2004 conflict remembered as KAAC chief rejects Kuki resettlement in Karbi Anglong

Tuliram Ronghang also announced that land pattas would be provided free of cost to villagers of Sarpo Teron & Sarthe Engti;

Update: 2025-03-25 12:47 GMT
2004 conflict remembered as KAAC chief rejects Kuki resettlement in Karbi Anglong

KAAC CEM Tuliram Ronghang at the foundation laying of memorial stone and children's park in Langvoku (AT Photo)

  • whatsapp icon

Diphu, March 25: The Chief Executive Member (CEM) of the Karbi Anglong Autonomous Council (KAAC), Tuliram Ronghang, has reiterated that Kuki refugees fleeing Manipur’s ongoing ethnic clashes will not be granted land or shelter in Karbi Anglong.

Speaking at the 20th annual memorial event at Sarpo Teron village, Langvoku, in honour of the victims of the Karbi-Kuki clash of March 24, 2004, Ronghang said, “It was not the Kukis living here who committed the crime, but those who came from Manipur and Myanmar to kill our brothers. As long as I am the CEM, I cannot allow them land or shelter.”

He also dismissed claims that Karbi Anglong should be regarded as “tribal land,” stressing that land rights cannot be extended indiscriminately to outsiders.

"Being tribal does not mean that people from Jharkhand and Orissa can automatically be accepted. Land cannot be granted to just anyone under the guise of tribal identity," he asserted. 



KAAC CEM Tuliram Ronghang (AT Photo)

While local village headmen have the authority to issue No Objection Certificates (NOCs) for settlement, the CEM urged them to prevent the entry of outsiders into their territories.

Ronghang further announced that land pattas would be provided free of cost to villagers of Sarpo Teron and Sarthe Engti, along with street lights and other essential amenities.

The event also marked the remembrance of the 2004 Karbi-Kuki clash, in which alleged Kuki militants massacred 19 Karbi villagers, including the son of the village headman.

Sarpo Teron village, located about 25 km from Diphu, observed the solemn occasion by paying tribute to the victims of the violence that unfolded as part of the wider Karbi-Kuki clashes of 2003–2004.

In November 2024, the KAAC had officially stated that over a thousand Kuki people had migrated from Manipur and settled in Karbi Anglong’s Singhason Hills. Of them, 700 were sent back.

Following this, then-Manipur Chief Minister N. Biren Singh remarked that the state would only accept “genuine people”.

“As the state already has a base year of 1961, all citizens falling within those parameters will be accepted,” Singh had stated on November 28, 2024.

Similar News