Moronic,Simplistic and Babu thinks he can fool all the people all the time.

I told the same to  MMS  " Let go of Assam to its original status-and we will help you to become a great Nation. Try to cling on -you yourself will collapse" .

mm


From:  "Bartta Bistar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:  AssamNet <[email protected]>
Subject:  [Assam] Moronic suggestion for the ULFA aping Tankhul Muivah by this Baboo. India must brush away the ideation of a political solution aiming to keep Assam inside India. Declare today Assam’s sovereignty restoration resolve and see the result, India.
Date:  Fri, 9 Feb 2007 07:00:36 +0000

BATTLE GAMES

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070208/asp/opinion/story_7362756.asp

Games should make more sense to people anywhere than guns and

grenades. In Assam, however, the forthcoming National Games were not to be just
big-time entertainment. For the terror-struck state, the event could have been
a matter of life and death. The cloud over the event has melted following the
assurance by the United Liberation Front of Asom that it would not "interfere"
with it. The chief minister, Mr Tarun Gogoi, can justifiably feel somewhat
relaxed. But he needs to look beyond the games and think of a strategy to
tackle the Ulfa's challenge. It would be naïve to see the militants' assurance
as a sign of a change of heart. By promising not to disrupt the games, they are
obviously hoping to win back some popular support for their movement. The
Ulfa's capacity to blast bombs and kill people is no measure of its popularity
among the common Assamese. If there were any doubts on this score, a recent
survey of public opinion on the Ulfa has decidedly removed them. Militants in
the North-east are known to step up their violence in order to make up for
receding public support.

The other motive behind the Ulfa's conciliatory move should also

be pretty obvious. It wants New Delhi and Dispur to respond to the gesture by
suspending the counter-insurgency operations and resuming the stalled peace
process. Dialogue and persuasion must eventually play the bigger role in
resolving the crisis in Assam. But the Ulfa is largely to blame for the failure
of the last round of peace talks. And once the talks failed, it made things far
worse by triggering another spell of senseless violence. It would, therefore,
be a mistake for the government to suspend the army's operations in Assam. Such
a strategy failed during the "temporary ceasefire" last year, and may fail
again if the Ulfa's motives are not properly understood. The insurgents must
not be given the impression that they can blackmail the state with blood and
terror. Neither the Centre nor the state government can afford to think of a
purely military or administrative answer to the Assamese militancy. As with the
Naga insurgency, the ultimate solution in Assam has to be political. But,
unlike the leaders of the Naga movement, the Assamese rebels have shown little
interest in a political resolution of the conflict. Terror, to them, has become
its own justification. It is worse than a battle of attrition; the Ulfa's game
is clearly a betrayal of the people's hope for peace.



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