- 23 August, 2025
New Delhi, August 23, 2025: The People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) on 20 August released the Independent People’s Tribunal on the Ongoing Ethnic Conflict in Manipur at the Press Club of India, New Delhi. The 694-page report, prepared under the chairmanship of former Supreme Court judge Justice Kurian Joseph, concluded: “The violence which erupted on 3 May 2023 was not spontaneous but planned, ethnically targeted, and facilitated by state failures.”
Wide Representation
PUCL established the Tribunal in 2024 with a jury of eminent figures deliberately drawn from outside Manipur to ensure neutrality. Alongside Justice Kurian Joseph, the jury comprised Justice K. Kannan, Justice Anjana Prakash, former bureaucrats M.G. Devasahayam and Swaraj Bir Singh, academics Uma Chakravarti and Virginius Xaxa, human rights defenders Manjula Pradeep and Henri Tiphagne, and journalist-author Aakar Patel.
Over 150 survivors gave oral testimony, while thousands more submitted written accounts or participated in group discussions. “The voices we heard,” the jury stated, “paint a picture of systemic impunity and targeted brutality.” The report recorded that over 60,000 internally displaced people “remain in camps with no end in sight, even after 27 months of violence.”
Roots of Discord
The report identified long-standing ethnic divisions, socio-political marginalisation, and land disputes as the roots of the violence. These were aggravated by “systematic hate campaigns and political rhetoric” that intensified mistrust between the Meitei and Kuki-Zo communities.
A major trigger was the 27 March 2023 order of the Manipur High Court recommending Scheduled Tribe (ST) status for the Meiteis. The directive sparked fears among tribal groups – particularly Kukis and Nagas – that their constitutional protections would be undermined. “The judgment acted as a catalyst,” the report noted, “setting off state-wide protests on 3 May, which quickly descended into targeted violence.”
The report also dismantled two dominant narratives: that Kukis were “illegal immigrants” from Myanmar, and that they were driving poppy cultivation. “Both claims were found to be exaggerated and politically weaponised,” the report said, “serving to demonise the community.”
Atrocities and Collusion
Survivor testimonies provided some of the report’s most searing insights. “We saw killings, mutilations, disrobing of women, and sexual violence on a large scale.” Women testified that police often failed to help them and, in some instances, “handed them over to mobs.”
The report emphasised the central role of hate propaganda. “Social media was flooded with incendiary content, while partisan print media coverage deepened divisions,” it stated.
One survivor told the jury: “We knew the violence was coming; the government did nothing to stop it.”
The collapse of relief measures worsened the suffering. Camps lacked basic sanitation, food, and medical facilities. Hospitals were attacked, staff fled, and patients were denied treatment on communal lines. The report noted “serious mental health consequences – trauma, PTSD, and depression – with no institutional interventions in place.”
Breakdown of State Institutions
The findings on law and order were particularly severe. “FIRs were selectively filed, investigations delayed, and security forces accused of active complicity.” The report criticised the state government for failing to establish impartial Special Investigation Teams.
Even interventions by the Supreme Court were described as inadequate. “The Gita Mittal Committee and limited CBI probes were narrow in scope, poorly resourced, and lacked follow-up,” the report observed. Both state and central governments were indicted for “enabling impunity and worsening ethnic divides.”
Pathways to Justice and Reconciliation
The report outlined a comprehensive roadmap to restore accountability and rebuild trust in Manipur. It called for a permanent bench of the High Court in the hill districts to guarantee equal access to justice and for an independent Special Investigation Team to probe thousands of pending cases, including those involving security forces. It urged strict prosecution of hate speech and propaganda that fuelled the violence, while also advocating a restorative justice framework with reparations, acknowledgement of harm, and survivor reintegration. Strengthened relief measures and sustained community dialogue were highlighted as essential for healing deep ethnic divides.
“The people of Manipur deserve more than piecemeal measures,” the report declared. “Without a systemic response, peace cannot return.”
Justice Kurian Joseph told The Wire: “Justice and accountability are non-negotiable if democracy and peace are to return to the state.”
A Caution for Tomorrow
Two years since Manipur was engulfed in violence, the report’s findings remain bleak. Survivors consistently testified that “the state either allowed the violence to happen or actively enabled it.”
The report ended with a stark warning: “If accountability is not enforced and impunity allowed to persist, Manipur could become a dangerous precedent; a template for future instances of state complicity in ethnic violence.”
Source: The Wire
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