Why this matters now
North-East insurgency is examined for its distinctive causes, the AFSPA debate, peace accords, and the role of development and connectivity (Act East). It is a key internal-security theatre.
Causes
The roots are complex: strong ethnic and tribal identities and demands for autonomy; a sense of geographical and psychological isolation from the mainland; underdevelopment and unemployment; migration and demographic anxieties; porous international borders enabling arms and safe havens; and historical grievances.
Key issues
The region has seen numerous insurgent groups seeking independence or autonomy. A central debate is the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act (AFSPA), which gives special powers to forces in “disturbed areas” — criticised for alleged excesses but defended as necessary in active-insurgency zones; its footprint has been gradually reduced.
Government response
The response combines security operations, political dialogue and peace accords (e.g. various ceasefire and settlement agreements), the reorganisation of states, and constitutional protections (the Sixth Schedule, autonomous councils). Connectivity and development under the Act East Policy aim to integrate the region economically.
The way forward
Durable peace requires inclusive development and connectivity, honouring identity and autonomy, completing peace accords, good governance, and addressing migration concerns sensitively — turning the North-East from a periphery into a gateway to South-East Asia.
UPSC angle
Structure the causes (ethnic identity, isolation, underdevelopment, migration, porous borders), the AFSPA debate, and the response (accords + Sixth Schedule + Act East development).
Frequently asked questions
What causes insurgency in the North-East?
Ethnic and tribal identity and autonomy demands, geographical isolation, underdevelopment, migration anxieties, porous borders and historical grievances.
What is AFSPA?
The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, which grants special powers to security forces in areas declared “disturbed” — a subject of significant debate.
How has the government responded to North-East insurgency?
Through security operations, political dialogue and peace accords, autonomous councils (Sixth Schedule), and development/connectivity under the Act East Policy.
How does development help counter insurgency?
By addressing underdevelopment and unemployment and integrating the region economically, it reduces the grievances that fuel insurgency.