Mohan Bhagwat’s Comments on Manipur Violence Show Northeast Remains a Puzzle That RSS Can’t Solve

The Hindutva idealogue’s blaming ‘external forces’ for the clashes between the Meiteis and Kukis could be an attempt at narrative correction. But they also reveal the group’s lack of understanding about a peculiar element in societies in the northeast.

New Delhi: On October 24, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) supremo Mohan Bhagwat squarely blamed ‘external forces’ for the Manipur violence. 

Much as it matches the stand taken by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) governments at the Centre and in Manipur, it, nevertheless, comes off as a strident attempt at narrative correction by the top Hindutva leader – perhaps to garb the right-wing outfit’s own powerlessness in the Northeast.

Soon after the ongoing violence broke out in Manipur on May 3, the narrative in both local and national media was set. It broke out during a tribal solidarity march carried out in all hill districts of the state against the Manipur high court’s order to the state government that it should recommend the inclusion of the Meitei community in the Scheduled Tribes (ST) list. 

In quick succession, we saw the line shifting to ‘narco-terrorism’, allegedly by “illegal” Kukis. It was particularly vented not just by the Meitei-faction of the BJP in the state but also the Sangh parivar across the country. Peddling of drugs within the state, and from outside the international border, has been a matter of concern not just in Manipur but in some other northeastern states too. However, in a state where the incumbent chief minister was once accused by a police officer in an affidavit in the high court for asking her to “go slow” on a drug kingpin (from the Kuki community), it was only a matter of time before that narrative lost steam.

Lo and behold, it did. None other than the chief minister, N. Biren Singh, began telling select local and national media outlets that ‘external forces’ infiltrating Manipur through the open border with strife-torn Myanmar piloted the violence that left hundreds dead and injured and displaced at least 70,000 people belonging to both Kuki and Meitei communities.

The same narrative was mouthed by Bhagwat at his annual Vijayadashami address to the cadres at the RSS headquarters in Nagpur. The Hindutva ideologue said:

Why, and by whom, was an attempt made to give a communal tinge to this mutual conflict between the Manipuri Meitei and Kuki communities, who were apprehensive about the future of their existence? Who has a vested interest in trying to drag and besmirch an organisation like the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which has been engaged in serving everyone without any bias for years, into this unfortunate incident without any reason? Which foreign powers may be interested in taking advantage of such unrest and instability in Manipur, located between Nagabhoomi and Mizoram in this border area? Does the geopolitics of Southeast Asia also have a role in these events?”

His utterance came across as an attempt to separate the RSS from the Manipur violence, perhaps because local rightwing outfits with alleged links to it – like the Arambai Tenggol and Meitei Leepun – were widely alleged to have a hand in the attack on the Kukis in the valley areas. 

More importantly, Bhagwat’s words miss a peculiar element within societies across the Northeast, which organisations like the RSS, hinged on religious hegemony, find hard to crack. 

Across large parts of the country, caste and religion can play a determining role in huddling a society under one umbrella. In the northeastern belt, what cements a group of people as one is the strong sense of community. Pluck out from recent history any bloody strife that rocked the region and you will find that fear of one community losing its power to another is at its root. Not religion or caste. It is this strong sense of community that gives agency to any grouping of people across the region, whether it is a majority or minority.

This factor was seen playing out in the Kuki-Meitei clashes too. Kukis may be a minority in Manipur but are certainly not voiceless; not cowering against a community which is in greater numbers in their state and also has in Biren Singh, a chief minister perceived as batting only for his Meitei community. The agency required to put up a fight was drawn from the neighbouring Mizos, their kindred tribe. Mizoram chief minister Zoramthanga soon acted as the equivalent of Biren Singh for the Kukis of Manipur.  

It is this sense of community that also kicks up a peculiarity during a riot or violent situation in the Northeast. While Church and Hindutva leaders were going all out in the media, counting the number of churches and temples burnt respectively during the Manipur violence, on the ground, Meitei Christians were accusing the Kuki Christians of setting fire to their churches. Clearly, then, religion appears to have played a subservient role to the sense of community. If those accusations were true, Meitei Christians were lumped in by the Kukis with the Meities who are Vaishnavites and followers of Sanamahism. Ditto the case with some recent attacks against the Meitei Pangals or Muslims in the Kwakta area that borders the Kuki-dominated Churachandpur. 

A protest in Manipur against the killing of a Meitei pangal man. Photo: By arrangement

A small section within the Kukis is Bnei Menashe, or Jewish. Wilson Hangshing, an MLA and co-founder of the Kuki People’s Alliance, who has been an important voice in the national media for the Kukis during the Manipur clash, belongs to that community. But religious identity was never a factor when it came to joining hands with the rest of the Kukis, who are mostly Christian. It is also this sense of community and kinship that pivots the Mizoram government’s refusal of orders from New Delhi to push back the Chin refugees into Myanmar.

In the run-up to the 1983 Nellie riots of Assam too, the sense of community played out. Multiple instances of violence were noted where villagers attacked villagers from other communities. E. Rammohan, who was an Assam police officer then, notes in his book Simply Khaki: A Policeman Remembers that a group of Assamese Muslims attacked Muslims of East Bengal origin in the state’s Darrang district. Clearly, then too, community was the pivot.

In the all-so-common insider-outsider conflicts that break out across the Northeast, religion more often than not takes a backseat when posed against the idea of community. Take the Chakmas of Arunachal Pradesh. They may be Buddhist, like a section of people in the state, but it is never a concession when it comes to counting who comes under the umbrella of Arunachalee as a whole. The BJP-RSS have a strong base in both the Chakma and Arunachalee communities, but have not been able to bring them under one umbrella even after years of work.

In recent times, when the National Register of Citizens (NRC) was being updated in Assam under the BJP, religious polarisation of the society was seen to be at its peak. That the state has a considerable population of Muslims of Bengali origin has helped matters for both Hindu and Islamic forces to blow their trumpets. However, by the time the Union government brought in the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), the old equations came to the fore. Firm lines of division were drawn not as per religion but community. Much as the BJP-RSS and chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma kept prodding the Assamese community to ‘identify the enemy’, the Bangladeshi Hindus found no acceptance. The religious card was thrown by the wayside when Guwahati saw a large crowd of anti-CAA protesters hitting the roads, mouthing the 17th century Sufi saint Azan Fakir’s Jikir, ‘Hindu or Muslim, we are the children of the same god…’

A protest in Guwahati against the CAA. Photo: Dr Vikramjit Kakati/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0

The violence in Manipur has uncanny similarities with the ‘Assam problem’ of the 1980s – the bogey of ‘illegal immigrants’. Even then, there is a variation. In Assam, a sub-nationalist movement led by the majority Assamese community began tilting towards religion (read Hindu) in later decades (until the anti-CAA movement against accepting Hindu Bangladeshis in Assam broke that continuity). In Manipur though, it began as a religious assertion with the involvement of groups like Arambai Tenggol and Meitei Leepun but is now gradually leaning towards an assertion of Meitei sub-nationalism.

In other words, a sense of community overrides that of religion. For outfits structured around religious hegemony, Manipur may prove a puzzle hard to solve.

Non-Bailable Arrest Warrant Against Meitei Leepun Chief Pramot Singh: Report

The warrant comes after there was no response from the local police station despite numerous reminders, and when Singh did not appear in person despite orders before investigating officer  

New Delhi: The court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate in Churachandpur, Manipur, has issued a non-bailable arrest warrant against Pramot Singh, chief of the Meitei Leepun group, reported The Hills Journal.

Kuki groups have alleged that the Meitei Leepun group – like the Arambai Tenggol – is instigating violence in Manipur, but the Meitei Leepun have denied these allegations.

The order also directed the Superintendent of Police, Churachandpur, to ensure the timely execution of the order which is returnable by November 9, 2023, THJ also reported.

THJ reported that at the court hearing, the assistant public prosecutor submitted that during the course of investigation, Singh’s address was established as Nepali Basti Chingmeirong, Imphal West District, Manipur, which lies under the jurisdiction of Lamphel Police Station, Imphal West, and its office is at Sana Konung, Imphal East District, Manipur.

The Investigating Officer of the case stated that Singh could not be arrested now as his address now falls under the jurisdiction of Lamphel Police Station, Imphal West District. 

Though a message was sent to the Officer-in-Charge of the Station to take necessary action, including conducting a house search on September 9 under Section 41A of the Code of Criminal Procedure, there was no response, despite a reminder also being sent.

Singh was also served a notice to appear in person before the investigating officer on October 2, 2023 at 10:00 am at Churachandpur Police Station, but he did not cooperate or give a reply, THJ reported.

The Court hence issued a non-bailable arrest warrant against Singh. It also directed the Superintendent of Police, Churachandpur, to ensure timely execution of the order which is returnable by November 9, 2023, per THJ.

