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Why is the Indian Government not serious about Manipur violence?

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I want to discuss a pressing issue that's been bothering me, the ongoing violence in Manipur, India. As a neighboring country, we can't ignore the human suffering and instability it's causing.

Manipur has been plagued by ethnic tensions between the Meitei and Kuki communities for decades. The Meitei demand greater autonomy, while the Kuki seek a separate state. This conflict has roots in colonial-era policies and has been exacerbated by government neglect.

Despite the severity of the situation, the Indian government seems reluctant to take concrete steps. Why? In my opinion:

- Fear of setting a precedent for other separatist movements
- Economic interests in the region's natural resources
- Political calculations to appease certain voter bases

Facts:

- Over 50 deaths and thousands displaced in recent months
- Widespread property damage and economic losses
- Human rights abuses by security forces

Here are the potential steps that the Indian government should have taken:

Autonomous administrative structures to address Meitei and Kuki demands
Economic development initiatives to bridge the gap between communities
Neutral third-party mediation to facilitate negotiations
Addressing external factors like geopolitical rivalries

Share your thoughts and suggestions
 
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India believes there is a Chinese hand at play.
 
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Kukei and metie is a fight between two tribes and it's been going on for ages.
 
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Kuki Meitei fight has been for centuries.

Kukis have been fighting Myanmar's army as well.
 
Could be. But it is a centuries old tribal fight and they are fighting Myanmar army as well. Regarding supply of weapons, there is corruption in India and arms cache can make its way through multiple routes.
 
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Evening briefing: Kharge slams Modi's 'failure' to end Manipur violence; BJP on Mamata's conspiracy charge; and more​


Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge on Monday attacked Prime Minister Narendra Modi for “abject failure” in ending ethnic violence in Manipur, calling it unforgivable. “People of Manipur are asking, why doesn’t Modi ji want to end violence in the state?” he asked on X. The violence, which was triggered in May last year, has escalated with the use of drones and rockets in attacks over the last week. A former soldier was killed after he accidentally crossed the “buffer zone” between the Meitei and Kuki areas late on Sunday

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Monday criticised West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee over her allegation against the Centre of conspiring over the public outcry in the rape and murder of a trainee doctor in Kolkata last month. The rape and murder of the junior doctor in a seminar hall of the state-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata on August 9 has sparked nationwide protests. The case is being investigated by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

Source: Hindustan Times
 
Manipur is an ethnic conflict between two tribes. I doubt they are getting any external support. Maybe China at most but there is no concrete proof. Regarding weapons.. its not that difficult to get - black market trading, being on border with Myanmar which is in a state of civil war. The tribes want autonomy but also want to remain with the union ( as of September 2024).
 
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Baluchistan is a just cause for Independence Day. The British made mistakes which the Pashtuns and Baloch are suffering from to this day. They are a separate people and separate nation historically after Mahabharat was dissolved.

We will continue to support the Baloch until they achieve their objective of an independent state. Until then the Baloch shall fight till the last drop of their blood. They are brave people not like Punjabi Pakistanis who only surrender during wars.
 
Indian police arrest 33 after violence in troubled Manipur

Indian police have arrested 33 people after a surge in ethnic violence in Manipur state, where a curfew and an internet blackout have been imposed, officers said Thursday.

Fighting broke out in Manipur in May 2023, between the predominantly Hindu Meitei majority and the mainly Christian Kuki community, an ethnic conflict that has since killed at least 200 people.

Since then, communities have splintered into rival groups across swaths of the northeastern state, which borders war-torn Myanmar.

After months of relative calm, fresh fighting erupted this month.

At least 11 people have been killed, including in what police called a "significant escalation" of violence, with insurgents firing rockets and dropping bombs with drones.

"In the follow up to the violent protests in the past few days, Manipur Police has arrested 33 people and apprehended seven juveniles," a police statement read.

It urged people "to cooperate with law enforcing agencies in the maintenance of peace and normalcy".

Authorities have imposed an internet shutdown in several areas, repeating a blackout that last year lasted for months.

Police have also ordered a curfew, but hundreds in the state capital Imphal defied the order.

Meitei protesters marched through Imphal on Tuesday to demand security forces take action against Kuki insurgent groups, whom they blame for the latest spate of attacks.

Long-standing tensions between the Meitei and Kuki communities revolve around competition for land and public jobs.

Rights activists have accused local leaders of exacerbating ethnic divisions for political gain.

Manipur is ruled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.

Fighting last year forced around 60,000 people from their homes, according to government figures. Many have been unable to return home.

AFP
 
The Manipur government on Sunday extended the ban on mobile internet services in five districts for another five days, till September 20, even as it relaxed curfew prohibitions in four districts for a few hours in the morning

The Home Department, in an order extending the ban, said that the decision was taken in view of the prevailing law and order situation.

After incidents of violence and student protests for two days, the state government on September 10 suspended the mobile internet service in five districts — Imphal West, Imphal East, Thoubal, Bishnupur, and Kakching — for five days (till September 15).

Commissioner, Home, N. Ashok Kumar, in Sunday’s order, said: “State government, after reviewing the prevailing law and order situation and its possible co-relation with the general operation of internet suspension in the last fortnight, decided to continue suspension of internet and mobile data services including VSATs, and VPN services in the territorial jurisdiction of Imphal West, Imphal East, Thoubal, Bishnupur, and Kakching districts of Manipur for another 5 days with effect from September 15.”

The state government, on September 12, restored broadband and fixed lease line internet service in five districts in the Manipur Valley, while keeping the suspension for the mobile internet.

On September 10, mobile internet service was suspended in five districts for five days (till September 15).

Apprehending fresh trouble in the valley regions, including in the state capital Imphal and its adjoining areas, district authorities on September 10 reimposed curfew for an indefinite period in four districts — Imphal East, Imphal West, Bishnupur, and Thoubal. However, prohibitory orders in these districts were relaxed on Sunday for seven hours from 5 a.m.

Strife-torn Manipur has witnessed a series of violent incidents since September 1, with suspected militants gunning down at least 12 people, including two women, elderly persons and a retired soldier, and injuring over 20 others in different districts.

After the violence, thousands of students belonging to schools and colleges held protests for two days (on September 9 and 10) in support of their demands which included the removal of the Director General of police and chief security advisor to the state government for their alleged inability to deal with the rising militant violence.

The student leaders separately met Governor Lakshman Prasad Acharya and Chief Minister N. Biren Singh and highlighted their demands, which also included the withdrawal of Central forces from the state and maintaining the territorial integrity of Manipur. Owing to militant violence and student protests, the Higher and Technical Education Department and the Directorate of Education, in two separate orders, closed all schools, colleges and technical institutions till September 14.

Meanwhile, the Army, and the Assam Rifles, along with the Border Security Force, the Central Reserve Police Force, and the Manipur Police continue their anti-insurgency operations across the state.

 
Schools, colleges in Manipur to reopen from September 17

The Manipur government has said that schools and colleges, which have remained closed due to the prevailing law and order situation, will reopen on Tuesday (September 17, 2024) and normal classes will resume.

