Phaitol
Phaitol
Pheitual | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 24°47′03″N 93°09′24″E / 24.7841°N 93.1567°E | |
Country | India |
State | Manipur |
District | Tamenglong/Jiribam |
Population (2011)[1] | |
• Total | 971 |
Language(s) | |
• Official | Meitei |
• Spoken | Thadou |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
Phaitol[a] is a village in Manipur, India. It is at the foothills of the Vangaitang range, close to the National Highway 37. The village is part of Tamenglong district, Tousem Subdivision, but it is geographically located within the precincts of Jiribam district.[4][5]
During the 2023–2024 Manipur violence, Phaitol was the site of much activity, population displacement and trauma.[6][7][8]
Geography
[edit]The Vangaitang range to the east of the Jiribam district is traditionally inhabited by the Kuki-Zo tribes, mainly Hmars but also some Thadou Kukis. In 1907, the Jiribam plain was opened for settlement by the Government of Manipur, and it came to be settled by Meiteis and Bengali speakers from the neighbouring Cachar district.[9][10]
The Jiribam plain roughly ends at the Uchathol village, to the east which lie the forested foothills of the Vangaitang range. A line of tribal villages stretch along the Cachar Road (now National Highway 37), with Phaitol being the first of them. Others are Tatbung, Muktokhal (Muktokhong), Kaiphundai etc. These are tribal villages, populated by mainly Thadou Kukis (called simply "Kukis" in this context). Originally treated as part of the Jiribam subdivision,[11] they were included in Tamenglong district since at least 1981.[12]
Between 1991 and 2001, the borders of Jiribam district were extended to cover a portion of the northern stretch of the Jiri River.[13] This resulted in Phaitol as well as Muktokhal coming within the precincts of the Jiribam district. But administratively they continue to be in the Tamenglong district.[14][5][6]
Demographics
[edit]According to the 2011 census, Phaitol has a population of 971 people living in 189 households. Tatbung and Muktokhal have populations of 268 people each.[1] Almost all the population (99 percent) is made up of Scheduled Tribes, predominantly "Kukis" (Thadou Kukis).[15]
The Kuki Inpi of Jiribam, Tamenglong and Noney (KIJTN) has its head office in Phaitol.[16]
2023–2024 Manipur violence
[edit]On 3 May 2023, major ethnic violence broke out between the Meitei and Kuki-Zo communities of Manipur. Within weeks over 100 people died and 60,000 people got displaced. All the Kuki-Zo people in the Imphal Valley and the Meitei people in the Kuki-Zo-dominated hill districts were forced to flee to the other side. The Jiribam district, consisting of both the classes of population but also other communities such as Bengalis, was affected in a unique fashion.
During the first week of violence, Meitei mobs led by the Arambai Tenggol militia attacked Kuki-Zo localities in the Jiribam Town. The security forces quickly controlled the violence and brokered a peace agreement between the communities.[17] Phaitol was at the forefront of these efforts as a meeting of Kuki-Zo people at the village was addressed the Deputy Commissioner of Tamenglong.[6] The peace agreement held for almost a year. Even though there were sporadic incidents such as house burning and abduction, there were no deaths.[17][18]
The peace was shattered by twin murders in May–June 2024. The first was of a Kuki individual named Seigoulen Singson from Phaitol.[17] He went missing on 14 May, and his body was discovered floating in Jiri River three days later near Muolzawl.[7][19] A second death occurred on 6 June, that of a Meitei individual named Soibam Saratkumar Singh from Hilghat area[b] who went missing while returning from his farm. His two-wheeler and slippers were found near Uchathol, the likely place of his abduction, and the body was found near Mullargao.[20][21] Within an hour rumours spread on social media that his body was found beheaded, and in another hour, widespread arson broke out in Jiribam as Meitei mobs started attacking Kuki-Zo settlements and churches.[17][22]
