18 October 2010

100 Yr Old Indian Freedom Fighter Pursues PhD

Guwahati, Oct 18 : Indian freedom fighter Bholaram Das marked his 100th birthday this weekend by announcing he was going back to school.

Das has enrolled in a PhD program at Gauhati University in Assam - making him perhaps the oldest university student in this country of 1 billion.

"In my 100 years, I have done many things in the sphere of society, politics, governance and religion," said Das, dressed in a suit, tie and white Gandhi cap at his birthday celebration Saturday.

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"I thought I must work towards a PhD that could satisfy my hunger for learning."

Das was 19 when he was jailed for participating in a 1930 protest against British rule. He spent two months doing hard labor and went on to study commerce and law.

In 1945, he joined the Congress Party that led India's drive for independence, achieved in 1947.

Das worked as a teacher, a lawyer, a magistrate and a district court judge

before retiring in 1971. With his wife Mandakini, he had five sons and a daughter.

For his doctorate, Das plans to study a subject close to his heart - how his native Bohori village helped in the spread of neo-Vaishnavism, a liberal and monotheistic stream of the Hindu religion credited with breaking down social divisions in Assam, one of India's easternmost states.

The centenarian said he wanted to pursue his interest and belief in the religion's philosophies of one God and humanism.

"It is indeed rare to find a student who is 100 year old," said the university's vice chancellor, O. K. Medhi.

"We are thrilled because Das can be an inspiration for the youth with his formidable spirit and dedication to public service."

Das, who now has 10 grandchildren and a great-grandchild, is being advised in his studies by one of his granddaughters, a university professor, and other family members.

His wife died in 1988."It amazes me that, 40 years after retiring from service, my grandfather is still mentally strong and wants to do new things," said grandson Abhinab Das, an engineer.

"This is indeed inspiring for all of us in the family."

Hill Queen Express Train Service Resumes

Hill Queen Express train Silchar, Oct 18 : The Hill Queen Express resumed its normal service between Lumding and Haflong from today after restoration of most critical breach site in between Migrendisa and Muhur stations on Lumding-Silchar section of Northeast Frontier Railway.

NF Railway sources said the route was restored on war footing during the festive season after heavy landslide washed out 40 metre area of the line on the night of October eight.

However, services of other trains, including Agartala-Lumding Express, Barak Valley Express and Cachar Express, are yet to be restored as a number of other landslide areas between Silchar and Haflong portion are yet to be cleared.

Lumding-Silchar section of NF Railway experienced the worst ever intensity of landslide as soil, tress, boulders and mud came down the Barail Hill in as many as 28 places in Dima Hasao district last week.

The worst was between Mahur and Migendisa stations where 40- mt-long stretch of the railway line was completely washed away by the heavy landslide leaving the track hanging in the air. NF Railway sources said hundreds of workers and engineers were engaged in removing the debris on war footing.

NF Railway Divisional Railway Manager (Lumding) Ajit Pandit had rushed to the place to monitor the situation. Authorities had cancelled services of all the trains in this section until further orders.

The landslide had triggered fresh blow to the people of southern Assam, Tripura, Mizoram and Manipur during the festive season.

The rail route connecting both Silchar and Agartala with rest of the country was closed for railway traffic for long three months since June 16 this year after a 300-mt stretch between Harangajao and Maliongdisa was washed by heavy landslide that came down the Barail Hills.

Nagaland Fashion Week Photos

The first ever Nagaland Fashion Week (NFW) with the theme “Re-Defining Style” enters day 2 with 6 Designers at Urban Haat, Dimapur, India.
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Bru Organisation Insists on MoU Before Repatriation

bru villagers Agartala/Aizawl, Oct 18 : Repatriation of the 37,000 Bru refugees from neighbouring Mizoram sheltered in six camps in North Tripura district has run into rough weather with an ethnic organisation stating that they would not return home unless a MoU was signed.

