<p>Social rights activist Irom Chanu Sharmila, who held a 16-year-long hunger strike against the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, said she fought authorities as a one-woman army.</p>.<p>“If you want something, you need to start working for it. You can’t wait for others to join you,” is what the ‘Iron Lady of Manipur’ said while addressing students at<br />St Joseph’s College during the Open Heart Fest 2022.</p>.<p>“I was not educated,” Sharmila said. “I was physically, academically, and financially weak. The society laughed at me and mocked me. But neither did I stop what I was doing nor did I wait for someone to come and support me. I was and have always been a one-woman army.”</p>.<p>“I was on a hunger strike for 16 years and I told myself ‘enough is enough’. I needed to change my strategy and that is when I decided to get into politics.”</p>
<p>Social rights activist Irom Chanu Sharmila, who held a 16-year-long hunger strike against the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, said she fought authorities as a one-woman army.</p>.<p>“If you want something, you need to start working for it. You can’t wait for others to join you,” is what the ‘Iron Lady of Manipur’ said while addressing students at<br />St Joseph’s College during the Open Heart Fest 2022.</p>.<p>“I was not educated,” Sharmila said. “I was physically, academically, and financially weak. The society laughed at me and mocked me. But neither did I stop what I was doing nor did I wait for someone to come and support me. I was and have always been a one-woman army.”</p>.<p>“I was on a hunger strike for 16 years and I told myself ‘enough is enough’. I needed to change my strategy and that is when I decided to get into politics.”</p>