Zo people
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regions with significant populations | |||||||||||||
| Bangladesh, India, Myanmar | |||||||||||||
| Languages | |||||||||||||
| Kuki-Chin languages | |||||||||||||
| Religion | |||||||||||||
| Majority: Christianity Minority: | |||||||||||||
| Related ethnic groups | |||||||||||||
| Halam tribe, Karbi people, Kom-rem | |||||||||||||
The Zo people is a term to denote the ethnolinguistically related speakers of the Kuki-Chin languages who primarily inhabit northeastern India, western Myanmar, and southeastern Bangladesh.
The dispersal across international borders resulted from a British colonial policy that drew borders on political, rather than ethnic, grounds.