Ulfa chief not held in Bangladesh
Ulfa chief not held in Bangladesh
Asserts Sahara; Indian home secy says he surrendered in Meghalaya
Star Report
The Bangladesh government yesterday finally spoke about the rampant international media speculations regarding United Liberation Front of Asom (Ulfa) Chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa's arrest in Dhaka and his subsequent transfer to Indian custody.
Terming the media reports baseless, Bangladesh Home Minister Sahara Khatun told reporters, "Since we did not arrest him, there is no question of pushing him back," adding, "Media reports about the Ulfa chairman's arrest in Bangladesh is baseless and untrue."
The Indian authorities however formally announced yesterday afternoon that the Ulfa chairman surrendered to Indian Border Security Force (BSF) earlier in the day at Dawki in the northeastern Meghalaya state of the country.
"Rajkhowa and another Ulfa leader Raju Baruah surrendered, and then they were arrested. They are now in Guwahati. They will be produced before a court," Indian Home Secretary Gopal Krishna Pillai told reporters yesterday.
The announcement by Pillai came three days after the Indian media had reported that Rajkhowa had been in the Indian government custody, while an Indian television channel in Guwahati claimed yesterday that Rajkhowa spoke to it denying his arrest or surrender.
The Indian government's announcement also contradicts media reports that he had been arrested in Dhaka on Monday and that the Bangladesh authorities handed him over to India on Wednesday night, following which he was taken to Delhi on Thursday.
Meanwhile, displaying a photograph of Rajkhowa on the screen, another Indian TV channel NDTV aired an audio track yesterday claiming that the voice was of the Ulfa chief, which said he was not arrested and was speaking from a place in Bangladesh from where he had spoken earlier as well. The media speculations have been going on for four days.
In response to a query whether the Bangladesh government will officially respond to the recent related reports, Sahara Khatun yesterday said the media published whatever they thought had happened, and her government has nothing to say about it.
Talking to The Daily Star, Bangladesh Rifles Director General Maj Gen Mainul Islam said yesterday that he was not aware of handing over of any Ulfa leader to India by his government.
Asked if he knew whether Rajkhowa had been arrested in his country, the Bangladesh border security force chief said that is the job of the police, he would not know about it.
Asked whether he knew if Rajkhowa had crossed the border from Bangladesh, he replied, "Nothing of that sort happened at the border.
Pallab Bhattacharya reported from New Delhi that the Indian government yesterday announced that BSF arrested Rajkhowa at Dawki of Meghalaya bordering Sylhet region of Bangladesh after being on the run from law for 17 years.
"They have just come. Everything will take place in due course. Wait for that," said Indian Home Secretary Gopal Krishna Pillai, adding that the Ulfa leaders, who surrendered, will have to face judicial process as several cases are filed against them. He also said talks with them will be held in due course.
53-year-old Rajkhowa, who has been out of India since 1992, faces several cases including on the charge of waging war against the nation, and his arrest would be a major setback to Ulfa which has been fighting for a separate nationhood for more than two decades.
According to Indian reports, Rajkhowa and his deputy commander-in-chief Raju Baruah, along with eight others including their family members, surrendered to the Indian government.
Among those who reportedly surrendered are Rajkhowa's wife Kaveri and two children, Baruah, his wife and one child, the wife of another senior Ulfa leader Sashadhar Choudhury, and their son.
The surrendered Ulfa leaders and their family members were then reportedly brought to Guwahati by a helicopter and were lodged at the 4th Assam Police Battalion headquarters in the city.
According to the Indian government's claim, last week, two other top Ulfa leaders Sashadhar Choudhury and Chitraban Hazarika, who had allegedly been in Dhaka, were arrested by BSF after they had been handed over by the Bangladesh authorities.
Another senior Ulfa leader Anup Chetiya has been confined in a Bangladesh jail since his arrest in 1998.