08 June 2010

Mizoram Health Infrastructure in Dire Straits

mizo hospital Aizawl, Jun 8 : As per the financial investigation carried out by the visiting team from Planning Commission on the expenditure of centrally sanctioned schemes, it has been found out that the government of Mizoram is not spending the money enough on National Rural Health Mission.

The officials in its report also discovered lack of modern infrastructure in the health sector. The Mizoram government, which is allotted financial assistance to recruit 68 doctors under NRHM only recruited 36 doctors where there are still 32 vacant posts lying for medical doctors and 57 posts for health workers in this sector.

At a review meeting held in Aizawl recently, officials from the state department maintained that lack of good health infrastructure in Mizoram is due to the delay in sanctioning financial from the centre.

The meeting also resolved  to ask the centre to allot more financial package as only 33% of the NRHM fund is allowed to spent for civil works like construction of building, purchasing of building materials etc,.

The visiting team from Planning Commission while briefing media on their tour across Mizoram has highlighted that many hospitals in Mizoram were out of service and their equipments were also not good enough.

As most Public Health Centre has very vast area in its jurisdiction which resulted in leaving many patients beyond the reach of doctor’s care and treatment.

Due to maximum effort made by Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA), rate of baby born in government hospital has jump up from 53.5% to 55.9%, as well as supply of immunization to a baby was increase from 32 % to 50%.

The visiting team was also spoke of their concerned for high increase of HIV/AIDS in Mizoram. They suggested the state government to create more awareness among the general masses.

Mizoram has received Rs. 6,752.23 lakhs from the centre under NRHM. The Mizoram government also sanctioned Rs. 1,206 lakhs during 2009-10. Out of the total sanctioned, Rs. 5,871.74 (73.8%) has been spent on this scheme.

Meanwhile, sources from the government revealed that in Mizoram, 2,623 people have shared one doctor which is much higher than India which is 1,786 whereas one nurse for 666 people.

[ via Newmai News Network ]

06 June 2010

Mizoram Initiates Census of Bru Refugees in Tripura

Mizoram Aizawl, Jun 6 : Mizoram government has taken initiative to conduct census amongst Bru refugees lodged in the six relief camps in Kanchanpur sub-division of North Tripura district.

Elvis Chorkhy, president of Bru Displaced People's Forum (MBDPF) told PTI over phone that Mizoram government sent them two proformas for the census - one for those who left Mizoram in 1997 and another for those who left the state last year.

"We were doing a head count of the refugees who left Mizoram in 2009 and who had not returned till date, but the Mizoram government's instruction left us with no option but to undertake census for the all the refugees," Chorkhy said.

He said Tripura government had also taken up head count of the refugees who left Mizoram last year and had not returned and had found around 120 families so far.

Thousands of Brus left Mizoram in the later part of 1997 after Bru National Liberation Front (BNLF) militants gunned down Lalzawmliana, a forest guard inside Dampa Tiger Reserve in October 1997, which triggered communal flare-up.

The efforts of Mizoram government and Union home ministry to repatriate Bru refugees from November 16 last year was derailed by the killing of a Mizo youth by suspected Bru insurgents three days before the scheduled repatriation, sources said.

India's Rent-a-Womb Industry Faces New Restrictions

By Hillary Brenhouse

Surrogate mothers wait for check up at Dr. Nayna Patel's clinic in Anand, Gujarat, Dec. 4, 2007 - Ajit Solanki / AP

Since the day they were delivered more than two years ago, twin toddlers Nikolas and Leonard Balaz have been stateless and stranded in India.

Their parents are German nationals, but the woman to whom the babies were born is a twenty something Indian surrogate from Gujarat.

The boys were refused German passports because the country does not recognize surrogacy as a legitimate means of parenthood. And India doesn't typically confer citizenship on surrogate-born children conceived by foreigners.

Last week Germany relented, turning over travel visas, and the entire Balaz family is finally going home — though only after a long legal battle that took them deep into the convoluted world of inter-country adoption.

