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Meghalaya
Meghalaya
from Wikipedia

Meghalaya (/ˌmɡəˈlə, mˈɡɑːləjə/;[7][8] lit. "the abode of clouds"[9]) is a state in northeast India. Its capital is Shillong. Meghalaya was formed on 21 January 1972 by carving out two districts from the state of Assam: the united Khasi Hills and Jaintia Hills, and the Garo Hills.[10] The estimated population of Meghalaya in 2014 was 3,211,474.[11] Meghalaya covers an area of approximately 22,429 square kilometres, with a length-to-breadth ratio of about 3:1.[12] The state is bound to the south by the Bangladeshi divisions of Mymensingh and Sylhet, to the west by the Bangladeshi division of Rangpur, and to the north and east by India's State of Assam.

Key Information

During the British rule of India, the British authorities nicknamed it the "Scotland of the East".[13] English is the official language of Meghalaya. Unlike many Indian states, Meghalaya has historically followed a matrilineal system where the lineage and inheritance are traced through women; the youngest daughter inherits all wealth and she also takes care of her parents.[13]

The state is the wettest region of India, with the wettest areas in the southern Khasi Hills recording an average of 12,000 mm (470 in) of rain a year.[12] About 70 per cent of the state is forested.[14] The Meghalaya subtropical forests ecoregion encompasses the state; its mountain forests are distinct from the lowland tropical forests to the north and south. The forests are notable for their biodiversity of mammals, birds, and plants.

Meghalaya has a predominantly agrarian economy with a significant commercial forestry industry. The important crops are potatoes, rice, maize, pineapples, bananas, papayas, and spices. The service sector is made up of real estate and insurance companies. Meghalaya's gross state domestic product for 2012 was estimated at 16,173 crore (US$1.9 billion) in current prices.[15] The state is geologically rich in minerals, but it has no significant industries.[13] The state has about 1,170 km (730 mi) of national highways. It is also a major logistical center for trade with Bangladesh.[12]

In July 2018, the International Commission on Stratigraphy divided the Holocene epoch into three,[16][17] with the late Holocene being called the Meghalayan stage/age,[18][19] since a speleothem in Mawmluh cave indicating a dramatic worldwide climate event around 2250 BCE had been chosen as the boundary stratotype.[20]

One of the biggest Central Institutes, the North Eastern Council Secretariat, is also situated in Shillong.

Etymology

[edit]

The word Meghālaya means "the abode of clouds"; the name derives from a compound of the Sanskrit words megha ("cloud", मेघ) and alaya ("abode", आलय)[9][21]

History

[edit]

Meghalaya, alongside the neighbouring Indian states, has been of archaeological interest. People have lived in Meghalaya since the Neolithic period. Neolithic sites discovered so far are located in areas of high elevation in Khasi Hills, Garo Hills and in neighbouring states, where Neolithic style jhum or shifting cultivation is practised even today. The highland plateaus fed by abundant rains provided safety from floods and a rich soil.[22] The importance of Meghalaya is its possible role in human history via domestication of rice. A theory for the origin of rice is by Ian Glover while states, "India is the center of greatest diversity of domesticated rice with over 20,000 identified species and Northeast India is the most favorable single area of the origin of domesticated rice."[23] The limited archaeology done in the hills of Meghalaya suggest human settlement since ancient times.[24]

After the Conquest of Taraf in 1304, Shah Arifin Rafiuddin, a disciple of Shah Jalal, migrated and settled in the Khasi and Jaintia Hills where he preached Islamic monotheism to the local people. His khanqah remains in Sarping / Laurergarh on the Bangladeshi border but the part containing his mazar is in Meghalaya on top of Laur Hill.[25]

Bhaitbari is an archaeological site first discovered and excavated by A. K. Sharma in 1993, a fortification of burnt brick with mud core was discovered at Meghalaya - Assam border and is dated to 4th-8th century AD, the city has been speculated to have been one of the capital cities of Kamarupa.[26]

The British discovered Camellia sinensis (tea shrub) in 1834 in Assam and later companies started renting land from 1839 onwards.[27][clarification needed]

The Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia tribes had their own kingdoms until they came under British administration in the 19th century. Later, the British incorporated Meghalaya into Assam in 1835.[13] The region enjoyed semi-independent status by virtue of a treaty relationship with the British Crown. When Bengal was partitioned on 16 October 1905 by Lord Curzon, Meghalaya became a part of the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam. When the partition was reversed in 1912, Meghalaya became a part of the province of Assam. On 3 January 1921 in pursuance of Section 52A of the Government of India Act of 1919, the governor-general-in-council declared the areas now in Meghalaya, other than the Khasi states, as "backward tracts." Subsequently, the British administration enacted the Government of India Act 1935, which regrouped the backward tracts into two categories: "excluded" and "partially excluded" areas.[citation needed]

At the time of Indian independence in 1947, present-day Meghalaya constituted two districts of Assam and enjoyed limited autonomy within the state of Assam. A movement for a separate hill state began in 1960.[10] On 11 September 1968, the Government of India announced a scheme for constituting an autonomous state within the state of Assam comprising certain areas specified in Part A of the table appended to paragraph 20 of the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution.[28] Accordingly, the Assam Reorganisation (Meghalaya) Act of 1969 was enacted for the formation of an autonomous state.[29] Meghalaya was formed by carving out two districts from the state of Assam: the United Khasi Hills and Jaintia Hills, and the Garo Hills.[10] The name 'Meghalaya' coined by geographer S.P. Chatterjee in 1936 was proposed and accepted for the new state.[30][31] The Act came into effect on 2 April 1970, with the autonomous state having a 37-member legislature in accordance with the Sixth Schedule to the Indian constitution.

In 1971, the Parliament passed the North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971, which conferred full statehood on the autonomous state of Meghalaya. Meghalaya attained statehood on 21 January 1972, with a Legislative Assembly of its own.[10]

Geography

[edit]
Laitmawsiang landscape, wrapped in fog. Meghalaya is mountainous, and it is the rainiest state of India. The word Meghalaya means, "abode of the clouds".

Meghalaya is one of the Seven Sister States of northeast India. The state of Meghalaya is mountainous, with stretches of valley and highland plateaus, and it is geologically rich. It consists mainly of Archean rock formations. These rock formations contain rich deposits of valuable minerals like coal, limestone, uranium and sillimanite.[32] The name Meghalaya was given by Shiba P. Chatterjee, a geography professor at the University of Calcutta.[33]

Relief map of Meghalaya

Meghalaya has many rivers. Most of these are rainfed and seasonal. The important rivers in the Garo Hills region are Ganol, Daring, Sanda, Bandra, Bugai, Dareng, Simsang, Nitai and the Bhupai. In the central and eastern sections of the plateau, the important rivers are Khri, Umtrew, Digaru, Umiam or Barapani, Kynshi (Jadukata), Umngi, Mawpa, Umiam Khwan, Umngot, Umkhen, Myntdu and Myntang. In the southern Khasi Hills region, these rivers have created deep gorges and several waterfalls.[citation needed]

Farming on hilly terrain (tea plantation).

The elevation of the plateau ranges between 150 m (490 ft) to 1,961 m (6,434 ft). The central part of the plateau comprising the Khasi Hills has the highest elevations, followed by the eastern section comprising the Jaintia Hills region. The highest point in Meghalaya is Shillong Peak, which is a prominent IAF station in the Khasi Hills overlooking the city of Shillong. It has an altitude of 1961 m. The Garo Hills region in the western section of the plateau is nearly plain. The highest point in the Garo Hills is Nokrek Peak with an altitude of 1515 m.[citation needed]

Climate

[edit]

With the average annual rainfall as high as 12,000 mm (470 in) in some areas, Meghalaya is the wettest place on Earth.[34] The western part of the plateau, comprising the Garo Hills region with lower elevations, experiences high temperatures for most of the year. The Shillong area, with the highest elevations, experiences generally low temperatures. The maximum temperature in this region rarely goes beyond 28 °C (82 °F),[35] whereas sub-zero winter temperatures are common.

A sign board in Cherrapunji

The town of Cherrapunji in the Khasi Hills south of capital Shillong holds the world record for most rain in a calendar month, while the village of Mawsynram, near Cherrapunji, holds the record for the most rain in a year.[36][37]

Flora and fauna

[edit]
Meghalaya's forests host 660 species of birds[38] and numerous species of other wildlife. Peacock pheasant (top) and hoolock gibbon (bottom) are found in Meghalaya.[39]

About 70% of the state is forested, of which 9,496 km2 (3,666 sq mi) is dense primary subtropical forest.[14] The Meghalayan forests are considered to be among the richest botanical habitats of Asia. These forests receive abundant rainfall and support a vast variety of floral and faunal biodiversity. A small portion of the forest area in Meghalaya is under what are known as "sacred groves" (see Sacred groves of India). These are small pockets of an ancient forest that have been preserved by the communities for hundreds of years due to religious and cultural beliefs. These forests are reserved for religious rituals and generally remain protected from any exploitation. These sacred groves harbour many rare plant and animal species. The Nokrek Biosphere Reserve in the West Garo Hills and the Balpakram National Park in the South Garo Hills are considered to be the most biodiversity-rich sites in Meghalaya.[citation needed] In addition, Meghalaya has three wildlife sanctuaries. These are the Nongkhyllem Wildlife Sanctuary, the Siju Sanctuary, and the Baghmara Sanctuary, which is also the home of the insect-eating pitcher plant Nepenthes khasiana also called "Me'mang Koksi" in the Garo language.[citation needed]

Due to diverse climatic and topographic conditions, Meghalaya forests support a vast floral diversity, including a large variety of parasites, epiphytes, succulent plants and shrubs. Two of the most important tree varieties are Shorea robusta (sal tree) and Tectona grandis (teak). Meghalaya is also the home to a large variety of fruits, vegetables, spices, and medicinal plants. Meghalaya is also famous for its large variety of orchids — nearly 325 of them. Of these, the largest variety is found in the Mawsmai, Mawmluh and Sohrarim forests in the Khasi hills.

Nepenthes khasiana

Meghalaya also has a large variety of mammals, birds, reptiles and insects.[40] The important mammal species include elephants, bear, red pandas,[41] small Indian civets, mongooses, weasels, rodents, gaur, wild buffalo,[42] deer, wild boar and a number of primates. Meghalaya also has a large variety of bats. The limestone caves in Meghalaya such as the Siju Cave are home to some of the nation's rarest bat species. The hoolock gibbon is found in all districts of Meghalaya.[43]

Common reptiles in Meghalaya are lizards, crocodiles and tortoises. Meghalaya also has a number of snakes including the python, copperhead, green tree racer, Indian cobra, king cobra, coral snake and vipers.[44]

Meghalaya's forests host 660 species of birds, many of which are endemic to Himalayan foothills, Tibet and Southeast Asia. Of the birds found in Meghalaya forests, 34 are on worldwide threatened species list and 9 are on the critically endangered list.[38] Prominent birds spotted in Meghalaya include those from the families of Phasianidae, Anatidae, Podicipedidae, Ciconiidae, Threskiornithidae, Ardeidae, Pelecanidae, Phalacrocoracidae, Anhingidae, Falconidae, Accipitridae, Otididae, Rallidae, Heliornithidae, Gruidae, Turnicidae, Burhinidae, Charadriidae, Glareolidae, Scolopacidae, Jacanidae, Columbidae, Psittacidae, Cuculidae, Strigidae, Caprimulgidae, Apodidae, Alcedinidae, Bucerotidae, Ramphastidae, Picidae, Campephagidae, Dicruridae, Corvidae, Hirundinidae, Cisticolidae, Pycnonotidae, Sylviidae, Timaliidae, Sittidae, Sturnidae, Turdidae, Nectariniidae and Muscicapidae.[38] Each of these families have many species. The great Indian hornbill is the largest bird in Meghalaya. Other regional birds found include the grey peacock pheasant, the large Indian parakeet and the common green pigeon.[45] Meghalaya is also home to over 250 species of butterflies, nearly a quarter of all butterfly species found in India.

In 2020, scientists have discovered the largest known subterranean fish in Meghalaya's Jaintia Hills.[46]

Byrnihat has been ranked 38th best “National Clean Air City” under (Category 3 population under 3 lakhs cities) in India.[47] In 2025, The World Air Quality Report 2024 by Swiss air quality technology company IQAir ranked Byrnihat as the most polluted city in the world.[48][49]

Demographics

[edit]

Population

[edit]
Historical population
YearPop.±%
1901 340,524—    
1911 394,005+15.7%
1921 422,404+7.2%
1931 480,820+13.8%
1941 555,820+15.6%
1951 605,674+9.0%
1961 769,380+27.0%
1971 1,011,699+31.5%
1981 1,335,819+32.0%
1991 1,774,778+32.9%
2001 2,318,822+30.7%
2011 2,966,889+27.9%
Source: Census of India[50]

Tribal people make up the majority of Meghalaya's population. The Khasis are the largest group, followed by the Garos then the Jaintias. These were among those known to the British as "hill tribes." Other groups include the Bengali, Hajongs, the Biates, the Koches and related Rajbongshis, the Boros, Dimasa, Kuki, Lakhar, Tiwa (Lalung), Karbi, Rabha and Nepali.[citation needed]

Meghalaya recorded the highest decennial population growth of 27.82% among all the seven north-eastern states, as per the provisional report of census 2011. The population of Meghalaya as of 2011 has been estimated at 2,964,007 of which females constitute 1,492,668 and males 1,471,339. As per the census of India 2011, the sex ratio in the state was 986 females per 1,000 males which was far higher than the national average of 940. The urban female sex ratio of 985 was higher than the rural sex ratio of 972.[51]

Religion

[edit]
Religion in Meghalaya (2011)[52]
  1. Christianity (74.6%)
  2. Hinduism (11.5%)
  3. Tribal religions (8.70%)
  4. Islam (4.39%)
  5. Buddhism (0.33%)
  6. Jainism (0.02%)
  7. Sikhism (0.10%)
  8. Others (0.35%)

Meghalaya is one of three states in India to have a Christian majority. About 75% of the population practices Christianity, with Catholics, Presbyterians, Baptists, and Church of God the more common denominations.[52] The religion of the people in Meghalaya is closely related to their ethnicity. Close to 90% of the Garo and nearly 80% of the Khasi are Christian, while more than 97% of the Hajong, 98.53% of the Koch, and 94.60% of the Rabha tribes are Hindus. A minority of Garo and Khasi are also Hindus mainly because of the influence of Hindu populations in Hindu majority villages.[53][54]

Hindus are the largest religious minority in Meghalaya with 11.52% of the total state's population as of 2011 census[52] Hindus are concentrated mainly in West Garo Hills, East Khasi Hills and Ri-Bhoi with 19.11 per cent, 17.55 per cent and 11.96 per cent respectively. The Nartiang Durga Temple is a major Hindu temple in Meghalaya and it is one of the 51 Shakta pithas on Earth.[55]

