11 political parties in Nagaland, including BJP and NPF, to boycott Assembly polls

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: Jan 30, 2018, 06:51 AM IST

As many as 11 political parties in Nagaland, including the BJP and its ally ruling NPF have decided not to contest the February 27 elections

As many as 11 political parties in Nagaland, including the BJP and its ally ruling Naga People’s Front (NPF) have decided not to contest the February 27 elections, agreeing to the demand of tribal bodies and civil society groups to resolve the protracted Naga political problem first.

The decision came at a meeting called by the Core Committee of Nagaland Tribal Organisations and Civil Societies (CCNTOCS), and attended by representatives of 11 parties and 7 Naga Nationalist Political Groups (NNPGs) on Monday.

"It is the unanimous view of the Naga people that the political solution or Naga peace accord is more important than elections and therefore, it has become imperative that the elections to the legislative assembly of Nagaland be deferred for peace and tranquillity," read a joint declaration signed by the parties.

The parties are -- Naga People s Front, Congress, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Nationalist Democratic Peoples Party, Nagaland Congress, United Nagaland Democratic Party, Aam Admi Party, National Congress Party, Lok Jan Party, Janata Dal (United) and National People's Party.

The BJP later suspended two of state leaders - Kheto Sema and Tsasepi Sangtam - signing the resolution without authority, according to a report by The Hindu.  

Tsasepi Sangtam is a state vice-president of the BJP. 

The National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Isak Muivah and the working committee of 6 NNPGs were in attendance at the meeting.

A copy of the joint declaration was given to the media by the convenor of the CCNTOCS, Theja Therie, at a press briefing here.

"We firmly believe it is expedient for all parties, both national and regional, to come together in the greater interest of the state in solidarity with the call for Solution before Election and defer the elections to the 13th Nagaland Legislative Assembly.

"And therefore, we, on behalf of all the political parties and the intending candidates, have in compliance with the wishes of the people decided not to go ahead with the issuance of party tickets or filing of nominations," it read.

The parties "respected the sentiments of people and decided to give wholehearted support to the call for Solution Before Election'", Therie said.

"If they stand by it and don t allot tickets, there will be no candidate. We have full confidence that no independent candidate will defy the people s popular slogan," he said.

The Naga people would be compelled to take to the streets if the Election Commission went ahead and issued the official notification on January 31, he warned.

The Core Committee has given a call for a total bandh on February 1, the day on which filing of nomination begins.

The Naga Hoho, an apex Naga tribal body, had earlier this month sought Prime Minister Narendra Modi's help in postponing the elections, saying the vexed issue should be resolved first.

Civil society groups in Nagaland have also launched a campaign 'Solution before Election'.

Union Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju, BJP’s election in charge for Nagaland, and party general secretary Ram Madhav have reportedly met Chief Minister TR Zeliang and NPF president Surhozhelie in Kohima to resolve the crisis.

“Government of India attaches utmost importance to the Naga issue and has full faith in the ongoing talks. We believe that peaceful election in Nagaland will facilitate the talks,” Rijiju reportedly said.

(With PTI inputs)