31 January 2010

Assam's Picnic Spot Chawki Attracts Tourists as Insurgency Recedes

By Peter Todd Alex

chawki Guwahati, Jan 31 : Nature has been generous to Assam by providing it with amazing natural beauty. And, as insurgency declines, people are making their way to various tourist spots across the state.

Chawki, an upcoming picnic spot at Uttarkuci in Baksa district of Assam, is attracting hundreds of people from across the state.

Filled with immense scenic beauty, lush green mountains and meandering rivers that cross its diversified landscapes, the place is a picnickers treat.
The minimum entry fee is charged from every picnic party and the revenue collected is utilized for the maintenance of the place.

Located at the Indo- Bhutan Border, Chawki was once affected by militant activity, but But as normalcy returns, so do tourists.

"Nowadays, there are less and almost no disturbances in the area. Insurgency problem is lessening here. So, people are coming here peacefully," said Dipak Kalita, a visitor.

A local NGO "Manas Sousi Khongkhor Eco-Tourism Society" comprising of local youths, some of them ex-militants who have laid down their arms and others ex-poachers, have taken the responsibility to develop Chawki and its adjoining areas.

The Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB), has its base-camps in the area and this also helps to maintain peace in the area.

"After the NDFB and the ULFA moved out from here, this place has become very peaceful. As the place is beautiful, people are coming here for picnics. An NGO has opened up and developed this place. Poor people from the area like us can now earn money by doing business," said Sulkal Daimary, a local vendor.

The revival of normalcy has not only brought back visitors to Chawki but has also generated business for the local residents who are extremely happy with the changes that have taken place.

Map picture

Aggrieved Mizoram Cabbies Approach Court

mizoram taxi Aizawl, Jan 31 : Taxi owners and drivers have moved to the Gauhati High Court against the Mizoram government's order for rotational service for Aizawl taxis.

Zoram Taxi Drivers' Association (ZTDA) sources said here today that the cabbies filed an FIR with the Aizawl bench of Gauhati High Court against the order which came into effect from September 14 last year.

After hearing on the case, the high court served show cause notice to the state government of Mizoram, state transport commissioner, state home secretary, SP (Traffic), secretary of state transport authority, traffic management committee and secretary of ZTDA.

In a bid to ease the increasing traffic snarls in the city, the government had proposed rotational service for the taxis from September 14, 2009, according to which each taxi has four days a week, excluding Sundays, to operate.

There are about 400 taxis in Aizawl.

Gates Commits $10 Billion To Vaccines

Stockholm, Switzerland, Jan 31 : U.S. philanthropists Bill and Melinda Gates say their foundation will spend a record $10 billion over 10 years to develop vaccines for AIDS and other diseases.

"We must make this the decade of vaccines," Bill Gates said Friday at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

The commitment is the largest pledge ever made by a charitable foundation to a single cause, The Chronicle of Philanthropy reported.

The $10 billion program is to focus on vaccines for AIDS, pneumonia, tuberculosis and rota virus, the Gateses said, adding vaccines for those diseases could prevent nearly 9 million deaths.

The Gateses, who amassed their wealth through Bill Gates's development of Microsoft Corp. into today's computer software behemoth, said they were concerned the global recession and competing government prioritize would slow effort to combat diseases in developing countries, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Excluding Friday's commitment, the Gates Foundation has committed more than $21 billion to global health, education and agriculture since it was established in 1994.

Gates

Britain Interested In Business With Mizoram

uk_flag Aizawl, Jan 31 : The British Government has evinced keen interest in doing business with Mizoram. British Deputy High Commissioner for Eastern India Sanjay Wadvani told media persons here today that his main purpose of visit Mizoram was to explore trade avenues where his country and the State may be able to work together.

“My main purpose (of visit) was fact finding, to find more about what is happening economically and politically and to identify areas where we can work together,” the diplomat told reporters over lunch.
Wadvani expressed concern that the entire Northeast, despite its huge potential in different sectors, remained unknown to the British investors and tourists. This, he believed, was mainly because of lack of publicity and the insurgency problems.

“Only a few British tourists visit the Northeast, including Mizoram. I hope if the huge potential in tourism was properly tapped, Mizoram’s natural beauty will attract more and more tourists in the future,” Wadvani said. Wadvani agreed that Mizoram has huge potential in eco-tourism but lacks tourism infrastructure such as accommodations. He observed that there was considerable scope of collaboration in two particular areas –– environment or green technology and education.

“My colleagues will also visit Mizoram in the days to come. We will ask British companies to venture into the State,” he said. Prior to the meeting, the British diplomat had met Mizoram Governor Lt Gen (Rtd.) M M Lakhera and industries minister S Hiato separately.

