Showing posts with label Arunachal Pradesh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arunachal Pradesh. Show all posts
11 September 2012

Reading FC Of UK To Develop Football in Arunachal

Itanagar, Sep 11 : Reading Football Club (Reading FC) of UK has shown interest to explore football potentials in Arunachal Pradesh after meeting Chief Minister Nabam Tuki.

A four-member delegation from UK met Tuki on Sunday at his New Delhi office and had a discussion on development of football in Himalayan state.

"Football is the favourite game in every corner of our state. Talent and passion are immeasurable. We need proper guidance, training and exposure and I can assure you of world class players," Chief Minister, a football player and lover of the game, told the delegation.

The Reading FC members expressed desire to do a talent search in the state and take under their umbrella sub-junior level players.

Selected players would be then groomed at the highest level at Reading FC football academy in the UK, officials said.

According to Reading FC CEO Nogel Howe, the club would send two coaches to Arunachal Pradesh for preliminary assessment immediately.

Howe, while narrating future plans for Arunachal, said if things work out, the club will take on the responsibility of propagating and developing the game by placing its coaches permanently in the state.

Meanwhile, the Reading FC delegation also invited Tuki to watch one of its matches in the ongoing Barclay Premier League.
16 July 2012

Woman Journalist Shot And Injured in Arunachal

Itanagar, Jul 16 : A woman journalist was shot at by unknown gunmen and critically injured on Sunday when she was entering her office here in Arunachal Pradesh.

Gunmen shot journalist Tongam Rina of the Arunachal Times from close range when she was entering her office at about 6.15 pm, police said.

Thirty-four-year-old Rina is the associate editor of Arunachal Times, a popular daily and the first English newspaper of the state owned by former chief minister Gegong Apang.

Her backbone and intestines were affected by the bullets, police said.

Chief Minister Nabam Tuki rushed to the Ramakrishna Mission Hospital where she is undergoing an operation. The police have launched a manhunt to arrest the culprits, sources said.
23 April 2012

Arunachal Tribe Troubled By Too Many Suicides

Itanagar, Apr 23 : The colourful Idu-Mishmi community, concentrated in the Dibang Valley and Lower Dibang Valley in Arunachal Pradesh has possibly the highest suicide rate in the country.

With a population of over 13,000 as per the 2011 census, the Idu-Mishmis have reported 226 suicides in less than four decades.

They are a tribal community distinctly identified by their unique hairstyle, typical costumes and artistic patterns embedded on their clothes.

Tarun Mene, a research scholar, who has been just awarded a PhD by the Rajiv Gandhi University here, in his doctoral thesis “Suicide among the Idu Mishmi tribe of Arunachal Pradesh”, revealed that women surpassed the men in committing suicides.

From 1971 to 2010, the years under review, 115 women ended their lives while the number for its opposite sex is 103.

According to a recent report, seven cases of suicide were registered during the year 2011, while a case has been registered at Anini, headquarters of Dibang Valley, in January, this year.

“The total number of suicides may be more considering the fact that there are areas in the two valleys they inhabit have no police station where they can report suicides,” Mene pointed out.

The total male/female suicide ratio stood at 47:53 against the national ratio of 64:36 and the State ratio of 70:30.

The overall male/female ratio for youth in the 10-29 age groups stood at 41/59 and are the prime group contributing (about 59.1 per cent to the total suicides).

The analysis of annual incidents of suicide for the decade 2001-2010 shows a mixed trend with the annual average rate of 6.2 suicides per year.

As per the record, the spring season remained most favourable. Irrespective of genders, the frequency of suicides among the unmarried Idus is 49.6 per cent, followed by married persons at 40.8 per cent and 9.6 per cent for the widowed.

Mene said in most cases, the suicides had roots in love affairs between young males and females. “While young people want to choose their life partners, the closely-knit community has numerous barriers erected by generations,” he pointed out.

Mene said suicide is a serious issue in the community and social customs, norms, religious beliefs, practices, values and socio-political aspects have greatly influenced and determined the suicidal tendencies among them.

The State Women’s Commission in a study found that the limited scope for marital relation because of the small size of the community was a major reason for frustration in the younger generation of the community,” Gumri Ringu, chairperson of the Commission, said.

For the Idu women, when it comes to marriage, they have to face various traditional problems, the most important being forcible marriage,” pointed out Ringu.

“We will take up the issue with the State Government for creating awareness in the community,” Ringu said.

In the Idu-Mishmi society, a woman, once widowed, can be married by her deceased husband’s younger or elder brother without any question of consent. A man may marry his step-mother (other than his mother’s sister) after the death of his father. And in case the step-mother refuses to remarry, she or her parent or guardian has to pay back the bride price, Mene pointed out.

As regards the solution of the social problem, Rajya Sabha member from Arunachal Pradesh, Mukut Mithi, who represents the community, said, “Two things were immediately required: First, a serious intervention by the government and social groups and second, there was the need for further documentation and research.”
02 March 2012

In Arunachal, A Tiny Community With A Huge Suicide Rate

FPBy Samudra Gupta Kashyap

Guwahati, Mar 2 : The Idu-Mishmis are more than just another colourful tribe of Arunachal Pradesh. Apart from their typical hairstyle and costumes and artistic patterns embedded, which distinguish them from other tribal groups of the state, they also have the highest suicide rate in India, according to Tarun Mene, a young scholar from the community.

“Our community hardly has about 12,000 people. But, believe it or not, over 200 persons have committed suicide in less than four decades,” says Mene, 30, who has won a PhD from Rajiv Gandhi University in Arunachal Pradesh.

Mene’s doctoral thesis, “Suicide among the Idu Mishmi Tribe of Arunachal Pradesh”, has opened up the possibility of further studies on this social aspect. Of the 218 suicides that he has gathered from official as well as unofficial sources, most involved young people in the age-group 10-29, with girls and women outnumbering boys and men 53:47. The Idu-Mishmis live in two districts, Dibang Valley and Lower Dibang Valley, the former sharing a boundary with China.

Mene said that in most cases, the suicides had roots in love affairs. “While young people want to choose their life partners, the closely-knit community has numerous barriers brought forward by generations,” Mene said.

The increasing suicides have alerted social activists and institutions in the state. “The state Women’s Commission tried to study the issue,” said Jarjum Ete, a former chairperson. “We found that limited scope for marital relationships (because of the small size of the community) was a major reason for frustration among the younger generations.”

Idu women are good weavers but “they have to face various traditional problems, the most important being forced marriage”, Mene said. In Idu-Mishmi society, a woman, once widowed, can be married by her deceased husband’s brother without any question of consent. A man may marry his stepmother (unless she is his mother’s sister) after the death of his father. And if the stepmother refuses to remarry, she or her parent or guardian has to pay back the bridal price.

