It was during her internship in the late 1990s at Human Rights Alert (HRA), Manipur, that civil rights activist, Irom Sharmila Chanu grew deeply indignant at the periodic abuse of human rights after listening to testimonies of survivors of military violence. She learnt that joint military operations to weed out armed opposition groups, combing operations to catch ‘suspects’ or instil fear in civilian areas, humiliating frisking in public of boys and men, enforced disappearances, extrajudicial killings, random detention, torture and sexual violence were commonplace in Manipur. Sharmila publicly launched her indefinite fast against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), 1958, on 5 November 2000, after the Assam Rifles shot 10 innocent civilians at Malom village. Since then she has been in detention on the false charge of ‘attempt to commit suicide’ under Section 309 of the Indian Penal Code, which criminalises her political demand for democracy. In this context, while the centre’s declared intention—to decriminalise attempt to suicide and repeal Section 309—offers hope for Irom Sharmila’s release; it risks being worthless without a decisive debate on AFSPA and the crisis of impunity in Manipur.