Showing posts with label Meghalaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meghalaya. Show all posts
27 August 2012

Power Failure Forces NEH Varsity To Close

By Rahul Karmakar

Guwahati, Aug 27 : Educational institutions in India face unscheduled shutdowns for a number of reasons.

But a Central university in Meghalaya's capital Shillong broke new grounds when it tripped over power failure.

Last month, North India hit the headlines following a two-day power grid outage. But the North Eastern Hill University (Nehu) has already been without power for six days.

With dark classrooms and no water supply, the university was forced to declare an unscheduled holiday till September 2. But officials say it might take as long as 45 days for power to return to the campus.

On the afternoon of August 20, lightning struck the university's 3MVA transformer. A back-up transformer failed to start.

"On August 22, we purchased a 1MVA transformer for Rs. 15 lakh, but it failed to take the load and crashed," said vice-chancellor AN Rai.

Generator sets proved inadequate.

Repairing the damaged transformer will take at least 45 days, said an official of the university. It would take 90 days and a cost of Rs. 25 crore for a custom-made transformer to reach Shillong.

With no power to illuminate the classrooms - the dense foliage between buildings makes interiors dark even at noon - and run computers and other essential services like water supply, students and research scholars  gheraoed the vice-chancellor on August 24.

The classes were suspended and around 2,500 students and teachers were advised to leave the campus.

"We have shifted to my mother's house but I have been reporting to the hospital, where even the steriliser is not working let alone other power-intensive medical tools. We have been literally groping in the dark," Caroline Mukhim, a doctor at the university's hospital.

While locals have shifted to their own houses or to their relatives', the 70% non-locals are in a dilemma.

"We want a written assurance from the university authorities that they would provide generator, mineral water and candles," said research scholar R Shangpliang.
24 August 2012

‘Book’ Replaces ‘lock’ in Shillong

A labourer paints the gate of the National People's Party's new office in Shillong on Thursday.

Shillong, Aug 24 :
The NCP “clock” in Meghalaya will not be heard ticking for quite a while as change is blowing over the hills in the abode of clouds.

The winds of change could be witnessed today in the heart of the city as labourers were deployed to wipe out the NCP symbols, which have been dotting the walls of the party office since March this year.
The “clock” was subsequently replaced with a “book”, which is the symbol of the National People’s Party (NPP), hitherto, a Manipur-based party.
This was contrary to the claims made by former Lok Sabha Speaker and erstwhile NCP leader Purno Agitok Sangma that he would form a new political party.
The NPP, Meghalaya state unit, will be launched here tomorrow afternoon in the presence of the defeated presidential candidate where state NCP workers are expected to enrol themselves with the party.
After having fought a losing battle in the bitter war for Raisina Hill last month, Sangma had set the tone for the formation of a new political party, which would be “tribal-centric”, but “open for all”.
Sangma, who arrived this evening from New Delhi, admitted that NPP is already a registered recognised party with the Election Commission, and only the Meghalaya state unit of the party will be formed here tomorrow.
All the NCP members and legislators will be present during the formal launching of the state unit.
Sources said the 13 NCP legislators would not immediately join the NPP lest they unnecessarily attract disqualification from the state Assembly.
“The legislators have been deliberating the fundamentals of the prospect of merging with the NPP, and they are yet to decide when they would part ways with Sharad Pawar-led party,” the source said.
The 13 legislators include Sangma’s sons — James and Conrad. Sources said Sangma’s daughter, Agatha, who is currently the Union minister of state for rural development, would not jump ship as yet.
“She (Agatha) might even join the NPP just before the next Lok Sabha polls,” the source added.
According to Sangma, the state NCP legislators will not face any problem in joining NPP, and that it will be considered as the merger of NCP with NPP.
The formation of the NPP here also comes just few months away from the next Assembly polls scheduled for February-March next year.
A few months ago, the state unit of NCP had announced the list of more than 20 candidates, including sitting legislators, who will be contesting the Assembly elections.
Ironically as it may sound, it was the former Lok Sabha Speaker who had inaugurated the Meghalaya NCP office on March 17, and it will be the same Sangma who will launch the NPP state unit from the same venue.
Before he threw his hat into the presidential ring against UPA nominee and eventual winner Pranab Mukherjee, Sangma had resigned both from the NCP and the Meghalaya Assembly.
It may be mentioned that the NPP had fielded five candidates in the 2012 Manipur Assembly polls, but could not win any seat. Five years earlier, the party had three legislators in the Assembly.
17 August 2012

Northeast Exodus: Meghalaya To Send Team To Other States

Shillong, Aug 17 : Expressing concern over "students' exodus" from southern states fearing attacks, the Meghalaya government Thursday decided to send a delegation to these states to unearth the truth.

