At a recent gathering in Mumbai, a senior educationist spoke of how she had wept on hearing about the Indian Army’s massacre of 14 innocent coal miners at Oting village in Nagaland’s Mon. “I have visited Nagaland, have come to know communities here and seen their living conditions. How could this have happened? I am confused,” she said. Cutting her short, a senior businessman said an army general had told him that the controversy around these deaths was “a media concoction”. Were the villagers not carrying guns? Why did they not stop when the security personnel flagged their vehicle, he said. The official whitewash does not hold in the light of subsequent eye-witness accounts saying the army fired directly upon the coal miners, without warning. Meanwhile, anyone familiar with eastern Nagaland districts knows that young men with locally-made hunting guns are a common sight on the hill roads.