30 August 2011

Little Knowledge On Northeast India Hampers Unity: Mizoram Chief Minister

lalthanhawla Mizoram Cm

Aizawl, Aug 30
: Little knowledge about the Northeast India hampered the national integration, said Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla today.

''Most of the mainland Indians consider only Assam as the Northeast region, which proves their ignorance about the different tribes living in this region. This (ignorance) has hampered the integration of India as a whole,'' Lal Thanhawla said, while addressing a two-day festival of the Northeast tribes which began here today.

''We, the northeast people also need more exposure so that people in the rest of the country can have better knowledge of us and that will bring about oneness,'' he said.

The chief minister urged the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), who organised the festival, to organise more exposures for the northeast tribes. He thanked the ICCR regional officer, Shillong, Munish Singh for his assurance to include a Mizoram cultural troupe in the next cultural exchange programme with foreign countries.

Fourteen different tribes in the Northeast showcased their cultural dances at the ‘Dance and Music Festival,’ organised by the ICCR, in association with art and culture departments of Mizoram and Meghalaya. The second edition of the festival would be held at Shillong on September 1.

Porn Shutdown Over HIV Case

Porn Shutdown Hiv

LOS ANGELES — An adult film performer has tested positive for HIV, causing porn producers to shut down shoots in Southern California as the diagnosis is confirmed through re-testing, according to an industry group.

Free Speech Coalition executive director Diane Duke told The Los Angeles Times () on Monday that her group became aware of the HIV case Saturday. http://lat.ms/mX0vin

A series of tests were being conducted on the performer to confirm the case before anyone the performer might have spread the illness to will be notified to get tested, Duke told The Associated Press.

She didn't know how long that would take.

Duke declined to release the performer's name, age or gender, citing the person's federal right to medical privacy. She also declined to say how her group learned of the case.

The case was found in an out-of-state clinic that doesn't report to California health officials, said Duke.

If the initial case is confirmed, the group will ask two generations of the person's sexual partners to get tested, meaning those who had sex with the performer and the sexual partners of those who had sex with the performer.

The voluntary industry shutdown affects porn producers in the San Fernando Valley, the heart of the multi-billion dollar American porn industry, and includes Hustler and Evil Angel's productions.

The porn industry was shut down similarly in late 2010, after porn actor Derrick Burts was diagnosed HIV positive.

Burts has since gone on to advocate for the mandatory use of condoms in porn with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation.

The health advocacy group and state workplace safety officials say state law mandates porn performers to use condoms to protect themselves under the same set of rules that require nurses to wear gloves in hospitals when dealing with bodily fluids.

Cal/OSHA is working to clarify the regulation to make it more specific to porn.

Earlier this month, the health advocacy group announced that it will gather 41,138 petition signatures to get the issue of condoms in porn on the June 2012 ballot.

The ballot measure would ask Los Angeles residents whether porn producers must require performers to use condoms on shoots as a condition of getting a filming permit.

"The question remains how many performers must become infected with HIV and other serous STDs before the industry will clean up its act and government will do the right thing?" said Michael Weinstein, president of AIDS Healthcare Foundation.

The group has unsuccessfully pushed California and Los Angeles County officials to tighten enforcement of condom use on porn sets through legislative attempts, lawsuits and regulatory complaints.

How To Convert Mobile Into A Universal Remote

How to convert mobile into a universal remote


Your smartphone can do more than you think. With some additional hardware or apps, it can remotely start your car, control various appliances in your home, control A/V equipment like TVs & home theatre systems and even your PC.

Read on to find about the various free apps and systems available today that allow your smartphone to work as a universal remote control.

Remotely control your home

Remotely control your home

Crestron is one of the leading brands for home automation. Although each installation usually comes with its own universal remote control, Crestron also provides apps for iOS and Android devices.
These apps connect to the Crestron system using Wi-Fi (for seamless access anywhere ) and allow you to remotely control any home appliances or gizmos that are wired into the system. Plus, you need not be at home to control your air conditioning or lighting for instance - you could do it from anywhere you have a data connection . The Android and iPhone/iPod Touch apps are free, but the iPad app costs a hefty $99.

Remotely start your car

Remotely start your car

Viper SmartStart for your Car enables you to lock, unlock or start your car using an iOS, Android or BlackBerry smartphone. For this to work, you need a Viper security system and smartphone module installed in your car.
The app also remembers where your car was parked and shows directions on your phone using augmented reality. Currently , SmartStart only works with US-based GSM providers, though the company is working on making the app work anywhere. For more information check out www.viper.com

Remote apps for PC/ Mac

Remote apps for PC/ Mac

Mobile operating systems offer a number of applications to control various aspects of your PC/MAC. You can choose to control just the mouse pointer and input text or you could control various applications such as the audio player, video player, presentations and so on.
Each app requires a small server application installed on your PC/MAC, which is also available for free.

Android

Android

Gmote is a free application that lets you control your PC, MAC or Linux music and video player over Wi-Fi . It shows various controls on screen with the album art in the background and can even be used to browse and select files for playback.
Another free (ad-supported ) app called WIN-Remote offers connections to your Windows PC over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It provides control over almost everything - browser, task manager, video/audio players, image viewers and even presentations.
If you want to control specific media players, the Android Market and Apple App Store have free apps for common ones like VLC, Windows Media Player, Media Player classic, XBMC, iTunes & Foobar.

iPhone/iPod Touch

iPhone/iPod Touch

One of the best free remote apps for the iPhone/iPod Touch is Logitech Touch Mouse. It connects to your machine over Wi-Fi and converts the 3.5-inch display into an input device. You get full control over the mouse pointer with multi-touch gestures thrown in too.
An onscreen keyboard can be used to enter text input when required. Apple's own free app called 'Remote' is perfect when you just want to control iTunes.
Similarly, there are apps like i-Clickr to control presentations , VLC remote for VLC player, PowerDVD remote and a Remote X app that lets you control a variety of media players with a single interface.

BlackBerry

BlackBerry

Vectir's Bluetooth/Wi-Fi Remote allows you to launch and control VLC Media Player, iTunes, Windows Media Player and even PowerPoint presentations . It even has a remote desktop feature to view and control the desktop from your BlackBerry or Android device. Like Logitech's offering, mouse and keyboard input can be done using your phone.
The app can be used for free for the first 30 days, after which you will need to purchase a license for the desktop server app (a one-time purchase of $10) from www.vectir.com. Unlike the others, Vectir also supports Java ph

Hotel Romp is Match Of The Day

Into touch ... couple

Into touch ... couple

Footie fans cheer as couple score

A ROMPING couple were seen by thousands of footie fans as they scored in their hotel room overlooking the stadium.

The crowd at the top-flight clash cheered as they watched the off-pitch performance through the window.

The woman was later identified as glamour model Alicia Tenderness, 26. She said: "We thought it was tinted glass and that we could see outside, but not vice-versa.

"When we checked out the next morning the lady on the front desk was very cold, but we did not understand why.

"We only realised on Monday when we read it in the newspaper."

Footie officials blasted the couple. Philippe Bormans of Belgian team Sint-Truiden – who were playing at home to rivals Lokeren – said: "There are children in the crowd. We do not want this repeated."

Hotel boss Luc Withofs vowed to get stewards to monitor the windows.

But Alicia hit back: "He should put tinted glass in the rooms."

http://www.reidaverdade.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Alicia-Tenderness-2-500x301.jpg

Alicia Tenderness

http://www.balls.ie/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/one.png

Madras HC Stays Execution Of Rajiv Killers



Chennai, Aug 30 :
In a major relief for three convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, the Madras High Court on Tuesday stayed their hanging which was scheduled on September 9. Hearing their mercy petition the High Court gave interim relief for eight weeks to Murugan alias Sriharan, Santhan and Perarivalan alias Arivu.

The Centre will file a counter affidavit in the case within eight weeks.

Meanwhile, the Tamil Nadu Assembly also adopted a resolution moved by the J Jayalalithaa government urging the President to consider the clemency petition and commute their death sentence to life sentence.

The three convicts filed a petition on the grounds that the President of India took 11 years to reject their mercy pleas. Senior Counsel Ram Jethmalani appeared for the convicts in a case that has political overtones especially in Tamil Nadu.

K Perarivalan alias Arivu is the only Indian amongst the three men who are facing the death sentence in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case on September 9.

The families of the death row convicts hope political and legal intervention could stop the hanging.

