21 March 2011

Manipur Also Figures in WikiLeaks


‘Manipur More A Colony Of India’


By Suresh Nambath

Overwhelming presence of military, paramilitary and police forces gave visiting American diplomat the impression that Imphal was under occupation

Imphal, Mar 21 : In an assessment of the situation in Manipur in 2006, American Consul General in Kolkata Henry Jardine wrote that the overwhelming presence of military, paramilitary and police officers contributed to the impression that Imphal was under military occupation.

“In ConGen's many interactions, even with some government officials, a reoccurring comment was that Manipur was less a state and more a colony of India,” he reported in a cable sent on September 1, 2006 ( 76968: confidential).

“The general use of the AFSPA [Armed Forces Special Powers Act] meant that the Manipuris did not have the same rights of other Indian citizens and restrictions on travel to the state added to a sense of isolation and separation from the rest of India proper,” he added.

“Several Manipuris,” he recalled, “argued that they had greater rights under the British Raj than under the present federation.”

The Indian civil servants were also clearly frustrated with their inability to stem the growing violence and anarchy in the State, feeling their efforts to effectively control the insurgencies were hamstrung by local politicians either in league with or at least through corruption, helping to finance the insurgents, he said.

Rampant corruption was complicating the effort to control the rising violence and a lot of money was being taken as kickbacks from contracts and government projects, the cable reported, adding: “The corruption results in a nexus between politicians and the insurgent groups. At a dinner reception, Chief Secretary [Jarnail] Singh noted that many politicians have links with or receive support from the insurgent groups.”

Rights violations

According to the leaked Embassy cable, authorities have committed numerous human rights violations under the AFSPA. “Governor [S.S.] Sidhu admitted to ConGen that the Assam Rifles in particular are perpetrators of violations.”

(This article is a part of the series "The India Cables" based on the US diplomatic cables accessed by The Hindu via Wikileaks.')

‘Recce' of Northeast Over For Study Of Deadly Thunderstorms

By Vinson Kurian

Thiruvananthapuram, Mar 21 :  Even as heavy to very heavy thundershowers are pounding Cherrapunji in Assam, India Meteorological Department (IMD) and India Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will launch a combined experiment to track seasonal thunderstorms in east and northeast India.

Cherrapunji saw an exceptional 46 cm of rain being recorded overnight on Sunday morning while the previous day's figure stood at 32 cm.

PILOT INITIATIVE

A pilot initiative to track thunderstorms has been on form last year, according to Dr P. V. Joseph, renowned meteorologist and a former director of IMD. The meteorological parameters need to be checked and analysed to see whether the Cherrapunji events heralds the beginning of the annual thunderstorm season.

Meanwhile, the nationally coordinated programme is being called ‘Severe Thunderstorm Observation and Regional Modelling (STORM).'

Dr Joseph would lead a dedicated team of experts in the experiment to be carried out from its base at IIT-Kharagpur from April 15. This is a comprehensive observational and modelling effort to improve understanding and prediction of severe thunderstorms.

Thus the proposed programme is expected to improve both understanding and prediction of these local storms, Dr Joseph told Business Line. An elaborate plan to track thunderstorm development has been laid out, which has seen the deployment of sophisticated instruments in the entire northeast.

The IMD alone has set up 300 automatic weather gauges while ISRO has lined up another 100. This would facilitate a study of surface conditions at close intervals. The Doppler Radar at Kolkata and a counterpart coming up at Guwahati, apart from a fleet of mobile Doppler radars, would help track the storms down. According to Dr Joseph, the experiment would be equipped to study the inside of a thunderstorm and look at the cloud from various angles.

“TINDER BOX”

Hot and dry northwest to southeast winds flow in a southeast direction over the plains of northwest India towards east and northeast India and confronts moisture-laden easterlies from the Bay of Bengal. This sets up ‘tinder box' conditions, fuelling intense convection to spark thunder, lightning and heavy to very heavy localised showers, which are seasonal in nature.