“It is an interesting research work that has brought to light a complicated situation faced by a small community. I think two things are immediately required. The first is serious intervention by the government and social groups, and the other is further documentation and research,” said Prof S K Chaudhuri of Rajiv Gandhi University, who was Mene’s guide during his research.
05 February 2012

Police Officer Arrested in Arunachal MMS Sex Scandal

http://www.youngkingdom.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Sakshi-Pradhan-MMS-scandal-Video-Clip.jpgItanagar, Feb 5 : The Special Investigating Team (SIT) of Arunachal Pradesh Police has arrested a police officer in connection with an MMS sex scandal involving two minors.

ASI Boham Bo, the prime accused in the scandal which rocked the state in recent times, was nabbed by police from his native house at Wangun Ponthai, 7 km from Bordumsa police station in Changlang district, on Friday. Bo and his four accomplices, all police constables, had created a statewide outrage by filming an indecent MMS of two under-age children inside Daporijo police station last year.

"Though state police arrested all the accused, Bo, after getting bail, was on the run since then," said DIG Anil Shukla, who has been supervising the MMS case investigation since the SIT took over the probe on April 23 last year.

The MMS depicting the sexual act of a minor boy and girl, who, after being rounded up from Tadak Dulom bridge in Daporijo's Pakam Colony, were confined to a room of the police station in Upper Subansiri. They were allegedly forced to have sex by Bo and his accomplices on June 12, 2009, which was captured on a mobile phone.

Daporijo police station inspector R N Hazarika had arrested Bo on March 21 from the Police Training Centre, Banderdewa. He was produced before Capital Complex chief judicial magistrate here, who had granted two-day bail remand and directed him to report to Upper Subansiri CJM on March 23. But Bo went underground and a massive search by police proved futile.

He was dismissed from service on May 12 last year and was declared an offender on November 19.

A fake CBI identity card was seized from Bo, along with 1,952 fired cartridges of .22 pistol, map of Tirap, Changlang and Lohit districts, a mobile telephone, a pocket telephone directory and a threat letter issued by an underground in 2007, the DIG said. He added that Bo was brought to Itanagar in the evening.

SP (Changlang) Tume Amo, who assisted the SIT team, said police had earlier seized single and double barrel guns from him. "We believe Bo has links with anti-social elements," added Amo.
24 December 2011

Anti-Dam Protests Choke Arunachal

By Rahul Karmakart

arunachal dam protestGuwahati, Dec 24
: Economic blockade of the Manipur kind has changed lane to now trouble Arunachal Pradesh, thanks to a marathon anti-dam protest.
Several Assam-based organizations had from December 16 enforced a blockade on NH52 to prevent turbines and construction material from being carried to a major

dam site straddling Arunachal Pradesh and Assam. The blockade in Lakhimpur district of northeastern Assam, though dam-specific, spilled over to all vehicles to and from three districts in Arunachal Pradesh.

The dam on river Subansiri at Gerukamukh is for the 2010MW Lower Subansiri Hydro Electric Project (LSHEP) under the National Hydro Power Corporation (NHPC). The project is scheduled to be completed by 2015, but has undergone cost escalation because of frequent protests.

“We extend our moral support to any democratic movement including this one against mega dams, but fact is East Siang, West Siang and Upper Siang districts of our state, dependent on NH52, have been facing acute shortage of fuel, medicine and other essentials since the blockage began,” All Arunachal Pradesh Students’ Union (Aapsu) president Takam Tatung told HT from Itanagar.

Tatung said an Aapsu delegation met the anti-dam protestors on Friday requesting them not to harass the common people of Arunachal Pradesh. “They agreed after we told them that even vehicles carrying pregnant women for delivery have not been spared,” he added.

Because of its mountainous terrain and lack of proper healthcare facilities in the districts, people in Arunachal Pradesh have to use highways in Assam to reach state capital Itanagar.

The meeting between Aapsu and anti-dam protestors followed an appeal by a group of ministers constituted by Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi for calling off the blockade. “Our movement is not against the people of Arunachal Pradesh and so we have ensured their people don’t suffer. But mega dams such as LSHEP are against the greater good of the people and not desirable in a highly seismic zone,” Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti leader Akhil Gogoi said.

The anti-dam protestors also referred to a report by an expert committee comprising scientists from IIT Guwahati and universities in Assam. The report, submitted to the government a year ago, advised against mega dams in a tectonically unstable region.

Arunachal Pradesh has at least 140 hydroelectric projects, big and small, in various stages of construction. New Delhi is banking on these projects totaling more than 35000MW to take care of India’s power problems.

22 December 2011

Arunachal Stares At Food & Fuel Crisis

Krishak Mukti Sangram Samity KMSS AssamItanagar, Dec 22 : Food and fuel crisis looms large over three Arunachal districts following a road blockade launched by anti-dam activists in Assam's Lakhimpur district in protest against the Lower Subansiri hydroelectric project.

The ongoing blockade by All Assam Students' Union (Aasu) and Krishak Mukti Sangram Somiti (KMSS) in Lakhimpur since the last few days has badly hit the three districts of East, West and Upper Siang resulting in a halt in supply of fuel and essential commodities, an official said on Wednesday.

The organizations have launched an agitation against construction of mega dams in the Subansiri River at Gerukamukh which they fear would jeopardize the existence of people living in the downstream areas of the river.

They have accused the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC) of failing to act on the recommendations of an expert panel that pointed out perils of the ongoing 2000-MW Lower Subansiri Project. The organizations staging protests have blocked movement of vehicles carrying construction materials and fuel to the project site at Gerukamukh thereby sending a strong message to the authorities concerned to stop dam construction.

The protesters have blocked movement of all material-laden trucks and fuel tankers to Lakhimpur, which has resulted in acute fuel and food crisis in the Siang belt. East Siang deputy commissioner Talem Tapok on Wednesday requested his Lakhimpur counterpart for releasing the detained vehicles, including oil tankers, which are on the way to Arunachal.

"Lakhimpur DC has assured us to allow the vehicles in after a negotiation with the protesters," the DC said. The Siang districts have been hit by shortage of fuel for the second time this year. In August, due to flashfloods in Dhemaji (Assam), surface transport on National Highway-52 was disrupted for which three Siang districts had to face acute shortage of essential commodities and petroleum products for a fortnight.

The NH-52, which passes through Lakhimpur and Dhemaji district, is considered the lifeline of people for the three districts.

03 November 2011

China Envoy Ro Journos: 'Shut Up' on Arunachal

Sinlung Says: Chinese Ambassador might be right or wrong...but Arunachal will be blessed if its part of China...The world’s largest economy. That's All we say. Arunachalis won't be second class citizens at least by looks.

New Delhi: Chinese Ambassador to India on Thursday told journalists to 'shut up' when questioned about map showing Ladakh and Arunachal as part of China.

Chinese Ambassador was attending an event in Delhi where a Chinese company's brochure showed Arunachal and Ladakh as part of China.

The Joint Secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs who was present at the event had already raised the issue with the Ambassador.

The incident just happened suddenly at an event in New Delhi involving a delegation from Sichiang, which was being shepherded by the Chinese ambassador. A brochure given by a Chinese company, which is involved in some projects in India, showed a map of Ladakh and Arunachal as a part of China.