Many students from Meghalaya and the northeast region left Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry and Maharashtra after circulation of SMSes about northeast students being attacked.

The SMSes on the attacks emanated after the Assam ethnic violence.

"It is a matter of concern (students leaving southern states fearing attack) and such incidents would have serious ramification in the long run," Meghalaya Chief Minister Mukul Sangma told reporters after a cabinet meeting.

"We have checked with our counterparts and found that most of the information being circulated through SMSes are rumours," Sangma said.

He said a delegation would be sent to the affected states and the union home ministry was being approached to facilitate the visit.

"The director general of police and the chief secretary are in constant touch with their counterparts in the states. I have also taken up the matter with my counterparts there," Sangma said.

Meghalaya Police have also set up a helpline 91-8575001111.
09 August 2012

Bus Plunges Into Gorge in Meghalaya, 31 Dead


Shillong, Aug 9 : Thirty-one people were killed and 27 injured when a bus proceeding from Guwahati to Agartala rolled down a hill in Meghalaya on early Wednesday, police said.

Two women were among those killed when the bus rolled down a 100 metre deep gorge in Tongseng, East Jaintia Hills district police chief MK Dkhar told IANS.

Tongseng is about 150 km east of Shillong, the capital of Meghalaya. The privately-owned night bus was on its way from Guwahati in Assam to Tripura capital Agartala.

Of the injured, Dkhar said seven were rushed to Silchar Medical College in southern Assam and the rest in nearby hospitals in the district.

“The rescue operations are over and investigation has begun to ascertain the cause of the accident,” the officer said.

A Tripura official told IANS in Agartala that 27 people died on the spot.

The driver of the bus, who also died, lost control of the bus when he was taking a turn in the terrain cramped Assam-Agartala highway.

Tripura Transport Minister Manik Dey told IANS that a state government team had left for the site.

He said the place where the disaster site was “extremely accident prone”. “Every year a number of accidents have occurred in the area. killing many people.”
11 July 2012

15 Miners Trapped Inside Coal Mine in Meghalaya

By SUSHANTA TALUKDAR
  • Coal mining in most parts of Meghalaya is done in an indiscriminate and unscientific manner of manual extraction and is popularly known as rat-hole mining as the miners crawl inside a long tunnel and use basic implements to burrow and extract coal. This photograph shows a miner inside a typical rat hole mine. Photo: Rajkamal Goswami, ATREE.
    Coal mining in most parts of Meghalaya is done in an indiscriminate and unscientific manner of manual extraction and is popularly known as rat-hole mining as the miners crawl inside a long tunnel and use basic implements to burrow and extract coal. This photograph shows a miner inside a typical rat hole mine. Photo: Rajkamal Goswami, ATREE.
  • An surface picture of a coal mine in Meghalaya. Photo: Ritu Raj Konwar
    An surface picture of a coal mine in Meghalaya. Photo: Ritu Raj Konwar
Fifteen miners are trapped inside a rat-hole coal mine near Nangalbibra area of South Garo Hills district in Meghalaya since Friday afternoon after water from an adjacent abandoned mine gushed in when the miners accidentally hit on the wall of the abandoned mine.
Meghalaya Director General of Police N. Ramachandran told The Hindu that there was very little hope of any survivor.
“There were total 30 miners working in the rat-hole mine. Fifteen managed to come out while 15 others got trapped inside. It is suspected that the miners accidentally punctured the wall of a flooded abandoned mine and huge quantity of water gushed inside the mine in which they were working.
For the last two days the district authorities have been trying to pump out the water. The mine operator did not inform either the police or the district authorities. We have registered a case under Section 304 (a) for negligent action and arrested the main operator of the mine,” he said.
Unscientific mining
Coal mining in most part of Meghalaya is done in an indiscriminate and unscientific manner of manual extraction and is popularly known as rat-hole mining as the miners crawl inside a long tunnel and use handy implements to burrow in and extract coal.
South Garo Hills Deputy Commissioner in-charge R.P. Marak said a magisterial probe has been ordered into the incident while efforts were on to rescue the trapped miners. The district authorities have also requisitioned the services of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) for rescue operations.
The 1st Battalion NDRF has sent two rescue teams which are expected to reach the site on Wednesday night. The DGP said that the mine was located in a remote location and condition of the road leading to the site is also bad. The coal mines are located at Rongsa Awe village, about 10 km from Nangalbibra.
These rat-hole mines are privately owned. In Meghalaya, land and resources are privately owned by local tribal communities and the State government has little control over it.
22 June 2012

