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Insurgency in Northeast India

The Insurgency in Northeast India involves multiple separatist militant groups operating in some of India's northeastern states, which are connected to the rest of India by the Siliguri Corridor, a strip of land as narrow as 14.29 miles (23.00 km) wide.

Insurgency in Northeast India

Map of India with northeastern states highlighted red
Date1954–present
(69 years)
Location
Status Ongoing (Low level insurgency)
Human rights violations by both sides[11]
Belligerents

 India

Supported by :

Separatist groups:

Other:
Supported by:
Commanders and leaders

Former:
G Bidai
Arabinda Rajkhowa (POW)
Paresh Baruah
Anup Chetia (POW)
Kalalung Kamei
Arambam Samerendra
Angami Zapu Phizo 
Laldenga 
I. K. Songbijit 
Biswamohan Debbarma (POW)
Durga Minz 
Xabrias Khakha 
Prem Brahma 
Milton Burman (POW)
Tom Adhikary (POW)
Men Sing Takbi 
Pradip Terang 
Ranjit Debbarma (POW)
Strength
200,000 in Nagaland (1995)[12]
70,000 (1992)[12]
8634 (2008)[13]
Unknown
1,500 (2010)[14]
2,000 (2005)[15]
4,500 (2007)[16]
225 (2008)[17]
850 (2004)[18]
ACF: 350 (2005)[19]
Unknown
Casualties and losses
Since 1992: 2,762 killed[20]
13-36 killed, 43-68 injured[a][21][22][23][24][excessive citations]
Since 1992: 8,554 killed in India[20]
485-650 killed or captured in Bhutan[21][25]
Since 1992: 10,302 civilians killed[20]
Since 1979: 40,000 killed overall[26]

Northeastern India consists of seven states (also known as the Seven Sister States): Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur, and Nagaland. Tensions existed between insurgents in these states and the central government as well as amongst their native indigenous people and migrants from other parts of India and illegal immigrants.

In recent years, insurgency in the region has seen rapid decline, with a 70% reduction in insurgency incidents and an 80% drop in civilian deaths in 2019 compared to 2013.[27]

The 2014 Indian general election had an 80% voter turnout in all northeastern states, the highest among all states of India according to Indian government. Indian authorities claim that this shows the faith of the northeastern people in Indian democracy.[28] Indian Chief of Defence Staff Gen Anil Chauhan then Eastern Army Commander had stated that as of 2020, the area of violence in the entire North-East has shrunk primarily to an area which is the tri-junction between Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and north Nagaland.[29]

Reasons for Insurgency in North-East India[30]

Ethnic Diversity

North-East India is India’s most ethnically diversified area. Around 40 million people live there, including 213 of India’s 635 tribal groups. These tribes each have their own distinct culture, each tribal group disagrees with being combined into mainstream India because it means losing their unique identity, giving rise to insurgency.Northeast India: Culture, Nature, and Connectivity

Lack of Representation

The long distance between mainland India and the northeast, as well as a lack of representation for the region in the Indian Parliament, has contributed to the northeast being more neglected in the political framework of the country, which has served as a major reason behind the insurgencies occurring in the region.

East Bengali refugees

During the Bangladesh Liberation War, an estimated 10 million people from East Pakistan (present-day Bangladesh) fled the country and took refuge in India, particularly in the Indian states of West Bengal and the Indian northeast, especially Tripura and Assam. This changed the demography of the area, resulting in greater competition between locals and refugees, which further contributed to the insurgency in the area.

Underdevelopment

The northeast has been traditionally neglected economically in India, with the region receiving low levels of investment from both the Indian government and other investors.

Mizoram

Mizo uprising (1966)

The Mizo National Front uprising was a revolt against the government of India aimed at establishing a sovereign nation state for the Mizo people, which started on 28 February 1966.

MNF insurgency (1966-1986)

Mizoram's tensions were largely due to the simmering Assamese domination and the neglect of the Mizo people. In 1986, the Mizo accord ended the main secessionist movement led by the Mizo National Front, bringing peace to the region.[citation needed] Insurgency status is classified as partially active, due to secessionist/autonomy demands by the Chakmas and Brus. The Chakma and Reang tribes complain of religious and ethnic persecution, and complain that the dominant Mizo ethnic group, almost entirely Christian, wants to convert them to Christianity.[31]

Manipur

Manipur's long tradition of independence can be traced to the foundation of the Kangleipak State in 1110. The Kingdom of Manipur was conquered by Great Britain following the brief Anglo-Manipuri War of 1891, becoming a British protectorate.[32]

Manipur became part of the Indian Union on 15 October 1949. Manipur's incorporation into the Indian state soon led to the formation of a number of insurgent organisations, seeking the creation of an independent state within the borders of Manipur, and dismissing the merger with India as involuntary.[33]

Despite the fact that Manipur became a separate state of the Indian Union on 21 January 1972, the insurgency continued.[32] On 8 September 1980, Manipur was declared an area of disturbance, when the Indian government imposed the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 on the region; the act currently remains in force.[33]

The parallel rise of Naga nationalism in neighbouring Nagaland led to the emergence of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN) activities in Manipur. Clashes between the Isak-Muivah and Khaplang factions of the NSCN further aggravated tensions, as Kuki tribals began creating their own guerrilla groups in order to protect their interests from alleged Naga violations. Skirmishes between the two ethnic groups took place during the 1990s. Other ethnic groups such as the Paite, Vaiphei, Pangals and Hmars followed suit establishing militant groups.[33]

The Kuki National Army also maintains one armed wing in Manipur.

UNLF (1964-present)

The first separatist faction known as the United National Liberation Front (UNLF) was founded on 24 November 1964.

