Radio Netherlands Worldwide

SSO Login

More login possibilities:

Close
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Twitter
  • Google
  • LinkedIn
Home
Sunday 27 May RNW - NEWS AND ANALYSIS FROM THE NETHERLANDS IN 10 LANGUAGES, WORLDWIDE 24/7 ON RADIO, TV AND ONLINE
Memoria weaving for 15 euros a month

South Asia Wired - The conflict widows of Manipur

On air: 14 December 2011 11:15 - 21 December 2011 15:00 (Aletta Andre)

More about:

Based on a report by Aletta Andre

It’s perhaps the only market in the world where all the vendors are women.  Ima Keithal in Manipur’s capital of Imphal is a tourists' paradise where women, sell everything from vegetables to beautiful hand spun shawls. But there’s a bitter behind-the-scenes story here. 

Manipur’s women have a history of demonstrating their strength and independence - but even the tough resilience of India's north-eastern people has been sorely tested by the region's recent history, dominated since the 1960's by a messy, multi-sided conflict.   Human rights Watch estimates that the region has lost at least 20,000 lives over the last half a century.

Manipur's messy conflict 
Indian army and paramilitary forces are fighting about 30 different insurgent groups, and the imposition of the reviled Armed Forces Special Forces Powers Act means that government, army and police can, with almost total impunity, arrest or even kill anyone suspected of being an insurgent.  The region is awash with weapons, and violent crime has become a regular occurrence.  Civilians are inevitably the greatest casualties.  Even today, two or three people, mostly men, die every day in Manipur, leaving behind thousands of “conflict widows”.

Conflict widows
Memoria Chingsubam is just 23 and poorly educated, and she’s struggling to bring up her six year old son alone.  She remembers the day her husband was killed four years ago.  She found out about his murder when she saw his corpse on the television news.  His killers were never found, despite the fact that Memoria urged the police to investigate.  She has never recieved any compensation, and survives now on the paltry 15 euros a month she earns from weaving shawls at home.

300 widows are born every year in Manipur", says activist Binalashmi Nepramin.  She helped set up the Manipur Gun Survivors Network, which offers small loans to women like Memoria to set up micro enterprises.  They have  125 women on their books at the moment, and of that number only three have ever received any kind of compensation for the death of their husbands.  So the organization has also set up a legal team to help these women with the kinds of situations they’re hardly equipped to deal with on their own.  “Even for a widows pension, you have to pay a bribe” says Nepram.”

When Sana saw her husband’s corpse she say “heavy marks of torture.”  She asserts that he was just a businessman but police claim they shot him because he was an insurgent.  She filed a case but was so intimidated that she didn’t turn up in court when the case was being heard – a common phenomenon where ordinary civilians with no money or protection, are left vulnerable to violence that could come from any direction. 

Kill for promotion
 Basantakumarr Warappa is an activist with Human Rights Alert.  He says that the only way a lower rank officer can get a promotion is by showing “how much activity” he is involved in – which can be interpreted as an incentive to kill “militants”.  It’s a set-up open for abuse, and according to the present culture of impunity, almost impossible to stem.

Naked protests
But the women of Manipur have a history of defiance.  They staged successful agitations in the war against the British, and in 2004, protesting against the frequent rapes committed by Indian soldiers, a group of women – young and old - paraded naked on the streets of Imphal.  The news footage and pictures  of  100 naked women bearing signs “Indian Army rape us” sent shock waves around  India.

We have been made to be scared so much that we don’t get scared anymore”, says Binalakshmi Nepram.  “Women have been told to shut up, but it is mainly us, the women who have to pick up life again for us and our children. And they can’t subdue us anymore so we fight back and we will continue to fight back.”
 

  • Edina with her child<br>&copy; Aletta Andre  - www.rnw.english.nl
  • Ima Keithel market<br>&copy; Aletta Andre - www.rnw.english.nl
  • Ima Keithel market<br>&copy; Aletta Andre - www.rnw.english.nl

Recent articles

Most popular news in this dossier

Above the law: Namal Rajapakse and family

Above the law

It’s December 2010, and two young law students are sitting for their exam. One is in a hall full of...
Sri Lanka war

'US to pressure Sri Lanka on reconciliation process'

The United States is set to table a resolution against Sri Lanka at the next sitting of the United Nations...
India TB patient taking meds

Tuberculosis resistance neglected by Indian Government

Recently,  a doctor in Mumbai sounded the alarm about tuberculosis treatment. For two years he has been...

Nepal's first sex shop a Sweet Secret

Sex toys are still a difficult topic in many South Asian countries. In India they're often sold as...
Hrishikesh Salunkhe, PhD student at Eindhoven Technical University

Eindhoven University of Technology: Meet Hrishikesh Salunkhe

Hrishikesh Salunkhe is a PhD student studying Embedded Systems. Originally from just outside Mumbai, India,...

Discussion

Post new comment

Please be reminded all comments must be in English, short and to the point - guideline 250 words. Abusive and inappropriate comments will be removed.

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options

Video highlights

Dutch beachcombers: a dying breed
Dutch beachcombers are a dying breed. In the past, objects would regularly...
Shell presented with "Oily Mary" cocktail from Niger Delta
Friends of the Earth Netherlands has offered "Oily Mary"...

RNW on Facebook

Sign up for our newsletters

Email news bulletin

What's on - Programme Preview

Press Review - of the leading Dutch newspapers every weekday

Media Network

Euro Hit 40 - Europe's No. 1 chart show

RNW - News and analysis from the Netherlands in 10 languages, worldwide 24/7 on radio, television and online