30 April 2013

Mob Torches Houses in Mizoram Village

Aizawl, Apr 30 : A mob from Mizoram border Vaphai village in Champhai district today burned down all the 40 houses in Saikhumphai hamlet.

Around five people were injured in a clash with the police who were deployed in the hamlet to enforce a High Court order.

Though a number of police personnel including three platoons of armed policemen were deployed, the police could not stop the mob from torching all the houses excluding three church buildings, an Anganwadi centre and a vacant house temporarily occupied by the police.

There were no villagers of Saikhumphai inside the hamlet when angry people from Vaphai village destroyed it, reports said.

The incident took place after Justice Ujjal Bhuyan of Aizawl bench of Gauhati High Court delivered a judgement on Friday quashing the orders of the State Local Administration department instructing all the inhabitants of Saikhumphai to migrate to Vaphai village.

Mizoram Government issued an order last year, declaring Saikhumkhai as illegal settlement and eviction of all the residents on or before October 31 last year.

The villagers challenged the order of the State Government in Gauhati High Court’s Aizawl bench and the court quashed the government’s eviction order and directed the Deputy Commissioner of Champhai to ensure the return of even those who had shifted to Vaphai.

The court also directed the Champhai district DC to pay adequate compensation to those villagers whose house were dismantled earlier and reconstruct their respective houses. – PTI

Reports said that Myanmarese nationals who had earlier settled in the hamlet were already deported but Vaphai village leaders could not accept the fact that ‘illegal’ settlement should spring up in a land under their jurisdiction.

Saikhumphai’s surrounding areas, located near the banks of Mizoram-Myanmar border river Tiua are fertile and the villagers also prospered through hard work, sources said.

Nagaland, Mizoram & Tripura are Highest Tobacco Consuming States

Shillong, Apr 30 : Following the direction of the union government, Tripura and Meghalaya will ban the sale, manufacture and distribution of gutka (tobacco-laced areca nut pieces) and pan masala (a chewing mixture), officials said on Tuesday.

Assam, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Mizoram and Sikkim have already banned such products.

The Supreme Court earlier this month directed 23 states and five Union Territories to file status report on the implementation of the notification issued by them banning these products and also asked the remaining states and Union Territories to explain the reasons why they have not imposed the ban so far and the time they need to do so.

“Mizoram, Nagaland and Tripura have emerged as the maximum tobacco consuming states in the country. Incidence of cancer has been rising alarmingly in the hilly North Eastern region, almost half the cases being attributed to consumption of tobacco products,” Goutam Majumder, superintendent of Regional Cancer Centre in Tripura, said.

He said that people who use tobacco in public places should be punished and an awareness campaign should be launched about the cause of cancer.
According to official figures, the number of patients registered with the regional cancer centre in 2006 was 1,263. The figure increased to 1,386 in 2007, 1,444 in 2008, 1,524 in 2009 and 1,836 in 2010.

According to the Population-Based Cancer Registry (PCR) in Mizoram, cancer is on the rise in the mountainous state with 600 to 650 people dying of cancer annually in the state.

10 Manipur Cops Arrested For Drug Trafficking

Imphal, Apr 30 : Ten Manipur Police personnel, including two officers, have been caught red handed while transporting drugs to the Manipur-Myanmar border town of Moreh.

They were arrested on Sunday evening with the psychotropic drug, pseudoephedrine, worth approximately Rs 3.6 crore. The accused were produced before the court of the Thoubal district magistrate on Monday morning and remanded in police custody.

They were transporting drugs in two official vehicles. Police sources said that they were in full uniform and were also armed. Police sources added that the drugs were collected from one Mohammad Ali of Lilong Leihaokhong, Papal Lamkhai, in Thoubal district on April 28 at around 5 am.

All the accused, including a sub-inspector and a jamadar rank official, were posted with Moreh's Police Commando Unit. They were caught at Pallel on the Imphal-Moreh route by a team of Thoubal commandos. The accused told the court that drugs were collected from Papal Lamkhai under the instruction of R K Binodid Singh, who is presently posted as the Officer-in-charge of Moreh Police Commando Unit. Singh has been suspended.

In February, Defence PRO in Imphal Col Ajay Choudhury was arrested from Pallel while he was going to Moreh with a consignment of drugs worth Rs 15 crore.

More airports developed in Northeast

By Krupa Vora
The Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) is developing more airports in Northeast India.
India to enhance connectivity to Northeast
The ministry has informed the Rajya Sabha that in order to connect the remote hills areas of the region, the Airport Authorities of India (AAI) is developing non-operational airports at Daparizo in Arunachal Pradesh, Tura in Meghalaya and Kamalpur in Tripura for ATR42 and ATR72 type of aircraft.
The AAI is also developing civil enclaves at Along, Passighat and Ziro in Arunachal Pradesh and Rupsi in Assam. However, the proposals are subject to the land acquisition by the state government for these projects.
In addition to this, India will also construct greenfield airport in Pakyong and operationalisation of Tezu airport in Arunachal Pradesh. These airports will be able to handle ATR-72 type of aircraft.
The AAI had undertaken a study through Rail India Technical and Economic Services (RITES) for improving the air connectivity in north east which includes air connectivity among state capitals and other important remote locations in the north-east region.
The Minister for Civil Aviation, K C Venugopal also informed Rajya Sabha that Air India is operating three flights/week on Aizwal-Imphal route through Airbus A 319 and eight flights on Aizwal-Kolkata route through Airbus A-319. Operations in domestic sector have been deregulated and flights are being operated by airlines concerned on the basis of commercial viability subject to adherence of Route Dispersal Guidelines laid down by the government with a view to achieve better regulation of air transport services taking into account the need for air transport services of different regions of the country.
According to these guidelines, all scheduled operators are required to deploy in the North Eastern region, Jammu & Kashmir, Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep (Category-II routes) at least 10% of their deployed capacity on trunk routes (Category-I routes). Further, at least 10% of the capacity thus required to be deployed on Category-II routes, is required to be deployed for connectivity exclusively within these regions (Category -II A).

28 New ITIs To Come Up in Northeast

New Delhi, Apr 30 : Seven northeastern states, including Assam, have proposed setting up 28 new Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs) in the region, parliament was informed Monday.

The northeast now has 71 ITIs, affiliated to the National Council of Vocational Training, Minister of State for Labour and Employment K. Suresh said in a statement in the Lok Sabha.

He added that no unemployment benefit programmes for educated tribal youths of the northeastern region had been taken up as the "government of India is not in favour of such unemployment doles.

"However, the government has been imparting them skills to make them employable."
29 April 2013

Mizoram’s ‘illegal village’ Must Exist, Says Court

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgM-Y0yHctBNxa7sqhTGQr3GMWnSTQWAZnpl3D9ERnAJML9kKWTIkQ68WFRRyz7R4aF6Jvh7Lo9rdmxErGRxLJG_-KMrHt5ypNwPr8AtDrovgDlj0NhyTK6gMT_lebJEddOuHofMwLSfMX5/s1600/Vaphai+village.jpgAizawl, Apr 29 : The Gauhati High Court has ruled against the Mizoram government’s order to demolish Saikhumphai Bawk, an alleged illegal settlement near the Indo-Myanmar border, and told the latter to give appropriate compensation to the residents who were forcefully evicted and whose houses were dismantled.
The verdict issued by station judge of Aizawl bench of Gauhati HC Ujan Bhuyan on Friday directed the concerned deputy commissioner of Champhai to make assessment on the houses and properties destroyed to determine the amount of compensation.
Sources said the court also told the Mizoram government to provide necessary housing materials to the homeless residents and also give Rs 20,000 to the village leaders to recover their expenses for going to the court.
Saikhumphai Bawk is situated on the banks of Tiau River that divides India and Myanmar, and it falls under the jurisdiction of Vaphai village council in Champhai district.
Under mounting pressure from village council and NGOs of Vaphai, the local administration department issued a demolition order in the latter part of 2013. Even as the court had stayed the order that set a deadline of December 1, 2013, the residents of Vaphai took the law into their own hands and destroyed several houses on December 15.
The government’s resettlement package includes a plot of land, Rs 30,000, four bundles of GI sheets and free transportation of housing materials from Saikhumphai Bawk to Vaphai free of cost. They will also be given two silpaulin sheets each for temporary shelter before they have houses.
Owing to its strategic location and Myanmarese domination, Saikhumphaibawk has allegedly turned into a hub of cross-border crimes like gun running, drug smuggling and a haven for Myanmar-based militants. Besides these, Myanmar security forces occasionally crossed into Indian border and terrorised the people. However, Saikhumphaibawk villagers have strongly refuted such allegations.
The village is surrounded by 150 hectares of paddy fields dubbed as ‘granary of Vaphai.’
The settlement came into existence in 1987 when four farmers from Vaphai built farm houses as there was no proper connecting the paddy fields to Vaphai, a 10-km distance, by that time.
The Indian farmers used to employ manual labourers from the Myanmar side of the border. These Myanmarese labourers started to settle and gradually increased in number.
Later, a road was constructed under the Border Area Development Programme to connect Vaphai village and the Tiau river with the main objective of harnessing the riverine products. This road connection made Saikhumphai Bawk as a hub for illegal border trade with more Myanmarese migrants settling in, they alleged.
The Vaphai village council’s concern came after the illegal settlement sought for sub-village council status from the Mizoram government in 2007.
Sources said all the Myanmarese migrants living in the village have been evicted and pushed back.

