PICTURES

Clashes in north-east India leave 17 dead as thousands flee

Displaced members of the Rengma Naga tribe use a hand pump at a relief camp at a school in the Karbi Anglong district of India's north-eastern state of Assam on Jan 7, 2014. Clashes between tribes in India's restive north-east Assam state have l
Displaced members of the Rengma Naga tribe use a hand pump at a relief camp at a school in the Karbi Anglong district of India's north-eastern state of Assam on Jan 7, 2014. Clashes between tribes in India's restive north-east Assam state have left 17 dead and forced thousands to flee, officials said on Jan 8, 2014 -- PHOTO: AFP
Displaced members of the Rengma Naga tribe peel potatoes at a relief camp at a school in the Karbi Anglong district of India's north-eastern state of Assam on Jan 7, 2014. Clashes between tribes in India's restive north-east Assam state have left 17 dead and forced thousands to flee, officials said on Jan 8, 2014 -- PHOTO: AFP
Displaced members of the Rengma Naga tribe use bamboo baskets to clean rice at a relief camp at a school in the Karbi Anglong district of India's north-eastern state of Assam on Jan 7, 2014. Clashes between tribes in India's restive north-east Assam state have left 17 dead and forced thousands to flee, officials said on Jan 8, 2014 -- PHOTO: AFP
A displaced Rengma Naga tribesman sleeps alongside his child at a relief camp at a school in the Karbi Anglong district of India's north-eastern state of Assam, some 320km from the main city of Guwahati on Jan 7, 2014. Clashes between tribes in India's restive north-east Assam state have left 17 dead and forced thousands to flee, officials said on Jan 8, 2014. -- PHOTO: AFP

GUWAHATI, India (AFP) - Clashes between tribes in India's restive north-east Assam state have left 17 dead and forced thousands to flee, officials said on Wednesday.

Some 4,000 people have sought refuge in makeshift camps since fighting started in December in Karbi Anglong district, about 320km from the main city of Guwahati, a police spokesman said.

The latest violence, between the Karbi and Rengma Naga tribes over attempts to grab land, has involved villagers being shot at close range and their bodies dumped in a jungle area, officials said.

"Most of the people have fled their homes out of fear following violent clashes between the two tribes that have been raging on in the past fortnight," state water resources minister Rajib Lochan Pegu said.

The latest violence, between the Karbi and Rengma Naga tribes over attempts to grab land, has involved villagers being shot at close range and their bodies dumped in a jungle area, officials said.

Extra army, police, and paramilitary troopers have been deployed to prevent further clashes, said Pegu, who is overseeing security and relief operations in the district.

Separatists belonging to the Karbi People's Liberation Tigers attacked a Rengma Naga village in late December, killing seven residents, police officials said.

In a retaliatory attack, militants from the National Socialist Council of Nagaland, which comprises Rengma Naga tribespeople, killed 10 Karbi villagers.

Their bodies were found in an isolated jungle area near Dimapur, the commercial hub of adjoining Nagaland state, a police official said.

"All the victims were first abducted, their hands tied and blindfolded and then shot at from close range with automatic weapons," said V.Z. Angami, police chief of Dimapur.

"There have been threats and counter-threats going on in the area with a sense of fear and hence the exodus of villagers from both communities," local police official A. Das said.

North-east India, linked to the rest of the country by a narrow land bridge, has seen decades of unrest among ethnic and separatist groups.

The region is home to dozens of tribal groups and small guerrilla armies that resist rule from New Delhi. Many are fighting for separate homelands for their tribes, and they often compete against each other.

The minister blamed the latest violence on attempts by one tribal group to take control of land dominated by the other.

"It is nothing but a turf war between the two tribes that has resulted in the clashes," he said.

"We are taking all precautions to prevent outbreaks of an ethnic clash in the area."

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