Silchar : For the first time in the history of North East, residents  of 65 villages in  Southern Karimgang District of Assam have declared to merge with Mizoram.
About 16000 residents of  65 villages in Karimganj district in southern Assam have formed  Cheragi-Jamuyang Sadak Unnayan Samiti (CJSUS) earlier this month to expedite the process.
“The Assam government has turned a deaf ear to our woes. The state government has not done anything to provide proper infrastructure and development in these villages,” CJSUS president Abhimanyu Singh told IANS Â here.
“We will intensify our movement after the panchayat elections in Assam,” he said.
The CJSUS has submitted a resolution to the deputy commissioner of Mamit district of western Mizoram expressing the villagers’ willingness to merge with Mizoram.
Assam’s Karimganj district Deputy Commissioner Debeswar Malakar met CJSUS leaders last week and assured them that their woes would be addressed after the panchayat elections beginning Jan 30.
“Following our assurances, CJSUS leaders have withdrawn their panchayat poll boycott agitation. We have assured them that their problems will be resolved gradually,” Malakar said.
CJSUS secretary Sarful Ali said villagers of the area had boycotted the last Assam assembly election May 2011 over the government’s apathy to provide basic facilities, including roads, drinking water, electricity, health care and education.
“Even though Assam Border Area Development Minister Siddique Ahmed is from southern Assam, he has never visited these villages or tried to solve their problems,” Ali said.
The CJSUS leaders also alleged that besides the backwardness of the villages, militants from Mizoram were creating trouble in the areas.
Residents of the 65 villagers comprise Manipuris, Muslims and Hindu Bengalis.
A Mizoram home department official told IANS that the state government has no role to play in the villagers’ willingness to join Mizoram.
“The matter can be examined only after the central government forms a boundary commission,” the official added.
The Mizoram government last year had formed a five-member committee led by legal experts and former minister C. Chawngkunga to resolve its boundary dispute with Assam.
Mizoram, a mountainous state, has a 123-km border with Assam, 66 km with Tripura and 96 km with Manipur.