NEW DELHI, July 31: Heavily armed Maoist insurgents took control of Chaura railway station in Bihar’s insurgency-hit Jamui district and disrupted railway services on the Delhi-Howrah mainline for over two hours in the early hours of Saturday.
Jamui police superintendent Pramod Kumar Mandal said a contingent of paramilitary forces rushed to the spot but the Maoists had fled by then taking advantage of the hilly and forested terrain in the remote area, over 50 kilometres from the district headquarters.
A railway official said the siege forced them to halt a dozen long route express trains at separate railway stations along the railway line. He added the train services were affected between 3.20 am and 5.30 am.
Chief public relations officer (railways) Rajesh Kumar said the movement of trains on the Delhi-Howrah mainline resumed at 5.30 am after the tracks were examined for detection of sabotage or explosives.
Officials said the insurgents first surrounded the station before one of them in police uniform entered station master Binay Kumar’s office and forced him to turn the track signals red to halt trains. They threatened to blow up the railway station if Kumar refused to do so.
The insurgents asked other railway staffers to pass on a message to their seniors about their siege. They also addressed passengers on public address system and asked them to remain seated. The siege came on the fourth day of a weeklong bandh Maoists have called in memory of their slain comrades.
Police said it took the security forces over two hours to rush to the station as operations in remote Maoist insurgency hit areas require some preparation. He added there was always fear of ambush or trap and landmines. “Police go to Maoist areas in adequate numbers. Jamui is the worst affected area and going there needs utmost precaution. The police got information after the Maoists left the station and despite moving fast, the extremists took advantage of the jungle and hilly terrain.”
Central Reserve Police Force officers said the Maoists apparently intended to lure security forces to the area and ambush them.
Jamui is among the Left-wing insurgency-hit areas of Bihar, where two Railway Protection Force (RPF) personnel were killed and five injured when Maoists attacked a Howrah-Mokama passenger train near at Narganjo railway station on April 8, 2007. The Maoists also took away weapons of the slain and injured RPF personnel.
On June 14, 2013, over 150 armed Maoists attacked a Patna-bound train and killed three people including a RPF personal in the district. Five people were injured, and Maoists looted passengers and fled the scene carrying away weapons of the security forces they targeted.
(Manas Dasgupta)