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PM may find ennui persisting in N-E
Samudra Gupta Kashyap
GUWAHATI, May 17: The North-East states have nothing to look forward to
during Prime Minister I K Gujral's proposed five-day tour of the area
beginning next Monday.
Gujral, who arrives at Dibrugarh on Monday, will inaugurate the Railways'
broad-gauge extension to the easternmost town of the railway network
there.
He will then return to Guwahati, where he will have routine meetings with
delegations of citizens and political parties.
His predecessor H D Deve Gowda's ambitious and much-hyped Rs 6,100-crore
economic package for the northeastern region, which was announced during his
visit in October last, has not made any progress.
According to reports, even the special monitoring cell for the package, set
up in the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) is not functioning properly. This
has been blamed on the fact that most of the Centre's departments and
ministries are yet to actually set up their respective `North-east cells' so
far.
Earlier, Gowda had to issue repeated instructions to the ministries due to
the latter's reluctance to abide by his announcement that 10 per cent of
their annual funds should be allocated to the North-East.
That the implementation of the Rs 6,100-crore economic package had not
gathered momentum was evident from the fact that both the Assam Chief
Minister Prafulla Kumar Mahanta and his Tripura counterpart Dasarath Deb had
to remind Gujral to set up a special monitoring cell in the PMO to ensure
implementation of the package.
Soon after Gujral announced his intention to tour the northeastern region,
Mahanta submitted a memorandum to him last week while Deb sent a letter to
the Prime Minister on Tuesday, stressing the need for a monitoring cell.
On the insurgency front also, Gujral does not appear to have much to say, as
his predecessor's open invitation to the armed rebels for a dialogue has not
evoked much response.
While the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (I-M) leaders Thingleuing
Muivah and Issak Chisi Swu met Gowda at Davos in February, the ULFA leaders
have refused to come for negotiations unless the issue of sovereignty
figures on the agenda.
The suggestion of a high-level commission headed by Planning Commission
member S P Shukla for allocation of Rs 25,000 crore for infra-structural
facilities in the backward northeastern regions is also pending
implementation.
Meanwhile, the All Assam Students' Union (AASU) has already described the
Prime Minister's proposed visit to the region as ``fruitless''.
The AASU has pointed out that it was futile to announce economic packages
without first tackling the infiltration problem effectively. The student
body has also criticised the continued deployment of the Army. They have
demanded that the Centre come up with practical solutions to remove the
sense of deprivation and neglect among the northeastern people instead.
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