Binalakshmi Nepram: Engineering Peace, Creating History
NEW DELHI, January 27 (IPS) - It was Christmas eve: some two decades ago. Binalakshmi Nepram was a witness to the killing of a 27-year-old.
In utter disbelief, she saw a group of three men dragging the victim from his workshop. Within minutes, he was shot dead.
“Every day three or four people are shot dead in Manipur’s ongoing conflict. Thousands have died and many women widowed and children orphaned. And those who survive look into a scarred future. This must end,” she said.
When Nepram contributed 4,500 Indian rupees to buy a sewing machine for the victim’s wife, Rebika, the intervention was just the beginning. Since then, there has been no looking back. The date is etched in Nepram’s mind and psyche: December 24, 2004.
Now, two decades later, when she was unanimously elected Vice President of the International Peace Bureau, it was a befitting tribute to her crusade for peace: a recognition of the work her organization, the Manipur Gun Survivors Network, has done to rescue and uplift women from the trauma and agony that they face because of armed conflict.
Nepram has been at the forefront of providing the necessary healing touch to those affected by the violence perpetrated by mindless individuals.
She has also co-founded the Control Arms Foundation of India to focus on gender-based violence and end racial discrimination in India.
Currently, Nepram is chair of the Rotary Satellite Club of International Peace, an initiative that led to the establishment of the International House of Peace in Japan. She is also an associate at Harvard University and she is researching and leading work on Indigenous approaches to peacebuilding to help resolve some of the entrenched global conflicts.
“Good research should be the foundation of good policies and social action,” she says.
A globally recognized Indigenous scholar and a peace builder, Nepram is the first Indigenous person from the Indian state of Manipur to be appointed to this prestigious post. In the past, she has served on the IPB Board for two terms. As Vice President, she will hold this position until 2028.
With 400-member organizations spanning 100 countries, the International Peace Bureau or IPB is a Nobel Peace Laureate; 14 of its officers have been recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize. Founded in 1891, the IPB is one of the oldest Peace Organizations. It was awarded the Nobel in 1910.
Hammering a vision of a world without war, the IPB focus is on reducing funding for the military sector and disseminating those funds for social projects.
In her role as Vice President, Nepram would focus on strengthening global coalitions for peace and disarmament.
Peace, for Nepram, is not a project but a lifetime commitment. Her firm belief: “If wars can be engineered, we can also engineer peace.”
In an exclusive interview with IPS, Nepram spelled out the various dimensions of her work and what she plans to in her new role at the International Peace Bureau.
Excerpts from the interview:
IPS: What does this election mean?
Nepram: My election as Vice President of the International Peace Bureau is a historic one because it is the first time that anyone from India or my home state, Manipur, has been elected to this post. It means the growing recognition of our role, especially women-led peacebuilding—whether at home in Manipur, Northeast India or around the world—that we have been honored by the international community.
IPS: What would be your focus areas?
Nepram: My focus areas will include building a more peaceful world where people treat each other with love, respect and dignity; reducing wars and conflicts in biodiversity hotspots where Indigenous Peoples live; and the inclusion of women and Indigenous Peoples in peace talks, peace mediation and negotiations, as this is, as of now, missing.
IPS: What needs to change and has remained neglected?
Nepram: What needs to change are the mindsets of people, policymakers and nations who believe in “war profits.” As of now, many “wars” in our homes, regions and nations are “engineered” for profit and power. Pitch this against the hundreds and thousands of innocent civilians who pay the price by way of their homes being burnt and many of them being displaced. In this context my own hometown, Manipur, stands as an example, particularly since 2023. But change will come; it must come and it will come once realization dawns.
IPS: How will your election help your people and the cause you are fighting for?
Nepram: Manipur has been in a state of violent conflict since the 1970s. Nobody has been able to work genuinely to bring peace in my state for decades. I, for one, will work for bringing the peace that has been denied but that every citizen in the state deserves. This is the need of the hour.
IPS: What are the first steps you will take?
Nepram: The first steps for peace in Manipur had been taken even before my election. This is by way of the formation of the Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network, the Northeast India Women Initiative for Peace and the Northeast India Women Peace Congregations. I have also conceptualized the Global Summit on Indigenous Peacebuilding in April 2026 and will help in the forthcoming World Peace Congress. We will also continue peace meetings, dialogue, negotiations, and mediation this year. These are the first few steps I will take this year.
IPS: What does this election mean for women and India and Manipur? How excited are you?
Nepram: This election puts India and Manipur back on the world map of peacemaking, and this, to me, is crucial and critical. India and the women of Manipur in particular have shown the world the power of peace and non-violent action in ending the colonization of British rule. At a time of rising wars and conflicts, this news will come as a balm to many wounded lives.
IPS: What is the big picture that needs to be addressed? What is the way forward?
Nepram: The big picture we are considering is that there are currently 132 conflicts and wars in the world, which have displaced 200 million people. Eighty percent of these conflicts and wars are happening in biodiversity areas where Indigenous Peoples live. Greed and power are what are driving the world towards wars and if humans don’t stop this, we will be heading towards doom. War is the greatest polluter in this world; every year our climate is changing. There are floods, droughts etc. so we need solutions now to protect the planet and to achieve this peace is the answer, as is Indigenous peacebuilding the way forward. We must include Indigenous people and women in every process of decision-making from now on.
Peace for us is not a project; it is a commitment of a lifetime. If wars can be “engineered,” we can also “engineer” peace.
IPS UN Bureau Report
© Inter Press Service (20260127132956) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service
Where next?
Browse related news topics:
Read the latest news stories:
- Cuts Stall Clinical Trials, Scientists Warn US Risks Losing Its Research Edge Tuesday, January 27, 2026
- Binalakshmi Nepram: Engineering Peace, Creating History Tuesday, January 27, 2026
- A Not So Happy United States Tuesday, January 27, 2026
- As Korea Ages, Fiscal Reforms Can Help Safeguard Government Finances Tuesday, January 27, 2026
- Uganda: Democracy in Name Only Monday, January 26, 2026
- Another of Trump’s Quixotic Imperial Designs Monday, January 26, 2026
- Is the US Board of Peace Aimed at Undermining the UN? Monday, January 26, 2026
- ‘We must stand up for our shared humanity - each and every day’: UN human rights chief Monday, January 26, 2026
- Gaza ceasefire is making a difference, but situation is still deadly for children Monday, January 26, 2026
- World News in Brief: Deadly shipwrecks in the Mediterranean, Duterte trial update, final hostage remains recovered in Gaza, FAO boosts farming in Haiti Monday, January 26, 2026