Torbung

Last updated

Torbung
India Manipur location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Torbung
Location in Manipur, India
India location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Torbung
Torbung (India)
Coordinates: 24°25′41″N93°42′57″E / 24.4281°N 93.7157°E / 24.4281; 93.7157
Country India
State Manipur
District Bishnupur, Churachandpur
Area
[a]
  Total
12.57 km2 (4.85 sq mi)
Population
 (2011) [1] [2]
  Total
5,139
(2,781 in Bishnupur)
(2,358 in Churachandpur)
Language(s)
  Official Meitei (Manipuri)
Time zone UTC+5:30 (IST)
Torbung

Torbung [b] is a census village split across the Bishnupur district and Churachandpur district in Manipur, India. The Bishnupur part of the village has a population of 2781, [1] and the Churachandpur part a population of 2358 in the 2011 census. [2] Torbung is watered by the Torbung stream and the Loklai river, which flow down from Thangjing hills to join the Khuga River. Torbung is a village of historical as well as current political significance.

Contents

Geography

The Torbung village is at the mouth of the Khuga River valley (which is also known as "Lamka plain"), [5] bordering the Imphal Valley. It is named after the Torbung stream, which flows down from Thangjing hills and joins the Khuga River. The British Gazetteer of Manipur (1886) mentions the stream by the name "Turbung", and describes its valley as an excellent camping ground. Several villages in the valley as well as "on the stream" are listed, but none by the name Torbung. [6] Other historical references indicate that the name "Torbung" might have been used for the wider area around the stream.

South of the Torbung area, another river called Loklai [7] flows down from Thangjing Hills, taking a bend near the Pengjang village at the foothills and joining the Khuga River very near to the Torbung stream itself.

The Torbung census village is split across the valley district of Bishnupur and the hill district of Churachandpur. The division is practically significant since the valley and hill districts in Manipur have different land revenue regulations. [8] The Torbung village in the Bishnupur district is listed in the census with 1,257 hectares (12.57 km2) area and a population of 2781 people. [1] This includes subvillages such as Torbung Sabal and Torbung Govindpur, as well as villages further away such as Phougakchao Ikhai, Torbung Bangla and Waikhurok. All these villages are included in the gram panchayat (village council) of Torbung. [9]

Churachandpur district's Torbung village is listed in the census with a population of 439 people, and other villages are listed separately: New Zalenphai (275 people), Matijang (646 people), Maichammun (290 people), S. Kotlian (411 people) and Torbung Loklaiphai (197 people). [2] The last two villages are on the bank of the Loklai River. All these villages are populated predominantly by Scheduled Tribes. [10] Scholar Rohlua Puia points out that the hill tribes (here Kuki-Zo people) living in border localities regard themselves as belonging to the hill districts (here Churachandpur), while the Meitei people in the same localities regarded themselves as belonging to the valley districts (here Bishnupur). [8]

Tedim Road (part of the National Highway 2), connecting the Imphal and Churachandpur towns, passes through Torbung. About 1 km to the north is the village of Kangvai, populated by Kuki-Zo people and the headquarters of a subdivision of the Churachandpur district. Further north is Phougakchao Ikhai, populated by Meitei people and included in the Torbung gram panchayat. [11] These overlapping district jurisdictions makes it hard to depict geographic boundaries of districts. [c]

History

Early history

Until late 19th century, the southern frontier of the princely state of Manipur was the southern end of the valley. The tribes inhabiting the southern hills were not under the control of Manipur. [13] That would have made the Torbung region the frontier area of the Manipur state.

A location called "Torbung" is mentioned in Manipur's court chronicle Cheitharol Kumbaba in the year 1712. An official called Chantrasekhor, who was on his way to Tripura, was murdered at the location, which was described as being near "Khuka". The latter is a possible reference to the Khuga River, which is mentioned for the first time in this instance. [14] In 1766, a village was apparently established at "Torpung" by the people of "Kyamkei" under the direction of the Moirang chief (Chantramani). [4]

Scholar Pum Khan Pau believes that the Khuga River valley might have been traversed by Manipuris for the first time in 1857, when Maharaja Chandrakirti led an expedition to Tedim (in the present day Chin State of Myanmar), which was then the central base of the Kamhau-Sukte tribes. The Manipuri troops fled "in confusion" after facing the combined troops of Kamhau, Sukte and Sihzang tribes, and returned to the Imphal Valley via a previously "unknown route", which eventually formed the route of the present day Tedim Road. [15]

