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Digital Desk: Following a meeting between the two parties in Itanagar on Monday, Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu said that the boundary dispute between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh could be settled "once and for all" by the end of November.

 

The conference between the two states was the last before a decision was made, according to Khandu and other senior Assamese ministers present, including minister of border protection and development Atul Bora.

 

For a definitive agreement and long-term solution, me and my Assam colleague Himanta Biswa Sarma will meet once again. By the end of November, we both intend to put our issues behind us, Khandu told reporters.

 

By signing the Namsai Declaration in July of this year, both states agreed to reduce the number of disputed villages from 123 to 86 and settle the boundary dispute by establishing 12 committees, each headed by a cabinet minister, who would travel to the disputed areas, gather input from locals, and submit reports to their respective governments.

 

"Today, we had a thorough discussion of these reports per district. The committees of both states have truly and cooperatively sought to find a long-term solution to this boundary issue, and I am pleased that all reports are good in substance, said Khandu.

 

Atul Bora, the minister responsible for Assam's border development, concurred, stating that the state's resolution with Meghalaya will be similar, and he asked for support from locals in both states' border regions.

 

The purpose of today's meeting was to discuss the committees' reports in order to find a quick fix. On one point of contention, there is still no agreement, but we anticipate it happening soon. Soon, there will be a meeting between the chief ministers of the two states, he promised.

 

The shared border between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh is 804 kilometres long. Although there was initially no conflict, claims that citizens of one state were encroaching on the territory of the other have since given rise to conflict and even violence. Since 1989, a lawsuit about the matter has been pending before the Supreme Court.

 

Last year, both states decided to address their border dispute through negotiations at the urging of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah.

 

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