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August
28, 2001
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Pushing
the Naga peace process forwards
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Muivah
is a safe bet
IF
it is transparency to which the National Democratic Alliance (NDA)
government is sworn, it should have made public the joint statement
signed between former home secretary K. Padmanabhaiah on its behalf
and Isak Muivah, secretary of the underground Naga outfit, National
Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN). The statement should have
been placed before Parliament by now because it was signed on June
14, 2001. I reproduce it below because it can have a serious impact
on the Indian polity.
Joint
statement: In continuation of the ongoing peace process, a meeting
was held on 13 and 14 June 2001, in Bangkok between the representatives
of the Government of India and the NSCN and the following are mutually
agreed upon:
1.
The cease-fire agreement is between the Government of India and
the NSCN as two entities without territorial limits.
2.
Both the parties would abide by the ground rules as revised on 13
January 2001, both in letter and in spirit.
3.
It is agreed to further extend the ceasefire for a period of one
year with effect from 1 August 2001.
4.
The Government of India and the NSCN agreed to proceed with the
peace process on substantive issues to bring about a lasting political
solution to the issue. It is recognised that there is a need for
mutual trust and respect.
5.
The next round of talks would be held in the last week of August
2001.
The
word, ‘entities,’ says more than what is required. Entity is something
that has a real and separate existence. In other words, the Government
of India has put itself and the NSCN on an equal footing. Is this
what New Delhi wanted to convey? When Deve Gowda fulfilled Muivah’s
precondition that India’s prime minister should meet the underground
leader in a foreign country to kick off the talks, the PM accepted
their demand. The NDA government followed the same road and had
its meetings with Muivah in Bangkok and Amsterdam. The NDA also
agreed to the earlier government’s formulation that the ceasefire
in Nagaland would extend to the Greater Nagaland, which the underground
Nagas claimed as their territory. The phrase, “without territorial
limits” is New Delhi’s.
It
cannot blame it on anybody else, although it can justifiably say
that it got the consent of the chief ministers of the states to
which the ceasefire was extended. Padmanabhiah, as he has explained
in a press interview, is only a communicator. He does not go beyond
his brief. In fact, Muivah’s complaint is that Padmanabhiah acts
like a post office, without giving any interpretation, additional
information, much less any suggestion. It is a frustrating monologue,
says Muivah. True, New Delhi has deleted three words, “without territorial
limits” from the joint statement. Muivah is playing it safe and
says the ceasefire is still alive. But he is looking for some other
words to delineate Greater Nagaland. His faith in New Delhi is shaken
but he wants to go on because he expects to have talks on “substantive
issues.”
The
question New Delhi has to ask itself is how far it is willing to
go. The late Anjami Zapu Phizo wanted independence and even Muivah
has reminded New Delhi of Mahatma Gandhi’s assurance that the Nagas
could stay separate if they so desired. Still, the fact remains
that there has been a change of heart on the part of the Nagas in
the last few years. Phizo wanted a status within India. Before his
death in London in 1990, the year I was India’s high commissioner
there, his associate, Khodao-Yanthan, met me. He said that Phizo
had changed and wanted to settle the Nagaland question with Indian
leaders. Khodao-Yanthan was insistent on describing his nationality
as “Naga” in the visa application. The consular section was inclined
to reject it on the ground that India did not recognise Nagaland
as a separate nation. I intervened. I thought it was important that
he visit India and meet political leaders. After living in London
for three decades, he had lost touch with the reality; he might
begin to face facts if he returned. By the time he reached Delhi,
the VP Singh government had fallen. I wondered if New Delhi’s policy
on the Northeast has been realistic.
Jawaharlal
Nehru kept the area separate and secluded so as to preserve the
culture of the people living there. The result was that it was cut
off from the mainstream, affecting not only emotional integration
but economic and social development as well. The youths in particular,
felt alienated and many had taken to the gun in frustration.
The
joint statement has described the problem as “political.” All prime
ministers and chiefs of army staff in the past have acknowledged
this. The late Jayaprakash Narayan, who had a serious go at the
problem, said once in reply to a question that the problem was “purely
and simply political” and that Indian forces should go away right
now.
The
proposal of former Speaker PA Sangma being the interlocutor has,
therefore, not been liked by the underground Nagas. He has said
again and again that the problem is that of law and order. It may
be in certain ways after violence has erupted. But that is the fallout,
not the cause.
When
even after the deletion of words, “without territorial limits,”
Muivah is keen on talks, New Delhi should push the process forward
and discuss the instruments of governance to come to grips with
the problem. He has said in an interview at Amsterdam: “We will
not do anything that will be detrimental to India’s interests.”
Perhaps the time has come to discuss the specifics. Article 370
can pave the path to a solution: a special status to Nagaland within
the Indian Union. Muivah is said to be in favour of New Delhi handling
the currency as it does in the case of other states. For some reason
he believes that if Nagaland does not have a semblance of foreign
affairs and defence, the underground Nagas will not be satisfied.
After
all, they have defied New Delhi for the last five decades for total
independence. There are 3,000 Naga youths, equipped with the latest
weapons. Once the question is settled, there should be no problem
in absorbing them in India’s armed forces. Muivah should have no
fears on that score.
The
underground Nagas will have to try and accommodate themselves in
a pluralistic society. When Muivah can accept an Indian passport
to travel to Amsterdam, he should be less squeamish in talking about
a status within the Indian Union. It is no secret that Pakistan
had offered him a passport but he preferred India’s. Perhaps New
Delhi can appoint one more person as interlocutor, after talking
to Muivah so that he is acceptable to him. It will help accelerate
the process of settlement.
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