Archery, Gambling, & Betel Nuts in Shillong

Archery lotteryArchery lottery
Archery lottery

Our trip, up to this point, had been concentrated in a pretty small area of the Himalayas in West Bengal and Sikkim. However, we would have kicked ourselves if we had come to this region of the world & failed to visit the Living Root Bridges of Meghalaya.

We leave the Makaibari tea estate in a car driven by a teenage driver acompanied by his friend, loud bengali rock blaring on the CD player. We like it. We leave the mountains, & are soon driving thru a monkey infested military base & then thru Siliguri, the 2nd largest town in west Bengal. Arriving at the New Jalpaiguri train station several hours early for our train, we are quickly overwhelmed by this, our first exposure to Indian train stations. We are soon befrended by our "gardian angel", Theja, from Nagaland. He senses our confusion & stays with us & directs us to our train, arrainging to upgrade our tickets from "sleeper" to "first class" for us. We travel thru the night, & I am disapointed that there are no windows in our train car to see out of, but we get some sleep and arrive in Guwahati, Assam at about
Betel Nut vendorsBetel Nut vendors
Betel Nut vendors
4:30AM. Theja, who has also been on our train, in a different car, meets us after we disembark, to guide us thru the busy train station & secure us on a share jeep bound for Shillong. We bid a grateful farewell. as he is heading back to Nagaland. While waiting to leave Guwahati, Patty spots a "flying fox" bat above us & we wnjoy the dawn of a new day in the Northeast of India.

Shillong looks and feels different from the rest of India. The majority of the people here belong to the Khasi tribe, & belong to their traditional religon or are Christian. They are very hospitible to visitors like us. They love music and Betel nuts. We stay 3 days in Shillong & visit the facinating Don Bosco Museum of Indigenous Cultures, the Huge Bazaar, & the Tir or Teer (archery gambling).

The archery gamlking is a lottery of sorts with the local archery associations shooting at a target. People all over maghalaya place bets on the last 2 digits of the number of arrows sticking to the target. It is rally a facinating mixture of sport, culture & gambling.

In Shillong we also had one of the most amazing meals of our trip (& we had some good ones). It was the "chilli Baby corns" at Bombay Bites!
collecting the arrowscollecting the arrows
collecting the arrows

source: travelblog.org

21 June 2012

Shillong Chamber Choir: Bringing Northeast India To The World

There are many niches in the music industry today that are being quickly discovered and filled in. A Hindustani orchestra playing Mozart, a sitar in a Jazz Festival, bhangra at the discos, an east meets west, north meets south, India meets the world flavour is being explored.

But the traditional norm of western choral singing meeting with the vibes of Bollywood hits like ‘Kabhi Aar Kabhi Par’, and making it on the main stage is something fresh and zingy with a portion of Desi.

A choir making Bollywood hits their own and much more; the Shillong Chamber Choir (SCC) Concert is a multi-cuisine treat with specialties from home and the world. Such included as German Opera in Hindi, G.F. Handel mixed with some ‘Tu Ashqui Hai’, the power of the rock band Queen and subtleties of Gregorian chants.

Then comes Khasi folk opera, Tamil classics, Assamese patriotic, Latin traditional, Punjabi beats, Naga elements and Malayalam treats. With so many more ways to approach and please a growing audience, the Shillong Chamber Choir is always willing to learn, to teach and be taught.

Like the mentor and founder of the choir, Neil Nongkynrih says, “Whether singing for one person or for thousands, always do it wholeheartedly and with passion’’.

JuThere are great projects that the choir is looking forward to in 2012, and bringing the North East and India to the world is but one of their goals.

Source: nagaland post
16 May 2012

Sangma Meets Jaya Amid Talk of Tribal For President

New Delhi, May 16 : Former Lok Sabha Speaker  P A Sangma on Tuesday met Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and All India  Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam  chief J Jayalalithaa  against the backdrop of him favouring a tribal candidate as the next President.

Sangma and his daughter Agatha Sangma , who is minister of state for rural development, met Jayalalithaa at the state secretariat.

