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World’s Longest Hunger Protest to End Next Month in India

© AP Photo / Bullu RajIn this Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2014 photo, Irom Sharmila, center, walks out of a security ward after her release in Porompal district, in Imphal, India.
In this Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2014 photo, Irom Sharmila, center, walks out of a security ward after her release in Porompal district, in Imphal, India. - Sputnik International
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Irom Sharmila has been fasting for the last 16 years as a mark of protest against the controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) in India’s northeastern state Manipur.

New Delhi (Sputnik) — The "Iron Lady" of Manipur, Irom Sharmila has decided to finally break her hunger protest, one of the world's longest running individual protests. Sharmila announced that she would break her fast on the 9th of August, 16 years after she started her lone battle against the Indian state, demanding an end to AFSPA.

Sharmila says her decision to end the hunger protest is motivated by her desire to contest elections. "I have decided to end my 16-year fast on August 9 and contest the 2017 state elections as an independent candidate."

​Sharmila says she would continue to protest the AFSPA, though in a more democratic manner. "My fight so far has been all alone and so I have decided to wage a war against the act democratically by becoming a lawmaker instead of continuing with my fast."

A woman carries a sack of food aid after a food-drop in a field on February 23, 2015 at a village in Nyal, Panyijar county, near the northern border with Sudan - Sputnik International
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At Least 800 Million People Worldwide Suffer from Poverty, Hunger - UN
Sharmila is currently in judicial custody as she faces charges of attempting suicide. She started her protest in the year 2000, a day after Indian armed forces allegedly killed 10 civilians including two children in the garb of the AFSPA which gives special powers to soldiers to shoot and arrest people in regions declared as "disturbed" by the government.

Last week in Parliament, Kiren Rijuju, India's Minister of State for Home Affairs said, "At present there is no proposal under consideration to withdraw AFSPA from the North Eastern Region."

On July 8 this year, India's apex court criticized the AFSPA and ruled that armed forces personnel could be tried by normal criminal courts in case of a complaint of excessive force used under the law. The Supreme Court ruled this judgement on a petition filed by the Extra Judicial Execution Victim Families Association who alleged that a total of 1528 civilians had been killed by armed forces in northeastern India.

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