Mumbai: The work done by its volunteers during the coronavirus pandemic such as performing the last rites of COVID-19 victims helped the Popular Front of India (PFI) widen its presence in Maharashtra, a senior police official said. The controversial organization had a presence only in Nanded in Marathwada region until eight years ago, but it had members in at least 22 of 35 districts of the state when it was banned last week, he said.
The organization, which originated in Kerala, was banned by the Union government under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act for five years. Several of its members and functionaries have been arrested.
In Maharashtra, the PFI became visible after 2014, particularly in the Nanded area, the official said. In the next few years, the organization recruited active members in all eight districts of the Marathwada region. By 2018 it had members in Mumbai and Pune too.
PFI members would volunteer their services during natural calamities like floods, the official said. For instance, they handed out kitchen utensils in areas affected by Cyclone Tauktae in 2021. During the pandemic, PFI members volunteered to perform the last rites of those who had died due to COVID-19 as the relatives would often be unwilling to handle the bodies of such patients for fear of infection.