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End of the road for India’s Red rebellion

21 0
14.04.2026

Today, there is music in the midst of desolation. In the scarred, whispering forests of Chhattisgarh, brave souls like my father fell like sacred rain in the line of duty, but their blood was not swallowed by silence. It was tempered in fire and forged into the hard, irreversible blade that severed Naxalism’s long shadow.

Sixteen years ago, I was a teenager, absorbed in the trivial urgencies of college placements and annual day celebrations, when a familiar call came — the kind that came every day, brief and unassuming, almost like a ritual of care. It lasted no more than a few seconds, a simple check-in, but it meant everything. That day, I let it ring, telling myself there would be another tomorrow, another call, another chance. There wasn’t.

The next morning, my father, Vinod Kumar Chaubey, superintendent of police of Rajnandgaon, was killed in a Naxal ambush while leading his men to rescue a besieged outpost. Twenty-nine policemen fell with him. My mother was left with the Kirti Chakra; I was left with a silence that never quite lifted — until now.

Years later, in 2012, I was confronted with a reality that tested me as a servant of the Constitution and as a son whose life had already been rewritten by a bullet. The same men who claimed the language of........

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