When a journalist from Outlook Business asked the ambassador for his reaction on that, he was asked to shut up. So, there were some raised voices in the process, and the Joint Secretary, China also intervened.

The matter was apparently sorted out, but it's not clear if the Chinese ambassador apologised for his remark.

But it's pretty clear that since the map also involved a China's stated position, it's unlikely that the ambassador would have gone back on that either.

29 October 2011

Arunachal Pradesh CM Jarbom Gamlin Resigns



Itanagar, Oct 29 :
Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Jarbom Gamlin resigned on Friday following the leadership crisis in the state.

Gamlin sent his resignation letter to the All India Congress Committee (AICC).

This came after Gamlin was told by the high-command to resign to resolve the leadership crisis in Arunachal Pradesh.

The Congress president is slated to meet AICC observers on Saturday afternoon to discuss the issue.

Meanwhile, as many as 24 out of 42 Congress MLAs have supported state party president Nabam Tuki as the next Chief Minister.

Tuki also has the support of two independent MLAs.

The development came a week after Congress leaders from Arunachal Pradesh met party president Sonia Gandhi over the issue in New Delhi.

The leadership crisis in the state emerged when Gamlin was accused of getting a senior state Cabinet minister, Chowma Mein, abducted.

The minister was allegedly abducted for a few hours in state capital Itanagar at gunpoint.

01 September 2011

Does Arunachal Pradesh Really Have The Highest Growth Rate?

Their reason for being at the top of the league table is probably the low base for these states

By Manas Chakravarty

Guess which is the fastest growing state in the country. Is it Gujarat, much tom-tommed for its industry-friendly policies? Could it be Maharashtra, where Mumbai remains, despite recent attempts to reduce it to a parochial village, a throbbing cosmopolitan metropolis, home to the country’s entrepreneurial elite? Or is it one of the southern states such as Tamil Nadu, which has attracted so many industries? Or, wait a bit, could it be once-laggard states such as Bihar, which is now purportedly in the process of catching up rapidly with the rest of the country?

A couple of years ago, economists discovered that economic growth had suddenly taken wing in Bihar. Growth in its gross domestic product (GDP) in 2008-09 was an astounding 13%. A few months later, Chhattisgarh became the new champion, as economists found that its growth was the highest in 2009-10.

Alas, no longer. Even these new poster boys of growth have bitten the dust. The data provided by the Central Statistics Office shows that the front-runner among high-growth states in 2009-10 was, hold your breath, Arunachal Pradesh, whose GDP grew by a mind-blowing 22.43%. Eat your heart out, mainstream India, the north-eastern star is rising, despite decades of neglect.

There’s more to the story. In second place was another surprise—Mizoram, with a growth rate of 13.95%. Goa came third in 2009-10, growing its GDP by 13.03%. That’s not all. It now turns out that Bihar was not really the fastest growing state in 2008-09—that honour goes to Mizoram, with a growth rate of 13.91%, while Bihar came second. Andaman and Nicobar Islands, growing by 11.17%, came third.

As a matter of fact, 2005-06 was the last year in which the fastest growing states were the conventional champions. In that year, Gujarat was the most rapidly growing state, followed by Maharashtra. Since then, however, the league tables have gone haywire. In 2006-07, the leader was Chhattisgarh, followed by Bihar. Andaman and Nicobar Islands came third. In 2007-08, the top spot was taken by Jharkhand, which grew by a huge 20.52%. Uttarakhand came second. The top ranks for 2008-09 and 2009-10 have already been given above. Mizoram’s average growth rate between 2007 and 2010 has been 12.9%. The average for Arunachal Pradesh in those three years was 13.98%.

Does this mean that these north-eastern states have now become the new growth hubs? That’s unlikely. Their reason for being at the top of the league table is probably the low base for these states. Could the data be wrong? That too would hardly be surprising, considering that the total of the states’ and Union territories’ GDP does not add up to India’s GDP. In 2008-09, the states’ total was lower than the all-India figure by Rs2.18 trillion (at 2004-05 prices), slightly lower than Karnataka’s GDP. In 2009-10, the all-India was higher than the states’ total by Rs2.24 trillion. In short, there’s a huge discrepancy in the data, about 5% of the country’s total GDP.

Let’s look a bit further. If we take the states’ domestic products at 1999-2000 prices, we find that the picture doesn’t really change and the rankings turn out to be equally odd. For instance, in 2000-01, Nagaland recorded the highest rate of growth among states, with a growth rate of 16.6%. Bihar came second, with a growth rate of 16.04%. In 2000-01, Arunachal Pradesh was numero uno, with a growth rate of 15.7% while Tripura came second, growing by 14.07%. In 2002-03, Chandigarh was first, followed by Bihar. Rajasthan and Jharkhand were the leaders in the following years.

But wait a bit. There’s also a huge difference between the growth rates if we take 1999-00 constant prices and 2004-05 constant prices. Arunachal Pradesh’s growth according to the 1999-00 prices for 2006-07 was 13.75%, for 2007-08 6.36%, for 2008-09 5.87%. At 2004-05 constant prices, the growth for 2006-07 is 4.95%, 12.01% for 2007-08 and 7.51% for 2008-09. Why should GDP at 2004-05 prices be so much lower than GDP at 1999-00 prices for 2006-07 and so much higher in 2007-08?

For Bihar, GDP growth at 1999-00 prices for 2008-09 is 16.59% while it is 13.06% at 2004-05 prices. That is fine, perhaps the 2004-05 series lowers growth? But in 2009-10, the state GDP computed according to the 2004-05 prices is 8.56% while it is much lower, at 4.72% at 1999-00 prices. This is absurd.

A friend of mine, who worked in a nationalized bank, told me a story about how, when he was posted in a village branch, he was once asked to respond immediately to a parliamentary question. The question was about how many Christians, Muslims, Sikhs and other minorities he had given advances to. But the bank records did not mention the religion of the borrower. My friend estimated that the village in which he was posted had about 50% Muslims and the rest Hindus. He accordingly took the total number of borrowers, divided it by two and said that was the number of Muslims financed by his branch. All over the country, bank managers adopted similar methods. The upshot was a completely bogus report on minority financing by banks reached Parliament and there must have been impassioned debates on this absolutely useless piece of information. Given the problems with the GDP, Index of Industrial Production and the state GDP numbers, I suspect most macro information in this country might be collected in the innovative manner my friend adopted.

**Manas Chakravarty looks at trends and issues in the financial markets. Comment at capitalaccount@livemint.com

30 June 2011

Arunachal Pradesh Becoming Safe Haven For Militants

By Anurag K

naga_militants

Guwahati, Jun 30
: Arunachal Pradesh, which shares its eastern boundary with the troubled region of Myanmar, and has a large number of insurgents, has become a favourite transit route and operation base for several militant outfits from neighbouring Nagaland and Assam.

