Fresh violence erupted in Manipur as clashes were reported on June 15 between security forces and miscreants. Teargas shells were fired in the State capital Imphal town, officials were quoted as saying by news agency PTI.
A day after an attack in the Khamenlok area left nine people dead and injured ten others, at least two houses were set on fire by a mob.
OPINION | The next step: On Manipur and the path to normalcy
Security forces which tried to quell the mob were forced to use force and fired tear gas shells at the mob at New Checkon in Imphal, officials added.
This happened as the army and Assam Rifles intensified their “area domination” operations in the aftermath of the recent spurt in violence in the strife-torn State of Manipur.
Army and Assam Rifles columns intensified patrolling, taking down barriers wherever they had been created.
Data | Kuki-Meitei ethnic violence: The sharp hill-valley divide that is Manipur’s burden
An Army tweet said, “Enhanced Area Domination Operations by Army and Assam Rifles are being undertaken in the aftermath of the recent spurt in violence”.
The social media post by the Spear Corps of the Indian Army, whose operational area Manipur falls, said the “domination of fringe areas and higher reaches underway by long duration self-contained columns” was being enforced.
The security forces redoubled their efforts in the wake of an attack on a Kuki village in the Khamenlok area bordering Imphal East and Kangpoki districts in the early hours of Wednesday, where nine people died and 10 more were injured in a gunbattle which ensued between the miscreants who attacked the village and villagers.
Later on Wednesday evening, other miscreants set on fire the official quarters of woman Manipur Minister Nemcha Kipgen in the Lamphel area in Imphal West district. Firefighters reached the spot and doused the flames before the blaze could spread to the neighbourhood.
More than 100 people lost their lives and 310 others were injured in the ethnic violence between Meitei and Kuki community people in Manipur that broke out a month ago.
Clashes first broke out on May 3 after a ‘Tribal Solidarity March’ was organised in the hill districts to protest against the Meitei community’s demand for Scheduled Tribe (ST) status.
Meiteis account for about 53% of Manipur’s population and live mostly in the Imphal Valley. Tribals — Nagas and Kukis — constitute another 40% of the population and reside in the hill districts.
(With PTI inputs)