This is sort of continuation of yesterday’s post.
Because, today’s papers carried the press statement of the rebel group owning up the mortar attack on the AR post along the Indo-Burma international boundary. They did not say the attack was launched from the Burmese soil but that has already become a common knowledge here.
Because of this press statement, today becomes a very significant day in the otherwise lethargic, geo-political scenario of this region.
I’ll start by giving you a brief back grounder.
Slowly but steadily, the realization has dawned on the common people here that the rebel groups here had established a working relationships with the Burmese army. There have been not even a write up about it in the newspapers but it has also become a common knowledge all the same. Everybody knows that the rebels can stay and operate near the international border because they are logistically supported from across the border. These have been going on since two or three years back.
But the official confirmation came only some months ago. And it came from Kolkatta. The Times of India carried that innocuous looking news story several months ago. As I remember it now, no other papers carried that story. A senior Army official was addressing the media in Fort William (where the Eastern Command of the Army is headquartered), Kolkatta. He said the Burmese army is giving sanctuary to the rebels, mainly in Sagaing division (ie, the parts of Burma bordering Moreh and other parts along Chandel district), only with the rider that they should not carry out attacks on Indian forces from the Burmese territory.
Note the rider. It is very significant. It’s the minimum acceptable protocol between two neighbouring nations, even in the case of the two being at each other throat.
But today’s press statement shattered that rider to smithereens. It appears that the rider is not in force right now.
What’s happening??
Saturday, July 22, 2006
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