Besides the lack of coordination among state police forces of Assam, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh, the rugged and thickly forested terrain of the state has made it favourable for insurgents to escape the heat of sustained counter-insurgency operations in Assam and Nagaland.

Security sources said Arunachal Pradesh's eastern districts of Tirap and Changlang bordering Myanmar have become a hotbed of insurgents of late.

The area is infested with factions of the Naga rebels – National Socialist Council of Nagaland - Khaplang and National Socialist Council of Nagaland - Isak-Muivah – besides anti-talks faction of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland and United Liberation Front of Assam. The NDFB, in fact, has infiltrated the forested area in Arunachal Pradeah bordering North Assam.

The Naga rebel groups are notorious for their extortion operations in Arunachal districts besides engaging in the occasional turf war between them for control over not territory. Arunachal Pradesh does not have sufficient manpower as well as equipment to put up a strong challenge before rebel groups armed to the teeth with sophisticated weapons.
The NSCN rebels are constantly trying to expand their area of operation to other parts of the sparsely populated hill state.

The twin districts of Tirap and Changlang have become one of the few remaining strongholds of the anti-talks faction of the ULFA. The outfits, besides remote controlling its operations in eastern Assam's industrial belt, use the area as transit route to its Myanmar base.

The anti-talk faction of National Democratic Front of Bodoland is very active in districts of West Kameng, East Kameng, Papum Pare, West Siang and East Siang which share boundary with Assam.

All these insurgent groups of the neighbouring states have hatched a design to promote small local insurgent groups within Arunachal Pradesh during the last few years for their advantage. There have been reports that one of those small outfits, Arunachal Naga Liberation Front, recently merged with the NSCN-K.

However, the small Arunachalee outfits hardly pose as much a threat as the bigger outfits from the neighbouring states. The sparsely populated and thickly forested steep hills of Arunachal Pradesh have provided a natural shield to these outfits against security forces.

These outfits resort to rampant extortions in areas close to inter-state boundary with Assam and Nagaland. Politicians and government officials too face the threat of extortion in those areas.

25 June 2011

A Snake Safari in India

In Arunachal Pradesh, a remote region of India that time forgot, brave amateur naturalists can join a scientific expedition to collect snake venom

By Kevin Rushby

Kevin Rushby holds a (non-venomous) rat snake

In safe hands … Kevin Rushby holds a (non-venomous) rat snake in Arunachal Pradesh, India. Photographs by Kevin Rushby

The first thing that happened was that an old man wearing a cap crowned with a peacock's claw, a hornbill's beak, a bearskin and a pair of knitting needles strolled up to the veranda of the government resthouse. "You want snakes?" he asked in broken Hindi, "Come with me now."

It was late afternoon. We had only just arrived from Assam, driving north for the last 100 miles up through increasingly thick jungle on a deteriorating dirt road, watching the last vestiges of modern India drop away. The garish advertising went first, the traffic next, then the plastic litter and jerry-built, stained concrete buildings. In their place came deep jungle and mountain rivers, interspersed with bamboo longhouses and people who stared. "Are you ghosts?" one man shouted. By the time we reached Leporiang village at the end of the track, we had slipped out of the 21st century and landed, hopeful and smiling, in something very different to the rest of the howling, honking mayhem that is modern India.

The north-east of India has never made much of a contribution to the country's tourism phenomenon. There have been, for a start, plenty of political problems. Culturally more akin to Burma or China than Delhi or Mumbai, the region has been a minefield of independence movements and ethnic rivalries. And of these, Arunachal Pradesh is one of the most remote and inaccessible. It covers those jungled mountains that extend 350 miles eastwards from the Bhutanese border all the way to Burma. Claimed by China and largely ignored by Delhi, its steep-sided hills and rampaging rivers have barely been touched by the modern world. Our hosts, the Nyishi tribe, are a people whose knowledge of the lands beyond their jungles was, until half a century ago, largely based on slaving forays among the lowland Assamese. I had arrived as part of a scientific expedition, one that amateur naturalists can accompany, with the aim of collecting snake venom for anti-venom serum.

This is not a frivolous or obscure project, as expedition leader Gerry Martin pointed out. "There are about one million snake bites in India every year – 50,000 of them fatal. Thousands of other people are incapacitated."

Nyishi A member of the Nyishi tribe in traditional headgear

The problem is that Indian snakes are not well studied. Scientists are just beginning to realise that venom is often location-specific and also that certain species may in fact be several distinct species. Our other expert, Rom Whitaker, American-born but brought up in India, is one of the greatest authorities on Indian snakes; he was quick to point out the limitations of current knowledge.

"Take some of the snakes we are looking for here: Medo's pit viper – we know almost nothing. It's probably a group of species. And Kaulback's pit viper – discovered in 1940 in south-west China and here in India only three years ago. It's a six-foot-long, highly venomous pit viper – that's about all we know." Rom's particular object of study is king cobras. "They'll be here for sure."

I'm no snake expert. In Africa once I was chased by a black mamba and the experience frightened the life out of me. I have very mixed feelings about this trip. But I am not going to have time to dwell on that. No sooner has the old man in the curious tribal hat mentioned his knowledge than we are on the march, heading out past the rice fields, following him down towards the river at the bottom of the valley.

We cross the torrent on logs laid across boulders, then climb up to a large flat rock in a bracken-covered clearing. "They live under there," says our informant. Immediately Gerry and his assistant Soham Mukherjee are on their knees shining torches into the cracks. "Cobras," whispers Gerry, "Big ones."

A crowd of excited villagers is gathering. For them it is clearly a thrilling novelty that someone might want to catch a snake and not kill it. Rom is showing them identification photographs and they all pick out the monocled cobra as the species we are tackling. They are more interested, however, in another picture: Kaulback's pit viper. "Oh, very bad!" says one young man in English – a language as rare as anti-venom in these parts. "We call him barta [meaning the deadliest of all snakes] and he is very bad. If you see one, you must kill it immediately or it will follow you home and kill someone in your longhouse."

"Where do you find them?" asks Rom.

"In the jungle – mountain tops."

Rom looks doubtful. "People always think snakes are far away, but in my experience they are close, like this one."

Gerry is calling him over to the boulder. He's placed a coat over one side of the crack, creating a dark, inviting escape hole. Now he's gently poking with a stick and waving the torch. "He's coming. You ready, Rom?"

Rom jumps up next to the boulder, a long, hooked snake stick in hand. Some of the local children start running away, a few adults too. The snake, smooth, powerful and grey, shoots out of the hole over Rom's waiting snake hook. Rom grabs it by the tail and lifts it up with the hook. The cobra, furious, whips its body around hissing, but Rom skilfully controls it. Gerry has a canvas bag ready and the six-foot reptile is dropped inside. It immediately settles down, comforted by the darkness. "They go into a kind of torpor," says Gerry. "We'll keep him a week, then take venom before we release him."

guide Rom Whitaker crosses a bamboo bridge Snake expert Rom Whitaker crosses a bamboo bridge

Walking back to the resthouse, it's getting dark and I'm close behind Rom at a tricky climb over a bamboo fence. Suddenly he stoops down and seizes a snake in the undergrowth and bags it. "Himalayan keelback," he grins. The manouevre is completed so quickly I haven't even seen the creature.

