Source: The Sangai Express
Imphal, October 16:
�Use the salt and mustard oil in little quantities otherwise nothing will be left in a few days� time,� the ailing mother told her little daughter cooking food in a dirty silver ware.
As soon as she wiped her brows with one hand, a faint cursing escaped her lips.
�Darn these insects, coming all the time as if they could not do without harming humans.� And then she turned to her son who had had just returned from hunting on the day�s account.
These are the daily�s account of the people in remote villages located at the Tamenglong and Churachandpur border.
The rising mountains are home to these people who have little access to the outside world.
Here the villagers are more worried about salt than meat as procuring them is the hardest task for them.
Recently a group of journalists reached Churachandpur district�s Mamong, Maokot and M Molcham village under Henglep subdivision.
The team also visited Nongdang, Pungsang and Nungbai village in Tamenglong district.
Most of the villages do not have more than six families.
Give or take a few hours, a one way journey to either Imphal or Churachandpur bazaar takes three days by foot.
Ruled by the wilderness and gorges with deep falls, the scenery of Nungbai village is exhilarating.
The orange fruits planted in rows covering the hill incline make one poke at nature�s nose.
The ripe fruits added a radiating hue to the greenery of the place.
Villagers said that the fruit will be plucked for sale in 15 days time.
Villagers face a lot of horrid time waiting for the ripening of the fruits.
Selling oranges is the only source of income for the villagers.
The process of transportation is equally difficult as they have to carry them to points where vehicles are accessible.
Sometimes they are in a dilemma when buyers demand too less a price after all the hard work.
However, the only option is to sell them and return home as fast as they could.
The villagers of Maokot, Mamong and Molcham were in an extremely wretched condition.
There was nothing from which they draw an income.
�If we have the money, there is no place to buy food and even if we have something to sell, there is no market.
Barter system is the best here� a hapless villager quipped.
There is complete absence of facilities like medical and education forgot about electricity supply.
Items like salt, mustard oil, garlic, onion etc are such a scarce that people prefer these things to meat.
Ironically the light of education and knowledge are far away from their minds as they are busy fighting for daily sustenance.
Lunkholam Haokip, the 70yearold chief of Somkong village around 20 kms towards Tamenglong from Mamong said settling in the surrounding villages began only in January this year after they fled homes during the Naga-Kuki clashes.
Around 300 members of 30 families had been residing in Somkong village earlier.
However, only around a hundred persons have returned.
Though some are still in Phailen village and Churachandpur bazaar, they are not sure of the fate of the others; he said adding that prayer is the last resort for the villagers as they are helpless when clashes broke out.
During the time of elections, polling stations are opened at Somkong, Mamong, Molcham, Maokot, Jaolin and Moibung village.
The chief wanted setting up dispensaries and sub-post offices in these villages, construction of a road connecting all the villages with the mainland and building a bridge on the Sandang river.
Villagers sleep at just as night falls as they do not get kerosene or candles despite the absence of electricity supply.
Mosquitoes and other insects are abundant here and the villagers suffer as they cannot afford mosquito nets.
The houses in these villages are adorned with skulls and bones of animals which the villagers had hunted.
The journalists saw villagers carrying a dead deer and shooting dead a Mithun for lunch.
�These are prized catches,� a villager confided.
But cooking them is a problem due to non-availability of salt and other ingredients.