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NIA charges 12 for Tiriya Naxal encounter

Legally SpeakingNIA charges 12 for Tiriya Naxal encounter

New Delhi

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) has recently filed a comprehensive chargesheet against 12 accused individuals in connection with the 2019 Tiriya encounter case. The case in Chhattisgarh that resulted in the deaths of 6 naxals and one civilian.

The case relates to an incident in which armed naxal cadres launched an attack on the security personnel near Tiriya village in Chhattisgarh.

The accused persons have been charged under various sections of the IPC, Arms Act and Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Investigations revealed that a group of naxal cadres led by senior Maoist leaders, including Sanju, Lxman Nag, Dashri Kawasi, Dubasi Shankar, Jalimuri Srinu Babu, Vijayalaxmi, Ramesh Kunjami, and others conspired to commit this act.
Combined teams of the District Reserve Guard, Special Task Force, State Police, and the Central Reserve Police Force who were engaged in a search operation near Tiriya village in Chhattisgarh’s Jagdalpur district were targeted by the assailants, who used sophisticated weaponry during the attack.
NIA stated, “Additional suspects in the case have also been identified, including B. Ch. Padma, Dubasi Devender, Dongari Devendra, Duddu Prabhakar, and Kandula Sirisha. “These suspects were operating under the guise of various organisations, while actively working in allegiance with the CPI (Maoist) or naxals.”

The agency stated, “The accused individuals with close ties to the top leadership of the Naxals were actively engaged in advancing the unlawful and violent agenda of the banned organisation. They were instrumental in receiving funds from the CPI (Maoist) to support their operations, while also functioning through various frontal organisations to propagate Maoist ideology.”

The case was initially registered on June 28, 2019, encompassing various sections of the IPC, the Arms Act, and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UA (P) Act). Subsequently, on March 18, 2021, NIA took over the case.

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