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Four militants held in Manipur, 26 firearms recovered in separate ops

Four militants held in Manipur, 26 firearms recovered in separate ops

Security forces arrested five people, including four militants belonging to three banned outfits, from several districts of Manipur for their alleged involvement in extortion activities, police said on Thursday.
All the arrests were made on Wednesday.
During a frisking and checking exercise at Ngaikhong Khunou check point in Bishnupur district, an active cadre of the proscribed Peoples' Liberation Army and his associate, who is not a member of the organisation, were apprehended for allegedly being involved in extortion activities, an officer said.
They were accused of demanding money from contractors, businessmen and the general public in Imphal and Bishnupur districts, he said.
One member of the banned Kangleipak Communist Party (PWG) was arrested from Heirol Part 2 in Thoubal district for his alleged role in extortion, threatening people and recruiting cadres for the outfit, the officer said.
One active cadre of the outlawed Prepak (Pro) was apprehended from his residential locality at Taothong Khunou in Imphal West district. He was also involved in "extortion" activities, the police said.
Another member of the banned KCP (PWG) was arrested from Kairang Chingya in Imphal East district, the officer said.
Meanwhile, security forces recovered 26 firearms, nine explosives and other ammunition during separate operations in Churachandpur and Thoubal districts on Wednesday, another police officer said.
Security forces have been conducting search operations in Manipur since ethnic violence broke out two years ago.
More than 260 people have been killed and thousands rendered homeless in ethnic violence between Meiteis and Kuki-Zo groups since May 2023.
The Centre had on February 13 imposed the President's rule in Manipur after Chief Minister N Biren Singh resigned.
The state assembly, which has a tenure till 2027, has been put under suspended animation.
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Farming under the shadow of guns in Manipur's ‘buffer zone'
Farming under the shadow of guns in Manipur's ‘buffer zone'

The Hindu

time6 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Farming under the shadow of guns in Manipur's ‘buffer zone'