A Missing Girl, A Known Militant Story in Manipur

By Esha Roy
FP14-year-old Alice (right) with a cousin. File photo

Alice Kamei had been missing for two days when Sundari got the call. What the voice on the other end said about her 14-year-old daughter has turned the world of this family living in Chingphu Kabui village in Manipur's Bishnupur district upside down. "It was a call from the RPF (Revolutionary People's Front). They said that Alice had come to them of her own will," says Sundari. "They asked to speak to her father. My husband wasn't home at the time. I asked for my daughter and they said they would call the next day at 6 in the evening. They told us not to go to the police or the media, or we would not hear from her."

When they talked the next day, the 35-year-old says, both she and Alice were in tears. "I asked her, 'Don't you love us, don't you love your younger brother? Why did you leave?'," says Sundari, breaking down. According to her, Alice replied that she loved them all very much and "desperately wants to come back". "'Please please come and get me. I don't know where I am but come and get me'," she told her mother. The phone got disconnected before her father, 45-year-old Chakri Kamei, could speak to her.

That was March 13. The family hasn't heard from Alice in the 45 days since.

It was at 6 pm, March 10, that the Kameis first had an inkling that something was wrong. They received a call from Grace Reach Academy in Thoubal district of Manipur, a boarding school where both their children studied, asking if Alice had by any chance come home. "I was shocked... They told me they couldn't find her," says Sundari.

As the reports filed by the Kakching police station in Thoubal district earlier this month say, Alice and her 15-year-old friend Sanakalbi Khaidem went missing from the school at 11.30 am that day. It was a Sunday and most officials were not present on the campus. The girls were accompanied by a school helper, Elangbam Rojita Devi.

Since then, Rojita (35) and the school cook, 48-year-old Elangbam Thoinu, have been arrested and have reportedly confessed to being "overground workers" of the RPF, the political wing of the banned underground group, the People's Revolutionary Army. The PLA is an active militant group in Manipur. Police are now hunting for a warden of Alice's building, who is absconding.

According to the FIR lodged against Thoinu and Rojita, the two reported to 29-year-old Ranjana Devi, known as a child recruiter for the PLA. Police say Thoinu and Rojita had confessed that on March 3, they met Ranjana and two male members of the PLA in Myanmar and were instructed to specifically recruit Alice and Sanatalbi. They were allegedly given Rs 30,000 for the recruitment — Rojita got Rs 20,000.

But as far as tracing the girls goes, there has been no progress. Two weeks ago, the RPF released a statement reiterating that the girls had joined it "of their own free will".

Chakri Kamei, who has withdrawn his son as well from the boarding school, disputes that. "There is no way that Alice would join a militant group — that too a Hindu Meitei valley group. We are Zeliengrong Nagas. Why would we support their movement?"

The Zeilengrong Naga community has been holding protests for the release of the girls. "We submitted demands to the Home Minister and even President Pranab Mukherjee when he visited Manipur recently," says Zeilengrong Youth Front president Titus Kamei. "The RPF has told the family they are willing to release Alice if their underground and overground operatives are protected and the police take no action against them. They have said this is the family's responsibility. How can the family be responsible for police action?" Titus asks.

Thoubal Superintendent of Police A K Jhalajhit, who is in charge of the Alice case, says Manipur militant groups routinely induct children and such cases were difficult to crack. "Most of the children inducted are from poor families. As soon as the militant organisation threatens them, they don't even report the disappearance. In Alice's case, three operatives had been placed in a school as scouts," he says.

Jhalajhit doesn't blame the school, noting that it is difficult for them to check antecedents of their employees.

The police officer also admits that chances of the abducted children returning home are slim. Most disappear for good.

Alice's parents hang on to hope. Chakri talks about her daughter's "big dreams". The family had scrimped and saved to send their two children to the Thoubal boarding school. The Kameis grow and sell vegetables to sustain themselves.

Alice, a keen sportswoman, wanted to become a national-level archer. A bronze medal and plaque that she won at the 15th International Tribal Archery Competition, held in Vijaywada last year, occupy pride of place in their modest mudcaked thatched hut.

Their Chingphu Kabui village is known for its archers, with a local boy recently selected for an archery competition in Korea. Chakri believes Alice too would have made it to there.

Sundari has now locked up Alice's notebooks, filled with her neat, precise handwriting, safely in a trunk. Her prized possession was a yellowing, cover-less book on birds.

"The lord is my shepherd" is scribbled on her algebra copy. Alice also had a book of hymns that Sundari now takes out and opens to a psalm, 'Rescue the Perishing'. They would often sing it together, she says.

An Indian Road Trip: From Calcutta to Sikkim

In the second of our series on road trips, Minty Clinch braves tumultuous traffic to explore the hill stations of West Bengal and Sikkim
Train in Darjeeling©Richard Dunwoody
A train makes its way through the traffic in Darjeeling
The streets of Darjeeling reverberated to the sound of honking as the traffic surged, spluttered and stopped. The pedestrians flowed more freely than the vehicles, a peacock tide of saris, old-fashioned school uniforms, agricultural workers in golden wellies, stray dogs and goats. A day much like any other, except one of many hands hard to their horns was mine.

Self-drive rentals for foreigners are new to India and almost unknown in West Bengal. Back in the UK, friends sounded appalled at my plan for a fly-drive trip to northeast India. I explained that I would have an expert co-pilot in Richard Dunwoody, three times champion steeplechase jockey-turned professional photographer. As a double Grand National winner, he is expert at squeezing fast-moving objects through narrow gaps, a spatial awareness talent that is vital when driving in India.

We had flown to Siliguri, an hour north of Calcutta, where our car was waiting – not the classic Hindustan Ambassador I’d originally envisaged but a Toyota Innova, a wimpy-sounding people-carrier. Richard took the wheel for the drive to Darjeeling, self-styled “Queen of Hill Stations”. An altered flight time meant a 3.30pm start – inconveniently late, as it would be dark within two hours. The rally driver-style route guidance manual we had been given was equally inauspicious. “Turn left at end of Airport road”, it stated unequivocally, beside an arrow pointing right.

Helped by a Garmin GPS device, we completed the 98km journey to our hotel in Darjeeling’s maze of alleys in five hours. “A foot of space on either side is the most you can hope for,” said Richard, by now a master of close shaves on mountain roads shared with narrow-gauge railway tracks, in the face of dark clouds of pollution and blazing headlights – or no lights at all. Naively, I believed this was the worst Indian driving could throw at us. I was wrong.

