New Delhi: A day after the cross-firing incident that escalated tension on the disputed inter-state border, police personnel of both Assam and Mizoram visited the area on Wednesday (August 18). Superintendents of police of both Assam’s Hailakandi and Mizoram’s Kolasib district informed that they did not find anything suspicious left at that area when they searched in the daylight.


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While Mizoram alleged that personnel of the Assam police fired on its civilians injuring one, the neighbouring state claimed that the men in uniform only returned the fire after miscreants from the other side of the border sprayed bullets on them.


Mizoram's Kolasib district Deputy Commissioner H Lalthlangliana told PTI that Tuesday's incident occurred at around 2 am at the disputed Aitlang area bordering Assam's Hailakandi district when three residents of Vairengte town went there to collect meat from a friend, a resident of Bilaipur in Assam, who invited them to come. One person was injured in the firing by Assam Police personnel who were guarding the inter-state border, he claimed. Hailakandi Superintendent of Police Gaurav Upadhyay said that an exchange of firing took place but declined to share details. "No casualty has been reported on both sides," he said.


A senior district official, however, told PTI that miscreants from the Mizoram side showered bullets in darkness from the top of Darasing Hills when workers were constructing a road leading to the border from Bilaipur under the MGNREGA scheme. "In reply to the firing from the Mizoram side, Assam Police personnel also fired several rounds," the official said.


Upadhyay said that he along with the Deputy Commissioner of Hailakandi, Rohan Jha, rushed to the spot immediately after the firing at around 2 am.


State police forces, however, have continued to guard the border. Representatives of Assam and Mizoram held talks in Aizawl on August 5 and agreed to resolve the inter-state border dispute amicably.


"Representatives of Governments of Assam and Mizoram agree to take all necessary measures to promote, preserve and maintain peace and harmony amongst people living in Assam and Mizoram, particularly in border areas," a joint statement issued after the meeting had said.


The Assam government also revoked an advisory issued earlier against travel to Mizoram on the same day. Assam's Barak Valley districts of Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi share a 164-km border with Mizoram''s three districts of Aizawl, Kolasib and Mamit.


Mizoram was a district of Assam before it was carved out as a separate union territory in 1971 after years of insurgency. The border issue cropped up after that as perceptions over where the boundary should be, differed.