Updated
Raipur, May 10 (PTI): Maoists took 400 villagers hostage in Sukma district of Chhattisgarh hours before Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to neighbouring Dantewada but freed all the captives on Saturday night barring one who was beaten to death after being tried in a "people's court".
Sukma Superintendent of Police D Shravan said the "Naxals killed a villager identified s Sadaram Nag by holding so-called Jan Adalat in the forests between Gaadem and Munga villages under Tongpal police station limits and released others."
As per information, the freed villagers were returning to their homes, carrying Nag's body with them, Shravan said over phone.
The Maoist rebels abducted the residents of Marenga and some adjoining villages within Tongpal police stations limits late on Friday night and herded them to a nearby forest in protest against construction of a bridge.
According to police, the villagers had incurred the rebels' wrath by supporting the development work in the area.
Sadaram Nag was supervisor at construction of a bridge on a river near Marenga which may be the reason behind his murder, the SP said.
"Some Villagers have been abducted and 4-5 others (locals) are negotiating their release," Chief Minister Raman Singh told reporters after conflicting claims were made by police officials on the number of villagers forcibly taken by the ultras.
Additional Superintendent of Police, Sukma, Harish Rathore said between 400 and 500 villagers were "taken away" to the jungles by the Maoists opposing the construction of a bridge but Inspector General of Police, Bastar region, RP Kalluri, dismissed it as a "fiction" created by the media.
Modi, who was on a visit to Dantewada on Saturday, said there was no future for violence in democracy and said the "macabre drama of death will end."
"Only plough on the shoulders and not guns can bring development. And this will bring everyone to the mainstream of the country. There is no future for violence. The future is only of peaceful means. The birth place of Naxal movement Naxalbari has already given up this violent means. Don't get disheartened," he said.
"The macabre drama of death will end," he said, referring to Maoist violence in the state, and added "a lot of people have been killed by "mad men on the path of violence".
Security forces were mobilised in the region to nab the Maoists, Shravan added.
Earlier Report
250 people abducted by Maoists in Chhattisgarh, says CM
Raipur/New Delhi, May 9 (IANS): Maoists have abducted around 250 villagers in Chhattisgarh, and efforts were on for their release, Chief Minister Raman Singh said on Saturday.
Speaking to media persons in Bastar district, Raman Singh said most of the abducted villagers were connected with the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.
The abductions took place even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the region on Saturday, and 11,000 additional security personnel were deployed for the visit.
The villagers were reportedly on their way to Modi's rally, against which the Maoists had called a shutdown in Bastar.
Sources, however, said around 500 people were abducted from Sukma district just hours before they were to attend Modi's rally in Dantewada district.
The whereabouts of these 500 people from Mongra village in Tongpal region was not known yet.
The sources said that as the villagers gathered near the national highway to proceed to Dantewada, a group of around 100 Maoists - wearing army fatigues and carrying sophisticated weapons - arrived at the spot and took them away to a nearby forest area.
The Maoists also reportedly took away their mobile phones.
However, the state's information commissioner Ganesh Shankar Mishra denied reports of any abduction by Maoists, and said the villagers had themselves gone to meet the insurgents.
He said some insurgents had come to the villages to prevent some government work from being done, and the villagers went with them to discuss the issue with their leaders.
Sources also said the Maoists were opposing the construction of a bridge in Barnadi, and had earlier abducted 17 employees of a Hyderabad-based construction company.
Meanwhile, officials said Maoists uprooted railway tracks in Kamalur and Kumhar in Dantewada district during their bandh.
Officials said the movement of trains was stopped beforehand in view of the strike, and railway personnel were on their way to repair the broken tracks.
Meanwhile, Kawasi Lakhma, the Congress legislator from Sukma, also claimed on Saturday that Maoists abducted around 500 people, except women and children, from five villages.
He said around 2,000 Maoists entered the villages and abducted the people.
After reports of 500 people being held hostage by Maoists surfaced, a senior police officer in Chhattisgarh said such reports were "fiction created by the media".
"Reports of 400-500 people being held are a fiction created by the media," Inspector General of Police (Bastar) R.P. Kalluri told media persons.
"Only five-six people are being held by Maoists. We are negotiating with them to free the people," he said.
In Delhi, the union home ministry also denied a hostage-like situation in the state.
"There is no hostage-like situation there. We have got a report that some labourers gathered there at a construction site," home ministry spokesman Kuldeep Singh Dhatwalia said.