WHY MANIPURIS FIGHT FOR RIGHT TO SELF DETERMINATION
I. A Brief History of the Manipuri People
INTRODUCTION
‘Manipur’ is the ancestral
territory of the ‘Manipuri’ people. Manipur is presently under Indian
colonial rule. It is situated in the northeast corner of India and
bounded in the east by Myanmar
(Burma).
The present territorial area is 22,327 sq. km. It lies within 23.83°N to
25.68°E latitude and 93.03°E to 94.78°E longitude. A fertile alluvial valley
extends north-south in the middle and it is surrounded on all sides by hill
ranges forming a part of the eastern Himalayas.
Though constituting only about 12 p.c. of the total geographical area, the
valley is settled by more than 75 p.c. of the total population of 2.3 million
(2001 Census).
The Royal Chronicle Cheitharol Kumbaaba
maintains an uninterrupted historical record of the land and its people since
33 A.D. Throughout the history, the valley was, and continues to be, the core
region where the distinctive Manipuri culture and way of life took shape and
where political developments having repercussions throughout the Indo-Burma
Region often originated.
Among the
Manipuris, the Meiteis form the predominant ethnic group and they
traditionally inhabit the valley. The surrounding hill ranges are settled by
many tribes. They are broadly grouped together and known as the Naga and the
Kuki tribes. While the Meiteis thrive on wet cultivation, the tribal population
subsists largely on the slash-and-burn technique of cultivation and depends
heavily on the valley for their needs. In recent decades, however, the steady
influx of immigrants from the Indian subcontinent into the hill areas and into
parts of the valley and also the internal migration of tribes from the hills to
the valley, have disturbed the traditional settlement patterns and demographic
balance both in the hills and the valley
of Manipur.
The
tribal ethnic groups have their mutually distinct cultural heritage. The
members of a tribe communicate among themselves in their own dialect, but the
Manipuri language is the lingua franca used for inter-tribal
communication and by all Manipuris settled inside and outside Manipur. The
tribal dialects are in varying stages of development; they are all written in
the Roman script. The Manipuri language had evolved from Meiteilon, the native
language of the Meiteis, which is written in its own script. All the tribal
dialects as well as the Manipuri language belong to the Tibeto-Burman family of
languages, just as all the indigenous ethnic groups in Manipur are of the
southern Mongoloid stock racially.
Of the 18
‘national languages’ constitutionally recognised in India, the only language
from the Tibeto-Burman family so recognised, though done so under political
compulsions of the ongoing liberation struggle, is the Manipuri language.
Anybody whose mother tongue is Manipuri language or who identifies
himself/herself as a Manipuri, whether living inside or outside Manipur,
belongs to the Manipuri people. There are about three million Manipuris in the
world today. The Manipuris as a people are thus bound by a common racial
origin, a common language and culture and by inheritance of a common ancestral
territory now called Manipur. The following paras give a brief account of how
their distinctive identity was forged and how they rose time and again against
all odds throughout their long history.
EARLY HISTORICAL SETTING
The origins of the Manipuri people
are filled with myths and legends. One of them relates to three brothers who
went in different directions from a place called Makhel in the northern hills
of Manipur. The youngest of the brothers is said to have gone to the valley to
become the ancestor of the Meiteis while the remaining brothers became those of
the Naga tribes. Another common myth among the people is that of human beings
originally coming out of a big cave.
Manipur
lies on an ancient trade route linking South-east Asia
with South Asia and beyond. Scholars agree
that waves of migration from the north and the east brought the Tibeto-Burman
speaking peoples to the region in the prehistoric times. Archaeological
evidence also point to the fact that the present valley was under water during
the quaternary period and that the earliest human settlements in the hills
gradually extended downwards and to the valley over the centuries. A successful
response to the historic challenge of draining the valley and consequent
transformation from food-gatherers
and hunters to sedentary cultivators gave birth to a rich culture and a
distinctive way of life.
During the early centuries of the
Christian era, seven major exogamous clans struggled fiercely for power and
supremacy in the valley. The Ningthouja clan emerged victorious. Under
its leadership, a larger and composite Meitei identity was forged out of the
clans through a long historical process. Many tribal elements from the hills
and many streams of migrating people naturally became a part of the cultural
melting pot. The hill tribes in the interior regions maintained a subordinate
relationship to the more powerful Meitei king. The consolidation of the Meitei State
was more or less completed by the 12th century. It then embarked on a process
of territorial expansion from the next century onwards.
The Meiteis emerged as an important player in the regional political arena by the 15th century, particularly
during the reign of King Kyamba (1476-1508). The boundaries of the Meitei
kingdom expanded in the east up to the west bank of the Chindwin River
(in Myanmar
today) and were recognised as such by other powers in the region. The Meiteis
were also known variously to the neighbouring peoples during the early period.
They were the Kathe to the Burmese, the Cassay to the Shans, and
the Meklee to the Ahoms.
MANIPUR AS A SOVEREIGN STATE
A steady migration of non-Mongoloid
peoples from the Indian subcontinent, Brahmins and Muslims in particular, began
in the 16th century. They were subsequently assimilated into a larger Manipuri
society. Under the impact of these migrations, however, the cultural complexion
of the indigenous society underwent far-reaching changes. A pluralistic society
and polity emerged. The Meitei kings began to assume Hindu names and titles.
The kingdom itself came to be known as ‘Manipur’ during the 18th
century, even though it was still referred to as ‘Meckley’ in the treaty of
alliance signed between King Jai Singh and the British East India Company in
1762.
The 18th
century also witnessed the zenith of Manipur’s power and influence as a
sovereign state in the Indo-Burma Region. During the reign of King Pamheiba @
Garib Niwaz (1709 to 1748) the Manipur cavalry frequently raided deep inside
the Burmese territory and gave a deathblow to the ruling Toungoo dynasty of Burma. The
sacking of Sagaing in 1738 was the most remarkable event of the Manipuri
attacks into Burma.
The territorial extent of Manipur also spread far beyond the present
boundaries. The Burmese retaliated in good measure when their opportunity came.
A schism occurred in the Manipuri
society with the advent of Hinduism under royal patronage since the time of
Garib Niwaz’s reign. The Meitei followers of the indigenous faith, with its
accent on ancestor worship, strongly resisted the imposition of the new
religion on the people. It was taken as erosion of their distinctive culture
and national identity. The religious dissension not only sapped the vitality of
the people but also blurred their political vision. In fact, the national
disunity and a corresponding discord among the Manipuri princes were principal
factors that invited the Burmese invasion to Manipur with its disastrous
consequences. When the Burmese forces also began to pose a threat to the
eastern frontier of the British Indian Empire, it led to the First
Anglo-Burmese War.
The
Burmese forces invaded and occupied Manipur for seven years (1819 to 1826). The
Seven Years’ Devastation, as the period is known in history, marked a
turning point in the fortunes of the Manipuri people. The Burmese pursued a
policy of genocide on the Manipuri people and adopted scorched earth policy
that thoroughly devastated the land. Thousands of Manipuris were taken prisoner
and carried away to Burma
as slaves; many more fled the country. A sort of Manipuri ‘Diaspora’ took
place. Their descendants are still settled in large numbers in other States of
‘northeast India’,
in Bangladesh
and Burma.
Those who stayed behind used guerrilla tactics to harass the Burmese occupation
forces. However, it was not until Gambhir Singh, a Manipuri prince who fled
from Manipur, raised a force called the Manipur Levy with British help in Assam and
fought the Burmese who were ultimately driven out of Manipur in 1826.
Gambhir Singh was recognised as the
king of independent Manipur by both the British and the Burmese under the Treaty
of Yandabo (1826), which ended the First Anglo-Burmese War. However, the
Manipuris as a people were at the nadir of their power and influence. They
could not resist effectively when the Kabaw Valley,
a strip of Manipur territory on the border, was ‘made over’ to Burma in 1834
by the British Indian government. The British adopted the policy of appeasement
at the expense of Manipur to safeguard the northeast frontier of British India, to which the latest addition was Assam in 1826. The
British did not feel secure enough by an independent Manipur as a buffer state
because, despite its long record of antipathy to Burma, Manipur was then very weak.
Manipur was compensated for the loss of her territory by a monthly allowance of
‘500 sicca rupees’ to be given to the Manipur king until such time the Kabaw
Valley was reverted to Manipur. Gambhir Singh died of heart attack on the same
day the Kabaw Valley was transferred to Burma.
Extremely depopulated and
economically ruined, a majority of the Meiteis began to take refuge and find
solace in the escapist Vaishanava cult of Hinduism from Bengal. The Manipuri ruling class began to find living
under the British imperial umbrella convenient for them, even though Manipur
was referred to by British authorities as ‘an Asiatic power in alliance with
the [British] Queen’. A British Political Agent was posted at Imphal, the
capital of Manipur, from 1835 onwards to facilitate a friendly intercourse. A
Manipur representative was similarly posted at Calcutta. The Manipur king collaborated with
the British imperialists on subjugating the neighbouring peoples, such as the
Lushai and the Naga tribes outside Manipur, in the second half of the 19th
century. When the British encouraged the emigration of certain non-Naga tribes
from Burma
in order to exploit their traditional hostility to the Nagas, the Manipuri ruling
class did not protest against the imperialist policy. Such co-operation with
the imperialists earned for the
Manipur king a British knighthood, but it alienated the Meiteis from the
neighbouring peoples.
Manipur’s usefulness to the British
as a buffer state between Burma
and the British Indian Empire and as the cat’s paw in their colonial expansion
vanished when the British annexation of Burma was completed in 1885 and
Manipur remained as the only independent kingdom in the midst of a vast British Empire. Many unreasonable and unfriendly demands
were soon made on Manipur by the British Indian Government to give an excuse
for the annexation of Manipur. In their moment of truth, the Manipuri ruling
class called on the national feelings of the Manipuri people to meet the
imperialist designs. The Manipuris, of course, knew that they were no match
against the British might. But it was a measure of their pride as a nation that
they deliberately chose open confrontation with the British rather than succumb
tamely to their ploy.
So, five high-ranking British officers
specially sent by the Governor General to the Manipur king for political
arm-twisting were beheaded inside the palace compound. And when, as expected,
the British retaliated by dispatching three army columns to Manipur, all
sections of Manipuris fought pitched battles in the hills as well as in the
valley against the invading British forces. The outcome of the war was, of
course, a foregone conclusion. The Manipuri forces were defeated in what came
to be known in history as the Anglo-Manipur War of 1891. Yet, it was the
finest hour for the Manipuri people.
MANIPUR UNDER BRITISH COLONIAL RULE
The British hanged the Defence Minister and
younger brother of the King, along with the General of Manipur army, in a
public square to intimidate the Manipuri people. Many others, including the
King, were exiled or imprisoned for long years. Manipur’s ancient and holy seat
of power, the Kangla, became the new barracks for the British occupation
forces. An annual tribute, a heavy fine and other punitive measures were
imposed to subdue the rebellious masses. Significantly, however, Manipur was
never annexed to the British Indian Empire.
The British imperialists put on the
Manipur throne a distant relative of the deposed king as ruler of the state.
The ruler was assisted by a Durbar. However, real powers were exercised by the
Political Agent and by the President of the Durbar, who were invariably British
officers. The latter was personally made responsible for administration of the
hill areas. In other words, nearly 90 p.c. of Manipur’s territory was
deliberately kept outside the jurisdiction of the native ruler.
Drastic changes were made in the
administration to facilitate better collection of the revenue and to
consolidate their colonial rule. Importance was subtly given to inter-tribal
differences and rivalries in the hills. The British rulers also gave indirect
encouragement to Christian missionaries who came to fulfill the White Man’s
Burden among the tribes in the hills. The subsequent religious differences
between the tribal converts to Christianity and the Meitei converts to Hinduism
were then exploited to cause social and political friction among the Manipuri
people. The policy of divide-and-rule was given a further refinement when the
‘prestige’ of the native ruler was propped up by turning a blind eye to his
imposition of feudal and Hindu orthodox values and practices on the people.
This served the useful purpose of diverting the attention of the people from
the colonial masters to the oppression by their puppet.
Manipur was important to the British
as their strategic outpost in the Indo-Burma Region. Little attention was
therefore paid to direct economic exploitation of the state as was usually done
elsewhere. However, the indirect British colonial administration, through a
native ruler and the tribal chiefs, extracted a heavy price from the people in
the form of compulsory free labour in the construction of roads for use by the
occupation army and in supplying rations to far-flung army outposts. Heavy
taxes were also levied for payment of the annual tribute and the punitive fine
and for contributions towards maintenance of roads, etc. Such measures angered
the Manipuri public.
