How year of ethnic violence changed Manipur
News Desk
Over 220 people have been killed, scores are missing and approximately 60,000 people displaced since communal and ethnic violence ripped through India’s northeastern state of Manipur between the majority Meitei and minority Kuki last year, according to government officials and civil society groups.
A year after the first violent clashes, tensions between the two communities appear undiminished. Military camps now dot the landscape in a stark reminder of instability and insecurity griping the region.
Ordinary people ‘dread’ armed militias
The religious divide is also apparent geographically — the mostly Hindu Meitei, who make up 53% of Manipur’s population, tend to live in the valleys, while the predominantly Christian Kuki, with a 16% population share, live largely in the surrounding hills.
In Manipur, valleys are richer and more prosperous.
“Things are far from normal in Manipur. One thing which was always starkly evident, and has not changed, is the absence of the authority of the state — both the provincial state of Manipur and the Indian state — in this conflict theater, leaving it up to people to fend for themselves,” Pradip Phanjoubam, editor of the Imphal Review of Arts and Politics web journal, told DW.
Phanjoubam has covered the deadly violence closely since the first clashes in May 2023. He is now concerned about the emergence of armed civil militias who pose as defenders of their respective communities.
“This is a grotesque but expected phenomenon which the ordinary people dread and detest, but nonetheless, cannot disown or rubbish. This is another visage of the immense catastrophe Manipur is faced with today,” he added.
Other Manipur tribes pick up arms
Ethnic clashes continue intermittently in Manipur. Several NGOs and rights activists pointed out that the severe division between the valley and the hills has granted a degree of “respectability” and “popularity” to radical armed groups.
“Youth are armed across the state, not only warring groups but also tribes that are not Kuki or Meitei groups also arm themselves. Militarization is gearing up once again in Manipur,” Mary Beth, an activist from Churachandpur, ground zero for the violence, told DW.
“The government has not done anything with regards to peace initiative or negotiation. It is only engaging in controlling buffer zones and deputing armies. There is no talk of peace as of now as lawlessness in the state continue. Worse, no justice has been delivered to victims of violence,” added Beth.
Fading hope for return to normalcy
Political scientist Bidhan Laishram points out that armed factions are nothing new for the restive state.
Many forces have been active in the region, including various separatist groups and troops loyal to New Delhi operating with impunity under the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) — a decades-old law granting the military special powers in “disturbed” areas.
“The recent conflict has added another level to this militarization — it has normalized it. It has become part of everyday consciousness as a necessity and this is another layer added in the last year,” Laishram told DW.
This rapid militarization of society, combined with the resurgence of previously dormant armed groups. has led to a complete breakdown of law and order, according to Sophia Rajkumari, the founder of Eta Northeast Foundation Trust.
“Consequently, this has stymied any hope of a return to normalcy, as development projects and investments that existed before have come to a grinding halt,” Rajkumari told DW.
Youth mobilizing ‘to survive’
The Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity (COCOMI), a collective of dominant Meitei groups. has been pressing the government for a resolution. Its leaders have also grown annoyed at the excessive delay in finding a way out of the conflict.
“Instead of fulfilling its responsibility to protect the lives and property of its citizens, the government is resorting to mercenaries to attack its own people. The people of Manipur are trapped in a cycle of hopelessness,” COCOMI spokesperson KhuraijamAthouba told DW.
“Despite this despair, the youth are mobilizing and arming themselves to survive, as the government’s proxy war continues to destroy Manipur’s future under the pretense of national and geopolitical interests,” added Athouba.
Kuki activist wants separate administration
Janghaolun Haokip of Kuki Inpi, the apex body of the Kuki tribes, also maintains that the situation in Manipur region is volatile.
More than 4,500 weapons were looted from police armories after ethnic violence erupted in the state. Only around 1,800 firearms have been recovered or surrendered by the civilians. Haokip would like to see more effort to recover the weapons.
“The state government under chief minister Biren Singh is complicit in the violent and armed aggression against the Kuki, which results in continued hostilities between the two communities,” Haokip told DW.
According to the Kuki activist, the way to end the conflict is to separate the two groups.
“The government can only bring a solution through determined efforts to realize the inevitability of establishing separate administrative units for the Kuki and the Meitei for lasting peace and stability in the region,” Haokip claims.
Still no fix for deep ethnic divide
The prolonged conflict has also affected social and economic aspects of daily life.
Prices of essential commodities — such as food, fuel, and medicine — have fluctuated and increased due to supply chain disruptions and prevailing uncertainty.
Many individuals have left the region, others have lost their livelihoods and assets. And the impact goes beyond money — longstanding friendships and social bonds have dissipated in many areas, complicating everyday activities like farming or fishing on the fringes of valleys and hills.
Activist Sophia Rajkumari says the intensity of violence has gone down since the early phases of the conflict, even with the sporadic outbursts.
“But no efforts have been made at any level to address the underlying issues,” said Rajkumari.
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