14 June 2010

Broad Gauge Rail From Assam's Lumding to Agartala by 2012

http://www.agricultureinformation.com/mag/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/indian-railways.jpgAgartala, Jun 14 : The much-awaited conversion of railway track from meter gauge to broad gauge from Assam's Lumding to Agartala is expected to be completed by 2012, the government said today.

Replying to a notice initiated by CPI(M) MLA Manindra Chandra Das, transport minister Manik Dey said that it is likely to be completed by 2012.

"During a review meeting between Chief Minister Manik Sarkar with the General Manager of Northeast Frontier Railway (NFR) on February 10, the later said that the ongoing work from Lumding to Badarpur was progressing satisfactorily and the conversion work from Lumding to Agartala is expected to be completed by 2012."

The conversion work on the 394 km rail track from Lumding to Agartala was started in 1996 but has not made much progress due to militancy in North Cachhar Hills, Dey said adding that with the decline of insurgency in the area, work is progressing fast.

The minister further said that the state government had requested the NFR authorities to seek Assam government's help to provide more security in the area to expedite the conversion work.

De said, only three months would be needed to convert the railway track from narrow or meter gauge to broad gauge from Kumarghat to Agartala (110 km) because during the laying of rail lines, provisions were kept for swiftly converting it to broad gauge.

Naga Students Federation to Call off Blockade in Manipur

http://www.ndtv.com/news/images/manipur216.jpgNew Delhi, Jun 14 : The Naga Students Federation (NSF) Monday said after meeting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh here that it planned to call off the two-month long economic blockade of Manipur "temporarily".

"We met the prime minister this morning and he assured us that he will look into the matter and asked us to call off the blockade. Therefore, we have decided to temporarily suspend the blockade after consultations with senior members in Kohima," NSF's Samuel told reporters here.

The delegation was led by NSF president Mutsikhoyo Yhobu.

The central government Monday said paramilitary troopers would be used to break the blockade enforced by Nagas in Manipur to ensure that supplies of essentials enter Manipur, now facing an acute shortage of food and drugs.

Several Naga groups called an indefinite blockade of National Highway 39, Manipur's main lifeline, April 11 to protest against the decision of the state government not to allow Naga separatist leader Thuingaleng Muivah to visit his birthplace.

The Manipur government had banned 75-year-old Muivah's trip to his home village, saying it could stoke unrest.

Samuel said: "The Manipur government, instead of resolving the crisis and addressing the matter, issued arrest warrants against our student leaders and human rights activists which compelled us to continue our fight.

"Therefore what we are demanding now - and what we have put forth to the prime minister too - is to take back those warrants and immediately withdraw the Manipur security forces from the Naga areas in Manipur," he added.

Indian Fan Waiting to Celebrate German Win

Guwahati, Jun 14 : Germany had an unlikely supporter cheering on its 4-0 thrashing of Australia in their World Cup opener Saturday.
For 16 years, Indian businessman Putul Bora has kept a bottle of whisky buried in his garden waiting for his favorite football team  Germany  to lift the World Cup trophy.
For Bora, who owns a grocery store in the remote town of Diphu in eastern Assam state, his passion for the German team started when he traveled to watch a television broadcast of West Germany and Argentina in the 1986 final.
"I drove several kilometers to watch the matches in 1986 as there was no television connectivity in Diphu. I decided to support the team that would be down by a goal in the final match. The team happened to be Germany."
The day after Germany lost to Bulgaria in 1994 quarterfinals, Bora bought a bottle of Scotch whisky for 650 rupees ($15).
"I got the bottle of whisky back home and buried it in our courtyard. No one knows about this, not even my wife," he said.
And while Bora's whisky ages as he waits for another German World Cup title, he checks on his bottle regularly to make sure it's still buried safely.
Bora stopped drinking alcohol in 2002, but says he'll be ready to celebrate with a drink if Germany lifts the trophy.
"I shall resume drinking only when Germany lifts the Cup. No one can lure me to consume alcohol before that," he said.
Every evening scores of mostly friends and relatives make their way to the 42-year-old's tin-roofed house to watch the World Cup matches on television.
"Every World Cup has been a festival for me and my family," he said.
"I have been a loyal Germany fan since I first watched the soccer World Cup matches on television in 1986. My team lost, but won the championship in 1990."

