Hill-valley divide: Protest to highlight Manipur situation.

Centre wakes up to Manipur bills issue; tribal ministry seeks report

Three bills directly undermine existing safeguards for tribal hill areas

Agency Report | New Delhi | 14 April, 2016 | 11:30 PM

The Centre has finally intervened in the controversy arising out of three bills passed by the Manipur state assembly in August last year that resulted in violence and the death of nine youths in the hills of the northeastern state.

However, it is not the union home ministry, but the tribal welfare ministry that has written to Manipur’s social welfare department seeking information and action taken in the aftermath of the passing of the bills.

After the union tribal welfare ministry sent a letter on March 17, the state’s social welfare department asked the home department for information “since the action is related to your department”.

The official letter from the social welfare department to the state home department was dated April 4.

Ostensibly to safeguard the rights of the indigenous people, the Manipur government, bowing to pressure from agitators from the state’s valley, convened a special session of the assembly on August 31 last year and passed three controversial bills — 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.

The very day the bills were passed, protestors, mainly comprising tribal organisations, torched five houses belonging to Congress legislators. Among them were the dwellings of Health and Family Welfare Minister Phungzathang Tonsing and Lok Sabha member from Outer Manipur Thangso Baite in Churachandpur district.

The violence and resultant police action left at least nine people dead.

The nine bodies are still lying in a Churachandpur hospital mortuary with the families refusing to bury them till the hill peoples’ demands are met.

The state government had passed the bills after a three-month-long agitation spearheaded by the Joint Committee on Inner Line Permit System (JCILPS) demanding the enforcement of an inner line permit system similar to those in force in Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, and Nagaland to check the influx of non-Manipuris into the state.

The JCILPS says that according to the 2011 census, Manipur’s population is 2.7 million. Of this, only 1.7 million are indigenous people while the rest are people who have their roots outside the state.

However, according to the tribes inhabiting the hills of Manipur, the three bills would directly undermine the existing safeguards for the tribal hill areas regarding land ownership and population influx, as the primary threat for the tribal people came not from outside the state but from the Meitei people of the valley itself.

Given that the hills of Manipur are inhabited by Nagas and Kukis among other tribes, Nagaland’s lone MP Neiphio Rio in December pointed out in the Lok Sabha the anomaly in passing the bills saying these were passed without proper consultations with tribal leaders and elected members of the autonomous district council according to norms.

Rio sought the intervention of the central government in this context.

Rajya Sabha member Tarun Vijay also took up the issue in Parliament stating that the agitating tribal people were the children of India.

The union tribal welfare ministry’s letter was dispatched to the Manipur government following the interventions of these two MPs as the social welfare department’s letter to the home department showed.

On the 227th day of an ongoing protest by the Manipur Tribals Forum Delhi (MTFD) in New Delhi on Thursday, April 14, its convenor Romeo Hmar expressed disappointment at what he called the Centre’s reluctance to act.

“The tribal people of Manipur fail to understand the reluctance of the central government in upholding Article 371C of the Constitution,” Hmar said.

“The tribal people of Manipur are the only tribal people in the northeast who are not protected under the Sixth Schedule,” he added. (IANS)