Khroku Nuh
Thousands of Naga households are facing the same silent, agonising question right now:
Do I register in my ancestral village — or where I actually live?
This is not a bureaucratic inconvenience. This is one of the most consequential decisions the Naga community will make in a generation. And the way many are attempting to resolve it — through dual registration and quiet dishonesty — risks destroying everything it is trying to protect.
Here is the unfiltered truth.
Two Fears. Both Real. Both Valid.
The Pull of the Village
Political Assembly seats are allocated based on Census population. As Nagas have moved to Dimapur, Kohima, and Chumoukedima, ancestral villages have quietly emptied. Village councils — rightly fearing Delimitation will strip their districts of political seats — are directing their people to register back home. To them, it is not manipulation. It is survival.
The Reality of the City
But here is what that strategy is quietly destroying. Dimapur, Niuland, and Chumoukedima already have large and growing non-local populations. If every indigenous Naga registers in their village while living in the city, the Census will show a demographic void of locals in our own commercial capital.
On paper, Nagas become a minority in Dimapur — not because outsiders took it, but because we statistically abandoned it ourselves.
Policies on land use, urban planning, trade licensing, and municipal governance follow the numbers. If the numbers say Nagas are not there, governance will eventually reflect that reality.
The Digital Trap — The Loophole That No Longer Exists
In past paper-based Censuses, quiet adjustments were possible. Nagaland’s notoriously inflated 2001 numbers and the sharp suspicious decline in 2011 tell that story plainly.
That era is over.
The 2027 Census is India’s first fully digital, paperless enumeration. The system cross-references mobile numbers, unique Self-Enumeration IDs, and GPS-tagged map markers in real time.
If you attempt to register in two places:
* You will not be counted in the village
* You will not be counted in the city
* You will have committed a statutory offence under the Census Act of 1948
In trying to save both, you lose both. You become a statistical phantom — with no civic voice anywhere.
The Ghost Population and the Starved City
Development funding for roads, water, power, hospitals, and schools is allocated based purely on Census data.
If urban Nagas register in their villages:
* Villages receive infrastructure funds for a ghost population that isn’t there to use them
* Cities receive a fraction of what they need for the real population living and working there
* The result? Crumbling roads. Water shortages. Overwhelmed hospitals. Power failures.
This is not hypothetical. It is already happening. And inaccurate Census data is a significant part of why.
You cannot build a modern city — boutique hotels, multi-storey residences, commercial infrastructure — and simultaneously tell the government that almost nobody lives there.
A Word to the Naga Christian Community
For a people whose identity is so publicly and profoundly shaped by the Christian faith — where churches fill every district, where Scripture is not merely read but lived — this is ultimately a moral question.
“The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are truthful.” — Proverbs 12:22
“Do not use dishonest standards when measuring.” — Leviticus 19:35
“Let your yes be yes and your no be no.” — Matthew 5:37
The motivation behind false registration may be tribal loyalty and genuine love for community. Those motivations are honourable in their origin. But the act remains a falsification of a national record. And the consequences — starved cities, ghost villages, lost civic voices, and communities displaced by their own data — are the predictable harvest of institutional dishonesty.
The Christian call is not passive acceptance of a flawed system. It is to fight injustice with truth — not replicate it with deception.
The Hard but Honest Question
Why should any Naga citizen be forced to compromise their integrity and risk losing their civic voice entirely — just to navigate a political system that should never have put them in this position?
The answer is not found in falsifying data. It is found in fixing the system — legally, constitutionally, and collectively.
The Way Forward — Practical, Honest, Actionable
Register Where You Actually Live
The Census Act is clear: register at your usual place of residence — where you sleep, live, and work. If you live in Dimapur, register in Dimapur. Registering in the city is not betraying your village. It is claiming your city. It is saying: I am here. I live here. This is mine.
Fight Delimitation Constitutionally — Not Through Fake Data
The fear of losing rural seats is valid. But the solution is legal advocacy, not data manipulation.