On July 8, the Manipur Police registered a First Information Report (FIR) by the Kuki Students Organisation against Singh, regarding both tweets he and the Meitei Leepun posted online, as well as comments he made in an interview he gave to Karan Thapar on The Wire on June 6 this year. In the interview, he says that all Kukis would be wiped out or annihilated from Manipur. The Kuki-Zo community had reacted strongly against this.

The FIR against Singh invokes charges including criminal conspiracy, promoting enmity between groups, intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace and criminal intimidation.

Manipur: Both Centre and State Played a Principal Role in Ethnic Violence, Claims Fact-Finding Team

The team claimed that the double-engine government was following a policy of “divide and rule”, having “orchestrated an ethnic divide which they will communally exploit”.

New Delhi: A fact-finding team that visited Manipur last month has claimed that despite intense divisions between the Meiteis and Kukis, both communities believe that the government has played a key role in the state’s ethnic violence.

“The broad consensus across different communities is that the government, both at the Centre and the State, have played a principal role in the lead up to the violence and the continuance of the violence for so long,” reads the team’s report, which was released last week.

It goes on to say that the Meitei community has “broadly aligned” itself with the state government and pins a greater share of responsibility on the Union government, and that the Kuki community finds the state government more culpable instead.

The eight-member team visited Manipur between August 10 and 14 and was constituted by the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation.

Probing the two communities’ views on why the violence began, the report says that according to the Kukis, there was a “conscious attempt” to trigger violence by Meitei chauvinist groups, who they said torched the Anglo-Kuki War memorial at Churachandpur.

“Most Kukis believe that the attacks on them were pre-planned and orchestrated by the Arambai Tenggol and the Meitei Leepun with full support of the state government, and came at a time when the Union government was days away from declaring [sixth schedule] status to the hill areas of Manipur,” the report adds.

The Wire has reported on how the Union home affairs ministry was planning to finalise a peace accord along the lines of the sixth schedule – which provides for autonomous territories – with Kuki insurgent groups before the ethnic violence put paid to these plans.

Also Read: What’s Behind the Manipur Violence and Why Stopping It Poses a Test For Modi

The fact-finding team’s report then says that for the Meiteis, the larger reason behind the ethnic violence was the Kukis’ backlash to three state government policies: its “clamp down on illegal infiltration of Kukis from Myanmar, the attempts to stop illegal forest encroachments by Kukis and the war waged on drugs by the state government targeting Kuki poppy cultivators.”

“Underlying this narrative of the conflict, is the strong belief that Meiteis are original inhabitants of Manipur, while the Kukis are late-comers,” it adds.

It also says that the economic disparity between the two communities was “accentuated by the lopsided and valley-centric policies of the BJP government”, referring to Manipur’s Meitei-majority Imphal Valley.

Having visited the relief camps in the state – over 60,000 people were displaced as a result of the ethnic violence – the team found that despite varying levels of state support for Meitei and Kuki-run camps, hurdles to accessing nutritious food are present across the board.

“It is a matter of grave concern that the situation persists even three months after the outbreak of the violence,” its report says.

The team also said that while the state government facilitated the admission of displaced Meitei students into schools and colleges near their relief camps, the education of Kuki students – displaced or otherwise – is “under serious crisis”.

Some Kuki students have turned to the rest of India for their higher studies after finding themselves unable to access their Imphal-based universitiesThe Wire reported recently.

Regarding demands made by either community following the violence, the report notes that the Kuki community has “taken a clear stand that [a] separate administration is the only way out”.

“On the other hand, the Meitei community demands that the withdrawal of [the Suspension of Operations] agreement, protection of [the] territorial integrity of Manipur and strict action against forest encroachments, Kuki militancy and poppy cultivation and the demand for [a] separate state to be dropped,” the report says.

The team has also recorded a displaced Meitei person’s demand for the removal of the Assam Rifles from the state.

Meitei civil society organisations have accused the Assam Rifles of siding with the Kukis during the ongoing ethnic conflict in Manipur.

As for who is responsible for the violence, the team finds the BJP’s double-engine government “squarely to blame”.

“The resolution of this crisis ought to be considered within the broader context of restoration of peace in the state, and fixation of accountability on the twin-BJP governments. Accountability must start from the top, and Chief Minister Biren Singh, who has not only overseen but has fed into the polarising narrative that culminated in such unprecedented violence and segregation must resign,” it alleges.

It also claimed that the double-engine government was following a policy of “divide and rule”, having “orchestrated an ethnic divide which they will communally exploit”.

“This government has no legitimacy whatsoever to continue,” it said.

Watch | A Visit to the ‘Frontline’ of the Manipur Conflict

Venturing into the heart of the turmoil, The Wire visited the frontline in Churachandpur.

David Thiek, a member of the Kuki community, was brutally murdered by unidentified individuals on July 2 in Manipur. His body was dismembered and graphic images of the incident were posted on social media. According to the FIR, Arambai Tenggol – a Meitei group that is accused of stoking violence – was responsible for the murder. The Wire spoke to Thiek’s family and learnt that there have been several harrowing killings over the past few months, unfolding against the backdrop of an escalating ethnic clash between two communities.

The Meitei community has levelled accusations at the Assam Rifles, alleging their involvement in aiding Kuki militants. On the other hand, the Kuki community has accused the Manipur police of displaying favouritism towards the Meiteis. Venturing into the heart of the turmoil, The Wire visited Churachandpur. Here’s a report of what we’ve pieced together so far, shedding light on a complex web of rivalries and allegations, and the sombre aftermath of lives lost.

Manipur Needs ‘Healing Touch’ Say Former Civil Servants, Urge Union Government to Act

In a statement, the Constitutional Conduct Group said that the ethnic conflict in Manipur threatens not just to tear apart the social fabric of the state but calls into question the “very spirit of harmony and fraternity that is the foundation of India’s ‘unity in diversity’”.

New Delhi: A group of retired civil servants have said that the ethnic conflict in Manipur threatens not just to tear apart the social fabric of the state but calls into question the “very spirit of harmony and fraternity that is the foundation of India’s ‘unity in diversity’”.

The open statement by the Constitutional Conduct Group (CCG), released on August 6, is signed by more than 100 former civil servants. It accused the Manipur state government and the state police of dereliction of their fundamental duty to protect the life and property of citizens.

“This has created the conditions for a complete breakdown of law and order, with a deliberately orchestrated and targeted carnage that has included large scale arson, lynching, collective rape, vandalism, looting, mob violence and obstruction of central security forces from carrying out their duties, followed by armed attacks and retaliation by both communities,” the statement says.

The “total failure” of the state is evident in the raiding of police armouries, which has allowed people to loot around 4,500 weapons and an estimated 5 lakh rounds of ammunition, the statement says. Such looting is unimaginable and without precedent in India, the signatories added.

For the Union government, the “immediate priority” must be to provide a healing touch through relief and rehabilitation measures, compensation and other assistance, CCG said. The statement adds that the “underlying causes” of the conflict “need to be objectively identified and addressed within the bounds of constitutional parameters”.

The former civil servants urged the Union government to impose President’s Rule in Manipur; provide relief and rehabilitation measures; and take severe punitive action against individuals and groups intent on fomenting unrest.

The full statement and the list of signatories are reproduced below.

§

CCG OPEN STATEMENT ON MANIPUR: MANIPUR NEEDS THE HEALING TOUCH

6 August 2023

The Constitutional Conduct Group, a group of former civil servants firmly committed to the Constitution of India, and not affiliated to any political party, notes with the greatest concern the total breakdown of the rule of law and constitutional values in the state of Manipur since early May 2023. What started as a protest by the Kuki-Zo community against the decision of the Manipur High Court, directing the state government to recommend to the Government of India the grant of Scheduled Tribe status to the majority Meitei community, has since snowballed into a dangerous, internecine ethnic conflict that threatens not just to tear apart the social fabric of Manipur but calls into question the very spirit of harmony and fraternity that is the foundation of India’s “unity in diversity”. 

We wish to strongly highlight the dereliction of their fundamental duty by the Manipur state government and the state police in protecting the life and property of their citizens. This has created the conditions for a complete breakdown of law and order, with a deliberately orchestrated and targeted carnage that has included large scale arson, lynching, collective rape, vandalism, looting, mob violence and obstruction of central security forces from carrying out their duties, followed by armed attacks and retaliation by both communities. These atrocities have taken place under a double-edged internet ban, lifted only partially on July 25, that has prevented their horror and scale from coming out earlier, while also providing grist to rumour-mongering and spread of fake news.  This total failure of the state has allowed the raiding of police armouries by perpetrators of the violence, reportedly resulting in around 4,500 weapons of varying sophistication and an estimated 5 lakh rounds of ammunition being looted, which is continuing even to the present day. Such looting is unimaginable and without precedent anywhere in India.

