21 May 2010

Lasubun Festival Celebrated in Shillong

By D. Henpilen

Mawphlang Shillong (Meghalaya), May 21
: A large number of people celebrated Shillong's two-day Lasubun Festival in style, with the objective of promoting the region as a tourist-friendly destination.

Hundreds of visitors thronged the Mawphlang sacred grove to join in the festivities.

Stalls showcasing flowers, pottery, beekeeping, loofah processing, weaving, local food and zorbing were set up. The state's art and culture was on display for the visitors.

Edward Pakyntein, a visitor, said: "There are lots of traditional items that are shown from the Garo Hills, the Khasi Hills and other art and craft forms from our state. Also music and other things were really up to the mark."

The Government of Meghalaya's Department of Tourism promoted the event. Visitors also appreciated a fashion show and a rock concert that formed part of the event.

Syrpai Khonglah, another visitor, said: "We all support tourism in urban Shillong and people really do not get to see real tourism. The main idea of tourism is seeing landscapes and other things, including culture and art. This is a true way pf promoting tourism. We see the beauty and take part and find that entire combination is fantastic.

The festival provided the people of Shillong a chance to experience both traditional and contemporary art forms on a single platform.

Four Poachers Shot Dead in Kaziranga, Assam

Guwahati, May 21 : Four poachers shot dead inside Kaziranga National park in an encounter on Friday (May 21) morning.

Encounter took place between forest officials and the poachers.

Two poachers managed to escape the Kaziranga National park premises.

Kaziranga Jeep Safari Association declared award of Rs 6000 to six forest officials who killed the poachers in Kaziranga National Park

‘Why Should Manipur Remain in India?’

By Tarun Vijay

nemap Kamminlung Singson was sitting next to me on a four-hour hopping flight from Delhi to Imphal. He had one year of training in a short-term programme of Indian Army and was on his way back home to Churachandpur, about 60km from Imphal.

He was supposed to travel by train up to Guwahati and then take a bus, but the highways to his hometown, NH 39 and NH 53, had been blocked by Naga rebels for almost 30 days at that time, so he had to somehow arrange for an air ticket. Not many Manipuri's can afford an air ticket, he said sadly.

He was casual, in a cotton Bermuda with blue strips and a brown, wrinkled T-shirt. I looked at his footwear - he was wearing colored slippers. He was looking out of the scratched window pane when the plane took off. We started chatting.

How’s is the situation, I asked?

Very bad. UGs are ruling and people are suffering. Imphal to Churachandpur ticket has gone up to Rs 150 per person, which it was just 40 rupees a few months back, he said.

UGs? Who are they? Underground rebels, he grinned at my ignorance. There is a severe food scarcity and no petrol or diesel is available. One has to be in a queue for one or two days to get 20 or 40 liters of oil.  He stared at me as if asking who the hell you are so oblivious of the facts that are tearing apart the lives of Manipuri's.

I know some of it, I said sheepishly, hence on my way to Imphal. OK, now that you have taken an armed training with the Army, would you be serving the Indian forces or join the other side? I collected myself and asked.

It was a mischievous question, just to poke him and get him speaking on his motherland. He opened up.

I will fight for India, that’s my motherland. But not many in my village think so. They feel India doesn’t care for them. He showed me a news clipping from a south-based daily which made horrendous reading - it was about the death of a Manipuri woman due to starvation. I didn’t find it mentioned in any other newspaper or channel.

The correspondent of the newspaper Iboyaima Laithangbam had filed an Imphal-datelined report:

IMPHAL: Takhellambam Komberei (70), a diabetic, died of starvation and lack of Medicare owing to the ongoing protest by tribal students in Manipur. While going to her home at Jiribam from here on May 5, the bus in which she was travelling was stranded on Highway 53 as a result of economic blockade. She and other passengers managed to buy rice at an exorbitant price of Rs 200 a kg from the nearby village. But soon nothing was available in the village market and they started eating roots, herbs and green bananas found on the mountain slopes. The old woman then started trekking up, but collapsed and died by the roadside.( hindu.com)

Why was Takhellambam Komberei’s death, a painful end, ignored by a Muthalik-obsessed media? A Mulayam prank or a Lalu joke and statue devis and the Hindu terror talk to please the Arab variety of secularism overwhelms the media, but nothing on the pains and anguish of those who are living under a constant threat from anti-national ultras, have yet to see a railway station after six decades of independence, bad roads, almost negligible infrastructure, 38 insurgent terror groups always breathing down their necks to extort money and yet proud to be an Indian?

