10 January 2012

Man Versus Leopard Clash On Camera


A leopard, which attacked a person (R) in a residential colony, is taken away after being tranquillized by zoo officials in Guwahati. The leopard had injured three persons. 

Guwahati, Jan 10 : A labourer who had his scalp ripped off by a rampaging leopard over the weekend has spoken of his horrific ordeal, saying he was trying to save the cat when it turned on him.

Pintu Dey is recovering in hospital in Assam after being badly mauled outside his house in an attack captured in a series of startling and gruesome photographs.
"My two children were inside the house and so I went to save them when I found some policemen aiming to shoot the leopard," Dey, who is in his 40s, told AFP from his hospital bed.

"I pleaded against killing the cat and literally stood between the policemen and the leopard like a shield, and all of a sudden I found myself attacked and blood splattered all over."

The leopard had strayed into a residential area in the centre of Guwahati, the capital of Assam, and attacked another three people, killing one.

Dey also suffered a fractured hand and cuts caused by multiple bites on his hands and legs.

A former journalist and lawyer called Deva Kumar Das succumbed to his injuries on Sunday. The condition of the other two was said to be stable.

Referring to Dey, a doctor in the Wintrobe Hospital told AFP: "I would say the injury is really severe as he lost a lot of blood and his scalp wound is indeed serious."

The cat was later tranquilised by forest officials and taken to the Assam State Zoo in Guwahati. On Monday it was set free in a tiger reserve in Manas, western Assam.

"I wish the government could take care of my medical expenses as my financial condition is not sound," Dey told AFP, explaining that he does casual work but has no reliable source of income.

Thousands of people are attacked by wildlife in India each year, with tigers, leopards, elephants and snakes the most dangerous.

Conservationists blame a decline in the natural habitat for wild animals, particularly dense forest cover in areas surrounding cities, for the deadly incidents occasionally reported from urban areas in India.
09 January 2012

Mizoram govt will not resume talks with Hmar group


Aizawl, Jan 9 : Mizoram government will not resume talks with Hmar People’s Convention (D) ‘merely’ because of the Centre’s pressure to do so, state Home minister R Lalzirliana said on Sunday.

Lalzirliana told PTI here that the Union Home Ministry had recently sent a letter to state chief secretary Van Hela Pachuau instructing the state government to resume negotiations with HPC-D.

“How could the Centre ask us to talk to the outfit now when the Union Home Ministry, a few months back, had itself asked state governments to deal with the insurgent outfits as dacoits? ” he asked.

The Centre had signed Suspension of Operation (SoO) agreement with several north east ultra groups, including HPC-D on the condition that their cadres would be confined within designated camps and that they would deposit their arms with the security forces.

The HPC-D cadres had not only not remained in the designated camps but had also never deposited their arms and continued to indulge in violent and illegal activities, including extortion from across the Manipur border, he said.

“Even if we want to comply with the Union Home Ministry’s diktat, it would be difficult to decide to which faction of the outfit we would engage in the parleys as it now has two of them,” he said.

The Hmars belong to the Chin-Kuki-Mizo group of tribes, and are recognised as Scheduled Tribe under the 6th Schedule of the Constitution of India. Literally, Hmar means North or Northern people, as they are living north to the Lusei people.

Hmars live mostly in the hills of south Manipur, Mizoram, Cachar, North Cachar, Meghalaya, Tripura and Chittagong Hill Tracts.

Although these areas are within different administrative divisions, they are geographically connected.

In Mizoram, the Hmars live mostly in the north, especially in the Aizawl District.

With creation of Autonomous Regional Council for the Hmars, in line with those granted to the Pawi (Lai), Lakher (Mara) and the Chakma, as its objective, Hmar Regional Movement was launched in 1964 at Palsang village in north Mizoram. The movement was mainly fostered by the feeling of neglect by the state government.

The Mizoram government and HPC-D had signed a pact on Suspension of Operation to last for six months on Novemeber 11, 2010 after concluding their peacetalks.

The pact was, however, short lived as several differences cropped up between the two sides and the state government officially announced in July last year that it would not resume talks with the outfit as the Centre had already iniatiated talks with the group. The party apparently stood henceforth as representing the Hmars of Mizoram state.
05 January 2012

Manipur's Women Not Adequately Represented in State Legislature


Imphal, Jan 5 :  After Mizoram, Manipur is the second Indian state where women voters outnumber men. However, the number of female legislators in the state assembly is minimal.

The outgoing ninth assembly has only one woman member in the 60-member house -- O. Landhoni Devi, wife of Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh.

According to an election department official, all the six women, except Landhoni Devi, who stood for election in 2007 lost the race to their male rivals.

Manipur has a total electorate of 1,740,820. Out of this, 889,497 are women and 851,323 are men.