What lends credence to the charge of the Chief Minister, Mr. N. Biren Singh, being partisan in his approach to tackling the tragedy is his demonisation and targeting of one community as ‘illegal migrants’, ‘poppy cultivators’, ‘encroachers’, ‘narco-terrorists’ and ‘terrorists’. These “dog whistles”, which tend to smear an entire community, have served to excite the passions of the majority community to which the Chief Minister belongs. A high constitutional functionary, like the Chief Minister, is expected to restore the rule of law and take steps to cool inflamed passions, rather than stoke them further. The failure to take strong action against militant organisations of the Meitei community, the Arambai Tenggol and Meitei Leepun, which openly issue threats of “annihilation” and “blowing up” of the tribal Kuki-Zo minority, or the Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity (COCOMI), which advocates a “Manipuri national war against Chin-Kuki narco-terrorism” and the arming of civilians, only seems to confirm fears about the partisan approach of the state administration; the same applies to the approach of the law enforcement authorities of Manipur state to the aggressive actions of the Meira Paibis, which include their preventing the army from apprehending those engaged in violent activities.  

What causes us even deeper anguish, as former civil servants who have dealt with surcharged law and order situations in the course of our careers, has been the largely passive role that the union government has played in this entire imbroglio. What was required at the very onset of the violence in May 2023 was the imposition of President’s Rule, given the abject failure of the state government to function in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution. However, instead of invoking Article 356 of the Constitution to impose President’s Rule, a Security Adviser to the state and a new Director General of Police from the cadre of a neighbouring state were appointed, and a Unified Command constituted, all reporting to the Government of Manipur, headed by the Chief Minister. Apart from the visit to Manipur by the Union Home Minister end May-early June 2023, when he met with different sections of society, there has been no active political involvement of the centre in establishing peace between the opposing communities.   

The union government also lost a golden opportunity to involve the opposition parties in trying to arrive at a political solution to the problem. Political expediency has won out: we are witness to the spectacle of a non-functioning parliament at a time of crisis, with the Prime Minister making no statement in Parliament on the Manipur crisis, which would enable the initiation of a dialogue on the issue. 

We are even more appalled at the approach of the union government to the ghastly events of the stripping and parading naked of two women, the alleged gangrape of one of them and the murder of two male members, all of the same family, on May 4. While expressing his outrage over the incident, outside Parliament rather than on the floor of either House, the Prime Minister seemed to draw an equivalence between this incident in Manipur and other incidents in states like Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh, though the incidents are not at all comparable. There was no explanation of how his government and the Manipur state government were blissfully unaware of this heinous incident despite the filing of an FIR over two months ago. 

We would like to bring to the union government’s notice that the May 4 incident (along with other such similar incidents of sexual violence against women during the last three months in Manipur) represent the disgraceful phenomenon of Conflict Related Sexual Violence. The intent of the perpetrators of this violence and their instigators is to use womens’ bodies for signalling dominance. Failure to nip such perverted tendencies in the bud can lead to escalation in conflict and make reconciliation difficult. 

While the Union Home Minister, during his visit to Manipur, announced the setting up of a panel headed by a retired High Court judge to investigate the reasons for the violence and to identify those behind the violence, this will not suffice to heal the wounds that have been caused by the ongoing violence and the severe trust deficit between the two communities, as well as the lack of confidence of the minority Kuki community in the impartial conduct of the state government and its police force. The nonpartisan and positive role played by the army, the Assam Rifles and central paramilitary forces, which has been appreciated, indicates that there is need to continue with the deployment of these forces in the buffer zones between the two communities, to forestall offensive attacks . 

The immediate priority is to provide a healing touch to the affected persons of both communities. The lethargic relief measures taken by the state government have been very inadequate. Effective relief and rehabilitation measures as well as adequate compensation need to be provided to all affected individuals/families to enable them to rebuild their lives. These should include: (i) providing suitable shelters to the affected, either in public buildings or in requisitioned private premises, with proper hygiene and security, for as long as a return to their homes is not feasible; (ii) providing free food supplies for those in the relief camps and free PDS rations for internally displaced people residing elsewhere ; (iii) starting MNREGA works that could provide income to those affected; (iv) providing childcare, health, trauma care and education services that would meet the needs of those in the relief camps, especially mothers and children, including newborns (v) in the medium term, providing assistance for rebuilding damaged houses and other public premises.

The underlying causes of the ongoing mayhem in Manipur need to be objectively identified and addressed within the bounds of constitutional parameters. Unsubstantiated charges and dangerous brinkmanship by all parties, and grave disruptions of the social fabric of Manipur, as well as sustained violence, could resonate and spill over not only into neighbouring states but also across international borders, where ethnic bonds exist. This would be a recipe for unimaginable strife which will not leave the rest of India unscathed.

We, therefore, urge the Government of India to take the following actions at the earliest:

1) Impose President’s Rule in Manipur and appoint, as Advisers to the Governor, experienced former administrators and police officers who have knowledge of the region and can empathetically interact with the local populace. Every effort should be made to restore the trust of all sections of the citizenry in the local administration.

2) Provide relief and rehabilitation measures as well as compensation to affected individuals/families in a nonpartisan manner, with the aim of bringing back normalcy at the earliest.

3) Take severe punitive action against individuals and groups intent on fomenting unrest, including bringing to justice all the instigators and perpetrators of incidents of violence since the beginning of May, firmly checking hate speech, rounding up looted arms and ammunition and putting an end to offensive attacks against other communities. The message needs to firmly go out that no attempt by any non-state organisation to take the law into its hands will be tolerated.

  We earnestly entreat the Government of India as well as other stakeholders not to let issues of prestige and political expediency inform actions, when the imperatives of both internal peace and external security warrant mature responses. We must all realise that if India loses, no one wins. 

SATYAMEVA JAYATE

Constitutional Conduct Group (113 signatories, as at pages 4-7 below)

