The signing of Frontier Nagaland Territorial Authority (FNTA) MoA between the GoI and the ENPO was an emotional moment for the people of eastern Nagaland.
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The signing of the Frontier Nagaland Territorial Authority (FNTA) Memorandum of Agreement (MoA) between the Government of India (GoI) and the Eastern Nagaland People’s Organisation (ENPO), in the presence of the Government of Nagaland (GoN), was not merely a political event; it was an emotional moment etched deeply into the hearts of the people of eastern Nagaland. For many of us, it symbolised the culmination of decades of aspiration, neglect, and silent endurance. It felt as though history had finally turned its gaze toward a region long overlooked.
When the MoA was signed, hope blossomed across the eastern districts. There was a collective sense that our long-cherished dreams had finally been acknowledged and fulfilled. The return of ENPO leaders was met with warmth, pride, and celebration. Communities came together, not divided by tribe or distance, but united in a shared belief that a new chapter had begun. Tribal bodies extended heartfelt receptions, presenting tokens of gratitude to the cabinet ministers of GoN, symbolising trust, respect, and expectation.
For once, the people felt seen. For once, the voices from the eastern frontiers felt heard.
However, (when) the 8thsession of the 14th Nagaland Legislative Assembly unfolded, that wave of optimism began to recede. What was once clear has now become a confusion. What was once hope is slowly being replaced by uncertainty. The silence, the lack of visible progress, and the absence of clear direction have left people questioning- was this another moment of promise without delivery?
Today, a painful question echoes across eastern Nagaland: Are we once again witnessing the return of the infamous notion that “No solution is the solution”?
This phrase, once uttered in a different context, now threatens to define the present situation. It carries with it a deep sense of betrayal and fatigue. For decades, the people of eastern Nagaland have remained patient, patient through delays, through negotiations, through assurances that often led nowhere. But patience, no matter how strong, is not infinite.
Adding to this growing frustration is a difficult reality that many are now forced to confront. Initially, the aspiration of the people was clear, a Frontier Nagaland Territory (FNT) with a more defined and empowered political structure. However, what has emerged instead is the Frontier Nagaland Territory Authority (FNTA), an arrangement that is neither a state nor even a Union Territory. This shift has left many questioning whether the original vision has been diluted along the way.
The concern is not merely about nomenclature; it is about substance. It is about whether the structure in place will truly address the long-standing challenges faced by the region. The people had hoped for a framework that would decisively bridge the gap of neglect. Instead, there is a growing fear that what has been offered may fall short of those expectations.
The frustration today is not born out of impatience, but out of repeated disappointment. The MoA raised expectations to a level where people began to believe that real change was imminent and a dignified arrangement that acknowledges the unique challenges of the region. Yet, the apparent stagnation following the 8th NLA session has cast a long shadow over those expectations.
It is important to understand that this is not merely a political demand, it is a human one. It is about roads that connect villages, healthcare that reaches the unreached, education that empowers the youth, and governance that listens to its people. It is about dignity, identity, and the right to equitable progress.
At the same time, there is a deeper, more emotional concern that weighs heavily on the hearts of the people. For years, there has been a perception of step-motherly treatment towards eastern Nagaland people, a narrative filled with neglect, imbalance, and missed opportunities. This is not a history that we wish to pass on to our future generations. We do not want our children to grow up hearing stories of exclusion and disparity. We want them to inherit a story of justice, inclusion, and progress.
The people of eastern Nagaland are not asking for the impossible. We are asking for sincerity, for clarity, and for commitment. We are asking that agreements signed in good faith are honoured in both letter and spirit. We are asking that their trust is not taken for granted.
There is still time to restore faith. There is still time to ensure that this MoA does not become another chapter in the long history of unfulfilled promises. What is needed now is transparency, timely action, and a clear roadmap that reassures the people that their aspirations are not being sidelined once again.
Let it not be said that history repeated itself. Let it not be remembered that once again, “No solution became the solution.”
Instead, let this moment be reclaimed as the turning point where promises translated into action, where hope triumphed over uncertainty, and where the people of Eastern Nagaland finally witnessed the dawn they have waited for so long.
The silence must end. The solution must begin.
Dr. CM Phom
A concerned citizen