<p>There was an eerie silence outside the demolished house of gangster Vikas Dubey where around 60 policemen are keeping a hawk-eyed vigil after the news spread that he was killed in an encounter on Friday.</p>.<p>The policemen, most of whom are deployed on daily shifts, were sitting on wooden beds under a Neem tree, watching a steady stream of media persons arriving with a variety of questions.</p>.<p>But the scribes are welcomed with silence as the policemen and locals are unwilling to speak.</p>.<p>A broken baseball bat, damaged tractors, and some two-wheelers and an SUV are seen as one enters the house using a ramp -- signs of what it was before the Kanpur administration demolished it on Saturday.</p>.<p>Some statuette of Lord Shiva, Parashurama, goddess Durga and Radha-Krishna are kept on unused electrical equipment under a Neem tree.</p>.<p>The walls of the house lay demolished, and the barbed wire used for fencing are on the ground with damaged parts of vehicles all around.</p>.<p>Among the debris lies a new mattress in a room that has a ceiling fan mounted.</p>.<p>The house is around 18 km from Chaubeypur police station, where a new station officer has taken over, after all the policemen posted there were shunted out after the Vikas Dubey gang ambushed and killed eight cops who went to arrest him.</p>.<p>The new SHO, however, politely refused to speak.</p>.<p>Locating Dubey's house was not very difficult as everybody in neighbouring villages knows by now where the dreaded criminal lived in the area. They were willing to tell the direction.</p>.<p>But, the scene at Dubey’s village Bikru was quite opposite: people remained indoors and refused to speak about him and the killing of eight cops he was alleged to have masterminded.</p>.<p>Somalu (50), when asked about the incident, said that he is from a neighbouring village, and is a labourer and does not know much. When asked whether he has got any help from Vikas Dubey, he said, "No." He refused to speak further.</p>.<p>Dogs barking at strangers and the cry of peacock break the cycle of silence and uneasy calm the village has witnessed over the past few days.</p>.<p>Dubey was accused of masterminding an ambush at his Bikru village near Kanpur on the night of July 2. Eight policemen, including DSP Devendra Mishra, were killed, triggering a manhunt for him.</p>.<p>Madhya Pradesh police arrested him in Ujjain. He was being brought back to Kanpur by UP police, who claim they shot him when he tried to escape. </p>
<p>There was an eerie silence outside the demolished house of gangster Vikas Dubey where around 60 policemen are keeping a hawk-eyed vigil after the news spread that he was killed in an encounter on Friday.</p>.<p>The policemen, most of whom are deployed on daily shifts, were sitting on wooden beds under a Neem tree, watching a steady stream of media persons arriving with a variety of questions.</p>.<p>But the scribes are welcomed with silence as the policemen and locals are unwilling to speak.</p>.<p>A broken baseball bat, damaged tractors, and some two-wheelers and an SUV are seen as one enters the house using a ramp -- signs of what it was before the Kanpur administration demolished it on Saturday.</p>.<p>Some statuette of Lord Shiva, Parashurama, goddess Durga and Radha-Krishna are kept on unused electrical equipment under a Neem tree.</p>.<p>The walls of the house lay demolished, and the barbed wire used for fencing are on the ground with damaged parts of vehicles all around.</p>.<p>Among the debris lies a new mattress in a room that has a ceiling fan mounted.</p>.<p>The house is around 18 km from Chaubeypur police station, where a new station officer has taken over, after all the policemen posted there were shunted out after the Vikas Dubey gang ambushed and killed eight cops who went to arrest him.</p>.<p>The new SHO, however, politely refused to speak.</p>.<p>Locating Dubey's house was not very difficult as everybody in neighbouring villages knows by now where the dreaded criminal lived in the area. They were willing to tell the direction.</p>.<p>But, the scene at Dubey’s village Bikru was quite opposite: people remained indoors and refused to speak about him and the killing of eight cops he was alleged to have masterminded.</p>.<p>Somalu (50), when asked about the incident, said that he is from a neighbouring village, and is a labourer and does not know much. When asked whether he has got any help from Vikas Dubey, he said, "No." He refused to speak further.</p>.<p>Dogs barking at strangers and the cry of peacock break the cycle of silence and uneasy calm the village has witnessed over the past few days.</p>.<p>Dubey was accused of masterminding an ambush at his Bikru village near Kanpur on the night of July 2. Eight policemen, including DSP Devendra Mishra, were killed, triggering a manhunt for him.</p>.<p>Madhya Pradesh police arrested him in Ujjain. He was being brought back to Kanpur by UP police, who claim they shot him when he tried to escape. </p>