Manipur: The Forgotten Fire India Refuses to Douse
đ„ A State on Fire â And No One Wants to Talk About It
For decades, Manipur has been a land soaked in tension, fear, and forgotten pain. Bordering Myanmar, this little northeastern state has been in the newsâbut only when things get bloody. Rapes. Killings. Ethnic cleansing. Internet shutdowns. And an eerily consistent absence of national outrage.
The Indian governmentâacross all regimes, including Modiâsâhas mostly done what it does best with the Northeast: ignore, deny, delay, and divert.
So, whatâs really going on in Manipur? Why does it burn so often? Why does no one want to fix it?
Letâs strip away the fake headlines and get to the naked truth.
âïž The Real History Behind the Violence
Manipur isnât just another state. Itâs a former kingdom. Yes, Manipur was an independent princely state that merged with India in 1949 under controversial circumstances. Many Manipuris still call it an annexation, not an integration.
And thatâs where the resentment began.
đ„ The Deep Divide â Meiteis vs. Kukis vs. Nagas
Manipur has three dominant ethnic groups:
- Meiteis â Mostly Hindu, live in the Imphal Valley (the urban, politically powerful center).
- Kukis â Christian tribals living in the hills; feel alienated and discriminated against.
- Nagas â Also Christian tribals, with overlapping identity issues with Nagaland.
These groups have different religions, languages, culturesâand political aspirations.
And they donât get along.
India drew lines on the map. But people drew blood on the land.
đ„ Why the Riots Keep Happening
1. Land and Tribe Politics
Only the hill tribes (Kukis & Nagas) can own land in the hills. Meiteis canât.
But Meiteis dominate the state government. And they want Scheduled Tribe (ST) status so they can also buy land in the hillsâseen by Kukis as an attempted land grab.
In 2023, the High Court supported this ST demand for Meiteis.
That triggered a violent backlash from Kuki groups. Tribal protests turned into ethnic violence. Villages were torched. Women were paraded naked. People were killed.
2. Drugs and the Myanmar Border
Manipur borders Myanmar, which is a hotbed for narco trade.
The Kuki-Chin tribes have familial ties across the Myanmar border. Some Kuki leaders are accused of allowing poppy cultivation and being involved in drug trafficking.
Meiteis accuse Kukis of turning Manipur into a drug corridor.
Kukis, in return, accuse the Meitei-led state government of racial profiling and using anti-drug campaigns to target them.
3. Militancy, Insurgency, and Armed Factions
Manipur has over 40 armed insurgent groups. Many of them are:
- Funded by extortion
- Linked to drug trade
- Sometimes supported by politicians during elections
- Protected under AFSPA (Armed Forces Special Powers Act)
No riot survives without political oxygen. In Manipur, the fire is state-sponsored.
đ€ Why India (Still) Doesnât Solve It
đ§č 1. Because Itâs Convenient to Ignore
New Delhi treats the Northeast like a distant relative: send money, send troops, but never attention. The region contributes little to national votesâso itâs politically irrelevant for Delhi.
đ§š 2. Because the Conflict Is âUsefulâ
When communities fight each other, they donât fight the system. Politicians use the divide to win elections by blaming one group and pleasing another.
Remember:
- Meitei groups accuse the Centre of backing Kukis.
- Kuki leaders say BJP supports Meitei domination.
Everyone plays the victim, while the common people suffer.
đȘ 3. Because the Army Is Caught in a Mess
AFSPA allows the Indian army to act with near-impunity in âdisturbedâ areas.
Manipur is one such area.
But here’s the truth: AFSPA protects the army, not the people. Itâs been misused, creating more mistrust between locals and the Indian state.
đ” Internet Shutdowns = Information Blackouts
Every time the situation escalates, the first thing the state government does?
Kill the internet.
For weeks, sometimes months.
No tweets. No WhatsApp. No media.
When the truth is ugly, they cut the lights.
đ Whatâs the Situation Now (As of 2025)?
- More than 200 people have died since May 2023.
- Over 70,000 people displaced.
- Villages segregated by ethnicity. Complete ghettoization.
- Armed militias rule many areasânot the police.
- State CM Biren Singh still in power despite serious allegations of bias.
- A permanent military presence in civil zones.
This is not peace. This is cold ethnic war.
đ§ Whatâs the Way Forward?
India must do what it has avoided for decades:
- Acknowledge the history of forced annexation
- Convene neutral peace talks between all communities
- Strip politics out of the conflict
- Ensure land and identity protection for all sides
- End selective internet blackouts
- Set up a truth commission to uncover the real culprits of past violence
But letâs not kid ourselves. Unless there’s public outrage, the Centre will continue washing its hands of Manipur.
â ïž The Naked Truth
Manipur is Indiaâs ethnic time bomb.
It isnât just a Northeast problem. Itâs a test of India’s federalism, secularism, and soul.
And right now, India is failing that testâwith full marks.
â Final Words for Nishani.in Readers
Dear reader, truth dies in silence. If we donât speak up for Manipur today, tomorrow it could be Kashmir. Or Punjab. Or Assam. Or your home.
You donât need to be a politician to care. You just need to be human.