In 1858, Torbung is mentioned as a region. The Maharaja of Manipur is said to have settled "Saitons" in a (new) village in Torbung. [16] The Saiton Hills (the east–west-running range of hills on the southern boundary of the Imphal Valley) were invaded in 1789, but not fully subdued. In 1858 when the Maharaja came to Moirang to repel the Kamhaus (Aakam-Hao) tribes, a Haokip clan of Kukis apparently came down from Saiton hills to accept settlement in the Torbung region. [17]

British Raj

The British-compiled Gazetteer of Manipur (1886) describes the "Turbung stream", [3] which it describes as a fair-sized stream that enters the Manipur valley at its southwest corner. It is said to flow through a wide flat-bottomed valley, which is described as suitable for camping. The Gazetteer makes no mention of a village by the name Turbung, but mentions several villages along the stream or the valley of Turbung, including "Lairit" (a Kom village), [18] "Mangyol" (a Kuki village of the Simmte clan), [19] "Saikot" (a Kuki village of the Mangoung clan), [20] "Saitul" (a Kuki village of Vungsun clan), [20] and "Tunnam" (a Koireng village), [3]

In 1872, the Maharaja sent an expedition to the Chivu salt springs (near modern Behiang on the present day southern border of Manipur), ostensibly to support the British Lushai Expedition. The Manipuri troops camped there for two months, and arrested the Kamhau chief of Mualpi during their return journey. Even though the British officials decried the expedition as "treachery", the Maharaja succeeded in marking his desired territory. [21] The Chivu expedition did not have any immediate consequences. The southern tribes continued to be either independent or paid tributes to the Kamhaus. From their base at Mombi, the Kamhaus appear to have controlled the hills up to the Khuga River valley. The British administration reports narrate an incident in 1876, describing a clash between Manipur's khongjai troops and the Kamhaus, with victory going to the Manipur troops. [22]

In 1894, The British delineated the border between Manipur and the "Chin Hills", which were awarded to Burma. They ran it close to the previously marked "Pemberton's line" and continued it to Chivu springs. According to scholar Pum Khan Pau, 47 tribal villages that paid tribute to the Kamhau chief were thus transferred to Manipur, including the entire southern part of the present-day Churachandpur district. [23] Thus, Torbung became an interior location to the state of Manipur instead of being a border locality.

During the World War II, the British constructed the motorable Tedim Road between Imphal and Tedim in 1942–1943. Seven decisive battles were fought along this road between the 17 Indian Division of the British and the 33 Division of Japan. The Japanese reached Churachandpur on 8 April 1944, and four of these battles were fought within Manipur, including one at Torbung. The Japanese were eventually defeated at Imphal and withdrew from Manipur with heavy losses. [24]

Independent period

After Manipur's merger with India in 1949, the whole state was administered as a single district. The Bishnupur ("Bishenpur") subdivision was established some time between 1951 and 1961, and Torbung was included in it. [25] By 1991, Bishnupur has been made a district. [26]

As a key interaction point between the valley communities of Meitei people and the Kuki tribes of the Churachandpur district, Torbung has often been in the news. Protests were held by the valley communities against the renaming of Thangjing Hill and another group opposed the protest. [27] Women protesters from the tribal communities protested against three controversial bills passed by the Manipur assembly in 2015, who were in turn opposed by other women's groups. [28]

The Torbung area was also the epicentre of the 2023 Manipur violence. On 3 May 2023, as the tribal communities protested the Meitei community's demand for the scheduled tribe status, the valley communities organised a "counter-blockade" at Torbung and another "counter agitation" from the Moirang subdivision, which led to clashes between the two sides and properties were burned on both the sides of the district border. [29] [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] The resulting tensions led to months-long violence resulting in close to 200 deaths and over 50,000 people displaced.

See also

Notes

  1. area in Bishnupur district [1]
  2. Alternative spellings: Turbung, [3] and Turpung. [4]
  3. For example a government-sponsored map by the Manipur Remove Sensing Applications Centre puts almost all the villages described here within the geographical precincts of the Moirang Subdivision of Bishnupur district. [12]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Churachandpur district</span> District in Manipur, India

Churachandpur District, is one of the 16 districts of the Indian state of Manipur populated mainly by Kuki-Zo people. The name honours former Maharaja Sir Churachand Singh of Manipur. The district headquarters is located in the Churachandpur town, which is also locally known by the name Lamka.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kuki people</span> Ethnic group in India, Bangladesh, and Myanmar

The Kuki people, or Kuki-Zo people, are an ethnic group in the Northeastern Indian states of Manipur, Nagaland, Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram, as well as the neighbouring countries of Bangladesh and Myanmar. The Kukis form one of the largest hill tribe communities in this region. In Northeast India, they are present in all states except Arunachal Pradesh. The Chin people of Myanmar and the Mizo people of Mizoram are kindred tribes of the Kukis. Collectively, they are termed the Zo people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bishnupur district</span> District of Manipur in India

Bishnupur district or Bishenpur district, is a district of Manipur state in northeastern India.

