Tough path to peace in the Bodo bastion : The Tribune India

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Tough path to peace in the Bodo bastion

SUSPECTED insurgents belonging to the National Democratic Front of Bodoland, Songbijit faction NDFB(S) killed 14 innocent civilians and injured another 20, some critically, in a broad daylight dastardly attack in the busy Balajan Tinali (trijuction).

Tough path to peace in the Bodo bastion

A woman walks with her child past burnt-out shops at the site of a militant attack at Balajan Tinali in the Kokrajhar district of Assam on August 5, 2016. AFP



Somesh Goyal

SUSPECTED insurgents belonging to the National Democratic Front of Bodoland, Songbijit faction NDFB(S) killed 14 innocent civilians and injured another 20, some critically, in a broad daylight dastardly attack in the busy Balajan Tinali (trijuction). It is next to Kokrajhar, the headquarters of Bodoland Territorial Council(BTC) governing the Bodoland Territorial Area Districts (BTAD). As per eyewitness accounts, three militants donning army fatigues and wielding AK series rifles and grenades arrived in the market in an autorickshaw around noon and opened indiscriminate fire on unsuspecting civilians, inflicting huge casualty unknown in the last two years in the area. It is also believed that a grenade was also lobbed to cause large-scale damage to life and property. 

The security forces and the state police patrolling the area were quick to respond and engage the militants, neutralising one and injuring the other while the other(s) managed to escape. They left behind AK series rifles, grenades and some documents. It is early for the police to establish the identity of the slain militant.

BTAD comprises of four districts of Assam, namely Kokrajhar, Chirang, Udalguri and Baksa. Kokrajhar and Chirang are the worst affected by NDFB(S) violence. NDFB(S) is the anti-talk group that refuses to engage with the state government and is the sole armed violent group in these districts. It broke away from the parent NDFB (R), led by Ranjan Daimary, in 2012. The Ranjan Daimary faction has been in negotiations with the central and state governments. Most of Ranjan cadres are in designated camps and are not involved in any violent incidents. The avowed goal of NDFB(S) is the creation of Bodoland and most of its ire is targeted at the Bengali Muslim immigrants. This faction is known for brutality and is very severe on suspected police informers and those showing any resistance to the faction's demands of ransom or protection money, rations and harbour. 

It is not yet clear whether the August 5 assault was a reaction to the July 17 encounter, in which three of its cadres were neutralised by the security forces. It could also be to re-establish its dominance by terrorising shopkeepers and civilians to ensure steady supply of rations and cash to sustain its armed struggle. The faction's leader Songbijit is hiding in Myanmar, while the de facto leader Bedei and the platoon commander of Kokrajhar Mwdan are alleged to be in a safe camp somewhere in Bhutan. The three militants killed on July 17 were also trying to cross over to Bhutan with rations and supplies.

The year 2014 was a watershed year in the NDFB(S)-related violence. The year was marked by large-scale violence at the hands of NDFB(S) and communal violence in the BTAD area that resulted in the death of 125 civilians and 16 NDFB(S) cadres. A major offensive was successfully launched in the four districts to cripple the capability and terror of the group. The state police did an excellent job by providing specific technical intelligence and carrying out numerous operations with the security forces to create disarray among the rank and file of this group. The year 2015 witnessed minimal violence. No casualty in the area, except of NDFB(S) cadres, was reported as the security forces gained upper hand. Efforts to regroup and equip itself had been going on and the cross-border movement of NDFB(S) cadres to Bhutan has been reported.

India shares a 699-km border with Bhutan. Out of this, Assam has a 267-km border with Bhutan which is guarded by the youngest border guarding force, SSB. The terrain between the two countries abutting Assam is difficult and tough during the monsoon when innocuous streams, both seasonal and perennial, become ferocious and are rendered impossible to negotiate. Bhutan has also borne the brunt of NDFB violence in the past and has been pointing to frequent movement of terrorists from India to Bhutan, despite the presence of SSB camps every two to three kilometres along the border. 

In almost all cases of violent attacks on the civilians and security forces, NDFB(S) cadres are believed to take refuge in the Bhutanese territory which does not have any significant deployment of the Royal Bhutan Army. However, in 2003-2004, the Royal Bhutan Army had launched a campaign codenamed "Operation All Clear" to destroy all the NDFB camps, but the porous border has remained the security force's achilles' heel.

It is customary for the insurgent groups in the north-eastern states to perpetrate violence on the civil population and security forces before national festivals. But the scale and fury of the attack does not seem to be a tokenism and the group seems to have reinvented itself. The state police, the Army and other security forces deployed in the area have been successful in bringing peace to the area due to excellent synergy and intelligence sharing. Some of the assets that moved away from Kokrajhar may have to be brought back to provide proper leadership and teeth to day-to-day operations. 

In the wake of this attack, the security apparatus in Kokrajhar will have to move with utmost alacrity by once again recalibrating its strategy by assessing the efficacy and efficiency of the state police, security forces and the border-guarding force to deliver maximum damage to the brutal anti-talk NDFB(S) faction.

The writer, a serving IPS officer, has worked in Assam as Inspector General of SSB. The views expressed are personal.

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