1 Anita Agnihotri IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Social Justice Empowerment, GoI
2 V.S. Ailawadi IAS (Retd.) Former Vice Chairman, Delhi Development Authority
3 Anand Arni RAS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
4 G. Balachandhran IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
5 Vappala Balachandran  IPS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
6 Gopalan Balagopal  IAS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
7 Chandrashekar Balakrishnan  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Coal, GoI
8 Sushant Baliga Engineering Services (Retd.) Former Additional Director General, Central PWD, GoI
9 Rana Banerji RAS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
10 T.K. Banerji IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Union Public Service Commission
11 Sharad Behar IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh
12 Aurobindo Behera IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha
13 Madhu Bhaduri IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Portugal
14 K.V. Bhagirath IFS (Retd.) Former Secretary General, Indian Ocean Rim Association, Mauritius
15 Pradip Bhattacharya  IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Development & Planning and Administrative Training Institute, Govt. of West Bengal
16 Nutan Guha Biswas IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Police Complaints Authority, Govt. of NCT of Delhi
17 Meeran C Borwankar  IPS (Retd.) Former DGP, Bureau of Police Research and Development, GoI
18 Ravi Budhiraja IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust, GoI
19 Sundar Burra  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
20 Maneshwar Singh Chahal IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Secretary, Home, Govt. of Punjab
21 R. Chandramohan IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Secretary, Transport and Urban Development, Govt. of NCT of Delhi
22 K.M. Chandrasekhar IAS (Retd.) Former Cabinet Secretary, GoI
23 Rachel Chatterjee IAS (Retd.) Former Special Chief Secretary, Agriculture, Govt. of Andhra Pradesh
24 Kalyani Chaudhuri  IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
25 Gurjit Singh Cheema IAS (Retd.) Former Financial Commissioner (Revenue), Govt. of Punjab
26 F.T.R. Colaso IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Karnataka & former Director General of Police, Govt. of Jammu & Kashmir
27 Anna Dani  IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra
28 Vibha Puri Das  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Tribal Affairs, GoI
29 P.R. Dasgupta IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Food Corporation of India, GoI
30 Pradeep K. Deb IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Deptt. Of Sports, GoI
31 Nitin Desai   Former Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance, GoI
32 M.G. Devasahayam IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Govt. of Haryana
33 Sushil Dubey  IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Sweden
34 A.S. Dulat IPS (Retd.) Former OSD on Kashmir, Prime Minister’s Office, GoI
35 K.P. Fabian  IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Italy
36 Suresh K. Goel IFS (Retd.) Former Director General, Indian Council of Cultural Relations, GoI
37 S. Gopal IPS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, GoI
38 H.S. Gujral IFoS (Retd.) Former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Govt. of Punjab
39 Meena Gupta IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Environment & Forests, GoI
40 Ravi Vira Gupta  IAS (Retd.) Former Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India
41 Wajahat Habibullah  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, GoI and former Chief Information Commissioner
42 Deepa Hari  IRS (Resigned)
43 Vivek Harinarain  IAS (Retd.) Govt. of Tamil Nadu
44 Siraj Hussain IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Agriculture, GoI
45 Kamal Jaswal  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Information Technology, GoI
46 Naini Jeyaseelan  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Inter-State Council, GoI
47 Najeeb Jung IAS (Retd.) Former Lieutenant Governor, Delhi
48 Sanjay Kaul IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Secretary, Govt. of Karnataka
49 Brijesh Kumar  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Information Technology, GoI
50 Ish Kumar IPS (Retd.) Former DGP (Vigilance & Enforcement), Govt. of Telangana and former Special Rapporteur, National Human Rights Commission
51 Sudhir Kumar IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Central Administrative Tribunal
52 Subodh Lal IPoS (Resigned) Former Deputy Director General, Ministry of Communications, GoI
53 Sunil Lal IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Brazil and former Ambassador to Spain
54 P.M.S. Malik  IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Myanmar & Special Secretary, MEA, GoI
55 Harsh Mander  IAS (Retd.) Govt. of Madhya Pradesh
56 Amitabh Mathur IPS (Retd.) Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI
57 Aditi Mehta IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan
58 Shivshankar Menon IFS (Retd.) Former Foreign Secretary and Former National Security Adviser
59 Sonalini Mirchandani  IFS (Resigned) GoI
60 Malay Mishra IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Hungary
61 Sunil Mitra  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Finance, GoI
62 Avinash Mohananey IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Sikkim
63 Geetmala Mohananey IRS (Retd.) Former Chief Commissioner of Income Tax, GoI
64 Satya Narayan Mohanty IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary General, National Human Rights Commission
65 Jugal Mohapatra IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Department of Rural Development, GoI
66 Deb Mukharji  IFS (Retd.) Former High Commissioner to Bangladesh and former Ambassador to Nepal
67 Shiv Shankar Mukherjee IFS (Retd.) Former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
68 Gautam Mukhopadhaya IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Myanmar
69 Ramesh Narayanaswami IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of NCT of Delhi
70 P. Joy Oommen IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Chhattisgarh
71 Amitabha Pande  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Inter-State Council, GoI
72 Mira Pande  IAS (Retd.) Former State Election Commissioner, West Bengal
73 Maxwell Pereira IPS (Retd.) Former Joint Commissioner of Police, Delhi
74 Alok Perti  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Coal, GoI
75 G.K. Pillai IAS (Retd.) Former Home Secretary, GoI
76 R. Poornalingam IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, GoI
77 Jayant Prasad IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Nepal
78 Rajesh Prasad IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to the Netherlands
79 Rajdeep Puri IRS (Resigned) Former Joint Commissioner of Income Tax, GoI
80 T.R. Raghunandan  IAS (Retd.) Former Joint Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj, GoI
81 N.K. Raghupathy  IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Staff Selection Commission, GoI
82 V.P. Raja IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission
83 K. Ramanujam IPS (Retd.) Former Chief Information Commissioner, Tamil Nadu
84 M. Rameshkumar IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Maharashtra Administrative Tribunal
85 K. Sujatha Rao IAS (Retd.) Former Health Secretary, GoI
86 M.Y. Rao  IAS (Retd.)
87 Satwant Reddy  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Chemicals and Petrochemicals, GoI
88 Vijaya Latha Reddy IFS (Retd.) Former Deputy National Security Adviser, GoI
89 Julio Ribeiro  IPS (Retd.) Former Adviser to Governor of Punjab & former Ambassador to Romania
90 Aruna Roy  IAS (Resigned)
91 A.K. Samanta IPS (Retd.) Former Director General of Police (Intelligence), Govt. of West Bengal
92 Deepak Sanan IAS (Retd.) Former Principal Adviser (AR) to Chief Minister, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh
93 G.V. Venugopala Sarma IAS (Retd.) Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha 
94 N.C. Saxena  IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Planning Commission, GoI
95 Ardhendu Sen  IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal
96 Abhijit Sengupta IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, Ministry of Culture, GoI
97 Aftab Seth  IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Japan
98 Ashok Kumar Sharma IFoS (Retd.) Former MD, State Forest Development Corporation, Govt. of Gujarat
99 Ashok Kumar Sharma IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Finland and Estonia
100 Navrekha Sharma  IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Indonesia
101 Avay Shukla IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary (Forests & Technical Education), Govt. of Himachal Pradesh
102 Sujatha Singh IFS (Retd.) Former Foreign Secretary, GoI
103 Tara Ajai Singh IAS (Retd.) Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Karnataka
104 Tirlochan Singh IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary, National Commission for Minorities, GoI
105 A.K. Srivastava IAS (Retd.) Former Administrative Member, Madhya Pradesh Administrative Tribunal
106 Parveen Talha IRS (Retd.) Former Member, Union Public Service Commission
107 Anup Thakur IAS (Retd.) Former Member, National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission
108 P.S.S. Thomas IAS (Retd.) Former Secretary General, National Human Rights Commission
109 Geetha Thoopal IRAS (Retd.) Former General Manager, Metro Railway, Kolkata
110 Jawed Usmani IAS (Retd.) Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh & former Chief Information Commissioner, Uttar Pradesh
111 Ashok Vajpeyi IAS (Retd.) Former Chairman, Lalit Kala Akademi
112 Ramani Venkatesan IAS (Retd.) Former Director General, YASHADA, Govt. of Maharashtra
113 Rudi Warjri IFS (Retd.) Former Ambassador to Colombia, Ecuador and Costa Rica

 

What’s Behind the Manipur Violence and Why Stopping It Poses a Test For Modi

In this comprehensive discussion, Praveen Donthi of the NGO and think tank International Crisis Group explains the reasons behind the Manipur violence and why the government has failed to control it, before offering a solution.

Inter-communal clashes have erupted in India’s Manipur state, near Myanmar. In this Q&A, Crisis Group expert Praveen Donthi delves into what caused the unrest and what New Delhi could do to stop it.

What happened?

At least 150 people have been killed in clashes between the Meitei and Kuki ethnic groups that have engulfed India’s north-eastern state of Manipur, on the border with Myanmar.

The violence broke out in Churachandpur, a town just south of the state capital Imphal, on May 3, following a Kuki-led tribal solidarity march in ten of the state’s sixteen districts. As the Meitei organised counter-protests and blockades, clashes spread across Manipur.

Women were part of some of the mobs. In some cases, they blocked soldiers trying to intervene, in order to shield Meitei men conducting attacks.

Thousands have been injured and more than 60,000 displaced in the violence; more than 12,000 have fled to the neighbouring Mizoram state.

Hundreds of houses, places of worship and vehicles have been vandalised, and thousands of weapons stolen from government armouries. Arson and other attacks continue unabated.

Numerous serious cases of sexual violence by Meitei men, militias and militants against Kuki women have also been reported, and all available evidence points to the widespread use of sexual violence as part of the ethnic conflict.

Fake news about a Meitei woman’s rape in a Kuki-dominated area provoked a violent reaction from the Meitei community. A video went viral online on July 19 showing a mob of Meitei men parading and groping two naked Kuki women on a rural road before taking them to a field, where one of them was reportedly raped.

The video triggered outrage throughout India, with protests organised in various cities. Responding to questions from a television news channel, Manipur chief minister N. Biren Singh acknowledged that there had been “hundreds of such cases”.

The government has been unable to bring the situation under control, despite taking drastic measures. The state government shut down the internet, imposed a curfew and authorised all district magistrates to issue “shoot-on-sight orders” in “extreme cases”.

The federal government dispatched some 50,000 security personnel, most of them from other regions. It also set up a unified command for the various security forces deployed in the state.

But all this action was to little avail. Manipur is now divided into exclusive ethnic zones, with the dominant, largely Hindu Meiteis concentrated in the valley where the state capital sits and the mostly Christian Kukis living in the surrounding hills.

Relief map of Manipur. The Imphal valley is seen in the centre. Photo: Milenioscuro/Wikimedia Commons. CC BY-SA 3.0.

Security forces helped evacuate the Kukis living in predominantly Meitei areas and vice versa. They now patrol the buffer zone created in between, while the militias that have formed on both sides dig trenches and wait for an opportunity to attack.

The state’s police force, which like the rest of the local administration is made up largely of Meiteis, has also been segregated, with Kuki members either being transferred or spontaneously fleeing to Kuki areas. Just over two months into the crisis, the physical – and emotional – separation of the communities is total.

International concern about the Manipur violence has been muted so far, though on July 13 the European Parliament passed a resolution asking the Indian government “to take all necessary measures and make the utmost effort to promptly halt the ongoing ethnic and religious violence”.

The resolution also asked the government to end the internet shutdown and to grant unhindered access to journalists and international observers.