Marxist & Maoist groups (1977-present)

Between 1977 and 1980, the People's Liberation Army of Manipur (PLA), the People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) and the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP), were formed, immediately joining the war.[33]

Nagaland

Nagaland was created in 1963 as the 16th state of the Indian Union, before which it was a district of Assam. Active Naga-Kuki insurgent groups mainly demand full independence. The Naga National Council led by Phizo was the first group to dissent in 1947 and in 1956 they went underground.[citation needed]

NSCN insurgency (1980-present)

The National Socialist Council of Nagaland was formed in 1980 to establish a Greater Nagaland, encompassing parts of Manipur, Nagaland, and the north Cachar hills (Assam). The NSCN split in 1988 to form two groups, NSCN(IM) and NSCN(K). As of 2015, both groups have observed a ceasefire truce with the Indian government.[34]

The National Socialist Council of Nagaland—Khaplang is the second faction with the same aim of a Greater Nagaland and was formed in 1988.[35][36][37][38]

Tripura (1978-2019)

The insurgent groups in Tripura emerged at the end of the 1970s, as ethnic tensions between perceived Bangladeshi infiltration and the tribal native population who were outnumbered by the former, hailing from other parts of India and nearby Bangladesh, which resulted in their being reduced to minority status even threatening them economically, socially, culturally; this resulted in a clarion call for safeguarding tribal rights and cultures. Such being the extent of desperation, this naturally resulted in hatred and suspicion and their status is classified as active.

The first militant outfit to form was Tripura National Volunteers (TNV), which was active until 1988.

The National Liberation Front of Tripura was formed in March 1989. During the period 1992 to 2001, a total of 764 civilians and 184 members of the security forces were killed in NLFT attacks. In 2019, it signed the Tripura Peace Accord to end the insurgency.

The All Tripura Tiger Force was formed by local aboriginal tribes in 1990, who were gradually outnumbered both directly and indirectly, even at the cost of being threatened for their survival economically and culturally, not to speak of their being reduced to minority population-wise; their sole aim is the expulsion of all Bangladeshi infiltration nearby Bangladesh.

Assam

Assam has been a refuge for militants for a number of years, due to its porous borders with Bangladesh and Bhutan and also due to its very close proximity to Burma. The main causes of the friction include anti-foreigner agitation in the 1980s, and the simmering indigenous-migrant tensions. The government of Bangladesh has arrested and extradited senior leaders of the ULFA.[39]

Bodoland

ULFA (1990-present)

The United Liberation Front of Assam was formed in April 1979 to establish a sovereign state of Assam for the indigenous people of Assam through an armed struggle. In recent times the organisation has lost its middle rung leaders after most of them were arrested.[39]

KLO (1995-present)

The objective of the Kamtapur Liberation Organisation (KLO) is to carve out a separate Kamtapur Nation. The proposed state is to comprise six districts in West Bengal and four contiguous districts of Assam which are Cooch Behar, Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri, North and South Dinajpur and Malda of West Bengal and four contiguous districts of Assam – Kokrajhar, Bongaigaon, Dhubri and Goalpara. The KLO, in the beginning, was an unconcealed organisation, which was formed to address problems of the Koch Rajbongshi people, such as large-scale unemployment, land alienation, perceived neglect of Kamtapuri language, identity, and grievances of economic deprivation.[41]

Meghalaya

The state of Meghalaya was separated from the state of Assam in 1971, in order to satisfy the Khasi, Synteng and Garo for a separate state. The decision was initially praised as an example of successful national integration into the wider Indian state.[42]

This, however, failed to prevent the rise of national consciousness among the local tribal populations, later leading to a direct confrontation between Indian nationalism and the newly created Garo and Khasi nationalisms. A parallel rise of nationalism in the other members of the Seven Sister States further complicated the situation, resulting in occasional clashes between rebel groups.[42]

The state wealth distribution system further fueled the rising separatist movements, as funding is practised through per-capita transfers, which largely benefits the leading ethnic group.[42]

The first militant outfit to emerge in the region was the Hynniewtrep Achik Liberation Council (HALC). It was formed in 1992, aiming to protect the interests of Meghalaya's indigenous population from the rise of non-tribal ("Dkhar") immigration.[43]

A conflict of interest soon led to a split of the HALC. The Garo members formed the Achik Matgrik Liberation Army (AMLA) while the joint Jaintia-Khasi alliance of Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC) was formed in 1993. The HNLC claims to represent the Khasi - Jaintia people, and its aim is to free Meghalaya from the alleged domination of the Garos and the outsiders (the "Dkhars").

The AMLA passed into obscurity, while the Achik National Volunteers Council (ANVC) took its place. The Garo-Khasi drift persisted as the HNLC had set up the goal of turning Meghalaya into an exclusively Khasi region; the ANVC, on the other hand, sought the creation of an independent state in the Garo Hills.[43]

A number of non-Meghalayan separatist groups have also operated in the region, including the United Liberation Front of Assam and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland among others.[44]

GNLA insurgency (2010-present)

The most active outfit in the state is the Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA), which was formed in 2009.[45]

Other insurgent groups

In Assam

  • DHD (1995-2009): The Dima Halam Daoga (DHD) is a descendant of the Dimasa National Security Force (DNSF), which ceased operations in 1995. Commander-in-Chief Jewel Gorlosa, refused to surrender and launched the Dima Halam Daogah. After the peace agreement between the DHD and the central government in the year 2003, the group further broke out and DHD(J) also known as Black Widow was born which was led by Jewel Gorlosa. The Black Widow's declared objective is to create Dimaraji nation for the Dimasa people in Dima Hasao only. However the objective of DHD (Nunisa faction) is to include parts of Cachar, Karbi Anglong, and Nagaon districts in Assam, and sections of Dimapur district in Nagaland. In 2009 the group surrendered en masse to the CRPF and local police, 193 cadres surrendering on 2009-09-12 and another 171 on the 13th.[47]

