Mizoram Peace Accord
The Mizoram Peace Accord, 1986 was an official agreement between the Government of India and the Mizo National Front to end insurgency and violence in Mizoram, India. The Mizo National Front was an organisation of Mizo secessionists led by Laldenga to fight for independence from India. The movement was basically due to lack of support from the government during the great famine in Mizoram in the late 1950s. Political insurgency and social unrest ensued in the next decades. After a number of negotiations, the document titled Mizoram Accord, 1986: Memorandum of Settlement was finally signed on 30 June 1986. It was signed by Laldenga for MNF, R.D. Pradhan, Home Secretary, Government of India, and Lalkhama, Chief Secretary, Government of Mizoram. It is remarked as the most and only successful peace agreement in India after its independence from British Empire in 1947.
Background
The Mizo people were incorporated to the British rule since the 1870 as a retaliation of the Mizo people invading the British territory and capturing a British girl Zoluti. As India got independence in 1947, the Mizo people were governed under the state of Assam. In 1952 a subsidiary government called the Lushai Hills District was created under Assam, which basically covered the later Mizoram. There was a general opposition as many Mizo people were demarcated in Manipur and Burma. They demanded that Mizo people should be given freedom of either independence or join Burma. The political situation was exacerbated in 1959 when there was a famine due to Mautam. Mautam is a literal term for bamboo flowering and death every 48 or so years. It is accompanied by plagues of insects and rodents. Particularly plagues of rats caused total agricultural destruction in 1959. The Mizo people blamed Assam and Indian authorities of negligence. A social organisation named Mautam Front was established in 1960 for local relief works. It was soon renamed the Mizo National Famine Front to enthuse the Mizo people that the organisation was of the Mizo people only. As the famine subsided the next year the organisation turned more political and became Mizo National Front. In November 1961 it officially became a political party with Ladenga as its president. The main goal was then to struggle for creating Greater Mizoram so as to encompass all the Mizo tribes in a singe political governance. It led to political insurgency and social unrest lasting for two decades.Uprising and insurgency
The MNF created its armed wing, the Mizo National Army. It declared independence from India on 1 March 1966 under the Operation Jericho. Guerilla war broke out immediately in major towns. The first major action was an attack on the Telephone Exchange and ransack of Government Treasury in Aizawl. Government offices and stations were attacked and destroyed. The Government of Assam declared Lushai Hills District as a "disturbed area" the next day, and the central government banned MNF as a terror organisation under the Defence of India Rule. The Indian Army was deployed in the region as a retaliation. The army was authorised with "Operation Security" by which soldiers rounded up suspicious civilians. Civil liberty was completely suppressed in the region. Starting from 5 March, Aizawl was attacked with strategic bombing and became uninhabitable. The Armed Forces Special Power Act was enforced in 1967. An administrative called "grouping" was declared under rules such as Protected and Progressive Villages, New Grouping Centres, Voluntary Grouping Centres and Extended Loop Areas. With military force small villages were evacuated and regrouped into larger clusters. The guerillas were outmatched and outnumbered and were forced to flee in Bangladesh and adjoining Burma. MNF then became a lingering underground movement.Negotiation for peace
As the civilians were the ones to suffer the most, local social organisations and church leaders were compelled to make negotiations. As a Christianised society the Mizo people had only the church as the peacemaker. The authorities of Presbyterian and Baptist churches jointly created a Peace Committee to negotiate between the rebels and the government. Zairema, a Presbyterian minister, was the dominant force in the initial negotiations starting from 1968. The first major communication between MNF and the government was in 1974 when Laldenga submitted his terms to Indira Gandhi, the then Prime Minister of India. But to no avail. By 1982 the prospects of agreement were grim. The Governor of Mizoram Sourendra Nath Kohli sought for the effort from church leaders. On 15 June 1982 representatives of different church denominations met at the Synod Conference Hall in Aizawl. "Zoram Kohhran Hruaitute Committee " was formed on 30 July. They started fresh negotiations from the perspectives of the civilians who were oppressed by the military administration. V. L. Rawna, Secretary of ZKHC, met Laldenga in London on 1 March 1983 and asked him to lay down arms. In May ZKHC convinced all political parties to make a joint memorandum for peace. Signed by all party presidents, the memorandum stated:With this resolution they met Rajiv Gandhi, the All India Congress Committee General Secretary, who visited Aizawl on 7 March 1984, and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi who visited Aizawl on 16 April. In October 1984 Ladenga returned to India but the assassination of Gandhi on 31 October hampered any further development. It was the day scheduled for the peace talk. After several communications, MNF agreed to the conditions laid down by the Government of India in 1986.
The peace accord
As Rajiv Gandhi became Prime Minister, his focused on national harmony and immediately prepared agreement documents for MNF. The then Home Secretary G. Parthasarathy was of little help as Laldenga objected to the terms. This was because Gandhi and his government could not accept Ladenga's demand such as:- All MNF members should be freed from criminal charges.
- No Act of Indian Parliament would be legalised in Mizoram unless the state government approves it.
- Mizoram should be a separate state, and be given a university and high court.
Important terms and conditions
The statement of the accord entailed the following terms and conditions:- The Mizo National Front should surrender all arms, ammunition, and equipment to the government.
- The MNF should amend its constitutions so as to conform to the Indian constitution.
- The MNF should detach itself from support from Tripura National Volunteer, People's Liberation Army of Manipur and other allied revolutionary organisations.
- The government should provide necessary settlement and rehabilitation to all underground personnel.
Legal binding
- The government should take action to make Mizoram, which was then a Union Territory, to a full-fledged state.
- The territory of Mizoram should be specified according to the North Eastern Areas Act, 1971.
- After normalcy is established, the President of India should hold election for the Mizoram Legislative Assembly.
- Assistance should be given to the state government according the case of "Special Category State".
- Border trade would be legalised upon agreement with neighbouring countries.
- The Innerline Regulation should remain in force.
Other provisions
- The new state would be able to adopt one or more of the local dialects as its official language.
- Establishment of a new university in the state.
- Separate high court for the state.
- Government will make amelioration such as compensation to places occupied by the military and to families of people killed in the 1966 uprising.
Outcome
The Government of India officially approved statehood to Mizoram on 7 August 1986. Mizoram became the 23rd state of the Indian Union on 20 February 1987.
A high court was established on 5 July 1990.
As part of the deal the Mizoram University was established after a decade and half of the accord by an Act of Parliament on 25 April 2000. The university was formally inaugurated on 1 July 2001. It now administers all colleges and professional institutes in Mizoram.
30 June became the official public holiday "Remna Ni" of the Government of Mizoram.