08 June 2010

Indian Govt Turns Down Meghalaya's Proposal For Music University

Keyboards Shillong, June 8 : The Centre has turned down Meghalaya&aposs proposal for setting up a world class university of music in the state.

State Education Minister Ampareen Lyngdoh told the assembly today that the proposal for the Rs 100 crore project, made by her predecessor Manas Chaudhuri, was turned down by the then Union HRD Minister Arjun Singh.

The Centre had argued that Meghalaya already had North Eastern Hill University, a central institution.Recalling that during his tenure as Education minister Chaudhuri himself had written to the then Union Minister of DoNER, Mani Shankar Aiyar for setting up a world class central university of music, Lyngdoh informed the House that the ministry took up the matter with HRD ministry.

In his reply to the state education department, Singh had, however, acknowledged that the people of state did have"exceptional aptitude"in a myriad genre of music.

Contending that such a music university should be set up in any other state of the Northeast region, which does not have a central university, Singh had even proposed Assam’s name for the proposed project.

Pointing out that there was"music talent"in the state, Chaudhuri urged the education minister to examine the idea of introducing music in the school board curriculum.

The education minister maintained that the state government was still "trying to put pressure"on the Centre for clearing the proposal.

Assam Truckers Hesitant to Ply Through Nagaland

assam trucks Guwahati, June 8 : Private truck associations in Assam have expressed reservations in running their vehicles on National Highway 39 leading through Nagaland to Manipur, crippled by a blockade by Naga students.

"Although we sincerely want to carry essentials to the Manipur, safety concerns for out staff on trucks prevent us from plying vehicles through Nagaland," a spokesman of the association said here.

"The association has decided to refrain from plying vehicles on National Highway 39 due to the blockade by the Naga Students Federation (NSF) due to safety concerns," he said.

Meanwhile, the influential All Assam Students Union (AASU) today appealed to NSF to lift the blockade on 'humanitarian grounds' in the interest of the common people.

"We have appealed to NSF which is a part of the North East Students Organisation (NESO) to lift the blockade," AASU advisor and NESO chairman Samujjal Bhattacharya said.

Rights Group Exposes Children Mining Scandal in Meghalaya

8mining1 Kazuko Ito (left) with Hasina Kharbhih at the press conference in New Delhi

New Delhi, Jun 8 : At least 70,000 children, mainly from Bangladesh and Nepal, are working in hazardous and inhumane conditions in mines in the Jaintia Hills area of Meghalaya in northeastern India.

An international human rights group and an Indian NGO have urged national and international bodies to investigate.

India has many mechanisms to address child labor but they are ineffective in the Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya, Kazuko Ito, secretary general of Human Rights Now (HRN), a Tokyo-based international human rights group.

Meghalaya comprises three hills districts - Garo, Jaintia and Khasi.

An HRN team collaborated with the Impulse NGO Network, a Meghalaya-based NGO, to study the child labor situation in the Jaintia Hills from May 31-June 2. The team visited three coal mines and interviewed 45 people, including child workers.

Ito said they found most children below 14. A 12-year-old boy told them he has worked there since he was eight.

The children also work in extreme danger with few safety measures. They cut coal in deep underground holes with little air supply.

Ito said her team felt suffocated and made a hasty retreat after going some 1000 meters into a coalmine hole.

The team quoted some elders as saying middlemen duped the children promising easy money for simple tasks.

Hasina Kharbhih of the Impulse NGO Network alleged that the mine owners are also guilty of extrajudicial killings as they lock up children in closed mines as punishment and many die.

She said her group has worked in the Hills for the past five years and had reported the matter to the federal Social Welfare Department and National Human Rights Commission, but so far no action has been taken.

The NGOs want international monitoring bodies such as Commission of Inquiry of ILO and UN Special Rapportuers to look into child trafficking and extrajudicial killings in the Jaintia Hills.

