26 March 2011

Who is Ileana D'Cruz?

Who is Ileana D'Cruz?

Ileana D’Cruz, the sizzling south Indian actress is now also the highest paid in her industry after she signed on to feature opposite Allu Arjun in an upcoming movie for Rs 2 crore. By Durba Ghosh

The southern sensation, started her career as a model and appeared in an advertisement endorsing the brand 'Fair and Lovely'. She was recognised by Y V Choudhary and made her debut in a Telegu film, 'Devadasa'. She won a Filmfare award for her portrayal of Bhanumati's role.

Ileana went on to appear in commercially successful ventures including 'Pokiri', 'Jalsa' and 'Kick', establishing herself as one of Telugu cinema's leading actresses.

The actress demanded an amount of Rs 2 crore for '3 Idiots' remake, 'Nanban'. The fee was later negotiated for Rs 1.5 crore. Ileana, who will play the role Kareena Kapoor played in 3 Idiots, feels she deserves the fee she demands.

Ileana will have back-to-back releases in the coming weeks, including 'Shakthi', where she%u2019s paired opposite NTR Junior, she also has Nenu Naa Rakshasi opposite Rana Daggubati releasing in the first week of April.

Bare-Faced Beauty: Megan Fox

Megan shows off model looks on-set of steamy Armani lingerie advert in behind-the-scenes video

By Sarah Fitzmaurice

She is considered one of the most beautiful women in the World and her latest shoot for Emporio Armani’s lingerie collection certainly sets pulses racing.

But as she sat in her makeup chair ahead of the shoot Megan Fox showed off her bare-faced beauty and needed little touching up as shown in this behind-the-scenes video.

Fans are invited to view footage shot on location in Mallorca to find out what it really takes to look as good as the Transformers star.

Picture perfect: Megan Fox sizzles in the Armani underwear advert and the behind-the-scenes footage shows that she needs little help in the make-up department

Picture perfect: Megan Fox sizzles in the Armani underwear advert and the behind-the-scenes footage shows that she needs little help in the make-up department

But while many might be hoping her looks are down to digital enhancement or copious amounts of makeup the video shows Megan needs little adjusting and is picture perfect just as she is.

Sizzling in the Spring and Summer underwear collection Megan appears to be a natural at striking a seductive pose.

But while some shots show her looking extremely toned but healthy other angles show he looking extremely thin – which sparked rumoured about her weight when the campaign was launched earlier this month.

Little touchup: Megan only needed a quick dab with the makeup brush

Little touc hup: Megan only needed a quick dab with the makeup brush before she was ready to be shot

Ready for my close-up: The video showing behind the scenes at the Armani video shoot show Megan showing off her moves as she posed for shots in the underwear Ready for my close-up: The video showing behind the scenes at the Armani video shoot show Megan showing off her moves as she posed for shots in the underwear

Ready for my close-up: The video showing behind the scenes at the Armani video shoot show Megan showing off her moves as she posed for shots in the underwear

She is seen lying across a couch and at points prominent stomach muscles are clearly visible.

Earlier this month Megan’s personal trainer has put her slim frame down to her ‘fast metabolism’ and has denied claims she is suffering from anorexia but instead insists she simply struggles to put on weight.

Harley Pasternak, her 24-year-old personal trainer said: ‘She gets frustrated at times because she's like "I need to put on weight." So she actually weight-trains to keep on that lean muscle tissue.'

On set: Showing off the underwear and her prominent abdominal muscles Megan sits on a sofa on the shoot

On set: Showing off the underwear and her prominent abdominal muscles Megan sits on a sofa on the shoot

Sparking concerns: While some of the shots show Megan looking extremely toned but healthy other shots show her ribs clearly visible and caused questions over her weight

Sparking concerns: While some of the shots show Megan looking extremely toned but healthy other shots show her ribs clearly visible and caused questions over her weight

'Believe it or not she has this really fast metabolism. So her training is all about body toning and sculpting. With her its really about she’s eating enough of the right things.

'People thought, "Oh she must be anorexic," but she’s far from that!' the trainer told America’s Hollywood Life.

