A "red corridor" large enough to tear India apart is rapidly spreading towards the Sino-Indian border.
As India's elections loomed, so did the country's domestic situation, which has become more volatile over the past 60 years when the radical left-wing opposition has regularly attacked the police and police.
Naxalite guerrillas attacked a military police patrol in Chhattisgarh, killing three officers and wounding 14 others, Indian officials said. This raid led to attacks on the Armed Police and Armed Police personnel, including elite personnel from the reserves, which made India feel humiliated. This is not the first time that Naxalites have launched attacks on police forces in recent years, and since November, the movement of these men in Chhattisgarh has become more frequent, with 35 people killed and 40 injured during the siege of the camp in mid-January.
The spate of attacks may be due to a change in India's internal political environment. The BJP won control of important states in December and won the heart of the Naxalite state, Chhattisgarh. This success won Modi the vote to be re-elected, but it also gave the Naxalites an opportunity to extend their power by force during the transfer of power.
The BJP and opposition parties will be more concerned as the country is approaching, and at the same time, the military attacks organized by Naxal are likely to intensify.
Worryingly, the Naxalites have drawn up an "expeditionary plan" to extend their influence to the Sino-Indian border, especially northeastern India. The region is not too close to the traditional Naxalite guerrilla zone, and their common interests lie in economic backwardness, the oppression of low-caste people by the caste system, and some ethnic issues. The increased engagement of ethnic forces in northeastern India with the Naxalites has provided a favorable environment for the growth of leftist forces in the region.
Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) encourages Hindu nationalism within India, which has exacerbated India's racial, religious and other issues. Northeast India and Indian-controlled Kashmir continue to see major events, and if the Naxalites do not stop their military activities in their heartlands, the situation in both regions will change, causing national unrest. India should respond accordingly to prevent possible financial risks.
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