| Nellie Massacre | |
|---|---|
| Location | 26°06′41″N92°19′02″E / 26.111483°N 92.317253°E /26.111483; 92.317253 Assam,India |
| Date | 18 February 1983 |
| Target | Bengal-origin Muslims[1][2] |
Attack type | Mass murder |
| Deaths | 2,000 – 3,000 |
| Perpetrator | A mob of a several hundredTiwas[3] |
| Motive |
|
TheNellie massacre took place in centralAssam during a seven-hour period on the morning of 18 February 1983.[7][8] The massacre claimed the lives of 2000–3000 people[9][10][11][12][13] from 14 villages—Alisingha, Khulapathar, Basundhari, Bugduba Beel, Bugduba Habi, Borjola, Butuni, Dongabori, Indurmari, Mati Parbat, Muladhari, Mati Parbat no. 8, Silbheta, Borburi and Nellie—ofNagaon district.[14][15] The victims were people ofBengali Muslim descent.[16][8][17] Three media personnel—Hemendra Narayan ofThe Indian Express, Bedabrata Lahkar ofThe Assam Tribune, and Sharma of ABC—were witnesses to the massacre.[18] The death toll was notably high among children, women, and the elderly, who were unable to flee the attackers. Bodies were strewn across fields and in some instances, whole families were killed.[19] The victims were called foreigners, or evenBangladeshis, despite the fact that the majority of them had been living there since the 1930s.[20]
The violence that took place in Nellie was by natives, mostly rural peasants. It was seen as a fallout of the decision to hold the controversialstate elections in 1983[21] in the midst of theAssam Agitation, afterPrime MinisterIndira Gandhi's decision to give four million Bengali Muslims the right to vote.[14][22] It has been described as one of the worstpogroms sinceWorld War II and one of the deadliest pogroms against a minority community in post-partition India.[23][24]
In 1978,Lok Sabhamember Hiralal Patwari died, necessitating a by-election in theMangaldoi Lok Sabha Constituency. During the process of the election it was noticed that the electorate had grown phenomenally. Investigation revealed that there had been mass inclusion of alleged illegal migrants.[25][26] TheAll Assam Students Union (AASU) demanded that the elections be postponed until the names of 'foreign nationals' were deleted from the electoral rolls. The AASU subsequently launched an agitation to compel the government to identify and expel allegedly illegal immigrants.[27]
Thecentral government attempted to placate theAssamese by agreeing to proscribe any migrants who entered the state after March 1971 from voting, and proceeded with the elections. The Assamese, demanding an earlier cutoff date, were inimical to the government's decision, as were theLalung (Tiwa) tribals who resented the proliferation of Bengali immigrants onto their land. Conversely, the Bengali communities (both Hindu and Muslim) as well as thePlains Tribal Council of Assam, an organization composed exclusively ofBoro tribals opposed to Assamese hegemony, supported the elections, and subsequent inter-ethnic violence unfolded.[28]
The ethnic clash that took place in Nellie was seen as a fallout of the decision to hold the controversial Assembly elections in 1983 (boycotted by the AASU) despite stiff opposition from several elements in the state.[14] Police officials had suggested to hold the polls in phases in order to avoid violence. According to then AssamInspector General of Police,KPS Gill, there were 63 constituencies, where elections could have been held without any trouble. Among the rest, the Assam police had declared there were 23 constituencies where it was "impossible to hold any election." Nellie was cited as one of the "troubled" spots before the elections. 400 companies ofCentral Paramilitary Force and 11 brigades of theIndian Army were deployed to guard Assam while the polls were scheduled to take place in phases.[14]
In a speech,Atal Bihari Vajpayee expressed concern about the government's inaction towards foreigners: "Foreigners have arrived, and the government remains inactive. Imagine if they had enteredPunjab – people would have dealt with them harshly and would [have] chopped them into pieces and thrown them away". Following the speech, violence erupted in Nellie. Vajpayee, returning toNew Delhi fromAssam, strongly condemned the Nellie massacre. This quote attributed to Vajpayee was presented by former CPI-M MP Indrajit Gupta during a trust vote debate in May 1996, and it went unchallenged in theLok Sabha.[29][30]
Reports that immigrant Bengali Muslims had kidnapped and gang-raped four young women from a Lalung family, killed six children, illegally cultivated Tiwa lands, and stolen cows quickly spread, leadingTiwa Hindus to assemble to avenge the outrages.[31] It was also alleged that on February 13,Miya Muslims had attacked a Bihari village in that area.[32] The occurrence of the alleged killings and abductions remains uncertain, as noFirst Information Report (FIR) could be located, nor is there any record of criminal proceedings against the purported perpetrators. None of the individuals interviewed in Nellie confirmed that such incidents had taken place.[33][5]Tiwa chiefs reportedly decided they must kill at least 700 Bengalis for each of their tribesmen killed, and consequently an all-out attack was launched on immigrant areas.[34]
The massacre itself took place on the morning of 18 February 1983, starting in the village of Borbori, perpetrated by several hundredTiwas, who targeted Nellie and 14 otherMuslim-majority villages in the area. In Nellie, the mob burnt many houses and placed itself at all the roads and exits to the village, killing anyone who tried to escape. The massacre lasted until dusk. Between 1,600 and 3,000 people died, but locals report the number as having been higher.[3]
The massacre ended with the arrival of theCentral Reserve Police Force (CRPF) in the evening. Many survivors recall that the local police tried convincing the CRPF battalion that there was no violence in the area; the smoke emitted was due to burning of agricultural waste rather than houses. The survivors also recalled that the local police diverted the battalion to patrol the national highway suggesting that no road lead to the area from where the smoke rose. The battalion eventually located the area when a woman from the village stopped the CRPF trucks and led them to the village.[35]
The official Tiwari Commission report on the Nellie massacre is still a closely guarded secret (only three copies reportedly exist).[14] The 600-page report was submitted to theAssam Government in 1984 and theCongress Government (headed byHiteswar Saikia) decided not to make it public, and subsequent Governments followed suit.[36]Assam United Democratic Front and others are making legal efforts to make Tiwari Commission report public, so that reasonable justice is delivered to victims, at least after 25 years after the incident.[37]
Police filed 688 criminal cases, of which 378 cases were closed due to "lack of evidence" and 310 cases were slated to be charged. However, all these cases were dropped by the Government of India as a part of the 1985Assam Accord; and, as a result, no one was prosecuted.[38]
Prime MinisterRajiv Gandhi signed the Assam Accord with the leaders of the AASU to formally end the Assam Agitation in 1985.[27]
The physical violence flowed directly from the emotive violence generated by the agitation, which sought the expulsion of "illegal Bengalis/Bangladeshis" from Assam.