Elusive Naga peace solution adding fodder to speculations
Source: Hueiyen News Service / NNN
Dimapur, September 23 2013:
Although the tepidness of hype on the Naga peace talks has become today's reality and NSCN-IM topmost leaders Isak Chisi Swu and Thuingaleng Muivah prolong their confinement in the outfit's base Hebron, choosing to remain mute, the elusive Naga political solution keeps laymen as well as intellectuals busy in the world of speculations.
And all the more, election times are the period when colourful and unexpected promises are made by the government of India.
Also, the 'wintry feeling' is here and the Central government is busy packing hollow Christmas gift for the Nagas, as were the 'Supra-State' and 'Bhutan-type' arrangement for the Nagas and what more.
Talks of Lok Sabha polls are doing the round and so is the Christmas programme among the Nagas.
But this time too, will the Central government comes out with its surprises again? .
The Nagas are today too indifferent to all these hollow promises from the government of India and so this Christmas is not going to be diluted by the hypes on the settlement of the protracted Naga political issue.
The Nagas seem to be tired of the hype of late.
Two years ago, Guwahati based newspaper Seven Sisters Post (SSP) had reported about the Nagas' Supra-State status which was reported to be a Christmas gift of that year.
The report had swayed the social tidings in Manipur, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh opposing that purported arrangement.
The hype got over with the withering of Christmas trees and the fading of colourful Christmas stars atop the Naga houses.
Again, the hype got climaxed last year's Christmas time after Union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde had assured that the Naga political issue will be settled by March 2013, the time the Nagaland assembly election process got over.
That situation was even buttered it by the concerted show of the now-unheard Joint Legislature Forum (JLF) formed by the 60 MLAs of the Nagaland legislative assembly of the previous tenure to push for the early settlement of the Naga political problem.
Now, it has been almost ten months that the dialogue between the government of India and the NSCN-IM has not been resumed.