Assam groups push for Assamese as official language

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 By IANS

*Tuesday October 16, 02:03 PM*

Guwahati, Oct 16 (IANS) Literary and student groups in Assam have embarked
on a campaign to force the state government to use Assamese as the official
language by implementing a legislation to that effect which was enacted
nearly five decades ago, movement leaders said Tuesday.

'In 1960 itself the state passed the Official Language Act. It is
unfortunate that governments in Assam have not taken concrete measures to
implement the legislation. We are now bent on ensuring that Assamese is
actually used as the state's official language,' Kanak Sen Deka, president
of the Asom Sahitya Sabha (ASS) - Assam's highest socio-literary body - told
IANS.

On Monday, Deka, accompanied by dozens of ASS members, toured eastern Assam
districts of Jorhat, Sivasagar, Dibrugarh and Tinsukia, meeting the district
magistrates at their respective offices and making the case for using
Assamese in all official documentation and correspondences.

'Our interaction with the district magistrates has been good. Most of them
assured me that they would try their best in enforcing the legislation,'
Deka said.

The ASS has made it clear, however, that it was not against any language as
such.

'We are not opposed to the English language or English as a medium of
instruction in some schools, for instance. But, Assamese, which is Assam's
official language, must be patronised,' Deka said.

He said the ASS has urged Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on a number of
occasions to take the initiative in implementing the use of Assamese as the
official language. 'But no government seems to be actually carrying out what
has been accepted and made legally binding 47 years ago,' Deka said.

The Official Language Act provided for the use of Bengali as associate
official language in the Bengali-dominated southern Assam districts of
Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi and Bodo in the Bodo-majority districts in
western and northern Assam. In the southern districts, Bengali is often used
along with English in government offices.

On Monday, another influential organisation in the State, the All Assam
Students' Union (AASU), urged Bodo leaders running the autonomous Bodoland
Territorial Council (BTC) to use Assamese as the official language along
with the commonly used Bodo language in the area.

A 20-member AASU delegation led by its president Shankar Prasad Rai made
this appeal during a meeting with BTC chief Hagrama Mahilary in Guwahati.
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