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India: popular agitation against army atrocities engulfs the
northeast state of Manipur
By Kranti Kumara
15 September 2004
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Since the middle of July, the small northeastern Indian state
of Manipur has been convulsed by popular protests demanding the
repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), an Indian
law that grants extraordinary coercive powers to the armed forces.
These powers include unrestricted and essentially unchallengeable
authority to arrest and kill people in carrying out their
duties.
Passed by parliament in 1958, the APSFA automatically comes
into force when the Indian Union government designates a territory
as a disturbed area. The state of Manipur was declared
disturbed in 1980, and during the subsequent quarter century,
Indian security forces have repeatedly committed human rights
violations and brutal atrocities.
Although the rage against the AFSPA and the Indian government
as a whole has been simmering for many years, the latest bout
of agitation was triggered by the vicious torture, rape and murder
of a 32-year-old woman, Thangjam Manorama, following her arrest
by a team of paramilitary Assam Rifles personnel. Around midnight
on July 10, a group of Assam Rifles soldiers burst into the home
of Manorama and dragged the sleeping victim to a veranda where
they proceeded to beat her mercilessly in front of her family.
The arrest was prompted by suspicion that Manorama belonged
to the banned Peoples Liberation Army, a nationalist insurgent
group that is seeking Manipurs secession from the Indian
union. The violent methods utilised in apprehending this young
lady are the standard modus operandi of the security personnel.
Mere suspicion of belonging to a banned organisation is sufficient
reason for security personnel to run rampant.
Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil was greeted with a 12-hour
general strike on his arrival at the state capital Imphal on September
5. The strike was called by the coordinating committee Apunba
Lup, which unites 32 womens, student and civic organisations,
and succeeded in largely shutting down Imphal and surrounding
areas.
Shortly after Manoramas murder, several women protested
naked in front of the headquarters of the Assam Rifles holding
up a banner displaying the words Indian Army, Rape Us.
Another young lady named Irom Sharmila began a fast unto death
in protest. She has been arrested and force-fed by the Indian
authorities.
On August 15, the 57th anniversary of Indias independence
from Britain, a 19-year-old student leader, Pebam Chittaranjan
Mangang, burned himself to death to dramatise, and demand an end
to, the suffering that the people of Manipur have endured under
the AFSPA. On August 17, a general strike called by Apunba Lup,
in response to Chittaranjans death, paralyzed Imphal.
The Indian ruling elite has reacted to this popular agitation
with a mixture of bewilderment and confusion. The state Chief
Minister, Congress leader Ibobi Singh, proposed that the AFSPA
be lifted in Imphal. However, he has also denounced Apunba Lup
as a front for extremists and ordered the arrest of several of
its leaders. The Congress-led United Progressive Alliance central
government recently did announce the lifting of the AFSPA in Manipurs
capital. But it has also threatened to impose Presidents
rule in Manipur, which would suspend the state legislature
and government and place Manipur under the direct administration
of the central government.
Elements of the Congress leadership in Manipur have denounced
Ibobi Singh for conciliating the opposition in a patent attempt
to destabilise his government. This could provide the requisite
reason for the ruling Congress coalition government at the center
to impose Presidents rule.
The Assam Rifles has refused to cooperate with an enquiry commissionset
up, in response to the protests, by the state governmentto
examine the circumstances surrounding the death of Manorama. The
accused Assam Rifles personnel have repeatedly ignored orders
to testify. So emboldened do they feel under the AFSPA that they
accuse the state government of not having obtained the necessary
permission from the central government to hold such an enquiry.
They even petitioned the Gauhati
(capital of Assam) High Court to issue a stay order against
the commission. Only after much wrangling were four soldiers who
took part in the arrest compelled to appear before the commission.
