24 October 2010

Former Mizoram CS Files Defamation Charges

Haukhum Hauzel Aizawl, Oct 24 : Former Mizoram Chief Secretary Haukhum Hauzel has filed a criminal defamation charges in a local court against a person who allegedly tarnished his professional record in an open letter in a local daily.

According to sources close to Mr Hauzel, one Lalhmingthanga, a resident of Chanmari in Aizawl, in an open letter, had alleged that the former did not have any appointment letter from the Ministry of Home Affairs when he became the chief secretary of Mizoram in 2005 because he was ''not qualified'' for the post.

Mr Lalhmingthanga, in the open letter published in 'Evening Post', an Aizawl-based vernacular daily, on August 24, 2010, alleged that Mr Hauzel was not entitled to the pay scale of additional secretary to the Government of India and was deemed ''unfit for a chief secretary by the MHA''.

In response to this open letter, Mr Hauzel had also demanded a public apology from the writer through the newspaper on September nine within ten days.

''One month has already passed after the expiry of the dateline on September 19. So, I do not have any choice than to go to the court to get justice,'' Mr Hauzel said today.

Dismissing the allegations, Mr Hauzel maintained that he got the post of additional secretary to the Government of India from September 8, 2004, and he was appointed as the chief secretary of Mizoram on September 20, 2005.

Mr Hauzel was presented by his lawyer C Lalramzauva. The charges were filed in the court of Chief Judicial Magistrate-cum-Senior Civil Judge R Vanlalchami yesterday.

Mary Kom Sure of a Podium Finish in Asian Games

M C MARY KOM Lucknow, Oct 24 : Boxer M.C. Mary Kom wants to win gold at the forthcoming Asian Games in China before she eyes the Olympic gold in 2012. "These two are on my mind and I am putting all my efforts towards achieving them," Mary Kom told HT here on Saturday. "It's not going to be easy for me at the Asian Games as

boxers from China, Thailand and Malaysia are pretty good. But I am sure of a podium finish," she said.

Mary Kom, who competes in the 51 kg category, said she was paying a lot of attention to her fitness.

"I have little time to prepare for the Games. I am concentrating on technique, planning and speed," said Mary.

The five-time world champion boxer admitted that defending the world title this year wasn't easy at all. "Coming back from motherhood to win the title was tough. People discouraged me, including my father, by saying that I should focus on raising my family. People laughed at me when I said I want to win another title. I took it as a challenge."

"The geoghraphical environment of Manipur inspires people of the area to opt for power sports. Sports is in our blood," she said.

Bangladesh Agrees to Give India Access to Chittagong, Mongla Ports

chittagong-port bangladesh New Delhi, Oct 24 : Bangladesh has agreed to give India access to its Chittagong and Mongla ports. This move will help in enhancing the economic engagement and trade between Bangladesh and the entire eastern and north-eastern India.

“Bangladesh has responded positively to India's request for accessing these ports,” the Commerce and Industry Minister, Mr Anand Sharma, told presspersons here after holding talks with his Bangladeshi counterpart, Mr Muhammad Faruk Khan.

This will also increase investment and joint ventures between the east and North-East India and Bangladesh, Mr Sharma said.

Mr Khan said: “This has been decided between the Governments that Bangladesh will give access. But once the discussions are over, this will be done, of course.” Earlier since Bangladesh was not giving access, India was building an alternative multi-modal route from Mizoram to Myanmar through the river Kaladan. In this regard, India was helping Myanmar develop Sittwe port. The two sides also signed an MoU for establishing Haats along the Meghalaya-Bangladesh border.

In the power sector, India and Bangladesh have already signed the $1-billion Line of Credit, the Bulk Power Transmission Agreement and an MoU between NTPC and Bangladesh Power Development Board.

Mr Sharma said India was currently constructing seven Integrated Check Posts and eight Land Custom Stations under a $125-million ASIDE scheme.

The two sides are also in discussion to construct the bridge across the Feni to begin trade between Sabroom and Ramgarh.

India and Bangladesh have also agreed to increase their bilateral trade from the present level of $3 billion to $5 billion in two years.

Two agreements on procedures were signed to facilitate movement of trucks between the two countries and also for movement of trucks from Nepal to Bangladesh both up to Land Customs Stations, thus fulfilling important commitments made during the visit of the Bangladeshi Prime Minister, Ms Sheikh Hasina, an official statement said.

Northeast Militants Forced to Wind Up Bangla Camps

By R Dutta Choudhury
 
northeast India militants bangladesh Guwahati, Oct 24 : Sustained pressure from the security forces of Bangladesh forced the militant groups of Northeast to wind up their camps in the neighbouring country and some militants are staying in villages. Meanwhile, the Bangladesh authorities have confirmed the arrest of the chief of Manipur-based militant outfit UNLF and he is likely to be handed over to India soon.

