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Map: Tribal Areas Cordoned Off by the
British in Northeast India (PDF, 80K)
Continuing
terrorist actions and violent demonstrations
over the last five decades have turned
India's Northeast into a dangerous place.
Large-scale introduction of narcotics and
arms from neighboring Myanmar (Burma) and
China has made this strategically crucial
area a potential theater of violent
secessionist movements.
Imbued with the British ideology of
encouraging ethnic, sub-ethnic, religious,
and linguistic identities—as opposed to the
identity of a citizen of a sovereign
nation-state—both New Delhi and the
residents of Northeast India are marching
recklessly along the very path prescribed by
the British Raj in 1862, when he laid down
the law of apartheid to isolate "the tribals."
While it is not clear how long this fateful
road is, there is little doubt what awaits
them at the end.
British mindset at
work
Since India's independence in 1947,
Northeast India has been split up into
smaller and smaller states and autonomous
regions. The divisions were made to
accommodate the wishes of tribes and ethnic
groups which want to assert their
sub-national identity and obtain an area
where the diktat of their little coterie is
recognized. New Delhi has yet to comprehend
that its policy of accepting and
institutionalizing the superficial
identities of these ethnic, linguistic, and
tribal groups has ensured more irrational
demands for even smaller states. It has also
virtually eliminated any plan to make these
areas economically powerful, and the people
scientifically and technologically advanced.
A situation has now arisen in which New
Delhi's promised carrot of economic
development evokes little enthusiasm in the
Northeast. Money from New Delhi for
"development" serves to appease the "greed"
of a handful and to maintain the status quo.
On the other hand, fresh separatist
movements bring the area closer to the
precipice.
Assam has been cut up into many states since
Britain's exit. The autonomous regions of
Karbi Anglong, Bodo Autonomous Region, and
Meghalaya were all part of pre-independence
Assam. Citing the influx of Bengali Muslims
since the 1947 formation of East Pakistan,
which became Bangladesh in 1971, the locals
demand the ouster of these "foreigners" from
their soil. Two violent movements in Assam,
the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA)
and the Bodo Security Force (BdSF), are now
practically demanding "ethnic cleansing" in
their respective areas.
To fund their movements, both the ULFA and
the BdSF have been trafficking heroin and
other narcotics, and indulging in killing
sprees against other ethnic groups and
against Delhi's law-and-order machinery.
Both these groups have also developed close
links with other major guerrilla-terrorist
groups operating in the area, including the
National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Muivah)
and the People's Liberation Army in Manipur.
Assam, unlike most other areas of the
Northeast, was better integrated with
mainstream India prior to independence;
Assam participated in the national
independence movement and contributed much
to India's intellectual and cultural wealth.
Today, however, instead of encouraging its
sons and daughters to train themselves in
science and technology, and
entrepreneurship, Assam has engulfed itself
in mindless bloodletting.
In 1972, Meghalaya was carved out of Assam
through a peaceful process. Unfortunately,
peace did not last long in this "abode of
the clouds." In 1979, the first violent
demonstration against "foreigners" resulted
in a number of deaths and arson. The
"foreigners" in this case were Bengalis,
Marwaris, Biharis, and Nepalis, many of whom
had settled in Meghalaya decades ago. By
1990, firebrand groups such as the
Federation of Khasi, Jaintia, and Garo
People (FKJGP) and the Khasi Students' Union
(KSU) came to the fore, ostensibly to uphold
the rights of the "hill people" from Khasi,
Jaintia, and the Garo hills. Violence
erupted in 1979, 1987, 1989, and 1990. The
last violent terrorist acts were in 1992.
Similar "anti-foreigner" movements have
sprouted up across the Northeast, from
Arunachal Pradesh in the east and north, to
Sikkim in the west, and Mizoram and Tripura
in the south. Along the Myanmar border, the
states of Nagaland, Manipur, and Mizoram
remain unstable and extremely porous.
