Assam again on the edge

Six months before the Assam assembly elections, there may be another bout of social unrest if the Tarun Gogoi government presses for franchise rights for those voters who bear the “doubtful” tag after their names. In a recent judgment, the Guwahati High Court has rejected the state government’s plea for allowing voting rights to even […]

Assam

Six months before the Assam assembly elections, there may be another bout of social unrest if the Tarun Gogoi government presses for franchise rights for those voters who bear the "doubtful" tag after their names. In a recent judgment, the Guwahati High Court has rejected the state government's plea for allowing voting rights to even those people whose cases are pending before the Foreigners Tribunal and who have not yet been declared as foreigners.

Obviously, the major political powers in the state are now busy trying to effect a realignment of political forces, having been quite oblivious of the fact that Assam is a highly strategic state and any kind of brinkmanship here may compromise India's security structure. The Congress and the Tarun Gogoi government have been raising the issue before each election with an eye on the minority votes. But branding a certain segment of voters as "doubtful" and then segregating them in some camps is an outcome of the judicial decision and instead of pestering the judiciary with insincere appeals, efforts must be made to help it reach the finale.