Arab Times

Conflicts plague India for decades

Kashmir clashes claim thousands of lives

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NEW DELHI, July 27, (AP): India has been plagued with often deadly political disputes for decades: A decades-old confrontat­ion between protesters and armed forces in Kashmir has claimed tens of thousands of lives. A festering conflict with Maoist rebels cuts a wide swath across many of the country’s states. A host of insurgenci­es fuel violence in the northeast.

Many of these conflicts date back to India’s independen­ce in 1947 from British colonial rule, when maps were drawn without adequate considerat­ion given to the schisms it would create between ethnic groups. Many other disputes stem from centuries of discrimina­tion and exploitati­on that still have not been addressed or resolved.

These long-simmering conflicts could have an impact on how quickly India, the world’s fastest-growing economy, succeeds in its aim of becoming a leading global power.

A look at three major conflicts: MAOIST

India’s Maoist conflict began as an armed struggle in the late 1960s, when poor peasants in the village of Naxalbari in West Bengal state demanded land rights. The uprising was crushed, but the conflict spread across vast tracts of central and southern India.

Rebels inspired by Chinese revolution­ary leader Mao Zedong have been fighting ever since, staging hit-andrun attacks against Indian authoritie­s. They demand a greater share of wealth from the area’s natural resources and more jobs for farmers and the poor.

Just last week, at least 10 Indian paramilita­ry soldiers were killed in an ambush by Maoist rebels in dense forests in the eastern Indian state of Bihar. The government’s response was to send more troops, but the rebels had fled deep into their forest hideouts.

Since the 1980s, Maoist rebels have recruited thousands of poor villagers and indigenous tribespeop­le, training

Sharif was toppled in a coup in 1999 and returned to power after winning a 2013 election but his relations with the powerful military have been testy at times, and both sides are sensitive about talk of military interventi­on.

The arrests came after posters appeared in 13 cities seeming to invite army chief them in the use of arms and explosives to target government officials, security forces and state installati­ons. Over the past decade, the rebels have acquired smuggled Chinese-made shoulder rocket launchers, and explosives and mines that they have used to deadly effect.

The government has called them India’s greatest internal security threat. Thousands have died on both sides, but little has changed in the struggle. Many Indians have grown weary of the conflict. Politician­s debate whether a military operation to flush the rebels out of their jungle hideouts is preferable to offering better economic opportunit­ies to assuage the rebel fury. NORTH INSURGENCI­ES In India’s remote northeast, government forces battle dozens of ethnic insurgent groups who push a welter of demands ranging from independen­t homelands to maximum autonomy within India. More than 21,000 people have been killed in insurgency-related violence in northeast India, according to the South Asia Terrorism Portal.

The most prominent of those conflicts, that of the Naga people, has been on the boil since the mid-1950s. Naga leaders Isak Chishi Swu and Thuingalen­g Muivah signed a truce with New Delhi in 1997 and been engaged in peace talks ever since. Swu died earlier this month, but Muivah said the peace talks would carry on.

“Things are on track and we are expecting to reach an acceptable solution to the long-standing Naga issue soon,” Muivah said recently.

Several other insurgenci­es in the northeaste­rn states of Mizoram, Manipur, Tripura and Assam — all of which share borders with either Myanmar or Bangladesh — are keeping Indian security forces on a nearconsta­nt counterins­urgency mode.

The government has cease-fire agreements with more than 40 insurgent

General Raheel Sharif, who is due to retire in November, to step in and rule the country.

A military spokesman disavowed the posters. General Sharif, who is no relation to the prime minister, has said he would step down as planned.

Police arrested one of the men, Muhammad groups in the region, and over the years it has signed peace agreements with six. Those deals gave ethnic groups more autonomy, but India has rejected their demands for separate homelands. This resulted in the splinterin­g of several insurgent groups, with some factions carrying on with hit-and-run guerrilla strikes.

Neighborin­g Bhutan and Bangladesh are cooperatin­g with Indian authoritie­s to expel insurgent leaders and cadres operating from their territorie­s. New Delhi is trying to reach a similar agreement with Myanmar.

KASHMIR

Clashes between protesters and Indian forces in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir this summer again highlight the challenge that the restive Himalayan region has posed for Indian policymake­rs ever since it was split between India and Pakistan shortly after the two archrivals gained independen­ce in 1947.

New Delhi initially grappled with largely peaceful anti-India movements in its portion of Kashmir. However, political blunders, broken promises and a crackdown against dissent resulted in a full-blown armed rebellion against Indian control in 1989. Thousands of Kashmiris crossed over to Pakistani-controlled Kashmir for arms training, returned with guns and grenades, and joined the armed struggle against India for a united Kashmir, either under Pakistan rule or independen­t of both.

Kashmir became a battlegrou­nd, with rebel groups ratcheting up bloody attacks aimed at Indian security forces and pro-India Kashmiri politician­s. India responded with a massive militariza­tion of Kashmir, saying it was fighting a Pakistan-sponsored proxy war. Soldiers empowered with emergency impunity laws carried out a brutal military crackdown. At least 68,000 people have died in Kashmir since 1989.

Islam Khan, in the northweste­rn town of Bannu on Monday after he staged a poll on a street, asking people whether they were satisfied with the government or wanted the army to step in.

Bannu police chief Qasim Ali Khan told Reuters Khan had been detained and charged with a public order offence. (RTRS)

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