Schools and colleges were closed on September 7 after rocket attacks killed one person and injured several others. The institutions continued to remain closed as students hit the streets demanding the return of peace to the ethnic strife-torn state. They clashed with security forces, prompting the imposition of curfew in several districts.

Orders for the reopening of schools and colleges were issued by the Directorate of Education (Schools) and the Higher and Technical Education Department on Monday (September 16, 2024) night.

Meanwhile, the Manipur government relaxed curfew restrictions in Imphal East and West and Thoubal districts from 5 am to 6 pm on Tuesday (September 17, 2024) to facilitate people to purchase essential items, including food and medicines.

The relaxation, however, does not permit any gatherings, sit-ins or rallies.

More than 200 people have been killed and thousands rendered homeless in ethnic strife between Imphal Valley-based Meiteis and adjoining hills-based Kukis in Manipur since May, 2023.

SOURCE: https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...-reopen-from-september-17/article68650562.ece
 

India in talks with ethnic groups clashing in Manipur state​


The Indian government is in talks seeking to resolve a long-running conflict between two ethnic communities in the northeastern state of Manipur, Interior Minister Amit Shah said at a press conference on Tuesday.

Internet and mobile data services were restored in Manipur on Monday, official orders showed, after being suspended in some areas last week when student protests turned violent amid fresh fighting between the majority Meitei and minority Kuki groups.

"We hope that we will be able bring the situation (in Manipur) under control," Shah told reporters at an event outlining the first 100 days of the third term of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration.

"If both (ethnic groups) do not come to an understanding, there won't be a resolution to the matter," Shah said, adding that the government was prepared with a "road map" outlining a range of efforts for the coming days.

Source: Reuters
 
I want to discuss a pressing issue that's been bothering me, the ongoing violence in Manipur, India. As a neighboring country, we can't ignore the human suffering and instability it's causing.

Manipur has been plagued by ethnic tensions between the Meitei and Kuki communities for decades. The Meitei demand greater autonomy, while the Kuki seek a separate state. This conflict has roots in colonial-era policies and has been exacerbated by government neglect.

Despite the severity of the situation, the Indian government seems reluctant to take concrete steps. Why? In my opinion:

- Fear of setting a precedent for other separatist movements
- Economic interests in the region's natural resources
- Political calculations to appease certain voter bases

Facts:

- Over 50 deaths and thousands displaced in recent months
- Widespread property damage and economic losses
- Human rights abuses by security forces

Here are the potential steps that the Indian government should have taken:

Autonomous administrative structures to address Meitei and Kuki demands
Economic development initiatives to bridge the gap between communities
Neutral third-party mediation to facilitate negotiations
Addressing external factors like geopolitical rivalries

Share your thoughts and suggestions


Don't know much about this conflict, but was surprised to read that the two ethnic tribes are separated by religion, not just tribal differences as most Indians are suggesting. Majority Meitei are hindus, while the Kuki minority are christian. That may answer your question as to why the govt is not serious about intervening.
 

Congress alleges BJP plot to create Manipur-like situation in Tripura, cites recent violence​


After visiting areas affected by the recent communal violence and arson, the Opposition Congress on Wednesday alleged that people belonging to the ruling BJP were trying to create a Manipur-like situation in Tripura.

“They had a blueprint for a communal riot at Koitorabari last month. They burned houses, vehicles and livestock. An atmosphere of panic was prevailing there. There were lapses on the part of the administration in tackling the situation, especially the police. Hooligans backed by the ruling party succeeded in creating communal tension in the area due to inaction of the police. They tried to create such situations elsewhere in the state as well,” state Congress president Ashish Kumar Saha said.

On August 25, at least 16 houses were burnt, 11 vehicles torched and several other properties damaged in a communal flare-up in the Durganagar and Koitorabari areas of Ranirbazar of the Jirania subdivision in West Tripura district following the defacement of a Kali idol at a local temple.

Saha said the Kali idol defacement was used as a pretext to perpetrate arson and looting and to create a fear psychosis. He also said certain people were trying to create a discord between Hindus and Muslims as well as a divide between tribals and non-tribals.

“They are trying to create a Manipur-like situation in Tripura,” he said.

The Congress also claimed the BJP was resorting to intimidation tactics and communal incitement as it had lost its support base.

MLA Sudip Roy Barman, who was part of the Congress team, said, “We will ensure justice for this barbaric incident (at Koitorabari). We appeal to them to hold their head high and not bow down to any intimidation. If they become weak, these miscreants will try to further cow them down. Many people are still stranded in relief camps. We will ensure that food and other necessary supplies are provided there, because there is nothing for them to go back to.”

“Those who perpetrated this attack are not human beings. Such people can have no religion. If those people had any religion of their own, they would not have burnt cows. They are miscreants, anti-socials and hooligans. We have identified them,” he added.

Barman said his party would gherao the state police headquarters on September 23 in protest against the alleged deterioration of law and order and incitement to communal and ethnic violence as well as crimes against women.

The Congress leaders also demanded the state government ensure action against the perpetrators of the violence and provide compensation for its victims.

After the police arrested five people in connection with the Koitorabari violence, a group of protesters blocked a national highway alleging that their “innocent Hindu brethren” were arrested in the aftermath of the idol desecration and purported attacks on Hindus.

Source: Indian Express
 
3 Killed In Clashes Over Land Dispute In Manipur's Ukhrul: Sources

At least three people were killed in a gunfight between residents of two villages over a land dispute in Manipur's Ukhrul district, sources said. Internet has been snapped in the area, and large gatherings have been banned. Several people were also injured in the clashes, sources said.

The gunfight broke out between residents of the two villages while they were cleaning a plot of land as part of the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan programme, sources said.

Both villages belong to the Naga tribes, and residents in the two villages have been laying claim to the disputed land.

The state police along with the Assam Rifles have been deployed to bring the situation under control, sources said.

In another development, the Manipur Police have flashed a message to all district police heads to remain on "high alert" due to the "present law and order situation".

"All officers, police stations, outposts, nakas etc should remain on high alert," the police said in the message.

 
Fresh Gunfight Breaks Out in Manipur’s Jiribam District

A fresh gunfight erupted in Manipur’s Jiribam district on Saturday, amid peace talks initiated by legislators from the Meitei, Kuki-Zo-Hmar, and Naga communities to restore peace in the strife-torn state.

According to police reports, the gunfight started around 5:30 am when suspected Kuki militants launched an attack in Borobekra, approximately 30 km from the Jiribam district headquarters. Jiribam district shares its border with Assam’s Cachar district.

A heavy exchange of fire took place between the suspected armed militants and a combined team of Manipur police and central forces. Fortunately, there have been no reports of human casualties.

The attack took place on the same day that the Manipur Police observed its 133rd Raising Day across the state. Speaking to the media during the Raising Day celebrations at the 1st Manipur Rifles parade ground in Imphal, Director General of Police (DGP) Rajiv Singh acknowledged the ongoing violence but confirmed that the situation had been brought under control. Additional security forces have been deployed to prevent any further escalation.

DGP Singh also stressed that the best way to resolve the ongoing crisis is through peaceful dialogue between the warring communities. He urged all groups to come forward with constructive suggestions and highlighted that efforts were being made to prevent further violence.

