The surrender of Devuji, alias Thippiri Tirupathi, along with 20 cadres in Telangana has reduced Maoists to around 180 armed cadres. This marks the near end of Left-Wing Extremism ahead of the government's March 31 deadline. The development calls for reflection on development and inclusion rather than celebration.
Thippiri Tirupathi, alias 'Devuji', the highest-ranking Maoist, surrendered in Telangana along with 20 other cadres. The Communist Party of India (Maoist) now has an estimated armed cadre of just around 180, with its leadership all but decimated. This surrender is part of nearly 2,000 Maoist cadres who have laid down arms since 2024.
Security operations have neutralized key leaders. Nambala Keshava Rao, alias Basavaraju, the then general secretary, was killed in May 2025. Madvi Hidma, head of Battalion 1, was eliminated in November 2025, and Modiyam Vella, commander of Company No 2, in December 2025. The surrender of Mallojula Venugopal Rao, alias Sonu, a chief ideologue of the Naxal movement, represented a major ideological blow.
The success against Left-Wing Extremism stems from state capacity, surrender and rehabilitation policies, and internal splits recognizing the futility of armed struggle. Forward posts in the red corridor across Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana, backed by local intelligence, have aided these efforts. However, the moment demands sombre reflection rather than triumphalism. At its peak, the red corridor spanned India's most backward districts where the state was often absent or coercive. Policies must now ensure development, representation, forest rights, and transparent land acquisition to integrate the marginalized. India's democracy's strength lies in turning rebels into stakeholders, preventing Naxalism's return.