“Such interference in India’s internal affairs is unacceptable, and reflects a colonial mindset”, the Indian government snapped.

What is the background to the crisis?

The fighting pits the Meitei, who make up 53 per cent of the state’s 2.85 million population, according to the last census in 2011, but occupy only 10 per cent of its land, against the Kuki and 33 other tribes, which constitute about 30 per cent of the population and are geographically more spread out in the poorer hill areas.

The conflict stems from decades of contestation over land and natural resources, fuelling deep-seated resentment among both the Meiteis and Kukis.

Manipur is one of seven states in India’s Northeast region, often referred to as the “seven sisters”, which are connected to the rest of the country by a narrow strip of land that skirts Nepal and Bangladesh.

The region, which consists of a mosaic of ethnicities, languages and cultures, many of them tribal, is home to some of India’s oldest separatist insurgencies. Many of these erupted soon after independence in 1947, partly as a result of the administrative chaos the British colonial rulers left behind.

Today, most of the region’s insurgencies are dormant, limited to practicing extortion or stuck in various stages of slow-moving peace processes. Some of the remaining armed groups now operate largely from rear bases on the other side of the porous Myanmar border.

Indian army personnel walking along the India Myanmar border. Credit: PTI

Indian army personnel walking along the India–Myanmar border. Photo: PTI

Though, as noted, the Kukis are mostly Christian and the Meitei mostly Hindu (small numbers of Meiteis are Christian or Muslim), the violence has occurred over ethnic rather than religious divides.

The Nagas, another tribal community in Manipur that is mostly Christian, have not been involved at all, while Kukis have attacked fellow Christians who are Meitei living in or near majority-Kuki areas.

Some Meitei leaders have nonetheless been trying to portray the turmoil as religious, seemingly for reasons having to do with national politics: they are trying to rally support among Hindus elsewhere in India, including within the federal government, which is run by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

According to available evidence, the Meiteis appear to have been the more aggressive side. As Manipur’s largest community, they enjoy immense social, political and economic advantages, not least dominating the state government, and therefore its police force, which gives them an upper hand in the conflict.

What was the immediate trigger for the violence?

The Kuki have long been recognised as a Scheduled Tribe under Indian law, an affirmative action measure that assures tribal community members access to state-run educational institutions, government jobs and safeguards such as the exclusive right to buy and own land in the state’s recognised tribal areas.

The Meitei also enjoy certain benefits on account of being recognised as a “socially and economically backward class”, and a tiny segment of them as a Scheduled Caste.

But they have been demanding the tribal status instead, arguing that it is necessary to “preserve” the community and “save [its] ancestral land, tradition, culture and language”. The demand has gained momentum only in the last few years.

The Kuki, however, argue that the more numerous Meitei are already privileged. The minority fears that if the Meitei get Scheduled Tribe status, they will not only corner the reserved government jobs but also start acquiring land in the hills, displacing Kukis and other tribal communities.

What set off the series of protests culminating in clashes and sexual violence was a Manipur high court ruling in favour of the longstanding Meitei demand. The court made its decision in late March, but it became public only on April 19, when the judgment appeared on the court’s website.

The Supreme Court on May 17 stayed the Manipur court order, calling it “completely factually wrong”, but that did not calm tempers.

The violence is also related to the civil war raging in neighbouring Myanmar since shortly after its February 2021 coup. Chin refugees from Myanmar have reportedly been seeking shelter in Manipur (though in fewer numbers than in the adjacent state of Mizoram).

In justifying their demand for Scheduled Tribe status, the Meitei claim that “illegal immigration from Myanmar [and] Bangladesh” is threatening their position.

Radical Meitei outfits such as Arambai Tenggol and Meitei Leepun accuse the Kuki, who share an ethnic heritage with the Chin, of illegally settling refugees in Manipur’s hills (according to official figures, there are 10,000 Chin refugees in the state).

Biren Singh, himself a Meitei and a BJP member, has echoed these allegations as well as others, implying that the Kuki are involved in the illegal drug trade, including poppy cultivation, in collaboration with transnational networks operating from Myanmar.

Some Kuki criminal groups are in fact running drugs, but they are just one of many players in the illicit business, who also include Meiteis and Nagas.

These allegations added to longstanding animosity between the two communities. The Meitei have long alleged that the Kuki are not indigenous to Manipur but were resettled in the state by the British from the nearby hills of Myanmar in the nineteenth century.

Trouble has been brewing since August 2015, when a former state government, also headed by a Meitei, passed three laws that tribal communities perceived as designed to favour the Meitei. The tribes saw these laws as an attempt by the Meitei to acquire the power to buy land in the hills and sow doubt about the citizenship of tribal groups.

In the ensuing demonstrations, the security forces killed nine young people belonging to the tribes in Churachandpur. As a mark of protest, the Kuki and other tribal groups refused to bury the dead, keeping them in the morgue for two years.

After a new state government headed by Biren Singh came to power in 2017, it signed (under the guidance of the federal government) an agreement with tribal leaders to restore quiet.

But things soon deteriorated again, particularly after Biren Singh’s government won a second term in 2022. The government started evicting primarily Kuki villagers from houses and villages allegedly built on forest land in violation of the Indian forest law.

Manipur chief minister N. Biren Singh. Photo: Twitter/@NBirenSingh

The Kuki, who believe the Meitei chief minister has been acting in a partisan manner, again mounted a series of protests, some of which turned violent. The high court order was therefore just the spark in an already combustible situation.

Is there a link to Manipur’s insurgencies?

Manipur is home to more than 30 ethnic rebel groups, all made up primarily of men, who were originally all fighting for homelands of their own. They can be broadly divided into three categories: Naga, Meitei and Kuki.

The Naga outfits, which also operate in the neighbouring state of Nagaland, were the first to arise as organised armed insurgents, in the 1950s. The main faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland, the biggest Naga insurgency, struck a ceasefire agreement with the federal government in 1997, and is still in talks with New Delhi.

The Meitei groups, which appeared soon after the Naga militant outfits, have not entered into peace discussions, though they are much less active than in the past. The security forces refer to them as “valley-based insurgent groups”.

The Kuki militant groups emerged only in the early 1990s, as a response to Naga attacks, but they signed a tripartite Suspension of Operations agreement with the federal and state governments in 2008.

Since then, the Kuki militants have been confined to thirteen camps, with their arms under lock and key.

But the two Kuki umbrella militant groups that signed the agreement, the Kuki National Organisation and the United People’s Front, had to wait until 2017 for New Delhi to start actual peace talks. During these talks, the Kuki demanded the creation of territorial councils that would grant more autonomy to tribal communities in Manipur. Negotiations are proceeding slowly.

Members of the Kuki National Organisation. Photo: Facebook/Kuki National Organisation-KNO Dept.of Defense, January 21, 2019.

Much weakened, the remaining Meitei and Kuki militants have diluted their initial demands. They engage mainly in extortion, rather than rebellion, and play an active role in mainstream politics, though some continue to seek various degrees of autonomy within India’s federal structure.

The legacies of these insurgencies, however, haunt the state’s political and social life, including amid the present unrest.

Despite evidence pointing to radical Meitei outfits Arambai Tenggol and Meitei Leepun as the main culprits in starting the clashes, on May 28, Biren Singh tried to ascribe responsibility to Kuki militants.

“The fight is between the state and central forces [and] the terrorists who are trying to break Manipur”, he said, telling the media security forces had killed 40 Kuki insurgents who were attacking Meitei civilians with sophisticated weapons. “It is not a fight between communities”, he asserted.

He was contradicted two days later by the Indian army’s top general, Chief of Defence Staff Anil Chauhan, who said: “This particular situation in Manipur has nothing to do with counter-insurgency and is primarily a clash between two ethnicities”.

Earlier, Singh had accused Kuki militants of fomenting violence to protest his government’s eviction drive, and even attempted to pull out of the tripartite peace talks, but backtracked when the federal government opposed it.

The violence threatens to reignite separatist fires. Now physically separated from the Meitei, the Kuki have resurrected an old demand to create an autonomous administrative unit with its own elected representatives and laws within Manipur.

On May 12, all the Kuki members of the state assembly issued a statement reading “to live amid the Meiteis again is as good as a death for our people”.

In Mizoram, the violence has rekindled support for a separate homeland for the Kuki-Chin-Mizo ethnic group, which is spread across India, Myanmar and Bangladesh.

The unrest has also had consequences in Myanmar, where both Meitei and Kuki militant groups have rear bases.

Since the February 2021 coup, Myanmar’s military regime has reportedly roped in groups from both ethnicities, though mostly Meiteis, to support its security forces in fighting the new armed opposition, in return for giving them safe haven.

