Insurgency in Tripura

The insurgency in Tripura was an armed conflict which took place in the state of Tripura between India and several separatist rebel organisations. It was a part of the wider insurgency in Northeast India and was fueled by Tripuris who had become a minority in their own state because of immigration of Bengali people.

Insurgency in Tripura
Part of Insurgency in Northeast India

Location of Tripura in the map of India
Date1990–2012
(22 years)
Location
Result Indian government victory
Territorial
changes
Indian government recaptures the territory seized by rebels and withdraws AFSPA from Tripura in 2015.
Belligerents
 India
Supported by: Bangladesh
 Bhutan
TNV (until 1988)
NLFT
ATTF
BNCT
Commanders and leaders
Ramaswamy Venkataraman
Shankar Dayal Sharma
Kocheril Raman Narayanan
APJ Abdul Kalam
Pratibha Patil
Pranab Mukherjee
Supported by:Iajuddin Ahmed
Zillur Rahman
Abdul Hamid
Jigme Singye Wangchuk
Bijoy Kumar Hrangkhawl  
Biswamohan Debbarma  (POW)
Nayanbasi Jamatia  (POW)
Ranjit Debbarma  (POW)
Strength
1,325,000 Indian army[1]
28,031 Tripura Police
850-1050 (NLFT)
200-400 (ATTF)
Casualties and losses
457 police [2] 520 rebels 
1123 rebels (POW)[2]
2008: Nayanbasi Jamatia arrested in Bangladesh.
2012: Biswamohan Debbarma and Ranjit Debbarma arrested in Bangladesh.
2013: Nayanbasi Jamatia handed over to the Indian government.
2017: Biswamohan Debbarma and Ranjit Debbarma handed over to the Indian government.

Background

Tripura, literally meaning land adjoining water, is located in the extreme southwest corner of the Northeast. Following India's independence in 1947, Tripura acceded to the Indian Union in 1948 as a "C" category State. It became a Union Territory in November 1956. Tripura attained full Statehood on 21 January 1972.

Tripura's demography underwent a major change as a result of migration from former East Bengal and subsequently from Bangladesh. Tripuris were pushed to the hills and the politics and administration in the state became dominated by the Bengali-speaking and immigrants.

It was the particular reason which had created national consciousness among the local populations. The continuous neglect on the immigration issue had led to a direct confrontation between Indian nationalism and the newly created Tripuri nationalism. The parallel rise of nationalism in the other states of the Northeast India had further complicated the situation more, resulting in a deadly armed conflict between India and rebel groups thus, creating the insurgency on ethnic lines as a Tribal versus Bengali conflict.

The first militant outfit to form was Tripura National Volunteers (TNV). It was active until 1988. However, most prominent ones were National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) and All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF).

These groups had various demands. NLFT wanted to establish an independent Tripura and ATTF wanted to finalise the Tripura merger agreement. However, all of them wished to remove Bangladeshis immigrants who had entered Tripura after 1950 despite of their ideological differences.

Anti-Bengali sentiments of Tripuri rebels had given birth to the United Bengali Liberation Front. The group wanted to protect Bengalis in Tripura from militants. This group was supported by the Bengali Dominated Communist Party which supplied arms and infrastructure.

Internal conflicts among them had divided NLFT into NLFT(B) led by Biswamohan Debbarma and NLFT(N) led by Nayanbasi Jamatia. ATTF which was a right wing organisation of NLFT had become its own militant organisation led by Ranjit Debbarma.

Those groups had received the major blow when Biswamohan Debbarma, Nayanbasi Jamatia and Ranjit Debbarma were all arrested in their hideout camps in Bangladesh. It is estimated that some of those armed cadres are still present at their hideout camps at Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh.

As of 2019, Tripura's insurgency has collapsed.

References

  1. IISS 2012, pp. 243–248
  2. "Insurgency related fatalities in Tripura". cdpsindia.org. 7 May 2019. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.