It is now a well known fact that in 2009 alone, Arabinda Rajkhowa’s Sonali Bank deposits in Bangladesh totalled 3, 990 crore taka (Rs 2, 710.9 crore) held under the false name of Arabinda Ray. The ULFA also ran nearly ten to twelve underground camps in Bangladesh. Due to this proximity to Bangladesh, the ULFA lost much of the Assamese population’s support as the most critical political, social and economic issues in Assam are connected to the issue of illegal Bangladeshi migration. Thereby, many started viewing the ULFA as facilitating the illegal Bangladeshi migrant flows into Assam as a return favour to the then Bangladeshi authorities and population, who were sheltering the ULFA leadership in Bangladesh. Based on these two failings, the ULFA now faces the challenge of the three Rs: Representative ness, Rationality, and Responsibility --which usually qualifies a group or party to represent a community.
When it comes to representativeness, it is not clear whom the ULFA really represents in the present context. Surely, the people of Assam have moved beyond the separatist narrative of the ULFA based on an exclusivist ethnic base and suspicion of outsiders. This is no more the reality in Assam, where the youth are marching along with the rest of India towards a brighter future. The rationality of the ULFA is also under severe doubt due to the use of force against civilians in the 1990s and 2000s. Such terror tactics have been strongly criticized by many well known Assamese civil society actors and intellectuals like Dr. Hiren Gohain, Homen Borgohain, Dr. Kanak Sen Deka, Jayanta Madhab, Amalendu Guha and Dr. Nagen Saikia. When it comes to responsibility, the outfit’s engagement in extortions, killing of surrendered cadres and creating an atmosphere of fear has dented its image to a large extent especially since 1997 with the killing of Sanjoy Ghosh, the noted social worker. While ULFA has never explained the reason behind the killing, the suspicion is that Ghosh was killed as he exposed the nexus between the ULFA, contractors and government officials involved in corruption in Majuli.
Nevertheless, though the ULFA lacks a popular support base in Assam as of now, certain districts like Tinsukia, Sibsagar and Dibrugarh do have population pockets that still support the ideology of the ULFA, which it once professed. Hence, it is rather critical that the talks between the Centre and the ULFA must address the ideology behind the armed group’s emergence like optimal development of Assam’s resources, equitable sharing of the revenue earned from Assam’s oil and tea between the Centre and Assam, economic upliftment of the people, better governance, the issue of illegal Bangladeshi migration and tribal rights.
As a success formula, the talks need to also include noted Assamese intellectuals and social workers in order to give it wider legitimacy and representativeness. The Assam government must also keep the people of Assam informed about the progress of the talks in order to avoid misinformation by the local media hungry for some sensational news in order to up their own TRP (Television Rating Points) ratings.
The challenge for the Centre and the Assam government will however be to ensure that Paresh Barua, the Commander-in-Chief of ULFA is brought to the negotiating table. Barua is threatening to revive the ULFA movement from the Myanmar-China border where he is currently residing. While this sounds far-fetched since Barua lacks the intellectual wherewithal to create the ideological base for ULFA’s revival, he does have the potential to revive the armed struggle from a purely military point of view with the help of the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) who earlier trained ULFA cadres for a price of Rs one lakh per trainee. The jailed ULFA leadership could also use Barua’s threats of reviving the ULFA as a bargaining chip against the Centre on the negotiating table.
While talking to the ULFA is a sound policy on the part of the government of India, the challenge is to ensure that the entire ULFA leadership is willing to arrive at a negotiated framework of resolution in order to ensure that armed struggles such as these do not revive again after a period of hiatus in northeastern states like Assam.