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HomeNational InterestManipur saw 'free' India's 1st flag hoisted. Now it's BJP's biggest internal...

Manipur saw ‘free’ India’s 1st flag hoisted. Now it’s BJP’s biggest internal security challenge

There are 3 things you never do in a small northeastern state: undermine local leaders, divide and rule, push homogenisation.

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The most important development in the ongoing crisis in Manipur is that Union Home Minister Amit Shah went there to try and douse the fires.

It isn’t just one of those flying visits to a distant outpost from New Delhi. Land, speak to the press, hold two meetings with the state government and officials, meet some delegations and head back home to sleep at night, the usual. He stayed put for four days.

It isn’t just the longest time he has spent in a troubled state in his years as home minister; it is probably the longest any home minister has spent camping in a troubled state’s capital.

This is a public acknowledgement that the Centre is putting the crisis in this out-of-sight/out-of-mind zone at the top of its concerns. It’s a good thing, therefore, that the home minister has invested much time and political capital in Manipur.

The time in Manipur would have enabled him to see the realities of a complex state beyond its electoral politics. In the past five decades since the region was reorganised and the new states came into being (in the 1970s), one pattern has been consistent: that whoever rules at the Centre has generally been able to own, acquire, co-opt or subvert and substitute local power elites, either to form its own government or to install loyalists.

The Congress did it in its times, even the Janata Party did some of it in its relatively short tenure post-1977. The BJP, therefore, has done nothing new here. Except, as with everything else, this BJP prefers scale.

It is heady, too, if your party or its tiny, microscopic-on-the-national-scale allies rule the northeast. It rarely happened even in the Indira or Rajiv eras. Tripura, for example, where the Left continued to beat Indira’s Congress. The political map of the region looks dramatically different now. The BJP’s sway here has no precedent in history.

This also brings problems in its wake. As Shah would have seen on his visit if he checked the local newspapers while he was in Imphal. The morning after he left, on 2 June, the leading English-language newspaper, The Sangai Express, had the message.

It carried a full front-page government advertisement, as is the routine all over the country now. This one hailed the visit and “peacekeeping initiatives of Amit Shah ji”, listing at the top condolences for all the bereaved families from Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the steps taken to restore normalcy during Shah’s visit from “29th May to 1st June”.

Once you go beyond the front page, you’d see the paper’s editorial saying exactly the opposite. I’d repeat a couple of sentences from this editorial, which displays the kind of courage missing from much of our more powerful media lately. It begins: “Nearly one month down the line and there is nothing to suggest that Manipur is on the road to recovery.”

It then reminds us that “gunmen continue to rule the Imphal-Dimapur highway checking private vehicles in case they are carrying any ‘enemy’ (Meiteis)”. The editorial isn’t partisan on ethnic lines. It’s a fair, desperate cry from the heart.

While it talks of the targeting of Meiteis and their flight from tribal districts, it also notes how Kukis have been violently driven out of the Imphal Valley. “Imphal and the other Valley-based district headquarters are today practically free of the Kukis and despite this tragic reality either side does not seem to have softened their stance.” 


Also Read: A broken Manipur is out of sight, out of mind. Here’s why we can’t be so callous & arrogant


If in its nine years in power, little Manipur has emerged as the BJP’s most formidable internal security challenge, it is to do with the complex politics and demographics, especially of the smaller northeastern states (besides Assam), which have always been impossible to govern from New Delhi.

Over the years, they’ve also proven impossible to govern from Shillong (the original capital of the larger Assam) or now Guwahati. Each state has a mind, politics and demographic and temper of its own. The one party, one slogan, one idea, one leadership stuff does not work here. At least, not as it might work in Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat or even Assam.

The tribal elites have forever resented Delhi’s heavy hand. Now they also have to deal with a regional commissar in Himanta Biswa Sarma. They won’t say so in public, but if they speak with you in confidence, they will remind you — somewhat wistfully — that one big reason they wanted separate states was to get out of Assam’s control. The BJP has brought them back exactly to that situation.

You might want to take note of the fact that the one BJP leader missing in action in Manipur is Himanta Biswa Sarma. Never mind that he’s seen as the leader of the entire region and formally, he leads the North-East Democratic Alliance (NEDA). It’s a grouping of all chief ministers either from the BJP or parties aligned with it.


Also Read: Northeast a success story not just for BJP but all of India. It’s all about getting to end of bell curve


There are multiple reasons that the tiny states of the northeast confound ‘mainland’ leaders. They can be politicians, administrators or from the intelligence agencies.

The first is the mindset of autonomy. Maybe the distance over so many centuries and the distinctness of identity complicate this. That’s why so many insurgencies began here, and some still smoulder.

For example, the most significant one, the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN), is led and mostly ‘peopled’ by members of the Tangkhul tribe who have kept the Modi government waiting for a peace settlement for nine years. Its leader, T. Muivah, is a Tangkhul too. 

Now think about the fact that the Tangkhul are a Naga tribe who live not in Nagaland but in Manipur. And they are no more than six lakh people, if that many. And at this point in Manipur, they aren’t even fighting on either side. They just help put the challenges of dealing with the region’s diversity in perspective. I might go a step forward and qualify this: the region’s heavily armed diversity.

If these six lakh do not defer to orders from New Delhi, why would a million Kukis? Or tomorrow, who knows, their Mizo cousins next door?

It shows how ignorant and oblivious we are of the realities in this complex region that we haven’t seen the national media reach out yet and report on the growing anxieties within the Zoramthanga-led Mizo National Front (MNF) government, which is facing elections later this year. Mizos and Kukis have a shared ethnic identity. And if the anger with the BJP from Manipur spills across the border into Mizoram, it will make life that much tougher for the MNF. As an NDA member, it’s seen as a BJP ally.

There are three things you never want to do in these smaller northeastern states. One, tell the people that their chief minister is a dummy and the real bosses live elsewhere. Second, play one ethnicity against the other to conjure up a majority in your favour. And third, never suggest a homogenisation or subsuming of distinct ethnic, linguistic and cultural identities into a rounded national one.

Over the decades, as separatism has declined, these states have gently grown into a calmer, non chest-thumping, relaxed, even serendipitous idea of Indian nationalism. Any forcing of the pace causes an immune reaction.

Finally, just remember how central Manipur is to the idea of India. The first time ‘independent’ India’s flag was unfurled by an advancing nationalist liberation army was in Manipur: Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Moirang, 14 April 1944, just about 45 kilometres from Imphal. It was then the gateway to Dilli. Now it looks up to the same Dilli for a better understanding, and much empathy.


Also read: Why Mizoram vs Assam is a BJP project to ‘integrate’ northeast gone wrong


 

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