The killing of each Ulfa member was reported as the an example of the oppression by New Delhi. Many Guwahati based editor-journalists would also visit the dead bodies of Ulfa cadres or attend their ‘Adyashradha’ (last ritual) organized in different parts of the state. The headline was supposed to carry the term ‘revolutionary cadre’ being killed by the agency of Indian government. But in recent days the Guwahati media has started behaving differently with the Ulfa. Now if a cadre of the banned outfit is killed, it gets space, but with toned down language.
After the Dhemaji blast on August 15, that killed 13 women and children during the Independence Day celebration all the dailies of Assam (Guwahati witnesses 20 dailies published from the city) reported the incident as the handiworks of ‘terrorists’ or ‘insurgents’, and no way by revolutionaries. The language of the editorials on the fateful incident was harsh. The message of the editorials were loud and clear: ‘enough is enough, stop terrorism’. The post Dhemaji blast period has witnessed tremendous anger and outrage against Ulfa thoroughout Assam. The armed group tried to prevent the people from protesting by spreading horror thorough as many as nine blasts that killed at least 15 people and wounded over 40 others.
Then suddenly the outfit reiterated its demand for "Ganabhot" or plebiscite on the sovereignty of Assam. In a very long e-mail message written in Assamese with dateline of August 29, the Ulfa chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa claimed that they had possesses all relevant argument and documents for demanding a "Ganabhot", whether the people of Assam want independence or to remain with India. The political chief of the outfit Mr Rajkhowa, while criticizing the government of India for preventing a plebiscite in the region, had dared the Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi to organize the plebiscite on sovereignty. "The government is scared of the "Ganabhot" and hence they are preventing any initiatives for the plebiscite," he said in the release.
The release contained a few ruthless lines against a senior journalist and also the editor of Dainik Asom, a prestigious publication which is the and oldest Assamese daily from Guwahati. Ulfa accused him of playing the Hindu card like the Bharatiya Janata Party. The readers of Assam may remember a very strong editorial with the byline of D.N. Chakrabarty, published on the front page of the daily following the Dhemaji incident, where Mr. Chakrabarty had termed the attack on civilian by Ulfa as crueler than even the days of Burmese aggression on Assam in the eighteenth century.The media has obviously not changed its attitude only after a single massacre. The Dhemaji blast was significant as Ulfa killed innocent children and women and later owned up the responsibility. The Ulfa chairman even tried to justify their stand and in a press release he put the responsibility for the killings on the administration. After prolonged mass protests thorough out the state, the military chief of Ulfa, Paresh Baruah tried in vain to deny their involvement in the incident. But nobody bought his assertion.