Hmar

The Hmar People's Convention-Democracy (HPC-D) is an armed insurgency group formed in 1995 to create an independent Hmar State in North East India. It is the offspring of the Hmar People's Convention (HPC), which entered into an agreement with the Government of Mizoram in 1994 resulting in the formation of the Sinlung Hills Development Council (SHDC) in North Mizoram. Their recruited cadres are from the States where the Hmar people are spread – Assam, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura and Meghalaya. The HPC(D) is demanding a separate administrative unit under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India.[citation needed]

Taniland

The National Liberation Council of Taniland (NLCT) was active along the Assam – Arunachal Pradesh border, and its members belong to the Tani groups of people which are demanding Taniland. The group enjoys no support from the local population of Arunachal Pradesh who are fiercely pro-India and the group is all but defunct now.[49][50] The Tani groups are one of the ethnic groups of northeast India (variously known as Mising in Assam and Adi, Nyishi, Galo, Apatani, Tagin, in Arunachal Pradesh) in India as well as the Lhoba in China who live along the frontier of India.[51]

Spillover in Bhutan

Following the 1990 Operations Rhino and Bajrang, Assamese separatist groups relocated their camps to Bhutan.[52] In 1996 the Bhutan government became aware of a large number of camps on its southern border with India. The camps were set up by four Assamese separatist movements: the ULFA, NDFB, Bodo Liberation Tigers Force (BLTF) and Kamtapur Liberation Organization (KLO). The camps also harboured separatists belonging to the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN) and the All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF).[53]

India then exerted diplomatic pressure on Bhutan, offering support in removing the rebel organisations from its soil. The government of Bhutan initially pursued a peaceful solution, opening dialogue with the militant groups on 1998. Five rounds of talks were held with ULFA, three rounds with DNFB, with KLO ignoring all invitations sent by the government. In June 2001 ULFA agreed to close down four of its camps; however, the Bhutanese government soon realized that the camps had simply been relocated.[52]

By 2003 the talks had failed to produce any significant result. On 14 July 2003, military intervention was approved by the National Assembly.[52] On 13 December 2003, the Bhutanese government issued a two-day ultimatum to the rebels. On 15 December 2003, after the ultimatum had expired, Operation All Clear – the first operation ever conducted by the Royal Bhutan Army – was launched.[54]

By 3 January 2004, the Royal Bhutan Army had killed about 120 militants. They managed to capture several senior ULFA commanders. Large numbers of rebels fled to Bangladesh and India. Militants also were dislodged from all 30 camps and 35 observation posts, with the camps burned and razed to the ground.[53][55]

Between 2008 and 2011, Royal Bhutan Police and Royal Bhutan Army personnel undertook numerous actions against alleged north Indian militants. Several firefights occurred while Bhutan military personnel were required to dispose of several explosive devices and destroyed a number of guerrilla camps.[56]

Spillover in Myanmar

The Indo-Burmese border was drawn over the homeland of many ethnic groups, such as the Mizos/Chins and the Nagas, with communities with strong ethnic ties living on both sides of the border. Several separatist groups have operated out of Myanmar, crossing into India via the porous border. [57]

India-Myanmar military cooperation dates back to the 1960s when the Tatmadaw intercepted Naga and Mizo rebels heading to China for training. Indian support for the pro-democracy movement in the 1980s had caused the Tatmadaw to stop their operations against the northeastern rebel groups. [58]

After the 2015 Manipur ambush, India conducted surgical strikes against NSCN-K camps inside Myanmar, and inflicted significant casualties.[59]

In February and June 2019, Indian army and the Burmese Tatmadaw carried out joint operations Sunrise and Sunrise II, targeting in co-ordination several militant groups along the Indo-Burma border including the Kamtapur Liberation Organisation (KLO), the NSCN-K, the United Liberation Front of Assam (I) and the National Democratic Front of Boroland (NDFB).[60] In February, Burmese troops stormed the NSCN-K headquarters at Taga. The Indian army reciprocated by starting a major operation against the Arakan Army in south Mizoram. [58]

Alliances

CorCom

In Manipur the following militant groups have come together as the CorCOM[61][62] which is a short name for Coordination Committee.[63]

CorCom is on the extremist organisations list of the Government of India, and is responsible for many bombings usually associated with Indian holidays and elections.[64]

WESEA Forum

Some of the above-mentioned militant groups have formed an alliance to fight against the governments of India, Bhutan and Myanmar. They use the term "Western Southeast Asia" (WESEA)[65][66] to describe the region in which they operate: Northeast India, Bhutan, North Bengal and Myanmar. These groups include:[67][68]

United National Liberation Front of WESEA

Nine militant groups of the northeast, including the NSCN (Khaplang) and the ULFA faction led by Paresh Baruah, have come together to form a new unified front known as UNLFW during a meeting held in Myanmar in early 2015.[69][70] Besides the NSCN (K) and ULFA-Independent, other groups that participated in the meeting held at Taga in Sagaing division of Myanmar earlier this month were the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP), Kanglei Yawol Kunna Lup (KYKL), the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK), the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), the United National Liberation Front (UNLF) and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (Songbijit faction) (NDFB).

All Muslim United Liberation Forum of Assam

The MULTA is said to be part of the AMULFA, an organization that rejects separatism in favor of sharia law.[48]

Counter-insurgency

In 1955, an order of the day from the then Chief of Army Staff Rajendrasinhji Jadeja to troops fighting insurgency in the north-east read,[71]

You must remember that all the people of the area in which you are operating are fellow-Indians... and the very fact that they are different and yet part of India is a reflection of India’s greatness. Some of these people are misguided and have taken to arms against their own people, and are disrupting the peace in this area. You are to protect the mass of the people from these disruptive elements. You are not there to fight the people in the area, but to protect them. You are fighting only those who threaten the people and who are a danger to the lives and properties of the people. You must therefore, do everything possible to win their confidence and respect and to help them feel that they belong to India.

