16 October 2011

Mizo Churches Go on Anti-Tobacco Drive

mizo church Anti tobacoo driveAizawl, Oct 16 : Churches in Mizoram have always championed a social cause, and this time they have taken up the crusade of battling consumption of tobacco. The 2009-2010 Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS) conducted by the International Institute for Population Sciences for the Union ministry of health and family welfare, said the rate of consumption is 67 per cent in Mizoram. The prevalent rate of tobacco use in the Northeast is 44 per cent, slightly lower than the eastern region, which is 45 per cent.

Again, Mizoram is the highest tobacco smoking state at 39 per cent. The tobacco smoking rate for the Northeast is 19.3 per cent, against the national rate of 14 per cent. Meghalaya is second in tobacco smoking at 35.7 per cent followed by Nagaland with 31.7 per cent.

Mizoram is only behind Nagaland in the consumption of smokeless tobacco. Consumption of smokeless tobacco in Nagaland is 45.3 per cent while in Mizoram it is 40.7 per cent. Bihar tops in the use of smokeless tobacco at 49 per cent.

Mizoram State Tobacco Control Society (MSTCS) nodal officer, Jane R Ralte, said churches of all denominations across the state are now taking up the leading role to spread awareness about the harmful effects of tobacco consumption.

"Anti-tobacco messages have now become a part of Sunday ceremonies in churches. In the Sunday preaching, pastors quote from the Bible on the harmful effects of tobacco consumption. The involvement of churches in the anti-tobacco campaign is gradually becoming an effective tool to fight the menace," Ralte said.

He added that churches have also started giving power-point presentations on the harmful effects of tobacco consumption during Sunday ceremonies. Chief minister Lalthanhawla and his wife are also supporting the cause. On Saturday, the Northeast fact sheet on the findings of GATS was released where senior bureaucrats and health officials were present. "There are laws for checking the prevalence of tobacco uses, and the state government should implement this legislation so that the menace is effectively curbed. It is a good move that churches, the chief minister and his wife are actively behind the anti-tobacco campaign," said Union health ministry chief medical officer Jagdish Kaur.

"We are seeing significant changes in terms of tobacco consumption. Smoking at public place in Mizoram has come down to 18 per cent from 65 per cent in recent time because of active anti-tobacco campaigns, and churches have a significant role to play in this," said Ralte.

The survey interviewed 15,259 people in the age group of 15 and above. All the Northeast states have surpassed the national average of 34.6 per cent in the consumption of tobacco products.

Eleven Girls From Northeast Rescued From Prostitution

By A Selvaraj

prostitution_racket busted in chennaiChennai, Oct 16 : The anti-vice squad of the police has arrested three persons, including two women, from two massage parlours in Alwarpet and Nandanam on prostitution charges. Eleven girls from Manipur and Assam, who worked as trainees in these parlours, have been rescued.

On Friday, police raided Sukko Spa on Eldams Road in Alwarpet and Banyan Tree Family Spa Academy in CIT Nagar, Nandanam. Police had sent decoys to the parlours nearly five times before they managed to confirm that they offered sexual favours to regular customers.

Suba alias Aancy (32) and Sunitha (35), both hailing from Kerala, and Balaji (23) of Chennai, have been charged under Sections of the Immoral Trafficking (Prohibition) Act. They were produced before the fourth metropolitan magistrate court in Saidapet and sent to Puzhal prison.

Police said these parlours offered sexual favours only to regular clients. "They wait to gain the customer's confidence. It's quite difficult to crack such cases. We sent the decoys to the parlours, acting on a tip-off.Each time we spent Rs 3,000 to Rs 5,000 to settle the bill," he said.

Police teams rescued four Manipuri girls from one parlour and seven others from Manipur and Assam from the other.

Suba had earlier been arrested for running a brothel with young girls from Manipur and Assam. For the past few months, she has been running a special course on massage therapy. As a part of internship, the students were taken to the parlour. "Such girls are forced into prostitution.

The girls accept the job after being offered extra money," another police officer said.