Meanwhile, the military high command has strongly objected
to the relaxing of the AFSPA in Manipur, claiming that it will
weaken the fight against extremists. Chief of Army
Staff N.C. Vij and other senior military officers are reported
to have told the Home Minister that the order lifting the AFSPA
in Imphal is compromising security. They also expressed concern
that the governments concession to the anti-AFSPA agitation
in Manipur could lead to similar movements elsewhere in the northeast
and in the troubled state of Jammu and Kashmir. According to the
Sept. 14 Hindu, Sources said that the Army officers
who made the presentation to [Home Minister] Patil indicated they
were simply forwarding their assessment of the situation and it
should not be read as an ultimatum of any sort.
Continuity of repression from British colonialists
to the Indian ruling elite
The main security force in Manipur is the Assam Rifles, a paramilitary
force that is subject to the administrative control of the Indian
Home ministry and the operational control of the Indian military.
It is the main enforcer of the AFSPA in northeast India. Created
by the British colonialist regime in the nineteenth century to
put down a rebellion of tribal peoples in the northeast, the Assam
Rifles have been greatly expanded since 1947 and now number 40
battalions.
The AFSPA is fashioned after the 1942 Armed Forces (Special
Powers) Ordinance passed by the British colonialists in their
bid to squash the Quit India movementa mass
agitation initiated by Mahatma Gandhi and the leadership of the
Indian National Congress, but which quickly went beyond the prescribed
limits of civil disobedience and became a quasi-insurrection in
many parts of India. The 1942 act granted special powers to commissioned
officers of the rank of Captain and above to issue, in writing,
shoot-to-kill order to soldiers under their command if, in their
opinion, the situation so required.
In 1955, the state of Assam passed an even more odious law
termed the Assam Disturbed Areas Act allegedly to combat an insurgency
in Nagaland, then part of Assam. Whereas the British act required
a written order from an officer holding at least the rank of Captain,
the Assam legislature granted these powers to an ordinary soldier
just above the rank of Sepoy (the lowest-ranked soldier in the
Indian army); while the 1942 act stipulated that the order be
written, no such requirement was contained in the Assam Disturbed
Area Act of 1955.
In 1958, the Indian parliament, under the stewardship of Prime
Minister Nehru, passed the AFSPA ostensibly to maintain internal
security. In six sections, this law uses similar wording
to the 1955 act passed by the Assam legislature. In 1990, the
Indian parliament passed legislation termed the Armed Forces (Jammu
and Kashmir) Special Powers Act extending these repressive powers
to the state of Jammu and Kashmir.
These acts have provided legal cover for the Indian armed forces
to act with impunity in attempting to crush various insurgencies.
Indeed, the violent and arbitrary violence of the security forces
have become one of the principal popular grievances fuelling secession
movements both in the northeast and in Jammu and Kashmir.
The United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) determined
that Section 4 of the AFSPA, which expressly grants the unrestricted
power to kill, is incompatible with three articles of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), ratified by India
in 1979. Many members of the commission expressed shock at the
existence of such legislation in India. But no government at the
Center, whether dominated by the Congress party or the Hindu-chauvinist
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) or made up of third parties,
has sought to repeal this odious legislation.
The strategic importance of the northeast to
Indias ruling elite
Northeast India currently comprises seven statesAssam,
Manipur, Nagaland, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Tripura and Arunachal Pradesh.
Nagaland, Mizoram and Tripura were all formed from areas carved
out of post-1947 Assam.
The pristine forests, mountains and valleys in this region
have given rise to the most varied ethno-cultural groups with
distinct cultural imprints. The northeast is also rich in minerals,
forest resources and biodiversity. The region receives high rainfall
from both the southwest and the returning northeast monsoon rains,
resulting in a lush flora and fauna with many unique medicinal
plants.
As a region, the northeast is demarcated by Indias international
boundaries with China, Myanmar (formerly Burma), Bhutan and Bangladesh,
and internally by the boundary between Assam and a very narrow
strip of northern West Bengal known as the chickens
neck. The 1947 communal partition of British India thus
further enhanced the regions relative isolation from the
rest of India and created new barriers to the free movement of
its many peoples, who historically have interacted with China,
southeast Asia and the Indian core, absorbing and in turn influencing
their respective cultural traditions.
