http://telegraphindia.com/1050908/asp/others/print.html

Poster crusade to foil bandh 
A STAFF REPORTER 
  
School students read a poster opposing the 12-hour call by Ulfa.
Picture by S.H. Patgiri
Sept. 7: The Assam Public Works Ulfa Pariyal Committee, a
non-government organisation, has embarked on a massive poster campaign
in the city, making a fervent appeal to the people to boycott the
12-hour bandh call given by the outfit tomorrow.

The government has also mounted a massive security drive to foil any
sabotage attempt by the Ulfa.

The posters, that have come up all over the city, has generated a lot
of curiosity, since this is the first time that an NGO has come
forward to launch a campaign against a bandh called by a militant
outfit.

The posters, written in Assamese, were stuck on almost all the city
buses plying on the roads.

The committee, through the posters, made an appeal to people to not
the support the bandh as "it was tantamount to encouraging terrorism
and bloodshed in the state".

The Ulfa has called the bandh to protest the death of its senior
leader, Robin Handique, in Tezpur civil hospital while in judicial
custody. Ulfa chairman, Arabinda Rajkhowa, has even claimed that
Handique died due to "poisoning by the government in a pre-planned
manner".

The posters, however, said that " Handique was a terrorist and there
cannot be any justification for calling a bandh to protest the death
of a terrorist". "Handique was no saint, he was a militant. The Ulfa
may hold the government responsible for his death, but a bandh
affecting lakhs of people in the state is unjustified," Abhijit Sarma,
director of the committee, said in a statement issued here last
evening.

The committee also questioned whether an organisation like the Ulfa,
which believes in armed and violent struggle, has any moral right to
call a bandh, which is a democratic method of protest. The NGO
requested the people to oppose the bandh, as it will badly affect the
daily wage earners. "The Ulfa has called the bandh to protest the
death of its leader, but who will call a bandh for so many people
killed in militant attacks over the years?" stated a poster.

The committee dubbed Ulfa chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa a traitor. 

The posters said a bandh called by a democratic organisation may have
some justification, but a bandh called by an armed militant group
cannot be justified at any cost.

Manab Adhikar Sangram Samity (MASS), a human rights group, criticised
the committee for its campaign.

The chief adviser of MASS, Lachit Bordoloi, said that such a campaign
would surely negate all efforts by the government to bring the
militant outfit to the negotiation table.

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