Manipur CM calls meeting with Kuki Zo Council a good beginning
Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh termed his meeting with the Kuki Zo Council a good beginning towards peace, stressing the need to rebuild trust. Talks will continue amid efforts to address displacement and ethnic tensions in the state
Published Date - 22 March 2026, 06:47 PM
Imphal: Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh on Sunday said his meeting with a Kuki Zo Council delegation was a “good beginning” towards restoring peace in the state and rebuilding trust between Meiteis and Kukis.
A day after holding a closed-door meeting with the delegation in Guwahati, he told reporters here that “the talks between the Kuki Zo Council (KZC) and the state government for the first time in nearly three years are a really good thing”.
“The talks will proceed,” the chief minister said.
More than 260 people have been killed and thousands rendered homeless in ethnic violence between Meiteis and Kuki-Zo groups since May 2023.
The KZC, in a statement on Sunday, said the meeting commenced at 7 pm on Saturday and lasted around 1 hour and 45 minutes. The interaction was largely an ice-breaking session, it said.
Addressing the media on Sunday, the chief minister said, “In Manipur’s situation, the most saddening part is that internally displaced persons (IDPs) are unable to return to their native homes.
“What is of utmost importance for their return is to rebuild trust between the two communities. How long can central forces keep guarding the population in some places? What is required is for the communities to forget the conflict and rebuild trust,” Singh said.
Informing reporters that the issue of IDPs from both sides returning to their places featured in the talks, the chief minister added that “at least we need to have a good beginning”.
“I would like to thank the Kuki Zo Council for accepting the invitation for talks. We held the talks with the objective of bringing peace.
“My appeal to all is to restore peace and proceed with the concept of forgive and forget. My approach is to bring peace and build trust. There is no demand or commitment,” Singh said.
Responding to media queries on the demand for a separate administration, he said, “Prime Minister Narendra Modi has already announced that the territorial integrity of Manipur would remain intact.”
On the buffer zone terminology, Singh said, “There is no buffer zone for the government. During talks, I refer to it as a sensitive zone. Since there is no trust, security forces engage in checking at such sensitive zones.”
He, however, asserted that “now is not the time for any kind of confrontation. If we want to bring peace, we must work honestly and, more importantly, we must not focus on who said what”.
The Kuki Zo Council, on the other hand, said that its delegation raised several key issues during the meeting in Guwahati on Saturday, all of which were attentively heard by the chief minister.
“Prominent among these were the urgent need to de-escalate the ongoing tensions between the Kuki and Tangkhul communities, and the imperative of ensuring justice for the victims of the conflict as a fundamental prerequisite for any meaningful peace and reconciliation process,” it said.
The delegation also emphasised the importance of maintaining the sanctity of the buffer zone until a political settlement is reached and stressed the need to expedite a resolution to the ongoing Suspension of Operations talks to ensure durable and lasting peace in the region, the KZC statement said.
“The chief minister, in turn, shared his concerns, commitments, and the steps undertaken by his government in restoring peace and normalcy in Manipur. He expressed high appreciation for the KZC’s initiative and its bold step in engaging with him during this challenging period,” it said.