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Video of burning man sparks demands for justice in Manipur

Authorities identified the victim as Laldinthanga Khongsai, 37, and an umbrella body of Manipur’s tribal groups said he belonged to the Kuki community

Video of burning man sparks demands for justice in Manipur

A video showing a man's body on fire in India's restive Manipur prompted calls for justice from a minority tribal group in the northeastern state, which remains on edge more than five months after bloody ethnic clashes killed at least 180 people.

State authorities said they had ordered an investigation by the federal police into the incident suspected to have taken place on May 4.


The violence erupted on May 3 as members of the majority Meitei ethnic group and minority Kuki tribals clashed over sharing government benefits and quotas in jobs and education.

The seven second video, which surfaced on social media on Sunday (8) and has been verified by state police, showed a man with injuries to the head lying near barbed wire while a portion of the body was ablaze.

Voices and gunshots could be heard in the background. It is unclear whether he was alive or already dead.

Authorities identified the victim as Laldinthanga Khongsai, 37, and an umbrella body of Manipur's tribal groups said he belonged to the Kuki community.

Kuldiep Singh, the state's security advisor, said the man was killed on May 4, when armed members of the two communities fought pitched battles and a mob stripped and sexually assaulted two tribal women.

"The body is still unclaimed," Singh told reporters on Monday, adding that the case will be investigated by the Central Bureau of Investigation.

The Indigenous Tribal Leaders' Forum, an umbrella body, said, "The video is a harrowing testament to the ethnic cleansing campaign against the Kuki-Zo community by the majority Meiteis."

Asserting that such "brutal acts" cannot be overlooked, the ITLF said: "The selective application of justice further reinforces our demand for a separate administration."

The Meitei make up 53 per cent of Manipur's population, while the Kuki account for 16 per cent.

Sporadic violence has continued after the peak of the clashes despite tens of thousands of extra security personnel being deployed in the region.

(Reuters)

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