Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Odisha hostage crisis: Abducted MLA Jhina Hikaka to be released at 10 am tomorrow


Maoists who have held Odisha legislator Jhina Hikaka hostage for over a month will release him on Thursday, a lawyer who fights cases for the rebels said on Wednesday.

Nihar Ranjan Patnaik, based in Koraput district, told a TV channel that the rebels will set Hikaka free by 10 a.m. Thursday.

The rebels will hand him over to Patnaik and Kaushalya, the wife of the abducted Biju Janata Dal legislator, in Narayanpatna area of the district, the lawyer said quoting a Maoist leader.

However, there is still no official confirmation of the development. No audio tape has been released by the rebels.

The left-wing extremists, who kidnapped 37-year-old Hikaka from Laxmipur in Koraput March 24, had announced they will hold a 'people's court' on Wednesday where his fate would be decided.

Tension spread in Chhattisgarh as the deadline set by the abductors of Sukma District Collector Alex Paul Menon lapses at 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Reports coming in from the Maoists stronghold of Bastar said the deadline could be extended.

Menon , 32, a 2006 batch Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer, was abducted at gunpoint on Saturday by rebels from a forested location, about 500 km south from here, when he was interacting with tribals. The Maoists shot dead his two guards who resisted his abduction.

"Tension is running very high at police headquarters here and in the IAS community as well. But the worst period is for the family of Menon, mainly his wife Asha who is going through a phase of mental trauma," a senior official with home department said.

The only relief, he said, was that Maoists had allowed one of the three proposed mediators - Manish Kunjam - on Tuesday to carry medicines for Menon, who is an asthma patient, to their hideout in Sukma.

Kunjam, the former Chhattisgarh legislator and well known Communist Party of India leader in troubled Bastar region, had collected medicines from Asha Menon from her official residence at Sukma and reached Chintagufa area Tuesday evening. He then went into the jungle to hand over medicines to Menon, who reportedly needs urgent medical attention.

Maoists are demanding that Chhattisgarh's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) regime set free its eight key jailed colleagues - Marakam Gopannam, Nirmal Akka, Devpal Chandra Shekher Reddy, Shanti Priya Reddy, Meena Chowdhary, Korasa Sunny, Markan Sunny and Asit Kumar Sen - and had set April 25 as the deadline.

In a message sent to media houses, Maoists proposed Hyderabad-based Prof Haragopal as a mediator after Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan and Kunjam refused the offer.

Haragopal is said to be the man who played a crucial role in the release of Malkangiri District Collector R. Vineel Krishna in February 2011 when he was held hostage by Maoists in neighbouring Odisha.

A senior official said that tension is running very high, but the worst period is for his wife who is going through a phase of mental trauma.
Tension spread in Chhattisgarh as the deadline set by the abductors of Sukma District Collector Alex Paul Menon lapses at 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Reports coming in from the Maoists stronghold of Bastar said the deadline could be extended.

Bofors scam allegations anguished me, relieved at exoneration: Big B


One of the persons who paid the price in the course of the then government's cover-up operations in the shady Bofors gun deal was film star Amitabh Bachchan, who was widely seen as close to then prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi.
 
Twenty-five years after fingers were pointed at him for being complicit in the Bofors deal, which brought down the government of Rajiv Gandhi, the veteran actor has heaved a sigh of relief.
 
After former Swedish top cop Sten Lindstrom -- the whistleblower in the case -- exonerated Bachchan, saying the actor's name was planted by Indian intelligence agencies, Big B wrote in his blog saying he was relieved that his name was cleared. He said he knew he was innocent, but it was a dark spot in his life.

In an interview to website thehoot.org, Lindstrom said that the case against actor and then Congress MP Amitabh Bachchan and his family was planted in Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter by Indian investigators.
 
"No one shall be able to understand or even remotely fathom, the hours and days and months and years of the anguish of petulant blame that I had to go through. But will it really interest another? No, it shall not. For, those that colluded in desperation still abound, without as much as a conscious twitch on their well articulated and fashionably cleaned skins," the superstar wrote.

He concludes, "Loss of ones conscience would have to be the most defeating element in our lives. Somewhere we shall all fall victim to it. But, greatness lies with them that redeem it... in time!!"