In the ensuing mayhem, over a thousand Kuki-Zo people, mainly Hmars and Thadou Kukis, from Jiribam fled to Assam's Cachar district. A Hmar village called Hmarkhawlien near Lakhipur became their refuge.[17][23]
On 10 June, the Chief Minister's Office revealed that it had flagged intelligence to the effect that "200 armed Kuki-Zo militants" from Churachandpur were moving to the Phaitol and Kaiphundai areas, and demanded an 'action taken report' from the Director General of Police (DGP).[24][25] The newly elected MP for Inner Manipur, Bimol Akoijam questioned why the chief minister has not sacked the DGP.[26] Journalist Greeshma Kuthar however revealed that it was the Meitei militants belonging to the Pambei faction of United National Liberation Front (UNLF) that had moved to Jiribam well before November 2023, when they signed a peace agreement with the government. The peace agreement provided a cover for them to operate freely in the district.[17] Following the eruption of the violence, Arambai Tenggol and UNLF-Pambei cadres patrolled the Meitei localities in and around the Jiribam town and the Kuki-Zo residents had to flee their homes.[17]
On 13 June, the Kuki-Zo villagers imposed a blockade of NH-37 near the Tatbung village to protest the Jiribam violence.[27] It was lifted for two days and reimposed again on 20 June, citing the reason that Meitei mobs were blockading medical and essential supplies to the Kuki-Zo villages.[28][29] On that day, there were also allegations that the Kuki armed men set ablaze an empty narcotics checkpost and that the Manipur police commands and Meitei militants fired upon the Phaitol village indiscriminately.[28][29] The blockade was lifted two days later after the central security forces signed a memorandum of understanding agreeing to the demands made by the blockading population.[30]
In early July, hours before a scheduled visit of Rahul Gandhi to the area, the police reported gunfire from the Phaitol village towards Gularthol. They combed the village and arrested two individuals, including a juvenile, whom the villagers identified as "village volunteers".[31] Kuki-Zo Village Volunteers of Vangailhang and Tuilangkuol condemned the action, and claimed that there was indiscriminate firing towards Phaitol from a Naka Check Point of Jiribam Police near the village. They demanded the removal of the Check Point.[32] Kuki Inpi Manipur called a 12-hour shutdown to protest the arrests along with similar arrests in Kangpokpi district.[33] Shortly after these events, unidentified miscreants torched the house of Seijathang Khongsai, the general secretary of KIJTN, in Phaitol.[34]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Tamenglong District Census Handbook, Census of India, 2011. page 84.
- ^ Ganesh Rajaraman, Fresh Wave of Violence Erupts, Newsreel Asia, 12 June 2024. ProQuest 3067512215
- ^ "Notification No. IJ/2/56", Manipur Gazette, 16 August 1956, pp. 15–16 – via archive.org
- ^ Thomas Ngangom, Manipur violence: Truck set ablaze in Kangpokpi, police check post in Jiribam, Hindustan Times, 20 June 2024. "The Kuki Inpi, a tribal body, has alleged that Manipur police commandos and Meitei militants were indiscriminately firing on the villagers and village volunteers of Phaitol Village, Tamenglong district (a border village between Tamenglong and Jiribam)."
- ^ a b Jiribam Subdivision, Manipur Remote Sensing Applications Centre, retrieved 8 November 2024.
- ^ a b c Maintain peace: Tamenglong DC, Imphal Free Press, 30 May 2023. ProQuest 2820251966 "Tamenglong DC [Deputy Commissioner] L Angshim Dangshawa conducted an interactive peace meeting at Phaitol village, Tousem subdivision, Tamenglong, on Monday, in an effort to maintain peace and tranquility between different communities amid the prevailing unrest in Manipur."
- ^ a b Kuki Inpi Publishes Chronology of Jiribam Violence, Condemns Atrocities by Meitei Radicals, The Hills Journal, 22 November 2024. "May 14, 2024: Mr Seigoulen Singson of Phaitol village was abducted from Police Check point in Phaitol and later on 17th May, tortured & decomposed body found in Jiri river and his latest mobile location was at Dibong, Meetei locality of Jiribam."
- ^ Hours after Rahul Gandhi's visit, trouble erupts in Manipur district, The Times of India, 10 July 2024.