Later, this incident prompts me to ask if an untutored outsider can actually help much on an expedition like this.

"Honestly?" he asks. "Well, the money from paying guests helps a lot. This kind of expedition would not go ahead without it. And extra pairs of eyes and hands are genuinely useful."

There is another benefit that I start to appreciate over the following days. Simply by showing an interest in wildlife, the visitor can help transform local attitudes. In Nyishi territory, the birds, for example, are hunted along with other creatures: the deer, the squirrels, the clouded leopard and bear. Tigers and elephants have all but disappeared, though a few old men tell us that they still exist in the most remote areas. Our interest triggers a response. Climbing up a steep hillside cleared for rice, one farmer is keen to show me a nest in his rain shelter, then points out the brilliant colours of a golden-throated barbet on a nearby tree and a pair of woodpeckers. The Nyishi here are hunters and they have an intimate and detailed knowledge of every living creature around them. It just never occurred to them that these might have any use other than food.

That evening more people stop by the resthouse – as we are apparently the first Europeans ever to visit Leporiang, we are treated to a constant stream of curious visitors. They leaf through our books, stare at Gerry's laptop, ask questions: "Why do you white people all look the same?"

One youth grins at our female expedition members, Janike and Hema, and announces, "In my grandfather's time we would keep your women and thrash the men." We all laugh. I'm pretty sure that "thrash" is a euphemism for "kill".

Almost every middle-aged man carries a sword, and some have bows and poison-tipped arrows in bearskin quivers. The youths scorn such things, preferring hair gel and sneakers. Women are less adorned and appear to do all the work: hoeing the impossibly steep hillsides, carrying vast loads of firewood and cooking our meals in the government resthouse – Leporiang's only accommodation for visitors. On Sunday they head for the church on the hill and throw themselves, babies on their backs, into frenetic bouts of mass hysteria and swooning. This is a culture that's diving headlong into its own unfathomable future.

Among our visitors is one old man who saunters up the veranda and from a basket produces a dead snake – a gorgeous black, yellow and blue creature about five foot long. The effect on our experts is electric. Janike does a scale count – a diagnostic test in snakes – and declares the creature to be a Kaulback's. The old-timer has different ideas.

"It's not barta," he says, using the local name. "It's taji. They are different."

This is inexplicable, but our scientists do not discount it: knowledge of these snakes is so scarce that every morsel of local information is noted down.

The next day we trek for miles, deep into the jungled mountains, to find where this snake lived. The trees are shaggy with orchids and ferns – entire ecosystems in themselves. The rivers are heaving with fish and tadpoles the size of my thumb. And the vegetation is laden with leeches – harmless, if unpleasant. We flick them away with increasing regularity. Inside a narrow valley, we locate the precise spot where the Kaulback's pit viper was killed, then we fan out and start searching. Three hours later we have not found any snakes and decide to return. Almost immediately, Soham spots movement in the undergrowth and pounces, triumphantly lifting up a small lizard. It's a long-legged creature with a gorgeous green and orange throat.

"Almost certainly a new species," declares Gerry. "We found one last year in the next valley and no one has yet identified it." It seems a pretty good consolation for not finding the viper, but our guides are not satisfied. That night another old man in a Nyishi cap arrives to look at us. News of the strange foreigners who are interested in snakes has reached his longhouse some miles away. "Search the river at night," he tells us. "The overhanging trees are full of snakes."

Naturally, a torch-lit search for venomous reptiles while waist-deep in a fast-flowing Himalayan river is a snake-hunter's idea of a good night out. After dinner we head off, myself rather reluctantly at the rear. We clamber down to the river below the village, Gerry and Rom leading the way. Not everyone, it has to be said, would enjoy such abnormal behaviour, but I am about to experience one of the highs that such determination can bring.

The river is fast-flowing and 30 metres across. Soon the group is spread out, torches flaring off the trees and water. I find myself wading after Soham – he found the lizard, I reason, so maybe good luck is with him. We get separated from the others and come across two local men hunting fish with their hands. It's one of them who shouts the warning. "Look up!"

On a branch 10 feet above the raging torrent is a coiled emerald-green serpent, its head the shape of a blunt arrowhead. We inch closer. The boulders are desperately slippery and I go down once, grateful I've packed my camera in a dry bag. The fisherman, eager to help, grabs the branch and shakes. The viper falls in the river among us. Soham coolly dives forward and grabs its tail, then gets it on his snake stick. We all shuffle and stumble towards a sandbank to get a closer look at this phenomenally beautiful creature, so perfect in every precisely defined scale and feature.

Back at base camp we get further treats: Leporiang has only recently got electricity and there are a few bulbs in town, some of them on our veranda. The light has brought visitors: a huge pale moth, pressed to the door like a fallen moon, then another, as broad as my outstretched hand, with huge brown eyes on its furry wings.

Gerry Martin, left, and Rom Whitaker with a cobra Gerry Martin, left, and Rom Whitaker with a cobra

The days roll by and the end of the week arrives. It's time to inspect all our snakes – nine of them – to identify and photograph them. Unfortunately, I am going to miss the venom extraction as the necessary ice has not arrived from Assam, but we go through the identification. First is a green rat snake – non-venomous, so I have a go at handling it. Then come keelbacks – Himalayan and St John's – and two Medo's pit vipers, one a baby with its umbilical cord mark still visible (most vipers give birth rather than laying eggs). Next is a false cobra and a strange burrowing snake, more like a worm, really. Finally we come to the two cobras. Gerry prepares carefully. This is a big, fast animal and extremely venomous. As it drops out of the bag it's clearly angry, hissing loudly. Held by the tail, however, the snake rears up and spreads its hood.

"Monocled cobra," someone shouts confidently. But Rom is frowning. "I'm not so sure. Let's do the scale counts."

They place the snake's head in a clear plastic tube to prevent any mishaps and start the counts. Janike immediately announces that nothing fits the expected figures for a monocled cobra – a well-known Indian species. "Check the tail-to-body ratio," she says.

When the result is shouted out, Rom shakes his head. "That's incredible. I mean, what is this thing?"

Further results only increase his consternation. The snake, meanwhile, is getting tired. They pop it back in the bag to rest. It feels like no one dares say it, so I do. "New species of cobra?"

Gerry and Rom share a glance. "Could be."

"It's a long process," explains Gerry. "And the truth is we are probably looking at a local variation within the monocled species."

That night, my last in Leporiang, I wander out among the paddy fields, treading carefully on the narrow earthen bunds that separate the fields. Thousands of frogs are celebrating the arrival of the monsoons, and no doubt, so too are the vipers, the cobras and the keelbacks. On either side of me, I can sense, rather than see, the jungle: a dark shadow that rises up. I had never expected that such a place could exist in modern India, a place so unknown and untouched. In this province the local government is planning dozens of new hydroelectric dams, and yet the contents of that astonishingly diverse jungle remain largely unknown and undiscovered. If paying guests can help scientific expeditions like ours to take place, then the tourist dollar, I reckon, will be well spent.

