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          New Delhi, April 24  Two Italians kidnapped in Odisha,   then a legislator and now a collector in Chhattisgarh. The high profile   abductions have again focused attention on the government strategy to counter   Maoists and even officials are asking whether there is any clarity of thought in   the twin approach of development and military action.
 |  While security experts and activists wonder if the government is losing its way,   the talk gaining momentum in government circles is whether development in tandem   with security operations has paid dividends. 
 According to sources in the   home ministry, some officials feel that building schools, health centres and   road connectivity in Maoist strongholds is irrational until security forces   first dominate the areas.
 
 Left-wing extremists in Odisha had kidnapped   two Italians in March, released one after 11 days and the second almost a month   later. Another Maoist group abducted Odisha's ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD)   legislator March 24 but his fate continues to be uncertain.
 
 And last week   Saturday, Alex Paul Menon, the 32-year-old collector of Chhattisgarh's Sukma   district was taken into captivity from the Manjhipara area, affected by leftist   insurgency, described by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as the "biggest" threat   to internal security.
 
 Menon was travelling with a thin security cover of   only two personal security officers, who were shot dead by the rebels.
 
 This, security experts believe, underlines the fact that rebels continue   to rule the red corridor - the nearly 80 Maoist-affected districts on the   borders of Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh,   Odisha, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.
 
 Some experts feel the only way to   stop abductions is to provide heavy security cover for officers and also ensure   that the areas where development takes place is dominated by a heavy security   presence. Rights activists see an inherent contradiction in this.
 
 Both   believe the government might be confused. But that's the only point of   convergence in their views.
 
 "In a situation, where you have no capacity   (to dominate), how can you have a developmental strategy?" asked Ajai Sahni, an   author and expert on counter-terrorism.
 
 But Justice (retd) Rajinder   Sachar, an activist with the People's Union for Civil Liberties and Democratic   Rights (PUCLDR), disagreed "totally".
 
 "It has to be a combined strategy.   Security doesn't mean you go for the kill. You have to win the hearts of the   people. Secure their rights. Make them feel safe. And that can happen only when   you improve their living conditions. It cannot be only security."
 
 The   89-year-old activist said the government had failed to address the root cause of   the problem on which "Maoist insurgency thrives". "That is poverty, violation of   rights."
 
 Sahni, the executive director of the Institute for Conflict   Management, argued that the government's double pronged strategy had failed   "totally".
 
 "You see the government is not doing enough. Instead it is   making itself vulnerable and Maoists are taking advantage," he said.
 
 The   abductions of the two Italians, it is argued by some, had been successful and   forced the government to concede Maoist demands for the release of some of their   arrested leaders.
 
 "You can kill unknown Maoists everyday - that doesn't   matter too much for them. But you cannot replace leaders so fast… They use   abduction as a two edged weapon…Weaken the government and get their leaders   back," Sahni said.
 
 Ajit Doval, a former Intelligence Bureau chief, agreed   that the Maoists had "made the government surrender".
 
 "They think it is   a weak government and they get encouraged every time you concede their demands.   You have to take tough action," he said.
 
 He added that the government   needed to tell state police forces "be tough, we will protect you legally".
 
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