Thousands of majority believers lost homes and churches in India s worst ethnic conflict this year. Yet they feel "overlooked and despised" by both sides.
News18 spoke with some Meitei community members who moved from the violence-hit areas and reached neighboring Mizoram and then Assam, awaiting a way to go back home, along with fearing for their life
Dimapur, Oct. 8 (EMN): Naga apex organisations and the Church, under the initiative of the Forum for Naga Reconciliation (FNR), have extended support to the ‘September Joint Accordant’ signed by the NSCN (IM) and the Working Committee of the Naga National Political Groups (WC-NNPG). FNR in an update informed that the Naga organisations and the Church, in a meeting held on Saturday, affirmed that “Naga people must change by acting in hope and acknowledging one another as people of common belonging in the moment for the future.” It stated that the public in sincere trust await the fulfillment of the joint accordant by the signatories in “letter and in spirit.” “The Naga public will render our wholehearted assistance to this reconciliation process for the NSCN/GPRN and WC-NNPG to find common ground and mutually agree on a relationship of cooperation based on the Naga historical and political rights in order to move forward,” it stated. According to FNR, organisations which
Several civil society organizations took part in a sit-in-protest in Imphal today to condemn the Oting killings in Nagaland state under Mon district and also show solidarity to the victims.