New Delhi, Aug. 8: As the Centre
attempts to defuse tension in north Bengal and Assam, Gorkha and Bodo
groups seem to be inching towards an understanding for joint action.
Distrust has grown
between the Centre and ethnic groups after the announcement on
Telangana. Now moderate and radical groups demanding Gorkhaland and
Bodoland are ready to find a meeting ground to synergise their protests.
The groups,
including ruling outfits like the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) in
Darjeeling hills and the Bodoland People’s Front in Assam, are facing
mounting pressure from within the ranks to act. As a result, they feel
the need to act jointly.
Last week, GJM
general secretary Roshan Giri and BPF Rajya Sabha MP Biswajit Daimary
spoke on forging an understanding that would help both.
“We have an
understanding that can mutually benefit our causes,” Daimary said
wihtout elaborating on the contours of a detailed strategy.
The Centre has
tackled the groups with separate tactics. While it has adopted a
two-pronged strategy with the BPF, with both Delhi and Dispur engaging
in talks with its leaders, it has cold-shouldered the GJM, which is also
facing a combative Trinamul Congress government, led by Mamata
Banerjee, in Bengal. Giri has been camping here seeking a meeting with
Congress president Sonia Gandhi.
Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh and Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi met leaders of the
BPF, and ally at Dispur, yesterday. An announcement for a tripartite
meeting with Bodo students could be announced by August 13, sources
said.
The future course
of action by outfits whose stakes have suddenly come into sharp focus
after the Telangana announcement, therefore, continues to be uncertain.
Govinda
Basumatary, the general secretary of the National Democratic Front of
Boroland (Progressive) said, “We are in talks with like-minded groups in
Gorkhaland so that we can help each other and express solidarity.” He
added that overground groups were also meeting so that they can take
advantage in the elections.
Sources in the GJM also said they were in talks with the BPF for cooperation.
Meeting of Gorkha
and Bodo protesters can spell trouble for security planners who are
forever worried about security in chicken’s neck, a sliver of land that
connects the Northeast with the rest of India.
In the home
ministry, the mood is sombre after the announcement of Telangana as new
concerns about security have cropped up, especially in the Bodo belt and
Karbi Anglong district in Assam.
The Telegraph
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