Way to go

India travel map

Getting there
Planet Wildlife (0845 519 4948, planetwildlife.com) is running a 12-day trip to the Gujarat highlands in October led by Gerry Martin to see snakes, birds and Asiatic lions for £1,648pp, excluding flights. Planet Wildlife can also arrange flights from London to Ahmedabad – ask for details. Emirates (emirates.com) has return flights via Dubai from £500 for travel in October. Kevin travelled from York to London with East Coast Trains (eastcoast.co.uk). Returns from £20

Further information
For details of other Gerry Martin expeditions, see gerrymartin.in. To see king cobras in the UK, visit the King Cobra Sanctuary (07508 797010, kingcobrasanctuary.com) in Eastwood, near Nottingham. To get involved with reptile and amphibian conservation in the UK, contact Amphibian and Reptile Groups of the UK, arguk.org

via the Guardian

12 June 2011

Arunachal Band To Release Debut Album

Alien Gods band pic

Itanagar, Jun 12
: Local rock group ‘Alien Gods’ is poised to go places with their debut album ‘Lunar Blackened Death’ set for a worldwide release soon.

The three-member band is very upbeat about their kind of music, though they regret that locally there are not many takers. “We are yet to find sponsors here even nearly two months after the album was released in the State, perhaps unable to sync with our brand of music,” said vocalist Olik Boko.

The other members of the group are Ravi Prasad on drums and Raju Thapa on bass guitar. “It would be a lot better if we can go out and promote our music,” says Olik, the frontman.

Started in the year 2002 while still in school with the name ‘Holo Band’, the three of them had formed the band to pursue their passion for music.

Olik says initially they used to play songs from all genres and after performing only two shows they shut shop in order to pursue higher studies.

“Then in 2004 when we performed in a musical soiree called Megatone at Ziro in Lower Subansiri district, I saw that we had improved a lot and then by the end of that year Alien Gods was formed,” said Olik.

Talking about their music, Olik said, “Our music is very tough and it needs years of practice and stamina.”

Ravi said, “The tempo goes from 140 BPM to 300 BPM. So our music has to be perfect, a note goes in there and the shows is all gone.”

Many of the companies, national and from outside, are showing interest in their music, said the band.

23 May 2011

Northeast Woman Breaks World Record

Woman scales Mt Everest twice in 10 days

Anshu Jamsenpa
Anshu Jamsenpa on a High

Itanagar, May 23 : A girl from Arunachal Pradesh created history by climbing Mt Everest twice in 10 days and also became the first woman mountaineer in the world to achieve the feat twice in the same season.

Anshu Jamsenpa, a 32-year-old mother of two children, unfurled the tricolour and an Arunachal logo at the summit of the 29,035 feet peak yesterday at 5.05 am local time, official sources said here today.

She had earlier been on the top of the world on May 12.

Hailing from West Kameng district, Anshu offered a short thanks-giving prayer to Lord Buddha on reaching the summit.

Anshu is also the leader of the International Everest Expedition team consisting of 10 members from six countries, the sources said.

Another girl from Arunachal Pradesh Tine Mena also scaled the world’s highest peak Mount Everest on May 9. Mena hails from Roing in Lower Dibang Valley district.

Anshu Jamsenpa1

09 May 2011

Prime Minister Pledges To Finish Khandu's Work

Singh and Sonia pay homage to late CM

Locals pay tribute to late Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu in Itanagar on Thursday. Khandu’s body was found at a mountainous site in northeast India after a massive air and ground search.

Itanagar, May 9 : Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday pledged his government's full support in completing the "unfinished task and dream of all round development" of Arunachal Pradesh chief minister Dorjee Khandu, who was killed in a helicopter crash.

"Dorjee Khandu was a visionary and his untimely death is not just a loss for Arunachal Pradesh, but the nation as a whole and we, together with the support of the people here, are committed to realising the dream and the unfinished task of all-round development undertaken by him," the prime minister told journalists after paying homage to the late chief minister.

Manmohan Singh, accompanied by Home Minister P. Chidambaram and Congress president Sonia Gandhi, arrived in Itanagar and spent about 15 minutes with Khandu's family members. The three placed wreaths on Khandu's coffin.

The body of Khandu, 56, was flown to his home district of Tawang for his last rites to be performed on Wednesday according to Buddhist rituals.

"On the advice of the Buddhist lamas, the family would be performing his funeral rites with the burial taking place on May 11 in Tawang," Arunachal Pradesh MP Takam Sanjay said.

New CM sworn in

Khandu and four others, two pilots, a personal security officer, and the sister of the Tawang MLA, were killed in the crash last Saturday. The bodies were retrieved from the crash site at Lobotang near the 13,700 feet Sela Pass in Tawang district on Thursday after six days of intense search operation.

Senior Congress party leader Jarbom Gamlin was sworn in as the new chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh late on Thursday by Governor Gen (Retd) J.J. Singh at the Raj Bhavan here.

Although six names emerged, Gamlin, the power minister in the Khandu-led cabinet, got the nod from the Congress party president.

04 May 2011

Dorjee Khandu: Man Of The Masses

Dorjee Khandu — From grassroots activist to Chief Minister

Itanagar, May 5 : A military intelligence man who participated in the 1971 Bangladesh war, Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu had worked his way up as a local politician helping set up schools and organising drinking water supplies in far-flung areas of the mountainous State.

Dorjee Khandu — From grassroots activist to Chief Minister

Mr. Khandu, who became the Chief Minister twice, was with the Indian Army's intelligence wing for seven years and received a gold medal for rendering meritorious services during the India-Pakistan war that led to the creation of Bangladesh.

Becoming an Anchal Samiti member in 1980, he turned his focus to social work in far-flung villages. He helped arranging drinking water supplies, electricity and communication and also setting up schools in remote areas of Tawang, his home district. Due to his efforts, cultural and cooperative societies were established in Tawang.

This helped him consolidate his standing among the masses when he replaced Gegong Apang as Chief Minister of the State in 2007.

Dorjee Khandu — From grassroots activist to Chief Minister

He led a cultural troupe to the 1982 ASIAD in Delhi from Tawang which won a silver medal.

Born on March 3, 1955 in Gyangkhar village in Tawang district, Mr. Khandu belonged to Monpa tribe and was a Buddhist with little formal education. He is survived by four wives, four sons and two daughters.

His political innings started in 1983 when he was elected uncontested as the district vice-president of the West Kameng District Zilla Parishad and worked in that capacity till 1987.

In March 1990, he was elected uncontested to the Legislative Assembly from the Mukto constituency.

Mr. Khandu was re-elected to the Assembly in March, 1995 from the same constituency and was given the portfolio of Minister of State for Cooperation.