STRUGGLE AGAINST COLONIAL RULE - EARLY PHASE
Public resentment against the colonial rule
was evident as early as 1904 when the capital’s main market and the residences
of some British officers were destroyed by fire during the night under
suspicious circumstances within the span of a few days. The Political Agent
ordered the male inhabitants of Imphal to rebuild the residences at their own
cost. Six Manipuris who were alleged to be ringleaders in the acts of arson
were also ordered to be expelled from Manipur. An agitated public could no
longer take such high handedness lying down and decided to defy the orders. And
in a manner, which is still peculiar to Manipur, the women took the lead in the
mass struggle. Thousands of them converged on the Market Square in Imphal and demanded to
meet the Political Agent for withdrawal of the orders. The police were
ineffective against the massive outburst of pent-up fury. The colonial
administration and the normal public life were completely paralysed. The
British had to beat a hasty retreat and cancel the orders.
The colonial masters had learnt a lesson. But
the exigencies of the First World War prompted the British to raise a labour corps from among the Naga and the
Kuki tribes of Manipur. Though much
against their will, the first batch of
some 2000 recruits were sent to France
in 1917. However, when the British proceeded to recruit and send another batch,
the Kuki chiefs did not obey the orders. The Political Agent took this an issue
of prestige and sent troops to punish some of the more rebellious tribal
chiefs. In the hilly tracts where the Kukis routinely shift their settlements
from place to place, the British found them more elusive in the prevailing
atmosphere of mutual suspicion and antagonism. So, what began as a limited
measure to teach a lesson to some Kuki chiefs, snowballed to a big punitive
expedition against the Kukis in general with the participation of many British
forces from India
and Burma.
The expedition continued, despite considerable casualties on both sides, sides,
till the last of the leading Kuki chiefs was captured in 1919.
From this bitter experience with the
Kukis, the British appointed more British officers in the hill areas to ensure
strict control over the people. The co-operation and assistance they received
from the then native ruler was a crucial factor in their success and therefore,
a Knighthood was conferred on him in appreciation of the services rendered. And
mindful of the geopolitical importance of the valley and of the need to keep
the majority Meiteis settled there in good humor, the British rulers began to
make other ‘friendly’ gestures also, like reduction in the amount of annual
tribute, relief from contribution to maintenance of roads, easier terms in loan
repayment, etc. More funds were made available for more extensive
administrative machinery.
STRUGGLE AGAINST COLONIAL RULE - LATER PHASE
The spontaneity of the earlier struggles against the colonial rule gave
way to more organized movements in the 1930s. One such movement was that of the
Zeliangrong Naga tribes in the western hills of Manipur. As Christianity under
colonial patronage began to challenge the traditional values and ideals of the
tribal people, this mass movement under a charismatic leader was in the
beginning a movement for reform in the traditional religion and society. The
British rulers were uneasy at its mass support and became really worried when
it gradually transformed into a movement against the British colonial rule. The
leader told his followers to stop paying taxes, to disobey unjust laws, to
fight against all foreigners and to struggle for a ‘kingdom promised long ago
by God.’ The British suppressed the movement ruthlessly by hanging their leader
in 1931 and his more prominent followers were imprisoned for long years.
More sustained struggles against the colonial
rule became possible with the emergence of educated native elite who had been
exposed to the Indian freedom struggle during their study in Indian colleges
and universities. It began as a non-political pan-Manipuri movement to bring
all Manipuris, inside and outside Manipur, under one banner. They
combined this with reformist zeal against the oppressive feudal and Hindu
orthodoxy of the puppet ruler. In the ‘petition phase’ of the struggle, they
submitted all kinds of petitions to the British rulers but mainly for various
constitutional reforms in Manipur. This kind of passive and elitist protest was
rudely shaken by an upsurge of mass indignation against colonial exploitation.
The immediate provocation was an
artificial scarcity of rice, the staple food of the Manipuris, during
harvesting season and the consequent jump in prices in 1939. This was caused by
the unrestricted export of rice from Manipur by Indian traders who, along with
the Bengali clerks, were appendages to the British colonial rule. They were
settled in large numbers inside the British Reserve, an extraterritorial
enclave in Imphal, which came under the direct rule of the Political Agent.
While the Bengali clerks were petty tyrants in government offices, the rich
Indian traders were sharks in the colonial economy.
In 1939 also, as it was in 1904, the
first explosive reaction against the colonial regime came from the women of
Manipur. As if out of nowhere, thousands of them gathered in Imphal and
demanded immediate stoppage to the export of rice from the state by the Indian
traders. In the course of their demand, they braved rifle butt and bayonet
charges by the occupation forces, they lay down on the road in front of trucks
loaded with rice for export, and they even compelled the high and mighty
Political Agent to go with them to the rice mills and cut off their power
supply so that the wily Indian traders would not be able to process rice for
export even secretly. The fierce intensity of their anger, though brief,
unnerved the colonial masters and their Indian lackeys so much so that the
events came to be known in history as the Nupi Laan (Women’s War).
Unlike in the previous occasions,
the mass struggle continued with widespread disobedience movement with active
participation by men. The social, economic and political superstructure
carefully built up in Manipur on feudal and colonial foundations, simply
collapsed in the frenzy of a mass defiance of colonial authority in the next
few months, And the awe in which the British rulers were held by ordinary
Manipuris was gone forever in the aftermath of the Nupi Laan. The nature of the
struggle in Manipur was obviously influenced by the civil disobedience
movements in India
under Mahatma Gandhi’s leadership. But, being motivated by local issues and in
the absence of any links organisationally between them, the movement in Manipur
was not a part of the Indian freedom struggle.
It was during such a politically
fluid condition that the Second World War broke out and the Japanese dropped
their first bomb on Imphal in 1942. Manipur was then quickly drawn into the
vortex of war. From a transit route for hundreds of thousands of refugees
fleeing from the advancing Japanese forces in South-east
Asia and from a camp for the retreating Allied Forces, Manipur
itself was turned into a prime target for the two contesting armies. After
fierce battles on Manipur soil in 1944, the Japanese advance was checked for
the first time by Allied forces on the outskirts of Imphal and, in a decisive
turn in the fortunes of the War in Asia, it
was rolled back until the Japanese were finally defeated.
Never before were the Manipuris so
intensely exposed to the ravages of a modern war. The business of day-to-day
survival took precedence over anything else for the majority of the people.
But, to the more politically conscious Manipuris, men and women who actively
took part in the Nupi Laan and in the subsequent disobedience movement, the
Japanese forces were seen as liberators. They went underground and mobilised
the public to provide food, shelter, information, etc. to the Japanese forces.
Despite the strict wartime surveillance by the British, they established
pockets of influence in the valley. The local support enabled the Indian
National Army led by Subhas Chandra Bose, an ally of the Japanese, to raise for
the first time the flag of their ‘Provisional Government of Free India’ on
Manipur soil. They announced it as the beginning of the end of British colonial
rule in the Indian subcontinent.
Of course, the hope of liberation
from colonial rule was dashed with the Japanese defeat. But it soon became
apparent that the British had neither the energy left nor the inclination to
continue ruling over an increasingly hostile Indian people. When the modalities
for the transfer of power were finally worked out, the Native States like
Manipur, administered by the native rulers under British paramountcy, were
given the option to remain free or to join one of the two Dominions, namely, Indian
and Pakistan.
BACK TO SQUARE ONE
When political developments of such historic significance were taking
place around them rapidly, the Manipuris were still recovering from the
traumatic experiences of the War and were trying to bring back some normalcy to
their lives. So, war compensation, to them, was perhaps an issue more important
than political happenings elsewhere. Besides, while the old social values and
mores had been swept away by the War, new ones were yet to take roots. During
such a period, Maharaja Bodh Chandra, the then young and inexperienced native
ruler of Manipur who was put on the throne by the British on the death of his
father during the War, signed the Instrument of Accession (see Appendix I) on
11 August 1947 acceding Manipur to the Dominion of India, just three days
before the long-awaited dawn of freedom. Nobody knew how and under what
circumstances he signed, or was made to sign, the document which put the clock back in Manipur and placed
the Manipuri people once again at the mercy of the new rulers in New Delhi. However, under
the terms of the Instrument of Accession, the Maharaja of Manipur retained the
sovereign power to reject ‘any future constitution of India’.
Manipur’s political relations with
an independent India
were still the same as they existed under British paramountcy. Under the terms
of the Instrument of Accession, the Indian government was responsible for
Defence, External affairs, and Communications and the Maharaja enjoyed
considerable autonomy in internal administration. A leader of the Indian
National Congress from Assam
was appointed the Dominion Agent in Manipur to look after India’s
colonial interests, just as the Political Agent did regarding British colonial
interests. The Political Agent had functioned during the British Rule under the
direction of the Governor of Assam in Shillong who was in overall charge of the
Indo-Burma Region in his capacity as Agent to the Crown Representative in India. The
Governor of Assam now had similar responsibilities as Agent to the Government
of India. The Governor now reported to the Minister of States, Government of
India. Almost everything remained unchanged, including the occupation of the
Kangla, the sacred and ancient seat of power of Manipur kings, by an Assam
Rifles battalion.
There were however significant
changes in Manipur’s internal administration and politics. The long-standing
public demand for a ‘full responsible government’ in Manipur, which was
disrupted during the War, had gained political momentum once again when the
winding-up of the British Indian Empire became imminent. A Constitution Making
Committee headed by the President of the Durbar, a British officer, was
therefore constituted by the Maharaja by the end of 1946. The 15-member
Committee included five elected members from the valley, five nominated
non-officials from the hills and officials deputed or nominated by the
government departments concerned. After years of procrastination on the issue,
there was a sense of urgency all around. A draft Constitution incorporating the
basic structure of a responsible government was ready a few days before the
transfer of power by the British.
But the Maharaja was reluctant to
outright introduction of a responsible government. In the meanwhile, the Durbar
was abolished and replaced by an interim Manipur State Council as the hub of
administration in the wake of the transfer of power. With a Chief Minister at
the head, the Ministers in the Council were appointed by the Maharaja and they
were responsible to the Maharaja. The Maharaja-in-Council had both legislative
and executive powers over the whole of Manipur.
POLITICAL POLARIZATION
The most vocal element in the
protest over delay in adoption of the Constitution was the Manipur State
Congress, a political party which came into existence overnight in the second
half of 1946. Its leaders had a political godfather in the Dominion Agent, a
veteran Indian Congress leader. They resorted to demonstrations, picketing
government offices, and other forms of agitation to dislocate normal life in
Imphal. The Manipur State Congress was later affiliated, in 1948, to the All
India States’ Peoples’ Conference, a front organization of the Indian National
Congress for the people in Native States.
The role of the Manipur State Congress
was that of a usurper, for the demand for a responsible government had been
spearheaded since 1938 by a broad-based political movement under the
charismatic leadership of Hijam Irabot. The Manipur State Congress was nowhere
on the political scene when Hijam Irabot was sentenced to three years’
imprisonment in 1940 for leading the Nupi Laan and the mass disobedience
movement that followed. The British rulers incarcerated him at the far away
Sylhet Jail (now in Bangladesh).
On being released from the jail, he was not allowed to enter Manipur. He was
re-arrested and detained in the Silchar Jail (now in Assam state) till the end of the
War. No other political leader was so popular and respected among the Manipuri
people, and for that reason so ‘dangerous’ to the British, as Hijam Irabot.
During the years he spent in jail,
Hijam Irabot had the opportunity to interact with Indian communist cadres and
to study Marxism-Leninism. As a result, he became a committed Marxist with a
radically changed political outlook. But Hijam Irabot’s political line was
conditioned by his long experience in political organization and his intimate
knowledge of the Manipuri people and society. He did not, therefore, subscribe
to the then prevailing communist dogma originating from Moscow and being obeyed
in toto by the Indian communists, even though he was organizationally
associated with the Assam unit of the Communist Party of India. For this, in
October 1949, he was subjected to self-criticism by the party and he confessed
that he had been following the political line of Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia.
Translated into ordinary language, it meant that Hijam Irabot was a Manipuri
nationalist who also believed in the revolutionary tenets of Marxism-Leninism.
