29 July 2011

‘Editor’s Remarks’ on Facebook Trigger Outrage, Bandh in Assam

By Samudra Gupta Kashyap

assam bandhGuwahati, Jul 29 : The “derogatory remarks” allegedly made by the editor of a local news channel against a community sparked outrage and a bandh that shut several districts of upper Assam on Thursday.

The 12-hour bandh, called by Tai-Ahom Yuva Parishad and supported by several other organisations representing the community, paralysed Dibrugarh, Tinsukia, Jorhat, Sivasagar, Dhemaji, Golaghat and Lakhimpur districts, shutting down schools, colleges, offices and shops and keeping traffic off the roads. There were a few stray cases of stone-pelting but the bandh passed off relatively peacefully.

The “derogatory remarks” were allegedly made by Atanu Bhuyan, editor-in-chief of Guwahati-based NewsLive, on his Facebook page some days ago.

Bhuyan, however, denied making such remarks, claiming that the Facebook page where the remarks appeared was a fake account created by some miscreants to defame him. Bhuyan said he had filed a case with the police, and hoped the “actual culprits” behind this fake Facebook account would be soon brought to book.

Bhuyan’s denial, however,did not cut ice with the Ahom organisations, some of which called and supported the bandh while some demanded his arrest, some his resignation and others a public apology.

Manipur Sadar Hills Committee Calls Economic Blockade

Sadar Hills District Demand Committee economic blockade manipurImphal, Jul 29 : The Sadar Hills District Demand Committee (SHDDC) has announced to impose economic blockade on the two national highways of Manipur from July 31.

It will continue till August 31 and may be extended if committe's demands are not met, a statement said today.

The Committee is demanding a full-fledged revenue district status for Sadar hills, which is now under Senapati district.

The Sadar Hills are dominated by people belonging to Kuki tribe. The Manipur government was earlier to declare it into a full- fledged district but was stopped after objections from certain community.

District status related stir were also witnessed at Ukhrul and Jiribam areas. The state has nine districts now.

Sixth Schedule will help develop hill areas: Kulabidhu

Janata Dal (Secular), Manipur President, W Kulabidhu today said extending the provisions of the Sixth Schedule will benefit the hill areas. He said there are six hill revenue districts where the Manipur Hill Areas (District Councils) Act 1971 is in force.

Now, in consonance with the spirit of the constitution (72nd Amendment) Act, 1993, and the constitution (73rd Amendment) Act, 1993, enlarging the powers of the Panchayat raj institutions, municipal corporations and nagar palikas, the extension of the Sixth Schedule to the administration of the tribal areas of the hill districts will play a big role.

It will play a big role in solving the ethnic violence which is prevailing in Manipur at the present moment, he said. The Cabinet of the United Legislature Front under Chief Ministership of R K Ranbir Singh took a decision on May 13, 1991 to request the Centre to extend the Sixth Schedule to the Hill District Councils of the State of Manipur with local variations and certain amendments.

Again, the Cabinet of the Congress MPP coalition ministry under the leadership of R K Dorendra Singh reaffirmed the earlier decision on September, 17, 1992. Two consecutive State Cabinet decisions are there for the extension of the act.

Embraceable You: India & Bangladesh

Growing geopolitical interests push India to seek better relations nearer home

Dhaka: Not much noticed by outsiders, long-troubled ties between two neighbours sharing a long border have taken a substantial lurch for the better. Ever since 2008, when the Awami League, helped by bags of Indian cash and advice, triumphed in general elections in Bangladesh, relations with India have blossomed. To Indian delight, Bangladesh has cracked down on extremists with ties to Pakistan or India’s home-grown terrorist group, the Indian Mujahideen, as well as on vociferous Islamist (and anti-Indian) politicians in the country. India feels that bit safer.

Now the dynasts who rule each country are cementing political ties. On July 25th Sonia Gandhi (pictured, above) swept into Dhaka, the capital, for the first time. Sharing a sofa with Sheikh Hasina (left), the prime minister (and old family friend), the head of India’s ruling Congress Party heaped praise on her host, notably for helping the poor. A beaming Sheikh Hasina reciprocated with a golden gong, a post

humous award for Mrs Gandhi’s mother-in-law, Indira Gandhi. In 1971 she sent India’s army to help Bangladeshis, led by Sheikh Hasina’s father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, throw off brutal Pakistani rule.