They also want the Indian government to sign a bilateral agreement with Nepal and Bangladesh to prevent child trafficking and prosecute offenders.

The groups also want international business communities to stop buying coal from Meghalaya until the mine owners stop using child labor.

[ via ucanews ]

Naga Girls Tops Berklee College of Music Exam

Dimapur, Jun 8 : Nagaland has added one more feather in its cap in the filed of music.

This time, Sentirenla Lucia Panicker of Dimapur scored ‘A’ grade in all her subjects in Music from the most prestigious institution ‘Berklee College of Music’, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.

She did her major in ‘Performance’ and also won the annual award ‘The Sylvia Zunz Endowed Scholarship’.

It was a wonderful moment for her when she was selected to perform on May 7 at Berklee 2010 Commencement Concert.

Out of 862 students who had graduated, only few were selected to sing ‘Naima’, a sad song of the difficult days of the Blacks in South Africa, sung by the famous South African singer and producer, ‘Angelique Kidjo’, who herself was present at the concert.

It was to Lucia’s credit that Angelique walked up to her and hugged her in front of the audience saying “You brought tears to my eyes” and signed her autograph.
naga girl
Lucia Panicker (right) performing at the Berklee 2010 Commencement Concert, and left, being hugged by the famous South African singer and producer, ‘Angelique Kidjo’ after a touching performance.

Lucia started singing at the age of 9 and also sang for an English channel ‘No kidding’ for Doordashan, besides lending her voice for advertisements in various TV channels.

It was her luck that in 2006 while she was studying in International College of Music in Malaysia, a team from Berklee College of Music visited the campus to select students and Lucia was among the two selected under ICOM in 2006 with a scholarship for four years due to her excellent performance.

She was also among the 3 students who were selected to sing at the swearing in ceremony of the governor or Massachusetts in 2009, where President Barack Obama paid a short visit.

Lucia is the daughter of Bobby Panicker and Narola Nokden, and resides in Diphupar, Dimapur.
Lucia wants to build a career in music for few years in USA and sing gospel songs in memory of her late grandfather Padmashree Nokdenlemba Ao, and then to return to Dimapur to support young talented boys and girls in the field of music.

[ via Nagaland Post ]

India is World's Road Deaths Capital

India steadily increases its lead in road fatalities

By Heather Timmons and Hari Kumar

india road accidents New Delhi, Jun 8 : India lives in its villages, Gandhi said. But increasingly, the people of India are dying on its roads.

India overtook China to top the world in road fatalities in 2006 and has continued to pull steadily ahead, despite a heavily agrarian population, fewer people than China and far fewer cars than many Western countries.

While road deaths in many other big emerging markets have declined or stabilized in recent years, even as vehicle sales jumped, in India, fatalities are skyrocketing — up 40 percent in five years to more than 118,000 in 2008, the last figure available.

A lethal brew of poor road planning, inadequate law enforcement, a surge in trucks and cars, and a flood of untrained drivers have made India the world's road death capital. As the country's fast-growing economy and huge population raise its importance on the world stage, the rising toll is a reminder that the government still struggles to keep its more than a billion people safe.

In China, by contrast, which has undergone an auto boom of its own, official figures for road deaths have been falling for much of the past decade, to 73,500 in 2008, as new highways segregate cars from pedestrians, tractors and other slow-moving traffic, and the government cracks down on drunken driving and other violations.

Evidence of road accidents seems to be everywhere in urban India.

Highways and city intersections often glitter with smears of broken windshield and are scattered with unmatched shoes, shorn-off bicycle seats and bits of motorcycle helmet. Tales of rolled-over trucks and speeding buses are a newspaper staple, and it is rare to meet someone in urban India who has not lost a family member, friend or colleague on the road.
The dangerous state of the roads represents a "total failure on the part of the government of India," said Rakesh Singh, whose 16-year-old son, Akshay, was killed last year by an out-of-control truck in Bijnor, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, as he walked along a highway to a wedding.

