Nine people were killed and 10 were injured in fresh violence on Tuesday night in Manipur’s Aigejang village, which is situated along the border of Kangpokpi and Imphal East districts, a senior official told Scroll.

Arson also took place in the Khamenlok area, which is adjacent to Aigejang village. The village falls under the police jurisdiction of Imphal West but its revenue jurisdiction comes under Kangpokpi district.

The North Eastern state has witnessed ethnic clashes between the Meitei and Kuki communities since May 3. The clashes have left more than 100 persons dead, over 300 injured and thousands displaced. Nearly 60,000 are taking shelter in 350 relief camps.

On Tuesday, an additional superintendent of police in Imphal East told Scroll that those who died in Aigejang, which is a Kuki village, are said to be “youth volunteers from the Meitei side”. A postmortem examination of the bodies is underway.

The Coordinating Committee on Manipur Integrity, an umbrella organisation of six groups representing Meitei interests, said that three persons are missing and 10 have been injured in the violence in Aigejang. It said that the violence took place when village guards were having dinner around 11 pm on Tuesday.

In a statement, the group quoted a survivor of the violence saying that there was a bomb blast, followed by incessant shooting from three sides through the windows.

It also raised suspicions that the attackers could be Myanmarese nationals. “Many of them [the assailants] wore lungee or a wrap-around cloth, which is not common in Manipur Kukis, but a regular uniform or dress of the Myanmar nationals,” the group said.

Violence had erupted on Monday too in Kangpokpi, Imphal East and Churachandpur districts. One person had died and nine others were injured in separate incidents.

After the latest round of tensions, curfew relaxations have been reduced in Imphal. In the Imphal East district, the curfew relaxation period was from 5 am to 6 pm earlier and is now from 5 am to 9 am, The Indian Express reported. Internet services are suspended in the entire state.

On Friday, three people were killed and two injured when an armed gang of 20 suspected Meiteis attacked the Kuki village of Khoken. A few days earlier, two women and an injured child were burnt inside an ambulance that was being escorted to hospital by the police chief of Imphal West.

The Central government has constituted a peace committee in Manipur to facilitate a truce among various ethnic groups. The panel is headed by the state’s Governor Anusuiya Uikey and includes Chief Minister N Biren Singh, a few state ministers, MPs, MLAs, and leaders from various political parties.

But groups representing both the Meitei and Kuki communities have said that they will not take part in the work of the peace committee, expressing a lack of faith in it.