High on the euphoria that accompanies a journey unexpectedly completed, we settled into the New Elgin Hotel, one of the former Maharaja of Cooch Behar’s many summer residences. The rulers of the Princely states during the Raj often favoured furnishings lifted from English Victorian drawing rooms – lustrous red brocade, polished walnut, gleaming brass – and His Highness was no exception. Outside, a pair of Siberian Samoyed dogs frolicked in gardens as immaculate as their fluffy white fur.
The next morning we began our pursuit of Kanchenjunga, at 8,586m the world’s third-highest mountain and part of a vast massif that is the focus of tourist activity in the region. Mark Twain, a visitor on a global lecture tour in 1896, described the spectacular terrain as, “the one land that all men desire to see and having seen once even by a glimpse would not give that glimpse for the shows of the rest of the world combined”.
The views are at their best at first light, so we rose before dawn to join other peak spotters on the nearest strategic hilltop. The show began at sunrise, with the great mountain taunting us with fleeting appearances of razor ridges and remote snowfields wreathed in swirling mists.
Darjeeling’s other star attraction, recognised as a Unesco World Heritage site, is an 86km narrow gauge railway built between 1879 and 1881, an engineering feat that includes three loops and six “Z-reverses”. Originally used to transport tea from the Himalayan foothills to the flatlands of West Bengal, the “Toy Train” now makes two daily 8km circuits to Ghum, at 2,258m the highest station in India. Pulled by a vintage British-built steam engine, it puffs to a halt on the spectacular Batasia Loop, looking up at Kanchenjunga.
After his white-knuckle introduction to night driving on the first journey, Richard decided we should complete all future stages before darkness fell. Sound thinking, especially as it was my turn to take the wheel for the 95km drive to Gangtok, capital of the former Himalayan kingdom of Sikkim. I foresaw a baptism of fire on the rain-lashed mountain road, its surface reduced to bare rock in places by the recent monsoon; but on the upside, I reasoned, it was Sunday. In a region that has retained so much of yesteryear British life, that would mean light traffic. Wrong again; but, as the kilometre signs passed at snail’s pace, I had time at least to absorb some basics.
First, honking is the accepted method of announcing your presence to other road users: it’s a constant decibel assault, but it seems to work. Second, cars are expensive so, despite appearances, drivers aren’t out to kill you. Buses and trucks, however, do whatever they like: non owner-drivers don’t care about paintwork.
Most important, all normal rules of the road are left at the wayside. If the right hand lane is empty, drive the wrong way up it. You may think you won’t be able to cut back into the walls of trucks on your left but you can – and you will often have to.
Following these golden rules, we made it to the Nor-Khill, our second Elgin hotel, in time for a rapturous welcome from more Samoyeds, a curry buffet and strong drinks furtively supplied, as alcohol must not be flaunted on Sundays.
Map of Bengal
Gangtok has a broad pedestrian main street, with flowerbeds down the centre, a cable car that provides dramatic views and numerous tour companies eager to arrange treks into the mountains. With the car at our disposal, we hit the heights on quiet hill roads, winding up to the monastery and centre for Buddhist studies at Rumtek and the Temi tea plantation, its massed ranks of organic bushes and flowering cherry trees stretching as far as the eye can see.
After another magnificent drive via the Tibetan monastery at Lara on roads fringed by dense hanging ferns, we reached Kalimpong and checked into Silver Oaks, built in 1930 by a British jute magnate with a taste for austere Scottish stonework. The hill station is a poor man’s Darjeeling, a rabbit warren of steep streets with a rewardingly low tourist count. The open-air butchers are not a pretty sight but the Wednesday street market, stalls stocked by farmers from the surrounding countryside, is colourful and photo friendly.
All too soon, it was time to head down to Calcutta, on 730km of trunk roads built to British specifications around 1900. In the flatlands, sacred cows came into the equation, along with cycle rickshaws, wobbly bikes, deranged bus drivers and what seemed like half the world’s trucks.
Minty Clinch©Richard Dunwoody
Minty Clinch asks for directions in Murshidabad
Expecting the unexpected became second nature – I had to slam on the brakes to let three wild elephants cross the road; later our progress was blocked by a bullock cart and a belching truck approaching us on our side of the dual carriageway.
We stopped to spend a day at Murshidabad, a former capital of Bengal during the 18th century. Today the peaceful town is a microcosm of the Bengali melting pot, a warren of mosques, temples, tombs and “gardens of delight” competing for space on the banks of the Ganges. The Nabob’s Hazarduari “1,000 door” Palace, built in Italian style in 1837, is a museum to linger in, with a circular durbar hall, notable paintings and a collection of arms. In the run-up to the Diwali festival, it was packed with Bengalis in bling: many of their family group photos from the day include the only two foreigners present, posing bashfully centre frame.
And so our Toyota, the honest workhorse that coped with everything Bengal could throw at it, headed for the ultimate test of nerve and skill on the streets of Calcutta. Except it wasn’t. With rickshaws and tuk-tuks banned from the centre and some of the citizens preferring to walk on the pavements, the traffic ground along much as it would in London. Triumphantly, we cruised past Lord Curzon’s Victoria Monument, the Test match stadium in Eden Gardens, the racecourse on the Maidan and the banks of the river Hugli.
Pulling up at the sumptuous Sonar hotel for a champagne and lobster celebration, I switched off the engine for the last time. No scratches, no punctures, no insurance excess to pay. Sighs of relief for sure, but of regret too, for the end of an unforgettable adventure. Back in London, fellow road users look at me resentfully as I slice through the gridlock. Is honking illegal nowadays?
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Minty Clinch was a guest of Road Trip India (www.roadtripindia.co.uk) and Qatar Airways (www.qatarairways.com). A 10-day self-drive trip including car rental, delivery to Siliguri airport and collection from Calcutta, half-board accommodation and guides in Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Gangtok, costs from £1,975. Qatar Airways flies daily from Heathrow to Calcutta via Doha, from £680 return

Over 500 Pigs Die of Swine Fever in Mizoram

Aizawl, Apr 29 : Over 500 pigs have died in Mizoram due to swine fever in the last two months.

According to report from Animal Husbandary and Veterinary department officials, the number of pigs died due to the endemic "Classical Swine Fever" has crossed 500 mark since the month of March.

Officials said, the endemic swine fever caused the death of as many as 465 pigs in Aizawl district alone, while another 11,163 pigs are reported to have been infected with the disease.

More than 200 piglets of the New Land Use Policy (NLUP) beneficiaries also had died due to the disease.

The officials however expressed optimism that the 'Classical Swine Fever' will be contained soon.

The AH & Vety officials also informed that besides 'Classical Swine Fever' another disease is known to be spreading in the neighbouring Burma which is called PRRS (Parcine Respiratory & Reproductive Syndrome), and the same is suspected of spreading in Mizoram too as some of the infected pigs have the symptom of PRRS.

However, it is not yet ascertained, as the officials informed that that test is being conducted at Selesih Veterinary College after which they will send the samples to a laboratory in Bhopal for confirmation. Meanwhile, consumption of pork in Mizoram and Manipur have become less following the outbreak of swine fever.

Imports of pigs from Myanmar to Mizoram has been restricted following the outbreak of the swine flu.

Restriction on selling of 'affected pork' by the administration continues in the state capital Aizawl for the past one month and this restriction will continue till May end.

Owing to the spreading of flu among the pigs in Aizawl area in the past one month which has been proved to be 'Classical Swine Fever', the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Aizawl Sadar Sub Division, Aizawl here has been imposing certain restrictions regarding selling of pork in the market and related activities.

As the news of the spread of pig flu spread, the denizens of Aizawl have started avoiding their delicacy.

The sales of pork also dropped rapidly.

Chicken and beef have been substituting the menu in marriage feasting these days.

As reported earlier, taking advantage of the situation, the dealers have hiked the price of chicken.

Prior to the detection of the swine flu chicken (dressed) was sold at Rs 180 per kilogram but these days it has risen to Rs 250 or more a kilogram in Aizawl.

The 'Classical Swine Fever' was detected after examination at Laboratory of College of Veterinary Science & Animal Husbandry in Selesih last month.

Following the detection, vaccine is being administered free of cost to uninfected pigs for prevention of further spread of the disease.

However, butchers shall have to possess Acknowledgement from Local Council/Village Council and Vety Director, along with certificate on the health of their pigs.

In case of any death of pig due to swine fever, the owners are to bury immediately with the acknowledgement of their respective Local Council/Village Council.

The restriction is being made following the direction of Director of AH & Vety Deptt. vide No..D30017/1/99-DTE (AH&Vety) on March 22 .

The Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Aizawl Sadar Sub Division, Aizawl has imposed the restriction in exercise of his power under Section 144(4) of G.P.C.(Act II of 1973) .

The restriction will be effective during two months from the date of notification, within which any violator of the restriction shall be punished as per the above-mentioned law.

Newmai News Network

How Many Rhinos Must Die…

PATRICIA MUKHIM



‘For those who have never seen the rhino in its natural habitat, the first sight of this pachyderm is ecstatically uplifting’ The one-horned rhino that has put Assam on the world map is gasping for life in the Kaziranga National Park (KNP). A recent lead article in a news magazine from the Northeast titled, “Poaching is my business, business is good,” is a horrible indictment of the nonchalance exhibited by the government of Assam to a mammoth crisis.

