11 December 2011

New Sports Complex Being Constructed in Mizoram

Rajiv Gandhi Sports Stadium in AizawlAizawl, Dec 11 : The Rajiv Gandhi Sports Stadium in Aizawl, the first full fledged sports complex in Mizoram, is expected to be completed next year.

The sports complex will comprise of a football ground and an eight lane athletic track of international standards. It is being constructed at a cost of 150 crore rupees.The project began in 2009.

“Work is going at a good speed here. We have used 600 metric tonnes of iron and only 30 metric tonnes is left with us. And we think we shall be able to finish the work much before the set deadline,” said Diwakar Bhattacharjee.

Four different government agencies are involved in its construction, including the public works department.

The entire project is funded under the central government’s Non lapsable Central Pool of Resources with the operational part of this project taken under the state sports council.

Apart from the Rajiv Gandhi Sports Stadium, another contact sports stadium for contact games like Judo, Karate, and Taekwondo is also under construction.

These stadiums will provide a well organized set up for the training of Mizo sportspersons in future.

Both these projects are part of the bigger policy of the state government “Catch them young” that aims to train the under 14 youth of the region to promote sports in Mizoram.

“There is a great potential for sports in Mizoram and we are going to tap this entirely. I am encouraging cricket in the region and in a few years from now we shall be able to promote good players,” said Lal Thanhawla, Mizoram Chief Minister.

Bangladesh And Mizoram Minister Inaugurate Trade Centre











Aizawl, Dec 11 : Border Trade Facilitation Centre at Mizoram-Bangladesh border Tlabung town in south Mizoram's Lunglei district was jointly inaugurated by the visiting Bangladesh state minister for Chittagon Hill Tracts Dipankar Talukdar and Mizoram Trade and Commerce Minister Lalrinliana Sailo yesterday.

An official statement today said that the centre was constructed at the cost of Rs 108.07 lakh and funded by the Union Commerce Ministry.

The two ministers also unveiled the India-Bangladesh Shared Vision of Peace, Prosperity and Partnership stone at Kawrpuichhuah, the proposed border trade centre for Indo-Bangladesh trade, the statement said.

MJA Takes Strong Exception To Delay in Bill Clearance

Aizawl, Dec 11 : Mizoram Journalist Association (MJA) today took strong exception to the delay in the clearance of advertisement bills by the state PWD's National Highway for a long time and threatened to approach the court of law if all the pending bills are not cleared by December 31, 2011.

A press statement issued by the MJA also instructed all the local newspapers not to publish any advertisements issued by the PWD National Highway before the pending bills are cleared.

The scribes body also condemned the decision of the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways that the rates of advertisement should be as per the rates of the DAVP and not as per the approved rates of the state government.

"The advertisements given through the state government should be billed as per the government rates," the statement said.

The advertisements been kept pending for a year should be paid with 12 per cent interests in accordance with the instruction given by Justice Murkandey Katju, chairman of the Press Council of India, the statement added.

Tripura Provides Most Jobs Under NREGA

NGERAAgartala, Dec 11 : Tripura has once again topped all the states in implementing the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), which guarantees minimum job days to people in rural areas, a minister said here on Saturday.

State Rural Development Minister Jitendra Chaudhury, quoting a performance report of the union rural development ministry, told reporters: “Tripura stands at the top in terms of person-days generation of 45 so far in the current fiscal (2011-2012), followed by Andhra Pradesh (39.19 person-days) and Sikkim (38.39).”

Others in the top 10 list are Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Lakshwadeep, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh.

The MGNREGA guarantees 100 days of employment in a financial year to a rural household whose adult members volunteer to do unskilled manual work.

Tripura has also topped in getting per head fund allocation from the central government and providing wages to MGNREGA workers through banks, the report added.

The minister claimed that in 2010-11 and previous years too, Tripura secured the top position in the country by providing on an average of 67 man-days to people under rural job scheme.

Northeast Has Huge Pool Of Resources in Sports: Maken

Shillong, Dec 11 : Union Minister of Sports and Youth Affairs Ajay Maken today acknowledged the potentiality of huge pool of resources in sports in North-East and assured assistance from Centre.

"North East and Meghalaya (in particular) has enormous potential in sports, particularly in football," Maken said while speaking to reporters at the sideline of YES project convocation held here.

He said, "Rs 42 crore has been sanctioned for NEHU multi-purpose sports centre which will be ready by August next year."

While admitting that the project has been delayed, Maken said he had met the CPWD Superintendent engineer and asked him to complete the project within August.

Centre has sanctioned two regional sports centres - one in Assam and another in Manipur - and a SAI training centre in Shillong.

For People in Imphal, The State Is A Failure

By Gaurav Sharma

street-market-imphal-manipur-indiaImphal, Dec 11 : Ibungochoubi Ningthoukhongjam, 49, owns five mobile phones, not because he is a gadget freak but to ensure he does not lose contact during an emergency, as one cannot count on the erratic telecommunication network in the Manipuri capital plagued by months of civil unrest and supply blockages.

"Carrying five mobile phones is cumbersome. The extremely poor mobile connection forces a person like me to keep them. When the diesel supply won't reach the gensets in mobile towers, how can you expect uninterrupted communication? This state is a failure," Ningthoukhongjam told a visiting IANS correspondent.

