City
Epaper

Roads, schools and surrenders: How development is dismantling Maoism in Chhattisgarh

By IANS | Updated: December 5, 2025 15:40 IST

New Delhi, Dec 5 For decades, the red corridor of Chhattisgarh -- stretching through Bastar, Sukma and Bijapur ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Dec 5 For decades, the red corridor of Chhattisgarh -- stretching through Bastar, Sukma and Bijapur -- symbolised one of India’s most seemingly intractable internal conflicts.

Maoist insurgents not only claimed lives but also systematically blocked development, ensuring that some of India’s poorest citizens remained trapped in isolation.

According to a report by India Narrative, their strategy was deliberate: infrastructure weakens insurgency.

"Roads expose hideouts, phone towers enable governance, and schools widen horizons -- so these became targets," the report said.

Towers were toppled, bridges mined, power lines blown up, and schools flattened, leaving tribal communities cut off from services essential to progress.

The economic fallout was severe.

Despite Chhattisgarh contributing 17 per cent of India’s mineral output in 2022-23, mining in Maoist strongholds remained paralysed.

Forest-produce markets were disrupted, agriculture suffered, and basic movement of goods became hazardous.

Entire districts functioned below capacity for years.

According to the report, the 2001 census showed literacy, electricity access and road connectivity in conflict-hit areas lagging far behind the state average. Underdevelopment fed resentment; resentment sustained insurgency.

The past decade, however, has brought a decisive change.

Under the National Action Plan since 2015, security operations have been coupled with intensive development pushes, the report said.

Nationwide, Maoist-affected districts have dropped from 126 in 2013 to just 11 in 2025, with only three in Chhattisgarh among the “most affected”.

Violent incidents have halved; civilian and security personnel deaths have fallen sharply.

This reduction in violence has cleared the way for large-scale connectivity.

Nearly 15,000 kilometres of roads have been built in LWE zones; more than 8,600 mobile towers now operate in areas where such infrastructure was once unthinkable.

Banking services have expanded, with 283 new branches opening in Chhattisgarh alone.

Villages like Chikapalli have received electricity for the first time in decades, and schools in previously inaccessible Abujhmad have reopened.

Welfare schemes, housing projects, skill centres and new tribal institutions have reached thousands.

The Niyad Nellanar rehabilitation drive has seen over 2,200 Maoists surrender in two years, many citing improved development rather than coercion.

As mining revives and agriculture stabilises, Chhattisgarh’s GSDP is projected to touch Rs 6.35 trillion in FY26, it highlights.

The shift is unmistakable: where development strengthens its foothold, insurgency loses ground. The long-shadowed districts of Bastar are finally stepping into a new era.

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

International"A very good thing": Macron hails Iran-US ceasefire as vital step for regional stability and freedom of navigation

BusinessAries Agro Limited Announces Sourav Ganguly as Brand Champion

MumbaiMumbai Viral Video: Commuters Sit on Railings Between Tracks to Catch Train Amid Rush

NationalMild 3.6 magnitude earthquake jolts MP's Barwani

BusinessET Now Awards 2026: 5 Visionaries and Organizations Driving Innovation Across Industries

National Realted Stories

NationalUS ‘forced’ into ceasefire, says Iran Supreme Leader’s India representative

NationalMP aims for farmer prosperity, agri revolution, says CM Yadav at 'Krishi Manthan 2026'

NationalBJP accuses Cong of ‘tukde tukde’ politics as Gujarati groups protest in Delhi against Kharge's remarks

NationalCM Mohan Yadav speaks to farmers groups in MP ahead of wheat procurement set to begin tomorrow

NationalAdani Electricity reinforces ‘Zero Harm’ commitment during National Safety Month