Chhattisgarh Nears Maoist-Free Bastar Goal with Surrenders & Rehab

Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai has hailed recent surrenders as proof of the state's resolve to eliminate Maoist influence in Bastar. Four active cadres from Sukma district surrendered, each carrying a significant bounty, amid a broader wave of defections. The state's multi-pronged strategy pairs security operations with proactive rehabilitation, including vocational training for surrendered youths. Officials believe expanding development and trust in remote areas will lead to lasting peace in the region.

Key Points: Chhattisgarh Advances Toward Maoist-Free Bastar: CM Sai

  • Four Maoists with Rs 8 lakh bounty surrender
  • State targets Maoist-free Chhattisgarh by March 2026
  • Rehabilitation program trains surrendered youths in masonry
  • Strategy combines security ops, development, and dialogue
2 min read

Chhattisgarh advances toward Maoist-free Bastar with key surrenders, rehab efforts: CM Sai

Four key Maoists surrender in Sukma as Chhattisgarh's security & rehab strategy aims for a Naxal-free Bastar by March 2026.

"A Naxal-free Bastar and a secure Chhattisgarh is our resolve. - Vishnu Deo Sai"

Raipur, Jan 30

Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai hailed the development as a testament to the state's unwavering commitment.

In a post on X, he stated, "A Naxal-free Bastar and a secure Chhattisgarh is our resolve."

He emphasised that the incident reflects the expanding atmosphere of trust, security, and development in Bastar.

The Chief Minister credited the success to coordinated security operations, the establishment of robust security camps, enhanced road connectivity, and sustained efforts that have steadily shrunk Maoist influence while eroding their local support base.

"People are now coming forward to embrace the mainstream of development," Sai noted, expressing confidence that the government's integrated policy of security, development, and dialogue will encourage more cadres to lay down arms in the coming days.

In a significant stride toward eradicating Naxalism from the Bastar region, four active Maoist cadres from the Kistaram area of Sukma district surrendered to security forces on Friday.

Each of these individuals carried a bounty of Rs 8 lakh, highlighting their prominence in the outlawed CPI (Maoist) network. This surrender comes amid a broader wave of Maoist defections in Bastar throughout early 2026, with hundreds of cadres abandoning violence under the state's rehabilitation initiatives.

Authorities view such instances as indicators that Naxal strength is waning, with the ultimate goal of a Maoist-free Chhattisgarh by March 31, 2026, aligning with national targets.

Complementing these security gains, the Dantewada district administration has launched a proactive rehabilitation program to facilitate the smooth reintegration of surrendered Naxalites.

Meanwhile, the district administration, in collaboration with the State Bank of India's Rural Self-Employment Training Institute, has started a training programme for 35 surrendered youths in masonry work.

The initiative, directed by Collector Devesh Kumar Dhruv, aims to provide employment-oriented skills to these individuals, enabling them to contribute productively to society.

The training addresses the growing demand for skilled construction workers in the region, particularly under flagship schemes such as the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (housing for all) and the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MNREGA).

By equipping former insurgents with vocational expertise, the program seeks to ensure sustainable livelihoods and prevent relapse into extremism. These combined efforts underscore Chhattisgarh's multi-pronged strategy: robust anti-Naxal operations paired with compassionate rehabilitation.

Officials believe that as development reaches remote areas and trust builds among local communities, the cycle of violence will further diminish, paving the way for lasting peace in one of India's most insurgency-affected regions.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Finally, some good news from Chhattisgarh! My cousin is posted in CRPF there. He says the atmosphere has genuinely improved with new roads and camps. The key is to ensure these rehabilitation promises are kept long-term. Hope these youths get stable jobs.
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Aman W
While surrenders are good, the government must be careful. Rs 8 lakh bounty each means they were serious cadres. Their rehabilitation must be monitored so they don't become informants for old networks. Security can't be relaxed.
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Sarah B
I'm an international development student, and this is a fascinating case study. Combining hard security with soft skills training addresses both the symptom and the cause. The focus on construction aligns with local needs. Hope it's sustainable.
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Karthik V
As someone from a neighbouring state, I've seen the fear around Bastar. If this works, it will change the entire region's future. Roads and training are good, but schools and hospitals must follow quickly. Development is the ultimate weapon.
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Nisha Z
Respectfully, we hear such announcements often. The target is March 2026? That's very soon. I hope the focus remains on the people of Bastar—their land rights, their forests—and not just on a political "Maoist-free" headline. True peace needs justice.
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