Highly placed official sources told The Assam Tribune that the Rapid Action Battalion of Bangladesh has mounted an all out offensive against the militants taking shelter in that country and the militant groups like the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) have been forced to wind up all their camps in the Sherpur district. Sources said that some militants are now staying in villages in the Bakapura area. Sources said that though the personnel of the Rapid Action Battalion have been taking action against the villagers who gave shelter to militants, it is almost impossible to trace out members of the militant groups of the region without pinpointed information.

Sources said that according to intelligence inputs, some of the militants have shifted to the Chittagong-Myanmar border areas by taking advantage of the fact that there is hardly any security presence in that area. “Though a few senior leaders of the militant groups may still be staying in Dhaka, it is not easy to trace them without specific information,” sources added.

Among the hardcore ULFA members, Antu Chowdang and Drishti Rajkhowa are still in Bangladesh and efforts are on to bring them to India.

Sources said that security agencies managed to get in touch with them to persuade them to return to Assam along with 32 members, who returned last month, but they refused to do so and now they are untraced. With the Bangladesh authorities intensifying the probe into the arms haul case of 2004, where the ULFA commander in chief Paresh Barua was named as an accused, pressure on the ULFA will mount in the days to come, making it impossible for the militants to use the territory of the neighbouring country as safe sanctuary, sources pointed out.

Meanwhile, Bangladesh Government has officially informed India about the arrest of UNLF chief RK Meghen alias Sanayaima. He is now in the custody of the security forces of Bangladesh and he is likely to be handed over to India soon.

via Assam Tribune

23 October 2010

Mainland Discourse

By Sanjoy Hazarika

The media ignores basic facts about the Northeast, J&K in its insurgency chatter

Across India, there is a bonding of searing pain, especially in its northern and eastern peripheries. The hurt and tumult envelops families and communities in a shroud of despair, whether it is in the Northeast, Jammu and Kashmir or earlier in Punjab.

It has its roots in a political definition articulated by regional non-state groups (armed and civil society) that posits ‘mainland’ India as the ‘other’. The political challenge to the state, backed by armed revolt, has not been crushed despite deploying the army and paramilitary forces for over 50 years in the Northeast, and in Kashmir for over two decades. It appears to have been successful in Punjab but at an unacceptable cost. India truly has been at war with itself—locked with adversaries who have refused to blink or budge for the most part—but that appears to be changing.

The media misses the point that lack of services exacerbates alienation and therefore fuels insurgency.
Dissent: Manipuri women protest the alleged rape of Thangjam Manorama by paramilitary forces in Imphal, 2004

This is different from the groundswell of anger which has spread in central India as well as parts of Maharashtra, Orissa and Andhra Pradesh. The Maoist campaign has grown from an acute frustration at the lack of delivery on promises, from bad government and governance, from the system’s failure to provide basic health, education and livelihood opportunities 63 years after independence. The focus here is more on inequity and ineptitude of the state than on sovereignty. It should be clearly recognised that the politics of J&K and the Northeast have little or nothing to do with issues of underdevelopment that drive the Maoist agenda. The country’s media misses and messes this up time after time because they don’t have a memory of even contemporary history, forget what happened a century ago.

It could be argued though that poor basic services and slothful, insensitive and corrupt administration have aggravated the political crisis both in the Northeast and Kashmir. This is often where the media fails to make the connection—insurgency and bad governance are part of the same coin, the same story—and often misses the point that lack of services exacerbates alienation. These are the kind of stories that must be leadership-driven, by editors of vision and perspective. For that, you need the kind of determined editors represented by the ilk of B.G. Verghese and P. Sainath. There aren’t many of them around.

The challenge in the Northeast—once India’s primary security threat—has abated in the past decades. On the ground, group after group, tired of unrelenting security pressure and living on the run, have opted for a cessation of hostilities or opened negotiations. The earlier power and romance when they even enjoyed some popular support is truly a thing of the past. Corruption has seeped into the core of their existence, a condition rarely reflected by the media. This is not to discount their capacity to re-emerge because of the Indian state’s ineptness and failure to take political advantage of favourable conditions. Few in the media reflect on this at any depth, for want of space, time or interest or all three.

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In the line of fire Media persons rush for cover during an encounter in Srinagar, April 2005. ((AFP, From Outlook Magazine Nov 01, 2010 Issue)

On the other side, the men in uniform and government officials wonder why the media focuses on them and not the ‘anti-national activities’ of those opposed to the idea of India.

