Key Points

Former Manipur Chief Minister N. Biren Singh made a passionate plea for unity during Patriots Day celebrations. He highlighted the importance of peaceful coexistence amid ongoing ethnic tensions between Meitei and Kuki-Zo communities. Singh emphasized the historical legacy of Manipur's freedom fighters and their sacrifices against British colonial rule. The state continues to grapple with complex political and social challenges following months of devastating ethnic conflicts.

Key Points: Biren Singh Urges Manipur Unity Amid Ethnic Tensions

  • Former CM emphasizes unity despite political differences
  • Patriots Day commemorates 1891 resistance against British empire
  • Ethnic conflicts between Meitei and Kuki-Zo continue since May 2023
  • Congress criticizes Union government's peace restoration strategy
3 min read

Former Manipur CM Biren Singh urges unity despite political, ideological differences

Former Manipur CM calls for peaceful coexistence and unity during Patriots Day, addressing ongoing ethnic conflicts and state challenges.

"We have to re-establish peace and harmony for the interest of the future generation. - N. Biren Singh"

Imphal, Aug 13

Former Manipur Chief Minister N. Biren Singh, on Wednesday, urged people to remain united irrespective of ideology and political mindset to restore peace and normalcy in the state.

"We have to ensure peaceful coexistence in the state," he said.

Manipur Congress President, Keisham Meghachandra Singh, on Wednesday, claimed that the Union government has no real and realistic roadmap to restore peace in Manipur, where ethnic conflicts between Meitei and Kuki-Zo tribals have been devastating since May 2023.

Speaking to the media on the sidelines of the 134th Patriots Day celebrations, former Manipur Chief Minister Biren Singh said that despite knowing that they would be defeated, Yubraj Tikendrajit, Thangal General, Chirai Naga, and others fought a war in 1891 against the British empire.

"Patriots Day is a commemoration to show respect and pay tribute to those warriors who sacrificed their lives for their motherland in the historic battle 134 years ago. Manipur has the legacy of those forefathers," said Biren Singh, who quit the Chief Ministerial post on February 9, days before the President's Rule was imposed in the state due to prolonged ethnic violence.

He added that despite different political ideologies, diverse thinking and separate perspectives, people must unite for the greater interest of the state and restore peace and normalcy with joint efforts.

"We have to re-establish peace and harmony for the interest of the future generation. I urge all to come forward unitedly for the sake of development of the state and welfare of all," he said.

The former Chief Minister earlier said that a popular government must be elected at the earliest to take forward the development of the state.

Biren Singh, earlier in the day, along with Governor Ajay Kumar Bhalla, MLAs, and senior leaders paid floral tributes to Yuvraj Bir Tikendrajit Singh and other patriots at the state-level event commemorating the fallen freedom fighters of the Anglo-Manipur War of 1891.

Patriots Day is observed every year in Manipur on August 13 to commemorate the hanging of Bir Tikendrajit and Thangal General by the British on this day in 1891 for waging war against the British empire.

State Congress President, while separately attending the Patriots Day celebrations at Congress Bhavan, said that the Union government has no practical roadmap to restore peace in the state.

He added that the Central government did not allocate sufficient funds for rebuilding damaged houses and properties of the violence-affected people and to rehabilitate the displaced people.

To undertake development, rebuild the damaged houses and to provide security to the affected people, sufficient funds are required from the Centre, the Congress leader said.

Meghachandra Singh said that former Chief Secretary Prashant Kumar Singh had earlier announced the resettlement of violence-hit displaced people in three phases by December this year.

However, there is not much initiative from the state government to resettle the displaced people in their villages, Singh said, who is also the member of the Manipur Assembly.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who has worked in conflict zones, I appreciate Biren Singh's call for unity. But words aren't enough - where's the concrete action plan? The displaced families need immediate rehabilitation.
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Priya S
Beautiful message on Patriots Day! Our ancestors fought together against the British, today we must fight together for peace. Manipur's diversity is its strength, not weakness. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Rohit P
Congress is right about funds issue. My cousin's family is still in relief camp after 3 months! When will government help rebuild homes? Enough speeches, we need action now.
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Kavya N
Both leaders make valid points. Unity is important yes, but without proper funds and rehabilitation plans, how will normalcy return? Centre must intervene more actively.
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Vikram M
Respect to Biren Singh for speaking about unity. But I wish he had shown this statesmanship when he was CM. Better late than never though. Hope all communities come together.
M
Michael C
The historical context here is fascinating. Manipur's fight against British was heroic. Today's leaders should draw inspiration from that unity against a common challenge.

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