The quote has unfortunately not been attributed to any single poacher but it can be assumed that those are the words of a paid sharpshooter. Although there is no definite scientific proof that the keratin inside the rhino horn is an aphrodisiac or that it can heal high blood pressure and fevers (according to the Chinese), the superstition that the person using it would derive aphrodisiacal powers has driven the poaching perverts crazy since there is big money out there in the international markets for the rhino horn.
While many in Assam are quick to point accusing fingers at the sundry militant groups in state such as Ulfa, the Karbi and Dimasa outfits for being involved in this nefarious activity, others feel that poaching on such a scale is not possible without collusion from within the system. Why would poachers have a field day inside the sanctuary day after day and the entire system not budge an inch?
After the latest rhino killing incident, the CBI will be stepping in to unearth the real reasons for this largescale poaching of rhinos inside the KNP. This park is perhaps one of the most frequented by national and international wildlife lovers.
A CBI inquiry is important to set at rest allegations flying thick and fast that there is a huge nexus within the system itself and that people in positions of authority are in league with the poachers.
In March this year, I happened to visit the KNP with a few students of journalism from the Journalism Mentor Foundation, Mumbai. For those who have never seen the rhino in its natural habitat, the first sight of this animal is ecstatically uplifting.
The other wild animals around the park seem a shade uninteresting, except if a tiger were to be sighted. This is because the KNP is known as the sanctuary of the one-horned rhino. And that is what most people come here to see! If you wanted to see tigers, deer and other fauna there are other sanctuaries across this country. But the one-horned rhino is our pride and joy. Yet this poor animal is being hounded because of human greed, and those in charge of safeguarding their lives such as the forest minister of Assam and the entire department of environment and forest seem ill-equipped to deal with this crisis.
Callousness
I also wonder why the plethora of wildlife protection NGOs, like Aaranyak and Nature’s Beckon have not demanded that forest minister Rakibul Hussain step down. Surely there is a system of accountability somewhere and that should begin at the highest level! Someone has to pay for this repeated onslaught on the one-horned rhino (17 killed between January and April 18 this year) Alas! No one has lost his job so far! What does this suggest?
I recall a wildlife NGO putting up on Facebook the picture of a dead rhino with its face bloodied after the murderers made off with its horn in the most brutal manner by sawing it off the animal’s face. This picture created an uproar across the universe. But hunters always seem to get away lightly even when arrested. No wonder poaching is not just a sport but a money-spinning business for many. In this regard one must appreciate the keepers of the Orang wildlife sanctuary who have not allowed a single rhino to be poached this year.
This raises some fundamental questions about the vigilance adopted in the two wildlife sanctuaries. What is Orang doing differently that KNP is not? When one enters the KNP, the forest guard posted at the entrance sits on his chair reading the daily newspapers, quite oblivious of who comes or who goes. We captured this picture on our cameras because we found it strange that a guard would not even put up a posture of being up and about his work.
The image that one carries back is that of a slothful worker with no passion for his work. He is only doing a job and there may be many like him in the park!
While one would not like to pass judgement on the entire wildlife protection framework on the basis of this solitary person’s attitude to his work, this is perhaps an indication of how the system functions. Coming back to the Orang Park it was heartening to read that four poaching attempts were foiled by the park authorities and one poacher was killed by forest guards. Both parks are close to Dimapur — the commercial hub of Nagaland and the bazaar for illegal trade in wildlife parts. Firearms are aplenty in Nagaland and Nagas are traditional hunters. Many are paid big money by the poaching mafia to hunt the rhino for its horn which is smuggled across the Indo-Myanmar international border via Moreh in Manipur.
A challenge
A hunter who was commissioned to kill a rhino but was arrested told the media that a kilogram of rhino horn fetches Rs 30 to 35 lakh in Dimapur. He said the price increases several times over in the international market. There are several websites that speak about the dangers posed to rhinos even in South Africa and how the international wildlife protecting agencies are trying to tackle this more cohesively.
But as long as the demand for the rhino horn remains, protecting this poor animal is going to be a monumental challenge. Apart from being used as a traditional Asian aphrodisiac, the rhino horn is also used for dagger handles in Yemen and Oman. Interestingly, the rhino horn is now used as the party drug of choice among rich Vietnamese kids and is said to be more expensive than cocaine. They apparently grind the rhino horn into powder and mix it with water or wine. One Vietnamese news website described rhino horn wine as “the alcoholic drink of millionaires”.
The latest news that the government has asked for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) to track down poachers and that this proposal is awaiting the nod of the defence ministry should bring a ray of hope to the poor rhinos. Recently, the National Tiger Conservation Authority, the Assam forest department, the Wildlife Institute of India and World Wildlife Fund (WWF) International (Switzerland), had conducted four-day trials of UAVs over the KNP. Before this the government had also created the Assam Forest Protection Force (AFPF) which is armed with automatic weapons to deal with poachers.
It is true that all this while the forest guards were not well armed or well paid. If some of them were carrying out their duties with a passion it was out of love for their work. Unfortunately there are not too many with that same zest to save the rhino.
Many succumb to bribes and collude with the poachers. There is need to incentivise those who guard our threatened wildlife species.
(The writer can be contacted at patricia17@rediffmail.com)

Airports Authority of India Developing Northeast's Defunct Airports

Guwahati, Apr 29 : The Airports Authority of India (AAI) is developing three non-operational airports at Daparizo in Arunachal Pradesh, Tura in Meghalaya and Kamalpur in Tripura for operating ATR 42 and ATR 72 aircraft to connect the remote hill areas of the NE region.

An official said the AAI is also developing civil enclaves at Along, Passighat and Ziro in Arunachal Pradesh and Rupsi in Dhubri district of Assam.

The source said the proposals are subject to land acquisition by the state government concerned.

Operationalisation of Tezu airport has also been taken up, which can handle ATR-72 type aircraft.

The source added that once these airports are developed, they can be used for short take off and landing (STOL) aircraft also.

Minister of state for civil aviation KC Venugopal informed the Rajya Sabha that the AAI had undertaken a study through Rail India Technical and Economic Services (RITES) for improving air connectivity in the northeast which includes air connectivity among state capitals and other important remote locations of the NE region.

The minister said Air India is operating three flights every week on the Aizwal-Imphal route through Airbus A 319 and eight flights on Aizwal-Kolkata route through Airbus A-319.

He stated that operations in domestic sector have been deregulated and flights are being operated by airlines concerned on the basis of commercial viability subject to adherence of route dispersal guidelines laid down by the government to achieve better regulation of air transport services taking into account the need for air transport services of different regions of the country.

According to these guidelines, all scheduled operators are required to deploy in the northeastern region, Jammu and Kashmir, Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep (category-II routes) at least 10 per cent of their deployed capacity on trunk routes (category-I routes).

Further, at least 10 per cent of capacity thus required to be deployed on Category-II routes, is needed to be deployed for connectivity exclusively within these regions (Category-II A).
26 April 2013

Young Mizo Association Closes Down Bridge on Border of Mizoram & Tripura

Aizawl, Apr 26 : The Langkaih Group of the Young Mizo Association (YMA) in Mamit district has decided to close down the bridge over the Langkaih river on the Mizoram-Tripura border from 5 pm on Monday.

The decision was taken at a meeting held on Wednesday after the Bru community in Tripura organized a bandh in protest against the mysterious death of Sibaram Reang and accused the Mizoram government and the Mizo people of being involved in the latter's death.

The YMA leaders said the closure of the bridge would be indefinite and would begin from 5pm on Monday. The Bru community of Tripura adjoining Mizoram organized a bandh on April 23 in protest against the death of Sibaram Reang (25), who was a suspect in a robbery case, police said.

Reang was arrested by police in connection with the robbery of Abdul Manaf Uddin and his family members on April 8. Police said he escaped from the custody of the Mizoram Police on April 14.

His mutilated body was later found hanging from a tree at Laitauhpara village in Tripura on April 21. The Young Bru Association and Bru Socio-Cultural Organisation alleged that Reang died in the custody of the Mizoram police, who later amputated both his arms and legs and hung his body from a tree.

Earlier on April 8, reports said that eight masked, armed men speaking in the Bru dialect entered a farm hut owned by a Mizo man, J Malsawma, near Bungthuam early Sunday morning. They physically tortured the chowkidar of the farm, Abdul Manaf, and his family members.

Mumbai International Film Fest Comes to Aizawl

Aizawl, Apr 26 : Mumbai International Film Festival gets underway here in Aizawl from today as the Parliamentary Secretary to Chief Minister Lal Thanzara inaugurated the event at I&PR Auditorium today.

