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@Evening: ☮️ ➡️ Why Peace Continues To Evade Manipur

Karan KambleJun 13, 2023, 07:47 PM | Updated 07:47 PM IST
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Violence-wracked Manipur

Manipur is not new to ethnic tensions and strife. But peace was restored each time through persistent efforts by the state government.

Context: This time around, the task of restoring peace in Manipur seems to be hobbled by seemingly unsurmountable hurdles.

  • Primarily, the Kukis simply do not trust Chief Minister Biren Singh and his administration, including the state police. 

  • They accuse the police and administration of being complicit in the attacks on Kukis and doing nothing to rein in the Meitei groups targeting Kukis.

  • Kukis distrust Meitis and the state government. The reasons are many, as explained comprehensively by Jaideep Mazumdar in Swarajya today. In this email, let's go over the main points:

    • Earlier this year, the Manipur government unilaterally declared many areas as reserve forests and evicted hundreds of Kukis from the lands.

  • The population of Kukis has witnessed an exponential rise in recent years. Large-scale illegal immigration from Myanmar has been cited as a reason by the state government.

  • More Kukis than Meities became victims — loss of life and house, and displacement — of the ethnic violence. Kukis hold that they suffered more because the state administration was biased against them.

  • Kukis say that Meiteis' demand for ST status is a ploy by the majority community to take over lands belonging to the Kukis in the hills.


    • Kukis numbered 4.7 lakh in 2011, making up about 16.4 per cent of Manipur’s population.

  • According to reliable estimates, the population of Kukis in 2022 was 9.26 lakh.

  • If the Kuki population is projected using the 2021 state birth rate of 13.3 (per thousand), Kukis should have numbered about 5.4 lakh in 2022.

  • Where did the 'extra' Kukis come from? Meiteis and the state government say they are illegal immigrants from Myanmar. 

  • Meiteis say Kukis are working towards a demographic change in Manipur and, therefore, an exercise to update the NRC should be conducted to detect illegal immigrants from Myanmar.

  • Meiteis also allege that the Kukis coming in from Myanmar have taken to large-scale cultivation of poppy in the hills, turning Manipur into a major producer of opium and a hub of the drug trade.

  • Meiteis also feel it is grossly unfair to be denied the right to own properties in areas outside Imphal Valley.

  • Other factors hindering peace. The widespread availability of arms, inept peace moves by the Centre, delayed intervention by New Delhi, and a lack of out-of-the-box thinking are among the other factors, described in detail in Mazumdar's article.

    Bottom line: A loss of faith in the state administration by both Meiteis and Kukis is now the major hurdle in the path of a return to peace.

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