27 July,2023 12:18 PM IST | New Delhi | mid-day online correspondent
Pic/PTI
Rajya Sabha proceedings were adjourned till 12 noon on Thursday as members of opposition parties, who were dressed in black, raised slogans in the House demanding a discussion Manipur violence row.
Soon after the listed papers were laid on the table of the House, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar made a suo moto statement on the latest developments related to India's foreign policy.
While he was making the statement, opposition members started raising slogans.
At one point, the treasury benches started shouting 'Modi, Modi'. To counter them, the opposition members shouted 'INDIA, INDIA'.
Chairman Jagdeep Dhankhar asked members to seek clarifications on Jaishankar's statement but it could not be done due to the sloganeering by the opposition. Amid the din, the proceedings were adjourned till 12 noon around 11:45 am.
Meanwhile, the opposition Congress in Manipur has requested Governor Anusuiya Uikey to convene an emergency session of the assembly to discuss the "ongoing unprecedented turmoil" in the state, reported PTI.
The assembly is the most appropriate forum to discuss the situation and get suggestions on how to restore peace in the state rocked by ethnic strife since early May, the five Congress MLAs including CLP leader Okram Ibobi Singh said in a letter to the governor.
"We... seek your constitutional intervention to our urgent demand to convene an emergency session of the Manipur Legislative Assembly... (for discussing) the ongoing unprecedented turmoil for the last almost three months in Manipur," the letter read.
It claimed that Chief Minister N Biren Singh did not pay heed to the requests that came from several quarters for an emergency session of the assembly for a debate on the issue.
Ethnic violence broke out in the northeastern state nearly three months ago, killing over 160 people since then, and injuring hundreds.
The violence erupted on May 3 after a 'Tribal Solidarity March' was organised in the hill districts to protest against the Meitei community's demand for Scheduled Tribe (ST) status.
Meiteis account for about 53 per cent of Manipur's population and live mostly in the Imphal Valley, while tribals, which include Nagas and Kukis, constitute 40 per cent and reside mainly in the hill districts.
Meanwhile, the Manipur government on Tuesday lifted the suspension on broadband internet conditionally in a "liberalised manner", nearly three months after it was banned due to the ethnic violence in the state. However, mobile internet will remain suspended, the Home Department said in a notification.
Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge on Tuesday urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to make a "comprehensive" statement in both houses of Parliament on the violence in Manipur, reported PTI. He said the situation in the northeast was fragile and the repercussions of the Manipur violence seem to be spilling over to other states too, asserting that it was not good for the country's sensitive border states. Kharge said 83 days of unabated violence in Manipur require that the prime minister make a comprehensive statement in Parliament.