City
Epaper

34 Maoist cadres surrender in Bijapur with Rs 84 lakh combined bounty

By IANS | Updated: December 16, 2025 17:25 IST

Raipur/Bijapur Dec 16 In a significant victory for anti-Naxal operations, 34 Maoist cadres, including 7 women, surrendered before ...

Open in App

Raipur/Bijapur Dec 16 In a significant victory for anti-Naxal operations, 34 Maoist cadres, including 7 women, surrendered before senior police and CRPF officials in Bijapur district on Tuesday, carrying a combined bounty of Rs 84 lakh.

The surrendered cadres, primarily from the South Sub-Zonal Bureau, also include members linked to the Dandakaranya Special Zonal Committee (DKSZC), Telangana State Committee, and Andhra-Odisha Border (AOB) Division.

Key figures include a Divisional Committee Member (DVCM) from the Keralapal Area Committee with a Rs 8 lakh bounty, several PLGA (People's Liberation Guerrilla Army) members, Area Committee Members (ACMs), platoon leaders, militia commanders, and frontal organisation office-bearers like DAKMS and CNM presidents.

Disillusioned with Maoist ideology, they pledged allegiance to the Indian Constitution, vowing a peaceful life. Each received Rs 50,000 immediate incentive under the state's rehabilitation policy, Police officials said.

The surrender occurred amid joint efforts by District Reserve Guard (DRG), Bastar Fighters, Special Task Force (STF), CoBRA, and CRPF battalions, influenced by the Chhattisgarh government's "Puna Margam: Rehabilitation to Rejuvenation" campaign—a reintegration drive—and the "Niyad Nellanar" scheme delivering development to remote villages.

Bijapur Superintendent of Police Jitendra Kumar Yadav appealed to the remaining Maoists, "abandon violence without fear. The government's policies ensure a secure, respectable future."

He highlighted family desires for normal lives.

Since January 2024, Bijapur has seen over 824 surrenders (per local claims, aligning with reports of 790+ by late 2025), alongside arrests and encounters, reflecting intensified operations.

Statewide, thousands have surrendered in 2025, weakening Maoist structures in Bastar.

Officials credit proactive security, trust-building, and welfare initiatives for transforming fear into dialogue and development in South Bastar.

Rehabilitation processes, including legal formalities and reintegration support, are underway. This marks another step toward Chhattisgarh's goal of lasting peace in Naxal-affected regions.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentOscars 2026: Neeraj Ghaywan's Homebound gets shortlisted for Best International Feature Film

EntertainmentAamir Khan says he would love to attend Kumbh Mela

FootballMessi thanks India for "warm welcome, great hospitality" following "GOAT India Tour" conclusion

InternationalNepal: Technical glitch halts election process in ongoing general convention of KP Oli's CPN-UML

CricketKKR go big at IPL 2026 Auction, blend global firepower with Indian promise

National Realted Stories

NationalSuspected militants open fire in Manipur's Bishnupur, no injury reported, tensions escalate

NationalAll India Civil Services Lawn Tennis Tournament 2025–26 begins in Gandhinagar

NationalWomen-centric schemes have enhanced their dignity, says Assam CM

NationalOdisha: OHRC seeks CS report on outsourced employees’ plight

NationalAndhra Pradesh continues to play important role in India-US relations: Chandrababu Naidu