The truck crushed Akshay so completely that his father could identify his son only by his shirt. The truck also ran over a second man and drove away.

Reckless driving and the juxtaposition of pedestrians and fast-moving heavy vehicles is common. The expressway that runs southeast from Delhi to Greater Noida, a fast-growing satellite city, cuts through farmland interspersed with new industrial parks and shopping malls. Small settlements of huts piled with cow-dung patties fringe the road.

During a 40-minute ride on that highway, a tractor hauling gravel was seen driving the wrong way, a milk truck stopped in the road so its driver could urinate and motorists swerved to avoid a bicycle cart full of wooden tables in the fast lane. Drivers chatted on mobile phones as they steered stick-shift cars and wove across lanes. Side mirrors were often turned in or were nonexistent.

A cluster of women in saris holding small children waited anxiously for a gap in traffic so they could race across the highway. Opposite them, a group of young men in office attire waited to cross in the other direction.

The breakdown in road safety has many causes, experts say. Often, the police are too stretched to enforce existing traffic laws or take bribes to ignore them; heavy vehicles, pedestrians, bullock carts and bicycles share roadways; punishment for violators is lenient, delayed or nonexistent; and driver's licenses are easy to get with a bribe.

Kamal Nath, India's minister of road transport and highways, said in an interview that highway safety was a "priority" for the national government. "Road safety is one of the major issues" the ministry is addressing, he said. The ministry is reviewing the Motor Vehicles Act and, three years after a government-backed committee recommended that a national road safety board be established, it has introduced legislation to that effect in Parliament.

International safety experts say the Indian government has been slow to act. Bringing down road deaths "requires political commitment at the highest level," said Dr. Etienne Krug, director of the department of violence and injury prevention at the World Health Organization. India's government is "just waking up to the issue," he said.

Mr. Nath, who was India's commerce minister before moving to the Highway Ministry last year, has increased highway expansion plans and is raising $45 billion from private investors to extend India's 3.3-million-kilometer, or 2-million-mile, road network. The expansion is an integral part of keeping the economy, now at about 9 percent growth a year, humming, Mr. Nath says.

Government planners warn that fatalities are unlikely to decline soon. When highways are built, "there are always more accidents," said Atul Kumar, chief general manager of road safety with the National Highways Authority of India, part of Mr. Nath's ministry.

Mr. Kumar said that his agency had spoken with local residents before building and expanding roads near towns and villages but that it could not always satisfy them. "If we accept all their demands, we'd have an underpass every kilometer," he said. The expansion has to be "viable for bidders," he said, and "underpasses and flyovers are expensive."

In the rest of the world, a rise in high-speed roads does not always have to mean a rise in deaths. In Brazil, for example, new, privatized highways have much lower rates of fatal accidents than other roads.

Private companies building and running new highways in India say that their hands are sometimes tied. From his office overlooking a 32-lane set of tollbooths, Manoj Aggarwal, chief executive of the road-building company Delhi-Gurgaon Super Connectivity, says he witnesses hundreds of traffic violations every day that he cannot stop.

"Look at this man in the middle of the road," he said during an interview, pointing to a pedestrian slowly weaving his way through the traffic. "I can't fine him. I can't punish him."
Only the police can ticket or fine speeders, or people who are on the roads but should not be. But, over-burdened and understaffed, the police are rarely available, Mr. Aggarwal said, even though he has offered to pay them extra to work on off-duty hours.

In 2008, 73 people were killed on just this 27-kilometer stretch of highway, earning it the nickname "Expressway to Death." The death toll dropped as Mr. Aggarwal added safety features outside the government contract.

Shivani, a 15-year-old student, recently landed in St. Stephen's Hospital in Old Delhi with a fractured right leg after just such a highway dash.

