Kolkata: Describing the situation in Manipur as tragic, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's grand-nephew Prof Sugata Bose called for working out a just power-sharing arrangement in the northeastern state in order to bring all three communities -- Meiteis, Kukis and Nagas -- on the same page. Bose, who was earlier a Lok Sabha MP, pointed out in an interview to PTI that members of all the three communities had joined Netaji's INA in 1944 and fought shoulder to shoulder in the battlefields of Bishnupur and Ukhrul districts in an advance into India.
He said there was a need to work out a just power-sharing arrangement in Manipur (which would engage all three communities and address their grievances). We need to draw upon the best legacy of the past armed struggle against the British to bring the three communities together again, added Bose, who holds the Harvard University's Gardiner chair in history.
The Meiteis account for 53 per cent of the state's population and live mostly in the Imphal valley. Tribals Nagas and Kukis constitute another 40 per cent of the population and reside in the hill districts surrounding Imphal. The situation in Manipur is truly tragic for short-term political gains, one community has been played against the other. That kind of political game must stop, Netaji's grand-nephew said.
For the last five months, Meitei and Kuki communities have rioted against each other, resulting in the deaths of more than 175 people. Thousands have been rendered homeless and forced to live in make-shift refugee camps. Initial grievances and accusations include bulldozing of villages, which had sprung up on forest lands, and an Imphal High Court order asking the state government to send a recommendation to the Centre on demands for scheduled tribe status for Meiteis, which the tribal communities resented. These were compounded by rival accusations of ethnic cleansing and involvement in the drug trade by both communities.