Nearly 200 babies born in shelters for displaced in Manipur

baby child

Photo: IANSLIFE

Imphal/Churachandpur: Cradling her baby born in a shelter for the displaced in Manipur, Hatneu says she has named her daughter Nganthoibi which aptly means shining light.

Dispelling some of the darkness of 11 months of conflict and continuing uncertainty, Nganthoibi is one of the 200 babies born to displaced women who have taken shelter in different relief camps across the state.

For the women like Hatneu, the last months have been unforgettable. Not just because their lives were upended when violence broke out in Manipur last year in May but because they welcomed their newborns.

“When I held my twins in my arms, all my miseries melted away,” a 26-year-old woman at a relief camp in Kakching district told PTI, requesting not to be identified or photographed.

Her twin boys are now four months old. “When they grow up, I will tell them these stories.”

“This is an unforgettable period for me for a different reason and I want to remember it as such years later. I don’t want any memory of this period to haunt my children when they grow up,” she said.

When she landed at the relief camp, she knew it was going to be very tough.  “Pregnancy is a period when we are told to take extra care of ourselves, not do any heavy-lifting, not take stress, and eat well. However, for me, this period was all about survival.”

Hatneu, who found shelter at a camp in Churachandpur, the epicentre of the violence then, ran a bamboo goods shop in Imphal Valley.

“I am a Kuki but I have always lived in the Valley only. We were forced to relocate here due to circumstances. Last month I gave birth to my baby at a nearby health facility. I have named my baby girl Nganthoibi, which means shining light,” she said.

Hatneu said at least 15 babies have been born in her camp.

PTI visited six relief camps in the Meiti-dominated Imphal Valley and Kuki-zo-dominated Churachandpur district. According to official estimates, at least 200 children were born in the six camps. Over 280 relief camps are operational across the state.

The hill state has witnessed sporadic, sometimes intense, ethnic clashes since May 3 last year between the majority Meitei community and Kukis, resulting in loss of over 200 lives. While Meiteis population is concentrated in Imphal city, Kukis have shifted to the hills.

The violence displaced thousands of people, with officials saying more than 50,000 people are living in camps following the unrest.

Ngahjemkim, who is also in a camp in Churachanpur, said she wants to remember this period for the gift she got in her baby. “Despite all odds, my daughter was born here and is healthy today. At a time when I thought none of us would survive… this seems like a miracle,” she said.

Lu Lamva Ngahjemkim was eight months pregnant when the clashes broke out. She and her family landed at a relief camp in Churachandpur.

A month later, she gave birth to her daughter Christy who became the “silver lining in these grim times”.

“We were having dinner at home when the clashes started and everybody started rushing out… We had to hide in the nearby hills for several hours until the forces rescued us. It felt like our world was coming crashing down… we had built our house and livelihoods bit by bit and within a day it was all gone,” she told PTI.

Nine-month-old Christy has now begun crawling and is a centre of attention at the relief camp.

T H Anjali, living in a relief camp in Akampat, delivered her daughter in October.

“Whenever a couple wants to welcome a baby, they want it to happen at a time when they can provide well for it. But for us, it wasn’t the same. Yes we are grateful for being alive but all that we had achieved in life so far is gone,” Anjali said.

Among the women counting their blessings in form of their newborns at the relief camps are four who gave birth to twins.

A dedicated camp set up for pregnant women in Imphal Valley saw the birth of 168 babies.

The facility, which was opened May 21 last year, hosted 164 women, who were brought there from different relief camps around the state. The camp wound up in February when no pregnant women were found in the relief camps in the valley.

“Earlier, pregnant women were staying in the same camps as other women and it was felt they will not get the adequate space and care needed during the period. So a dedicated camp was set upwhere 168 children were born between May 2023 till February this year,” said Manipur BJP president Sharda Devi who spearheaded the initiative.

“We allowed one person to stay with each pregnant or lactating woman to serve as an attendant while the rest of the family members stayed in other camps,” she added.

As Manipur goes through a period of uncertainty, there is an anti-poll sentiment in the state among the displaced.

But the elections for the two Lok Sabha seats in Manipur have been announced alongside the general elections.

They will be held in Manipur in two phases April 19 and 26. While Inner Manipur and some segments of Outer Manipur will vote in the first phase April 19, the remaining segments of Outer Manipur will vote in Phase 2 April 26.

PTI

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