See also

Further reading

  • A. Lanunungsang Ao; From Phizo to Muivah: The Naga National Question; New Delhi 2002
  • Blisters on their feet: tales of internally displaced persons in India's North East; Los Angeles [u.a.] 2008; ISBN 978-81-7829-819-1
  • Dutta, Anuradha; Assam in the Freedom Movement; Calcutta 1991
  • Hazarika, Sanjoy; Strangers of the Mist: Tales of War and Peace from India's Northeast; New Delhi u.a. 1994
  • Horam, M.; Naga insurgency: the last thirty years; New Delhi 1988
  • International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (Hrsg.); The Naga nation and its struggle against genocide; Kopenhagen 1986
  • Nibedom, Nirmal; The Night of the Guerillas; Delhi 1978
  • Srikanth, H.; Thomas, C. J.; Naga Resistance Movement and the Peace Process in Northeast India; in: Peace and Democracy in South Asia, Vol. I (2005)
  • Terrorism and separatism in North-East India; Delhi 2004; ISBN 81-7835-261-3

Notes

  1. ^ At least 39 Bhutanese soldiers, 4 Bhutanese police officers

References

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Works cited

  • Rashid, Ahmed (2013) [1st pub. 2012]. Pakistan on the Brink. The future of Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the West (Penguin Paperback ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-241-96007-3.

External links

  • "The Other Burma: Conflict, counter-insurgency and human rights in Northeast India"
  • Insurgencies in Northeast India:Conflict, Co-option, and Change
  • Journal of North East India Studies