Khoirentak Khuman, about 48 km south of Manipur's capital, Imphal, has been an island of uneasy peace in a sea of bloodshed. This village of about 100 Kom tribal families is situated in what has come to be known as the 'buffer zone' — a strip of farmland of varying width separating the Meitei-dominated Imphal Valley, measuring approximately 1,864 sq km, from the surrounding hills inhabited by the Kuki-Zo people — since the ethnic conflict between the two communities broke out on May 3, 2023, eventually leaving more than 250 people dead. Khoirentak Khuman, located near the village of Kangathei, which is home to Olympic medallist and six-time world boxing champion M.C. Mary Kom, also reflects the administrative dichotomy in Manipur. It is geographically situated in Churachandpur district, a Kuki-Zo domain, but is a revenue village under the Moirang subdivision of Bishnupur district in the Imphal Valley. The village of the Koms and a few hamlets of the Rongmei Nagas, such as Houtak, located to the north, are situated along an alignment near the middle of a three-tier security set-up in the buffer zone. The midline is manned by personnel of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) from makeshift 'points' or bunkers, mostly on alleys of abandoned or partially tilled paddy fields. Flanking the CRPF line of defence, at least 500 metres away, are the watch points of the Border Security Force (BSF), strategically spaced out on a pathway along a 'high canal', an irrigation channel on the edge of the buffer zone in Bishnupur district. The BSF personnel are similarly stationed on the other edge of the buffer zone in Churachandpur district. Their duty, apart from ensuring calm, is to maintain a register, noting down the particulars of every person moving in and out of the tense zone. Deeper into the Meitei-inhabited plains are checkpoints or bunkers manned by personnel of the Army and the paramilitary force, Assam Rifles, who monitor the overall security scenario 24x7. There is similar deployment of the armed forces in the lower hills from where the Kuki-Zo area starts. Although the Bishnupur district administration, in a letter to the Army's 59 Mountain Brigade on May 26 this year, sought 'area domination at the foothills or peripheral areas' to let farmers of 24 villages under four police stations cultivate their lands up to a specified extent, few Meitei villagers dared to make it past the first security barrier until the latter half of June, when the BSF replaced the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) to take charge of the bunkers along the high canal on June 22. This was three days after two masked gunmen shot at and injured a 60-year-old farmer of Phubala village in the left arm as he was tending to his paddy field in the afternoon of July 19. Phubala is about 5 km north of Khoirentak Khuman, which faces the Meitei village of Thamnapokpi beyond the BSF's line of defence. The scenario has been similar for the Kuki-Zo people beyond the BSF barrier along the foothills. 'The situation since May 2023 did affect us, but as a community neutral to the conflict, we did not face much of a problem despite being in the buffer zone. We could engage in farming throughout the conflict, but our Meitei neighbours could not. The situation seems to have improved over the past few weeks under security cover, but we are tired of registering our details at the checkpoints every time we need to move in and out of the militarised zone. The security forces do not let us pass their posts unless we carry our Aadhaar card or any other acceptable identity card,' says Rex Kom, a resident of Khoirentak Khuman. Thamnapokpi's Moirangthem Muton, deputy chief of the Ngangkhalawai gram panchayat, says the villagers are 'unfortunate' to own lands in the 'firing zone' and have not been able to cultivate crops for more than two years. 'We regained confidence after the State government sought protection from the Central forces for us to work in our fields as close to the foothills during the ongoing kharif season, but the June 19 incident brought back the fear of being attacked anytime. The recent official notification for cultivating as much of the farmland that we were forced to abandon in 2023 is not reflected on the ground. In the case of Thamnapokpi, the government sought cultivation up to the high canal (from the 'low canal', another irrigation channel, about 1 km deeper into the Meitei area) in one stretch, and 300 metres above the high canal in another. However, we have not been able to go beyond 100 metres from the high canal,' he says. Thamnapokpi and Khoirentak Khuman are 40 km from Manipur's capital, Imphal, and 20 km from Churachandpur town, the two epicentres of the ethnic conflict. Fields left fallow According to the State Agriculture Department, more than 2 lakh farmers cultivate paddy on 1.95 lakh hectares out of the net cultivable area of 2.34 lakh hectares. In October 2023, a farmers' body, Loumee Shinmee Apunba Lup, estimated that crops on 9,719 hectares on the periphery of Imphal Valley could be lost as cultivators were afraid of tending to their fields because of sporadic firing by miscreants from the hills. It estimated the total loss of income for paddy farmers — rice accounts for 93.36% of the total agricultural and allied activities — at ₹211.41 crore. Towards the end of 2023, the Ministry of Home Affairs provided a relief package of ₹38.06 crore for crop losses on 5,127.08 hectares of agricultural land. 'The compensation was just a fraction of what the farmers on the fringes of Imphal Valley lost. After over two years, they are unable to access their farmlands in the so-called buffer zone, where conditions are worse than that in the no man's land between two warring countries,' Laishram Kiranjit, co-convenor of COCOMI Farmers' Wing (CFW), says. COCOMI expands to the Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity, an umbrella body of valley-based social groups. The CFW, in coordination with government officials at the grassroots level, studied the impact of the conflict on paddy farmers of the valley, which comprises five districts. About 9,720 hectares could not be cultivated in 2023, leading to a rice production shortfall of 32,263.76 metric tonnes. The non-cultivated area decreased to 7,084.586 hectares in 2024, but increased to 7,290.406 hectares before the kharif season started in May this year. The survey also revealed that the volatile situation forced 62 villages on the fringes of the valley to leave 3,973 hectares fallow. Bishnupur was found to be the worst-affected district with 5,288 hectares of farmland, constituting 54.4% of its total land area, left uncultivated in 2023. An attempt by the district administration to resume farming on the fringes saw 1,419.794 hectares being reclaimed in 2024, but a few farmers sustained injuries from bullets fired by suspected Kuki extremists, who had signed an agreement with the Centre in 2008 to suspend operations. 