Irom Sharmila Must Reach Out To People: GK Pillai

Irom Sharmila

Shillong, Aug 30
: Irom Sharmila, fasting for the last 11 years for the repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), must "reach out to people across the country" like anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare to make her cause known, says former union home secretary G.K. Pillai.

AFSPA enables security forces to shoot at sight and arrest anybody without a warrant if an area is declared disturbed. Sharmila is currently in an isolated room of Manipur's Jawarharlal Nehru Hospital.

"It is a question of how you reach out to people. AFSPA is applicable only in Jammu and Kashmir and in the northeastern states. Corruption is pricking people everywhere and that's why Anna Hazare had a high moral ground," Pillai told IANS Monday.

"She (Sharmila) has to reach out to the people across the country. She has to say why she is on fast," said Pillai.

"AFSPA should be repealed and the government should have a humane law," Pillai added.

Dubbed the 'Iron Lady of Manipur', Sharmila began her fast Nov 2, 2000, after witnessing the killing of 10 people by the army at a bus stop near her home. Now around 40, Sharmila was arrested shortly after beginning her protest -- on charges of attempted suicide. She was sent to a prison hospital in Imphal where began a daily routine of being force-fed via a nasal drip.

Sharmila is frequently set free by local courts but once outside, she resumes her hunger strike and is rearrested.

AFSPA was passed in 1990 to grant special powers and immunity from prosecution to security forces to deal with raging insurgencies in northeastern states and in Jammu and Kashmir.

The act is a target for local human rights groups and international campaigners such as Amnesty International, which say the law has been an excuse for extrajudicial killings.

Amnesty has campaigned vociferously against the legislation, which it sees as a stain on India's democratic credentials and a violation of international human rights laws.

Anna To Meet Irom Sharmila Soon

Anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare, social activist

New Delhi, Aug 30 : Social activist Anna Hazare will soon visit Manipur to meet civil rights activist Irom Sharmila, RTI activist and Team Anna member Akhil Gogoi said in Guwahati after his return from Delhi.

Gogoi also said that Anna had extended his moral support to the Iron Lady of Manipur, who
has been on hunger strike for over 10 years now, demanding the repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act in the state.

After being released from hospital, Anna would return back to his village in Maharashtra and post this he would be visiting Assam and the North East to commence the next round of democratic movement.

On the first day of his visit to Northeast, Hazare will join an anti-dam protest in Assam and would visit Manipur the next day, Gogoi said.

Manipur Sadar Hills Meeting Begin

Decision on agitation only after consultations are over: Committee

A rally at Noney in Manipur on Friday, protesting against the demand for creation of the Sadar Hills district. Picture by UB Photos

Imphal, Aug 30 : The Sadar Hills District Demand Committee has started seeking the opinion of the public on the next course of agitation by holding public meetings from today.

The first meeting was organised at Gangpiphai of Sadar Hills along the Imphal-Senapati highway. A large number people residing in and around the area attended the meeting.

Leaders of the demand committee and an MLA from Sadar Hills, Haoklholet Kipgen, attended the meeting.

A source in the demand committee said more meetings would be held before the committee took a final decision.

“A final decision would be taken on whether the agitation should continue further or be suspended temporarily only after the meetings are over. No decision was taken today,” the source said.

Another public meeting will be held at Kangpokpi, the headquarters of Sadar Hills, tomorrow. The committee also plans to hold meetings at Saikhul and Keithelmanbi to seek peoples’ opinion.

The decision to seek public opinion on the agitation came after the Okram Ibobi Singh government constituted an official-level committee to examine the boundary and police jurisdiction of the proposed boundary.

The official committee was asked to submit its report within three months. President Pratibha Patil and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also assured a delegation which met them in New Delhi that the matter would be looked into.

Sources said Ibobi Singh constituted the committee after the Centre “advised” him to resolve the Sadar Hills issue.

The Sadar Hills District Demand Committee launched its indefinite agitation on the midnight of July 31 to put pressure on Ibobi Singh government to create the district.

As a result of the strike, no vehicles, including trucks carrying essential items, were allowed along the Imphal-Dimapur and Imphal-Jiribam roads in Sadar Hills areas.

The situation worsened as the United Naga Council also imposed a blockade along these two highways from August 21 demanding that land belonging to Nagas should not be divided while creating Sadar Hills district.

As people in other areas of Manipur are reeling under the impact of the blockade, people in Sadar Hills are suffering too as all activities have come to a standstill, sources said.

Shops and business establishments have remained closed in the Sadar Hills areas since August 1.

Khasi Villagers Display No Sex Differences in Spatial Ability

Men’s spatial superiority takes cultural cues

Disputed study puts social forces at root of sex disparity

By Bruce Bower

download

In a new study, Khasi villagers in Northeast India displayed no sex differences in spatial ability. Researchers suspect that Khasi culture, which is organized around females, largely erased men's spatial superiority observed in many other societies.

Culture may hold a spatial place in thought. Social forces profoundly influence people’s ability to think about three-dimensional objects, a new study suggests.

In tests of spatial ability, men traditionally outperform women. But men’s spatial superiority disappears among Northeast India’s Khasi villagers, say economist Moshe Hoffman of the University of California, San Diego and his colleagues. In Khasi society, youngest daughters inherit property, men forward earnings to wives or sisters, and females get as much schooling as males.

Among neighboring Karbi villagers, men display spatial-thinking advantages over women, similar to those in many Western societies, Hoffman’s team reports in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In Karbi society, males inherit and own land and receive more education than females.

“These results show that nurture plays an important role in the gender gap in spatial abilities,” Hoffman says.

But some researchers who study sex differences in thinking view the study skeptically.

access

PIECES OF MIND Villagers who assembled a four-piece horse puzzle have provided clues to cultural forces at the root of men's and women's spatial skills.M. Hoffman et al/PNAS 2011

It’s not clear that the study in fact measured spatial ability, remarks psychologist Richard Lippa of California State University, Fullerton. Hoffman and colleagues measured spatial ability as the time taken to solve a four-piece jigsaw puzzle. But they didn’t assess volunteers’ accuracy at mentally rotating 3D figures and performing other spatial tasks, Lippa notes.

The villagers’ puzzle-assembly time could reflect cautiousness, impulsiveness or a desire to please the researchers, not spatial ability, Lippa says.

Psychologist Diane Halpern of Claremont McKenna College in California agrees. “This new paper doesn’t tell us much about sex differences in spatial cognition.”

In Hoffman’s study, 1,279 Khasi and Karbi villagers received the equivalent of 25 percent of a day’s wage to solve a jigsaw puzzle of a horse. Standard spatial tests are too abstract for these villagers, but the horse puzzle requires mental rotation of picture fragments, Hoffman says.

Khasi men and women alike took an average of just over 30 seconds to put together the puzzle. Karbi men required an average of 42 seconds, versus 57 seconds for Karbi women.

Although better-educated villagers solved the puzzle faster, schooling leaves much of the group difference unexplained, the researchers say.

Findings from these Indian villagers miss the big picture of how sex differences in spatial thinking vary across nations, Lippa asserts. In a 2010 study, his group examined the scores of more than 200,000 people in 53 countries on tests of mental rotation and line-angle judgments.

Surprisingly, men’s spatial advantage was largest in rich countries with many educational and career opportunities for women. Spatial scores for both sexes declined to roughly equal levels in poor countries, in line with a previous study of poor families (SN: 11/19/05, p. 323).

Lippa’s study compared nations that differ in many respects, including culture, genetics and means of subsistence, Hoffman responds. The new study compares two societies identical on all dimensions except culture, he argues, allowing a conclusion that nurture affects sex differences in spatial ability.

Source: sciencenews.org

29 August 2011

OIL Upbeat Over Mizoram Project

Exploratory drilling starts in 2012

oil india rig mizoramDibrugarh, Aug 29 : Oil India Limited (OIL) is all set to explore and produce oil and natural gas in Mizoram after it received the “clearance to operate” from the state recently.

“We have received tremendous support from the Mizoram government and the people in general. We are hoping to find some significant hydrocarbon reserves in the state, as it falls under the same geological structure as that of Myanmar and Bangladesh, where large hydrocarbon reserves have been found,” OIL spokesperson Tridiv Hazarika said.

He added that the oil major had received support from organisations like the Young Mizo Association during the three public hearings on environmental issues conducted by the Pollution Control Board.

Hazarika said OIL, with 85 per cent participating interest, and Shiv-Vani Oil and Gas Exploration Services, with 15 per cent, has signed a production-sharing contract with the government of India for the exploration and production of hydrocarbons in the exploration block MZ-ONN-2004/1 falling in the Lunglei, Aizawl, Serchhip and Mamit districts of Mizoram under NELP-VI.

