AYO volunteers lock gate of Nagaland secretariat and assembly building

KOHIMA: Volunteers of Angami Youth Organisation (AYO), a tribal youth organisation today locked the main gate of the Nagaland Civil Secretariat, state Assembly building and some government offices here demanding that Chief Minister T R Zeliang and his cabinet colleagues resign as demanded by NTAC.

AYO volunteers went around various areas of Kohima locking the main gates of the government offices and sealing them with a tag of the organisation, claimed AYO President Neinguvoto Krose.

District administration officials confirmed that some buildings have been locked by the AYO volunteers.

Earlier in the day educational institutions, banks, business establishments and shops had opened in the state capital.

The Nagaland Tribes Action Committee (NTAC) Kohima, after the funeral service of two youths killed in police firing, had yesterday announced that bandh against the functioning of state government offices and vehicles will continue even though restrictions on the general public and other private activities would be allowed.

With business activities kicking off after five days of bandh, long queues were seen at petrol pumps and shops and markets.

The bandh against the state government will continue till the three-point charter of demand is fulfilled in toto, NTAC Kohima had said.

AYO was entrusted with the responsibility of enforcing the bandh against the government by NTAC Kohima and Angami Public Organisation, an apex body of tribal organisations in the state, he claimed.

Krose claimed that AYO will not allow any government office in the state capital to function till the chief minister and his cabinet colleagues step down as demanded by NTAC Kohima.

Meanwhile, in Dimapur volunteers enforcing the bandh under Joint Coordination Committee (JCC) and other tribal organisations of the district allegedly damaged a vehicle in Chumukedima.

They claimed that the vehicle was government registered so the volunteers punctured the tyres and also smashed the windshields of the vehicle.

On February 2, violent mobs had set afire government offices and vehicles in Kohima demanding the resignation of the chief minister and his entire cabinet for going ahead with the urban local body (ULB) polls with 33 per cent reservation for women despite opposition from powerful tribal groups.
Stay on top of business news with The Economic Times App. Download it Now!
FROM AROUND THE WEB

Kick your business into high gear.

GoDaddy

HDFC Life - On being young, single and insured

HDFC Life

Meet the investment plan that will make you rich

Fundsindia

MORE FROM ECONOMIC TIMES

Work & Career

UIDAI shuts down 24 unauthorised websites and mobile apps

Reliance Jio, demonetisation led to revenue drop: Vodafone

From Around the WebMore from The Economic Times

Promote content on Times of India network

Colombia

Maintain a CIBIL Score of 750+

CIBIL

Watch TV without straining your eyes!

Dish TV

Travel across the world on easy EMIs ₹10,498

Sterling Holidays

Scooter's back, with new hero on road

Infosys 'releases' 9,000 employees due to automation

Real Estate

Budget 2017: STT amendment could hurt startups, ESOP holders