Besides Manipur, another northeastern state, Mizoram has 308,884 women voters as opposed to 302,240 male voters out of a total electorate of 611,124.

“However, very few women enter the political fray and even those who do are rarely elected,” prominent Manipuri writer and intellectual Rajkumar Kalyanjit Singh told IANS.

Several women organisations have been actively spearheading the campaign for women candidates in the state assembly polls.

“Despite constant pressure from various women organisations, very few women candidates were fielded in the previous elections by the political parties. Unfortunately, most of the female nominees were unsuccessful in the poll battle,” said Women Action for Development secretary, Sobita Mangsatabam.

Political parties, including the rulling Congress, Communist Party of India (CPI), the main opposition Manipur People’s Party (MPP) and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and their allies in Manipur are gearing up to reach out to the electorate. They are also busy in selecting their nominees in the crucial polls.

Polls would be held in Manipur on Jan 28. Counting of votes will be done on March 4.

Insurgents Threaten Action Against Manipur Cong Supporters


Imphal, Jan 5 : Seven major insurgent outfits of Manipur on Thursday threatened action against anyone taking part in the election campaign of the ruling Congress in the state.

In a joint statement, the insurgent bodies, who have a common goal of making Manipur an independent country, said elections were not meant to bring welfare for the people.

Reacting to it, Manipur Assembly Speaker and senior Congress leader I. Hemochandra Singh said India was a democratic country and anybody should be allowed to express their opinions and views.

People should have a free mind to exercise their franchise, he said. The seven organizations are United National Liberation Front (UNLF), Revolutionary People's Front (RPF), Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP), People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK)), PREPAK-Progressive and United People's Party of Kangleipak.

Meanwhile, official sources said unidentified persons exploded grenades at of some Congress offices at Shingjamei, Kwakeithel and other places in Imphal West district.

However, no casualty or injury was reported. In another development, unknown militants exploded two grenades at the house of Congress MLA M Hemanta at Tengtha in Thoubal district late last night but there was no casualty, the sources said today.
02 January 2012

Time To Know Your Neighbours

Carte Blanche - Arup Kumar Dutta

‘For instance, though Tura in Garo hills is hardly a few hours drive from Guwahati, how many of us know who Gamseng is?’

The seven states of the Northeast call themselves the seven sisters, but we rarely see genuine sisterly affection between them. It is only when two citizens from two different communities of this region confront the harsh realities of discrimination in a place like Delhi that they acknowledge their common identity as individuals from the broader entity called India’s Northeast. But within the region itself it is all fangs and claws, with sectarian and community considerations providing grist to mills of politicians.

Take Assam for example. It has border problems with Nagaland, Arunachal and Meghalaya, something politicians from each of the states do not hesitate to exploit. As Assam is the biggest and most strategically positioned “sister” of them all, many communities from the smaller states harbour aversion towards the Assamese, sometimes rightly because the display of arrogance on the part of the latter in the past. Often intense dislike exists between communities within the same state, as in Manipur where the rivalry between two ethnic groups threatens not only to rip apart the social fabric of the State, but also to destroy its economy. In Arunachal, the wondrous diversity of tribal communities has been a bane rather than a boon as far as forging a regional identity is concerned, with each ethnic group choosing to assert their differences rather than commonalities, thereby bringing about societal disharmony.

There are two negative aspects to such un-sisterly behaviour. First, it enables outsiders, especially the astute politicians of the nation’s capital, to pursue the divide-and-rule policy which the British had so effectively used to administer this difficult region. I am sure many non-political but enlightened individuals in every state of this region feel a sense of humiliation when they see political “leaders” from Delhi fly down to their respective capitals to decide who will become the chief minister. It is as if a new brand of imperialists have replaced the British and continued with the latter’s colonial policy. This also explains the decades of indifference and neglect faced by the Northeast till mounting public anger — especially when it assumed the insidious guise of insurgency — as also events such as the Sino-Indian war coerced Delhi to sit up.

At the same time, it has prevented the political leadership of the region from erecting a common platform upon which to voice their grievances at the national level. It is well known that individually the states of the Northeast are under-represented in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha, but if they were to unite under a common banner irrespective of their political or community affiliations, they would constitute a formidable bloc. There have been numerous attempts by progressive MPs to form such a common platform but, if actions speak louder than words, not much has been achieved in attaining the objective. A recent report of only one MP from the Northeast being present in the Lok Sabha during the discussion on and passage of a crucial bill relating to the region is a stark reminder of the role being played by our representatives at the national level. In fact, an organisation like Northeast Students’ Union is doing a far better job at voicing aloud the all-too-many common problems besetting the area.