"I don't know what happened," she said. "I was trying to cross the road." Her forehead and knuckles were blackened and scraped, and her eyes were glazed after a four-day coma.
She has to cross a busy highway during her one-kilometer walk to school. There are no crosswalks, no underpasses and no stoplights.

As cars increase, those who cannot afford them and continue to travel on foot, bicycle or rickshaw are more vulnerable, safety experts say. Dr. Mathew Varghese, the head of St. Stephen's orthopedics department, said he saw hundreds of patients a year like Shivani. The government is building "economic growth on the dead bodies of the poor on these highways," he said.

Frustrated Indians often take matters into their own hands, forming impromptu mobs to beat up offending drivers. "Road rage" incidents, where drivers step out of their cars and get into physical altercations, have become common. Some people have begun campaigns to curb unsafe driving.

"People don't understand the value of life here," said Manoj Gupta, a consultant from Chandigarh, whose wife was riding a motor scooter when she was crushed by a speeding bus two years ago. Helmet laws apply only to men, and she was not wearing one. The bus driver was out on bail in four or five days, Mr. Gupta said. Now Mr. Gupta stops reckless drivers to tell them about his wife and to ask them to drive more carefully.

Safety "needs to be an important part of the driving culture, and that is still lacking," said Harman S. Sidhu, president of ArriveSafe, a road safety awareness group in Chandigarh. He started it after he was left paralyzed by a car accident in the Himalayas.

Last year during Raksha Bandhan, a festival celebrating the bond between brothers and sisters, ArriveSafe enlisted thousands of sisters to beg their brothers to drive carefully.
Mr. Singh, the father of Akshay, the boy killed by a truck in Bijnor, said he had spent days searching for the driver who ran over his son after the local police refused to help, finally taking the police in his own car to make the arrest. Megh Singh, the investigating police officer for the case, said in an interview that the police were eager to investigate but hampered because the station has only one jeep for its 18 to 20 inspectors.

The truck driver, now awaiting trial on charges of negligent death in Akshay's case and murder in a second man's case, has been released on bail. The truck, which appeared to be carrying an illegally heavy load, was returned to its owner without incurring any fees or fines.

Dozens of letters Mr. Singh wrote to local and national politicians asking them to investigate overloaded trucks in the area have not been answered.

"No one wants to be responsible," he said. "They are all passing the buck."

are built, "there are always more accidents," said Atul Kumar, chief general manager of road safety with the National Highways Authority of India, part of Mr. Nath's ministry.

Mr. Kumar said that his agency had spoken with local residents before building and expanding roads near towns and villages but that it could not always satisfy them. "If we accept all their demands, we'd have an underpass every kilometer," he said. The expansion has to be "viable for bidders," he said, and "underpasses and flyovers are expensive."

In the rest of the world, a rise in high-speed roads does not always have to mean a rise in deaths. In Brazil, for example, new, privatized highways have much lower rates of fatal accidents than other roads.

Private companies building and running new highways in India say that their hands are sometimes tied. From his office overlooking a 32-lane set of tollbooths, Manoj Aggarwal, chief executive of the road-building company Delhi-Gurgaon Super Connectivity, says he witnesses hundreds of traffic violations every day that he cannot stop.

"Look at this man in the middle of the road," he said during an interview, pointing to a pedestrian slowly weaving his way through the traffic. "I can't fine him. I can't punish him."
Only the police can ticket or fine speeders, or people who are on the roads but should not be. But, over-burdened and understaffed, the police are rarely available, Mr. Aggarwal said, even though he has offered to pay them extra to work on off-duty hours.

In 2008, 73 people were killed on just this 27-kilometer stretch of highway, earning it the nickname "Expressway to Death." The death toll dropped as Mr. Aggarwal added safety features outside the government contract.

Shivani, a 15-year-old student, recently landed in St. Stephen's Hospital in Old Delhi with a fractured right leg after just such a highway dash.

