In what is being touted as a significant milestone in Assam's journey towards peace and development, there has been a 'landmark resolution to the ULFA insurgency problem of Assam.'?
The Centre, the Assam government and a key faction of Assam¡¯s oldest insurgent group signed a tripartite peace agreement on 29 December.?But a major extremist faction of the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), led by Paresh barua, has stayed away from the agreement.?
Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma said, "Except one person (Paresh Baruah) who is leading the anti-talks faction of ULFA, all the founding members of the outfit were here in Delhi today... They have assured us that ULFA will be disbanded, they will leave the designated camps where they were staying (after coming forward for talks in 2011), they will deposit their arms and 726 cadres will join the mainstream."?
On Saturday, 30 December, Paresh Barua who is the leader of the ULFA (independent) said, "The outcome of the talks is zero. We are not dismayed, discouraged or surprised by this. We don¡¯t feel like commenting on it. For me the deal is less descriptive and more ruminative."?
The faction of ULFA led by Arabinda Rajkhowa signed a peace pact with the Centre and the Assam government, agreeing to shun violence, surrender all arms and disband the organisation.?
These are the significant points that the agreement includes:?
The ULFA was set up in 1979 as an armed separatist outfit with the demand for a "sovereign Assam" consisting of indigenous Assamese people. It began as an ¡°anti-foreigner¡± agitation against the influx of undocumented immigrants from Bangladesh.?
By the 1980s, ULFA had launched armed operations and by the 1990s, it was considered one of the deadliest outfits.?
The Rajkhowa-led faction joined peace talks with the government in 2011, while the hardline Paresh Baruah faction of the ULFA is anti-talks.? ?
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