- ^ Higgins, J. C. (1912), Administration Report of The Manipur State For The Year 1911-12, Calcutta: Thacker, Spink & Co, p. 4 – via archive.org
- ^ Harvey, C. W. L. (1932), Administration Report of The Manipur State For The Year 1931-32, Imphal: The State Printing Press, p. 55 – via archive.org
- ^ "Notification No. IJ/2/56", Manipur Gazette, 16 August 1956, pp. 15–16 – via archive.org
- ^ Manipur Administrative Atlas (2005), pp. 18–21.
- ^ Manipur Administrative Atlas (2005), pp. 12–23.
- ^
Gopendro Singh, S. (2002), Planning of Rural Road Network: Case Study of Manipur State, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur,
This GIS database is used as source of input data for the present work. However, coordinates of two villages, Ejeirong and Phaitol as available in the data do not fall within the [Tamenglong] district boundary, hence these two villages are excluded while planning and only 107 villages are considered.
- ^ PCA TV: Primary census abstract at town, village and ward level, Manipur - District Tamenglong - 2011, Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, Government of India, 2011, PC11_PCA-TV-1402
- ^ Kuki Inpi Condemns Heinous Killing in Jiribam, Calls for Immediate Action, The Hills Journal, 8 November 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g Greeshma Kuthar, Stagnant Strife: Disinformation draws Manipur’s last district into violence, The Caravan, 1 September 2024.
- ^ Kuki Inpi Publishes Chronology of Jiribam Violence, Condemns Atrocities by Meitei Radicals, The Hills Journal, 22 November 2024.
- ^ Ganesh Rajaraman, Fresh Wave of Violence Erupts, Newsreel Asia, 12 June 2024. ProQuest 3067512215
- ^ Umanand Jaiswal, Fresh tension in Manipur: Abduction, murder roil peaceful pockets in Jiribam and Tamenglong, The Telegraph (India), 8 June 2024. ProQuest 3065476568
- ^ Noren Ningombam, Karishma Hasnat, Section 144 imposed in Manipur’s Jiribam after police recover mutilated body, houses burnt down, The Print, 7 June 2024.
- ^ How a relatively peaceful district became the ‘new battleground’ in Manipur, Scroll.in, 18 June 2024.
- ^ Debarun Choudhury, A New Wave of Displacement In Manipur, As Hundreds Of Tribal Minorities Seek Refuge In Assam, Article-14, 19 July 2024.
- ^ Manipur CM seeks police report on violence in Jiribam, The Hindu, 10 June 2024.
- ^ Manipur CMO seeks report over Jiribam violence by June 11, The Indian Express, 10 June 2024. ProQuest 3065804003
- ^ Abhinay Lakshman, Why has Manipur CM not sacked DGP, Security Adviser yet, asks MP-elect Bimol Akoijam, The Hindu, 10 June 2024.
- ^ Thomas Ngangom, Manipur: Economic blockade supporters block trucks along NH37 in Tamenglong, Hindustan Times, 17 June 2024.
- ^ a b Thomas Ngangom, Manipur violence: Truck set ablaze in Kangpokpi, police check post in Jiribam, Hindustan Times, 20 June 2024.
- ^ a b Kuki top bodies of Jiribam, Tamenglong to impose indefinite blockade on NH-37; Strongly condemn indiscriminate gun firing, The Hills Journal, 20 June 2024.
- ^ MoU inked, blockade along Imphal-Jiribam line called off; Naga youths offer to escort stranded trucks, The Sangai Express, 22 June 2024.
- ^ Sukrita Baruah, Hours before Rahul Gandhi’s Manipur visit, firing in Jiribam, The Indian Express, 8 July 2024.
- ^ Kuki-Zo Village Volunteers Condemn Police Actions, Demand Removal of Checkpoint Near Phaitol Village, The Hills Journal, 9 July 2024.
- ^ Thomas Ngangom, KIM calls for 12-hr shutdown in Manipur’s Kuki-dominated areas against arrest of 5, Hindustan Times, 9 July 2024.
- ^ Hours after Rahul Gandhi's visit, trouble erupts in Manipur district, The Times of India, 10 July 2024.
- Sources
- Manipur Administrative Atlas (PDF), Census of India, Government of India, 2005