States

Normal life affected in eastern Nagaland over shutdown for separate state demand

Shutdown paralyzes life in eastern Nagaland over separate state demand

Kohima | Normal life was affected in six districts of eastern Nagaland on Monday due to an indefinite shutdown called by ENPO to press for its demand for a separate state, officials said.

Shops and commercial establishments remained closed and most vehicles were off the roads as the Eastern Nagaland People's Organisation (ENPO), the apex body of seven Naga tribes in the region, called for the shutdown to press for its demand.

Power department, medical, fire and other emergency services, besides media and weddings were, however, exempted from the purview of the bandh.

The ENPO demands that a separate 'Frontier Naga Territory' state be carved out of the six districts of Mon, Tuensang, Longleng, Kiphire, Noklak and Shamator.

The decision to call for the shutdown was taken at the ENPO's headquarters in Tuensang district on Sunday, sources in the body said.

The ENPO has resolved not to allow any political party to campaign in the region for the upcoming Lok Sabha polls till the settlement of their demand.

On March 5, ENPO declared a "public emergency" in the region to press for their demand. On March 8, it enforced a 12-hour shutdown from 6 am as part of "public emergency"

APEC leaders to open Lima summit as Trump prepares to return to office

Despite progress in gender-focused policies, fragmented response in India limits support for women as climate leaders: Report

Centre says Wayanad landslides cannot be declared as 'national disaster'

Delhi Waqf case: Court orders 'immediate release' of AAP MLA Amanatullah Khan

India successfully test-fires guided Pinaka weapon system