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CRIME: CHAMBAL DACOITS
Terror Rides Again
After a lull of almost a decade, the scourge is
back. Only this time the bandits are resorting to kidnappings and extortion.
When 21 pandas
from the spiritual hub of Mathura in Uttar Pradesh were invited to participate
in a huge mahayagna being conducted in neighbouring Madhya Pradesh last
year and were paid Rs 50,000 as advance, many of them found it difficult
to refuse the offer. So what if the event was to be held in the heart
of the dacoit-infested Bhind district. So what if the invitation came
from Nirbhay Singh Gujjar, one of the most dreaded bandits in the Chambal
ravines. The money was too good and the dacoits would not harm religious
people like them.
Or so they thought. When they reached the ravines,
the pandas realised that money itself is a religion. The mahayagna was
just a bait to lure them into a trap. Each panda had to cough up Rs 5
lakh as ransom before they were allowed to return. The money was paid
through a network of intermediaries who interfaced with their families
back home in Mathura.
Similarly, five people from Guna district of
Madhya Pradesh thought they were on to a major archaeological find last
year when a local guide told them about a treasure trove of ancient artefacts
in Bhind. But when the relic hunters arrived in Bhind they were promptly
handed over to Rajjan Gujjar's gang. Again, each hostage had to pay Rs
5 lakh for his release.
Man Singh is dead. Phoolan Devi is now a lawmaker.
And Malkhan Singh has been leading a normal life after surrendering to
the police in 1982. But their legacy continues to haunt the Chambal ravines.
After a lull of almost a decade, dacoity has re-emerged in its 21st century
avatar as a fusion of extortion and kidnapping, a wedding of the urban
mafia and the rural bandit.
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"It is best and
safest to contact intermediaries."
SAYYAD AHMED,
Parana village, Agra
When he got a letter demanding ransom for his son's release, Ahmed
gave it to the police. But they 'lost' it. Ahmed got the message and
paid Rs 31,000 ransom. |
In the past 12 months, over 1,000 kidnappings
have taken place in the Chambal region comprising seven districts of Madhya
Pradesh, nine of Uttar Pradesh and two of Rajasthan. A dozen big gangs
with a combined strength of almost 200 armed dacoits are scouring the
countryside. Their victims: prosperous farmers, doctors and bureaucrats.
But anyone worth anything is no longer safe. In a crunch, even marginal
farmers and struggling shepherds will do. For instance, members of the
Mahabir Gujjar gang kidnapped 24 shepherds and released them only after
a collective ransom of Rs 3 lakh was paid. That's chickenfeed compared
to the estimated Rs 50 crore that has changed hands for the safe return
of hostages in the entire Chambal region in the past year.
In this lucrative business, urban crooks are
the new partners of the dacoits. They help identify potential victims
and pass on information about their movements to the dacoits. Daily schedules
of rich businessmen and affluent professionals are kept under watch and
are crucial for the planning and execution of the kidnapping. Sometimes,
like in the case of the treasure hunters from Guna, these crooks even
deliver the victims to their captors.
After the kidnapping, these urban thugs act
as intermediaries between the victims' families and their kidnappers,
negotiating the ransom money and the modalities of payment. During the
negotiations, the victims are kept at hideouts in small towns and villages
in the ravines. Bhind in Madhya Pradesh and Etawah in Uttar Pradesh have
emerged as the favourite havens for hiding victims picked up from as far
as Delhi, Kanpur and Ghaziabad.
The
ransom money is usually divided equally between the dacoits and the intermediaries.
Villagers who extend shelter to the dacoits or help in hiding victims
are given protection in return. In fact, harbouring dacoits is a tradition
in places like Sauda village in Datia district. Some families in the village
specialise in playing the intermediary between the victims' families and
the dacoits.
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KIDNAPPINGS AND MISSING PERSONS
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| Gwalior range |
191
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80
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| Chambal range |
39
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200
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| Kanpur range |
91
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800*
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Number of kidnappings in 2000
in police records
* unofficial estimate by a senior police officer |
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Number of missing persons, a
euphemism for kidnapped people |
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The local police have not remained silent spectators
in this well-oiled system. In fact, in many cases, lower level policemen
have worked as accomplices for the dacoits, providing them a place to
hide the victims before they are taken to the hideout in the ravines.
