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70% of Manipur weapons surrendered after guv call came from 4 valley districts

Nearly 70% of the weapons surrendered in Manipur came from four Valley districts — Imphal East, Imphal West, Thoubal, and Bishnupur. These surrenders followed a call given by governor Ajay Bhalla. A total of 991 weapons, along with thousands of ammunition items, grenades, bombs, and IEDs, were turned in by rebels and protesters.
70% of Manipur weapons surrendered after guv call came from 4 valley districts
<p>70% of Manipur weapons surrendered after guv call <br></p>
NEW DELHI: Nearly 70% of the weapons surrendered in Manipur in response to the call given by governor Ajay Bhalla last month, came from four Valley districts — Imphal East, Imphal West, Thoubal and Bishnupur.
As per CRPF sources, 991 weapons were surrendered between Feb 20 and expiry of the deadline set by the governor to voluntarily return the weapons looted following the outbreak of ethnic violence in Manipur in May 2023.
Around 11,526 ammunition items, 366 hand grenades, 230 bombs and 10 IEDs were also surrendered by the rebels or protesters across state, during this period.
The biggest chunk of weapons were turned in by rebels in Imphal West; the Valley district witnessed the surrender of 349 arms, 2,460 ammunition, 115 grenades, 2 bombs and 1 IED. Imphal West saw 204 arms, 5,764 ammunition, 109 grenades and 45 bombs returned to the authorities.
Thoubal and Bishnupur accounted for the surrender of 124 weapons, 1,329 ammunition, 58 grenades, 9 bombs and 2 IEDs, over the 15-day period. Districts occupying parts of the Valley and hills as well as the hill districts — saw fewer surrenders.
Sources said 4,500 weapons have been recovered from across Manipur since ethnic violence broke out, of which around 1,050 were surrendered. Remaining were seized by police and security forces during raids and searches.
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About the Author
Bharti Jain

Bharti Jain is senior editor with The Times of India, New Delhi. She has been writing on security matters since 1996. Having covered the Union home ministry, security agencies, Election Commission and the ‘prime’ political beat, the Congress, for The Economic Times all these years, she moved to TOI in August 2012. Her repertoire of news stories delves into the whole gamut of issues related to terrorism and internal strife, besides probing strategic affairs in India’s neighbourhood.

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