Manipur protest Sangai Festival
The Sangai Festival is set to open tomorrow and will run until November 30.

Guwahati: Displaced families taking shelter in relief camps across Manipurโ€™s valley districts staged a joint mass sit-in on Thursday, opposing the state governmentโ€™s decision to organise the Sangai Festival despite the continuing humanitarian crisis.

A woman staying at the Lamboikhongnang Khong Relief Camp told reporters that it was extremely distressing to see the government, now under Presidentโ€™s Rule, moving ahead with festival preparations while thousands of citizens continued to live in temporary shelters.

She questioned the administrationโ€™s priorities, asking why it was planning celebrations when camp residents still lacked resettlement and unrestricted movement.

โ€œAre we not citizens of Manipur? Why is our resettlement being ignored?โ€ she said.

She also appealed to the public to refrain from participating in this yearโ€™s festival, arguing that collective action could compel the authorities to listen.

โ€œThe government may have power, but peopleโ€™s voices are stronger. We should celebrate the Sangai Festival only when peace returns completely,โ€ she added.

Protestors displayed placards with messages that read โ€œFree Movement First, Then Sangai Festivalโ€, โ€œWe Boycott Sangai Festivalโ€, and โ€œFirst Resettlement, Then Celebrationโ€, urging the authorities to focus on rehabilitation instead of festivities.

The Sangai Festival is set to open tomorrow and will run until November 30. This yearโ€™s edition comes after a two-year pause caused by the ongoing conflict.