RAIPUR, India: Indian police said Maoist rebels launched a deadly attack on a ruling party campaign convoy in a restive central state Tuesday, just two days before voting starts in the country's general election.
Maoists exploded an improvised explosive device in Chhattisgarh's Dantewada district on Tuesday, killing five policemen who were escorting Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislator Bhima Mandavi who too was killed, authorities said.
The deadly explosion took place around 5.30 pm in Kuakonda area in Dantewada.
Girdhari Nayak, a senior officer from Chhattisgarh state, where the attack occurred, said the rebels, who have been waging an armed insurgency against the state for decades, detonated a roadside bomb before firing on the convoy of BJP officials.
The rebels often call for a boycott of elections as part of their campaign against the Indian state.
"It was a massive blast ... The vehicle was blown apart," he said.
"Immediately after the blast, the Maoists opened indiscriminate firing. One bullet hit the local lawmaker. Firing is underway. Bodies are mutilated."
The Maoists are believed to be present in at least 20 other Indian states, but most active in Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Bihar, Jharkhand and Maharashtra.
Their insurgency has left tens of thousands dead.
The Maoists struck in the last national election in 2014, killing seven police in a landmine attack.
The year before, in regional polls, 25 Congress party politicians were murdered in an ambush on their convoy by Maoist rebels in Chhattisgarh.
Naxalites primarily comprise a group of far-Left radical Communists who believe in the Maoist political ideology. The Naxalites-Maoists primarily believe that mainstream political parties and the political system that operates through democracy are just hogwash. Real socio-political change can be brought about only through a people’s revolution and a mass movement to overthrow the current political order.