GUWAHATI, Jan 9: Tribal rebels in India’s troubled northeast kidnapped an army officer and five soldiers, saying they were angry that government forces were encouraging rival groups despite a ceasefire, officials said on Friday.
The soldiers were on a routine foot patrol in the mountains of Nagaland late on Thursday when they were captured by separatist rebels of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Issac-Muivah) (NSCN-IM).
The group is among the strongest of dozens of militant organisations fighting Indian rule in the state. The insurgencies have killed thousands of people over the last half century.
“Efforts are on to secure their release with the help of village elders,” Lieutenant Colonel Nirupam Bhargav said in Kohima, the capital of Nagaland.
The kidnappers said New Delhi was encouraging rival groups to attack them and sabotage a decade-old peace process aimed at ending the longest-running insurgency in the region.
BOMB ATTACK: One person was killed and five others wounded on Friday when separatist militants triggered a powerful bomb blast in restive northeast India’s Assam state, police and witnesses said.
Police said the bomb was planted on a bicycle in a crowded market in Maligaon area of Guwahati.“We suspect it is the handiwork of the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA),” P.C. Saloi, a senior police officer said, referring to the main separatist group operating in the region.
Eyewitnesses said people were angry at authorities for failing to control the growing militant attacks.
India has beefed up security across the country after a militant attack on Mumbai last November left 179 people dead.—Reuters
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