يحاول ذهب - حر
THE NORTHEAST DARES INDIA TO REINVENT ITSELF
December 05, 2024
|The Morning Standard
The attitude of treating the Northeast as an alien territory started with British colonialism. Today, it challenges the independent nation's capacity to fuse its fringes with the mainstream
The idea of the Northeast is intriguing. It indicates a direction; therefore, it should have remained as an adjectival clause—‘northeast.’ It indeed does, to some extent, but increasingly the hyphen is dropped for it to become a single-word proper noun with many layers of nuanced meanings. Among the many images evoked are of wilderness, exotic customs, pristine landscapes, insurgency, incomprehensible tribal feuds, underdevelopment, etc.
The name also conjures up the picture of a composite geography of eight states, including Sikkim, after this former Himalayan kingdom became a part of India in 1975. In spirit, probably North Bengal/Darjeeling should also be included, as this peripheral extension of West Bengal geographically, culturally, and psychologically shares many affinities with this region.
How did a term signifying a coordinate come to be so intimately associated with the character and personality of a region? The question will necessarily invoke a legacy from British colonial rule. If the anchor of this coordinate were India’s national capital, the region should have been just east and not northeast, for the place lies directly to the east of New Delhi. Obviously, the anchor was different when the region first came to be taken cognizance of on the Indian map, which is after Assam’s formal annexation into British India by the Treaty of Yandaboo, 1826, signed with Burma (Ava kingdom), ending a devastating invasion and occupation of Assam by the latter.
After annexation, this new territory was merged into Bengal and remained so till 1874, when Assam was separated and made a separate chief commissioner’s province. It then constituted almost the entire Northeast, with the exception of Tripura and Manipur, separate principalities. From the then British India capital of Calcutta, Northeast was indeed to the north-east.
هذه القصة من طبعة December 05, 2024 من The Morning Standard.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Morning Standard
The Morning Standard
'I ALWAYS NEED A HAPPY ENDING'
Yoshitoki Oima, the mangaka behind the beloved Japanese manga A Silent Voice, made her first visit to India last week and decoded how silence matters in her manga and how survival, connection, and the possibility of making amends, are key in her storytelling
2 mins
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Majhi warns cow smugglers of strict action
Odisha ranks fourth nationally in fish production
1 mins
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Capex budget may grow 10% to ₹12 lakh cr
Analysts say govt must fix spending gaps for better impact on economy, should focus more on private investment
2 mins
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
HIL: Lancers to face Royals in playoffs
AFTER concluding their league stage by finishing on top of the table, Vedanta Kalinga Lancers will lock horns with Ranchi Royals in the first playoff of the Hockey India League (HIL).
1 min
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Over 150 booked for wrong-way driving in city
THE Delhi Police has registered over 150 cases in 17 days against motorists for driving against the flow of traffic in the national capital, with south and New Delhi ranges emerging as major hotspots, official data showed.
1 min
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
World’s biggest nuclear plant back online in Japan
THE world’s largest nuclear power plant restarted on Wednesday in north-central Japan for the first time since the 2011 Fukushima nuclear meltdown, as resource-poor Japan accelerates atomic power use to meet soaring electricity needs.
1 min
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
SC worried over drying up of Chandigarh lake
THE Supreme Court on Wednesday expressed concern over the deteriorating condition of Sukhna Lake in Chandigarh, as a bench headed by Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant remarked, “Aur kitna sukhaoge Sukhna Lake, ko?” (How much are you going to ruin Lake Sukhna).
1 min
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Murder, rape cases decline, police post high disposal rate
DELHI Police solved over 95 per cent of murder cases and more than 97 per cent of rape cases reported in the city last year, with data also showing a decline in the number of such crimes in 2025.
1 min
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Raj 2nd state to bring in Disturbed Areas Act
THE Rajasthan cabinet decided on Wednesday to implement the Disturbed Areas Act, becoming the second state after Gujarat to do so.
1 mins
January 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Jason Schmidt joins Angelina Jolie's Sunny
ACTOR Jason Schmidt has boarded director Eva Sorhaug’s film Sunny, which will also star Angelina Jolie.
1 min
January 22, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

