Threat letters to Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis post anti-Maoist operations
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has received a couple of anonymous letters threatening him and his family’s life.
Published: 09th June 2018 06:20 AM | Last Updated: 09th June 2018 07:31 AM | A+A A-

MUMBAI: Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has received a couple of anonymous letters threatening him and his family’s life. The letters, allegedly sent by Maoist operatives, were received by the Chief Minister’s Office about a week ago and have been handed over to the police for further investigation, a senior Home Department official told The New Indian Express.
According to officials, the letters were in retaliation to the encounter in Gadchiroli in April in which 39 Maoists were killed and stated that “killing of a few comrades will not stop the revolution.”
Of the 39 Maoists killed in the encounter, three were high-ranking commanders of the Naxals and seven were women. Maoist terrorists had condemned the encounter and had even given a call for bandh in protest against the encounters. They had also put up banners threatening revenge for the encounter.
News about the letters surfaced after the claims of Pune Police that they have intercepted Maoists’ communication regarding an alleged plot to kill Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The police had claimed on Thursday in a Pune court while demanding remand for the Maoist operatives arrested earlier this week that in a few of the communications seized by the operatives, they appear to be plotting to kill Modi.
When asked about the letters, Fadnavis said that several facts have surfaced in the letters seized by the police and the same would be presented before the court.
“A probe is underway to find more links and it would not be right to say anything more at the moment,” he said.
Meanwhile, the police claimed that the letters seized by them from the arrested Maoists earlier this week are expected to lead them to many more links of the Maoist terrorists and unearth their network in urban areas of the country.
“Earlier, Naxals were confined to rural areas, now they have spread to urban areas. They are on a mission trying to mislead people,” he said.