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Naxal-Free India: Integrated Strategies Defeated Left-Wing Extremism

(Source: PIB | Ministry of Home Affairs)

Topic: GS-1: Tribal Society | Vulnerable Sections , GS-2: Governance | Welfare Delivery , GS-3: Internal Security | Left-Wing Extremism

Key Highlights

  • 597 fortified police stations built
  • 408 new CAPF camps established
  • 12,249 km roads constructed in LWE areas
  • 9,600+ mobile towers installed
  • 96% village connectivity achieved
  • 3,927 Maoist cadres surrendered (2024–Mar 2026)
  • Naxal incidents reduced from 870 (2014) to 234 (2025)

Context

  • India declared itself effectively Naxal-free on 31 March 2026.
  • The success is attributed to a three-pronged strategy:
    • Vishwaas (Security & Trust)
    • Nirman (Infrastructure)
    • Jan Kalyan (Welfare)
  • Marks the culmination of efforts to tackle Left-Wing Extremism (LWE), one of India’s longest internal security challenges.

Background

  • Originated from the Naxalbari Uprising (1967) in West Bengal.
  • CPI (Maoist) formed in 2004 after merger of extremist groups.
  • Violence peaked in 2010:
    • 1,936 incidents
    • 720 civilian deaths
  • National Policy and Action Plan (2015) became the first comprehensive anti-LWE framework.

Vishwaas: Security & Trust

Strengthening Security Infrastructure

  • 597 fortified police stations established.
  • 408 CAPF camps deployed.
  • 68 night-landing helipads created.
  • 400 blast-proof and bullet-proof vehicles inducted.

Technology-Led Operations

  • UAVs and drones.
  • Satellite imagery.
  • AI-based analytics.
  • Communication intelligence and digital monitoring.

Special Forces

  • CoBRA (CRPF)
  • Greyhounds
  • District Reserve Guard (DRG)
  • Jharkhand Jaguar

Surrender & Rehabilitation

  • ₹5 lakh rehabilitation package.
  • ₹10,000 monthly stipend for 36 months.
  • 2,337 surrenders in 2025 alone.
  • 3,927 cadres surrendered between 2024 and March 2026.

Nirman: Infrastructure Push

Connectivity

  • 12,249 km roads constructed.
  • ₹20,557 crore sanctioned for road projects.
  • 96% village connectivity achieved.

Digital Inclusion

  • 9,600+ mobile towers installed.
  • Communication access expanded to remote tribal regions.

Financial Inclusion

  • 1,804 bank branches.
  • 1,321 ATMs.
  • 74,720 banking correspondents.
  • 6,025 post offices.

Jan Kalyan: Welfare & Development

Education & Skilling

  • 259 Eklavya Model Residential Schools sanctioned.
  • 46 ITIs established.
  • 49 Skill Development Centres created.
  • 90,000+ youth and women trained.

Tribal Welfare

  • PM-JANMAN for PVTGs.
  • Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan.
  • Housing support through PMAY.

Support for Surrendered Cadres

  • Free education up to Class XII for children.
  • Livelihood assistance and rehabilitation support.

Chhattisgarh Model

Bastariya Battalion

  • Raised in 2017.
  • 1,143 personnel.
  • Significant participation of local tribal youth.

Bastar Development

  • 3,240 km roads built.
  • 889 mobile towers installed.

Shaheed Veer Gunda Dhur Seva Dera

  • CAPF camps converted into citizen-service centres.
  • Focus on governance and public service delivery.

Strengths

  • Security, development and welfare implemented simultaneously.
  • Technology improved operational efficiency.
  • Increased trust between local communities and the State.
  • Rehabilitation policy encouraged voluntary surrender.
  • Significant decline in violence and extremist influence.

Challenges

  • “Naxal-free” status requires independent verification.
  • Long-term livelihood sustainability remains uncertain.
  • Tribal land and forest rights issues persist.
  • Risk of resurgence if governance gaps re-emerge.
  • Economic integration of remote regions remains incomplete.

UPSC Value Addition

Important Acts

  • Forest Rights Act, 2006
  • PESA Act, 1996

Important Schemes

  • Security Related Expenditure (SRE)
  • Special Infrastructure Scheme (SIS)
  • Special Central Assistance (SCA)
  • PM-JANMAN
  • Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan

Security Doctrine

  • “Trace, Target, Neutralise”
  • Intelligence-led and technology-driven operations.

Way Forward

  • Continue calibrated security deployment in vulnerable pockets.
  • Strengthen FRA and PESA implementation.
  • Expand livelihood and market-linkage opportunities.
  • Convert former security camps into permanent civic infrastructure.
  • Conduct independent assessments of post-conflict development outcomes.

Conclusion

  • India’s success against Left-Wing Extremism demonstrates that internal security challenges cannot be solved through force alone. Sustainable peace emerged from the combined impact of security operations, infrastructure expansion, welfare delivery and community participation.

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