Allegiances have shifted since the Manipur conflict erupted, however, partly because Chin fighters ethnically related to the Kuki constitute much of the Myanmar resistance in areas near the border. These rebel groups are now aiding the Kuki in the Manipur conflict, while the Myanmar military regime is backing the Meiteis. There are unconfirmed reports of arms being smuggled into Manipur for the benefit of both sides.

Why are the authorities unable to bring the situation under control?

Despite the obvious risks, Manipur’s state government failed to put adequate security measures in place ahead of the tribal solidarity march on May 3, and thus it let the situation spin out of control throughout the state. Had it deployed sufficient forces on the day of the march at all the sensitive locations along its route, it might have helped temper the initial outbreak of violence.

The most damage occurred in the first three days, when 72 people were killed, of whom 60 were reportedly Kukis living in the Imphal valley.

Mobs of Meitei men targeted government armouries from the very day of the march, leading to suspicions that these attacks may have been orchestrated.

The state police, which like the rest of the local administration are overwhelmingly Meitei, are alleged to have allowed the crowds to abscond with weapons such as assault rifles, long-range guns and even 51mm mortars.

In Kuki-dominated areas, Kuki police officers allegedly did the same, albeit on a much lesser scale.

An estimated 4,000 weapons and half a million bullets were stolen throughout the state. As a result, both communities have an arsenal at their disposal, which has escalated the intensity of the conflict manifold.

Gun drop box placed in Imphal Manipur. Authorities are asking people to voluntarily return snatched and looted weapons. Photo: Twitter

Also Read: Manipur: FIRs Show the Type and Quantity of Weapons Taken from Police Armouries

From May 4 onward, the central government gradually deployed security forces from other parts of India to help quell the unrest. Placed under state government command, these contingents largely failed to stop the violence, however, as Meitei groups, in particular, obstructed their movements by blocking – and even digging up – roads.

Just as the Kuki do not trust the Meitei-dominated local police, the Meitei allege that the central forces, particularly a counter-insurgency force called the Assam Rifles, are biased toward the Kuki.

Deployed in the state since the days of active insurgency, the Assam Rifles allegedly used Kuki militants after they signed the 2008 peace agreement to conduct operations against other militant groups, including Meitei outfits.

Despite a history of protests by women in the region, the armed forces also found themselves unprepared to deal with the active participation of Meitei women in the conflict.

On June 24, the army released twelve captured Meitei militants (all men) who belonged to the banned Kanglei Yaol Kangla Lup outfit, from whom they had recovered numerous arms and stores of ammunition, after a standoff with a mob of an estimated 1,500 women. The women reportedly blocked all the roads in the area and refused to let the army carry on with the operation.

The army said that considering the “sensitivity of use of kinetic force” against a large crowd of women and the risk of casualties, the troops decided to hand over the militants and leave. The danger of a backlash from the Meiteis and the state government dominated by the community is the unspoken subtext.

Apart from sending in the central security forces, the federal government has not been particularly proactive in dealing with the Manipur conflict; nor has it been very effective at dampening the unrest.

At the end of May, following weeks of violence, Home Minister Amit Shah paid a three-day visit to Manipur, meeting both Meitei and Kuki delegations.

Video screengrab showing Manipur CM N. Biren Singh with Union home minister Amit Shah in Manipur. Photo: Twitter/@NBirenSingh

The Meitei groups pleaded with him not to accede to the Kukis’ demand for greater autonomy and to replace the Assam Rifles with another force.

For their part, the Kuki delegation asked for imposition of president’s rule, a constitutional provision that allows New Delhi to suspend the state government and govern in its stead in case of emergency, and in the long term, for a separate Kuki administration.

Shah appealed for calm, according to media reports, and promised to return two weeks later. He has yet to come back.

On June 10, the federal government took what seemed to be an ameliorative measure, announcing the creation of a committee made up of the chief minister, elected representatives, political party leaders, and Meitei and Kuki representatives to start a peace dialogue.

The initiative was an instant failure, however, as both Meitei and Kuki representatives refused to participate due to disagreements over the committee’s composition.

Prompted by indignation over the video depicting the abuse of two naked Kuki women, Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke for the first time in public about the Manipur violence on 20 July. In a brief statement, he expressed shock at the video, assuring the public that justice would be served for the survivors of sexual violence. Whether this pledge translates into concrete action, however, remains to be seen.

Also Read: Narendra Modi Talked About the Manipur Violence. But Did He Really?

National politics is also playing a part in the central state’s half-hearted response. Despite reports that Home Minister Shah is keeping a close watch on security conditions in the state, the absence of new concrete measures suggests that New Delhi has delegated the effort to control the violence to the state’s Meitei-dominated administration.

Amid the turmoil, and given that state authorities like the BJP’s Biren Singh are widely perceived as partisan, the BJP-run federal government could have replaced the chief minister with someone less polarising.

Alternatively, New Delhi could have opted to impose president’s rule, which would allow the central state to assume command over all security forces in the area and recover stolen weapons – a step that would have been in keeping with the tough security image cultivated by Modi’s federal government.

Yet in the run-up to 2024 national elections, the BJP appears reluctant to acknowledge its failures in Manipur and to risk losing the Meiteis’ electoral support.

What can be done to put an end to the violence?

That Prime Minister Modi had kept mum on the crisis for almost three months, before the viral video forced him to break his silence, has generated anger on both sides. His statement, though criticised in some quarters for failing to address the broader outbreak of ethnic violence in Manipur, has encouraged Kuki women victims to share their testimonies with the media.

The prime minister is popular in Manipur – both the Meitei and Kuki voted for the BJP in large numbers in two consecutive elections – and he could have made an immediate difference with an urgent personal appeal for peace. There is still an opportunity for such an intervention, though the BJP has so far appeared inclined to avoid deeper central state involvement in the crisis.

Narendra Modi campaigning in Imphal, Manipur’s capital city in 2014. Photo: Twitter/@PriyaaReturnz.

Additionally, given the gravity of the situation, the central government should put political calculations aside and impose president’s rule in Manipur. This step would place all security forces automatically under New Delhi’s command and cause the state government to be dismissed, without abrogating citizens’ basic rights.

In the past, this exceptional measure has usually been imposed in a conflict’s early stages, such as when deadly clashes broke out between the Nagas and Kukis in 1993. President’s rule has in fact been imposed ten times in the past in Manipur, most recently in 2001 when the state government lost its majority in the local legislature.

Despite the delay, there is no better solution at this juncture given the urgent need for a neutral administration in Manipur to guarantee the peace and mediate between the parties. President’s rule would go a long way toward addressing Kuki distrust of the state government, but unless handled deftly could antagonise the Meitei.

To placate the latter, Modi might well need to visit the region before imposing president’s rule for an initial six-month period, and make it clear to them (as well as the Kuki) that he will protect their interests.

Measures to address the widespread sexual violence should be among the top priorities for the central government whether or not it decides to impose president’s rule. These should include sexual and reproductive health and psychosocial support for survivors, as well as efforts to bring perpetrators to justice.

Progress in these areas will also contribute to strengthening trust between the citizenry and the state, feeding into longer-term peace and reconciliation objectives.

Also Read: In Manipur, Violence Against Women, Impunity, and Apathy Show a Familiar Pattern of Events

Finally, measures to try to restore some level of comity between the clashing communities will be important. Two months after the unrest began, dead bodies are still lying unclaimed and unidentified in morgues because the Kuki are unable to travel to areas dominated by the Meitei and vice versa.

The central security forces, in coordination with civil society organisations from both communities, could facilitate an exchange of bodies so that kin can proceed with proper funeral rites. This step could help build a modicum of confidence between the sides that would, ideally, allow for a comprehensive peace dialogue.

Moreover, to avoid a failure like its first attempt in June at creating a peace committee, New Delhi should (when the moment arrives) consult widely among both communities before deciding on the composition of a dialogue panel.

As much as possible, it should bring in moderates, including women, from both communities, preferably academics or civil society representatives who have not taken polarising stands during the violence. It should also make sure that members have no link to prominent politicians or militants on either side.

Over the long term, the central government should consider putting talks with Kuki militants who signed the Suspension of Operations Agreement back in 2008 on a fast track. Addressing Kuki aspirations for tribal autonomy will no doubt prove complex, as it will face stiff opposition from both the Meiteis and Nagas.

But it is increasingly clear that whether the measures are immediate or for the longer term, New Delhi will need to overcome its reticence and take bolder steps to still Manipur’s ethnic turmoil.

This article has been republished here with permission from the International Crisis Group, where it first appeared.

Manipur: Case Registered Against Meitei Leepun Chief for ‘Promoting Enmity’

The complaint, filed by a Kuki students’ group, cites statements made by Pramot Singh in his interview with Karan Thapar and tweets that he posted before the ethnic clashes began in Manipur.

New Delhi: Based on a complaint filed by a Kuki students’ group, a case has been registered against Pramot Singh, the chief of the Meitei Leepun group that is accused of instigating violence in Manipur, for promoting enmity.

