Raipur/New Delhi, May 18 (Inditop.com) Fear stalked large parts of Chhattisgarh as police totted the toll of the Maoist massacre the day before and disheartened security forces stayed in their camps Tuesday, when a shutdown called by the guerrillas hit four other states and the central government reiterated its offer of talks.

The shutdown called by the outlawed Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) began — a day after 31 people were killed when the guerrillas blasted a bus in Chhattisgarh’s Dantewada district — amid fears of fresh attacks and crippled life in Bastar region as well as parts of Rajnandgaon and the rural areas of Raipur and Dhamtari districts.

Traffic was also disrupted in Orissa, Bihar, West Bengal and Jharkhand where trains were diverted or cancelled and buses stayed off the roads in many places as the Maoist strike to protest a government offensive against them came into effect.

Life was affected in the Maoist strongholds of these states. Police were on alert though no untoward incident was reported.

In Chhattisgarh, however, the second deadly attack in Dantewada in 40 days spread fear and terror.

Police officials said 31 bodies, including 16 of security men, had been recovered and feared that the death toll could rise with 15 of the injured in very critical condition.

“In Bastar, an absolute terror-like situation is prevailing. Forces are hardly moving due to fears of Maoist attacks… they are feeling terrorised at their base camps,” said a senior official based in Jagdalpur in Bastar region, the sprawling 40,000 sq km area comprising five districts.

A policeman posted within five kilometres from the blast site at the Gadiras police station admitted that he and his colleagues were demoralised.

“I admit that forces in the interiors of Bastar have gone on the defensive. Neither state police nor paramilitary forces are ready with heart and mind to go after the Maoists in the thickly forested areas.”

Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Raman Singh, Governor Shekhar Dutt, Home Minister Nankiram Kanwar and Director General of Police Vishwa Ranjan visited Dantewada to condole the deaths and meet the injured.

Ranjan spelt out the challenges ahead.

“Up to 25,000 sq km of Bastar’s 40,000 sq km is intensively mined and the big problem is that we have no technology and resources to de-mine the massive forested pockets. There is no technology to detect mines buried more than four feet deep inside.

“The massive Bastar region has turned into a minefield with landmines buried even up to 10 feet below the ground. Without taking out the landmines it’s literally impossible for forces to go after the Maoists freely in the thickly forested areas as the rebels are always ready with a booby trap.”

It was stocktaking time in New Delhi too.

While Home Minister P. Chidmabaram made a fresh offer of talks saying that talks could start if the guerrillas abjured violence for even 72 hours, security officials discussed changes in anti-Maoist strategy.

“The Maoists should say we will suspend violence, and actually suspend violence from any day they fix for 72 horus. Within 72 hours, we’ll get the chief ministers’ support and we will respond,” Chidambaram told a television channel.

The opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said the time had come for some concrete action and asked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to spell out if his government favoured a soft or hard line against Maoist guerrillas.

“We need to know if the government will wage only half a battle (against the Maoists) or an all out offensive,” said BJP leader Arun Jaitley.

At the other end of the poltical spectrum, the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) said in a statement: “The attack on the private passenger bus by the Maoists only highlights their bankrupt policies of attacking ordinary citizens in various parts of the country including tribals who refuse to accept their dictates.”