A stranger in my capital city: Being a Northeastern in Delhi

For thousands of people from India’s Northeast who come to Delhi seeking education and opportunity, the National Capital Region is both a place of promise and an area shadowed by prejudice

Updated - March 16, 2026 09:57 am IST

A lawyer who migrated from Manipur after ethnic violence hit her homeland, and was attacked in Delhi last week, shows her scars.

A lawyer who migrated from Manipur after ethnic violence hit her homeland, and was attacked in Delhi last week, shows her scars. | Photo Credit: Shashi Shekhar Kashyap

Spring is Atiya’s (name changed on request) favourite season. Back in Manipur, it arrives with pleasant weather, vibrant festivals, and fields bursting into colour. Since childhood, this time of the year for her has meant hours of gazing upon bright flowers and breathing in their fragrance. She hasn’t experienced that for two years now, ever since she moved to Delhi.

On March 8, she walked to one of Delhi’s gardens in Saket, with a transgender friend, hoping to find that spring comfort. What she encountered was just the opposite. She says a group of boys, between 13 and 16 years, began passing lewd remarks. “They began by calling me ‘chinki’ (a racial slur used on people with East Asian features), then went on to calling me a sex worker in Hindi,” says Atiya.

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