Hinomoto Insurrection

The Hinomoto Insurrection (日野元暴動) was a conflict in Hinomoto from 1974 to 1995 between various Hinoan independence movements and the Yamataian government. It is also known in other contexts as the Hinoan Emergency or Hinoan War for Independence. The conflict began as an escalation of violence by Hinoan independence movements just prior to the 1974 handover of Hinomoto from Chisei to Yamatai, and is usually deemed to have ended with the Dual 10 Accords in 1995. Although the Hinoan Insurrection mostly took place in Hinomoto, at times violence spilled over into other parts of Yamatai and Chisei. Fighting also took place between independence movements, mainly between nationalist and socialist factions, which were ideologically opposed to each other.

Unrest in Hinomoto

Hinomoto had formed a national merger with Yamatai in 1850,

History
During the early years, the guerillas still had vast amounts of weaponry at their disposal and were probably still being armed by Arshavat, which resorted to illicit civilian shipments and submarine shipments, forcing Yamatai to aggressively oppose these until it died out as Arshavat shifted its focus to the Crosswind. One high-profile incident occurred where the guerillas bombarded the town of Shirahama (used as an Imperial Army HQ) with rocket artillery from the hills daily for a week before they were eliminated.

A particular guerilla group was a constant thorn in the Imperial Army's side, carrying out guerilla actions throughout the winter of 1984, managing to cause significant damage in the vicinity of Yuzu before they disappeared in summer 1985, possibly having fled the country. After a massive complaint against Yamatai's conduct, reprisal tactics (officially denied by the Army but carried out nonetheless by ground commanders) were finally banned in 1985.

In 1990, the new Kojima Toshihiko government aimed to finally end the Insurrection and reached out to the guerillas, signing a fourth ceasefire in August and then the Dual 10 Accords on 10th of October, which allowed for guerilla representation in the SAR government, some concessions for Hinomoto, in return for an end to hostilities and disarmament of the paramilitary groups, some of which were allowed to continue operating as demilitarised, apolitical fraternal organisations to support the former fighters. However, certain Imperial Army officers were unhappy with this and caused the 1991 Heian Incident the following year. At the same time, infighting between the revolutionary groups began to intensify due to disagreements between those who agreed to end the fighting and those who wished to continue the revolution.