Two Tribes Battle For Control in India's Manipur State

By Eric Randolph

Vehicles burned out on National Highway 39 by protesters demanding a new district of Sardar Hills, who have imposed an economic blockade on the area.

      Imphal, Oct 16 : Out on National Highway 39, deep in the forested hills of Manipur, a teenage boy and a middle-aged woman with a leather handbag over her shoulder are inspecting a passenger bus.

      They are operating an illegal checkpoint. They look through the baggage compartment before climbing aboard to check under the seats and along the overhead racks. They are searching for anything that constitutes an import - whether it's a sack of potatoes, a bag of coal or a can of petrol. Satisfied that no contraband is on board, they wave the bus through.

      At this time in the early afternoon, the checkpoint has a relaxed and informal air. No guns are waved at the drivers, no threats are made.

      But the burnt-out remnants of lorries and jeeps that line the road on either side speak for themselves. "These things happen after dark," says one of the checkpoint volunteers with a grin.

      For almost three months, a group of villagers in the Sardar Hills region of Manipur have been enforcing this blockade on one of the main supply routes into this small and isolated state. By choking off supplies, they hope to pressure the government into giving them their own administrative district, allowing them more control over development money and government contracts.

      The effect of the blockade is immediately visible in the capital of Imphal, which lies in the valley below the hills. Motorists wait for hours at the few petrol stations that remain open. Prices for food and basic commodities have soared. Hospitals are even reporting shortages of essential medicines.

      On the surface, the reason for the blockade sounds prosaic, but it is tied up with the long-running and often violent animosity between the two tribes that dominate these hills - the Kukis and the Nagas - as well as demands for self-determination that date back to the birth of independent India.

      In the 1990s, bitter ethnic clashes between the Kukis and Nagas left nearly 1,000 people dead and hundreds of homes burnt to the ground. The violence was fuelled by the presence of dozens of armed groups keen to wrest control of the drug-smuggling routes that run across the border into Myanmar.

      Today, the intertribal killings have ceased, but the Kukis say the local government offices are still dominated by the Nagas, who siphon off the majority of the money for themselves.

      "We are not demanding this [an independent district] just for the Kukis," said SH Seipu, a community leader in the Sardar Hills. "It is for every community that lives in this region. At the moment, 80 per cent of education grants, employment schemes and recruitment drives go to the Nagas living around the district headquarters. This has to change."

      The Nagas see things differently. For them, the entirety of these hills are part of their ancestral homeland, and the Kukis, who migrated here mostly over the last 200 years, are recent interlopers.

      "We cannot drive the Kukis away, but they should acknowledge our ownership of this land," said Lohrii Adani, president of the United Naga Council, based in Senapati.

      "We are not against the formation of a new district in Sardar Hills per se, but there are many Nagas living in that region and we are against any agreement that divides our community."

      Soon after the Kukis started their blockade in August, the Nagas set up their own counter-blockade on the other major motorway into Manipur. They established the blockade to oppose the district the Kukis are demanding.

      Both say they have the law on their side, and brandish memoranda from the state government dating back 40 years in which various, contradictory promises have been made.

      In the background are dozens of insurgent groups - at least 40 by some counts. Many want independence for their respective communities, and use this as a cover for continuing to extort taxes and intimidate local businesses, leaving little room for moderate voices to prevail.

      "There doesn't seem to be any room for negotiation," said Pradip Phanjoubam, editor of the Imphal Free Press.

      "The local politicians are doing very well out of these blockades - they can jump on the bandwagon of either side to generate public support, but if it doesn't end soon, it could quickly descend into violence."

      Already, four deaths have been linked to blockade-related violence, although the details remain unclear. After the death of a driver in September, transport unions organised a strike that further crippled supplies to the state.

      Aware that arrests could spark more violent protests, and with one eye on local elections next year, the government has allowed the blockades to continue, while providing security for occasional emergency supplies to get through.

      But many see a wider political game being played, since the current agitations come at a sensitive time for talks between Naga insurgents and the central government in New Delhi.