Kamminlung tried to be as nice as possible 30,000 feet above the ground level. But I could see it was difficult to control emotions for him.

How many Indians would be caring for Manipur or Arunachal or Nagaland, inspite of all those patriotic songs? How many of us would be able to tell what kind of name a Naga, a Mizo or a Manipuri love to wear? Or distinguish their faces and not to call them all as ‘chinkies’?

How many of our elitist or government schools tell the children about India beyond Kolkata and the culture, names, social dynamics and problems of  our border region and northeast in particular?

How many newspapers from mainland India sent their correspondents to report what’s happening to a people who have been cut off from the rest of India, except through the air route, for the last one month? It’s our hypocrisy and a sham nationalism that makes distant areas like Manipur feel distanced from our hearts too.

Manipur faces a crisis that’s communal in its color and anti-national in its import.

Insurgents, blatantly anti-Indian, control the social and political life. They work on unhindered communal hatred. In Kashmir, Hindus were driven out by Islamist jihadist and nothing happened?

In Nagaland and Manipur it’s the Christian and jihadi insurgents stifling the Hindu masses and their voices. The real fight is to get maximum number of non-Christians either converted or annihilated. It’s as simple as that. It’s a foreign-aided political colonialism in the garb of religious fervor.

Manipur is on their target for its Vaishnav traditions. And how? The China-fixed insurgent group Peoples’ Liberation Army (PLA) has given notices to all non-Manipuri Hindus to leave the state by May 31.  Its slogan is – unless they sever all ties with “Hindus, Hindi and Hindi speaking people’’ their target to have an independent Manipur can’t be achieved.

The best protection for a non-Manipuri resident is to display Islamic half-skull cap, because none of the Muslims have ever been targeted or asked to leave, no matter which state they come from. Thousands of Bangladeshi infiltrators have entered Manipur, but these so-called puritan rebel terrorist groups, one of them an Islamic one Peoples’ United Liberation Front, having its headquarters in Hebron, Nagaland, with NSCN-IM have kept mum about them.

The entire northeast is in the grip of an unprecedented wave of Christianization with the help of foreign money. Recently on May 5, a huge Jesus statue was unveiled in Arunachal Pradesh said to be the tallest in Asia, in a region where Christian population is less than 5%. But still Kohima can’t have a Gandhi statue as the NSCN opposes any Indian icons in their region.

So is true about Manipur where under threats from insurgents, neither can the national anthem be sung in schools nor can it be published in school textbooks. Even Republic and Independence Day celebrations are held only in government offices under tight security and wrapped up in minimum possible time.

No school or private institution is allowed to have a function on such occasions leave aside hoisting the tricolor. The government employees, traders and politicians have to pay a part of their income to insurgents as a routine manner.

Even the government contract funds must be shared with them and almost 20% of each such contract is distributed in cash to various anti-national outfits. What a joke of governance: terror groups are sustained on state funds!

Surely, there is an answer to ‘why Manipur should remain in India?’- why shouldn’t it? Manipur is quintessentially  India and India is incomplete without its hoary Radha Krishna traditions, tribal richness and Meitei culture. But the inconvenient situation demands self-introspection as an Indian people and state.

** The author is part of a Hindu Political party

[ via Timesofindia Blog ]

Assam Rifles Cleaning Churachandpur From Drugs

By Kaimuanthang

assam rifles jawans Churachandpur, May 21 : In a bid to make Churachandpur district drug free, officials from the district administration, security forces, civil societies including NGOs, politicians and church level leaders joined hands and put their heads together today at an impressive function held at 27 Sector Headquarters of the Assam Rifles located at Tuibuong from about 10 am.

The programme was attended as special guest by the IPR and PHED minister TN Haokip, MTDC chairman T Manga Vaiphei MLA, T Hangkhanpau MLA from the 60 Singngat A/C , Jacintha Lazarus IAS DC/Churachandpur, Maj Gen DS Hooda, GOC who flew in to attend the gathering, besides leaders of the NGOs who were directly or indirectly related to the treatment of people living with HIV/AIDS apart from student union leaders and students.

TN Haokip who spoke on the occasion as special guest pointed out that the reported cultivation of poppy with the ulterior motive of getting easy money is like laying a mine of death for the residents of Churachandpur.

He said it is time to find an alternative means for earning income and positive means of livelihood while adding that cultivation of the crop at Thangching Hill ranges will soon cause depletion of forest and also the water resources.

Urging the gathering to join hands in the fight against poppy cultivation and other menaces arising out of drugs, Haokip pointed out that even now the Lanva and Koite river are on the brink of getting totally depleted.

