Arunachal Pradesh is once again being pushed toward turmoil — not simply because Arunachal Scheduled Tribes Bachao Andolan Committee (ASTBAC) is preparing its 72-hour agitation, but because the state government has spent far too long underestimating the depth of public anger building across the state.
The countdown to the protest is rapidly shrinking, yet the government still appears trapped in a cycle of empty reassurances, bureaucratic language, and political complacency. Instead of acting decisively when concerns over illegal immigration and weakening indigenous protections first began to intensify, the administration chose the easier path: delay decisions, manage headlines, issue statements, and hope public frustration would fade on its own.
That strategy now appears to have failed.
The approaching 72-hour protest has not emerged in isolation. It is the consequence of years of perceived inaction and a growing belief that the government only responds when pressure spills onto the streets. Ordinary citizens are increasingly asking a troubling question: if repeated protests, public outrage, and statewide concern still cannot compel meaningful action, then what exactly is the government doing?
At the center of the controversy stands Home Minister Mama Natung, whose public image has suffered significant damage during the crisis. Across Arunachal, criticism directed at him is no longer confined to opposition leaders or activist circles. Many people now view his leadership as symbolic of a government that has become reactive rather than proactive — a government that speaks of “strict systems” and “digital reforms” while failing to convince the public that enforcement exists on the ground.
The most alarming reality for the ruling establishment is that public distrust has begun hardening into political resentment.
Citizens no longer appear willing to accept vague promises wrapped in administrative jargon. Every new announcement is now met with immediate suspicion because confidence in the government’s sincerity has eroded so deeply. A leadership that repeatedly assures the public while failing to produce visible results eventually loses the moral authority to ask for patience.
Even more concerning is the perception that the government remains disconnected from the emotional weight of the issue itself. For many indigenous communities, concerns surrounding illegal immigration are tied directly to identity, land, demographic security, and the future of constitutional protections. Yet the administration’s response has often appeared cold, procedural, and politically calculated — as though public anxiety can be neutralized through press releases and temporary law-and-order measures.
This widening disconnect is precisely why the atmosphere in Arunachal feels increasingly volatile.
The approaching 72-hour agitation has become more than a protest; it is evolving into a public test of whether the government still commands trust at all. The fact that such large-scale mobilization continues to gain traction even after the recent bandh should have served as a warning sign. Instead, the administration still appears to believe it can outwait public anger rather than address the causes behind it.
That may prove to be a serious miscalculation.
A government that ignores rising public sentiment eventually creates the very instability it later struggles to contain. Every delayed response, every vague assurance, and every attempt to dismiss the issue as a mere “disturbance” deepens the perception that the leadership has lost touch with the people it governs.
Arunachal Pradesh now appears to be approaching a political crossroads. One path leads toward deeper unrest, escalating protests, and a further collapse of public confidence in the government’s credibility. The other requires something the administration has so far struggled to demonstrate: transparency, accountability, and decisive action instead of political theater.
The tragedy is that this crisis may still have been preventable. But as the 72-hour ASTBAC agitation draws closer, the government increasingly appears less like a leadership in control and more like an administration struggling to contain the consequences of its own failures.
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