      Naga militants - not only in Manipur, but across the Indian north-east and into Myanmar - have been demanding their own independent country for more than 60 years, making it the longest-running insurgency in India.

      A ceasefire has tentatively held since 1997 with the leading insurgent organisation, a faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland, although occasional terrorist attacks and killings continue.

      Reports suggest their talks with the government in New Delhi may be about to bear fruit.

      "We are told they are close to an agreement based on the idea of shared sovereignty," said Mr Adani. "We still want full independence, but a compromise may be the best option for our people."

      A final agreement on the Naga question would not be welcome by many Manipuris, who fear the break-up of their state. Manipur was an independent monarchy for some 2,000 years before its annexation into India in 1947.

      As if the situation were not complicated enough, the native Manipuris, or Meiteis, have their own insurgent groups demanding independence from India, as do the Kukis.

      Many believe the state government and these competing insurgent groups may be quietly supporting the recent Sardar Hills agitation as a way of undermining the Naga's desire for their own state.

      "This could all be a negotiating tactic by the government," said Jitan Yumnan, a local human-rights activist. "They know that granting the Sardar Hills would make it harder for the Nagas to claim this whole area as their land."

      Mr Adani agreed: "It's the old tactics of divide and rule, and they have an old wound to play on."

      In the murky world of northeastern politics, where militancy, political intrigue and the threat of ethnic violence have formed a perpetual backdrop to daily life for decades, it is hard to know where genuine negotiations start and conspiracy ends.

      "The government is using money and power to manipulate and divide communities," Mr Yumnan added.

      "They support one group against the other, making the issues more and more complicated, while doing nothing to deal with the real economic needs of the people.

      "If they don't handle this situation carefully, we could see a return to the violence of the 1990s."

      erandolph@thenational.ae

      Churchill Brothers Lifts Durand Cup

      By Vijay Lokapally

      HAPPY BUNCH: Churchil Brothers, which beat Prayag United via the tie-break in the final on Satuday to emerge champions.

      HAPPY BUNCH: Churchil Brothers, which beat Prayag United via the tie-break in the final on Saturday to emerge champions.

      Clinches tie-break in what was hardly a contest befitting the occasion

      It was hardly a contest befitting the occasion; a title clash, involving two of the finest clubs, but rarely rising above mediocrity. If Churchill Brothers won the Durand Cup at the Ambedkar Stadium here on Saturday, with a 5-4 tie-break win over Prayag United, it was more out of providence than conviction.

      The regulation and extra time had proved goalless. In the tie-breaker, Churchill Brothers scored through Lalrindika Ralte, M.P. Zakeer, Bineesh Balan, Matthew Kouacic and Denzil Franco.

      For Prayag, Kayne Vincent, Mohammad Rafique, Belo Razaq and Malsawntluanga scored while Yusuf Yakubu drove wide.

      Forced changes

      Churchill was forced to effect changes in the playing positions in the absence of Bineesh Balan and Roberto Silva. The focus was on denying Prayag and goalkeeper Felix D'Souza kept Churchill floating with some superb saves to carry the fight into extra time.

      James Singh's flag-kick provided a perfect setting for Prayag to strike early. He was measured with his effort but Denson Devadas slightly off the mark. His strong header thudded into the cross-piece. Churchill reorganised itself, launched a counter and this time Ndubusi Opara was awry with his drive. The teams now settled down to gauge each other, slowing down the pace. James was on the job again in the 19th minute. His flag-kick sailed over the collectively leaping Churchill defence and found an unmarked Arnob Mondal. His header was headed towards the goal when out of nowhere goalkeeper Felix D'Souza produced a stunning block. It was a spectacular save considering the fact that he had been blinded by the wall of defenders. Prayag dominated the first half, virtually parking itself in the Churchill territory. It should have scored twice. Josimar De Silva was well placed on both the occasions inside the box. He first failed to connect and then hit straight to a defender. Later, Yusuf Yakubu's curling shot was spectacularly kept out by an alert D'Souza under the bar.

