New Delhi:The armed insurgents of the Thuingaleng Muivah-led Naga underground leadership of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (NSCN-IM) currently negotiating with the Government of India, have not budged from their stand that they will not surrender their weapons in case a final resolution of issues is achieved and a pact signed, something that has been elusive till now.
A top source told ETV Bharat on condition of anonymity that when the issue of weapons surrender was brought up a few years ago, the NSCN (IM) leadership flatly refused to lay down their weapons. The matter was then taken by the then interlocutor to the then Indian Army chief who suggested a way out—the weapons could be rendered “unusable” by taking out the firing pins and the breech blocks.
The arrangement would ensure that the Naga guerrilla fighters wear their weapons but which, in actuality would be incapable of being fired or used. This way, the NSCN (IM) demand for an “honorable solution” and the government’s requirements could both be met.
The NSCN (IM) has an estimated 5,000 pieces of deadly weapons of various types and makes that include a wide range of assault weapons like AK-47s, G series of guns, small body arms like pistols and 9mm guns, other automatic guns, mortars, rocket launchers, etc. The cadres—part of the so-called Naga Army—are well-trained in operating most of these weapons. Their main mode of warfare is guerrilla fighting, essentially a ‘hit-and-run’ fighting style attuned to the hilly and dense jungles of much of Northeast India.
The Naga insurgency is said to be the world’s second-longest running insurgency after the Basque movement in Spain and is also said to be the ‘mother of all insurgencies’ that contributed in a big way to the formation of insurgency movements in Manipur, Assam, Tripura, and Meghalaya—neighbouring states in the region.