The killings took place during a joint operation by Odisha and Andhra Pradesh police at Bejingi in the Panasput gram panchayat area under Chitrakonda police station in Malkangiri district, surrounded by hills and forests on three sides and Balimela reservoir on one.
The ultras used to take shelter there after committing violence in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh or Chhattisgarh, said Nihar Nayak, a researcher of the Maoist movement in Odisha, adding that they used to take advantage of the geographical location of the area since they started operating from these parts in the 1980s.
The Bejingi area, where today's operation took place, had hosted a meeting of top Maoist trainers last night. The rebels did not think that the security personnel would launch an assault in the deep forests surrounded by hills and flanked by a reservoir, the officer said.
The Maoists had eliminated at least 38 security personnel, including 35 members of Greyhound, Andhra Pradesh's elite anti-Naxal force, while they were crossing the Balimela reservoir in a mechanised boat in 2008.
In their bid to keep the "cut-off area" safe and out of reach for the security personnel, the Maoists in the past had destroyed equipment used in road construction, mobile phone towers and government buildings.
Now that the Odisha government has been constructing a major bridge (918-mtr) at Gurupriya to connect 151 villages in the "cut-off area", the Maoists would further lose their "safe shelter", said a local engineer, adding that the construction of the bridge was likely to be completed by the end of 2018.
"After today's operation, the Maoists have suffered a major setback in the entire south Odisha, particularly in Koraput and Malkangiri districts," a top police officer involved in anti-Maoist operations said.
Earlier, the Maoist movement had suffered a setback when Sabyasachi Panda quit the CPI(Maoist) and formed his own group, 'Odisha Maobadi Party'. Panda is in jail, leading to a decline in Maoist activities in Gajapati, Rayagada and Ganjam districts.
However, the Maoists have re-grouped in Kalahandi, Boudh and Kandhamal. Naxal cadres, mostly from Chhattisgarh, operate in the western region of the state, while the guerrillas from Andhra Pradesh operate in south Odisha, the officer said.
Maoist leader Ramakrishna had reportedly addressed a meeting in the Jantri area in the "cut-off zone" earlier this month and asked the tribals to boycott the polls.
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