"Unless a MoU is signed by the Mizoram government with representatives of the displaced Brus, they will not return to Mizoram," a Bru Displaced Welfare Organisation (BDWO) statement said in Agartala.

"Our sincere request to the Government of Mizoram is that it reassure the rights and dignity of the Bru people, restore peace and harmony and start the process of dialogue that would lead to a permanent solution," BDWO General Secretary John Lalnuntluanga and President, Azawmdarai said in the statement.

The statement alleged that the Mizoram government was preparing to repatriate the Bru refugees to Mamit, Kolasib, and Lunglei districts, but the BDWO wanted that they be repatriated to Mamit district only.

The organisation said that they would launch an indefinite hunger-strike and sit-in at Aizawl and Delhi.

However, they did not fix any date for it.

Meanwhile, the Repatriation Implementation Committee (RIC), a Bru organisation recently formed in the Naisngpara relief camp in North Tripura''s Kanchanpur subdivision, said that the refugees supported the proposal of the Central, Tripura and Mizoram governments to repatriate all refugees from Tripura.

In a press statement e-mailed to PTI in Aizawl, RIC president Lallawma and secretary C Nunsiama said that they had full faith in the leadership of Elvis Chorkhy, president of the Mizoram Bru Displaced People''s Forum (MBDPF).

Reacting to the BDWO''s recent press statement, the RIC claimed that some elements in the community were trying to create problems for the refugees by spreading lies.

The RIC statement appealed to all refugees to await the decisions of the government and the Bru leaders coordinating with the Mizoram government.

"We, the people, must not be influenced by some misguided elements who are out to create trouble and derail the repatriation process," the statement said.

The Brus are sheltered in the camps in Tripura since 1997 following ethnic clashes with Mizos in their home state.

Myanmar Refuses to Invite Foreign Election Observers

myanmar elections Naypyitawn (Myanmar), Oct 18 : Myanmar will not allow foreign observers to monitor campaigning prior to general elections Nov 7, although foreign residents will be allowed to watch voting on polling day, the officials said Monday.

"On election day, diplomats and UN agencies will be invited to poll booths and witness voting, therefore they can represent observers for their respective countries," Thein Soe, chairman of the Union Election Commission, said in Naypyitaw, the capital since 2004.

"Therefore, it was not necessary to invite other foreign observers," he said.

Military-run Myanmar will hold its first general election in 20 years for the upper, lower and regional houses of parliament.

"The forthcoming election will be free and fair and in line with the international standards and norms," Thein Soe said.

Some observers have questioned the poll's standards, as the main opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), and its leader Aung San Suu Kyi are excluded.

Election regulations passed by the junta earlier this year would have forced the NLD to drop Suu Kyi as a party member if it wished to register.

Under the rules, detainees and people serving prison terms were barred from party membership. Instead the NLD chose to boycott the polls. Nobel peace laureate Suu Kyi is serving an 18-month sentence under house arrest that is due to expire Nov 13.

"If you do not vote, you may lose your citizen's right," Thein Soe warned.

More than 40 million people will be eligible to vote at some 40,000 polling stations for 37 parties and 3,071 candidates, including 114 women and 82 independents, the commission said.

The NLD won the last general election, in 1990, but the military refused to acknowledge the vote and blocked it from assuming power.

Analysts believe the pro-junta Union Solidarity and Development Party, with more candidates and money than its rivals, will win the most seats.

Pentagon Braces For Fresh Wikileaks Disclosure

Washington, Oct 18 : The Pentagon is bracing itself for a second grand disclosure by Wikileaks on Monday, touted to be the largest security breach of its kind in US military history.

The online whistle blower website is expected to release a whopping 40 thousand documents on the Iraq war — five times the size of the Afghan document dump.

This disclosure happens to be four times the number of classified documents released on the Afghan war in July.

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That move had triggered widespread condemnation because of fears that it endangered the lives of hundreds of American soldiers serving that country.

The US has urged WikiLeaks to return the information, arguing that it poses a risk to national security.

