Aizawl:Mizoram Home Minister Lalchamliana on Saturday said that the recent boundary clash with Assam was not related to drug trafficking or cattle trade and denied the involvement of 'non-state actors' in the incident.
He instead asserted that the clash was an "unavoidable countermeasure" to protect the territorial integrity and ancestral land of the Mizos, which was threatened several times over decades by "aggression and encroachment from Assam".
"Drug trafficking and cattle trade have nothing to do with the boundary clash, and non-state actors weren't involved in the incident. How can a responsible government be hand-in-glove with or be influenced by non-state actors?" the home minister told PTI.
Though certain student bodies had earlier clashed with the Assam Police over the border dispute, no such organization was involved in the recent incident, he said. Six Assam Police personnel and one civilian have been killed, and scores of people were injured in an inter-state border clash between Assam and Mizoram on July 26.
The Mizoram home minister, however, said there is no denying the fact that some civilians from Vairengte were indeed present during the clash but so were commoners from Assam.
"Despite maximum restrain at first, our men were compelled to resort to countermeasures when forces from the neighbouring state crossed over into our territory, overran our outpost and tried to set up camps, besides lobbing grenades, tear gas shells and even opening fire on our personnel and protesting civilians," he said, adding the Mizoram Police responded in self-defence and to protect the civilians.
"It was very unfortunate that some people lost their lives and several others sustained injuries in the clash," Lalchamliana said. He asserted that Mizoram was much ahead of Assam in launching a crackdown on drug trafficking.
The home minister said that the state government along with civil society organizations and churches have made massive efforts to curb drug smuggling from Assam and neighboring countries for decades.
He said that a plethora of drugs, including heroin, are smuggled from Assam and several drug peddlers from the neighboring state have been arrested in the past. Lalchamliana said that Mizoram hardly buys cattle for consumption from Assam as its demand is met from the eastern part of the state. He said that drug smuggling is a global problem, which can be curbed by joint efforts between states.
Read:Border row: Assam CM, 4 senior cops, two admin officials booked by Mizoram Police