When Hijam Irabot was allowed to
return to Manipur in 1946, he did not reveal initially his new political
ideology but quietly went about organizing the peasants at the grass roots in a
class struggle against the feudal land owners whose class interests were best
represented by the opportunist and urban based leaders of the Manipur State
Congress. Most of his political colleagues and followers of the pre-War period
belonged to the petty bourgeoisie and they were now regrouped under one banner. Hijam Irabot also tried to
forge a political alliance of the peasants, the petty bourgeoisie and the
tribal leadership for a national democratic revolution in Manipur.
So, when the British rulers left
Manipur, there was a clear political polarization. The Manipur State Congress,
which got all their political sustenance from India and represented the
land-owning urban middle class, was on one side. In the Manipur State Council,
where the feudal elite were entrenched, they also had an ally. There was, on
the other side, Hijam Irabot’s broad nationalist alliance of the petty
bourgeoisie, the tribal people and the increasingly class conscious peasants.
The contradiction turned into a class antagonism when the Manipur State
Council, vested with enormous legislative and executive powers, felt threatened
by the political awakening among the peasants and took up repressive measures
in 1948 against the movement led by Hijam Irabot. He went underground in
September 1948 to avoid being arrested on fictitious criminal charges.
DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT AND CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY
The Maharaja-in-Council finally
adopted the Manipur State Constitution Act 1947 (See Appendix 2) and also the
Franchise rules, which laid down, the details regarding conduct of elections.
The salient features of the Manipur Constitution and the Rules were:
(a) a 53-member legislature, of which 51 members were elected from
territorial constituencies on the basis of adult suffrage by secret ballot and
the remaining two being representatives of Educational and Commercial
interests;
(b) a seven-member Council of Ministers, consisting of six Ministers,
including two Ministers reserved for the Hill people, elected by the
legislature and a Chief Minister appointed by the Maharaja in consultation with
the elected Ministers;
(c) a Maharaja who was ‘Constitutional Head of the State’, enjoying
certain personal prerogatives and a
fixed percentage of the state revenue as civil list and to whom the Council of
Ministers was jointly responsible for administration of the state;
(d) a provision of the Fundamental Rights and Duties of the citizens
which, among others, guaranteed the rule
of law, equality before the law, ‘freedom of thought, expression, belief,
faith, worship, vocation, association, and action subject to law and public
morality’; and
(e) a Judiciary, which was completely separate from the Executive.
There were about half a million
eligible voters, adults above 21 years of age, in the electoral rolls of the 51
territorial constituencies. In view of the inadequate manpower and poor communication
facilities, the elections were conducted in a staggered manner from June 11 to July 27, 1948 and the final
results were published on 20
August 1948. The new legislature was ceremonially inaugurated by
the Maharaja on 18 October
1948.
The Manipur State Congress secured
just four seats in the legislature, reflecting the big gap between their
pretensions and the reality. A local party, with support from Independent
legislators, came to power. The Maharaja
appointed his younger brother as the Chief Minister and the new Council
of Ministers were sworn in by the Chief Judge on 26 November 1948. Thus Manipur became perhaps
the first among the Native States to have a secular and democratic government
within the framework of a constitutional monarchy (See Appendix 3). In a
society which was steeped in feudal values and with an electorate which were
largely illiterate, it was a bold and remarkable achievement.
INDIAN INTRIGUES AND ANNEXATION OF MANIPUR
When the new Ministers were feeling their way in the government and
when the legislators were busy debating on all kinds of issues in their
new-found freedom and enacting basic laws urgently required for governance, the
leaders of independent and resurgent India were consolidating the empire
they inherited from the British. The so-called merger of hundreds of Native
States, big or small, to the Dominion of India was on the top of their agenda.
The process was nearly complete by the beginning of 1949. But the people and
the government in Manipur were too absorbed in their respective local problems
to fully appreciate the real strategic importance of Manipur to India’s
security and, therefore the necessity, from India’s point of view, of annexing
it as soon as possible. On the other hand, they contented themselves with an
assurance given by the Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, in a letter to
the Maharaja, that the integrity and distinct identity of Manipur would be
preserved.
The first Indian move was planting a
Trojan Horse in Manipur. The Governor of Assam, on behalf of the Government of
India, insisted on appointing an officer called the Dewan to look after the
‘treaty obligations’ between Manipur and the Indian Dominion, on the ground
that such an officer was essential at Imphal with the abolition of the Dominion
Agency. The Maharaja reluctantly agreed to the proposal as the Chief Minister
was to be appointed concurrently as the Dewan. But the Governor changed his
mind soon after the appointment and told the Maharaja to appoint a person
nominated by the Indian Government as the Dewan ‘with full powers over the
whole range of administration’.
The Government of India had no right
to interfere in the internal affairs of Manipur like this under the terms of
the Instrument of Accession. Clearly, the Indian political leaders who claimed
to be the champions of democracy had no respect for the democratic government
and institutions in Manipur. Through the Governor of Assam, they adopted the
tactics of recognising the Maharaja only and nobody else. They now pressurised
an inexperienced Maharaja into accepting a situation where the Ministers of a
responsible and popular government were to take orders in day-to-day
administration from an extra-constitutional functionary like the Dewan.
With the installation of a Major
General as the new Dewan in April 1949, the denouement came quickly. The
Manipur State Congress, which had been smarting from their election fiasco,
soon began to whip up public emotions on the alleged oppression of the people
in ‘social and religious matters’ by the Maharaja and demanded the Maharaja’s
head as well as the integration of Manipur with India as the price. To get over
the last hurdle in India’s
colonial expansion, the Governor was now orchestrating the pressure on the
Maharaja in Manipur through the Dewan on the one hand and, on the other, he
applied guile and flattery so skillfully that he could pose as the Maharaja’s
saviour!
It was primarily to seek the advice
of the Governor on a contentious legal matter involving the disqualification of
a Minister by the Election Tribunal and also to entreat his ‘saviour’ to
restrain the unruly Manipur State Congress that the Maharaja went to Shillong,
the then capital of Assam State, in September 1949. The conspiracy hatched up
in New Delhi
and Shillong was thus working according to plan. The Maharaja’s own plans, of
course, fell apart. Instead of the benign Indian Congress freedom fighter whose
sole concern in the past always seemed to be the Maharaja’s welfare, there was
now a Governor in his true colours telling a shocked Maharaja to forget about
the popular government in Manipur and to put his signature on a prepared
document ceding full and exclusive authority regarding the governance of
Manipur to India.
There were indeed for some time all
sorts of press reports and rumours about
possible merger of Manipur into India.
But in his naivety, the Maharaja could not have thought that it would come
about in such an abrupt and treacherous manner. So, according to
well-documented accounts of that sordid episode, the Maharaja was adamant in
his refusal, insisting on first taking
into confidence the popular government and legislature in Manipur. The Governor
and his masters in Delhi
then resorted to applying intense psychological pressures on the Maharaja. The
Indian Army soon cordoned off the ‘Redlands’,
the private residence of the Maharaja in Shillong, where he and his small
entourage were staying. All means of communication with the outside world were
totally cut off. Not so subtle hints of dire consequences in case of continued
defiance and prospects of a much enhanced Privy Purse in case of compliance
were conveyed to the Maharaja. On the third day of torture, the Maharaja broke
down. And on the next day, 21
September 1949, India
got a new colony on its northeast frontier as the Maharaja signed the so-called ‘Manipur Merger Agreement’ (See
Appendix 4). It looked as though the British were fools in 1891.
To the Maharaja’s credit, he had
signed the so-called agreement ‘on behalf of himself, his heirs and successors’
only. In other words, the Maharaja left the door open for the Manipuri people
either to reject or approve of his action. Needless to say, the ‘Agreement’ was
never ratified by the Manipuri people’s elected representatives in the State
Assembly nor approved by the then popular government in Manipur. Besides, being
a document signed by the Maharaja under duress and in violation of the
provisions of the Manipur Constitution, the ‘Manipur Merger Agreement’ was, and
continues to be, legally invalid.
According to the terms of the
‘Agreement’, the formal annexation of Manipur took place on 15 October 1949 amid tight security.
II. Indian Colonial Rule in Manipur
THE BACKGROUND
India’s struggle for freedom from the British
colonial rule was a movement of historic proportions. With sacrifice and
participation by millions of Indians under Gandhi’s unorthodox leadership, it
was an inspiration to all freedom-loving peoples worldwide. Not surprisingly,
its impact on those Manipuris who were educated in India before the Second World War
was considerable. Moreover, there had been cultural interaction between the two
peoples for about two centuries. So the bulk of the Manipuris were not
ill-disposed towards India
or the Indians in 1949. Only the Indian rulers thought and behaved otherwise.
They adopted underhand treachery to annex Manipur and India’s very
first official acts in Manipur were the dismissal of the popular government and
the dissolution of the elected legislature. All powers were concentrated in a
Chief Commissioner who, at the first opportunity, muzzled the press and banned
all public meetings.
However, as perceived by the new
colonial regime, the greatest threat to them was the peasant movement led by
Hijam Irabot. This movement had acquired international ramifications after
Hijam Irabot attended the Second Congress of the Communist Party of India (CPI)
at Culcutta in March 1948 where he met with Thakin Than Tun, leader of the
‘White Flag’ Burma Communist Party (BCP). This development, with its potential
for linking up Hijam Irabot’s movement with other anti-colonial, nationalist
and usually communist movements in South-east Asia which extended in a
continuous arc from Burma to Indo-China, was a key factor in the hastening of
Manipur’s annexation by India overriding the popular sentiment against ‘merger’
and the Maharaja’s sovereign power, under the terms of the Instrument of
Accession, to reject ‘any future constitution of India’. In the Indian context
too, the Second Congress was a landmark in communist movement in that the CPI
decided to launch armed struggle against what they called the sham Indian
independence and the bourgeois ruling class.
Hijam Irabot, then working
underground, felt strongly against Manipur’s annexation. The manner in which it
was effected was, from his Marxist viewpoint, a further confirmation of the
reactionary character of the Indian ruling class. So Hijam Irabot seized the
opportunity provided by this tactical change in the communist movement and took
advantage of the comparatively easy availability of arms and ammunition in
Manipur in the after math of the Second World War. He then began to transform
the anti-feudal peasant movement in Manipur into a guerrilla movement against
the Indian rulers.
By the middle of 1950, his armed
‘Red Guards’ were in control of scores of
villages in the Manipur valley. The colonial administration promptly declared
them as ‘disturbed and dangerous area’. The police and the paramilitary forces
were then unleashed on the people to crush the movement. Hijam Irabot directed
the struggle from his hideout in a Burmese village, which was facilitated by
his cordial relations with the BCP. Unfortunately, he died in September 1951
due to illness, and the guerrilla movement also petered out in the next few
months from lack of proper leadership. Though the armed struggle led by Hijam
Irabot, the first of its kind in the Indo-Burma region, was not a success, its
revolutionary legacy is still cherished by the Manipuri people.
Unlike
the struggle in Manipur valley, which adopted a basically Marxist political
line, there was also opposition to the Indian colonial rule on ethnic lines by
many freedom-loving tribes. For example, the Naga tribes in what is now called
Nagaland (then a part of Assam)
began their own armed struggle for national liberation by 1956. There also, it
was a story of brutal suppression by India’s Occupation Forces.
THE WATERSHED
When the
mass of indigenous peoples in the Indo-Burma region were thus feeling alienated
from India
and the Indians, the Sino-Indian War broke out in 1962. A unilateral cease-fire
by China
saved this strategic region for India
by a hair’s breadth. This brought about a change in the attitude of Indian
rulers to the region. There was now more of a carrot in addition to the big
stick. A new State of Nagaland
in the Indian Union was formed in 1963, followed by the States of Tripura,
Manipur and Meghalaya in 1972. But it was too little and too late in the day
for the Manipuri people.
A new generation of Manipuris, born
during and after the Second World War, brought up without their parents’
wishful thinking about India’s freedom struggle but wiser from their own bitter
experiences of the Indian rule, had come of age by the middle of the Sixties.
They initially got their inspiration from the glorious past of the Manipuri
people. More important, they began to realize the irreconcilable nature of the
national contradiction between the Manipuris who have very close historical,
cultural and racial affinity with the peoples of South-east
Asia and the Indians who have their own rich and distinctive
cultural heritage. They also realized that similar national contradictions
prevailed in the Indo-Burma region with respect to other indigenous
peoples.
The thought, feelings, aspirations
and grievances of this generation of Manipuris found a concrete expression in,
and were propagated by, the establishment of the United National Liberation
Front (UNLF), Manipur in November 1964. Some veterans of the struggles led by
Hijam Irabot also joined to lend their experiences to the organization and to
complete what they felt was their unfinished task.