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The Insurgency in Northeast India involves multiple separatist militant groups operating in some of India s northeastern states which are connected to the rest of India by the Siliguri Corridor a strip of land as narrow as 14 29 miles 23 00 km wide Insurgency in Northeast IndiaMap of India with northeastern states highlighted redDate1954 present 69 years LocationNortheast India Assam Manipur Nagaland Tripura Meghalaya and Mizoram West Bengal and BhutanStatusOngoing Low level insurgency Human rights violations by both sides 11 Belligerents India CRPF SULFA 1 2 Supported by Bhutan from 2003 3 Bangladesh 4 Myanmar from 2018 5 Separatist groups UNLFW NDFB 1986 2020 NSCN ULFA KLO CorCom UNLF PLA M KCP PREPAK JRMI KYKL AMULFA MULTA NLFT 1989 2015 ATTF 1990 2015 KLNLF 2004 21 MCPM ZRA KNA 1988 2005 BLTF 1996 03 Other GNLA 2009 18 HNLC 2000 10 PDCK 2016 21 ACF 1996 2012 MNF 1954 86 TNV 1978 88 DHD 2009 13 UPDS 1999 2014 Supported by China claimed by India 6 Myanmar until 2018 7 Bhutan until 2003 8 CPI Maoist 9 AQIS only MULTA 10 Commanders and leadersDroupadi Murmu 2022 present Narendra Modi 2014 present Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck 2006 present Shahabuddin Chuppu 2023 present Myint Swe 2021 present Former Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan 1963 1967 Zakir Husain 1967 1969 Varahagiri Venkata Giri 1969 1974 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed 1974 1977 Neelam Sanjiva Reddy 1977 1982 Zail Singh 1982 1987 R Venkataraman 1987 1992 Shankar Dayal Sharma 1992 1997 K R Narayanan 1997 2002 A P J Abdul Kalam 2002 2007 Pratibha Patil 2007 2012 Pranab Mukherjee 2012 2017 Ram Nath Kovind 2017 2022 Jigme Dorji Wangchuck 1963 1971 Jigme Singye Wangchuck 1972 2006 Lam Dorji 1954 2010 Sheikh Mujibur Rahman 1971 1972 1975 Abu Sayeed Chowdhury 1972 1973 Mohammad Mohammadullah 1973 1975 Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad 1975 Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayem 1975 1977 Ziaur Rahman 1978 1981 Abdus Sattar 1981 1982 Abul Fazal Mohammad Ahsanuddin Chowdhury 1982 1983 Hussain Muhammad Ershad 1983 1990 Shahabuddin Ahmed 1990 1991 1996 2001 Abdur Rahman Biswas 1991 1996 Badruddoza Chowdhury 2001 2002 Muhammad Jamiruddin Sircar 2002 Iajuddin Ahmed 2002 2009 Zillur Rahman 2009 2013 Muhammed Abdul Hamid 2013 2023 Ne Win 1963 1981 San Yu 1981 1988 Sein Lwin 1988 Maung Maung 1988 Saw Maung 1988 1992 Than Shwe 1992 2011 Thein Sein 2011 2016 Htin Kyaw 2016 2018 Win Myint 2018 2021 G Bidai Arabinda Rajkhowa POW Paresh Baruah Anup Chetia POW Kalalung Kamei Arambam SamerendraAngami Zapu Phizo Laldenga I K Songbijit Biswamohan Debbarma POW Durga Minz Xabrias Khakha Prem Brahma Milton Burman POW Tom Adhikary POW Men Sing Takbi Pradip Terang Ranjit Debbarma POW Strength200 000 in Nagaland 1995 12 70 000 1992 12 8634 2008 13 Unknown1 500 2010 14 2 000 2005 15 4 500 2007 16 225 2008 17 850 2004 18 ACF 350 2005 19 UnknownCasualties and lossesSince 1992 2 762 killed 20 13 36 killed 43 68 injured a 21 22 23 24 excessive citations Since 1992 8 554 killed in India 20 485 650 killed or captured in Bhutan 21 25 Since 1992 10 302 civilians killed 20 Since 1979 40 000 killed overall 26 Northeastern India consists of seven states also known as the Seven Sister States Assam Meghalaya Tripura Arunachal Pradesh Mizoram Manipur and Nagaland Tensions existed between insurgents in these states and the central government as well as amongst their native indigenous people and migrants from other parts of India and illegal immigrants In recent years insurgency in the region has seen rapid decline with a 70 reduction in insurgency incidents and an 80 drop in civilian deaths in 2019 compared to 2013 27 The 2014 Indian general election had an 80 voter turnout in all northeastern states the highest among all states of India according to Indian government Indian authorities claim that this shows the faith of the northeastern people in Indian democracy 28 Indian Chief of Defence Staff Gen Anil Chauhan then Eastern Army Commander had stated that as of 2020 the area of violence in the entire North East has shrunk primarily to an area which is the tri junction between Assam Arunachal Pradesh and north Nagaland 29 Contents 1 Reasons for Insurgency in North East India 30 1 1 Ethnic Diversity 1 2 Lack of Representation 1 3 East Bengali refugees 1 4 Underdevelopment 2 Mizoram 2 1 Mizo uprising 1966 2 2 MNF insurgency 1966 1986 3 Manipur 3 1 UNLF 1964 present 3 2 Marxist amp Maoist groups 1977 present 4 Nagaland 4 1 NSCN insurgency 1980 present 5 Tripura 1978 2019 6 Assam 6 1 Bodoland 6 2 ULFA 1990 present 6 3 KLO 1995 present 7 Meghalaya 7 1 GNLA insurgency 2010 present 8 Other insurgent groups 8 1 In Assam 8 2 Hmar 8 3 Taniland 9 Spillover in Bhutan 10 Spillover in Myanmar 11 Alliances 11 1 CorCom 11 2 WESEA Forum 11 3 United National Liberation Front of WESEA 11 4 All Muslim United Liberation Forum of Assam 12 Counter insurgency 13 See also 14 Further reading 15 Notes 16 References 16 1 Works cited 17 External linksReasons for Insurgency in North East India 30 EditEthnic Diversity Edit North East India is India s most ethnically diversified area Around 40 million people live there including 213 of India s 635 tribal groups These tribes each have their own distinct culture each tribal group disagrees with being combined into mainstream India because it means losing their unique identity giving rise to insurgency Northeast India Culture Nature and Connectivity Lack of Representation Edit The long distance between mainland India and the northeast as well as a lack of representation for the region in the Indian Parliament has contributed to the northeast being more neglected in the political framework of the country which has served as a major reason behind the insurgencies occurring in the region East Bengali refugees Edit During the Bangladesh Liberation War an estimated 10 million people from East Pakistan present day Bangladesh fled the country and took refuge in India particularly in the Indian states of West Bengal and the Indian northeast especially Tripura and Assam This changed the demography of the area resulting in greater competition between locals and refugees which further contributed to the insurgency in the area Underdevelopment Edit The northeast has been traditionally neglected economically in India with the region receiving low levels of investment from both the Indian government and other investors Mizoram EditMain article Zomi nationalism Mizo uprising 1966 Edit See also March 1966 Mizo National Front uprisingThe Mizo National Front uprising was a revolt against the government of India aimed at establishing a sovereign nation state for the Mizo people which started on 28 February 1966 MNF insurgency 1966 1986 Edit Mizoram s tensions were largely due to the simmering Assamese domination and the neglect of the Mizo people In 1986 the Mizo accord ended the main secessionist movement led by the Mizo National Front bringing peace to the region citation needed Insurgency status is classified as partially active due to secessionist autonomy demands by the Chakmas and Brus The Chakma and Reang tribes complain of religious and ethnic persecution and complain that the dominant Mizo ethnic group almost entirely Christian wants to convert them to Christianity 31 Manipur EditMain articles Insurgency in Manipur and Meitei nationalism Manipur s long tradition of independence can be traced to the foundation