Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Major Gogoi lionised in Assam as war hero who fought Mughals

- Rahul Karmakar

GUWAHATI: Many in Assam have equated Major Nitin Leetul Gogoi, who triggered a controvers­y for using a Kashmiri man as ‘human shield’, to a medieval war hero who thwarted the Mughal army’s bid to conquer the region in 1671.

Social media users in Gogoi’s hometown Namrup, an industrial town 480km east of Guwahati, and elsewhere in Assam have proposed inviting and honouring the major for a “feat that has done us proud”.

Gogoi received a commendati­on certificat­e from the army for his role in counter-insurgency operations on Monday.

On Facebook, self-employed Abhijit Baruah said: “Asom gourab Major Leetul Gogoi Zindabad (long live Major Leetul Gogoi, pride of Assam)!”

Entreprene­ur Shyam Kanu Mahanta wrote: “Such daredevilr­y can be only expected from descendant­s of Bir Lachit Borphukan. Proud of you Major Leetul Gogoi! Keep the flag flying high!”

Gogoi is an Ahom, the community that had ruled Assam for 600 years before the British annexed Assam in 1824.

Borphukan was the Ahom general who defeated the Mughals at the Battle of Saraighat — billed the greatest naval battle ever on a river — on the Brahmaputr­a off Guwahati in 1671.

The allusion to Borphukan is because he had beheaded his maternal uncle for inefficien­cy in fortifying the base of the outnumbere­d Ahom soldiers against 69,000 Mughal invaders.

But the army officer’s parents — retired fertiliser plant employee Dharmeswar Gogoi and his wife Swarnalata Gogoi — have sought to be left alone because their son has merely done his duty as “is expected of all soldiers”.

On Tuesday night, BJP’s Dibrugarh MP Rameswar Teli visited Gogoi’s house in Namrups’ Sector F to felicitate his parents. Officials of the local police station said the parents were not keen on the MP’s visit being made public.

Chandan Mili, officer in charge of Namrup police station said the parents want to be left alone.

“They are not in the best of health and the sudden media glare has unnerved them. Besides, they are disturbed by rumours that their son’s job is at stake,” he said.

The youngest of three siblings, Major Gogoi had joined the army as a jawan at 18 and joined the Dehradun-based Army Cadet College nine years later to become an officer.

He was commission­ed as a lieutenant in December 2008.

Friends recall Major Gogoi as a good footballer.

His trainer Tosen Gogoi said the army officer had earned laurels for local and district clubs at state-level football tournament­s.

 ??  ?? Major Nitin Gogoi received a commendati­on certificat­e from the army for his role in counterins­urgency operations
Major Nitin Gogoi received a commendati­on certificat­e from the army for his role in counterins­urgency operations

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