10 April 2010

12 Student Protestors Injured in Police Firing in Haflong, Assam

NC-Hills protest Haflong, Apr 10 : More than 12 protestors comprising mainly of Tribal ethnic students of North Cachar Hills Assam, including 2 girls, were injured when police fired on demonstrators at Haflong, headquarter of Assam's North Cachar hill district, Friday.

The demonstrators, under the banner of NC Hills Indigenous Students' Forum, were demonstrating at the bus stand demanding bifurcation of the hill council into two districts for the Dimasa and non-Dimasa tribes of Jemi, Hmar and Kuki.

As the students refused to vacate the area, police first resorted to lahi-charge and then opened fire at 8.45 am.  The injured students have all been admitted to Haflong civil hospital.

The current situation is to be blamed directly to the Tarun Gogoi policy of appeasing the Dimasa militants while not even raising a thought on the ethnic population.

Sinlung Says:
A Bloody carnage awaits Mr. Tarun Gogoi and We at
Sinlung.com hold you directly responsible for this unnecessary incident and future incidents that will because of you folly. Sinlung.com request the NIA to uncover the money triangle as to how the district name got changed with money. Incase NIA wants to contact the news editors -  we have enough proof to support our claim. It’s time Tarun Gogoi resigns to better and brighter Assam.

The Branding And Business Smarts of Victoria’s Secret Models

The Second Life Of Victoria's Secret Models

By Kiri Blakeley

Everybody knows their faces, their bodies, their names. A notable few have gone on to media or entrepreneurial careers with astonishing success.

If there are institutions that consistently produce winners--say, Harvard among universities or Goldman Sachs for investment banking--Victoria's Secret would be that institution for the modeling industry. The $5.6 billion brand has churned out dozens of supermodels. Everybody knows their faces, their bodies, their names, and some have graduated from modeling into credible acting or entrepreneurial careers. A notable few, such as Gisele Bundchen, Heidi Klum and Tyra Banks, have done so with astonishing success.

While other fashion and beauty brands have produced famous models, they tend to remain just that. Models. In recent years, those companies have also tended to hire prized Hollywood talent: Rihanna and Drew Barrymore (CoverGirl), Eva Longoria and Scarlett Johansson (L'Oreal), Keira Knightley and Audrey Tatou (Chanel) and Jessica Alba thus undoing an important training ground for any supermodels-in-the-making.

Victoria's Secret has refused to buy into this trend, mostly because its models stomp the runways in alpine high heels and barely there lingerie, which requires an impossibly tall and leggy silhouette that most Hollywood actresses lack. While Victoria's Secret Chief Marketing Officer Edward Razek, who helps choose the brand's models, points to the sheer volume of models the company needs as the reason why so many have managed to go on to successful post-VS careers, he also notes that strutting around in only a bra and V-string takes a certain personality type that translates perfectly to other, more professional endeavors. "They have a certain level of confidence that bodes well for whatever they want to do going forth," he says.

Victoria's Secret is a unique launching pad for a model looking for second act success for a few reasons. First, unlike most fashion houses, it signs young women to long-term contracts, allowing them a chance to develop not only as models but as brands. Secondly, it puts the full force of its public relations team behind the women, getting them booked on talk shows, sending them out for personal appearances and even producing lines of cosmetics and body products stamped with their likenesses.

"I try to encourage all of the women to get involved with the brand, to develop their communication skills and to watch the best examples, like Heidi, to see what they've done with their careers," says Razek. "I am constantly looking for the next Tyra, Gisele or Heidi."

To that end, the company gives the girls advice on publicists, business managers and even financial advisors. Victoria's Secret also offers media training and tries to steer a model away from any career-related decisions that won't enhance her chances of success.

Razek is also adamant that the girls be professionals. "The notion of girls partying at night and showing up late and throwing cellphones at chauffeurs, you won't see it, period," he says. While the world's most celebrated cellphone thrower, Naomi Campbell, has indeed fluttered her Victoria's Secret "angel wings" in various fashion shows, she apparently didn't learn her social skills at the company. "There are too many good girls [out there] and we won't deal with divas," says Razek.

Being in an atmosphere where the company and its models are driven can also enhance success. Josie Maran, who modeled for the brand 10 years ago, used to hang out with future media mogul Heidi Klum. "Her personality got her where she is today," says Maran, who launched an all-natural cosmetics company in 2007. "[Heidi] makes it so easy to work with her, and that's something I took away from knowing her."

