Home News India: 121 churches of 15 denominations destroyed in Manipur violence

India: 121 churches of 15 denominations destroyed in Manipur violence

Food is scarce as a curfew is still enforced by the army and paramilitary troops

As normalcy limped back to Manipur, Churches have taken stock of the damages they have suffered during the four-day mayhem that ravaged the northeastern Indian state.

According to a list published by the Churachandpur District Christian Goodwill Church, as many as 121 churches and buildings belonging to 15 denominations were torched or destroyed in the ethnic violence that began on May 3 across Manipur.

The violence claimed more than 70 lives and wounded 200 people. According to an official record, some 30,000 people have been displaced.



Archbishop Dominic Lumon of Imphal, head of the Catholic Church in Manipur, said about 45,000 people now live in relief camps in the valley and the hills.

About 13,800 are in Imphal west, 11,800 in Imphal East, 4,500 in Bishnupur, 5,500 in Churachandpur, around 7,000 people in Kangpokpi district.

Christianity, with several denominations, is the second most followed religion in Manipur, according to a 2011 census data of India.

During the recent violence, the worst affected denomination was the Manipur Presbyterian Singlup that lost 39 churches, followed by the Evangelical Churches Association, and the Manipur Presbyterian Church Synod with 14 each.

- Newsletter -

Close behind is the Tuithaphai Presbytarian Church (Manipur Synod) that lost 13 churches on May 4.

The Evangelical Free Church of India lost nine churches on May 4 while eight places of worship belonging to the Independent Church of India were torched on the same day.

Five places of worship of the Evangelical Baptist Convention Church were completely burnt down and two were partly burned.

The Catholic Church, the Manipur Evangelical Lutheran Church and Evangelical Organization Church suffered three losses each, while the Eastern Manipur Presbyterian Church and Evangelical Assembly Church lost two each.

The New Testament Baptist Churches Association and the Assembly of God church one building each.

Meanwhile, Archbishop Lumon appealed to people outside Manipur to send relief materials in kind and cash to help the victims.

Food is scarce as a curfew is still enforced by the army and paramilitary troops. The internet remains suspended while shops, schools and offices are closed.

Thousands of people remain stranded in crowded and unsanitary refugee camps. And reports of fresh violence over the weekend prompted fresh displacements.

According to the report, the violence has affected some 4,000 school-going students. Among them, around 1,000 have become homeless in Churachandpur and affected areas of neighboring Bishnupur district. the rest are from Imphal East district and Moreh town.

© Copyright LiCAS.news. All rights reserved. Republication of this article without express permission from LiCAS.news is strictly prohibited. For republication rights, please contact us at: [email protected]

Support Our Mission

We work tirelessly each day to tell the stories of those living on the fringe of society in Asia and how the Church in all its forms - be it lay, religious or priests - carries out its mission to support those in need, the neglected and the voiceless.
We need your help to continue our work each day. Make a difference and donate today.

Latest