Film Division, government of India and Directorate of Information & Public Relations, government of Mizoram are organizing the three-day non-competitive Documentary, Short and Animation Film Festival in Mizoram which will conclude on April 27 .

Jim K.Chozah, Director, I & PR and Sumay Mukherjee, Film Division, Ministry of I & B, Government of India are also participating in the event.

During the festival, award winning films of Mumbai International Film Festival for Documentary, Short & Animation Films (MIFF) will be screened, along with a Mizo feature film.

MIFF in Mizoram is a festival of award winning films from the Mumbai International Film Festival for documentary short and animation, which is held biennially at the financial capital of India.

The MIFF, which began its journey in 1990 as Bombay International Film Festival (BIFF) has since grown in size and stature as one of the premier international events of documentary film movement.

The past editions have been overwhelming successes, and now MIFF is considered as one of the most spectacularly organized international festivals in the world.

It is reckoned on par with prestigious international film festivals like Leipsig, Berlin, Oberhausen, Cracow, and Tampere, etc.

However, MIFF has an edge over other festivals as it gives away the maximum cash awards-a total worth approximately Rs.6.35 million, besides mementos such a golden and silver conches for outstanding films.

On an average more than 35-40 countries participate in every edition of the festival, which serves as a platform for documentary film makers to meet, interact and exchange ideas.

The festival attracts the best of films made all over the world on varied subjects.

Many internationally renowned filmmakers like Gagisa Oshima, Werner Kobe, Krzysztof Zanussi, Peter Wintonik etc.

have participated in the festival as jury/ participants in the past.

Apart from micro animation & lengthy documentaries, MIFF boasts of a bouquet of acclaimed films curated and sourced from India and abroad in special packages and retrospectives.

MIFF in Mizoram has been showcasing in this event, some of the finest cinematic works realized in the last eight years throughout the world.

"Little Terrorist" directed by Ashvin Kumar, which was also nominated for the 2005 Oscar Awards for Live Action Short Film, was screened as the opening film.

The festival will culminate by screening the Mizo feature film "Zodinpuii" directed by Lalzidinga.

Addressing the Film Festival today, Lal Thanzara said that even as film making and production is not a new thing for the Mizos, given that for some years like in 2004 mizo films even began widespread, but due to lack of efficiency in film-acting, editing and other technicalities, the Mizo film industry still lagged behind.

As faced by other places in the world, piracy and violation of copyrights are the hindrance in the progress of filmmaking in Mizoram, Lal Thanzara said.

Parliamentary Secretary mentioned that Mizoram government since last fiscal allocates 10 lakhs for promotion of filmmaking in response to the need of the younger generations.

He expressed his expectation that the seeting up of IIMC Centre in Aizawl, Mass Communication cources in MZU would enhance immense development in filmmaking and production.

Saying that television programmes these days are not mere entertainment but educational and informative, Parliamentary Secretary expressed his hope that the pictures to be showcased in the Film Festival would be instructive and helpful.

The inauguration of Film Festival today was conducted by I&PR Director Jim K.Chozah, while Film Division of India, Kolkata Branch Manager Sumay Mukherjee delivered the foundation of the event.

During the 3-day festival to be held between 1 pm - 3 pm everyday at I&PR Auditorium.

Documentaries and Animated films will be presented for all interested visitors.

The film 'Little Terrorist 'was shown today.

On the last day of the popular Mizo film 'Zodinpuii' will be presented.

Central Government Film Divsion organises Mumbai International Film Festival after every two years in diffetent states, and the event being held in Aizawl is the fisrt time in Mizoram.
25 April 2013

458 Non-Tribals Without ILP Detained in Mizoram

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-O3stKEBNYz8/T46_tMD3BuI/AAAAAAAAF2g/JvVn8b31rwo/s576/sikkim+inner+line+permit.jpgAizawl, Apr 25 : At least 458 non-tribals without valid Inner Line Permit (ILP) have been detained in various police stations in Mizoram after the influential Young Mizo Association (YMA) launched a recent drive against them.

Police said those identified as staying in the state without valid ILP or fake ILP were brought before the local courts and, if convicted, they will be deported, a senior police official said here today.

192 of the Inner Line Regulation violators have been detained in the Aizawl police station while 180 of them in Bawngkawn police Station in the northern part of the city.

ILR violators were also detained in Mizoram-Assam border Vairengte and Kolasib police stations while majority of them were held in police stations and outposts within Aizawl city.

Under the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation 1873 and the Inner Line Regulation, people from outside Mizoram have to have ILP before or after entering the state.

The laws were made by the British rulers to ensure that the tribal people in the North East, undeveloped and few in population, were safeguarded and protected from assimilation by larger communities.

Mizoram Track Gets Green Signal

Guwahati, April 25 : The Union ministry of environment and forests has cleared the forest-diversion proposal for the construction of a broad gauge railway line in Mizoram.

The forest advisory committee gave the green signal in its meeting held in New Delhi recently with a condition that no trees would be felled in stretches of alignment where the track passes through tunnels and no muck would be disposed of in any of the streams, rivers or on any forest land.

The 51.3km railway line project between Bairabi in Kolasib district and Sairang in Aizawl district will cost Rs 2,384.34 crore for execution.

Altogether 74.48 hectares of forestland will have to be diverted to construct the track. A total of 22.300 trees will have to be felled in Aizawl and Kolasib forest divisions for the project.

The committee stated as the project, whose deadline in March 2015, would generate large amounts of muck as it involved construction of tunnels on hilly terrain.

For this, the NF Railway has been asked to prepare detailed muck utilisation and disposal plan.

The state forest department has cleared the proposal stating the track is not passing through any national park, wildlife sanctuary or protected area.

The state government has been asked to constitute a committee under the chairmanship of local conservator of forests with representatives of NGOs in the field of forest, wildlife or hydrology.

This panel will visit the site during construction and submit half-yearly report to the regional office of the ministry.
24 April 2013

Mizo Arrested in With Rs 6 cr Drugs: 'Kingpin' of Gang Arrested

Aizawl, Apr 24 : A commerce graduate from Mizoram has been arrested in connection with the seizure of Rs six crore worth banned pseudoephedrine tablets here allegedly from the son of a former Congress MLA.

Henry Lalremsanga, whom police described as the kingpin of the gang, was arrested yesterday.

"He was coming from Mizoram and is involved in illegal trade along with Arvind Ahuja, son of the former MLA Ashok Ahuja, and his driver Manish who were arrested yesterday from the capital with 2,51,680 strips of pseudoephedrine tablets," police said.

According to Additional Commissioner of Police (crime) Ravindra Yadav, the trio allegedly supplied pseudoephedrine based tablets in Mizoram and other states of North-East India and Myanmar.

Henry allegedly contacted Ahuja, a whole sale distributor of medicines, for supply of the drugs. Ahuja placed orders to pharmaceutical companies for the drugs and other medicines and after procuring he supplied it to Mizoram on his directions.

Henry, a commerce graduate, came to Delhi in 2003 and worked in various banks and later shifted to property dealings in the NCR region.

Yadav also added that Ahuja used to get huge commission on the transactions. He fell for this lucrative proposal and started supplying the contraband.

Meghalaya To Take Action Against Cement Plants On Forest Land

Forest and Environment Minister Prestone Tynsong said the union forest and environment ministry would take a final call on the penalties, including compensatory afforestation.

Meghalaya to take action against cement plants on forest land (© Reuters)
Shillong, Apr 24 : The Meghalaya government Thursday promised to take action against cement companies violating forest conservations laws. "The government is under process to initiate action against cement plants based on the findings of the Joint Inspection Team (JIT)," Forest and Environment Minister Prestone Tynsong said, while replying to a cut motion in the assembly on functioning of the forest department.

He, however, said that the union forest and environment ministry would take a final call on the penalties, including compensatory afforestation which the industrial units would have to compensate as per the provision of the Forest Conservation Act, 1980.

The JIT constituted by the Meghalaya government as per the direction of the Supreme Court has found nine cement plants in Meghalaya's East Jaintia Hills district are being run on forest land as nearly 50 percent of the surveyed land under the nine plants was classified as forest.

The nine companies are Adhunik Cement, Amrit Cement Industries, Cement Manufacturing Company, Cosmos Cement, Green Valley Industries, Goldstone Cement, Hills Cement, JUD Cements and Meghalaya Cement. The JIT was constituted in July 2011 and the inspections were carried out between March and June last year.

