It’s Now Bodo vs Druk Yul

"If Bhutan tries to throw out the rebels, it gets involved in what essentially are India's problems. If it shies away from action, it risks the wrath of Delhi."

When Bodo militants attacked a Bhutanese police post at Nanglam in Southern Bhutan one morning in September, the totally unexpected had happened. The attack defied logic, for why should Bodo rebel groups, who have used Bhutan as their main transborder refuge, attack Bhutanese policemen and invite retribution from the kingdom´s administration? It has been more than four years since Bodo rebels from across the border in Assam have used the jungles of southern Bhutan to regroup after attacks on Indian security forces. The Bodos are not the only separatists to have found sanctuary in these jungles. Following their lead, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) too set up shop here in the mid-1990s. The kingdom´s southern border zone, much of it astride Assam, has thus changed into a guerilla refuge.

Responsibility for the attack on the Bhutanese police post has not been claimed by either of the two Bodo rebel groups – the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB), fighting for an independent Bodo homeland to be carved out of India, and the Bodoland Liberation Tigers (BLT), which demands a Bodo homeland separate from Assam but remaining within India.

Loading content, please wait...
Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com