Indigenous Faiths is followed by 8.7% of population. The indigenous faiths of Meghalaya are Niamtre, followed by Jaintia people,[56] Niam Khasi and Niam Tynrai, followed by Khasi tribe and Songsarek followed by the Garo people.[57][58]

Muslims constitute 4.39% of the population[52] and are concentrated mainly in West Garo Hills, where they make up 16.60% of the population.[59]

Conversion from indigenous to Christianity began in the 19th century during the British colonial era. In the 1830s, American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society had become active in Northeast India to convert indigenous tribes to Christianity.[60] Later, they were offered to expand and reach into Cherrapunji Meghalaya, but they declined out of the lack of resources. Taking up the offer, the Welsh Presbyterian Mission began work at the Cherrapunji mission field. By the early 1900s, other Protestant denominations of Christianity were active in Meghalaya. The outbreak of World Wars forced the preachers to return home to Europe and America. It is during this period that Catholicism took root in Meghalaya and neighbouring regions. In the 20th century, Union Christian College started operations at Umiam, Shillong. Currently, Presbyterians and Catholics are two most common Christian denominations found in Meghalaya.[61]

Languages

[edit]
Languages of Meghalaya in 2011 [62]
  1. Khasi (33.8%)
  2. Garo (31.6%)
  3. Pnar (10.7%)
  4. Bengali (6.44%)
  5. Nepali (1.85%)
  6. War (1.73%)
  7. Hindi (1.62%)
  8. Hajong (1.40%)
  9. Assamese (1.34%)
  10. Others (9.51%)

English is the official language of the state.[63] The most spoken languages in Meghalaya are Khasi (33.82%) and Garo (31.60%) followed by Pnar (10.69%), Bengali (6.44%), Nepali (1.85%), War (1.73%), Hindi (1.62%), Hajong (1.40%) and Assamese (1.34%).[62]

Khasi (also spelled Khasia, Khassee, Cossyah, and Kyi) is a branch of the Mon–Khmer family of the Austroasiatic stock and according to 2001 census, Khasi is spoken by about 1,128,575 people residing in Meghalaya. Many words in the Khasi language have been borrowed from Indo-Aryan languages such as Assamese, Bengali and Nepali. Moreover, the Khasi language originally had no script of its own. The Khasi language is one of the very few surviving Mon–Khmer languages in India today.[citation needed]

The Garo language has a close affinity with the Bodo languages, a small family of Tibeto-Burman languages. Garo, spoken by the majority of the population, is spoken in many dialects such as Abeng or Ambeng,[64] Atong, Akawe (or Awe), Matchi Dual, Chibok, Chisak Megam or Lyngngam, Ruga, Gara-Ganching and Matabeng.

Pnar is spoken by many people of both the West and East Jaintia Hills. The language is related to the Khasi language. Apart from the main languages, various local dialect are being spoken by the War Jaintia (West Jaintia Hills), Maram and Lynngam (West Khasi Hills), War Pynursla (East Khasi Hills), Tiwa language by Tiwa peoples of Ri-Bhoi district. Another example is the Biate language spoken by many people inhabiting the south-eastern part of Meghalaya bordering Assam.[citation needed]

Indo-Aryan languages like Assamese, Bengali, Hajong, Hindi and Nepali are spoken by many people residing mostly in the East Khasi Hills district and the West Garo Hills district.[62]

English is spoken as a common language across the diverse ethnic and demographic groups. In urban centres most of the people can speak English; rural residents vary in their ability.[citation needed]

Districts

[edit]
An aerial view of the state capital, Shillong.

Meghalaya currently has 12 districts.[65]

Jaintia Hills Division:

Khasi Hills Division:

Garo Hills Division:

The Jaintia Hills district was created on 22 February 1972. It has a total geographical area of 3,819 square kilometres (1,475 sq mi) and a population of 295,692 as per the 2001 census. The district headquarters is in Jowai. Jaintia Hills district is the largest producer of coal in the state. Coal mines can be seen all over the district. Limestone production in the state is increasing, as there is high demand from cement industries. Recently, the one big district was divided into two: West Jaintia Hills and East Jaintia Hills

The East Khasi Hills district was carved out of the Khasi Hills on 28 October 1976. The district has covered an area of 2,748 square kilometres (1,061 sq mi) and has a population of 660,923 as per the 2001 census. The headquarters of East Khasi Hills is located in Shillong.

The Ri-Bhoi district was formed by the further division of East Khasi Hills district on 4 June 1992. It has an area of 2,448 square kilometres (945 sq mi). The total population of the district was 192,795 in the 2001 census. The district headquarters is at Nongpoh. It has a hilly terrain, and a large part of the area is covered with forests. The Ri-Bhoi district is known for its pineapples and is the largest producer of pineapples in the state.

The West Khasi Hills district is the largest district in the state with a geographical area of 5,247 square kilometres (2,026 sq mi). The district was carved out of Khasi Hills District on 28 October 1976. The district headquarters are located at Nongstoin.

The East Garo Hills district was formed in 1976 and has a population of 247,555 as per the 2001 census. It covers an area of 2,603 square kilometres (1,005 sq mi). The District Headquarters are at Williamnagar, earlier known as Simsangiri. Nongalbibra, a town in this district, has many coal mines. The coal is transported to Goalpara and Jogighopa via NH62.

The West Garo Hills district lies in the western part of the state and covers a geographical area of 3,714 square kilometres (1,434 sq mi). The population of the district is 515,813 as per the 2001 census. The district headquarters are located at Tura.

The South Garo Hills district came into existence on 18 June 1992 after the division of the West Garo Hills district. The total geographical area of the district is 1,850 square kilometres (710 sq mi). As per the 2001 census the district has a population of 99,100. The district headquarters are at Baghmara.

In 2012, there were 11 districts, 16 towns and an estimated 6,026 villages in Meghalaya.[66] A 12th district, Eastern West Khasi Hills, was created in 2021.[67]

The table below shows the human development index of various districts of Meghalaya, as of 2021.[68]

Human development index (HDI) of various districts of Meghalaya, as of 2021[68]
Rank District HDI score
1 East Khasi Hills 0.676
2 West Garo Hills 0.571
3 Ri Bhoi 0.496
4 South Garo Hills 0.484
5 Jaintia Hills 0.469
6 West Khasi Hills 0.405
7 East Garo Hills 0.396
Meghalaya 0.550

Education

[edit]
Indian Institute of Management, Shillong Campus

Meghalaya schools are run by the state government or by private organisations, including religious institutions. Instruction is only in English. Other Indian languages like Assamese, Bengali, Garo, Hindi, Khasi, Mizo, Nepali and Urdu are taught as optional subjects. The secondary schools are affiliated with the council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), the Central Board for Secondary Education (CBSE), the National Institute of Open School (NIOS) or the Meghalaya Board of School Education.

Under the 10+2+3 plan, after completing secondary school, students typically enroll for two years in a junior college, also known as pre-university, or in schools with a higher secondary facility affiliated with the Meghalaya Board of School Education or any central board. Students choose from one of three streams: liberal arts, commerce or science. Upon completing the required coursework, students may enroll in general or professional degree programs.

Colleges

[edit]
North-Eastern Hill University Campus, Mawlai, Shillong

Universities

[edit]

Government and politics

[edit]

Meghalaya's Governor is C. H. Vijayashankar since July 2024.[1]

State government

[edit]

The Meghalaya Legislative Assembly has 60 members at present. Meghalaya has two representatives in the Lok Sabha, one each from Shillong and Tura. It also has one representative in the Rajya Sabha.

Since the creation of the state the Gauhati High Court has jurisdiction in Meghalaya. A Circuit Bench of the Guwahati High Court has been functioning at Shillong since 1974. In March 2013, the Meghalaya High Court was separated from the Gauhati High Court and now the state has its own High Court.

Local self-government

[edit]
Autonomous District Councils in Northeast India

To provide local self-governance machinery to the rural population of the country, provisions were made in the Constitution of India; accordingly, the Panchayati Raj institutions were set up. Because of distinct customs and traditions prevalent in the northeast region, it was felt necessary to have a separate political and administrative structure in the region.[citation needed] Some of the tribal communities in the region had their own traditional political systems, and it was felt that Panchayati Raj institutions may come into conflict with these traditional systems. The Sixth Schedule was appended to the Constitution on the recommendations of a subcommittee formed under the leadership of Gopinath Bordoloi, and the constitution of Autonomous District Councils is provided in certain rural areas of the northeast including areas in Meghalaya. The ADCs in Meghalaya are the following:

Economy

[edit]

Meghalaya is predominantly an agrarian economy. Agriculture and allied activities engage nearly two-thirds of the total workforce in Meghalaya. This sector's contribution to the state's NSDP is about one-third. Agriculture in the state is characterised by low productivity and unsustainable farm practices. Despite the large percentage of the population engaged in agriculture, the state imports food from other Indian states.[citation needed] Infrastructural constraints have also prevented the economy of the state from creating high-income jobs at a pace commensurate with that of the rest of India.

Meghalaya's gross state domestic product for 2012 was estimated at 16,173 crore (US$1.9 billion) in current prices.[15] As of 2012, according to the Reserve Bank of India, about 12% of total state population is below the poverty line, with 12.5% of the rural Meghalaya population is below the poverty line; while in urban areas, 9.3% are below the poverty line.[71]

Agriculture

[edit]
Tea Plantation in Meghalaya, on the way to Shillong

Meghalaya is basically an agricultural state with about 80% of its population depending entirely on agriculture for their livelihood. Nearly 10% of the geographical area of Meghalaya is under cultivation. Agriculture in the state is characterised by limited use of modern techniques, low yields, and low productivity. As a result, despite the vast majority of the population being engaged in agriculture, the contribution of agricultural production to the state's GDP is low, and most of the population engaged in agriculture remain poor. A portion of the cultivated area is under the traditional shifting agriculture known locally as jhum.

Meghalaya produced 230,000 tonnes of food grains in 2001. Rice is the dominant food grain crop accounting for over 80% of the food grain production in the state. Other important food grain crops are maize, wheat, and a few other cereals and pulses. Besides these, potato, ginger, turmeric, black pepper, areca nut, Bay leaf (Cinnamomum tamala), betel, short-staple cotton, jute, mesta, mustard and rapeseed etc. are some of the important cash crops. Besides the major food crops of rice and maize, the state is renowned for its horticultural crops like orange, lemon, pineapple, guava, litchi, banana, jack fruits and fruits such as plum, pear, and peach.[72]

Agriculture in Kukon, Meghalaya

Grains and staples production covers about 60% of the land area dedicated to crops. With the introduction of different crops of high yielding varieties in the mid-1970s, a remarkable increase in food grain production has been made. A major breakthrough was achieved when high yielding varieties of paddy[73] such as Masuri, Pankaj IR 8, RCPL and other improved varieties series – especially IR 36 which is suitable for Rabi season – allowing three crops to be grown every year. Another milestone was reached when Megha I and Megha II, which are cold tolerant rice varieties developed by the ICAR North East Region at Umroi near Shillong, was released in 1991–92 for the higher altitude regions where there was no high yielding rice varieties earlier. Today the state can claim that about 42% area under paddy has been covered with high yielding varieties with the average productivity of 2,300 kg/ha (2,100 lb/acre). As is the case with maize and wheat where the productivity has increased tremendously with the introduction of HYV from 534 kg/ha (476 lb/acre) during 1971–72 to 1,218 kg/ha (1,087 lb/acre) of maize and from 611 kg/ha (545 lb/acre) to 1,490 kg/ha (1,330 lb/acre) of wheat.[74]

Oilseeds such as rapeseed, mustard, linseed, soybean, castor, and sesame are grown on nearly 100 km2 (39 sq mi). Rape and mustard are the most important oilseeds[75] accounting for well over two-thirds of the oilseed production of nearly 6.5 thousand tonnes. Fiber crops such as cotton, jute, and mesta are among the only cash crops in Meghalaya, grown in Garo Hills.[76] These have been losing popularity in recent years as indicated by their declining yield and area under cultivation.

Climatic conditions in Meghalaya permit a large variety of horticulture crops including fruits, vegetables, flowers, spices, mushrooms, and medicinal plants.[72] These are considered to be higher value crops, but home food security concerns have prevented farmers at large from embracing them. The important fruits grown include citrus fruits, pineapples, papayas, and bananas. In addition to this, a large variety of vegetables are grown in the state, including cauliflower, cabbages, and radishes.

Areca nut plantations can be seen all over the state, especially around the road from Guwahati to Shillong. Other plantation crops like tea, coffee and cashews have been introduced lately and are becoming common. A large variety of spices, flowers, medicinal plants and mushrooms are grown in the state.

Industry

[edit]
View of MCL Cement plant, Thangskai, P.O. Lumshnong, Jaintia Hills

Meghalaya has a rich base of natural resources. These include minerals such as coal, limestone, sillimanite, Kaolin and granite among others. Meghalaya has a large forest cover, rich biodiversity, and numerous water bodies. The low level of industrialisation and the relatively poor infrastructure base acts as an impediment to the exploitation of these natural resources in the interest of the state's economy. In recent years two large cement manufacturing plants with production capacity more than 900 MTD have come up in Jaintia Hills district and several more are in pipeline to use the rich deposit of very high-quality limestone available in this district.

Electricity infrastructure

[edit]
Meghalaya has abundant but undeveloped hydroelectric resources. Above is Mawphlang hydroelectric dam reservoir.

Meghalaya, with its high mountains, deep gorges, and abundant rains has a large, unused hydroelectric potential. The assessed generation capacity exceeds 3000 MW. The current installed capacity in the state is 185 MW, but the state itself consumes 610 MW. In other words, it imports electricity.[77] The economic growth of the state suggests rising demand for electricity. The state has the potential to export net hydroelectric-generated electricity and earn income for its internal development plans. The state also has large deposits of coal, thus being a candidate for thermal power plants.

Several projects are under works. The proposed Garo Hills thermal project at Nangalbibra is expected to generate an additional 751 MW of power. There is a proposal for setting up a 250 MW thermal power plant in West Khasi Hills. The State Government aims to increase its power generation output by about 2000-2500 MW, of which 700-980 MW will be thermal based while 1400-1520 MW will be hydroelectricity. The State Government has outlined a cost-shared public-private partnership model to accelerate private sector investments in its power sector.[78] The generation transmission, transformation and distribution of electricity is entrusted to the Meghalaya Energy Corporation Limited which was constituted under the Electricity Supply Act, 1948. At present, there are five hydel power stations and one mini hydel including Umiam Hydel Project, Umtrew Hydel Project, Myntdu-Leshka-I Hydel Project, and the Sunapani Micro Hydel (SESU) Project.