To the new generation, the
fundamental national contradiction between the Manipuris and the Indians
explained why India’s ‘democratic’ rulers had no qualms about trampling on
Manipur’s nascent democratic government and institutions in 1949; why they were
interested only in the physical security provided by the Himalayan range which
extends upto the Indo Burma region, ignored Manipur’s rightful historical claim
over the Kabaw Valley while settling the India-Burma boundary and erected an
artificial wall between countless families who have been living on the border
for centuries; why India’s professed ideals like anti-colonialism, secularism
and socialism do not extend to the Mongoloid indigenous peoples of the region;
why India’s armed forces behave and operate like an army of occupation; why
this region is the least developed economically despite its rich natural
resources and has instead become the dumping ground for Indian industries as
well as the cheap source of their raw materials; why even the judiciary adopts
a different norm on human rights for the peoples of this region; or why an
ill-concealed attempt is being made to change the demographic composition of
the region. The list seems endless. In short, the irreconcilable national
contradiction explained why Manipur and the rest of the Indo-Burma region
remain an Indian colony.
THE CAPTIVE MARKET
The so-called development activities
undertaken by India
from the late Sixties onwards were naturally conditioned by considerations of India’s
security and territorial integrity. Priority was given to construction of roads
in the border areas for better deployment of an ever-increasing number of
Indian Occupation Forces (IOF) in the
region. That the people could also use the same roads was an incidental
benefit. With its vast untapped natural and mineral resources, with its
perennial rivers, the Indo-Burma region has the potential to generate huge
surplus power and become a well-developed region. But India’s
colonial rule has ensured that it remained the least developed and the most
backward region thereby making it totally dependent on India. Not much
attention was given to planned development of the human resources nor to
modernization of the means of production. India was interested only in
extracting the raw materials that its developing industries desperately needed,
such as tea, oil and timber and in keeping the region as a captive market for
their shoddy products. Consequently, it has caused an ecological disaster in
the region.
In
Manipur, for example, its handloom and handicraft industries, the traditional
mainstay of livelihood in a majority of Manipuri families and famous for their
exquisite workmanship, were allowed to be strangled economically by cheap,
machine made goods from India.
In the absence of irrigation facilities, multiple cropping was unheard of in
Manipur’s fertile agricultural lands even though their acreage was shrinking
due to increased population pressure. Not long ago, Manipur used to export rice
and many more items, but it is now compelled to depend on India for each
and every item of human needs.
Under the circumstances, the more India invested
money in Manipur’s ‘development’ under its Five Years Plans, the more profit
thus accrued to Indian business and industry. All the reins of the colonial
economy are consequently held by their agents and collaborators in Manipur. What is more, not even 5 p.c. of the
huge amount mobilized annually from Manipur by the Indian financial
institutions and banks are reinvested in Manipur. By any yard stick for
measuring human development, Manipur today is far below India’s
national average except for the literacy rate. At 60.96 p.c. (1991 Census), it
is higher than the all-India average of 52.11 p.c. This happened despite, not
because of , India’s
policies. Many private schools and colleges were established, particularly in
the late Fifties and the Sixties, not only to provide more educational
facilities for the rising generation but also to create the only avenue to
employment for those who were already educated.
But there is a limit to how much
employment can be provided in this manner. In the absence of meaningful
development in agriculture and industry to absorb them, a massive unemployment
among the educated youth is thus a natural corollary of ‘development’ under
colonial rule. A tragic social consequence of this has been Manipur’s educated
but frustrated young men and women drifting to drugs in large numbers. So the
world knows Manipur better today as the land with possibly the highest per
capita concentration of drug addicts and the related HIV-positive cases in the
world, not as the land from where the modern game of polo originated
during the British Rule and where a glorious heritage in martial arts is still
alive. Of course, from the ranks of the educated youth have also come the bulk
of the patriotic freedom fighters who have vowed to destroy the evil colonial
regime.
The real beneficiaries of the
present regime are only a handful of persons who have managed to pocket a
portion of the so-called development funds as they trickled down from New Delhi. Though their
share of the loot is a small fraction of the amount that has gone back to
Indian hands, it is enough to create this local elite who are servile and given
to vulgar ostentation. They are the fountain of corruption, which has become
endemic and pervasive, and of moral degeneration in the society. They belong to
any ethnic, linguistic or tribal community in Manipur. The members of this
class will be found in positions of
power and influence, as
‘representatives’ of the people, as ministers, bureaucrats, police top brass,
contractors and so on. Underpinned by the Indian Occupation Force, they are
putting up the show of a democratic government in Manipur.
After half a century of colonial rule, there
are only Indian collaborators in Manipur, not even a native capitalist class
that can take advantage of new economic opportunities. Now, in the free-for-all
environment of a liberalized Indian economy, the Manipuris and other peoples in
the region are not going to have a level playing field for competition. The
delicate balance in their natural environment will be under greater threat than
ever before as the multinationals and the Indian capitalists spread their
tentacles with renewed vigour into the region. The Indian colonial regime did
not in the past protect the vital interests of the peoples in the Indo-Burma
region. Neither can it be expected now nor in the future too. To see light at
the end of the tunnel and for the sake of generations yet to be born, those
living today have no alternative but to organize themselves and fight to end
the Indian colonial rule.
THE CHALLENGE AND THE RESPONSE
The reply to India’s
colonial policies, practices and attitudes has been, therefore, the birth of
many national liberation movements in the Indo-Burma region. And like any
colonial power, India
had resorted to brute force to pacify them, to wear them down by attrition and
finally to bring them to total submission. India had also adopted the policy of
divide-and-rule, had tried to placate a section of the population, had
physically shut off the region from the world by restricting the entry of
foreigners, had made a mockery of the internationally accepted human rights
norms by such laws as the Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958 which
empowers any armed personnel to kill anyone with impunity, and had even tried
to change the demographic composition of the region by turning a blind eye to
illegal infiltration and settlement by co religionists from Nepal and
Bangladesh.
Of late, special attention has been
given to administer a heavy dose of propaganda through the government-owned electronic
mass media. However, the outcome of all their efforts has been generally
negative. Because, the economic exploitation, the indiscriminate arrests and
physical torture in detentions without trial, of which anybody can be a victim,
the enforced disappearances, the killing of innocent people in cross-fire or in
fake encounters, the cynical destruction and looting of private property by
Indian security forces during their operations, the cases of rape and
molestation, and other innumerable harassment that ordinary citizens have to
endure, are simply too harsh realities of daily life under Indian colonial rule
to be glossed over by India’s propaganda.
As India had unleashed state terrorism
against the political movements of the
indigenous peoples, this region had witnessed enough bloodshed and human misery
during the last five decades. But India had singularly failed in its
efforts to get a military solution. Now, there is a growing political
polarization. On the one hand, there are the lackeys of the colonial regime
and, on the other, an increasing number of people who are alienated from the
repressive Indian rule. To counter the growing unity and understanding among
peoples and organizations in the region, India has perfected the technique
of divide-and-rule, that old favourite of all colonial powers. Old wounds,
ancient misunderstandings or any cracks in the society have been exploited to
the hilt for the purpose. The hostilities in the late 1990s between the Naga
and the Kuki tribes in Manipur which claimed hundreds of innocent lives on both
sides including those of women and children, and now trying to pitch the Nagas
against the Meiteis through the process of India-NSCN (IM) ceasefire, is a
glaring example of how successful, and also how cynical, can India be in the
pursuit of its colonial interests. Thus India has managed ‘free of cost’ to
divert the attention of these tribes from their rulers in New Delhi to their own neighbours, at least
for the time being.
THE STRUGGLE
Peace can once
again return to the picturesque hills and valleys of the region, bring back the
smiles to the people, only when India
opts for a political solution to this political problem of the indigenous peoples
in the region. So far, instead of accepting this reality, India has been
pushing for a military solution thereby prolonging the armed conflict between
the Region and India.
Therefore, the organizations in the vanguard of the struggles for national
liberation are compelled to fight for the right to national self-determination
of their respective peoples so as to regain their freedom and independence.
Against this background, the UNLF also has been spearheading the fight for the
right of the Manipuri people to determine freely their own political status
according to their own genius as guaranteed by the International Covenant for
Civil and Political Rights.
III. Human Rights Situation in Manipur
INTRODUCTION
A striking feature of the Indian
political system is the wide gap between theory and practice. The Manipuri people
had been painfully aware of this fact even when, in the first flush of India’s
freedom, its leaders were giving lectures to the world about the historical
necessity of decolonization and of granting freedom to dependent peoples.
Because, in sharp contrast to their outward postures, India had
treacherously annexed Manipur on 15 October 1949 and its very first official act were the
dissolution of the elected State Assembly and the dismissal of the Council of
Ministers. All legislative and executive powers were then concentrated in a
Chief Commissioner appointed by New Delhi
and he was responsible only to his masters. A semblance of these powers was
restored to the Manipuri people when, in January 1972, Manipur was reluctantly
granted the status of a ‘State’ under the Indian Constitution.
THE FRAMEWORK
The discrepancy between what is presented to the world and what
actually happens on the ground, is glaring in the matter of human rights as
well. The Indian Constitution has undoubtedly many features in common with the
human rights standard accepted by the international community. In March 1979,
India also acceded to the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and
Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
with reservations, inter alia, on the Right of Self-determination but accepting
nevertheless obligations under the above Covenants. India, however, has not ratified
the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights. Then, under its municipal law called the Protection of Human Rights Act
1993, a National Human Rights Commission and many State Human Rights
Commissions, were set up recently including one in Manipur. Within such a
constitutional and legal framework, there ought to be a reasonable observance
of human rights in any part of India.
But, as in other spheres of public life, there is a different standard even in
human rights for the indigenous peoples in the Indo-Burma region.
A
DIFFERENT STANDARD
From the very beginning, the ‘democratic’ Indian leaders sought a
military solution to a political problem concerning the indigenous peoples. The
Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958 was enacted specifically for Manipur and
the other six States in the region. It negates every constitutional and legal
provision concerning human rights when a State or a part of it has been
declared a ‘disturbed area’ under the Act, and this declaration is made by the
rulers not for a few months to cope with an emergency but for years or even
decades together. For example, the whole of Manipur has been a ‘disturbed area’
since 1980, with no sign of respite from it in the near future.
Under
this Act, the subjective opinion of or a mere suspicion by a Non-Commissioned
Officer of the Indian armed forces is enough for the arrest without warrant,
torture and killing of any person even before he has committed any offence, and
for the destruction of any property. There is actually no need for the Indian
Occupation Forces to invent fake encounters to cover up their crimes, for the
Act provides them legal immunity from any prosecution. The Act enjoins on the
Indian Occupation Forces to hand over a person in their custody to the nearest
police station ‘with least possible delay’. But they ignore even this minor
concession by the Act and routinely interrogate and detain persons arrested by
them, interpreting the time-limit according to their convenience. Cruel and
degrading treatment, torture, extra-judicial executions and ‘disappearance’ of
innocent persons take place during such unauthorized detentions. But, under
section 19 of the Protection of Human Rights Act 1993, even the National Human
Rights Commission is debarred from direct investigation into such flagrant
violation of human rights by the India’s armed forces.
In a ‘disturbed area’, the Indian
armed forces are supposed to operate in aid of the civil authority. But, in
actual practice, the deployment of armed forces personnel in large numbers with
unlimited powers over a long period, against the background of an irreconcilable
national contradiction between them and the indigenous Mongoloid peoples, has
induced them to operate and behave as a racist army of occupation. The
continued and deliberate defilement of the Kangla by stationing an Assam Rifles
battalion, despite its incalculable hurt to the Manipuri psyche, is just a case
in point. This itself has undoubtedly provoked many young men and women into
joining the struggle for national liberation. Their arrogance and ill-concealed
contempt for civilians have alienated the Indian Occupation Forces even from
the local civil authorities to whose aid they are supposed to be operating.
In 1991, the Human Rights Committee
of the United Nations not surprisingly remarked that several provisions of the
Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958 seemed to be incompatible with those of
the International Covenant for Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Again, in
1997, the Human Rights Committee endorsed the view that the problems in the
region were ‘essentially political in character and that the approach to
resolving such problems must also, essentially, be political’. In this respect,
the Committee had in mind, among others, the right to self-determination of
peoples in article 1 of the Covenant.
The Committee regretted that the Armed Forces
Special Powers had been applied throughout Manipur since 1980
and that India
was ‘in effect using emergency powers without resorting to article 4, paragraph
3, of the Covenant’. The Committee recommended that ‘the application of these
emergency powers be closely monitored so as to ensure strict compliance with
the provisions of the Covenant’. Further, the Committee hoped that the
provisions of the Act would be closely examined by the Supreme Court of India
for their compatibility with the Covenant.