The governor informed the British diplomat how Mizoram could benefit from the border trade with Bangladesh and Myanmar and India’s Look East Policy, the State’s rich potential in gas and oil, hydro-electricity and organic farming.

Wadvani also met Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla at the latter’s office today. They agreed to find ways to rope the British companies doing business in mainland India into the Northeast, including Mizoram.

Bhutan to Export Oranges to Bangladesh Via Northeast India

orange-tree Shillong, Jan 30 : Bhutan will export oranges and other horticultural products to Bangladesh through India's northeastern states, officials said here Saturday.

'The first consignment of oranges would be exported to Sylhet in Bangladesh soon through the Dawki land customs station in Meghalaya,' a senior Meghalaya government official said.

'New Delhi has recently agreed to a Bhutan government proposal to carry out the export to Bangladesh through the northeastern states.'

To finalise the modalities and formalities, a delegation from Bhutan comprising a member of the Bhutan Chamber of Commerce, Bhutan export and import association, Indo-Bhutan friendship association and government officials earlier this week had visited the Dawki land customs station.

Bhutan has so far been exporting oranges, ginger and various other crops to Bangladesh through West Bengal. Bhutan has been producing on an average 100,000 tonnes of oranges annually.

India and Bhutan share a 643-km unfenced border while four northeastern states - Tripura, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Assam share a 1,880-km border with Bangladesh.

At the end of a three-day visit to India by Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina earlier this month, a joint communique by the two countries had said trucks from Bhutan and Nepal would be allowed to enter about 200 metres into Bangladesh at Banglabandh, a land customs station at Phulbari in West Bengal.

Bangladesh has been pressing India to provide a corridor through West Bengal to conduct trade with Bhutan and Nepal.

Observations From a Stranger in a Friendly Land

By Alex Howard

The Rev. Tezenlo (pronounced Deezenlow) Thong is a pleasant man in his early 40s. He is a native of Nagaland, a landlocked province in northeast India.

  He married the delightful Eunjung Han when he was a student in South Korea. They have one daughter (Soye, 12) who was born in Korea, one son (Yechan, 10) who was born in India, and another son (Nako, 4) who was born in the United States. It’s truly an international family.
 
nagaland baptist church “What is such an international family doing in Pueblo? Exercising Christian ministry, that’s what.

  Tezenlo is the pastor at Vineland United Methodist Church. And make no mistake about it: He and his family call Vineland home just as much as they call Nagaland, South Korea, India and the United States home.

  Because of the non-Indian members in this family, Indian laws prevent the Thongs from visiting Tezenlo’s homeland for more than 12 days at a time.   Why this is so is the subject for another day. Suffice it to say that Nagaland hasn’t always been a part of India, nor has it enjoyed native sovereignty since the British came in 1832 and left in 1947.

  Shortly after the British arrival, (as others like them have done elsewhere) missionaries came in and eliminated the native culture and replaced it with their version of civilization. That, too, is a subject for another day.

  Despite all the choices others would have made for him, Tezenlo chose to become a Methodist minister and wound up in the United States on a student visa. He has since completed his doctorate, taken the pulpit at Vineland UMC and converted his visa from “student” to “religious.”

  Everybody seems happy with that, apparently including the congregation who would be glad to have him stay here for as long as he chooses.

  What makes Tezenlo such a valuable asset to the community — and here I’m including the community of clergy with which he interacts on a weekly basis — is that he’s not stuck in the same frame of reference as the rest of us are.

  This gives us a better picture of what the world outside our narrow field of vision is about. It’s not that he has a revolutionary point of view so much as it is a refreshing one. He brings a perspective to the Gospel that we don’t have — in fact, a perspective that we couldn’t have because of our cultural molding.

  Most of us — including many of the readers of this newspaper — have so long been accustomed to the world in which we live that we have forgotten how privileged we are to enjoy complete freedom in the choices we make and how we exercise those freedoms.

  I’m not trying to get all mushy and uber-patriotic on you. I just want all of us to remember that our religious preference is just that: a preference.
  Whatever we choose, however we exercise our choice, even if it means choosing to opt out of a choice, it’s our choice.

  It isn’t always that way elsewhere on the big blue marble. Sometimes choices are made for you. Give thanks for what you’ve chosen. You’re lucky to be able to do so. Blessedly lucky.

