
NEW DELHI, Mar 18 (IPS) – For Kikim*, it was the ides of Might, as a substitute of March, that was, in a single sense, her undoing. She was trying ahead to welcoming her child, her first. However life took an surprising flip, and issues modified inside a break up second.
That night she was cooking soup when she noticed hordes of males strategy the village—some brandishing swords, others holding bottles of petrol and diesel. Kikim additionally smelled smoke.
Alarmed, she fled from the again door solely to search out her neighbors making an attempt to flee. They helped her leap onto a truck that was heading out. Kikim didn’t know the place, and she or he didn’t care. Her speedy concern—security.
Because the truck moved, she counted hours that appeared endless. The one query that stared everybody within the face was: Will we make it alive?
What added to the uncertainty was the arduous journey by a dense forest.
By means of meals, there was little or no. The ladies huddled within the truck and gave Kikim a portion of what that they had managed to deliver alongside. “You want it greater than we do,” they advised her.
Kikim feared that she would possibly ship in the course of a forest with no medical assist.
She really did within the early hours of the morning. The boys had been advised to maneuver away; the truck was transformed right into a makeshift supply ward, and items torn from the wraparound girls had been made right into a curtain of kinds for Kikim. When she heard the primary cry of her new child, she heaved a sigh of reduction.
Little did she know, that the ladies round her confronted one other problem: there was not sufficient water aside from a one-liter bottle. Their solely choice was to wipe the new child, sprinkling a number of drops everywhere in the frail physique.
Kikim’s is among the many circumstances which have unfolded in the course of the Manipur disaster that has engulfed the northeastern state of India for some two years.
The state has witnessed violent clashes between two communities, the Meiteis and the Kukis.
The current disaster stems from a suggestion from the state Excessive Court docket to grant Scheduled Tribe, or ST, standing, to the Meiteis. The controversial clause has since been modified. On February 24, 2025, the Manipur Excessive Court docket modified the March 27, 2023 order. It ordered the removing of a paragraph that had instructed the Manipur authorities to think about the inclusion of Meiteis within the checklist of Scheduled Tribes. It was the March 23, 2023 path that’s believed to have triggered the continuing ethnic battle between the Meiteis and the tribal Kuki-Zo communities within the State.
The Kukis protested as a result of they felt that the path would give the Meiteis heft over the hilly areas.
“They’d use cash energy to remove our land and seize our jobs too,” says Thangso (title modified). Because the battle, he carries a shotgun for defense.
The Kuki-Zo tribes are protected below the ST standing. It’s by this mechanism that the Indian authorities acknowledges traditionally marginalized tribal communities.
Roughly translated as “land of gems,” Manipur is essentially remoted from the remainder of India.
The bulk inhabitants, the Meiteis, are Hindus. They dwell in Imphal, the state capital.
The Kukis and Nagas are in a minority. Primarily Christians, they dwell within the hills.
The Indian Structure reserves land in Manipur’s hill districts. This particular provision prohibits the Meiteis from buying land within the hills and in addition restricts the migration of Meiteis and different teams into the hill districts.
Meiteis really feel that their exclusion from the ST standing is unfair.
In addition they rue the inflow of unlawful migrants, particularly from throughout the border in Myanmar.
Manipur has a porous worldwide border. Since civil struggle broke out in Myanmar, its nationals fled to Manipur. The army seized energy in that nation on February 1, 2021.
There are experiences of Kukis offering a secure haven to unlawful Chin migrants.
In Myanmar, Kukis are generally known as Chins.
If the Meiteis are apprehensive in regards to the “shifting demography,” the Kukis cost them with pushing a “majoritarian agenda.”
The fault traces are deep and the distrust full.
It might be incorrect to presume that the clashes between the 2 are a one-off. Removed from it.
Because the Sixties, militant teams have fanned the grievances of the Kukis and the Nagas, who’re preventing for a separate homeland. Pitch the battle towards the Meiteis, who’re decided to defend the state’s territorial integrity.
