India’s Naxal-Free Milestone: Security, Development and the Politics of Closure (UPDATED)

In a landmark declaration in the Lok Sabha on March 31, 2026, Union Home Minister Amit Shah announced that India has become “Naxal-free,” with Maoist violence now “on the verge of extinction.” The last red bastion—Chhattisgarh’s Bastar—has been wrested from the shadow of “Red Terror,” Shah said, crediting a decade-long strategy that combined relentless security operations with aggressive development.

Bastar today boasts a school in every village, ration shops in every hamlet, Primary and Community Health Centres at every tehsil and panchayat level, and universal issuance of Aadhaar and ration cards. Residents now receive five kilograms of food grains monthly. The government’s self-imposed March 31 deadline has been met, marking the effective end of a 60-year insurgency that claimed over 20,000 lives and disrupted the lives of 120 million people, mostly tribals.

The achievement underscores the success of an integrated approach: sustained counter-insurgency pressure paired with “development as counter-narrative.” Yet Shah’s message was unambiguous—surrender arms for rehabilitation, or face decisive force. Dialogue remains open only to those who lay down weapons.

Politically, the announcement reopened old wounds. BJP lawmakers blamed Congress’s “60 years of misrule” for allowing Maoism to fester, citing former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s own admission that Naxalism posed a greater threat than Kashmir or Northeast militancy. Congress countered by questioning the completeness of the victory and the sustainability of gains in remote tribal regions.

For now, Bastar walks the “path of development.” Whether this marks the final chapter of India’s longest internal conflict or merely its most decisive phase will depend on whether security gains translate into lasting prosperity for the communities long caught in the crossfire.

 

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