Maran also says her time modeling lingerie gave her so much confidence that when she started her company, she had no problem walking straight into Sephora's San Francisco headquarters and showing the company her marketing plan. "I was ignorant about business, but I totally believed in myself," she says. Sephora now carries her line.

Victoria's Secret has bucked another trend: Using bony, size-zero models. "The women are curvy and beautiful and healthy, and there's a movement [in the fashion world] to exude that," says Ivan Bart, senior vice president and managing director of IMG Models Worldwide, which reps or has represented many of the brand's models. Indeed, the Victoria's Secret "Angels" made a surprise appearance at the Paris and Milan winter fashion shows, as designers like Miuccia Prada and Marc Jacobs paid tribute to their "curvier" bodies.

However, at the end of the day, a model's career depends in large part on the model herself, Razek says. He talks about the time he went to a personal appearance that Tyra Banks made at a mall in Beverly Hills. Banks was not yet a media mogul, but she already had a large following, and "an enormous sea of humanity" was waiting for her autograph. When Banks saw Razek, she jumped up, took a picture with him and later sent a personal note thanking him for coming. "I didn't train her to do that," says Razek. "That's a business professional."

The ForbesWoman list of Victoria's Secret alums who've gone on to post-modeling success includes names synonymous with the brand (Gisele, Tyra) as well as women who are better known for their campaigns with other brands. With the exception of Heidi Klum, none of them work regularly for the company anymore.

List members were also chosen because their entrepreneurial or acting careers are currently active. Some, like Elle MacPherson, have long-established brands, while others, like Maran and Alek Wek, are just starting their businesses.

[ via Forbes ]

09 April 2010

Lessons From The Dantewada Debacle: Training, Not Threats

By Ajai Shukla

CRPF dead dantewada New Delhi : It has been 44 years since that forgettable incident when New Delhi — for the first and only time — used its air force against its own citizens. With the Mizo National Front rampaging through Mizoram in 1966, the government warned that any Mizo who did not relocate to designated safe villages would be treated as a rebel. On the heels of that announcement came the Indian Air Force (IAF), bombing and machine-gunning stretches of jungle. Resentment against that indiscriminate killing, in which innocent Mizos died, sustained the insurgency for years thereafter.

Home Minister P Chidambaram’s warning, after the killing of 75 men of the 62nd Battalion of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) in a Naxal ambush on Tuesday was put into context by an alarmed IAF chief, who clarified quickly that air power was a blunt weapon ill-suited for discriminating between insurgent and innocent. Chidambaram’s words, however, linger as a reminder that the Home Ministry still considers — as it did after the terror strike on Parliament in 2001, and the Mumbai attack of 26/11 — that bluster and threat are convenient tools for masking abysmal security failures.

The CRPF’s operational debacle has transformed Operation Green Hunt: The hunter now seems the hunted. In the first three months of this year, 42 Naxal rebels had been killed in Bastar at the cost of 4 policemen’s lives. In innumerable small operations, the state police and central police organisations (CPOs) had engaged and bested Naxal dalams; after this disaster, Naxal morale will be revitalised.

The Naxals’ dwindling strength before this week was also evident from the statistics of Improvised Explosive Device (IED) attacks mounted by them over the last three years. In 2007, Chhattisgarh experienced 76 IED attacks; the next year, it was down to just 58; in 2009, the Naxals could successfully detonate only 29 IEDs. But Tuesday’s fiasco has made this depleted organisation look powerful enough to have the Prime Minister threaten that all options remain on the table.

A key reason for the CRPF’s dismal response to the Naxal attack has been their lack of training. As CPO units poured into Chhattisgarh for Operation Green Hunt, 5 battalions of the Border Security Force (BSF), 5 battalions of the Indo-Tibet Border Police (ITBP) and 2 battalions of the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) were all put through jungle warfare orientation courses at Chhattisgarh’s well-reputed Jungle Warfare College in Kanker. The CRPF, inexplicably, refused to undergo this training. Neither did CRPF HQ in New Delhi order them to do so; nor did the Home Ministry.

Training at the Jungle Warfare College, as every organisation except the CRPF seems to have known, has underpinned anti-Naxal operations in Chhattisgarh since 2005, when the college was set up with the help of the Indian Army. Over the last five years, Chhattisgarh has trained 12,700 policemen (including 3700 from other states) at this institution. The college’s credo: Fight the guerrilla like a guerrilla.