Had it not been for a graphic video of two tribal girls being stripped bare, occasions in Manipur might have gone unnoticed. The video went viral, sparking outrage not solely throughout India but in addition overseas.
Mary Beth Sanate of the Rural Girls Upliftment Society, advised IPS, “Girls are being charred, handled like objects, mob-lynched, and sexually assaulted. There’s a full breakdown of the system, and what we’re seeing is a mockery of their human rights.”
In response to a doc, “Crimes towards Kuki-Zo Girls by Meites,” there are harrowing accounts of violence towards girls.
The doc catalogues cases of Meitei extremists focusing on Kuki-Zo girls: “Kill her, rape her, burn her. Do to her what her folks did to our girls” is what Meitei girls reportedly advised a mob who had barged right into a nursing hostel in Imphal, quickly after the pogrom started two years in the past.
It might, subsequently, not be incorrect to see this disaster as one the place girls have performed a number of roles: each as victims and perpetrators of violence.
Consequently, what began as girls serving to girls quickly remodeled right into a women-versus-women form of state of affairs.
To elaborate on this, if girls had been saviors within the case of Kikim and helped her ship, there are sufficient cases the place group allegiance overtook gender affiliation.
“From girls defending girls, it quickly changed into girls focusing on girls. The love for one’s group overtook gender. As a substitute of defending one another, girls grew to become perpetrators of violence,” mentioned Nonibala from WinG, or Girls in Governance.
A instructor turned activist, Nonibala’s change from teachers to the social sector was in 2005. When she noticed Irom Chanu Sharmila on an indefinite quick, a guilt pang seized her: “I can’t keep hungry even for a day,” she mentioned. Her penance: “Empower girls.” Since then, there was no trying again.
The current battle, she advised IPS, has taken its toll on girls.
Vacillating between costs of being a protector and instigator, girls in Manipur are central to the theme of sexual violence and assaults.
There are allegations and counter-allegations, accusations and denials, however a continuing is the widespread worry and trauma.
Within the eye of a storm are the Meira Paibis.
Roughly translated as torchbearers, Meira Paibis are an ethnic women-led social motion, that rose to prominence in the course of the protest towards the Armed Forces (Particular Powers) Act, or AFSPA, that grants the army unparalleled energy.
If the Kukis model is something to go by, Meira Paibis are instigating among the rapes of ladies of the minority group.
A member of the Kuki Girls Group for Human Rights, who requested anonymity for worry of being focused, mentioned she knew a dozen girls had been raped after Meira Paibis handed them over to menfolk. “Girls abetting public rape and urging males to rape girls, is a nightmare,” she advised IPS.
This was substantiated by Momoi (title modified), who confirmed that one of many girls within the mob watched her being overwhelmed up by Meitei males.
On their half, Meira Paibis members refute this, claiming that ladies’s organizations don’t differentiate between a Kuki or a Meitei. “I’ve handed over 4 deserted kids, all Kukis, to the Police in Imphal,” Sujata Devi advised IPS, including that the “first offensive” is at all times from “the folks within the hills,” which means the Kukis.
Widespread as “voluntary moms,” Devi’s group, IMAGI MEIRA, has been on the forefront for the reason that disaster.
She has had a number of run-ins with the police, together with being below home arrest.
Caught within the crossfire are the likes of Thoibi and Memcha, who’ve misplaced buddies. “All our buddies abruptly see us as a Meitei. They’ve stopped speaking to us.”
This “transition” is a disturbing narrative that throws up the inherent tensions within the state. Worse nonetheless, girls pitched towards girls as contributors and perpetrators of violence is chilling.
Now, peace is a distant dream and the divide a actuality.
Is there a method ahead? Will the injuries be balmed? Will they ever heal? Or will they proceed to fester?
There aren’t any simple solutions or apparent options. At the least as of now.
*Names modified to guard the security of the ladies IPS spoke to.
IPS UN Bureau Report
Observe @IPSNewsUNBureau
Observe IPS Information UN Bureau on Instagram
© Inter Press Service (2025) — All Rights Reserved. Authentic supply: Inter Press Service