Left Wing Extremism (LWE) in India

Context:

Thirty-seven alleged Maoists, including several carrying cash rewards, surrendered before security forces in Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh, under the State’s continuous push for rehabilitation and weakening Left Wing Extremism (LWE).

  1. Origins of LWE in India
  • Began with the Naxalbari uprising in 1967 (West Bengal), led by Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal.
  • Inspired by Maoist ideology → “Protracted People’s War.”
  • Spread through forested, tribal, and economically backward regions forming the Red Corridor.
  1. Geographical Spread

Historically affected parts of 10 states, mainly:

  • Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Bihar, West Bengal, Maharashtra, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh.

Today, LWE has significantly declined — only few districts remain severely affected (mainly in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, parts of Odisha).

 

  1. Causes of LWE (UPSC Favourite)
  2. Socio-Economic Causes
  • Poverty, unemployment, lack of development
  • Land alienation and landlessness
  • Displacement due to mining and development projects
  • Inequitable resource distribution
  1. Governance Deficit
  • Weak administrative presence in remote areas
  • Corruption and exploitation by local elites
  • Inadequate implementation of welfare schemes
  1. Tribal Issues
  • Encroachment on tribal land and forests
  • Restrictive forest laws
  • Exploitation by outsiders (contractors, moneylenders)
  1. Geographical Factors
  • Dense forests, hilly terrains enable guerrilla warfare.
  • Borders of multiple states → administrative vacuum.
  1. Maoist Strategy and Tactics
  • Guerrilla warfare
  • Ambushes and IED attacks
  • Targeting infrastructure (roads, telecom towers)
  • Extortion from contractors and businesses
  • Operating through People’s Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA)
  1. Government Response to LWE
  2. Security Measures
  • Operation Green Hunt (intensified offensive)
  • Deployment of CRPF, CoBRA, BSF, ITBP, and state police
  • Modernisation of Police Forces (MPF Scheme)
  • Unified Command in worst-affected states
  1. Developmental Measures
  • Aspirational Districts Programme
  • Integrated Action Plan (IAP) / Special Central Assistance
  • Improved road connectivity (PMGSY LWE Roads)
  • Banking, telecom, and education infrastructure in remote areas
  1. Rights-Based Measures
  • Forest Rights Act (2006)
  • PESA Act
  • Rehabilitation & surrender policies for Maoists
  1. Recent Initiatives
  • National Policy & Action Plan (2015) aimed at:
    • Security + Development + Good Governance
  • Use of drones, technology, and real-time intelligence
  1. Decline of LWE

According to recent government data:

  • LWE incidents and deaths have reduced by over 70% in the last decade.
  • Number of worst-affected districts reduced from 90+ to less than 50.
  • Many top Maoist leaders neutralised; cadre recruitment weakened.

Reasons for decline:

  • Better road connectivity, strong local policing
  • Improved developmental footprint
  • Declining ideological appeal
  • Internal factionalism within Maoist groups
  • Community participation and surrenders
  1. Challenges That Remain
  • Strong Maoist bases in South Bastar (Chhattisgarh)
  • Difficult terrain and forest cover
  • Tribal grievances still present
  • Slow development in remote pockets
  • Maoist expansion attempts in new regions (Kerala–Karnataka–TN tri-junction)
  1. Environmental & Tribal Angle
  • Many Maoist-affected areas are mineral-rich tribal regions → conflict over natural resources.
  • Issues of displacement, land rights, and environmental degradation fuel resentment.
  • Development projects often lack adequate rehabilitation & resettlement (R&R).

 

« Prev March 2026 Next »
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031