London's legacy
The root cause of the problem is the
conditions set in place by British rule in
the Northeast since 1826 and the formation
of East Pakistan in 1947. New Delhi's
inability to integrate the region stems from
its failure to recognize that the British
Raj had converted Northeast India into a
human zoo, where each tribe was allowed to
roam free within its "own territory," but
was not allowed to cross the boundaries set
forth by their British masters and establish
contact with the rest of India.
The British came into the area in the 1820s,
following the Burmese conquest of Manipur
and parts of Assam. The area had become
unstable in the later part of the eighteenth
century following the over-extension of the
Ahom kingdom, a Burmese-based kingdom that
reached into Assam. The instability caused
by the weakening of the Ahom kingdom
prompted the Burmese to move westward to
secure their flanks. But the Burmese action
also helped to bring in the British. The
British East India Company was lying in wait
to see the Ahom kingdom disintegrate.
The Anglo-Burmese war of 1824-26 ended with
the British emerging victorious. By the
peace treaty signed at Yandaboo on Feb. 24,
1826, the British annexed the whole of lower
Assam and parts of upper Assam (now
Arunachal Pradesh). The Treaty of Yandaboo
provided the British with the foothold they
needed to annex Northeast India, launch
further campaigns to capture Burma's vital
coastal areas, and gain complete control of
the territory from the Andaman Sea to the
mouth of the Irrawaddy River.
What were London's motives in this venture?
The British claimed that their occupation of
the northeast region was required to protect
the plains of Assam from the "tribal
outrages and depredations and to maintain
law and order in the sub-mountainous
region." British historians campaigning on
behalf of two ex-viceroys, Lord Minto and
Lord Curzon, assert that the defense of the
British Empire in the northeast frontier was
no less important than the northwest
frontier, the scene of the so-called Great
Game between Britain and Czarist Russia.
But the tribal territories in the
northeastern borderland cover 700 miles of
the Indian frontier. These tribal belts,
from 70 to 100 miles deep, are almost
impenetrable by any force from the north,
e.g., China. The Indo-Burmese border, though
crossed by the conquering Ahoms to capture
Upper Kamarupa in upper Assam in 1228, was
mountainous and heavily forested. There is
little doubt that the British were not
concerned about the enemy; crossing such
difficult and hostile terrain was simply not
possible for either Russia or China.
But for the British East India Company,
gaining control in the northeast of India
aided in gaining access to southern China's
natural wealth. Significantly, in the Treaty
of Yandaboo it was mentioned that the
British East India Company would have access
through upper Burma to chart out a direct
trade route between India and China through
Assam. As early as 1826, a member of the
Governor General's Council said: "We may
expect to open new roads for commerce with
Yunan and other southwestern provinces of
the celestial empire through Assam and
Manipore."
The annexation of Assam was also designed to
"fix" the situation in Bhutan, Sikkim (an
independent kingdom till 1975 before it
merged with India), Nepal, and Tibet. The
British role in Tibet, as reflected in
Francis Younghusband's armed invasion of
Tibet during 1901-04, the subsequent
invasion of Tibet by the Manchu dynasty
rulers for the first time in 1910, the
fleeing of the 13th dalai lama, and the
subsequent influence exerted by the British
over the Tibetan and Mongolian lamas, will
be treated in future EIR reports. But it
should be noted that the accession and
isolation of Northeast India was designed to
infiltrate Tibet, as part of London's
greater geopolitical plan to upset
China—which remains London's aim today.
The 'apartheid law'
Following annexation of Northeast India, the
first strategy of the British East India
Company toward the area was to set it up as
a separate entity. At the outset, British
strategy toward Northeast India was:
*** to make sure
that the tribals remained separated from the
plains people, and the economic interests of
the British in the plains were not
disturbed;
*** to ensure that all tribal aspirations
were ruthlessly curbed by keeping the bogey
of the plains people dangling in their
faces; and,
*** to ensure that
the tribal feudal order remained intact,
with the paraphernalia of tribal chiefs and
voodoo doctors kept in place. Part of this
plan was carried out through the bribing of
tribal chiefs with paltry gifts.