Measured by size, the database will dwarf the 92,000-entry Afghan war log WikiLeaks partially published last July. “It will be huge,” says a source familiar with WikiLeaks’ operations, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Former WikiLeaks staffers say the document dump was at one time scheduled for Monday, though the publication date may well have been moved since then. Some large media outlets were provided an embargoed copy of the database in August.

In Washington, the Pentagon is bracing for the impact. The Defense Department believes the leak is a compilation of the “Significant Activities,” or SIGACTS, reports from the Iraq War, and officials have assembled a 120-person task-force that’s been scouring the database to prepare for the leak, according to spokesman Col. Dave Lapan.

The Kukis And The SoO: The Road Ahead

By Ngamjahao Kipgen & Th. Hethang George Haokip

Kuki SOO The historic tripartite SoO (Suspension of Operations) that was signed between the Government of India, state Government (Manipur) and the Kuki revolutionary groups under the umbrella of a common bilateral platform called the UPF (United People’s Front) and the KNO (Kuki National Organisation) in New Delhi on 22nd August 2008 under a certain set of ground rules was represented and inked  by D.S. Poonia, Principal Secretary (Home)  and  Naveen Varma, Jt. Secretary (North-East), Ministry of Home Affairs on behalf of the state and central Government respectively.  

Also, to safeguard/oversee the implementation of the SoO, a committee called Joint Monitoring Group (JMG) was formed amongst the signatories and it is headed by the Principal Secretary (Home), Government of Manipur, and includes members like Inspector General of Police (Intelligence) of the concerned state; Department of Home Ministries; CPO’s, Army, and the UG groups. They convened a meeting/meet at least once in a month, though the agreement binds upon for a period of one year.

Yet, it can be and has been extended from time to time through mutual agreement until today and that there will soon be a discussion on its further extension. In analyzing the terms of the agreement, the Security Forces viz., the Army, Para-military Forces and the State police were not to launch any operations, neither could the UG groups were allowed to undertake offensive operations either by violent or non violent acts.

Some of the important ground rules, set for the Suspension of Operations (SoO), signed between the Government of India (GOI), the State (Manipur) Government and the Kuki insurgent groups included the following given points:

(i) The constituents of UPF and KNO will abide by the constitutions of India, the laws of the land and the territorial integrity of Manipur, (ii) They are barred from committing all kinds of atrocities and extortions, (iii) Construction of designated camps, depositing of arms under a double locking system and financial assistance for the UGs, and (iv) Submission of the list and recent photographs of all cadres along with their bio-data. In pursuance to this, all cadres will be issued Identity Cards etc.

The most controversial and debated agenda on the set ground rules that arose during the course of signing the SoO was ‘Maintaining Territorial Integrity of Manipur’. Many voices has been raised and discussed as the signing of the SoO involved abandoning their dream of Kukiland or Zalengam. However, Kuki Revolutionary groups under the umbrella of KNO and the UPF, in spite of the set ground rules on Territorial Integrity of Manipur, has signed the document by upholding a different perspectives. Some of the viewpoints are analyzed as under:

First, the (Kuki insurgents and hereafter we will refer them as ‘they’) are of the view that the state/Manipur government has nothing to loose or gain once the political dialogue got under way. Aaron, the Secretary General of the KNF in this regard has stated, “the hill areas of Manipur are not under the ambit of the state government and that there is a specific location for establishing Kukiland within an outlined map” (TSE).

Second, they are of the opinion that prior to the British incursion on Kuki inhabited areas; the Kukis were living independently in their ancestral land, called Zale’n-gam or Kukiland. PS Haokip in his article “the Zale’n-gam and Kangleipak Equation” (www.kukination.net) has put forth that Kangleipak/Imphal valley (Manipur) which comprises of 10 percent of the present state of Manipur and Zale’n-gam (Kukiland) were in peaceful co-existence. They also claim to have begun asserting for the restoration of their ancestral land since 1917 [Kuki Rebellion, 1917-1919]. With this aim in view, the Kuki Insurgent groups’ were keen to sign the accord despite knowing the fact that the ground rules under SoO includes maintaining the territorial integrity of Manipur.  Rather, they propagated that maintaining territorial integrity of Manipur has been the desire and aspiration of the Kukis since the very beginning of their movement.

