GUWAHATI (India), Oct 6: India’s Assam state deployed paramilitary troops on Monday to quell clashes between Muslim migrants and tribal groups that have left at least 40 people dead.
Some 100,000 people have been forced to flee their homes as a result of the violence that broke out Friday and swiftly spread through three districts of the state.
The death toll rose to 40 on Monday after eight people injured in fighting over the weekend died in hospital, the state’s chief minister, Tarun Gogoi, told reporters, insisting calm was being restored.
A senior Assam police official said that an additional 2,100 paramilitary personnel had been sent to the affected areas where curfews with shoot-on-sight orders had already been imposed.
The clashes, between members of the Bodo tribal group and Muslim settlers originally from Bangladesh, have seen raids on villages by groups armed with bows and poison-tipped arrows, spears and machetes.
“They set fire to a large number of homes in my village,” said Dipali Basumatary, who had taken shelter with her two children in a government-run relief camp.
At least 15 of the fatalities so far have been people killed in police firing, the chief minister has said.
Although there have been tensions between indigenous and immigrant communities in Assam, violence on such a scale is extremely rare, and some state officials accused local separatist groups of fuelling the unrest.
Assam Health Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said the root cause was a programme of “ethnic cleansing” implemented by the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB), a rebel group fighting for an independent tribal homeland.
“They want to drive out all non-Bodos from the area,” Sarma said. The NDFB, which is a largely Christian outfit, entered into a ceasefire with the Indian government in 2005, but has never renounced its independence struggle.—AFP
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