As a result, officials this week chirped that relations are now “very excellent”. They should get better yet. India’s prime minister, Manmohan Singh, will visit early in September to sign deals on sensitive matters like sharing rivers, sending electricity over the border, settling disputed patches of territory on the 4,095km (2,500-mile) frontier and stopping India’s trigger-happy border guards from murdering migrants and cow-smugglers. Mr Singh may also deal with the topic of trade which, smuggling aside, heavily favours India, to Bangladeshi ire.

Most important, however, is a deal on setting up a handful of transit routes across Bangladesh, to reach India’s remote, isolated north-eastern states. These are the “seven sisters” wedged up against the border with China.

On the face of it, the $10 billion project will develop poor areas cut off from India’s booming economy. The Asian Development Bank and others see Bangladeshi gains too, from better roads, ports, railways and much-needed trade. In Dhaka, the capital, the central-bank governor says broader integration with India could lift economic growth by a couple of percentage points, from nearly 7% already.

India has handed over half of a $1 billion soft loan for the project, and the money is being spent on new river-dredgers and rolling stock. Bangladesh’s rulers are mustard-keen. The country missed out on an earlier infrastructure bonanza involving a plan to pipe gas from Myanmar to India. China got the pipeline instead.

Yet the new transit project may be about more than just development. Some in Dhaka, including military types, suspect it is intended to create an Indian security corridor. It could open a way for army supplies to cross low-lying Bangladesh rather than going via dreadful mountain roads vulnerable to guerrilla attack. As a result, India could more easily put down insurgents in Nagaland and Manipur. The military types fear it might provoke reprisals by such groups in Bangladesh.

More striking, India’s army might try supplying its expanding divisions parked high on the border with China, in Arunachal Pradesh. China disputes India’s right to Arunachal territory, calling it South Tibet. Some Bangladeshis fret that if India tries to overcome its own logistical problems by, in effect, using Bangladesh as a huge military marshalling yard, reprisals from China would follow.

Such fears are not yet widespread. Indeed, India has been doing some things right in countering longstanding anti-Indian suspicion and resentment among ordinary Bangladeshis. Recent polling by an American university among students found a minority hostile to India, whereas around half broadly welcomed its rise. A straw poll at a seminar of young researchers at a think-tank in Dhaka this week suggested a similar mood—though anger remained over Indian border shootings.

For India, however, the risk is that it is betting too heavily on Sheikh Hasina, who is becoming increasingly autocratic. Opposition boycotts of parliament and general strikes are run-of-the-mill. Corruption flourishes at levels astonishing even by South Asian standards. A June decision to rewrite the constitution looks to be a blunt power grab, letting the government run the next general election by scrapping a “caretaker” arrangement. Sheikh Hasina is building a personality cult around her murdered father, “the greatest Bengali of the millennium”, says the propaganda.

Elsewhere, the hounding of Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel laureate and founder of the Grameen Bank who briefly flirted with politics, was vindictive. Similarly, war-crimes trials over the events of 1971 are to start in a few weeks. They are being used less as a path to justice than to crush an opposition Islamic party, Jamaat-e-Islami.

It hardly suggests that India’s ally has a wholly secure grasp on power. A tendency to vote incumbents out may yet unseat Sheikh Hasina in 2013, or street violence might achieve the same. She would then be replaced by her nemesis, Khaleda Zia, of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party. Mrs Zia’s family dynasty, also corrupt, is as against India as Sheikh Hasina’s is for it. But India’s habit of shunning meetings with Mrs Zia and her followers may come to look short-sighted. When he visits Bangladesh in September, Mr Singh, the Gandhi family retainer, would do well to make wider contact if India’s newly improving relations are not one day to take another big dive for the worse.

Preserving The Aroma of Topola Bhaat

By Samudra Gupta Kashyap

FF

Farmers of Assam cultivate around 2,000 varieties of traditional rice.

Guwahati, Jul 29 : The state government, in association with the Assam Agricultural University (AAU), Jorhat, has sought to protect and preserve its wide variety of traditional rice, and two of these are on the verge of being recognised as registered farmers’ varieties.