Though the visit was described as a "courtesy call", it assumes significance as the Nationalist Congress Party leader has pitched for a tribal candidate to be fielded in the coming presidential poll.

The member of Parliament from Meghalaya had recently said that even after 60 years of India becoming a republic, no tribal had become the President.
07 May 2012

Justice For Dana: Friends, Family Meet Meghalaya CM

New Delhi/Shillong, May 7 : The north-eastern community along with other students of Amity in Delhi has strongly reacted to the mysterious death of Dana Sangma, a student of Amity University from Meghalaya, who committed suicide after allegedly being mistreated by college authorities.

Considering the matter as grave concern of discrimination and racial-profiling, friends and family of Dana Sangma met Meghalaya CM Mukul Sangma to refute the claims that Dana was using cellphone during exams.

Dana Sangma was pursuing an MBA course at Amity and committed suicide after she was accused by her college of cheating.

Earlier, Amity University had dismissed all the allegations that north-east student Dana Sangma was facing any sort of discrimination.

Also, University had maintained that there was no discrimination of any nature on the basis of caste, creed, region or religion.
02 May 2012

Cops Send Dana Sangma Exam Paper To Forensic Lab

By Hakeem Irfan
Dana Sangma
Meghalaya CM Mukul Sangma's niece Dana Sangma. 

Gurgaon, May 2: The Gurgaon Police, soon after filing a case under the SC/ST Act in connection with the suicide of Meghalaya CM's niece Dana M. Sangma, have sent her answersheet to the forensic lab for examination.

Dana committed suicide in her room at Amity University's Pachgaon (Manesar) campus earlier this week after she was expelled for cheating in an exam.

"Dana's answersheet has been sent to FSL Madhuban to clarify who wrote what on it and check for other details," a Gurgaon policeman said.

The National Commission for Women has also constituted a four-member team for an independent inquiry into the incident.

Meghalaya CM Mukul Sangma will arrive in the Capital on Saturday and meet government officials to take up the issue of discrimination against people from the North-East in Delhi and NCR. He will also reportedly take up the suicide case with the National Commission for Scheduled Caste and Tribes.

"This unfortunate incident has not happened in isolation. Such incidents are triggered because of the psyche of people who label people from the North-Eastern states as inferior.

Whenever I interact with students from these states studying in Delhi, they complain of racial discrimination," Sangma said over phone.

According to the CM, the invigilator had noted that Dana's mobile phone was found in "switched on" mode in her pocket. "It does not infer that she was cheating. Besides, if she was thrown out of class just for this, then something more must have happened to force her to commit suicide," he said.

Amity University, meanwhile, clarified in a detailed statement that Dana was surfing the internet during the exam.

The administration officials said some personal reason might have forced Dana to take the extreme step.

According to the statement, the invigilator took away Dana's paper and asked her to leave the examination hall.
26 April 2012

Meghalaya CM Alleges Discrimination Against Students From Northeast

Gurgaon/Shillong, Apr 26 : A day after an MBA student was found dead in her hostel room in Amity University's Gurgaon campus, she has been identified as Dana Sangma, niece of Meghalya chief minister Mukul Sangma. The city police on Wednesday registered an FIR against the university's administration.

In Shillong, chief minister Sangma described his niece's suicide as a "result of discrimination" by the authorities of the institute. "Primary evidence suggests that the girl was thrown out of an examination hall after the invigilator found a mobile phone with her," Sangma said.

The CM also said that students from the northeast are regularly subjected to humiliation by the university, which, he said, could also be true in the case of his niece. "This could have resulted in mental pressure that pushed the girl to take the extreme step," he added.

"There have been many instances of students from the northeast being subjected to all kinds of atrocities and discrimination," Sangma told reporters.

Police filed the FIR after a complaint was lodged by Dana's aunt Sofia. Twenty one-year-old Dana's body was found on Tuesday afternoon after she returned from the examination hall.

Investigators said that during the examination, the university officials caught the victim cheating through a mobile phone. "The girl might have committed suicide as its fallout," police officers said.

Sangma's daughter Miani Shira, a student of SRCC, said the university authorities compelled Dana to take the extreme step. She alleged that Dana was traumatized.

"All such practices should stop. The university authorities also did not inform her family members about the incident. We have filed the FIR seeking action against whoever is responsible for this," Miani said.

