IMPHAL, 14 Dec: The bodies of 64 victims of the Manipur violence lying in morgues since ethnic clashes broke out in the state in May were handed over to their families under tight security, officials said here on Thursday.
According to a report by Supreme Court-constituted committee to look into the violence, 175 deaths were reported during the clashes and 169 bodies identified.
The bodies of 60 members of the Kuki community, which were kept in the JNIMS and the RIMS hospitals here, were airlifted amid tight security arrangements put in place by the Manipur Police and the Army’s Assam Rifles unit.
Four bodies of Meiteis that were lying at a morgue in Churachandpur, a district dominated by tribals, were also brought to Imphal and handed over to their families for the last rites, the officials said.
In a statement, the Committee on Tribal Unity said that the burial rites of the “fallen KukiZo brethren” will be held on Friday at the Martyr Cemetery at Phaijang.
It said that the handing over of the bodies marks the “much-awaited homecoming of our fallen brothers and sisters after a long tumultuous eight months of despair, heartbreak and hopelessness” to reach their “resting place here in our homeland.”
It expressed appreciation for the Supreme Court for “intervening and understanding the sentiments of the Kuki-Zo communities.”
The organisation called for a 12-hour total shutdown within Sadar Hills Kangpokpi from 5 am to 5 pm on Friday for the funeral services, and appealed to the general public to cooperate.
Emergency services and funeral parties will be exempted from the purview of the shutdown, it added.
The Supreme Court had formed a committee in August of three former high court judges – Gita Mittal, Shalini Joshi and Asha Menon – to look into the investigation, relief, remedial measures, compensation and rehabilitation in violence-stricken Manipur.
Subsequently, on the committee’s report, the apex court issued directives for the burial or cremation of those killed in the ethnic violence in the northeastern state, including the 88 people who were identified but their bodies not claimed by their family members, by 11 December.
“Either the relatives of the deceased can accept the bodies and perform the last rites at any of the nine burial sites identified by the Manipur government or the state can go ahead and do the same in accordance with municipal laws,” the court had ordered.
Twenty-four more bodies, believed to be of Kukis, were at the Churachandpur morgue. The tribals had refused to bury those until the bodies from Imphal were brought.
“We are expecting that these bodies would also be claimed and the last rites performed,” an official said.
According to the report, 175 deaths were reported during the ethnic clashes and 169 bodies identified. The top court noted that, of the 169 identified bodies, only 81 were claimed by the relatives of the victims.
The committee report had said that 94 unclaimed bodies were being preserved in mortuaries maintained by state authorities, and added that preserving a large number of bodies for a long period is a drain on the state’s exchequer and a failure to perform the last rites would amount to showing disrespect to the dead.
The apex court had also agreed that it would not be either appropriate or proper to keep the bodies that have not been identified or claimed indefinitely in the mortuaries, and said that “we do not want to keep the pot boiling on dead bodies.”
For the unidentified bodies, the court had allowed the state to carry out burial or cremation with due observance of religious rites. (PTI)