Third, they are also of the opinion that, Kangleipak (Manipur) and Zale’n-gam (Kukiland) were in peaceful co-existence with mutual respect for territorial integrity and that the inhabitants vis-à-vis the Meiteis and the Kukis were living peacefully in their own respective territories without any interference in each other’s internal affairs. This may be well visualized from the events that have occurred in 1891 (Khongjom war) & 1917–1919 (Kuki war of Independence) in which the Meitei-land (Kangleipak/Manipur) and Zale’n-gam /Kukiland were subjugated and conquered successively i.e., one after another.

Fourth, they also vehemently assert that the ‘Kuki Nation’ which has a distinct ethnic and socio-cultural identity, has every right to self-determination, i.e. the freedom to decide their own future, and that would be possible only when political autonomy (self-governance) is granted to them within the fabric of the Indian Constitution.

Consequently, so far, ever since the implementation of the SoO there no such major differences from both government (SFs) and the Kuki insurgents till today. Though there have been some instances of misunderstanding on violation of ground rules; the killing of four cadres of KNO/KLA at Mongkot Chepu village by the personnel of 12 Maratha Light Infantry on the evening of September 7, 2009 is one such instance. Significantly, the rate of extortion, ransom, kidnapping, encounter, casualties and so on which often makes daily headlines in all local news papers has decline considerably. The Kukis yearn for peace and lasting solution can further be seen from the recent developments as mentioned in the agreed ground rules. Construction of designated camps like, Camp Ebenezer, Gamnom camp, Muvanlai camp, Camp Sinai, Nazareth camp and so on are completed and inaugurated. Indian Home Secretary, G.K Pillai, had visited the designated camp of the Kuki National Front’s (KNF) “Ebenezer Peace Camp” much before it was officially inaugurated. Even the Deposition of arms under a double locking system has also been on the move (process).

Stage being set for political dialogue
The Kuki insurgency movement has started right from the late 80s. Since then the journey has begin with despondency and many revolutionaries have sacrifice/lay down their precious lives with a ‘Hope’. And today that is emerging with concrete hope towards the future – from ideal to objectivity.

A lot has been said and written as to whether the SoO would materialize or remains an enigma ever since it has been signed. For instance, there has been skepticism on the part of the center and state governments’. Commander of 59 Mountain Brigade Brig Anil Chauhan while speaking at the inaugural function of the administrative block of a designated camp built for KNF at Natheljang said that the tripartite Suspension of Operation (SoO) pact signed between the Central Government, the State Government and Kuki militant groups is now in transitory phase and no political dialogue has been initiated as yet. (TSE 28th Nov. 2009). After much hiccups, hopes and yearning of the Kuki people, the much-awaited political dialogue is on the track as most of the SoO signatories have deposited their arms. All these development have signals the beginning of a new era of bright hope for the Kukis.

The Kuki national organization (KNF), one of the oldest organizations of the Kuki armed groups took the initiative of being the first one to deposit their arms at their designated camp, EBENEZER at Natheljang, in the Koubru range of Sadar Hills. The General Secretary of the KNF maintained the fact that cadres were able to settle at one place and open a peace camp after over 23 years of struggle, which is considered a positive political step of the Kuki people. They also further appeal to all SoO signatories to do the same so that a political dialogue could be held at the earliest point of time.

Similarly, Calvin H, secretary of ZRO’s ministry of external affairs in his speech on the inauguration of ‘Camp Muvanlai’ remarked that their gesture is made as a confidence building measure to signify their commitment to a durable and honorable political solution and to re-affirm that it believes in the goodwill and sincerity of the Government in taking forward their legitimate demands for political autonomy. He further asserts that as we have shown that we wish to settle our political desires through peaceful means we expect reciprocal moves from the government in the form of political dialogue.