The university has rejected all allegations of torture or pressure. Vice chancellor of the Amity University (Gurgaon), Major Gen (retd) B S Suhag said they have no personal agenda against any student. "She was a nice student and we never received any complaint against her.

The invigilator had reported a case of using unfair means when she was caught with her mobile phone in the exam hall," Suhag said.
21 April 2012

What’s Killing The Fish in Meghalaya

Govt refuses to accept that uranium mining is the cause, blames the locals for coal mining with toxic substances Ratnadip Choudhury

Shillong, Apr 21 : The death of a large number of fish in West Khasi Hills district since 5 April has caused more than a ripple in the state.

The Mukul Sangma-led Meghalaya government says preliminary investigations suggest that the death of fish in Ranikor river is due to ‘use of toxic substances by locals’ in coal mining.

The delay in solving the mystery has pitched the powerful Khasi Students Union (KSU) against the government. “We have collected samples of dead fish as well as river water from different locations and we will send it to an independent body,” says Daniel Khyriem, ksu President.

“There is a high chance the deaths are due to uranium radiation.” KSU alleges that a similar incident was reported in the 1990s during exploratory drilling of uranium in the West Khasi Hills. Deputy Chief Minister Bindo Lanong denies the charge.

“If uranium radiation had caused the deaths, all other aquatic animals should have been affected and there should have been lesions on the fish,” he says. “This was not the case.”

Meghalaya has huge reservoirs of coal and uranium, lending credence to both theories, especially among Khasi tribals.

The state government has now asked scientists from the Meghalaya State Pollution Control Board to test the waters of Kynshi and Rilang rivers to ascertain the cause of contamination.

This eerie development comes at a time when Sangma is lauding his government’s initiative to increase fish production, The Meghalaya government had also recently launched an ambitious state aquaculture mission.

The worst affected rivers are the Ranikor, the Kynshi and Rilang.

There have been reports of radiation from uranium ore exploration in Porkut, Borosa in the district. Sources in the government do not rule out this.

We have collected samples of dead fish as well as river water from different locations. There is a high chance the deaths are due to uranium radiation”

Annually, Meghalaya imports around 15,000 metric tonne of fish. Finding the dead fish easily accessible, villagers initially carted them home to eat.

“But after they received reports that dead fish have been found in Kynshi and Rilang rivers, panic spread,” a local villager claimed. It is also said that several villagers of Ranikor area have been suffering from dysentery.

With reports reaching Shillong that the dead fish are being sold in nearby markets, the state government is about to issue an advisory not to consume the fish until the cause of death is ascertained, well-placed sources say.

Ratnadip Choudhury is a Principal Correspondent with Tehelka. ratnadip@tehelka.com
20 April 2012

The Police Officer Who Turned Militant

By Samudra Gupta Kashyap

Guwahati, Apr 20
: A former deputy superintendent of police in Meghalaya has been keeping the force on its toes with a militant outfit he has launched. The police are struggling to contain a series of violent acts unleashed by the Garo National Liberation Army, and they have no clue about the whereabouts of its founder chairman, the former police officer.

Champion R Sangma, who had quit the police to float the outfit in 2009, was supposedly arrested by security forces in Mymensingh in Bangladesh, according to reports that surfaced in November 2011. There was also news that it was his obsession with Facebook and social networking sites that had made it possible for the security forces to nab him. But no one in the Meghalaya government or police is sure or wants to say anything about the supposed arrest, other than admitting that there has been no official confirmation from across the border.

Champion, whose real name is Pakchara R Sangma, is a postgraduate in philosophy from the Northeastern Hills University, Shillong. He was recruited to the Meghalaya Police Service as a DSP in 2004. But he remained on probation till 2009, until one day he disappeared. In early 2010, the police confirmed that the DySP, who had taken his service weapon, had set up an underground group.

The government is on record that during the probation period, his attendance was irregular, his behaviour and conduct was not satisfactory and he had failed to improve himself despite repeated warnings. Police records say he was a habitual drinker.

He hails from Songsak constituency in the backward East Garo Hills district, but the police do not have detailed records about his family background. Champion’s batch mates from the Northeastern Police Academy say he neither showed a militant streak nor carried the impression of a good policeman in the making. But, having trained in the elite academy, he was well-equipped with the latest methods of guerilla warfare and can handle sophisticated weapons.

His outfit, its strength estimated at roughly 150, has over the past few weeks burned down 14 coal-laden trucks, abducted at least 12 persons, mostly belonging to coal firms and construction companies, and killed an eight-year old girl in a grenade attack. It has also been using minor boys, both as militants and as couriers to deliver extortion notes.