Amid this, the changing nature of conflicts is overlooked. There seems to be a tacit understanding within groups and civil society that an agreement assuring great political power within the Indian Union is better than no agreement i.e. a constitutional settlement, which till recently was anathema.

But the media, especially television, with its desperation for trp ratings (which for the most part are fudged anyway), is totally inconsistent and uncommitted to following up such issues in a sustained manner. Instead, it gives the impression of being a bull in a china shop with noisy, celebrity anchors and breathless reporters.
Thus, whenever the media raises the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), which empowers soldiers to kill on suspicion and still not be prosecuted for murder, the discourse often focuses on an individual or the most visible sights of protest in Manipur. These discussions and the articles should have taken place and been written over the years. Too much is taken for granted: the metro media has made the mistake of focusing primarily on AFSPA as in Kashmir, forgetting that the act has been in place in the Northeast for over 50 years and that for most part of the decades where other parts of India had awoken “to light and freedom”, people in this region were being shaken by midnight knocks, destruction of homes, granaries and villages. Even basic facts are not stressed—for instance, in areas of maximum unrest in Kashmir, it is not the army that’s been deployed but the state police backed by central paramilitary forces. Indeed, our focus is limited; our viagra is the immediate, not the consequences or the sustainability of the story.

Whenever the media raises the afspa, it only skims the surface and talks of the most visible sights of protest.

Yet, in the Northeast, the media’s fractured credibility would still be higher than the government or underground organisations. The reason for this is simple. Time and again, especially in Manipur and Assam, journalists have been the target of arbitrary killing and intimidation by armed non-state groups for their courage in speaking, writing and representing the truth. As far as the state is concerned, what it seeks to hide is extensive and devious—whether it is the atrocities committed under AFSPA or other legislation. Its credibility or otherwise is not helped, for example, when a group of reporters in Assam band together to write a stunning expose of the secret killings of relatives of ULFA members during the regime of Prafulla Mahanta.

That’s why while AFSPA must go, it represents just one challenge. This law reflects impunity, built into the system and mindsets of those who rule, and we have been inept at covering both. Unless we understand that, we’ll get the story wrong and keep talking about street fights when the battles are elsewhere.

via Outlook India

A Look At The Windows Phone 7

Review: Windows Phone 7

When it comes to smartphones, Microsoft is itching to get back in the game.

Microsoft was sick of watching consumers flock to Apple's iPhone and smart phones running Google's Android software as its own Windows Mobile software floundered. So the world's largest software maker started from scratch with its new phone operating system, Windows Phone 7, which wireless carriers are rolling out on smart phones starting next month.

I tested three of them to get a feel for Microsoft Corp.'s latest work. The Samsung Focus and the HTC HD7 will be available Nov 8 from AT&T and T-Mobile, respectively, while the HTC Surround is coming to AT&T by late November.

On its face, Windows Phone 7 is unabashedly consumer focused and pleasantly easy to use.

Home screen

Home screen

The phone's main screen features a wall of bright tiles that you tap to open applications. You can make tiles for everything from websites to Facebook friends.
There are plenty of fun features, such as the ability to connect to the company's online game service, Xbox Live, and to download music, apps and games through Microsoft's Windows Phone Marketplace. If you pay $15 per month for a Zune Pass, you can listen to as much music as you want right on the phone.

8GB memory, 5 MP camera & more

8GB memory, 5 MP camera & more

Beyond this, there are lots of solid features that all Windows Phone 7 handsets will share: A minimum of 8GB of internal memory (like the iPhone, there is no slot for a memory card), a five-megapixel camera and the ability to record high-definition videos, a multi-touch screen and a simple on-screen keyboard that is impressively accurate.
For search and maps, unsurprisingly, the phone turns to Bing. It uses Microsoft's TellMe voice recognition software to operate voice controls.

For biz users

For biz users

The operating software should also appeal to business users, as it integrates with e-mail and calendars from corporate Exchange servers and allows you to set up several different Exchange accounts.
If you want to do work on the go, it includes mobile versions of Microsoft Office applications such as Word, Excel and PowerPoint.

No IM app

No IM app

There is no instant-messaging application built into the phone, though you will be able to download one. And you won't find any free turn-by-turn navigation software here as you'd find on Android phones, though the built-in mapping application is good-looking and simple.
Windows Phone 7 does have a feature I wish all smart phones had: Hold down the camera button even when the phone is locked and asleep, and the camera turns on. If you have a password set on your phone, you'll still have to tap it in to use the other functions, but it's handy for taking photos on the fly.
But will all this be enough to sway smart-phone-seeking consumers who have long been bombarded by sexy ads for the iPhone and Android phones, not to mention surrounded by others who are using those phones? I tend to doubt it.