Moreh is a border town located on the India–Myanmar border in Tengnoupal district of the Indian state of Manipur. As a rapidly developing international trade point with the integrated customs and international immigration checkpoint, Moreh plays an important role in India's Look East Policy, trade and commerce under ASEAN–India Free Trade Area, India-Myanmar relationship, India–Myanmar–Thailand road connectivity, and Trans-Asian Railway connectivity.

Guite is the progenitor clan of Zomi people, also called Chin in Myanmar, Mizo, or Paite, or sometimes Kuki in India. According to Zam, Nigui Guite is the elder brother of the ancestral fathers of the Thadou people, namely Thangpi, Sattawng, and Neirawng. This genealogy was recently inscribed on the tribal memorial stone at Bungmual, Lamka in the presence of each family-head of the three major clans, Doungel, Kipgen, and Haokip, on August 7, 2011. Some historians, like Shakespeare, assumed Lamlei was the Nigui Guite himself but the Guites themselves recounted Tuahciang, the father of Lamlei, as the son of Nigui Guite instead, in their social-religious rites. Regarding Guite as the born son of Songthu and his sister, Nemnep, it was the practice of ancient royalty to issue royal heir and also to keep their bloodline pure instead. Depending on local pronunciation, the clan was also called by different names such as Nguite or Vuite, Gwite, Nwite, Paihte by the Lushei. In accord with the claim of their solar origin, the Guite clan has been called nampi, meaning noble or major or even dominant people, of the region in local dialect in the past.

Churachandpur, locally known as Lamka is the second largest town in the Indian state of Manipur and the district headquarters of the Churachandpur District. The name "Churachandpur" was transferred from the earlier headquarters of the district at Songpi to the present location, and honours Churachand Singh, former maharaja of the Manipur princely state. The local people reject the name as a colonial imposition and prefer using the native name "Lamka".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christianity in Manipur</span>

Christianity is the second largest religion in Manipur, a state in Northeast India, according to 2011 census. The tribal communities, Kukis and Nagas are overwhelmingly Christian, along with their kindred communities in the neighbouring states. The dominant Meitei community has only small numbers of Christians, but Meitei groups claim Christianity to be a threat. At the start of the 2023–2024 Manipur violence, Meitei mobs burned down 200–300 churches in the Imphal Valley belonging to all communities, and prohibited pastors from rebuilding them.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jiribam district</span> District of Manipur

Jiribam District is a district at the western periphery state of Manipur, India. It borders the Cachar district of Assam on the west, and serves as the western gateway for Manipur. Formerly a subdivision of the Imphal East district, it was made an independent district in December 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tuivai River</span> River in India

The Tuivai River is a river that originates in Myanmar and flows through the states of Manipur, Mizoram and Assam in India. It is the longest tributary of the Barak River, into which it flows at Tipaimukh near the village Sipuikawn.

Khuga River,, is a river in Manipur, India. It originates in the Churachandpur district and flows through the district for much of its course. It enters the Imphal Valley near Torbung, and flows east, joining the Manipur River near Ithai. The Khuga River valley in the Churachandpur district is thickly populated, with the Churachandpur town and numerous villages.

Thangjing Hill , is a mountain peak in the Indian state of Manipur. It is in the Churachandpur district, to the west of Moirang. The north–south-running mountain range on which it sits is also called Thangjing range or Thangjing Hills. The range forms part of the western border of the Imphal Valley.

On 3 May 2023, ethnic violence erupted in India's north-eastern state of Manipur between the Meitei people, a majority that lives in the Imphal Valley, and the Kuki-Zo tribal community from the surrounding hills. According to government figures, as of 3 May 2024, 221 people have been killed in the violence and 60,000 people have been displaced. Earlier figures also mentioned over 1,000 injured, and 32 missing. 4,786 houses were burnt and 386 religious structures were vandalised, including temples and churches. Unofficial figures are higher.

Mombi, original name Lawmpi or Lonpi, is a census village in the Chandel district in the Manipur state of India. It had a population of 464 in the 2011 census.

