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NSCN-K camp destroyed by Myanmarese forces

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New Delhi: India on Tuesday claimed that a camp allegedly belonging to NSCN-K, a banned Naga insurgent group responsible for killing of 18 Army soldiers in Manipur in June, was demolished along the Indo-Myanmar border by the Myanmarese security forces last weekend.
The camp, located at Myanmarese village Monlei, across Tuensang in Nagaland, was completely destroyed by the Myanmarese Army, official sources quoted reports from Myanmar as saying.
The camp was located in the same area where Indian Army carried out operations against NSCN-K during which top government officials had claimed loss to the group. However, there was no clarity on the casuality in that operation and the NSCN-K had claimed that no operation had been carried out inside the Myanmarese territory.
The camp was located just across the Indo-Myanmar border and perhaps the authorities in that country did not want such camps to continue near the border, the sources said, explaining the reason for Myanmarese forces destroying the camp.
The NSCN-K, which abrogated ceasefire with the government in March, has been involved in a series of attacks on security forces in recent past. The government declared NSCN-K a banned outfit last month.
In a pre-dawn cross-border operation in June, elite commandos of the Indian Army in coordination with the Air Force went a few kilometres inside Myanmarese territory to destroy two camps of insurgents hiding there after attacks in Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh by suspected NSCN-K and KYKL outfits.
The Nationalist Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN) is a Naga nationalist Military group operating in Northeast India.
The union government has banned NSCNK(K) a terror group operating out of Nagaland and Myanmar. The same group headed by S S Khaplang was responsible for the Manipur ambush in which 18 army personnel were killed.
While the Government had signed a peace pact with the NSCN(IM), the NSCN(K) had decided to derail the peace process. Indian Intelligence Bureau officials say that Khaplang currently in Myanmar is closely associated with the ULFA-I as well.
His association with the ULFA(I) was a dangerous development. It is a well known fact that the ULFA(I) leader, Paresh Baruah has taken shelter in China and there are several NGO’s over there which have been funding his campaign.  (PTI)

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