A member of the Indian Central Reserve Police Force guards a building in Guwahati (AFP/File)
GUWAHATI, India — A 10-year-old boy was killed and five more people
injured when suspected militants lobbed a grenade into a crowded market
in India's tense northeast, police said.
"Militants riding a
motorcycle threw a grenade as they drove through a busy market, killing
one child and wounding five other people," senior police official
Debajit Deuri told AFP.
Two of the injured were in critical condition, he added.
The attack took place in the small town of Udalguri, 71 kilometres (44 miles) north of Assam state's capital Guwahati.
There
was no immediate claim of responsibility, but in the past police have
blamed similar attacks on groups fighting for independent homelands for
their tribal followers in the tea and oil-rich region of Assam.
Last
year, one of the strongest militant groups, the United Liberation Front
of Asom (ULFA) announced it would join peace talks with the Indian
government in a move to end a 33-year-old rebellion.
A faction of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) militant group also recently agreed to a ceasefire with New Delhi.
Since
then, factions of both groups, which oppose the peace overtures have
carried out bomb and grenade attacks in the state, according to police
officials.
More than 10,000 people, mostly civilians, have lost their lives to insurgency in Assam during the past two decades.
India
has been wracked by separatist conflicts since its independence in
1947, with deadly insurgencies in its northwestern Kashmir region and
the northeast.
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