Home
 
About Us
Menifesto
Committee
Front Organization
About CHT
Documents
Articles
Major Activities
Press Release
PhotoGallery
Bengali Section
Contact Us
Link
News
 
 

 

 


Timeline

1776-1787
The Jummas wage a guerrilla war against British aggression. (Some writers tend to refer to it as "Chakma revolt". A through study on the subject suggests that it was not a revolt, nor was it fought by Chakmas alone. For all practical purposes, it was a popular resistance in which the Jummas - men and women - fought to maintain independence and sovereignty of Carpas Mahal as the CHT was once called.)
 
1787
Feb.

A treaty of peace signed between the Jummas and the British at Fort William in Kolkata ends hostility.
 
1860:
The British formally annexes the CHT; colonial rule begins.
 
1900:
The British enacts the Chittagong Hill Tracts Regulation, Act 1 of 1900, also known as CHT manual.
 
1947:
Decolonization of Indian subcontinent takes place and two states - India and Pakistan - emerge on the basis of two nation theory. Without consultation with the Jumma people, the British awards the Chittagong Hill Tracts, with its more than 98 per cent non-Muslim population, to Pakistan. This act of the British also violates the very theory on the basis of which India was partitioned. CHT now forms a part of the East Pakistan.
 
1960 - 63:
The government of Pakistan constructs a dam under Kaptai Hydro Electric Project with far reaching consequences on the socio-economic and political life of the Jumma people. The immediate effect of the dam is that it inundates 54 thousand acres of farm land and evicts 100,000 people from their homesteads.
 
1971
The liberation war of Bangladesh begins. After a nine-month long bloody war the East Pakistan finally secedes from West Pakistan and a new state Bangladesh comes into being. The CHT now becomes a part of Bangladesh.
 
1972
February

A delegation of Jumma leaders submits a memorandum to Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, first Prime Minister of independent Bangladesh. The PM refuses to accept the memo, throws it on the ground and advises them to forget their Jumma identity and become Bengali.
The Jana Samhati Samiti, a political platform for the nationalist Jumma youths, is formed to ventilate the grievances of the Jumma people.
 
1975
Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman is killed in a military coup d' tat and his party Awami League is thrown out of power. The Jana Samhati Samiti goes underground following a ban.
 
1976
The government of Ziaur Rahman establishes Chittagong Hill Tracts Development Board (CHTDB). Militarization of the CHT begins in full swing.
The JSS launches guerrilla war.
 
1979
Transplantation of 400,000 illegal Bengali settlers under state patronization begins.
 
1980
Kalampati massacre takes place in Kawkhali, Rangamati. An estimated 300 Jummas die. A dozen more massacres and genocides follow.
 
1982
The Jana Samhati Samiti splits. The Badi (short) faction led by Bhabatosh Dewan and Priti Kumar Chakma opposes the idea of protracted guerrilla war as espoused by Lamba (Long) faction led by Manobendra Narayan Larma.
 
1983
The Badi faction attacks the Head Quarters of its opponent and kills M. N. Larma along with his eight lieutenants. A brutal civil war follows.
 
1985
The Badi faction concedes defeat and surrenders to the government of Bangladesh.
 
1988
March 8

Jumma female students of Chittagong University forms Hill Women's Federation.
 
1989
20 May


Jumma students form the Chittagong Hill Tracts Hill Students Council in Dhaka. The following morning the Jumma students bring out a silent procession on the streets of Dhaka to protest against Longudu massacre, which took place on 4 May. This marks the beginning of a popular democratic resistance to state repression in CHT.

The International Commission on the Chittagong Hill Tracts is established.

 
1990:
The Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission visits Tripura and the CHT.
 
1991:
The Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission brings out a report titled "Life is not Ours: Land and Human Rights in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh".
 
1992:

The horrible Logang massacre takes place in a border hamlet in Panchari under Khagrachari district inviting national and international condemnation.

Progressive Bengali intellectuals, writers, lawyers, journalists and human and civil rights activists form the "Parbattyo Chattagram Maulik Odhikar Sangrakkan Committee" (Chittagong Hill Tracts Fundamental Rights Protection Committee) to support the cause of the Jumma people.

The JSS declares unilateral ceasefire on August 1 and expresses its willingness to find a negotiated settlement to the CHT problems. On 5 November dialogue between JSS and the government begins.