For the 12th five-year plan of India, there is a proposal to set up more hydel power projects in the state: Kynshi (450 MW), Umngi −1 (54 MW), Umiam-Umtru -V (36 MW), Ganol (25 MW), Mawphu (120 MW), Nongkolait (120 MW), Nongnaw (50 MW), Rangmaw (65 MW), Umngot (260 MW), Umduna (57 MW), Myntdu-Leshka-II (60 MW), Selim (170 MW) and Mawblei (140 MW).[79] Of these, Jaypee Group has committed itself to building the Kynshi and Umngot projects in Khasi hills.[80]

Education infrastructure

[edit]
St. Edmund's School, Shillong

Meghalaya had a literacy rate of 62.56 as per the 2001 census and is the 27th most literate state in India. This increased to 75.5 in 2011. As of 2006, the state had 5851 primary schools, 1759 middle schools, and 655 higher secondary schools respectively. In 2008, 518,000 students were enrolled in its primary schools, and 232,000 in upper primary schools. The state monitors its school for quality, access, infrastructure and teachers training.[81]

Institution for higher studies like Indian Institute of Management, the University of Technology and Management (USTM) which is in Shillong is the first Indian university to introduce cloud computing engineering as a field of study, in collaboration with IBM and the University of Petroleum and Energy Studies. IIM Shillong is one of the top ranked management institutes in the country.[82]

Health infrastructure

[edit]

The state has 13 state government dispensaries, 22 community health centres, 93 primary health centres, 408 sub-centres. There were 378 doctors, 81 pharmacists, 337 staff nurses and 77 lab technicians as of 2012. A special program has been launched by the state government for the treatment of tuberculosis, leprosy, cancer and mental diseases. Though there has been a steady decline in the death rate, improvement in life expectancy and an increase in health infrastructure, about 42.3% of the state's population is still uncovered by health care, according to the status paper prepared by the Health Department. There are numerous hospitals being set up, both private and government, some of them are Civil Hospital, Ganesh Das Hospital, K.J.P. Synod Hospital, NEIGRIHMS, North Eastern Institute of Ayurveda & Homoeopathy (NEIAH), R P Chest Hospital, Wood Land Hospital, Nazareth Hospital, Christian Hospital etc.

Urban areas

[edit]

New proposal for urban areas

[edit]

Culture and society

[edit]

The main tribes in Meghalaya are the Khasis, the Garos, and the Jaintias. Each tribe has its own culture, traditions, dress, and language.

Social institutions

[edit]
Garo Couple in traditional dress.

The majority of the population and the major tribal groups in Meghalaya follow a matrilineal system where lineage and inheritance are traced through women. The youngest daughter inherits all the property and she is the caretaker of aged parents and any unmarried siblings.[13] In some cases, such as when there is no daughter in the family or other reasons, the parents may nominate another girl such as a daughter in law as the heir of the house and all other property they may own.

The Khasi and Jaintia tribesmen follow the traditional matrilineal norm, wherein the Khun Khatduh (or the youngest daughter) inherits all the property and responsibilities for the family. The male line, particularly the mother's brother, may indirectly control the ancestral property since he may be involved in important decisions relating to property including its sale and disposal. In case a family has no daughters, the Khasi and Jaintia (also called Syntengs) have the custom of ia rap iing, where the family adopts a girl from another family, perform religious ceremonies with the community, and she then becomes ka trai iing (head of the house).[83]

In the Garo lineage system, the youngest daughter inherits the family property by default, unless another daughter is so named by the parents. She then becomes designated as nokna meaning 'for the house or home'. If there are no daughters, a chosen daughter-in-law (bohari) or an adopted child (deragata) comes to stay in the house and inherit the property. This adopted girl child is then the head of the house.[citation needed]

Meghalaya has one of the world's largest surviving matrilineal cultures.

Civil society

[edit]

Meghalaya's civil society considers the people of the state as a collective community that exists through civil society organisations (CSOs), and serves the general interests of the public.[84] These organisations include a wide spectrum of non-government organisations (NGOs), other community associations, and foundations. The current status of Meghalaya's civil society and the effectiveness of the many programs is debated by scholars.

There are currently over 181 NGOs within Meghalaya that vary from charities to volunteer services and social empowerment groups.[85][86] Most civil society organisations are also ethnically affiliated as the interests of different groups are championed between each organisation . This in turn causes them to become representatives of ethnic communities around the state since the same individuals from such communities also participate in corresponding organisations that protect their ethnic interests. Three student organisations that represent the major ethnic groups of Meghalaya: Khasi Students' Union (KSU), Jantia Students' Union (JSU), and Garo Students' Union (GSU) embody this example into their overall functions as CSOs by applying pressure to local government in order to ensure that certain rights are being met.[84]

There also exists many forms of community associations that revolve around the idea of community building. This includes examples such as sports, religious, educational, and other clubs that aim to establish individuals into different social circles based on their interests.[86]

Philanthropic foundations in Meghalaya's civil society strive for the overall well-being of its citizens. The Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) has recently partnered with the government of Meghalaya to improve public health in many rural parts of the state by first strengthening the abilities of non-government organisations to perform such services.[87]

Scholars are divided on the effectiveness Meghalaya's civil society. Some argue for its important role in state development through CSOs, while others point out that their impact is not only limited from above by the central government and its military, but also from below by insurgent groups.[88]

Concerns over national security, such as the unification of neighbouring hostile countries and local insurgent groups for a possible attack on the Indian state, has served as the longstanding point of emphasis on how the Indian Central Government operates in the Northeast. Different administrative programs have been created to establish peace and stability in this region through economic development.[89] The Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) that was passed in 1958 by the Indian Government granted the Indian Army exclusive powers to maintain order in this area. Many insurgent organisations were also developed alongside cultural and political movements, making it very difficult to distinguish them from what constitutes a civil society.[88] These two factors have combined to enable CSOs to be easily deemed as insurgencies and grouped with other insurgent organisations that were banned by the government, thus restricting Meghalaya's civil society as a whole.[88][90]

Traditional political institutions

[edit]

All the three major ethnic tribal groups, namely, the Khasis, Jaintias and the Garos also have their own traditional political institutions that have existed for hundreds of years. These political institutions were fairly well developed and functioned at various tiers, such as the village level, clan level, and state level.[91]

In the traditional political system of the Khasis, each clan has its own council known as the Dorbar Kur which is presided over by the clan headman. The council or the Dorbar managed the internal affairs of the clan. Similarly, every village has a local assembly known as the Dorbar Shnong, i.e. village Durbar or council, which is presided over by the village headman. The inter-village issues were dealt with through a political unit comprising adjacent Khasi Villages. The local political units are known as the raids, under by the supreme political authority is known as the Syiemship. The Syiemship is the congregation of several raids and is headed an elected chief known as the Syiem or Siem (the king).[91] The Siem rules the Khasi state through an elected State Assembly, known as the Durbar Hima. The Siem also has his mantris (ministers) whose counsel he would use in exercising executive responsibilities. Taxes were called pynsuk, and tolls were called khrong, the latter being the primary source of state income. In the early 20th century, Raja Dakhor Singh was the Siem of Khymir.[91]

Meghalaya
festival[92]
Local
calendar month
Vedic
calendar month
Gregorian
calendar month
Den'bilsia Polgin Phalgun February
A'siroka Chuet Chaitra March
A' galmaka Pasak Vaisakha April
Miamua Asal Asharha June
Rongchugala Bado Bhadra August
Ahaia Asin Ashwin September
Wangala Gate Kartika October
Christmas Posi Pausha December

The Jaintias also have a three-tier political system somewhat similar to the Khasis, including the Raids and the Syiem.[93] The raids are headed by Dolois, who are responsible for performing the executive and ceremonial functions at the Raid level. At the lowest level are the village headmen. Each administrative tier has its own elected councils or durbars.

In the traditional political system of the Garos, a group of Garo villages form the A·king. The A·king functions under the supervision of the Nokmas, which is perhaps the only political and administrative authority in the political institution of the Garos. The Nokma performs both judicial and legislative functions. The Nokmas also congregates to address inter-A·king issues. There are no well-organised councils or durbars among the Garos.[citation needed]

Festivals

[edit]
Mary Help of Christians Cathedral, Shillong
Christmas

Being a Christian majority state, Christmas is one of the biggest festivals of Meghalaya, celebrated in almost all of the parts of the state—villages, towns with great fervour and enthusiasm by native Christian Tribes.[94][95] The entire state comes alive with Christmas trees, carols and lights during 25 December. Shillong and Cherrapunji are best destination for tourists who want to see and celebrate Christmas.[96]

Dance of Meghalaya
Khasis

Dance is central to the culture of Khasi life, and a part of the rites of passage. Dances are performed in Shnong (village), a Raid (group of villages), and a Hima (conglomeration of Raids). Some festivals includes Ka Shad Suk Mynsiem, Ka Pom-Blang Nongkrem, Ka-Shad Shyngwiang-Thangiap, Ka-Shad-Kynjoh Khaskain, Ka Bam Khana Shnong, Umsan Nongkharai, Shad Beh Sier.[92]

Jaintias

Festivals of the Jaintia Hills, like others, is integral to the culture of people of Jaintia Hills. It celebrates nature, balance and solidarity among its people. Festivals of Jaintias includes Behdienkhlam, Laho Dance, Sowing Ritual Ceremony.[92]

Garos

For Garos, festivals sustain their cultural heritage. They were often dedicated to religious events, nature and seasons as well as community events such as stages of jhum cultivation. The main festivals of Garos are Den Bilsia, Wangala, Rongchu gala, Mi Amua, Mangona, Grengdik BaA, Jamang Sia, Ja Megapa, Sa Sat Ra Chaka, Ajeaor Ahaoea, Dore Rata Dance, Chambil Mesara, Do'KruSua, Saram Cha'A, A Se Mania or Tata.[92]

Hajongs

Hajongs celebrate traditional festivals and Hindu festivals. The entire plain belt of Garo Hills is inhabited by the Hajongs, they are an agrarian tribe. Major traditional festivals include Pusne', Biswe', Kati Gasa, Bastu Puje' and Chor Maga.

Biates

The Biates had many kinds of festivals, including Nûlding Kût, Pamchar Kût, Lebang Kût and Favang Kût, for different occasions. They no longer practise or observe most, except Nûlding Kût ("renewal of life") every January, with singing, dancing and traditional games. A priest (thiampu) prays to Chung Pathian to bless Biates in every sphere of life.

Spirituality

[edit]

In southern Meghalaya, located in Mawsynram, is the Mawjymbuin cave. Here a massive stalagmite has been shaped by nature into a Shivalinga. According to legend, from the 13th century, this Shivalinga (called Hatakeswarat) has existed in the Jaintia Hills under the reign of Ranee Singa.[97] Tens of thousands of the Jaintia tribe members participate over the Hindu festival of Shivratri (Night of Lord Shiva) every year.[98][99]

Living root bridges

[edit]
Double-Decker Living root bridge, Nongriat village.

The practice of creating living root bridges can be found in Meghalaya. Here, functional, living, architecture is created by slowly training the aerial roots of the Ficus elastica (rubber tree). Examples of these structures can be found as far west as the valley east of Mawsynram,[100] and as far east as the East Jaintia Hills District,[101] meaning that they are made by both Khasis and Jaintias. Large numbers[102] of these man-made living structures exist in the mountainous terrain along the southern border of the Shillong Plateau, though as a cultural practice they are fading, with many individual examples having disappeared recently, either falling in landslides or floods or being replaced with more standard steel bridges.[103]

Transport

[edit]

The partition of the country in 1947 created severe infrastructural constraints for the Northeastern region, with merely 2% of the perimeter of the region adjoining the rest of the country. A narrow strip of land often called the Siliguri Corridor or the Chicken's Neck, connects the region with the state of West Bengal. Meghalaya is a landlocked state with many small settlements in remote areas. The road is the only means of transport. While the capital Shillong is relatively well connected, road connectivity in most other parts is relatively poor. A significant portion of the roads in the state is still unpaved. Most of the arrivals into the Meghalaya take place through Guwahati in neighbouring Assam, which is nearly 103 km away. Assam has a major railhead as well as an airport with regular train and air services to the rest of the country.

When Meghalaya was carved out of Assam as an autonomous state in 1972, it inherited a total road length of 2786.68 km including 174 km of National Highways with road density of 12.42 km per 100 square kilometre. By 2004, total road length has reached up to 9,350 km out of which 5,857 km were surfaced. The road density had increased to 41.69 km per 100 square kilometre by March 2011. Meghalaya is far below the national average of 75 km per 100 km2. To provide better services to the people of the state, the Meghalaya Public Works Department is taking steps for improvement and up-gradation of the existing roads and bridges in phased manner.[66]

Road network

[edit]

Meghalaya has a road network of around 7,633 km, out of which 3,691 km is black-topped and the remaining 3942 km is gravelled. Meghalaya is also connected to Silchar in Assam, Aizawl in Mizoram, and Agartala in Tripura through national highways. Many private buses and taxi operators carry passengers from Guwahati to Shillong. The journey takes from 3 to 4 hours. Day and night bus services are available from Shillong to all major towns of Meghalaya and also other capitals and important towns of Assam and the northeastern states.

Railway

[edit]

Meghalaya has a railhead at Mendipathar and regular train service connecting Mendipathar in Meghalaya and Guwahati in Assam, has started on 30 November 2014.[104] The Cherra Companyganj State Railways was a former mountain railway through the state.[105] Guwahati (103 kilometres (64 mi) from Shillong) is the nearest major railway station connecting the north-east region with the rest of the country through a broad gauge track network. There is a plan for extending the rail link from Guwahati to Byrnihat (20 kilometres (12 mi) from Guwahati) within Meghalaya and further extending it up to state capital Shillong.

Aviation

[edit]

State capital Shillong has an airport at Umroi 30 kilometres (19 mi) from Shillong on the Guwahati-Shillong highway. A new terminal building was built at a cost of 30 crore (US$3.5 million) and inaugurated in June 2011.[106] Air India Regional operates flights to Kolkata from this airport. There is also a helicopter service connecting Shillong to Guwahati and Tura. Baljek Airport near Tura became operational in 2008.[107] The Airports Authority of India (AAI) is developing the airport for operation of ATR 42/ATR 72 type of aircraft.[108] Other nearby airports are in Assam, with Borjhar, Guwahati airport (IATA: GAU), about 124 kilometres (77 mi) from Shillong.

