Raipur: Altogether 18 naxals, four of them carrying cash rewards on their heads, surrendered on Wednesday in Chhattisgarh's Dantewada district, police said.
The rebels, including a woman, turned themselves in before Dantewada Collector Dipak Soni, Superintendent of Police Abhishek Pallava and CRPF officials at Bhansi police station, and expressed desire to lead a normal life and contribute in development of their area, they said.
All of them were active in the Bhansi-Kamaloor area under the Bhairamgarh Area Committee of Maoists and mainly tasked with damaging railway tracks, putting up Maoist banners, posters and spreading naxal propaganda and supplying ration to ultras, Pallava said.
The surrender comes two weeks after the police launched an initiative named in the local Gondi dialect as 'lon varratu', meaning 'return to your village/home to encourage Naxals to give up arms and join the national mainstream.
Of the 18 rebels, two - Telaam Bhima and Mangal Bhaskar - were active as head of Dandakaranya Adivasi Kisaan Majdoor Sangthan (DAKMS - a wing of Maoists) units, the SP said.
Two others - Telaam Chaitu and Santu Kunjam - were chief of CNM (Chetna Natya Mandli- a cultural outfit of Maoists) groups, Pallava said, adding all these four were carrying a reward of Rs 1 lakh each on their heads.