He assured the public that the state police and security forces are on high alert to prevent any incidents of arson and firing. He also appealed to the public not to see the police as using excessive force, stating that the police are working to prevent further violence and protect civilians.

 
Manipur continues to face a deepening crisis as ethnic tensions between the Kuki and Meitei communities have escalated, with the Modi government facing growing criticism over its handling of the situation

The recent violence, which erupted on October 26th in the Churachandpur and Imphal districts, has led to a state of fear and uncertainty among the local population. The clashes, which involved gunfire and explosions, have caused civilian casualties and forced many residents to flee their homes.

The police have accused the Kuki community of initiating the attacks, a claim that has been strongly refuted by the local population. Instead, they argue that the police's heavy-handed response and alleged bias towards the Meitei community have further exacerbated the situation.

The ongoing conflict in Manipur has its roots in longstanding tensions between the two communities, which have been further exacerbated by the policies of the Modi government. The Kuki community has accused the government of favoring the Meitei community, leading to a perceived sense of marginalization.

Bimal Akoijam, a Congress leader in Manipur, has held the Modi government and the BJP responsible for the escalating violence, stating that their "inhumane policies" have contributed to the crisis. He has also criticized the government's apparent lack of intervention, describing it as a "silent spectator" to the unfolding humanitarian crisis.

The situation in Manipur has been volatile for over 500 days, with the latest flare-up being the result of the Modi government's alleged social polarization tactics. Civilians have borne the brunt of the conflict, with hundreds killed and thousands displaced, yet the central government has been accused of failing to take decisive action to restore

Source: Samaa News
 

Manipur CM highlights economic revival with increased GST collections​

Guwahati: Despite battling challenges on ethnic clashes in last one and half years, Manipur chief minister N Biren Singh claimed that economy of the state is reviving. He said GST collection has shown an 18% growth in the period of May to September in 2024 compared to similar period in 2023.

 

Manipur CM highlights economic revival with increased GST collections​

Guwahati: Despite battling challenges on ethnic clashes in last one and half years, Manipur chief minister N Biren Singh claimed that economy of the state is reviving. He said GST collection has shown an 18% growth in the period of May to September in 2024 compared to similar period in 2023.


Baldy needs to know all about inflation.
 
Fresh violence may derail peace process in India’s Manipur

A gunfight between tribal Kuki militants and security forces left 11 dead and two injured in Jiribam district

A protestor from a tribal community carrying an umbrella shelters from the sun during a demonstration in New Delhi on May 4 to mark a year of the ongoing ethnic conflict in the remote northeastern state of Manipur. (Photo by Arun SANKAR / AFP)

A Church leader in India's Manipur has expressed concern that the latest killings in a fierce gunfight between tribal Kuki militants and security forces may lead to further escalation of violence in the troubled northeastern state.

At least 11 militants, who were described as village volunteers by their tribal body, were killed when security forces claimed to have repulsed an attack on a police station by them on Nov. 11.

The fresh bout of violence will increase animosities between rival groups and may jeopardize the federal government's initiative to restore peace in the state, the Church leader who did not want to be named due to security concerns told UCA News on Nov. 12.

Government sources said two personnel from the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) were injured as the militants in camouflage uniforms and armed with sophisticated weapons fired indiscriminately at the Borobekra police station in Jiribam district.

The Indigenous Tribal Leaders' Forum (ITLF) condemned the killings of tribal men and denied the government's claim that they were militants.

The tribal body in a statement on Nov. 12 expressed deep sorrow over the tragic loss of our 11 brave volunteers.

The gunfight comes close after the burned corpse of a Kuki woman was found in the district last week.

The woman was reportedly killed by Meitei gunmen in Zairawan village on Nov. 7.

The ITLF claimed that the CRPF personnel posted nearby refused to fire even one shot to help the villagers.

They stayed put in their camp as the village was pillaged and burnt for over an hour by the Meitei armed attackers. But they brutally killed 11 Hmar village volunteers who were on patrolling duty to sanitize the area where the indigenous woman was killed, it alleged.

The Hmar people are a smaller group within the Kuki.

They are martyrs who selflessly gave their lives for our land, the statement said, adding that their sacrifice will serve as a beacon of hope and motivate us to keep defending our land.

The ITLF questioned the bias of the personnel from CRPF, a federal paramilitary force, against the indigenous people.

The hilly state of Manipur bordering civil war-hit Myanmar has witnessed unprecedented violence since May 3 last year.

The long-standing tensions between the predominantly Hindu Meitei majority and mostly Christian Kuki people revolve around their claims over land and government jobs.

The state has continued to witness sporadic violence that claimed the lives of over 230 and displaced 60,000, a majority of them Christians.

Manipur is ruled by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The tribal people are opposed to any peace deal with the BJP's Chief Minister N Biren Singh who is a Meitei. They want a separate administrative setup for their districts directly under the control of the federal government.

Tribal people make up 41 percent of Manipur's 3.2 million people while Meiteis form 53 percent and dominate the politics and economy of the state.

Source: UCA News
 
If Nagas can have Nagaland, Mizos can have Mizoram, then Kukis can have Kuki land.

Its time for India to carve out another state for Kukis. Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya can all donate a small portion of the land and create a new state Kukiland for Kukis.

No point in forcing people to stay in the same state and continue the bloodshed. Clearly Meitei and Kuki do not like each other.

** Kukis are in conflict with Meiti in Manipur, Nagas in Nagaland, several militant attacks in Tripura, Bangladesh in Chittagong, and also Myanmar army. Basically they do not seem to like anyone. Something tells me they are the problem.
 
Clearly Meitei and Kuki do not like each other.

** Kukis are in conflict with Meiti in Manipur, Nagas in Nagaland, several militant attacks in Tripura, Bangladesh in Chittagong, and also Myanmar army. Basically they do not seem to like anyone. Something tells me they are the problem.

Kukis wanted to secede from Bangladesh. They were doing terrorism in southeastern Bangladesh (part of Chittagong division).

Anyway, BD military neutralized them recently. There was a military operation.
 
Kukis wanted to secede from Bangladesh. They were doing terrorism in southeastern Bangladesh (part of Chittagong division).

Anyway, BD military neutralized them recently. There was a military operation.

So even you agree that Kukis have problems with everyone.
 
Kukis wanted to secede from Bangladesh. They were doing terrorism in southeastern Bangladesh (part of Chittagong division).

Anyway, BD military neutralized them recently. There was a military operation.
Good on BD.

BJP government needs to seriously talk to Kuki leaders and find a solution for the conflict. One group cannot have so many enemies.
 
They want to take land from BD India and Myanmar to create a new nation.

Yes. Bangladesh doesn't have much terrorism problem but Kukis have been causing problems for a while. They have targeted BD civilians and military.

They are a bit like Kurdish militants (who want to take lands from Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran).
 

Centre Reimposes AFSPA In Manipur's 6 Police Station Areas, Including Jiribam​


The Centre has reimposed the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, under which an area is declared as "disturbed" for the convenience of security forces to operate, in Manipur’s six police station areas, including the violence-hit Jiribam.