"We can only wish them good luck," India's Supreme Court told local media. But it also reiterated the urgent need for legislation to regulate one of India's fastest-growing industries. Hundreds of foreign tourists spill into the country every year to hire women to incubate their children. India has become the world capital of outsourced pregnancies, whereby surrogates are implanted with foreign embryos and paid to carry the resultant babies to term.

In 2002 the country legalized commercial surrogacy in an effort to promote medical tourism, a sector the Confederation of Indian Industry predicts will generate $2.3 billion annually by 2012. Indian surrogate mothers are readily available and cheap. Unlike most countries in which surrogacy is lawful — and bucking the norm in heavily bureaucratic India — the procedure can take place without reams of government red tape.

That may soon change. A draft bill to direct assisted reproductive technology (ART) is likely to be introduced this year in Parliament.

The new legislation will beef up surrogacy guidelines authored by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) that have often gone unheeded by the few hundred Indian fertility clinics accustomed to writing their own rules. Among them is the Akanksha Infertility Clinic in the town of Anand, in the western state of Gujarat, where the Balazs found themselves.

"We are lost when there are no laws," says Akanksha medical director Dr. Nayna Patel, who has become the face of the industry abroad since being spotlighted on the Oprah Winfrey Show in 2007. "But the people drafting the bill have to remember to take care of the clinics, too."

Patel chooses among the women who appear at the clinic, at least three a day, hoping to hire out their wombs. She pairs the surrogates with infertile couples, catering to an increasingly international clientele base — from 13 foreign couples in 2006 to 85 in 2009.

And she oversees the negotiations between them. The entire process costs customers around $23,000 — less than one-fifth of the going rate in the U.S. — of which the surrogate mother usually receives about $7,500 in installments.

Patel implants the women with embryos, using specimens from sperm or egg donors if necessary. Once pregnant, the surrogates are housed onsite until delivery, in a dormitory that was once a local tax office, so that they can be supervised. But under the new legislation, Patel will be permitted to supervise nothing but surgery.

The new proposed government bill bans in-vitro fertilization (IVF) clinics from brokering surrogacy transactions. It also calls for the establishment of an "ART bank" that will be responsible for locating surrogate mothers, as well as reproductive donors. Fertility clinics will only come into contact with surrogates on the operating table.

"We need to create a safe distance between the clinic and the surrogate to avoid unethical practices," says Dr. R.S. Sharma, deputy director general of the ICMR and member-secretary of the bill's drafting committee. "IVF clinics should only be concerning themselves with science."

It's a suggestion that has caused a stir in the medical community. Dr. Patel insists that she will not accept a surrogate sent to Akanksha unless she herself is permitted to perform medical and background checks. She maintains that ART banks will not have enough experience to determine whether a woman is fit for surrogacy, let alone to replicate the personal bonds she cultivates with her surrogates. "The trust they have with me is what makes the whole thing secure and safe," she says. "And at the end, when they want to buy a house or a piece of land for farming, we get them the best deal. With this bill, we will not know what they are going to do with such a big amount of money."

Indeed, surrogate mothers are likely to enjoy an unprecedented autonomy. They'll have more freedom in negotiating their fee and receive mandatory health insurance from the couple or single employing them. Firm legal standards will ensure that medical professionals only be permitted to implant three embryos in a woman's uterus per attempt.

(The American Society for Reproductive Medicine advises doctors to implant just one; until recently, Dr. Patel routinely used five at a time, aborting anything more than two fetuses.) The legislation will only allow a woman to act as a surrogate up to five times, less if she has her own children, and will impose a 35-year age limit. That way, ladies motivated by desperation won't be able to put themselves at risk.

In a push to avoid cases similar to the Balaz family debacle, the bill will also make things more challenging for foreign customers. The new legislation will require that the international couple's home country guarantee the unborn infant citizenship before a surrogacy can even get off the ground. Such a stipulation will certainly not go over with Germany.

"In fact, I'm not sure if any country will be ready to pledge citizenship before birth," says Amit Karkhanis, a prominent Mumbai surrogacy lawyer. Countries accepting of surrogate-born children typically rely on DNA tests done post-delivery to determine the parentage of the baby.

Same-sex couples — a growing number of whom are relying on Indian surrogates — may not even make it as far as a plea for a government pledge. Just last year, Delhi's High Court overturned a section of the penal code outlawing "carnal intercourse against the order of nature," and the status of gays and lesbians in the country remains unclear.

