>> see, the situation in assam is really complicated, you know, because,e, like you said, assams a state that bordersrs banglgla. earlier, it was part of what was then known as east bengal, whicich then became east pakist, which became bangladesh. and it has a history of migration which goes back to like 1826 or earlier. when the british basically took over assam, they more or less invited the kind of robust peasants of east bengal to come in to this state, which they thought was, like the british thought in australia, you know, terra nullius. they did not pay attention to the fact that it was actually populated by very many tribes. there's something like 200 different tribes, languages, communities. there's a history to the national citizens register in assam which can'n't be simplifieied, you knowow? it wasn't what people in the indian mainland like to think of as, "oh, some hindu-muslim problem." it was not. it was more,e, actually, a resentmement of the assamese, or people who thought they were assasamese, against bengalis. and then there was a linguistic problem there of the british