In 1838, the East India Company assumed
charge of the government of Assam, in order
to enhance trade and commerce, and sacked
the Ahom king, who had been its "protected
prince" since 1826. In the early years, the
company had often run into trouble with the
tribals, and clashes between the two were
routinely reported.
The decision to isolate the tribals came
about in 1873 through the promulgation of
the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation.
However, the policy of declaring the
Northeast Frontier Agency (NEFA) a secluded
area had been advocated long before. Section
2 of the regulation empowered the company
"to prescribe and from time to time alter by
notification, a line to be called the Inner
Line and to prohibit any subject living
outside the area from living or moving
therein." Thus, the British policy of
apartheid in Northeast India was implemented
in the tribal area of the District of
Lakhimpur in September 1875, and in the
District of Darrang in March 1876.
Civil officers could extend their
administrative jurisdiction no further than
the Inner Line, and the
governor-general-in-council prohibited all
British subjects from crossing the Inner
Line without a pass obtainable from the
deputy commissioners of districts.
Then, in 1880, the Frontier Tract Regulation
was enacted, which stated that it was
expedient "to provide for the removal of
certain frontier tracts in Assam inhabited
or frequented by barbarous or semi-civilized
tribes from the operation of enactments in
force therein." It was stated that the
regulation would extend to such frontier
tracts in Assam as the governor general
might designate. The regulation was
subsequently extended to cover wider areas
in the Northeast.
The Palmerston crowd
at work
The British plan to cordon off the Northeast
tribals was part of their policy of setting
up a multicultural human zoo during 1850s
under the premiership of Henry Temple, the
third Viscount Palmerston. Lord Palmerston,
as Henry Temple was called, had three
"friends"—the British Foreign Office, the
Home Office, and Whitehall. With the help of
these offices and such close associates as
Giuseppe Mazzini, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte,
and David Urquhart, Palmerston began to
establish British assets throughout Europe
and elsewhere. Young Italy was set up in
1831, attracting Garibaldi and Louis
Napoleon. Young Poland and Young Germany
followed. And in 1834, Mazzini founded Young
Europe, billed as the "Holy Alliance of the
Peoples." By 1835, a Young Switzerland and
Young France were created. There was also
Young Corsica, which was the mafia.
The underlying motive behind setting up
these groups was evident in Mazzini himself,
to whom nationality meant race, an ethnic
group with a fixed array of behavior.
Mazzini's organizations would demand
immediate national liberation on the basis
of aggressive chauvinism. Each was obsessed
with borders and territory, and each found a
way to oppose the concept of a sovereign
nation-state. This was Mazzini's racist
gospel of universal ethnic cleansing, which
was implemented in full in Northeast India
in 1873.
The apartheid program eliminated the
Northeast Frontier Agency from the political
map of India and segregated the tribal
population from Assam, as the British had
done in southern Africa and would do later
in Sudan. By 1875, British intentions became
clear even to those Englishmen who believed
that Mother England's intervention in India,
and the Northeast in particular, was to
improve the conditions of the heathens. In
an 1875 intelligence document, one operative
wrote: "At this juncture, we find our local
officers frankly declaring that our
relations with the Nagas could not possibly
be on a worse footing than they were then,
and that the non-interference policy, which
sounds excellent in theory, had utterly
failed in practice."
Apartheid also helped the British to
function freely in this closed environment.
Soon enough, the British Crown introduced
two other features—proselytization of
Christianity among the tribal population and
recruiting units of the Frontier
Constabulary. The Land of the Nagas was
identified as "virgin soil" for planting
Christianity. "Among a people so thoroughly
primitive, and so independent of religious
profession, we might reasonably expect
missionary zeal would be most successful,"
according to the 1875 document, as quoted in
the Descriptive Account of Assam, by William
Robinson and Angus Hamilton. Missionaries
were encouraged to open government-aided
schools in the Naga Hills.
Between 1891 and 1901, the number of native
Christians increased 128%. The chief
proselytizers were the Welsh Presbyterians,
headquartered in Khasi and the Jaintia
Hills. British Baptists were given the
franchise of the Mizo (Lushai) and Naga
Hills, and the Baptist mission was set up in
1836.
