Manipur: Tribal Outfits Demand Union Territory for Kuki-Zo Areas, Write to Amit Shah

The Committee on Tribal Unity has also suggested that the Centre must consider establishing a Kuki-Zo regiment under the Indian military apparatus by streamlining the existing Kuki-Zo village volunteer forces.

New Delhi: Tribal outfits representing Kuki-Zo communities of Manipur have written to Union home minister Amit Shah suggesting that a political solution in the form of separate administration or Union territory for the hill districts be considered to contain the ongoing violence in the state.

Both the Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum and the Committee on Tribal Unity (CoTU) have submitted their respective memoranda to Shah through district magistrates. They appealed to the Union government to consider the creation of a Union territory with a legislature for Kuki-Zo communities under Article 239 (A) of the Indian constitution.

The CoTU has also suggested that the Centre must consider establishing a Kuki-Zo regiment under the Indian military apparatus by streamlining the existing Kuki-Zo village volunteer forces, “so as to prevent the upsurge of armed insurgency among young Kuki-Zo defenders”, E-Pao reported.

The memoranda said that the tribal communities have been living under the constant threat posed by armed groups possessing large arsenals of weapons. These groups, the tribal outfits said, have openly declared their intention to either eliminate the ‘tribal’ population or force them out of their lands.

They also alleged that the maintenance of public infrastructure and development works in the Kuki-Zo areas have come to a halt.  “ITLF further alleged that the state government has conducted mass job recruitments, excluding ‘tribal’ youth from these opportunities due to their inability to travel to the state capital, consequently deepening feelings of discrimination and marginalisation,” the E-Pao report added.

Until a political solution is reached, the ITLF said the Centre should consider setting up a separate secretariat for the hill districts.

Opposition to separate administration calls 

On Monday, the women vendors of Ima Market, who are grouped under the banner of the Khwairamband Ima Keithel Coordinating Committee for Peace, took to the streets of Imphal to demand immediate parliamentary intervention into the ongoing violence in the state.

While opposing the calls for separate administration by the Kuki-Zo community, the women vendors appealed to the Union government to preserve the unity and integrity of Manipur.

Police foiled the group’s attempts to march towards the Manipur Raj Bhavan and the Chief Minister’s Bungalow to press their demands. The police intercepted them at the western gate of Kangla Fort, and the protestors were sent back to Khwairamband Bazar.

“Our representatives have failed to raise their voices for the people they are supposed to serve. Their silence is a grave disservice to the citizens of Manipur who are living in fear and uncertainty,” said Peace Committee co-convenor Huirem Binodini, according to Imphal Free Press.

Metei body reasserts demand for ST status

The World Meetei Council has reasserted its demand for Scheduled Tribe (ST) to Meteis in an open letter to chief minister N. Biren Singh. The particular demand was indeed an immediate trigger for the outbreak of violence on May 3 last year, which continues to rage on till date.

The Council held its two-day meeting recently and issued an ultimatum to Singh to send reports to the Union government by August – when the work for the delimitation exercise of 2026 kicks off – recommending ST status for Meiteis. According to the Metei body, the delimitation exercise is set to “decimate” the Meetei identity, Imphal Free Press reported.

At present, the Manipur assembly has 40 seats in the valley and 20 seats in the hills, based on the 1971 census report. This could change with the delimitation exercise.

The Metei body said that according to the 1971 census, 69% of Manipur’s population resided in the valley, while the remaining 31% lived in the hills. Though the census does not provide community-wise population figures, the body said, various indices suggest that the Meetei population comprised approximately 60% of the total population of Manipur in the 1971 census report.

According to the 2011 census, the Meetei population consisted of approximately 44%, indicating a sharp decline from the 1971 census, the Council said. It cited a low birth rate among the Meteis and an unchecked heavy influx of migrants, especially from Myanmar and Bangladesh as reasons for the drop in their population.

