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Battle for Bastar Part 1: How Maoist citadel was breached

Battle for Bastar Part 1: How Maoist citadel was breached

The Federal 10 months ago

Two major anti-Maoist operations in Bastar in the past two months are but signs of a sustained pushback of the armed movement and major setbacks to the outlawed Communist Party of India (Maoist).

Backed by two major forward security bases on either side, the village has a round-the-clock vigil by paramilitary troops; the security camps form the epicentre of the primary administrative developments.

"Abhi pehli baar koi bus yahan chal rahi hai (It's for the first time in decades that a bus comes here)," remarked Chandrashekhar Renga, a 35-year-old villager in Nambi belonging to the Dorla tribe. Renga has a tractor, a recent addition to his farm equipment. A water tank has come up here, he told The Federal. "Abhi ek Anganwadi khulne wala hai (a new Anganwadi centre is about to open)."

For the first time in decades, South Bastar's villages held their panchayat elections in February 2025 without any major untoward incident, albeit under the shadow of a strong security apparatus.

It'll be a big challenge, Kosma says, to run the panchayat affairs. But they will learn, he says.

Even in Awapalli, in remote Bijapur, three tribal students making it to the medical colleges in the state show growing aspirations in this boxed region.

Also read: Who is Basavaraju, the top Maoist commander killed in Bastar encounter?

The Salwa Judum years

The strides are remarkable even if nascent, given that the South Bastar region suffered immensely during the Salwa Judum campaign, when the then Raman Singh government in Chhattisgarh gave arms to the civilians and turned the anti-Naxal campaign into a fratricidal war, until a Supreme Court decision asked the state to dismantle it by calling it unconstitutional and illegal.

Jagargunda, Tadmetla, Nambi, and all the villages in Dantewada, Sukma, or Bijapur were split along vertical lines, with the tribals turning on each other, picking up guns either on behalf of the police or the Maoists.

Hundreds of tribals fled their homes to escape the fratricide. Hundreds of them had to move to the Judum camps to protect themselves from the Maoists, while scores of young men and women joined the Maoist ranks to seek retribution against security forces.

Today, the Judum camps have folded up. People have moved back to their native villages, except those who fled to migrate to Andhra Pradesh. Their lives still hang in balance there.

Also read: Jharkhand: Maoist with Rs 10 lakh bounty killed in gunfight

How the change came

Bastar's journey from the 2010 Tadmetla ambush and the 2013 Jheeram Ghati massacre to the KGH operations that served a crushing blow to the Maoists has been a story of determination and endurance of security forces to come a long way from being frequently proven sitting ducks groping in the dark to a juggernaut striking at will.

There's a stark contrast today with the security scenario 15 years ago, not just in Bastar, but perhaps across the country in the LWE-affected areas of Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and West Bengal.

"The Maoists are at their weakest today," a top intelligence officer in Raipur told The Federal, enlisting several factors that have led to the security forces gaining, perhaps, a decisive upper hand: Surrenders of Maoist cadres, the waning of local support, exterminations of top cadres, filling up of security and administrative vacuum, infrastructure changes, gathering of quality real-time intelligence on the movement of the Maoist top ranks, and changed social conditions.

Today, across the entire Bastar landscape, even in the remotest parts, villagers can be seen riding motorcycles, using smartphones, and using tractors for agriculture

Major hits this year

With the key axes dotted with heavily-staffed security camps, the pinnacle of the security blitz came in about 50 days in three different police raids on Maoists in their own fortified strongholds in Bastar, particularly in the Bijapur and Narayanpur districts.

For the first time ever in the LWE's history of over five decades, its topmost leader, the general secretary of the banned CPI (Maoist), was killed in a three-day operation on May 21.

Nambala Keshav Rao alias Basavraju (74), successor to the long-time general secretary Ganapati aka Muppala Lakshamana Rao, was killed along with 27 others in a hideout in what was hitherto considered an impregnable Maoist "safe zone" of Abujhmadh in Narayanpur.

Barely 15 days after this operation, in early June, security forces caught up with another top Maoist leader, the 66-year-old Thentu Laxmi Narasimha Chalam alias Sudhakar, a member of the top CPI (Maoist) decision-making body called the Central Committee (CC) - this time in Bijapur.

Also read: Bastar belongs to its people, security camps will go once Naxalism ends: Chhattisgarh DyCM

Out on the run

The other top Maoists, who apparently managed to escape the KGH given its vast expanse, now seem to be running for cover, according to the officials overseeing the anti-Naxal operations.

Prominent among them are Madvi Hidma, the most feared Maoist military commander believed to be involved in many police ambushes, including the Tadmetla CRPF ambush, Devji, who is said to be commanding their central military commission, and Bhupathi, a senior CC member pitted to be the next general secretary of the outfit, among many others.

