Thursday, September 07, 2006

Another riddle

A riddle for every day!

Today’s papers carried a report of a media team’s visit to rebel camps along the Manipur-Nagaland border. It seems that the team was invited by a rebel group. The group is of Muslim rebels, who they say, are fighting for ‘sovereign Manipur’.

They did not fail to tell all those were typical of any rebel group. But what stands is the way they spelt out two points.

>> They are under a ‘suspension of operations’ arrangement with the military.

>> They say they know some groups which are responsible for the bomb blast in ISKCON temple.

The way they form the sentences while spelling out the above points, particularly the second, we get the impression that they know with certainty the people who threw the grenade. As they have no material evidence they can’t name them.

Interesting.

But the most interesting aspect is the timing of their media interaction. We are just beginning to form the impression that we had actually moved on to the Chin State clash, leaving behind the bomb blast in ISKCON for good!

We have to note here that whoever had planned the Chin State clash failed in their objective. Because, the Burmese army do not (so far) react in the way they have anticipated, particularly in the Moreh-Tamu sector.

But what’s most not anticipated is the way in which the reconfigurations in the complex relationships among rebel groups in Manipur is taking place here (see my last post). Today’s development strongly points to the likelihood that some very interested people do not want the reconfiguration to take place.

That’s why they are trying to bring the focus again to the ISKCON bomb blast. More than this refocusing, they are trying to throw the proverbial spanner into the emerging process of the reconfiguration, by pointing accusing fingers to some rebel groups for the throwing of that devilish grenade inside the ISKCON temple complex.

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