Nirmal Patel, a rich farmer from Mangrol village whose son was kidnapped
by dacoits last year, relates the modus operandi. "My son was kept
in the local thana for three days before being taken to the ravines. When
some influential politicians offered to talk to senior officers, I refused
because I knew it would not help. I paid the ransom and my son was delivered
safely."
The crime graphs in police stations consequently
do not show any alarming rise in kidnappings and dacoities. If police
records are to be believed, there were only 191 kidnappings in 2000, while
101 dacoits were arrested and 23 killed in 33 encounters. But how many
of these were actual encounters is debatable. In the forgotten badlands
of the Chambal valley, fake encounters and cold-blooded killings of innocents
is not an uncommon aberration.
The most glaring example is that of a poor Scheduled
Caste villager from Datia district who was kept in custody for three months
before he was shot dead in cold blood and shown as a dacoit killed in
an encounter. The farce would have succeeded but for a senior police official
who spilled the beans. However, thanks to a massive cover-up by the state
police, nothing came out of the enquiry into the incident and the guilty
officer is now stationed in Mumbai.
That the police is also hand in glove with the
dacoits is an open secret. When Sayyed Ahmed's teenaged son was kidnapped,
the farmhand from Parna village in Agra district collected Rs 31,000 from
the community to pay for his release but did not go to the police. Why?
"I approached the police when the letter demanding the ransom came
by post and gave it to them. But they lost the letter itself. It had been
posted at a post box near the police station," he says.
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CHAMBAL'S
MOST WANTED
Rewards announced on dacoits by the Madhya Pradesh police
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THE BIG FISH ...
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Raju Kushwaha
Rs 1 lakh
Ramesh Kushwaha Rs 1 lakh
Dayaram Gadaria* Rs 1 lakh
Nirbhay Singh Gujjar Rs 1 lakh
Bhoora Rs 75,000
Hajrat Singh Rawat Rs 50,000
Sobran Singh Rs 25,000
Janak Singh Rs 10,000
* Arrested
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... AND THE SMALL FRY
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Pehelwan Gujjar
Rajjan Gujjar
Ramashray
Tiwari
Punjab Singh
Shugar Sing
Man Singh
Dheemar
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| These
dacoits carry less than Rs 5,000 on their heads. |
Today, Ahmed fears the police as much as he is
scared of the dacoits who kidnapped his son. Silence and secrecy are the
ground rules and the victims observe them staunchly. "When I was
kidnapped my family contacted not the police but the intermediaries. That
is the safest way," says Brijnandan Dixit, a farmer from Bhind who
had to pay Rs 1.5 lakh as ransom for his release last year.
The state governments are now taking some feeble
steps to fight the menace of dacoits. Since the beginning of 2000, the
Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh police have been running joint operations
against the dacoits. Exchanging notes and sharing information on the bandits
have helped eliminate two notorious dacoits, Hari Baba and Lalaram, in
the past year. "We are confident of tackling the problem," says
Inspector-General (Gwalior Range) N.K. Tripathi.
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijay Singh
has announced a programme for the formation of gram raksha samitis (village
protection committees). The programme envisages providing arms to a group
of 10 people of any village terrorised by dacoits. At least four people
from each group will be trained for a week. In a bid to curb corruption
at the lower levels, Madhya Pradesh Home Minister Mahendra Baudh has already
directed the Police Department to avoid posting a policeman in his home
district and to ensure that no officer spends more than five years in
one division.
The general feeling though is that any strategy
will have to be a mix of aggression and conciliation. INDIA TODAY investigations
revealed that many gangs want to surrender but do not trust the police
of Madhya Pradesh or Uttar Pradesh.
For example, the Mahabir Gujjar gang, which
operated in Morena district of Madhya Pradesh, travelled all the way to
Dhaulpur to lay down its arms before the Rajasthan Police on January 18.
Madhya Pradesh Additional Director-General Rajendra Chaturvedi, who took
his chances against Malkhan and Phoolan as a young superintendent of police
in the early 1980s and persuaded them to surrender, says any initiative
should work to eliminate the problem of dacoity, not fight individuals.
Perhaps, another surrender mela is needed.
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