The Metei Council said it was their community that has adhered to the National Population Policy of “Small Family, Happy Family”, but yet “the paradox is that delimitation is set to penalise those who dutifully followed the National Policy and reward those who have not and the 2026 delimitation is poised to victimise the Meetei for being lawful and obedient citizens, posing a threat to our identity”.

It said that enlisting Meetei in the ST list of the Indian constitution is the “only one way to protect our identity”.

62-Year-Old Woman Killed in Imphal West Lived Alone, Suffered from Schizophrenia

A relative of the woman said she was unaware of the gravity of Manipur’s violent situation as a result of her disease. Meanwhile, a 19-year-old student was shot to death in a gunfight on July 7.

New Delhi: Sixty-two-year-old Nu Donngaihching Hangzo was shot dead by unidentified people outside a school in Manipur’s Imphal West district on July 6. Her friends and relatives are now demanding an inquiry into and action against those who not just killed her but “falsely” implicated her as a suicide bomber.

Nu was suffering from schizophrenia for more than 30 years, her relative Tara Manchiin Hangzo, who is an ex-member of the Manipur state commission for Scheduled Tribes (ST), told The Wire.

“Our WhatsApp group has been flooding with her memories and how we all find it so difficult to tolerate and understand the cruelty that has been thrown upon her … they [the assailants] not only killed her but also tarnished her ‘being’ by branding her with unbelievable terms like ‘suicide bomber’,” Tara said.

Tara herself fled Manipur after ethnic clashes erupted in the state on May 3, and is currently living in New Delhi.

Most of Nu’s family members and friends had also left the state. “But she stayed back saying nothing would happen,” Tara said.

“On July 6, 2023, news emerged that she had been shot at close range outside Shishu Nistha Niketan School in Imphal West. Her own relatives discovered this distressing information after disturbing images of [Nu] were circulated on social media,” she added.

The Lamphelpat unit of the Young Paite Association, a charity organisation, used to take care of her. A local church built a small home for her, and for food and provisions, she used to work at the homes of people living nearby.

Watch | 2 Months of Manipur Riots: People Say Present and Future Have Been Destroyed, State Has Failed Them

Her friends had failed to convince her to leave Manipur in the last two months because she did not want to leave her newfound “home that she had gotten after years”, Tara said.

The former member the of state’s ST commission also said that while there was more than one version of how Nu died, she personally believes that Nu had hired an autorickshaw to go to [Tara’s] home on July 6 under the delusion that she would still be there, and was killed on the way.

“Her home was only a few yards away from mine,” Tara said.

The arson in the state has hit all services, including healthcare. Consequently, Nu was left with no medicines. This deteriorated her mental condition, because of which she was unaware of the gravity of Manipur’s current circumstances and believed that things were business-as-usual.

People in her neighbourhood knew that she suffered from a mental illness and would take care of her. Despite the exodus of a large number of people from her community, Nu chose to stay at Lamphelpat, where she got support from others.

However, despite her illness, she was very conscious of her surroundings and the place where she lived. She was witty and could speak many dialects, Tara said.

The Wire also contacted one of Nu’s sisters-in-law over the phone, but she declined to speak with us.

According to media reports, police have registered a case. Tara said she didn’t know about this, but added that she and other well-wishers of Nu would pursue legal action against those who killed her.

Also Read: Who Is in Charge of Manipur?

Meanwhile, a 19-year-old student was killed in a gun battle in the state’s Bishnupur district on Saturday, July 7. He was studying in Class XI at the Multipurpose Higher Secondary School in Moirang town.

An Ukhrul Times report cited the student’s family members as saying that he was on his way to a relief camp – as his village had been attacked – when he was hit by a bullet.

About 150 people have been killed so far in the violence between the majority Meitei and minority Kuki communities that has lasted for more than two months now.

The Manipur Police has said that a joint team of the Central Armed Police Forces and state police are conducting operations in areas dominated by both warring communities in order to destroy the bunkers being used by assailants.

The Committee on Tribal Unity (CoTU), in a statement, has criticised chief minister N. Biren Singh’s decision of destroying bunkers and warned him “not to interfere” in the security and safety of the tribal communities.