Two decades after he wrote the much-acclaimed "Strangers of the Mist", writer-journalist Sanjoy Hazarika presents the case for the region in "Strangers No More: New Narratives from India's Northeast", published by Aleph Book Company.
Armed with more stories, interviews and research, and after extensive travels through the region, he explains how and where things stand today in the Northeast.
He spends a fair amount of time looking at how new frontlines are emerging, of the new battlegrounds of discrimination and communalism, of the dangers of Islamic radicalism born out of prejudice as much as mobilisation in the nearly-400 pages book.
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The book among other things also examines the imposition of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act (AFSPA) in the Northeast - a triangular shape of land wedged between Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Tibet - which has longer borders with its neighbours than it has with India.
"That incapacity and official inchoateness has democratic incontinence stamped all over it. These are studied in detail, with personal narratives, official texts and a range of responses and documentation," he says.
"AFSPA is a brief yet ponderous and powerful law, widely reviled as draconian. It has survived the wrath of Supreme Court judges who have virtually shredded the official position in powerful judgments. Yet its removal remains implacably blocked because the Centre hasn't shown the guts, vision or trust that's needed for its revocation," Hazarika says.
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