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ConflictBarometer_2015

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ASIA AND OCEANIA<br />

United Liberation Front of Assam Independent faction (ULFA-<br />

I) against the Hindi-speaking population continued. ULFA-I<br />

further opposed ethnic Biharis and Bengalis. Militant Bodos,<br />

such as the National Democratic Front of Bodoland I.K. Songbijit<br />

faction (NDFB-S), did not conduct violent attacks against<br />

Adivasis as in previous years, but continued their armed<br />

fight for an independent Bodoland [→ India (ULFA-I et al. /<br />

Assam)]. Furthermore, indigenous groups, such as Adivasis,<br />

Assamese and Bodos, carried on non-violent protests against<br />

Bangladeshi immigrants.<br />

On July 14, members of ULFA-I shot dead two Hindi-speaking<br />

people and injured three in Tinsukia district. The following<br />

day, Tinsukia residents organized demonstrations and road<br />

blockades demanding protection against ULFA-I. When police<br />

forces tried to disperse the protests, they killed one person<br />

and injured up to ten. Demanding a stop to the demonstrations,<br />

ULFA-I threatened to conduct more violent actions<br />

against the Hindi-speaking population. They also urged two<br />

civil Bihari organizations to stop their activities, accusing<br />

them to work against the indigenous population. On December<br />

1, ULFA-I militants shot at a group of Hindi-speaking<br />

people in Dibrugarh district, injuring two.<br />

After NDFB-S had killed at least 64 Adivasis, most of them<br />

Santhals, in Sonitpur and Kokrajhar districts in December<br />

2014, over 100,000 Adivasis and Bodos were internally displaced<br />

by the end of 2014. During the first three months of<br />

<strong>2015</strong>, student organizations such as the All Bodo Students'<br />

Union (ABSU), the All Adivasi Students' Association of Assam<br />

(AASAA), and the Assam Tea Tribes Association repeatedly<br />

staged joint sit-ins, demonstrations, strikes and road blockades.<br />

They collectively appealed to the government to take<br />

action against NDFB-S and to increase support for Adivasis<br />

and Bodos affected by the 2014 attacks.<br />

In the context of the actualization of the National Register of<br />

Citizens in July, members of indigenous tribes held demonstrations<br />

and submitted memoranda to the state and central<br />

government. They demanded that Bangladeshis who had immigrated<br />

before 1971 would not be acknowledged as citizens<br />

of Assam. On September 9, the central government allowed<br />

Bangladeshis, who were persecuted for religious reasons in<br />

their home country to stay in Assam [→ Bangladesh (Islamist<br />

groups)]. Subsequently, indigenous' protests intensified. For<br />

instance, on November 17, the All Assam Students Union<br />

organized a demonstration with thousands of participants in<br />

Morigaon, eponymous district, followed by a sit-in in front of<br />

the district court.<br />

Throughout the year, ethnic Assamese, Bodos and Santhals<br />

staged several demonstrations for the enhancement of their<br />

rights, more autonomy or the legal acknowledgement as a<br />

Scheduled Tribe. juh<br />

INDIA (JEM ET AL. / KASHMIR)<br />

Intensity: 3 | Change: | Start: 1947<br />

Conflict parties:<br />

Conflict items:<br />

HM, JeM, LeT, TuM vs. government<br />

secession<br />

The secession conflict in the state of Jammu and Kashmir<br />

(J&K) between Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), Hizbul Mujahideen<br />

(HM), Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), and Tehreek-ul-Mujahideen<br />

(TuM), on the one hand, and the government, on the other,<br />

continued as a violent crisis. No activities from other groups<br />

such as Harkat-ul-Mujahideen were reported. Throughout the<br />

year, a total of at least 195 people died. Members of militant<br />

groups repeatedly attempted to cross the Line of Control<br />

(LoC) from Pakistan, but army and security forces reportedly<br />

prevented many of these efforts. Security forces undertook a<br />

series of extensive search operations, discovering at least 19<br />

militant hideouts stocked with large amounts of weaponry.<br />

In the course of the year, militants attacked the Indian police<br />

and army numerous times, killing a total of 69 and injuring<br />

100. Furthermore, 78 civilians were injured. For example,<br />

on March 21, two militants opened fire in an army camp in<br />

Kathua district using automatic weapons and grenades, killing<br />

three Indian soldiers, two civilians and injuring eleven people.<br />

Soldiers consequently killed both attackers. On July 29,<br />

TuM members hurled a grenade at security forces in Anantnag<br />

district, injuring four officers and civilians respectively. On<br />

August 5, two Pakistani LeT militants ambushed a Border Security<br />

Force convoy in Udhampur district, killing two soldiers.<br />

In a subsequent search operation, security forces killed one<br />

militant while capturing the other.<br />

Indian security forces killed 104 militants and three civilians.<br />

For example, on October 4, police and army forces killed the<br />

high-ranking JeM commander Aadil Pathan and his associate<br />

in a joint operation in Pulwama district.<br />

Several pro-secession demonstrations took place throughout<br />

the year. Violent clashes between protesters and security<br />

forces erupted in Srinagar town on November 7 when Prime<br />

Minister Narendra Modi addressed a rally there. Over the<br />

course of the day, security forces using tear gas and bullets<br />

killed one protester. The clashes lasted for another day, leaving<br />

a total of 23 protesters and ten police officers injured.<br />

In preparation of the event, the government had deployed<br />

thousands of security forces to Srinagar as well as connecting<br />

highways and had detained nearly 400 Kashmiri separatists<br />

in order to prevent demonstrations. In total, security forces<br />

injured 126 protesters throughout the year. jam<br />

INDIA (MANIPUR)<br />

Intensity: 3 | Change: | Start: 1964<br />

Conflict parties:<br />

Conflict items:<br />

Meiteis, UNLF et al., PLA, PREPAK-Pro,<br />

KCP, KYKL, JCLIPS, Kukis, KNF vs. government<br />

secession, autonomy<br />

The violent crisis over autonomy and secession of Manipur<br />

state between Kuki and Meitei ethnic groups, on the one hand,<br />

and the government, on the other, continued. While various<br />

civil groups held violent protests against the government<br />

to demand the restriction of migration to Manipur, militants<br />

fought for an independent state to be created out of varying<br />

areas in Manipur. The latter were organized in groups such as<br />

United National Liberation Front (UNLF), People's Liberation<br />

Army (PLA), People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak Progressive<br />

faction (PREPAK-Pro), Kangleipak Communist Party<br />

(KCP), and Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL).<br />

On April 17, these militant groups and four formations belonging<br />

to Assamese, Naga, and Bodo ethnicities set up an<br />

umbrella organization called United National Liberation Front<br />

of West South East Asia (UNLFW) [→ India (UFLA-I et al. / Assam);<br />

India (NSCN factions et al. / Nagaland)]. UNLFW claimed<br />

responsibility for an ambush on soldiers of the 6th Dogra<br />

Regiment in Chandel district on June 4, using RPGs and IEDs.<br />

The militants killed 18 soldiers and injured eleven. This was<br />

the highest loss in a single attack for government forces since<br />

the mid-1990s. The same week, the government launched<br />

139

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