The Indian Supreme Court did not find the time
to examine the constitutionality of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act and
kept it pending for about two decades until international public pressure could
not delay it any longer. When it gave its judgment finally on 27 November 1997, the
Supreme Court upheld its constitutionality in toto within India’s
democratic framework. It amounted to prescribing a different human rights
standard for the Manipuris and other indigenous peoples in the Western Southeast
Asia region; it could also be interpreted as judicial sanction to racial
discrimination as the indigenous peoples of the region are mostly of Mongoloid
origin.
The indigenous peoples of the Region
are simply outraged by the Indian Supreme Court judgment. In a recent workshop
for human rights defenders in India
by the Amnesty International, it was decided to protest against the judgment
and to observe every year 27 November as ‘Anti-Armed Forces Special Powers Act
Day’ throughout the region.
The Terrorist and Disruptive
Activities (Prevention) Act 1987 (TADA) gave a similar licence to the civil
police in regard to arrest and detention. However, being a law extended to the
whole of India
and the public outcry against its continuance being that much more effective,
the TADA was allowed to lapse while another repressive Act, Prevention of
Terrorism Act (POTA) has been repealed as a result of public outcry against the
Act throughout mainland India.
However, the Armed Forces Special Powers Act remained intact. Then there is
also the Punjab Security of State Act 1953 which has been extended to Manipur
and it enables the rulers to impose inter alia collective fines on villages and
towns.
THE TORCH BEARERS
The Manipuri people naturally do not repose much faith in the Indian
political and judicial system for the protection of their human rights. An
association of like-minded lawyers in Manipur called the Civil Liberties and
Human Rights Organization (CLAHRO), established in 1983, used to plead in the
courts for victims of human rights violations by the Indian Occupation Forces
or by the police. They are now resigned to their ineffectiveness and quite
disillusioned with India’s
judicial system. Then, in 1993, the Committee on Human Rights (COHR) was formed
in Manipur as an apex body of many NGOs active in human rights. The COHR,
unlike CLAHRO, relies more on creating awareness among the people to build up a
mass movement against human rights violations. The trickle of information that
the outside world now gets regarding the human rights situation in Manipur owes
every much to these NGOs and human rights activists.
However, the vanguard in the
struggle against colonialism from the time of British Rule down to the present
is the ordinary women of Manipur. Today, in their respective localities, they
keep all-night vigil with bamboo torches at the first sign of trouble from the
police or the Indian Occupation Forces. They are called the Meira Paibis
or, literally, the torchbearers. A mass of angry women participating in a rally
or marching to any government functionary when they think a grave injustice or
human rights violation has been committed, is a common sight. A glaring example
- on 15 July 2004 twelve Meira Paibi Imas (mothers) staged a historic protest
against the rape and killing of a young woman, Thangjam Manorama, by the 17
Assam Rifles of the Indian Occupation Forces stationed at the Kangla in the
heart of Imphal. The women protestors were so enraged and shocked by the
barbaric act of the Indian soldiers that they unrobed their cloths at the gate
of the Kangla and challenged the Indian soldiers there to rape and kill them
also. Sensitised by this unique protest, the long pent up anger of the entire
people of Manipur exploded in revolt against the Armed Forces Special Powers
Act (AFSPA) in particular and the Indian colonial occupation in general. This
is the beginning of a democratic struggle against Indian colonial occupation of
Manipur.
IV. The United National Liberation Front
(UNLF): Manipur
THE PREMISE
The
armed struggle led by Hijam Irabot in Manipur was an exciting new experience to
those who participated in it. But it had a comparatively short existence; by
1952 it was suppressed by police and paramilitary forces of the new colonial
administration. Therefore, questions have been raised ever since about the
cause of its failure. The obvious and most important one was the vacuum in
leadership after the death of Hijam Irabot. But it was also distinctly possible
that the Manipuris of that period were not fully prepared, socially and
politically, for that kind of ant-colonial and communist armed struggle.
The armed struggles by many tribes
in the Indo-Burma region on ethnic lines have been more resilient, though, in
the end, the outcome has not been much different. While the ethnic bonds
brought cohesion within the tribes and provided a critical psychological input
during armed confrontations with the Indian Occupation Forces, that very ethnic
character also tended to put others off. It became all the more difficult for a
broader political concept or a new national identity to develop with the
changing times. For the colonial power, it becomes that much easier to apply
the policy of divide-and-rule, now divide-and-destroy, among them and then bring
them to heel one by one.
When the United National Liberation
Front (UNLF), Manipur was formally established on 24 November 1964, it was with an acute
awareness of these twin dangers: that of a liberation struggle going far too
ahead of the people’s level of political consciousness and that of being stuck
in an ethnic groove.
Subsequent events and the
experiences of the Naga and the Mizo struggles have borne out what the UNLF
feared. Once in the forefront of armed liberation struggles in the region against
the Indian colonial rule, the Mizos have been bought over by India with
‘statehood’ in 1987. In the case of the Nagas too, the then tired leaders of
their armed struggle had capitulated to India with the signing of the
so-called Shillong Accord in 1975. The Naga people owe it to the leadership in
the undivided National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN) for bringing them
back to the path of a liberation struggle. However, the present leadership of
the Naga struggle also may ultimately capitulate in the process of talks with India under the
current ceasefire agreement.
THE FIRST PHASE
The UNLF, it may be recalled, came
into existence as the ‘representative’ organisation of a new generation of
Manipuris who were born during and after the Second World War. It represented
the hopes and aspirations of this generation for
freedom and human dignity and it propagated their feelings against the Indian
colonial regime. It also reflected their frustrations and grievances against
their parents’ generation and their disillusionment with what their parents
stood for.
Because it was a time when Manipur and the
Manipuri people have been systematically obliterated from the school textbooks;
a time when children were ignorant of their distinctive and rich cultural heritage
and of even elementary geographical and historical facts about Manipur. But
they knew all about, say, the Indian film actors and actresses. It was a time
when families of those martyrs in the Anglo-Manipur War of 1891 used to go on
pilgrimage every year to Khongjom, the place where the last and decisive battle
with the British forces was fought, and prayed in private for the souls of the
departed and nobody took notice of. It was a time when sycophancy was a
prerequisite qualification for climbing up the colonial hierarchy and when
servility was the social norm.
It became apparent to the UNLF
leaders that there was no alternative to a painstaking political socialisation
of a whole generation with a new Manipuri political ethos and that there would
be no quick-fix solutions. The means they adopted for the purpose was the
establishment of front organisations in the late Sixties to reach out to all
sections of the Manipuri society. These organisations had their own separate
memberships, organisational structures and objectives. Most of them were
pioneers in their respective fields. By dint of their sincere and dedicated
service to the Manipuri society for about three decades, they are highly
regarded by the people in their own right.
The effectiveness of the front
organisations has been such that, following the ground swell of public
pressure, even the colonial administration in Manipur had to adopt as their own
some of the programme initiated by them. For example, the puppet government
today officially observes the following Manipuri national functions: the Khongjom
Day on April 23 to commemorate the Anglo-Manipur War of 1891; the Patriots
Day on August 13 to pay homage to all martyrs of that War, as it was on
this day in 1891 that the then Defence Minister and younger brother of the
Manipur king and the then General of the Manipuri forces were hanged by the
British in a public square; the Women’s Day on December 12 to honour the
brave Manipuri women who, in the Nupi Laan of 1939, led the mass defiance of British
authority in protest against their colonial policies.
THE ADVENTURE
The multifarious activities of the
front organisations also gave birth to a patriotic revolutionary generation of
Manipuris by the late Seventies. Many from this generation began to look
askance at the strategy and the pace of the UNLF. Thus came into existence a
number of underground organisations in Manipur during this period, proclaiming
their armed struggle for the liberation of Manipur from the yoke of Indian
colonialism. Indeed, many of the members belonging to these patriotic
organisations laid down their lives either in their sporadic attacks on or in
counter-attacks from Indian Occupation Forces. The Manipuri public applauded
the bravery and sacrifice of these patriots, as though a whiff of fresh air had
come into the prevailing climate of corruption and sycophancy.
However, subsequent course of events
proved that sacrifice alone was not sufficient and that a realistic strategy
and tactics for liberation in the context of the Western Southeast Asia as a
whole was needed. This valuable lesson has guided the UNLF in its approach to
the liberation struggle as a whole.
THE SECOND PHASE
The UNLF believes in the
inter-relatedness and in the inter-dependence of all peoples in the Western
Southeast Asia. It believes that there is no scope for isolated ethnic
struggles, however charismatic their leaders are or however powerful the
organisations may appear at present. All must join hands together in a
liberation struggle against our common enemy. But that depends on achieving a
minimum level of political consciousness among all the peoples, such as the
ability not to be a pawn in India’s
divide-and-rule policy. The UNLF also believes that the strategy and tactics of
the struggle should be uniquely from our own practice and experiences, not
something borrowed or transplanted from somewhere. The nature of the struggle
will also be determined by the nature of the enemy. Taking all relevant factors
into consideration, the UNLF decided in 1990 to begin the next phase of the
struggle. While the valuable work of the front organisations will continue as
before, the focus has shifted to armed propaganda. In fact, preparations for
this phase had begun in the Eighties when the UNLF and the NSCN started
co-coordinating in their activities. The basic objective of this armed
propaganda is to consolidate the unity of the Manipuri people by raising the
level of their political consciousness.
Therefore, in the early stages, armed actions
by the UNLF were directed mainly against antisocial elements, particularly
against those who committed crimes on women or exploited them for immoral
purposes. They were given appropriate punishments after careful investigation.
The UNLF also provides the ‘cutting edge’ to campaigns by the Manipuri public
against rampant alcoholism, gambling, drug peddling and drug abuse. Having lost
their faith in the kind of justice meted out by
the corrupt colonial administration in Manipur, the people have begun to bring
even their private and petty disputes to the UNLF for adjudication. It is a
measure of their trust and confidence in the UNLF that its armed cadres operate
freely among the Manipuri people today. Thus, having established a considerably
vast area of mass base, both in the hills and the plains, the UNLF has now
entered the next phase of the struggle to engage the Indian Occupation Forces
in a full-scale armed struggle for national liberation.
TOWARDS UNITY
That the strategy and tactics of Manipur’s
liberation struggle should be charted out in the context of the interdependence
and inter-relatedness of all the peoples of the WESEA region and of the common
external enemy they confront today, is the basic political and military line of
the UNLF. This demands unity first among the revolutionary organizations of
Manipur. The UNLF, therefore, has all along taken the stand that all the
genuine revolutionary organizations of Manipur should unite and fight together
against Indian colonial occupation. Urged by this reality, the UNLF has been
seeking possibilities of bringing about unity among the revolutionary
organizations of Manipur. Other fraternal organizations have also been working
for unity in their own ways. Their efforts, the hurdles they faced and the
consequences thereof, are now a part of the history of the national liberation
struggle of Manipur. This experience in the search for unity has provided
invaluable lessons for the future.
Thus the common efforts of the Kangleipak Communist
Party (KCP), Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL), the People’s Revolutionary Party
of Kangleipak (PREPAK), the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak
(PREPAK-Pro), the Revolutionary People’s Front (RPF) and the UNLF brought them
together in July 2011 to discuss the paramount necessity for unity among them.
Ultimately, as the result of a long deliberation for 6 days, they committed
themselves to fight together for the liberation of Manipur from Indian colonial
occupation. Thus the COORDINATION COMMITTEE (CORCOM) was formed on 08 July
2011, first step as confidence building among six Parties to institutionalize
their unity. The 6 parties also took the historic decision to unify, step by
step, into a single party. The CorCom has formed its Joint Fighting Force (JFF)
to fight IOF. Now they are preparing to attack the IOF in the coming near
future. Basic unity lies on joint war activities. This war activity will bring
to build unity among us. The UNLF believes that the achievement towards unity
in Manipur will give a new direction and impetus to the liberation struggle for
the region as a whole.
The emergence of the CorCom has brought about a new
revolutionary situation in Manipur. Now, the Manipuri people’s national
liberation struggle can be expected to make significant progress under a unified
leadership.
The decision of the six
parties to form the CorCom gave a new hope and a long awaited smile to the
entire people of Manipur. There was euphoria all around. However, concerned
peoples could not but ask some worried questions: Is the unity real? How long
will it go? Will they not break up again…? For the CorCom, these are relevant
questions to be answered in time, by deeds.
