|  | 
      
        | 
            
            
            
          
           |   
          
          
          
          Patna, April 22 (IANS) In the wake of audacious abductions by   Maoists in Odisha and Chattisgarh, the Bihar government has asked legislators   and top officials in the state's 33 insurgency-hit districts to step-up their   security and avoid late night travel, officials said Sunday.
 |  An official in chief minister's office here said the state police headquarters   has alerted them to take their security seriously following abductions of BJD   legislator Jhina Hikaka from a hilly area in Odisha and Sukma district collector   Alex Paul Menon in Chhattisgarh.
 As many as 33 of Bihar's 38 districts   are Maoist-affected.
 
 "The government had requested legislators and   district officials, particularly district magistrates, posted in Maoist-affected   districts to take their security seriously during their visits to rural areas,"   an official told IANS on condition of anonymity.
 
 Legislators of   Maoist-affected districts - including Gaya, Aurangabad, Arwal, Jehanabad, Banka   and Jamui - have been asked to inform local police stations before their visits   and avoid late night travel, officials said.
 
 All officials, particularly   district magistrates and divisional commissioners, were asked not to visit rural   areas without proper security.
 
 An official in the state's intellgence   department said that Maoists may abduct legislators or top officials in Bihar to   create trouble for the state government. "Maoists are desperate to free their   leaders lodged in different jails across the state. They could strike in the   manner they did in Odisha and Chattishgarh to bargain," the official   said.
 
 "The district magistrates have to assess their security needs   during visits to rural areas. It is for them to decide upon their own security,"   the official added.
 
 He pointed that the Maoists' abducted Chattishgarh   collector due to lack of proper number of security forces with him during his   visit to an interior part of the district.
 
 The government has asked them   to avoid unpaved roads and use anti-landmine vehicles in vulnerable   areas.
 
 
 comments... |  
   |