Event End Date
Event Title
Violence and Displacement in the Forest Areas of Bodoland, Assam: 1993-2012
Event Details
<strong>CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF NORTH EAST INDIA
SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES-I</strong>
<strong>Violence and Displacement in the Forest Areas of Bodoland, Assam: 1993-2012</strong>
<strong>Makiko Kimura</strong>
Associate Professor, Tsuda College
Visiting Faculty, CSNEI, JNU
<strong>Abstract :</strong> In 2012, a violent attack against Muslims of Bengal origin took place in Kokrajhar district, in the western part of Assam. The attackers belonged to the Bodos, an indigenous ethnic group of the area. About one hundred people died and 400,000 were displaced by the violence.
This was not the first time for such violence to take place in the Bodo Territorial Autonomous Districts (BTAD) in Assam&#39;s west. There had been ethnic clashes in the past in response to a movement to create a separate state of Bodoland and achieve autonomy for the Bodo people. In the 1990s, in particular, there were large-scale attacks against Muslims in 1993 and 1994 and attacks against Adivasis in 1996 and 1998.Retaliatory attacks against the Bodos followed, with several chains of violent incidents. Several hundred people lost their lives and more than half a million were displaced.
One prominent feature of the violence in this area is that although the number of deaths is not too high, the number of people displaced is much higher, and people have had to take refuge in makeshift camps for a long period of time. Even before 2012 attack, more than 50,000 people were already living in the camps. In addition, in most cases, the violence had broken out in forest areas in the northern part bordering Bhutan.
Based on fieldwork undertaken among internally displaced persons (IDPs) in BTAD, this presentation will attempt to analyze why people cannot return to their villages even two decades since the violence, and why most of the attacks took place in the forest areas.
Date: <strong>9TH September (Friday), 2016</strong>