CPI (Maoist) loses another key member

CPI (Maoist) loses another key member

CPI (Maoist) loses another key member

New Delhi: CPI (Maoist) loses another key member

The death of CPI (Maoist) central committee member Paka Hanumanthu alias Ganesh Uike in an exchange of fire with the security forces in Gasma forest area in Odisha’s Kandhamal district on Thursday, has further deprived the party of its intellectual base, people familiar with the matter said.

With the death of 69-year-old Hanumanthu, who hails from Pullemla village of Chandur mandal in Telangana’s Nalgonda district, the outlawed party is now left with only two active leaders from Telugu states in the top hierarchy — party general secretary Thippiri Tirupati alias Devji and Malla Raji Reddy alias Sangram, for whom security forces are searching.

Another top leader Muppalla Lakshman Rao alias Ganapathi, who headed the party for a long time, has been inactive since 2018.

“Hanumanthu, who had been underground since 1982, was a low-profile leader but was one of the important pillars of the CPI (Maoist), particularly in providing training to the cadres on the ideology, besides of course in military operations,” a former state intelligence official said, on condition of anonymity.

Known by several proxy names, including Ganesh Uike, Rajesh Tiwari and Chamru dada, Hanumanthu has been associated with the movement since the days of CPI (Marxist-Leninist) People’s War, founded by Kondapalli Seetharamaiah in 1980.

Hanumanthu was the eldest of six children born to Paka Chandrayya and Papamma of Pullamla village. “He left for the movement in 1982 itself and since then, he had been dedicated to the cause. He had not come to the native place when his father died three years ago and mother one-and-a-half years ago,” said Hanumanthu’s brother-in-law L Pradeep told Hindustan Times.

The Maoist leader studied up to Intermediate in Chandur and later pursued a BSc degree at NG College in Nalgonda.

During his college days, he served as general secretary of the Radical Students Union (RSU), a period marked by frequent clashes between RSU and the RSS-affiliated Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP).

Following the 1982 murder of ABVP leader Achyuta Srinivas, in which police named Hanumanthu as an accused, he reportedly discontinued his studies and went underground, following a call given by Kondapalli Seetharamaiah. He steadily rose through the ranks to become the CPI (Maoist) Central Committee member.

Hanumanthu played a key role in leading Maoist activities across Odisha, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh and was involved in several violent incidents in these states. After the death of senior Maoist leader Nambala Keshava Rao, Hanumanthu served as the Odisha Central Committee member in charge of southern states.

He was also one of the key figures who spearheaded the Maoist movement in the Andhra–Odisha Border (AOB) region. Hanumanthu was a prime accused in the 2013 Darbha Valley attack in Chhattisgarh, in which senior Congress leader Mahendra Karma and 22 others were killed.

He is believed to have led or orchestrated several major Maoist attacks in Odisha.

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