The Transformers actress is no stranger to showing off her body and in her latest film Passion Play she is seen in an extremely low-cut and revealing dress.

Racing pulses: The Transformers star has caused a stir with the provocative shots seen in the film Racing pulses: The Transformers star has caused a stir with the provocative shots seen in the film

Racing pulses: The Transformers star has caused a stir with the provocative shots seen in the film 

But despite her best efforts to wow on-screen the film is already a flop and despite premiering at the Toronoto Film Festival in September it is now being released straight to DVD.

After numerous viewers walked out of the screening in Canada last year and critics branded it 'awful', a 'mess' and 'an absolute car wreck', the distributes have apparently cut their losses.

It is yet another blow to Megan's acting career, which has nosedived since she parted ways with the successful Transformers franchise.

Jennifer's Body which was released in 2009 debuted at a disappointing number five and only earned $6.8million.

Racy shots: The behind the scenes footage shows scenes not included in the final campaign

Racy shots: The behind the scenes footage shows scenes not included in the final campaign

Jonah Hex, released last summer, did better but did not set the movie industry alight.
Passion Play is about an angel who is under the thumb of a ruthless gangster and is saved by a trumpet player down on his luck.

Mickey Rourke plays washed-up jazz musician Nate Pool who does not want to betray sinister gangster Happy Shannon, played by Bill Murray

Fox plays Lily, a beautiful and mysterious carnival sideshow attraction, known as the Bird Woman.

Kelly Lynch and Rhys Ifans also star in the ill-fated film which will be released on DVD on May 24 in the U.S.

Mizo Political Party Concerned For Violation Of ILP

Zoram Nationalist Party LalduhawmaAizawl, Mar 26 : There has been a gross violation of Inner Line Permit (ILP) by the 'non-indigenous tribals' in Mizoram, alleges Zoram Nationalist Party (ZNP)’s chief Lalduhawma.  

Lalduhawma while asking the state government of Mizoram to check the influx of 'outsiders' to the state had  said, “There is a gross violation of the guideline for regulating entry and stay of non-indigenous persons within the Inner Line of Mizoram”.  

Stating this in a calling attention motion in the ongoing Mizoram assembly budget session. The member alleged that there is gross violation of the law relating to issue of Inner Line Permits.

Displaying some documents said to be Inner Line Permits issued to 'non-indigenous persons' for the purpose of trade and the ILPs sponsored by non-indigenous persons, the legislator asked the state government to look into this matter for the safety of indigenous tribals.

Reacting to this, Mizoram home minister, R. Lalziriliana informed the House that the government has detected some clear cases of issue of Inner Line Permits for the purpose of trading.

The government has given instruction not to renew such permits and action is being taken against the defaulters, the home minister added. Earlier, Young Mizo Association (YMA), the most influential NGO of Mizoram and Mizo Zirlai Pawl (MZP) had raised concerned to the influx of 'foreigners' and violation of Inner Line Permit.

During their raid against possessing illegal and expiry of ILPs, the two NGOs had arrested several persons and deported them to their respective states as per the guideline.

Further, there are several persons from outside the state who indulge in illegal trade and business in the state like smuggling drugs and other banned products.

Indian Army Not A Sight Of Security: Northeast Women

indian army rapeImphal, Mar 26 :Indian Army is not a sight of security. It is rather a sight of insecurity,” said activist Grace Jajo today during the discussion on the topic ‘Women in Armed Conflict’.

The three-day programme entitled ‘Militarism and Future of Democracy in Manipur organised by Manipur Research Forum in collaboration with Department of Philosophy (Manipur University), Indian Council of Social Sciences and Research, All Manipur Working Journalists Union and Human Rights Alert kick started yesterday.

Presenting a paper, Grace Jajo narrated her bitter experiences with security forces under the Armed Forces Special Powers Act.

Renu Takhelambam, a member of a widow body broke down while narrating how society and the government treated them. She along with others had floated a forum of women whose husbands were killed by the security forces.

Political processes hijacked by Indian military in the name of national security
Senior journalist of the state Yumnam Rupachandra dwelt on the difficulties faced by the media persons in a trouble torn Manipur due to various factors.

