Indian police say Maoist leader of worst rebel massacre killed

By AFP
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Published November 19, 2025
Indian security forces have killed five Maoist rebels in jungle clashes as they seek to quash the decades-long insurgency in the resource-rich central regions. — AFP/File

RAIPUR, India: India´s police said on Tuesday its forces had killed a “dreaded” Maoist rebel commander responsible for one of the deadliest attacks by the guerrillas, along with five other insurgents.

New Delhi has vowed to end the decades-long insurgency entirely by March 31, 2026, with Tuesday´s killing marking the latest in a series of reported victories against the shrinking rebel force.

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Senior police officer Mahesh Chandra Laddha told reporters that Madvi Hidma, a top Maoist commander, his wife Raje, and four other fighters were “killed in an encounter with police” in Andhra Pradesh state.

Ladda called Hidma the “most dreaded Maoist commander”, who had a bounty of 10 million rupees (around $110,000) on his head. Police also seized assault rifles, pistols and explosives.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi´s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) hailed the operation, noting that Hidma had masterminded the April 2010 ambush in Dantewada, Chhattisgarh, that killed 76 security personnel -- one of the worst massacres in India´s recent history.

“Left-wing extremism is collapsing across the country, shrinking from 182 affected districts in 2013 to just 13 today,” the Hindu nationalist BJP said in a statement.

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