Centre initiates dialogue with Meghalaya militant groups

Shillong, Mar 25 (ANI): Former Intelligence Bureau (IB) chief P C Haldar who was nominated by the Centre to hold talks with militant groups in Meghalaya has initiated a political dialogue with the Achik National Volunteers Council (ANVC).

The ANVC is demanding for creation of separate Garo Territorial Council.

The people of Meghalaya are watching the talks with eagerness, as the success of talks will ensure peace and progress in the state.

The representatives of the outfit ANVC, a Garo rebel group demanding autonomy, held the first round of talks with the Centre’s interlocutor Pradyot Chandra Haldar in Shillong.

The group had entered into a tripartite ceasefire with the Union and the State Governments on July 23, 2004.

As the ceasefire agreement between the government and the ANVC ends on March 31, the group recently threatened to break the truce.

Though the ceasefire extension was not discussed in Shillong, the meeting was termed as “cordial” from both the sides.

“Today, regarding the discussion on our demands, it was very encouraging but we feel it should go ahead. We should have a kind of assurance from the government that our demands are going to be looked into seriously,” said

Torik Jangning Marak, ANVC spokesperson.

“I had talked with the ANVC representatives. We had detailed discussion (and it was) very fruitful, very useful. We will continue with the discussion further,” said P C Haldar, Centre’s interlocutor.

The ANVC was formed in December 1995 and was proscribed on November 16, 2000.

In September 2009, the group in a meeting with officials from Union Home ministry, decided to give up its demand for a separate state for Garos.

Instead it put forward the demand for the creation of Garoland Autonomous Council, an autonomous body, for all the three districts of Garo Hills – East, West and South – for effective governance.(ANI)

Political dialogue gets going with Meghalaya rebels

Shillong, March 16 (IANS) The central government Tuesday set the ball rolling for political negotiations with Achik National Volunteer Council (ANVC), a powerful rebel group in Meghalaya, to ensure lasting peace in the Garo Hills.

‘Today, we have started a political dialogue with the ANVC and discussions on their demand for creation of an autonomous council will continue,’ New Delhi’s pointsman and former Intelligence Bureau (IB) chief Pradyot Chandra Haldar told journalists here.

ANVC, a tribal Garo rebel group operating in Meghalaya’s Garo Hills region, is fighting for creation of Garoland Territorial Council. It had entered into a tripartite ceasefire with the central and the Meghalaya governments July 23, 2004.

The outfit had threatened to pull out of the agreement and return to armed struggle if the government failed to come forward with an ‘acceptable solution’ to its demands.

‘Today, we have aired our political demands before Haldar and we have left it to the government to decide on it,’ ANVC spokesman Arist Sangma told IANS.

‘We have scaled down our demand from separate statehood to an autonomous council in line of Bodoland Territorial Council in Assam in the larger interests of our people,’ he said, expressing hope that the government would concede the group’s demand to ensure lasting peace and development in Garo Hills region.

However, Tuesday’s meeting between Haldar and the ANVC did not touch on extension of the ceasefire, which is due to expire March 31.

‘Since we discussed mainly about the political issues of ANVC, the ceasefire extension will be discussed in upcoming joint monitoring group meeting scheduled before March 31,’ Haldar said.

Haldar, who arrived in Shillong Monday, also held meetings with Chief Minister D.D. Lapang, Deputy Chief Minister Mukul M.Sangma and other senior government officials.

Meghalaya has asked the central government not to waste time and reach an ‘acceptable tripartite accord’ with the ANVC for lasting peace in the Garo Hills.

Lapang is leaving for New Delhi to meet Home Minister P.Chidambaram to urge upon him the need for extension of the ceasefire with the ANVC.

‘The ceasefire with ANVC will cease March 31. We cannot drive them (ANVC) to the wall…they might go to the extreme,’ Lapang, who also holds the home portfolio, said.