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Has India forgotten Irom Sharmila?

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Its been 10 years and Irom Sharmila is continuing her fight against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act beign imposed in Manipur for over 50years. After the Lokpal Bill movement, Irom's cause has gained some attention. But the question is why has the Centre ignroed Irom Sharmilla for 10 long years.

It took Anna Hazare all of 10 days to move the Govt out of its slumber. Its taken Irom Sharmila 10 years but Irom Sharmila's crusade has only fallen on deaf ears.

But spurned by Anna's movementthe Iron Lady of Manipur has found new support.

The support for iron lady from Manipur, Irom Sharmila has gained momentum. Various students organizations under the banner of North East Students Organization (NESO) took out a candlelight vigil in Guwahati on Monday (24th April) supporting Irom Sharmilas 10 years of crusade demanding repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) from North East.

NESO has demanded that Sharmilas non violent and democratic protest should be taken seriously by the Central Govt. There was an uprising in the entire country with Gandhian, Anna Hazare going on a fast unto death in protest against corruption and demanding the Lokpal bill.

But Irom Sharmila has completed 10 years of fasting and is still continuing. NESO has asked that does the nation care about Northeast and does the nation recognize peaceful and silent protest like the one carried out by Irom Sharmila.

NESO fully supports Anna Hazares fight against corruption, but at the same time wants that Sharmilas decade long fight to save innocent civilians from the atrocities of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act should not get ignored and there should not be any discriminatory attitude towards the people of the Northeast.

Questions are now being raised as to whether if the Nation has fogotten the North-East and the alleged brutality of the Army in the region .Or will India only respond to well known activists and movie stars ?

Its time we did some introspection.

Has India forgotten Irom Sharmila?- TIMESNOW.tv - Latest Breaking News, Big News Stories, News Videos

After reading her story and her fight.. I am feeling ashamed as an Indian
 
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you should be proud, that people like irom sharmila live among you in your times...

what should i proud that a poor lady from manipur is fighting for justice for last 10 years and we have maintained a deafening silence .. like she doesn't exist..
 
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Manipur: Irom Sharmila completes 10 years of fasting

Imphal, Manipur: On the world's longest hunger strike, Irom Sharmila has completed ten years of fasting over human rights abuses in Manipur and promises to continue.

Silently but forcefully, she is highlighting the rarely reported decade-long insurgency in Manipur and the government's response to it with Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), something she opposes.

Irom Sharmila Chanu is a poet, a writer and an activist. She was brought to the jail ward of Jawaharlal Nehru Hospital at the age of 27. Now ten years have passed in solitary confinement.

In the year 2000, she had pledged a fast-unto-death against the imposition of AFSPA in Manipur. She was arrested and since then kept in custody - force fed with a tube.

When we met her, a cheerful Irom Sharmila seemed more determined than ever to continue with her fast. She, however, did not wish to talk much.

NDTV: In Manipur ten years back, there was a 27-year-old girl who sat in Malom for a protest. Ten years later, what do you see when you look back?

Irom Sharmila: Let us realise why we are here in this world. How and when we will go away from here? This is our duty to just self-realise.

This was a rare interview opportunity for both of us. But the one-hour, so hard-earned, was spent mostly in edgy silence. As if she was asking, 'I am living the struggle...I am living my protest...what more can my words give you that my life already doesn't?'


Read more at: Manipur: Irom Sharmila completes 10 years of fasting
 
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what should i proud that a poor lady from manipur is fighting for justice for last 10 years and we have maintained a deafening silence .. like she doesn't exist..

I just saw her picture, and it almost made me cry.... yaara I can feel your pain, I know how bad it feels... but I hope many would realize like you, and stand by her cause....

---------- Post added at 09:20 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:20 PM ----------

Hats off to the great lady

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A decade of starvation for Irom Sharmila


Her skin is ghostly pale from years of incarceration, her body is diminished and thin. But Irom Sharmila's eyes still sparkle. This week, in the drab surroundings of a hospital's secure wing in the north-east of India, the world's longest hunger striker completed 10 years of refusing food or water. The 38-year-old woman marked the occasion by reaffirming her vow not to end her fast until the demand for which she is struggling has been met.

"Ten years has been completed. She is spending the time reading and writing poetry," the woman's brother, Singhajit, said yesterday from Manipur. "Several days ago we went to see her. She was fine, still strong. She told us that unless she gets her demands she will continue fasting."