Hail-storms, dust-storms, surface wind squalls, down-bursts and tornadoes also get thrown up in the process, which can cause heavy damage to life and property. During the pre-monsoon season of April and May, north India witnesses severe thunderstorms.

SEVERE DAMAGE

Downsteam to the east and southeast, Gangetic West Bengal and surrounding areas also get severe thunderstorms called Nor'westers, locally called Kal Baisakhi. Northwest India gets convective dust storms, called locally andhi.

Severe thunderstorms create lot of damage to property and standing crops. The strong surface wind squalls, large hail and occasional tornadoes accompanying them cause human and animal fatalities. They also pose serious hazards to aviation activities.

20 March 2011

Last Stand Of The Asian Elephant

assam elephantJia Gabharu, Mar 20 :  Every night when the rice is ripening in their fields, the young men climb into watchtowers to peer anxiously toward the Himalayan foothills from which the gray giants emerge.

Before them, a 5-kilometer (3-mile), high-voltage fence provides dubious defense against a crafty, brainy enemy. To their rear, patrols are mounted from settlements ringed by trenches and armed with spears, torches, stinging smoke bombs and sometimes guns and poison.

Here, in India's northeast state of Assam, is one of the hottest fronts of a heart-rending, escalating conflict. It is waged daily in villages, fields and plantations of 13 countries across Asia where forests and grasslands continue to shrink, igniting a turf war between one-time friends: land-hungry man and a simply hungry Elephas maximus, the Asian elephant.

The elephant's survival is at best uncertain.

In India and Sri Lanka, where the struggle is most intense, more than 400 elephants and 250 humans are killed each year. Deaths on both sides occur frequently in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and elsewhere. Sharks, by contrast, kill fewer than half a dozen swimmers a year worldwide.

Although the age-old bonds between human and elephant are yet to be totally severed, some angry villagers electrocute the animals with high tension wires or fell them with rifles, poison-tipped arrows and homemade rice liquor, an elephant favorite, laced with insecticides.

Humans, often poor rural dwellers, suffer no less.

In the village of Galighat in eastern Assam, accessible only by boat and foot, a rogue male elephant recently killed five residents in little more than a month, wrecking six houses in nighttime strikes, decapitating scores of banana trees and pilfering granaries.

The latest victim was Phulania Dutta, whose skull bones were still strewn on the earth near her obliterated home where eyewitnesses described how two nights earlier the elephant crushed her head and chest with a foreleg, then kicked her aside.

First, it knocked down the stilts of the raised bamboo and thatch house, then began furiously stomping down on the rubble. Trapped under a wooden pillar, Dutta's husband survived, but as the 48-year-old woman fled the ruin screaming, the elephant closed in for the kill.

"We have applied for help from the government but nothing has come. We have taken whatever precautions we can. We have prayed. But nothing works. We cannot coexist," said villager Mohammed Abul Ali, looking over tattered clothing, pans and other meager possessions scattered among Dutta's totally flattened home. A family dog and its puppy lay listlessly on what was once the roof.

Prospects for future coexistence, wildlife experts say, are bleak despite a host of conservation projects, from biofencing to elephant tracking via satellite telemetry.

The past is a stark indicator of the endangered creature's future. The animal has disappeared from some 95 percent of its historical range, an elephant empire which stretched from the shores of the Mediterranean to the Yellow River in northern China. Thailand, for example, harbored some 100,000 elephants at the beginning of the 20th century, but is down to less than 6,000 today.

According to the Switzerland-based International Union for Conservation of Nature, 38,500 to 52,500 wild elephants survive in Asia with only another 15,000 in captivity, having largely lost their traditional roles as loggers, trucks, battle tanks and prestige symbols of royal courts.

An Asian elephant can weigh up to five tons. The larger African elephant, although more numerous, is also listed as an endangered species, subject to similar onslaughts.