This brings me to the heart of the problem — one of the primary reasons behind our inability to present a common front, as well as the prevalent internecine discord, is that even six decades after Independence and the expansion of communication technology and infrastructure, we know very little about each other’s history, culture and way of life. While some books in English have been written about the divergent communities peopling the hills and valleys of the area, these are mostly targeted towards outside readers. Sad to say, there are very few books in the regional languages of the Northeast about the historical and cultural background of different communities which can inform the people about other ethnic groups apart from their own.

For instance, though Tura in the Garo hills is hardly a few hours drive from Guwahati, how many of us know who Gamseng is? Or why the name Balpakram is so important to the Garos? Gamseng, of course, is the mythical hero of the Achiks as the Garos like to call themselves, while Balpakram is a place of spiritual significance to them. How many individuals in Assam have read the Adventures of U Don Putit written in Khasi, or heard of Khasi icon Saso Tham despite Shillong being just a stone’s throw away?

Or, for that matter, does anyone in Garo or Khasi hills know about the Manipuri hero Lamabam Kamal, or read their classic Khambaton? Not many in other parts of the Northeast know about the Mizo folk hero Chhurbura or read their book titled Lalawmpll. It indeed is surprising that neither state governments nor private enterprise have taken any initiative in the six decades since Independence to acquaint the diverse components of the Northeast about each other’s societies and cultures. Ignorance is the mother of bigotry, while knowledge is the cornerstone of amity. Much of the conflict and strife besetting this region might perhaps have been avoided had we known more about each other!

This is precisely why I congratulate a well-known local NGO, Anwesha, for undertaking a project for inter-regional translation of books in association with the Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts (IGNCA). The target-reader at the initial stage will logically be the new generation, but even adult readers will benefit from the project. For the time being Anwesha has started work of selecting six books each from Assamese, Bodo, Garo, Khasi, Manipuri and Mizo and translating them into the above-mentioned languages. It might be a small step for this reputed organisation, but it is indeed a giant step for Northeast!

Though it might sound like a simple project, given the communication constraint in the area, the logistical difficulties were stupendous. Anwesha constituted a nodal committee comprising expert representatives from all the six languages, which, in turn, formed individual language advisory committees in their respective state headquarters. The advisory committees not only selected six suitable manuscripts, but also had these translated into English so that they could then be translated into the other languages. With the completion of the preliminary process, a three-day workshop of various language advisory committee members along with translators and illustrators was held in December to thrash out problems of comprehension in translation and illustration. The final output would be a fantastic 180 books in six different languages of the region retelling folk-literature, depicting adventures of beloved local heroes, humorous short stories for young adult et al. One important component would be six biographical books telling about the lives of important personalities of a particular region. For instance, the biographical book from Manipur has sketches of five famous Manipuri personalities — Lamabam Kamal, Hijam Anganghai Singh, M.K. Binodini, Bir Tyikendrajit and Khwairakpam Chaoba — individuals who should surely have by now become familiar to the other six “sisters” of this region.

With Anwesha leading the way, one can only hope that other organisations would take up similar projects so that we can learn more about each other through the medium of translated books. Government-sponsored publishing institutions of different states can be involved by their respective governments in the exercise so that more books in more languages are covered. As observed by Robert Frost, good fences make good neighbours. But it is my sincere belief that knowing your neighbours makes for even better ones.

01 January 2012

The Converted Warriors

By Esha Roy

Spasmo Proxyvon injection

The Ningthoujams have been battling drugs for years. All four brothers were chronic drug addicts till a few years ago—when the youngest finally went to rehab and became clean for the first time in years. The eldest, 30-year-old Roshan, was the first to start taking drugs in the family. He says veins on his left arm are completely blocked after years of “shooting drugs”. But now, a transformed Roshan has made anti-drugs campaign a personal mission.

For the last two years, Roshan has been working for the Social Awareness Service Organisation (SASO), a non-profit funded by the Bill Gates Foundation, which has led the fight against the HIV in Manipur—one of the states with high number of addicts. There are 50,000 male and 1,600 female addicts, at the last count, and 22 rehabilitation centres, aided by the Union Ministry of Social Justice and Welfare.

“When I was young I was very timid and had severe self-esteem issues. When I was in the class VIII, a classmate brought an Alprazolam tablet (a sedative much abused by addicts in Manipur). Just to prove that I was brave, out of all 62 students in the class I was the only one who tried,’’ says Roshan.

This was just the beginning. Through his teens, Roshan tried various other drugs, finally settling on Spasmo Proxyvon (an analgesic used to ease pain during delivery, addicts call it SP).

Roshan had begun taking the drug orally, but soon started injecting it—sometimes even 10 times a day. “I had tried heroin a number of times but found that I preferred the kick that I got from shooting SP. This is not an over-the-counter drug. It’s available at Rs 50 a strip in black markets around Manipur,’’ he says. He points out that easy availability and low cost of drugs in the state fuel addiction.

