The Federation of Haomee is a Meitei-led civil society organisation based in the Imphal Valley of Manipur, India. In addition to Meiteis, it has participation from some Naga groups.[4][5] The organisation claims to campaign for the rights of the "indigenous communities" of Manipur,[6] including the Meitei and Naga people among them, but excluding the Kuki people.[7] It has published a book titled Manipur after the Coming of Kukis authored by one of its functionaries R. K. Rajendra Singh, arguing that Kukis "arrived" in Manipur a century ago and transformed Manipur in some way.[8] Scholars have called it a "vigilante organisation" that has generated a "free flow" of hate speech against the Kukis of Manipur.[9][10][11]

Federation of Haomee
Founded12 October 2017[1]
TypeCivil society organisation
FocusCampaigning for "indigenous communities" of Manipur
HeadquartersImphal
Area served
Imphal Valley, Manipur, India
President
Sapamcha Jadumani[2]
Vice-President
Kh. Kabui[3]
Convenor of core committee
R. K. Rajendra Singh (till May 2023)

References edit

  1. ^ FoH observes 4th foundation day, The Sangai Express, 13 October 2021.
  2. ^ Federation of Haomee rejects Manipur People's Bill 2018 / Non indigenous tribal groups should be excluded: Jadumani, Imphal Free Press, 8 November 2018. ProQuest 2130604267
  3. ^ 'Manipur after the coming of Kukis' released, Chronicle News Service, 9 August 2023.
  4. ^ Rokibuz Zaman, Why a battle of narratives has broken out in Manipur over the 1917-1919 Anglo-Kuki War, Scroll.in, 20 August 2023. "A Meitei group filed FIRs against authors of two books, claiming it was only a rebellion."
  5. ^ Haokip, Paul Lelen (23 February 2024), "Shooting the Sun: why Manipur was engulfed by violence and the government remained silent (book review)", Asian Ethnicity, doi:10.1080/14631369.2024.2322656, The Federation of Haomee (FoH) is composed of Meiteis and Nagas, although it does not represent the collective voice of all the Nagas.
  6. ^ Open letter to WC, NNPGs, The Morung Express, 26 June 2023. "Federation of Haomee is an apex civil society organisation of indigenous communities of Manipur."
  7. ^ Vangamla Salle K. S., ‘Centre must abrogate peace talks with foreign-based Kuki outfits’, EastMojo, 26 August 2019. "The federation alleged that the Kukis are not the [original] settlers of Manipur but were once illegal refugees who infiltrated from neighbouring Myanmar."
  8. ^ Salam Rupachandra Singh, RK Rajendra's Manipur after the coming of Kukis, e-pao.net, 11 July 2023.
  9. ^ Haokip, Thongkholal (January 2023), "Territoriality, Conflict and Citizenship in the India–Myanmar Borderlands", The Journal of Indian and Asian Studies, 4 (1), doi:10.1142/S2717541323500018, S2CID 257370090, In more recent times, a vigilante groups, such as Federation of Haomee, have been frequently engaged on such matters [issues that involve Kuki and Naga of Manipur] and specialized in pitting against minorities in Manipur including the Kukis. However, such questioning of indigenousness has no basis at all as 'the question is charged by the new zeal of nationalism having no real ground at the base'
  10. ^ Haokip, Seilienmang (2023), "Memory and kinship across the Indo–Myanmar border: A study of the lived experiences of displaced Kuki families", Memory Studies, doi:10.1177/17506980231188484, S2CID 260526732, An example of the latter can be found in Manipur, where hate speech and slogans are directed against the Kuki population, described as a 'refugee' and 'immigrant' community. The irony lies in the fact that these rampant insults and questions of indigeneity against the Kuki population have been orchestrated by civil society groups such as the Federation of Haomee and the International Meitei Forum.
  11. ^ Haoginlen Chongloi, Free-Flowing Hate Speech, Rampant Racial Profiling: How Manipur Grew Intolerant, The Wire, 18 June 2022. "Additionally, Colonel R.K. Rajendro, leader of a civil society group International Meitei Forum (IMF), and Sapamacha Jadumani, president of another civil society group Federation of Haomee (FOH), have been instrumental in spreading venomous hate speech directed at the Kukis since the past few years. Highlighting a few instances of involving the Kukis in the recent past, these leaders from the majority community are habituated to generalising the entire Kuki population as refugees and migrants."