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Manipur hills simmer with tension as tribals resent bills (News Analysis)
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By Aroonim Bhuyan
New Delhi, Sep 21
The hills of Manipur
continue to simmer with tension ever since the state assembly, in a
specially convened session on August 31, passed three controversial
bills ostensibly to protect the rights of the indigenous people in the
state.
The passing of the Protection of Manipur People Bill, the
Manipur Land Revenue and Land Reforms Bill (Seventh Amendment), and the
Manipur Shops and Establishments (Second Amendment) Bill was the
culmination of months-long mass agitation by people living in the valley
districts of the north-eastern state.
They demanded an inner
line permit (ILP) system similar to the ones in force in Arunachal
Pradesh, Mizoram and Nagaland to be int roduced in Manipur..
That
very day, the hills of Manipur erupted in flames - literally - with
protesters, mainly comprising tribal organisations, torching five houses
belonging to Congress lawmakers, including those of state Health and
Family Welfare Minister Phungzathang Tonsing and Outer Manipur Lok Sabha
member Thangso Baite.
The violence and resultant police action left at least nine people dead.
According
to people living in the hills of Manipur, the three bills will directly
undermine the existing safeguards for the tribal hill areas regarding
land ownership and population influx as the primary threat for the
tribal people comes not from outside the state but from the Meitei
people living in the valley itself.
Of Manipur's total area of
22,327 sq km, the valley covers 2,238 sq km while the hills cover the
remaining 20,089 sq km. Of the nine districts in the state, five are
spread across the hills.
"Manipur emerged as a political entity
only in 1891 with the British invasion," Lakpachui Siro, spokesperson of
the Manipur Tribals Forum (MTF), Delhi, told IANS here.
"They
made Imphal the administrative headquarters and gradually brought the
hills under them without the people's knowledge or consent," he said.
A
main grouse of the hill people is that the Protection of Manipur People
Bill has made the 1951 National Registry of Citizens (NRC) as the
cut-off year for deciding on native and non-native people of Manipur.
"This
will create a lot of complications as many people in the villages in
the hills are still not registered in the NRC," Siro said.
"It
will make it difficult for relatives of Nagas of the Manipur hills to
come to Manipur from Nagaland. Similarly, Kukis are spread over various
parts of the northeast," he pointed out.
According to Siro, many villages in the hills are cut off from the Manipur government.
"Only
central government schemes have reached these far-flung areas while
there is hardly any state government footprints," he said, adding that
is why the people living in the hills want an administration separate
from the state government.
As the debate rages on, the hills
continue to simmer with tension. On Friday, a torchlight procession by
women filled up an entire football field in Churachandpur while on
Saturday, protesters formed a 12-km-long human chain to the hospital
where the bodies of the nine victims of the violence are still lying.
The protesters have refused to take the bodies, pending the Centre's intervention.
"The
hospital does not have freezer facilities and this is creating a huge
problem," said Romeo Hmar, convenor of the MTF, Delhi.
"We need the central government to initiate a dialogue so that a permanent political solution could be found."
Hmar
said though memoranda have been submitted to top central officials,
including the prime minister and the union home minister, "we are yet to
hear from the Centre".
"We heard that the home minister has
directed the home secretary to send a team of observers to Churachandpur
but we don't know when or who will go," he said.
According to
Hmar, with authorities stopping the mainly valley-based media from
covering the situation in Churachandpur, the real story of the people in
the hills has not been heard by the mainstream media at the national
level.
"The Centre should ask how long the Manipur government will continue to subdue the voice of the hills," he said.
"The
Manipur Tribals Forum will do whatever it takes to fulfill our
political objective - total separation from Manipur government
administration," he added.
Observers feel the current stalemate has been caused because people in the hills and valleys have not held talks directly.
"Neither
the people in the valley nor the hills reached out to each other and
tried to understand each other on the matter," senior journalist Pradip
Phanjoubma wrote in an article.
According to him, even now it is not too late.
"The
Manipur government must initiate the process to find out what exactly
are the objections of the hill people to the three bills and prepare for
further amendments," Phanjoubma stated.
With the bills now being
forwarded by the Manipur governor to the president for assent, only
time will tell how the problem can be resolved.
(Aroonim Bhuyan can be contacted at [email protected].)