For three days, Thoibi did not speak. She deactivated her accounts. The mainstream news channels ran chyrons: “Viral Video: Manipur Girl’s Silent Cry?” and “What Is Hidden in the Frame?” A right-wing commentator suggested it was a “false flag” to distract from local politics. A left-leaning influencer wept on camera, saying, “We have failed our sisters from the borderlands.” Neither had asked Thoibi a single question.
Social media, briefly chastened, moved on within a week. A new outrage emerged—a cat meme, a celebrity feud, another crisis.
She now runs a small digital literacy workshop in Imphal. Her first lesson: “Before you share a video of a stranger’s room, remember—someone lives there. And that someone has a name.” For three days, Thoibi did not speak
But the damage was done. A Facebook page called “North East Safety Watch” shared the video with a caption: “Is this another case of missing indigenous girl? 22 seconds in, look at the door opening slightly.” The door had not opened. A shadow from a passing scooter had flickered across the wall.
Within twelve hours, the "Manipuri Girl By Room" video had crossed state borders. By morning, it was on Twitter, Reddit, and a dozen WhatsApp groups. The algorithm did what it does best: stripped context, amplified noise. A left-leaning influencer wept on camera, saying, “We
Thoibi learned about the viral storm when her cousin in Bangalore sent her a screenshot. Her phone crashed from notifications. Strangers had geolocated her hostel using the angle of the sun and a distant water tank. A man from Maharashtra had sent her a marriage proposal. Another had messaged, “I can get you out of the Northeast. DM for help.” Her college principal called, worried about “institutional reputation.”
Then, on the fourth day, a small Manipuri YouTube creator named Rohan did ask. He traveled to Imphal, found Thoibi through her cousin, and sat with her over black tea and singju . She spoke for twenty minutes. He recorded her with her permission. She now runs a small digital literacy workshop in Imphal
She added: “The worst part? While everyone debated whether I was a victim, nobody asked if I was even a person.”
In the quiet, rain-soaked evening of Imphal, a young Manipuri girl named Thoibi did something unremarkable: she filmed a 47-second video inside her hostel room. She had just finished a traditional Ras Lila performance, still wearing her intricate phelia and phurit , her face glowing with sweat and chandan . The video was meant for her grandmother—showing her the new shawl she had bought from the Khwairamband Bazaar.