“Assam and the entire Northeast have an unbelievable number of rice varieties, most of which are yet to be studied scientifically and classified,” said Dr Birendra Kumar Sarma, a former scientist of the ICAR, whose pioneering work, Rice Diversity of North East India, has won acclaim among the scientific community.

According to Sarma, there should be anywhere between 3,000 and 3,500 varieties of rice or paddy in the Northeast, with a World Bank-sponsored National Agricultural Technology Project listing about 2,000 varieties in Assam alone.

Two of the traditional varieties of rice, awaiting registration from the National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources (NBPGR), incidentally, are exclusively grown by the Singpho tribe of Tinsukia district in Upper Assam. “It is very important to register the traditional varieties that have been cultivated by different ethnic groups and have been part of their culture and tradition,” said Dr Pranab Talukdar, a professor of plant breeding and genetics at the AAU. Talukdar, who heads a team of scientists studying the rice varieties, said the Krishi Vigyan Kendras in each district in Assam have been asked to find out the number of farmers’ variety rice and also the area under cultivation.

The two varieties, Khawlung and Miaotong, are used exclusively for making topola bhaat — rice boiled while packed in plantain, koupaat and other leaves — by the Singpho community. It is a delicacy prepared from purely organic and aromatic glutinous type of traditional fine rice varieties such as Miaotong and Khawlung. Topola bhaat has become quite popular among the tourists and is a big hit during the traditional Patkai Festival and Pangsau Pass Festival organised in Margherita in Assam and Changlang in Arunachal Pradesh.

“Once the NBPGR issues the registration certificate, the Singpho community will enjoy the exclusive rights for commercial production as well as cultural promotion of the two varieties, which, in turn, will also bring economic benefits to the small community,” Talukdar said.

While several ethnic communities in Assam and the Northeast prepare topola bhaat, the aromatic topola bhaat of these two Singpho varieties remain fresh for up to three days after being cooked.

Distant cousins of the Jingpo community of the Yunan province of China and Jingpaw tribe of Myanmar, the Singphos are credited to have grown and brewed tea since time immemorial in Assam.

“It is very important that we protect and preserve our traditional rice varieties. We have requested the AAU to expedite the process so that most of these traditional varieties, several of which are already endangered, are not wiped out. This will not only help save the varieties, but also bring good economic returns to the people,” said Assam Agriculture Minister Nilamoni Sen Deka.

Nagaland Targets Self Sufficiency in Meat Production

Kohima, Jul 29 : The Nagaland government has set the target of becoming the first state in the country to become self-sufficient in meat production by 2020.

Under the policy, Animal protein for all: Securing food basket through sustainable livestock and poultry farming, the department of veterinary and animal husbandry has taken up ambitious schemes by involving cross-sections of people, including the HIV-infected and the physically challenged.

State government officials said by 2020, Nagaland was expected to export meat to other parts of the country and also to South East Asia.

At present, the state imports Rs 220-crore worth of meat annually but officials of the veterinary and animal husbandry department are hopeful that this would come down drastically as all efforts are being made to increase meat production.

Senior technical assistant Z. Mekro said the department would soon sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the German company, Pig Dutchman, to start modern slaughtering houses and pig-breeding farms in the state through public private partnership (PPP).

The detail project report has been sent to the Planning Commission with a projected cost of Rs 1,180 crore.

At present, Nagaland imports Rs 93.726 crore worth of pork, beef worth Rs 23.241 crore, chicken worth Rs 28.575 crore, dog and goat worth Rs 7.62 crore, milk (powder milk and baby food) worth Rs 64.162 crore and eggs worth Rs 3.525 crore. Nagaland also imports cattle and buffalos from Myanmar.

The state’s internal monetary value in terms of internal production of meat, milk and egg is Rs. 637.71 crore, which contributed around 20 per cent to the state’s revenue earning.

“During the eleventh five year plan, the department is focusing on development of piggery and poultry for meat production and infusion of superior germplasm of dairy cattle for milk production to narrow the gap between the demand and supply of animal husbandry products,” Mekro told this correspondent.

He said Nagaland produces the best pork in the country and rural piggery, poultry and dairy are being taken up in the form of backyard farming in rural areas.

The state government has also initiated the process of setting up a veterinary college at Jalukie, 100km from Kohima, to promote veterinary practice and to enhance production of meat.

