Ulfa leaders meet Chidambaram for Assam peace talks

Ulfa chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa coming out after a meeting with Home Minister P. Chidambaram

Ulfa chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa coming out after a meeting with Home Minister P. Chidambaram

Leaders of the banned Ulfa on Thursday met home minister P. Chidambaram as they began face-to-face unconditional talks with the Centre in an attempt to usher in peace in insurgency-hit Assam.

An eight-member Ulfa delegation led by its 'chairman' Arabinda Rajkhowa met Chidambaram at his North block office here as a part of an introductory meeting.

The meeting was followed by a full session with senior Home Ministry officials led by home secretary G.K. Pillai. Thursday's meet assumes significance as it took place for the first time in Ulfa's 31-year-old history.

The meeting will also be attended by Assam home secretary N.K. Das, additional director general police (Assam) Khagen Sharma, Assam home commissioner Jishnu Barua, Centre's interlocutor P.C. Haldar, secretary (Internal Security) U.K. Bansal and Intelligence bureau chief N. Sandhu.

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"On Thursday's meeting is a preliminary one, more so a familiarisation exercise," a senior home ministry official said.

On February 5, the Ulfa announced that it will sit for unconditional talks with the Centre 'respecting the wishes of the people of Assam'.

It also apologised for the violent acts it committed. Apart from Rajkhowa, 'vice-chairman' Pradip Gogoi, 'political advisor' Bhimakanta Buragohain, 'foreign secretary' Sasha Choudhury, 'finance secretary' Chitrabon Hazarika, 'cultural secretary' Pranati Deka, 'publicity secretary' Mithinga Daimary and 'deputy commander-in-chief' Raju Barua will participate in the talks.

They arrived here last evening and were whisked away by armed security men. Before leaving for the national capital, the Ulfa leaders met Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi and sought his cooperation to take forward the peace process with the Centre.

"I hope talks with the Centre is successful and they discussed with me how to take the peace process forward", Gogoi had said.

Rajkhowa said the modalities for the talks have not been worked out so far and will come later. The Ulfa leaders released from jail recently have decided to hold unconditional talks with the government but the faction led by the group's 'commander-in-chief' Paresh Barua is opposed to it.

The Ulfa delegation is also likely to meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on February 13 after his return from Kerala.

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India

As a self-confessed hardliner, I must admit that being a part of the team engaged in Indo-Pak Track 2 dialogue has been very interesting.

In June 2012, world leaders along with thousands of participants from governments, NGOs and environmental groups as well as the private sector will come together in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil for Rio+20