Moves over Kin OS

Moves over Kin OS

Windows Phone 7 is good — far better than the hobbled software Microsoft briefly introduced on the Kin phones earlier this year — but it's not phenomenal.
I immediately took a shine to its ease of use, but at the same time it feels limited. For example, the phones I tested had two main screen panels that just got longer and longer as I added more applications to them. Somehow, it doesn't feel as jazzy or cutting-edge as Apple's iOS4 or Google's latest Android release. Those phones have numerous, screen-fitted panels.

Fewer apps

Fewer apps

One area that I'm withholding judgment on is Microsoft's Marketplace. Just a few hundred apps were listed when I played with the phones, including a Netflix movie-watching app and one from location-sharing service Foursquare.
So it didn't seem fair to judge it against the well-established app stores available for the iPhone and Android phones. Microsoft said it plans to add several hundred apps each week this year; based on that, it will be a while before we can gauge its competitiveness.
Beyond the Microsoft experience loaded onto the phones, each one has its own quirks, so below is a rundown of how each fared in testing.

Fewer apps

Fewer apps

One area that I'm withholding judgment on is Microsoft's Marketplace. Just a few hundred apps were listed when I played with the phones, including a Netflix movie-watching app and one from location-sharing service Foursquare.
So it didn't seem fair to judge it against the well-established app stores available for the iPhone and Android phones. Microsoft said it plans to add several hundred apps each week this year; based on that, it will be a while before we can gauge its competitiveness.
Beyond the Microsoft experience loaded onto the phones, each one has its own quirks, so below is a rundown of how each fared in testing.

HTC Surround

HTC Surround

The Surround's most interesting feature is a long speaker with a kickstand on its back that slides out from its right side. While I appreciated this setup for listening to music or watching videos, the sound wasn't incredible. I would have preferred a skinnier phone with just a speaker on the back.
The Surround's touch screen — 3.8 inches diagonally — was crisp enough for surfing the Web and futzing around on Facebook, but videos streamed from Netflix looked surprisingly pixelated.
The phone's 16 gigabytes of storage seems generous enough, but users may be unimpressed by its battery life, which is rated for up to just 4 hours of talk time.

HTC HD7

HTC HD7

The largest of the bunch, the HD7 includes a 4.3-inch touch screen that makes a fine display for videos and a giant viewfinder for the phone's built-in digital camera.
The phone conveniently includes a Netflix app, so if you have a Netflix account, you can use it to watch movies and TV shows on your phone (other phones can download the app from the Marketplace).
I started watching "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" over Wi-Fi and found it streamed well on the HD7's generous screen, though I had expected it to look sharper. The phone has a smartly designed kickstand hidden around the camera lens and flash. Over T-Mobile's network, the movie took longer to load than over Wi-Fi and often stopped to re-load, which was frustrating.
The big screen is good for playing games, too.
The HD7, which includes 16 GB of memory, is rated for as many as 6.5 hours of talk time. This probably won't be enough if you're having a marathon movie-watching session, but should hold up through regular multitasking.

Hindu Right Wing Against Playboy's Nude Yoga: Wanna Watch ‘Em?

Here it is?


Sara Jean Underwood Playboy Yoga Los Angeles, Oct 23 : A video featuring Playboy model Sara Jean Underwood performing various yoga postures while naked, has caused outrage in the Indian community.

The racy video is available for viewing on the Playboy website and the use of the age-old technique as erotica has irked many, reported Ace Showbiz online.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed has taken aim at Playboy saying, "Hindus are upset over what is the misuse of the revered system of yoga by Playboy for mercantile greed and we are urging the organisation to withdraw all its yoga-related products."

The video was posted to promote DVD titles "Erotic Nude Yoga" , "Totally Nude Yoga" and "Erotic Yoga for Couples" .


Yoga: Standing Forward Bend and Gorilla Pose
Uploaded by uhnyuftz. - Find more steamy, sexy videos.

Angry Mob Threatens Wayne Rooney At His Home: Report

WAYNE ROONEY-THREATENED-ANGRY-MOB An angry mob threatened the life of soccer star Wayne Rooney at his home on Thursday night, according to The Telegraph (UK).

The mob reportedly gathered outside Rooney's mansion and chanted, "Join Man City and you die."

Cheshire police were called to the scene to clear the mob, which "consisted of men wearing balaclavas and Eric Cantona-masks," according to the report.

Rooney agreed to a new contract with Manchester United today, shortly after it was reported that the 24-year-old told chief executive David Gill that he wanted to leave the team.