- Source: Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity
The Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity (COCOMI) is a joint body of Meitei civil society organisations in the Indian state of Manipur. It came into being in 2019 in the wake of the peace talks between the Indian government and Naga rebel groups, as the latter sought autonomy and integration of the Naga-inhabited areas of Manipur into a Greater Nagaland. COCOMI campaigns for maintaining the "territorial integrity" of Manipur, which was a princely state under the British Raj and became part of the Indian Union upon India's independence.
During the 2023–2024 Manipur violence, COCOMI acted as the main representative body of the Meitei community.
Organisation
COCOMI is an activist body in Manipur that strives for preserving the "integrity" of Manipur, which essentially means preserving the territory of Manipur as it existed as a princely state at the end of British Raj in 1947. Any form of division or cession of this territory is sternly opposed. The organisation is described as an "umbrella body" of several civil society organisations of Meitei ethnicity. It was described in October 2019 as having been "recently formed". Its convener at that time was mentioned as Sunil Karam.
In 2023, COCOMI was headed by Jeetendra Ningomba as its coordinator. Upon the end of his term in January 2024, he passed on the office of coordinator to Somorendro Thokchom.
History
COCOMI was formed on 21 October 2019 as an umbrella organisation of several Meitei civil society organisations. These were:
United Committee Manipur (UCM), headed by Sunil Karam
Committee of Civil Societies of Kangleipak (CCSK), headed by Jeetendra Ningomba
League of Indigenous People's Upliftment (LIPUL), headed by Somorendro Thokchom
Ethno Heritage Council (HERICOUN), headed by Longjam Ratankumar
All Manipur United Clubs Organisation (AMUCO), headed by Ph. Nando Luwang
Sunil Karam and Somorendro Thokchom were elected as the coordinators of the new organisation and the other leaders were named as assistant coordiantors.
United Committee Manipur, the best known of these constituents, was founded in July 2001 as an umbrella body in itself. It was formed in response to the extension of the Naga ceasefire agreement to the Naga-inhabited areas of Manipur.
In 2024, COCOMI was reported to be operating from the offices of UCM.
= Indo-Naga peace talks
=In October 2019, COCOMI launched a mass protest to oppose any deal that could affect the territorial integrity of Manipur during the Indo-Naga peace talks. The then president, Sunil Karam, said that the central government's move to settle the Naga issue without Maniput state's involvement was an "insult" to Manipur.
= 2023–2024 Manipur violence
=Ethnic violence between the majority Meitei community and the hill-based Kuki-Zo community broke out on 3 May 2023, causing virtually all of the Meitei people living in Kuki-dominated hills to get displaced to the Valley, and all the Kuki-Zo people living in the Valley to get displaced to the hills. COCOMI was reported to have supported the "age-old tradition of coexistence".
But in early June, it organised a People's Convention in Imphal East, and declared a "national war against Chin-Kuki narco-terrorists", which was supposed to be fought unitedly by all the "indigenous people of Manipur". It also claimed that, with the declaration of war, a "public emergency" came into force.
The Convention also rejected the Union home minister Amit Shah's appeal to surrender weapons looted from the police armouries and refused combing operations by security forces, though it backtracked on this resolution the following day.
See also
Coalition of Indigenes' Rights Campaign, Manipur
Federation of Haomee
International Meeteis Forum
Notes
References
External links
Karan Thapar Watch | 'Will Never Accept Separate Kuki Administration,' Says Manipuri Body, The Wire, 2 August 2023.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity
- Coalition of Indigenes' Rights Campaign, Manipur
- International Meeteis Forum
- Ministry of Defence (India)
- Separatist movements of India
- 2008 Mumbai attacks
- 2024 Wayanad landslides
- LGBTQ rights in India
- First Opium War
- Indian Rebellion of 1857