In a notification, the Union Home Ministry said the decision was taken given the continuous volatile situation there due to the ongoing ethnic violence.

The police station areas where AFSPA has been reimposed are Sekmai and Lamsang in Imphal West district, Lamlai in Imphal East district, Jiribam in Jiribam district, Leimakhong in Kangpokpi and Moirang in Bishnupur.

The fresh order came after the Manipur government imposed AFSPA in the entire state on October 1, barring 19 police station areas that include these six.

The police stations excluded from the Manipur government’s October 1 order of AFSPA imposition were Imphal, Lamphal, City, Singjamei, Sekmai, Lamsang, Patsoi, Wangoi, Porompat, Heingang, Lamlai, Irilbung, Leimakhong, Thoubal, Bishnupur, Nambol, Moirang, Kakching, Jiribam.

Eleven suspected militants were killed in a fierce gunfight with security forces on Monday after insurgents in camouflage uniforms and armed with sophisticated weapons fired indiscriminately at a police station and an adjacent CRPF camp in Manipur’s Jiribam district.

A day later, six civilians, including women and children were abducted by armed militants from the same district.

More than 200 people have been killed and thousands rendered homeless in ethnic violence between Imphal Valley-based Meiteis and adjoining hills-based Kuki-Zo groups since May last year.

The ethnically diverse Jiribam, which was largely untouched by the clashes in Imphal Valley and the adjoining hills, witnessed violence after the mutilated body of a farmer was found in a field in June this year.

 

Curfew Declared In Imphal As Tensions Intensify In Manipur, Protesters Target MLAs Houses​


A curfew has been declared on Saturday in Manipur’s capital, Imphal, as tensions continue to escalate in the state.

The curfew comes after three bodies, suspected to be among the six people who went missing from Manipur’s Jiribam on Monday, were found floating in River Jiri in the district.

The Ministry of Home Affairs also directed the security forces to restore peace and urged the people to cooperate with them.

More than 200 people have been killed and thousands rendered homeless in ethnic violence between Imphal Valley-based Meiteis and adjoining hills-based Kuki-Zo groups since May last year.

The ethnically diverse Jiribam, which was largely untouched by the clashes in Imphal Valley and the adjoining hills, witnessed violence after the mutilated body of a farmer was found in a field in June this year.

 
Manipur unrest: 61-year-old woman’s body found floating in Assam

The body of a 61-year-old woman, likely among the six people who armed militants allegedly abducted from Jiribam in Manipur on November 11, was found floating at Lakhipur in Assam on Sunday (November 17, 2024) morning. A police official said that the identification process is on.

Bodies of three others were found on November 14. Two others including a two-year-old remain missing.

reports that the bodies of all six persons, believed to be women and children missing since November 11, 2024, had been recovered from a river along the State’s border with Assam.

As protestors took to the streets, setting vehicles ablaze and attacking the residences of several MLAs in the State’s capital Imphal, the government temporarily suspended internet and mobile data services in seven affected districts of the valley, which is dominated by the non-tribal Meiteis, and the surrounding hills where the tribal Kuki-Zos are in a majority. Curfew was also clamped in the three valley districts of Imphal East, Imphal West, and Bishnupur.

At least 17 people have been killed in the State since November 7. Barring one, all deaths have been reported from Jiribam. This mixed-population district erupted in violence this June, more than a year after the ethnic clashes between the Meitei and Kuki-Zo people began on May 3, 2023.

SOURCE: https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...y-found-floating-in-assam/article68878156.ece
 
Kukis seem to be a problem everywhere they are.

Central Government should seriously sit and talk to their leaders to see what exactly they want. If it is something that is within the constitution, they should be given their due share. If it is something about having their own country or something like that, then government should do what Bangladesh did and take military action to curb the kuki terrorists. There should be zero tolerance towards murderers and anti national groups.
 

Biren Singh-led Manipur government failed: Conrad Sangma's party withdraws support​


The Conrad Sangma-led National People's Party (NPP) on Sunday withdrew its support to the BJP-led Manipur government, amid the ongoing unrest in the northeastern state.

In an official letter marked to BJP national president JP Nadda, NPP said that the Manipur government, under the leadership of Chief Minister N Biren Singh, has completely failed to control the ethnic violence in the state and restore normalcy.

Citing its dissatisfaction with the handling of the crisis, the party announced its decision to withdraw support from the government with immediate effect.

"The Manipur State Government under the leadership of Shri Biren Singh has completely failed to resolve the crisis and restore normalcy," the letter issued by NPP read.

 

Fresh ethnic clashes in India's Manipur after six bodies found​


India's north-eastern state of Manipur is on high alert after a fresh spate of violent protests rocked the region over the weekend.

The protests broke out after police reportedly recovered the bodies of six women and children, who were from the state's majority Meitei community.

Meitei groups have alleged that they were kidnapped by people from the minority Kuki group. The police, however, have not confirmed this.

The two ethnic groups have been locked in a deadly ethnic conflict since last May, which has killed 200 people and displaced thousands.

On Saturday, protesters ransacked and torched the houses and offices of at least a dozen lawmakers, mostly from the state's governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Police have arrested 23 people in connection with the violence and authorities have imposed an indefinite curfew and have suspended internet services in Meitei-dominated Imphal Valley and Bishnupur district.

In the wake of the unrest, the federal government has rushed top security officials to the state. Federal Home Minister Amit Shah chaired a high-level security meeting on the situation on Sunday, but the state remains on edge.

At least 20 people - both Kukis and Meities - have died in flare-ups that have erupted between the two ethnic groups this month.

Tensions began on 7 November, after members of an armed group allegedly raped a woman, who reportedly belonged to the Kuki community, and set her on fire in the state's Jiribam district.

Four days later, a police station and relief camp housing Meitei refugees in the area was attacked. The majority community blamed Kuki groups for the assault.

Police on the same day shot dead 10 suspected militants in what they said was a shoot-out, also known as an "encounter" in India.

Police alleged that the armed men were suspected Kuki militants, but Kuki organisations deny this and claim that the individuals were "village volunteers" - or armed civilians protecting the community.

Following the attack on the relief camp, six inhabitants - a grandmother, her two daughters and three grandchildren - went missing. Meitei groups alleged that they were abducted by armed Kuki men when they had attacked the area.

On Friday, police reportedly recovered six bodies - and though they have not confirmed their identities, some Indian media reports say they are that of the missing persons.

Protesters and civil society groups in the region are demanding that authorities put an end to the violence and take firm action against armed groups.

Clashes between the Kukis and Meiteis erupted in May last year - they were sparked by Kuki protests against demands from Meiteis to be given official tribal status, which would make them eligible for affirmative action and other benefits.

Since then, the state has witnessed months of violence and unrest, with only sporadic moments of calm.

Today, Manipur is divided into two camps, with Meiteis inhabiting the Imphal Valley and Kukis living in the surrounding hill areas. Borders and buffer zones guarded by security forces separate the two regions.