"Tomorrow, if the government outlaws gay relations," says Sharma of the bill's drafting committee, "then we will not allow gay couples to hire surrogates. The law of the land will be followed so far as this issue is concerned."

When Australian partners Trevor Elwell and Peter West visited the country nearly two years ago, only one clinic was open to providing them surrogacy services. Now, with their surrogate-born twin girls a year old and their third baby incubating in Mumbai, Elwell estimates that a half-dozen Indian IVF clinics cater to homosexual couples. The men have found it uncomplicated to use Indian egg donors.

They've made the switch to a facility where their new surrogate knows they are gay, and is comfortable with it. And they attained Australian citizenship for their children in a process that took no more than a few weeks.

For them, as for most who flock to India hoping for a baby, informal surrogacy guidelines have been a blessing. "If the bill does complicate things, people will go to another country," Elwell says. "There will always be somewhere this can be done. This is just the beginning."

[ via time ]

National Highway 44 Threatened by Erosion of Barak River

Barak River erosion May Threaten Lifeline to Barak Valley, Mizoram, Tripura and East Manipur

Silchar, Jun 6 :
The stretch of National Highway 44 regarded as the lifeline of supply of Barak Valley, Mizoram, Tripura and East Manipur is now being threatened by slow but steady erosion caused by river Barak near Panchgram where the only industry of this valley, Cachar Paper Mill, is located.

The Border Road Organisation signboard along the highway indicates that the area in question is sinking, most probably due to inside seepage by the river.

However, though vehicles have been cautioned to drive carefully in this stretch, no action plan has been taken up till now to contain the ever-increasing erosion.

Even though the monsoons have set in and the same is likely to continue till August, there is no semblance of seriousness on the part of the BRTF to adopt any preventive measures.

And unless the erosion is checked, water seepage will continue, submerging the highway which will ultimately affect the movement of vehicles adversely. 

Judging from the manner in which erosion has taken in its stride the villages along the highway, it is feared that NH 44 might soon be washed away by the turbulent river in the near future.

Poetry in Pottery

By Brinda Suri

These black beauties made at Nungbi village in Manipur have a simple ethereal aesthetics that is so new-age…

Photo: Brinda Suri
Classical lines: Glistening black Lori Ham...

By itself ‘Lori Ham' seems a rather rhythmic expression. When you learn what it means it acquires a curious edge. It has a harmony about it, connected as it is with the poetry of pottery. Lori means village and Ham stands for pottery, except it's not the regular earthenware made by potters across the country. Lori Ham specifically applies to the black pottery made at Nungbi village in the northern parts of Ukhrul district, Manipur.

Almost all villages of Manipur make their trademark pottery, each determined by its colours and designs. It's Nungbi village though that's taken the lead outside the state frontiers, and made a mark in the big world with its black earthenware crafted by the Tangkhul tribe, attracting eyeballs wherever it's been displayed. As in the other North-eastern states, Lori Ham is not shaped on the potter's wheel, but it is uniquely made with rock powder and not river clay.

Unique material

Nungbi is amongst the oldest settlements of the Tangkhuls and is rich in natural resources as clay, limestone, chromites etc. While these are found in considerable measure in other parts and other lands, Nungbi village is reportedly the only place in the world rich in serpentinite, the dark grayish-black soft rock found deep down in the layers of the earth, which is the prime material used in making its famous pottery. This rock is powdered and mixed with a tempering material called leshonlung, a kind of clay found near the rock deposit. Between September and March the rock is dug out and preserved for the months ahead because once the rains arrive in the region serpentinite cannot be accessed.

The process of Lori Ham is laborious and begins with the mixing of leshonlung and serpentinite, following which it's kneaded with water till the desired consistency is achieved. In absence of the wheel, this dough is pounded until smooth and formed into a block that's further whacked into a long thick strip. A required dimension is cut out of this strip and its edges trimmed, after which begins the procedure to cast it into shape.

