Skip to main content

Did leaked Manipur video shake India, where indifference is said to rule the roost?

By Liaquath Mirza 

The horrific incident of Manipur has once again left Indians hanging their heads in shame. It shook the insides of even the so-called apolitical denizens with revulsion. Tears trickled down looking at the gut wrenching visuals of death of humanity in Kangpokpi. The distressing video melted even the most corroded hearts so much so that even trolls of establishment raised their hands in helplessness initially at least.
It became increasingly difficult for the event management government to manage this distressing event which happened some eighty days ago. The Manipur government hopelessly failed in its efforts to hide the video of this dastardly act. When someone finally summoned the courage and decided to leak the video it shook a nation which has of late gained the notoriety of indifference.
It is alleged that Manipur police was an active accomplice and actually handed over the helpless women to the monsters of Manipur who not only raped, paraded naked and pillaged but also brutally killed their kin in the process. Hundreds participated and thousands cheered merrily. The inhuman incident happens on 4th May but FIR gets filed after two weeks of the dastardly incident.
They say that it’s a zero FIR which then has to get converted into an FIR with FIR number allotted at the police station which has the jurisdiction. Formality of FIR aside no action was taken, no investigation made and no arrests effected when the crime happened until after nationwide uproar.
The dastardly act was the result of a fake video of dead woman wrapped in plastic passed off as rape victim of Kuki marauders whereas the video itself was that of a Delhi incident which happened years ago.
Such heinous acts are supposed to have been brought to the notice of the Central Home Ministry and NCRB (National Crime Records Bureau) which then updates its records. In fact there should be no doubt that all those who need to know would have known right from state government political and bureaucratic bosses to HMO and PMO bosses in Delhi.
The national commission for women turned a blind eye and feigned ignorance despite getting a written complaint. All the myriad sleuthing agencies would also have been tipped off. And yet… everyone remained tight lipped trying their best to hide the ghastly act from public eye. Rather than owning up and acting on the tip off to nab the culprits each one of them would have passed the buck by taking shelter in a bureaucratic rule book and letting the political bosses go scot-free.
Internet in Manipur is shut down so that gore and ghastliness does not get leaked to the outside world. Manipur of the North east which barely catches the conscience of main land Indians gets further isolated barring a few snatches on burning Manipur once in a while. For the political bosses it was business as usual what with the Karnataka state elections underway. Political bickering from the election podiums reached a crescendo drowning out the cries of help of helpless Manipuris.

Pretence of collective amnesia

Amidst cacophonic speeches of mudslinging and flower petal rallies the nation forgets about a tiny state which is up in flames. Meanwhile our Home Minster remembers that he has to fulfil the formality of paying a visit to Manipur. Off he goes on a 3 day visit. Not much is known about what transpired between him and his party colleague at the helm but a series of platitudes are belted out and peace committees are formed. Appeals are made to the mobsters who looted and scooted with arms from state armouries to surrender their weapons.
It is worth noting that the Home Minister visited Manipur on May 29th, a good 25 days after the ghastly incident and ten days of the FIR of his police. It is hard to believe that his DGP might not have apprised him of the heinous crime. And yet the whole State and Central government machinery decided to remain tight lipped, taking every bit care to keep it under wraps. The victims were neither heard nor provided the much needed succour. Every one adopted the proverbial three monkeys’ pose and went about their work as if nothing happened.
After his return from Manipur it is safe to assume that the Number Two would have apprised his boss the Numero Uno of the incident probably in hushed tones. Hush hush… Amit Bhai hush it up. His advice to his deputy in Gujarati would probably have been: don’t let this out. That’s when realisation might have dawned on the Supremo that his visit to Manipur would possibly lead to bad press.
Even though he knows that the godi media is in his pocket and would do his bidding, he was unsure of the pesky digital media who might play spoil sport by spilling the beans. And that is precisely what happened when the ‘Print’ first published about the heinous crime.
So the Supreme leader decided to avoid Manipur at all costs to possibly save his carefully crafted image and left Manipur to its own devices and to his partisan chief minister. No amount of protests by Manipuris in the nation’s capital moved the supreme leader who resolved to not even utter the letter M of Manipur.
Post blues of Karnataka debacle it was time for the Nation’s Pradhan to cheer himself up a bit with frenetic foreign jaunts…. attending a White House dinner here and collecting a French Bastille sash there and so on and so forth. Signing for a drone here and buying some fighter jets there was also part of the itinerary. It was business as usual for the Pradhan sevak. Manipur? What Manipur?