The contract designates OIL as the operator of the block, the total area of which is 3,213 square km. The capital city, Aizawl, lies 5km north of the northern boundary of the block.

“Exploratory drilling has not been carried out at any place in the block so far. Acquisition, processing and interpretation of two-dimensional seismic survey, gravity magnetic survey, geochemical survey has been done for the block MZ-ONN-2004/1 while three-dimensional surveys are in progress,” Hazarika said.

The company’s expectations are quite high given the fact that official data released by the Centre states that the block has huge hydrocarbon reserves of around 170 million tonnes. At present, the company is producing around 4 million tonnes of crude per annum from its Assam operations.

OIL is planning to carry out exploratory drilling and testing at five promising locations within the block areas during phase I (within 2012) and at another location by 2015. This will be done in accordance with the minimum work programme outlined in the production-sharing contract, with an aim to ascertain the techno-economic viability of hydrocarbon production in the block area for an eight-year period (2007-2015).

Hazarika, however, said the drilling of wells in Mizoram would cost almost four times more in comparison with the drilling cost in Assam, basically because of the lack of proper roads and the tough geographical terrain of the state.

According to an estimate, the company is going to spend around Rs 500 crore to drill the first five wells in the state.

“The days of easy oil are over across the globe. One has to be prepared to take very strong measures to strike hydrocarbon reserves today,” Hazarika said.

Paite’s At Home in Delhi

By PATRICIA MUKHIM

Artistes perform during the Paite festival

Those glued to 24x7 television news channels might be forgiven for believing that the entire population of Delhi is dancing to Anna Hazare’s tune. But that is hardly the case. Large swathes of Delhi remain unaffected by the Ram Lila gig. There are people who pursue their duties with a “business as usual” attitude. However, Anna and the Lokpal are definitely topics of avid conversation. Such conversations precede meetings called for other more mundane issues because this is one movement that is so “in your face,” that you can hardly ignore it; or do so at your own peril.

After all corruption is so all pervasive and those entrusted with the public trust are so disdainful of the janata that Anna and his cohorts are the only people who could make them do a reality check.

But let me come back to the point of this article. On Saturday, August 20, the 2,000-strong Paite community working and studying in Delhi held a cultural programme named North East Colours at Siri Fort Auditorium.

The programme was essentially aimed at bringing together the Paite people from all corners of Delhi for what is a celebration of togetherness. I was briefed by a senior at the function that there are today a number of tribes who have come under the larger umbrella of what is called “Zomi”. They include the Paite, Vaiphei, Zou, Simte, Tedimchin and Thangkhal.

The last time I wrote of this peculiar grouping phenomenon, I was greeted by a couple of angry mails. This time I am only quoting an insider and hope to get off without a rap on the knuckles. The same gentleman also proudly informed me that the Paite group is the first to have their own church at Dwarka in Delhi.

I had learnt early in my journalistic sojourns and forays into some of the backwaters of Manipur such as Churachandpur, Ukhrul, Senapati and Tamenglong that the government is an invisible entity.

Political scientists might observe that less government is better than too much government but that is if you are part of a developed nation where people have learnt to govern themselves. In the case of these hills of Manipur, it is a complete absence of government and with it also the absence of the rule of law. But whereas the latter is somehow managed by tribal institutions that adjudicated over local problems, the vacuum of governance was too palpable to be missed. Roads are in a bad shape and villages remain disconnected.

There are no schools and colleges worth their name. Districts continue to remain laggards even as the Manipur government gets away with the alibi that it is fighting insurgency and is, therefore, always on notice.

Green pastures

It is no surprise therefore that those who could somehow afford to escape this vicious trap of under-development, lack of good education, and who were therefore fuelled by the ambition to have exposure to a better life, quickly moved out of their nests and ventured into Shillong or Guwahati. Those who can do better make it to Delhi, Bangalore, Mumbai or Chennai.

Most do well in their studies and get absorbed in the IT sector or other multinational companies (MNCs). The Indian corporate sector is growing and MNCs setting up shop in this country offer opportunities that would never have opened up back home in Manipur.

Tomes have already been written about how every mall, every upmarket eating joint and nearly every back office of international firms, including those engaged in public relations and the beauty and cosmetics businesses, have some northeasterners cosily fitting into the ambience.

Either by design or default most of them come from the hills of Manipur.

This is not an assumption but information volunteered by these young people who have no qualms about doing so.

After all, they have a right to work with dignity despite the occasional glitches that all of us from the region are subjected to from ignoramuses who believe we are Southeast Asians or Chinese.

These young men and women are great as salespersons. The American Diner at the India Habitat Centre’s plush pub has a couple of northeasterners working and they do a good job as gracious hostesses.

No wonder they don’t have problems finding a job.

What, however, is also creditable about the tribes of Manipur is their determination to make it in life, come what may. At the Paite function I was introduced to Haulianlal Guite, who cleared his civil services examination in 2010 and was ranked 33rd in the qualifying list.

Raw gut

This is a great achievement. Haulianlal is only 23 years of age and wrote his UPSC exams after graduating from St Stephen’s in Delhi, with honours in philosophy. A beaming and confident Haulianlal said he was grilled for over 15 minutes at the personal interview. One of the commission members asked him whether he believed in reincarnation. Without batting an eyelid his witty reply was that there is a difference between what he believed and what is reality. Apparently the interview panel was impressed. Haulianlal said he knew then that he would get in.

Haulianlal’s parents are both doctors and posted in Delhi; so that perhaps gives him a distinct advantage over his peers who have had lesser exposure. But this is not to say that the others do not strive. Every year there are people from this and other hill tribes of Manipur who make it to the civil services and with good grades. Haulianlal is now awaiting his cadre posting.

At the ministry of home affairs is another Paite IAS officer, V. Vumlunmang, at the director level rank. He was probably handpicked by former Union home secretary G.K. Pillai, whose commitment to the cause of this region is unsurpassed. Pillai, who came as guest of honour at the Paite function, made no bones about the fact that officers from the region are integral to filling up the huge information gap that exists in this ministry about the Northeast.

Vumlunmang, too, studied in Mumbai and that is because his father was also in the civil services. Talk about national integration and you see it among the tribes of Manipur who seem to have blended very well with the Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore or Pune circuit.

Achievers

A young, articulate and good-humoured lady compere for the Paite cultural function kept the audience spellbound with her comments. She works as a public relations person for an international firm and says she prefers to remain in that sector as it is challenging and adventurous.

The Paite community in Delhi has a website called www.paite.org which lists the activities of the group, its achievements and keeps them connected. I wonder how many other groups from the region are as cyber savvy. Organisers of the cultural function, the Delhi Paite Indongta were magnanimous enough to invite cultural performances from all groups in the region. The Meiteis performed their Choubal dance but before the performance the leader of the dance troupe cautioned the audience that the Northeast is not just about song and dance. “We should not be a cultural zoo but move forward in other endeavours,” the dancer wisely proclaimed.

Indeed, the Northeast has come a long way from being an isolated, little known region disparaged and disconnected. People from here have made an impact in the consciousness of the average Indian and continue to seize the opportunity.

(The writer can be contacted at patricia17@rediffmail.com)

Migrants Outnumber Tribals in Manipur: Report

By Sobhapati Samom
 
manipur migrantsImphal, Aug 29 : Manipur Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh on Friday said the government will urge the Centre to re-introduce the Inner Line Permit(ILP) system or Inner Line (IL) Regulation in the State once the Cabinet takes a decision in this regard.

“Let the Cabinet first take a decision so that the government can urge the Centre”, said Ibobi while clarifying on a private members’ resolution by N Mangi on the re-introduction of ILP system in the State.

Ibobi also expressed the need to take certain precautionary measures to monitor influx in the State, particularly in the border town of Moreh. Opposition leader Radhabinod Koijam said there will be a demographic and social change if the government fails to regulate the influx in the State.

“Every village in my constituency has a Myanmarese. They settle here after their marriege with the local girls”, Opposition MLA Morung Makunga, who wished to have a regulatory system in the State to monitor entry of migrants, said.

Morung who represents Tengnoupal constituency in Manipur’s Chandel district bordering Myanmar, claimed that the total number of voters in his constituency has been surprisingly risen from 21,000 to 40,000.

According to a report compiled by United Committee Manipur ‘Influx of Migrants into Manipur’, the number of migrants (7,04,488) outnumbered the State’s indigenous tribal population (6,70,782) while the majority indigenous Meetei was just 9,18,626 (2001 census).