Considered among the least developed of Indias regions,
the northeast is inhabited by both tribal and non-tribal people,
with the tribes generally inhabiting the mountainous regions and
the non-tribal people inhabiting the valleys.
Within the limits of the validity of ethnic classification,
three main ethnic groups can be distinguished in Manipur: the
Meitei, the Kuki and the Nagas. Historically, the Kukis and the
Nagas have inhabited the mountains and the forests, whereas the
Meitei are valley-dwellers. While the tribes communicate amongst
themselves in their own dialects, Meitei, is the official language
of the state and is spoken by a majority of its people.
Historically, one of the most distinguishing characteristic
of tribes is that they form local self-contained economic units.
Goods that are not indigenously produced are acquired from neighbouring
tribes through barter exchange. Though tribal economies in the
northeast previously displayed this characteristic, this is no
longer the case due to the penetration of capitalist relations
into the region, a process that began under British rule but which
has advanced rapidly since 1947. Today, the northeastern tribes
deal in cash and purchase many modern conveniences such as televisions.
The disruption of the economic base of tribal society under
conditions of growing economic insecurity and social inequality
has undoubtedly fuelled national-ethnic resentments and conflicts.
The rise to political prominence of the Hindu-chauvinist BJP since
the mid-1980s has also further exacerbated ethnic tensions, since
many of the tribal peoples in the northeast are Christians.
The varied natural resources of this region such as coal, forests,
minerals and petroleum are of great economic importance to the
Indian ruling elite. For example, Assam accounts for at least
15 percent of domestic petroleum and 50 percent of tea production.
The Indian ruling elite, largely ignorant of both the history
and cultures of the northeast, has treated the region with contempt.
The central government has allocated meagre resources to it in
successive five-year plans. The region is far less industrialised
than other parts of India and suffers widespread poverty and unemployment.
When the masses have attempted to protest, the Indian government
has reacted with military repression.
Manipur acquired statehood in 1972, but has been under martial
law since 1980. Many of the unemployed and student youth, having
no political outlet for their grievances, have become ready recruits
to the various insurgent groups, which advocate ethnic nationalism
and separatism as the solution to the inequities produced by the
rule of the Indian bourgeoisie.
Although many insurgent groups in Manipur identify with or
spring from a particular ethnic group, it would be incorrect to
characterise them along purely ethnic lines as is frequently done
by the Indian media. Some insurgent groups profess to unite
several or all of the peoples of the northeast into a separate
state, whereas others recruit on an exclusively ethnic basis and
demand the denial of basic rights or even the expulsion of others
whom they deem to be outsiders. Some of the more prominent insurgent
groups in Manipur are the United National Liberation Front (UNLF),
Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) and Peoples Revolutionary
Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK).
The alliances that these groups form are ever-shifting, and
many have undertaken ethnic cleansing. None of them reach out
for unity with the working class and oppressed masses of the subcontinent.
While some use socialist phraseology, all advocate a variant of
petit-bourgeois nationalism based upon ethnic, national and linguistic
identities, and seek nothing more than a reshuffling of the reactionary,
capitalist, nation-state system in South Asia.
The Indian elite has reacted to these insurgencies by giving
its security forces unrestricted power. As a result, these forces
essentially function as a terrorist state-sponsored gang. Over
the decades, they have committed murders and rapes, destroyed
dwellings, subjected people to arbitrary arrest, and humiliated
people.
The victims have no recourse to courts or any other remedial
measure unless prior permission has been obtained from the central
government, which is next to impossible. This has created mass
resentment and anger against both the security forces and the
government authorities.
Traditionally, Indias mainstream media has neglected
to cover the struggle for basic human rights in the northeast.
Most of the press coverage has been confined to reporting encounters
between insurgents and the security forces, thus painting a picture
of this region as one racked by insurgency and violence. Lost
in all this has been peoples day-to-day struggle for existence
and dignity and the repressive character of the Indian state.
See Also:
India: government program
gives assurances to big business
[14 June 2004]
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