Lone wolf who cries foul

Rahul Gandhi, the simpleton according to BJP, lands in Manipur on June 29th to visit the various relief camps. This act of sensitivity annoys the state and Central government machinery no end. They erect a makeshift hurdle course along his path only to be vociferously dismantled by the brave women of Manipur. Rahul’s visit briefly brought Manipur to centre stage again only to be relegated back to the background after a few feeble voices and noises.
Purpose is to rake up so much noise that it drowns cries of hapless victims. Focus is on who released video, not on giving justice to victims
Seventy eight day ban on internet in Manipur proved to be futile when some dejected soul decide to pull the pin and blow the lid off. The horrific record of human depravity shook the whole nation and erupted into a volcano of anger and despair. The nation’s conscience was jolted awake. World countries sat up and took notice. World media rooms were flabbergasted. Godi Media paid lip service. Chief justice of India took Suo-Moto cognizance and warned the Government to either take action or face reaction.
Seeing the situation slipping out of hand what with the Chief Justice of India butting in and the chattering classes trending the topic on twitter Vishwa Guru hurriedly summons a clutch of reporters on the Parliament door steps and launches into an eight minute monologue (sorry no questions please… listen to what I have to say) dwelling at length on Paavan Saavan session of the Parliament (monsoon session) and, oh, as a side note a 36 second remorseful contriteness on Manipur incident while taking care to also add Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh (Congress ruled states) to the list thereby not only trivializing the ghastly incident but also obliquely hinting at his troll armies to attack opposition with a bout of whataboutery.
He also sermons all the State governments to act tough against atrocities on women while steadfastly saving his tainted colleagues such as the BB Singhs etc.

Wheels of whataboutery

Taking cue from the supreme leader, IT cell hordes, the godi media hobbledygook, waning and wannabe stars of the BJP -- all swing into action and do the tango in tandem. Just a few of the scores of gems are given for the reader to sample the sheer insensitivity:
Ravi Shankar Prasad: A retired minister wanting to crawl back into the cabinet tries to impress his boss after shedding customary tears by questioning the timing of the video leak. Hint… a certain grand old party’s karyakartas may have been responsible.
  • Tejinder Singh Bagga: Goes a step further and brings an Abdul khan angle into the crime thereby bringing in the tried and tested ‘M’ formula.
  • Dharmendra Pradhan: Manipur incident unfortunate but what happened in West Bengal was even more unfortunate (See so many opposition ruled states are also culpable. Don’t just blame poor Biren Singh Government).
  • Amit Malviya: Chief honcho of IT cell describes opposition hypocrisy with a pictorial tweet of TV remotes with full volume on Manipur and Mute on Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh and West Bengal.
  • Hemanta Biswa Sarma: The North-East poster boy of Hindutva politics also sees congress conspiracy in the timing of the video leak. He has sane advice for all ‘sad incident but don’t blame entire Manipur’.
The list is endless and their stupidity limitless. The whole purpose of the Supreme leader’s dog whistle is to rake up so much noise that it ultimately drowns the cries of the hapless victims. Focus is on who released the damning video and not on giving justice to the victims. The whole modus operandi appears to be to play the victim shoving aside the unfortunate victims and cry wolf.

Comments

TRENDING

Prof. Vidyut Joshi: Gujarat’s knowledge institutions have lost their soul, urgent reorientation needed

By A Representative   In a thought-provoking column published in Sandesh , eminent sociologist and former Vice-Chancellor Prof. Vidyut Joshi has raised urgent concerns over the erosion of intellectual autonomy and social relevance in Gujarat’s leading research and academic institutions. Building on insights from the recent paper Secret of Creating High Performing Knowledge Institutions  by development economist Prof. Tushaar Shah, Joshi paints a stark picture of institutions that have strayed far from their foundational vision.