THE PROPOSAL
The peoples of
Manipur have suffered for more than sixty four long years under Indian colonial
occupation and military repression. Their fundamental human rights, both
collective and individual, have been usurped by the rulers in New Delhi. In order to hold on to their
colonial rule, India now deploys more than 40,000 military and para-military
forces in Manipur alone. In their attempt to suppress our national liberation
struggle the Indian Occupation Forces have committed summary executions of
several hundred freedom fighters, committed massacres on many occasions while
reacting to attacks by freedom fighters and many of our women have been raped
in front of their family members. India also has lost many of their
soldiers in the process of the so-called ‘Counter Insurgency Operations’. India’s
military effort has only escalated the conflict rather than finding a solution thereby
aggravating further the sufferings of our people.
In order to resolve
the Manipur-India Conflict satisfactorily once and for all, the UNLF Central
Committee announced a 4-Point Proposal on 31 January 2005 as below:
1.
To hold a PLEBSCITE under UN aegis so that the people
of Manipur can exercise their democratic right to decide on the core issue of
the conflict – the restoration of Manipur’s sovereignty and independence.
2.
To deploy a UN Peace Keeping Force in Manipur to ensure
free and fair conduct of the Plebiscite.
3.
UNLF to deposit all its arms to the UN Peace Keeping
Force and India
to withdraw all its regular and para military forces from Manipur before a
deadline prior to the Plebiscite date to be decided by the UN.
4.
The UN to hand over political power in accordance with
the result of the Plebiscite.
The UNLF has made the above
proposal so that our people, the ultimate authority of their own fate, could
give their judgment on the core issue of the Manipur-India Conflict. We believe
that the above proposal is the most democratic means to resolve the conflict,
which ‘the largest democracy in the world’ should accept.
We, therefore, appeal to the
international community in general and the United Nations in particular, to
fulfill their moral obligation of protecting and upholding the rights of
nations and peoples to determine their own future by themselves vis-Ã -vis the
Manipur-India Conflict.
Appendix
1
INSTRUMENT OF ACCESSION
WHEREAS, the
Indian Independence Act, 1947 provides that as from the fifteenth day of
August, 1947 there shall be set up an independent Dominion known as INDIA, and
that the Government of India Act, 1935 shall with such omissions, additions,
adaptations and modification as the Governor-General may be order specify be
applicable to the Dominion of India;
AND
WHEREAS the Government of India Act, 1935 as so adapted by the Governor-General
provides that an Indian
State may accede to the
Dominion of India by an Instrument of Accession executed by the Ruler thereof;
NOW
THEREFORE I, Bodha Chandra, Ruler of
MANIPUR in the exercise of my sovereignty in and over my said State do hereby
execute this my Instrument of Accession and
1.
I hereby declare that I accede to the Dominion of India
with the intent that the Governor-General of India, the Dominion Legislature,
the Federal Court and any other Dominion authority established for the purposes
of the Dominion shall, by virtue of this my Instrument of Accession but subject
always to the terms thereof, and for the purposes only of the Dominion exercise
in relation to the State of MANIPUR (hereinafter referred to as 'the State')
such functions as may be vested in them by or under the Government of India
Act, 1935, as in force in the Dominion
of India on the 15th day of August, 1947 (which Act as so in force
is hereinafter referred to as 'the Act'); **and I further declare that the
Dominion of India may, through such agency or agencies, and in such manner, as
it thinks fit, exercise in relation to the administration of civil and criminal
justice in this State all such powers, authority and jurisdiction as were at
any time exercisable by His Majesty's representative for the exercise of the
functions of the Crown in its relations with Indian States.*
2.
I hereby assume the obligation of ensuring that due
effect is given to the provisions of the Act within this State so far as they
are applicable therein by virtue of this my Instrument of Accession.
3.
** Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 1*,
I accept the matters specified in the Schedule hereto as the matters with
respect to which the Dominion Legislature may make laws for this State.
4.
I hereby declare that I accede to the Dominion of India
on the assurance that if an agreement is made between the Governor-General and
the Ruler of this State whereby any function in relation to the administration
in this State of any lay of Dominion legislature shall be exercised by the
Ruler of this State, then any such agreement shall be deemed to from part of
this Instrument and shall be construed and have effect accordingly.
5.
The terms of this my Instrument of Accession shall not
be varied by any amendment of the Act or of the Indian Independence Act, 1947,
unless such amendment is accepted by me by an Instrument supplementary to this
Instrument.
6.
Nothing is this Instrument shall empower the Dominion
Legislature to make any law for this State authorising the compulsory
acquisition of land for any purpose, but I hereby undertake that should the
Dominion for the purpose of a Dominion law which applies in this State deem it
necessary to acquire any land, I will at their request acquire the land at
their expense or if the land belongs to me transfer it to them or such terms as
may be agreed, or in default of agreement, determined by an arbitrator to be
appointed by the Chief Justice of Delhi.
7.
Nothing in this Instrument shall be deemed to commit me
in any way to acceptance of any future Constitution of India or to fetter my
discretion to enter into arrangement with the Government of India under any
such future Constitution.
8.
Nothing in this Instrument effects the continuance of
my sovereignty in and over this State, save as provided by or under this Instrument,
the exercise of any powers, authority and rights now enjoyed by me as Ruler of
this State or the validity of any law at present in fore in this State.
9.
I hereby declare that I execute this Instrument on
behalf of this State and that any reference in this Instrument to me or to the
Ruler of the State is to be construed as including a reference to my heirs and
successors.
Given under my
hand this 11th day of August, Nineteen hundred and forty-seven.
SD/-
Bodha Chandra
Maharaja
of Manipur
I do hereby accept this
Instrument of Accession.
Dated this 11th day of
August, Nineteen hundred and forty-seven.
SD/- Louis Mountbaten
(Governor-General of India)
S C H E D U L E
The matters with respect to which the Dominion
Legislature may make laws for this State.
A. DEFENCE
1. The naval, military and air
forces of the Dominion and any other armed forces raised or maintained by the
Dominion; any armed forces, including forces raised or maintained by an Acceding State, which are attached to, or
operating with, any of the armed forces of the Dominion.
2. Naval, military and air
force works, administration of cantonment areas.
3. Arms, firearms, ammunition.
4. Explosives.
B. EXTERNAL AFFAIRS
1. External affairs; the implementing
of treaties and agreements with other countries; extradition, including the
surrender of criminals and accused persons to parts of His Majesty's dominions
outside India.
2. Admission into, and
emigration and expulsion from, India , including in relation thereto the
regulation of the movements in India or persons who are not British subjects
domiciled in India or subjects of any acceding State, pilgrimages
to places beyond India.
3. Naturalisation
C. COMMUNICATION
1.
Posts and Telegraphs, including telephones, wireless, broadcasting, and
other like forms of communication.
2.
Federal railways; the regulation of all railways other than minor
railways in respect of safety, maximum and minimum rates and fares, station and
service terminal changes, interchange of traffic and the responsibility of
railways administrations as carrier of goods and passengers; the regulation of
minor railways in respect of safety and responsibility of the administration of
such railways as carriers of goods and passengers.
3.
Maritime shipping and navigation, including shipping and navigation on
tidal waters; Admiralty jurisdiction.
4.
Port quarantine
5.
Major ports, that is to say, the declaration and determination of the
ports, and the Constitution and powers of Port Authorities therein.
6.
Aircraft and Air navigation; the provision of aerodromes regulation and
organization of air traffic and of aerodromes;
7.
Lighthouse, including
lightships, beacons and other provisions for the safety of shipping and
aircraft.
8.
Carriage of passengers and goods by sea or by air.
9.
Extension of the powers and jurisdiction of members of the police force
belonging to any unit to railway area outside that unit.
D. ANCILLARY
1. Elections to the Dominion
Legislature, subject to the provisions of the Act and of any Order made thereunder.
2. Offences against laws with
respect to any of the aforesaid matters.
3. Inquiries and statistics for
the purposes of any of the aforesaid matters.
4.
Jurisdiction and powers of all courts with respect to
any of the aforesaid matters, but, except with the consent of the Ruler of the
acceding State, not so as to confer any jurisdiction or powers upon any courts
other then courts ordinarily exercising jurisdiction in or in relation to that
State.
Appendix 2
The Manipur State Constitution Act 1947
BACKGROUND
When
the British paramountcy lapsed, the basic legal framework for the governance of
Manipur was the revised rules for the Administration of the Manipur State
which became operative from July
1, 1947. It provided for an interim Manipur state council consisting
of a Chief Minister and six other Ministers who were appointed by, and
responsible to the Maharaja. The Maharaja-in-Council exercised both legislative
and executive authority over the whole of Manipur.
The
detailed structure, powers and functions of the Chief Court and the subordinate Civil and
Criminal courts in Manipur were already provided for under the Manipur state
courts act 1947. Similarly, the Manipur
State hill peoples (Administration)
Regulation 1947 gave details about administration in the Hill areas of Manipur.
So for the sake of continuity and possibly also with a view to complete their
work within the short time at their disposal the 15-membet Constitution Making
Committee incorporated the existing laws and rules wherever applicable in the
drafting of a new constitution for Manipur.
The
Manipur Constitution, when it was finally adopted and enacted, formalized the
transfer of powers from the Maharaja to the elected representatives of the
people and confirmed the Maharaja’s position as the constitutional head of the
state. The constitution and the form of responsible government introduced by it
for the first time in Manipur may appear rudimentary by today’s standards but
it was, in its historical context of a colonial and feudal society, a proud
achievement of the Manipuri people.
Given
below is the full text of the Manipur Constitution which was written in English
and enacted as the Manipur State Constitution Act 1947:
THE MANIPUR STATE CONSTITUTION ACT, 1947
Whereas it is expedient to enact
a law for the governance of the Manipur state, His highness the maharaja of
Manipur is pleased to enact as follows:
CHAPTER 1
1.
Title:
This act shall be called the Manipur State Constitution Act, 1947.
2.
Extent and
application: This act shall extend to the whole of the Manipur State inclusive of the Hill Areas saving
that it shall not apply in any matter where a specific reservation of powers is
made to any Authority in the hill under the provisions of the Manipur State
Hill (Administration) Regulation, 1947.
3.
Government
of the State by His Highness the Maharaja: The territories for the
time being and hereafter vested in the Maharaja be governed by and in the name
of the Maharaja. All rights, authority and jurisdiction which appertain or are
incidental to the government of such territories are exercisable by the
Maharaja subject to the provisions of this Act.
4.
Succession:
Succession to the throne shall be governed by the Law of Primogeniture provided
that the heir must be the legitimate son of a marriage recognized by the
Council of Ministers. In the event of failure of heirs in the direct male line,
His Highness the Maharaja shall, after consultation with the Council of
Ministers and the Assembly, designate his heir.
5.
Attainment
of Majority: The Maharaja or his heir shall be taken to attain
majority at the age of 21 years.
6.
Council of
Regency:
(a) Whereby reason of the Maharaja being a minor or whereby reason of
any mental defect or grave bodily sickness as a result of which the Maharaja
becomes permanently incapable of exercising his powers, the Council of
Ministers shall take steps to set up a Council of Regency which shall exercise
their powers in the State and shall continue in office for such time as the
Council may determine.
.
(b)
Notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection (a) above, the Maharaja in
consultation with the Council of Ministers may, at any time or for any reason
which may appear suitable, set up a Council of Regency to exercise his
functions.
(c) A Council of Regency set under Subsections (a)
and (b) may comprise one or more persons as may seem desirable. The Regent or
Council of Regency shall before taking office be required to take an oath
before the State Assembly to be loyal to the State and to observe faithfully
its Constitution and laws.
(d) Where in
any event it shall be necessary to set up a Council of Regency either for the
reasons laid down in Subsections (a) and (b) above or for any other reason or
where exercising his powers before such Regency can be set up, the Council of
Ministers shall take whatever steps may be necessary for the governance of the
State till such time as the Regency is created.
7.
Failure of
heirs and disputed succession: (a) In the event of failure of heirs
in the direct male line and failure of the Maharaja to designate his heir under
Section 4 above, a joint extraordinary session of the State Assembly and the
Council of Ministers shall immediately be convened and shall remain in closed
and continuous session till it shall have determined, by a 75 percent majority
of the members present and voting, the person to whom the throne shall pass.