 
Don't know much about this conflict, but was surprised to read that the two ethnic tribes are separated by religion, not just tribal differences as most Indians are suggesting. Majority Meitei are hindus, while the Kuki minority are christian. That may answer your question as to why the govt is not serious about intervening.
You claim to not know much about this conflict,yet you opened a thread on this matter almost a year back on Oct 3, 2023.

You had enough time to google for the articles to post and discuss here. Funny that you became Ghajini in less than a year..😂
 
Kukis are our secret weapon against Bangladesh. When the time is right we will unleash it on them and 1 kuki is capable of putting to sword 10 Bangladeshi Islamists. Take over 20-25% Bangladesh land and give it to Kukis to create their own vessel state under the dominion of Bharat.
 
Kukis are our secret weapon against Bangladesh. When the time is right we will unleash it on them and 1 kuki is capable of putting to sword 10 Bangladeshi Islamists. Take over 20-25% Bangladesh land and give it to Kukis to create their own vessel state under the dominion of Bharat.

LMAO. They were neutralized very easily. BD military smashed them a few months ago.
 
You claim to not know much about this conflict,yet you opened a thread on this matter almost a year back on Oct 3, 2023.

You had enough time to google for the articles to post and discuss here. Funny that you became Ghajini in less than a year..😂

I don't know much about the conflict, but I only came across that story because it made the news in the paper I read in the UK, The Times. Horrific read about women being led into a field and raped and left for dead, and there was suggestions of BJP complicity in the ethnic cleansing which had taken place over a sustained period which included 300 churches burnt to the ground. I read it and posted it here, then forgot about it.
 
India to send 5,000 extra troops to quell Manipur unrest

India will deploy an extra 5,000 paramilitary troops to quell unrest in Manipur, authorities said Tuesday, a week after 16 people were killed in fresh clashes in the troubled state.

Manipur in India's northeast has been rocked by periodic clashes for more than 18 months between the predominantly Hindu Meitei majority and the mainly Christian Kuki community, dividing the state into ethnic enclaves.

Ten Kuki militants were killed when they attempted to assault police last week, prompting the apparent reprisal killing of six Meitei civilians, whose bodies were found in Jiribam district days later.

New Delhi has "ordered 50 additional companies of paramilitary forces to go to Manipur", a government source in New Delhi with knowledge of the matter told AFP on condition of anonymity, as they were not authorised to speak with media.

Each company of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), a paramilitary unit overseen by the home ministry and responsible for internal security, has 100 troops.

The Business Standard newspaper reported that the additional forces would be deployed in the state by the end of the week.

India already has thousands of troops attempting to keep the peace in the conflict that has killed at least 200 people since it began 18 months ago.

Manipur has been subject to periodic internet shutdowns and curfews since the violence began last year.

Both were reimposed in the state capital Imphal on Saturday after the discovery of the six bodies prompted violent protests by the Meitei community.

The ethnic strife has also displaced tens of thousands of people in the state, which borders war-torn Myanmar.

Incensed crowds in the city had attempted to storm the homes of several local politicians.

Local media reports said several homes of lawmakers from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which governs the state, were damaged in arson attacks during the unrest.

Long-standing tensions between the Meitei and Kuki communities revolve around competition for land and jobs.

Rights groups have accused local leaders of exacerbating ethnic divisions for political gain.

SOURCE: AFP
 
Autopsy Reveals Chilling Details Of Meitei Family Kidnapped, Killed By Kuki Militants In Manipur

The last photograph of L Chingkheinganba Singh, 3, whose partially decomposed body was found in a river in Manipur's Jiribam district, shows five other family members including his infant sibling and mother sitting together in a forested area.

Chingkheinganba Singh, in a tiny pink t-shirt, had turned his head to look at something or someone. His mother and eight-month-old sibling sat a step across from him. An orange rattle toy lay on a nest of dry bamboo leaves on the ground.

The three-year-old boy from the Meitei community has a bullet wound in the skull, the autopsy report said. There are stab wounds and fractures in the chest and lacerations in the forearm and other parts of the body. His right eye is missing.

The autopsy report shows his mother, L Heitonbi Devi, 25, has three bullet wounds in the chest and one in the buttock.

His grandmother Y Rani Devi, 60, has five bullet wounds - one in the skull, two in the chest, one in the abdomen, and one in the arm.

There are deep lacerations on many parts of the bodies of the two women, the autopsy reports show.

The autopsy reports of the three other family members of Chingkheinganba Singh are with the Jiribam police. They are eight-month-old infant Langamba Singh, his mother's sister T Thoibi Devi, 31, and her eight-year-old daughter T Thajamanbi Devi.

Laishram Herojit, the father of Chingkheinganba Singh, told NDTV today he asked the police to give the remaining three autopsy reports as the family has the right to access them under the law. Mr Herojit said he is waiting for the police's response.

Calls to the Jiribam police station went unanswered.

A joint action committee formed to demand justice in the killings said the police have asked them to bring a court order if they want the three remaining autopsy reports.

The premeditated kidnappings and killings of the six members of the Meitei community were done by "Kuki militants", the Manipur government has said. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) is looking into the case.

All the six were living in a relief camp in Jiribam's Borobekra after they lost their homes in the ethnic clashes between the Meitei community and the Kuki tribes that broke out in May 2023.

At least two dozen Kuki militants attacked the police station in Borobekra, near the interstate border with Assam, on November 11 and killed two senior citizens from the Meitei community, police sources have said. Another group of militants kidnapped the six civilians while the other group pressed on with their attack, sources said.

The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) soon engaged the Kuki militants in a 45-minute gunfight, at the end of which the security forces found 10 bodies along with assault rifles and a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) launcher.

Mr Herojit told NDTV an eyewitness saw his family being taken away in a boat on the Barak River on November 11. All the six bodies were found floating in the river between November 15 and 18.

The photo of the six civilians in captivity appeared in a WhatsApp channel called 'Zogam News', which has over 12,000 followers. Reactions on the photo had smiling emoticons. It soon went viral on social media. The WhatsApp channel's information page shows it was created on March 25, 2024.

Intelligence sources said this WhatsApp channel is among the many they have been monitoring in Manipur.

Civil society organisations of the Kuki tribes claim the 10 men killed in the encounter were "village volunteers", an allegation the police and other authorities have refuted strongly, pointing at the weapons brought by the militants and numerous bullet holes in a police SUV.

Political leaders across party lines have condemned the killing of women and children in Manipur. Most have said the latest incident was a terror attack considering it was not a skirmish between two communities in a riot-like situation, but a calculated, premeditated kidnapping operation with an intention to execute them.

The latest round of violence in Jiribam began on November 7 when suspected Meitei insurgents attacked a village of the Hmar tribe. A woman from the Hmar tribe was killed in the attack. Her husband in a police case alleged she was shot in the leg, raped and then set on fire by the suspected Meitei militants. Civil society groups of the Kuki tribes have accused the Manipur government of keeping silent on that attack.

The Manipur cabinet in a statement on November 16 had said "Kuki miscreants" burnt several houses and attacked Borobekra police station in Jiribam district on October 19. This attack and not the November 7 attack led to a fresh cycle of violence, sources have said.