Another opposition MLA RK Anand said the situation took a grim turn when the ILP system was removed from the State in November 1950. Since then, the number of migrants has increased at a rapid rate. Presently ILP Regulation was in force in three NE States – Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland and Mizoram.

Blockade: Suspected blockade and bandh supporters set on fire one goods laden vehicle and one school building in two separate incidents late Friday night.

Police said a junior high school at Kangchup Chiru area under Saparmeina police station was burnt down around 9.30 pm while a rice carrying truck was set on fire near Senapati district headquarter around 11.30pm.

Meanwhile, the Manipur Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh has appealed to both the agitating groups to call off the blockades saying the government will take a decision on the district issue once the State Chief Secretary led Committee on Re-oganisation of Administration and Police District Boundary which was formed after a Cabinet decision on Tuesday, submits a report within three months.

Senior opposition member O Joy of Manipur People’s Party had moved a private member’s resolution for the constitution of a District Re-organisation Commission of Manipur for effective and efficient administration of the State on Friday.

Demanding a separate Sadar Hills district, Sadar Hills District Demand Committee had been imposing economic blockade on the two National Highways-39 and 53, since July 31 while UNC has imposed indefinite bandh on these highways and NH 150 since August 21 to protest the alleged move to bifurcate “Naga areas” in creating the district.

Manipur Situation Grim As Lifelines Choked

SADAR-DISTRICT demand in manipurImphal, Aug 29 : In Manipur today, if you have in your stock a filled LPG cylinder and some rice to last for a month then you are a contented person. The indefinite bandh arisen out of the Sadar Hills district demand issue has choked the lifelines of Manipur for the last one month now.

Hundreds of vehicles will be seen snaking up to oil an oil pump from the evening onwards if the filling station is to sell fuel in the following day. Desperate vehicle owners have been spending their nights in their vehicles in the roadside waiting for the day-break in front of the oil pumps.

A litre of petrol in grey market has shot up to Rs 100 and rising while a filled LPG cylinder will cost you anything between Rs 1500 to Rs 2000 and that too, after an intensive search for the commodity.
Given this situation, schools and other educational institutions are likely to close down in want of fuel. Vehicles transporting students and staff of institutions are now finding it hard to continue their services due to scarcity of fuel.

Meanwhile, everyone is waiting for the outcome public meeting to be held on Monday over the Sadar Hills issue convened by the Sadar Hills Districthood Demand Committee (SHDDC). Another important programme slated for Monday has been the meeting between the state government and the Jiribam District Demand Committee. If things do not strike well in these two proposed meetings, the hardship faced by the people getting respite is going to be remote.

Interestingly, amidst these chaotic developments, Schedule Caste people residing in the Sadar Hills area bordering the valley districts took out a silent rally today demanding that their villages should not be included in the Sadar Hills once it got converted to a full-fledged district. The people from Phayeng, Khurkhul, Kangchup, Chirang, Senjam and Sekmai participated in today's silent rally.

27 August 2011

MYSF Continues Its SMEAR CAMPAIGN Against Mizoram

smear campaign against mizoram

Sinlung SAYS: There are several non-Mizo communities living in Mizoram. But the group below MYSF continues in its smear campaign against Mizoram which we find very disturbing. The claims, made by this organization is not only baseless as they cannot bring up one single case from any police station in Mizoram to prove their claim. Further, as mentioned by minority organization in Mizoram (see our earlier news) that they are not harassed…WHY DOES THIS Minority Youths & Students Federation keep on raising false claims?

PM Urged To Ensure Safety Of Non-Mizos

Nilambazar, Aug 27 : The Minority Youths & Students Federation (MYSF) in a memorandum addressed to the Prime Minister of India, through the Deputy Commissioner Karimganj here on Saturday, demanded an immediate halt to the harassment of non-Mizos in different parts of Mizoram since the last few days.

A shrill campaign of sorts has been taken up by some Mizo organisations which has created a panicky situation. Trade licenses and inner line permits of many non-Mizos have been seized by the agitating members of the NGOs while some others have been forced to down their shutters of their shops.

The memorandum signed by the office bearers and members of the youths and students federation has urged the Prime Minister to take effective steps to restore normalcy in the State so that the victims of physical and mental torture can resume their business and other activities.

Those whose trade licenses and inner line permits have been taken away should get them back, besides providing them adequate security for their safe stay. It is noted with alarm that the non-Mizos have been served with an ultimatum to quit Mizoram by August 31.

The federation made it clear that if the harassment of non-Mizos does not stop, both the rail and road communication with Mizoram would be blocked indefinitely besides imposition of curfew prohibiting the movement of Mizo people through Barak Valley.

This decision was unanimously taken at a meeting of the citizens– representing various social and civic bodies held at the premises of Silchar Press Club.

It is hoped that the Prime Minister would exert his good offices to bring back some confidence among the panic-ridden non-Mizos and maintain the traditional goodwill and friendship between the people of Mizoram and the Barak Valley.

Earlier, the Minority Youths & Students Federation met the Minister BAD and Cooperatives etc., Siddeque Ahmed at the Karimganj Circuit House demanding safety and security of the non-Mizos, who are working in Mizoram.

7500 Mizo Jews to Migrate to Israel This Year

Flag of BM

By Thawng Zel Thang

Flag of Bnei Menashe (Picture: Wikipedia)

Aizawl, Aug 27 : Thousands of Mizos from India, who claim to be of Jewish descent, are expected to leave Mizoram State for Israel, also known to them as the Promised Land.

At least 7,500 people from Mizoram and Manipur states of India are believed to be joining an estimated number of 1,700 Mizo Jews who have already settled in Israel, according to sources.

Jeremiah Hnamte, one of the leaders of Aizawl-based Bnei Menashe, a community claiming to be one of the descendants from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, was quoted as saying that mass migration plans have been prepared and will take place later this year.

The Mizo Jews, of which about 3,000 are from Manipur State, are claimed to be formally converted into Judaism once they arrive in their new Promised Land.

It is reported that the Bnei Menashe’s have been accepted as one of the Jewish descendants since 2005 after an official visit by one of the chief Rabbis from Israel.

Some speculations have been raised over the possibility of a genetic connection between Jews and Mizos.

Zaithanchhungi, a Mizo researcher, was quoted as saying the Bnei Menashe’s, who claim to be of Manasseh descent, ended up in the Indian states through a journey via China.

Some Mizo Christians voiced their concerns over the mass migration as a threat to social stability in Mizoram State while others said similarities between customs of any two communities of the world don't mean they shared the same ancestors.

A Christian pastor studying in India said it seems that their claim is likely to be rather a supposition based in the biblical verses as it is very difficult to prove that we are descendants of the lost tribes of Israel.

In 2003, migration of Mizo Jews to Israel was stopped by Interior Minister Avraham Poraz after an allegation that the Bnei Menashe were 'exploited for political purposes' as they were being settled in the Gaza Strip and in the West Bank.

The Mizos have reportedly started migrating to the Holy Land as early as mid 1990’s.

It is estimated that there are more than 9,000 members of the Bnei Menashe in Mizoram and Manipur states of India.

Sources record that the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, which refers to the ancient Northern Kingdom of Israel, include Reuben, Simeon, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun, Ephraim, and Manasseh, son of Joseph.


Source: chinlandguardian.com

The Long Road To Northeast Peace

The keenness of insurgent groups in the region to talk peace is driven by self-preservation.

By
Nilim Dutta

Winds of change The NSCN is vying for peace

For the first time in decades, insurgency and violence have ebbed in almost all the states in India’s Northeast. All major insurgent groups, with the exception of those in Manipur, are in ‘ceasefire’ and/or in various stages of a negotiated political settlement with the Centre. Several of these negotiations have been unfolding at an excruciatingly slow pace, given the complexity of the issues involved: ranging from demands of secession to autonomy, with competing claims over territory and indigenous rights. The situation is further complicated by rivalries between insurgent groups belonging to the same ethnic sub-nationality, vying to be the predominant, if not the sole representative, of their people; or between split factions of even the same insurgent group vying for legitimacy.

While it will be foolhardy to predict how the multiple peace processes are likely to unfold, an accurate recognition of the entities who hold the keys and an equally perceptive understanding of the core issues they will need to successfully resolve, could bring about a clarity to a possible roadmap.

