Lalzirliana told media persons that the decision was made at the meeting convened in Delhi on Friday by the Union Home Ministry and attended by representatives of the Mizoram and Tripura governments.
The meeting, chaired by Joint Secretary (NE) of Union Home Ministry Shambhu Singh, decided that the Brus lodged in the relief camps in North Tripura district should be given six month deadline for returning to Mizoram, he said.
Lalzirliana said that the next round of repatriation efforts would begun from March or April as the state government has been making arrangements for implementation of the road map for repatriation of the Brus from Tripura.
"We would soon submit the estimated expenses and requirement for free ration," he said.
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While the Mizoram Bru Displaced People's Forum (MBDPF), led by A Sawibung, demanded Rs 1.5 lakh as rehabilitation and resettlement package for a repatriated family, the centre decided that Rs 80,000 per family was sufficient.
The repatriated Brus would not be allowed to resettle at their own will, but would be resettled in their respective villages where they lived before leaving Mizoram during the later part of 1997, he said.
"If their village had been deserted and no longer inhabited, they would be resettled in another suitable village within the same assembly constituency," the home minister said.
According to the Mizoram voters' lists those who were yet to be repatriated were 3,455 families - 2,594 families from Mizoram-Tripura border Mamit district, 628 families from Mizoram-Assam border Kolasib district and 233 families from Mizoram-Bangladesh border Lunglei district.
The plans to repatriate the Brus from Tripura from November 16, 2009, the murder of Zarzokima, a young boy from Bungthuam village by Bru militants not only derailed the proposed repatriation, but triggered another round of exodus due to heightened communal tension.