A senior official of the Chhattisgarh Police has pointed out to Business Standard that the CRPF has the worst record of all the police organisations that are conducting counter-Naxal operations in that state. “CRPF columns have often got caught in Naxal ambushes; many of the Naxals’ recent successes are against the CRPF.”

Instead of providing adequate training to each battalion that is sent into counter-insurgency operations, the CRPF has relied heavily for success on “elite” units, like its feared “Naga Battalion” which was based in Bastar for several years before being pulled out. In 2008, the Home Ministry authorised the CRPF to raise 10 COBRA (Commando Battalions for Resolute Action) units, for counter-Naxal operations. But the regular battalions remain largely untrained, pushed at will from election duty, to counter-insurgency, to patrolling riot-affected areas, to anti-Naxal operations. The Home Ministry’s approach has always centred on getting the CRPF to the trouble-spot. After that, it is left to the harried battalion or company commander to deliver the goods.

The answer clearly lies in carefully training CPOs, especially before they go into counter-insurgency operations. The advantages are evident of stiffening the CPOs by laterally inducting retiring military jawans. Even without that boost forces like the CRPF are better equipped and armed than the Naxals that they confront. It is the Home Ministry’s job to ensure adequate training and then holding the force accountable for debacles like the recent one that sets back a campaign by years.

06 April 2010

Assam Governor Helps Break Taboo Against Women

By Syed Zarir Hussain

J.B. Patnaik Barpeta (Assam), Apr 6 : Bhabani Pathak and Kamala Bharali are excited and yet haunted with a sense of guilt. They were among the few women who broke a more than 500-year-old tradition by entering the sanctum sanctorum of a revered Xatra or Hindu monastery in Assam.

“I am overwhelmed as I was among the very few who stepped into the kirtan ghar (sanctum sanctorum) of the Xatra, but at the same time I don’t know why I am filled with a sense of guilt,” Bhabani told IANS.

The Xatras or monasteries were formed by 16th century saint philosopher Srimanta Sankardeva who propagated Vaishnavism, a sect of Hinduism in Assam.

The move came after Assam Governor J.B. Patnaik visited Barpeta in western Assam Sunday night to attend a function of the Xatra Mahasabha, the apex body of an estimated 600 Xatras.

On his way back, the governor decided to visit the Patboukhi Xatra, a monastery founded by the saint himself.

“I saw a group of women waiting outside the Xatra and when I enquired with some locals, I was told women don’t enter the sanctum sanctorum. I was a little stunned,” the governor said.

Patnaik then tried reasoning with the male members and the Xatra management - that Sankardeva preached equality and never discriminated between men and women.

The Xatra management conceded to the governor’s reasoning and he took some of the waiting women inside the monastery.

“We are part of history no doubt, but then still don’t feel like breaking the tradition. Somehow, don’t know why this guilt feeling is there,” Kamala said.

But a day after the historic decision, there was a mixed reaction in the Xatra - people are yet to come to terms with reality.

“There are no written instructions or decisions of not allowing women to enter the sanctum sanctorum, but it was just a tradition practised for centuries. We are not against the decision, but have to see the reaction of the locals,” Dhiren Bayan, president of the Patboukhi Xatra, said.

“I feel happy that the people accepted my reasoning,” the governor said.

IANS

Manipur Records Highest Rainfall So Far

rain through window Imphal, Apr 6 : The ongoing rainfall in the State is three times higher than that of last year, according to Meteorological (MET) Office sources.

When compared with last year’s record, the ongoing rainfall rate is much higher. The State has recorded around 185.5 mm rainfall till April 2 this year against last year’s 51.1 mm.

Kh Meghachandra Singh, officer in-charge of the MET office Imphal at Tulihal airport, told this reporter that the rainfall now is not unusual. “We experienced a similar rainfall pattern some years back”, the official claimed.

But the continuous rain and thunderstorm which began on March 29 has disturbed the landing of aircraft at the Tulihal airport. An Imphal-bound Indigo aircraft returned to Guwahati without landing here due to low visibility yesterday.

According to MET officials, an aircraft needs clear visibility of not less than 1,500 metres.

Meanwhile, reports of damages caused by hailstones accompanied by strong winds in various parts of the State are pouring in since the past three days. The Government and private NGOs are assessing the damages in order to prepare a report to be submitted to the Government for grant of relief.

MLA Prithibiraj of Moirang distributed relief materials to the affected villagers of Phoubakchao village yesterday while MLA Thangkhonlun of Chandel inspected the cyclonic rain-hit government buildings in Chandel district headquarters.

