Rajib: 
Partly based on whatever I could glean from conversations with my old friends 
that now happen to be high officials of the GOI - some of them directly in 
charge of north east India - and partly based on history, I think that the 
political and bureaucratic elite of GOI are still not quite aware of the 
economic potential of north eastern India. The old mentality of the north east 
as an outpost of the mainland, useful for raw materials, but otherwise a 
liability, a problem that has to be "managed" - remains prominent. 
The inertia is actually based on the fact that these elites are still not 
convinced about the efficacy of a full scale economic embrace of the east Asian 
neighbors. They are particularly wary of forging free foreign direct investment 
links in the production of intermediate goods (including energy), capital goods 
and of large scale technology cooperation. Even regarding China, there remains 
a very high degree of suspicion - and the idea of investing in long term 
infrastructure and links that can foster direct investment links with China, 
Thailand etc is still viewed as Utopian at best and misadventurous at worst. 
Their current "liberal" thinking stops at allowing trade in goods (for which 
shipping routes are seen as sufficient). 
In other words, the forward looking rational thinking that you think the GOI 
ought to have, is still not entrenched in the core - its peripheral. But if 
that were to happen, it would be much easier for them to see the crucial 
economic and strategic importance of Assam & the north east. 
Santanuda. 

-----Original Message-----
From: Rajib Das [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sun 6/5/2005 2:25 AM
To: Roy, Santanu; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Assam] GOI-ULFA Negotiations II
 
Santanuda,

I was trying to point out that GOI has a non-trivial
stake in attaining peace and stability - even if the
assumption is made that it does not give a damn about
the people of Assam. Looking at the situation from
certain prisms, it is no longer one remote and
unimportant backfill for the country. While Kashmir
has only political significance, Assam has both
political and economic significance. India's internal
axes of importance in the future is to be found in the
edges (the south and the east), not the heartland
north. And perhaps that could fuel a change in the
governance model.

Since the stake is non-trivial, GOI will be willing to
pay a price (in cash and certain kinds of kind).
Perhaps a high price. And Assam needs to analyze and
understand how much of cash it will be, what kinds of
kind will it be ready to part with and then be
prepared to extract that price. 

Would be interested in understanding your analysis of
what imperatives GOI might have or not, with regard to
attaining peace in the region. What are they prepared
to give up?

Rajib





--- "Roy, Santanu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Rajib: 
> 
> I am not sure about the broad objectives of the GOI
> outlined by you  - but I perfectly agree with you
> that 
> 
> "Neither the ULFA nor the GOI voices the aspirations
> of many sections of Assamese people. Which is why
> its voice/s and the message/s are necessary. The
> public does not need to twiddle their
> thumbs and stay behind the rest of India for the
> next 50 years just because the ULFA decided on a
> pernicious fight for 25 years. And if for that it
> needs to sell out ULFA or treat the GOI as a
> business opponent which needs the maximum extracted
> from, so be it. God forbid, we have a new cabinet
> and the change over of cornering the market for
> government contracts from SULFA to ULFA alone and
> nothing else to show for it. "
> 
> 
> Santanu 
>   
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of
> Rajib Das
> Sent: Sat 6/4/2005 8:38 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Assam] GOI-ULFA Negotiations II
>  
> 
> > > The GOI's strategy is to wait and hope that all
> > militancy will eventually tire and >get corrupted
> to
> > a degree that doles and state level ministries can
> > buy out. Then >it can just do another Assam accord
> > of 1985.
>  
> Left to itself GOI would have waited out the
> eventual
> death of a militant group that finds its space
> continually getting limited by the day. 
> 
> The context for GOI, however, is very different.
> There
> is way more than a strong desire for peace in the
> state to the point where the GOI is hearing it loud
> and clear. It seeks economic growth in Assam (as it
> seeks in Karnataka) and waiting much longer would be
> very detrimental. There is a huge sensitity locally
> and globally against terrorism. It desires to be in
> the Security Council. It needs to connect to the
> rich
> nations of SE Asia to fuel the humongous economic
> growth it is seeking. GOI NEEDS peace in the next
> 2/3
> years, not the next 20/30.
> 
> This context has very little to do with ULFA. 
> 
> And the public - its context is very different from
> either ULFA or GOI. Neither the ULFA nor the GOI
> voices the aspirations of many sections of Assamese
> people. Which is why its voice/s and the message/s
> are
> necessary. The public does not need to twiddle their
> thumbs and stay behind the rest of India for the
> next
> 50 years just because the ULFA decided on a
> pernicious
> fight for 25 years. And if for that it needs to sell
> out ULFA or treat the GOI as a business opponent
> which
> needs the maximum extracted from, so be it.
> 
> God forbid, we have a new cabinet and the change
> over
> of cornering the market for government contracts
> from
> SULFA to ULFA alone and nothing else to show for it.
> 
> 
> 
>               
> __________________________________ 
> Discover Yahoo! 
> Have fun online with music videos, cool games, IM
> and more. Check it out! 
> http://discover.yahoo.com/online.html
> _______________________________________________
> Assam mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam
> 
> Mailing list FAQ:
> http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/assam/assam-faq.html
> To unsubscribe or change options:
> http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/options/assam
> 
> 



                
__________________________________ 
Discover Yahoo! 
Find restaurants, movies, travel and more fun for the weekend. Check it out! 
http://discover.yahoo.com/weekend.html 



_______________________________________________
Assam mailing list
[email protected]
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam

Mailing list FAQ:
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/assam/assam-faq.html
To unsubscribe or change options:
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/options/assam

Reply via email to