It is then that the second mistake occurred. The late Congress chief minister, Hiteswar Saikia, who was not taken into confidence while drawing up the accord terms, sabotaged its implementation. Taking advantage of the absence of any demarcated boundary for the BAC, he employed his famed divide and rule policy and split the Bodo political party, formed by the ABSU leaders in the wake of the accord. For three years, the provisions of the accord remained unfulfilled. Finally, this March, the ABSU, which was watching the drama from the sidelines, again decided to intervene. It got different factions together and went back to its demand for a separate state. As Hemendra Brahma, a Bodo MLA allied with ABSU says: "Only a separate state can meet our aspirations. For too long, the rulers have exploited us and neglected our demands. Under the present administrative set-up we will never get justice."