Twenty-four-year-old J바카라s* (name withheld) mother was pregnant with him in June, 1997, when the Paite-Kuki conflict broke out in the tribal-populated hills of Manipur. The Kuki family had lived in H Khopibung village of Saikul at the time. His mother recalls how they had to run away from their homes in the middle of the night in a bid to escape the ethnic violence that had unfolded in the region following the massacre of at least 10 Paite men in one night by armed militants belonging to the Kuki National Front (KNF). J바카라s parents fled the village and lived for days in relief camps before finally settling down in New Lambulane, a neighbourhood in the East Imphal region. Over the years, the family rebuilt their life. J was born and his sister followed soon. Almost 25 years later, J and his family were displaced once again in May 2024 due to ethnic clashes, this time between the Kukis and valley-dwelling Meiteis. 바카라All the memories and trauma of those years came flooding back,바카라 J바카라s mother recalls inside a rented house in Kangpokpi district of Manipur. This time, however, was even worse. J바카라s sister was allegedly gang-raped by armed Meitei militia. The family has lodged an FIR in the case, but remains shaken; investigations have been slow. J is jobless as he lost all documents in the violence, his father is too ill to work, his mother makes ends meet by selling vegetables on a cart, while the sister recuperates from her mental and physical wounds.
A year since the violence, the precarious lives that the survivors of the ethnic clashes are living reflects the political instability of Manipur today. And yet, ethnic warfare is not new to the state or its people, divided mainly between the Meitei, Kuki-Zo and the Naga communities. Victims of the ongoing violence, Kuki-Zo have remained adamant against reconciliation with the Meiteis. All 10 Kuki-Zo MLAs in Manipur assembly have pushed for 바카라separate administration바카라 of tribal areas and the demand echoes in every Kuki-Zo home.
Against this backdrop, the recent Supreme Court바카라s verdict on sub-categorisation of Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs), allowing state governments to sub-classify these communities to promote affirmative action, has left many in the region concerned.


The concerns are not unfounded. Since the start of the conflict, the N Biren Singh government바카라s role has been highlighted multiple times, not just for his inability to stop the violence, but for his and Manipur Police바카라s alleged role in instigating and perpetuating systematic attacks against the Kuki-Zo community. His 바카라anti-Kuki바카라 political tirades and policies predate the current conflict and conform to a pattern of persecution and vilification of Kukis as 바카라Myanmarese immigrants바카라, 바카라poppy cultivators바카라 and 바카라militants바카라. The chief minister is alleged to have direct links with armed 바카라socio-cultural바카라 Meitei nationalist groups like the Arambai Tenggol, accused in nearly all cases of violence, arson, looting and sexual assault against Kuki-Zo since May 2 last year. The recent audio tapes released by The Wire also point toward his alleged involvement in the communal violence.
With Manipur trifurcated between Meiteis, Kuki-Zo and Nagas, sub-categorisation and 바카라creamy layer바카라 debates among tribals could open a Pandora바카라s Box
Accusing Singh of 바카라orchestrating a genocide against the Kuki-Zo minority to grab tribal land바카라, activist Lamminlun Singsit says the community finds it hard to trust the discretion of the state government in deciding who is 바카라backward바카라 or 바카라forward바카라. After all, it was a demand for tribal status by the socio-politically dominant Meiteis that became a catalyst for the ethnic clashes unfolding since last year, leaving over 220 people dead and thousands displaced. In January, the Manipur government announced the formation of a committee comprising all tribal communities to deliberate on the demand for deletion/inclusion of nomadic Chin-Kuki from the state바카라s ST list, provoking a sharp response from Kuki-Zo, who at present, have 10 of 60 seats in the Manipur Assembly.
바카라The government is run by Meiteis. How can we trust them? Will they guarantee that they will not use sub-categorisation as a tool against the tribes?바카라 Singsit, who is the general secretary of the Committee on Tribal Unity (COTU), Kangpokpi, asks: 바카라At present, all tribal communities in Manipur (other than the Nagas) are united and organised under the banner of Kuki-Zo, and we want separate administration for our regions in Kangpokpi, Churachandpur and Tengnoupal.바카라
This rather tenuous unity has come after years of inter and intra-tribal rivalry and bloodshed. With Manipur trifurcated between Meiteis, Kuki-Zo and Nagas, sub-categorisation and 바카라creamy layer바카라 debates among tribals could open a Pandora바카라s Box of past ghosts. 바카라In spirit, sub-categorisation might be a good thing for marginalised communities, but it also has the potential to sow seeds of division within the already ramified tribal societies as found in most parts of the Northeast, including Manipur,바카라 says Singsit.


