海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Doubts emerge over Indian Army 'hot pursuit' into Myanmar

India claimed to kill many rebels in Myanmar and said its cross-border raid was facilitated by Myanmar's government. Both claims appear shaky. 

By Shaikh Azizur Rahman , Correspondent
Kolkata, India

Earlier this month the Indian Army suffered its deadliest ambush in nearly 30 years. Heavily armed rebels in the remote northeast state of Manipur killed at least 20 soldiers, then fled across the border into neighboring Myanmar, a common tactic.聽

Five days later India announced a successful cross-border Army raid.聽Special commandos had killed nearly 40 rebels in two bases, 鈥渄eep in another country,鈥 a government spokesman told reporters. New Delhi officials crowed that the June 9 incursion was made possible by聽鈥渇riendly relations鈥 with Myanmar.聽

The front-page news stirred pride among Indians 鈥 and disquiet among its neighbors.聽Rajyavardhan Rathore, an Indian press minister and former Army colonel, said the strikes were a message to all nations and to groups harboring 鈥渢error intent鈥 toward India that 鈥渨e will strike at a place and at a time of our choosing.鈥澛

Arch-rival Pakistan bristled at the news, warning India it wouldn't stand for聽any similar violations of its sovereignty.聽鈥淭hose who have evil designs against us, listen carefully. Pakistan is not Burma," Pakistan's interior minister, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, said in a statement.聽

Now, India's story of a full-bore military incursion into Myanmar has been called into question.聽Human rights activists returning from the scene in Myanmar after talking to local villagers report finding no evidence of the 鈥渟ignificant casualties鈥 of rebels the Army claims to have inflicted.聽

Respect for sovereignty

Moreover, India appears to have overstated the willingness of Myanmar's government to look the other way and allow India to engage in cross-border hot pursuit.聽After the June 9 raid, the chief of聽staff to Myanmar President Thein Sein, a retired Army general, called for 鈥渆very country to respect鈥overeignty.鈥

India has repeatedly asked Myanmar to clean up the rebel camps, but to little of no avail; dozens of聽ethnic and tribal militants straddle the聽lawless borderlands. A week after the incursion,聽both India鈥檚 foreign secretary and national security advisor visited Myanmar to smooth relations, but reportedly failed to clear a new proposal by Delhi for joint military action inside Myanmar.聽

While the region is remote, there is plenty of traffic across the border; various groups have since visited the area where the incursion took place.聽One rights activist from Manipur, Debabrata Roy Laifungbam, talked to villagers on both sides of the border, joining an Indian Red Cross Society team.聽

鈥淎ll local people we met鈥aid that Indian soldiers had indeed launched a military operation inside Myanmar on June 9. But, it did not result in any casualty in the area, they all confirmed,鈥 according to Dr. Laifungbam, president of an indigenous people鈥檚 NGO.聽鈥淰illagers 鈥 heard gunshots on the morning of June 9 and found the camps had been fired upon and destroyed by Indian soldiers."

Yet the destruction of the camps did not result in fatalities, according to these villagers. 鈥淓ven an injury of a rebel cannot go unnoticed 鈥 We spoke to different villagers at different places. They all confirmed that the rebels had not been fired upon by Indian soldiers on June 9,鈥 Laifungbam says.聽

Rebel casualties in doubt

Col. Rathore told reporters on June 9 that, 鈥渟uch attacks [like the Manipur ambush] will no more be tolerated. It was a historic and very brave decision by the Prime Minister to go in hot pursuit and annihilate the rebel camps. And, that鈥檚 exactly what was done.鈥

Authorities did not say how many rebels were killed, but Indian media quoted unnamed defense officials relaying a tally of 38; one newspaper, citing the home ministry, said the incursion聽may have killed more than 100 Indian rebels. However, Laifungbam says villagers in Sagaing, near the Myanmar rebel camps, were taken aback when told of these claims.

The rebels have formed an umbrella group called the United National Liberation Front of West South East Asia. One major faction is the National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Khaplang (NSCN-K), a separatist group. 聽

A NSCN-K leader quickly dismissed the Army account of the June 9 incursion as 鈥渃ompletely false,鈥 according to the Nagaland Post. The NSCN-K is now asking Indian authorities to produce any evidence, including bodily remains, that would support their claim of a military success.聽

Three other groups from Manipur and Assam in northeast India who have their camps in Myanmar, have also refuted the claims, issuing a statement calling the story 鈥渇alse and cheap propaganda to boost the morale鈥 of India's soldiers.