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NSCN (I-M) leaders issued Indian passports
New Delhi, Dec 22: Indian passports have been issued to leaders of Naga insurgent group NSCN (I-M) who are expected to arrive here on December 27 and meet Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee the next day, official sources said here today.
New Delhi, Dec 22: Indian passports have been issued to leaders of Naga insurgent group NSCN (I-M) who are expected to arrive here on December 27 and meet Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee the next day, official sources said here today.
While the NSCN (I-M) general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah, who already possesses an Indian passport, will arrive from The Hague, the outfit's chairman Isak Chishi Swe and three others have been issued passports by the Indian mission in Oslo and will arrive here from the Norwegian capital, sources said. The Naga delegation will be lodged by the government in a "safe" hotel or guest house for security reasons, the sources added.
The crucial meeting between the Naga delegation and Vajpayee will also be attended by deputy prime minister L K Advani and is likely to be held on December 28.
"Even though no accord is likely to be reached at the parleys, the talks with the highest Indian leadership are expected to provide a major boost to bring peace in Nagaland affected by decades of insurgency," sources said.
While the NSCN (I-M) general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah, who already possesses an Indian passport, will arrive from The Hague, the outfit's chairman Isak Chishi Swe and three others have been issued passports by the Indian mission in Oslo and will arrive here from the Norwegian capital, sources said. The Naga delegation will be lodged by the government in a "safe" hotel or guest house for security reasons, the sources added.
The crucial meeting between the Naga delegation and Vajpayee will also be attended by deputy prime minister L K Advani and is likely to be held on December 28.
"Even though no accord is likely to be reached at the parleys, the talks with the highest Indian leadership are expected to provide a major boost to bring peace in Nagaland affected by decades of insurgency," sources said.
Government has already acceded to the demand of the 3000 strong insurgent outfit by allowing the ban on it to lapse beyond November 26 and withdrawing cases against Muivah for an alleged plot to assassinate Nagaland chief minister S C Jamir.
In the last few years since 1997 Centre-NSCN (I-M) ceasefire accord, Swe and Muivah have been holding peace negotiations with Centre's interlocutor K Pamanabhaiah and successive intellegence bureau chiefs including present director K P Singh in third countries like the Netherlands and Thailand.
Bureau Report