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The
Bodo & Ulfa Problem |
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Bhutan Bodo & Ulfa Conflict |
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Royal
Bhutan Army's operations "Flush out" and "Operation All Clear" |
Bhutanese
nationals start leaving Assam |
December
19, 2003
Scores
of Bhutanese nationals start leaving Assam in the face of ULFA's retaliatory
strike on them for the ongoing crackdown that captured several top guns
with the north east militant outfits. The Bhutanse people who use to sell
woolen clothes and oranges in Paltanbazar, Ganeshguri, Fancy Bazar and
Chandmari areas are remaining absent from the streets and gatecrashing
the bus counters to rush to the areas along the Indo-Bhutan border. The
ULFA, NDFB and KLO have asked the Bhutanese nationals to quit the north
eastern states. The banned insurgent outfits also urged the people not
to continue any deal with these people until the Bhutan stops its Army
offensive against the militant outfits from the north eastern region.
Military
offensive slowed |
Bhutan
has said it was going slow in its military offensive to expel anti-India
rebels from the country to keep down casualties on both sides. RNA says
it has destroyed all the 30 camps belonging to three Indian separatist
groups. Bhutan's national carrier Drukair has stopped direct flights
from Thimphu to Bangladesh to prevent the rebels from escaping to hideouts
there. Bhutan said earlier this week that 500 rebels had surrendered to
its forces.
Security
sources said that the RBA crackdown smashed a headquarter of a ULFA battalion
located at the Kalikhola area. The fleeing militants are not trying to
sneak into India through North Bengal after the crackdown. A number of
militants went deeper into Bhutan territory and are scattered into the
dense forest areas after the crackdown. They would like to come down to
India and move to the safer bases in Bangladesh through North Bengal.
Human
right groups concerned |
International
humanitarian and rights groups urged Bhutan to allow independent teams
to verify claims that women and children were trapped in the continuing
military offensives against Indian separatists. Bhutan on Tuesday refused
permission to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to send
a team to kingdom. Ten days after Bhutan launched its military operation,
there has been no official confirmation from Bhutanese authorities about
casualty figures or the number of women and children in their custody.
Seconde
phase of the offensice more difficult |
December
23, 2003
The
Royal Bhutan Army personnel is intensely engaged in the fight against the
Northeast rebels. Bhutanese military spokesman said the fighting was fierce
in the second phase of the offensive and the troops had managed to clear
some "strategic heights". "The second phase of fighting is going to be
more difficult than smashing the rebel bases," he added. The Anti-indian
rebels have threatened to disrupt cross-border trade with India. The cross-border
trading activities have come to a standstill since the Northeast militants
asked the Bhutanese nationals to leave Assam, and not to use Assam for
any sort of trading. This will pose a threat to Bhutan's economy since
the local Bhutanese have had to use Assam for trading.
Bhutanese
troops are reported to be engaged in heavy fighting as they press on with
an offensive against Indian rebels.
The
rebels fled to a forest reserve in west Bhutan after the Bhutanese troops
demolished their bases in the eastern part of the country. In Thimphu security
arrangements have been tightened.
Bangladesh
officials rejected New Delhi's charges that Indian rebels are operate from
its soil.
Army
smashed Indian insurgent camps |
Bhutan
Army smashes 19 Indian insurgent camps |
December
19, 2003
Bhutanese
armed forces continued to pound the Indian insurgents in the Himalayan
Kingdom for the fifth day demolishing 19 of their 30 camps. There were
reports of United Liberation Front of Asom ideologue Bhimkanta Buragohain
succumbing to injuries. The Royal Bhutan Army had smashed 19 of the 30
well fortified insurgent camps located in the dense jungles of the land-locked
kingdom. The army action spread from Dhangtar in Samdrup Jongkhar district,
where offensives were concentrated to Nganglam area in southen Bhutan,
Sarpang district in west Bhutan and beyond Samtse, he said.
Bhutan
King leads operations against anti-India insurgents |
Bhutan
King Jigme Singye Wangchuk is leading his troops from the front in the
operations launched to flush out anti-Indian outfits from the Himalayan
Kingdom. The king 'is risking his life' to protect the sovereignty and
security of the Himalayan kingdom by 'leading the troops into the hostile
jungles' to flush out the anti-India insurgents holed up here, a Bhutan
government statement said. His majesty the king is in good health and is
very well.
Militants
and the RBA have suffered 'heavy casualty' |
GOC-in-C
of the Indian Army's Eastern Command in Kolkata had said 90 to 120 militants
were killed in the anti-insurgent operations, while reports from Assam
said over 35 Royal Bhutan Army personnel were killed in the counter-insurgency
operations.
Anti-India
militants in Bhutan cornered |
"The
morale of the ultras has been on the lower side for the last few days and
they are low on ration and poorly fed. The militants can't survive and
will have to give up sooner or later", an Indian Army spokesman said in
a press briefing. The military assault by the RBA personnel was concentrated
mainly north of Samdrup Jongkhar where most of the militants' camps were
located. "Most of the ultras flushed out of their camps and now hiding
in the jungles, were waiting for "a direction from their leadership. The
rebels will see the writing on the wall. With their resources depleting
and no escape route, they should surrender and join the mainstream," the
spokesman said. He ruled out the possibility of rebels escaping to north
Bhutan saying the conditions there are cold, difficult and the area is
sparsely populated. Referring to the ULFA's appeal to Bhutan's monarch
for a ceasefire, he said the Bhutan government "will take the offensive
to its logical conclusion. The Indian Army is not providing artillery to
the RBA. There is no truth in reports that the Indian Army has crossed
over into Bhutan's territory to engage the rebels in encounters. RBA personnel
are not using artillery, but only 81mm mortars for the assaults," he said
but confirmed the Indian Air Force had been evacuating casualties on the
side of the RBA.
Bhutan
arrests 3 top anti-India militants |
December
17, 2003
RBA
forces arrested at least three top insurgents even as its army overran
several important bases of anti-India militants in Bhutan. Soldiers overcame
stiff resistance and captured the United Liberation Front of Asom's headquarters
in the forests at Guabari in the southern part of the country bordering
India. The camp housed the ULFA's central training unit and a top insurgency
unit. The biggest break has been the arrest of ULFA's former central publicity
chief and think tank member Mithinga Daimari. Indian Army sources reported
earlier that ULFA chairman Arobindo Rajkhawa and commander Baruah are in
Bangladesh.
Bhutan Maps
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