'Kuki militants blocked major irrigation channels and disrupted the water supply in the conflict zone. Dams and canals were deliberately cut off or made inaccessible, particularly affecting fields in Bishnupur and Imphal West districts. This led to crop failure, soil erosion, and abandonment of seasonal cultivation, affecting up to 45,000 farming families across Manipur's foothill regions,' the CFW report states. The Manipur government, however, indicated that the situation has been changing for the better since President's Rule was imposed on February 13 this year. Former Chief Secretary Prashant Kumar Singh said on July 4 that adequate arrangements have been made for uninterrupted farming activities. He said it was a 'good sign that both sides (Meitei and Kuki-Zo) are farming together within an eyeball-to-eyeball distance and sharing water'. He also appealed to all civil society organisations to not let 'one odd incident here and there' roughen the path to peace. A senior officer of Assam Rifles, declining to be named, corroborated the former Chief Secretary's claim. 'Meitei and Kuki farmers are engaged in cultivation side by side, separated by alleys, focused on growing crops for their needs and commerce. This is happening in the Keithelmanbi area (Imphal West district, bordering the Kuki-dominated Kangpokpi district). Unlike a year or two ago, the hill dwellers are no longer blocking or diverting natural channels or streams flowing to the valley. The conflict and the resultant tension have made the people weary of confronting each other; they want to get on with their normal lives now,' the officer said. A Kuki farmer in the Kangpokpi district, identifying himself as Samuel, said the increased security cover has made him more at ease this year, but the fear that something or the other might happen lurks in the mind. 'Things can go wrong if the government decides to withdraw the security forces from the buffer zone,' he says. Things did go wrong for Phubala's Ningthoujam Brojen in broad daylight on June 19. Two gunmen, 'dressed like farmers', came down from the hills and shot him about 15 metres from a bunker of the SSB in the afternoon. 'It was alarming how these assailants breached the security barriers and unfortunate that the SSB jawans did not try to shoot or capture them after the attack on my field, which is not even in the buffer zone. If this can happen to me, imagine what can happen to fellow farmers who have fields in the buffer zone,' he says. In the Phubala area, this zone is about 10 km long and 1.5 km wide. Brojen's neighbour, M. Ramesh Singh, is among those worst hit by the conflict. His paddy field stretches from the high canal to the base of the Churachandpur hills. 'The permission to cultivate up to 300 metres of my land from the high canal is a relief, but the CRPF lets us work on our fields only up to 1 p.m. This may not serve the purpose as the growth of the paddy needs monitoring for a longer period during the day,' he says. Grappling with losses At Naranseina, south of Phubala, the villagers are yet to be allowed to cultivate beyond the high canal. One of the reasons is the sensitivity of the place. Kuki extremists allegedly killed two CRPF personnel at Naranseina in April 2024, and the National Investigation Agency arrested a member of the Kuki National Front (Military Council) in connection with the incident six months later. Of the 47 hectares the villagers have not been able to cultivate, 30 are allegedly in possession of the Kuki-Zo people. 'It is heartbreaking to see the Kukis cultivate our ancestral farmlands we have been kept out of. All this security is meaningless if we cannot access our lands and do odd jobs to sustain our families,' Laishram Surjit says. He has almost given up on his two-hectare land, as have Laishram Gourabidhu, Narengbam Nobin, Hijam Memi Devi, Moirangthem Ibohal, and Meisnam Ipi, who own a total of six hectares in the buffer zone. Another villager, Salam Jotin, who was shot in the shoulder during a bid to till his land in September 2023, earns a living by driving an e-rickshaw in Moirang town, about 5 km away. 'Apart from being unable to carry out farming, we have lost cattle let out to graze. More than 30 cows disappeared from the fields beyond the high canal. Who took them is anybody's guess,' Naranseina's Oinam Basanta says. Thamnapokpi's Pukhrambam Dhamu has a similar complaint. In June 2023, miscreants killed a couple of his cows and blew off the lower jaw of another with a powerful firearm. Further south, Ngangkhalawai presents a grimmer picture. The villagers here are allowed to cultivate up to an Army post, which is almost 1 km off the buffer zone. 'About 270 out of the 400 families in our village have 300 hectares of farmland in the buffer zone. These have been captured by the Kukis, most of them new to the area, and all we can do is watch them cultivate from afar,' Moirangthem Brojen, the village chief, says. The Indigenous Tribal Leaders' Forum, which has been the voice of the Kuki-Zo people during the conflict, chose not to react to the allegations that the Kukis have taken over the lands of the Meitei or targeted their cattle. 'It is not in our jurisdiction to comment,' a leader of the organisation says. Road to recovery The long-drawn ethnic conflict displaced about 62,000 people, a majority of them Kuki-Zos from the Imphal Valley. Official records state that about 8,000 of the displaced people are Meiteis from the fringes of the valley, who abandoned their homes after raids from the hills. A cluster of such abandoned houses at Thamnapokpi, now used as a BSF camp, belongs to three siblings — Trongbam Ketuki, Trongbam Hemanta, and Mairengbam Vyjayanti and her husband Mairengbam Raja. They took refuge in a relief camp less than 5 km away after the violence broke out. Ketuki was a resident of Christian Kanan Veng in Churachandpur district's Saikot. He and his siblings relocated to Thamnapokpi in 2020, five years after the demand for the implementation of the Inner Line Permit — a temporary travel document for non-resident Indians entering frontier States in the north-east — caused friction, albeit low-key, between the Kuki and Meitei communities. 'Our houses are at least in safe hands, unlike those of many farmers displaced from the fringe areas. The government can set things right if it wants to, so that we can return to our houses and not be relocated again to the prefabricated houses the government is building for us. It is painful to stay away from the houses we have built with our blood and sweat,' he says. The Manipur Police Housing Corporation Limited is constructing 356 prefabricated units in Bishnupur district, each measuring 20x20 feet and worth ₹9.3 lakh. A total of 183 units are being constructed at Phubala, not far from where Ketuki has taken refuge with his family. 'The government can easily help us reclaim our lands by pushing security posts and bunkers to the foothills. Instead of several lines of defence, multiple security forces can take up positions along the foothills closer to each other so that assailants cannot slip through as they did on June 19 to shoot at one of us,' Ramesh Singh says. The CFW has urged the governments in the State and at the Centre to quickly restore normalcy in Manipur as the future of agriculture in the Imphal Valley depends on swift and sincere efforts to protect, support, and compensate farmers. 'If we cannot get back our lands, so be it. Let us farm and let them [Kukis] farm too. The fighting has cost us a fortune; we have to salvage what is left,' Muton says. Edited by Vishal Mathew

