RT’s exclusive report from Imphal, the capital of India’s northeastern state Manipur, where children bare the brunt of an ethnic conflict
The ethnic violence in India’s northeastern state of Manipur, now in its fourth month, has displaced approximately 100,000 children who are lodged in 337 relief camps and are undergoing counseling and being observed by mental health professionals. They have tracked some disturbing trends.
Manipur has three major communities – Meiteis, Nagas, and Kukis. Nagas and Kukis are tribes and most of them adhere to Christianity. Meiteis are largely Hindus. Violence broke out between Meiteis and Kukis on May 3 and, sadly, it continues today. So far, it has left around 150 people dead and over 60,000 others displaced.
Experts from the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bengaluru have been visiting the camps – many of which are located in dingy surroundings and lacking in basic amenities – in an effort to understand the depth of anxiety and depression among the children, many of whom have been in the camps for the past three months.
For instance, a 10-year-old from the hill district of Tengnoupal used to play football with other children from different communities and went to school with them. After the outbreak of violence, he is afraid of the hills where he was born and raised.
“The hills fill him with dread. Some other displaced children have a similar fear,” said Yurembam Indramani, a district child protection in Imphal. The young boy has a negative response even to just the Meitei word ‘yumnak’, which means ‘surname’. “When I asked him his name in our Meitei dialect, he said ‘I…’,” Indramani recalled. “When I asked him further about his yumnak, he said he doesn’t have a home now. It was burned down by a mob.”
The psychological scarring is so deep that the mention of ‘yum’, which is Meitei for ‘home’, instantly reminds the boy of the arson attack on his neighbourhood. Indramani narrated another anecdote to underscore how hatred is developing among the children. During a vocational computer class, he said that a handful of children aged 9-10 wrote that their former best friends have now become enemies.