Winds of change The ULFA is vying for peace

Photo: Shailendra Pandey

The Naga peace process: Secession no Longer an option
The Nagas raised their banner of rebellion on the eve of India’s independence, apprehensive about their future in the new postcolonial nation-state, and have remained locked in a war of attrition with the Indian Union for ‘sovereignty’ ever since. During this time, the Naga insurgency has witnessed many twists and turns, including splits in leadership, internecine feuds and lost opportunities for peace. It also inspired, nurtured and sustained a multiplicity of ethnic insurgencies, putting the nation’s security architecture under severe strain for decades. In the past few decades, the Naga insurgent movement came to be headed by two factions of the Nationalist Socialist Council of Nagaland — the NSCN(ISAK-MUIVAH) and the NSCN(KHAPLANG) factions. The NSCN(IM), after rounds of secret negotiations, entered into a ceasefire with the Centre in 1997 and the NSCN(K) followed suit about a year later. It has now been 14 years and negotiations have been slow because of complicated issues. Hope lies in the fact that in spite of provocations by all sides, the ceasefire has endured. The Naga peace process is now at a critical juncture, and how it is likely to unfold hereafter has to be inferred from how the three core issues have been addressed so far.

First is the issue of Naga sovereignty. It is indisputable that the Naga movement has been instrumental in forging disparate Naga tribes into a nation owing to their distinct history of keeping alive their quest for a separate homeland. Even as they fought for decades, the Nagas paradoxically got further integrated into the Indian Union. Strong ‘Indian’ interests got entrenched in Naga polity and economy. The Naga middle class elite became beneficiaries of privileges that India bestowed, as did the insurgent organisations themselves. Perceptive observers had long held that ultimately, sovereignty shall have to be ruled out. This was borne out in the statements by Muivah and RS Pandey, the Central government interlocutor, that the NSCN(IM) and the Union of India have reached an ‘understanding’ of a ‘shared sovereignty’. What that ‘shared sovereignty’ turns out remains to be seen, but it certainly won’t be secession.

The arrival of NSCN(IM) Chairman Isak Chisi Swu and his entourage in New Delhi in January on an ‘Indian passport’ for the first time should be indicative of their relinquishing the demand for sovereignty.

Second is the claim for ‘integration’ of all Naga-inhabited areas into one geopolitical entity. That claim includes not only the Naga-inhabited hilly districts of Manipur, areas of Assam and Arunachal Pradesh, but also Naga-inhabited territories of Myanmar. That the general secretary of NSCN(IM), Thuingaleng Muivah, hails from the Ukhrul district of Manipur, whereas NSCN(K) Chairman SS Khaplang hails from Naga-inhabited areas of Myanmar makes it somewhat awkward for both groups to relinquish claims to these territories.

Reorganising the boundary of an Indian State would require a political consensus. Such a consensus is unlikely. No existent state will cede territory to a new larger Naga state. And an attempt to do so would unleash inevitable violence. The leadership of both NSCN factions know this. That the ceasefire remains operational only in Nagaland even after 14 years further underscores this. Integrating areas of Myanmar is anyway beyond the jurisdiction of India and hence, irrelevant.

Insurgency will either die a natural death through ‘honourable’ settlement or will go into hibernation

Third is the question of Naga reconciliation, unifying the various feuding Naga factions under one umbrella. This process received a setback when NSCN(K) supremo Khaplang pulled out of the process in 2008 and remained recalcitrant to reconsider. A significantly large section of the NSCN(K) leadership was suspicious that the talks with the NSCN(IM) have attained a definite and irreversible momentum, and that they were likely to be sidelined in a settlement due to the intransigence of Khaplang.

This led to a ‘coup’ of sorts by the NSCN(K) prime minister and their military commander who impeached the chairman. The June split and the rise of the NSCN(Khole-Kitovi) faction was a consequence of this. Khaplang, meanwhile, continues to retain territories and cadres in his strongholds. Even though such splits during peace talks do not bode well, this one indicates that the insurgent leaders perceived a settlement was within grasp and it was important to remain relevant, even if it meant breaking with intransigent leadership. The inclusion of the NSCN (Khole-Kitovi) and the extension of the ceasefire is also a step in the right direction by the Centre.

Peace With ULFA: No More Red Carpets

The United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), in its three decades of existence, has endured several splits and peace processes. It has also endured several military crackdowns. The ones that nearly crippled it, however, did not occur at the hands of Indian security forces. The 2003 crackdown by Bhutan Army on ULFA camps in its territory led to either the wiping out or the arrest of a number of top-rung leaders. The ULFA had seriously underestimated the capability and intent of the Bhutanese government as it did India’s diplomatic clout over its tiny neighbour. ULFA never managed to regain a foothold there. The years that followed saw a major peace initiative fall through, while it remained entrenched in Bangladesh and Myanmar.

Public opinion, however, started mounting on both the Union government as well as ULFA to consider peace seriously. A citizens’ initiative had started to coax both sides on to the negotiating table. Also, a few influential ULFA leaders came overground with cadres. Still, an all-encompassing ‘peace process’ eluded Assam. That is when the next blow fell on ULFA. Late in 2009, Bangladeshi security forces swooped down on top ULFA leaders residing in Bangladesh. Among those who fell into the dragnet were chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa and deputy military commander Raju Baruah. ULFA had once again failed to anticipate the resolve of another foreign government to act. All arrested leaders were quickly handed over to India and they soon found themselves walking to jail in cuffs. The hubris of a triumphant return as liberators was forever ground to ashes. The only top leader who escaped unscathed was military chief Paresh Barua, who had already relocated to Myanmar.

With Bangladesh firmly going after all camps in their territory, suddenly there was no more pressing need for the Union government to talk. Only after strong intervention by a section of Assam’s eminent intellectuals and civil society, and seeing the need to assuage feelings prior to Assembly elections in the state, did talks kick-start. One by one, the leaders were released from judicial custody on bail, and many second-rung leaders with cadres from ULFA’s operational units surfaced in Assam. While leaders who were released from judicial custody remained committed to the peace process, an influential section entrenched in Myanmar, led by Paresh Barua, has spurned every offer for peace. ULFA is in an uneasy stalemate, with neither the pro-talk faction led by Rajkhowa nor the anti-talk faction led by Paresh Barua officially admitting to what has practically become a split. But the Rajkhowa faction has little leverage over the Union government as it is a foregone conclusion that they have no ‘rebellion’ left in them. On the other hand, even though Barua cannot be compelled to acquiesce to the talks, he stands severely weakened by the split and the losses in Bangladesh. Even if he ultimately accepts offers for talks and is given a safe passage, the red carpet isn’t likely to be rolled out as it was for Muivah and Swu.

The claim for Assam’s sovereignty has already lost relevance. So have the dreams of ULFA leaders to hold it as a bargaining chip for political privileges in their transition back to a constitutional democratic set-up. The virus of insurgency will either die a natural death through an ‘honourable’ settlement or be allowed to go into hibernation to spring back to life at a future time. This is relevant to the success of the parallel peace processes underway with the Bodo, Karbi and Dimasa outfits in Assam as well.

**Nilim Dutta is Executive director, strategic research & analysis organisation, Guwahati. nilimdutta@gmail.com

UPF Raises 'Autonomous State' Demand in Northeast India

http://lh6.ggpht.com/_qQQQg0ODhzo/THirOebsqBI/AAAAAAAAJPw/NvO74PLNZcU/KNF_thumb%5B1%5D.jpg
KNF Cadres during raising day parade (KNF is part of the umbrella group UPF)

Churachandpur, Aug 27 : Members of the United Peoples' Front (UPF) have at a convention held early this week agreed to formally endorse 'autonomous State' as mentioned in Article 144 A of the Indian Constitution to be their collective political demand and the same will soon be tabled before the Government, inside sources said.

A signatory to the tripartite Suspension of Operation, the UPF have a two-day convention at Guwahati this week wherein all its members endorses to table 'autonomous State' as its political demand, Kamsuan, the UPF information secretary told The Sangai Express.

The convention also witnessed a major reshuffle with the KNF chief Seiminthang alias ST Thangboi assuming the chairman's post while ZRO president Thanglianpau Guite has been designated as the general secretary.

H Sanga Hmar from the HPC (D) was assigned the task of a convener and will lead the Front in all JMG meetings, he said.

He added, very soon the UPF will table the collective political demand before the Government and pursue the same.

26 August 2011

OIL Begins Hunt For Oil in Mizoram

Oil India limitedAizawl, Aug 26 : Oil India Limited (OIL), India’s second largest oil and gas company, has entered Mizoram in a mission to explore oil and gas in an area of 3213 square kms in four districts of Mizoram.