Lost in Nomenclature
Manipur is home to 34 STs, including Kuki and Naga groups. By the 1950s, when the Kaka Kalelkar Commission arrived in Manipur, both Kuki and Naga communities made concerted efforts to delineate each tribe separately so as to add them to the ST list. However, the loosely-defined criteria led to an exponential growth in the number of scheduled tribes across India바카라from 225 in 1960 to over 700 at present.
In Manipur, the politics of scheduling is underscored by its complex history of identity assertion, kinship patterns and phenomenological heuristics that remain in flux amid recurrent violence. Soon after Independence, 21 Manipuri tribes, labelled as 바카라Kuki바카라 by the British, formed a organisation called Kuki Company. But the dominance of the Thadous, one of the tribes inside the Kuki umbrella, became a bone of contention and most non-Thadou tribes, branched out, forming the Khul Union. After the rise of the United Naga Council and the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN-IM) in the 1980s, some of the tribes that had been called 바카라Old Kuki바카라 in the British nomenclature, quit the Kuki fold and adopted the Naga political identity. Growing militancy바카라the seeds of which were sown in the colonial period바카라and violent clashes between the Kukis and Nagas affected the stability of regions like Churachandpur, home to Zo tribes. Eventually, seven 바카라New Kuki바카라 tribes, including Zou, Vaiphei, Gangte, Ralte Simte, Paite and a collection of smaller tribes other than Thadou rejected the 바카라Kuki바카라 label and decided to adopt the 바카라Zomi바카라 nomenclature. In 1995, the Zomi Re-unification Organisation (ZRO) was formed, along with its armed wing, the Zomi Revolutionary Army (ZRA), explains Churachandpur-based Zo rights activist George Guite, who is also secretary of Kuki State Demand Committee and member of ZRO.
The Kukis, who had their own armed groups like the Kuki National Front (KNF), which is funded by voluntary social taxation, started clashing with the Zomi groups and levying heavier taxes on tribes identifying as Zo. Things came to a head in 1997 when a full-scale conflict broke out between the Kukis and the Paites, one of the dominant groups among the Zo tribes, after KNF operatives massacred Zo civilians in Saikul on the suspicion of being linked with Nagas. The year-long conflict, notes author Th Siamkhum, left over 300 dead and thousands like J바카라s family displaced. Today, the Kuki Inpi, a civil society organisation named after the system of pre-colonial governance followed by Kuki groups, remains the apex body of Kuki civil society groups and is at the forefront of what an observer in Imphal sardonically called 바카라the Kuki show바카라.


Hierarchies of Invisibility
A year since the violence, strands of assertion can be seen across the Kuki bastions. In the boarded-up Churachandpur, with higher number of Zo tribes and shared borders with Mizoram and Myanmar, the Zomis have consolidated influence, as can be seen in the banners, flags and posters of 바카라Zomaland바카라 across the region. In Kangpokpi, the writing on the wall is still 바카라Kukiland바카라. A member of the Kuki Student Organisation (KSO) in Kangpokpi, without wanting to be named, says, 바카라The Union government should accede to the demand for separate administration바카라the final name will be decided in consultation with all, but it will most likely be Kuki. We are all Kukis.바카라
Often listed as 바카라unclassified바카라 or reduced to clans or 바카라sub-tribes바카라 within a tribe, several communities that deserve distinct classification remain unseen.
Others like author and researcher Thongkholal Haokip remain hopeful that 바카라if implemented fairly and using the right criteria, sub-categorisation could prove to be a positive thing for socio-economically and politically deprived groups바카라. 바카라Every community has its own layers of social division. Among Kukis, the Thadous and the Paites can be considered more advanced,바카라 says Haokip. The dominance of the Thadous is evident from their high degree of political participation in democratic governance. At present, five of the Kuki MLAs from reserved seats are Thadous. Haokip, however, warns against looking at tribes as homogenous groups and a 바카라one-size-fits-all바카라 kind of policies for tribal development, especially in the Northeast. 바카라More Thadous and Paites may have access to development, but that can also be attributed in part to their larger numbers than other tribes. There are many families from both these communities who remain in remote regions with no access to employment, education or healthcare,바카라 he explains.
Caste-Tribe-Continuum
Focusing on inter-tribal politics at an academic or policy level also tends to ignore intra-tribal politics. Often listed as 바카라unclassified바카라 or reduced to clans or 바카라sub-tribes바카라 within a tribe, several communities that deserve distinct classification remain unseen. For example, Saihriem (also called Farhriemh) community, found in Cachar district of Assam바카라s Barak Valley, has not been accorded ST status since it is less in number and typically considered a clan of the Hmar tribe, under the Kuki umbrella in Manipur. However, the dialect spoken by Saihriem is distinct from the Hmar dialect. Contrarily, Thadou, Paite and Vaiphei are listed as separate tribes in Manipur, despite being culturally and linguistically similar.
Activist and scholar Lal Chand Dhissa from Kullu, Himachal Pradesh, states that the problem arises when academics as well as policymakers fail to differentiate 바카라tribe바카라 and 바카라scheduled tribe바카라. 바카라A tribe can be any ethnolinguistic or geographically proximate group or grouping of groups. Scheduled tribes need to be based not on myopic criteria like 바카라primitiveness바카라 or exoticism of a tribe, but on their socio-economic, political, geographic and phenomenological status within tribal society,바카라 he says. Dhissa, who belongs to a community of Dalit tribals, has been fighting for constitutional status for the 바카라Scheduled Tribe Dalits바카라. Due to his efforts, Dailts from tribal communities like Swangla got the right to register for both for SC and ST certificates in 2004. The activist feels that sub-categorisation would be a good idea as it will help highlight the 바카라caste-tribe-continuum바카라. 바카라In Lahaul, the identity of 바카라Lahauli바카라 is universal and natural to many. But most Hindu groups have been clubbed under Swangla, while most Buddhist groups are considered 바카라Bodh바카라,바카라 he says, adding that the Dalit communities remain invisibalised, often failing to get either caste or tribal benefits.
Academics like Guwahati-based Ngamjahao Kipgen, nevertheless caution that using caste or tribal identity as the basis for inter/intra tribal classifications could lead to disaster. 바카라Instead of cherry picking tribes, the government needs to look at a more holistic form of development. Provide roads in remote regions, make education more accessible. That would automatically work to alleviate the status of communities which often remain on the margins,바카라 says Kipgen. Tinkering with tribal groupings, he warns, could be a risky business, especially in the Northeast where even minor changes can lead to catastrophic events. It바카라s something that only J and his family know too well.
(This appeared in the print as 'United Indifference')