I got it wrong in my last post. The Hmar National Army has not withdrawn the agitation of blocking the passenger bus services. Today, they have threatened to intensify the agitation.
They invited a team of media men in Churachandpur district. As I said in my last post, their main grouse is the lack of rehabilitation of the mass rape victims.
But behind such straight talk, there is the underlying message that an armed Hmar group is much interested in anything connected with the mass rape issue. Outwardly, they are trying to caricature themselves as the aggrieved party but underneath, they are also let it be known to anybody concerned that they are ready to use brute steps to force their agenda.
Especially when it comes to the issue of cross-examination of the alleged rape victims.
Read the emergence of an armed group under the guise of Hmar National Army together with the newly-acquired vigour in the tone of the Hmar Women’s Association, then, it is very clear that they are giving notice to Mr Babloo Loitongbam to stay away from the subject of cross-examination of the alleged victims.
This comes in the close heels of the warning issued to Mr Loitongbam by the state government. I’ve already dealt with in a post and I’m quoting again from it here.
>> As I had said in my last post, the real purpose behind the arrest of the two human rights activists is to intimidate the larger human rights community in general, and Mr Baloo Loitongbam, in particular. Those scripting the arrest, and thus, the news, have no business to disclose this real context to the general reading public. Their game plan is to clinically convey their messages to the select ‘subjects’.
But the reading public’s real business is to understand those behind the scene machinations because they are happening in their own society.
Going a bit deeper, we can discern that by intimidating people like Mr Babloo Loitongbam, the military of this largest democracy of the world want to influence the judicial proceedings of the legally constituted inquiry commission. Their logic is quite simple: if people like Mr Babloo Loitongbam don’t make representation to the Rajkhowa commission to put the alleged victims of the Parbung rape cases under the test of commonly accepted norm of cross examination, then the Commission is more likely to give its verdict of ‘possible rape—but without any conclusive evidences’.
Going still a bit deeper, we are confronted with the stark reality of the military of the largest democracy of the world trying insidiously to influence the verdict of a lawfully constituted inquiry commission. This is a very serious matter with fearsome implications—not only for Manipur but for the whole world.<<
You have only to replace ‘ the military of the largest democracy of the world’ with ‘Hmar National Army’ to get the full picture of the forces that are swooping down on Mr Babloo Loitongbam.
Here is the link to the full post.
Certainly, Mr Babloo Loitongbam is in the most dangerous position of having caught in the eye of the gathering storm.
Monday, September 11, 2006
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