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Dozens of Indian officials quit after Maoist threat
05 May 2008 08:43:23 GMT
Source: Reuters
PATNA, India, May 5 (Reuters) - At least 64 district politicians in one of India's poorest states have resigned en masse, citing threats from Maoist insurgents, officials said on Monday.

Officials from the National Democratic Alliance in the eastern state of Bihar quit their party posts on Sunday after 37 of them were kidnapped and then released last week by insurgents, who accused them of failing to check police abuses on local inhabitants.

"Many of them have cited threats to their lives as reasons behind their resignations," senior government official Deonandan Prasad Sinha told Reuters from Gaya, a district a few hours drive south of the state capital Patna.

Thousands of tourists visit Gaya every year to see where Buddha is said to have gained enlightenment under a pipal tree.

Maoist rebels say they are fighting for the rights of the poor and landless villagers. They operate in a large swathe of India stretching from the east to some southern states, mostly in the countryside, and attack government officials and property.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the four-decade-old Maoist rebellion as the single biggest threat to India's internal security. It has killed thousands of people. (Editing by Alistair Scrutton)


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A worker falls asleep among heaps of rice sacks at a wholesale market in Jakarta May 3, 2008. Southeast Asia nations meeting in Bali have agreed to cooperate over the rice ...



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