Bodo leader ready for unconditional talks
November 26th, 2010 - 8:00 pm ICT by IANSGuwahati, Nov 26 (IANS) The National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) is ready for unconditional peace talks with New Delhi and even keep the demand for sovereignty or independence out of the process, chief of the outlawed outfit Ranjan Daimary has said.
“We are ready to discuss any issue and even leave the issue of sovereignty out of the talks,” the jailed NDFB chairman said in an interview telecast by a local satellite TV channel.
Daimary is in jail in the eastern Assam town of Nagaon after he was captured by Bangladesh in May this year and then handed over to India.
The NDFB is blamed for the October 2008 serial explosions in Assam in which about 100 people were killed and more than 400 injured - the Central Bureau of Investigation probing the explosions had named Daimary as the main accused in terror attacks.
“We wanted to send a message to the Indian government (and so carried out the serial blasts) but we never thought so many innocent people would die,” the NDFB terror leader said.
The NDFB is now split into two factions - the group led by Gobinda Basumatary has been in a ceasefire mode with New Delhi since 2005.
The NDFB chairman said the outfit in the past carried out several bank robberies in Assam with the help of the Isak-Muivah faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN-IM).
“We had decamped with about Rs.6 million from three banks in Assam with the help of NSCN-IM,” Daimary said.
Daimary’s statement about giving up the demand of sovereignty and willing to negotiate peace with the central government has been welcomed.
“We welcome the statement of the NDFB chairman to hold peace talks by giving up the sovereignty demand,” Chanakya Brahma, leader of the Bodoland Citizens Forum, said.
- NDFB offers indefinite ceasefire - Jul 26, 2011
- NDFB offers unilateral ceasefire for peace talks - Jan 05, 2011
- NDFB leader Daimary ready for talks, but without handcuffs - May 16, 2010
- Interlocutor Halder meets Ranjan Daimary in Guwahati - Apr 25, 2012
- Thanks to Dhaka, one of India's most wanted fugitives arrested (Roundup) - May 01, 2010
- Government in 'back channel' talks with Bodo militant leader - Aug 03, 2011
- Halder meets chief of NDFB anti-talk faction - Feb 10, 2012
- Bodo rebels will negotiate if handled properly: Army chief (With Image) - Jul 20, 2010
- Pro-talk Bodo group to take part in local elections - Jan 29, 2010
- Bangladesh hands over NDFB chief to India (Second Lead) - May 01, 2010
- Bodo militant faction warns against staged shootouts - May 31, 2012
- Assam's Bodo tribals ramp demand for separate state - Nov 20, 2010
- Militant groups in north-east get together - Jul 26, 2010
- Rebel group asks Assam-based groups to leave Meghalaya - Aug 15, 2011
- Bangladesh handovers NDFB chief Daimary to India - May 01, 2010
Tags: assam, bank robberies, bodoland, ceasefire, central bureau of investigation, central government, citizens forum, explosions, faction, factions, indian government, national democratic front, national socialist council of nagaland, nscn, rs 6, satellite tv channel, sovereignty, terror attacks, unconditional peace talks, unconditional talks