ASSAM-ARUNACHAL PRADESH BORDER DISPUTE
- February 3, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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ASSAM-ARUNACHAL PRADESH BORDER DISPUTE
TOPIC: Internal Security
Context- Arunachal Pradesh, which was earlier a part of Assam, shares a boundary of roughly 800 km with the state—with frequent flare-ups reported along the border since the 1990s.
Concept-
Bone of contention: 1951
- The dispute dates back to colonial times, when the British in 1873 announced the “inner line” regulation, demarcating an imaginary boundary between plains and the frontier hills, which were later designated as the North East Frontier Tracts in 1915. The latter corresponds to the area that makes up present-day Arunachal Pradesh.
- After Independence, the Assam government assumed administrative jurisdiction over the North East Frontier Tracts, which later became the North East Frontier Agency (NEFA) in 1954, and finally, the Union Territory (UT) of Arunachal Pradesh in 1972.
- It gained statehood in 1987.
- However, before it was carved out of Assam, a sub-committee headed by then Assam chief minister Gopinath Bordoloi made some recommendations in relation to the administration of NEFA (under Assam) and submitted a report in 1951.
- Based on the Bordoloi committee report, around 3,648 sq km of the “plain” area of Balipara and Sadiya foothills was transferred from Arunachal Pradesh (then NEFA) to Assam’s then Darrang and Lakhimpurdistricts. This remains the bone of contention between the two states.
- The border issues came to the fore after Arunachal Pradesh became a UT in 1972.