Operation Dabanal
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changes Chittagong Hill Tracts
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| Part of Chittagong Hill Tracts conflict | |||||||
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Operation Dabanal, translation Operation Wildfire, was a counterinsurgency operation carried out by Bangladesh Army in the Chittagong Hill Tracts from 1977 to 1997.[1][2][3] During the operation, an estimated 30 to 80 thousand security personnel were deployed to the region.[2]
Chittagong Hill Tracts is a hilly region of Bangladesh.[4] This region had changed hands many times.[4] The Kingdom of Arakan took it over in 953, Kingdom of Tripura in 1240, and reconquered by Arakan in 1575 who lost it 1666 after a war with the Mughals.[4] It remained a contested territory between the two Kingdoms.[4] From 1666 to 1760, it was ruled by the Mughal Empire who ceded it the British East India Company.[4] In 1860, the region was taken over by the British Raj and made part of British India.[4] It was the British who named the region as the Chittagong Hill Tracts as they saw it as an extension of Chittagong District and placed it under the Province of Bengal.[4] The land south was called Arakan Hill Tracts and the land north was called Hill Tippera.[4] Chittagong Hill Tracts Regulation created a tax collection system in 1900.[4]

After the Partition of India, the Chittagong Hill Tracts became a part of Pakistan.[4] It became part of Bangladesh after the independence of Bangladesh.[4] Unlike the rest of Bangladesh, it was neither Bengali nor Muslim majority.[4] Most of the inhabitants followed Buddhism and Hinduism.[4] In the 1980s, the government of Bangladesh divided it into three districts, Bandarban District, Khagrachari District, and Rangamati District.[4] In 1989, the government of then-president Hussain Muhammad Ershad passed the District Council Act created three tiers of local government councils to devolve powers and responsibilities to the representatives of the native peoples, but the councils were rejected and opposed by the PCJSS.[5]
Over 100 thousand tribals became refugees due to the construction of the Kaptai Dam, which also flooded 40 percent of agricultural land, and many were not compensated. Some of them fled to Arunachal Pradesh, India.[5]