Meanwhile, several seasoned intellectuals of Manipur and others addressed discerning listeners on the opening day of the three-day colloquium under the broad theme Militarism and Future of Democracy in Manipur.

The speakers mostly delve on the interplay between militarism and democracy. Speaking authoritatively on the dais of the Senate Hall of Manipur University on the opening day, Namrata Goswani of Institute of Defense Studies and Analysis, Delhi, underscored the hypocrisy of the Indian Union saying the security of the Indian state is dictated more by territorial integrity than its people.

Manglem Ningthouja, Chairperson, Campaign for Peace and Democracy (Manipur) led a scathing attack on the pretense of the Indian state to socialist ideology infused by the founding fathers of modern India.india-police-atrocities

On the question of the historical and political possibilities of India and Manipur, he said that Indian state since its inception is based on monopoly capitalism and the expansion of territory is part of the capitalist agenda to explore new market.

According to him, the Indian state must first accept the peoples’ right to self determination and plebiscite in Manipur in order to set in motion a conducive environment to rebuilding democracy and democratic practices in the State.

Joseph Kuba, Regional Director, Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU), Imphal, expressed the anxiety created by the political processes which have been hijacked by the military in the name of national security.

Speaking on the same day, A Bimol Akhoijam, Associate Professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, made a self-deprecating observation about the “subservient mentality” of the people of Manipur which was born out of the historical and geopolitical accident of the Manipuri kingdom being crammed between the British Indian Empire and the Burmese Empire. The subservience was reinforced even after 1891, he said.

Assam Govt Funds Non-Existent Schools in Assam

Guwahati, Mar 26 : The election campaign in Assam is gathering momentum with politicians battling more for votes and less for issues. But education seems far from their agenda.

Government schools in Assam are in shambles. And an RTI filed by a student has revealed shocking revelations.

The BR Ambedkar School in Guwahati, which has apparently received Rs 4,01,450 for its 217 students - actually does not exist.

There is money trickling in for schools which exist only on paper and not in reality. For example, one such school is the Dr BR Ambedkar school in Lachitpur. You can see the list of students and the money that has been procured in their name. But go around Lachitpur and you will find no trace of this school.

The Mangal Chandi Hindi LP School is another example. The headmaster says that funds for the dalits were instead going to a school - which had ceased to exist since 1991. In 2009-10, this non-existent school received Rs 2,94,150.

Headmaster NP Singh said, "This school does not exist, I don't know who these children are. This signature is also fake and this headmaster doesn't exist."

When we confronted the Department of Welfare for SCs and STs, which sanctions these funds, they blame it on shortage of manpower, but promise to investigate.

None of the senior officials we tried to contact were available for comment. All saying they were busy with election preparations. They may not speak to us, but they definitely owe an explanation to the people of Assam, especially the children, who's future is under threat.

Rights Of Children From Northeast Being Violated: Nina Nayak

 Nina Nayak, Commissioner for KSCPCR (second from left), interacting with presspersons in Mangalore on Friday.

Mangalore, Mar 26 : There is “total violation” of the rights of children who have been brought to Karnataka from Meghalaya, Tripura and Manipur, Nina Nayak, Chairperson of the Karnataka State Commission for the Protection of Child Rights (KSCPCR), said here on Friday.

During an interaction with presspersons organised by the Journalists' Study Centre here, Ms. Nayak said the children were brought here for schooling.

Describing the phenomenon, she said that the “displacement of children” from their home environment to five or six districts in Karnataka resulted in their not being able to adjust to the food and climate.

When the commission conducted an inquiry, it found to its “shock” that the children aged around five could speak perfect Kannada and were found to be reciting shlokas.

She said that around 20 children were studying in Dakshina Kannada. There were 3,000 such children. The institutions brought them here because they were “very good at sports”.

Ms. Nayak said that a large number of institutions across the State providing child care facilities would be illegal because they were not registered with the Government.

Giving an example, she said that around 15 children housed in a “Hindu religious institution” were removed from the place because it was found that they were being made to conduct religious rituals, and so on.

“This institution filed a case against us, but fortunately the judge understood (the circumstances) and said that the institution could keep children if it had proper facilities as mandated by law,” she said.

