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Keithels are not ethnic

The Manipur government needs to consider the development of various Keithelmanbi markets where hill women come to market their produce daily

ByIFP Bureau

Updated 20 Feb 2024, 8:13 pm

(PHOTO: IFP)
(PHOTO: IFP)

A recent incident of an unpleasant altercation in the vicinity of Khwairanband Keithel between a woman vendor from the hills and a group of market women which became viral in the social media almost ignited another ethnic conflict in the already volatile situation in the state. But the day was saved by the intervention of a few groups committed to the cause of communal harmony. We congratulate the timely response of the said groups in preventing a negative fallout.

However, the reason for the altercation was lost in the din. Conducting business on Nongma Panba or the first day of the month (lunar, of course) is considered a bad omen by the Meiteis and normally Keithel women shun from conducting any business in the market on this day. It is an unwritten law and everyone who does business in the Keithel is expected to follow it. It is a rule of the market and nothing communal about it. Since times immemorial, the Khwairamband Keithel was the exclusive domain of Meitei women vendors.

Besides the original market complex, two other market complexes were added to create more room for vendors selling different wares. On the other hand, women vendors from the hills were allowed to hawk their wares and produce on the stretch of road connecting BT road and Old Assembly road popularly known as Family Welfare Road in those days and it was known as Hao Keithel. When a temporary market came up after the demolition of the adjoining Old District Hospital, some of those tribal women vendors came to sit there.

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Whether these tribal women vendors presently housed in temporary markets would be accommodated in the new Market complex coming up in Tombisana High School still remains a question mark. Before the Naga Nullah was covered with concrete slabs and converted into parking space, temporary market sheds were erected on the side of the Nagamapal Road and many tribal women vendors were accommodated there.

As usual, there are squabbles among vendors regarding vending space at Nagamapal, be it among Meiteis or between a Meitei and a Tribal vendor. But, no other vendors or onlookers took sides and no discrimination was seen during those squabbles.

The state government’s new initiative of constructing a Hao Keithel in Lamphel area must have been an idea after several other hill communities began to demand a vending space after the establishment of a Mao market near the DM University complex recently. Mao market in Imphal has a history of its own. When the southern Angamis prevented the Mao traders from selling their produce in Nagaland in 2015 who did they turn to? They turned to Imphal.

SAPO and its youth wing SAYO had been constantly harassing Mao people/leaders on the National Highway, serving quit notice, damaging vehicles, intimidating innocent civilians, vandalizing shops and physically assaulting Mao people and their leaders since long. The question was, why should Mao seek to sell its produce in Nagaland while there is a high demand in Imphal for vegetable produce including potato.

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Time and again, Imphal has proven to be a safe market for the vegetable produce in Imphal. Ever since the 2015 violence against Mao farmers in Nagaland, valley based civil society had been facilitating sale of their produce in Imphal and even weekly markets in various places of Imphal. Five years down the line and Mao Market has been opened at different locations in Imphal and elsewhere on a weekly basis since then. There has been a history against Manipuri Nagas in Kohima and Dimapur. There was a time when the Tangkhuls of Manipur were driven out of Kohima.

The animosity of Southern Angamis against Mao-Maram people had always been there. At the moment, a number of women from the hills come down to sell their produce by the roadside at Lamlong Keithel with no permanent structure. The state government also needs to consider the development of various Keithelmanbi markets where hill women come to market their produce daily and a comprehensive plan needs to be drawn up for cold storage and godown facilities in the Keithelmanbi markets located near the foothills.

- EDITORIAL

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Tags:

communal harmonymanipur crisisethnic conflictNongma PanbaKhwairanband Keithel

IFP Bureau

IFP Bureau

IMPHAL, Manipur

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