The Union Government on Tuesday said the ULFA has set up bases in Arunachal Pradesh to facilitate their movement. “Reports indicate that the ULFA has established temporary camps and hideouts in Arunachal Pradesh,” Union Minister of State for Home S Regupathy told the Lok Sabha in reply to a written question. He said the Government has taken several measures to deal with the activities of ULFA which include declaring the outfit as “unlawful association” under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 and declaring the whole of Assam and its 20 km belt with Meghalaya, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh as a “disturbed area”.
Meanwhile, worried over the increasing presence of ULFA and NSCN cadres within its territory, the state government has sent several requests to the Union Home Ministry to take appropriate steps to deal with the menace.
While the two south-eastern districts of Arunachal—Tirap and Changlang—have witnessed the presence of large number of militants from both Assam and Nagaland for several years now, these militants have of late also started spreading out to Lohit district in the north of Changlang. “They take advantage of the thick forests. The state police is virtually absent because of very little population there,” an army official said. These regions have also witnessed inter-group clashes between the cadres of two factions
of NSCN.
“Due to the terrain, it is difficult to keep them under control. Moreover, most rebels do not stay there permanently and use these districts as corridors and hideouts,” a senior army official said.
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