Tourism

[edit]
Elephant Falls
Krang Suri Waterfall
Umiam Lake, Shillong, Meghalaya, India

Until 1955, foreign tourists required special permits to enter the areas that now constitute the state of Meghalaya, which is sometimes compared to Scotland for its highlands, fog and scenery.[13] Meghalaya has some of the thickest primary forests in the country and therefore constitutes one of the most important ecotourism circuits in India. The Meghalaya subtropical forests support a vast variety of flora and fauna. The state has two national parks and three wildlife sanctuaries.

Meghalaya also offers many adventure tourism opportunities in the form of mountaineering, rock climbing, trekking, and hiking, caving (spelunking) and water sports. The state offers several trekking routes, some of which also afford an opportunity to encounter rare animals. The Umiam Lake has a water sports complex with facilities such as rowboats, paddleboats, sailing boats, cruise-boats, water-scooters, and speedboats.

Cherrapunji is a tourist destination in north-east India. It lies to the south of the capital Shillong. A rather scenic 50-kilometre long road connects Cherrapunji with Shillong.

Living root bridges are also a tourist draw, with many examples located near Cherrapunji.[109] The Double-Decker root bridge, along with several others, is found in the village of Nongriat, which is tourist friendly. Many other root bridges can be found nearby, in the villages of Nongthymmai, Mynteng, and Tynrong.[100] Other areas with root bridges include Riwai village, near the tourist village of Mawlynnong, Pynursla, especially the villages of Rangthyllaing and Mawkyrnot, and the area around Dawki, in the West Jaintia Hills district, where there are many living root bridges scattered throughout the nearby villages.[101]

Waterfalls and rivers
Multiple drops of Nohkalikai Falls
Main drop of Nohkalikai Falls
Nohkalikai Falls is one of the tallest plunge type waterfalls in India and on Earth.[110]

The most visited waterfalls in the state include the Elephant Falls, Shadthum Falls, Weinia Falls, Bishop Falls, Nohkalikai Falls, Langshiang Falls and Sweet Falls.[citation needed] The hot springs at Jakrem near Mawsynram are believed to have curative and medicinal properties.

Nongkhnum Island located in the West Khasi Hills district is the biggest river island in Meghalaya and the second biggest in Asia. It is 14 kilometres from Nongstoin. The island is formed by the bifurcation of Kynshi River into the Phanliang River and the Namliang River. Adjacent to the sandy beach the Phanliang River forms a lake. The river then moves along and before reaching a deep gorge, forms a waterfall about 60 meters high called Shadthum Fall.

Sacred groves

Meghalaya is also known for its "sacred groves". They are small or large areas of forests or natural vegetation that are usually dedicated to local folk deities or tree spirits or some religious symbolism over many generations, often since ancient times. These spaces are found all over India, are protected by local communities, and in some cases, the locals would neither touch leaves or fruits or in other ways damage the forest, flora or fauna taking refuge in them. This guardianship creates a sacred area where nature and wildlife thrive. The Mawphlang sacred forest, also known as "Law Lyngdoh," is one of the most famous sacred forests in Meghalaya. It's located about 25 kilometres from Shillong. It's a scenic nature destination, and one can find the sacred Rudraksha tree here.[111]

Rural areas

Meghalaya rural life and villages offer a glimpse in northeast mountain life.[tone] The Mawlynnong village located near the India-Bangladesh border is one such village. It has been featured by travel magazine Discover India.[112] The village is geared for tourism and has a Living Root Bridges, hiking trails and rock formations.

Umaim lake (top & bottom) and scenery near Shillong.
Lakes

Meghalaya also has many natural and manmade lakes. The Umiam Lake (popularly known as Bara Pani meaning Big water) on the Guwahati-Shillong road is a major tourism attraction for tourist. Meghalaya has several parks; Thangkharang Park, the Eco-park, the Botanical Garden and Lady Hydari Park to name a few. Dawki, which is located at about 96 Kilometres from Shillong is the gateway to Bangladesh and affords a scenic view of some of the tallest mountain ranges in Meghalaya and the Bangladesh borderlands.

Thadlaskein Lake also Pung Sajar Nangli is the only historical Lake of Meghalaya. It is located besides National Highway 6 by the side of a small village called Mukhla village which falls under West Jaintia Hills district Jowai. It is about 35 mile from the city of Shillong

Balpakram National Park with its pristine habitat and scenery is a major attraction.[113] The Nokrek National Park, also in Garo Hills has its own charm with a lot of wildlife.[114]

Caves

Meghalaya has an estimated 500 natural limestone and sandstone caves spread over the entire state including most of the longest and deepest caves in the sub-continent. Krem Liat Prah is the longest cave, and Synrang Pamiang is the deepest cave. Both are located in the Jaintia Hills. Cavers from the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, Ireland, and the United States have been visiting Meghalaya for over a decade exploring these caves. Few have been developed or promoted adequately as major tourist destinations.

Living root bridges

Meghalaya is famous for its living root bridges, a kind of suspension bridge made over rivers using intertwined roots of Ficus elastica trees planted on opposite banks of the river or hill slopes. These bridges can be seen around Cherrapunji, Nongtalang, Kudeng Rim and Kudeng Thymmai villages (War Jaintia). A double-decker bridge exists in Nongriat village.

Other important places of tourism interest Meghalaya include:

  • Jakrem: 64 km from Shillong, a potential health resort having gushing hot-spring of sulphur water, believed to have curative medicinal properties.
  • Ranikor: 140 km from Shillong, is one of Meghalaya's most popular spots for angling, with an abundance of carp and other freshwater fish.
  • Dawki: 96 km from Shillong, is a border town, where one can have a glimpse of the neighbouring country of Bangladesh. The colourful annual boat race during spring at the Umngot river is an added attraction.
  • Kshaid Dain Thlen Falls: Located near Cherrapunji, meaning the falls where the mythical monster of Khasi legend was finally butchered. The axe-marks made on the rocks where Thlen was butchered are stillintact and visible.
  • Diengiei Peak: Located to the west of the Shillong plateau, Diengiei Peak is just 200 feet lower than Shillong peak. On the top of Diengiei, there is a huge hollow, shaped like a cup, believed to be the crater of an extinct pre-historic volcano.
  • Dwarksuid: A scenic pool with wide, rocky sandbanks located on a stream alongside the Umroi-Bhoilymbong Road is known as Dwarksuid or Devil's doorway.[citation needed]
  • Kyllang Rock: Located about 11 kilometres off Mairang, is a several million years old steep dome of red granite rising to an elevation of about 5400 feet above sea level.
  • Sacred Forest Mawphlang: One of the most celebrated sacred-groves of the State is the grove at Mawphlang about 25 kilometres off Shillong. Preserved since time immemorial, these sacred groves have wide range of flora, thick cushion of humus on the grounds accumulated over the centuries, and trees heavily loaded with epiphytic growth of aroids, pipers, ferns, fern-allies and orchids.

Major issues

[edit]

The significant issues in the state include illegal migrants from Bangladesh, incidences of violence, political instability and deforestation from traditional cut-and-burn shift farming practices. There are several clashes between Khasi people and Bangladeshi in Meghalaya.

Illegal immigration

[edit]

Illegal immigration has become a major issue in Indian states that surround Bangladesh – West Bengal to the west, Meghalaya and Assam to the north, and Tripura, Mizoram, and Manipur to the east.[115] Dozens of political and civic groups have demanded that this migration be stopped or controlled to manageable levels.[116] The border between Meghalaya and Bangladesh is about 440 kilometres long, of which some 350 is fenced; but the border is not continuously patrolled and is porous. Efforts are underway to fence it completely and introduce means to issue ID cards.[117]

Chief Minister Mukul Sangma, in August 2012, called upon Government of India to take corrective measures to stop the illegal immigration of Bangladeshis into the northeast of the country before the situation goes out of hand.[118]

Violence

[edit]

Between 2006 and 2013, between 0 and 28 civilians have died per year in Meghalaya (or about 0 to 1 per 100,000 people), which the state authorities have classified as terror-related intentional violence.[119] The world's average annual death rate from intentional violence, in recent years, has been 7.9 per 100,000 people.[120] The terror-related deaths are from conflicts primarily between different tribal groups and against migrants from Bangladesh. Along with political resolution and dialogue, various Christian organisations have taken the initiative to prevent violence and help the process of discussion between groups.[121]

There have been repeated clashes with Assam e.g. Mukroh.[122]

Political instability

[edit]

The state has had 23 state governments since its inception in 1972, with a median life span of less than 18 months. Only three governments have survived more than three years. Political instability has affected the state's economy in the past.[123] Over recent years, there has been increasing political stability. The last state assembly elections were held in 2013, after a five-year government that was elected in 2008.[124]

Jhum farming

[edit]
Jhum cultivation, or cut-and-burn shift farming, in Nokrek Biosphere Reserve of Meghalaya.

Jhum farming, or cut-and-burn shift cultivation, is an ancient practice in Meghalaya.[24] It is culturally engrained through folklores. One legend states the god of wind with the god of hail and storm shook off seeds from the celestial tree, which were picked up and sown by a bird known as do' amik. These were the seeds of rice. The god gave the human beings some of those celestial seeds, provided instruction on shift agriculture and proper rice cultivation practice, with the demand that at every harvest a portion of the first harvest must be dedicated to him. Another folktale is from the Garo Hills of Meghalaya where a man named Bone-Neripa-Jane-Nitepa harvested rice and millet from a patch of land he cleared and cultivated near the rock named misi-Kokdok. He then shared this knowledge with others, and named the different months of the year, each of which is a stage of shifting cultivation.[125]

In modern times, shift cultivation is a significant threat to the biodiversity of Meghalaya.[126] A 2001 satellite imaging study showed that shift cultivation practice continues and patches of primary dense forests are lost even from areas protected as biosphere.[127] Jhum farming is a threat not only for natural biodiversity, it is also a low yield unproductive method of agriculture. It is a significant issue in Meghalaya, given majority of its people rely on agriculture to make a living.[128][129] Shift farming is a practice that is not unique to northeastern Indian states such as Meghalaya, but the issue is found throughout southeast Asia.[130]

Media

[edit]

Some major media outlets in the state are:[citation needed]

  • Meghalaya Times: Meghalaya Times is one of the new entrants in the market and the fastest growing English newspaper in the state. In a short period of time, it has already established large readership across the state.
  • Salantini Janera: Salantini Janera is the first Garo language Daily of the state
  • Shillong Samay: Shillong Samay is the first Hindi Daily of the State.
  • Shillong Times: Shillong Times is one of the oldest English newspapers of the region.
  • The Meghalaya Guardian: The Meghalaya Guardian is one of the oldest newspapers of the state.

Over the years there have been several weeklies and Dailies that have come up. To name a few:

  • The Tura Times: The Tura Times is the first English Daily which is published out from Tura.
  • Salantini Ku'rang: Salantini Ku'rang is the Garo edition of The Tura Times, Pringprangni Aski being the most recent Garo language newspaper to circulate.
  • U Nongsaiñ Hima: U Nongsaiñ Hima is the oldest circulating Khasi newspaper in Meghalaya. Established in December 1960, it is now the highest circulated Khasi daily (ABC July – December 2013).
  • 'Mawphor': It is one of the daily newspaper circulating in Jowai, Meghalaya.

Weekly Employment Newsletter which is distributed throughout the state:

  • Shillong Weekly Express: Weekly Newsletter that was started in 2010.
  • Eclectic northeast

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Meghalaya (Hindi: मेघालय), meaning "abode of the clouds," is a hilly state in northeastern India formed on 21 January 1972 by separating the Khasi, Jaintia, and Garo Hills districts from Assam. The state has its capital at Shillong and covers an area of 22,429 square kilometers. As per the 2011 census, Meghalaya's population stood at 2,966,889, with a density of 132 persons per square kilometer and a literacy rate of 74.43 percent. It is bordered by Assam to the north and east and by Bangladesh to the south and west, featuring rugged terrain with plateaus, gorges, and abundant forests. The state's population is predominantly tribal, comprising mainly the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia (Pnar) communities, who speak Austroasiatic and Tibeto-Burman languages alongside English as an official language. Meghalaya is noted for its extreme rainfall, driven by monsoon winds from the Bay of Bengal, with Cherrapunji recording the world record of 26,470 millimeters in a single year from August 1860 to July 1861. This precipitation supports rich biodiversity, including unique flora like the carnivorous pitcher plant Nepenthes khasiana and fauna such as the hoolock gibbon, while fostering agriculture centered on crops like rice, maize, and horticultural produce such as pineapples and oranges. Economically, over 80 percent of the population relies on agriculture, supplemented by small-scale industries and emerging sectors like tourism drawn to its waterfalls, caves, and living root bridges—a type of simple suspension bridge formed from living plant roots by tree shaping, handmade from the aerial roots of rubber fig trees (Ficus elastica) over several generations and common among the Khasi people.

Etymology

Name origin and symbolism

The name Meghalaya derives from the Sanskrit compound words megha ("cloud") and ālaya ("abode" or "residence"), translating literally to "abode of clouds." This etymological structure parallels other Sanskrit-derived geographical terms, such as Himālaya ("abode of snow"), emphasizing the region's defining environmental features. The term was coined in 1936 by geographer Shiba Prasad Chatterjee to designate the elevated Shillong Plateau, an isolated massif protruding westward from the Naga Hills, distinct from surrounding lowlands. Chatterjee, known for his pioneering work in Indian regional geography, selected the name to highlight the plateau's unique physiography and climate, which he mapped extensively in the early 20th century. Upon Meghalaya's formation as a state on January 21, 1972, the indigenous Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia communities adopted this externally proposed name, reflecting a preference for a descriptive, non-ethnic identifier over tribal-specific alternatives. Symbolically, the name encapsulates the area's perennial cloud cover, mists, and extreme precipitation, with locales like Mawsynram and Cherrapunji (Sohra) recording annual rainfall exceeding 11,000 mm, among the highest globally. This climatic identity underscores causal links between the plateau's orographic lift—where moist monsoon winds ascend the escarpment, condensing into persistent clouds—and its biodiversity, hydrology, and cultural perceptions of the landscape as a misty, cloud-enshrouded realm. The designation thus serves not as a political emblem but as an empirical descriptor of meteorological reality, validated by long-term rainfall data from British colonial records onward. ![Meghalaya Abode of the Clouds landscape][center]

History

Pre-colonial tribal societies

The pre-colonial societies of Meghalaya were dominated by three primary indigenous groups—the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia (also known as Pnar)—who inhabited the region's hills and maintained autonomous tribal structures without external centralized control. These societies emphasized matrilineal kinship, tracing descent, inheritance, and clan membership through the female line, which shaped family organization, property rights, and social obligations. Economic activities centered on slash-and-burn agriculture (jhum cultivation), hunting, gathering forest resources, and participation in regional trade networks linking the hills to the plains. Khasi society comprised a loose confederacy of over 100 independent chiefdoms or syiemships, each governed by a hereditary syiem (chief) selected from matrilineal clans through councils of clan heads and elders (dorbar). Clans, known as kur, were exogamous, with the youngest daughter (khatduh) inheriting ancestral property and authority, while males held nominal leadership roles but deferred to maternal lineage in disputes and succession. Villages operated semi-autonomously, with inter-chiefdom relations characterized by alliances, raids, and warfare over territory and resources, fostering a decentralized political landscape. Garo communities organized around exogamous matrilineal clans called machong, which defined social identity, marriage prohibitions, and resource sharing, with villages led by a nokma—the senior male from the maternal line responsible for land allocation, dispute resolution, and ritual duties. Family units were typically nuclear, comprising husband, wife, and children, though extended kin supported cooperative jhum farming and communal hunts; inheritance passed to the youngest daughter, ensuring clan continuity. Political authority remained localized at the village level, with minimal hierarchical structures beyond clan elders, emphasizing consensus in governance. In contrast, Jaintia society formed a more unified kingdom through the amalgamation of the Sutnga hill domain and the Jayanti plains realm around the 16th century, centered at Jaintiapur with a monarchical syiem advised by nobles (dollois) overseeing territorial divisions. Retaining matrilineal descent for inheritance and clan ties, the kingdom administered trade in betel nut, elephants, and forest products along routes to Bengal, supported by a standing militia and taxation systems that centralized power more than in Khasi or Garo polities. Royal lineages claimed descent from ancient rulers, legitimizing authority through oral traditions and megalithic monuments.

