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Home Opinion Article

Sunset over the Red Corridor

Deepak Kumar Nayak by Deepak Kumar Nayak
28/02/2026
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Sunset over the Red Corridor
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The long-standing Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) insurgency in India, once described as the nation’s “greatest internal security threat,” has reached a historical inflection point. On February 22, 2026, Thippari Tirupati aka Devji aka Devuji aka Deoji aka Sanjiv aka Sanjeev aka Chetan aka Ramesh aka Kumma aka Shankar aka Sheshu aka Jagan aka Sudharshan aka Devanna (60), the general secretary, strategist, and head of Central Military Commission (CMC) of the CPI-Maoist, surrendered to the Telangana Police.

His surrender has been described as one of the most significant reversals the insurgency has faced in decades. According to multiple reports, Devji and Malla Raji Reddy aka Sangram (76), a member of the ‘central committee (CC)’ and ‘Politburo’, have reportedly surrendered along with 21 cadres, before the Special Intelligence Bureau (SIB) of the Telangana Police. Devji’s capitulation is not a mere tactical loss for the rebels – it reflects the symbolic collapse of the movement’s central nervous system. Coming just weeks before the Union Home Ministry’s March 31 deadline to eliminate Left-Wing Extremism (LWE), this event signals a decisive shift in the decades-long conflict.

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Devji’s surrender represents a severe disruption to the CPI-Maoist’s organisational structure. As a long-time commander and strategist who reportedly succeeded the late Nambala Keshava Rao aka Basava Raju – killed by Security Forces (SFs) in a major tactical blow on May 21, 2025 – Devji was central to the group’s military planning and the People’s Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA) operations.

Officials have described his exit as a “deadly blow” to the outlawed organisation’s command cohesion. The capture or surrender of a leader of Devji’s seniority is unusual and suggests that the senior Maoist leadership may be increasingly unable to sustain guerrilla operations across core zones such as Bastar, Abujhmarh and adjoining forest belts, with growing difficulties in recruitment, retention of cadres, and maintaining weapons stockpiles under sustained SF pressure.

Devji’s surrender follows months of coordinated SF operations, particularly in the Karregutta Hills (bordering Telangana and Chhattisgarh), where authorities reportedly dismantled operational bases and recovered explosive devices, repeatedly targeting leadership clusters and disrupting communication lines.

This government’s approach – which combines the threat of force with socio-economic incentives – has contributed to a steady stream of surrenders over the past two years. Authorities claim that hundreds of Maoist leaders and cadres have already ‘rejoined mainstream society’ through such schemes.

Devji’s surrender might act as a catalyst, triggering broader defections among the remaining Maoist cadres, with morale and organizational coherence eroding, and potentially triggering splits in the party over continuing the armed struggle. A minority of hardliners may, however, choose to fight to the end. Declaring the organised insurgency defeated, consequently, would be premature. Despite leadership losses, pockets of armed cadres remain, especially in dense jungle terrain. Further, without meaningful redress of structural issues that fuel insurgency, the ideological appeal of armed rebellion could linger, even if operational strength wanes.

Devji’s surrender is a strategic turning point in India’s protracted battle against the Maoist insurgency. It reflects the impact of sustained security pressure, strategic rehabilitation incentives, and growing organisational weakness within the CPI-Maoist. However, declaring this the definitive end of the insurgency risks oversimplification. While leadership vacuums and successive surrenders weaken operational capacity, the structural roots of the conflict, the distributed nature of cadre networks, and the socio-economic challenges in affected regions remain critical determinants of what comes next.

Author: Deepak Kumar Nayak
Research Associate, Institute for Conflict Management

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