As it has been highlighted, the main purpose of SoO is to engage in political dialogue to find a political settlement for the Kukis within the Constitution of India. The Kuki peoples’ political aspirations and constitutional rights could be realised only with the creation of an autonomous state within the framework of the Indian constitution. With this hope, today, the initiative taken by the Kuki insurgents has signaled their readiness for an early peaceful political dialogue.

Considering the recent positive development after the signing of SoO, the Kuki groups have reaffirmed their respect for democratic principles of the Indian constitution. Their efforts and interests have entered into a new stage. This is definitely a breakthrough. It is also hopeful that once the dialogue begins the Government of India will show their commitment and sincerity to the democratic principles of the rule of law and good governance.

**Authors can be reached via-email: nkipgen@gmail.com/ &hethangmu@gmail.com

Assam Farmers Protest Arunachal Mega Dam Project

A 2009 file photo of the country's largest hydel project - the NHPC’s 2,000 MW Subansiri Lower project in Arunachal Pradesh. The total cost for the project is estimated at Rs 7000 crore. The Subhansiri Lower project in Arunachal Pradesh was originally scheduled to be completed by the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC) in September 2010 but the company now expects to commission it only by December 2012. It is situated on the Assam-Arunachal Pradesh border.

A photo of the country's largest hydel project - the NHPC’s 2,000 MW Subansiri Lower project in Arunachal Pradesh. The total cost for the project is estimated at Rs 7000 crore. The Subhansiri Lower project in Arunachal Pradesh was originally scheduled to be completed by the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC) in September 2010 but the company now expects to commission it only by December 2012. It is situated on the Assam-Arunachal Pradesh border.

Guwahati, Oct 18 : Effigies of Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorji Khandu were burnt in Assam by the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti volunteers protesting his alleged “pressure” on the Centre to carry on the proposed mega dams in his state.

The farmers on Friday burnt Khandu’s effigies in front of the Secretariat here at Dispur and in different districts forcing the police to arrest several protestors across the state, official sources said. The demonstrators with banners and placards also shouted slogans accusing Khandu and his MLAs and MPs of putting pressure on the Centre.

According to KMSS general secretary Akhil Gogoi, following a recent public hearing in Guwahati on the issue, Union Environment minister Jairam Ramesh had written a letter to the PM urging a review of the mega dam project in the N-E region and a moratorium on further clearances for hydel projects in Arunachal Pradesh, saying these were bound to be the subject of agitation in Assam..

Khandu had submitted a memorandum to Singh appealing that the decision for construction of mega dams in Arunachal should not be revoked, Gogoi asserted.

Sending a memorandum to the PM for revoking the decision for mega dams there, he threatened to launch an economic blockade against the neighbouring state and also stop the transmission line of the Lower Subansiri Hydel Project.

The KMSS also threatened to observe November and December as ‘Brihat Nadibandh Birodhi Andolonor Mah’ (protest months against mega dams) if Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi failed to clarify his stand on the issue by Monday.

The Arunachal dams have evoked protests from other quarters also with prominent Assam intellectuals, including Gnyanpeeth awardee Indira Goswami and Sahitya Akademi honour recipient Prof Hiren Gohain, calling for their review. The intellectuals on Tuesday had appealed to the Prime Minister to review the government decision predicting that they would have enormous downstream impact on their state.

In a memorandum to Singh, the intellectuals and academics asserted that the Lower Subansiri Hydel Dam construction was started with the most “perfunctory environmental impact assessment and its viability from seismological point of view was decided on an old 1983 report.”

Meanwhile, according to sources, a delegation from Arunachal Pradesh is said to have met External Affairs Minister S M Krishna to protest Jairma Ramesh’s stand. The delegation led by Lok Sabha member Takam Sanjoy called on Mr Krishna in New Delhi and sought his intervention warning about the impact on Arunachal Pradesh if development and exploitation of its natural resources was halted.