header banner
WORLD

UN experts slam India's 'inadequate' response to Manipur abuses

GENEVA, Sept 5: UN experts condemned Monday the Indian government's "slow and inadequate response" to reported serious rights violations, including sexual violence, amid deadly ethnic clashes in the country's remote northeast.
By AFP/RSS

GENEVA, Sept 5: UN experts condemned Monday the Indian government's "slow and inadequate response" to reported serious rights violations, including sexual violence, amid deadly ethnic clashes in the country's remote northeast.


"We have serious concerns about the apparent slow and inadequate response by the Government of India, including law enforcement, to stem physical and sexual violence and hate speech in Manipur," they said in a statement.


The nearly 20 independent United Nations rights experts, including the Special Rapporteurs on violence against women and girls and on torture, responded to the abuses reported since clashes broke out in Manipur in May.


Related story

Authorities decide not to immediately shut down Melamchi water...


Reports indicated that by mid-August, around 160 people had been killed and 300 others injured in the violence, they said, also pointing to tens of thousands of people displaced, thousands of homes and hundreds of churches burnt down and farmland destroyed.


In particular, the experts said they were "appalled by the reports and images of gender-based violence targeting hundreds of women and girls of all ages, and predominantly of the Kuki ethnic minority".


"The alleged violence includes gang rape, parading women naked in the street, severe beatings causing death, and burning them alive or dead," they said.


The experts, who are appointed by the UN Human Rights Council but who do not speak on behalf of the United Nations, said they were especially concerned "that the violence seems to have been preceded and incited by hateful and inflammatory speech".


Such hate speech, spread online and offline, had been used "to justify the atrocities committed against the Kuki ethnic minority, particularly women, on account of their ethnicity and religious belief", they said.


Manipur has been fractured along ethnic lines, with rival militias setting up blockades to keep out members of the opposing community.


Tens of thousands of additional soldiers have been rushed from elsewhere to patrol towns and highways, and a curfew and internet shutdown remain in force across Manipur.

See more on: UN_experts
Related Stories
SOCIETY

Civil society members urge swift diplomatic action...

OPINION

Parliament's Inadequate Response to the AI Revolut...

ECONOMY

Role of local govt crucial to address issues of re...

Editorial

Think about food

POLITICS

Experts slam Speaker for telling House panels not...

Trending

Top Videos

Bold Preety willing to fight for her musical career

Awareness among people on heart diseases has improved in Nepal’

Print still remains the numbers of one platform

Bringing home a gold medal is on my bucket

What is Nepal's roadmap to sage child rights