"Everyone knows the cause, even the layman, the villager, that the forest is finished, that the elephant has no place to remain safely and doesn't have anything to eat, so they are coming out," says Bhupendra Nath Talukdar, a leading wildlife officer in the Assam Forest Department.

"In this battle, the elephant will be defeated easily," he says. "It is really not a conflict with the elephant. It was their place and now we have occupied it."

But the elephant isn't giving up without a fight, and in some places man has even had to surrender territory.

Faced with daily crop raiding, the 45 families of Assam's Rubberbeal village fled a decade ago while residents of a neighboring village remained but built tree houses for speedy getaways. Only now, a few of the families are cautiously returning to an eerie site. The creaking of wind-swept bamboo floats across fallow rice fields and tangled jungle vegetation blankets traces of abandoned homes.

The villagers hope that a now defunct electric fence can be restored. But foolproof humane deterrents — killing of elephants is illegal in Asian countries — have yet to be found, and the highly intelligent animals rarely fall for the same trick twice.

At Jia Gabharu, in Assam's elephant-rife Sonitpur district, forest ranger Gopal Deka said he recently saw a bull sniff the 5-kilometer, 10,000-volt fence, then grab the branch of a banana tree to batten down the wires.

Similar stories are heard of elephants kicking down fence posts or wielding their tusks, which don't conduct electricity, to break through. They have been known to push in earth to fill trenches.

Some herds quickly habituate to traditional repellants like firecrackers, drums and torches, while others take a liking to formerly shunned crops, like citrus fruit, grown as buffer zones. In Bhutan, they have been seen eating oranges and in Sri Lanka even sampling chilies which the giants normally can't tolerate.

Nevertheless, Nandita Hazarika, head of the Assam Haathi Project, says chili has proved probably the best defense for the 800 families the nongovernment organization is helping. In an adaptation from Africa, farmers mix ground chilies, automobile grease and tobacco and smear the paste on rope fences.

The same concoction, wrapped in straw or even inserted into dried dung, is used in chili rolls and "bombs" that are set afire to emit a stinging smoke, made more potent in Assam if the "bhut joloika," perhaps the world's hottest chili, is used.

Elephants can also be clever tacticians. Staffer Dhruba Das has for four years been tracking a "gang" of half a dozen young bulls led by a massive male named Tara, who has taught his charges to open compound gates and neatly break into kitchens and food storage sheds without destroying them. They have not killed, preferring to surround a house, stationing two at the front, one in the back to keep frightened people inside while a fourth homes in on food with his trunk. The loot is then shared.

Such scenes are played out every fall in Sontipur as elephants move out of the Himalayan foothills southward to the Brahmaputra river, following traditional corridors to feed and breed in the grasslands. They return early in the year.

The elephants used to pass human settlements with few problems. But in recent decades, more than 65 percent of forests in the foothills have been razed, while the once forested migration corridors and open grasslands are all but gone, forcing the elephants to move through villages, fields and tea plantations where food is not hard to find.

In a pattern similar to other Asian countries, the corridors are also fragmented by roads, railways, dams and mushrooming towns so the elephants now disperse over ever wider areas. The elephant-man conflict, it is estimated, has spread to almost 60 percent of Assam.

Herds rarely enter villages and killers tend to be male rogues — frustrated young bulls expelled from a herd, aging loners with painful injuries or animals in sexual heat.

Dinesh Choudhury, whose family kept elephants for generations, is one of the last hunters called on by the Indian government to put down habitual killers. He adamantly believes elephants can also turn into what he calls "criminals, terrorists" if severely abused by humans.

Some experts say the only hope for an end to the wars are well-managed wildlife sanctuaries, the restoration of forests outside such reserves and perhaps the abiding love of man for jumbos.

"We're only giving painkillers. We have not had real success... But politicians have no interest in wildlife. For them it's a burden. Wildlife doesn't vote. Right now I don't think we have a chance of reclaiming even 1 percent of the destroyed forests," said Hiten Kumar Baishya of the Sontipur office of the World Wide Fund for Nature, which runs projects throughout Asia's elephant ranges.

