Skip to main content

NAPM appeals to President Murmu: Urgent public health crisis in Manipur requires immediate intervention

By A Representative
 
The National Alliance of People’s Movements (NAPM), along with its pan-India initiatives — the National Health Rights Alliance, All India Feminist Alliance (ALIFA), and National Alliance for Justice, Accountability and Rights (NAJAR) — has made an urgent appeal to the Hon’ble President of India, Droupadi Murmu, seeking immediate and robust intervention to restore and rebuild the crumbling public health infrastructure in Manipur.
In a strongly-worded letter dated June 12, 2025, addressed to the President, NAPM and over 200 signatories including public health experts, social workers, doctors, legal professionals and concerned citizens highlighted the catastrophic collapse of health services in the violence-hit state. With Manipur under President's Rule, the alliance called on the Centre to act swiftly to safeguard the constitutional right to health under Article 21.
“We urge the Hon’ble President to visit Manipur, meet with displaced communities in the valley, hills and camps, and ensure the Right to Health and Dignity is upheld for all citizens, especially women, children, the elderly, and the disabled,” said Meera Sanghamitra of NAPM.
The letter paints a harrowing picture of public health in Manipur, where over 70,000 people have been displaced due to ongoing ethnic violence since 2023. Hospitals and clinics have been damaged, many health centres are non-functional, and the few that remain operational face acute shortages of personnel and medicines. Relief camps, meanwhile, are overcrowded and unsanitary, creating high risk for disease outbreaks.
Citing data from Sphere India, the letter notes that 253 relief camps across 10 districts shelter tens of thousands of displaced people amid severe public health strain. Vulnerable groups — pregnant women, children, the elderly — are being denied essential care. Health services for chronic illnesses like HIV, TB and NCDs have been disrupted, and the mental health toll is described as severe.
Women and children, in particular, have borne the brunt of this breakdown. Widespread sexual violence has led to surging cases of PTSD, anxiety and depression among women. Children’s education has stalled, and their mental health has been severely affected by constant exposure to trauma.
Dr. Suhas Kolhekar, a virologist and health rights activist associated with NAPM and Jan Swasthya Abhiyan, stressed: “The silence and inaction of the authorities on this humanitarian and public health emergency is deeply disturbing. It is imperative to depoliticize health and prioritize urgent rebuilding of Manipur’s healthcare infrastructure.”
The signatories have put forth a 10-point demand charter, including:
- Creation of a high-level Special Task Force with emergency powers to assess and act on the crisis within two months.
- Establishment of functional Community Health Centres in underserved regions like Tuibuang and Sangaikot in Lamka.
- Immediate recruitment of nurses, doctors and paramedical staff across Manipur’s districts.
- Doubling of the state’s health budget and regulated public-private partnerships to prevent unchecked privatization.
- Inclusion of mental health services in all PHCs and decentralization of health infrastructure beyond Imphal.
- Comprehensive anti-discrimination mechanisms in health services across gender, religion, and ethnicity.
- A long-term legal framework ensuring Right to Health as a justiciable right.
“Health is not charity — it is a constitutional guarantee,” asserted Dr. Vandana Prasad, a public health expert and signatory. “It is unconscionable that while the state reels under devastation, the health system lies paralyzed without strategic support.”
The letter concludes with a plea for moral leadership, calling on President Murmu to ensure that India's commitment to universal healthcare reaches even the most conflict-ridden and remote parts of the nation.

Comments

TRENDING

Overriding India's constitutional sovereignty? Citizens urge PM to reject WHO IHR amendments

By A Representative   A group of concerned Indian citizens, including medical professionals and activists, has sent an urgent appeal to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, urging him to reject proposed amendments to the International Health Regulations (IHR) before the ratification deadline of July 19, 2025. 