Informing the assembly that the JIT are still inspecting the remaining forest areas where cement plants are being operated, Tynsong said: "We (government) would have a better picture on the total forest areas where the illegal mining operations by the industrial units are going on once the fresh inspection of the remaining forest areas is completed."

Assam: Preliminary Medical Report Finds No Rape Sign On Injured Minor

Assam minor was not raped: Medical test

Assam minor was not raped: Medical test 

Silchar
, Apr 24 : A day after angry protestors hit streets over alleged rape of 9-year-old girl in Assam, the preliminary medical report on Tuesday failed to confirm any sexual assault on the minor.

According to the police, the medical report confirmed that there was no injury in the girl’s private parts and there was no sexual attack on the girl.

"Preliminary medical tests conducted by the attending doctors at the Silchar Medical College Hospital have found no sign of rape or sexual assault on the girl, Cachar Superintendent of Police Digonta Bora said.

The final medical report of the tests carried out on the girl was, however, yet to come, Bora said.

The nine-year-old from Karimganj had gone to visit her grandfather in Pechachora village under Kallain police station of Katigora sub-division when she was kidnapped by two unidentified persons, with their faces covered, on Sunday evening, they said.

The girl was taken to a house in Section 9 of Kallain Tea estate and gang-raped before being abandoned in the tea garden outside the house.

Tea garden labourers returning from work found the girl crying and rushed her to a hospital in a critical condition from where she was later shifted to Silchar Medical College Hospital.

Injury marks were found on her neck and the police suspect that the rapists had attempted to kill her after raping her.

Angered over the incident, agitated villagers had demonstrated outside a local police station demanding immediate arrest of the perpetrators. - See more at: http://post.jagran.com/assam-preliminary-medical-1366717076#sthash.aYcRIt6o.dpuf
23 April 2013

Pork Consumption Decline in Manipur, Mizoram

http://lh5.ggpht.com/_qQQQg0ODhzo/TUJkgB5-YcI/AAAAAAAALRU/R1FP9IaiqMs/open%20meat%20stall%20in%20mizoram%5B2%5D.jpgAizawl, Apr 23 : Consumption of pork in Mizoram and Manipur has become less in Mizoram and Manipur following the outbreak of swine flu. In Manipur, veterinarians are still investigating the reasons for the death of pigs in large number at Heingang Chonthabi and Luwang shangbam areas of Imphal East district following the reports made in local newspapers.

However, in the case of Mizoram, doctors have confirmed it as ‘Classical Swine Fever’.
Imports of pigs from Myanmar to Mizoram has been restricted following the outbreak of the swine flu. Restriction on selling of ‘affected pork’ by the administration continues in the state capital Aizawl for the past one month and this restriction will continue till May end.

Owing to the spreading of flu among the pigs in Aizawl area in the past one month which has been proved to be ‘Classical Swine Fever’, the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Aizawl Sadar Sub Division, Aizawl here has been imposing certain restrictions regarding selling of pork in the market and related activities.

As the news of the spread of pig flu spread, the denizens of Aizawl have started avoiding their delicacy. The sales of pork also dropped rapidly. Chicken and beef have been substituting the menu in marriage feasting these days.

As reported earlier, taking advantage of the situation, the dealers have hiked the price of chicken. Prior to the detection of the swine flu chicken (dressed) was sold at Rs 180 per kilogram but these days it has risen to Rs 250 or more a kilogram in Aizawl.

The ‘Classical Swine Fever’ was detected after examination at Laboratory of College of Veterinary Science & Animal Husbandry in Selesih last month.

India: No Country For Women

While violence against women continues unabated in India, our crime investigation and justice systems offer no comfort.
 
No country for women (© Reuters)
The Capital has erupted once again over the gruesome kidnapping and rape of a five-year-old girl child. This time, the protests are more political with the presence of volunteers from organisations such as the Aam Aadmi Party, the ABVP, etc. But matters have come to such a head vis-à-vis the gender front that help from any quarter is welcome.

Since the gang rape of the physiotherapy student in Delhi in December 2012, horrendous and continuing brutalisation and sexual assaults on women have continued. Western tourists have also not been spared, resulting in advisories by countries such as the US and the UK cautioning women tourists to take extreme care while travelling in India.

Erupting even amidst economic scams connected to 2G and 3G Spectrum and Coalgate, the debate on India being no country for women/girls has hogged media headlines. Grim-faced politicians, from the UPA as well as the Opposition, have expressed their pain and outrage at these developments, and voiced concern on the growing cult of violence against women.

In the latest incident of monstrosity on the tiny girl in Gandhi Nagar in Delhi, once again we saw the total indifference and callous attitude of the police. The child’s parents were made to wait for hours to file a “missing” complaint. The child, abandoned in a room in the same building in a serious condition, was found no thanks to the police but after her cries were heard by a neighbour.

The events that followed were even more bizarre when it comes to shaming and disgracing an already discredited police force.

A policeman offered the father a “bribe” of Rs 2,000 to hush up the matter! Hence it was nothing short of catharsis to watch continuous telecast of several protestors offering the police a “bribe” of Rs 2,000. The pained expressions on the face of the policemen facing this barrage was gratifying, to say the least.

Known perpetrators
At the core of the protests and demands from Opposition parties is the issue of Delhi, and the rest of India as well, being unsafe and insecure for women. This is not to defend the police force, which is more often than not found lacking when it comes to prompt filing of FIRs or investigation. But the fact remains that much of the violence — sexual and otherwise – that women and girls face is perpetrated by known people… a relative, a friend, a lover or ex-lover. If not in the womb, where foetuses are aborted, with the common consent of male and female relatives.

Delhi Police Commissioner Neeraj Kumar, who addressed a press conference Monday afternoon, was quick to latch on to his point when questions were raised about his resignation.

At first he impudently asked the reporter, “When you do misreporting, does your editor resign?”
Later he pointed out the futility of expecting the police to prevent sexual assaults against women or girls that are carried out by their relatives. Quoting figures, he said that in several cases, fathers, stepfathers, brothers-in-law, cousins, neighbours, lovers and ex-lovers were guilty of rape. This doesn’t absolve those supposed to prevent crimes failing to do so in thousands of cases where young women are abducted on roads or raped in moving cars, as happens often in Delhi, but there is an element of truth in what he says.

The mighty climb down
But what I enjoyed the most while watching Kumar’s live press conference was his opening statement where he said the ACP who had slapped a woman protestor had been suspended. But the two policemen who had offered bribe to the father to hush up the case had not been identified because the father was busy in the hospital where his daughter was being treated.

And next followed a clear demonstration of what collective rage or mass protests can do. Delhi’s police force was ready, said its chief, to parade the possible culprits before the father at the hospital if he so desired!

Wow! How many ordinary people who throng our police stations for a modicum of action or justice can expect such a gesture from the top boss of the police?

No country for the poor too
But let us not fool ourselves. Whether it is the crime redressal dispensation, or our justice system, beginning with the lawyer who takes up a case, how many economically disadvantaged people have timely access to these? But for the protests which the media picked up and broadcast and wrote about, would the two men accused in this child’s rape been arrested so quickly?

The heavy wheels of our crime administration system move only on the application of lubricants such as bribes, influence, or public pressure. The ACP who slapped the woman protestor only displayed the habitual arrogance of our public “servants”. And why only suspend a senior officer who would dare to so impudently slap a young woman in full view of hundreds of others? Instead of a “departmental inquiry” in which the public has little faith, should he not be thrown behind bars?

Isn’t a man in uniform who is supposed to protect civilians a bigger criminal when he assaults a woman? And one who is well within her right to express her outrage over the plummeting record of the Delhi administration when it comes to making girls like her feel safe.

Juxtaposed against the way our creaky wheels of crime investigation and justice dispensation move, I watched in utter admiration the speed and efficiency with which the Boston police carried out operations to hunt down and kill one terrorist and capture the second one involved in the Boston Marathon bombing.

An entire township was shut down, the people responded and co-operated totally and within a week the perpetrators had been traced, challenged and one captured. You may find any number of faults with the US for its arrogance or its supercilious manner in dealing with the rest of the world.

But when it comes to rising as one to ensure public safety and security, they just do it…without any fear, favour or fuss. Now this is the kind of police force that inspires confidence. Not one which slaps protestors, or offers bribes to the victims to shut their mouths.

Or worse, derisively asks a middle-aged woman who goes to report her rape: “Tu teen bachcho ki maa hei; tujhe kaun rape karenga? (You’re a mother of three, who will rape you)?

