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Modi govt has ‘no plans’ to oust interlocutor Governor Ravi despite demand from Naga groups

A file photo of Nagaland Governor R.N. Ravi. | Photo: Commons
A file photo of Nagaland Governor R.N. Ravi. | Photo: Commons


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New Delhi: Despite a fallout between the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah) and interlocutor R.N. Ravi, the Nagaland Governor, further delaying the 23-year-old peace process, the central government has no plans to remove the latter from his position, ThePrint has learnt.

According to a source in the government, talks between the NSCN(I-M) delegation and representatives of the Government of India, including two senior officials of the Intelligence Bureau, to resolve “certain issues” are going on in Delhi, and there are no plans to replace Ravi “as yet”.

For five years, Governor Ravi successfully acted as an interlocutor between the Naga groups and the Centre. He signed the Framework Agreement, which aimed to end the decades-old Naga issue, in the presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 3 August 2015.

Now, after five years, the NSCN(I-M) is demanding Ravi’s ouster, accusing him of arbitrarily tweaking the agreement by deleting a key word from it to “suit his interpretation” and mislead other Naga groups. 

The NSCN(I-M) is part of the Naga insurgency, which began in the early 20th century and was initially centred on the demand for a greater Nagaland or ‘Nagalim’ comprising the state and Naga-inhabited areas of Assam, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh and Myanmar.

In the 2015 agreement, the NSCN(I-M) had agreed to give up its demands for sovereignty and settle for a solution that doesn’t require the state boundaries to be redrawn. It, however, later demanded for a separate flag and constitution for Nagaland.

NSCN(I-M) chief Thuingaleng Muivah in his Independence Day speech last week said the Nagas will co-exist with India by sharing sovereign powers as agreed in the 2015 agreement but will “not merge with India”.

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