Harrowing stories as thousands flee ethnic violence in northeast India

Mobs attack Manipur village near India's Myanmar border a week after clashes erupted between Meitei people and Kuki tribes in the region.

A few men, infants, older women and young girls were huddled inside three military trucks. / Photo: AFP
AFP

A few men, infants, older women and young girls were huddled inside three military trucks. / Photo: AFP

Father-of-five S. Mamang Vaiphei hid in the jungle for three nights after a mob attacked his village in Manipur, the remote Indian state where ethnic violence has reportedly killed at least 54 people.

Around 23,000 people have fled the unrest which erupted last week in the hilly northeast state bordering Myanmar.

"The Meitei people first burnt down 26 or 27 houses," Mamang, now sleeping out in the open in an army camp with around 900 others bringing similar horror stories, told AFP.

"Then they came again and finished all 92 houses (in the village), ransacked the church , the school and whatever was left," the 54-year-old said, surrounded by exhausted and traumatised men, women and children.

The far-flung states of northeast India sandwiched between Bangladesh, China and Myanmar have long been a tinder box of tensions between different ethnic groups as well as a hotbed of separatism.

The latest clashes erupted last week between the majority Meitei people, who are mostly Hindu, living in and around the Manipur capital Imphal and the mainly Christian Kuki tribe of the hills.

The spark was a protest about plans to give the Meitei "Scheduled Tribe" status giving them, in a form of affirmative action, guaranteed quotas of government jobs and college admissions.

Violence erupted in Imphal and elsewhere with protestors setting fire to vehicles and buildings and according to villagers, Meitei mobs armed with guns and petrol cans then attacking Kuki settlements in the hills.

'Shoot-at-sight'

The military has deployed thousands of troops, issued "shoot-at-sight" orders in "extreme cases", imposed curfews and cut the internet.

Mamang, spending his fifth night homeless on Sunday, is one of around 23,000 people that the military says it has brought to safety.

He said that on May 4 he fled his village of Kamuching, which had a population of more than 500 people before the unrest, when a "large crowd" starting attacking.

"Everything was on fire... We ran away, all of us ran to the jungle and we try to survive," he said.

Mostly people only managed to grab a small bag with a few personal belongings, an extra pair of clothes or their smartphones.

The army said that bringing people to safety was not easy given the polarisation and complete breakdown of dialogue between the communities.

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