The Manipur cabinet's statement on November 16 said the following: On October 26, "Kuki miscreants" again set a house on fire at Moulkangthol village in the same district. On November 3, Jiribam police rescued a Vaiphei woman from Chandrapur Rani Veng Babupara and handed her over to her family. On November 7, a Hmar woman was killed and several houses were set on fire in Zairawn village by Meitei miscreants. The same day, Kuki miscreants attacked Mongbung Meitei village with bombs. On November 11, the CRPF effectively countered an armed offensive by Kuki militants on Borobekara police station which housed a relief camp, killing 11 militants. In the attack, two Meitei civilians were killed by the Kuki militants.

There are many villages of the Kuki tribes in the hills surrounding the Meitei-dominated valley. The clashes between the Meitei community and the nearly two dozen tribes known as Kukis - a term given by the British in colonial times - who are dominant in some hill areas of Manipur, has killed over 220 people and internally displaced nearly 50,000.

The general category Meiteis want to be included under the Scheduled Tribes category, while the Kukis who share ethnic ties with people in neighbouring Myanmar's Chin State and Mizoram want a separate administration carved out of Manipur, citing discrimination and unequal share of resources and power with the Meiteis.

 
Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has dismissed concerns about the ongoing violence in Manipur impacting other Northeastern states, including Assam

Addressing the media at the International Tourism Mart in Kaziranga on November 27, CM Sarma emphasised that while Northeastern states share emotional and cultural ties, they remain geographically and administratively distinct.

“We are emotionally one, culturally one, but boundary-wise different,” he stated.

Drawing a parallel to other parts of India, Sarma added, “Is an event in Rajasthan a setback for Haryana? While we share a cultural bond, we are individual states.”

Referring specifically to Manipur’s situation, he remarked, “To link an incident in Manipur with Kaziranga or Manas is unfair. It only leads to frustration.”

The Chief Minister underscored the need to view events in each state within their specific contexts rather than generalising them across the region.

The statement comes amid escalating tensions in Manipur, where violence over the past few weeks has intensified. Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh recently revealed that security forces are conducting extensive combing operations in the Jiribam area to arrest those responsible for recent acts of violence that claimed the lives of several individuals, including women and children.

In response to the unrest, additional Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) units have been deployed to the region, and operations will continue until the culprits are apprehended, Singh assured.

Source: Statesman
 

Manipur's prolonged violence, internet shutdowns, curfews hitting students hard​


Ongoing violence in Manipur, coupled with frequent internet shutdowns, curfews, and strikes, has deeply disrupted education and career opportunities for students in the state. Academic schedules, online learning, and placements have all been hit hard, educators say.

The National Institute of Technology (NIT) Manipur has seen a significant decline in recruitment drives since the violence began.

"At least 40 companies recruited online, selecting 70 students, but this is much lower than the 100 we anticipated," shared Dr KH Johnson Singh, Head of Computer Science and Engineering.

Companies hesitant about offline recruitment have cited safety concerns despite NIT’s assurances. "The campus is safe and close to the airport, but images of violence and burning tyres have created a negative impression," Singh added.

INTERNET SHUTDOWN A MAJOR SETBACK

Assistant Professor Natasha Elangbam from Manipur University highlighted how the internet shutdown has limited students' access to online resources.

Many students, dependent on mobile data, struggle with classes, assignments, and research.

The disruption has also hit career counselling agencies hard. “We’ve seen a 90% drop in student counselling activities. Services like psychometric assessments and online mock tests are no longer accessible for most students,” said Sapam Joychandra, Director of SS Career Counselling.

The ethnic conflict between Meitei and Kuki-Zo communities has not only resulted in over 250 deaths but also displaced thousands. While the unrest continues, students in both urban and rural areas bear the brunt of restricted mobility and limited resources, further widening the educational gap.

 

'Centre and State Governments Have to Take Action, Not Us': Supreme Court on Manipur Conflict​


While hearing a petition on strife-torn Manipur, the Supreme Court on Monday (December 9) said that it is the state and central government which have to take action instead of the Apex court.

“It is Union and state governments that have to take action, not us,” said a bench of Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Sanjay Kumar, making it clear that the court is not going to pass any orders on supplementary applications filed by other persons, reported The Times of India.

The court also asked the state to give details of properties burnt, damaged, looted or illegally occupied during the crisis.

“We want every detail of such incidents. Also give details of action taken by the state in each of these incidents and whether the properties which have been encroached upon or illegally occupied have been restored to the original owners and whether the encroachers have been penalised,” ordered the bench.

The court also asked the Manipur state government to respond to the issue of releasing funds for temporary and permanent housing as flagged by Justice Gita Mittal Committee, which was constituted in 2023, reported The New Indian Express.

Ethnic violence began in Manipur in May 2023, and has been going on ever since – killing hundreds, displaces tens of thousands and sharply dividing the state along ethnic lines.

Source: The Wire
 
Mortar Bomb Found Near Manipur CM Biren Singh's House, Security Beefed Up

An unexploded mortar bomb was found near Manipur’s Koirengei, which is a kilometre of distance from Luwangshangbam, close to the private residence of Chief Minister N Biren Singh, on Tuesday morning.

The locals claimed that a rocket-propelled bomb was fired last night but failed to detonate. The unexploded 51 mm mortar bomb was discovered early today, triggering panic in the area.

authorities intensified security measures in the area and initiated an investigation to determine the source of the live bomb and the motive behind its placement near the Chief Minister’s residence.

 
UNLF has been extorting crores in Manipur to fund terrorist activities: ED says Myanmar based terror network also involved

On the 18th of December, a special PMLA court took cognisance of a chargesheet submitted by the Enforcement Directorate in a money laundering case against two arrested cadres identified as Thokchom Gyaneshor alias Thoiba/Sidabamapu and Laimayum Anand Sharma alias Ingba of the United National Liberation Front (UNLF), Manipur’s outlawed terrorist group.

In a statement, ED said that a chargesheet was filed against Thokchom Gyaneshor and Laimayum Anand Sharma. It added that on Wednesday, December 18, a PMLA court took cognisance of the chargesheet filed.

The duo was arrested by the ED on the 16th of October and are currently in judicial custody. The UNLF was created in 1964 with the goal of gaining Manipur’s ‘independence’ from India.

According to the ED, Gyaneshor is the outfit’s self-proclaimed “Chief of Army Staff” and “Secretary, External and Regional Affairs Department”. Sharma is the UNLF’s self-proclaimed “Intelligence Officer”.

The money laundering case originates from a July 2023 FIR and two chargesheets filed by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) earlier this year. The case pertains to a “trans-national conspiracy” hatched by Myanmar-based leadership of terror outfits active in the northeastern states to exploit ethnic unrest in Manipur, “wage war” against the Indian government, and carry out terrorist attacks, thereby exacerbating the security situation in Manipur.