Working with rival groups dangerous: NSCN(I-M) on 10 years of peace pact
Working with rival groups dangerous: NSCN(I-M) on 10 years of peace pact

The Hindu

time11 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Working with rival groups dangerous: NSCN(I-M) on 10 years of peace pact

The National Socialist Council of Nagalim, also called the NSCN (Isak-Muivah) or NSCN (I-M), said working with the Working Committee of the Naga National Political Groups (NNPG) to find 'common ground for Naga political solution' was a dangerous proposition. The NNPG is a conglomerate of at least six Naga extremist groups opposed to the NSCN (I-M). The Centre signed the Agreed Position with the former in 2017, two years after the Framework Agreement (FA) was inked with the latter on August 3, 2015. Don't dump Kuki extremists in Naga areas, NSCN (I-M) tells BSF Q. Tuccu, the chairman of the NSCN (I-M), said the significance of the 'historic' FA lies in the government of India's recognition of the sovereign rights of the Nagas. He said the political importance of the FA defines the road to the final draft of the Naga political solution. '...we are going to give up what has been achieved... to reclaim our rightful place with sovereign right as a nation. Though the government of India is going slow under various pretexts, we have waited with our enduring commitment to stand by FA overcoming numerous challenges,' he said in a speech marking the 10th anniversary of the FA. Nagaland extremist groups to form task force to check illegal immigration amid Assam eviction drive Mr. Tuccu said the Nagas should accept their bounden duty to defend the sanctity of the FA at any cost. 'This FA symbolically acknowledged the existence of the Naga nation as testified by the recognition of the unique history of the Nagas by the Government of India on July 11, 2002, during the Indo-Naga political talks that took place in Amsterdam,' he said. Division within The NSCN (I-M) chairman said the Nagas were at the crossroads today because of divisive politics within. Calling for unity and reconciliation to achieve the common goal, he, however, said working with the NNPG was a dangerous proposition for the NSCN (I-M). He claimed that the NNPG was created by the Government of India to counterweight the bonafide leadership of the NSCN (I-M) for the Naga political solution and signed the 'deceitful' Agreed Position with them. Mr. Tuccu explained why the NSCN (I-M) cannot imagine finding common ground with the NNPGs, which the Government of India controls to propagate a political solution under the Constitution of India and undermine the rights of the Naga nation. 'Thus, Framework Agreement and Agreed Position are poles apart and we see no meeting point whatsoever,' he said, insisting that such 'treacherous' and divisive elements have been trying to make the Nagas settle for a political solution under the Constitution of India. 'Nagas shall be found wanting if we fail to defend the God-given national identity as testified before the world with the signing of the FA... Let us be serious and watchful as divisive elements are roaming around to undo the FA and thereby destroy the history of the Nagas altogether,' he said. 'We still have a long way to go before we convert the FA into something practical and not just as a political document and continue working on the competency to make sense of our responsibility for the agreement we have signed with much fanfare,' he said. 'After having given tireless efforts spanning several decades at the cost of blood, sweat, and tears, we cannot afford to waver but pledge allegiance to the FA,' Mr. Tuccu said, warning of 'other options' to 'keep holding our nerves' to protect the Naga history.