Dorjee Khandu — From grassroots activist to Chief Minister

On September 21, 1996, he was elevated to Cabinet rank and given Animal Husbandry & Veterinary, Dairy Development department

In 1999, he was elected to the third Assembly of the State and served as the Power minister from 1998 to 2006.

He also served as Minister for Mines and held the portfolio of Minister for Relief and Rehabilitation and Disaster Management.

Mr. Khandu revolted against Mr. Apang in 2007. When the Congress high command first refused to accept Mr. Khandu as a replacement for Mr. Apang as Chief Minister, he went to New Delhi with most party legislators and stayed put for 10 days till the AICC leaders relented.

After taking over as the Chief Minister on April 9, 2007, he promised to reopen the state-owned APEX Cooperative bank having 32 branches across the State lying defunct for two years after an over Rs. 200 crore loan scam was unearthed.

Dorjee Khandu — From grassroots activist to Chief Minister

Within few weeks, Mr. Khandu secured a loan of Rs. 225 crore from PSU power major NHPC and invested it into the bank, enabling it to reopen, much to the relief of lakhs of depositors who were mostly poor locals.

His popularity grew further when he forced the Centre to open the FIC regional head office in Itanagar and godowns deep inside the State to check pilferage of PDS commodities.

In 2009, he was again elected unopposed to the Assembly and became the Chief Minister for second time on October 25, 2009.

The Rs. 24,000-crore special package announced by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Itanagar on January 31 last year made Mr. Khandu's popularity soar even further.

Khandu's relative identifies his body

Search party located the wreckage of the copter; relative identifies the body of Arunachal CM; Chidamabaram, S M Krishna condole the demise of Khandu

Khandu's relative identifies his body

Itanagar: Five mutilated bodies and the wreckage of the helicopter carrying Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu were found Wednesday near the Jang waterfalls in Tawang district, exactly 96 hours after they went missing, officials said.

A relative and panchayat leader of Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu's Assembly constituency has identified his body, according to Union Minister for Development of North Eastern region B K Handique.

He told reporters that the panchayat leader Thupten has identified the body of 56-year-old Dorjee while the other four bodies have been charred beyond recognition.

The minister, however, said that only after the divisional commissioner takes charge of the body and the formalities are completed, they could officially confirm news about Dorjee.

Asked about the successor to Dorjee, he said, "Everything will be taken care of."
The single engine four-seater Pawan Hans helicopter with Dorjee and four others on board went missing soon after taking off from Tawang on Saturday.

Besides Khandu, others on board were pilots Captain J S Babbar, Captain T S Mamik, Khandu's security officer Yeshi Choddak and Yeshi Lhamu, sister of Tawang MLA Tsewang Dhondup. Inclement weather had prevented teams from carrying out aerial searches.

Khandu's relative identifies his body

Krishna condoles demise of Arunachal CM Khandu

External Affairs Minister S.M Krishna on Wednesday condoled the sad demise of Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu, who has been killed in a chopper crash in Lobothong near Tawang District.

In a statement, Krishna said: "I am deeply pained to receive confirmation of the tragic and untimely demise of a great son of India and the Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh Dorjee Khandu."

"He was dedicated to the cause of improving the quality of lives of the people of the Indian State of Arunachal Pradesh," he added.

He further said: "In his (Khandu) death, the state and country has lost a visionary administrator and an excellent human being. I would like to convey my heartfelt condolences to members of his family and friends.

Wreckage located at Tawang

TV reports indicate that the crash site has been located near Jang waterfall in Tawang. Appealing to the media to not speculate till the official confirmation, Home Minister Chidambaram said none of the bodies had been identified. "The crash site has been located, some bodies sighted. Let's wait for more information," the home minister told reporters here.

Search teams spotted the wreckage and the bodies in remote and inaccessible Lobotang area around 10 a.m. at an altitude of 10,000 ft. The area is surrounded by steep mountain ranges and is thickly forested.

The bodies are likely to be lifted to the first accessible point and then brought to Itanagar later in the day, officials said. Rescue teams could take three to four hours to bring the bodies to the first accessible point on foot.

Khandu's relative identifies his body

The rugged and difficult terrain with rains and heavy snow is affecting the progress of the rescue workers.

The Pawan Hans AS350 B-3 helicopter had taken off from Tawang at 9.50 a.m. Saturday. The last radio contact with the ground was about 20 minutes after take off as it flew over the Sela Pass along the Chinese border perched at an altitude of 13,700 feet.

Six Indian Air Force helicopters Wednesday morning began an aerial survey along the dizzy heights of Sela Pass for the rescue and search mission.

Congress legislator Tsewang Dhondup's younger sister, Yeshmi Lamu, was the lone woman occupant in the helicopter. She was in the helicopter with the chief minister for a medical check-up in Itanagar.

The helicopter had two pilots and three passengers on board, including the chief minister and his personal security officer. Yeshmi Lamu was the third passenger.

The Arunachal Pradesh government had announced a cash reward of Rs.1 million to anyone who could provide information about the missing helicopter.

On Wednesday, six Indian Air Force helicopters did an aerial survey along the dizzy heights of Sela Pass in Arunachal Pradesh. Six helicopters - two each of the Mi-17, Cheetah, and Cheetak - took off from bases in Tawang and Tezpur in Assam at 5.05 a.m. Wednesday for rescue and search mission, IAF spokesperson Ranjeeb Sahoo said.

The Pawan Hans AS350 B-3 helicopter carrying the chief minister and four others went missing after it took off from Tawang at 9.50 a.m. Saturday. The last radio contact with the ground was about 20 minutes after take off as it flew over the Sela Pass along the Chinese border perched at an altitude of 13,700 feet.

Source: PTI, ANI & IANS

News is Sad And Grim, Says Chidambaram

Union Minister for Development of North Eastern region B.K. Handique addresses the media on the chopper crash, in Itanagar on Wednesday.Union Minister for Development of North Eastern region B.K. Handique addresses the media on the chopper crash, in Itanagar on Wednesday.

Itanagar/New Delhi, May 4 : A party sent by the circle officer has located the crash site of the Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister’s Pawan Hans, on the flight path of the chopper.

Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorji Khandu, who went missing on Saturday on a flight from Tawang, is believed to have died when his helicopter crashed in the mountains and the wreckage was located on Wednesday.

Along with him, four other occupants of the single-engined Euro Copter B8 of Pawan Hans are also believed to have perished in the crash of the chopper, whose wreckage has been spotted in a place between Kyela and Lobothang in the mountainous region of the State.

The other occupants of the helicopter were pilots Capt. J.S. Babbar, Capt. T.S. Mamik, Mr. Khandu’s security officer Yeshi Choddak and Yeshi Lhamu, sister of Tawant MLA Tsewang Dhondup.

Officially no declaration has been made of any death, but Union Minister for Development of North Eastern Region B.K. Handique said a relative of Mr. Khandu and a panchayat leader from his constituency identified his body.