British colonial administration

The British East India Company first established contact with the tribal polities of the Khasi Hills in the early 19th century, primarily to secure a direct overland route connecting the Bengal plains to Assam following the Treaty of Yandabo in 1826, which ceded Assam to British control. David Scott, the inaugural British political agent for the North-East Frontier, negotiated treaties with several Khasi syiems (chiefs) in 1828–1829 to permit construction of the Nongkhyllem road, but these agreements imposed demands for free labor (begar) and transit duties, sparking resistance. This culminated in the Anglo-Khasi War of 1829–1833, led by Tirot Sing Syiem of Nongkhlaw, who mobilized allied chiefs against British encroachment; the conflict involved guerrilla tactics by Khasi warriors armed with traditional weapons against British forces equipped with muskets and artillery. By 1833, British military expeditions suppressed the uprising, resulting in the annexation of the Khasi Hills; the region was placed under the political jurisdiction of the Governor-General's Agent to the North-East Frontier in 1834, with a dedicated political agency established shortly thereafter to oversee indirect rule through compliant syiems while curtailing their autonomy. The Jaintia Kingdom, contiguous to the south, faced similar pressures and was fully annexed in 1835 after disputes escalated, including the kidnapping of British subjects and violations at sacred sites, leading to the deposition of Raja Ram Singh and direct British governance. In the Garo Hills, British consolidation proceeded more gradually amid sporadic raids and opposition to forced labor; initial zamindari claims were overridden by 1822, but formal control was asserted through military expeditions in 1872–1873, following earlier policing efforts from 1865, with the district separated from Goalpara and placed under a dedicated deputy commissioner by 1870. Across these hill tracts, administration emphasized exclusionary policies, including the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation of 1873 (extending the Inner Line), which restricted non-tribal entry and land transfers to preserve tribal customs while facilitating extraction of resources like timber and limestone. Shillong, selected for its temperate climate, served as the administrative headquarters from the 1860s and became the summer capital of Assam Province in 1874, housing key offices and European settlers. British governance differentiated the hills as "backward tracts" under the Government of India Act 1919, exempting them from provincial legislatures and maintaining rule via political officers who mediated between tribal councils and imperial interests, though this often eroded traditional authority through taxation and missionary-influenced reforms. Resistance persisted, as seen in Garo leader Sonaram Sangma's campaigns against begar in the mid-19th century, reflecting ongoing tensions over colonial impositions.

Integration into India and state formation

Following India's independence on August 15, 1947, the hill districts of Khasi, Jaintia, and Garo—territories that would form Meghalaya—were incorporated into the state of Assam, with special administrative provisions under the Sixth Schedule of the Indian Constitution to preserve tribal autonomy and customary laws. These arrangements recognized the distinct ethnic and cultural identities of the predominantly tribal hill populations, separate from the Assamese plains majority, amid growing demands for self-governance driven by linguistic, administrative, and resource-sharing disparities. Agitation for a separate hill state intensified in the 1960s, led by organizations such as the All Party Hill Leaders' Conference, culminating in the Assam Legislative Assembly's passage of legislation to create an interim autonomous entity. On April 2, 1970, Meghalaya was established as an autonomous state within Assam under the Assam Reorganisation (Meghalaya) Act, 1969, granting it legislative and executive powers over local affairs while remaining subordinate to the Assam government. This transitional status addressed immediate tribal aspirations without immediate full separation, reflecting India's federal approach to Northeast integration by balancing unity with regional distinctiveness. The push for complete statehood persisted, supported by parliamentary action through the North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971, which reorganized Assam by carving out the specified hill districts into a fully independent state. Meghalaya attained full statehood on January 21, 1972, becoming India's 21st state with Shillong as its capital, marking the culmination of negotiated autonomy rather than conflict-driven partition. The formation preserved the Sixth Schedule's tribal protections, including autonomous district councils for Khasi, Jaintia, and Garo areas, ensuring continuity of indigenous governance structures within the Indian Union.

Geography and Environment

Topography and borders

Meghalaya comprises the Garo Hills in the west, the Khasi Hills in the center, and the Jaintia Hills in the east, forming a dissected plateau region of the Shillong Plateau, which is a detached northeastern extension of the Indian Plateau. The terrain features undulating hills, high plateaus, deep river valleys, gorges, and extensive karst landscapes in limestone-dominated southern areas of the Garo, Khasi, and Jaintia Hills. Elevations vary significantly, ranging from approximately 50 meters above mean sea level in the northern river valleys to 1,965 meters at Shillong Peak, the state's highest point in the Khasi Hills. The Garo Hills, generally lower than the eastern ranges, rise abruptly from the Brahmaputra Valley to around 300 meters before merging into the higher Khasi Hills, with Nokrek Peak at 1,412 meters as a notable elevation. The central Khasi Hills plateau averages about 1,500 meters, characterized by rolling uplands and steep escarpments, while the Jaintia Hills to the east exhibit similar hilly topography with altitudes decreasing eastward. The state's total area spans 22,429 square kilometers, predominantly covered by these hill systems interspersed with narrow alluvial valleys and fast-flowing rivers that contribute to numerous waterfalls and canyons. Meghalaya shares its northern and eastern borders with Assam, extending approximately 884.9 kilometers, while its southern and western boundaries abut Bangladesh over a length of 443 kilometers. These borders traverse varied terrains, including porous riverine sections along the southern plains and more defined hill demarcations to the north, with ongoing inter-state disputes in select Assam-Meghalaya sectors influencing boundary management. The state's compact, elongated shape aligns roughly east-west, bounded by latitudes 25°02' to 26°07' N and longitudes 89°49' to 92°50' E.

Climate patterns

Meghalaya features a subtropical monsoon climate dominated by the southwest monsoon, delivering the majority of its precipitation between June and September, with the state experiencing high humidity and frequent cloud cover year-round due to orographic lift from its hilly terrain. Annual rainfall averages vary markedly by region and elevation; the Garo Hills in the north receive approximately 4,850 mm annually, while the southern Khasi-Jaintia plateau sees extremes exceeding 11,000 mm, driven by moist winds from the Bay of Bengal ascending the southern slopes. Mawsynram village holds the record for the highest average annual precipitation at 11,873 mm (1941–1978 data), surpassing nearby Cherrapunji's long-term average of 11,621 mm (1973–2020). Post-monsoon (October–November) and winter (December–February) periods are relatively drier, with occasional cyclonic disturbances bringing light rain, though the highlands maintain misty conditions. Temperatures remain moderate owing to elevations between 1,000 and 2,000 meters, with statewide summer highs (March–May) typically 20–25°C and winter lows dipping to 5–10°C in higher areas like Shillong, where annual means hover around 18°C. The lowlands experience warmer summers up to 30°C with higher humidity, contrasting the cooler, more temperate highlands. Pre-monsoon thunderstorms (locally called wal-lukhain) contribute sporadic heavy downpours from April to May. Recent analyses of IMD data indicate stable long-term rainfall patterns but localized variability, with no significant statewide declining trend despite occasional dry spells in rain-shadow northern districts.

Biodiversity, resources, and conservation

Meghalaya's subtropical forests form part of the Indo-Burma biodiversity hotspot, hosting exceptional floral diversity with approximately 3,128 species of flowering plants, representing 18% of India's total flora, including over 1,200 endemic species. Among these, 115 plant species are exclusively endemic to the state, with epiphytes comprising 25.4% and trees 25% of the endemic taxa. Fauna includes over 110 mammal species, such as the hoolock gibbon (Hoolock hoolock), the state animal, alongside diverse birds, reptiles, and insects adapted to the region's high rainfall and varied topography. Sacred groves, traditional community-protected forests, serve as refugia for ancient and endemic species, functioning as natural seed banks amid surrounding habitat pressures. The state's natural resources are dominated by minerals, with substantial deposits of coal, limestone, kaolin, clay, granite, glass sand, and uranium supporting extraction activities that contribute to local employment and economy. Coal and limestone mining have seen significant output over decades, though much remains untapped due to regulatory and environmental constraints. Limestone extraction, often via open-cast methods in areas like Jaintia Hills, supplies cement industries, while coal mining, predominantly rat-hole style, has historically driven informal sector growth despite bans implemented since 2014 to curb illegal operations. Conservation efforts center on protected areas like Nokrek National Park and Biosphere Reserve in Garo Hills, designated in 1986 and 1988 respectively, which safeguard wild citrus genetic diversity and diverse ecosystems against encroachment. Balphakram National Park protects semi-evergreen and grassland habitats, while community-managed forests and sacred groves aid in preserving plant diversity under traditional stewardship. However, threats persist from deforestation, which reduced tree cover by 243,000 hectares (14% of 2000 levels) between 2001 and 2024, releasing 136 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent. Mining exacerbates habitat loss, soil erosion, acid mine drainage, and water contamination, diminishing biodiversity and spring recharge in fragile ecosystems. Initiatives like community reforestation and landscape management programs, supported by international aid, aim to restore degraded hillsides and mitigate these impacts through sustainable practices.

Demographics

Population growth and density

As of the 2011 Census of India, Meghalaya's population totaled 2,966,889, marking a decennial growth rate of 27.82% between 2001 and 2011—the highest among India's northeastern states—driven primarily by high fertility rates in its predominantly tribal communities. The state's annual population growth has since moderated to approximately 0.9% as of projections for the early 2020s, comparable to the national average, with estimates placing the population at around 3.3 million by 2021 amid delays in the 2021 census due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This deceleration reflects declining birth rates, though the natural increase remained at 17.6 per 1,000 population in 2020, above the national figure. Meghalaya's overall population density stands at 132 persons per square kilometer (based on 22,429 square kilometers of area), significantly below India's national density of 382, owing to its steep topography, extensive forests, and limited arable land that constrain settlement patterns. Over 80% of the population remains rural, with urban centers like Shillong accounting for concentrated growth; rural densities are particularly sparse in remote hilly districts, exacerbating infrastructure challenges. District-wise densities vary markedly, reflecting geographic and economic disparities:
DistrictArea (sq km)2011 PopulationDensity (persons/sq km)
East Khasi Hills2,748825,922292
West Garo Hills2,941643,291219
Ri-Bhoi2,448259,296106
West Khasi Hills5,247385,72674
Jaintia Hills3,819395,12458
East Garo Hills2,603317,917122
East Khasi Hills hosts the densest population due to Shillong's administrative and commercial role, while lower densities in districts like Jaintia Hills stem from mining activities and isolation rather than widespread habitation. Recent projections suggest continued uneven growth, with urban migration potentially elevating densities in capital-adjacent areas, though official 2021 census data remains pending for verification.

Ethnic composition and languages

Meghalaya's ethnic composition is dominated by indigenous tribal groups classified as Scheduled Tribes under the Indian Constitution, comprising 86.15% of the state's population of 2,966,889 as per the 2011 Census of India. The three primary ethnic communities are the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia (also known as Pnar or Synteng), who trace their origins to distinct linguistic families: the Khasi and Jaintia to the Austroasiatic group, and the Garo to the Tibeto-Burman branch. These groups maintain matrilineal social structures, with descent, inheritance, and clan affiliation passed through the female line, a practice rooted in their pre-colonial tribal customs. The Khasi people, the largest group, predominantly occupy the central and eastern districts including East Khasi Hills around Shillong, while the Garo inhabit the western Garo Hills, and the Jaintia reside in the eastern Jaintia Hills. Non-tribal populations, making up the remaining 13.85%, consist mainly of migrants such as Bengalis, Nepalis, Hajongs, and Assamese, concentrated in urban centers and involved in trade or labor; these groups often follow Hinduism or other faiths and have integrated through historical migration patterns from neighboring regions. District-level variations show higher tribal densities in rural hill areas, with urban Shillong exhibiting greater ethnic diversity due to influxes from Assam and Bangladesh borders. Languages in Meghalaya reflect its ethnic diversity, with English serving as the principal official language for administration, education, and inter-community communication, a legacy of British colonial influence and the state's Christian missionary history. The state recognizes Khasi and Garo as additional official languages, both written in the Roman script and used in local governance and media. Khasi, spoken by the Khasi and related subgroups, belongs to the Austroasiatic family and features intricate tonal systems and verb morphologies; Garo, a Tibeto-Burman language, is prevalent in the west and includes dialects like A•chik. Other indigenous tongues include Pnar (a Khasi variant used by Jaintias), War, and Lyngngam, with Hindi, Bengali, and Assamese serving as lingua francas among non-tribals and migrants. Multilingualism is common, particularly in border districts, though efforts to preserve tribal languages face challenges from English dominance in urban and educational settings.