Kuki Students Ask Manipur Governor To Open State Civil Service Exam Centre In Churachandpur
Kuki Students Ask Manipur Governor To Open State Civil Service Exam Centre In Churachandpur

NDTV

timea day ago

  • NDTV

Kuki Students Ask Manipur Governor To Open State Civil Service Exam Centre In Churachandpur

Imphal: State civil service aspirants in Manipur's Churachandpur district have requested Governor AK Bhalla to hold the Manipur Public Service Commission (MPSC) mains exam in the southern hill district too, considering the situation in the state where members of the Meitei community and the Kuki tribes are unable to visit each other's areas with safety guarantees. An MPSC notification on July 11 said the mains exam will be held in two centres - state capital Imphal, and Guwahati in neighbouring Assam. "...However, this arrangement imposes undue physical, psychological, and financial hardship on aspirants from the Kuki community. So, we earnestly request your kind intervention to facilitate the conduct of the mains examination in Churachandpur district," the Kuki Students Organisation (KSO) said in a letter to Mr Bhalla. The KSO said holding the exam in Churachandpur will ensure inclusivity and equal opportunity for all aspirants, while also addressing the logistical and psychological challenges posed by long-distance travel. Several national-level exams such as UGC-NET, NEET, Agniveer, SSC, and banking services have been "successfully and smoothly conducted in Churachandpur in recent times", the KSO said, adding they are confident the state-level MPSC exams can also be conducted in the district efficiently in the same conducive environment. "Your timely and compassionate intervention will not only ensure fairness and justice for all aspirants but will also go a long way in restoring trust in the democratic institutions of the state. It will reaffirm the commitment that no deserving youth is left behind due to circumstances beyond their control," the KSO said. The Kuki tribes have refrained from going toward the valley area where the airport is located, citing security concerns. The better paved National Highway also passes through the valley to the east in central Manipur and goes toward Nagaland and Assam. To get out of Churachandpur, the Kuki tribes have been taking National Highway 102B - known for its bad patches and large potholes - that goes to Mizoram's capital Aizawl to the west. Aizawl has an airport. Members of the Meitei community can only take flights out of Imphal as all the highways pass through Kuki settlements. The Kuki tribes say they will not allow Meiteis to pass through their areas until their demand for a separate administration is met. A civil service aspirant in Churachandpur told NDTV it would be helpful if the MPSC mains exam can also be held in her district. Going to Guwahati will take a minimum of three days, and not every candidate has barely enough to survive, let alone travel, she said. "If the exam centre is in Guwahati, we have to be ready more than a week in advance to prepare for travel. We will waste many days on the road. It will be physically and financially draining," the civil service aspirant said, requesting anonymity.

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