The Surrendered Insurgents of Assam
Just a decade ago, there was near-unanimous agreement among the people of Assam that the cadre of the United Liberation Front of Assam/ Ahom (ULFA) should lay down arms and join the 'mainstream', a euphemism used by the Government and pro-establishment intellectuals to mean surrender. And so, many of the ULFA 'boys' did, to become known as the Sulfa, an abbreviation of "surrendered ULFA".
Today, there is an about turn in the public's attitude, and a cross-section of the Assamese population now says that, given a choice between the two, it would prefer the ULFA to its surrendered counterparts, the Sulfa. If an opinion poll were conducted now in the state, the diffuse grouping known as the Sulfa would probably come out on the top only in a measure of unpopularity. Indeed, it is an interesting phenomenon when nearly everyone continues to urge the ULFA cadres to surrender while abhorring the ULFA boys who have in fact surrendered. Understanding how this came to happen will provide a window on the state of the insurgency in Assam today, and the complicated nexus between the politician, political parties and the insurgents, which makes the problem so much more than a simple fight of good versus bad.