[ via Associated Press ]

Ready-to-Eat Rice From Assam to Fix Food Woes?

By Zia Haq

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiaFfx1t3IxK59N3dkpHvFIw1V_Qf5Mtice0PmbYaV_snCbq9ZYI72kq6dHoUhBfsEREEmbxWDpaLRbWodV2jL7ZMZ6TGK7YY0O6Bvw8DNivxmajXipnz6uB8eXrUBGUSUXfgCos-grmYfH/s400/rice+and+potato+fry.jpgThis is even better than a ready-to-eat meal.

A rice variety that requires no cooking has been pulled out of obscurity in Assam — where it was developed 18 years ago — and it promises to do a lot more than cut down on your cooking chores.

The government hopes it will aid India’s growing food security needs and cut cooking fuel costs since it doesn’t require cooking.

The rice type — agonibora — was developed in 1992 by scientists at Titabor Rice Research Station in Assam, from an existing Assamese variety called “kumal chaul” or soft rice.

“It has very low amylose content, which makes this rice very soft. It can be had after soaking in plain water for 20 minutes,” said T.K. Adhya, chief of the Cuttack-based Central Rice Research Institute (CRRI).

Asked by the government to bring this rice variety out of Assam, the CRRI will this summer produce enough seeds so that they can be taken to major rice-growing states.

“Somehow, due to oversight, nobody knew of it. We are currently multiplying its seeds so we can get a threshold quantity this year for distribution,” Adhya told HT.

Rice is almost entirely made of up starch, which determines it hardness. Amylose is one kind of rice starch.

“Initially, we plan to grow the variety in compatible areas of Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar and Orissa,” Adhya said.

India has 44 million hectares of land under rice cultivation. According to the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organisation, rice is the staple of 65% of Indians. Government figures put the country’s rice production in 2009-10 at 89.31 million tonnes.

NSF Leaders Meet Chidambaram, Center To Send Troopers To Manipur

NEWSMAKERS
Kohima, Jun 14 : A delegation of Naga Students’ Federation (NSF) met Union Home Minister P Chidambaram in New Delhi and requested him to direct Manipur to withdraw forces from Naga-inhabited areas.

The NSF delegation, led by its president Mutsikhoyo Yhobu, on Friday urged Chidambaram to issue necessary directives to the Manipur Government to immediately withdraw the Manipur Armed Police personnel from the Naga-inhabited areas of the neighbouring State and revoke the arrest warrants issued against some Naga leaders.

While apprising the Union Minister about the prevailing situation, the student leaders put the onus on the Government of Manipur and the Centre to solve the problem.

Chidambaram asked them to lift the restriction of movement of Manipur registration vehicles as early as possible, Federation leaders said, adding the Union Home Minister assured the delegation that he was personally monitoring the situation and would do whatever was necessary to resolve the present crisis.

NSF imposed an indefinite blockade of Manipur-bound vehicles in Naga-inhabited areas on May 4 after Manipur police personnel denied entry to a group of student leaders the previous day at the inter-State Mao Gate.

It demanded an apology from Manipur Chief Minister Ibobi Singh and revoking of Section 144 of CrPC and armed police forces from Naga areas of Manipur.

The student leaders also called on BJP leader Sushma Swaraj, who also appealed to the Federation to consider calling off the ongoing agitation, sources said.

After receiving ‘a letter of regret’ from Manipur Chief Secretary, the NSF had recently hinted that it might consider relaxing the blockade in a short period since many organisations have appealed to call off the agitation.

The Manipur Government had issued arrest warrants against the presidents of the All Naga Students’ Association Manipur and United Naga Council, Manipur for imposing indefinite economic blockade on two National Highways connecting the State for past two months, resulting in an acute shortage of essentials.

Centre to send troops to Manipur


New Delhi: Paramilitary forces will be deployed from Tuesday onwards to end the 65-day economic blockade of Manipur by Naga tribal groups that has led to acute shortages of food and medicines, says Home Secretary G.K. Pillai.

'We will move the forces to lift the blockade,' Pillai said as supplies of essentials to the northeastern state remained cut off for more than two months.