According to The Hindu, the complaint was filed by the Kuki Students Organisation (KSO) on June 13 but the case was registered only on July 8 at the Kangpokpi police station. The first information report (FIR) invokes charges such as criminal conspiracy, promoting enmity between groups, intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace and criminal intimidation, among others.

The complaint filed by the KSO mentions statements made by Singh in an interview with Karan Thapar for The Wire on June 6. Statements such as “Kukis are outsiders who are not indigenous to Manipur” have been cited, according to The Hindu. It also notes that Singh accepted that the Meitei Leepun was training people to use arms and warned that there “will be a civil war and the Kukis will not be able to defend themselves”. The complaint also cited tweets that Singh or the Meitei Leepun had posted, which it says instigated violence.

Meitei Leepun and Arambai Tenggol have been accused by Kuki groups of instigating violence in Manipur. The groups deny this allegation.

Singh told The Hindu that he was not aware of the FIR and that he is “not bothered” by it.

The ethnic clashes between the Meitei and Kuki communities in Manipur, which have been ongoing since May 3, have claimed more than 140 lives and displaced more than 50,000 people.

Three Kukis – a leading academic and two activists – have been summoned by an Imphal court for statements they made in interviews with Karan Thapar. The three are University of Hyderabad professor Kham Khan Suan Hausing; the convenor of the Kuki Women’s Forum Mary Grace Zou; and the general secretary of the Kuki People’s Alliance Wilson Lalam Hangshing.

Watch | ‘Kukis Losing Faith in Modi and Shah but What Choice Do We Have?’

In an interview with Karan Thapar, Kuki Women’s Forum convenor Mary Grace Zou says her community cannot understand why the prime minister and home minister are persisting with Biren Singh as chief minister.

The convenor of the Kuki Women’s Forum Mary Grace Zou has said her community is “losing faith” in Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union minister Amit Shah and cannot understand “why they persist with Biren Singh as chief minister” but pointedly added, “What choice do we have but to keep hope in the Central government?”

In a 40-minute interview with Karan Thapar for The Wire, Zou repeatedly called for the removal of Biren Singh as chief minister of Manipur, accusing him of being anti-Kuki as well as misleading the Union government. Right at the end of the interview, Zou said that the Kuki and Meitei are at “breaking point”.

This is the first of a two-part series of interviews speaking to the women of Manipur about the crisis in their state and how it has affected the lives of their communities.

Zou said the Kuki community in Manipur was “barely surviving”. She said, after the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic, the present complete closure of schools in Manipur means a whole generation of children have missed out on their education. She said the elderly Kuki, when they fall ill, do not have access to multi-speciality hospitals because they are all in the Imphal Valley. Instead, they have to travel via Mizoram to metropolitan centres like Kolkata and Delhi. She said Kuki wives are struggling to run their homes and feed their children. The price of cooking gas has doubled. It’s particularly difficult for people dependent on a daily wage income.

Zou said that her organisation, the Kuki Women’s Forum, presented a memorandum to Amit Shah a week ago. They made four demands. First, do not post Meitei officers in the army to Manipur. Second, create a buffer zone between Kuki and Meitei settlements manned by the army. Third, do not allow Manipur state police and law enforcement agencies to operate in Kuki areas. Fourth, take action against the Meitei organisations like Arambai Tenggol and Meitei Leepun, which Kuki-Zo communities claim are engaged in violent activities.

She said although a week has passed, they have got no official response whatsoever from the home minister. She added that reports from Manipur itself suggest their demands have been ignored.

In the interview, Zou and Karan Thapar discuss the situation facing the Kuki community in Manipur; how Kuki women assess the handling of the crisis by the Union government; the Centre’s failure to restore order in Manipur even after six weeks; why she believes a separate administration, as demanded by all 10 Kuki MLAs, is the only solution to the crisis; why there is no possibility of a dialogue between the Kuki and Meitei to build trust; and why it’s unlikely that Kuki and Meitei women can emulate the example of Catholic and Protestant women in Northern Ireland who won the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to bridge the gap between both communities.

In Letter to Manipur Governor, Tribal Forum Demands ‘Separation’ of Meiteis and Kukis

The Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum told Anusuya Uikey that “the ethnic fault line and mistrust” between the two communities are beyond compromise because of the violence that has been ongoing since May 3.

New Delhi: The Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum (ITLF) has written to Manipur governor Anusuya Uikey, saying that the only solution to the violence that has continued in the state since May 3 is a complete separation of the Meitei and Kuki-Zo communities because “the ethnic fault line and mistrust” between the two communities are beyond compromise.

The Forum, which describes itself as a conglomerate of recognised tribes in Lamka district of Manipur, said that the Kuki-Zo communities are enduring challenging times as a “result of the ethnic cleansing campaign by the Meiteis and the communal Government of Manipur”.

The northeastern state has turned into a war zone since May 3, when simmering ethnic tensions between the Meiti and tribal communities were brought to a boiling point. The Meiteis, who constitute a majority in Manipur, have been demanding Scheduled Tribe status – which is opposed by the tribal communities.

The ITLF letter mentioned that since the violence began more than 40 days, 4500 houses in 160 villages have been burned down, rendering about 36,000 people homeless. “Significantly, 253 Churches were burnt down and thousands of our people [Kuki-Zo] are relocating to various places across the country,” it said.

The forum said that if the governor visits and interacts with the displaced people at the relief centres, she will gain a new perspective and insight into the plight of the tribal communities.

Accusing Manipur chief minister N. Biren Singh and his “bigoted supporters” of pushing the State towards “intolerance” towards the tribal communities, ITLF said that the attacks on Kuki-Zo people and territories by Meitei militias is being done “under the guidance of communal ‘State’ forces such as Manipur police commandos, IRB and MR personnel”.

It also claimed that Kuki-Zo village vigilantes, who are using licensed and traditional weapons to “repel” attacks by Meitei militia, are branded as ‘militants’ and ‘terrorists’ by the Manipur government. On the other hand, “Meitei militias, radical mobs, the police commandos and other State forces” who let “loose terror” on tribal people in Imphal valley “are vindicated”, it said.

ITLF also decried the government’s description of Kuki-Zo people as ‘illegal immigrants,’ ‘foreigner,’ ‘poppy planter,’ ‘drugs dealers,’ ‘forest encroachers,’ ‘tenants,’ ‘terrorists’ and ‘narco-terrorists’.

The letter says it is unimaginable for Kuki-Zo people to go back to the Imphal Valley. “The crux of the problem lies in disconnected communities living together without any cohesive or binding force. Therefore, the ultimate solution lies in the separation of the ‘disconnected’ communities so as to enable them to live as neighbours,” it says.

The forum also claimed that since Union home minister Amit Shah’s visit, “as many 55 villages were burnt, more than 11 lives were lost”. It said that villages in Kangchup which were deserted by the displaced Kuki-Zo villagers were now occupied by the Meitei people.

The complete letter is reproduced below.

§

To,

Smt. Anusuiya Uikey, Governor of Manipur.

Your Excellency,

Date: 12 June 2023

The Kuki-Zo people have been enduring one of the most challenging phases in our history as a result of the ethnic cleansing campaign by the Meiteis and the communal Government of Manipur. In the State- sponsored pogrom against our people since May 3, we have lost as many as 100 precious lives and many more dead remains unaccounted for. Besides, about 4500 houses in 160 villages have been burned down thereby rendering about 36,000 people homeless. Significantly, 253 Churches were burnt down and thousands of our people are relocating to various places across the country. We believe that your visit and interaction with the displaced people at the relief centres will give you a new perspective and insight into our plights.

The mayhem was the result of open hatred of our people by radical and chauvinist Meiteis whose unprecedented upsurge was recorded during the past six years when N. Biren Singh took over as the Chief Minister of Manipur. N Biren and his bigoted supporters pushed the State towards intolerance and their open dislike for our people culminated with the pogrom on May 3 resulting in the physical separation of the Kuki-Zo hill people and the Meiteis. Imphal became literally the valley of death for our people as anyone identified with Kuki-Zo ethnicity was brutally attacked, killed and thrown out of the Imphal valley. Our sufferings and ordeals were indescribable and it will remain a blot in the history of human civilisation.

As you are very much aware, the brutality on our people reached such a horrible height that a Kuki-Zo MLA, who is also the Adviser to CM, is in a coma till today after being bludgeoned by the Meitei mob in Imphal. The residence of a Cabinet Minister belonging to the Kuki-Zo community was razed to the ground by the same Meitei mob. This particular Minister made a narrow escape from the jaws of the Meitei mob. Our people cannot even imagine sharing space again with the Meiteis, whose extreme hostility towards our people is boundless.