Designing the edge, erasing the river: Sabarmati Riverfront and the dissonance between ecology and planning

By Mansee Bal Bhargava, Parth Patel  Across India, old black-and-white images of the Sabarmati River are often juxtaposed with vibrant photos of the modern Sabarmati Riverfront. This visual contrast is frequently showcased as a model of development, with the Sabarmati Riverfront serving as a blueprint for over a hundred proposed riverfront projects nationwide. These images are used to forge an implicit public consensus on a singular idea of development—shifting from a messy, evolving relationship between land and water to a rigid, one-time design intervention. The notion of regulating the unregulated has been deeply embedded into public consciousness—especially among city makers, planners, and designers. Urban rivers across India are undergoing a dramatic transformation, not only in terms of their land-water composition but in the very way we understand and define them. Here, we focus on one critical aspect of that transformation: the river’s edge.

FSSAI defies Supreme Court order on food warning labels, citing 'trade secrets' for withholding vital information

By A Representative   India’s food regulator, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), is facing strong criticism for deliberately delaying the implementation of crucial warning labels on High Fat, Sugar, and Salt (HFSS) food products. This comes despite a clear Supreme Court order on April 9, 2025, which mandated the completion of the "entire exercise" within three months. Adding to the controversy, the FSSAI is reportedly hiding expert reports and over 14,000 public comments under the pretext of "trade secrets."

‘Act of war on agriculture’: Aruna Rodrigues slams GM crop expansion and regulatory apathy

By Rosamma Thomas*  Expressing appreciation to the Union Agriculture Minister for inviting suggestions from farmers and concerned citizens on the sharp decline in cotton crop productivity, Aruna Rodrigues—lead petitioner in the Supreme Court case ongoing since 2005 that seeks a moratorium on genetically modified (GM) crops—wrote to Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on July 14, 2025, stating that conflicts of interest have infiltrated India’s regulatory system like a spreading cancer, including within the Indian Council for Agricultural Research (ICAR).

Ecological alarm over pumped storage projects in Western Ghats: Policy analyst writes to PM

By A Representative   In a detailed letter addressed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, energy and climate policy analyst Shankar Sharma has raised grave concerns over the escalating approval and construction of Pumped Storage Projects (PSPs) across India’s ecologically fragile river valleys. He has warned that these projects, if pursued unchecked, could result in irreparable damage to the country’s riverine ecology, biodiversity hotspots, and forest wealth—particularly in the Western Ghats.

Civil rights coalition condemns alleged abduction of activist Samrat Singh by Delhi police

By A Representative The Campaign Against State Repression (CASR), a collective of civil and democratic rights organisations, has strongly condemned what it describes as the illegal abduction of psychologist and social activist Samrat Singh by a team of Delhi Police officials. The incident occurred on the evening of July 12, 2025, at Singh’s residence in Yamunanagar, Haryana.

Gurdial Singh Paharpuri: A lifetime of revolutionary contribution and unfulfilled aspirations

By Harsh Thakor*  Gurdial Singh Paharpuri, a Central Committee member of the Communist Party Re-Organisation Centre of India (Marxist-Leninist) (CPRCI(ML)), passed away on July 2, marking a significant loss for the Indian Communist Revolutionary movement. For six decades, Singh championed the cause of revolution, leaving an enduring impact through his lifelong dedication to the global proletarian movement. His contributions are considered foundational, laying groundwork for future advancements in revolutionary thought. He is recognized as a key figure among Indian Communist revolutionary leaders who shaped the mass line, and his example is seen as a model for revolutionary communists to follow.

Historic Supreme Court ruling grants tribal women equal right to inherit property

By Raj Kumar Sinha*  The Supreme Court of India has delivered a landmark judgment declaring that denying tribal women inheritance rights solely based on gender is unconstitutional. The court affirmed their equal right to ancestral property, stating that refusing a share in such property to a tribal woman or her legal heirs on the basis of sex is both unjust and unconstitutional.

A disconnect between data and daily life: India's inflation puzzle

By Hemantkumar Shah*  In recent news, the government has announced that the inflation rate has reached a six-and-a-half-year low. According to the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation for June stood at just 2.1 percent, down from 2.82 percent in May. This is the lowest rate in 77 months, and the ministry even claims that food prices have fallen by 1.06 percent compared to last year.