“ED initiated investigation on the basis of an FIR No Rc-23/2023/NIA/DLI Dated 19.07.2023 and Chargesheet No. 05/2024 dated 07.03.2024 and Supplementary Chargesheet No. SCS-05(A)/2024 dated 30.07.2024 filed by National Investigating Agency (NIA) related to transnational conspiracy hatched by Myanmar-based leadership of terror outfits operationally active in the North Eastern States to exploit the ethnic unrest in the state of Manipur to wage war against Government of India and execute terrorist attacks thereby exacerbating the security situation in Manipur. NIA has invoked Sections 120 B, 121 A and 411 of IPC, 1860; Sections 17, 18, 18A, 18B, 20, 38, and 39 of Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 and Section 25 of the Arms Act, 1959 which are scheduled offences under PMLA 2002,” the Enforcement Directorate said.

Source: OpIndia
 

Tens of thousands displaced by ethnic violence in northeast India suffer squalid conditions in camps​


KANGPOKPI, India -- Phalneivah Khonsai ran for her life when violence struck her neighborhood in India's restive northeast, carrying just the bare essentials in the hope that she and her family could return soon.

Khonsai, her husband and three children left behind their house, which was torched by a mob, and made for the hills, where thousands of people from their community headed for safety.

That was in May last year. Almost 19 months later, Khonsai, 35, is still away from home, living in a government building that was turned into a relief center with squalid conditions and little privacy.

The relief camp is in Kangpokpi, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) from Imphal, the capital of India's northeastern Manipur state, which has been wracked by ethnic violence since last year. In the building’s damp and dark interior, fabric partitions separate at least 75 families like hers driven away from their homes.

“It is very difficult to live here,” Khonsai said, as women went about their daily chores such as washing clothes and dishes.

The violent ethnic clashes erupted last year between the majority Meitei community and the minority Kuki-Zo tribes in Manipur. The conflict has claimed more than 250 lives and displaced at least 60,000 people.

The state remains divided into two ethnic zones, one controlled by the Meiteis and the other by the Kuki-Zo community. The factions have formed armed militias that patrol roads checking for signs of their rivals. Borders and buffer zones guarded by security forces separate the two regions. Youths spend nights guarding vulnerable villages.

Khonsai, a Kuki, said the struggles of living in a relief center are taking a toll on the family's health but they can't go back home because they fear for their lives.

“If we go back, they will kill us. There is no hope for going back,” she said.

The Meiteis, who are predominantly Hindus, live in the Imphal Valley and nearby districts, while the Kuki-Zos live in hilly areas. The violence began last year when Meiteis demanded that they be listed by the government as a Scheduled Tribe, which would bring them more benefits such as quotas in jobs and educational institutions. That categorization would also bar non-Meiteis from buying land in the Meiteis' strongholds in the Imphal Valley.

The Kukis opposed this, saying such benefits should be given only to tribal groups that are less developed economically and less educated.

Soon, protests by both sides turned violent. Each side rampaged through villages, torching houses, massacring civilians and driving tens of thousands from their homes. Violence had receded in recent months, except for occasional flareups, but returned in November when 10 people were killed by paramilitary soldiers.

The Kuki-Zo community has been particularly hit hard by the violence. They accuse state Chief Minister N. Biren Singh of siding with the Meiteis and have sought his removal. They now seek federal rule over the state and administrative autonomy for the community.

Source: ABC News
 

Not enough classrooms for Kuki students displaced by Manipur violence​

I am a member of a Kuki students’ organisation in Manipur’s Churachandpur district. The area has seen an influx of members from the Kuki community in the past year. Since May 2023, when the ethnic conflict began in the state, an estimated 40,000–60,000 people have been displaced. Most of them continue to live in relief camps.

In the Tuibuong block where I work, there are approximately 15,000 school and college students whose education has been disrupted. Initially, when people started moving from the violence-affected blocks to this town area, schools were used as relief camps. Now, there are way more children than the schools in the town area can register. Gandhi Memorial and Tuibuong, two government schools in this area, have the capacity to accommodate 600 students but are currently admitting 2,000 each. They are stretched for resources and are running shifts for different batches. Private schools are too expensive for most of the students living in the camps.

In order to prevent junior school children from dropping out, the student organisation I work with has started community schools. To run these, we receive aid from the community, private donors, nonprofits, and the church. Teachers work voluntarily and we are now able to afford an honorarium of INR 5,000–6,000 for them.

Despite our best efforts, we are managing to serve only approximately 50 percent of the displaced students. Many parents are unwilling or unable to send their children to school because they don’t have the means. Some children help their families in earning a livelihood by selling bamboo shoots. Among the ones we interact with in the schools, we see the effects of trauma. Some of them have lost their parents. The children often speak of AK-47s and being chased by mobs; they talk of hostility and enemies. We offer them counselling so that they can heal in a healthy and non-violent environment.

Source: IDR
 

JDU's damage control, sacks leader for 'no support to BJP in Manipur' letter​


The Janata Dal (United) has clarified that it continues to support the N Biren Singh-led BJP government in Manipur, dismissing claims of withdrawing support as "baseless". The party has also sacked its Manipur unit president, Kshetrimayum Biren Singh, for writing a letter reiterating the alleged withdrawal of support without consulting the central leadership. The JD(U) cited indiscipline as the reason for his removal and reaffirmed its alliance with the BJP at both state and national levels.

JD(U) national spokesperson Rajeev Ranjan Prasad called the letter misleading, asserting that the state unit had not communicated with the central leadership and acted independently.

"The party has taken cognisance of this and the president of Manipur unit of the party has been relieved of his position. We have supported NDA and our support to the NDA government in Manipur will continue even in the future. Manipur unit did not have any communication with the central leadership, they were not taken into confidence. He (Manipur JDU chief) had written the letter on his own," Prasad said.

"Considering this an act of indiscipline, action has been taken against him and relieved of his position...We are with the NDA and the state unit will continue to serve the people of Manipur towards the development of the state," he added.

The controversy arose after Kshetrimayum Biren Singh wrote to Manipur Governor Ajay Kumar Bhalla, claiming the JD(U) was reiterating its withdrawal of support to the BJP government and that the party's lone MLA, Md Abdul Nasir, would sit in the Opposition benches.

The letter referenced the defection of five of JD(U)'s six MLAs to the BJP after the 2022 Manipur Assembly elections and linked the decision to the party's earlier alignment with the INDIA bloc.

While the JD(U)'s stance in Manipur has now been clarified, the letter initially raised eyebrows due to the party's role as a key ally of the BJP at the Centre and in Bihar.

The BJP, however, retains a comfortable majority in the 60-member Manipur Assembly, with 37 legislators and additional support from five Naga People's Front MLAs and three Independents.

This development also follows a similar move last year when the Conrad Sangma-led National People's Party withdrew support from the Manipur government. However, the JD(U)'s central leadership has distanced itself from any such comparison, emphasising that its alliance with the BJP in Manipur, Bihar, and at the Centre remains strong.

 

Did Manipur Chief Minister Stoke Violence? Court Seeks Government Lab Report​


The Supreme Court has sought a report from the government forensic laboratory CFSL on leaked audio tapes purportedly of Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh, who a petitioner of the Kuki tribes alleged instigated the Manipur violence.

At the beginning of the hearing today, Justice PV Sanjay Kumar asked whether he should recuse from the hearing as he recently attended a dinner hosted by the Manipur Chief Minister.

In response, the petitioner's lawyer Prashant Bhushan said Justice Kumar need not recuse himself.

