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The Curious Case Of Women In Manipur Politics 

At the fore on social and economic fronts, women are in the backseat when it comes to political representation 

Grace Jajo바카라s voice first choked and then she broke into tears, a microphone in her hand, addressing a gathering at Manipur Press Club in Imphal, the capital of the northeast Indian state. It was February 6, three weeks before the first of the two-phase election in Manipur was scheduled.

바카라Today, the (withdrawal of) AFSPA is making it to the manifestos of every political party. But when the respected Irom Sharmila contested, she got only 90 votes. And that바카라s after 16 years of sacrifice! It바카라s a very emotional thing, to speak of this바카라바카라 

Jajo, an independent journalist, was speaking on the 바카라invisibility바카라 of women in Manipur바카라s political scene. She could not control her emotions once touching upon how Sharmila, known as Manipur바카라s 바카라Iron Lady바카라, faced a humiliating electoral defeat in 2017. 

바카라And look at how we treat the Muslim ladies. Najima Bibi got 33 votes! This is how you treat women! And just look at how parties are using AFSPA now, every political party. Shame on you!바카라 Jajo said, trying to hold back tears before she could no more. 

For a tourist in Manipur, her statement may come as a surprise 바카라 having seen women everywhere in the front, from managing markets to in the statues that dominate the city space 바카라 until one takes a look at the electoral records. 

Sharmila had ended her 16-year-long hunger strike seeking the withdrawal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (APSPA), one of the biggest sentimental issues for Manipur바카라s people, in 2016 and launched her own party. She herself contested against the Congress바카라 Okram Ibobi Singh, who had been the chief minister for 15 years. Najima Bibi was also a candidate fielded by her party. 

But its disastrous result in the 2017 assembly elections led Sharmila to quit politics, ostensibly with a broken heart. 

In this 50 year's history of the modern Manipur state - it became a state from Union Territory in 1972 바카라 it has had only six women elected to the 60-seat assembly. The Lok Sabha election for the two seats of Inner Manipur and Outer Manipur has been held since 1952 but only one woman has made it to the Parliament. 

Of the six MLAs, four were wives of influential politicians, including chief ministers, and one's spouse heads an armed insurgent group. 

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This year has seen the highest number of women contestants and the numbers are still abysmally low - 17 out of 265 candidates are women. That바카라s only 6.41% of the total contestants in fray. In 2017, only 10 women contested and two won 바카라 Akoijam Mirabai of the Congress from Patsoi in Imphal West district and Nemcha Kipgen of the BJP from Kangpokpi in the eponymous district. Both had won the 2012 election as well. 


This year, they are in the fray to become the first among women in Manipur to get elected for a third time. Both of them had served in ministerial roles - Mirabani in Okram Ibobi Singh바카라s Congress government between 2012 and 2017 and Kipgen a three-year term in the BJP바카라s N Biren Singh government since 2017.  

However, critics have always said that behind Kipgen바카라s victory has been the influence of her husband - Semma T Thangboi Kipgen, the head of the Kuki rebel group United People바카라s Front that has a suspension of operation agreement with the government at present. 

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A Paradoxical Paradigm

바카라The women of Munnipore and not confined as in Hindostan. They manage all the domestic concerns; nay more than that, they are more supporters of their families than their husbands are, and in many cases, they support them entirely,바카라 wrote William McCulloch in his book, Account of the Valley of Munnipore and of the Hill Tribes, which was published from Calcutta in 1859. By Hindostan, he most likely referred to as 바카라mainland India.바카라

McCulloch was not just another tourist - apart from serving the East India Company바카라s army in various capacities from lieutenant, captain and major to lieutenant-colonel in different parts of India and especially in the northeast, he also served as the Company바카라s political agent in Manipur. And his observations cannot be said to be wrong. 

The state has consistently had higher female sex ratio than India바카라s national average, more female voters than male since the 1990s, and is known for a leading role of women in economic activities and social and civil rights movements 바카라 from the women-led movements 바카라Nupi Lan바카라 of 1904 and 1938 against British forces and the Meira Paibi movement of women torchbearers and the anti-alcoholism movement of Nisha Bandh from the late 1970s to the solely women-run trading hub of Ima Market in Imphal. Not to forget sports in which females have enjoyed a better track record
over males. 

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And yet, Manipur바카라s ratio of women members of the assembly and the parliament is as skewed as it can get. 

바카라Men in Manipur allow and encourage women to share social and economic responsibilities but not the political space. Families would hardly allow a woman to get an election ticket. I wanted to be in politics. I knew it from a young age. So, I remained a spinster,바카라 Akoijam Mirabai, a rare species among politicians in Manipur, told this correspondent, battling a busy schedule of the electoral campaign. 

