VIJAYAWADA: The police narrative on the biggest-ever ‘encounter’ in the State, in which 20 persons, a majority of whom were tribal workers from Tamil Nadu, were killed in the Seshachalam jungles, has only raised more questions.
The routine police explanation of acting in self defence, was given by DGP J V Ramudu. In ‘encounters’ of this nature, it is only the outlaws who die while the police do not suffer any losses, not even bruises.
Police were combing the area after clear inputs that the smugglers were felling red sander trees, Ramudu said.
According to him, firing was necessitated as smugglers began attacking the police. He said it was yet to be ascertained who were the smugglers and who were the workers.
The scene of offence presented a picture that did not support a genuine encounter theory, opined many of those who had visited the spot.
Debunking the police version, CPI leader T Harinath Reddy said it appeared as though they were shot dead somewhere and the bodies brought and thrown around at two places.
“There were no marks of blood that should ooze from the wounds. That workers had attacked the police is a far-fetched theory. The weapons being shown as ones used in the attack are a poor give-away. The axe blade is rusted and had not been used for long. Worse still, it had no handle. Then, the red sander logs lying in between the bodies appear to have been brought from forest department depots since they still have white paint on them.
“The way the death occurred did not suggest any genuine encounter since the place where the bodies were found was a plain area in the forest and does not give any scope for an exchange of fire. There were no bushes or trees and the victims did not appear to have run for life either,” he argued.
Further, the police claim of sighting the smugglers in the early hours in the jungle is being questioned.
“It may not be possible for the workers to attack the police nor the police shoot at them precisely in the head or on the limbs unless they happened to have been practising shooting at night. This itself is a big hole in the police theory,” Reddy said.
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