Over time the Zo nationalist idea has been carried by various parties and NGOs: •
Mizo National Front (MNF) – The MNF began as an armed independence movement in the 1960s. After the 1986 peace accord, the MNF became a mainstream regional party in Mizoram. Today it governs or leads Mizoram at times. The MNF often embraces Zo rhetoric: its leaders have publicly affirmed that the party "fights for Zo nationalism, unity and freedom of the Zo" wherever they live (for example, MNF officials joined tribal unity events in neighboring Manipur). •
Zo Reunification Organization (ZORO) – Founded on 20 May 1988 in Aizawl, Mizoram, ZORO is a nonprofit advocacy group dedicated to uniting Zo peoples. It grew out of an international "World Zo Convention" held in Champhai (Mizoram) on 18–19 May 1988, which was convened by Zomi leaders from India and Myanmar. At that convention delegates adopted
“Zo” as the collective ethnonym for the tribes tracing their origin to an ancestral land (Chhinlung), and set up ZORO with Mizoram politician Brigadier
T. Sailo as its first chairman. ZORO’s mission is to preserve Zo culture and push for political unity across borders. It has engaged internationally – participating in UN indigenous rights forums (the
Working Group on Indigenous Populations since 1999 and the
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues since 2004) – and it lobbies governments about Zo concerns. •
Zomi National Congress (ZNC) – A small party founded in Manipur in 1972 (In Mizoram’s politics, an ally was the People’s Conference party of Brig. Sailo, which had earlier cooperated with Zomi activists.) Today the ZNC as a regional party under names like Zomi Party or Chin Union. •
Zomi Revolutionary Army (ZRA) – As noted, the ZRA is a militant insurgent group formed in 1997 from the Zomi Re-unification Organization’s Manipur wing. It openly advocates
Zomi nationalism as its ideology. At times the ZRA has clashed with Indian security forces, and it maintains bases in Manipur and refugee camps in Myanmar. (Although it took up arms in India, it also sees itself aligned with Chin groups in Myanmar.) •
Chin National Army and
Chin National Front– In Myanmar, the major Chin resistance force has been the Chin National Front (CNF), with its armed wing the Chin National Army (CNA). The CNF, formed in 1988, fought low-intensity guerrilla war before settling for ceasefires in the 1990s •
Kuki-Chin National Front: In Bangladesh, the outlawed KNF (2017–present) is the only overtly Zo-identified group with an armed wing; • '''
Zoram People's Movement''' (ZPM): It is a regional political party in Mizoram, India, that aligns closely with the ethos of Zo nationalism—the movement advocating unity, identity, and self-determination for the Zo people, who are spread across Mizoram, Manipur, Chin State (Myanmar), and parts of Bangladesh. Founded in 2017 and led by
Lalduhoma, ZPM champions clean governance, youth empowerment, and protection of Zo cultural and political identity. Though primarily active in Mizoram, ZPM reflects broader pan-Zo nationalist sentiments == Key events and conflict ==