Along with this peaceful religious
proselytizing, the strength of the Frontier
Constabulary was increased. During Ahom
rule, only nine companies of police were
used to keep the bordering tribes under
control, but under the new regime each
company was raised to battalion strength.
By the time the nineteenth century came to
an end, the British were deeply involved in
the "Great Game." At this point, Northeast
India became the theater of a new gambit.
The British plan was to set up a buffer
state between China-Central Asia-Russia, and
British India. The British split Bengal and
joined part of it to sparsely populated
Assam, in order to form a Muslim-majority
state as the western flank of the buffer
state.
The ill-effects of the partition of 1905
began to show up in subsequent years. There
was a large-scale migration of people from
Bengal into Assam. The Census Report of 1931
says: "Probably the most important event in
the province during the last 25 years—an
event, moreover, which seems likely to alter
permanently the whole future of Assam and to
destroy more surely than did the Burmese
invaders of 1820 the whole structure of
Assamese culture and civilization—has been
the invasion of hordes of land-hungry
Bengali immigrants, mostly Muslims, from the
districts of Eastern Bengal and in
particular Mymensingh."
Under this British set-up, enormous
animosity was fostered between the Bengalis
and the Assamese, as the "tribals" now had
reason to harden their stance against the
"plains people." In the 1911 census, the
Muslim population of the Assam Valley was
only 355,320. This number had grown to
1,305,902 by 1941, according to the Census
Report, the last taken by the British. A
large number of violent incidents in Assam
and Meghalaya in recent years are directly
related to this settlement issue, and
tensions have been further exacerbated by a
large wave of Muslim migrants fleeing into
Assam from instability in neighboring
Bangladesh.
The ultimate apartheid in the Northeast came
with the partition of India and the
formation of East Pakistan, which in 1971
became the independent nation of Bangladesh.
With the partition of Bengal, Northeast
India became practically isolated, connected
to the mainland through a narrow corridor
running between Nepal and Bangladesh. The
southern Northeastern states have no
railroads and are accessible from the
mainland by road, air, and sea. There is no
railroad in Tripura, Mizoram, Meghalaya,
Manipur, Nagaland, and Arunachal Pradesh.
The hilly terrain, and New Delhi's
continuing faith in the British policy
subsumed under a blanket of security
concerns, makes the building of railroads
extremely difficult. Broad-gauge railroads
exist up to Guwahati in truncated Assam, and
a meter-gauge railroad is presently under
construction to connect eastern Arunachal
Pradesh with the mainland by rail. However,
all the other Northeastern states, which are
now without railroad, will continue to
depend on roads, air, and sea to link up
with the mainland.
These British policies provide a clue to why
Northeast India has remained a bubbling
cauldron and vulnerable to secessionist
movements. Why the British continued
supporting such a policy can only be
understood from their own stated policy, as
formulated in 1944 by Prof. Reginald
Coupland, a fellow at All Souls College in
Oxford, three years prior to the partition
of India. In a three-volume study of British
Indian history, Coupland, a student of Lords
Palmerston and Curzon, said: "India is a
geographical unity, it is not divided by
such physical barriers as have fostered the
growth of separate nations in Europe. Its
unification under British rule has not only
made all Indians feel themselves to be
Indians; it has saved India from the fate
which political and economic nationalism has
brought on Europe. The Partitionists
threaten to throw India back to the
condition it was in after the break-up of
the Mughal Empire, to make another Balkans.
This would negate the development of
democracy in India. Partition would also
prevent a free India from taking her due
place in the world as a great Asiatic power;
for it would probably mean disruption into
several States ranking with Egypt or Siam."
*** This article appeared in the October
13, 1995 issue of Executive Intelligence
Review
*** Permission for republication of this
article is awaited. Due to the importance of
the said article, ManipurOnline has taken the
liberty to republish this article.
*** You may visit
http://www.larouchepub.com
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