Tension on Mizoram Border Over Death

https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcT8sgrlxCFKAMgT2SbJeOKyDTgWZcdIfefZf6tKFGs6yC7jb03X9wAgartala, Apr 23 : Tension is mounting along the Tripura-Mizoram boundary following the recovery of the body of Sebaram Reang, 31, at Gangajaypara village in Kanchanpur sub-division of North Tripura district yesterday.

Some firewood collectors saw the body around 1pm yesterday and the news spread like wildfire, till hundreds of angry villagers converged, ready to attack villages in Mizoram. Though police managed to quell the mob on time, the Reang village sardars refused to hand the body over for autopsy, forcing the police to stay overnight in the village.

According to sources, Mizoram police personnel had entered Damcherra unofficially last week in search of the victim, who was allegedly involved in a robbery in the Kanghmun police station area of Mizoram’s Mamit district. While Reang managed to flee, the policemen were cornered by villagers and had to be rescued by a police team from Damcherra police station led by officer-in-charge Swapan Debbarma, who assured them that Reang would be handed over as soon as he was apprehended. On Saturday, Reang succumbed to police pressure and surrendered at Kanghmun, only to be found dead yesterday.

This morning, only after superintendent of police (North) Abhijeet Saptarshi assured the villagers that he would talk to his Mamit counterpart, could Reang’s body be taken for autopsy.

Inspector-general of police (operations) Nepal Chandra Das today said tension being high in all Reang villages along the inter-state boundary, Tripura State Rifles personnel had also been deployed. “Village chiefs have been asked to prevent people from crossing the border,” he said.

Manipur Oil Tanker Drivers Stop Service

Imphal, Apr 23 : Oil tanker drivers in the state stopped services from Monday to denounce the abduction of their colleague in Nagaland by unknown gunmen, triggering panic buying by Imphal residents at fuel outlets.

This came amid a growing people's protest against the gunning down of another driver, S Babu, and torching of two loaded trucks at Charoi Pandong area along the Imphal-Jiribam highway by suspected rebels on last Wednesday night.

A motorcade of over 100 loaded fuel tankers escorted by CRPF men was going from Khatkhati in Assam to Manipur on Sunday morning, sources said, adding that when they stopped for a while at Khuzuma area in Nagaland, driver S Surjit was whisked away by unknown armed men.

Condemning the incident, the All Manipur Petroleum Tanker Drivers' Union on Monday afternoon announced they would stop plying fuel tankers till Surjit is freed by his captors.

There have been numerous cases of killing, abduction and harassment of drivers in addition to torching of their vehicles by miscreants along the highways leading to Manipur, lamented Y Bhupenchadra Ghosh, the union's president.

Urging the authorities concerned to secure safe release of the driver, Ghosh also appealed to the people, particularly civil bodies, to extend support to the union's 'democratic' stir.

Owing to a series of bandhs called on the Imphal-Dimapur and Imphal-Jiribam highways by different bodies on and off for the last few days, the stocks of many fuel outlets in the state have dwindled and many of them remained closed. The Union's sudden announcement triggered panic buying of fuel at some outlets in Imphal even as stocks ran dry.

In the meantime, the Transporters' and Drivers' Council ( TDC) donated Rs 50,000 to the bereaved family members of Babu.

The council's president, H Ranjit, handed over the amount to the late Babu's mother at their Samurou Awang Leikai residence in Imphal West on Sunday.

The joint action committee set up against Babu's killing has not taken his body from the mortuary of RIMS here as a token of protest even as deputy chief minister Gaikhangam assured to take stringent action against the culprits.
22 April 2013

20 Fake ‘Open Schools’ in Aizawl

AIZAWL, Apr 22 : There are 20 fake 'Open Schools' in Aizawl, according to Mizo Students Union (MSU) that has expressed grave concern.

Fraudulent business by way of deceiving students under National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) is reportedly prevalent in Mizoram.

Expressing grave concern over that development, Mizo Students' Union maintained that while there are only 7 Accredited Institution (AI)/Study Centres of NIOS within Aizawl district, there are many others who run NIOS illegally for sheer business. MSU said that it demands immediate cease of such deceiving activities and fake NIOS.

The MSU said it would take steps to ensure their closure soon.

In connection to the issue, Zodinpuia, president of Mizo Students' Union along with other leaders, interacted with media persons in Aizawl today and informed that they had lodged an FIR to Aizawl police against one NIOS co-ordinator who has created problems to the students.

The MSU president advised the Mizo students to be cautious over the alarming issue, saying there are many people who run 'Open Schools' outside the purview of NIOS Study Centre, which, he said, are illegal.

"Such fake 'Open Schools' charges high amount of money in admission fee, violating the rules of NIOS", he alleged.

While NIOS does not allow for monthly fees to be taken from the students, the fake Open Schools on their take a monthly fee of Rs.300 or Rs.400 per student, the MSU leader stated, adding, "These schools charge Rs.1,500 or Rs. 1,700 as admission fee per student."

Stating that steps are being taken to ensure penalty to the people who run the fake schools and outside the jurisdiction of NIOS, the MSU president warned, "If the people involved do not immediately close their fake open schools, MSU will take further steps."

Mizoram Bans Pig Import From Myanmar

Aizawl, Apr 22 : All the district magistrates of Mizoram, sharing international border with Myanmar, have issued prohibitory orders banning import of pigs from the neighboring country where a dangerous swine fever spreading as an epidemic.

Dr L B Sailo, Director of the state Animal Husbandry and Veterinary department said that while the endemic classical swine fever in the state was subsiding, especially in Aizawl city, measures must be taken to prevent the entry of 'Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome' (PRRS) from Myanmar.

"If the PRRS enters Mizoram, it would be much more disastrous than the classical swine fever," Sailo said, adding that import of pigs from neighbouring states, especially those sharing borders with Myanmar was justified.

Meanwhile, at least 101 pigs have died in South Mizoram's Lunglei district during the past few weeks due to the classical swine fever which hit at least four district out of the total eight districts of the state.

Though pork remained the staple meat of the Mizos, pork sellers were having a hard time as people were reluctant to eat pork while beef, chicken and fish sold like hot cakes replacing the booming pork market due to the prevailing swine fever.

All Mizos Should Learn Hindi: Mizoram Minister

Aizawl, Apr 22 : Mizoram Education Minister Lalsawta has said that Mizos “should learn Hindi.” He said this while attending the Mizoram Hindi Prachar Sabha (MHPS) ‘Biennial General Conference-cum-Election’ at the Agriculture Conference Hall here yesterday.

“Hindi is the most widely spoken language throughout India, and that due to our incompetency in speaking Hindi, the Mizos often times could not come out (successful) as we ought to be,” Lalsawta said.

Mentioning that there are some people within Mizoram who dole out fake Hindi Certificates, the minister said this could have serious impact upon the Mizos. “The State don’t need such people who indulge in fraudulent activities,” the minister said.

MHPS secretary John P.C. Rema gave the Annual Report and mentioned that the State government has allotted the plot for MHPS Office Building at New Secretariat Complex.

MHPS at constant rate enrolls more than 1000 learners and it now has 9 Exam Centres in Aizawl, Lunglei, Serchhip, Lawngtlai, Champhai, Kolasib, Saiha, Saitual and Chawngte.

As part of its programme to promote Hindi, MHPS, in partnership with Mizoram State Sports Council, used to organize one-month Spoken Hindi Class for Sportspersons who represented Mizoram at State, National and International levels.

Manipur Rifles Man Killed, 17 Hurt in Blasts

Imphal, Apr 22 : A Manipur Rifles personnel was killed and 17 others, including a superintending engineer and nine security personnel, were injured in separate explosions in Chandel and Imphal West districts of Manipur on Sunday, officials said.

They said suspected insurgents ambushed an official team, including the superintending engineer and Manipur Rifles personnel of 8th Battalion escorting them, by exploding two bombs and opening fire at a place between Khudengtabi and Kwatha Lamkhai, about 110 km south-east of here, at around 7.45 am.

An Army personnel, identified as Sushil Singh, was killed on the spot and 10 persons — six Manipur Rifles personnel and four civilians including the engineer — were injured by bomb splinters, sources said, adding the team was returning to Imphal from the border town of Moreh after inspecting the condition of some roads in the area.

Official reports from Chandel district said the injured civilians included an assistant engineer and two drivers.

All the injured were taken to a hospital in Imphal, they said, adding the condition of some of them was stated to be serious. Four hours later, suspected insurgents also exploded a powerful bomb attached to a vehicle at the roadside at Sekmai area in Imphal West district injuring three CRPF personnel and four civilians, sources said, adding that condition of the injured was not stated to be serious.

