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History
Formerly part of Assam, the area was seized by Britain from Burma (now Myanmar) in 1826. The British sent 18 expeditions against the Naga peoples in the north 183287. After India attained independence in 1947, there was Naga guerrilla activity against the Indian government; the state of Nagaland was established in 1963 in response to demands for self-government, but fighting continued sporadically. A peace accord was struck with the guerrillas in 1975 but fighting resumed in 1980. Charges of serious human-rights violations have been filed against Indian forces operating in the area. The Naga guerrillas have links with other rebel groups in northeast India, but there is conflict between groups over protection money from the heroin trade, transport, and banking; by August 1993 they had forced the closure of 57 of the 63 bank branches in Nagaland and held hundreds of lorries to ransom on the NagalandAssam border.