Ethnic violence in India’s troubled frontier is not just a law-and-order problem but the culmination of history and political failure. For more than three years, Manipur has remained trapped in a cycle of violence that has scarred communities, displaced tens of thousands and exposed the limits of the Indian state’s ability to manage ethnic conflict. The turmoil is the product of historical grievances and competing identities that have gradually transformed social tensions into open conflict. The temptation in New Delhi has often been to view Manipur through the lens of security. Yet the state’s troubles cannot be understood merely by counting insurgent attacks or casualties. The roots of the crisis lie much deeper, stretching back to the colonial period and the peculiar political geography that emerged from it. Colonial Scars Like many conflicts in South Asia, Manipur’s present owes much to its past. British colonial administrators introduced new systems of governance, taxation and land management that disrupted existing patterns of authority. Communities that had previously interacted through fluid arrangements found themselves increasingly classified into rigid ethnic categories. Administrative boundaries hardened identities as competition over land and resources intensified. The colonial state’s attempts to manage diversity often had unintended consequences. Among them was the encouragement of certain communities as buffers between others, creating divisions that would outlive the Raj itself. In Manipur, relations between the valley-dwelling Meiteis and various hill communities, including the Kukis and Nagas, became increasingly shaped by political calculations rather than shared interests. Independent India inherited these tensions. Over time, they were compounded by insurgency, uneven development and a persistent sense of alienation from the national mainstream. Manipur witnessed decades of armed movements, military operations and political instability. While periods of calm emerged, the underlying questions of identity, land ownership and political representation remained unresolved. Dormant Tensions Recent violence has brought these dormant tensions violently to the surface. At the centre of the dispute lies the Meitei demand for Scheduled Tribe status. For many Meiteis, who constitute a majority in the state’s valley region, such recognition is viewed as necessary to secure access to educational opportunities, employment reservations and constitutional protections. For the Kuki and Naga communities, however, the demand raises existential concerns. They fear that extending tribal protections to the numerically and politically dominant Meiteis would allow them greater access to lands and benefits currently reserved for hill tribes. The consequences have been devastating. Communities that once coexisted uneasily have retreated into segregated enclaves. Vast numbers of people remain displaced, living in relief camps with uncertain prospects of returning home. Trust, once broken, is far harder to rebuild than roads or buildings. The economic costs have been equally severe. Trade routes connecting the Meitei-dominated valley and Kuki-majority hill districts have repeatedly been disrupted. Essential commodities have become scarce. Prices have surged. Small businesses, already operating on thin margins, have suffered immense losses. Agriculture, the backbone of many rural livelihoods, has been crippled as farmers are unable to safely access their lands. Tourism, a sector that once offered Manipur an opportunity to showcase its cultural richness and natural beauty, has all but collapsed. Investors are reluctant to commit resources to a region where uncertainty remains the only constant. Development projects have stalled. The most alarming consequence has been the collapse of public confidence in security institutions. The looting of state armouries during the conflict placed sophisticated weapons in civilian hands, dramatically increasing the lethality of local clashes. Areas separated by heavily guarded buffer zones increasingly resemble hostile territories rather than parts of the same state. The imposition of President’s Rule in 2025 was intended to restore order. Yet many residents interpreted it as evidence of political failure rather than political resolve. While direct federal intervention may have prevented further deterioration, it did little to address the underlying causes of conflict. The state’s instability has implications for India’s broader strategic ambitions in the north-east. New Delhi's “Act East” policy depends on connectivity, infrastructure and cross-border trade linking India to South-East Asia. Persistent violence threatens these ambitions. Meanwhile, Manipur’s porous border with Myanmar continues to raise concerns about illicit trafficking, the movement of armed groups and transnational criminal networks. What, then, is required? The first necessity is political honesty. Lasting peace cannot emerge from temporary ceasefires or administrative decrees. Political leaders must acknowledge that no community can secure its future through the permanent exclusion of another. Dialogue remains indispensable, however frustrating and imperfect it may appear. Rebuilding trust requires sustained engagement beyond official negotiations. Local organisations are often better placed than governments to facilitate reconciliation and counter inflammatory narratives. They must also act as watchdogs, documenting abuses and demanding accountability regardless of the perpetrators’ identity. Equally important is the restoration of the rule of law. Violence cannot be allowed to become a legitimate political instrument. Those responsible for killings, arson and intimidation must face impartial justice. Selective enforcement merely entrenches resentment. Humanitarian rehabilitation is another urgent priority. Displaced families need more than temporary shelters. They require secure resettlement, access to livelihoods, healthcare, education and the confidence that returning home will not place them in renewed danger. Administrative sensitivity and competence are as important as financial assistance. Finally, the digital battlefield cannot be ignored. Social media has repeatedly amplified rumours, misinformation and communal hatred. Stronger mechanisms to counter online incitement while preserving legitimate freedoms are essential in preventing future escalations. The tragedy of Manipur is that its people have become prisoners of competing historical narratives. Yet history need not be destiny. The philosopher Karl Jaspers observed that conflicts can lead either to destruction or to deeper forms of unity. Manipur stands at precisely such a crossroads. (The author is a retired naval aviation officer and a defence and geopolitical analyst. Views personal.)
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