Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Rohingya issue mirrors violence, xenophobia faced by many in NE

- Rahul Karmakar rahul.karmakar@hindustant­imes.com

SINGLED OUT Tribe or regionspec­ific extremist groups in the area carry out targeted killings of those ‘from outside’ GUWAHATI:

Killing of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar and their exodus to Bangladesh, described by a UN official as ethnic cleansing, is similar to what many communitie­s across the eight Northeast states in India have suffered intermitte­ntly since 1948, according to social scientists.

Tribe or region-specific extremist groups in the Northeast are blamed in most cases of targeted killings, often labelled as “riots” despite being one-sided or xenophobic mass movements, the social scientists argue.

Clashes are often attributed to the insular characteri­stic of most ethnic groups that makes them suspicious of other cultures and view numericall­y and economical­ly more powerful communitie­s as aggressors.

The perception, more of secessioni­st groups, that “mainstream” groups such as Hindi and Bengali speakers have replaced the British as colonisers is also a factor, according to NE watchers.

Political scientist Akhil Ranjan Dutta acknowledg­es these as factors, but says the main reason for conflicts is the penetratio­n of state dynamics into mostly tribal communitie­s that are used to a certain kind of living and resource-sharing.

“The ultimate aim is political space for each community. The state has been playing a divisive role because it can’t control collective resistance. This division has percolated down to ethnically different communitie­s and within certain tribes,” he said.

The NE has not had any major incident of targeted killing since 2012 when 114 people were murdered and 450,000 displaced in the Bodo-dominated Bodoland Territoria­l Council (BTC) areas of western Assam. The victims were mostly migrant Bengali Muslims.

“But given the seeds of distrust sown as a political strategy, there is unlikely to be an end to ethnic violence in the region,” he said.

Bengali academic Nabanipa Bhattachar­jee wrote of “breathing in an atmosphere of immense vulnerabil­ity, torment and fear” in Meghalaya capital Shillong in the 1980s and 1990s.

“I witnessed… the non-tribals of Shillong being persecuted and brutally murdered. I recall the disruption of puja procession­s, days and nights of curfew, the rush for essential supplies, deserted streets, the plight of refugees, arson, and much more. I, therefore, joined the great dkhar and 1994.

Manipur (1993): Over 100 Pangals or Manipuri Muslims killed.

Assam (1996-2015): Bodoland extremists targeted Adivasi tea garden workers, killing 460, displacing 400,000.

Mizoram (1997): Attacks on minority Brus saw at least 50,000 flee. w (Khasi word meaning foreigner) exodus and left Shillong in 1994,” she wrote for a website in 2015.

Almost every community or sub-region has a word, often used derogatori­ly, for outsiders. What dkhar is to Meghalaya, mayang is to Manipur, and fatarnibor­ok to Tripura. In Assam, the word bohiragata is often used to distinguis­h outsiders from the khilonjia (indigenous).

But the animosity is not restricted to those considered outsiders. For instance, extremists batting for the Nagas have a Manipur (1992-1995): NSCN-IM targeted Kukis, killing over 1,000 and displacing 100,000.

Manipur (1997-1998): 352 killed in Churachand­pur district.

Assam (2003-2004): 117 killed, 25,000 displaced. history of hostility toward those clubbed as Kukis.

“We observe September 13 as black day to mark the massacre of 108 Thadou (Kuki) tribal people by National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah) in Manipur’s Joupi and Janglenpha­i villages in 1993. Between 1992 and 1995, more than 1,000 Kukis were killed,” Michael Lamjathang Haokip, a Thadou student leader, said.

The fight for political space has also seen intra-tribe conflicts, specifical­ly among the Bodos and Assam (2005): Over 50 killed, 41,000 displaced.

Assam (2009): 63 killed

Assam, Meghalaya (2010-11): At least 12 killed

Assam (2013-14): At least 15 killed Karbis of Assam over the years.

Assam home department’s data in 2016 said the state had witnessed eight bloody ethnic clashes since 2001. These clashes claimed 535 lives, including 80 women and 45 children.

A 2011 report by the Internal Displaceme­nt Monitoring Centre said ethnic violence in Northeast forced almost a million people to flee homes over the past 20 years. “More than 76,000, according to conservati­ve estimates, are still living in displaceme­nt,” the report said.

 ?? BURHAAN KINU/HT ?? Selective killing by rebels in Assam reopened a 24yearold conflict in 201314, leaving at least 15 dead — nine of them Karbi youths — and displacing more than 3,000, a majority of them Rengma Nagas. Forced to flee home, Rengma Nagas took shelter at...
BURHAAN KINU/HT Selective killing by rebels in Assam reopened a 24yearold conflict in 201314, leaving at least 15 dead — nine of them Karbi youths — and displacing more than 3,000, a majority of them Rengma Nagas. Forced to flee home, Rengma Nagas took shelter at...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Varun Gandhi
Varun Gandhi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India