It was late Saturday evening on?February 3?when the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) cadres in the eastern districts of Nagaland got the news that the Eastern Nagaland People’s Organisation (EPNO), a body representing the interest of seven tribes inhabiting the region, had called off their boycott of the upcoming assembly elections in Nagaland. The withdrawal came after ENPO and eastern Naga tribal leaders, many of whom were huddled in Guwahati for days, received ‘assurance’ from the Centre that their demand for greater autonomy for the eastern districts would be considered. Election fever finally hit the erstwhile sleepy streets of the hill towns on Monday. “Nagas don’t do anything on?Sunday. It’s God’s day,” C. Pukho, a resident of Noklakh, says with a chuckle, as he points at the local church visible on the horizon.