28 July 2011

Mizoram Enjoys Peace, But Clamours For Progress

By K Anurag

Image: A Mizo tribal woman waits for a bus after buying household goods from a market in Aizawl

The  tiny state of Mizoram is called an island of peace in the disturbed Northeast. It is a landlocked hilly state spread over 21,087 square kilometer inhabited by over 10.9 lakh people who mostly follow the same religion, Christianity, and of whom 91.85 per cent are recorded as literate.

The people of this Northeastern hill state bordering Myanmar and Bangladesh, recently celebrated the Silver Jubilee of the famous Mizo Peace Accord which was signed on June 30, 1986.

The celebration was not only in the state capital Aizawl but also in all the eight district headquarters reflecting how the people of the state cherish the peaceful atmosphere and want to keep those forgettable two decades (1966-86) of turmoil at bay.

Unlike other peace accords or ceasefire pact signed with various other militant groups in the Northeast which usually end up breeding more disgruntled armed groups instead of restoring lasting peace, the Mizo Peace Accord has worked splendidly well in bringing back lasting peace to the state.

Termed as the most successful peace accord with any insurgent group in the country, peace accord tasted success mainly because the MNF complied with all the requirements of the Accord viz.

This was to abjure violence and surrender all arms, not to aid any other rebel group elsewhere in the region and acknowledge Mizoram as an integral part of India in letter and spirit.

However, questions are being raised whether the government has fulfilled all the commitments it had made in the accord to facilitate all round development of the tiny state that has few sources for internal revenue generation.

Matters like rehabilitation of former MNF rebels and facilitate border trade have been fulfilled partially, but much is yet to be done to tap the real potential of the state in respect of tourism, ethnicity, and horticulture etc sectors.

"We want the Central and Mizoram government to work in tandem to make proper planning and mobilise resources to tap most potential sectors in the state to mitigate the burgeoning unemployment problem in the state. We need professional education institutions and better air and surface connectivity for rapid growth," said a senior office bearer of Mizo Zirlai Pawl (Mizo Students Union).

Lack of opportunities for employment and professional education back home have driven thousands of young Mizo women and men to big cities outside thereby triggering flight of huge amount of money from the cash-starved state every year.

"The state of finances of our tiny state is well reflected from the reality that it was the government which provided the money for celebration of Silver Jubilee of Mizo Peace Accord throughout the state," said a senior leader of the influential Young Mizo Association.

The YMA leader said unless there is massive central assistance Mizoram government would never have resources of its own to build much needed roads to improve connectivity in the state as well as to improve the dismal power supply scenario which have been major deterrent for investment from outside.

"We have urged our chief minister to seek special central assistance to improve basic infrastructure in the state so that the State can be put on the fast track of development exploiting the peaceful situation, the YMA leader said.

The burning problem of unemployment has given rise to a restive young generation in the hill state where drug abuse has become a serious problem and the prohibition has turned out to be total failure calling for rethinking on part of the government.

The dismal state finances has attracted ban not only on creation of new jobs but also on filling up of vacant posts in the state government sector.

The incumbent Congress regime led by Chief Minister Lalthanhawla, however, takes heart that many of the clauses of Mizo Accord related to border trade and rehabilitation of surrendered MNF rebels have been fulfilled to some extent.

Border trade with Myanmar initiated though it remains to be commissioned formally. A border haat with Myanmar is on the anvil. Talks on border trade with Bangladesh through Demagiri in Mizoram are in progress.

Lalthanhawla met Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina during the latter's visit to India, to discuss the issue and Bangladesh High Commissioner in India subsequently visited Mizoram for the purpose.

Unless rapid strides are made on the path of development and growth, the prevailing peace may turn uneasy in days to come.

Traffickers Use TV Channel To Lure Northeast Girls

By Dwaipayan Ghosh

THe SOLD project demonstration in front of the Memorial Union. New Delhi, Jul 28 : A gang of inter-state traffickers has been trying to use the name of a wildlife, knowledge and travel television channel to lure girls.

The gang members have even typed 'offer letters with attractive salaries' bearing fake logos of the channel to attract girls from Nagaland, Mizoram, Manipur and Tibetans. The channel has lodged a complaint with the south district police in this regard.