of the Kangleipak State in 1110 The Kingdom of Manipur was conquered by Great Britain following the brief Anglo Manipuri War of 1891 becoming a British protectorate 32 Manipur became part of the Indian Union on 15 October 1949 Manipur s incorporation into the Indian state soon led to the formation of a number of insurgent organisations seeking the creation of an independent state within the borders of Manipur and dismissing the merger with India as involuntary 33 Despite the fact that Manipur became a separate state of the Indian Union on 21 January 1972 the insurgency continued 32 On 8 September 1980 Manipur was declared an area of disturbance when the Indian government imposed the Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958 on the region the act currently remains in force 33 The parallel rise of Naga nationalism in neighbouring Nagaland led to the emergence of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland NSCN activities in Manipur Clashes between the Isak Muivah and Khaplang factions of the NSCN further aggravated tensions as Kuki tribals began creating their own guerrilla groups in order to protect their interests from alleged Naga violations Skirmishes between the two ethnic groups took place during the 1990s Other ethnic groups such as the Paite Vaiphei Pangals and Hmars followed suit establishing militant groups 33 The Kuki National Army also maintains one armed wing in Manipur UNLF 1964 present Edit The first separatist faction known as the United National Liberation Front UNLF was founded on 24 November 1964 Marxist amp Maoist groups 1977 present Edit Between 1977 and 1980 the People s Liberation Army of Manipur PLA the People s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak PREPAK and the Kangleipak Communist Party KCP were formed immediately joining the war 33 Nagaland EditMain articles Naga nationalism and Ethnic conflict in Nagaland Nagaland was created in 1963 as the 16th state of the Indian Union before which it was a district of Assam Active Naga Kuki insurgent groups mainly demand full independence The Naga National Council led by Phizo was the first group to dissent in 1947 and in 1956 they went underground citation needed NSCN insurgency 1980 present Edit The National Socialist Council of Nagaland was formed in 1980 to establish a Greater Nagaland encompassing parts of Manipur Nagaland and the north Cachar hills Assam The NSCN split in 1988 to form two groups NSCN IM and NSCN K As of 2015 both groups have observed a ceasefire truce with the Indian government 34 The National Socialist Council of Nagaland Khaplang is the second faction with the same aim of a Greater Nagaland and was formed in 1988 35 36 37 38 Tripura 1978 2019 EditMain article Insurgency in Tripura Further information Tripuri nationalism The insurgent groups in Tripura emerged at the end of the 1970s as ethnic tensions between perceived Bangladeshi infiltration and the tribal native population who were outnumbered by the former hailing from other parts of India and nearby Bangladesh which resulted in their being reduced to minority status even threatening them economically socially culturally this resulted in a clarion call for safeguarding tribal rights and cultures Such being the extent of desperation this naturally resulted in hatred and suspicion and their status is classified as active The first militant outfit to form was Tripura National Volunteers TNV which was active until 1988 The National Liberation Front of Tripura was formed in March 1989 During the period 1992 to 2001 a total of 764 civilians and 184 members of the security forces were killed in NLFT attacks In 2019 it signed the Tripura Peace Accord to end the insurgency The All Tripura Tiger Force was formed by local aboriginal tribes in 1990 who were gradually outnumbered both directly and indirectly even at the cost of being threatened for their survival economically and culturally not to speak of their being reduced to minority population wise their sole aim is the expulsion of all Bangladeshi infiltration nearby Bangladesh Assam EditMain articles Assam separatist movements and Bodo nationalism Assam has been a refuge for militants for a number of years due to its porous borders with Bangladesh and Bhutan and also due to its very close proximity to Burma The main causes of the friction include anti foreigner agitation in the 1980s and the simmering indigenous migrant tensions The government of Bangladesh has arrested and extradited senior leaders of the ULFA 39 Bodoland Edit BLTF 1996 2003 The Bodo Liberation Tigers Force fought for autonomy of Bodoland under Prem Singh Brahma It surrendered with the establishment of Bodoland Territorial Council NDFB 1986 2020 The National Democratic Front of Bodoland NDFB was formed in 1986 as the Bodo Security Force and aims to set up an independent nation of Bodoland 40 ULFA 1990 present Edit The United Liberation Front of Assam was formed in April 1979 to establish a sovereign state of Assam for the indigenous people of Assam through an armed struggle In recent times the organisation has lost its middle rung leaders after most of them were arrested 39 KLO 1995 present Edit The objective of the Kamtapur Liberation Organisation KLO is to carve out a separate Kamtapur Nation The proposed state is to comprise six districts in West Bengal and four contiguous districts of Assam which are Cooch Behar Darjeeling Jalpaiguri North and South Dinajpur and Malda of West Bengal and four contiguous districts of Assam Kokrajhar Bongaigaon Dhubri and Goalpara The KLO in the beginning was an unconcealed organisation which was formed to address problems of the Koch Rajbongshi people such as large scale unemployment land alienation perceived neglect of Kamtapuri language identity and grievances of economic deprivation 41 Meghalaya EditMain article Insurgency in Meghalaya The state of Meghalaya was separated from the state of Assam in 1971 in order to satisfy the Khasi Synteng and Garo for a separate state The decision was initially praised as an example of successful national integration into the wider Indian state 42 This however failed to prevent the rise of national consciousness among the local tribal populations later leading to a direct confrontation between Indian nationalism and the newly created Garo and Khasi nationalisms A parallel rise of nationalism in the other members of the Seven Sister States further complicated the situation resulting in occasional clashes between rebel groups 42 The state wealth distribution system further fueled the rising separatist movements as funding is practised through per capita transfers which largely benefits the leading ethnic group 42 The first militant outfit to emerge in the region was the Hynniewtrep Achik Liberation Council HALC It was formed in 1992 aiming to protect the interests of Meghalaya s indigenous population from the rise of non tribal Dkhar immigration 43 A conflict of interest soon led to a split of the HALC The Garo members formed the Achik Matgrik Liberation Army AMLA while the joint Jaintia Khasi alliance of Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council HNLC was formed in 1993 The HNLC claims to represent the Khasi Jaintia people and its aim is to free Meghalaya from the alleged domination of the Garos and the outsiders the Dkhars The AMLA passed into obscurity while the Achik National Volunteers Council ANVC took its place The Garo Khasi drift persisted as the HNLC had set up the goal of turning Meghalaya