#TheHindu #Editorial Keeping the vigil in Kokrajhar

August 8, 2016    

Militants have struck again in Assam after a lull. On Friday, 14 people were killed and over 20 injured in firing by three gunmen in a rural weekly market in Kokrajhar district. All indications are that the I.K. Songbijit faction of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland, or NDFB(S), is behind the attack. Known hitherto for targeting mostly Muslims and Adivasis in the Bodo areas, including in the December 2014 attacks on Santhals in which 76 people were killed, the group took to indiscriminate firing on a crowd this time, which meant the casualties included six Bodos. The killings are being seen as the group’s attempt to retaliate in the face of a sustained crackdown by security forces since 2014, as also to open a new front and divert attention from an ongoing operation against it along the Assam-Bhutan border. This it attempted to do with a three-man team ostensibly operating independently of each other and reportedly covering their faces to give it the semblance of a jihadist attack in an area which has witnessed numerous arrests of people suspected of links with the terrorist outfit Jamat-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh. But one of the trio engaged and felled by the Army has been identified as being an NDFB(S) commander.

The objective is apparently two-fold. Carrying out an attack in the run-up to Independence Day has been a time-tested method employed by insurgent groups to signal that they aren’t a spent force. More insidious is the attempt to shift the blame on to jihadist elements which, had it not been called out swiftly, could have vitiated the atmosphere in the Bodoland Territorial Area Districts where wounds of the recent past are yet to fully heal — notably the Bodo-Muslim violence of July 2012, that claimed 77 lives. The May 2014 killings of 32 Muslims were, in fact, alleged to have been the handiwork of the NDFB(S). The challenge for the BJP-led government of Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal, as also the Bodoland Territorial Council controlled by its ally Hagrama Mohilary, is to remain alert to such potential attempts to deepen the schism. At another level, the attack also proves that the project of securing peace in Assam — and the Northeast at large — is still a work in progress. Groups such as the NDFB(S), the anti-talks faction of the United Liberation Front of Asom, and the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Khaplang) remain outliers even as others have arrived or are in the process of arriving at an amicable understanding with the Central government. Having chosen to deal with these holdouts with force, there must be no let-up on the part of the Indian state.

Let's block ads! (Why?)

#TheHindu #Editorial Keeping the vigil in Kokrajhar 4.5 5 Yateendra sahu August 8, 2016 Militants have struck again in Assam after a lull. On Friday, 14 people were killed and over 20 injured in firing by three gunmen in a rura...


Related Post:

  • #TheHindu #Editorial Owning without interfering
    Promises are extremely easy to make for a politician. The problem, however, lies in delivering on them. Tougher still is to do so in a time-bound manner. The coming Union budget provides Finance Minister Arun Jaitley that one near-term opportunity to… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial A wave of awe and opportunity
    The detection of ripples in space-time, known as gravitational waves, here on Earth marks a watershed moment for astronomy and for science as a whole. The detection at once improves our understanding of the workings of the universe and, more importan… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial State overreach on the campus
    The Union government’s response to the recent developments at Jawaharlal Nehru University betrays a disquieting intent to create an atmosphere of fear amongst its students and teachers. The rationale for the police action was an event to mark the ann… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial Conundrums for the Congress
    In West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Puducherry that will face Assembly elections in 2016, the Bharatiya Janata Party is relatively weak, but the political configuration in these States (and a Union Territory) will not make it any easier for… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial War and possible peace in Syria
    The agreement reached in Munich by major world powers, including the United States and Russia, to work towards a cessation of hostilities in Syria within a week is the most constructive step yet to find a political solution to the country’s civil war… Read More
Load comments

No comments:

Post a Comment