The attack on our people and territory by Meitei militias under the guidance of communal ‘State’ forces such as Manipur police commandos, IRB and MR personnel is still going unabated in our areas bordering the Meitei settlement of Manipur valley.

The Meitei militias masquerading as mob, led by Manipur police commandos and IRB personnel continued attacking our villages in the peripheral areas. Our helpless villagers are spending sleepless nights maintaining strict vigil around the villages in the face of imminent attacks. There have been enough cases wherein well-armed marauders from neighbouring communities who came in hordes under the guidance of communal Manipur state forces were repelled by village vigilantes using licensed and traditional weapons.

Unfortunately, these village volunteers, who are defending their ancestral land from the onslaught of neighbouring invaders, are branded as ‘militants’ and ‘terrorists’ by the Manipur Government and Meitei CSOs. To our dismay, the Meitei militias, radical mobs, the police commandos and other State forces, let loose terror on our people in Imphal valley and launched offensive strikes, including the shelling of mortars on our civilians, killing and maiming women and children mercilessly, are vindicated on the other hand.

The Meitei CSOs continued issuing open threats and warnings of an impending attack on our people. While some declared ‘war on Kuki-Chin Narco-terrorists’, others warned of delivering a powerful and ‘indefensible blow’ on our people which can wipe out the whole Kuki-Zo population. In their attempt to project their pre-planned pogrom against our people to suit their agenda and interest, the communal Manipur government and Meitei CSOs gave and called us different names such as ‘illegal immigrants,’ ‘foreigner,’ ‘poppy planter,’ ‘drugs dealers,’ ‘forest encroachers,’ ‘tenants,’ ‘terrorists,’ ‘narco-terrorists’ and whatnots. This has further alienated us and made our pains and sufferings more excruciating.

Against these backdrops of affronts, open insults, agonising ordeals and importantly severe impending threats, our people (including Government employees) returning to Imphal or the idea of ‘going back’ to the valley is unimaginable and out of the question. Our fear and apprehension are real and cannot be downplayed.

The crux of the problem lies in disconnected communities living together without any cohesive or binding force. Therefore, the ultimate solution lies in the separation of the ‘disconnected’ communities so as to enable them to live as neighbours. Unless the separation of the two disconnected communities is accomplished, communal flames of higher magnitude are certain to happen again at any given moment in the future. The ethnic fault line and mistrust between the two communities are entrenched deeper and have reached such a level which is beyond compromise.

Ever since the Union Home Minister’s visit, the demands that we put up to him were not met. We asked for better security to safeguard our lives and villages, yet as many 55 villages were burnt, more than 11 lives were lost. Villages in Kangchup which were deserted by the displaced Kuki-Zo villagers were now occupied by the Meitei people. This shows Meitei’s intention of grabbing the land of the Kuki-Zo people.

The Chief Minister, as an alleged perpetrator, cannot be considered impartial in matters concerning the Kuki-Zo community and cannot be accepted as a member of the peace committee. Also, COCOMI who recently declared war against the Chin-Kuki community is made part of the Peace Committee. Granting them a position of authority within the peace committee would undermine the principles of fairness and impartiality, potentially hindering the pursuit of justice in this ethnic violence. While the Meitei Leepun’s Chief Pramot Singh openly announced the intention of the Meiteis in wiping out the Kuki population from Manipur, the constitution of a Peace Committee without addressing this threat is dubious and deceitful.

Solution precedes Peace. Our only hope of survival lies in a political solution for the Kuki-Zo community which is total separation from the communal Manipur Government and the Meitei people. The Hills and Valley have been partitioned and the only thing left now is separation in the administration. Peace will only prevail once the separation is in effect.

We beseech you to take cognizance of our plights and take prompt measures to redress our grievances and also endorse our aspiration of having a separate administration to the authority concerned.

Pagin Haokip
Chairman,
Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum (ITLF)

Muan Tombing
Secretary,
Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum (ITLF)

Echoes of Kashmiri Disempowerment Are Being Felt in the Northeast

The BJP’s majoritarian politics, its insistence on uniformity and an imaginary single cultural construct are creating insecurities. 

The horrific scenes out of Manipur this past month confirm what is well established: diversity, while something many of us cherish, is incredibly hard to manage. Reconciling different perspectives is complex when people seek refuge in their identities, rushing to safe harbour when the ‘others’ look menacing, and life feels unsettling and unsettled. With more than 100 people killed and thousands displaced, Manipur’s cataclysm requires careful consideration. This comes across clearly in a series of interviews for The Wire by veteran journalist Karan Thapar. In these engaging, at times confrontational discussions with Meitei, Kuki and Naga guests, there emerges a complex tapestry of Manipur and Northeast India. But one thing specifically caught my attention. In some of the interviews, there were references to Article 370 that merit attention, as we seek answers for a more dignified and peaceful life in Manipur, in Kashmir and in the rest of the country.

It should not surprise anyone that Jammu and Kashmir was not the only state with special provisions in the Indian constitution. To accommodate the aspirations of people in various parts of the country, the constitution was amended several times. Specifically, Article 371A applies to Nagaland and stipulates (among other things) that “no Act of Parliament in respect of— ownership and transfer of land and its resources, shall apply to the State of Nagaland unless the Legislative Assembly of Nagaland by a resolution so decides.” In 1971, Article 371C provided special safeguards for the Hill Areas of Manipur. In 1986, as part of the Mizo Accord, Article 371G protected land ownership rights in Mizoram. Many other states have similar special accommodations.

The parallels with J&K

Beyond these provisions is the Inner Line Permit (ILP) system, a colonial holdover travel document that Indian citizens from other regions must possess when venturing into parts of the Northeast. Independent India retained the ILP as protection for indigenous tribes in the Northeast. This contrasts with J&K, where citizens from other parts could visit freely. However, issues of protection of identity and land, which underpin protections for states in the Northeast are similar to those in J&K, especially in Kashmir.

The lack of sufficient land from a Meitei perspective or the sense of Kuki persecution is front and centre of the current conflagration. However, all this is part of a broader and more complex problem of identity, demography, opportunity, migration, etc., that leads to fear and loathing of the ‘other’. To the extent that people in Manipur are fearful of losing their lands and identity, Thapar’s guests seemed to be pointing to Jammu and Kashmir as an example of what must not happen. An exchange between the Naga statesman Niketu Iralu and Thapar was instructive. 

As a follow-up to an earlier question, Thapar asked, “It’s not just the Kuki and the Meitei but all north-eastern states cherish their unique identity, they wish to preserve and protect it. This is precisely what Article 371A is created to do. But after the Modi government abrogated Article 370, and despite the fact that the Modi government has repeatedly said that it won’t do anything similar with 371, are there fears and question marks in the minds of the people of the Northeast? Is a trust deficit emerging between the Northeast and New Delhi as a result?”

Iralu’s response was emphatic and revealing. He said, “Definitely, really, I am sorry to say, what happened in Kashmir, we said well that is not worthy of India. There is a strong element of vengeance that is too disgraceful, too small, too tragic for India.” He went on to say, “If they are going to do this kind of thing to solve problems, will they do something like this to solve what they think is the problem here?” He added: “That is our fear and that is our despair, because we are so small.”

When Thapar brought up Article 370 with former Manipur assembly speaker Hemochandra Singh, the worries over the unique identity of communities in the Northeast came up along with the region’s sensitive geopolitical context. In a conversation with the leader of Meitei Leepun Pramot Singh, the plight of Kashmiri Pandits came up as a way of sounding the alarm for protecting Hindus in Manipur. The majority Meitei community is overwhelmingly Hindu and the Pandit exodus from Kashmir helps craft a narrative to consolidate Meitei identity.

That J&K’s special status was, to my mind, unconstitutionally snatched, or that the state was divided and then demoted to union territory status reflects what Niketu Iralu characterised as vengeance. It is a miserable thing to be so small that a larger group can do whatever it pleases with you. That the Nagas or others fear the fate of Kashmiris because of “how small” they are is strangely reassuring. After all, misery loves company. But, more importantly, it is also an opportunity to reassess how we negotiate the tricky terrain of identity, especially as it pertains to small or marginalized communities.

Perhaps Iralu is right when he says that Indian democracy “cannot deal with it”, referring to the aspirations of the Nagas or other small communities. But perhaps with time, as Indian democracy matures, we will be better at accommodating each other’s dreams and aspirations. This is not to say India has not attempted such accommodation in the past. Articles 370 and 371 are examples of that. However, the BJP’s majoritarian politics, its insistence on uniformity, and an imaginary single cultural construct are creating insecurity. For India to mature as a vibrant and modern social democracy, there must be respect for the aspirations of those in the minority – whether religious, ethnic, linguistic or something else. The founders of independent India understood that. That is a legacy worth protecting.

Salman Soz is an economist, author, and deputy chairman of the All India Professionals’ Congress. Views are personal.