[The crux of the write-up is rather summed up in its concluding
comment: All in all, the story has changed sharply from ‘what is there
in the accord’ to a ‘is there a Naga accord at all?”]

http://www.thecitizen.in/NewsDetail.aspx?Id=4698&NAGA/ACCORD:/THE/MOUSE/THAT/ROARED

NAGA ACCORD: THE MOUSE THAT ROARED?
SEEMA MUSTAFA. Sunday, August 9, 2015

Naga Accord, or Agreement?

NEW DELHI: The “historic” New Delhi-Naga accord signed by the
government with the National Socialist Council of Nagaland
(Isak-Muivah) in the presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and NSCN
chief Thuingaleng Muivah has run into trouble even before the details
have been disclosed. And government interlocutors, faced with a
building backlash from the north-east, have been virtually forced to
move back a couple of steps in admitting that the ‘accord’ was not a
final document but just a draft agreement at best.

Witness the movement. The week opened with the disruption of
Parliament, a belligerent Congress party after the suspension of its
MPs in the Lok Sabha, followed by the sudden announcement that the
government had reached an accord with the Nagas, thereby ending the
vexed dispute that has been hanging fire since independence. PM Modi
spoke amidst smiles, congratulatory handshakes, of the “historic peace
accord” adding, “"the Nagaland political issue had lingered for six
decades, taking a huge toll on generations of our people." The
impression given to the media in attendance was that the accord being
discussed for years now with the NSCN (IM) had finally been agreed
upon, and as PM Modi tweeted “today, we mark not merely the end of a
problem but the beginning of a new future. #Nagaland
http://nm4.in/1g0sUvP

The news alerted all states in the North East, as a ‘solution’ as per
the NSCN(IM) position lay in sovereignty and the creation of a Greater
Nagaland, carved out of the other states with a substantial Naga
population. Has the NSCN(IM) given up its position? was the question
being asked by the Nagas with the corollary, “If yes, how will they
justify the struggle of the past decades? There was no answer, as
there were no details being given out of the ‘accord’ finalised in
Delhi.

Has the government agreed to the demand for Greater Nagaland, was the
other question creating major concern amongst the states of Assam,
Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh. The reaction built up on speculation,
to the point where the Chief Ministers of these states felt compelled
to rush to Delhi for clarifications. They met PM Modi, Home Minister
Rajnath Singh and were now told that no this was not a final accord,
it was just an agreement, and that before anything is finalised they
would all be consulted. They have returned to their states with the
assurance from the top echelons of the government that they will be
part of the final decision.

This takes the issue back to Nagaland where the reaction to this news
has been extremely adverse. They have taken us for a ride, is the
response of the people according to well informed journalists.

It has been clear from the response that the sticking points, if
indeed ‘resolved’ will create a huge political backlash for one of the
other signatories to the accord. If the government has conceded on the
NSCN-IM’s demand for a Greater Nagaland, the north-eastern states will
react strongly, perhaps violently. This has been the issue all along,
and according to sources, there is no indication that a via media has
been found. The present interlocutors said that the NSCN-IM has agreed
to work with the Indian Constitution, but this then raises question
marks over the compromise on sovereignty and what actually has the
Naga group achieved. Besides from the New Delhi perspective, if the
government has conceded major ground on the issue of sovereignty even
if through a compromise of sorts, this will impact on all future peace
talks with armed insurgents who still operate in the states of the
North East.

>From all the confusion emerging because of the inexplicable decision
to announce an ‘accord’ and then keep it secret is the one question
that those associated with the peace process in the North East and in
New Delhi are asking: what was the need for this sudden announcement
if nothing really is finalised? Conversely, the question is being
reframed to ask: what has been agreed to that they do not want the
rest of the country to know?”

The one answer that many officials conversant with and part of the
peace process in some capacity or the other agreed to was that there
was some level of desperation from the NSCN-IM. Muivah is aware of the
fact that he is not a Naga, and is regarded with some suspicion by
many there. The Naga credibility for the organisation comes from Isak
Chishi Swi who is in the intensive care unit of a hospital in Delhi.
It was thus necessary for the two leaders to get a pact together
during his life, so that it was not rejected altogether by the Nagas
as a Muivah initiative or as a source said, “sell out” even.

PM Modi is thus credited with going ahead on this as he needed
diversionary tactics, being under tremendous pressure in Parliament
from the Opposition. He had clearly hoped that the accord would then
come as a positive in a pond of negatives, and break the cycle of
critical headlines in the media. Interestingly Congress president
Sonia Gandhi questioned the government’s failure to consult the chief
ministers subsequently, saying, "from this I take that this government
is arrogant... their arrogance is even more clear than it was before,
it's an insult to the chief minister, not only to them, but also to
the people of those states and federal structure of our country."

All in all, the story has changed sharply from ‘what is there in the
accord’ to a ‘is there a Naga accord at all?”
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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