And yet, an Imphal-based civil society initiative playing watchdog to the elections documented 46 violent incidents, including four deaths, 10 bomb blasts, 15 incidents of violence using guns, and 19 incidents of ransacking of properties, even before the first phase of polling. All of them involved mainstream political parties. “The main highlight of the Manipur election 2022 is the escalating poll-related violent incidents,” reads a statement issued by Youth Collective Manipur, a civil society initiative, on February 26, two days before the first phase of the elections. “Such naked violence overshadowed other forms of poll violence.” Violence marred the polling day as well. By “other forms of poll violence”, it referred to another interesting twist to the elections: the “open intimidation” by Kuki militant groups “forcing members of its ethnic community to vote for one particular political party”, though without naming either the Kuki National Organisation (KNO) or the BJP. Is Manipur standing at a crucial juncture, when violence perpetrated by security forces and armed ethnic groups is going to be replaced, or superseded, by political violence?