Hazarika says restoration of their habitat would take 20 to 30 years, adding, "Till then what do you do? We can't even protect what we have."

She hopes the instinct to retaliate after an elephant attack will be mitigated by the ancient aura of divinity around the animal on the Indian subcontinent and around Southeast Asia, mainly through Ganesha, the elephant-headed son of the Hindu god Shiva, whose shrines dot the region. Enraged villagers may kill an elephant only to later pray before its corpse.

"Villagers still have a respect for elephants," Hazarika says. "But the level of tolerance is getting lower and lower."

This was true of the traumatized people of Galighat as some 30 men set out to expel the rogue killer armed only with spears, machetes and firecrackers. They crossed harvested rice paddies, cut a tunnel through thick undergrowth and followed fresh footprints and dung on a dry river bed.

Finally, the elephant was found deep in a sea of towering reeds, hidden, angry and crazy, its breathing clearly audible. It was the size of two pickup trucks and endowed with incredible speed over short distances. The men called a retreat.

The elephant will almost certainly return, and raid and perhaps kill again. But Choudhury believes free-roaming beasts will vanish in less than a decade.

"We knew elephants by heart and they also knew us by heart. The golden era is gone and that is quite painful," he says. "The present scenario is altogether a different thing. The conflict is at the high end and the elephant is fighting a losing battle.

"The fate of the Assam elephants? We will see only their graveyard, and nothing beyond that."

Millionaires To Ex-Militants in Assam Poll Fray

assam electionGuwahati, Mar 20 : From millionaires to former separatist militants and charge-sheeted politicians, candidates of all hues are in the fray for the April 4 first phase of assembly elections in Assam.

The candidate for the Sootea assembly seat of Assam's main opposition Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), Padma Hazarika, is by far one of the richest among the 529 nominations received for the first phase of polls.

Monday is the last date for withdrawal of candidature for the first phase vote, which includes 62 of the 126 assembly segments in the state.

Hazarika's total declared assets come to around Rs.50 million.

Despite the fact that the AGP has been out of power during the last 10 years, there are millionaries like Hazarika in its list of candidates whose sole profession is politics.

Also, there are five former militants of the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) in the fray this time - two of them are sitting lawmakers having won their respective seats as independents.

Jiten Gogoi and Kushal Duwori from Bokakhat and Thowra assembly seats respectively have been lawmakers for two successive terms.

Three more surrendered ULFA leaders are in the fray this time - Suresh Bora, a Congress candidate from Barhampur, Jayanta Khound contesting as an independent from Naoboicha and Prafulla Bora alias Dhekial Phukan, the Nationalist Congress Party candidate from Bihpuria.

'I don't think my former ULFA tag would have any bearing on the election outcome. I have come to the mainstream and have been given a Congress ticket to fight the polls. I am sure I would get the blessings from the people and win the polls,' Bora told IANS.

All the five were at one time among the most dreaded names in the ULFA.

'I had done lot of good work in my area during the last two terms and hope to repeat my success this time as well,' Gogoi said.

Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi had said two weeks ago that his party would not give tickets to any charge-sheeted leaders. But his views were ignored when the Congress high command included Debabrata Saikia, son of former chief minister Hiteswar Saika, in the list of candidates.

Saikia, contesting from the Nazira, was charge-sheeted by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in the multi-crore veterinary scam during his father's regime in the early 90s.

The scam involved a massive financial irregularities of about Rs.400 crore in the Assam animal husbandry and veterinary department between 1988 and 1992.

'Unless a person is convicted he is not guilty,' Congress party in-charge for the Assam elections Digvijay Singh said referring to Saikia's candidature.

The second phase of the vote will be on April 11.

21 Charred To Death in Tripura Refugee Camp, Tripura CM To Take Measures

Manik SarkarAgartala, Mar 20 : Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar has asked the forest officials to take steps to arrest the wild fire during the summer following sudden spread of fire in Bru (Reang) refugee camps in Kanchanpur of North Tripura which claimed 21 lives and left eight seriously injured yesterday.

