What I’m going to say right now might seem to be sensational because there is likelihood that it may be termed as outlandish or an act of jumping to conclusion. I’ll say it anyway because there is enough solid trend to indicate it’s going towards what you think ‘sensational’.
Well, normally, it should sound like just a routine. I’m referring to the resolution of Nagaland unit of the Indian National Congress demanding the bringing together of all Naga inhabited areas under one administrative set up. But if we read it together with the recent extension of ceasefire agreement between the NSCN(IM) and the Government of India for ‘indefinite period of time’, it’s not routine.
To my mind, it’s now going beyond the simple re-demarcation of boundary lines among various neighbouring States.
Now, Nagas, at least the present leadership, seem to think that it is the ‘national interest’ of the Naga to befriend the Government of India. It’s 180 degrees reversal of what constitutes the ‘national interest’ of the Nagas because they had been fighting a tenacious guerilla war with the Government of India, terming them as their enemy no 1, for the last 50-60 years . Symbolically, it’s like saying it’s now in the ‘national interest’ of the Nagas to go West whereas it was always in their ‘natioinal interest’ to go East only some years back.
Why this drastic change in their perceptions of what constitute their ‘national interest’?
In symbolic terms, can we look at the history of Britain’s ‘national interest’ vis a vis France and vice versa? History is replete with instances of Britain’s ‘national interest’ going 180 degrees reversal if it is opportune time to drag down France. It’s all the same case with France.
So, the big question is here.
Is the Naga’s 180 degrees reversal of what they perceive to be ‘national interest’ meant to drag down some peers in the neighbourhood, like the cases of Britain vs France in past histories?
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
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