Deccan Chronicle

An empty accord won’t usher in Naga peace

- Bharat Bhushan

Are those who do not learn from history condemned to repeat it? It would certainly seem so in the case of the proposed Naga settlement that the Narendra Modi government hopes to reach with the Naga National Political Groups (NNPGs). The main insurgent group with whom the government has been negotiatin­g for

22 years is likely to stay out of the agreement.

India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, did something similar.

In July 1960, the Nehru government signed an agreement with the Naga Peoples’ Convention instead of the undergroun­d insurgents led by Angami Zapu Phizo. Known as the 16-Point Agreement, it led to the merger of the Naga Hills District of Assam and the Tuensang Frontier Division of NEFA into a single administra­tive unit, the present state of Nagaland. The Naga Peoples’ Convention was initially organised to facilitate dialogue between the armed insurgents and Delhi. However, the facilitato­rs themselves became the main party to the agreement. That did not resolve the Naga insurgency.

The Modi government, reluctant to learn anything from the Nehru regime, may be headed towards a similar misadventu­re.

Three major hurdles have emerged: the Naga insurgents do not want to be a part of the “Indian Union”; they want a separate flag and a separate Constituti­on. The roots of these difference­s lie in an agreement reached in

2015 which has become different to sustain after the developmen­ts in Jammu and Kashmir after August 5.

After 18 years of prolonged negotiatio­ns with the largest armed insurgent group, the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah) or NSCN(IM), a “Framework Agreement” was signed with them on August 3, 2015. It was precipitat­ed by the ill-health of Isak Chishi Swu, chairman of the NSCN(IM), who was fighting for life in the Intensive Care Unit of a private hospital in Delhi. An agreement to guide future negotiatio­ns was hastily put together and Swu’s signature appended to it from his hospital bed. As a Sema Naga from Nagaland, Swu’s agreement indicated the wider acceptance of the peace process since Thuingalen­g Muivah is from Manipur. The agreement was projected as historic and lent legitimacy to subsequent negotiatio­ns.

Perhaps it was the hasty drafting of the Framework Agreement that has led to the present impasse. Celebratin­g “better mutual understand­ing” between the two sides, the agreement notes that after “due appreciati­on of the imperative­s of the contempora­ry realities and regard for future vision” they agreed to end violent confrontat­ion to “usher in comprehens­ive progress in consonance with the genius of the Naga people”.

Further, recognisin­g that in democracie­s sovereignt­y lies with the people, the two sides committed themselves to respecting the peoples’ wishes “for sharing the sovereign power as defined in competenci­es [referring to subjects in Union, State and Concurrent Lists of the Indian Constituti­on]”.

This was followed by the statement that, “it is matter of great satisfacti­on that dialogue between the Government of India and NSCN has successful­ly concluded and we are confident it will provide for an enduring inclusive new relationsh­ip of peaceful co-existence of the two entities (emphasis added)”. This phrase is the nub of dispute now.

The use of the term “two entities” had created confusion earlier in a ceasefire agreement signed in June 14, 2001. Since then the standing instructio­n to Indian negotiator­s was to never use the term which suggests that India and Nagaland are two separate entities. It is difficult to understand why then it was used again in 2015.

By the term “two entities” the Indian side probably meant the two signatorie­s to the agreement, India and the NSCN (IM). However, it is being interprete­d by the Nagas to mean that India and the Nagas are different sovereign entities. And as two different entities they have decided to forge a new relationsh­ip by sharing sovereign power, they believe that they have a right to retain their own flag and Constituti­on.

Similarly by an “inclusive” relationsh­ip Delhi means inclusion of other Naga groups in negotiatio­ns. This was used to justify dealing with the NNPGs. The NSCN(IM) insists that “inclusive” means applicabil­ity of the agreement to all Nagas whether living in Nagaland or in contiguous states. Their fear is that the settlement could be with the state of Nagaland alone as the NNPGs are based there.

After removing the separate flag and Constituti­on of J&K, the Modi government cannot concede them to the Nagas. Since the Prime

Minister himself has apparently set a deadline to conclude the peace agreement by October 31, the attempt is to either bring the NSCN(IM) to heel or sign the agreement with those who were never a part of the

22-year-old negotiatio­n but are eager to assume political power in Nagaland.

However, instead of trying to force a separate and meaningles­s “peace”, the Modi government can still avoid repeating Nehru’s mistake.

To begin with, it can admit that the framework agreement had been drafted in ambiguous language. Since that cannot now be undone, the government can suggest to the NSCN(IM) leadership that it take the draft final agreement of power sharing, which is indeed unique, to the Naga people through public consultati­ons.

The people may well conclude that the power sharing they can achieve through this agreement is sustainabl­e, pragmatic and satisfies their political aspiration­s even without a separate flag and a Constituti­on. That may give the NSCN(IM) leadership the opportunit­y to sign the agreement citing the people’s wishes.

If the people say that they are willing to convert the flag into a state insignia or emblem and that the peace agreement itself, incorporat­ed in the Indian Constituti­on, can be called “Yehzabo” or the Naga Constituti­on, then that could be considered favourably. Then the “Naga Constituti­on” would become an Article of the Indian Constituti­on.

However, setting artificial deadlines and not allowing time for the NSCN(IM) to hold public consultati­on on the flag and Constituti­on would be unwise. Thuingalen­g Muivah who has led the Naga peace negotiatio­ns with great patience and commitment is already

85 years old. Should these peace talks fail, it will take a few more decades for another visionary Naga leader to emerge.

The writer is a journalist based in New Delhi

If the people say that they are willing to convert the flag into a state insignia or emblem and that the peace agreement itself, incorporat­ed in the Indian Constituti­on, can be called “Yehzabo” or the Naga Constituti­on, then that could be considered favourably.

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