Lailapur/Buarchep (Mizoram):The border clash between Assam and Mizoram on July 26 was not only about the loss of lives, but it was about the loss of livelihood too. As ETV Bharat visited some of the border villages along these two neighbouring States, it was found that the people living here have found themselves caught in the boundary dispute.
Several Mizo villagers have now been claiming that they are being prevented by the Assam police from going to the fields depriving them of their livelihoods. "Many of my villagers and I are afraid of going to the other side of the border as the Assam police prevents us. We lost many of our agricultural lands following this dispute," said Vanlalzawna, president of Saihapu-V village council.
Many of the Mizo farmers are traditional jhum cultivators. They clear nearby hillocks through the burn-and-slash process for cultivation. Jhum cultivation is commonly known as shifting cultivation since after one harvest, the land is left to regenerate for a few years. In a rotating process, the farmers cultivate in other hillocks. Many villagers of Kolasib, Buarchep along the border area suddenly find the farmlands they had been cultivating for several decades are within the "enemy zone".