Manipur Violence
The Wire visited various relief camps in the state to understand the issues that the people are confronting.
The Manipur government reopened schools on July 5. The state has around 1,110 schools, out of which a total of 4,521 schools for classes 1 to 8 reopened on Wednesday.
by Yaqut Ali
07/07/2023
Manipur has been known for more than just the existence of numerous insurgent groups. It is known for the bravery of its people, especially women, against the injustices of the state. Who doesn’t remember the one of its kind protest, in 2004, in front of Assam Rifles headquarters when 2-3 dozen naked women protested with the banner ‘Indian Army Rape Us’ after the abduction and murder of a young lady Manorama or the 16 years long lonely battle that Irom Sharmila fought from the hospital with a rubber tube inserted in her nose to feed her as she fasted against the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act? More recently, Manipur fame has been extended to sports, with the female sportspersons such as Mary Kom and Mirabai Chanu bringing laurels to the country, in fields not normally considered the domain for women in this country, and becoming national icons. The mothers’ organisation Meira Paibi would keep a vigil all night to ensure that the Army did not pick up their youth in the name of insurgents. The term ‘brave’ aptly characterises the people of Manipur.
Meiteis have long been identified as a Hindu community. Although there is a small percentage of Muslim ‘Pangal’ Meiteis, there has been a definite Sanskritisation of their culture in history. If there is one community in the entire Northeast outside of Assam which would most easily amalgamate with the mainland Indian culture it is the Meiteis. The aspiration of this community to seek a Scheduled Tribe status seems to be driven more by the material considerations. Numerically smaller Kukis and Nagas felt threatened by this demand as this would have allowed Meiteis to buy lands in hills. This has provoked the conflagration.
25/06/2023
https://www.facebook.com/incsandesh/videos/650645263598700 People of Manipur boycotted Mann Ki Baat, the Prime Minister’s monthly radio programme, and stomped on transistor sets in marketplaces to protest against Narendra Modi’s silence on the carnage in the state. The violence in the state has been continuing since May 3, claiming at least 110 lives so far and displacing 60,000.
Why Manipur is Burning https://www.nationalheraldindia.com/national/why-manipur-is-burning
Tussles over land, forests, drugs and poppy cultivation plus an influx of refugees from Myanmar lie at the heart of the latest flare-up
- Bihar Citizens’ Rights Forum: Silent March says Speak out on Manipur
- Medicine Shortages, Uncertain Educational Futures: Manipur Is Reeling Under Many Impacts of Violence
- Over 550 civil society groups and concerned individuals condemn the continuing violence in Manipur.
- Manipur Violence, PM Modi? Silence is Complicity
- BJP’s Communal Politics Has Deepened Historical Conflicts in Manipur
- Manipur: 7-Yr-Old Boy, His Mother and Neighbour Killed as Mob Sets Ambulance on Fire
- Armed gangs and a partisan state: How Manipur slipped into civil war
- Manipur: Rise in Vigilante Groups Due to Ethnic Conflict; Petition in SC Against Internet Shutdown
- Full Text: Why Naga Statesman Iralu Suspects Union Govt Is Allowing Manipur Violence To Continue
- Our Daughters Were Killed in Imphal on May 5. We Haven't Even Been Able to Retrieve Their Bodies.