The OIL is currently conducting public hearings in villages to be affected by the exploration and is in the stage of procurement of land, a source from the company said.

Oil India Limited is very optimistic that Mizoram will become a major producer of hydrocarbon and discovery of oil or gas will bring in sustainable socio-economic development of the entire state, especially for the people of the operational areas, Tridev Hazarika, spokesperson for OIL said today.

The company is committed to putting in place all the resources under its command to explore for hydrocarbon reserves in the land of the blue hills, he said. As per the agreement, OIL is required to drill six wells of which three locations have been identified.

The other three will be selected after further geo scientific studies and results of the drilled wells. Drilling operation is expected to begin from early next year, the spokesman said.

In order to obtain environmental clearance, OIL is required to carry out an environmental impact assessment (EIA) study in the block to establish present baseline environmental scenario and the likely impact on the same as a result of proposed exploratory drilling and testing of the wells.

EIA report is prepared using primary baseline data collected at the site for nearly five weeks during March and April last and secondary data collected from various sources in public domain as well as the project information provided by OIL.

If the ONGC, which is deeply engaged in drilling operation in northern Mizoram, is being accused of violating environmental norms, the OIL is taking every possible measure to cause the least impact on the environment. Drilling rig and associated system will be used for drilling of the exploratory wells.

Water based mud will be used as drilling fluid which is intrinsically safe and causes minimum environmental disturbances.

Facilities for production testing will be created within each exploratory well site, Hazarika said. Use of water based mud for drilling is very eco-friendly and will cause minimum environmental disturbances.

There will be no impact on soils of the area except for the collection of rock cuttings, bentonite clay and other non-toxic ingredients of wasted WBM in HDPE lined effluents pits due to drilling of the wells. Tuirial, Mat Tuikum, Tut and Tuichang rivers are perennial rivers flowing in and close to the block area.

The construction of HDPE lined shallow effluents pits will ensure that there is no adverse impact on ground water or surface water quality of the block area. The discharge, if required, of treated effluents meeting on-shore discharge standards at a controlled rate will ensure that there is no perceptible adverse impact on surface water quality of nearby nullah/river, the spokesperson said.

Oil exploration giants like ONGC, IOC and OIL and firms from Israel, the US, France and Russia have been selected through global tenders to explore the gas and oil deposits in an area of 12,430 Sq Km, which comprised 58.9 per cent of the total geographical area of the state.

According to the agreements, 12 per cent of oil produced and 10 per cent of gas produced will go to the state of Mizoram as royalty.

As recommended by the 11th Finance Commission, the net profit will also be shared 50:50 between the state and the Centre.

Geologists said Mizoram falls under category number one or proven commercial productivity zone which roughly estimates there could be about 170 million metric tonnes of untapped crude reserves.

Analysis: India's Social Media ‘Spring’ Masks Forgotten Protests

Irom Sharmila Chanu, 34, reacts during an interview with Reuters in New Delhi October 4, 2006.REUTERS/Vijay Mathur

By Alistair Scrutton

New Delhi, Aug 25 : Irom Sharmila has been on hunger strike for 10 years to protest against military abuses, force-fed by tubes through her nose. But the tragedy for the world's longest hunger strike is that she is on the wrong side of India's digital divide.

Twitter, Facebook and aggressive private TV have helped rally India's biggest protests in decades to support civil activist Anna Hazare, a digital groundswell of a wired middle class that echoes the Arab Spring and has taken a Congress party-led government of elderly politicians by surprise.

But Sharmila, who has been on a hunger strike in the northeastern Manipur state to demand an end to the army's sweeping emergency powers there, has only managed a small following, a footnote in media coverage.

"We also once tried to take our fight to New Delhi ... but we did not get support from the rest of the nation," Sharmila told Tehelka magazine.

She must be frustrated. The Hazare phenomenon has rallied Indians from the start with social media. Hazare's India Against Corruption website says it has had 13 million phone calls of support. Its Facebook page has nearly 500,000 "likes."

Its leaders have tweeted each step of the whirlwind crisis, whether describing their arrests in real time or negotiations with the government, outmanoeuvring Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his ministers at every step.

"Protest at PM's residence: 35 people detained, taken to Tughlaq Rd. PS, hundreds still there, come if you can #Janlokpal," twitter user @janlokpal sent its followers in just one example of how the movement was rallying support.

Cases like Sharmila expose the digital divide of Asia's third largest economy and underscore how a growing urban middle class may be getting its political voice heard while millions of poor remain off the digital protest map.

"This is the first time digital social media has resonated with such a large number of people," said Nishant Shah, head of research at the Center for Internet and Society think-tank.

"But this is far more of a middle class, urban movement, than a national movement. Many people in India are excluded from it."

Twitter and Facebook are barely used in many of India's social causes, including battles over land rights that are one of India's most pressing problems involving millions of farmers.

Huge social issues in India, from caste discrimination to high food prices, from the building of dams to protests by farmers against nuclear power plants, have failed to create the kind of digital mobilization that Hazare enjoys.

A DIGITAL DIVIDE

India's internet users have grown 1,400 percent between 2000 and 2010, behind only China and Vietnam among Asian countries, according to a report by Burson-Marsteller, a consulting firm.

But that masks India's low base. Internet penetration is around 8 percent in India, the lowest among major Asian countries. That compares with nearly 40 percent in China.

Out of a population of 1.2 billion, there are only 29 million people active in digital social networks. A report by Maplecroft consultancy warned that India was lagging other BRICs, Brazil, China and Russia in "digital inclusion."

"India, for example, the wealthier, more affluent segment of the population, primarily based in urban areas, has embraced the use of modern communications technology," the report said.

"The vast majority of the population has, however, been excluded from this process."

Those statistics highlight that while the middle class has found a voice, electorally the center-left Congress party will still need to pander to its traditional vote base of millions of farmers and poor Indians ahead of a 2014 general election.

Congress, in power for most of the life of independent India, has failed to use social media tools. One minister lost his job for tweeting too frankly, in a sign of government unease over the web, and the party lags behind an opposition that has embraced Twitter.

LIBYA OVERSHADOWED

So far, private TV channels have provided 24-hour coverage of the protests -- the news from Libya is hardly to be seen. Urban Indians with mobile phones in hand have dominated rallies in the open grounds where Hazare was on his second week of fasting.

Small protests across the country, from demonstrations outside ministers' houses to rallies outside metro stations, have been organized through Twitter and Facebook.

An app that can be downloaded on to smartphones running the Android operating system gives users the latest news on the campaign for a tough "Jan lokpal," or anti-corruption bill, and details of the latest meetings.

"Social media has been huge for us, it has a life of its own," said Shazia Ilmi, in charge of Hazare media strategy.

Even before Hazare was arrested last week, organizers had prepared a pre-recorded video from him that went on YouTube.

The movement does have deep roots and social media has widened the protests, if not caused them. Many of Hazare's protests have also been through word of mouth. Corruption also affects the poor more than middle classes with endemic bribes, whether permission for street food stands or driving licenses.

"It's not an up and down, national movement. It is largely a middle class cause," said Sagarika Ghose, a novelist and journalist at the CNN-IBN news television channel.

"But it's hugely important one. For a younger generation, corruption has become a catch-all phrase for the failure of development."

Some activists are already criticizing Hazare as a hype of an elitist social media.

"Those thronging the Ramlila grounds or marching in support of Anna in the metros are not necessarily 'the people' of the country, and it is dangerous to take the two as identical," academic Prabhat Patnaik wrote in The Hindu newspaper.

(Editing by Paul de Bendern and Alex Richardson)

Is it The Anna Team or The K-Team?

By Sanjay Basak

anna just a ToolNew Delhi, Aug 25 : Anna Hazare, the nation’s latest face against corruption, is being viewed by a section as merely a 'tool' used by Arvind Kejriwal, Kiran Bedi and the father-son duo of Prashant Bhushan and Shanti Bhushan.

Sources disclosed that sensing the campaign against corruption, which hit the government with a series of 2G exposes, the team of four started to look around for a credible face.

Speaking to this newspaper on condition of anonymity, a member of India Against Corruption (IAC) disclosed that when the Kejriwal team failed to make any impact on the corruption issue and get Ms Kiran Bedi posted as CIC chief, it zeroed in on Mr Hazare to plan the next move.

“Kejriwal met Anna at his village in Maharashtra and convinced him to join their movement against corruption,” the member claimed.

