Bridges on the Borders
S.K. Sood
The government of India has expressed its intentions to end the Free Movement Regime (FMR) with Myanmar, especially on the Indian border in the state of Manipur. This was stated by home minister Amit Shah during his address at the Border Security Force (BSF) Raising Day parade on 1 December 2023 at Hazaribag.
While there were reports that the government was also considering fencing the India-Myanmar border, the confirmation of its intentions came from Shah’s address during the passing out parade of newly appointed commandos of the Assam Police in Guwahati on 20 January 2024. Shah said, “Our border with Myanmar is an open border. The Narendra Modi government has taken a decision that the India-Myanmar border will be secure and the whole border will be fenced like the Bangladesh border. The government is reconsidering our Free Movement Regime (FMR) agreement with Myanmar and is going to end this ease of coming and going.” This announcement comes after reported requests by the chief minister of Manipur to suspend FMR due to ethnic strife in Manipur.
Before we attempt an analysis of the impact of ending FMR and fencing the India-Myanmar border, it is important to put things in perspective by understanding the significance of FMR for locals and the economy of the border region in this area. The British while culling out a separate Burmese (Myanmar) territory divided communities on both sides of the border. The border was no impediment for local tribes to retain their age-old ethnic ties. Marriages and exchange of local goods between the villages located within the vicinity of the border continued unhampered. The FMR was, therefore, necessitated in order to regularise these informal arrangements and to ease the problems of local tribes created by the division in 1937. FMR aimed to safeguard the interest and welfare of local tribes residing on both sides of the border. The FMR therefore gave impetus to local trade and business by simplifying movement of local tribals across the border by doing away with the formalities of documentation and the related financial burden on them for obtaining those documents.
The introduction of FMR dates back to 1950. Paragraph 41 under Section VII of the report of the ministry of home affairs 1950-51 is reproduced below for context.
“41. Exemption from the Indian Passport Rules.
(a) Members of hill tribes on the Indo-Burmese border—As a result of the revision of the Indian Passport Rules the free movement between India and Burma of members of Indian and Burmese hill tribes living in the territories adjacent to the Indo-Burmese land frontier who habitually travel between these countries, was hampered. In order to remove this difficulty and since members of Indian hill tribes entering Burma by land who do not proceed beyond 25 miles from the land border are exempt from the provisions of the Burma Passport Rules, similar exemption has been granted to members of hill tribes entering India by land.”

One of the busiest trading points between the tw

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