The method of giving shape to an item is quite rudimentary and in fact initially appears to be similar to what's done in play-school with a material like plasticine. But that is where the similarity ends as it is only deft hands, used to years of handling the earthenware mixture, who can give it an artistic finish. As an illustration, if it's an item like a tray, the thick strip is cut to dimension and its corners tapered by hand or with a basic implement like a wooden ruler. At times it's given a self-design with something as simple as a chisel. The moulding and enhancement of an item is all in the hands of a potter and creativity is limitless. The potter uses nature around in full measure, so for a cylindrical item like a mug or jug, the sheet of clay is usually wound around a bamboo that's possibly been growing around the house.

Once an item has been given a basic form it is patted further to the required thickness. On getting the final shape, the exterior surface is scraped with a bamboo strip and smoothened. The clay pieces are then left to harden and later fired for five to seven hours. It's on firing that the earthenware acquires a black metallic look.

Touch of magic

But that's not where it all ends as the finale is reserved for a little magic by the dried leaf of the chirona tree that's rubbed on the items shortly after they are out of the kiln and still warm. This process gives the pottery its lovely muted silken luster.

It's generally believed that cooking in this pottery enhances the taste of the food as compared to other pots and pans. In the olden days pottery making was confined to being a household activity with women members being the chief creators, while the men sourced the material. With the passage of time and industrialisation, black pottery gradually got replaced by others utensils. To revive the craft, NGOs like the popular Lori Ham Entrepreneur Foundation of Nungbi Khullen village jumped into the fray and some smart marketing as well as a dash of creativity has provided the products a considerably worthy plank.

Tangkhul potters today mould an attractive range of kitchenware as well as décor items. The all-black Lori Ham, a centuries-old utilitarian craft, appears minimalist, quite in sync with new age urban demands and lends a timeless quality to it. The addition of cane to the earthenware has given it a further designer look.

Plan To Deploy BSF Along Indo-Myanmar Border

India BSF Shillong, Jun 6 : A proposal to deploy Border Security Force (BSF) personnel along the Indo-Myanmar border to improve security was under consideration, Union home secretary GK Pillai said.

"A final decision on whether the Indo-Myanmar border will be manned by BSF or Assam Rifles will be taken by the Union cabinet," Pillai told PTI during his three-day visit to Shillong.

India shares a 1640km-long border with Myanmar manned by Assam Rifles and the dense forests in most parts make the border porous and vulnerable.

Most of the posts of Assam Rifles are located well inside Indian territory and only a handful of posts are located near the zero line, which makes it easier for the insurgents camping in Myanmar to sneak into India easily, the sources said.

BSF is currently responsible for guarding the Indo-Pak and Indo-Bangla border, with some battalions also deployed in Maoist-hit areas in central and eastern India and anti-insurgency operations in the Northeast.

Assam Rifles was entrusted with the responsibility of guarding the border with Myanmar in 2002 and at that time, the strength of the force was 30 battalions.

Gradually, the strength of the force has been increased to 46 battalions. Twenty more battalions are being raised by the force, the country's oldest paramilitary force.

Mizo Students Send Green Signal

world-environment-day Aizawl, Jun 6 : Braving the rains, hundreds of school students in the Mizoram state capital today participated in an awareness rally in the city to mark the World Environment Day.

The rally was organized by Green Mizoram Network, under the sponsorship of the state environment and forests department and public health engineering department.

The rally, which aims to stimulate environment awareness and enhance political attention and public action for environmental conservation, started from Chanmari junction and was crowned with a musical event at the Millennium Centre, in the heart of the city.

Every year the World Environment Day's message in Mizoram puts emphasis on the seriousness of rapid depletion of the green forests in Mizoram mainly due to the age-old jhumming system of cultivation.

''Mizoram, once covered by green forests and watered by several perennial rivers and streams which boasts of such a rich diversity of wildlife and plants, has now deteriorated due to large scale jhumming, reckless exploitation of forests and rivers in the guise of the so called development,'' the MPBC said in its message to the people of Mizoram.

''We have been negligent of the degradation our environment caused by our own hands,'' the message read.

''It is high time we do something to rectify the mistakes we have made in the past and reclaim our green gold,'' the MPCB said.

