Fresh incidents of violence occurred this morning in Gossaigaon area in Kokrajhar where several houses of Bodos were set ablaze by adivasis as the backlash to the Tuesday massacre continued for the second day despite indefinite curfew clamped in the entire district.
Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh today visited Sonitpur, one of the three violence-hit districts in lower Assam while reviewing the situation in the aftermath of the bloodbath by Bodo militants and declared that strong action will be taken against NDFB(S) under the Centre's "zero tolerance" policy for such "crafted terror".
Asked about operations against the outfit, Rajnath Singh said, "Operations will definitely be launched against the outfit but cannot say when".
"Government has taken it very seriously.... We have decided to act firm against them," he said.
The Home Minister has also requested External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj to seek help from Bhutan to tackle the banned militant group, a Home Ministry official said.
The Bodo militant outfit is believed to have set up a few bases in the dense forest along the Indo-Bhutan border. Officials said that whenever security forces carry out offensives against its cadres, they often sneak into the Bhutanese territory making it difficult to track them down.
In 2003-04, Bhutan had carried out a massive operation against ULFA militants and completely wiped out their bases from that country.
According to the police spokesman, in the worst affected Sonitpur district, six more bodies were recovered this morning from Maitalu Basti under Zinzia police station bordering Arunachal Pradesh taking the toll in attacks by anti-talks Songbijit faction of National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) to 43 in the district and overall toll to 71.
In Kokrajhar, the other severely affected district, retaliatory violence by adivasis claimed the lives of four Bodos at Manikpur and Dimapur areas.