The panchayat leader Thupten from Kyela village of Mr. Khandu’s Mukto constituency, first informed an official Rinchin of his sighting the body which was passed on Tawang Deputy Commissioner Hamli Padu, who alerted the Army base at Kyela, Mr. Handique told reporters in Itanagar.

However in New Delhi, Home Minister P. Chidambaram preferred to be cautious when he said, “I am afraid the news grim and sad”. Earlier, he spoke about helicopters locating the site of the crash and sighting of bodies.

“From whatever I can piece together the information from the information given by the villagers and assuming it to be true, I am afraid the news is grim and sad,” he told reporters here in his second update on the search operations.

Giving details, he said some villagers had reportedly reached the site of the crash of a helicopter and communicated to the control room in Itanagar that they had identified two bodies while three were charred beyond recognition.

“These are interrupted communications by villagers who have reached the site. But no official of the government, Army or police has been able to reach there,” he said.

“It may take several hours for any of these officials to reach the spot because it is about five kilometres from Kyela,” Mr. Chidambaram said.

He said a Cheetah helicopter, which flew over the site, was also able to locate the debris of a crashed helicopter and some bodies lying there.

“We are trying to land another Cheetah from Lubothang,” the Home Minister said, adding a team of the government to reach the accident site which is about 5 km from Kyela.

Mr. Handique said honouring the wishes of people, Mr. Khandu’s body would be brought here and kept in his bungalow for the people to pay their last respects.

Khandu’s Death: Pawan Hans Office Attacked

khandu helicopter

Itanagar, May 4
: Angry protesters attacked the local Pawan Hans office, breaking window panes and ransacking furniture after reports that the missing chopper carrying Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu had crashed.

A group of youths ransacked the local Pawan Hans office in Maharlagun, 14 kms from Itanagar, police said.

The glass panes of the director's chamber and booking counter were damaged in the attack, they said.

However, no one was injured, police said, adding the employees fled from the office after the protesters swooped on the building.

The single engine four-seater Pawan Hans helicopter with Khandu and four others on board went missing soon after taking off from Tawang on Saturday.

A pall of gloom descended on the state capital with thousands thronging Khandu's official bungalow at Niti Vihar here. Ministers, MLAs and senior officials were hesitant to talk.

"Never before has Arunachal witnessed such massive development as was undertaken under Khandu after he took over the reins on April 9, 2007," Power Minister Jarbom Gamlin who is also state government spokesman said.

Dorjee Khandu's Helicopter Found: 5 Bodies in Wreckage

Arunachal CM Killed in Crash

Chopper crash: MEA confirms death of Arunachal CM

Itanagar, May 5 : Five mutilated bodies and the wreckage of the helicopter carrying Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu were today found near the Jang waterfalls in Tawang district, exactly 96 hours after they went missing, officials said.

Search teams spotted the wreckage and the bodies in remote and inaccessible Lobotang area around 10 am at an altitude of 10,000 ft. The area is surrounded by steep mountain ranges and is thickly forested.

The bodies are likely to be lifted to the first accessible point and then brought to Itanagar later in the day, officials said. Rescue teams could take three to four hours to bring the bodies to the first accessible point on foot. The rugged and difficult terrain with rains and heavy snow is affecting the progress of the rescue workers.

The Pawan Hans AS350 B-3 helicopter had taken off from Tawang at 9.50 am on Saturday. The last radio contact with the ground was about 20 minutes after take off as it flew over the Sela Pass along the Chinese border perched at an altitude of 13,700 feet.

Six Indian Air Force helicopters this morning began an aerial survey along the dizzy heights of Sela Pass for the rescue and search mission.

Congress legislator Tsewang Dhondup's younger sister, Yeshmi Lamu, was the lone woman occupant in the helicopter. She was in the helicopter with the chief minister for a medical check-up in Itanagar.

The helicopter had two pilots and three passengers on board, including the Chief Minister and his personal security officer. Yeshmi Lamu was the third passenger.

The Arunachal Pradesh government had announced a cash reward of Rs 1 million to anyone who could provide information about the missing helicopter.

03 May 2011

ISRO Images Throw Up Clues To Missing Chopper

tawang

Itanagar, Amy 3
: The first possible clues to the missing helicopter carrying Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu emerged with the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) Monday claiming to have located metallic objects at a place called Nagarjiji near the Sela Pass in Tawang district.

"According to the ISRO radar findings, some bright spots, metallic substances, have been sighted at a place called Nagarjiji and details of what exactly it is could be ascertained only when the rescue and search teams reach the spot," union Parliamentary Affairs Minister V. Narayanasamy told journalists.

Rescue teams would, however, be able to reach the spot, at a height of 13,700 feet, only around 2 p.m. Tuesday with the terrain hilly and almost inaccessible.

"Teams have already set out for the area, but since the terrain is hostile they should be able to reach only by 2 to 3 p.m. Tuesday," the minister said.

"We don't know if that is the wreckage or anything at this point in time until and unless the search teams reaches there," Jarbom Gamlin, state power minister, said.

Meanwhile, the Indian Air Force (IAF) Monday said images taken by two Sukhoi aircraft have detected "an aircraft-like something" in an area in Bhutan.

Air Marshal K.K. Nohwar, chief of the IAF's Eastern Air Command, told journalists in Shillong: "Sukhoi-30s with recce pods and ISRO have managed to pick up something which has been given for assessment. The data (from Sukhoi and ISRO) is being corroborated with the ground situation."

The Pawan Hans AS350 B-3 helicopter carrying the 56-year-old Khandu and four others went missing Saturday morning after it took off from Tawang at 9.50 a.m, and has remained untraced for the third day Monday. The last radio contact with the ground was about 20 minutes after take off as it flew over the Sela Pass along the Chinese border.

The Crisis Management Team monitoring the rescue and search operation here earlier in the day identified three possible locations where the helicopter might have landed or crashed - Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary and Nagajen in the state's West Kameng district, and the small village of Mobi in Trashiyangtse district of Bhutan.

All three locations border Tawang district.

Earlier, four Indian Air Force helicopters were pressed into service Monday for conducting aerial surveys. Two Mi-17 helicopters took off from Tawang and two Cheetak helicopters flew from Tezpur in Assam.

Bad weather, however, led the aerial survey to be abandoned for the day after about two hours of flying.

"We are hoping against hope now to get some news about the helicopter and its occupants. There are prayers being held in all the Buddhist monasteries for some good news," Congress MLA from Tawang Tsewang Dhondup said.

Yeshmi Lamu, the lone woman occupant in the helicopter is the younger sister of Dhondhup.

"She was in the helicopter with the chief minister for a medical checkup in Itanagar," Dhondhup said.

The incident comes just days after another Pawan Hans helicopter crashed in Tawang April 19, killing 17 people and injuring six.

The Pawan Hans Helicopter Services Limited (PHHL) has been operating five helicopters across Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Tripura and daily Guwahati-Tawang services for the past nine years. It is one of the major lifelines of the landlocked Arunachal Pradesh.