Manipur government officials said state officials apprised the Home Minister about the ongoing situation in the northeastern state.

The meeting was attended by Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla, Intelligence Bureau Director Tapan Deka, Army Chief General Manoj Pandey, Army Chief-designate Lieutenant General Upendra Dwivedi, Chief Secretary Vineet Joshi, Advisor to Manipur Government Kuldeep Singh, State Director General of Police Rajeev Singh and other senior Officials attended.

However, Manipur government officials in Imphal refused to reveal the outcome of the meeting.

Manipur Governor Anusuiya Uike met President Draupadi Murmu at Rashtrapati Bhavan on Sunday and discussed the situation in the state. Sources said he apprised the President of the difficulties of the displaced people taking shelter in various relief camps in the state and requested for immediate action for their rehabilitation in their respective villages.“The governor also requested the President to provide financial assistance for the displaced people in the state,” a source said.

Manipur Raj Bhavan sources said that the President assured all possible cooperation.

The Governor also met Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman at Rashtrapati Bhavan and requested financial assistance for Manipur.

More than 50,000 men, women and children from different communities have been displaced due to ethnic conflict in Manipur since May 3 last year and are now taking shelter in 350 camps set up in schools, government buildings and auditoriums across Manipur. currently. There is tension in the mixed-populated Jiribam district of Manipur, adjacent to southern Assam, after the murder of 59-year-old farmer Soibam Sharatkumar Singh on June 6.Additional CRPF personnel have been deployed in the interior areas of Borobekara subdivision to maintain peace. And peace.

After the violence broke out, around 900 tribals from the Kuki and Hmar communities took shelter in the houses of relatives and friends in two villages - Haokipunji and Hmarkhwalinin - in southern Assam's Cachar district. Due to the violence and the burning of over 100 houses and other properties, including two police check gates, about 1,000 people, mostly from the Meitei community, are now taking shelter in seven relief camps in Jiribam, where the Meitei, Naga people live. . Is. Kuki, Muslim and non-Manipuri.