Hindustan Times (Noida)

Amid ceasefire, ULFA-I continues recruitmen­t

- Utpal Parashar letters@hindustant­imes.com

On April 13, a day ahead of start of Rongali Bihu, the Assamese New Year festivitie­s, news of 13 youths from across Assam joining the banned separatist outfit United Liberation Front of Asom-independen­t (ULFA-I) hit headlines in state.

Though the number was on the higher side for a single day, it wasn’t the first such news in the recent past.

This year, 234 persons left their homes and families to join the outfit, which is in a state of unilateral ceasefire since last year, according to unofficial estimates.

On Sunday, news came that Janardan Gogoi, vice president of Congress’s Tinsukia district youth unit, had left his home in Sadiya to join the ULFA-I camps located in neighbouri­ng Myanmar. Gogoi announced his move on social media platforms. “There is a conspiracy by some people to obliterate Assamese society. I can’t be a mute witness to destructio­n of my community...to protect Assamese society from extinction and to bring back its glory, there’s no other option apart from armed struggle,” Gogoi wrote on Facebook on Sunday.

The news of Gogoi and others joining ULFA-I, a banned terror outfit, which had declared a unilateral ceasefire in May 2021, has caused alarm in the corridors of power in Guwahati since this has happened at a time when there are indication­s of the outfit’s leadership sitting for peace talks with New Delhi.

“Youths leaving their homes and going to join terror outfits like ULFA-I have been happening every year. There seems to be an upsurge in that in recent past. Significan­tly, many of these youths also return back,” said additional DGP, special branch, Hiren Nath.

“In 2020, 64 youths who had left homes to join ULFA-I returned back to mainstream. Most of these youths join the outfit not because of ideologica­l leanings but because of family or personal issues. Poverty and unemployme­nt could also be reasons for such move,” he added.

Insurgency in Assam started in April, 1979 with the formation of ULFA—AS an offshoot of the antiforeig­ner’s agitation against inflow of immigrants to the state from Bangladesh. The stated aim of the outfit was to create an independen­t Assam.

In February 2011, ULFA split into two groups — one led by chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa that decided to give up its violent past and sit for talks with Centre without any condition, and another led by commander-inchief Paresh Baruah, which decided against talks and rebranded a breakaway faction as Ulfa-independen­t.

According to police and intelligen­ce sources, with possibilit­y of peace talks with ULFA-I taking place, many unemployed youths who have family problems are starting to join the outfit with the hope of gaining some benefit through rehabilita­tion packages if a peace deal is signed in the near future.

Some say that recruitmen­t amid a unilateral ceasefire could be a ploy by ULFA-I to have an upper hand if negotiatio­ns take place during the peace talks with the government of India.

“This trend of youths leaving homes to join ULFA-I will continue till the organisati­on is active. Though ULFA-I had indicated that they could sit down for peace talks, the government hasn’t shown much interest,” said Anup Chetia, general secretary of the pro-talks faction of ULFA.

“The government at the Centre hasn’t shown any initiative in holding talks with us (those who agreed to sit for peace talks). Issues like poverty and unemployme­nt, especially in the rural areas, which has become severe after the Covid19 pandemic, have also promoted youths to join ULFA-I,” he added.

 ?? HT FILE ?? In 2020, 64 youngsters who had left homes to join ULFA-I returned back to mainstream, officials said.
HT FILE In 2020, 64 youngsters who had left homes to join ULFA-I returned back to mainstream, officials said.

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