Earlier, Mr Hazare had been a part of K-Team only to endorse their move to install Ms Bedi as CIC chief following the retirement of Mr Wajahat Habibullah, sources said.

Mr Kejriwal and other civil society activists, including Ms Aruna Roy, have been working for a strong Lokpal Bill. Sources disclosed that differences cropped up after Ms Roy was appointed a NAC member. It was for the first time that Ms Roy and Mr Kejriwal stood on opposite sides. Mr Kejriwal had worked extensively with Ms Roy in the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan. “In fact, he was tutored by Aruna Roy,” sources said.

The IAC member said Mr Kejriwal, Ms Bedi and the Bhushans decided to make the Lokpal Bill the main weapon to fight corruption and emerge into the limelight. Mr Hazare’s clean image made Mr Kejriwal pick him as the movement’s mascot. Before Ms Roy and other civil society members realised it, Mr Kejriwal had “stolen the thunder”, the IAC member said.

via Asian Age

25 August 2011

Procession in Mizoram Demanding Resumption Of Peace Talks

peace-doveAizawl, Aug 25 : People belonging to different political parties in Mizoram today took out ''peace processions'' in Hmar villages in the north eastern part of Mizoram adjoining Manipur demanding resumption of peace talks between the Mizoram state government and the Hmar People's Convention - Democrats (HPC-D) militants to find a lasting solution to Hmar problem.

Police said that the procession, organized by all the political parties in the Hmar inhabited area at Sakawrdai, Suangpuilawn and Saiphai villages, all in Aizawl district.

Earlier the talks held on November 11 last year culminated into signing of bilateral Suspension of Operations (SoO) for six months, but the SoO was never extended as both the Mizoram government and the HPC-D began accusing each other on different issues.

Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla, on July 27 had informed the state assembly that the outfit has already signed SoO with the Centre and it was no longer fit for the state government to resume peace talks with the Hmar group.

Mizoram Embarks On Checking Fake Ration Cards

fake ration card Mizoram

Aizawl, Aug 25
: In its gigantic step to check gross anomalies in family ration cards in Mizoram, the food, civil supplies and consumer affairs has unearthed 4,559 fake ration cards in Champhai district alone.

The task of checking fake ration cards involved making photocopies all ration cards in the district and scrutiny with the assistance of village vigilance and monitoring committee in each locality and village.

There were 36,821 persons in the 4,559 fake ration cards, department sources said.

Department director M Zohmingthangi said all the other district civil supplies offices have been instructed to conduct the same in their respective districts.

It has also been learnt that there are a number of families, who have triple ration cards of BPL, AAY and APL. It is understood that the number of people in ration cards is much higher than the actual population of the state.

According to official sources, there are 2,49,445 including 46,000 BPL ration cards and 24,000 AAY ration cards.

Assuming that there were five members in each family, the state s population, according to the ration cards, would be more than 12 lakhs, while the actual population, according to the provisional report of the Census 2011, was a little over 10 lakhs.

Informing that the department has stocked rice in all government godowns in Mizoram to last till the end of September, the director said steps are being taken to issue family ration cards based on the Census 2011.

The department director said once the Food Security Act is passed by the Parliament, ration cards would be broadly divided into priority and general. In priority ration card, each person will be allotted seven kilograms of rice per month while in general ration card, each person would get four kgs of rice per month.

The Comptroller Auditor General of India, in its report for the year ended March 31, 2010, stated that the state s food, civil supplies and consumer affairs issued excess ration cards ranging between 66,746 to 1,23,570 during 2007-2010.

As a result, Mizoram had an excess number of population ranging between 1,07,708 to 3,70,414 during the period. According to the report, the department issued 315838 ration cards against the projected 249092 number of households in 2009-2010.

The excess population, therefore, came to 370414 against the projected population of 1126067. In 2007-2008, 311203 ration cards were issued against the projected 187633, making an excess population of 107708. Even though the projected number of households remained the same in 2008-2009, the ration cards came down to 305997.

However, the population according the FRC’s jumped to 1552009 in 2008-2009. The excess of ration cards came down to 66746 in 209-2010 from 118364 in 2008-2009 and that of population to 370414 from 529637.

Whereas the Mizoram’s population, according to the FRC’s issued in 2009-2010, was 1496418, the actual population as per the Census 2011 stands at 10,91,014.

Mizoram Population Nears 11 Lakh

market square in aizawl mizoram

Aizawl, Aug 25
: Mizoram has a population of 10,91,014 including 5,38,675 women, according to the final figure of the Census 2011 released by State chief secretary Van Hela Pachuau.

According to the Census figure, the sex ratio was 975 females per 1,000 males and there are 1,65,536 children below the age of six in which the sex ratio was 971 girls per 1,000 boys.

The sex ratio of children below the age of six showed that there were no female foeticide in the State, Pachuau said. The decadal growth rate since 2001 Census was 22.78 per cent while that of children below the age of six was 15.17 per cent during the same period.

Among the eight districts in the State, Aizawl was the most populous district having a population of 4,04,054 and the population of Saiha, the southernmost district was lowest at 56,366 population.

The density of population in the State was 52 per square kilometre.

At 91.6 per cent, Mizoram has the third highest literacy percentage in the country while Serchhip district at 98.8 per cent was the highest in literacy in the State.

'Northeast Issues Finally Heard After Decades'

By Sanjib Kr Baruah

akhil gogoi assam protest anna hazare northeast India

Akhil Gogoi (right) with Anna Hazare

New Delhi, Aug 25
: For RTI activist from Assam and core member of Team Anna, Ramlila Ground, the Ground Zero of Anna Hazare's epic fast, is turning out to be a platform and an unprecedented opportunity to highlight the issues of the Northeast region.

"For the first time since the 1942 movement, problems facing the Northeast region are finding an audience here," said Akhil Gogoi, who has also been at the forefront of an ongoing campaign against the setting up of more than 160 hydroelectricity projects across Arunachal Pradesh.

"When the floods take place with alarming regularity, it is Assam's problem, but when the water is required for hydroelectricity generation, it belongs to the entire Nation," he said.

Indicating that issues relating to the Northeast will find increasing focus at Ramlila Ground, Gogoi said: "Two issues are being laid bare before the public here. One is the devastation that the floods create every year and the other being the culture of all-pervasive corruption in the NE states as is exemplified by the Rs 1,000 crore scam in Assam's North Cachar Hills."

Asked about the support the 74-year-Old's fast has generated in the Northeast, Gogoi said: "Support is growing by the day. All the states of the Northeast have joined in."

Manipur's 'Iron Lady' Irom Sharmila who has been fasting for the last decade demanding removal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958 (AFSPA), had expressed her inability to join the fast at Ramlila as she was still in judicial custody in Imphal. Interestingly, she has extended an invite to Anna Hazare to come to Manipur 'the most corruption-affected region in the world'.

The AFSPA allows security forces personnel the power to arrest, search, and destroy property bereft of a warrant and to shoot, and even kill, on mere suspicion.

University Launches New Degree Courses to Empower Northeast India Leaders

By Shiji James

MSW Students with the dignitaries on the first day

Guwahati, Aug 25 :
In an effort to offer higher education in socially relevant studies accessible in northeast India the Assam Don Bosco University launched 3 new Masters level courses as well as a post graduate diploma course. The new courses introduced this year include Master of Social Work (MSW), M. Tech. in Electronics and Communication (Opto-electronics and Optical Communication) and M. Tech. in Computer Science (Artificial Intelligence).

Post Graduate Diploma in Child Rights and Development (PGDCRD) is another DBU new sector of specialized Human Rights studies introduced in the region.

The new courses were formally launched at the DBU Campus at Azara, near Guwahati airport, 23 August 2011, marking the commencement of fourth academic year.

``The focus on Master of Social Work is to train leaders in social responsibility who will impact their society for the better and bring about professional management of NGOs (non-governmental organizations),`` said DBU Vice-Chancellor Dr Stephen Mavely.

The four-semester postgraduate programme in Social Work leading to the degree of Master of Social Work (MSW) has an innovative blend of theory, fieldwork and research. It provides students with a variety of skills to enable them to be active social workers in the field themselves, to set up and manage social work organizations of their own, or to find employment with various national and international agencies.

In pursuance of these goals, great emphasis is placed on exposing the students to the philosophy and methodology of social work, its sociological and psychological underpinnings, and practical experience in scientific research in this field.