The Meghalaya police have set the outfit a deadline for surrender, failing which there would be a major crackdown At the chief ministers’ meeting on internal security in Delhi, Mukul Sangma has sought more manpower and sophisticated weapons to wipe out the last remnants of terrorism, though he claimed that the overall law and order situation in Meghalaya was stable “barring a few pockets”. Whenever action is launched, he said, the militants slip through the border into Bangladesh.

Speaking from Shilong, state director-general of police N Ramachandran said they have launched an offensive against the GNLA. “The self-styled area commander of the gang that burnt the coal trucks has been already killed in an encounter, while commander-in-chief Sohan D Shira had a narrow escape during a raid on a major hideout,” Ramachandran said.

“We have also identified the main hideout of the GNLA inside the Dorama hills on the border of South Garo Hills and East Garo Hills districts. Security forces have closed in on it. We have information that there are about 100 boys there, quite a number of them minors, who are mostly unarmed. That is why we have given them a deadline, so that they do not unnecessarily get killed,” he said.

Amid the confusion over where the GNLA’s founder chairman is, Ramachandran asserts that the outfit has serious internal problems, with commander-in-chief Shira no longer inclined to follow Champion Sangma’s diktat. “There is definitely a rift in the GNLA between the chairman and C-in-C, and that is now an open secret,” said Ramachandran. He cited reports that the arrest of several of Champion’s loyalists, too, had roots in the ongoing rift. Security forces last week gunned down Jeany C Momin, “action commander” .

Champion, incidentally, is not the first policeman in Meghalaya to have quit to float a rebel outfit. In 2005, Peter Marak, a commando with the Special Operation Team in Meghalaya Police, had formed the Liberation of Achik Elite Force after quitting his job. He fought the Assembly polls that year, and lost.
15 April 2012

PA Sangma for President: NCP

By D K Singh

With both the UPA and NDA short of requisite numbers, the Nationalist Congress Party has come up with Purno A Sangma’s name for the next president of India. An ally of the UPA, it has sent feelers to the NDA, including the BJP, on the former speaker’s name and is said to be getting a “positive” response.

“He is a Catholic and a tribal from the Northeast. We have never had an occupant of the Rashtrapati Bhawan with such descriptions,” a senior NCP leader told The Sunday Express. The presidential elections are to be held in July.

Among others, the names of Vice-President Hamid Ansari, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee and Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar have been doing the rounds.

NCP sources claim support from a section of the BJP to Sangma’s name. However, this section reportedly wants somebody like BSP supremo Mayawati or Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav or Mamata — all from parties whose support is vital to the UPA government — to propose Sangma’s name.

NCP sources said it too would not propose Sangma’s candidature, preferring that some other party does the same. NCP chief Sharad Pawar’s equation with politicians across party lines could prove to be a big factor in Sangma’s favour. What may also rally other UPA constituents around the NCP is the fact that Pawar has, of late, been targeting the Congress over not following the coalition dharma.

Senior SP leader Ram Gopal Yadav had said at the Idea Exchange programme of The Indian Express recently that the party would propose a name to the Congress for president.

While the fact that Sangma had walked out of the Congress along with Pawar over Sonia Gandhi’s foreign origin in 1999 could become an issue for Congressmen, the former Lok Sabha speaker has mended fences with the Congress president. In 2009, he had called on Sonia to apologise for what had happened a decade ago.

On Hamid Ansari, whose candidature the Congress is considering, the party hopes to get the Left support. It was the Left that had proposed his name for the vice-president’s post. However, the same factor could turn crucial ally Trinamool Congress against him given Mamata Banerjee’s opposition to anything remotely linked with the Left. However, Mamata may find it difficult to oppose the candidature of a minority community member, Congress strategists assess.

At the same time, a UPA leader quipped: “Going by our past experience, the Congress party’s first choice is not necessarily the final choice.”
Another name around which political consensus could be built is that of Pranab Mukherjee, However, the Congress high command has not been enthusiastic about his candidature.
While Meira Kumar is also said to be a contender, Congress managers are not sure whether a consensus could be arrived on her name.

The numbers
In an electoral college of 10,98,882, the UPA and those likely to support it make up 4,63,770 votes, as per a Congress calculation. These include Congress (3,31,131), Trinamool (48,044), NCP (24,060), DMK (21,783), RJD (8,934), JD-S (6,138), National Congress (5,556), RLD (5,204), JMM (4,757), IUML (3,040), Kerala Congress Mani (2,076), AIMIM (1,744) and LJP (1,303).

