U.S.-based academics call for Assam land rights activist Pranab Doley’s release
A group of academics associated with a human rights programme in the United States has called for the unconditional release of indigenous human rights activist
A group of academics associated with a human rights programme in the United States has called for the unconditional release of indigenous human rights activist Pranab Doley, arrested for allegedly fuelling violence to derail the Assam government’s move to construct a luxury hotel and a museum near the Kaziranga Park. The activist was detained in Guwahati on July 12 and arrested in eastern Assam’s Golaghat at 3.20 a.m. on Monday (July 13, 2026) on charges that he and several others had “unlawfully trespassed with deadly weapons” into the site of the Tea Tribes Museum and later into the hotel project by Hyatt Group and Assam Tourism Development Corporation (ATDC) at Ingle Pathar on June 29. The Indigenous Rights and Protected Areas Initiative of the Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Programme (IPLP) at the University of Arizona’s James E. Rogers College of Law condemned Mr. Doley’s arrest. The activist, who belongs to the Mishing community, is a member of IPLP’s Advisory Council and the convenor of the Greater Kaziranga Land and Human Rights Protection Committee (GKLHRPC). Also read: ‘How did Assam permit large-scale hotels in and around Kaziranga?’ “We call for his immediate and unconditional release and for the withdrawal of all charges arising from the peaceful exercise of his rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association, and to defend the collective rights of indigenous peoples,” the IPLP members, mostly comprising academics, said in a statement on Tuesday (July 14, 2026).
According to the Indigenous People’s Rights International, the Asia Indigenous People’s Pact, and India-based indigenous organisations, Mr. Doley was arrested in connection with a criminal case registered at Bokakhat police station on June 29. Bokakhat, in Golaghat district, is the administrative headquarters of the Kaziranga Park and Tiger Reserve. Land reportedly reclassified Doley, 40, was reportedly arrested without being shown an arrest warrant. His mobile phone was seized, and he was allegedly denied contact with supporters before being transferred from the Dispur police station (Guwahati) into the custody of the Bokakhat police. He was booked under numerous provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, including counts of criminal conspiracy, unlawful assembly, rioting, obstruction of and assault on public servants, mischief, criminal trespass, and criminal intimidation. “We are alarmed by reports that police raided Mr. Doley’s ancestral home (near Kaziranga) in the course of searching for Rajiv Pegu, another member of the GKLHRPC, suggesting a widening pattern of pressure on the leadership of the affected communities,” the IPLP members said. Doley and his associates have been leading a movement of Adivasi and indigenous farming families opposing the proposed luxury hotel project at Ingle Pathar on the fringes of the national park, famed for its one-horned rhinoceroses, and the alleged reclassification and allocation of community grazing and farmlands to the ATDC for that project. Panchayat and Rural Development Minister Atul Bora, who represents the Bokakhat Assembly constituency, defended the activist’s arrest and claimed that the site in question was government land and the ATDC was allotted 30 bighas (9.9 acres) for construction of the hotel and Tea Tribes Museum.