Instead, the aim of M Tech Programme Dr Mavely said, ``is for in-service teachers to create a well-prepared pool of staff for the professional colleges.``

The University has M. Tech. Programmes in three disciplines - Electrical Engineering, Electronics Engineering & Communications Engineering, and Computer Science Engineering. The specific areas of specialization - Optoelectronics and Optical Communication, and Artificial Intelligence - are areas where cutting edge technology meets the demands of industry.

These programmes seek to address the acute shortage of qualified professionals in these areas of engineering in North-East India by providing an opportunity to aspiring candidates to ground themselves in their disciplines of choice with specialized knowledge, hands-on projects and an introduction to research methodology.

Convenient class timings have been scheduled to enable lecturers and working professionals to use this opportunity to enhance their qualification and skills.

The PG Diploma Programme, Dr Mavely explained, ``will prepare professionals in the area of Child welfare, Child protection, Child legislation, and NGO Management.``

The PG Diploma Programme in `Child Rights and Development` brings children`s rights to life as outlined in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in the context of development using innovative research, education and capacity building that draws on the strengths of children, their families, communities and culture. It aims to enhance the capacity of individuals, organizations, and governments, to effectively use the existing legal provisions, insights from developmental psychology and the findings of contemporary research to transform systems and create peace and dignity for children and our world - moving child rights from rhetoric to reality.

This Programme, spread over two semesters (1 year), deals with topics of vital interest to Social Workers, NGOs, Lawyers, Human Rights Advocates, members of Religious Orders and Dioceses. The course will concentrate on a wide spectrum of child related issues and topics such as Child Rights, Child Psychology, Child Counseling, Child Care Services, Child Protection Issues, Child-related Legislation, and NGO Formation.

There are seven online degree programs started earlier this year. They include Executive MBA (18 Months), MBA in Technology Management (2 years), MBA in Entrepreneurship (2 years), MBA with Specialization (2 years), MS (Information Technology) (2 years), Bachelor of Business Administration (3 years), and Bachelor of Computer Application (3 years).

 

source: donboscoindia.com

24 August 2011

Bhaichung Bids Goodbye To International Football

Former India captain Baichung Bhutia during a practice session, at Nehru Stadium in Guwahati. File photo

Former India captain Baichung Bhutia during a practice session, at Nehru Stadium in Guwahati.

New Delhi, Aug 24 : The 'Sikkimese Sniper' had 16 years of international football. He was plagued by injuries the past year and has now decided to continue to play only for his club United Sikkim FC which he founded

Former captain and the face of Indian football for major part of the last two decades, star striker Bhaichung Bhutia today announced his international retirement, drawing curtains on an illustrious 16-year career.

The 34-year-old, known as the ‘Sikkimese Sniper’ for his shooting skills, announced his decision during a press meet at the All India Football Federation headquarters here.

“I had fantastic 16 years of international football. I enjoyed every moment to have represented the country, to have contributed to the game,” Bhaichung said.

Speculation had been rife on the imminent retirement of the talismanic striker, who pulled out of India Under-23 side’s tour of England where they will play against Pakistan and England Under-23 next month.

He was struggling with injuries in the past one year and could play for just 15 minutes in the Asian Cup in Qatar in January, the most prestigious event India has ever taken part in the last 27 years.

“Winning the AFC Challenge Cup in 2008, to qualify for the Asian Cup were the best moments of my career and I thought of retiring after playing in that tournament,” he said.

“But I could play only 15 minutes in the Asian Cup and I thought it was not the right way to retire. I wanted to continue playing but the last 7-8 months have been frustrating due to lot of injuries. So I have decided to quit,” he added.

He was dropped from the Indian squad selected for the 2014 World Cup qualifiers and the preparatory matches.

Bhaichung, however, will continue to play for his club United Sikkim FC which he founded.

“Lots of things in life do not happen the way we wish so I am quitting from international football but will continue playing for my club,” he said.

“My commitment and contribution to Indian football will not diminish and I am ready to help the AIFF in whatever way they want me,” he said.

Are Indians obsessed with fair skin?

Indian fashion's white skin obsession

The White fetish is not just limited to the Indian household. Even the fashion industry has been alleged of being racist off late.

Indian models have accused their own industry of racism over the increased use of foreign white models over darker-skinned local girls.

Many top models have spoken out about prejudice and discrimination due to which they lose out on a lot of assignments or are paid less as compared to their foreign counterparts. They say India has an obsession with pale skin that dates back to British colonial rule.

The Indian fashion industry is currently enjoying a boom. Many Indian designers such as Manish Arora and Rohit Bal are enjoying success in Europe and the United States. Indian fashion events have now become major media events.

While Russians, Brazilians and some other European models are cashing in, some of our top models have complained they are losing out on the jobs and are being paid much less than their European rivals. These models claim that the fashion industry is in denial of this phenomenon and it would take many years for the prejudice to fade. Supermodel Carol Gracias said the most successful Indian models were paid between £500 and £600 per show, a tiny fraction of the rates paid to their western counterparts, while lucrative Indian television commercial jobs mostly went to western models.

Indians have been obsessed with the White skin ever since the British established their domination on this ‘brown’ country. Although the British went away, the obsession still remains. The fashion industry doesn’t openly agree to this partiality, but the fact that most designers want to prove that their designs and garments will suit the foreign markets as well makes them prefer foreign models.

Supermodel and actor Deepanita Sharma pointed out that, "One could have understood, if it was about getting supermodels of international fame or to work in India but that's not happening, it's just that they want fairer skin on the Indian ramps."

As Indians we have had an inferiority complex, we have had a hangover about fair skin. The idea of fairness is an Indian concept. However, with Indian faces now endorsing foreign brands like Loreal, Longines, etc. it seems it is time we give up such shallow notions and think about giving our models more opportunities.

The perfect woman

Picture these advertisements common in Indian media today -

Ad 1 - A woman who wants to get fairer skin because she wants to attract that one man she likes

Ad 2 - Women are concerned about their skin colour, rashes or sun burns in hot weather

Ad 3 - A woman is busy thinking what she will cook tonight

Ad 4 - A woman is liberated, reason being a sanitary napkin which keeps her free from the trouble of the "Undino ke problems" (problems of those difficult days)

Ad 5 - A woman gets tired of meeting all the requirements of her family - husband, kids, in-laws - at the end suffers from a head/back ache. Finally, she gets some attention and then is provided with a massage or medicine.

Media decides the context in which a woman should be placed, and reinforces it constantly.

Media tries to establish a woman's feminine side, especially if she is a successful woman. It seems the Indian media loves to see women first as successful home-makers. The ideal picture is the femme fatale, the supermom, the sex kitten, the nasty corporate climber. Television, film and popular magazines are full of images of women and girls who are typically white, desperately thin, and made up to the hilt.

It is not that the portrayal has not changed with time at all. Earlier women either added the glam quotient of an ad or were busy looking good. Today, at least they are shown working in some ads. And today, even men are shown using creams and face wash to get that fair skin. However, when men do it, it is because they want to look macho. When women use such creams, it is because they want to attract men or to be accepted in the society which looks down upon dark women.

Although the media wants to project the modern, liberated woman, it is actually endorsing women as consumers. Not only is this derogatory to the image of women, it is also linked with their real concerns. They have better things to do than to look good and think about what the dinner menu will be. In fact many women today do not cook at all.

Have you ever noticed that interviews of men in newspapers hardly ever mention their marital status or their dress sense? The focus is on their work. However, the moment it's a woman, all such details are provided. What she likes to do apart from work, does she do all the household chores, etc.

While the women in Bollywood may no longer be portrayed as self-sacrificing door-mats, they still have to look sizzling hot most of the times. Although men have also started doing item numbers, the number is still less.

Media probably ignored the fact that the last few decades have seen tremendous changes in the lifestyles of men and women in India, all thanks to globalization, market economics and above all, fast strides in technology. Media, itself has also undergone a sea of change.

Another image of women in India that has grown in the recent years is the portrayal of the woman as a showpiece or an icon of glamour. We hardly come across an advertisement these days where we don't see a pretty model beaming at us, be it the advertisement of a new model car or that of a cold drink.

Thus, it won't be wrong to say that the portrayal of women in the Indian media oscillates between these two extremes: the "mother India" and the "glamour girl."

What the media ignores to see and project is the image of woman as a serious partner in decision-making, a serious contender as a professional: doctor, engineer, teacher or a computer specialist, a serious politician or leader. India today has a lot of successful women who have other roles as well and are not just home makers or pretty empty-headed bimbos. What is worse is the fact that this portrayal comes when the media industry is said to be dominated by women.

Sad huh!