New Delhi: It’s almost a year, and the clash between Kukis and Meiteis in Manipur continues unabated. In this backdrop, representatives from the Meiteis community on Thursday appealed to the Central and Manipur governments as well as the Kuki community to facilitate the return of 31 Meiteis, who went missing in May last year.
“To ameliorate the sufferings of the families tracing out the remains or whereabouts of the missing persons is a must. This allows them to perform the last rites, bringing closure to the missing incidents and enabling the perpetrators to be brought to justice. Furthermore, if the bodies are untraceable, there is an immediate requirement for the authorities concerned to declare the missing persons as untraceable and issue certificates accordingly,” said RK Bijyalakshmi, President of SOULS (Souls Offered Unitedly for a Lustrated Society). Several family members of the missing people on Thursday appealed to the government to take steps to bring back their family members.
SOULS, an NGO, in Manipur working to find the missing people. “We hope Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah will hear our voice. We appeal to the Central government to help us in tracing the missing people,” said Bijyalakshmi. Clueless about the existence of their family members, several kin of the victims in the volatile state have already performed the last rites as per the Meiteis tradition by using Pangong tree leaves.
Atom Kavita, 47 years wife of Atom Samarendra, a journalist missing since May 6, 2023, along with Yumkhaibam Kiran Kumar, says “My husband was among the first persons to have gone missing. I have performed the last rites as per our tradition by using Pangong tree leaves in place of his body.”