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Are Manipuris less important than Kashmiris?

Last updated on: June 4, 2010 16:46 IST Rediff.com


New Delhi's inaction on the grim situation in Manipur, whose people are facing untold hardship
due to the economic blockade by Naga rebels, is shocking and can have disastrous
consequences for India, warns Colonel (Dr) Anil Athale (retd)

Indians often complain that when they visit the northeast, they are asked if they have come from India.
Conversely, many north-easterners are asked for a passport, as they are mistaken to be foreigners.
There is a communication gap and there are problems of distance; but lack of governance and the
media's obsession with happenings in Delhi has widened the gulf further.

As the economic blockade of Manipur by Naga rebels enters the second month, the miseries of common
Manipuri citizens have seldom found space on the so-called national media. The price of petrol has gone
up to Rs 150 a litre and a gas cylinder costs Rs 2,000. Delhi either seems asleep or too weak to take any
action to break this blockade.

I am reminded of another era and another blockade. I refer to the oil pipeline blockade organised by
Assam agitators in 1980s. The idea was that if the oil remained blocked in the pipeline through winter, the
heavy crude would freeze. Oil experts had warned that if the oil was not flushed out, the whole pipeline
would have to be replaced as cleaning the wax would cost more than a new pipeline. We had the no-
nonsense Indira Gandhi as the prime minister then. She ordered the army to solve the problem.

 
Image: Cars damaged by Muivah's supporters outside the Manipur Bhavan in New Delhi 

Secretly, the army sent its engineers to the Gujarat oil fields and trained soldiers in complex operations
(codenamed Amar Prem). Once the army was ready, in a swift operation, the troops were airlifted to oil
fields and in a fortnight, Operation Indra Vajra broke the oil blockade.

The Assam agitation never recovered from that blow and such a tactic has never been attempted again.
The saddest part is that today the National Socialist Council of Nagaland rebels are a shadow of their
former self. There is very little support for them in Nagaland, since their leader Thuingaleng Muivah is
himself from Manipur. It is possible to call the rebel's bluff and end the blockade. If need be, the Indian
government should threaten to revoke the ceasefire and resume operations. But such is the
lethargy/indifference of the Centre that a small group of trouble makers have been holding the whole state
of Manipur to ransom.

The media silence is in glaring contrast to the shrill noises made when a couple of years ago Kashmir
valley faced a similar blockade in Jammu.

But there is another major failing that this episode has brought to light, namely the utter paralysis of
decision-making. Seems Union Home Minister P Chidambaram is so overwhelmed by the Naxals and
Pakistan-sponsored terrorism that the woes of Manipuris are not registered in Delhi.

 
Women hold placards during a protest against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act 

Our think tank Inpad was at the forefront of demanding the reform of higher decision making apparatus
and had hoped that now that the National Security Council and its associate organisations are in place,
security issues would receive due attention and see refined decision-making.

The reason to voice this disappointment is that the kind of deep psychological wound this would inflict on
the Manipuris would create trouble in the future. Are Indian citizens of Imphal not as important as those
living in the Kashmir valley?

The saddest part is that there is a non-violent solution, though a temporary one! Manipur has a common
border with Myanmar (Burma) at Moreh. A limited border trade is permitted across the border. What stops
the government from importing petroleum products from Myanmar? The infrastructure up to Moreh is
reasonably developed and the road to the border post runs mostly through Meitei-dominated (Meitei are
the majority ethnic group in Manipur) areas.
 
The border at Moreh 

Simultaneously, the NSCN must be served an ultimatum -- that their greater Nagaland demand can only
be achieved through peaceful means and violence would mean an end to the ceasefire.

Our foreign office seems so obsessed with our neighbour to the west that it fails to think of these
alternatives.

On a visit to Nagaland two years ago, I found that the Nagas have no desire to resume armed conflict.
Nagaland is already enjoying the dividends of peace -- it has the lowest percentage of people below
poverty line and thanks to the reservation policy, many Naga youth are in the IAS, IFS and IPS.

 
Image: The Moreh border 
Some years ago, when the agitation against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act was at its peak in
Manipur, I had suggested that the least the government could do was to hand over the Kangla Palace
area to the people (since British times it has been occupied by the Assam Rifles and was a reminder to
the Meiteis of their humiliation). Somewhere, someone apparently liked the idea and today the area has a
lovely garden and a monument.

The situation in Manipur is indeed desperate and any delay will leave a deep scar on its people's psyche.
After the Bangladesh victory, it was said that Indira Gandhi not only made history but also changed
geography! Her daughter-in-law (Sonia Gandhi) who is the current supreme leader of the ruling party,
may also get that credit (though with disastrous consequences for India), for let us make no mistake, the
neglect of Manipur's woes by tolerating the economic blockade would reap a whirlwind of secessionist
movement by the Meiteis.

Colonel Ani Athale (retired) is the coordinator of Pune-based think-tank Inpad.

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