How to fix India's troubled north-east 

              
       By Kaushik Basu 
Professor of economics, Cornell University 

   
  Tucked away between China, Burma and Bangladesh, and linked to the rest of 
India by a sliver of north Bengal that arches over Bangladesh, India's 
north-east is a region of amazing grace - charming people, ancient cultures and 
bountiful nature.                The eight states of the north-east comprise a 
region of diversity

  As any shrewd observer of the world would deduce from this, it is a region of 
contested claims, strife and anarchy.   The eight states of the north-east 
comprise a region of diversity - multiple religions, dialects and tribes, each 
with its distinctive culture and history.   In Mizoram there are the Bnei 
Menashe, who claim to be Jews, descendants of the ancient tribe of Menasseh.   
Then there are groups from as near as Bihar, such as the Adivasis who came to 
work in the Assam tea gardens and stayed on.   Their claim to special rights, 
granted to "original inhabitants", is contested by the local people, who argue 
that they lost that status by their move, for they are not original to Assam.   
                 If we do not act soon, there is every possibility that the 
region will erupt into internecine warfare of a kind not seen in India before 


    

  
  

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  Some of these contests acquire a farcical dimension, such as when China 
welcomed but refused to give visas to some delegates from Arunachal Pradesh on 
the grounds that China considered parts of that state to be Chinese.   India 
meanwhile insisted that China must insist on visas.   Copying Kapuscinski   Of 
all the states of this region, the most troubled is Manipur.   I flew into 
Imphal, Manipur's capital, by a short Indigo flight from Guwahati on the 
morning of 8 January.   Ryszard Kapuscinski is known to be the great travel 
writer of our times, but he was more than that.   He was a philosopher, an 
astute and compassionate observer of the human condition.                There 
are few signs of the famous Indian economic boom here

When Kapuscinski journeyed to remote lands, he carried with him the greatest 
travel book of antiquity, Herodotus' Histories.   Out of this experience came 
his own masterpiece, Travels with Herodotus. I am doing what Kapuscinski did, 
but at one remove - I am travelling with his book.   I arrive in Imphal with a 
blinding headache and flop down in bed in my artlessly large room in Hotel 
Nirmala. I try to read, but fall asleep.   When I wake up, the winter sun is 
streaming in through my open windows.   From my balcony I can see the chaos of 
Thangal Bazar - tarless streets, unkempt roof-tops, half-cemented buildings, 
the anarchy of low-hanging electric wires criss-crossing in different 
directions and tapped from below by small shops with rusty tin roofs.   
Collapsing economy   The flashes of colour come from the women, in their 
stunning phaneks - sarong like wrap-arounds - and shawls. They seem to be 
endowed with an effortless grace.   There are few signs of the famous Indian
 economic boom here.   This is a region of a collapsing economy, huge 
unemployment, and interrupted power supply. I was assured that at most times it 
was safe to touch those exposed wires.   At night I go for dinner to the home 
of an old Manipuri friend.                  Insurgent groups routinely extort 
money in Manipur

  It is a picturesque three-hundred year old house, with a quaint courtyard, 
mysterious stairways, muslin curtains and melodious wooden floors.   To get 
there one has to drive over a rock-strewn and dug-up road. It has been under 
repair for four years. When we reach the house, there is a power outage and we 
sit by lanterns and candles.   On the way back there is not a soul in the 
streets - life is too insecure for that - and my hotel has pulled down shutters 
from the ceiling which are bolted to the floor with padlocks.   The people of 
the north-east have high human capital - Mizoram's literacy rate is second only 
to the state of Kerala's. And it has a history that goes back 2,000 years.   
Ratan Thiyam's Manipuri theatre is famous internationally.   An 11-year old 
boy, Honey Kenao, plays the tabla like a grand master. He is a prodigy - we 
will without doubt see more of him.   At various institutes and universities 
where I speak, the discussion is lively and engaged.   Threat
 of war   But beneath this, the region is simmering.                The vast 
human potential of this region risks being wasted

  Insurgent groups routinely extort money from bureaucrats, shopkeepers and 
professors. Kidnappings are frequent.     Trucks on highways are often stopped 
by competing local powers and either have their cargo confiscated or are 
allowed to pass after paying a "tax".   Hardly any new industry worth its name 
is moving into the region.   There are three immediate measures that the Indian 
government needs to take.       
   Improve law and order   India has to clamp down on extortion and make it 
clear that the collection of taxes and exertion of force is a prerogative of 
government. As Max Weber had reminded us, the state must have a "monopoly of 
violence" - meaning, if anybody has the right to use force, it is the state.    
 


  
   Invest in infrastructure   Roads, railways, financial services and 
electricity provision all need more money and all lag behind other points of 
India.   

  
   Improve interaction   If the region remains cut off from the rest of India, 
there is every possibility that it will erupt into internecine warfare of a 
kind not seen in India before. And that will be extremely unfortunate for a 
region that has so much potential. 

  http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7232114.stm
   
   













































       
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