MAY 2011
ULFA
The Sanmilta Jatiya
Abhibartan (SJA), an umbrella body of civil society organisations of Assam, on
Saturday formally handed over a charter of demands to the United Liberation
Front of Asom (ULFA). SJA Chief Spokesman Hiren Gohain handed over the charter
to ULFA chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa in the presence of top leaders of both the
organisations here. The outfit will now discuss the charter threadbare before
submitting its own demand charter to the Centre.
The SJA charter
demands
1. Constitutional amendments to give the
State of Assam (as thereby its peoples) greater control over its own future
through strengthening the State's power to control the revenues generated here,
the natural resources, and the planning process and ensure a secure demographic
situation as well as accelerated and balanced development.
2. The Charter of demands in several parts
dealing with different aspects of the fundamental problem faced by the
indigenous peoples
3. The SJA noted that the Indian state the
legitimate hopes and aspirations of the indigenous people were not only not
fulfilled since independence, but they were aggravated by certain deliberate
policies of the Centre that took advantage of their weak socio-economic basis.
Instead of making adequate and well-conceived investments to rescue Assam from
colonial stagnation and backwardness, her natural resources were ruthlessly
exploited with little benefit for the indigenous peoples.
4. Every step in its industrial development was
brought about by mass agitations that forced the Centre's hand. Further, a
callous attitude of indifference towards massive unchecked immigration
threatened the independent existence of the identity of the indigenous peoples.
All such struggles were eventually brought to an end with deceptive and
insignificant awards and concessions by the Centre. Hence desperate sections of
the youth harassed by unemployment, economic stagnation in which unscrupulous
businessmen alone thrived and massive political corruption and misrule
prevailed, took to arms to wage a war against the Indian State. But it ended in
a bloody stalemate that spelt more misery for the indigenous people and an even
greater spurt in authoritarianism of the Centre,” the SJA statement added.
“The idea was to prepare with expert help a charter
of demands that will gain for indigenous peoples sufficient economic and
financial resources and political and Constitutional powers to chalk out an
independent path of development for themselves within the Indian Union,” stated
the SJA press note
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