A TOP official in India's remote northeast has appealed for an end to ethnic violence that has killed at least 48 people and left nearly 400,000 homeless in the past week.
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Jul 27, 2012, 8:32:40 PM7/27/12
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A TOP official in India's remote northeast has
appealed for an end to ethnic violence that has killed at
least 48 people and left nearly 400,000 homeless in the past
week.
Wasbir Hussain
AAP
July 28, 2012 10:24AM
A TOP official in India's remote northeast has appealed for an end
to ethnic violence that has killed at least 48 people and left
nearly 400,000 homeless in the past week.
The clashes between ethnic Bodos and Muslim settlers in Assam
state have spread fear among both groups, Chief Minister Tarun
Gogoi said on Friday.
"This is a time for everybody to appeal for peace so that people
see sense and normalcy is resumed," Gogoi told reporters in state
capital, Gauhati.
Tensions between the groups have long simmered, but the riots are
the worst bloodletting since the mid-1990s.
The killing of four Bodo men last week sparked the violence.
Soldiers have orders to shoot rioters on sight, a curfew is in
effect in most areas and army soldiers have marched through the
worst-hit areas in a show of strength to stop the violence.
Despite thousands of troops on patrol, covering all of the 10,000
square kilometres has proved difficult, Assam police chief
J.N.Choudhury said.
Arsons were reported again on Friday in the worst-hit districts of
Kokrajhar, Dibrugarh and Chirang, he said.
The relief camps, overrun with fleeing survivors who have escaped
with only a few of their possessions, are ill-equipped and most
have no food, drinking water or medicines. Villagers in the safe
areas have helped provide some food and water to the camps.
Gogoi said that with the worst of the violence under control, the
government would now turn its attention to ensuring that the camps
get adequate relief material.
At the heart of the violence is a fight over land as well as lack
of representation of non-Bodos in local government, according to
Monirul Hussain, a political scientist at Gauhati University.
Bodos are a majority in the Bodoland Territorial Council, an
autonomous administrative body that oversees the districts with
the worst violence.
"This is an unequal arrangement leaving the non-Bodos totally
alienated," Hussain said.