"I don't know what happened," she said. "I was trying to cross the road." Her forehead and knuckles were blackened and scraped, and her eyes were glazed after a four-day coma.
She has to cross a busy highway during her one-kilometer walk to school. There are no crosswalks, no underpasses and no stoplights.

As cars increase, those who cannot afford them and continue to travel on foot, bicycle or rickshaw are more vulnerable, safety experts say. Dr. Mathew Varghese, the head of St. Stephen's orthopedics department, said he saw hundreds of patients a year like Shivani. The government is building "economic growth on the dead bodies of the poor on these highways," he said.

Frustrated Indians often take matters into their own hands, forming impromptu mobs to beat up offending drivers. "Road rage" incidents, where drivers step out of their cars and get into physical altercations, have become common. Some people have begun campaigns to curb unsafe driving.

"People don't understand the value of life here," said Manoj Gupta, a consultant from Chandigarh, whose wife was riding a motor scooter when she was crushed by a speeding bus two years ago. Helmet laws apply only to men, and she was not wearing one. The bus driver was out on bail in four or five days, Mr. Gupta said. Now Mr. Gupta stops reckless drivers to tell them about his wife and to ask them to drive more carefully.

Safety "needs to be an important part of the driving culture, and that is still lacking," said Harman S. Sidhu, president of ArriveSafe, a road safety awareness group in Chandigarh. He started it after he was left paralyzed by a car accident in the Himalayas.

Last year during Raksha Bandhan, a festival celebrating the bond between brothers and sisters, ArriveSafe enlisted thousands of sisters to beg their brothers to drive carefully.
Mr. Singh, the father of Akshay, the boy killed by a truck in Bijnor, said he had spent days searching for the driver who ran over his son after the local police refused to help, finally taking the police in his own car to make the arrest. Megh Singh, the investigating police officer for the case, said in an interview that the police were eager to investigate but hampered because the station has only one jeep for its 18 to 20 inspectors.

The truck driver, now awaiting trial on charges of negligent death in Akshay's case and murder in a second man's case, has been released on bail. The truck, which appeared to be carrying an illegally heavy load, was returned to its owner without incurring any fees or fines.

Dozens of letters Mr. Singh wrote to local and national politicians asking them to investigate overloaded trucks in the area have not been answered.

"No one wants to be responsible," he said. "They are all passing the buck."

[ via NYT News Service ]

US Worried About Ties With India After Bhopal Verdict

By Chidanand Rajghatta

Bhopal gas tragedy: No question of re-opening case, says US

Washington, Jun 8 : The United States on Monday said it hoped the Bhopal gas tragedy case will not inhibit its growing ties with India or affect the nuclear liability bill currently before the Indian parliament, and that the verdict in the matter ''brings some closure to the families of the victims of the tragedy.''

In uniform reactions to the sentencing of seven Indian employees to two years in prison each more than 25 years after the tragedy caused by the American company, US officials said they did not expect the verdict to open any new inquiry.

''On the contrary, we hope that this is going to help to bring closure,'' Robert Blake, the US state department official overseeing South Asia, said of the tragedy which eventually claimed more than 15,000 lives.

The return of the Bhopal tragedy to the headlines is evidently worrying the Obama administration, going by the almost identical reactions from Blake and the State Department spokesman, suggesting the subject figured in the morning meetings at Foggy Bottom. The Indian verdict, which shocked many still angered by the US parent company escaping criminal liability, is particularly poignant considering that Washington, amid much anger in the US administration, is weighing criminal charges against British Petroleum for the oil spill off the Louisiana coast in an episode that claimed 11 lives.

In an NBC interview to be aired on Tuesday, President Obama said he had been talking to experts about the BP disaster because he wants to know ''whose ass to kick.'' But in the Bhopal tragedy, which occurred more than 25 years ago, the key people bolted a long time ago and escaped an ass-kicking.