Top civil rights leader announces plan to lead delegation to Pakistan amidst post-war tensions

By A Representative   In a significant move, well-known academic and civil rights leader Sandeep Pandey has announced the plan to send a 22-member delegation to Pakistan to engage in dialogue with its government and civil society. The delegation proposed to go to Pakistan under the banner of Socialist Party (India) as a fact-finding mission to help seek solution to continuing tensions between the two countries over the fallout of the Pahalgam terror attack.

Global recognition at UNHRC: A breakthrough for communities discriminated on work and descent

By Amit Kumar, Naveen Gautam*  In a historic moment for global human rights, the 59th Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council opened with a powerful acknowledgment of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (CDWD)—groups affected by caste-like systems of exclusion, marginalization, and inherited inequality. This recognition was delivered by United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk during his global human rights update, signaling a major shift in international discourse.

Former civil servants raise alarm over conflict of interest in Supreme Court's forest advisory panel

By A Representative   In a strongly worded open letter to the Chief Justice of India, 60 retired senior civil servants from the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Indian Police Service (IPS), Indian Foreign Service (IFS), and other central services have raised serious concerns over what they term a “conflict of interest” in the current composition of the Supreme Court-appointed Central Empowered Committee (CEC), tasked with advising the Court in forest and environmental matters. The signatories, all part of the Constitutional Conduct Group (CCG), expressed grave apprehension that the CEC—now comprising entirely of recently retired officials from the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC)—may lack impartiality in ongoing litigation, particularly those challenging the Forest Conservation Amendment Act (FCAA), 2023.

J&K's Mallabuchan villagers symbolically cut Off pipeline in protest against ‘water injustice’

By A Representative   In a striking act of peaceful protest, residents of Mallabuchan village in Jammu and Kashmir's Budgam district symbolically disconnected the Ahmadpora-Tangmarg water pipeline on Thursday, denouncing decades of official neglect and violation of Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) norms.

Few Bollywood actors possessed Sanjeev Kumar's subtle detachment and sensitivity

By Harsh Thakor  On 9th July, we celebrated the 85th birthday of legendary Hindi film actor, Sanjeev Kumar., known as Haribhai Jariwala. Sanjeev Kumar penetrated zones of versatility or acting craft, almost unparalleled in Hindi cinema. He was one one the very few who touched horizons of true genius, transcending regions in acting virtually unexplored. Rarely did any artist get stuck as thickly into the skin of the character. The diversity of expressions in his moves reminded one of the different water colours of a painting. Sanjeev manifested the ventures of an artist to tap the regions unexplored. He simply defied all conventions of Bollywood, making path breaking experiments. His acting had a subtle degree detachment and sensitivity, which few Bollywood actors ever possessed. He may not have possessed the drop dead looks of a Dev Anand, Dharmendra or Sashi Kapoor or the professionalism or star charisma of an Amitabh Bachan, Rajesh Khanna or Shah Rukh Khan. However in pure acting...

Climate action in rural India can go hand in hand with sustainable livelihoods: NGO shows the way

By Bharat Dogra  Mobilizing an adequate response to climate change is often seen as an expensive task and then there is a lot of talk about who’ll bear the burden. However in rural areas both climate mitigation and adaptation can be integrated well with the promotion of sustainable rural livelihoods and in such conditions people become very supportive towards it. In such conditions climate response can progress much more smoothly without becoming burdensome.

A healthier model for goat-based livelihoods in remote Madhya Pradesh villages

By Bharat Dogra  While buffaloes and cows often receive greater attention in animal husbandry-related government development schemes, goats remain vital for poorer households. Therefore, enhancing goat-based livelihoods is especially important for marginalized communities—particularly when such efforts reduce villagers' costs and lower goat mortality rates. One promising strategy involves training local villagers, especially women, to provide essential veterinary services. A welcome byproduct of this is that several women gain a respected source of income within their own villages.

Nation marks 10 years of Digital India, yet RTI filing with Parliament remains offline

By A Representative   As India commemorates a decade of the ambitious Digital India mission launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on July 1, 2015, a critical digital gap remains unaddressed: citizens still cannot file Right to Information (RTI) applications online with the Indian Parliament.