Friday, September 22, 2006

Why such a pronounced dichtomy?

Today’s papers completely ignored the emergence of the ‘joint task force’ of the three rebel groups ( see my last post).

In the same post, I concluded with this sentence:

>> Manipur’s rebels, in themselves trying to be an active player in these shifting power relations, are also bound to be impacted by it.<<

I’ll venture into putting this sentence in sharper focus relative to the broader ethnic canvas of the region, which in turn, is pictured in the context of the more or less active insurgency for the last 50 years.

For instance, take the case of Naga insurgency. It is one of the longest running insurgencies of the world. It must be also on the bloodiest. For all these toils and bloods for the last 50 years, do they have an impact on the fellow ethnic minorities across the Indo-Burma regions? But for the hue and cry of some Church leaders from Europe, no impact can be registered in the neighbors of its home turf.

To be very brief, so much toils and blood have been poured into an insurrectional arena, which literally barricaded off its neighboring environs. Is it the case of the classic ‘isolation and then, containment’?

The story is the same in the case of the Mizo insurgency.

Thus looking at the ethnic canvas of the region, we have no other clue than to trace the force, which led the India military establishment to become an active player in the power relations among the numerous ethnic groups, to the area, known as Manipur. It’s a very significant development, which may impact the carefully nurtured image of India as having a lot of restraint in exercising its military power. The deployment of considerable military resources by India to get its desired effects on the inter-ethnic power relations will have unpredictable ripple effects on the already simmering ethnic canvas stretching upto the borders of China and Thailand. Add this to the coming polarity of the world power relations, competition for the leadership of Asian block of the world and the already happening turf war for oil fields between India and China, then we sure have a sure shot recipe for great upheaval in the immediate neighborhood of Manipur.

Now, let me come to my point which is not anything particular about insurgents or insurgency. Actually, I don’t relish talking so much about them.

My point is all these developments show a disturbing dichotomy in our society. At one end of the spectrum is the hyper-active insurgents, who have the organization and the ingenuity to pull off an initiative which may have repercussion in the Asian ( and so, global) power relations. And, at the other end, are the editors, who are supposed to be thought leaders of a society, having not an inkling of such moves and counter-moves played out under their own noses.

It is such a deep dichotomy. It’s extremely disturbing.

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