Religious demographics and migration impacts

According to the 2011 Census of India, Christians formed the largest religious group in Meghalaya, comprising 74.59% of the state's population of 2,966,889, with 2,213,027 adherents primarily among the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia tribal communities converted through 19th-century missionary efforts. Adherents of indigenous tribal religions, often classified under "Other religions and persuasions," accounted for 11.53% or 342,065 individuals, reflecting traditional animist and ancestor-worship practices among tribals resistant to full Christian conversion. Hindus constituted 11.52% or 342,000 persons, concentrated among non-tribal migrant groups like Bengalis and Nepalis in urban areas such as Shillong. Muslims made up 4.40% or 130,000, largely from historical trading communities and recent inflows. Smaller groups included Buddhists (0.33%), Sikhs (0.10%), and Jains (0.02%).
ReligionPopulationPercentage
Christianity2,213,02774.59%
Indigenous tribal religions342,06511.53%
Hinduism342,00011.52%
Islam130,0004.40%
Buddhism9,8000.33%
Others (Sikhism, Jainism, etc.)~3,0000.10-0.02%
Data from 2011 Census of India. Migration has exerted pressure on these demographics, particularly through undocumented inflows across the 443 km border with Bangladesh, which state officials and tribal leaders cite as altering the indigenous Christian-tribal majority. Between 2001 and 2011, Meghalaya's non-tribal population share declined slightly to 14%, but illegal entries—estimated at thousands annually evading detection due to terrain—have raised alarms among Khasi and Garo communities about cultural and religious dilution. Most such migrants are Muslim Bangladeshis fleeing economic hardship or persecution, settling in border districts like South Garo Hills and East Khasi Hills, where they engage in low-skill labor or informal trade, contributing to localized increases in the Muslim population from 4.0% in 2001 to 4.4% in 2011. This influx strains resources in a state lacking Inner Line Permit protections, fostering tensions as tribals perceive threats to land rights under the Sixth Schedule and matrilineal customs, with Christian organizations like the Meghalaya Baptist Convention advocating stricter border fencing to preserve demographic stability. Empirical border apprehension data from the Border Security Force indicates over 1,000 detections yearly in the Garo Hills sector alone as of 2020, though undetected entries are believed to multiply this figure, potentially accelerating shifts in religious composition absent policy interventions. Local analyses attribute minimal overall change to date to tribal land safeguards, but project risks of non-Christian minorities exceeding 20% by mid-century if inflows persist at current rates.

Government and Politics

Constitutional framework and executive

Meghalaya operates within the constitutional framework of the Republic of India, as outlined in Part VI of the Constitution, which establishes the structure for state executives, legislatures, and judiciaries. The state achieved autonomy as a sub-state within Assam on 2 April 1970 through the Assam Reorganisation (Meghalaya) Act, 1969, and full statehood on 21 January 1972 via the North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971, granting it a unicameral legislature and executive apparatus akin to other Indian states. Under the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution (Articles 244(2) and 275(1)), Meghalaya's tribal areas—encompassing nearly the entire state—are administered through autonomous district councils (ADCs) to preserve indigenous customs, land rights, and self-governance. This schedule, applicable to specified regions in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram, empowers the Governor to constitute ADCs with legislative authority over subjects like land use, forest management, village administration, inheritance of property, marriage, and social customs, while also allowing them to establish village and regional councils for decentralized decision-making. Meghalaya features three such ADCs: the Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council, Garo Hills Autonomous District Council, and Jaintia Hills Autonomous District Council, each with elected members handling local executive functions under the oversight of the state Governor. The executive authority of the state vests nominally in the Governor, appointed by the President of India for a five-year term under Article 155, who serves as the constitutional head and exercises powers including summoning or proroguing the Legislative Assembly and assenting to bills. In practice, the Governor acts on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, as mandated by Article 163, with real executive power residing in the Chief Minister—the leader of the majority in the 60-member Meghalaya Legislative Assembly—who is appointed under Article 164 and heads the council, limited to no more than 10% of assembly strength (approximately 6 ministers). The council manages state administration, policy formulation, and implementation across departments, while the Governor retains discretionary powers in Sixth Schedule matters, such as constituting ADCs and approving their regulations.

Legislative assembly and elections

The Meghalaya Legislative Assembly constitutes the unicameral legislature of the state, comprising 60 members known as Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs), who are directly elected by adult suffrage from single-member territorial constituencies using the first-past-the-post voting system. All 60 seats are reserved exclusively for candidates from Scheduled Tribes, reflecting the state's predominantly tribal population and constitutional provisions under Article 332 of the Indian Constitution, which mandates such reservations proportional to ST demographics. The assembly's term is five years, subject to earlier dissolution, and it convenes in Shillong, with sessions notified by the Governor. Elections to the assembly occur periodically under the supervision of the Chief Electoral Officer, Meghalaya, with the most recent general election held on 27 February 2023, resulting in the formation of the 11th Assembly. The assembly's constituencies are distributed regionally as 29 in the Khasi Hills, 7 in the Jaintia Hills, and 24 in the Garo Hills, ensuring representation aligned with the state's ethnic and geographic divisions. Historical elections trace back to the first post-statehood poll in March 1972, following Meghalaya's creation as a full state on 21 January 1972, with subsequent polls in 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, 1998, 2003, 2008, 2013, and 2018; bye-elections have addressed vacancies, such as those in 1973 for constituencies like Mawthengkut and Songsak. Voter turnout in recent elections has varied, influenced by factors including terrain and ethnic mobilization, though specific figures for 2023 indicate participation exceeding 80% in many areas, driven by regional parties emphasizing tribal autonomy and development. In the 2023 election, the National People's Party (NPP) emerged as the single largest party with 26 seats, enabling it to form a coalition government with allies including the United Democratic Party (11 seats), Hill State People's Democratic Party (2 seats), and Bharatiya Janata Party (2 seats), alongside independents. This outcome marked a continuation of NPP's dominance since 2018, when it secured 27 seats amid a fragmented opposition led by the Indian National Congress (21 seats), reflecting voter preferences for regional outfits focused on infrastructure and ethnic representation over national parties, which have struggled due to limited organizational reach in tribal strongholds. The assembly elects its Speaker and Deputy Speaker from members, with the current leadership supporting legislative functions such as passing bills on state finances, tribal laws, and autonomous district councils. Political dynamics often hinge on coalitions, given no party has historically won a outright majority, underscoring the assembly's role in balancing Khasi, Jaintia, and Garo interests while navigating central government relations.

Local governance and administrative districts

Meghalaya comprises 12 administrative districts, organized under three primary divisions corresponding to its major tribal regions: Khasi Hills, Garo Hills, and Jaintia Hills. These districts serve as the basic units for state-level administration, including revenue collection, law enforcement, and development planning, with each headed by a Deputy Commissioner appointed by the state government. The districts are as follows:
DivisionDistrictHeadquarters
Khasi HillsEast Khasi HillsShillong
Khasi HillsWest Khasi HillsNongstoin
Khasi HillsEastern West Khasi HillsNongkhlaw
Khasi HillsSouth West Khasi HillsMairang
Khasi HillsRi-BhoiNongpoh
Garo HillsWest Garo HillsTura
Garo HillsEast Garo HillsWilliamnagar
Garo HillsSouth Garo HillsBaghmara
Garo HillsNorth Garo HillsResubelpara
Garo HillsSouth West Garo HillsAmpati
Jaintia HillsWest Jaintia HillsJowai
Jaintia HillsEast Jaintia HillsKhliehriat
Local governance in Meghalaya operates under the Sixth Schedule of the Indian Constitution, which grants special provisions for autonomous administration in tribal areas to preserve customary laws and institutions. This framework establishes three Autonomous District Councils (ADCs)—Khasi Hills ADC, Garo Hills ADC, and Jaintia Hills ADC—each covering the respective hill regions and functioning as elected bodies with legislative authority over subjects like land allotment, forest management, village administration, inheritance of property, marriage and divorce, and social customs. The ADCs also exercise executive powers through committees that oversee local taxation (e.g., on land, markets, and trades), resource allocation, and implementation of schemes in education, health, sanitation, and infrastructure, often in coordination with state departments. Unlike the Panchayati Raj Institutions in mainland India, Meghalaya's system prioritizes tribal self-rule, integrating traditional bodies such as village dorbars (councils) for dispute resolution and community decisions, which report to or collaborate with the ADCs. The District Council Affairs Department of the state government facilitates this by processing ADC legislation for gubernatorial assent and mediating inter-departmental coordination, though tensions arise from overlapping jurisdictions between ADCs and district administrations, particularly in development fund allocation. ADC members are elected every five years by adult franchise within their jurisdictions, with the councils comprising elected representatives and nominated members from unrepresented tribes, ensuring representation of indigenous groups like the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia. This structure, rooted in pre-independence tribal polities, aims to balance state oversight with local autonomy but has faced critiques for limited fiscal capacity and delays in elections, as seen in disputes over Article 371(G) interpretations in 2025.

Economy

Primary sectors: agriculture and mining

Agriculture forms the backbone of Meghalaya's economy, employing approximately 80% of the workforce and contributing around 23% to the state's gross state domestic product (GSDP) in 2023-24. The sector relies heavily on rain-fed terrace farming and traditional shifting cultivation known as jhum, practiced across hilly terrains that limit mechanization and irrigation coverage to less than 20% of cultivable land. Key food crops include rice, occupying about 108 thousand hectares in 2023-24, alongside maize, potatoes, and vegetables, with the latter's production reaching 548 thousand metric tons in 2024. Horticulture thrives due to the state's subtropical climate, yielding fruits such as pineapples, oranges, and bananas, with miscellaneous fruits totaling around 73 thousand metric tons annually as of recent estimates. However, jhum cultivation poses significant challenges, involving forest clearance and burning that lead to soil erosion, nutrient depletion, and reduced yields over time, exacerbating deforestation and limiting long-term productivity. Efforts to transition to settled agriculture, including agroforestry and improved seeds, face resistance from cultural attachments to traditional practices, resulting in fragmented holdings averaging under 1 hectare per farmer. Mining, particularly of coal and limestone, supplements agriculture but has diminished in scale following regulatory interventions. Meghalaya holds substantial reserves of coal, estimated at over 600 million tonnes, and limestone, supporting cement production, though official coal output plummeted to near zero after the 2014 National Green Tribunal ban on unscientific rat-hole mining methods. Limestone extraction continues more formally, with monthly production values exceeding 600,000 thousand Indian rupees as of January 2025, contributing modestly to the primary sector's 22.5% GSDP share in recent years. Rat-hole mining, characterized by narrow tunnels dug manually, has persisted informally despite the ban, driven by artisanal operations and weak enforcement, leading to severe environmental degradation including acid mine drainage, river siltation, and biodiversity loss in sensitive karst landscapes. Safety hazards, such as tunnel collapses and flooding, have caused multiple fatalities, including 15 trapped miners in 2018, underscoring the method's incompatibility with modern standards. Proposals for "scientific" mining, including open-cast methods, face opposition from environmental groups citing risks to fragile ecosystems and community livelihoods. Pre-ban, mining bolstered GSDP by up to 7.3% until 2015, but current contributions remain subdued amid ongoing disputes over land rights and extraction rights under the Sixth Schedule.

Secondary and tertiary sectors

The secondary sector, encompassing manufacturing, construction, and utilities, contributes approximately 17% to Meghalaya's gross state value added, with manufacturing alone accounting for about 8%. This sector has registered growth rates of 13.5% in 2022-23 and 13.53% in 2023-24, driven primarily by construction and small-scale processing. Industrialization remains limited by the state's hilly terrain, stringent environmental regulations, and predominance of micro-units, which constitute over 95% of enterprises. Key manufacturing activities include cement production, leveraging local limestone deposits, with plants concentrated near the Assam border; food processing of fruits like jackfruit; and textiles focused on handlooms, sericulture, and handicrafts. No heavy industries operate due to geographical constraints, though small-scale plywood and foodstuff units exist. The tertiary sector dominates Meghalaya's economy, comprising 59% of gross state domestic product in 2023-24 and including trade, public administration, tourism, and other services. Within services, trade, hotels, and restaurants account for 20.6%, while public administration contributes 13%, underscoring dependence on government functions and administrative employment. Tourism represents a vital subsector, contributing roughly 7% to state GDP through natural attractions like caves, waterfalls, and living root bridges. A living root bridge is a type of simple suspension bridge formed of living plant roots by tree shaping. They are handmade from the aerial roots of rubber fig trees (Ficus elastica) over several generations and are common in the communities of the Khasi people., which generate revenue via hospitality, transport, and local crafts. Visitor footfall reached a record 1.6 million in 2024, a 33% rise from pre-COVID levels of 1.2 million, with projections for 2 million annually by 2028 supported by infrastructure investments. State policies prioritize tourism expansion alongside emerging IT and electronics services to diversify beyond public sector reliance.

Fiscal performance and infrastructure gaps

Meghalaya's gross state domestic product (GSDP) at constant prices grew by 3.9% in 2022-23, lagging behind the national real GDP growth of 7.2% for the same period, with agriculture, manufacturing, and services sectors contributing variably to this modest expansion. The state's economy has shown inconsistent post-pandemic recovery, with claims of 10% growth in 2022-23, 11% in 2023-24, and a projected 10% in 2024-25 from state government statements, though independent analyses highlight lower average annual growth of around 3.64% from 2013 to 2024, underscoring reliance on central transfers amid structural limitations in primary sectors. In the 2024-25 budget, revenue surplus was driven primarily by central government transfers, enabling a targeted fiscal deficit of 3.8% of GSDP (Rs 2,029 crore), slightly down from prior years but exceeding the state's Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act limits in practice. For 2025-26, the deficit is budgeted at 2.96% of projected GSDP (Rs 1,970 crore), aligning closer to the 3% central allowance, yet outstanding liabilities reached 43.19% of GSDP in 2022-23, far above the 28% target, with the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) warning of a potential debt trap due to persistent high borrowing without commensurate revenue mobilization. Debt-to-GSDP stood at 44.1% in 2022-23, exceeding the median state level and reflecting vulnerabilities from guarantees totaling 7% of GSDP as of March 2023. Infrastructure deficiencies exacerbate fiscal strains, with road connectivity hampered by chronic project delays from multi-agency approvals and administrative inertia, despite Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) linking over 3,000 km by 2024. Power infrastructure lags, as evidenced by the 2024 Power Policy's emphasis on enabling private investments for supply and connectivity, indicating prior shortfalls in reliable electricity for industrial and rural needs. Water supply faces acute crises, with erratic availability linked to climate variability and inadequate storage, straining urban and agricultural demands without robust mitigation strategies in place as of 2024. These gaps, including limited digital and transport upgrades, hinder economic multipliers from investments, perpetuating dependence on federal funds over self-sustaining growth.

