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Seized letters show Rao's role in arms procurement: Police

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Press Trust of India Mumbai

The Maharashtra Police today claimed that letters seized from one of the persons arrested for alleged Maoist links in June this year show that Telugu poet Varavara Rao played a role in weapon procurement.

Rao and four others were arrested by Pune Police on August 28 following raids at houses of several Left-wing activists across the country.

A letter recovered from the laptop of Rona Wilson, who was arrested in June, speaks about procurement of arms and ammunition, said Param Bir Singh, Additional Director General (ADG) of Police, here.

"I have been in touch with designated contact in Nepal (for weapon procurement). Our comrades in Manipur can also assist in this. But, only V V (Varavara Rao) is authorised to communicate with them," Singh said, quoting one of the purportedly seized letter.

 

"It would benefit us to fast track the process and get equipments ready on ground. We are losing dozens and dozens of comrades in encounters in different states," the letter, allegedly written by Wilson to "comrade Prakash" said.

Surendra Gadling (arrested in June) and Rao felt the need to inflict heavy casualties on "enemy", something which the Maoists had not been able to do since 2013, ADG Singh claimed, quoting the letter.

Wilson also sent a catalogue of weapons with the letter, which had pictures and descriptions of a Russian-made grenade launcher, Chinese-made automatic grenade launcher and a machine gun, the senior police officer claimed.

"Comrade Prakash" was a conduit between the accused and the top Maoist leader Ganapathy and the "central committee" of the banned CPI (Maoist), Singh said.

The letters would be copied on "hard drives" and these hard drives were then couriered, ADG Singh said, adding that the drives would be password-protected.

The police are also probing the funding which Maoist received from abroad, he said.

Singh also said that one of seized letters showed that Maoists suffered due to demonetisation of November 2016.

Gadling, in reply to a letter by Rao in March 2017, said he could not distribute funds in Gadchiroli (in Maharashtra) and Chhattisgarh as police were carrying out frequent checks in the wake of note-ban, the ADG said.

Singh also said, without giving details, that some letters indicated that Maoists were helping some militant groups and "stone throwers" in Jammu and Kashmir.

Pune Police on August 28 arrested Rao, Vernon Gonsalves, Arun Ferreira, Sudha Bharadwaj and Gautam Navalakha in Delhi for alleged links with the Maoists.

The Supreme Court ordered the next day that the five should be kept under house arrest till September 6.

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First Published: Aug 31 2018 | 9:40 PM IST

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