The South Asian Studies Council presents
Dixita Deka, Postdoctoral Associate, Program in Agrarian Studies:
“Living without Closure: Memories in the Aftermath of Insurgency.”
In India’s Northeast region, insurgency led by the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) in Assam continues since 1979. While one of its factions under ceasefire since 2008, ULFA, signed the Memorandum of Settlement with the Central Government and the State Government of Assam on 29 December 2023, the other faction, ULFA (Independent), continues to be underground. Throughout the 1980s, ULFA enjoyed a strong popular base in rural Assam and was involved in community developmental work. It ran a parallel government, and was successful in mobilizing and recruiting young people to fight for a ‘sovereign Assam’. In 1990, President’s Rule was imposed in Assam, the state was declared a ‘disturbed area’ under the Armed Forces (Special) Powers Act, and ULFA was banned. It was during this time that Assam saw brutal counter-insurgency operations where social lives were militarized. Witnessing state violence and extrajudicial killings also compelled many young men and women to join the organization. While the introduction of monetary packages by the state was perceived to be a ‘successful’ rehabilitation tactic in pulling many insurgents back into the mainstream society and creating internal schisms within ULFA, some of them were mobilized as a ‘death squad’. One of their main objectives was to kill the family members, close aides, and sympathizers of ULFA on their inability to convince their underground kins to surrender. The Justice K.N.Saikia Commission was formed in 2005 to investigate these killings which had implicated the surrendered cadres and the police backed by the then state government, where the army was kept in the loop. While the Commission compensated 35 cases covering the lives of around 50 people, it was estimated that there were over 300 people killed by these death squads using the same tactics and within the period of 1996-2001.
In this talk, I shall firstly share about these killings, their targets and tactics, what makes this type of killing different from other forms of state violence, how it dehumanizes civilians, and how it resonates in other parts of Northeast India and beyond. Until the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, these killings remained a crucial issue in electoral campaigns in Assam. However, no one is convicted till date and the state made no attempts for reconciliation. The silence around these killings in Assam is symbolic of suspicion, fear, grief, guilt, shame, and a scarred history. Secondly, I will focus on the stories of the survivors and the families of victims. How do they remember? What happens when the body is not recovered? How do they mourn their family members under state surveillance? Thirdly, I discuss the challenges of researching about these killings ethically, and also share how engaged scholarship and collaboration between researchers and the community could begin a conversation towards healing.