In the remote hilltop village of Longwa, the most prominent structure is the corrugated tin roof of the hut belonging to the Angh, a symbol of traditional authority for the Konyak tribe.
National boundaries never mattered before to the local Konyak tribe. “I eat in Myanmar and sleep in India,” says Tonyei Phawang, the Angh, whose house sits on the border. The Indian government ...
Advertisement Article continues below this ad National boundaries never mattered before to the local Konyak tribe. “I eat in Myanmar and sleep in India,” says Tonyei Phawang, the Angh ...
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