Naxalism on the verge of its end: Shah
Raipur, Feb. 9 -- Union home minister Amit Shah on Sunday chaired a high-level security review meeting in Chhattisgarh's capital Raipur on Left-Wing Extremism (LWE), weeks ahead of the Centre's March 31 deadline to eliminate the Maoist insurgency from the country.
"The double-engine government has been leaving no stone unturned to completely eradicate the menace of Naxalism from the country, and it has reached the verge of its end," Shah said.
In a post on X, Shah reiterated the Centre's March 31 deadline to eradicate LWE. "The security-centric strategy, infrastructure development, targeting of the Naxal financial network and the surrender policy have yielded positive results, and Naxalism will be completely eradicated before March 31," he wrote.
The meeting was attended by chief minister Vishnu Deo Sai and deputy chief minister Vijay Sharma. Union home secretary, Director of the Intelligence Bureau (IB), and special secretary (Internal Security) in the ministry of home Affairs were also present, officials said. Directors General of the Central Reserve Police Force, Border Security Force (BSF), Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) and National Investigation Agency (NIA) also attended the meeting, along with the police chiefs of Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Maharashtra, Jharkhand and Telangana, and other senior officers.
Later in the day, addressing a conclave of Organiser Weekly, Shah said the country must get rid of what he termed the "destructive" communist ideology at the earliest and appealed to Naxalites to lay down arms, assuring them that the government would welcome those who surrender "with a red carpet."
Shah asserted that the Maoist problem cannot be attributed to lack of development or viewed merely as a law-and-order issue. "Left-Wing Extremism is an ideology-driven challenge," he said, adding that people should understand the "truth" of communist ideology. "Wherever communists remained in power, they could not bring development. Communist ideology is indicative of destruction, and the country needs to get rid of it immediately," Shah said.
He claimed that communist ideology has largely disappeared from democratic politics. "It does not exist in Tripura and Bengal. In Kerala, it is surviving to an extent; however, people have started the change from Thiruvananthapuram," he said, referring to recent electoral gains by the BJP in the Kerala capital.
According to police data, since January 2024, more than 500 Naxalites, including senior leaders such as CPI (Maoist) general secretary Nambala Keshava Rao alias Basavaraju, have been killed in encounters in Chhattisgarh. During the same period, around 1,900 Naxalites were arrested and over 2,500 surrendered in the state....
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