what a good Question raised ...........i think...the north east part of India is not safe........you know what they are doing.......they are gathering in the big states like Delhi and participating as a big parties in college elections and continuously doing lots of events to be noticed by people.......
i think there are some other problems faced by the people over their..are....................
Complete lack of understanding of the psyche of the people of the region.
• Repeated, and even forceful attempts at assimilation of the region and its people with the so-called Indian ‘mainstream’ which, if anything, is absolutely alien to most parts of the region, and, therefore, considered by many in the region as not worth being a part of.
• Realization that an integrationist policy was not correct after all, has led the government to concede autonomy demands of ethnic groups, often leading to more such demands and aspirations.
• The lack of an institutionalized response mechanism with the Union Government to address emerging situations and thereby preventing their consolidation and transformation into popular agitations.
• The tendency to ignore emerging movements until the situation turns violent.
• The tendency to attach importance to agitations, whether armed campaigns or otherwise, by those groups which are more powerful or more violent.
• Total marginalization of the state police forces and increased dependence on the Army.
• Poor governance and lack of accountability of the officials and the official machinery engaged in ushering in development of the region.
• Corruption and leakage of development funds, directly impacting on the poor and the needy. There are instances and admissions by the Government of development funds reaching the insurgents in the region. 5
• Inability of the government to make the private sector open shop in the region in any big way.
• The extremely dangerous fondness to hold so-called peace talks with rebel groups, irrespective of their strength, social acceptance or relevance to local situations.
• Political instability of elected governments as in Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh.
• Ineffective border management, and ineffective handling of the problem of illegal migration from across India’s borders.
• Insensitiveness of the media whose coverage of the region is violence-driven. This applies to the local, metropolitan or the international media, both print as well as electronic.