Shillong, Sep 24 (IANS) The central government Friday extended the
ceasefire with the Achik National Volunteers Council (ANVC), a powerful
rebel group in Meghalaya, by another one year till Sep 30, 2012.
The decision to extend the seven-year-old tripartite truce between
the central and Meghalaya governments, and the ANVC was taken at the
Joint Monitoring Group (JMG) meeting in Delhi.
The rebel group is fighting for the creation of Garoland Territorial
Council in Meghalaya’s Garo Hills region and had entered into a
tripartite ceasefire with the central and the state governments July 23,
2004.
‘We have agreed in-principle that the ceasefire will be extended for
one year from this day,’ Joint Secretary in Home Ministry (in-charge of
North East Affairs) Shambu Singh told IANS by phone.
The JMG meeting was attended by S.K Jain, the intelligence chief of
Meghalaya Police, while the ANVC was represented by its Chief Organising
Secretary Torik Janning Marak.
Singh said the extension of ceasefire for one year from the earlier
period of three months was to ensure more dialogue with the rebel
outfit.
Former Intelligence Bureau director Pradyot Chandra Haldar is
negotiating with the ANVC on their demand for creation of a Garoland
Territorial Council, in line with Bodoland Territorial Council in Assam.
In fact, the ANVC had scaled down its demand for creation of a
separate Garoland state to an autonomous council, like the Bodoland
Territorial Council.
The ANVC, one of the five Garo rebel groups, operates in Garo Hills region and has training camps in Bangladesh.
Meghalaya shares a 443-km border with Bangladesh, part of which is
porous, hilly and unfenced and prone to frequent infiltration.
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