Democratic movement spearheaded by Hill Students Council spreads throughout CHT. At its 3rd founding anniversary programme held in Rangamati on 20 May, the HSC brings to the fore the CHT autonomy demand.

 
1993
17 Nov.

The Naniachar massacre takes place in Rangamati. 36 Jummas die.
 
1995
The army creates Mukhosh Bahini or Masked Force with members drawn from drug addicts, thugs and other anti-social elements to counter the democratic upsurge of the Jumma people.
 
1996
12 June.


Lieutenant Ferdous abducts Hill Women's Federation leader Ms Kalpana Chakma from her home in New Lallyaghona village in Rangamati district.

The Awami League comes to power through an internationally accepted free and fair election and picks up the dialogue process where the BNP left off.

 
1997
Dec.2


The Awami League government and the JSS sign Chittagong Hill Tracts Treaty. The popular Jumma organisations such as Hill Students Council, Hill Women's Federation and Hill People's Council reject the treaty on the ground that it has failed to address the main demands of the Jumma people.

On 10 March, the three organisations put forward the demand of Full Autonomy for the first time.

 
1998
Feb. 10


Surrender of the members the Jana Samhati Samiti and its armed wing, the Shanti Bahini, begins at Khagrachari stadium amidst protest by activists of Hill Peoples Council, Hill Students Council and Hill Women's Federation across the CHT. Inside the stadium members of HSC and HWF display black flags and banners as a mark of denunciation of the surrender and the accord.

From 25 - 26 Dec. leading members of the Hill Students Council, Hill Peoples Council and Hill Women's Federation meet in a conference in Dhaka and forms a new party - United Peoples Democratic Front (UPDF) - to carry on the struggle for the right of self determination of the Jumma people.

Political repression of the members of the UPDF and its front organisations intensifies for voicing criticism to the CHT accord.

Government nominates top JSS leaders as chairman and members of the Regional Council (RC) constituted as per the CHT accord.

 
1999

Police open fire on crowds of UPDF supporters in Khagrachari killing two - Pratul Chakma and Suro Moni Chakma.

Army and settlers attack Jumma people in Babuchara killing three Jummas and a Bengali.

Police crack down on the members and supporters of the UPDF who were trying to assemble in Chittagong to observe the first founding anniversary of the Party. 45 persons are arrested and put to jail.

 
2000
UPDF renews its call for dialogue with JSS. Under intense pressure from all sections of the Jumma people and their well wishers from home and abroad, the JSS finds its way to the negotiating table. UPDF pledges full support to the JSS endeavour to have the Accord fully implemented in return for cessation of armed offensive against its members and supporters. JSS rejects the offer.
 
2001

In February the much publicised abduction of three foreign engineers takes place in Rangamati. The hostage drama ends after a month.

On 25 June settlers burn down 277 houses belonging to Marma community in 7 villages in Ramgarh under Khagrachari district. The attack leaves more then hundred Jummas wounded and thousands homeless.

UPDF takes part in the parliamentary elections held in October 1. UPDF chief Prasit Bikash Khisha contests from Rangamati and Khagrachari constituencies. In the run up to the election five UPDF members and supporters are killed in the hands of the JSS, which called for "boycott and resist".

 
2002

On 10 October, the Bengali settlers set fire to 11 Jumma houses in the village of Augyojai Karbari Para, 20 kilometers from Bandarban district headquarters. The incident occurs after the alleged murder of a Bengali settler in nearby village of Rajvilla. Houses are looted and ransacked and 40 villagers including women, children and aging persons are tortured. Allegations of abuse of women are also reported.

Military operations and JSS attacks on UPDF members continue unabated.

 
2003
Army and settlers carry out joint attack on several Jumma villages in Mahalchari of Khagrachari district killing two Jummas, burning down 500 houses and raping ten women. Buddhist temples are ransacked, statues of the Lord Buddha broken and monks harassed.
 
2004
Hill Watch Human Rights Forum publishes a report titled "Cruel Games With Peoples' Human Rights" on JSS atrocities in Lakshmichari and some other places in Khagrachari and Rangamati districts.
 
     

(C) Copyright 2005, All rights reserved by UPDF in Chittagong Hill Tracts.