After the recent UP Assembly elections, the SP has 68,771 votes, the BSP 43,777. If Mamata were to oppose Hamid Ansari as president, the UPA could bank on the support of Left parties (CPI, CPM, RSP and Forward Bloc), which together have around 52,000 votes.

Meghalaya Autos Seat 50, Cars Have 1,000-Yr Fitness

By Rahul Karmakar

Guwahati, Apr 15 : In Meghalaya, you can register a car 40 years before you buy it. You can also get a fitness certificate that makes it roadworthy for over 1,000 years. But, chances are, the car may share its engine and chassis numbers with 500 others.

There’s more. The car you have pre-registered can seat 11 persons. But, in contrast, a bus can seat only eight and an auto-rickshaw or a tempo, 50 people each.

If you think this is ridiculous, check out the latest report of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) on Meghalaya’s transport department after the implementation of “Vahan” since April 1, 2002.

The database prepared with the software had riveting nuggets, found the CAG, which examined records upto March 31, 2011.

Section 56 of the Motor Vehicles Act does not deem a vehicle registered unless it carries a fitness certificate.

But here, 202 vehicles were found to be roadworthy for far longer than the universally accepted 15 years. “In seven cases, it was 91 to 1,016 years from the date of registration,” the report said. Others — 6,881 of the 77,761 vehicles registered — lacked fitness information.

Of the 41,901 transport vehicles, the fitness certificate of 23,379 had expired, the CAG said. There was no information on renewal.

Analysing data from seven district transport offices, the CAG said 1,277 vehicles shared the same engine number, and 1,218 vehicles shared 654 chassis numbers.
08 April 2012

Khasi Withdrawn From UNESCO''s Languages in Danger List

Shillong, Apr 8 : The Khasi language of Meghalaya has been withdrawn from the UNESCO's Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger as it is now considered as "safe".

The language is spoken by some 900,000 people in the state and is no longer in danger, UNESCO declared on its website yesterday.

Khasi is spoken in the region of the Khasi and Jaintia hills and is also known as Khasia, Khassee, Cossyah or Kyi.

This language of the Mon-Khmer linguistic branch and its status was reassessed by the editorial board of the Atlas, which concluded that Khasi may be classified as "safe" on UNESCO''s scale of language vitality.

Recognized as "associate official language" in the state of Meghalaya since 2005, Khasi is widely used in several domains such as primary and secondary education, radio, television and religion, the UNESCO official website said.

Admitting that "some dialects" of Khasi are "dying" as they make way for the standardized variant, the editorial board said, it was pleased to acknowledge that "the future of this language seems to be assured."

Available in its online version since 2009, the Interactive Atlas is regularly updated based on feedback from linguists and speakers of endangered languages.

To date, the Atlas lists 2473 languages in danger in the world, classified in five degrees of vitality -- vulnerable, definitely endangered, severely endangered, critically endangered and extinct.
02 March 2012

Arunachal, Meghalaya Interested in Joint Package For Tourists

Shillong, Mar 2 : Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya have expressed interest in having a joint tour package for tourists in the North Eastern region.

"The chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh is enthusiastic about having a joint package for tourists in the region," Meghalaya Chief Minister Mukul Sangma told a workshop on 'Avenues for Entrepreneurship in Tourism' here.

He said, "When two states offers a package jointly, it becomes more attractive for prospective tourists."

Sangma has also suggested to his Arunachal Pradesh counterpart for a joint-workshop to push the idea forward.

He said, once the package was successful, other like minded states in the region would be roped in.
22 February 2012

Hydel Power Project in Meghalaya To Be Inaugurated Next Week

Shillong, Feb 22 : Fighting time and cost over-run, the first unit of the 126 MW Myntdu-Leshka hydel power project in Meghalaya will formally be inaugurated on February 29, officials said today.

The Rs 300 crore project, initiated way back in the 1980s, was constructed in 2004 and completed last year at a final cost of over Rs 1000 crore.

"Chief Minister Mukul Sangma will inaugurate the first unit of the project," Meghalaya Electricity Corporation Ltd (MeECL) Chief Project Manager E Lyngdoh told PTI.

He said the second unit (42 MW) of the project is also ready and will be commissioned next month.

