Some of India's worst cases of ethnic and communal violence have taken place in itsNortheast. Many of these went unreported. Others did not get the attention they deserved. But the recentattack on passengers from the Northeast, in Munger in Bihar, drew national attention, even edging out news ofimminent Legislative Assembly elections in four Indian States.
On November 9, 2003, applicants from Bihar were violently debarred from writing the Railway RecruitmentExamination in the Group C and D categories: an examination for posts that requires only senior schoolacademic qualification. There were 2,720 posts and 600,000 applicants. The All Assam Students Union (AASU), astudent's body that once spearheaded the Assam agitation in the 1980s, was leading from the front in agitatingagainst Biharis appearing at the examination.
In retaliation in Munger in Bihar, the Brahmaputra Mail, travelling from Guwahati to New Delhi was attacked,detained, people beaten up, women molested. It was a horrific tale of mob violence. Though saner Biharipassengers tried saving their co-passengers, the Railway Police stayed away. Apparently local politicalheavyweights oversaw the humiliation.
It took a while for people in Assam to react. Only when some of the passengers returned, the stories made therounds and there was anguish.
There was sufficient time for damage control, but the Government was busy in local body elections in theState, scheduled for December 1. For the student's body, AASU, the issue had come alive, creating newopportunities of another round of agitation, this time on their demand for a 100 per cent reservation in theGroup C and D categories in the Northeast Frontier (NF) Railways. But it took on the character of an agitationagainst the Biharis.
On November 17, the AASU called for a 24-hour general strike. Violence spread, and the AASU lost control overevents, or so it seemed. Other organizations progressively established control over the demonstrations andviolence. The State Government played it safe by blaming the 'anti-social elements', without naming any groupin particular. However, these anti-social elements also included armed groups with automatic rifles, and thosecapable of hacking people to death. In the next 36 hours, arson and killings stunned the State and made theCentre sit up. The State Government today admits that there had been serious administrative lapses, but deniesgoing soft on the rioters.
What followed were days of confusion, total administrative mismanagement, blaming the media, and generalpanic, as violence escalated - with the death toll crossing 50 by Sunday, November 23.
But Assam is no more what it used to be in the 70s and 80s, when the AASU agitation brought the State to astandstill. It is, today, much more resilient and mature in its reactions. For the average person on the road,the current wave of violence has been embarrassing. They demanded peace. The issue of reservations is on thebackburner. Of more immediate concern was the image of a State that has desperately been trying to make uplost ground.
It is, however, important to go back and read the sequence of events. A railway examination, which could havecentres for Biharis in Bihar and Assamese in Assam, ignored the possibilities and potential for disturbanceand political disruption. A nightmare of a rail journey, but no official words of assurance or apology,followed by AASU's mobilization of voices of protest.
The violence started in Guwahati, striking right at the capital. Then it spread to Upper Assam and, just asthe killings began to manifest characteristics of well-coordinated attacks, Lower Assam started feeling theheat.
If areas where the fire could not be doused were to be identified, these are seen to lie along the AssamBengal border, Bongaigaon, Nalbari, and areas bordering Bhutan that have been prone to extreme militantactivity. The action has been at its worst in the Tinsukia and Dibrugarh districts in Upper Assam, wheremilitancy has been the worst. There is clearly an effort by extremist elements to establish themselves inareas of their first choice, and suggest that the killings and the arson are a well-orchestrated designbetween the rioters and the militants, a fact that the Government has not denied.
On the morning of November 22, just as the Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi was claiming that the situation had beenbrought under control, suspected United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) militants gunned down another eightpeople in Tinsukia. The administration suspended police officers including the Superintendent of Police (SP)of Tinsukia and transferred the Deputy Commissioner of the district. But the damage was done. ULFA's messageto the three Union Ministers visiting the State on that very day was loud and clear.
To understand the ULFA's motivation, it is useful to look at events back in the year 2000. From Diwali thatyear, the ULFA went on a killing spree, gunning down more than a hundred people (all Hindi speaking) in thecourse of four months. The result was widespread fear and a dramatic increase in extortion.
Current developments suggest that, this time round, the State Government was caught on the back foot. Thereare, in fact, sufficient indications that its inaction was deliberate, mostly the result of reasons political.The ULFA had earlier issued a ban on all Hindi films in Assam from November 15, and there were several signsthat it was trying to whip up sentiments similar to its campaign in 2000. Though people defied their presentban, the signals were clear to see.