(b) Where for any reason the succession to the throne is disputed, the
Council of Ministers shall, on the death of the Ruler, take such steps as may
immediately be necessary for the good governance of the State and shall refer
the matter under dispute to the Chief
Court for decision. Where any party is aggrieved
by the decision of the Chief Court,
an appeal shall lie to such authority as may be determined hereafter.
8.
The
Maharaja’s Prerogatives:
(a) All family matters which are the Maharaja’s sole concern as head of
the Ruling Family, all matters which are his sole concern as the Defender of
Faith and all matters connected with Titles, Honours and Palace Ceremonials shall
be deemed to fall within the Maharaja’s Personal Prerogative and in such
matters the Maharaja shall exercise full discretion subject to the provisions
of the Constitution and the laws of the State.
The
Maharaja’s Prerogative shall not however be taken to comprise any matter
wherein the legitimate interests of the State Administration or a civil right
sustainable in a court of law is involved. It will be with the prerogative of
the Maharaja to remit punishment and pardon offenders subject to the provisions
of the Manipur State Courts Act provided that this prerogative shall not
prejudice the right of any individual to compensation.
(b) It shall
be the prerogative of the Maharaja and the Maharani that neither may be made
answerable at Law or subject to any legal proceedings in the State Courts.
Their persons and property shall be inviolable.
(c)
Notwithstanding Section 8(b) above, it shall be lawful for the State Council in
consultation with the Chief Court to draw up a statement of charges against the
Maharaja or the Maharani where it is proved beyond all possible doubt that the
Maharaja or the Maharani have been guilty of murder or of any other heinous
offence or of any extreme political crime against the provisions of the
Constitution.
(d) On a
statement of charges being drawn up under clause (c) above, the Council shall
present it before the Maharaja or the Maharani and require satisfaction. Should
satisfaction be not forthcoming, the Council may refer the matter to such
authority as may be determined hereafter.
CHAPTER II
DEFINITIONS
9.
In this Act and the Rules issued thereunder, unless
there is something repugnant to the subject or the context:
(a)
State shall mean the Manipur State
comprising the whole territory
of Manipur as delineated
in the maps of the Survey of India current at the date of this enactment.
(b)
The Maharaja means His highness The Maharaja of
Manipur, the Constitutional Head of the State.
(c)
Chief Minister means the officer entrusted with the
Chief Executive functions of the State.
(d)
Minister means a member of the Council of Ministers
appointed under this Act by name or by virtue of his office to administer
certain branches of the State Administration and to perform the duties and
exercise the power imposed and conferred upon a Minister by this Act and the
Rules framed thereunder.
(e)
Council means the State Council of Ministers
constituted under this Act.
(f)
Assembly means the State Assembly as constituted under
this Act.
(g)
Gazette means the official journal of the State by
means of which important orders, notices, communiqués, etc., are published.
(h)
Speaker means the President of the Assembly and
includes the Deputy Speaker in the absence of the Speaker or, in the absence of
both, a member voted to the Chair.
(i)
Civil List means the appropriation of funds for the
expenses of the Ruling Family and the Privy Purse of the Ruler.
(j)
Privy Purse means such portion of the Civil List as is
appropriated exclusively for the personal expenses of the Maharaja.
(k)
Revenue includes all receipts of the State from the
State Assets, from all Lands, Forest, Taxes,
Penalties, Forfeitures, Escheats, Laps and other sources.
(l)
Rules means any Rule issued under this Act.
(m) Fundamental
Rights shall mean those rights which the State’s people shall enjoy as of right
under this Act.
(n)
The pronoun ‘he’ and its derivatives are used of any
person whether male or female.
CHAPTER III
THE EXECUTIVE
10. Council of Ministers: (a) Subject
to the provisions of this Act and subject also to the provisions of the Rules
for the Administration of the Manipur
State, the Executive
Authority of the State is delegated to and shall vest in the Council of
Ministers.
(b) Where under this Act
or the Rules for the Administration of the State it is requisite that the
approval of the Maharaja shall be taken to any measure, the Chief Minister
shall seek the approval of the Maharaja in person or in writing and shall
obtain the Maharaja’s orders thereon. Should in any case the Maharaja’s
approval be withheld, the Maharaja shall be pleased to inform the Chief
Minister in person or in writing and to communicate his reasons for withholding
such approval in writing to the Council.
(c) The Council of Ministers shall
consist of the Chief Minister and six other Ministers.
(d) The Six
ministers on the Council shall be elected by the State Assembly subject to the
provisions that two of these Ministers shall be representatives of the Hill
people of the State elected in such manner as shall be laid down in the Rules
of Business of the State Assembly.
(f) The Chief
Minister and the Ministers shall receive letters of appointment over the seal
of the Maharaja.
(g) The Chief
Minister in consultation with the Ministers shall allot portfolios.
11. The
Chief Minister shall be the President of the Council and the Vice-President shall
be appointed by the Council.
12. The
Council of Ministers shall have a common seal and shall be jointly responsible
to the Maharaja for the Administration of the State.
13. The
Council of Ministers and the Ministers individually shall exercise such powers
and functions as may be assigned to them by or under this Act or by or under
the Rules for the Administration of the State.
14. The
quorum necessary for the transaction of business at a meeting of the Council
shall not be less than three excluding the President.
15. The
Chief Minister and Ministers shall, on taking office, swear an oath of loyalty
and allegiance to the Maharaja in the following form:
‘ I (name of
the Minister) having been appointed as a Member of the Manipur State Council,
do solemnly swear that I will be loyal and faithful and bear true allegiance to
the Maharaja, his heirs and successors and that I will faithfully discharge the
duties laid on me under this Act’
16. A
Minister of the Council shall not be removable from office except in accordance
with the provisions of the Chapter below.
CHAPTER IV
THE STATE ASSEMBLY
17. There
shall be constituted a State Assembly. The Assembly shall be elected for a
period of three years and shall comprise Representatives freely elected by the
people on an adult franchise and on the principle of Joint Electorates.
Elections shall be in such manner and by such franchise as may be laid down
under the Rules for the Representatives returnable from General, Hill and
Mohammedan Constituencies shall be in the ratios of 30:18:3 respectively with
an additional two seats for the Representatives of Educational and Commercial
interests.
18. The
State Assembly may debate all matters concerning the Government and well-being
of the State which, in the opinion of five Members of the Assembly, it is in
the public interest to debate. The Assembly shall tender such advice to the
Council of Ministers in any matter in which a majority of the Members present
are agreed on the advice which shall be tendered provided that no matter
touching the Maharaja’s Prerogative shall be debated and provided that the
Maharaja may on the advice of the Council, veto debate on any matter where such
course shall in the public interest be necessary.
19. The
State Assembly shall not tender advice to the Council on any matter which is of
primary concern to the Hill people unless such advice has the support of a
majority of the Hill Representatives in the Assembly.
20. Subject
to the provisions of this Act, the Assembly may make rules for regulating its
proceedings and the conduct of business.
21. Where
in any case it is required to pass a vote of no confidence against a Minister
of the Council for his individual acts, a motion of no-confidence signed by not
less than ten Members of the Assembly and laying out in detail the facts giving
rise to the motion, may with the permission of the Speaker of the Assembly be
moved. If such motion shall receive the support of at least 75 percent of the
Members present and voting, it shall be forwarded through the Chief Minister to
the Maharaja who, unless there appear strong and valid reasons to the contrary
which shall be recorded in writing, shall after consultation with the Chief
Minister require the Minister against whom the motion has been passed to
resign.
22. Wherein
any case the State Council or the Maharaja is in the special circumstances of
any case unable to accept the advice of the Assembly, the Maharaja or the
Council as the case may be, shall communicate in writing the reasons which have
led to such course and shall give facilities for personal discussion of the
matter with a representative or representatives deputed by the Assembly.
23. Subject
to the provisions of the Act and to Rules framed under it for the disposal of
the Assembly business, there shall be Freedom of Speech in the Assembly and no
Member shall be liable to any proceedings in any court in respect of any speech
or vote given by him in the Assembly or a committee thereof and no person shall
be liable in respect of any publication by or under the authority of the
Assembly of any report, paper, vote or proceedings.
24. No
Member of the Assembly shall be liable to arrest or detention in prison under a
Civil process -
(b)
if he is a Member of the Assembly, during the
continuance of the Assembly;
(b) if
he is a Member of nay Committee of the Assembly, during the continuance of the
meeting of the Committee;
25. The
elected Ministers, the Speaker, Deputy Speaker and Members of the Assembly
shall receive such emoluments as may be determined from time to time by the
Assembly.
CHAPTER V
THE LAW MAKING AUTHORITY
26. The Law
Making Authority in the State shall consist of the Maharaja in Council in
collaboration with the State Assembly acting under Section 18 above.
27. When
the Council or the Assembly consider that a law should be enacted the Council
shall cause a Bill to be drafted, which shall be laid before the Assembly and a
reasonable time shall be given for consideration thereof. The Council shall
then cause to be made such alterations or amendments as may be deemed necessary
in the light of the advice tendered by the Assembly, and the Chief Minister
shall submit the Bill in its final form for the Assent of the Maharaja.
28. On
the receipt of the Maharaja’s Assent, the Bill shall be published in the State
Gazette and shall become an Act having the force of law.
29. Should
the Maharaja in any case withhold his Assent to a Bill, that Bill shall lapse
as if it had not been passed. If the Assent of the Maharaja is not forthcoming
within one calendar month of the Bill being submitted to him, he shall be
deemed to have withheld his Assent.
30. Where
the Assent of the Maharaja to any Bill is withheld, the Council may cause the
selfsame Bill to be introduced in the next session of the Assembly and if
passed without amendment by 75 per cent majority of the Assembly, the Bill
shall be certified over the Seal of the Council and shall become law.
31. Nothing
in this Chapter shall be deemed to derogate from the absolute right of the
Maharaja in Council to promulgate, in emergency case, orders having the force
of law without previous reference to the Assembly where the public interest in
their opinion, demands that such order shall be promulgated provided that the
first opportunity shall be taken of laying the order before the Assembly for
consideration. Any such order shall bot have the force of law for a period of
more than six months.
CHAPTER VI
FINANCE
32. The Revenue
of the State and such other receipts as may accrue from whatever source, less
such reasonable percentage of the total real Revenue as may be reserved for the
Civil list, are placed at the disposal of the Council for expenditure on the
Government of the State in the manner prescribed by the State Account Rules
saving that in every year a sum representing not less than 17.5 per cent of the
average real Revenue of the State for the proceeding three years shall be
allocated for expenditure on the welfare and administration of the Hill people.
33. The
Minister in charge of Finance shall prepare an Annual Budget showing the
estimated receipts and expenditure for the ensuing year classified under the
prescribed heads of account and shall submit it to the Assembly within fifteen
days of its meeting for the Budget Session along with a statement of account
for the previous year.
34. The
Assembly shall after considering the Budget submit it with their recommendation
to the Council who, having made such modifications as may be deemed necessary,
shall submit it to the Maharaja for approval. Where any delay occurs in the
granting of Assent to the Budget by the Maharaja and where such Assent has not
been obtained by the first day of the financial year, provisional effect shall
be given to the Budget as passed by the Assembly and funds shall be drawn
against its provisions as if it had received Assent.
35. The
Maharaja’s Civil List shall be fixed at a figure equal to 10 per cent of the
real Revenues of the State over the preceding three years, provided that no
extraordinary revenues shall be taken into account when determining this amount
and provided that no State revenue in excess of Rupees twenty lakhs shall be
taken into account in any one year. The appropriation to the Maharaja’s Civil
List shall be non-votable and shall not be the subject of debate in the
Assembly.
36. No
tax whatsoever shall be shown in the Budget and no tax shall be collected by
any officer of the State or by any person unless such tax has been imposed by
due process of law.
37. (a)
There shall be a State Auditor who shall be appointed by the Maharaja in
Council on a nomination to be made by the Comptroller of Audit, Assam or such
other officer as may be deemed suitable. Such nominee shall be employed on
contract for a period of not less than five years and shall be removable only
by the Maharaja in Council in consultation with the authority making the
nomination.
(b)
The conditions of service of the State Auditor shall be
such as may be prescribed by the Maharaja in Council provided always that he
shall not be eligible for any office of profit in the State after his
retirement.
(c)
The Auditor shall exercise such powers and perform such
duties as may be laid down in the State Account Rules.
CHAPTER VII
HILL PEOPLE
38. The Council
shall be responsible for the welfare and the good administration of the Hill
people of the State and shall provide such funds for this purpose as may,
subject to the provision of Section 32 above, be deemed necessary provided that
the Local Authorities in the Hills shall exercise such powers of Local Self
Government as may be laid down in the Manipur State Hill (Administration)
Regulation, 1947.