Ms. Nayak said that according to Section 34 (3) of the Juvenile Justice Act, 2006, every residential facility for children must be registered with the Government, making a large number of children's homes across the country illegal. Only recently the Government asked the deputy directors to obtain information on this, she said.

The former chairperson of the Child Welfare Committee, Dakshina Kannada, Hilda Rayappan, said that there was no place to receive children who were rescued from the streets or were found to be in need of care and protection after the Bala Mandira (a reception centre for children) was closed here a few years ago.


Photo: R. Eswarraj

ATSUM Imposes Indefinite Economic Blockade in Manipur

By Iboyaima Laithangbam

ATSUM manipur

Imphal, Mar 26
: The All-Tribal Students' Union Manipur (ATSUM) imposed an indefinite economic blockade on the State and the national highways from Thursday night.

This is in protest against the government's alleged failure to maintain reservation quota for tribals in appointments and transfers in various offices.

The ATSUM is not happy with the slow moving construction works of the Indira Gandhi National Tribal University in Manipur.

As a result of the blockade, no truck plied on the roads on Friday.

Consequently, prices of essential commodities went up.

Official sources said that arrangements are being made to escort the trucks by the paramilitary personnel along the NH 39 for fetching essential items from Assam.

Last year, the tribal organisations imposed a crippling blockade against Manipur for 113 days from April 11, 2010 making various demands.

This followed the refusal by the Manipur government to allow the rebel leader Thuingaleng Muivah of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah) to enter Manipur.

However, it was suspended when the Centre intervened.

Mother Of Insurgencies Or Reinvention?

By M.S. Prabhakara

NSCN Muivah

Has the Naga insurgency come to terms with its unrealised and, indeed, unrealisable sovereignty aspirations?

In the early 1980s (when this correspondent returned to Guwahati as working journalist after an eight-year absence), insurgency in the northeast was limited to Nagaland, parts of Manipur and what was then the Union Territory of Mizo Hills.

In Nagaland, the Naga National Council (NNC), political face of the oldest of the insurgencies in the region, was led by Angami Zapu Phizo, then in exile in Britain.

Despite the challenge posed by a faction of the NNC that had recently split after much rancour on both sides and formed itself into the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN), the NNC remained the dominant voice of Naga nationalistic assertion.

In Manipur, Naga insurgency was active those days in the Naga-inhabited hill districts mainly in Tamenglong, while in the Imphal Valley, several outfits, some of them fighting one another as much as the Indian state, were active: the United National Liberation Front (UNLF), the Peoples' Liberation Army (PLA), the People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) and the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP).

In the Union Territory of Mizo Hills, the Mizo National Front (MNF) arrived at the Talk-Talk-Fight-Fight stage, and was on the way to give up its secessionist agenda, sign a peace accord and become a legitimate party of the government.

Insurgency had not become a generalized fact of life in the region including Assam, though formally the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) had been founded in April 1979.

The objectives of all these organisations, including the nascent ULFA, were broadly the same: independence and sovereignty, the restoration of sovereignty that ‘lapsed' to the people these organisations claimed to represent when the British left India but which India refused to concede.ulfa_cadres training

The undeniable historical fact underlying this idea of ‘restoration of sovereignty' as against the ‘demand for sovereignty' is that beginning with the British annexation of Assam following the defeat of Burma in 1826 in the First Anglo-Burmese War, the colonial government had embarked on consolidating the boundaries of these newly acquired vast territories, progressively annexing more of these borderlands and extending its own boundaries.

The annexation process was neither painless nor fair; nor even conclusive, the last most evident in the description of some of the ‘new' territories in the old maps as “excluded,” “partially excluded” and “unadministered” areas. The bland bureaucratic prose of the introductory chapter of the Assam Land Revenue Manual says it all.

However, received wisdom had it even those days that the resolution of Naga insurgency was central to resolving other insurgencies, actual and incipient.

