Can there be a better examples for others to emulate?

Yes, C'da.. sometimes it seems it does, doesn't it?

But, look at the ULFA. They have been violent for the last .. what 27 years?


What has it got them or what has it got its victims? What has Assam got in
return?

Without talking about the victims (not diminishing their plight here),
thanks to the ULFA, Assam today is known for
ULFA, Viollence, bandhs etc first.

The state (right or wrong) has to constantly fight this image off to others
and look for ways to tell people its "safe" to visit and invest in Assam.
A spate of bombings in Guwahati, killing innocent people has managed to keep
the local people in fear, but "kill" any immediate chance for investments in
the state.  That is great going for ULFA , which of course, has Assam
intesests in its heart!

And so, the ULFA example is probably the worst example for any group to
emulate.
Why? Because, even in India, with all the corruption, the political mileage
that the powers to be may get, what they cannot give up or give in to is
something that is "the Impossible".

So, in the ULFA case, the impossible is the word *sovereignty.*
Take that OFF the table, then maybe even the ULFA violence may still have
some positive results. But keep that word in and don't budge, India or any
political administration in India will never be able to give in.

And remember, C'da (you heard it here first) :) - IMHO this window for
negotiations is closing in really fast. India is a country with huge
resources, and often with a lot of patience.  The tide seems to have turned
in Assam, it won't be long for New Delhi to see an opening.

--Ram



**


On 6/2/07, Chan Mahanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 *NOW they are talking!*


Can there be a better examples for others to emulate?


cm




















Raje, Gujjars hold fourth round of talks
2 Jun, 2007 l 1727 hrs ISTlIANS

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JAIPUR: Amid comparative calm in Rajasthan after four days, Chief Minister
Vasundhara Raje and Gujjar leaders met on Saturday afternoon for the fourth
round of talks over the latter's demand for tribal status that has sparked
widespread violence.

At the talks, held at the chief ministers' residence, Vasundhara Raje led
the government team of ministers and officials while the Gujjar community
was represented by over 10 leaders.

Talks started on a positive note, said official sources, adding that there
was a hope of ending the crisis soon.

As all eyes were fixed on the outcome of the talks, Rajasthan remained
calm except for reports of burning of a police post in Tonk district.

The trouble started Tuesday when a road blockade announced by the Gujjars
to press for their demand for Scheduled Tribe status took a violent turn
during which 14 people were killed in clashes between agitators and police.

"No major incidence of violence was reported from any part of the state
since Friday evening, after four days of trouble in which some 25 people
were killed in police firing and group clashes," a senior police official
said.

"We are hopeful of a positive outcome from the final round of talks with
the chief minister," Gujjar leader Roop Singh said before going for parleys.

"This would be the final round of talks. If nothing comes out of this, the
consequences will be the sole responsibility of the government," he added.

The previous round of talks on Friday night between the government and the
representatives of the Gujjar Sangharsh Committee, the body spearheading the
community's campaign, ended inconclusively.

An ugly caste conflict looms large in Rajasthan with Gujjars and Meenas
clashing over the quota pie given to Scheduled Tribes. The Meena community
is the dominant Scheduled Tribe community in the state.

On Friday, five people were killed and 20 injured in clashes between the
two groups in Rajasthan's Dausa and Karauli districts, taking the death toll
to 25 since the Gujjar fury erupted May 29, officials said.

The trouble started Friday when the Meenas tried to remove roadblocks put
up by the Gujjars in Dausa. Intervention by the police and army averted
further clashes between the two communities.

The Gujjar movement demanding tribal status, which they feel will improve
their economic status, has paralysed rail and road traffic in many parts of
Rajasthan.

Thousands have been stranded at railway stations and bus depots as the
Gujjars continue to block highways leading to Agra, New Delhi and Madhya
Pradesh.

But the government said the Jaipur-Delhi highway had been cleared but
people are not willing to take the highway. The railways plan to run a few
trains on the Bharatpur and Jaipur sectors on Saturday.

The Rajasthan administration has also decided to evacuate over 5,000
pilgrims stranded in Mehendipur, on the Jaipur-Agra highway, with the help
of the Army.

"We are taking steps to clear the traffic jams on various highways. We
have also started running some buses on the Jaipur-Delhi route," Rajasthan
Transport Minister Younis Khan said.

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