Karuna Gulyani, a representative of the channel said she had come across some pamphlets purportedly being distributed in south Delhi seeking to employ girls from Tibet and Nagaland to travel with the group's two leading channels - one of them dedicated to knowledge and the other to wildlife.

These unauthorized pamphlets also state that the girls will be paid a salary ranging from Rs 25,000 to Rs 30,000 per month.

The logos, claimed channel representatives, appeared to be so close to the genuine logos that they fear many girls may have already been duped.

It is worthwhile to mention here that Munirka, located close to the Qutub Institutional area, has a huge population of girls - mostly students and young professionals - who come from northeasten states.

What has surprised cops regarding the modus operandi of the gang is the social profiling - asking girls from a particular area to join services.

"An organized gang is just trying to make a fast buck,'' said an officer, adding that the means could be achieved through trafficking or duping the gullible.

DCP (south) Chhaya Sharma said she was aware of the complaint but investigations were only at a preliminary stage.

According to a Vasant Kunj police officer, a case will be registered only after the cops have analyzed the source of these pamphlets. Efforts are on to trace the printers of these pamphlets.

Gulyani has advised girls to ignore these posters as they are in no way involved with the employment drive of the channel.

"Please report such incidents to us immediately and do not be fooled by these pamphlets,'' said Gulyani.

Youth-Centric Channel Hit7 Launched For Northeast India

By Nitin Pandey

Hit7 mizoram northeast India channelLSD Media Pvt Ltd has launched its first media venture - a free-to-air youth targeted entertainment channel Hit7 - for the North-East region of India on July 15, 2011. The channel is targeted at the regions including Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur and Tripura.

The channel, which is headquartered at Kandivili (West), Mumbai, will be carried on INSAT4-A. The content packaging, ingestion and transmission will be done from company facilities in Mumbai and Navi Mumbai.

Speaking to exchange4media on the thought process behind the launch of the channel, Sunil Manocha, Co-Founder, LSD Media Pvt Ltd, stated, “The primary youth segment (15-25) and secondary segment (26-35) roughly account for 70 per cent of the region’s 50 million population.

And there was no any dedicated entertainment channel available in the region for youth. Hence, we found a greater need for a localised entertainment channel there.

Now, the channel will also give an opportunity to those advertisers who want to reach out to the young audience of the North-East region of the country.”

Meanwhile, Hit7’s content plan consist content from 5 major sources that include International music labels like EMI, Virgin and Warner Music; locally sourced content like music videos and regional film music; IPR (Intellectual Property Right) based fiction and non-fiction content that will include daily serials, studio based shows and reality shows; IPR based shows containing local talent like performing bands, individual performers; licensed formats that will be indigenised to suit local taste and flavour.

Right now, in the North-East region of the country, there are few current affairs and entertainment channel available that include regional channels of DD, DY 365, News Live, Rang (GEC), News Time, NE TV, NE Hi-Fi and Frontier TV.

Presently, the advertisers on the local North East channels are a mix of national advertisers, local companies, local state governments and DAVP. In the first year of operations Hit7 aims to capture 10 per cent market share of the advertising spends. Manocha said that they will be targeting all sets of advertisers in the region for Hit7. He noted, “The FMCG companies like HUL, ITC, L’Oreal, Emami, Godrej are among the largest category of advertisers in the region.

All the telecom service providers like Vodafone, Airtel, Idea, Tata Telecom, Aircel are advertisers on the local channels. The other categories that are advertising on the local channels include Insurance and Banking sector, 2 wheelers among others. The local governments of the 7 states also use these channels to highlight the various schemes and projects of the government.”

On the distribution strategy for channel, Manocha remarked, “HIT 7 will be distributed across all the 7 states of North East India. The distribution of the channel is focused on local cable platforms, 20-30 urban/youth centers and deals have also been inked with all existing MSO’s (Multi System Operators) in the 7 states.”

Meanwhile, Hit7 plans a transition to DTH within two years of operations.

LSD Media Pvt. Ltd. is promoted by Sunil Manocha, Sanjay Dhar and Sumit Luthra. The mandate of LMPL is to identify, develop, deploy and own regional electronic media vehicles including Specialty channels like Music, Sports and Youth. The company mandate also includes creating media assets like talent representation; creation of IPR based formats and events.