Kangvai is a village in the Churachandpur district of Manipur, India, near its contested border with Bishnupur district. It is on the bank of the Kangvai stream that flows down from the eastern slopes of the Thangjing Hill into the Imphal Valley, stretching from the foothills to the Tedim Road. Kangvai is also the headquarters of the Kangvai Subdivision in the Churachandpur district. In the 2011 census, it had a population of 939, most of them Kuki-Zo people. Next to Kangvai along Tedim Road is a Meitei village called Phougakchao Ikhai, which is considered part of Bishnupur district.

Ukha Loikhai is a village in the Churachandpur district of Manipur, India. It is on the western slopes of the Thangjing Hill and has ongoing claims to the top of the hill itself. In the 2011 census, Ukha Loikhai had a population of 418 people. Ukha was one of the leading villages in the Kuki Rebellion of 1917–1919.

Henglep is a village in the Churachandpur district in the Manipur state of India, populated by about a thousand Kuki-Zo people. Henglep is also the headquarters of the Churachandpur North subdivision with a population of more than 30,000 people. Henglep was a key area of operations during the Kuki Rebellion of 1917–1919.

The Churachandpur–Khoupum Protected Forest was declared by the Government of Manipur in India in 1966. It is believed to be largely coincidental with the Thangjing Hills range that bounds the Imphal Valley on the southwest. The protected forest designation was relatively unknown until November 2022, when the government issued a memorandum derecognising 38 tribal villages embedded in the forest area, mainly populated by Kuki-Zo people. Amidst the uproar caused by the announcement, a small village called K. Songjang was dramatically bulldozed in February 2023, with the claim that it had encroached into the protected forest. Tensions arising from this event are stated to be one of the causes of the long drawn 2023–2024 Manipur violence.

Torbung Bangla is a village in the geographical precincts of Churachandpur district in Manipur, India. It is populated mostly by Meitei people who regard themselves as being part of Bishnupur district. The village was originally called Boljang, with an educational sericulture farm established here. At present, the village is a site of contestation between the majority Kuki-Zo people of the Churachandpur district and the Meitei people that dominate the state of Manipur. During the 2023–2024 Manipur violence, the village was almost entirely burnt down by Kuki mobs.

The Leimatak River is an upstream tributary of the Barak River in Manipur, India. It originates in the Churachandpur district near the Mamun Lhang peak, and flows north for 34 km (21 mi) before entering the Noney district. After flowing an equal amount of distance in the Noney district, it enters the Tamenglong district, where it drains into the Irang River, a major tributary of the Barak River.