Rare, because she is among the very few who did not benefit from the influence of a man. 

Women바카라s door for the Manipur assembly opened as late as 1991 and it required a grand tragedy. Hangmila Shaiza made her way to the Assembly riding on the sympathy wave that swept the Ukhrul constituency in the eponymous hill district after her brother-in-law, Lungshim Shaiza, was assassinated in the midst of his election campaign in 1990. Her husband, Lungshim바카라s elder brother Yangmaso, was a two-time chief minister of Manipur who too was assassinated by the same insurgent group, National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN), in 1984. 

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K Apabi Devi too got her chance after her husband, Keisham Bira Singh of the Congress, died in a plane crash in 1991. She was fielded and elected from Oinam in the bypoll. 

In 2002, Wahengbam Leima Devi, wife of Congress leader Wahengbam Angou Singh who had been a Speaker in the Assembly and later a Rajya Sabha member, was the sole woman MLA. She also achieved the feat of being the first female minister in the state, in the first Ibobi government. 

Later, O Landhoni, the wife of Okram Ibobi Singh, who served as Manipur chief minister from 2002 to 2017, got elected from Khangbok in 2007 and 2012. She was the sole MLA in 2007 but was joined by Mirabai and Kipgen in 2012. In 2017, her son got the nomination in her place. 


The first and the only woman MP so far, Kim Gangte, did not have any family backing either. A human rights activist, she won the 1998 election on the Communist Party of India ticket. Later, though, she switched from the Janata Dal (United), Manipur People's Party and the Trinamool Congress to the BJP and finally the Nationalist People's Party and has lost much of her political weight. 

Given this context, how confident is Thounaojam Brinda, one of the star candidates in the twelfth Manipur assembly election, about winning? Without saying anything about possibilities, she gave a cryptic reply:

바카라We have to win, we have to succeed.바카라 

바카라Women have taken a leading role in all spheres of life in Manipur, except for politics, because electoral politics in Manipur is dominated by money and muscle power and women do not have access to either. It바카라s high time the right women entered politics and end the dominance of these two menaces - the power of black money and muscles,바카라 she said, speaking to this correspondence during a door to door campaign in her constituency, Yaiskul, in Imphal East district in the Imphal valley where the elections are scheduled in the first phase, on February 28.  

Contesting on a Janata Dal (United)바카라s ticket, she is taking on the incumbent Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLA Thokchom Satyabrata Singh, whom chief minister N Biren Singh inducted in his cabinet in 2020 as a minister in charge of the departments of consumer affairs, food and public distribution, law and legislative affairs, and labour and employment. 

Former top cop Th Brinda during her campaigning in Manipur Pic: Snigdhendu Bhattacharya

But Brinda is no ordinary candidate. An award-winning policewoman and celebrated crusader against drug rackets, she is also a daughter-in-law of Rajkumar Meghen, the founder-chairman of Manipur바카라s oldest and largest insurgent group, the United National Liberation Front (UNLF). Meghen, who was arrested in Myanmar in 2010 and handed over to India, returned to Imphal in 2019 after spending nearly a decade in jail. 

Meghen, also known as Sana Yaima, or 바카라son of the soil바카라, is a legend among the Meitei people, the Hindu Vaishnavite community that make Manipur바카라s largest community and are based in the valley. He has not endorsed Brinda바카라s participation in electoral politics - his organisation is still waging a war to ensure Manipur바카라s 바카라sovereignty바카라. 

But Brinda also has her own identity and own achievements to bank on. Women from different age groups make the lion바카라s share of her campaign teams. She has gained a great deal of media attention for sure.  

Congress' Ak Mirabai Pic: Snigdhendu Bhattacharya

The story, however, will remain incomplete without speaking
 of Adhikarimayum Sharda Devi, a woman politician from Brinda's constituency, Yaiskul, who would leave no stones unturned to defeat her. 

Sharda Devi, who has been with the BJP since the mid-1990s, and without much family backing to speak about, was appointed as the BJP's Manipur unit president last year. That was a historic move - a major party in the state getting a woman chief.

"With my appointment, the BJP made it clear that it intended to empower women. Our manifesto also took special care of women's issues. We will change the gender dynamics in politics," she said, sounding gratuitous and confident. 

How many of these 17 candidates would win remains to be seen. So far, the highest number of women MLAs has been 3. No one knows if that track record can be improved. But one candidate's victory is possibly a foregone conclusion - S S Olish, contesting from Chandel on a BJP ticket. She has previously contested the elections twice from the same seat as independent but this time its different. She is a member of the BJP's state executive and known to be 'very close' to the incumbent chief minister. "She is Biren Singh's top priority candidate. None can defeat her," said a BJP worker at Chandel, unwilling to be named.

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