Society and Culture

Matrilineal kinship: principles and inheritance

In Meghalaya, the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia tribes adhere to matrilineal kinship systems, wherein descent, clan affiliation, and inheritance trace exclusively through the female line, with children deriving their identity and surname from the mother rather than the father. This structure emphasizes maternal authority in family organization, where husbands typically relocate to the wife's household upon marriage, reinforcing female-centered residence and resource control. Property, including ancestral land and dwellings, passes to daughters, ensuring continuity of maternal lineage holdings, while sons receive movable assets or support from maternal uncles who often assume guardianship roles. Among the Khasi, the youngest daughter, designated as ka khatduh, inherits the entirety of immovable family property, such as land and the family home, bearing responsibility for ancestral rituals and elder care. Clan membership (kur) is strictly matrilineal, with individuals belonging to their mother's kur for life, and succession to positions like chieftaincy follows female lineage, though males may hold titular roles under female oversight. This system, rooted in customary law, prioritizes female heirs to prevent fragmentation of estates, though disputes arise when no daughters exist, prompting adoption of female relatives or legal adaptations. The Garo exhibit analogous principles but with nuances in leadership; the youngest daughter (nokna) inherits core property, while the maternal uncle (waata) or eldest sister (nokrom) exerts influence over family decisions and rituals. Family units center on the female line, with the nokma (village headman) often selected from maternal kin, blending matrilineal descent with male administrative functions derived through females. Inheritance favors daughters to sustain household integrity, though cross-cousin marriage preferences can interweave kin networks, distinguishing Garo practices from the more rigidly clan-focused Khasi model. Jaintia (Pnar) matrilineality mirrors the Khasi closely, as subgroups of the broader Khasi-Jaintia linguistic family, with the youngest daughter inheriting ancestral property and clan ties passing maternally. Syiems (chiefs) derive authority through female lines, and family nomenclature reflects maternal origins, underscoring a shared Austroasiatic heritage that privileges women's roles in perpetuity of lineage and resources across these tribes. Despite variations, all systems resist patrilineal impositions from colonial or external influences, preserving empirical continuity through documented customary codes.

Customs, festivals, and spiritual practices

The indigenous tribes of Meghalaya—the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia—maintain customs rooted in clan-based social organization, communal dances, and artisanal crafts such as weaving cane mats, baskets, and textiles, which reflect a deep integration with the natural environment. Traditional attire includes the Jainsem draped skirt for Khasi and Jaintia women, paired with silver jewelry like the Paila bead necklace for ceremonial occasions, while Garo women wear the dokmanda wrap-around skirt; men across tribes don dhoti-like garments or lungis during rituals. These practices emphasize community harmony and oral traditions, with dances serving as expressions of gratitude for harvests and rites of passage. Major festivals preserve agricultural and seasonal cycles, often featuring vibrant dances and music. The Wangala festival, celebrated by the Garo in November, marks the post-harvest thanksgiving to the sun god Saljong, involving over 100 drums, feasting, and traditional dances in villages like Dobakkgre. The Khasi observe Shad Suk Mynsiem in April or May as a spring thanksgiving with graceful dances by unmarried women in Jainsem attire, symbolizing fertility and prosperity. Nongkrem Dance, held in November at Smit village, is a five-day Khasi ritual propitiating the deity U Blei Nongthaw for bountiful yields, featuring priests (rangbah shnong) and animal sacrifices. For the Jaintia, Behdienkhlam in July at Jowai drives away evil spirits and plagues through flagellation, music, and phawar drum beats, aiming to ensure community health and crop success. Spiritual practices blend indigenous animism with widespread Christianity, which constitutes approximately 75% of the population, particularly dominant among Garo (nearly 90%) and Khasi (around 80%) communities following 19th-century missionary conversions. Surviving indigenous faiths include Niamtre among Khasi and Jaintia, centered on ancestor veneration and sacred groves (law kyntang) for nature deities like U Blei Synshar, and Songsarek for Garo, involving rituals to appease spirits (Misi-Mande) for harmony with the environment; these persist among minorities and influence festivals despite Christian syncretism. Empirical observations indicate that while conversions have eroded some rituals, cultural festivals retain animistic elements, reflecting pragmatic adaptation rather than wholesale abandonment.

Gender dynamics and social critiques

In Meghalaya's predominant matrilineal tribes—the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia—property, lineage, and clan membership pass from mother to the youngest daughter, known as the khatduh, who assumes responsibility for family assets and ancestral home. This system grants women substantial economic influence, with 48% of women owning land compared to the national average of 34%. Men typically reside in their wives' households post-marriage, and women participate actively in economic activities such as agriculture and trade, fostering a degree of flexibility in gender roles where tasks like food provisioning are often shared. However, men retain authority in public domains, including village councils and decision-making bodies like the Khasi dorbar shnong, from which women were historically excluded until a 2023 High Court ruling affirmed their electoral rights in these traditional institutions. Despite these matrilineal foundations, critiques highlight persistent patriarchal intrusions that undermine women's autonomy. Men often exert indirect control over inherited property through managerial roles or family influence, leading to power conflicts and disputes over assets, exacerbated by modern economic pressures and external patrilineal norms. Khasi men report identity tensions, negotiating masculinity amid tribal expectations that can manifest as frustration or dominance in domestic spheres. Politically, women's representation remains minimal: in the 2023 assembly elections, only 36 of 369 candidates were women, yielding few seats, with no female cabinet ministers as of 2022. This disparity persists despite matriliny's economic leverage, as cultural barriers, lack of awareness, and traditional exclusions limit women's leadership. Gender-based violence further underscores these critiques, contradicting assumptions of female empowerment. Studies document prevalent emotional abuse, with women facing verbal threats, neglect, and rejection of healthcare access, alongside physical and sexual violence. Meghalaya reports elevated female mortality rates—the highest in India—and low overall gender equality metrics, including domestic violence incidents that affect child outcomes through intergenerational trauma. Critics attribute this to a hybrid patriarchy within matriliny, where women's property rights do not translate to protection from male entitlement or societal biases, prompting calls for legal and cultural reforms to address safety and equity gaps.

Infrastructure and Development

Transportation systems

Meghalaya's transportation infrastructure is predominantly road-based, reflecting the state's rugged hilly terrain and limited rail and air connectivity. The total road network spans approximately 25,000 kilometers, including national highways totaling 1,155.6 km as of 2024, state highways of about 768 km, and district and rural roads. Key national highways include NH-6 connecting Shillong to Guwahati in Assam and NH-62 extending 195 km from Dudhnoi to Dalu near the Bangladesh border, facilitating trade and intra-state movement. However, the network faces challenges from frequent landslides, heavy monsoons, and narrow single-lane stretches, which exacerbate connectivity issues in remote areas like the Garo and Jaintia Hills. Railway coverage remains minimal, with only one operational station at Mendipathar in North Garo Hills, established in 2014 via a 19.62 km line from Dudhnoi in Assam. This broad-gauge link serves as the state's primary rail access, handling limited passenger and freight traffic, but lacks extension to the capital Shillong or eastern districts. Proposed projects, such as the Byrnihat-Shillong line and a 180 km route from Chaparmukh to Jowai, have encountered delays due to environmental concerns, land acquisition hurdles, and geological difficulties in the hills, with some facing potential shelving as of 2025. The Northeast Frontier Railway oversees these efforts, but Meghalaya's rail density lags behind national averages, relying on connections through Assam for broader integration. Air transport centers on Shillong Airport (Umroi), located 33 km northwest of the capital, which handles domestic flights from cities like Kolkata, Guwahati, and Delhi via operators such as IndiGo and Alliance Air. Daily passenger movements averaged under 200 as of October 2025, constrained by a short runway limiting aircraft size. Expansion works, including a 550-meter runway extension and terminal upgrades valued at over ₹119 crore, commenced in October 2025 and are slated for completion by late 2026 or early 2027, aiming to accommodate wide-bodied jets and boost tourism. A greenfield airport at Baljek in West Garo Hills is under construction to enhance western access, though timelines remain uncertain. Inland waterways play a negligible role due to seasonal river fluctuations and lack of navigable infrastructure.

Education attainment and institutions

Meghalaya reports a literacy rate of 94.2% for persons aged seven and above, as per the Periodic Labour Force Survey for 2023-24, positioning the state fifth among Indian states. This marks a substantial increase from 74.4% in the 2011 census. However, foundational learning outcomes lag; the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2024 indicates that only 31.1% of Grade III students in government schools can read at the expected Grade II level. Dropout rates escalate at higher levels, with an average annual rate of 21.7% at secondary stage (Classes 9-10), the highest in Northeast India and second nationally. For ages 15-16, the rate stands at 13.9%, exceeding the national average of 7.9%. Gross enrolment ratios (GER) at secondary level exhibit district-wise disparities, ranging as low as 45% in Ri-Bhoi district per state policy assessments. Higher education is anchored by institutions such as North-Eastern Hill University (NEHU), a central university founded in 1973 in Shillong, offering multidisciplinary programs. The Indian Institute of Management Shillong (IIM), established in 2008, serves as a leading postgraduate management school. National Institute of Technology Meghalaya (NIT), operational since 2010, focuses on engineering and technology. Private entities like CMJ University and ICFAI University Meghalaya supplement offerings in various fields, though quality varies amid proliferation of affiliated colleges. State government colleges, numbering over 50, primarily affiliate with NEHU and emphasize undergraduate arts, science, and commerce education.

Healthcare access and outcomes

Meghalaya faces significant challenges in healthcare access due to its rugged hilly terrain, sparse population distribution, and limited infrastructure, which exacerbate disparities between urban centers like Shillong and remote rural areas. The state maintains a three-tier public health system comprising sub-centers (without doctors), primary health centers (PHCs), and community health centers (CHCs), but functional gaps persist, including inadequate staffing and equipment in peripheral facilities. As of recent assessments, healthcare delivery shows uneven spatial distribution, with districts featuring extreme topography, such as South West Khasi Hills, experiencing logistical hurdles in supply chains and patient transport. Human resource shortages compound these issues, with an estimated 2.5 allopathic doctors per 10,000 population, falling short of national benchmarks and straining service provision. Median travel distance to PHCs is 6.8 km (interquartile range: 4.2-11.5 km), with females reporting 15% longer distances on average, influenced by socioeconomic factors and gender norms. Poor road connectivity and seasonal flooding further delay access, prompting innovations like drone-based medicine delivery to distant health centers since 2023, targeting hard-to-reach villages. Enrollment in schemes like the Megha Health Insurance Scheme (MHIS) has expanded coverage, but utilization remains uneven due to awareness gaps and out-of-pocket expenses in underserved regions. Health outcomes reflect these access constraints, with the infant mortality rate (IMR) at 33 per 1,000 live births per National Family Health Survey-5 (NFHS-5) data, higher than the national average and indicative of vulnerabilities in neonatal care. Institutional delivery rates reached 65.4% in 2023, covering 1,12,751 reported deliveries, yet delays in antenatal care and emergency referrals contribute to elevated maternal risks in tribal areas. Prevalence of non-communicable diseases, such as hypertension, is notably high, underscoring needs for preventive services amid infrastructure deficits, including a bed shortage of over 10,000 despite 5,244 existing beds. Efforts under the Meghalaya Health Systems Strengthening Project aim to boost utilization and quality, but persistent inequities highlight the causal role of geographic isolation in poorer indicators compared to more accessible Indian states.

Tourism and Recent Initiatives

Natural and cultural attractions

Meghalaya features extensive cave systems formed by limestone dissolution, with over 1,000 documented caves, including Mawsmai Cave near Cherrapunji, known for its stalactite and stalagmite formations accessible via narrow passages. Krem Liat Prah ranks as India's longest cave at approximately 25 kilometers, harboring unique subterranean ecosystems with endemic species like cave-dwelling bats and invertebrates. These formations result from the region's high rainfall, averaging 11,000 millimeters annually in southern Khasi Hills areas, eroding soluble rock over millennia. Waterfalls abound due to the hilly terrain and monsoon precipitation, with Noh Ka Likai Falls dropping 340 meters in a single plunge, fed by seasonal streams and surrounded by forested cliffs. Krang Suri Falls, located in Jaintia Hills, cascades into turquoise pools amid bamboo groves, drawing visitors for its scenic pools suitable for swimming during dry seasons. The state's biodiversity hotspots, covering 70% forest, support endemic flora like the insectivorous Nepenthes khasiana pitcher plant and fauna including the hoolock gibbon, concentrated in sacred groves preserved by tribal customs that limit deforestation. Living root bridges, engineered by Khasi communities from Ficus elastica tree roots, span gorges in areas like Nongriat, where a double-decker example supports pedestrian traffic and strengthens via natural growth and weaving techniques passed down generations. These bio-engineered structures, resilient to floods, exemplify adaptive engineering in steep, rainy valleys, contrasting with conventional bridges by self-repairing and expanding load-bearing capacity over decades. Umiam Lake, an artificial reservoir near Shillong, offers boating amid pine-covered hills, while the crystal-clear Umngot River at Dawki enables transparent bottom views during low water levels. Cultural attractions center on tribal festivals and heritage sites of the Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia peoples. The Wangala Festival, celebrated by Garos in November, involves rhythmic drumming with over 100 drums honoring harvest deities through dances and feasts in Tura. Nongkrem Dance Festival, a five-day Khasi thanksgiving rite in Smit, features elaborately costumed performers invoking prosperity via ritual dances and animal sacrifices to ancestral spirits. Behdienkhlam, a Jaintia purification event in July, uses dances with phawar blades to drive away evil, accompanied by community feasts in Jowai. Shad Suk Mynsiem showcases Khasi women in traditional jainsen attire performing graceful dances during spring in Shillong, reflecting matrilineal social structures. Villages like Mawlynnong, recognized for cleanliness, preserve bamboo architecture and living root ladders as exemplars of sustainable tribal living.

Policy promotions and economic contributions

The Meghalaya Tourism Policy 2023, launched by Chief Minister Conrad Sangma in June 2023, establishes sustainable and responsible tourism as core principles, emphasizing high-value, low-volume visitor management, carrying capacity limits, waste reduction, and preservation of natural and cultural assets to drive long-term economic benefits without ecological degradation. The policy promotes community involvement through cooperatives and traditional governance structures, alongside technology integration for bookings, safety, and destination oversight, aiming to position the state among India's top 10 tourism destinations within a decade. Incentives include public-private partnerships to double accommodation capacity over five years, with at least 50% focused on premium units charging over Rs. 5,000 per night, supported by central funding schemes and private investments. Tourism contributed approximately 4.1% to Meghalaya's gross state domestic product in 2019-20, underscoring its role in economic diversification beyond agriculture and mining. By 2024-25, the sector generated Rs. 133.43 crore in revenue, reflecting a surge in arrivals to 16 lakh domestic and 2 lakh international tourists, up from 14 lakh domestic in 2023. It sustains around 50,000 direct and indirect jobs, primarily in hospitality, guiding, and local crafts, with projections for an additional 50,000 positions over the next three years through infrastructure expansion. Government initiatives channel over Rs. 3,625 crore into 210 infrastructure projects, including roads, viewpoints, and eco-lodges, to enhance accessibility and appeal, while the 2025 Film Tourism Policy offers financial rebates and support to attract media production, potentially boosting off-season revenue and global visibility. These efforts align with broader economic goals, such as expanding the state's GSDP to US$10 billion by 2028, by leveraging tourism's labor-intensive nature to foster rural entrepreneurship and reduce urban migration pressures.

