Manipur groups to mark one year of ethnic con ict
Kuki-Zo organisation calls for shutdown in Churachandpur on May 3, marking the day as one of ‘remembrance’ for their fallen; Meitei groups appeal to track down 35 of their missing people
uki-Zo and Meitei civil society organisations in Manipur have planned to hold events on Friday to mark one year of the ethnic con
ict in the State, though in completely dierent terms.
While the Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum (ITLF) in Churachandpur and the Kuki Inpi Manipur (KIM), apex body of Kuki tribes in the State, are marking the day as one of “remembrance” for their fallen and for “awakening” of their people, the Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity (COCOMI), a valley-based civil society organisation, is observing it as “the day illegal immigrants backed by narco-terrorists began their aggression”, making an appeal to track down over 35 of their people who are still missing.
The ethnic con ict between the valley-based Meitei people and the hillsbased Kuki-Zo tribal communities began on May 3, 2023 amid rising tensions over an order of the Manipur High Court, which directed
Kthe State government to consider the inclusion of the Meiteis on the Scheduled Tribes list.
In the one year since, over 220 people have been killed in the con ict, thousands of people injured, and tens of thousands displaced, many of them living in relief camps within the State and outside.
The ITLF, Churachandpur on Wednesday issued a public appeal calling for a district-wide shutdown on Friday.
The ITLF Committee, which issued the appeal, said, “As part of this solemn occasion, we urge all members of the Kuki-Zo community to hoist a black
ag on every household as a mark of remembrance and solidarity. Additionally all business establishments, institutions, and markets are requested to remain closed on this day as a sign of respect and homage to our fallen heroes.”
“Let us come together as one community to re
ect on our journey, reafrm our oneness, and strengthen our resolve towards a brighter future for the Kuki-Zo people,” it added.
Leaders of Kuki-Zo civil society organisations in Kangpokpi district told The Hindu that a similar shutdown might be observed across the district on Friday. “There will be an event to honour our fallen at the Martyrs’ Cemetery in Phaijang and later in the evening we will be lighting candles for them as well,” Janghoulun Haokip, of the KIM in Kangpokpi, said.
In Churachandpur too, the ITLF has planned a remembrance event to be held at the “Wall of Remembrance” near the DC Oce in the district.
The KIM has also passed a resolution to mark May 3 as the “Kuki-Zo Awakening Day”.
“It will be remembered as a day of great awakening for the Kuki-Zo people from the ruins of the systemic persecution and oppression of our people under the Manipur State government towards revolutionary transformation of our land and our society,” the KIM in Churachandpur had said in a public appeal issued last week.
Dhananjay Singh, assistant media coordinator for the COCOMI in the Imphal Valley, said that an event would be held at Shumang Lila Sanglen in Imphal East, where an appeal will be made to track down the over 35 Meitei people who are reported to have gone missing in the course of the con ict.