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Assam separatist movements

Assam Conflict
Part of Insurgency in North-East India
Assam locator map.svg
State of Assam
Date 1979-present (38 years)
Location Assam
Result Conflict ongoing
Belligerents
 India
 Bhutan (Indo-Bhutanese border)
ULFA
KLNLF
NDFB
Commanders and leaders

India Bikram Singh (31 May 2012-present)


Flag of India.svg Vijay Kumar Singh (31 March 2010 – 31 May 2012, retired)
Paresh Baruah
Arabinda Rajkhowa
Pradip Gogoi
Anup Chetia
Raju Baruah
Chitrabon Hazarika
Ashanta Bagh Phukan
Ramu Mech
Sashadhar Choudhury
Bhimkanta Buragohain
Mithinga Daimary
Pranati Deka
Drishti Rajkhowa
Sabin Boro
Men Sing Takbi
Pradip Terang
Strength
3,000-6,000 (1996)
3,500 (2005)
225 (2008)
Casualties and losses
10,000 killed

India Bikram Singh (31 May 2012-present)

Assam separatist movements are insurgency movements operating in India's oil-rich state of Assam. The conflict started in the 1970s following tension between the local Assamese and the Indian government over alleged neglect and internal colonisation through its federal centre in Delhi. The conflict has resulted in the deaths of 12,000 United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA) members and 18,000 others. The separatist movements initially was supported by the locals in Assam but later lost support because of innocent killings.

Several organisations contribute to the insurgency including the ULFA, the Adivasi National Liberation Army, Karbi Longri N.C. Hills Liberation Front (KLNLF) and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) with ULFA perhaps the largest of these groups, and one of the oldest, having been founded in 1979. The ULFA has attacked Hindi-speaking migrant workers and a movement exists favouring secession from the Republic of India. The alleged neglect and economic exploitation by the Indian state are the main reasons behind the growth of this secessionist movement.

The ULFA seeks to establish a sovereign Assam via armed struggle. The Government of India banned the organization in 1990 and classifies it as a terrorist group, while the US State Department lists it under "Other groups of concern".

Founded at Rang Ghar, a historic structure dating to the Ahom kingdom on April 7, 1979, the ULFA has been the subject of military operations by the Indian Army since 1990, which have continued into the present. In the past two decades some 30,000 people have died in the clash between the rebels and the government. Though separatist sentiment is considered strong, it is disputed if the secessionist movement continues to enjoy popular support. Conversely, assertions of Assamese nationalism are found in Assamese literature and culture. The neglect and exploitation by the Indian state are common refrains in the Assamese-language media with some reports casting the ULFA leaders as saviors.


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