The dedication of the woman known simply as Sharmila, has highlighted the rarely-told turmoil of the state of Manipur, where a decades-long insurgency, combined with a draconian response from the state has created a place where violence is common-place. Over the years, more than 40 insurgent groups, many of them little more than criminal gangs, have demanded autonomy from India. The authorities have responded by dispatching thousands of troops, creating a state that is almost as heavily militarised as Kashmir.

Sharmila, who is force-fed a mixture of liquified carbohydrates and proteins by a nasal tube three times a day, is demanding the repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), a piece of legislation that gives police effective immunity from prosecution.

Human rights campaigners say the act has created an environment of impunity, where troops often shoot suspects on sight. There have been numerous reports of so-called "fake encounters" where security has executed suspects and claimed they were killed in a shoot-out. Last year a photographer captured paramilitaries arresting and killing a former militant in daylight in a busy market. Many people are too scared to go out after dark. Unemployment is huge and mental health problems are rife.

Babloo Loitongbam, head of Human Rights Alert, a civil rights group for which Sharmila was working as a volunteer a decade ago, said her undertaking had been marked by a series of events demanding peace and justice. An exhibition of paintings inspired by Sharmila has been held and a play celebrating Manipur's long tradition of protest by women has been performed.

"The AFSPA is the use of emergency powers during peacetime on the people of the north-east," he added. "It has allowed extra-judicial executions, rape and torture. It has undermined democratic institutions."

Delhi would rather the dirty war of India's north-east did not attract the attention of the wider world. Manipur and several other north-eastern states are designated with a special security status and even Indians need special permission to travel there.

Earlier this year, when The Independent obtained permission to interview Sharmila in her hospital room in Imphal she said: "Everything is such a mess in Manipur right now. The politicians depend entirely on power, on physical power. They are power-hungry. [My struggle] is in the name of justice, peace and love. I am a very simple symbol of those things. My struggle is a very simple matter."

Sitting in her bed, wrapped in a blanket, she added: "Our oldest teacher is nature. Nature has no discrimination. I draw my inspiration from this. To change the structure [in Manipur] is my biggest challenge. It's a bounden duty."

When Sharmila began her fast on 3 November 2000, police arrested her and charged her with attempted suicide. Such a charge allows detention in jail for just 364 days. As a result, Sharmila has never been brought to trial and is annually released and rearrested. During all this time she has not seen her elderly mother, the two agreeing that meetings might undermine her determination.

Her mother, Shakhi Devi, who lives little more than a mile from where Sharmila is held, says: "I will meet her after getting our demand." For a reason the authorities have never explained, Sharmila is not even permitted to exercise or walk outside in the daylight, a right routinely granted to those convicted of the most serious crimes.

Earlier this year, when she entered her 10th year of fasting, Ramesh Gopalakrishnan, Amnesty's India researcher, called for the young woman to be freed. "The Government of Manipur must release Irom Sharmila and withdraw the criminal prosecution initiated against her. In addition, the Indian authorities must repeal the AFSPA," he added.

Sharmila, who cleans her teeth with dry cotton out of a determination that water not pass her lips, and whose body has stopped menstruating, began her fast the day after 10 people waiting at a bus stop on the outskirts of Imphal were shot dead by paramilitaries belonging to the Assam Rifles.

The previous day, insurgents had attacked the paramilitaries' base, though there was no evidence that any of the 10 people killed at the bus stop were linked to the attack. Today, the location in the village of Malom is marked by a simple memorial where the names of the victims are inscribed in a white block.

The night she learned of the massacre, Sharmila had scribbled on a piece of paper: "What is the origin of peace and what will be the end." The next day, she ate a meal her mother had prepared and told her of the killings at the bus stop. Sharmila has not eaten since.

Conflict in Manipur

* Several separatist groups have been fighting an insurgency in Manipur since the 1970s, leading to the Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1980 – the Indian government's attempt to regain control. Manipur was granted autonomy when the British left in 1947, but merged with India two years later in a treaty that many of its 2.3 million-strong population believe was forced upon their king. Around 10,000 people have died as a result of violence over the last 20 years. The mountainous state is isolated from the rest of the country, and in June supplies had to be flown in after a two-month blockade by rebels from a rival province.

A decade of starvation for Irom Sharmila - Asia, World - The Independent
 
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why so much apathy against such a poor woman ?? because she doesn't threatened the central government??

after seeing this anyone can know how we are dealing with people in northeast, kashmir and naxals affected areas....

disgusting and shameful
 
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Do those against corruption know about Irom Sharmila?

