High security in India’s Manipur on anniversary of ethnic clashes

By Reuters
May 04, 2024
Smoke billows from a vehicle allegedly burned by the Meitei community tribals protesting to demand inclusion under the Scheduled Tribe category, in Imphal the capital of India's Manipur state.—AFP

GUWAHATI: Security forces were on heightened alert in India’s troubled northeastern state of Manipur on Friday, the first anniversary of the start of clashes between the majority Meitei community and tribal Kukis that have killed at least 220 people.

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The remote state bordering Myanmar has been hit by violence since May 3 last year after a court ordered the state government to consider extending special economic benefits and quotas in government jobs and education enjoyed by the Kukis to the majority Meiteis as well.

Although much of the violence was put down within days, sporadic clashes, gun battles and bomb attacks have continued in the state of 3.2 million people.

The region has become divided into a valley controlled by Meiteis and the Kuki-dominated hills, separated by a stretch of no-man’s land monitored by federal paramilitary forces, with some 60,000 displaced people living in relief camps.

“Elaborate preventive measures are in place,” a top state police officer said, without giving details about security measures in a state where thousands of extra troops and federal police have been sent in the last year.

The Kuki Inpi Manipur, the apex body of the Kukis, said it will observe May 3 as “Kuki-Zo Awakening Day”, or a day for “introspection” and “self-realisation”.

The Kuki-dominated hill districts will hold mass prayers in the morning at churches followed by meetings to commemorate those who lost their lives during the past year.

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