There are many like Ningthoukhongjam, who are languishing in Manipur which is riddled with decade-old ethnic clashes, insurgency, sporadic economic blockades and the clamped under the much hated Armed Forces Special Powers Act.

The recent 121-day economic blockade, brought about by a dispute between the Nagas and the Kuki tribes over the creation of a new administrative district, literally brought the entire state to its knees by pushing prices of essential commodities sky-high. The blockade led to severe shortage of essentials, petroleum products and cooking gas cylinders, besides medicines and machines, causing untold misery to Manipur residents.

Even on normal days, life in Imphal comes to a standstill after 5 p.m. All you can see on the deserted roads are stray dogs and police vehicles.

Shops too down shutters after 5 p.m. in this city of around 250,000 people. Venturing out alone, without any plausible reason, may be foolhardy as you or your vehicle may draw unnecessary attention of the armed forces, who dot the roads, and who can ask you to produce your identity cards.

However, with their gritty determination, people have come to terms with life here. They don't bemoan the bandhs, curfews, economic blockades or other travails of life in verdant and panoramic Manipur, home to some 2.7 million people.

"We don't complain any more as there is nothing much you can do as the state government is sleeping and the centre does not care. Movement for secession is bound to rear its head as Manipur has been forgotten by the government of India," a local told IANS, refusing to be named.

The students from upper middle class families go to other parts of the country to pursue higher education.

"Anyone who wants to pursue good education cannot do so in Manipur as, due to the numerous bandhs, education gets disrupted," said Nintagmba, who is studying in Delhi.

The prevalence of drug use is very high in this state bordering Myanmar, from where opium and other narcotics are smuggled here.

Many youngsters and middle-aged people in the state are in the grip of substance abuse.

"Seeing the present state of affairs in Manipur, it does not seem that the situation will improve even after 10 years. You cannot expect a miracle when nothing has changed over the decades," said 44-year-old Imphal resident Rakesh.

(Gaurav Sharma can be contacted at gaurav.s@ians.in)

27 November 2011

Mizo Idol 2011: A Platform For Young Artists To Showcase Talent

Mizo IdolAizawl, Nov 27 : Mizo Idol 2011, a state level talent hunt, is turning out to be the most popular annual event among the youth of Mizoram who are opting for music as a full time career.

More than 600 youngsters from eight districts of the state participated in it this year.

The three month long contest finally reached its final round with two contestants, Lalthuthaa and Biakmuana, competing for the crown.

Lalthuthaa reckons that the event will promote Mizo traditional music "If I win the Mizo Idol contest I will try my level best to take traditional music of Mizoram to the mainstream," Lalthuthaa said.

The event is extremely popular with the youth in the region and the thousand strong crowd present for the final audition clearly reflected this fact.

"It is a show that helps the teenagers and youth to showcase their talent so that they can present themselves at the higher levels," Longmui Saihi, a local said.

Another local, Christobel, believes that there is a need for more such shows.

"I am hoping that we have more shows like this so that people also get to know the talent we have in the northeast," he said.

There are several bands like Boomerang and solo musicians like Rebecca from Mizoram who have played with top musicians in several contests and live shows across the country.

Mizo Idol is currently in its sixth edition and is providing a huge platform to artists from the region to the showcase their skills.

"I would request all our singers to go outside Mizoram and venture. This will give them an experience of performing outside the state and can surely have a huge impact," organizer Tato Lalthantluanga said.

Several musicians from the region like Rewben Mashangva and late Bhupen Hazarika are known not just in the country but across the world as well.

Fighting To End NREGS Corruption In Their Village at Meghalaya

By KumKum Dasgupta

Fatima Mynsong (39), Acquiline Songthiang (37) and Matilda Suting (38)

NREGAFighting to end NREGS corruption in their village at Meghalaya Believe it or not, activist Anna Hazare and minister of rural development Jairam Ramesh could now actually have common mascots in Matilda Suting, Acquiline Songthiang and Fatima Mynsong.

The three have been fighting corruption in the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) for the last three years in Meghalaya.

“I hate corruption and there is so much of it around us,” says Mynsong, a primary school teacher from Jongksha, a village of 600 households, 32 kilometres from Shillong.

When the NREGS, which entitled each household to up to 100 days work, began in the village in 2008, there was much anticipation since stable work options are rare in that area.

Songthiang, who is a school teacher, and her colleague Mynsong got involved in the implementation process.

As soon as the project began, Mynsong found to her horror that someone had fraudulently withdrawn money for the purchase of materials and wages by forging her signature.

Angry, she went up to the village executive committee and challenged them. Instead of launching a probe, the secretary just told her to mind her own business. Songthiang also had a similar experience.


“We were very angry and wanted to file a Right to Information case but did know how to go about it,” recounts Mynsong. Luckily, a cousin knew and helped frame the letter. An old friend and neighbour Matilda Suting, a housewife, also joined their fight.

When the news of misappropriation spread, some of the villagers came out in support, while many others stayed away. This divided the village into two camps. “We called a meeting of the NREGS workers and told them what was happening.

It was a giant leap for us but we believed that we must not accept corruption,” Mynsong reminisces.

Their rations were stopped and the three were even physically assaulted.

However, all these did not dampen their spirits.

Slowly, the wheels of justice moved and a chargesheet was filed against the erring officers. “Our people are often taken for a ride. This has to stop,” says Mynsong confidently.