TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) – On Monday evening, a day after police commandos launched that attack, police in Gadchiroli district killed six more Naxalite guerrillas, including four women, in a firefight.
Sunday's operation took place in the same district, on the border between Maharashtra and Chhattisgarh states, around 1,000 km east of Mumbai.
After a four-hour gun battle, some 16 militants, including men and women, were found dead, but police said an unknown number had been shot as they tried to escape into the Indravati River.
The bloated bodies began to surface a day later, and police were still pulling dead militants out of the river on Tuesday.
Satish Mathur, the director general of Maharashtra police, told Reuters the body count had reached 34, but could rise.
"We are still recovering bodies from the river... The count could go up as the search operation is still going on," said Prashant Diwate, a police spokesman in Gadchiroli.
Last month, a roadside bomb killed nine police in Sukma district of Chattisgarh State.
Landless peasants and tribals form the rank and file of the Naxalalites, a movement whose origins go back to the late 1960s.
The name is derived from a village in West Bengal State where the group was founded. At that time they used bow and arrows, but these days, they are armed with Kalashnikov automatic rifles and weapons captured from raids on police posts.
Source: Press TV