Alex Howard is a recently retired Episcopal priest. He may be reached at veracruz@socolo.net

Paid News Menace in India

By Nava Thakuria

paid news india India has finally woken up to the menace of 'paid news' culture in the mainstream media. The practice that involves money in acquiring unethically media space by the beneficiaries remained an important issue in India for many years. But lately a number of influential media persons' organizations have shown their concern with the ill practice of journalism in the country. The practice of offering envelopes to reporters remained visible across Asian media and especially India and China for decades.

But lately the practice appears to be becoming institutionalized, not by poverty-stricken reporters but by the publishers themselves. It is alleged that many media houses in India irrespective of their volume of business have started selling news space after some understandings with the politicians and corporate people without disguising those items as advertisements. First it was a meet of South Asia Free Media Association (India chapter) in Mumbai during the first week of December, where the issue of paid news was officially discussed with serious concern.

Then came the annual general meeting of the Editors' Guild of India during the fourth week of December, where most of the members expressed concern at the growing tendency of a section of media groups (both print and visual) to receive money for some 'non-advertorial' items in their media space. The editors' guild sent a letter to each of its member-editors throughout the country asking for pledges that his/her 'publication/TV channel will not carry any paid news' as the practice 'violates and undermines the principles of free and fair journalism'.

The letter, signed by Rajdeep Sardesai and Coomi Kapoor, president and secretary general of the Guild respectively, expressed hope that 'the entire journalist fraternity would come together on this issue' and defend their credibility with public declarations on the subject in order to restore public trust. Indian media has been recognized as sensitive, patriotic and very much influential tool in the socio-political sphere since the days of freedom movement. The father of Indian nation Mahatma Gandhi initiated his movement with the moral power of active journalism. Today, India with its billion population supports nearly 70,000 registered newspapers and over 450 Television channels (including some 24x7 news channels).

The Indian media, as a whole, often plays the role of constructive opposition in the Parliament as well as in various Legislative Assemblies of the State. Journalists are, by and large, honored and accepted as the moral guide in the Indian society. While the newspapers in Europe and America are losing their readership annually, the Indian print media is still going stronger with huge circulation figure and market avenues. For the democratic India, the media continues to be acclaimed as the fourth important pillar after judiciary, parliament and bureaucratic set-up. But unfortunately a cancer in the form of paid news has been diagnosed with the Indian media in the recent past.

Millions of rupees have been reportedly been paid to media houses. Some veteran editor-journalists like Prabhash Joshi, the founding editor of the Hindi daily Jansatta, who died in November, and BG Verghese, previously the editor of both the Hindustan Times and Indian Express, warned the Press Council of India that paid news has already turned into a full-blown scandal. It is worth mentioning that the Mumbai SAFMA meeting had serious discussion and concern on the recent trend of commercialization of mainstream media, and degradation of media ethics and practices in the country.

All the speakers in the meeting of SAFMA (which is recognized by the SAARC), were unanimous that media in the entire region must come forward in a transparent way with maintaining public trust. Addressing the audience, eminent journalist and the rural affairs editor of The Hindu, P Sainath disclosed that that the corporatization of the media world had simply threatened the existence of free media. "Newspaper owners are greatly influenced by political clout," P Sainath, the rural affairs editor of The Hindu, warned another media group.

It was Sainath who raised the issue of paid news through his regular columns in The Hindu, urging the press council and election commission to take appropriate action. "The proprietors now grant space for vivid coverage for the benefit of their 'friendly politicians' in the newspapers," Sainath warned in his speech. "Furthermore, to entertain their growing demands, many media groups have even gone for arranging extra space (during election periods).

Let's finish the culture of paid news; otherwise it will finish us in the coming days." An official statement of the SAFMA meet, which was attended by many distinguished editor-journalists of India including K K Katyal, Satich Jacob, Kumar Ketkar (editor of Loksatta), Om Thanvi (editor of Jansatta), Vinod Sharma (political editor of Hindustan Times) etc, expressed serious concern at the growing trend of selling news space. "Recent assembly elections in Maharashtra and elsewhere revealed the spread of the pernicious practice of accepting money for giving editorial space to contestants. In fact, this evil had been perpetrated by institutionalizing it," according to a statement by the South Asian Free Media Association.

Meanwhile, the press council, a quasi-judicial body, has decided to investigate, establishing a committee to examine violations of the journalistic code of fair and objective reporting. The press council Chairman GN Ray, a retired justice, acknowledged that a section of Indian media had 'indulged in monetary deals with some politicians and candidates by publishing their views as news items and bringing out negative news items against rival candidates' during the last elections.' Even a documentary titled 'Advertorial: Selling News or Products?' was produced by an eminent media critic and academic Paranjoy Guha Thakurta for India's national broadcaster, Doordarshan.