Pillai said central forces would be deployed all along National Highway 39 from Assam to Manipur to lift the blockade that has triggered a humanitarian crisis in the state.

Several Naga groups had April 11 called an indefinite blockade of National Highway 39, Manipur's main lifeline, to protest the decision of the state government not to allow separatist leader Thuingaleng Muivah to visit his birthplace in Manipur.

The Manipur government banned 75-year-old Muivah's trip to his home village, saying it could stoke unrest.

The non-stop blockade has led to an acute food crisis in Manipur with trucks carrying essentials and medicines stranded in the adjoining state of Nagaland as protestors lay siege on the highway.


Landlocked Manipur depends on supplies from outside the region with trucks from the rest of India carrying essentials passing through Nagaland.

Flood Situation in Barak Valley Improves

http://photogallery.maharashtratimes.indiatimes.com/photo.cms?photoid=3447086Silchar, Jun 14 : In Assam, the overall flood situation in Barak Valley has further improved today. Water levels in Barak, the second largest river of the Northeast and other rivers of the valley are falling.

According to Central Water Commission, Barak is flowing about 50 centi-metres below the danger level at Silchar this morning. However, Kushiara is still flowing about one metre above the danger level at Karimganj with falling trend.

AIR Silchar correspondent reports that people who had taken shelter in relief camps and other safer places have started returning homes.

Normal life is limping back gradually in the flood affected areas of the valley. In some parts of the valley, those people who took shelter in educational institutions and other government buildings have started returning to their homes.

Train service between Silchar and Lumding in the Hill section of North East Frontier Railway has also been resumed after remaining suspended for a few days following damage of a railway bridge due to heavy rains.

Meanwhile, the Assam Revenue and disaster management Minister, Dr Bhumidhar Barman is visiting today Silchar for an on spot assessment of flood situation of the valley.

Tibet's Watershed Challenge

By Uttam Kumar Sinha

http://shipbright.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/brahmaputrarivermap.pngWhile Tibet raises a number of controversial questions, one dimension will assume increasing political significance: its water resources.

The Tibetan Plateau, known to many as the "Third Pole," is an enormous storehouse of freshwater, believed by some to be the world's largest. It is the headwaters of many of Asia's mighty rivers, including the Yellow, Yangtze, Mekong, Salween, Brahmaputra, Indus and Sutlej.

These vast water resources are of course vulnerable to environmental challenges, including climate change, but they are subject to an array of political issues as well.

Should China be the lone stakeholder to the fate of the waters in Tibet? What happens in the downstream nations that depend heavily on these rivers?

China has exploited all but two rivers from the Tibetan Plateau; an exception is the Nujiang River, which flows through Yunnan province and enters Burma, where it is known as the Salween.

China's north-south diversion plans on the Yarlung Zangbo (known in India as Brahamaputra), the other untouched river, are bound to worry India, a downstream state.

China's rise in recent years has been displayed in military capability, economic pace and, now, water diversions. By 2030, China is expected to fall short of its water demands by 25 percent. Its increasingly aggressive hydro behavior is intended to secure its massive water requirements in its northern and western regions.

But control over such a valuable natural resource gives Beijing enormous strategic latitude with its neighbors; when one of those countries is a rival, such as India, it becomes an effective bargaining tool and potential weapon.

Chinese nationalism is based on its aspiration of great-power status and its historic territorial claims. Such claims, for example, over Tibet and Arunachal Pradesh, a state in northeast India, are being driven by China's water needs. Mao Zedong observed in 1952, "The south has a lot of water, the north little. . . .

If possible, it is ok to lend a little water." China is looking to exploit the water resources of Tibet and its hardening position on Arunachal -- Beijing considers the northeast Indian state part of its territory and made frequent military forays there this year -- is not merely rhetoric.

In laying claims to Arunachal, it is claiming almost 200 million cubic feet per second of water resources in the state.

China, well-accustomed to brinkmanship, is likely to maintain a strategic silence on its river diversion plans, to keep downstream states guessing. (China denies any activity on the Yarlung Zangbo, but publicly reported satellite imagery shows otherwise.)

And with no legally binding international treaty on such water-sharing, there is nothing to stop China from manipulating river flows and increasing downstream dependency.