T Manga Vaiphei, MLA while addressing the function regretted the existence of poppy cultivation in his constituency while accepting moral responsibility for the same.

He held certain factors responsible for the incident which among others include the people’s wanting to get easy money, lack of good road connectivity in the interiors and peripheral regions like Henglep area which has been taken as an advantage by people residing in the far flung areas under the impression that there is no security coverage etc.

Assuring to cooperate as best as he could in the fight against the menace he stressed the need for providing alternative sources of livelihood to those who have already taken up the work as a profession.

T Hangkhanpau, MLA while giving his address thanked the 27th Sector AR Commander Surendra Mehta for organizing such an ambitious programme and venture.

Unlike most of his preceding speakers, he pointed out arrest of the cultivators under the Narcotics Act may be easy but at times where there are variegated problems like famine due to extreme poverty plaguing the people and when ‘we cannot provide an alternative means to live for those people‘ such acts may not be the right solution.

Expressing his guilt over the existence of such practices in his constituencies he advocated for the creation of alternative means for the cultivators which if made available by authorities will help the practice stop forthwith.

Moving a step back over the issue, he said earlier if the practices are so bad as to cause such a harmful affects why the NGO leaders as well as tribe leaders didn’t organized a campaign for it to end in the initial stages.

He exhorted chiefs of all the villages to not allow their lands for cultivation of such crops while stating further that MLAs are there to help towards providing alternative sources.

Jacintha Lazarus, IAS DC/Churachandpur said in the northeast there are strong societal commitment of the people and as such there are no beggars and social evils like dowry deaths, besides many other advantages due to which she feels proud of working among them.

She urged all not to try to earn a living through activities which cause death and difficulty to others while pointing out the help extended to civil administration by the Army and in restoring the forest in its pure form.

The DC also assured to extend maximum cooperation to those farmers who wanted to take up other professions.

Maj General DS Hooda, GOC has said 40 percent of India’s Ganja is supplied from Manipur while disclosing that Churachandpur is also one of the most productive places of the drug and further said most of the seizures recently were brought from Churachandpur.

[ via The Imphal Free Press ]

32 MT of Life Saving Drugs Airlifted To Manipur

medicines Imphal, May 21 : A total of 32 metric tones of life saving drugs/medicines have been airlifted in Imphal today by air cargo while 43 vehicles including 17 heavy vehicles reached Churachandpur from Aizawl on Guite road.

The consignment of life saving drugs airlifted today included 139 packets weighing 2.593 MT in addition to another consignment of 416 packets of life saving drugs/IV fluids weighing about 3 MT reached Imphal by air force aircraft today.

With today's consignment, a total of about 32 MT of life saving drugs/medicines have been airlifted to Imphal so far.

The items include anti-hypertensive anxiolytics (Alprazalom), Anti-diabetic, antibiotics, anti-TB drugs and I..Vfluids such as dextrose and ringer lactate.
The movement of vehicles through Mizoram and Churachandpur continued with 43 vehicles including 17 heavy vehicles, 10 medium vehicles and 16 light vehicles reached Churachandpur transporting 270 barrels of diesel, 81 barrels of petrol, 2320 cement bags and 96 filled LPG cylinders.

A total of 53 vehicles also left Churachandpur for Mizoram today, a statement of the state home department said.

When Hueiyen Lanpao contacted with the joint director of state consumer affairs, food and public distribution, Kullachandra stationing in Guwahati said that more consignment of essential items will be airlifted tomorrow.

A total of 20 MT of rice are storing at Guwahati Airport for airlifting.

The department is also getting ready to airlift potato, edible oils and dals by air cargo in the coming days.
On the other hand, the arrival of petrol air cargo from Nagpur had been differed.

Meanwhile, another report said that a total of 135 trucks including 33 refilled LPG cylinder laden trucks 39 oil tankers and 65 trucks loaded with essential items were waiting from escorting for heading Imphal at various places on the NH-53 .

The vehicles are stranding at Golathon, Sorok Atingbi Khunou, Sorok Atingbi Hill Ghat, Kalinga, Chandrapur, Tuibong etc.
without knowing that when will they be escorted up to Imphal.

[ via Hueiyen News Service ]

Displacement of Nepalis in Meghalaya Increasing

 Siliguri, May 21 : Over 3000 Nepali speaking community based in northeastern India state of Meghalaya have been displaced due to the intensified attacks by the indigenous Khasis on them.

It has been learnt that the number of displaced Nepalis may double within Saturday.

