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History
Assam was thriving region from 1000 BC, with migrants coming from China and Myanmar (Burma). After the Burmese invasion in 1826, Britain took control and made Assam a separate province in 1874; it was included in the Dominion of India, except for most of the Muslim district of Silhet, which went to Pakistan in 1947. Ethnic unrest started in the 1960s when Assamese was declared the official language. After protests, the Garo, Khasi, and Jaintia tribal hill districts became the state of Meghalaya in 1971; the Mizo hill district became the Union Territory of Mizoram in 1972. There were massacres of Muslim Bengalis by Hindus in 1983. In 1987 members of the Bodo ethnic group began fighting for a separate homeland. In the early 1990s the Marxist-militant United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), which had extorted payments from tea-exporting companies, spearheaded a campaign of separatist terrorist violence.
Black stands for the African people. White symbolizes peace. Black, red, and green, the ‘black liberation’ colours, denote Africa's rebirth. Red represents the blood common to all people. Green recalls the fertile land. Effective date: 12 December 1963.
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