India has reimposed an Internet ban on restive Manipur state after violent protests erupted following the circulation of photographs of two dead students killed during the months-long conflict, officials said.
More than 150 people have been killed in the remote northeast state since armed clashes broke out in May between the predominantly Hindu Meitei majority and the mainly Christian Kuki community.
The far-flung state has fractured on ethnic lines with rival militia groups setting up blockades.
A nearly five-month long Internet ban was lifted last week, but was reimposed late Tuesday after dozens were injured during violent protests in the state capital Imphal.
On Tuesday, police fired tear gas as hundreds of angry students marched following the release of photographs of two dead bodies on social media, a 17-year old woman and a 20-year old man from the Meitei community, local media reported. The pair went missing in July. The Internet was then cut to curb the “spread of disinformation, false rumours, and other types of violent activities through social media platforms”, a government order read.
Biren Singh, the state’s chief minister, said officers were investigating the deaths.
“State police, in collaboration with the central security agencies, are actively investigating the case to determine the circumstances surrounding their disappearance and to identify the perpetrators who murdered the two students. The security forces have also started the search operation to nab the perpetrators,” the government said.
The government said it will take “swift and decisive action” against all those involved in the kidnapping and killing of the students. It appealed to the public to maintain calm and let the investigators do their job.
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