The Naga peace process faces another collapse
By: Singh, Kumar Sanjay
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Material type:
BookPublisher: The Caravan Description: Aug, 2021: p.20-24.
In:
The CaravanSummary: After many twists and turns, efforts to reignite the Naga peace process are once again underway. On 11 June, the Nagaland government issued a notification declaring the constitution of a parliamentary committee—including all 60 members of the state assembly and the state’s two MPs—tasked with playing the role of a facilitator in the thorny, decades-old negotiations. At their first meeting in Dimapur, in July, members of the core committee appealed to Naga rebel groups and the centre to “resume Peace Talks” by “setting aside pre-conditions” with the aim of finding “a political solution at earliest time possible.” One of the core contentions has been the demand for a separate Naga flag and constitution, led largely by the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah). The NSCN(I-M), one of the largest groups in the negotiations, fought the Indian government in an attempt to establish a sovereign state until a ceasefire was announced in 1997. – Reproduced
| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Articles
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | Aug, 2021: p.20-24 | Available | AR125973 |
After many twists and turns, efforts to reignite the Naga peace process are once again underway. On 11 June, the Nagaland government issued a notification declaring the constitution of a parliamentary committee—including all 60 members of the state assembly and the state’s two MPs—tasked with playing the role of a facilitator in the thorny, decades-old negotiations. At their first meeting in Dimapur, in July, members of the core committee appealed to Naga rebel groups and the centre to “resume Peace Talks” by “setting aside pre-conditions” with the aim of finding “a political solution at earliest time possible.” One of the core contentions has been the demand for a separate Naga flag and constitution, led largely by the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah). The NSCN(I-M), one of the largest groups in the negotiations, fought the Indian government in an attempt to establish a sovereign state until a ceasefire was announced in 1997. – Reproduced


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