More than 2 billion people in South and Southeast Asia depend on the waters flowing out of Tibet. Building a lower riparian coalition of, say, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Burma, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam would help cement recognition of Tibet's water as a common resource. India has a diplomatic opportunity here and, given its downriver position, needs to take the initiative.

One plus is that India has experience dealing with river treaties. But Tibet's unresolved political status will affect any proposals on how to sustainably manage its water resources and ensure its rivers' natural flow are not disturbed by Chinese diversion plans.

China's moves to encroach on Tibet's water need to be countered by downriver solidarity that includes agreement on multipurpose beneficial use of these resources. Downriver states need to work through legal norms of equitable utilization, "no-harm" policies and restricted Chinese sovereignty over Tibet.

This pressure and international attention to defining such vital resources as common would go a long way toward preserving and sharing the waters of Tibet. While such redefinition is politically sensitive, as it clashes with national jurisdiction, it merits attention now given the current and future water requirements of South and Southeast Asia.

Collective political and diplomatic pressure over a sustained period will be needed to draw in China to regional arrangements on "reasonable share of water" and frame treaties accordingly.

The concerned downstream states need to raise the issue internationally while also supporting local Tibetans and Chinese environmental lobbies' efforts to highlight the rampant ecological destruction of Tibet brought by dams and artificial diversion plans.

A larger debate on basin resource management is needed; it is increasingly clear that rivers are not merely for water provisions but also have ecological functions.

One need only look at China's Yangtze and Yellow rivers, both unfit for human use, to understand how important it is to follow the laws of nature regarding Tibet's waters rather than force economic development.

**The writer is a research fellow at the nonpartisan Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses in New Delhi.

Assam Govt Talks Tough Against Corporal Punishment

Nine Assam School Kids Tortured

kids tortured Guwahati, Jun 14 : The Assam government Sunday warned of exemplary punishment to errant teachers for caning students after nine school kids were physically tortured by a drunken headmaster.

“We shall take stern action against teachers for indulging in corporal punishment in schools. No teacher should use the rod or the cane to beat students,” Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi told reporters.

He was reacting to an incident Saturday in Lakhimpur district in which nine Class 6 students were beaten up by Chandreswar Miri Baruah, headmaster of Gurudev Middle English School at Bordeori.

The headmaster is absconding. All the students were admitted to a hospital. The headmaster, allegedly inebriated, beat them as they failed to answer some questions in the class.

“The students came to the hospital with visible injuries on their bodies, clear marks of injuries due to caning,” said Atul Khound, a doctor who examined the students.

The education department has ordered an enquiry into the incident.

“We have asked for a thorough probe. If the headmaster is found guilty, he would face action,” said Loknath Sharma, the district elementary education officer.

“There were complaints against the headmaster on earlier occasions as well for coming to school drunk. He had given an undertaking not to repeat the same mistake,” Sharma said.

Last week, a Class 6 student became Assam’s first fatality to corporal punishment. The kid was tortured by two teachers for not completing his homework.

Mousam Raj Mahanta, 12, died at a hospital in Guwahati June 7. Doctors said his death was due to septic shock followed by multiple organ failure.

The incident took place at the Saraswati Siksha Niketan, an English medium school, at Mirza on the outskirts of Guwahati.

“We are not going to tolerate such action by any teachers in Assam. Very soon we are coming up with a regulatory authority for private schools,” the chief minister said.

The government in February this year drafted a tough legislation banning corporal punishment in schools with provisions for prosecuting errant teachers, including with termination from service.

The Assam Corporal Punishment for Educational Institutions (Prohibition) Bill is likely to become law next month.

The decision to introduce the bill follows a recent UNICEF study that gave Assam schools the dubious distinction of topping the list of Indian schools where corporal punishment and humiliation of students were rampant - 99.56 percent of students in Assam were victim of corporal punishment.

More recently, a Class 8 student in Guwahati attempted to commit suicide by jumping from the second floor of the building alleging he was humiliated for speaking in Assamese inside the school.

Once the bill becomes an act, a teacher could be prosecuted on a criminal charge, suspended from service, and even be sacked if he goes for corporal punishment.