Durgapur is a census village in the Borobekra subdivision, Jiribam district, Manipur, India. It is about 35 km south of Jiribam, the headquarters of the district, close to the border with the Pherzawl district in the south. The village is on the bank of the Barak River, spanning a narrow valley between two forested hilly areas. The Barak River flows north in this region, up to Jirimukh, where it turns northwest. The Barak River also forms the border with the Assam state of India.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Bishnupur District Census Handbook (2011) , p. 102
  2. 1 2 3 Churachandpur District Census Handbook (2011) , p. 176 (listed under "New Zalenphai", "Torbung", "Matijang", "Maichammun", "Torbung Loklaiphai" and "S. Kotlian" villages)
  3. 1 2 3 Dun, Gazetteer of Manipur (1886), p. 220.
  4. 1 2 Parratt, The Court Chronicle of the Kings of Manipur, Vol. 2 (2009), p. 4.
  5. Pau, Indo-Burma Frontier (2019) , p. xii: "From a remote hill village in the Indo-Burma border, my grandparents moved to the plain of Lamka (Lamka zaang) in Churachandpur District of Manipur chiefly in search of better livelihood and opportunity for the education of their children."
  6. ( Dun, Gazetteer of Manipur 1886 , p. 220). Villages named include Lairit (p. 139), Mangyol (p.159), Saikot (p.193), Saitul (p.193) and Tunnam (p.220).
  7. Schemes of NEC Projects, Ministry of Development of Northeastern Region, retrieved 23 December 2024. See item 433.
  8. 1 2 Puia, When boundaries matter (2021).
  9. Gram Panchayat and their Coresponding Villages, Bishnupur District administration, retrieved 23 December 2024.
  10. PCA TV: Primary census abstract at town, village and ward level, Manipur - District Churachandpur - 2011, Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, Government of India, 2011, PC11_PCA-TV-1403
  11. Jon Suante (4 May 2023), "Manipur Govt Brings in Army, Assam Rifles to Curb Violence, CM Urges Peace on TV", The Wire
  12. Moirang Subdivision, Manipur Remote Sensing Applications Centre, retrieved 8 November 2024.
  13. Pau, Indo-Burma Frontier (2019), p. 53.
  14. Parratt, The Court Chronicle of the Kings of Manipur, Vol. 1 (2005), p. 122.
  15. Pau, Tedim Road (2012), pp. 778–779.
  16. Parratt, The Court Chronicle of the Kings of Manipur, Vol. 3 (2013), p. 82.
  17. Kuki Research Forum on objective historical position of the Kukis in Manipur, 25 May 2022.
  18. Dun, Gazetteer of Manipur (1886), p. 139.
  19. Dun, Gazetteer of Manipur (1886), p. 159.
  20. 1 2 Dun, Gazetteer of Manipur (1886), p. 193.
  21. Pau, Indo-Burma Frontier (2019), pp. 67–69, 160.
  22. Annual Administration Report (1876), p. 7.
  23. Pau, Indo-Burma Frontier (2019), p. 161.
  24. Pau, Tedim Road (2012).
  25. Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order, 1966, India Election Commission, 1967, p. 386, item 15
  26. Manipur Administrative Atlas (PDF), Census of India, Government of India, 2005, p. 20
  27. Clash between Teddim Road bandh supporters and opponents leaves at least 10 injured in Torbung, Imphal Free Press, 21 January 2016. ProQuest   1758335208
  28. Furquan Ameen Siddiqui, 147 days after Manipur violence, nine bodies yet to be buried, Hindustan Times, 22 January 2016.
  29. Special Leave Petition (Civil) Diary No 19206 of 2023: Dinganglung Gangmei vs. Mutum Churamani Meetei & Others, The Supreme Court of India, August 2023. "... large-scale violence broke out in the State of Manipur on 03.05.2023 after a Tribal Solidarity March undertaken by All Tribal Students Union Manipur (ATSUM) in opposition to the demand for inclusion of the Meitei community in the list of Scheduled Tribes. The call for this march led to a counter response by Meiteis. Thereafter large-scale violence broke out in the State of Manipur...".
  30. "Tribal Solidarity March takes ugly turn; houses, offices, vehicles burnt". The Sangai Express. 4 May 2023. Reports about a clash between people who had imposed a counter-blockade at Torbung and those returning from the rally started doing the rounds at Torbung. The stand-off that initially started with pelting stones soon escalated with vehicles and properties being targeted. Violence and arson rapidly engulfed the neighbouring Kangvai area as people were seen leaving their homes and running into an open field.
  31. "Tribal Solidarity March takes ugly turn; houses, offices, vehicles burnt". The Sangai Express. 4 May 2023. Several houses, shops and vehicles have been torched at Torbung, Bangla, Kangvai and Phougakchao Ikhai situated along the adjoining areas of Churachandpur and Bishnupur districts. It is reported that the properties were torched for launching a counter agitation against the Solidarity March of ATSUM.
  32. Watch | Meitei Pride Group's Threat: 'Kukis Mainly Illegal, Modi Must Intervene or There'll Be Civil War', The Wire, 6 June 2023. '[Pramot Singh is] also questioned about his tweet of May 2 (24 hours before the troubles began) where the Meitei Leepun official Twitter handle called for a counter-blockade adding, "it's our duty to enforce our position physically".
  33. Deeptiman Tiwary (26 July 2023). "An arrest, crackdown and deep distrust: Manipur fire had been simmering for over a year". The Indian Express. ProQuest   2841943429. Things began to turn ugly around 2.15 pm that day after a tyre was seen burning along the plaque of the Kuki War memorial gate near Torbung, kilometers ahead of Churachandpur. Around the same time, police found two bodies in Kangvai village, a kilometre away from Torbung. Following this, massive crowds began building up on the Torbung-Kangwai stretch of the Imphal-Churachandpur highway.
  34. Lien Chongloi, Dispelling Some Misleading Claims About the Violence in Manipur, The Wire, 27 May 2023. "On May 3, while a peaceful protest was underway at the Kuki-majority Churachandpur town, news had reached the hill areas that the Anglo-Kuki Centenary Gate at Leisang-Monglenphai was set on fire by unidentified Meitei miscreants. According to eyewitness accounts, many Meitei volunteers who were held up at Kakwa [Kwakta] areas started moving towards Torbung and Kangvai areas and began torching Kuki houses. The first victim of that mob attack was Haopu Kipgen from Torbung Village; he was bludgeoned to death. The first casualty with torching of houses, therefore, was a Kuki."

Bibliography