      Churchill was unable to cope with the absence of Silva, nursing an injury, and Henry Arnaud, serving suspension. The responsibility was thrust upon Opara but he lacked support upfront. Churchill was reduced to defending the entire first half.

      The second half was a scrappy affair. Desperation gripped both the teams and some aimless football evoked displeasure from the stands. Quality had certainly taken a beating as Churchill lacked innovation and Prayag ran out of ideas.

      The teams:

      Prayag United: Abhijit Mondal (Somnath Khara), Deepak Mondal, Arnab Mondal, Bello Rasaq and Sukhen Dey; Gouranga Biswas, James Singh (Malsawm Tluanga), Denson Devadas and Mohammed Rafique; Joshimar De Silva (Kayne Vincent) and Yasif Yakubu.

      Churchill Brothers: Felix D'Souza, Denzil Franco, Gourmangi Singh, Mathew Kouacic and Raju Yumnam; Steven Dias (Lalrindika Ralte), Lenny Rodrigues, Zakeer Mundampara and D. Ravanan; Ndbuisi Opara (Xavier Kumar) and Jerry Zirsanga. Referee: A. Arjunan.

      15 October 2011

      Malaria Deaths Still On Rise in Mizoram

      anti malaria campaign MizoramAizawl, Oct 15 : Malaria remains the biggest killer disease in Mizoram with at least 29 people falling victim to the vector-borne disease during January to September this year, compared to 11 deaths during the corresponding period last year.

      According to official reports, Lawngtlai district has topped in malaria deaths with 10 people getting killed this year, while Lunglei and Mamit considered malaria-prone districts, have witnessed only two deaths each. Serchhip, also considered malaria-prone district, recorded three deaths.

      One malaria death has been reported from Kolasib and Champhai districts each. During this year, 13,8,846 blood samples have been tested of which 6,929 were found to be positive for malaria.

      From January till December last year, 31 people succumbed to the killer disease, as compared to the counts 199 in 2009 and 99 in 2008.

      According to the record of State Vector-Borne Diseases Control Programme (SVBDCP) of the 322929 blood samples tested during last year, 15,130 were found to be positive with malaria, of which 14,189 were malaria pf, more deadly than malaria pv. As many as 15,099 malaria patients were cured.

      According to the death investigation report of the health department, most of the malarial deaths happened due to negligence on the part of the patients that led to delayed treatment.

      The health department has set up FTD/ASHA in all towns and villages to help malaria patients get treatment on time. The decline of malaria deaths in Champhai and Kolasib has been attributed to the high percentage of households sprayed with DDT.

      India's Longest Rail Tunnel Opened in Kashmir

      An engineering marvel was unveiled Friday when the Indian Railways opened a 10.96-km long railway tunnel, the longest in the country, that will help connect the Kashmir Valley with the rest of the country, a company release said.

      India's longest rail tunnel opened in Kashmir

      The tunnel, which connects the Jammu region to the Kashmir Valley at Banihal, about 190 km from Jammu, was constructed at the cost of Rs.391 crore, according to Hindustan Construction Corporation (HCC) project manger S. Yala.

      The construction took six years.

      "The engineering work included construction of a tunnel having a finished width of 8.405 metres and height of 7.393 metres with a provision of three-metre wide concrete road inside the tunnel throughout the length for maintenance and emergency relief purpose," the company said.

      India's longest rail tunnel opened in Kashmir

      "It also required 772 metres long access tunnel section," the release said.

      According to an HCC statement in Mumbai, the tunnel, part of the Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla rail link project of the Indian Railways, passes nearly half a kilometre below the existing Jawahar road tunnel through the rugged Pir Panjal mountains in Jammu and Kashmir.

      The tunnel aims at reducing the travel distance between Quazigund to Banihal to only 11 km and providing a hassle-free travel up to Baramulla.

      India's longest rail tunnel opened in Kashmir

      The HCC faces a tough task going through the changing geological strata of the young Himalayan rock, and adopted the New Australian Tunneling Methodology (NATM) for the construction, the statement said.