It was telecast in last November. Guha Thakurta, a member of the press council investigative team said in an interview that the committee had received many complaints from the journalists that a large number of newspapers and television channels (in various languages) had been receiving money to provide news space (and even editorials) for the benefit of politicians. Speaking to this writer from New Delhi, Guha Thakurta claims that the paid news culture has finally violated the guidelines of the Election Commission (of India), which makes restriction in the expenditure of a candidate (for any Legislative Assembly or Parliamentary elections). "Amazingly, we have found that some newspapers even prepared rate cards for the candidates in the last few elections.

There are different rates for positive news coverage, interviews, editorials and also putting out damaging reports against the opponents," Guha Thakurta asserted. The Indian Election Commission recently asked the Press Council of India 'to define what constitutes paid political news', so it can adopt appropriate guidelines. During a December meeting, the elections body also directed the press council to 'formulate guidelines to the media house' to require that the money involved be incorporated in the political party and candidate expenditures.

Lately, the Guild had submitted a memorandum to the election commission expressing its grave concern over the paid news phenomenon. A delegation from the Guild, led by its president Rajdeep Sardesai met the election commission on January 22 and urged the chief election commissioner Navin Chawla to 'take strong action against both candidates and media persons who violate the disclosure norms of election expenditure in regard to media publicity.'

Rajdeep Sardesai, the editor's guild president and also the chief editor of the CNN-IBN television news channel, speaking to this writer, said that the Guild was 'deeply shocked and seriously concerned at the increasing number of reports detailing the pernicious practice of publishing paid news by some newspapers and television channels, especially during the recent elections'. "We strongly believe that the practice of putting out advertising as news is a grave journalistic malpractice. Moreover the trend threatens the foundation of journalism by eroding public faith in the credibility and impartiality of news reporting.

It also vitiated the poll process and prevented a fair election, since richer candidates who could pay for their publicity had a clear advantage," Sardesai added. While admitting the right of news media to go for advertisements in various occasions, Sardesai insisted that the 'media houses should distinguish the advertisements with full and proper disclosure norms, so that no reader and viewer is tricked by any subterfuge of advertisements published and broadcast in the same format, language and style of news'.

With the same notion, a Guwahati-based media observer H. Mahanta claims that many regional newspapers in Northeast India in effect sell favorable reporting for extra income. "You can find a number of examples in Guwahati, where the proprietors of the media houses had misused the media space for their individual benefits.

It is amazing how some newspapers change their point of views towards a politician or party suddenly after getting money (in cash or kinds)," Mahanta said. There are specific allegations that many journalists in Guwahati, who are among the lowest paid in India with starting salaries as little as US$50 a month, enjoy regular payments like monthly lump sum compensation from politicians in power. Licenses for wine shops are offered to reporters (and accepted happily by many) with the inherent understanding that they only write positive stories and if possible, kill negative reports against their politician-financers.

However, the newspapers of Assam still maintain ethical values in respect of editorial space, as those are not being utilized visibly for earning extra hard cash till now, observers say. But how long it will continue that remains a bigger question.

Nava Thakuria
Nava Thakuria is a Guwahati, Northeast India based independent journalist and contributes to various media outlets throughout the world. Contact him at navathakuria@yahoo.com

Chopping To Mizoram Coming Soon

helicopter mizoram Aizawl, Jan 31 : Mizoram is planning to launch helicopter service in the near future, Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla said yesterday. While inspecting the proposed mini-airport at Kawmzawl in Lunglei district in southern Mizoram, the Chief Minister disclosed that quotations had been floated, inviting companies to operate the chopper service.

The Chief Minister said the government felt a strong need for airport in southern Mizoram in a bid to add to the States lone airport in Aizawl, adding the area had been identified in this regard. The proposed airport will accommodate small aircraft like nine-seated Cessna Caravan 208 B or 18-seated Dornier.

As the proposed site was being used as a helipad and maintained by the 14 Assam Rifles, talks between the Chief Minister and the concerned authorities would be required for clearance.

“At least four years will be required for the completion of the airport,” he added. “Besides Kawmzawl, another airport has also been proposed at Saitluk, also near Lunglei. A survey will be conducted by experts led by principal consultant, Civil Aviation during this February,” he said.

The chief minister was accompanied by two ministers Zodintluanga and PC Lalthanliana, High Power Committee Vice-Chairman and MLA Jospeh Lalhimpuia and wing commander (Rtd) Lalzawma, principal consultant of civil aviation wing under the State Government and Liansanga, engineer-in-chief of Public Works Department of Mizoram.