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India's history of truncating rights
Morung Express | Dimapur, March 11 (MExN):
The “truncating of rights” is a common feature of India’s accord-making history, said Dr. Kumar Sanjay Singh, Associate Professor of the Department of History at University of Delhi. He was speaking at a talk cum discussion on the ‘Naga-India conflict: Then and Now’ organized by the Forum for Understanding the Naga-India Conflict & Human Rights (FUNICH) on March 6 at the School of Open Learning, University of Delhi.
Dr. Singh, while focusing on the peace talks since 1997, also criticized the way the talks between the main negotiating party on behalf of the Nagas—NSCN (IM) – and India has been taking shape. He wondered if this is a sign of a “failure of the leadership” or decoded as “perversity of the people who represent the Government of India”.
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* This Post is uploaded on March 12, 2013
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