Long before such disaffection manifested itself among other people of the region, tribal and non-tribal, Phizo himself had tried on the eve of Independence to enlist the support of the largest and most advanced of the people, the Assamese, as well as other tribal people who, in course of time, were to form the core of Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya and Mizoram — the last two then politically and administratively part of Assam — for realising his plan for an Independent Nagaland. He also urged them to seek an independent status outside India.

Being the oldest insurgency in the region, which had also lent some material support to other disaffected elements, this perception was somewhat justified.

This has been especially so since the NNC split and the formation of the NSCN in early 1980.

Even though the NSCN in due course also split into two factions, and the NNC has refused to fade away, the NSCN (I-M) bearing the initials of chairman Isak Swu and general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah remains the dominant voice of the sovereignty aspirations of the Naga people.

However, all these insist that settlement of the “Naga political issue,” that is restoration of Naga sovereignty and independence — the resolution of what has come to be known in the Naga nationalist rhetoric as “the mother of all insurgencies” in the region — is central to resolving the other problems in the region.

This perspective has been expressed several times by Muivah since the NSCN (I-M) began talking directly to the Government of India nearly 15 years ago. During this period, the NSCN (I-M) leaders have met several Prime Ministers in foreign lands and in India, and have had prolonged dialogue with ‘interlocutors,' initially in cities in Europe and South East Asia, and later in Delhi. Peace of a kind has prevailed in Nagaland and in the Naga inhabited areas of Manipur, though the “Naga political issue” remains unresolved.

The other side of this peace is the parallel administration of the NSCN (I-M), which is evident to the most casual visitor to Nagaland and the Naga-inhabited areas of Manipur.

Perhaps one can see this as the Naga people's unique way of reconciling the irreconcilable, the “resolution of the Naga political issue” without actually getting the lost sovereignty restored.

By simply putting these tricky issues on the back burner, the State government and the Government of the People's Republic of Nagalim coexist in Kohima and near Dimapur. Situations where legitimately constituted State governments face challenges far more dire prevail in many parts of eastern and central India.

How has this unique “resolution of the Naga political issue” impinged on the ferment in the rest of the region?

Has the “mother of all insurgencies” in the region, whose leaders now travel on Indian passports with all implications of securing such a document, come to terms with its unrealised and indeed unrealisable sovereignty aspirations and injected a dose of realism into the sovereignty aspirations of other groups with far less legitimate claims than the Naga people who, under Phizo, formally declared Independence on August 14, 1947?

One significant development in the insurgency scenario is the “arrest” of senior leaders of ULFA and their resolve to hold talks with the Government of India without any precondition. Another is the “arrest” of UNLF chairman Rajkumar Sanayaima, who maintains that he was abducted by Indian agents in Dhaka and brought to India.

RKMeghenUnlike ULFA leaders who are on bail, Sanayaima remains in prison, defiant about not talking to the Government of India except on four preconditions being accepted, the core of which is a plebiscite under U.N. supervision to ascertain if the people of Manipur want to remain part of the country.

The differences in the government's approach to the NSCN (I-M), the ULFA and the UNLF are as striking as is the relatively realistic approach of the first two which too were insisting that the core issue in any talks with the government had to be sovereignty. Like the lady in the song, the NSCN (I-M) and ULFA leaders kept saying they would never consent, and yet consented. Will the UNLF follow suit?

There are other interesting developments on the insurgency front. Since the mother of all insurgencies began speaking to the government, other insurgent or terrorist groups have become active; these outfits have survived and even prospered by their capacity to reinvent themselves, though not their stated aims and objectives, and are carrying on.

The most curious instance of such reinvention is the path taken by Dima Halong Daoga (DHD), based in the North Cachar hills of Assam, one of the two Autonomous Hills Districts of the State, the other being Karbi Anglong where too the United Peoples Democratic Solidarity (UPDS), like almost every similar outfit, split into pro-talks and anti-talks factions.

The DHD's reinvention of itself by using a section of the Indian state, in this case, the administration of the North Cachar Autonomous District Council, a constitutional body, to channel development funds meant for the district to itself, an outlawed outfit, is indeed breathtaking.

The charge sheet by the National Investigative Agency available on http://nia.gov.in/niacases.aspx provides the most salutary education on the reinvention of insurgencies.