The encounters followed the biggest 21-day joint security operation in history - carried out by about 10,000 personnel belonging to the CRPF, the Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA), the Chhattisgarh police's own District Reserve Guards (DRG) and the Bastar Fighters, from April 21 to May 11, at another Maoist stronghold of KGH, a huge 60-km-long and 20-km-wide mountain, about 800 metres tall with four graded peaks, straddling the two sides of the Chhattisgarh-Telangana border - in which 31 Maoists were killed.

The newly made Dornapal-Jagargonda road, which was once an extremely sensitive zone. In 2010, Maoists had ambushed and killed 76 CRPF jawans in Tadmetla, about 50 km west of Dornapal, in this area

As the massive juggernaut of security forces tighten the screws on the Maoists, also often referred to as Naxalites, in what is poised to be the battle to the finish, the rebels find themselves in an unprecedented existential crisis. So deep and decisive is the penetration of the forces, who are now better trained in guerilla warfare than ever before, that they are dangerously close for the Maoists' comfort and safety, steadily shrinking the rebels' area of operation and influence to a few hundred square kilometres. To be precise, those areas are now shrunk to pockets.

Also read: 26 Maoists killed in encounter with security forces in Chhattisgarh

Local forces take the lead

The major changes appear to have happened after Chhattisgarh created two elite fighting forces roping in local youths - the District Reserve Guards in 2015 and the Bastar Fighters in 2022. The DRG mainly consists of surrendered Naxals and former Special Police Officers (SPOs) drawn from among the armed activists of Salwa Judum. The Bastar Fighters comprise tribal youths - male and female candidates -recruited locally in each of the seven districts with terrain and language familiarity.

Incidentally, a sizeable section of these locals are women, who participate shoulder-to-shoulder with men in armed conflicts with Maoists.

One circular issued by the Maoists in August 2024 told their ranks to be wary of the DRG and the Bastar Fighters, a senior intelligence officer revealed. The same circular specifically asked the cadres to retreat to their bases in multiple states, splinter into small formations of two or three, melt into civilians but with arms, and lie low. Monsoon is looming and the Maoists hope for some respite from the security offensive during the season when troop movement slows down.

Also read: Eight Maoists lay down arms before police in Telangana

Nothing succeeds like success

Officials attribute these successes in the anti-Maoist operations largely to the DRG and BF, who know the terrain and the treacherous explosive-laden footpaths (pagdandis) used by the Maoists to reach their hideouts and resting places like the back of their hands.

It is also this guidance from these local elite fighters that helps the forces remain safe from the IEDs that lie strewn across the landscape and premeditate the tactics of Maoist guerillas.

Ten years ago, the paramilitary forces mainly led the operations, suffering from the lack of familiarity with the terrain and tribal language. Today, with paramilitary troopers acting as the force multipliers and the DRG and the BF taking the lead, the operations are seeing success.

"Nothing succeeds like success," said the intelligence officer The Federal spoke to. "There is an avalanche effect of one successful operation to the other," he added.

Nambi village, in the foothills of the Karre Gutta Hills in Bijapur district, has got a water tank recently

Money speaks

Today, across the entire landscape, even in the remotest parts, one can find villagers riding motorcycles, using smartphones and deploying tractors for agriculture. Even the extremely remote Nambi village boasts three tractors, recent additions here, indicating a surge in the aspirational levels engendered clearly by a free and fearless interaction with the outside world in these past few years.

The mobile connectivity has also given a leg-up to real-time intelligence about Maoist movements. "With the fear factor reducing substantially due to the sanitisation of the areas of Maoists, communication becoming easy and quick, and handsome monetary rewards being offered, real-time and pin-pointed intelligence has started coming in greater measure, contributing to our operational success in a big way," a senior Intelligence officer said.

Also read: Chhattisgarh: Woman Naxalite carrying Rs 45 lakh reward in two states gunned down

Back to the wall

Clearly, the Maoists are fighting with their back to the wall. On one side, their "safe haven" has shrunk vastly, and on the other, the villages they could influence and get recruitment from are out of bounds. The banned outfit's political work is crippled; it's unable to hold meetings with villagers as freely as it did a decade ago.

Adding to their woes is the real-time intelligence that the surrendered cadres and villagers are providing to the police, exposing them to surprise police attacks. Whether - and how - the Maoists will negotiate this unprecedented crisis of survival, a paralysis at the helm post the recent killings of their top leaders, remains to be seen.

Still, nobody is writing them off just about yet.

Part 2, coming soon: Multi-layered security strategy at play in Bastar

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