Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: India's most wanted bandit Killed
Asia Finest Discussion Forum > Asian Culture > India Chat
Menikani


http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=177582

MADRAS, India Oct 19, 2004 — He was India's most wanted bandit, a brutal smuggler who murdered police officers, slaughtered elephants and kidnapped a movie star. In the end, it took millions of dollars, thousands of security forces and more than three decades to bring him down.

Koose Muniswamy Veerappan, 60, was killed in a shootout late Monday with a special paramilitary task force outside a small village 200 miles south of Madras, capital of Tamil Nadu state. Three of his core gang members were also killed, police said.

Relentlessly pursued by security forces, Veerappan had been forced in recent months to leave the dense jungle terrain straddling nearly 4,000 square miles in the southern states of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, where he was most at home. His death came in a sparsely forested area, far from the center of his power.

"This was the easternmost point he has ever come … in the last 15-20 years," K. Vijaykumar, head of the 752-member task force, said Tuesday. "It became more and more easy for us to monitor him."

"We watched him for several days" before the final gunbattle, Vijaykumar said.

With his trademark handlebar mustache, lanky frame and camouflage clothes, the flamboyant outlaw had enjoyed a level of celebrity comparable to the screen idols of India's Bollywood movie industry.

He had been on the run since the late 1960s, when he fell in with ivory smugglers. He was accused of smuggling ivory from 2,000 slaughtered elephants and thousands of tons of sandalwood, which is used for oil, soap, handicrafts and furniture.

He had a $410,000 bounty on his head and had escaped capture twice.

Peasants, in awe of his daring and dependent on his handouts, had helped him cover his tracks. Some politicians also were allegedly in his pay, and police said he terrorized locals by stringing up the bodies of suspected police informants from trees.

Some observers were not surprised that he was killed in his final confrontation, given his alleged ties to politicians.

"If they had caught him alive, lots of secrets would have tumbled out," said Abdul Kareem, a retired police official from the southern city of Mysore whose son, a policeman, was killed by Veerappan's gang in a 1992 ambush.

On Monday, police cordoned off the village of Paparapatti after receiving a tip the bandit was hiding there.

An intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press that an associate of Veerappan had surrendered about three hours before the gunbattle and led police to the hideout.

Kumar said Veerappan and his comrades were twice offered a chance to surrender. "The response was not appropriate," Vijaykumar told NDTV television news. "We threw stun grenades and opened fire."

He said, however, that some of Veerappan's gang may have escaped.

"This was his core group. There may be a few others," he told a news conference.

News of Veerappan's death was greeted Tuesday with relief.

"It is like the killing of a demon," said Raghvendra Rajkumar, son of Rajkumar, one of southern India's most popular movie stars, who was kidnapped by Veerappan four years ago.

Efforts to capture Veerappan were stepped up after his gang in August 2000 seized the then 71-year-old matinee idol, holding him captive in the jungle.

Fans rioted at the news of the kidnapping and Rajkumar was set free after three months under circumstances that were never fully explained.

The gang later kidnapped a politician, who was killed.

Since 1990, state governments had spent nearly $30 million hunting for Veerappan. Armed with assault rifles and machine guns, police had used a global positioning system and helicopters to scour the jungle region.

Associated Press Writer Habib Beary in Bangalore contributed to this report.

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.



Iron Malayan
QUOTE (Menikani @ Nov 12 2004, 03:35 AM)

*


Serves him right.
JMAC
QUOTE (Iron Malayan @ Nov 12 2004, 11:43 AM)
QUOTE (Menikani @ Nov 12 2004, 03:35 AM)

*


Serves him right.
*


damn, he got knock the fack out... embarassedlaugh.gif
Iron Malayan
QUOTE (Menikani @ Nov 12 2004, 03:35 AM)


*


Who made that hole on Veerappan's head ? I wanna buy him a drink beerchug.gif
Turtle
There was once a woman like this in India as well. She later became a politician instead of getting killed.
IniTiaL V.
damn how come it took this long to take him down???
purnomor
QUOTE (Turtle @ Nov 12 2004, 11:48 AM)
There was once a woman like this in India as well.  She later became a politician instead of getting killed.
*


You mean Phoolan Devi, the bandit queen? She eventually ended up killed as well in 2001
PervertBurger
He looks like he got the same amount of damage as Saddam's kids...I think they got owned in a worst way though..
Jupiterz
is he kinda Indian Robin Hood??
flipcombatmedic
jesus three decades for a single guy. he must have been green beret man.
ExpressYourself
QUOTE(purnomor @ Nov 13 2004, 06:22 AM) [snapback]537638[/snapback]

You mean Phoolan Devi, the bandit queen? She eventually ended up killed as well in 2001


Some guy on another forum claimed that he's related to the guy who killed her, and he's proud of it. icon_confused.gif


She was born into a family of the shudra sub-caste of boatmen called mallahs in the small village of Gorha Ka Purwa, Uttar Pradesh, India. She was married at an early age. Phoolan Devi had a troubled youth. Eventually she chose to turn to a life of crime, and joined a gang of dacoits, or bandits, becoming their leader after a few weeks.

She became known as the "Bandit Queen" who robbed, stole, and murdered at will. As such, she was a dangerous criminal, and murderer. Nevertheless, amongst certain sections of society, she may have gained a romantic image, after the fashion of Robin Hood.


Phoolan Devi gained national and international infamy in 1981 as the leader of a gang which murdered 22 Thakur men in the village of Behmai, in Uttar Pradesh. This cold blooded crime was carried out supposedly as retribution for her rape at the hands of certain men of the caste. Nevertheless, she ordered the massacre of unrelated members of the community of Thakurs living peacably in the village, simply on the basis of their caste.


On July 25, 2001, she was shot in front of her house in New Delhi, allegedly by one Sher Singh Rana, which he claims was retribution for the Behmai massacre. The police, however, are sceptical of his claims.

She is survived by her husband, Ummed Singh.

tree
That's crazy. Years ago, I read about this guy in a Maxim mag. He was one of their top ten scariest men on the planet.
Jagger
The deadliest serial killer in world history, Thug Behram, was also Indian.

In the early 19th century, Thug Behram, a gang leader of the Thugs (a religious cult of assassins worshipping the Hindu goddess Kali), murdered a total of 931 people in his 40-year career as a serial killer. He killed them by strangling them to death using a "rumal" (handkerchief). The Thugs became notorious and the word "thug" eventually entered the English language to refer to low lives.
ExpressYourself
^You know, I never could find any information on Indian serial killers before.


Don't ask why, but I had an uncanny interest in reading about their biographies when I was 15 and all I found were white people like Dahmer, Manson, Fisher, etc.
IniTiaL V.
QUOTE(IniTiaL V. @ Nov 13 2004, 09:53 PM) [snapback]537628[/snapback]

damn how come it took this long to take him down???

it still remains unanswered madgo.gif
Jagger
QUOTE(ExpressYourself @ Jul 2 2006, 10:20 AM) [snapback]2010781[/snapback]

^You know, I never could find any information on Indian serial killers before.
Don't ask why, but I had an uncanny interest in reading about their biographies when I was 15 and all I found were white people like Dahmer, Manson, Fisher, etc.

And of course, Jack the Ripper, although he was nowhere near as notorious as Thug Behram (931 kills is a bit too much even for a serial killer). A new word entered the English dictionary because of that Thug. There was also a 19th century best-seller novel about him, called Confessions of a Thug.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2009 Invision Power Services, Inc.