Union Carbide’s chairman at the time of the disaster, Warren Anderson, now 89, lives in seclusion in Long Island, New York, and is unreachable. Activists who have ambushed him in the years since he went into hiding variously report him as being deaf and senile. US officials also appeared to dismiss the possibility of his extradition now. ''The question of extradition — as a matter of policy, we never discuss extradition.

So I can't comment on that,'' Blake said.
Asked if the Bhopal case isn’t already inhibiting the Indian parliament from passing the nuclear liability bill, State Department spokesman P.J.Crowley said the Indian parliament will have to make a judgment on the matter, ''but this criminal case should have no relation to the liability legislation currently before the parliament.''

''We just had a strategic dialogue with India. Our countries are closely connected. Our economies are increasingly closely connected. So I certainly would hope that this particular case does not inhibit the continuing expansion of economic, cultural, and political ties between our two countries. We fully expect this will not be the case,'' Crowley said.

Meanwhile, in a late evening email response to ToI, a spokesman for Union Carbide maintained that ''by requirement of the Government of India, the Bhopal plant was detail designed, owned, operated and managed on a day-to-day basis by Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL) and its employees,'' and ''all the appropriate people from UCIL — officers and those who actually ran the plant on a daily basis — have appeared to face charges.''

"Union Carbide and its officials were not part of this case since the charges were divided long ago into a separate case.

Furthermore, Union Carbide and its officials are not subject to the jurisdiction of the Indian court since they did not have any involvement in the operation of the plant, which was owned and operated by UCIL,'' Tomm F. Sprick, Director of Union Carbide Information Center, said in the email.

Jon Bon Jovi Become First Ever Band to Perform on O2 Rooftop

Jon Bon Jovi and his band kicked off their 12-date show at London’s O2 Arena by performing live on the rooftop.

They became the first act to ever perform on top of the former Millennium Dome in Greenwich on Monday afternoon.

Jon Bon Jovi

Jon Bon Jovi and his band members perform on the roof of the O2 Arena in Greenwich, London to kick off their 12 night residency at the O2

The rooftop gig was seen more clearly by fans though on HD screens that were set up at Peninsula Square.

Climbing onto the top of the arena proved to be quite a challenge though and the musicians were helped by trained mountaineers in their quest to reach the summit.

Jon Bon Jovi Jon Bon Jovi climbed onto the roof of London's O2 Arena with the help of trained mountaineers to perform with his band

The extravagant set was to mark the beginning of their residency at the O2, where they opened the venue in 2007.

And Bon Jovi’s concerts will be supported by an unsigned band from the Highlands, who won a competition to play ahead of the US rockers.

Jon Bon Jovi Jon Bon Jovi

Luckily the band missed the rain and played on an overcast summer's day in London

The Side will play their first supporting act on Tuesday night after being selected from a shortlist of entries in the contest.

Guitarist Hugh Winton, drummer John Ross, keyboards player George Campbell and bass guitarist Ryan Golder, were chosen by Bon Jovi’s band and its management.

Jon Bon Jovi Jon Bon Jovi's performance was shown live on Sky News in HD on Monday afternoon

Despite the excitement of touring, Bon Jovi said before his rooftop show that he hates being away from his family.

‘It’s horrible when you are away touring, it’s terrible – you are away from everyone and it can be for long periods, but so are travelling salesmen and soldiers’, he told the Daily Mirror.

Jon Bon Jovi Jon Bon Jovi rocks out on his guitar on the roof top of London's O2 Arena

[ via Dailymail ]

Assam's Women Weavers Walk Out of Vulnerability With Ex-Supermodel

Guwahati, Jun 8 : Internationally renowned fashion designer and former supermodel Bibi Russell has joined hands with the ethnic Bodo women of Assam in creating a new line of lifestyle products that will blend traditional Bodo culture and high fashion.

Bibi Russell, who was associated with leading international brands and fashion shows in the 1970s and 80s, will train Bodo women working for Weaving Destination in modern design techniques and a range of skills that will help them market their products as a premium label.

