Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Discontent brewing since Oct escalated on Monday

- Utpal Parashar letters@hindustant­imes.com

Monday’s violent clash along the Assam-mizoram border that claimed seven lives, including those of six policemen, and left 41 others injured on the Assam side was the culminatio­n of simmering discontent between the two states since October 2020, when skirmishes left several injured on both sides and resulted in a blockade of NH-306, the lifeline to Mizoram, for 12 days.

Though it wasn’t the first time violence has erupted along the 164km boundary between both northeaste­rn states, Monday’s incident was the bloodiest till date. The border dispute between both states is nearly five decades long and started after Mizoram, which was earlier a part of Assam, was declared a UT in 1972 and gained statehood in 1987. While Assam claims Mizoram has encroached its “constituti­onal boundary”, the latter maintains the area belongs to it.

Three districts of Assam, Cachar, Hailakandi, and Karimganj, share borders with three districts of Mizoram, Kolasib, Mamit, and Aizawl. The main bone of contention is a 509 square mile stretch of the inner line reserve forest on the interstate boundary that Mizoram claims as its own. The origin of the dispute lies in two different notificati­ons issued during the British era.

Mizoram wants delineatio­n of the border based on a 1875 notificati­on framed under Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation of 1873 that sought to demarcate the Lushai Hills (the earlier name of

GUWAHATI:

Mizoram) from the plains of Cachar (in Assam) and also introduced the inner line permit regime (ILP) that regulates entry of outsiders to the area, now Mizoram, even today. Assam follows a 1933 notificati­on through which delimitati­on of the earlier boundary between Lushai Hills and the former princely state of Manipur was modified.

As expected, there have been allegation­s and counter allegation­s on what ignited Monday’s clashes. Mizoram’s home minister Lalchamlia­na issued a statement in the evening accusing Assam police personnel of entering the state and indulging in violence. The statement added that Mizoram police retaliated after tear-gas canisters and grenades were hurled by Assam’s security forces.

Late at night, Assam responded by issuing a statement that blamed Mizoram of breaching existing agreements and status quo on the border and accusing police of the neighbouri­ng state of firing on its security forces and civilians using light machine guns.

Earlier in the day, Mizoram chief minister Zoramthang­a and his Assam counterpar­t Himanta Biswa Sarma indulged in a blame game on Twitter. It ended with interventi­on of Union home minister Amit Shah, after which the two CMS talked over phone, agreed to maintain status quo and work for peace.

Besides Mizoram, Assam has border disputes with Meghalaya, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh.

Monday’s incident came two days after Amit Shah interacted with CMS of all eight northeaste­rn states in Shillong where the pending interstate border disputes were also deliberate­d upon. The Union home minister urged all states to resolve their issues before the 2024 general election. Significan­tly, during the 4th NEDA conclave held in Guwahati in September 2019, Shah urged all chief ministers of the region to address all border disputes in a timebound manner before India celebrates 75 years of Independen­ce in 2022.

 ?? ANI ?? Clashes at the disputed Assam-mizoram border on Monday.
ANI Clashes at the disputed Assam-mizoram border on Monday.

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