The boundary drawback between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh was resolved following the signing of an MoU by Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma and Arunachal Pradesh CM, Pema Khandu, within the presence of Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Thursday night. Sarma additionally had a one-on-one dialogue together with his Nagaland counterpart Neiphiu Rio on the Assam House late Thursday night to resolve the long-standing border row between the 2 neighbouring states.
Both the chief ministers additionally mentioned points of mutual pursuits and collaboration on oil exploration alongside the inter-state border.
Later, Sarma tweeted, “Happy to have gotten a possibility to spend time with Hon’ble Chief Minister of Nagaland @Neiphiu_Rio Ji at Assam House, New Delhi. We had a fascinating dialogue on bringing closure to the continuing boundary difficulty and different areas of mutual positive aspects and collaboration.”
Rio informed mediapersons that he had a fruitful dialogue together with his Assam counterpart on the settlement of the border dispute out of courtroom with the cooperation of ethnic teams from either side.
“We have mentioned our border difficulty and growth points as a result of now we have to work collectively, assist each other and know go ahead. Assam and Arunachal Pradesh signed an settlement on the border dispute on Friday. Likewise, we’re discussing how we should always settle our border dispute exterior courtroom with the (assist of) ethnic teams from either side,” quipped Rio.
Rio disclosed that each states have in-principle determined to go in for an MoU for oil exploration within the disputed areas alongside the inter-state boundary in order that oil could be extracted and royalties shared between the states. “Once it’s formalised, there may be big potential for exploration of oil inside Nagaland additionally. The nation wants oil in an enormous method,” he added.Sarma mentioned, “We will resolve the remaining areas of dispute with Meghalaya. The course of of resolving the border dispute with Mizoram has began. With Nagaland, we had talks as owing to the border dispute we aren’t capable of do oil exploration within the border areas. We have determined to get the dispute with Nagaland settled in courtroom.”
The then Nagaland governor Jagdish Mukhi in March final yr mentioned the Assam CM has positively indicated that the proceeds of petroleum and oil exploration and extraction between the 2 states in sectors A, B & C within the Disputed Area Belt (DAB) space could be equally divided.
For exploration and extraction exterior the DAB, he mentioned the Government of India has to recognise the possession for the indigenous inhabitants of Nagaland and the constitutional safety granted to them beneath Article 371(A) concerning the switch of land and its sources, and thereafter devise a mutually agreed, appropriate mechanism for cost of royalty and difficulty of petroleum exploration licence (PELs).
Rio earlier said the states have agreed to share royalty from petroleum from the disputed space. “The difficulty of royalty sharing alongside the disputed areas was additionally mentioned and is taking form. Earlier, groups from each the states together with the chief secretary met Union petroleum minister Hardeep Singh Puri and mentioned the sharing of royalty of petroleum and pure fuel alongside the disputed websites.”
Oil exploration couldn’t be taken up within the state as there was a standoff on the exploration difficulty between the Centre and the state.
The Nagaland authorities has maintained that if oil exploration needed to happen, it needs to be based mostly on the Nagaland Petroleum and Natural Gas Rules, 2012, and may take into accounts the particular provisions of Article 371 (A). ONGC had earlier stopped E&P actions in Nagaland in 1994 after the militant outfit NSCN (IM) requested it to stop the state.
Neutral forces have been stationed alongside the contentious space alongside the Assam-Nagaland border since 1971.The two states share a 512.1-km border. There have been clashes alongside the border in 1965, 1968, 1979, 1985, 2007 and 2014. The Assam authorities had filed a case within the Supreme Court in 1988 for resolving the border dispute.