Is it because that "Ittefaq" is a Bangladeshi newspaper and therefore it fails 
to mention that they are harbouring Paresh Barua and co.

Rgds,
Sandip


----- Original Message ----
From: KOUSHIK HAZARIKA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, January 27, 2007 2:15:40 AM
Subject: [asom] Asom reeling under bloodbaths


Asom reeling under bloodbaths
By Nava Thakuria
Fri, 19 Jan 2007, 08:34:00
http://nation. ittefaq.com/ artman/publish/ article_33435. shtml
The new year 2007 brought sad news for the people of Asom in the
first week itself. The Northeast Indian state of Asom received
international media headlines for a series of bloodbaths carried out
by the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA). The armed group,
which is fighting New Delhi for an Independent Asom (out of India)
since 1979 went on rampage to kill nearly 70 people in three days.
The carnage launched on January 6 soon after the dusk and continued
for many successive days simultaneously in different parts of the
locality to shake the nation's conscience. The gun totting ULFA
cadres targeted the poor unarmed victims from zero range and shot at
them to death. The mayhem was followed by two explosions in
Guwahati, where no causality was reported.

The massacre invited spontaneous reaction and grave concern from
various levels cutting across the society. The President Dr A.P.J.
Abdul Kalam and the Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh were quick to
condemn the massacres terming it as an act of cowardice. Then strong
reaction came from the UPA chief Sonia Gandhi and it followed the
outburst of anguish from various political party leaders. The Union
Home Minister Shivraj Patil to Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar and
the NCP leader (also former Loka Sabha speaker) P.A. Sangma to Asom
chief minister Tarun Gogoi everyone expressed grave concern at the
carnages. The Union Defence Minister A.K. Antony to the Minister of
State for Home Sriprakash Jaisawl and the Railway Minister (also RJD
chief ) Lalu Prasad Yadav to JD (U) leader George Fernandez made it
possible to visit the locations and met the victim families.

Condemnation came from all political parties of Asom and also
organizations, which are usually sympathizers to ULFA like Manab
Adhikar Sangram Samiti (MASS) and Peoples Committee for Peace
Initiatives of Asom (PCPI). Powerful students body, All Assam
Students Union (AASU) too came on heavily on the killing of common
people in the state. The New Delhi-based Asian Centre for Human
Rights (ACHR) termed the killing of those labourers as 'barbaric
acts of terrorism'. The Army, paramilitary forces and Asom police
had launched a massive counter insurgency operation in Asom and its
adjacent state of Arunachal Pradesh, where from the ULFA militants
suspectedly carried out those gory massacres.

But was the carnage a prompt reaction to an opinion poll that
negates that negates the demand of an Independent Asom by ULFA? The
January 6 morning witnessed a public meeting in Guwahati to disclose
the outcome of the opinion poll, where nearly 96 per cent people of
the state expressed big No for ULFA's core demand of a sovereign
state out of India. The Guwahati meeting at the District library
auditorium also heard many speakers refuting ULFA for their
impractical design of arm struggle that only misguides 26 million
people of Asom. The opinion poll, conducted by Assam Public Works, a
voluntary organization comprising family member and relatives of
ULFA cadres was as a signature campaign to know whether the people
of the state supported the primary demand of ULFA. All total 25,
64,128 people (from various districts of Dhemaji, Lakhimpur,
Sonitpur, Darang, Kamrup, Barpeta , Bongaigaon, Goalpara and Dhubri)
participated in the survey, out of them 24, 49,740 rejected the
sovereignty demand by the outfit.

Till the afternoon, it was big news for the reporters of morning
dailies, as the opinion poll was first of its kind in Northeast
India. But more cruel news waiting for them, that poured in the
evening from upper Asom, where ULFA militants went on killing spree
to take the lives of nearly 50 people in single night. The upper
Asom districts namely Dibrugarh, Tinchukia, Dhemaji, Sivsagar,
Golaghat emerged as theaters for the dances of deaths, where most of
the victims were identified as Hindi speaking milk vendors, workers
in brick kilns and daily wage earners. They were targeted by ULFA
militants at point blank ranges in most of the events (a section of
local newspapers received messages from a battalion of the outfit
informing their acceptance of responsibility for the incidents).

Now the question that arises was ULFA leaders too panic to face the
result of the opinion poll. The ULFA chief Arabinda Rajkhowa termed
it as a task of Research and Analysis Wing (of India), but even then
the outfit exposed its panicky while dealing with the outcome.

The armed group might succeeded in sabotaging the prime news space
deserved by the opinion poll that reflected their eroding public
support (the editorial comments of the dailies of Asom were however
very much critical to ULFA's misdeeds), but it lost the confidence
of the general public to a greater extent. For a huge section of
indigenous Asomiya populace, ULFA would never indulge in mass
killing, but the recent slaughtering in the state tarnished the
image of the outfit as cruel as any other terrorist organizations.
And the loss of credibility will definitely force the ULFA leaders
to succumb to the worsening situation in the coming days.
KOUSHIK HAZARIKA
http://www.asom. co.nr

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