The Centre has decided to scrap the Free Movement Regime (FMR) along the Indo-Myanmar Border (IMB), which was implemented in 2018 as part of India’s Act East policy.
The Union government is now set to suspend the FMR to “stop the influx of illegal migrants”, as per ThePrint report. India shares a 1,643 km-long border with Myanmar, which passes through the four Northeast states — Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, and Mizoram.
What is the Free Movement Regime? Why does the Centre want to end it now? Let’s take a closer look.
What is FMR?
The FMR is a mutually agreed pact between India and Myanmar that allows tribes dwelling along the border on either side to travel up to 16 km inside the other country without a visa. The members of hill tribes have to produce a border pass, which is valid for a year, and can stay in the other country for about two weeks per visit, according to PTI.
The FMR was introduced in 2018 when relations between the Narendra Modi-led government and Myanmar were on the rise. The agreement aimed to facilitate people-to-people ties between the countries as residents in the region enjoy strong ethnic and familial relations on both sides of the border.
A Myanmerese looks towards the Indian side at the India-Myanmar border in Mizoram, 20 March 2021. AP File Photo
The FMR was also brought to provide impetus to local trade and business.
Why it is being removed?
India and Myanmar share a mostly unfenced border. In Manipur, just 10 km of its border with Myanmar is fenced. The IMB goes through forested terrain which is difficult to monitor.
Mizoram has a 510-km-long porous border with Myanmar. Nagaland shares a 215 km boundary with the Southeast Asian nation and Arunachal Pradesh has a 520 km-long boundary with Myanmar.
Since the ethnic conflict erupted in Manipur last May, the free movement regime has come to the spotlight. The Meiteis have blamed the illegal migration of tribal Kuki-Chin peoples from Myanmar for stirring up tensions in the state. On the other hand, the Kukis in Manipur have accused the Meiteis and Chief Minister N Biren Singh of using this as an excuse for “ethnic cleansing”, as per Indian Express.
The alleged illegal migration via the FMR has emerged as a key issue between local leaders in Manipur. CM Singh said in September last year that he had urged the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) to end the FMR, blaming the free movement of people from across Myanmar into India for the ethnic violence in the state, reported The Hindu.
“We are going to end the FMR along the Indo-Myanmar border soon. We are going to put fencing along the entire border. The fencing will be completed in next four-and-a-half years. Anyone coming through will have to…get a visa,” a senior government functionary told PTI.
People who fled from Myanmar walk near a church after attending a mass at Farkawn village near the India-Myanmar border, in Mizoram, 21 November 2021. Reuters File Photo
Speaking to ThePrint, a government source said the FMR was suspended several times in the past, including in 2020 during COVID-19.
Since the military coup in Myanmar on 1 February 2021, a large number of tribals fleeing violence in their country have crossed over to India, especially into Manipur and Mizoram. As per The Hindu, over 40,000 refugees belonging to the Kuki-Chin-Zo ethnic group took shelter in Mizoram, while about 4,000 migrants are said to have entered Manipur.
There are allegations that these refugees took shelter on Indian soil and then got involved in illegal activities such as drug smuggling, reported ThePrint.
A senior government official told The Hindu that around 300 km of the Indo-Myanmar border will be fenced and a tender will be issued soon.
Is ending FMR the solution?
According to a paper published by Anuradha Oinam of the Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS), many insurgent groups such as United National Liberation Front (UNLF), People’s Liberation Army (PLA), the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN), and small groups of Kukis and Zomis have constructed camps in Myanmar’s Sagaing Division, Kachin State and Chin State, reported Indian Express.
“They took shelter there, obtained arms, trained cadres, and, most importantly, engaged in illegal activities such as smuggling drugs and selling weapons to raise funds. This is possible because of the porous borders and frequent misuse of FMR. Therefore, managing and administering the border areas effectively is pertinent for reducing drug trafficking and illegal cross-border movement on unfenced borders,” the paper said.
However, Oinam in his paper argued that neither cancelling the FMR nor completely fencing the border was the solution as it could affect livelihoods, education and essential travel for health care. The paper said “it is imperative for New Delhi to tackle the issue by pursuing ‘killing the snake without breaking the stick’ approach,” reported Indian Express.
Sources in the security establishment told the Indian daily last year that stopping illegal immigration or drug trafficking across an unfenced border in perilous terrain is a tough task. A senior officer said that all borders, including fenced ones, are “are struggling to deal with drug trafficking”.
With inputs from agencies
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