3000 Nepalis have been taking shelter at Jayanti hill in Assam and 1000 at Meghalaya, Purdung.

Quoting displaced Rimina Chhetri, Janamukti Morcha Asam Chairman NL Sulwa said the Khasis have also warned to attack them at the region they have been residing temporarily.

According to Meghalaya Gorkha Welfare Center member TR Joshi, Indian para-military force has been deployed at the tense and the adjoining areas to contain the situation.

However, the attack on the Nepali speaking community has not stopped.

Last Monday, the Khasis had issued a 24-hour ultimatum to the Nepali community to leave the Langpih, situated at the border of Meghalaya and Assam, after the clash between Khasis and Nepali over land dispute. Indian people of Nepali origin account for 2.6 percent of the total population in Meghalaya.

Both Meghalaya and Assam, a neighboring state, have been laying claim over the bordering Langpih village since long.

[ via Ekantipur ]

20 May 2010

Mizo Varsity Staff Come to Top Brass' Rescue

mizoram-university Aizawl, May 20 : Mizoram University (MZU) staff members today condemned the demand for resignation of the university Vice-Chancellor A N Raiand the Registrar Benjamin following the Mizoram University-Mizo Students Union impasse on recruitment matters.

''We condemned in the strongest term the demand for resignation of our Vice-Chancellor and Registrar, which is uncalled for in a civilized society,'' MZU Officers' Association said in a statement.

''We are proud of our Vice-Chancellor and Registrar. Their contributions to the university in particular and Mizoram in general have been unparalleled,'' the statement added.

The officers lauded the MZU top brass for securing sanction for 106 teaching and 182 non-teaching posts during the Eleventh Five Year Plan period. ''Their commendable contributions have been benefited by none other than the people of Mizoram,'' their statement said.

''We, therefore, strongly condemn those people who demand others to resign or leave the state and turned a blind eye to their laudable roles,'' the statement said.

The Mizoram University Teachers' Association (MIZUTA) in a separate statement expressed solidarity with the Vice-Chancellor and the registrar.

Condemning undue interference of non-governmental organization in the university's matters, the MIZUTA requested the Mizo Students' Union to withdraw its ultimatum given to the Vice-Chancellor and the Registrar.

Pakistan Expands Internet Clampdown on 'Everybody Draw Mohammad Day!'

By Karin Brulliard

Islamabad, May 20 : An Internet clampdown in Pakistan widened Thursday as the government blocked access to the YouTube Web site, citing its "growing sacrilegious content."

The move came one day after the civilian government ordered Internet service providers to restrict access to the Facebook social networking site, which drew fire in Pakistan over a page encouraging people to post caricatures Thursday of the Prophet Muhammad. That order followed an injunction by a Pakistani court, which agreed Wednesday with a petition by an Islamic lawyers' group that the page violated Islamic laws banning the prophet's image.

A spokesman for the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority said the decision to block YouTube came after government monitors found that references to the Facebook page -- called "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day!" -- were growing on the video-sharing site, as were other "derogatory" references to Islam, the majority religion in Pakistan.

"We are an Islamic republic, so we are monitoring the Muslim content," said Khurran Mehran, the spokesman. "We had to shut it down."

The Facebook page sparked protests by religious student organizations across the country on Wednesday, and they continued sporadically Thursday. In Islamabad, about 100 young men belonging to the Islami Jamiat Talba, the student wing of a religious political party, carried signs bearing slogans such as, "Death to Those Responsible for Blasphemy." They called Facebook a tool for spreading anti-Islamic sentiments.

"If Facebook and other such tools continue to be used for blasphemy by the Western nations, then we will target their embassies," said Faisal Javed, 21. enemies of prophet

Although only a small percentage of Pakistan's 180 million people have Internet access, Facebook and other sites have exploded in popularity as the middle class and media outlets have grown. Critics, many of whom voiced opinions in vigorous online debates Thursday -- called the crackdown an impingement of the free speech and that has blossomed under two years of civilian government.

Five years ago, cartoons of Muhammad that were published in a Danish newspaper triggered violent demonstrations in Pakistan and across the Muslim world. The issue has occasionally resurfaced, including in 2008, when a bombing outside the Danish Embassy in Islamabad killed eight people.

Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia, also appeared to be blocked in Pakistan on Thursday, but it was not clear whether the government had restricted access or there was a glitch in the system. Access from smartphones to Facebook, YouTube and other sites with "blasphemous content" was also blocked, according to one major cellphone company, Mobilink.

At least 450 links to Web sites had been shut down by midday Thursday, according to a government statement.

[ via Washington Post ]