into an exclusively Khasi region the ANVC on the other hand sought the creation of an independent state in the Garo Hills 43 A number of non Meghalayan separatist groups have also operated in the region including the United Liberation Front of Assam and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland among others 44 GNLA insurgency 2010 present Edit The most active outfit in the state is the Garo National Liberation Army GNLA which was formed in 2009 45 Other insurgent groups EditIn Assam Edit UPDS 2004 2014 The United People s Democratic Solidarity was formed in March 1999 with the merger of two groups in Assam s Karbi Anglong district the Karbi National Volunteers KNV and the Karbi People s Front KPF citation needed In 2004 the UPDS Anti Talks renamed itself as the Karbi Longri North Cachar Hills Liberation Front KLNLF and its armed wing as the Karbi Longri North Cachar Hills Resistance Force KNPR In December 2014 the UPDS disbanded following the mass surrender of all it cadres and leaders 46 KLNLF 2004 2021 The Karbi Longri N C Hills Liberation Front is a militant group operating in the Karbi Anglong and Dima Hasao districts of Assam that was formed on 16 May 2004 The outfit claims to fight for the cause of Karbi tribes and its declared objective is Hemprek Kangthim meaning self rule self determination of the Karbi people It is closely linked with the ULFA United Liberation Front of Assam citation needed DHD 1995 2009 The Dima Halam Daoga DHD is a descendant of the Dimasa National Security Force DNSF which ceased operations in 1995 Commander in Chief Jewel Gorlosa refused to surrender and launched the Dima Halam Daogah After the peace agreement between the DHD and the central government in the year 2003 the group further broke out and DHD J also known as Black Widow was born which was led by Jewel Gorlosa The Black Widow s declared objective is to create Dimaraji nation for the Dimasa people in Dima Hasao only However the objective of DHD Nunisa faction is to include parts of Cachar Karbi Anglong and Nagaon districts in Assam and sections of Dimapur district in Nagaland In 2009 the group surrendered en masse to the CRPF and local police 193 cadres surrendering on 2009 09 12 and another 171 on the 13th 47 MULTA 1996 present The objective of the Muslim United Liberation Tigers of Assam MULTA is to establish an Islamic state in India under sharia law The group composed of migrants and indigenous peoples who practiced Islam 48 Hmar Edit The Hmar People s Convention Democracy HPC D is an armed insurgency group formed in 1995 to create an independent Hmar State in North East India It is the offspring of the Hmar People s Convention HPC which entered into an agreement with the Government of Mizoram in 1994 resulting in the formation of the Sinlung Hills Development Council SHDC in North Mizoram Their recruited cadres are from the States where the Hmar people are spread Assam Manipur Mizoram Tripura and Meghalaya The HPC D is demanding a separate administrative unit under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India citation needed Taniland Edit Main article Insurgency in Arunachal Pradesh The National Liberation Council of Taniland NLCT was active along the Assam Arunachal Pradesh border and its members belong to the Tani groups of people which are demanding Taniland The group enjoys no support from the local population of Arunachal Pradesh who are fiercely pro India and the group is all but defunct now 49 50 The Tani groups are one of the ethnic groups of northeast India variously known as Mising in Assam and Adi Nyishi Galo Apatani Tagin in Arunachal Pradesh in India as well as the Lhoba in China who live along the frontier of India 51 Spillover in Bhutan EditMain article Operation All Clear Following the 1990 Operations Rhino and Bajrang Assamese separatist groups relocated their camps to Bhutan 52 In 1996 the Bhutan government became aware of a large number of camps on its southern border with India The camps were set up by four Assamese separatist movements the ULFA NDFB Bodo Liberation Tigers Force BLTF and Kamtapur Liberation Organization KLO The camps also harboured separatists belonging to the National Socialist Council of Nagaland NSCN and the All Tripura Tiger Force ATTF 53 India then exerted diplomatic pressure on Bhutan offering support in removing the rebel organisations from its soil The government of Bhutan initially pursued a peaceful solution opening dialogue with the militant groups on 1998 Five rounds of talks were held with ULFA three rounds with DNFB with KLO ignoring all invitations sent by the government In June 2001 ULFA agreed to close down four of its camps however the Bhutanese government soon realized that the camps had simply been relocated 52 By 2003 the talks had failed to produce any significant result On 14 July 2003 military intervention was approved by the National Assembly 52 On 13 December 2003 the Bhutanese government issued a two day ultimatum to the rebels On 15 December 2003 after the ultimatum had expired Operation All Clear the first operation ever conducted by the Royal Bhutan Army was launched 54 By 3 January 2004 the Royal Bhutan Army had killed about 120 militants They managed to capture several senior ULFA commanders Large numbers of rebels fled to Bangladesh and India Militants also were dislodged from all 30 camps and 35 observation posts with the camps burned and razed to the ground 53 55 Between 2008 and 2011 Royal Bhutan Police and Royal Bhutan Army personnel undertook numerous actions against alleged north Indian militants Several firefights occurred while Bhutan military personnel were required to dispose of several explosive devices and destroyed a number of guerrilla camps 56 Spillover in Myanmar EditMain articles Internal conflict in Myanmar and 2015 Indian counter insurgency operation in Myanmar The Indo Burmese border was drawn over the homeland of many ethnic groups such as the Mizos Chins and the Nagas with communities with strong ethnic ties living on both sides of the border Several separatist groups have operated out of Myanmar crossing into India via the porous border 57 India Myanmar military cooperation dates back to the 1960s when the Tatmadaw intercepted Naga and Mizo rebels heading to China for training Indian support for the pro democracy movement in the 1980s had caused the Tatmadaw to stop their operations against the northeastern rebel groups 58 After the 2015 Manipur ambush India conducted surgical strikes against NSCN K camps inside Myanmar and inflicted significant casualties 59 In February and June 2019 Indian army and the Burmese Tatmadaw carried out joint operations Sunrise and Sunrise II targeting in co ordination several militant groups along the Indo Burma border including the Kamtapur Liberation Organisation KLO the NSCN K the United Liberation Front of Assam I and the National Democratic Front of Boroland NDFB 60 In February Burmese troops stormed the NSCN K headquarters at Taga The Indian army reciprocated by starting a major operation against the Arakan Army in south Mizoram 58 Alliances EditCorCom Edit In Manipur the following militant groups have come together as the CorCOM 61 62 which is a short name for Coordination Committee 63 Kangleipak Communist Party KCP Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup KYKL People s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak PREPAK People s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak Pro PREPAK Pro Revolutionary