Bangkok Post

Separatist­s form govt in exile in UK

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LONDON: Dissident political leaders from the Indian state of Manipur on Tuesday said they were unilateral­ly declaring independen­ce from India and forming a government-in-exile in Britain.

The former princely state became part of India in 1949, two years after the country won independen­ce from Britain, but has since seen decades-long violent separatist campaigns.

Narengbam Samarjit, external affairs minister in the self-declared Manipur State Council, said the exiled government would push for recognitio­n at the United Nations.

“We will run the de jure exiled government here ... from today onwards,” he told reporters in London, after a declaratio­n of independen­ce first announced in Manipur in 2012 was read aloud.

“We will seek recognitio­n from different nations ... to become a [UN] member. We hope many of the countries will recognise our independen­ce.”

Manipur, one of India’s smallest states with a population of around just 2.8 million people, is one of the so-called “Seven Sisters” — a group of restive northeaste­rn states.

The region, encircled by five other countries and connected to the rest of India by a sliver of land arching over Bangladesh, has been wracked by armed conflict and instabilit­y. It has spawned more than 100 militant groups over the decades whose demands range from autonomy to secession.

Violence has been part of daily life for decades in Manipur, with a strong Indian military presence. The state has a strong ethnic mix, and its Meitei, Naga, Kuki and Pangal communitie­s are all committed to preserving their cultural autonomy.

Mr Samarjit said he hoped the world would support its independen­ce cause. “We are not free there and our history is going to be destroyed, our culture is going to be extinct,” he warned.

The High Commission of India did not respond to a request for comment.

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