It was fashionable to be patriotic during the Kargil war and now it is fashionable to be fighters against corruption, thanks to Anna Hazare.

Within days of the fast of the veteran Gandhian’s understandable ire against the delay in creating a Lokpal Act, the English media channels and their partners-in-arms, the English print media, have created a pseudo-war against corruption in India, with the middle and upper-middle classes suddenly waking up their consciences through candlelight walks.

Dear pseudo-comrades, have you heard of Irom Sharmila, fasting not for one or two days, but a full decade, with absolutely no media hype to create a single candlelight walk by the rich and the affluent of India.

Lend your ears not to me, friends, Indians and countrymen, but to Irom Sharmila, a fellow Indian like Hazare. Unfortunately, she is from Manipur, which many of us confuse with Manipal, where money gets education, whereas in Manipur, money cannot even guarantee you your life.

Here is a quick recap on Irom Sharmila. Assam Rifles, one of the Indian paramilitary forces under whose control Manipur is, gunned down 10 people, including an old woman, at a bus stop in Malom in the Imphal valley on November 1, 2000. The army claimed it had fired against insurgents; other eyewitness accounts challenged that.

On November 4, Irom Sharmila, a 28-year-old girl, started a fast-unto-death demanding a repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act of 1958, which empowers the army to kill without being questioned. She was arrested for attempting to commit suicide and force-fed by tubes.

For the last 10 years, the government repeats the farce of arresting her on the same charge every year, after a formal release for a day or two. This is because the charge of attempt to suicide does not entail imprisonment of more than one year even if convicted. Irom Sharmila continues to be under arrest till date and is being force-fed.

In 2004, Thangjam Manorama, another Manipuri girl was found dead, brutally killed by the Indian army and this led to hundreds of women protesting outside the army headquarters in Imphal. Forty women, young and old, went naked with placards demanding ‘Indian Army, rape us’.

Irom Sharmila continued to fast under arrest while India carried on elections and cricket. (If Anna Hazare had been on fast during the World Cup, the media would have blissfully ignored him. Timing is very important in politics and media. If the government has taken 42 years to draft a Lokpal Bill, Hazare too has taken so long to launch a fast.)

Except for a customary and superficial mention every now and then, the entire Indian media ignored her. Why? Because it is unpatriotic to question the army or criticise it, even though it may be as corrupt as our politicians and even more brutal.

A government bullying the citizens of an entire state with its army is worse than corruption. This has been going on in the Northeast irrespective of that party holds power in Delhi. The candle vigilantes of the educated middle, upper-middle and rich dare not take up issues of human rights violations, or adivasis’ traditional right violations. It is easier to shout from the rooftops about corruption while being part of the very same corrupt system in day-to-day life. And the politician is the favourite whipping boy for these classes.

And will corruption end with the Lokpal bill? No. Hazare’s fast is for drafting of a water-tight bill, which will take at least three to four months. Once the bill becomes an act, it does not dent corruption unless it is enforced. Enforcement is the responsibility of the same corrupt machinery and system we have.

We have enough laws to book corrupt politicians and public servants. Whatever cases that remain in court against a Lalu Prasad Yadav or Jayalalithaa or Madhu Koda or Ramalinga Raju or Ketan Desai have been booked under existing well-framed laws.

What we really need is an honest enforcement machinery to implement the best Constitution in the world. And such a machinery has to, unfortunately, come from the educated middle, upper-middle and rich classes, because it is these classes that have produced, protected and perpetuated the existing dishonest enforcement system.

What we need is not a candlelight rally around Hazare but a protest rally outside the houses of auditors, lawyers, doctors and teachers who have corrupted our system, blaming everything on an imaginary uneducated politician. But lo, they are an indistinguishable and inseparable part of the cacophony of the pseudo-war against corruption.

I wish someone would educate Anna Hazare about a place called Manipur and an unsung heroine called Irom Sharmila.
 
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Can u spare two minutes and think about a lady who hasn't eaten for last 10 years and fighting against injustice..
 
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only thing i know is that AFSPA is necessity in manipur as well as some other N.E states
 
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AFSPA Is necessary In some states of North East
But the govt for once should take a Look at her , Its very sad
She is determined to fast and had been forced fed with tube.....Govt should have talks with her.
 
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