Nagaland holds a powerful instrument: Article 371(A). The Naga Hoho, ENPO, CNTC, ENLU, and State Government must mount a formal, organised case before the Central Delimitation Commission, arguing for a Nagaland-specific formula that factors in:
* Geographical terrain and remoteness of interior districts
* Tribal parity and historical political boundaries
* Designation of all new urban seats as ST-Reserved — so that whether seats shift rural or urban, political power stays in Naga hands
Trust the RIIN — It Protects Who You Are
The Census does not determine who is Naga. It records where you are currently using public resources.
The Register of Indigenous Inhabitants of Nagaland (RIIN) is the proper legal instrument to protect your tribal identity, ancestral rights, and indigenous land ownership — regardless of where you are registered in the Census.
The RIIN protects who you are. The Census records where you are. These are not competing truths. They are complementary ones. The State Government must treat finalising and enforcing the RIIN as a matter of urgent, non-negotiable priority — alongside strengthening the Inner Line Permit (ILP) in the western settlements.
A New Compact Between Village Councils and Urban Citizens
Village councils must reckon with a hard truth:
Mandating false registration is not protection. It is self-harm dressed as loyalty.
True loyalty to the ancestral village in 2027 looks like:
* Maintaining cultural, financial, and ceremonial ties regardless of Census registration
* Sending remittances and investing in village development from urban earnings
* Advocating politically for rural seats through constitutional channels
* Participating in tribal life without needing a false address to legitimise your belonging
A Naga does not stop being Naga because the government knows they live in Dimapur. Identity is not a postal code.
What the Government Must Do — Now
* Finalise and enforce the RIIN before enumeration concludes
* Issue a joint advisory from the State Government, tribal Hohos, and church bodies clarifying that urban Census registration does not affect indigenous status, tribal membership, or customary rights
* Deploy awareness campaigns through church networks — the most trusted communication infrastructure in Nagaland — explaining the consequences of dual registration
* Submit a formal Article 371(A) representation to the Delimitation Commission for a Nagaland-specific, terrain-adjusted formula
* Designate all new urban constituencies as ST-Reserved to protect indigenous political ownership of growing cities
* Strengthen ILP enforcement in Dimapur, Niuland, and Chumoukedima so non-local populations are legally tracked and cannot exploit the demographic space created by Nagas registering elsewhere
The Bottom Line
Cutting off your arm to save your hand is not strategy. It is desperation.
Trying to save the native village by digitally abandoning Choumoukedima, Dimapur and Kohima is exactly that. It starves the city. It funds a ghost population. It hands our commercial capitals to whoever is willing to be counted there. And in 2027, it will get your data scrubbed entirely.
The path through this Catch-22 requires three things working together:
* Individual integrity — register honestly where you live: Claim your city. You are not betraying your village — you are owning your present.
* Collective advocacy — fight Delimitation legally and constitutionally in Delhi. Article 371A is our shield. Lobby Delhi for a formula that respects geography, history, and tribal parity — not just raw population. Fight Delimitation with advocacy, not false numbers. Fear leads to falsehood. Faith leads to integrity. Refuse the trap of double counting.
* Institutional reform — enforce the RIIN, strengthen the ILP, build systems that protect identity through proper legal instruments. The Census tracks where you use roads and water; the RIIN tracks who you are. One does not cancel the other.
Village councils, listen: Forcing your people to lie on the Census is self-sabotage. A Naga in Dimapur is still your son, your daughter. Let them register truthfully.
A Final Word
Nagaland’s story has never been one of surrender. It has been a story of tenacity, faith, and the willingness to stand in hard places without flinching.
The 2027 Census is the latest hard place.
Register where you live. Fight Delimitation legally. Protect your identity through the RIIN.
And trust that those who live and breathe their reality always have a more legitimate right to a place than those whose connection exists only on paper.
“Let your yes be yes and your no be no.” — Matthew 5:37
Census 2027: Truth or illusion. The choice is ours.
~ Khroku Nuh
(The views expressed are those of the writer and not of the newspaper)