Mr Sarkar left for Kanchanpur this morning and reviewed the situation with both police and civil administration while asking to create water sources in the camp areas besides, ensuring all other basic amenities for the inmates shelter in different camps since 1997 following ethnic clash in Western Mizoram.

According to a report, as many as 2500 huts were gutted that left more than 15,000 people homeless.

The administration made arrangements for the shifting the families to nearby schools and community halls last night.

The fire spread over the camps from forest fire last night.

Over 35,000 Bru had fled from Western Mizoram on October 15, 1997 night following fierce communal riots between the Brus and Lushais (Mizo) in adjoining North Tripura.

They were sheltered in six camps in Kanchanpur subdivision since then.

Several tripartite talks had failed to ensure repatriation of the Brus to their homeland as Aizwal was overtly reluctant to take them back.

15 Mistakes Women Make When They Try To Look Attractive (According To A Man)

portrait of a young caucasian woman in front of a white background with make upWomen in general are very beautiful, it doesn’t matter what they have on, to someone they will be beautiful. Then you have others who try to make themselves look more attractive by doing a little work. Too bad they are some that over do it and looks a mess and don’t even realize it.

Here are 15 of the worst mistakes women make while trying to look more attractive. Hopefully they read this and prevent it from here on.

via socialhype.com

Bollywood Stars Without Make-Up

A list contrasting looks of actresses with and without make-up. Includes Sonam Kapoor, Katrina Kaif, Rani Mukherjee, Deepika Padukone, Kareena Kapoor, Priyanka Chopra, Rakhi Sawant.

Rani Mukherjee

altBollywood actresses are known for their beauty and style. They are glorified on screens as demi-goddesses who are blessed with ethereal beauty.
But its now time for some reality check as the actresses don't really look like the perfect dreamgirls once they are stripped off their make-up. Lets take a look at how different actresses look without their usual dose of make-up.

Sonam

Bollywood's number one fashionista isn't very attractive to look at once her make-up comes off. In this pic, Sonam far from the glam diva that she always is.
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Katrina Kaif

Katrina Kaif doesn't look much different without make-up. She is one naturally blessed woman in terms of beauty and, hence, can easily survive without make-up. She looks beautiful in her most basic and natural avatar.
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Rani Mukherjee

Yes! The person you see in the pic is indeed Rani Mukherjee. And, she sure does look horrendous without her make-up on. Our advise to her would be not to step out of the house without any make-up or she might end up losing the few films that she's got in hand.
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Deepika Padukone

Sans make-up, Deepika looks like any other face in the crowd. It is after a good dose of grooming that Deepika manages to look like the stunner that she always appears to be.
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Kareena Kapoor

Kareena Kapoor also looks amazingly beautiful even without any trace of make-up. Guess its owing to her genes and a healthy lifestyle that always ensures that she looks radiant and glowing.
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Priyanka Chopra

The glamorous Piggy Chops looks like as bad without make-up as as she looks good with it. She seems like a totally different person from the gorgeous star that we all know
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Kajol

Kajol has always shocked us with her sense of style in the past and she does the same by coming forth without proper grooming. No matter what the occasion is, there can be no excuse for turning up looking like this in public.
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Rakhi Sawant

Not that we consider Rakhi a Bollywood star, but the difference in her look with and without make-up is so startling that we couldn't resist including her in the list. On the transformation in her appearance, we have only one thing to say: Miracles do happen!
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Source : mensxp.com

Kim Kardashian Naked Huge Ass (NSFW)

Kim Kardashian bikini
This is what Kim Kardashian’s bare ass looks like (Scroll Down to Bottom). I’d say much more attractive with her bikinis on!
Kim Kardashian bikini (10)

Kim Kardashian bikini (13)

kim-kardashian-nude-on-beach-nsfw-6503-1279658301-25


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