Bodo women working with Weaving Destination include those living with HIV, survivors of human trafficking and female migrant returnees who are highly vulnerable to getting re-trafficked and social exclusion.
bibi-russell
They produce a range of hand-woven products such as garments, scarves and hand-woven fabric for both individual and industrial use that preserve traditional Bodo motifs and weaving techniques.

Weaving Destination is part of Women and Wealth Project, a regional social enterprise led by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Population and Community Development Association (PDA) of Thailand, aimed at the socio-economic empowerment of women living with HIV. wo groups of women in India and one group in Cambodia are part of this initiative.

"Women need support to develop skills that will help them to be economically independent and socially confident. What they need is self esteem, human dignity and empowerment for better livelihoods and sustainable income. This is what I am committed to," said Bibi, who is also a UNAIDS goodwill ambassador and the founder of Fashion for Development. Bibi is currently working with the Bodo women of Weaving Destination for a fortnight at their production campus in Bodoland.

"Beyond economic empowerment, the Women and Wealth Project in Assam provides a space for psycho-social support that helps women to collectively cope with the indignities and discrimination they face at home and in society as trafficked survivors and HIV positive women," said Patrice Coeur-Bizot, the UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in India.
The experience in Cambodia and India shows that besides economic gains, this endeavour has helped women living with HIV gain better social acceptance, confidence, peer support, treatment-adherence and tremendous goodwill. "It is an important process of collaboration between developing countries and learning among community organizations that is making a difference in the lives of vulnerable women in Assam," he added.

Chaya, a staff member of Weaving Destination, said: "I joined Weaving Destination production campus in 2009 and since then I have been supporting my family back home. Today, I am very confident of leading an independent and dignified life and have been able to inspire other women as well. I live in the Weaving Destination production campus along with other friends."

The Women and Wealth Project for the socioeconomic empowerment of women living with HIV was initiated in 2006 by UNDP in coordination with Thailand's Population and Community Development Association.

The project enables groups of HIV-positive women to develop small business enterprises, which cultivate lasting economic and social growth for the women and their families and concurrently reduce HIV-associated stigma and discrimination at the community-level.

This project currently operates in Cambodia and in two locations in India, where participants were drawn from local networks of people living with HIV.

The project's first stage focused on establishing a sustainable, revenue-generating business among each women's group.

As the businesses expanded their services and marketing activities, they were unified under a common "WE" brand, which stands for "Women Empowered," and "WE can make it together" - that caters to the international market.

In the project's second stage, each business will implement its own microfinance scheme based on PDA's Positive Partnership Programme (PPP), which is recognized by the UNAIDS Best Practice Collection.

This model is designed specifically for people living with HIV to attain economic self-sufficiency and social inclusion through small loans.

As the center of each programme, the businesses under this initiative will create opportunities for larger networks of women living with HIV to improve their economic and social livelihoods.
Since its inception in 2009, Weaving Destination produces hand-woven silk and cotton products from traditional Bodo patterns.

Established in the post-conflict Bodoland Territorial Council in Assam, India, Weaving Destination empowers vulnerable indigenous women. The staff of more than 40 women includes HIV-positive women, survivors of human trafficking and female migrant returnees who are highly vulnerable to re-trafficking, social exclusion, and impoverishment.

Weaving Destination benefits from indigenous Bodo women's proficiency in weaving to produce silk scarves, handicrafts and cotton fabrics for commercial use. The business preserves traditional Bodo motifs and weaving techniques, while also designing products to suit national and international markets.

Using profits from product sales, Weaving Destination operates a vocational training centre that will build capacity among indigenous young women who are highly vulnerable to trafficking.

In this way, the business not only generates direct economic and social opportunities for its staff but also strives to support larger groups of women in need.

Weaving Destination also facilitates access to HIV medicines for HIV-positive mothers who live in remote villages. (ANI)