"No, not one bit," Mr Bhushan said.

Mr Bhushan, who represented the petitioner, Kuki Organisation for Human Rights Trust, said the non-profit Truth Labs has confirmed that 93 per cent of the audio tapes matched Mr Singh's voice.

Truth Labs, set up in 2007, is India's first non-government full-fledged forensic lab.

 

President's Rule imposed in Manipur days after Biren Singh's resignation​


With no consensus on a successor for N Biren Singh, even three days after his resignation as Manipur's chief minister, the state has been placed under President’s Rule.

Article 174(1) of the Constitution mandates that state Assemblies must be convened within six months of their last sitting. In Manipur, the last Assembly session was held on August 12, 2024, making Wednesday the deadline for its next sitting.

However, Governor Ajay Bhalla called off the Budget session, which was scheduled to begin on Monday, following the resignation of Chief Minister N Biren Singh on Sunday.

Singh stepped down just a day before his government was set to face a no-confidence motion and a crucial floor test, effectively preempting a political showdown. His resignation came nearly two years after ethnic violence erupted in Manipur in May 2023 and amid mounting pressure from the opposition, which had been relentlessly demanding his removal.

Congress on Monday alleged that the resignation of Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh, ahead of the Congress's planned no-confidence motion in the Assembly, was intended to save the BJP and not the people of Manipur, as nearly two months of ethnic violence continue.

While Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi termed the decision long overdue, Gaurav Gogoi, Congress's deputy leader in the Lok Sabha, alleged that the BJP does not have a roadmap to restore peace in the northeastern state.

The Manipur Chief Minister's resignation came days after the Supreme Court sought a sealed-cover forensic report on the authenticity of leaked audio clips alleging Singh's role in the ethnic violence. The tapes reportedly included conversations in which Singh allegedly suggested that Meitei groups were allowed to loot arms and ammunition from the state government during the violence with Kukis

Rahul Gandhi cited the Supreme Court investigation as one of the reasons for Singh's move, and said, "the resignation of CM Biren Singh shows that mounting public pressure, the SC investigation and the no-confidence motion by the Congress have forced a reckoning".

 
CRPF Jawan Opens Fire, Kills 2 Before Taking His Own Life At Manipur Camp

A CRPF jawan allegedly killed two of his colleagues and injured eight others before taking his own life at a camp in Manipur on Thursday, official sources said.

The incident took place at a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) camp in Lamphel located in the Imphal West district at around 8.20 pm, they said.

Accused Havildar Sanjay Kumar opened fire from his weapon killing a constable and a sub-inspector of the force on the spot. He later turned the gun on himself and has been declared dead, the sources said.

The accused was from the 120th battalion of the force.

Eight CRPF personnel have been injured in the firing and they have been shifted to the Regional Institute of Medical Sciences (RIMS) in Imphal, they said.

The cause of the incident is being investigated and there was no official word from the force immediately.

 

Direct rule in violence-hit Indian state after chief minister quits​


The Indian government has brought the troubled north-eastern state of Manipur under direct federal rule days after Chief Minister N Biren Singh resigned.

Singh, from India's governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), quit on Sunday after facing months of pressure to step down.

Ethnic clashes broke out between the state's majority Meitei and minority Kuki communities in May 2023 over economic benefits, land rights and job quotas.

More than 250 people have been killed in the conflict and tens of thousands displaced.

The state hit the global headlines in July 2023 when a video showing two women being paraded naked by a mob went viral, sparking outrage in India.

While the scale of unrest has reduced since the peak in 2023, divisions between the communities persist and violent incidents continue to occur.

Singh's position had become increasingly untenable in recent months with Kuki groups accusing him of favouring the Meitei community, of which he is a member - an accusation he denied.

Media reports said there was also rising discontent against him within the BJP.

BJP leaders tried but failed to agree on someone to replace him as chief minister.

On Thursday evening, the office of President Droupadi Murmu announced that federal rule - known as President's rule in India - had been imposed in the state.

"After receiving a report from the governor and after considering the report and other information received by me, I am satisfied that a situation has arisen in which the government of that state cannot be carried on in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution of India," the statement said.

Manipur's last assembly session was held in August and Monday was set to be the first day of the new session, but federally-appointed governor Ajay Bhalla released a statement declaring the session "null and void".

Earlier, opposition Congress party members had said they would bring a no-confidence motion against the chief minister during the session.

Congress leader Jairam Ramesh told the ANI news agency that Singh resigned as he sensed the motion would be passed. Ramesh called for federal Home Minister Amit Shah to resign.

Opposition leaders have also criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has not visited the state since the violence began.

Meanwhile India's Supreme Court is hearing a plea against Singh filed by a Kuki organisation which accuses him of playing a direct role in fuelling the violence. The petitioners have submitted leaked audio tapes to back up their claims.

The court has sought a forensic report on the tapes before the next hearing. Singh has denied any wrongdoing.

What is the Manipur conflict?
The conflict involves the state's two largest ethnic groups, the majority Meitei and minority Kuki, and their battle over land and influence.

Tensions boiled over in May 2023 when Kukis began protesting against demands from the Meiteis to be given official tribal status. The Kukis argued this would strengthen the Meiteis' already strong influence on government and society, allowing them to buy land or settle in predominantly Kuki areas.

But there are myriad underlying reasons. The Kukis say a war on drugs waged by the Meitei-led government is a screen to uproot their communities.

Since the violence, Manipur has been divided into two camps, with Meiteis inhabiting the Imphal Valley and the Kukis living in the surrounding hill areas. Borders and buffer zones guarded by security forces and community members separate the two regions.

Efforts to hold peace talks between the communities by federal and state officials have so far failed to end the conflict

Source: BBC
 

Surrender looted weapons: Manipur Governor's ultimatum amid President's Rule​


Manipur Governor Ajay Bhalla on Thursday asked people from all communities to surrender looted and illegally held weapons within seven days and assured that no punitive action would be taken against those who comply with the ultimatum.

"In the greater interest of restoring normalcy, so that people can return to their normal day-to-day activities, all communities in the state must come forward to ensure cessation of hostilities and maintenance of peace and order in the society," the Governor said in an official statement.

"It is in this regard that I sincerely request people of all communities, particularly the youths in the Valley and Hills, to voluntarily come forward and surrender the looted and illegally held weapons and ammunition to the nearest police station, outpost, security forces camp within the next seven days, with effect from today. Your single act of returning these weapons can be a powerful gesture towards ensuring peace. I want to assure you that no punitive action would be initiated if such weapons are returned within the stipulated time. Thereafter, strict action will be taken for possession of such weapons," the statement added.

President's rule was imposed in Manipur on Thursday and the state assembly put under suspended animation, days after Chief Minister N Biren Singh resigned from his post.

Biren Singh resigned from Chief Minister's post almost two years after the ethnic violence started in the northeastern state.

The violence in Manipur began in May 2023 and saw brutal clashes between the majority Meitei community in the Imphal Valley and the Kuki-Zo tribal groups in the surrounding hills, resulting in over 250 deaths besides displacing thousands of people.

 
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