Showing posts with label Conflict. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conflict. Show all posts

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Still Talking

NSCN-IM Cadre at Camp Hebron. Photo@Arijit Sen-All Rights Reserved

On March 2, Thuingaleng Muivah, Chairman of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland is supposed to meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Muivah reaches Delhi from Amsterdam tonight ( 11.30 pm IST/27th Feb). What are we expecting? Nothing probably. There have been 50 rounds of talks between the Government of India and the NSCN-IM, in Amsterdam, Paris, Bangkok, Geneva among other locations. So far, no one has been able to achieve anything. The ceasefire between NSCN-IM and Government of India ( signed in 1997) is still on. Everything seems to end there. Asia's oldest insurgency or movement for recognition of the Naga identity still continues in Nagaland. I took this photograph at the NSCN camp in Nagaland, few years back. I will be visiting this place again on Monday ( March 1), just to get an idea what people are thinking not just inside the camp, but also in Nagaland about Muivah meeting the Prime Minister. How much relevance does a Muivah visit still have?


NSCN-Unification Camp/2008. Photo @Arijit Sen. All Rights Reserved

The photograph above was taken at the NSCN-Unification faction camp in Nagaland. It was a faction formed by Azeto Chopy. I visited this camp in 2008--the year of state elections. Lack of unity among different groups is also one reason why the Naga talks have often failed. (NSCN-Khaplang is another prominent group that needs mention.) But lack of unity is of course not the main reason for failure to arrive at a solution. The games played by the Indian government, Intelligence Bureau, Indian Army for votes and making one faction fight another are well known.

Link to an old post when I visited this Camp in 2008

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Nagaland Elections




We were there in Dimapur and in Kohima and some areas around Kohima before the elections. The Democratic Alliance of Nagaland won. Some pictures from the NSCN (unification) camp taken during the shoot. This underground camp, when we visited, was yet to be recognised or designated by the government. It was just before the elections. Right now in Nagaland the situation is getting bad with the cycle of violence and counter-violence that had almost stopped existing, starting again.