Manipur’s Unfinished War: When Suppressed Conflict Returns with Firepower

Manipur today is not merely a regional crisis. It is a test of India’s democratic resilience. It highlights the limits of governance models that prioritize control over consensus. Without a shift toward genuine political engagement that addresses the fears, rights, and representation of all communities, the conflict will persist and resurface with greater intensity.
 

Aarav Sharma Apr 23, 2026
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Representational Photo

The renewed violence in Manipur, in India’s Northeast, is not a breakdown of peace. It is the exposure of a peace that never truly existed. The recent killings, triggered by the use of rocket-type weapons and high-intensity explosives, have shattered the narrative of normalcy that Indian authorities sought to project. What is unfolding is not a sudden crisis, but the predictable return of a conflict in the securitised border state left unresolved at its core.

For months, the state relied on administrative containment through curfews, communication blackouts, and heavy security deployments to maintain an appearance of stability. Such measures do not resolve conflict. They merely postpone it. The underlying drivers, including competing claims over land, political exclusion, and deep ethnic mistrust, were never meaningfully addressed. In the absence of reconciliation, grievances hardened, communities became more polarized, and Manipur drifted into a fragile equilibrium waiting to collapse.

Militarised Confrontation 

This latest escalation is particularly alarming because of the scale and intensity of violence. The reported use of rocket-like systems marks a shift from sporadic communal clashes to a more militarized confrontation. Such weaponization is not accidental. It reflects the earlier erosion of state control when arms were looted from security installations, along with the persistence of insurgent-era supply chains in the region. When heavy weaponry enters a civilian conflict, it fundamentally alters its trajectory and makes de-escalation far more difficult.

The responsibility for this deterioration cannot be confined to armed groups alone. It rests heavily on political leadership that has failed to move beyond reactive governance. The state’s approach has been defined by crisis management rather than conflict resolution. Instead of initiating inclusive political dialogue, authorities have relied on force and administrative restrictions. This has not only failed to address local grievances but has also reinforced perceptions of neglect, particularly among minority communities who feel excluded from both power and protection.

Under Narendra Modi, India has consistently projected itself as a confident and pluralistic democracy on the global stage. However, Manipur presents a deeply uncomfortable contradiction. Democratic credibility is not measured by rhetoric or international positioning. It is measured by how effectively a state manages internal crises and protects all segments of its population. In this case, the response has been slow, uneven, and insufficiently sensitive to the complexities of a minority-driven conflict.

Failure of Dialogue 

More broadly, the situation reflects a troubling pattern in which minority-dominated regions struggle to secure sustained political attention unless violence escalates to critical levels. This reactive posture undermines trust and can incentivize confrontation as a means of being heard. The failure to institutionalize dialogue and address structural grievances has allowed a localized conflict to evolve into a protracted and increasingly militarized standoff.

Equally concerning is the normalization of armed mobilization at the community level. As civilians turn to weapons for security, the authority of the state erodes further, creating a cycle of insecurity and retaliation. Each round of violence deepens divisions and makes future reconciliation more difficult.

Manipur today is not merely a regional crisis. It is a test of India’s democratic resilience. It highlights the limits of governance models that prioritize control over consensus. Without a shift toward genuine political engagement that addresses the fears, rights, and representation of all communities, the conflict will persist and resurface with greater intensity.

The latest flare-up should therefore be seen as a warning. Unresolved conflicts do not disappear. They accumulate pressure over time. When they return, they do so with a force that reflects the depth of their neglect.

(The author is a political analyst and columnist with a deep interest in South Asian geopolitics, international diplomacy and policy reform. He graduated from King's College London with a focus in global governance and is passionate about narrowing the disparity among academia and policy making.  Views expressed are personal. He can be contacted at aaravsharmaa245@gmail.com)

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