No individual or group has claimed responsibility though the spots where the explosions took place were the operating zone of insurgents of different groups. The police said security and police forces rushed to both the spots after the explosions were reported and launched massive search operations by blocking all exit points.

The insurgents, who reportedly exploded the bombs by using remote control device, escaped into the nearby thick jungles and hilly areas.
19 April 2013

PMO Hit Back With 'Empty Promises' in Mizoram

Aizawl, Apr 19 : With Mizoram state assembly elections around the corner, hollow promises made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, UPA chair Sonia Gandi and her would-be prime minister son Rahul Gandhi before the last polls have reverberated in the Prime Minister Office.

The Mizo National 'Youth' Front, the largest opposition in the Congress-ruled state, submitted a memorandum to the Prime Minister today telling him and the mother-son duo not to visit Mizoram only to visit Mizoram to lure voters with tall promises during election campaign anymore.

In the memorandum, the MNYF recollected how the state Congress chief Lal Thanhawla and others promised the people of Mizoram that the Congress party if voted to power would distributed not less than one lakh rupees to all families under its flagship programme New Land Use Policy (NLUP) which will be implemented with Prime Minister special package.

'The people were convinced when the central Congress leaders, Manmohan Singh, Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi reaffirmed this commitment in their public speechehes in Aizawl in the run-up to the 2008 December polls,' the memorandum stated, adding that this was the major factor behind the Congress' thumping victory in the elections, capturing 32 of the total 40 seats.

However, contrary to the pre-poll promises, the Congress government has implemented the NLUP from the state plan fund, resulting in a serious developmental setback.

It was stated that from 2009-10 fiscal to 2013-14 fiscal, the Congress government in Mizoram has earmarked Rs 100 crore, Rs 234.87 crore, Rs 234 crore, Rs 370 crore and Rs 370 crore respectively. As a result, over forty development-oriented departments had heavily reduced budgetary allocation during the last five years.

To make matter worse, 98.88 percent of the NLUP beneficiaries belonged to the ruling Congress party, as revealed by an independent survey conducted by the state's largest church Mizoram Presbyterian Synod's social front.

"Huge amount of fund allocated for the NLUP remains unutilised. The Congress government saved the amount to woo voters as Mizoram is going to the polls by November end or early December this year," MNYF president P C Laltlansanga said.

The MNYF memorandum further stated that when Mizoram had met with major disasters during the last two decades no central leaders visited Mizoram or provided monetary relief on a par with other states. "Why was all such comforts and monetary aids showered on other states restricted for Mizoram? Is Mizoram not considered a part of India?" the MNYF asked the PM.

The MNYF said that six major disasters took place in Mizoram during the period and the Congress party ruled both at the Centre and in the state when all the said tragedies struck Mizoram.

The MNYF demanded that if the central Congress leaders had refrained from visiting Mizoram when the people need them most, they should as well refrain from visiting the state for the sole purpose of "cheating" voters during election campaign. MNYF president said on the sideline of submitting memorandum to the Prime Minister, he and his colleagues met South Korea embassy cultural centre director Kim Kum-pioung where they discussed the prospect of establishing Korean language institute in Mizoram where Korean culture influence the youth.

Showing keen interest settling up Korean language institute in Mizoram, Kim Kum-pioung hoped that understanding Korean language would pave the way for employing jobless Mizo youths in Korean companies. He also said that 70 percent of the expenditure in setting up such institute would be borne by the South Korea government.

Foreign Models' Ffirst Foray Into Manipur Fashion Scene

By K Sarojkumar Sharma

Imphal, Apr 19
: Ten professional models from Russia, Brazil, Moldova and Ukraine are all set to walk the ramp in Imphal for the first time on April 27, giving a new dimension to fashion industry of strife-torn Manipur.

Under the banner 'Elegance of the Indigenous- A Showcase of Manipur Ethnic Attires', the models will walk the ramp in different Manipuri ethnic designs by eminent designers of the state.

"The foreign models - six from Russia, one each from Moldova and Brazil and two from Ukraine - have already given their consent to coming to Imphal. We have also conducted their audition in New Delhi recently," said Khoisnam Nishikanta Singh, choreographer and event director of the gala event.

Indian authorities have already cleared visas for the 10 foreign models. The models now don't require the Protected Area Permit (PAP) for visiting the state as the Centre has lifted it from Manipur in 2011.

"The models are currently staying in New Delhi as they have already obtained a three-month visa from the Indian authorities through a fashion agency based in the national capital," said Nishikanta .

Nishikanta, who choreographed over 50 fashion parades across the country, including Delhi and Mumbai, said the models would perform with six selective Manipuri models in the event to be held at Bheigyachandra Open Air Theatre (Boat) at the historic palace compound in the heart of Imphal.

The primary objective of the event, he said, is to focus on ushering in peace through diversity. "We hope that showcasing traditional Manipuri attire with ethnic patterns and textures during the show will attract national and foreign buyers in the near future," he said. He added that foreign models will land in Imphal on April 25.

On the eve of the event, the models would be taken to various historic and tourist spots where they can have a glimpse of Manipuri culture and tradition, said the young choreographer .

There will be four rounds in the event being organized by Imphal-based 'Blue Wings' and sponsored by Manipur Development Society (MDS) and Manipur Skill Development Society (MSDS) with support from Manipur tourism department.

The opening round will showcase the natural charms of different communities of the state through their ethnic attires which the models will wear.

"We have been trying to organize this event since the last couple of years and now it's nearly a dream come true as all concerned - models, related government and private agencies - have extended help to our sincere endeavour," said Nishikanta, who hails from Imphal West.

To make the event more meaningful and elegant, various ethnic Manipuri fabric patterns collected from different Meitei and tribal villages across the state, would be used by the designers, he added.

Models from other parts of India also come down to Imphal occasionally and walk the ramp popularizing the traditional attires of Manipuri women. The latest show christened "Manipur Fashion Extravaganza" was held in Hotel Imphal on January 6 this year. Gorgeous models from Mumbai, Bangalore and Hyderabad added a new dimension to the gala event.
18 April 2013

More Quakes Could Hit India: Experts

By Charu Sudan Kasturi

New Delhi, Apr 18 :  Tuesday’s 7.8 magnitude temblor near the Iran-Pakistan border could realign the region’s tectonic plates, potentially setting off follow-up earthquakes closer to India in the coming days and weeks, scientists have cautioned.

From Ahmedabad in Gujarat to Nongpoh in Meghalaya, India was on Tuesday shaken by a ring of earthquakes that scientists say were most likely unrelated, but could trigger aftershocks. The quakes have triggered fresh concerns over preparedness in the country’s burgeoning urban spreads.

The Iran quake occurred close to the line where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates meet, west of Gujarat in Pakistan. Proximity to that line makes western India — home to Latur, Maharashtra and Bhuj, Gujarat that were epicentres of two of India’s most destructive recent earthquakes — vulnerable.

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“When a major earthquake occurs on one plate near where it meets another plate, it causes shifts on the other adjoining plate,” Ramancharia Pradeep Kumar, earthquake engineer and professor at the Indian Institute of Information Technology in Hyderabad told HT. “There will also be aftershocks in neighbouring areas.”

Though most aftershocks occur within 24 hours, there have been instances of the follow-up tremors waiting for weeks before striking.

A quake measuring 4.4 on the Richter Scale with an epicentre in Nongpoh, Meghalaya triggered tremors across northeast India and even Odisha early on Tuesday morning. It was 49.2 km deep. Deeper quakes cause less damage as they lose most of their energy by the time they reach the earth’s surface. 

Early afternoon, just after 2pm, a second quake shook northeast India. This 5.3 magnitude earthquake had its epicentre in Motuo in eastern Tibet, and was 31 km deep. A few hours later, the biggest quake of the day struck, near Khash in Iran.

The sequence of the quakes and the distance between eastern Tibet and Iran makes it highly improbable that the two were related, said BK Rastogi, Director of the Institute of Seismological Research in Gandhinagar.

But the quakes have cast fresh focus on India’s preparedness to handle large quakes closer home.

After the 2001 Bhuj earthquake that killed about 20,000 people, India set up a National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) to formulate a strategy for national crises. Several states have also set up similar agencies.

But when it comes to ensuring earthquake-resistant building codes, little has been done, the scientists said. “The only solution is to make earthquake-resistant design non-negotiable for buildings,” Kumar said.