GAUHATI, India (AP) Thousands of tribal residents in remote northeast India are protesting against paying taxes to multiple rebel groups fighting for autonomy and a single Naga tribal homeland.
The protest movement, launched at a rally Thursday in Nagaland state's main city of Dimapur, marks the first time local residents have challenged the illegal tax arrangement that has guaranteed decades of funding to at least seven militant groups.
"We are not out to fight the rebels, but they cannot bleed the people of Nagaland," former government official K.K. Sema said in Dimapur.
The most prominent Naga rebel group the National Socialist Council of Nagaland, or NSCN warned protest organizers to call off their rally, saying it amounted to opposition to the "liberation struggle."
Rebels have been collecting taxes from everyone from traders to government officials since the first Naga rebel group formed at India's independence in 1947. Residents of Nagaland are exempt from federal taxes.