The government had to repeatedly postpone its commissioning because of various reasons both technical and non-technical, Lyngdoh said.

It was first scheduled for commissioning in December 2009, before it was shifted to March 2010, June 2010, October 2010, January 2011 and finally February 2012.

MeECL officials attributed the delay in completion and commissioning of the Project due to many reasons including to the continuous rainfall experienced at the project site and also due to geological conditions.

The 42 MW Myntdu-Leshka hydel project is the only hydro unit which will be contributing power during the 11th plan period, officials said.

The DPR for the project was prepared in 1999 and the government gave its clearance only in 2004 at an initial cost of Rs 363 crore, the official said.

MeECL officials said the project can withstand an earthquake measuring 9 on the Richter scale. Anti-corrosion steel and micro-silica and other admixtures have to be added in the concrete to make it more durable and dense, they said.
16 February 2012

Bitter Irony: Meghalaya minerals not helping Locals

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Shillong, Feb 16 : The land in Meghalaya is rich - with minerals, flora and fauna in abundance - but the people of the state are still languishing in poverty. This is the irony with Meghalaya, which has large deposits of coal, limestone and even uranium, which, if judiciously exploited, could bring progress to the state and help alleviate poverty.

The fact that mining activities in Meghalaya have not really benefited the masses is perhaps one of the reasons why there has been consistent opposition to the extraction of limestone and proposal to mine uranium from various quarters and pressure groups. "The benefits have not percolated down to the grassroots," said a former legislator on condition of anonymity.

Citing example of the ongoing limestone extraction by a multinational company in Shella in East Khasi Hills for supply to a cement factory in Bangladesh, he rued the fact that raw limestone is being siphoned off without adding value to it. "It is not regenerating the rural economy, which is in a shambles. The limestone should have been taken to the clinker stage at least, if not used here itself to manufacture cement before being exported. This would have provided employment to the local people," he said. "The conveyor belt of the company was burnt down some years back perhaps because the locals were not happy as they did not get a slice of the pie."

On the other hand, the unscientific "rat-hole" coal-mining processes deployed in Jaintia Hills has not only damaged the ecology of the region, but has also failed to uplift the economic condition of the locals. It is the rich coal merchants who have benefited, while those who toil in the mines under life-threatening conditions continue to live in abject poverty.

The case with agro-horticultural produces is not much different either. "Whatever is taken out of the state - broom-sticks or fruits or other agricultural produces and minerals - should be processed here instead of being exported in raw form," said J Lyngdoh, an upcoming entrepreneur. "The income has to spread over a greater number of people and not benefit just a privileged few. Only then can we regenerate the rural economy."

"Bangladesh is importing fruit pulps from Andhra Pradesh. The same could have been done here in Meghalaya and we could be exporting local products to the neighbouring country, which is our natural market and not mainland India. Our fruits are either left to rot or exported in the raw form," he said.
10 February 2012

IIM Shillong To Send Bureaucrats To China

http://a2.twimg.com/profile_images/521053019/iim4.JPGGuwahati, Feb 10 : Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Shillong is rolling out an advanced management programme for bureaucrats in the northeastern states in collaboration with Ocean University of China, from February 17 this year.

To begin with, nearly 20 bureaucrats from Meghalaya will be trained in China on the Chinese way of doing business. IIM plans to cover other states in a phased manner.

IIM-Shillong has signed a memorandum of understanding with Ocean University of China, and the five-day course will be conducted in the university's campus in Qingdao. The fee per participant is nearly Rs 2 lakh.

"We are also in talks with governments of other northeastern states for this course, and by next year, officials of these states will be taken for the course," IIM Shillong director Ashoke Dutta told ET.

The course will involve understanding Chinese business and its growth. "It will include a field visit. The economic transformation of China, state functioning and culture, besides operation of foreign direct investment and urban development will be the focus," says Dutta.

The whole idea of this programme is to establish people-to-people contact and learn from Chinese experience, he adds. "China to wants greater engagement with India and Northeast India is a good platform to do so."

The Northeast's bilateral trade with its neighbour is dismal. During 2010-11, total export from the region was worth around Rs 861.14 crore. "China has emerged as an important trading partner of India and the European Union, and knowing China has become very important for us," he adds. As part of its Look East policy which came into existence a decade ago, India is making attempts to foster greater economic ties with Asian countries.

"Meghalaya is looking to become the launching pad of the Look East policy. This region has close proximity with the emerging economics of South East Asia," adds Dutta.