Another bleak aspect of the Tarai picture, as painted by the report, is how various underground armed outfits routinely threaten government officials and successfully obstruct them from carrying out their duties. Initially, it was only civil servants of hill origin who were threatened and cowered into submission. But as most bureaucrats of hill origin have left their Tarai postings -- a fact also substantiated by this report -- the criminal groups have turned to Madhesi civil servants, and the citizenry, for undue favors and ransom. The latest lot to leave the Tarai are businessmen of Madhesi origin and middle class Madhesi families, who increasingly fear for their lives and property.
Though the Tarai has remained in such a mess for long, with matters worsening markedly of late, the state has failed to bring in a good plan or strategy to arrest the anarchy. The much-hyped Special Security Plan (SSP), which was designed specifically with the growing law and order challenge in the Tarai in mind, seems not to have had the desired results. We know that the SSP was not implemented in earnest due to lack of resources and also lack of political will. The home administration has complained repeatedly that the police never received the resources allotted to them, and in many cases police teams on the ground lacked even the fuel for regular patrolling.
If the police force was crippled by lack of resources, they were hamstrung by never-ending interferences from politicians. Each time they apprehended someone on suspicion of wrongdoing there would be pressure from politicians of one or another party to release him [it´s seldom been she] immediately and unconditionally. Criminals have connections with every party that has a political base in the Tarai and they have exploited this nexus during crunch times. Taking things under control in the Tarai, therefore, requires as much hard work by police and the home administration as commitment on the part of politicians hailing from the southern plains.
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