CHAPTER VIII
THE SERVICES
39. The Council
shall issue Rules regulating the conditions of service in the Departments of
the State.
40. A
Manipur State Appointments Board shall be constituted and the Council shall
issue Rules regulating the constitution, functions and procedure of the Board.
The Board shall consist of not less than three members, one of whom must be a
Hillman, and a Chairman and shall be the final authority in all matters
connected with appointments and promotions to the State Service except in so
far as specific powers may be reserved under this Act or the Rules for the
Administration of the State.
CHAPTER IX
THE JUDICATURE
41. (a) There shall be a complete separation of the
Judiciary from the Executive.
(b) The Judicature of the State shall be as laid down in the Manipur
State Courts Act, 1947.
42. The
Chief Justice of the State and two Puisne Judges shall be appointed by the
Maharaja in Council under the Royal Seal and shall hold officer until the age
of 65 years provided that -
(a)
A Judge may resign his office.
(b)
A Judge may be removed from his office by the Maharaja
in Council only on the grounds of misbehaviour or of infirmity of body or mind.
43. A
person shall not be appointed as a Judge of the Chief Court unless he -
(a)
be a graduate in law and has held Judicial Office at
least for five years, or
(b)
is a Barrister qualified in England of five years’ standing, or
(c)
has for at least five years held Judicial Office in
British India in a post not inferior to that of a Subordinate Judge, or
(d)
has for at least a period of ten years been a Pleader
of any High Court or of the Manipur
Chief Court, or
(e)
be a person recognized as having a special capacity for
the exercise of Judicial Functions.
CHAPTER X
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENSHIP
44. All
citizens shall be equal before the law. Titles and other privileges of birth
shall not be recognized in the eyes of law.
45. The
liberty of the individual shall be guaranteed. No person may be subjected to
any judicial interrogation or placed under arrest or be in any other way
deprived of his liberty, save as provided by law.
46. No
person shall be tried save by a competent Court.
47. No
person may be tried except by a competent Court who shall give full opportunity
to such person to defend himself by a means.
48. All
penalties shall be as determined by law.
49. Capital
punishment may not be inflicted for purely political crimes.
50. No
citizen may be banished from the State, expelled from one part of the country
to another, and obliged to reside in a specified place save in such cases as
may be expressly determined by law.
51. Every
dwelling shall be inviolable save under express provision of law.
52. There
shall be guaranteed to all people Justice - Social, Economic and Political;
equality of status, of opportunity and before the law; freedom of thought,
expression, of belief, faith, worship, vocation, association, and action
subject to law and public morality.
53. The
practice of Arts and Sciences shall be unrestricted and shall enjoy the
protection and support of the State.
54. Without
any prejudice to the communities concerned, public institutions shall be opened
to all the citizens of the State.
55. (a)
All officials of the State or of a Local Government shall be answerable before
the law for their individual and unlawful actions.
(b)
Where damage is caused to an individual by the act of
an official of the State or an official of a Local Government, such individual
may sue the State before the Chief Court and may seek redress save where such
damage has been caused by a bona-fide act of a State servant in pursuance of a
policy duly laid down by a Competent Authority.
CHAPTER XI
GENERAL CLAUSES
56. Any
provision of this Act may be subject to amendment by the Maharaja in Council
provided that such amendment is laid before the Assembly and receives the
support of at least 80 per cent of the Members of the State Assembly present
and voting when such amendment is debated.
57. Where
in any case circumstances arise which prevent the proper operation in law or in
spirit of this Constitution Act, the Council may at their discretion refer the
matter for decision to such authority outside the State as may be decided
hereafter and the decision of that authority shall be binding.
58. The
Court language of the State shall be Manipuri or English.
___________________
Appendix 3
The Representatives
THE STATE ASSEMBLY
A
peculiar feature of the elections to the State Assembly, conducted in a
staggered manner from June 11 to July 27, 1948, was the principle of Joint Electorates.
Under this system, separate General and Mohammedan or Hillman electorates in a
territorial constituency elected their own representatives to the assembly.
This legacy of the divide-and-rule policy of the British rulers was applicable
to four constituencies in the Manipur
Valley.
Particulars of the
representatives elected by the people to the State Assembly are given below:
Sl.
Name of Name of the elected Remarks
No. Constituency Candidate
1. Koirengei Khwairakpam
Chaoba Singh General
2. Khwai
LalambungKhongbantabam
Ibetombi Singh General
3. Lamsang
Wangkheimayum
Tarpon Singh General
4. Patsoi
Khumanthem
Golap Singh General
5. Sagolband
Arambam
Ibungotomcha Singh General
6. Keisamthong
Elangbam Tompok
Singh General
7.Yaiskul
Sougaijam
Samarendra Singh General
8. Malom Yumnam Megho
Singh General
9. Utlow Hijam Irabot
Singh General
10.Nambol Ayekpam Anganghal Singh General
11.Bishenpur Khwairakpam Kamalakanta Singh General
12.Moirang (i) Mairenbam Koireng Singh General
(ii)
Teba Kilong Hillman
13.Thanga Kumbi Wahengbam Gourakishore
Singh General
14.Waikhong Nongmaithem Toyaima Singh General
15.Kakching KhunouThokchom Shyama Singh General
16.Mayang Imphal (i) Irom Merajatra Singh General
(ii)
Md. Suleiman
Mia Mohamadan
17.Wangoi Nongmeikapam Iboton Singh General
18.Thoubal Waikhom Mani Singh General
19.Wangjing Laisram Chandramani Singh General
20.Khongjom Mutum Khono Singh General
21.Sekmai Khunbi Sorokhaibam Chourjit Singh General
22.Yairipok (i)
Waikhom Nimaichand Singh General
(ii)
Md. Amjad Ali
Mohamadan
23.Irilbung Moirangthem Gourachand Singh General
24.Lilong (i) Md.
Abdul Kadir Khan Mohamadan
(ii)
Md. Alimuddin General
25.Ningomthong
Khwairakpam Giri
Singh General
26.Wangkhei Laisram Achow Singh General
27. Khurai Lamlong Ningthoujam Leiren Singh General
28. Sawombung Maimom Modhumangol Singh General
29. Pangei Takhellambam bokul Singh General
30. Jiri Sinam Sree bijoy Singh General
31.Tengnoupal (1) Mono Hillman
32.Tengnoupal (2) Holpao Hillman
33.Hill Sadar Ralengnao Khathing Hillman
34.Phaisat Luying Hungyo Hillman
35.Ukhrul Thisan Luikham Hillman
36.Chingjaroi Miksha k. Shimray Hillman
37.Tolloi Rungsung Suisa Hillman
38. Mao (1) Mangpithang Kipgen Hillman
39. Mao (2) (vacant) Election could not be held.
40. Tama S.L.Lunneh Hillman
41. Tamenglong Thanggoumang Sithou Hillman
42. Langkhong (1) Buishing Kabui Hillman
43. Langkhong (2) Kakhangai Hillman
44. Maite Dr.
L.Kampu Hillman
45.Thlanship T.C.Tiankham Hillman
46.Senvawn Tualchin Hillman
47. Churachandpur Damjakhai Waiphei Hillman
48.Education Chingakham pishak Singh Non-territorial
Constituency
49. Commerce
& Ayekpam
Gourbidhu Singh Non-territorial Constituency Constituency
THE MINISTERS
Members
of the first Council of ministers under the Manipur State Constitution Act 1947
were:
1. Maharaj
Kumar Priya Brata singh - Chief Minister
2. Ralengnao
Khathing - Minister
3. Arambam
Ibungotomcha Singh - Minister
4. Ningthoujam
Leiren Singh - Minister
5. Ayekpam
Gourabidhu Singh - Minister
6. Teba
Kilong - Minister
7. Md. Alimuddin - Minister
______________
Appendix 4
The Manipur Merger Agreement
AGREEMENT
made this twenty-first day of September 1949 between the Governor General of India and His
Highness the Maharaja of Manipur.
WHEREAS
in the best interests of the State of Manipur as well as of the Dominion of
India it is desirable to provide for the administration of the said State by or
under the authority of the Dominion Government,
IT
IS HEREBY AGREED as Follows:
ARTICLE I
His
Highness the Maharaja of Manipur hereby cedes to the Dominion Government full
and exclusive authority, jurisdiction and powers for and in relation to the
governance of the State and agrees to transfer the administration of the State
to the Dominion Government on the fifteenth day of October 1949 (hereinafter
referred to as “the said day”).
As
from the said day the Dominion Government will be competent to exercise the
said powers, authority and jurisdiction in such manner and through such agency
as it may think fit.
ARTICLE II
His
Highness the maharaja shall continue to enjoy the same personal rights,
privileges, dignities, titles, authority over religious observances, customs,
usages, rites and ceremonies and institutions in charge of the same in the
State, which he would have enjoyed had this agreement not been made.
ARTICLE III
His
Highness the Maharaja shall with effect from the said day be entitled to
receive for his lifetime from the revenues of the State annually for his
Privy-Purse the sum of Rupees three lakhs free of all taxes.
This
amount is intended to cover all the expenses of the Ruler and his family,
including expenses on account of his personal staff and armed guards,
maintenance of his residences, marriages and other ceremonies, etc., and the
allowances to the Ruler’s relations who on the date of execution of this
agreement were in receipt of such allowances from the revenues of the State,
and will neither be increased nor reduced for any reason whatsoever.
The
Government of India undertake that the said sum of Rupees three lakhs shall be
paid to His Highness the Maharaja in four equal installments in advance at the
beginning of each quarter from the State treasury or at such other treasury as
may be specified by the Government of India.
ARTICLE IV
His
Highness the Maharaja shall be entitled to the full ownership, use and
enjoyment of all private properties (as district from State properties)
belonging to him on the date of this agreement.
His
Highness the Maharaja will furnish to the Dominion Government before the first January 1950 an
inventory of all the immovable property, securities and cash balance held by
him as such private property.
If
any dispute arises as to whether any item of property is the private property
of His Highness the Maharaja or State property, it shall be referred to a
Judicial Officer qualified to be appointed as a High Court Judge, and the
decision of that officer shall be final and binding on both parties;
Provided
that His highness the Maharaja’s right to the use of the residences known as
“Redlands” and “Les Chatalettes” in Shillong, and the property in the town of
Gauhati known as “Manipuri Basti” shall not be questioned.
ARTICLE V
All
the members of His Highness’s family shall be entitled to all the personal
rights, privileges, dignities and titles enjoyed by them whether within or
outside the territories of the State, immediately before the 15th
August, 1947.
ARTICLE VI
The
Dominion Government guarantees the succession, according to law and custom, to
the gaddi of the State and to His Highness the Maharaja’s personal rights,
privileges, dignities, titles, authority over religious observances, customs,
usages, rites and ceremonies and institutions in charge of the same in the
State.
ARTICLE VII
No
enquiry shall be made by or under the authority of the Government of India, and
no proceedings shall lie in any Court in Manipur, against His Highness the
Maharaja whether in a personal capacity or otherwise in respect of anything
done or omitted to be done by him or under his authority during the period of
his administration of that State.
ARTICLE VIII
(1)
The Government of India hereby guarantees either the
continuance in service of the permanent members of the Public Service of
Manipur on conditions which will be not less advantageous than those on which
they were serving before the date on which the administration of Manipur is
made over to the Government of India or the payment of reasonable compensation.
(2)
The Government of India further guarantees the
continuance of pensions and leave salaries sanctioned by His Highness the
Maharaja to servants of the State who have retired or proceeded on leave
preparatory to retirement, before the date on which the Administration of
Manipur is made over to the Government of India.
(3)
The Government of India also undertake to make
suitable provisions for the employment of Manipuris in the various branches of
Public Services, and in every way encourage Manipuris to join them. They also
undertake to preserve various laws, customs and conventions prevailing in the
State pertaining to the social, economic and religious life of the people.
ARTICLE IX
Except with
the previous sanction of the Government of India no proceedings, civil or
criminal, shall be instituted against any person in respect of any act done or
purporting to be done in the execution of his duties as a servant of the State
before the day on which the administration is made over to the Government of
India.
In
confirmation whereof Mr. Vapal Pangunni Menon, Adviser to the Government of
India in the Ministry of States, has appended his signature on behalf and with
the authority of the Governor General of India and His Highness Maharaja
Bodh Chandra Singh, Maharaja of Manipur has appended his signature on behalf of
himself, his heirs and successors.
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