      The project also became extremely challenging as the area sees heavy snowfall in winter, bringing the temperatures down to minus 10 degrees Celsius.

      Manipur Cries For Medicines, Doctors Helpless

      no medicineImphal, Oct 15 : As the economic blockade in Manipur continues for over 70 days now, the state is raising a helpless wail.

      Seriously ill patients are being turned away from hospitals, which are battling a shortage of life-saving drugs, and many are losing their lives.

      “It’s a pitiable situation. As a doctor I feel helpless that I can’t help...and have had to turn away many critically ill patients from my hospital just because there is a scarcity of life-saving drugs and oxygen because of the blockade,”

      KH Phalin, managing director of Shija hospital in Manipur said.

      According to Phalin, ever since the blockade began on Aug. 1, the price of an oxygen cylinder has gone up by four-five times.

      “Manipur does not have a medical gas plant of its own and is dependent on Assam. Therefore, because of the blockade, the supply of oxygen is affected. A cylinder that normally costs Rs320 in Assam, costs Rs1,100 here (from local suppliers) and at one time, went up to Rs2,400,” said Phalin, who is a surgeon and runs the state’s biggest private hospital.

      The hospital, like many others, also sends its own vehicle to get oxygen cylinders and other supplies from Guwahati in Assam, but has to “pay up to some local groups,” who, according to him, charge up to Rs5,000 to let their vehicle go.

      “In two weeks, we have had to reject at least 10 critically ill patients because we are running low on life-saving drugs and are in no position to take their responsibility.

      Moreover, we cannot take a risk with our own patients in the ICU and those on ventilator who require 15 cylinders every day,” he added.

      “There are cases of people losing their lives for lack of timely treatment and life-saving drugs,” Phalin said.

      According to doctors, besides medicines and oxygen, there has been a shortage of medical equipment as well.

      Whatever can be brought from nearby states, like Nagaland or Assam, are being arranged by the hospitals at their own cost.

      But the impact has been on the medical bills of the patients, which has shot up.

      “I hope the centre does something concrete, and urgently, to get us out of this situation. Otherwise Manipur will continue to bleed silently,” Phalin said.

      Mary Kom Storms Into National Boxing Semifinal

      Mary Kom, the current world champion in the 48kg category has moved to the 51kg group owing to her preparation for the 2012 Olympics.

      Bhopal, Oct 15 : Five-time world champion MC Mary Kom of Manipur stormed into the semifinals of the flyweight division at the 12th senior women's national boxing championship on Friday.

      Mary boxed her way into last four stage of the 51kg category with a comprehensive 17-0 win over P Nirosha of Andhra Pradesh.

      Mary, the 2010 Asian Games bronze medallist, was leading 17-0 when the referee decided to stop the fight and spare the Andhra Pradesh girl of any further distress.

      "It was a good victory for me and I had a good rhythm going on. I am happy with the way I have been performing and hope to carry the same form into the semis and most likely the finals as well," Mary said.

      L Sarita Devi (51kg) also advanced to the semifinals in the flyweight division.

      The former world champion was expected to have a tough battle for a place in the semis against Vanlal Duati of Mizoram, who won the gold medal in the 48kg at the 2011 National Games.

      But Sarita, who is playing for the All India Police team, was at her riveting best as she tore apart Duati's defence.

      After the opening two minutes of play the score was level at one-all, but with the beginning of the next round Sarita shifted gears and started increasing the margin.

      She scored six and seven points in the second and third rounds respectively with Duati only managing four in both.

      The final two minutes of play and Sarita launched an offensive onslaught on a worn out Duati. The 29-year-old was relentless with her straight punches and jabs and won the round 12:3 and with it the bout 26:13.

      In the same weight category, Pinki Jangra (51kg) of Haryana continued her purple patch as she stormed into the semifinals, beating local boxer Nirmala Kohli, who retired hurt after taking some heavy pounding.

      Sarita will take on National Games gold medallist Pinki Jangra in the semifinal, while Mary will be up against Dolly Singh of West Bengal in other last four bout.