People s Front RPF United National Liberation Front UNLF United People s Party of Kangleipak UPPK CorCom is on the extremist organisations list of the Government of India and is responsible for many bombings usually associated with Indian holidays and elections 64 WESEA Forum Edit Some of the above mentioned militant groups have formed an alliance to fight against the governments of India Bhutan and Myanmar They use the term Western Southeast Asia WESEA 65 66 to describe the region in which they operate Northeast India Bhutan North Bengal and Myanmar These groups include 67 68 The Kangleipak Communist Party KCP Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup KYKL People s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak PREPAK People s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak Pro PREPAK Pro Revolutionary People s Front and United National Liberation Front of Manipur Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council of Meghalaya Kamtapur Liberation Organization which operates in Assam and North Bengal United Liberation Front of Asom ULFA National Liberation Front of Tripura of Tripura United National Liberation Front of WESEA Edit Nine militant groups of the northeast including the NSCN Khaplang and the ULFA faction led by Paresh Baruah have come together to form a new unified front known as UNLFW during a meeting held in Myanmar in early 2015 69 70 Besides the NSCN K and ULFA Independent other groups that participated in the meeting held at Taga in Sagaing division of Myanmar earlier this month were the Kangleipak Communist Party KCP Kanglei Yawol Kunna Lup KYKL the People s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak PREPAK the People s Liberation Army PLA the United National Liberation Front UNLF and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland Songbijit faction NDFB All Muslim United Liberation Forum of Assam Edit The MULTA is said to be part of the AMULFA an organization that rejects separatism in favor of sharia law 48 Counter insurgency EditIn 1955 an order of the day from the then Chief of Army Staff Rajendrasinhji Jadeja to troops fighting insurgency in the north east read 71 You must remember that all the people of the area in which you are operating are fellow Indians and the very fact that they are different and yet part of India is a reflection of India s greatness Some of these people are misguided and have taken to arms against their own people and are disrupting the peace in this area You are to protect the mass of the people from these disruptive elements You are not there to fight the people in the area but to protect them You are fighting only those who threaten the people and who are a danger to the lives and properties of the people You must therefore do everything possible to win their confidence and respect and to help them feel that they belong to India See also EditIllegal Migrants Determination by Tribunals Act 1983 Separatist movements of India Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir Naxalite Maoist insurgency Terrorism in India Internal conflict in Myanmar Human rights in India List of organisations banned by the Government of India Insurgency in Arunachal PradeshFurther reading EditA Lanunungsang Ao From Phizo to Muivah The Naga National Question New Delhi 2002 Blisters on their feet tales of internally displaced persons in India s North East Los Angeles u a 2008 ISBN 978 81 7829 819 1 Dutta Anuradha Assam in the Freedom Movement Calcutta 1991 Hazarika Sanjoy Strangers of the Mist Tales of War and Peace from India s Northeast New Delhi u a 1994 Horam M Naga insurgency the last thirty years New Delhi 1988 International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs Hrsg The Naga nation and its struggle against genocide Kopenhagen 1986 Nibedom Nirmal The Night of the Guerillas Delhi 1978 Srikanth H Thomas C J Naga Resistance Movement and the Peace Process in Northeast India in Peace and Democracy in South Asia Vol I 2005 Terrorism and separatism in North East India Delhi 2004 ISBN 81 7835 261 3Notes Edit At least 39 Bhutanese soldiers 4 Bhutanese police officersReferences Edit Samaddar Ranabir 2016 Neo Liberal Strategies of Governing India Routledge p 196 Prominent SULFA militant killed Zee News 19 November 2007 Archived from the original on 7 September 2018 Retrieved 7 September 2018 Bhutan Army seizes ULFA HQ Times of India 16 December 2003 BSF Insurgent camps on Bangladesh India border have almost disappeared Dhaka Tribune 19 December 2017 Archived from the original on 11 June 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2019 While India was glued to Balakot airstrike army carried out mega strikes along Myanmar border India Today 15 March 2019 Archived from the original on 15 March 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Chinese agencies helping North East militants in Myanmar Indian Express 10 January 2017 Archived from the original 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2014 Retrieved 4 October 2014 A complex history and layered present What determines India s response to military rule in Myanmar 20 May 2021 a b Myanmar s army is increasingly turning to India for training and weapons Telegraph India Myanmar operation 70 commandos finish task in 40 minutes thehindu com 10 June 2015 Armies of India Myanmar target NE militants in coordinated operation India Times 16 June 2019 The heart of revolutionary movement in Manipur is CorCom Kangla Online 8 July 2014 Archived from the original on 9 September 2014 Retrieved 9 September 2014 CorCom promises new face of revolution E Pao net Archived from the original on 9 September 2014 Retrieved 9 September 2014 CorCom Coordination Committee Archived 30 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Terrorism Research and Analysis Consortium CorCom in GOI extremist organisations list Archived 30 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Manipur Times Freedom is our birthright Archived 30 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Sangai Express Manipur NDFB warns against divisive policies of Congress and AGP Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Sentinel Assam NE rebels call general strike on I Day The Sangai Express Archived from the original on 9 September 2014 Retrieved 9 September 2014 11 rebel groups call for Republic Day boycott The Times Of India Archived from the original on 26 January 2014 Retrieved 9 September 2014 2 Archived 10 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Chinese blessings Nine NE militant groups join hands Nagaland Post 3 Archived 26 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Nine militant groups of NE form united front with Chinese blessings Hindustan Times Raghavan V R 22 August 2012 Internal Conflicts Military Perspectives Vij Books India Pvt Ltd p 190 ISBN 978 93 82573 40 1 Works cited Edit Rashid Ahmed 2013 1st pub 2012 Pakistan on the Brink The future of Pakistan Afghanistan and the West Penguin Paperback ed London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 241 96007 3 External links Edit The Other Burma Conflict counter insurgency and human rights in Northeast India Mansi Mehrotra Bodo Uprising Sinlung Insurgencies in Northeast India Conflict Co option and Change Journal of North East India Studies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Insurgency in Northeast India amp oldid 1160148162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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