Mizoram Environment Minister H Rohluna said, ''The theme echoes the urgent call to conserve the diversity of life on our planet. A world without biodiversity is a very bleak prospect. Millions of people and millions of species all share the same planet, and only together can we enjoy a safer and more prosperous future.

''On this World Environment Day, let us resolve to do much more and much faster to win the race against extinction,'' the minister said in his message.

In Mizoram, the slash-and-burn method, on which about 80 per cent of the state's farmers still depend, has resulted in vast areas of green forest going up in flames annually.

According to the state environment and forests department, at least 17046.33 hectares of green forest were lost to jhum fires during this year's jhum burning season starting from early February till March end.

According to a recent survey by the Mizoram remote sensing application centre, there are only 3158.57 sq km of dense forests in Mizoram which is not yet touched (cultivated). This accounts for 14.98 per cent of the total Mizoram area. The forest area which is exploited for road constructions, building houses and other sources accounted for 147.85 sq km which is 0.70 per cent of the total land area of the state.

The survey also reported that while there are 2628.08 sq km medium dense forests (12.46 per cent of total land area) and 3738.57 sq km less-dense forest (17.73 per cent of the total land area), 31.81 per cent of the total land area is covered by bamboo which is 6708.37 sq km.
Of the seven states in the NE region, Assam, Mizoram and Meghalaya are facing maximum deforestation. A recent survey showed that 6.3 million hectares area in north-eastern region is affected of which four states - Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh - account for about 72 per cent.

Out of the 64 per cent forest cover in the region, 35 per cent cover is good (dense) and the remaining 29 per cent comprises post-jhum open/degraded secondary succession forests which require protection.

Aamir Khan’s 3 IDIOTS Sweeps Bollywood’s Controversial 2010 IIFA Awards

By Irene Young


aamir-khan-r-madhavan-sharman-joshi-3-idiots 
amitabh-bachchan-paa Aamir Khan, Sharman Joshi, R. Madhavan, 3 Idiots (top); Amitabh Bachchan, Paa (bottom)
Rajkumar Hirani’s 3 Idiots, an "inspirational" friendship comedy-drama starring Aamir Khan and one of India’s biggest blockbusters, won 16 Indian Film Academy Awards, including best film, best director, and best screenplay. The 2010 IIFA ceremony was held Saturday in Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka.
Veteran Amitabh Bachchan was voted best actor for his performance as a 12-year-old suffering from progeria, a disease that accelerates the aging process, in Paa. For their "aging makeup" job, Christien Tinsley and Dominie Till received the Best Makeup Award.
3 Idiots‘ Kareena Kapoor shared the best actress award with Vidya Balan for Paa, while Sharman Joshi was the Best Supporting Actor for 3 Idiots, and Divya Dutta the Best Supporting Actress for Dilli 6.
Hrithik Roshan, Anil Kapoor, Salman Khan, Sanjay Dutt and Preity Zinta were some of the Bollywood stars scheduled to attend the event, but missing in action, among others, were Amitabh Bachchan, Aamir Khan, Vidya Balan, Shah Rukh Khan, Abhishek Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai-Bachchan, and Best Actress nominees Priyanka Chopra, Deepika Padukone, and Mahie Gill.
Part of the problem may have merely been scheduling issues. But some Bollywood celebrities opted to skip the IFFA Awards this year for political reasons, as film talent from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu had called for a boycott of Sri Lanka to protest military violence against ethnic Tamils in that country.
Approximately 300,000 Tamils, displaced by the decades-long civil war that came to a close only months ago, have been detained in camps erected by the Sri Lankan government.
According to the CBC, "the South Indian Film Chamber of Commerce has even threatened to boycott movies starring or made by those who attend the awards in Colombo."
Veteran actor Shatrughan Sinha, who was present at the IFAA, was quoted on the BBC as saying: "We are not representing north, east, west or south India, but I am representing the whole of India for that matter as a world citizen… And our only caste, our only religion, is entertainment."
At the ceremony, Sinha remarked, “I want to congratulate everyone who didn’t give in to protests and threats and braved it to Colombo.” But according to a Reuters report, "the empty seats in front of him told a different story."
Next year, the IIFA will be held in Toronto.

[ via altfg ]