2020s developments: eco-tourism and events

In the early 2020s, Meghalaya advanced eco-tourism through targeted infrastructure projects, including the New Development Bank-funded Meghalaya Ecotourism Infrastructure Development Project, which focuses on constructing facilities to establish five dedicated ecotourism circuits across the state, emphasizing biodiversity hotspots and community involvement. Complementing this, the Asian Development Bank's Integrated Ecotourism and Sustainable Agri-Based Livelihood Development in Meghalaya Project integrates tourism with agricultural sustainability, aiming to enhance local livelihoods while preserving natural assets like living root bridges and forested regions. These initiatives address post-pandemic recovery by prioritizing low-impact development, with a 2025 study revealing tourists' willingness to pay an average of Rs 154 per visit toward conservation fees for sites such as the double-decker living root bridge in Nongriat, highlighting potential for revenue-based ecological funding aligned with site carrying capacities. By mid-decade, policy shifts emphasized community-led sustainability, as seen in the launch of the Chief Minister's Meghalaya Homestay Mission on October 2, 2025, which incentivizes local households to provide eco-friendly accommodations, tackling shortages while generating employment in rural areas. The September 2025 Indian Responsible Tourism State Summit in Shillong reinforced these efforts, promoting practices like waste reduction and cultural immersion, with state officials committing to eight 5-star hotels by 2030 to upscale offerings without compromising environmental standards. The Prime Tourism Vehicle Scheme further supports entrepreneurs in acquiring commercial vehicles for guided eco-tours, fostering economic inclusion in hill communities. Events in the 2020s have amplified eco-tourism visibility, with the Adventure Tourism Meet 2025 convening stakeholders on October 21 to discuss responsible practices amid Meghalaya's rugged terrains and rivers. The state's Autumn Calendar 2025 lineup, unveiled in September, includes six flagship festivals blending adventure and sustainability, such as the Megha Kayak Festival from October 14-18 in Umtham Village, Ri-Bhoi district, which drew international participants for river-based activities on the Umkhrah. The Ahor 4x4 Offroad Challenge on October 23-25 showcased off-road exploration in eastern districts, while the Shillong Cherry Blossom Festival on November 14-15 featured global acts like Jason Derulo and The Script, positioning the event as a cornerstone of a burgeoning "concert economy" tied to natural blooms and local heritage. These gatherings, supported by the Department of Tourism, integrate eco-guidelines like plastic bans and community revenue sharing to mitigate overcrowding risks at attractions.

Security Challenges

Historical insurgency and current threats

The insurgency in Meghalaya originated in the late 1980s amid ethnic grievances over land rights, economic marginalization, and perceived influx of non-tribal outsiders, primarily affecting the Khasi-Jaintia (Hynniewtrep) and Garo communities. The inaugural militant outfit, the Hynniewtrep Achik Liberation Council (HALC), formed to advocate tribal interests but fractured in 1992 along ethnic lines, yielding the Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC) for Khasi-Jaintia separatists and Achik-focused factions for Garos. HNLC's core demand entails expelling "Dkhars" (non-tribals) and establishing sovereignty for indigenous groups, often through extortion, kidnappings, and sporadic attacks on security forces and civilians. In the Garo Hills, parallel militancy intensified in the 2000s with groups like the Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA), founded in 2009 by Sohan Shira, pursuing a separate "Achik Land" via ambushes, bombings, and resource levies in coal-rich areas; GNLA peaked with over 200 cadres but fragmented after Shira's 2018 arrest, leading to mass surrenders by 2020. Other Garo outfits, including the People's Liberation Front of Meghalaya (PLF-M) and Liberation Army of Eastern Frontier (LAEF), engaged in similar low-level violence but dwindled through operations yielding hundreds of arrests and weapons seizures. Khasi-Jaintia insurgency under HNLC persisted more enduringly, with activities like the 2021 Shillong market IED blast injuring two, linked to retaliation over a surrendered leader's death. By the 2010s, overall fatalities declined sharply—from 45 in 2010 to single digits annually—due to sustained counter-insurgency, peace accords, and rehabilitation, rendering Meghalaya's conflict "frozen" compared to neighboring states. Garo militancy largely subsided post-GNLA's collapse, with no major regrouping reported as of 2025. HNLC endures as the primary threat, with an estimated 100-150 cadres operating from Bangladesh bases, sustaining extortion in coal belts and withdrawing from tripartite peace talks in 2023 over unmet demands. The Indian government renewed HNLC's ban under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act on November 14, 2024, for five years to 2029, citing ongoing violent acts including cadre infiltration attempts. In January 2025, HNLC alleged police misuse of force against affiliates, while state forces vowed to curb any militant displays of strength amid reports of fleeing cadres. These dynamics reflect persistent low-intensity risks, fueled by cross-border sanctuaries rather than mass mobilization.

Illegal immigration from Bangladesh

Meghalaya shares a 443-kilometer border with Bangladesh, characterized by hilly terrain, rivers, and dense forests that facilitate illegal crossings despite efforts by the Border Security Force (BSF) and state police. Primary motivations for such migration include economic opportunities in Meghalaya's agriculture and informal sectors, as well as evasion of poverty and instability in Bangladesh. The state's Infiltration Branch specifically targets foreign nationals within 10 kilometers of the border, verifying documents and pushing back undocumented entrants. Official data indicate persistent infiltration attempts, with BSF Meghalaya apprehending 421 individuals along the border from August 5, 2024, to July 15, 2025, during active crossing bids. Detections surged in early 2025, including 22 Bangladeshi nationals caught over roughly 40 days, prompting heightened vigilance at checkpoints like Byrnihat. However, BSF Director General reported a substantial decline in attempts following Bangladesh's political upheaval in August 2024, attributing it to improved bilateral cooperation rather than increased Indian enforcement alone. The influx threatens indigenous demographic stability, particularly among Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia tribes, who comprise over 80% of Meghalaya's population but face gradual shifts from undocumented settlements altering land use and community structures. Economic competition for low-skill jobs in mining, construction, and farming exacerbates tensions, while resource strain in border districts like South West Khasi Hills has led to localized violence, including armed clashes between intruders and locals on August 8, 2025. In response, the Meghalaya government acknowledged widespread infiltration in August 2025 and ordered police to apprehend and repatriate intruders, coordinating with BSF for pushbacks. Community groups and tribal organizations have intensified border patrols, though incomplete fencing—due to ecological sensitivities—persists as a vulnerability. These measures aim to preserve indigenous land rights under the Sixth Schedule, but undetected entries continue to fuel concerns over long-term cultural and security erosion.

Violence, political instability, and responses

Meghalaya has experienced persistent low-level insurgency and ethnic violence since the 1980s, primarily driven by separatist groups seeking autonomy or secession for tribal areas, alongside inter-communal clashes between indigenous Khasi, Garo, and Jaintia groups and non-tribal settlers. The Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC), active since 1993, has targeted non-tribals and security forces in Khasi-dominated regions, with incidents including extortion, kidnappings, and bombings, though its operations have diminished through surrenders and arrests. In the Garo Hills, the Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA), formed in 2009, perpetrated over 100 violent incidents by 2013, including ambushes on police and civilian abductions for ransom, before its leadership was neutralized. Ethnic violence has flared periodically, often triggered by land disputes, influx of outsiders, and pressure groups enforcing tribal exclusivity, such as the 1979 anti-Bengali riots in Shillong that displaced thousands and destroyed non-tribal properties. More recently, November 2022 clashes in Shillong's Punjabi Lane killed two non-tribals and injured dozens, fueled by longstanding resentment against migrant communities amid impending state elections, prompting curfews and deployment of central forces. Political instability manifests in coalition fragility and ethnic mobilization, with parties leveraging tribal identity politics; for instance, demands for inner-line permits to restrict non-tribal settlement have intensified post-2018 elections, exacerbating governance challenges in a state where tribals hold constitutional protections under the Sixth Schedule. Government responses include sustained counter-insurgency operations by Meghalaya Police and central agencies, leading to over 1,000 militants surrendering since 2018 and a 90% drop in insurgency-related fatalities from 2013 to 2023. The Union Home Ministry renewed the ban on HNLC in November 2024 for five years, citing its secessionist aims and links to external groups like ULFA, while facilitating peace talks that yielded ceasefires with factions like the Achik National Army. State measures encompass community policing, development packages under the North East Special Infrastructure Development Scheme, and probes like the Sharma Commission into ethnic tensions, though critics argue enforcement of anti-migrant laws remains inconsistent, perpetuating underlying grievances.

Environmental and Sustainability Issues

Jhum cultivation impacts

Jhum cultivation, the traditional slash-and-burn shifting agriculture prevalent among Meghalaya's tribal populations, clears forested hillsides for crop production, followed by short-term fallowing that has shortened from 10-20 years historically to 3-5 years due to population growth and land scarcity. This practice drives deforestation as one of the primary causes in the state's tropical forests, with shifting cultivation areas contracting from 2,086.77 km² in 2000 to 448.99 km² in 2010 amid efforts to curb expansion, yet persistent cycles continue to fragment habitats. Accelerated soil erosion accompanies repeated burning and tillage, averaging 40.9 tonnes per hectare annually under jhum plots, exacerbating land degradation on Meghalaya's steep slopes and leading to barren patches in surveyed villages. Nutrient leaching and organic matter loss further diminish fertility, with soil organic carbon stocks declining by 0.40 tonnes per hectare per year and up to 50.8% depletion in the top 15 cm layer under continuous cultivation compared to native forests. Microbial biomass reduces by 38.4%, impairing long-term productivity and contributing to broader northeast Indian soil degradation patterns where jhum lands show the highest organic carbon pool depletion at 41.8%. Biodiversity suffers from vegetation loss and habitat alteration, threatening endemic flora and fauna as shortened fallows prevent forest regeneration, while burn emissions add to regional carbon fluxes. In West Khasi Hills, jhum-related deforestation has correlated with forest cover dropping from 69.06% to 63.06% over 15 years, amplifying vulnerability to erosion and water resource depletion in a state already facing intensified environmental pressures. Unsustainable intensification, driven by demographic demands rather than inherent flaws in the system, underscores causal links to ecosystem deterioration without adequate policy interventions for alternatives like agroforestry.

Mining regulations and ecological damage

Coal mining, primarily through unscientific rat-hole methods, has been a dominant activity in Meghalaya, particularly in the East Jaintia Hills district, where thin coal seams necessitate narrow tunneling. The National Green Tribunal imposed a ban on rat-hole coal mining in 2014 via Order in OA No.73/2014, citing environmental hazards and safety risks, which extended to a decade-long prohibition on commercial coal extraction until scientific mining resumed in March 2025 under stricter regulatory oversight. State-level regulations include the Meghalaya Minerals (Prevention of Illegal Mining, Transportation and Storage) Rules, 2022, which aim to curb unauthorized extraction, transport, and stockpiling, alongside the Meghalaya Minor Mineral Concession Rules, 2016, and the Meghalaya Mines and Minerals Policy, 2012, which promote sustainable practices but face implementation gaps due to tribal land ownership under the Sixth Schedule of the Indian Constitution. Despite these frameworks, illegal mining persists, with 477 reported violations documented by Meghalaya state police records as of recent audits, leading to revenue losses and unchecked environmental harm. Enforcement challenges stem from decentralized tribal authority over mineral rights, allowing small-scale, unregulated operations to evade central oversight, as evidenced by ongoing extractions in remote areas post-ban. The 2025 resumption of mining mandates environmental impact assessments, reclamation plans, and scientific methods like open-cast or underground techniques with ventilation and support systems, but critics argue these may still enable disguised illegal activities through regulatory loopholes. Rat-hole mining has inflicted severe ecological damage, including acid mine drainage that acidifies rivers with heavy metals and sulfur, rendering waters like the Lukha River in Jaintia Hills toxic and unsuitable for aquatic life or human use. This process contaminates surface and groundwater, degrading soil fertility and disrupting fisheries, agriculture, and livestock rearing across mining-affected zones. Deforestation from coal stockpiles and pit expansions has reduced forest cover significantly, exacerbating soil erosion and landslides, while air pollution from dust and fumes contributes to respiratory issues in nearby communities. Biodiversity losses include destruction of caves, riparian habitats, and species-dependent ecosystems, with studies documenting ecosystem disruption in Jaintia Hills coal belts. Since 2012, illegal operations have been linked to nearly 60 deaths or injuries from collapses, underscoring the causal link between lax regulation and compounded environmental and human costs.

Reforestation efforts and policy responses

The Government of Meghalaya has prioritized community-driven reforestation to counter deforestation pressures from shifting cultivation and mining, with policies emphasizing payment for ecosystem services (PES) to incentivize tribal landowners. The GREEN Meghalaya scheme, initiated in recent years, provides financial rewards to villages, clans, and individuals for maintaining forest cover on degraded lands, aiming to restore biodiversity while supporting livelihoods through sustainable practices. On October 1, 2024, Chief Minister Conrad K. Sangma launched GREEN Meghalaya Plus, expanding PES to fund afforestation, soil conservation, and watershed protection across community-held territories. In response to a 12.46% decline in forest cover from 2001 to 2021, the state has integrated the Miyawaki method into its afforestation strategy, targeting restoration of 25,000 hectares by planting dense layers of native species for rapid, self-sustaining forest growth. Spearheaded by the Soil and Water Conservation Department as of May 2025, this approach seeks to enhance carbon sequestration, air quality, and resilience against soil erosion in hilly terrains, though long-term survival rates depend on community enforcement amid ongoing land pressures. The state Forest Department has raised over 2,400 hectares of plantations in the five years leading to 2024, focusing on native species to boost overall cover, which remains at approximately 80% but faces localized losses exceeding 61.8 thousand hectares in districts like West Khasi Hills since 2001. Joint Forest Management (JFM) committees, involving local tribes, have been formalized to protect and regenerate forests, contributing to welfare through shared benefits from timber and non-timber products while reducing illegal logging on unclassed lands that constitute 88.16% of recorded forest area. Compensatory afforestation under the Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority (CAMPA) mandates replanting for diverted forest lands, with 253.735 hectares pending as of recent records to offset mining impacts. Non-governmental initiatives, such as Sadhana Forest's project started in October 2020, have restored degraded sites through community training in sustainable planting, while efforts in Khasi Hills by groups like TreeSisters have rehabilitated 3,000 of 4,000 allocated hectares by 2023. These measures align with national goals but face challenges from weak tenurial rights and variable mortality rates in tropical restorations, underscoring the need for rigorous monitoring to achieve net gains amid a regional loss of 327 square kilometers of forest and tree cover.

References

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