Reports said that at least 100 houses were destroyed in the nature’s fury in the Chandel district while 500 houses were damaged in various parts of Thoubal district. Imphal West and Imphal East districts have recorded damages to about 50 houses each.

Hmar Students Want AIR Link Language Decision Deferred

All_India_Radio Imphal, Apr 6 : The Hmar Students' Association (HSA) Churachandpur District, clarified that claim that "The Hmar people of Churachandpur and its adjoining areas had withdrawn from the earlier stand on the issue of Link Language in the Churachandpur local station of All India Radio" is totally false, concocted and baseless.

The charge seems to have been created by individuals with vested interest and for their personal gains or with the intention of glorifying someone else, a release said.

The association reiterated the fact that it had never said "Hmar dialect" should be used as a link language in the radio station.

It said they had in fact said that the three more prominent dialects of the area – Hmar, Paite & Thadou (Kuki) should be used on rotational basis.

The HSA suggested the use of English or even Lushai (Mizo) which is easily understood by different communities of Churachandpur district rather than using a particular dialect mentioned above.

The association on behalf of the Hmar people asserted that in view of the volatile and sensitive nature of the issue, it will be unfortunate to commence service of the said station at this juncture with one dialect as the "link language".

Community mandated organizations should mutually agree and not by few individuals with vested interest it said.

For instance, if Thadou(Kuki) have to be the said dialect, let other organizations of other communities such as the Paite/Zomi Council,YPA and SSPP officially endorse with their Hmar counterparts such as the Hmar Inpui, HYA and HSA and vice-versa ratify the decision.

The association appealed and requested the state government as well as those who matter in Prasar Bharati to take some time to consider the matter instead of rushing it, so as to avoid any confusion and chaos.

05 April 2010

Talented Naga Designer Enthralls Audience at Wills Fashion Week

Atsu_Sekhose New Delhi, Apr 5 : The Wills Lifestyle Fashion Week 2010 saw the participation of many young fashion designers, including Atsu Sekhose from Nagaland.

The glaze, the style and the unique signature style of this Naga designer enthralled onlookers at the weeklong fashion extravaganza.

Sekhose, a Delhi-based Naga fashion designer, showcased his autumn winter collection.

Atsus exclusive signature style of designing made many fashion connoisseurs check out his collections.

Atsu is passionate about his work and believes the northeast is a hub for young talented people, who need to focus on their careers as he did.

From the other states of India, the northeast is a place where everyone dresses up fashionably. Everyone knows what fashion is, maybe because people are very inclined fashion, art and music. So, when you see northeast India, they are more fashionable, they are trendier, claimed Sekhose.

Sekhose believes in harmony and unity for the all round development of society.

Well, I think its about caring for each other, loving each other. That is what we all do. You can start it from your home and I think it will make a big difference, he added.

Atsu is a graduate of the National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT) and is moving rapidly towards establishing himself as a designer of note on the global stage.

He has worked for the Spanish label ZARA.

He has assisted famous designer Tarun Tahliani in the early part of his career, and now has his own label ATSU.

His hard work has won him praise, and this year, he registered his presence at the Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week.

Essentials in Short Supply in Manipur

By Iboyaima Laithangbam

fcihindieng Imphal, Apr 5 : Transportation of sugar, rice and wheat to Manipur from the Food Corporation of India (FCI) Godown at Dimapur in Nagaland has been stopped from March 31 onwards in view of the extortion bid for Rs. 50 lakh by the rebels of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak-Muivah), which is a signatory to the ceasefire with the Union government.

As a result, these essential items are in short supply in Manipur and local market prices have been hiked. This was disclosed by Yumkham Erabot, State Food and Civil Supplies Minister.

He further said that though the extortion letter was given to the FCI officials at Dimapur, the armed National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Kaplang) rebels who are making their presence felt here had prevented the transporters from lifting the goods from the godown for delivering to the Food and Civil Supplies godown in Imphal.

The Nagaland police have not come to the rescue of the transporters now stranded along the national highway.

A high-level meeting was held on Saturday in Imphal to take stock of the situation. Later a letter was sent to the Union Home Secretary G.K.Pillai to examine it in the joint monitoring cell of the cease fire since this kind of extortion is in flagrant violation of the ground rules of the cease fire.

Mr. Erabot expressed the view that the Union government shall take a serious view of the infraction by the signatory to the cease fire.

Meanwhile the transporters told journalists that the FCI had refused to pay illegal taxes to the rebels and as a result they were made the punching kit.