In a related matter with my last post, the kidnapped candidate of the Tamenglong Assembly Constituency, announced the withdrawal of his candidature from the elections as soon as he was released from the custody of the NSCN(IM). It shows that the rebel outfit is ready to play hardball in the face of the emerging resistance to its dictates in the district of Tamenglong.
In Chandel district, which borders Burma, there was also a protest rally by the women folks against the interference in the elections.
In the light of these emerging resistances to its dictates, it is indeed interesting that Mr Isaac Swu and Mr Thui-ngaleng Muivah chose to issue a joint press statement. They said that they are working for a greater Nagaland and talks with New Delhi pursuing that goal should start as soon as the elections conclude in Manipur.
>> We have to note here that it is a joint press statement. Here, we should remember that the two leaders arrived in India separately. Mr Muivah flew in from Amsterdam. Mr Swu, in sharp contrast, surfaced somewhere in Assam ( ostensibly from Bangladesh, jumping all legal processes) and traveled to Dimapur by road. And, a few months earlier, Mr Swu publicly called for a third party, preferably UN, mediation in the ongoing talks.
So, the friction between the two leaders is now public.
>> There is the change in vocabulary. They are using ‘Nagaland’ instead of ‘Nagalim’—greater Nagaland to be exact. They are dropping the pretence of not provoking the neighbouring States in asking for a greater Nagaland.
So, it’s a sort of coming to the moment of truth for them—they have to snatch the ‘greater Nagaland’ overcoming all the fierce resistances from the neighbouring Sates.
After noting these two points, we shall also not fail to note the timing of the joint press statement. It is being targeted to the voters in Tamenglong and Chandel districts who go to the polls on the 23rd. Sensing emergence of resistance to their leadership, they are in effect trying to put across the message that if the voters vote for the NSCN(IM)-sponsored candidates, they would be voting for a greater Nagaland. They are saying—‘Fall in line’.
Last but not the least, it also shows that Mr Muivah is now under tremendous pressure to come up with something tangible from the 9 years old talks.
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
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