This Article is From Jun 10, 2023

11 Cops, Bureaucrats Transferred After Fresh Violence In Manipur: 10 Facts

Reports of incidents of violence including the burning of houses were received from two other districts. But official confirmation has not yet been received.

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The Supreme Court refused urgent hearing on a plea against the repeated internet shutdowns in the state

In a major reshuffle in police and state administration in Manipur, 11 police officers and several top bureaucrats including IAS officers have been transferred after fresh violence. Three people, including a woman, were killed by insurgents yesterday

Here are 10 facts in this big story:

  1. After three days of fragile peace, Manipur was rattled in the early hours of Friday after suspected insurgents walked into Khoken village and opened fire, killing three residents and injuring another two.

  2. The Indigenous Tribal Leaders' Forum (ITLF) said that this attack is yet another example of the "utter disregard" shown by insurgents, and demanded swift action against the perpetrators. Reports of incidents of violence including the burning of houses were received from two other districts. But official confirmation has not yet been received.

  3. The Centre has constituted Peace Committee in Manipur under the Chairpersonship of Governor. The members of committee include Chief Minister, a few Ministers in the State Government, MP, MLAs and leaders from different political parties. The Committee also includes former civil servants, educationists, litterateurs, artists, social workers and representatives of different ethnic groups.

  4. Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Saturday met Chief Minister N Biren Singh in Manipur. The visit - his first visit to the state ever since violence erupted on May 3 - is seen as the first effort of BJP to build a political roadmap to peace.

  5. The Supreme Court on Friday refused an urgent hearing on a plea against the repeated internet shutdowns in the state. A vacation bench of justices Aniruddha Bose and Rajesh Bindal said the high court is already seized of a similar issue.

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  7. The judicial panel appointed by the Ministry of Home Affairs has arrived in Manipur to probe the ethnic violence. The three-member Commission of Inquiry, constituted by the Union Home Ministry (MHA), will probe the recent series of ethnic violence in the state that so far claimed over one hundred lives and injured over 320 people.

  8. The Central Bureau of Investigation has re-registered six First Information Reports (FIR) and set up a Special Investigation Team (SIT) under a DIG-rank officer to probe cases related to ethnic violence. Union Home Minister Amit Shah, during his visit to Manipur, had ordered a CBI probe into the matter.

  9. Ten political parties in Manipur, led by the Congress, have sought the intervention of Prrime Minister Narendra Modi to restore peace and normalcy in the northeastern state. The political parties have also urged the state government to convene a special session of the Manipur Assembly for a detailed discussion on the ongoing unrest.

  10. Security forces in Manipur have recovered 11,763 pieces of ammunition, 896 weapons and 200 bombs so far, security adviser to the state government Kuldiep Singh said on Thursday, roughly a week after personnel started a combing operation to retrieve weapons stolen by mobs during clashes that roiled the state last month.

  11. Nearly 100 people have lost their lives and 310 others injured in the ethnic violence in Manipur. Clashes first broke out in the northeastern state on May 3 after a 'Tribal Solidarity March' was organised in the hill districts to protest against the Meitei community's demand for Scheduled Tribes (ST) status. A total of 37,450 people are currently sheltered in 272 relief camps.

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