Agartala:Eyeing the Assembly elections in 2023, tribal-based parties in Tripura and Meghalaya have renewed their demand to create separate states for the indigenous tribals, even as the major political parties continue to strongly oppose their claims.
Tribals constitute over 86 per cent of the total population in Meghalaya, while in Tripura, they account for 31 per cent of the population. The Assembly elections in the two northeastern states are scheduled in 2023.
The ruling BJP's junior ally, the Indigenous People's Front of Tripura (IPFT), and the Hill State People's Democratic Party (HSPDP), which is a part of the ruling National People's Party-led Meghalaya Democratic Alliance, have been spearheading the separate state agitation in the two states.
The IPFT has been agitating since 2009 for the creation of a separate state by upgrading the politically important Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District Council (TTAADC), which has jurisdiction over two-thirds of Tripura's 10,491 sq km area and is home to over 12,16,000 people, of which 90 per cent are tribals.
Though the IPFT on its own has organised violent and vigorous movements to push its separate state demand during the past 12 years, the party on Saturday held a crucial meeting with many other tribal-based parties, NGOs and prominent tribal leaders to take forward the demand in a forceful manner.
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The IPFT's new strategy, according to political pundits, was designed as the party suffered a major setback after failing to secure any seat in the April 6 elections to the 30-member TTAADC.
The newly-formed Tiprahaa Indigenous Progressive Regional Alliance (TIPRA) headed by Pradyot Bikram Manikya Deb Barman, head of the erstwhile Royal house of Tripura, captured the TTAADC in April by winning 18 of the 28 seats for which elections were held.
The TIPRA scripted history in the northeastern state by capturing the TTAADC, which is considered as a mini-legislative assembly of Tripura, after raising the demand of 'Greater Tipraland' even as the demand triggered huge doubts and fears in the mixed populated Tripura ever since the newly-formed party raised the demand in 2019.
After TIPRA captured the TTAADC, a unanimous resolution was recently passed in the council and it was subsequently sent to the Governor, the state government and the Centre to create a Greater Tipraland.
"Under the Greater Tipraland concept, a powerful council would be constituted for the all-round socio-economic development of the indigenous tribals residing in the eight northeastern states and the neighbouring countries, including Bangladesh. Such councils exist in European countries. We want to resolve the tribals' basic problems permanently," Deb Barman told IANS.
He said that Greater Tipraland is only for the protection of the tribals and their socio-economic development and the demand is not against any non-tribal community, neither political nor is it vote bank politics.
"This is purely for the upliftment of a backward community," he said, adding that his party wants development of the tribals residing in the entire northeast region and the neighbouring countries.
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Deb Barman, who also attended Saturday's meeting called by its opponent party IPFT, said: "We have to put our people's interest above personal and party interest... We won't compromise on our aims and objectives as long as I am the leader of TIPRA."