Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Improved land policy may see Cong sail through

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more than ₹3,000 crore and entailing fiscal incentives, ran into complicati­ons. The NLUP was said to have been ironed out midway through Lal Thanhawla’s term to benefit almost half the 257,581 households in Mizoram, according to Census 2011.

The Congress government called the NLUP a success but experts attributed the party’s below-par performanc­e in the maiden municipal polls in 2010 to the policy’s inherent flaws. The Congress pipped the MNF by a solitary seat in the Aizawl civic body polls, but it was primarily due to its alliance with the Zoram Nationalis­t Party, a regional outfit.

“The Congress improved its NLUP show after the civic polls. And this could tip the scales in its favour,” said former bureaucrat L Ruatliana. “That the opposition has virtually no issue is evident from the targeting of Lal Thanhawla for wearing tilak at some Hindu function or visiting a temple.” Almost 85% of people in Mizoram are Christians. The church here outlines the dos and don’ts for political parties during elections.

The NLUP has also overshadow­ed other issues such as the influx of Chin people from Myanmar, drug abuse, autonomy for the Hmar tribals, resettleme­nt of non-christian Bru or Reang tribals, who are forced to be refugees in adjoining Tripura and a much-awaited deal with the church for lifting prohibitio­n to enable grape farmers offload their produce to wineries.

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