Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[1] Tripura National Volunteers (also Tribal National Volunteers or Tripura National Volunteer Force) was a Tripuri nationalist militant group in the Tripura region of India that launched an armed struggle in the early 1980s to separate Tripura from India. TNV was led by Bijoy Kumar Hrangkhawl. [citation needed]
1] Dhananjay Reang is a Tripuri rebel leader of the organisations National Liberation Front of Tripura, [2] and Tripura National Volunteers (TNV). [3] [4] He initiated the formation of National Liberation Front of Tripura after the TNV surrendered in 1988 before the Government of India, after signing the TNV accord. [citation needed]
Already a musician at 14, Jamatia joined the Tripura National Volunteers (TNV), a militant group. [6] He left the group in 1983. [7] References This page was last ...
The All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF) was a Tripuri nationalist militant group active in India's Tripura State. It was founded on 11 July 1990, by a group of former Tripura National Volunteer members under the leadership of Ranjit Debbarma. The ATTF is considered a terrorist organisation by India.
This list may not reflect recent changes. ... Tripura National Volunteers This page was last edited on 16 November 2024, at 16:55 (UTC). ...
Tripuri Sena soon evolved into the Tripura National Volunteers. [6] For ten years, 1978–1988, Hrangkhawl led an armed struggle as the supremo of the TNV, which sought to expel the Bengali majority from Tripura. TNV soon became infamous for their campaign of ethnic cleansing in the rural areas of Tripura.
Tripura United Indigenous Peoples Council (TUIPC) Joint Action Committee of Civil Societies of Tripura (JACCST) Tripura People's Party (TPP) National Socialist Party of Tripura (NSPT) {alliance partner of Left Front} Ganamukti Parishad (GMP), affiliated with Communist Party of India (Marxist) as tribal wing. Janganotantrik Morcha (JM)
The INPT was formed as a merger of the Indigenous People's Front of Tripura and the Tripura Upajati Juba Samiti in 2002. [citation needed]The formation of the INPT was pushed through after pressure from the underground National Liberation Front of Tripura, who wanted to unite all tribal nationalist forces in a single party.