PM MODI CELEBRATES BODO ACCORD
PM says some people spreading misinformation that CAA will lead to foreigners entering India illegally
On his first visit to Assam since Parliament in December passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday tried to assuage concerns of the people of the state over the new law and described Bodo Accord as a historic pact that will usher in peace and development. “This is a day to celebrate your efforts, which has led to permanent peace in this area. It is a day to take an oath to strengthen faith in development and discard the darkness of violence,” Modi said.
KOKRAJHAR: On his first visit to Assam since Parliament in December passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday tried to assuage the concerns of people in Assam protesting against the contentious law.
Addressing a crowd of 500,000 at an event to celebrate signing of the Bodo Accord last month, Modi accused some sections of engaging in fear-mongering.
“People are spreading misinformation that CAA will lead to foreigners entering India illegally. I want to assure the people of Assam that nothing like that will happen,” said Modi.
CAA proposes to fast- track the grant of Indian citizenship to so-called minorities from Muslim-majority nations of Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan, fleeing religious persecution.
The law has triggered widespread protests in Assam amid concerns that it could encourage a fresh wave of infiltration by illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and threaten the livelihoods of indigenous people.
In Assam and the rest of northeast, the demand is for the scraping the legislation because of a perception it will dilute the 1985 Assam Accord, under which the government agreed to identify and deport any and all refugees and migrants who entered the northeastern state after March 25 1971.The CAA extends the deadline until December 31, 2014.
Clause 6 of Assam Accord, signed after a six-year agitation against illegal immigrants, promises constitutional safeguards to Assamese people. A high-level committee will submit recommendations on implementing the clause to the government.
“Our effort is now to implement Clause 6 of the Assam Accord as soon as possible. I assure the people of Assam that as soon as the high-level committee’s recommendations on the issue come, the Centre will implement it. We don’t believe in delays and obstructions,” Modi said.
Modi described the Bodo Accord as a historic pact that will usher in peace and development. The Accord was signed on January 27 by the Centre with all four factions of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB),
All Bodo Students Union (ABSU) and United Bodo Peoples’ Organisation (UBPO).
“This is a day to celebrate your efforts, which has led to permanent peace in this area. It is a day to take an oath to strengthen faith in development and discard the darkness of violence,” Modi said.
“The accord is significant as it coincides with celebrations of the 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. I welcome all NDFB cadres to the national mainstream. The accord has put a full stop to all Bodo demands and now development is our primary and final goal,” the PM said.
Modi stressed that the accord will benefit not just the Bodos, but other communities as well. The PM listed important points of the accord including a special financial package of ~1,500 crore, which will benefit Kokrajhar, Chirang, Baksa and Udalguri, and the redrawing of Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC).
“All demands related to the Bodo issues have been met. Peace was not established after 1993 and 2003 agreements. The Centre, Assam and Bodo agitation groups have signed a historic accord, no demand is left,” he said.
With the signing of the accord, the United Liberation Front of Assam-Independent (ULFA-I), which is seeking a sovereign Assam, remains the only major banned militant outfit in the state. Last week, 1,615 cadres of all the factions of NDFB laid down arms in front of chief minister
Sarbananda Sonowal.
The PM said the Central government was providing solutions to problems which had been ignored in the past because of “social and political” reasons.
Assam governor Jagdish Mukhi, CM Sonowal, senior minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, Bodoland Territorial Council chief Hagrama Mohilliary and signatories to the Bodo Accord were present at the event.
In his address, Sonowal urged all NDFB cadres to contribute towards building a developed Assam. Sarma reiterated his appeal to the ULFA-I and all other active militant outfits in the northeast to join peace talks.
Some groups opposed the Bodo accord because they weren’t consulted and planned to sponsor a shutdown protest on Friday, but called off the move. The All Assam Students Union (AASU), which is spearheading the antiCAA protests in the state, also decided not to oppose Modi’s trip.
“The presence of a huge audience in Modi’s rally doesn’t mean much. Passage of CAA in parliament is a political move by BJP and the people of Assam will give a reply by voting against the party,” said Congress’s Assam unit president Ripun Bora.
Nani Gopal Mahanta, professor of political science in Gauhati University, said: “CAA’s impact is not very palpable in Bodo areas as much as it is in central and upper Assam. But Modi’s visit has a huge symbolic message to the people of Assam. He is trying to tell people that you give me a bit of support on CAA and in return I will resolve all your issues.”