Roshan first came in touch with the anti-drugs movement while he was still an addict—when he used to collect free syringes provided by NGOs fighting against the HIV.

“I was unwittingly exposed to a lot of training workshops which they sat me through in exchange for picking up the syringes,’’ he says. He is not the only former drug addict at SASO. Apart from doctors and nurses, all the employees have been drug addicts. “SASO employs 150 former drug users. There are 30 drug users in my drop-in centre alone,’’ he says.

A couple of years ago, the Union health ministry started the Oral Substitution Programme. After years of dealing with addicts, Roshan says, this is what he feels is the single-most successful scheme.

“Basically what we do is put the drug user on a drug called Buprenorphine which, like SP, is an analgesic. But unlike SP, it stops receptors of heroin and other drugs. What this means is that if you have this tablet every day, even if you shoot heroin or any other drug, you won’t get a high.” Buprenorphine facilitates withdrawal from addiction. “So when you are not taking drugs but you’re on this, you don’t feel the otherwise very painful withdrawal,’’ he adds.

However, Buprenorphine is not the only solution. “The problem, funnily enough, is of development as well. The youth in Manipur have nothing to do most of the time, especially in the evenings. They are closeted inside their homes by 5 or 6 p.m. There is all this pent-up energy and nowhere to vent it. They naturally turn to drugs,’’ says Roshan.

31 December 2011

Aizawl Set To Enter New Year With A Bang

aizawl at nightAizawl, Dec 31 : The state capital of Mizoram is all set to ring in the new year with a bang-boom-bang, not of fire crackers but of musical treats.

The state government had set aside Rs 60,000 each for New Year concerts in five strategic locations within the city where the state’s top singers and musicians will entertain the exciting New Year revelers.

Rs 50,000 each had also been sanctioned to the other seven district capitals of Mizoram for the same purpose.

The concerts, to be simultaneously kicked-off at 1300 hours on December 31, will be organized by the concerned branch of Young Mizo Association, the state’s largest NGO, in collaboration with district magistrate and police officials.

“The concerts aim to give entertainment to the youths and prevent them from indulging in anti-social activities like taking drugs, alcohol and drunken driving,” a government official source said today.

Such events had been organised on New Year’s eve last year and they proved to be successful.

Meanwhile, the law enforcement agencies, with the help of the local NGOs, have been taking measures to ensure New Year celebrations free of fireworks and crackers like the last two years.

Fireworks and crackers had been part and parcel of New Year celebrations in Mizoram for decades till the last two years. A complete change took place in 2009 when the state government announced prohibition of fireworks and crackers and sought the assistance of the local NGOs in enforcing the prohibition.

The prohibition was a complete success as virtually not a single sound of crackers was heard and no more flickering lights of fireworks travelling the skies above.

And for the first in many years, asthma patients and people with heart problem were able to enjoy New Year celebrations in peace.

“Thanks to the good cooperation of the police and local NGOs, we are hoping to enjoy peaceful celebration of New Year without noise and air pollution this time too,” said state home minister R Lalzirliana.

No Force Can Stop Nagas From Living Together- Dr Shurhozelie

Dr._Shurhozelie_LiezietsuKohima, Dec 31 : Naga People’s Front President Dr Shürhozelie Liezietsu has stated that no force can stop Nagas from living together, while calling upon the United Naga Council (UNC) to come out openly and extent its support toward the fight for the rights of the Naga people.

Dr Shürhozelie, who is also Nagaland Minister of Urban Development and Higher and Technical Education and now on a campaign tour for the forthcoming Manipur Assembly elections, said the forthcoming assembly elections in Manipur in January 2012 would be a referendum on whether Nagas live united as a family.

Speaking at an interaction with various tribal hohos and United Naga Council(UNC) at the NPF Manipur unit office at the district headquarters of Senapati in Manipur, he said no one could stop Nagas from living together and reminded that the forthcoming assembly election was an opportunity for Nagas in Manipur to decide, according to NPF party sources at Kohima today.

He stressed that NPF was for good relationship with various communities, political parties and organisations both underground and over ground but asserted that no one would be allowed to dictate terms upon Nagas.

Dr Shürhozelie revealed that the main purpose of the NPF was to defeat incumbent Okram Ibobi Singh. He urged all Naga organisations and church of Manipur to support NPF candidates in the forthcoming polls.

He said NPF in Manipur has received applications from candidates for 14 assembly seats while there was no ticket aspirant from Kuki dominated areas.

He however said NPF could make some seat adjustments with other political parties in Kuki dominated areas.

Dr Shürhozelie also asserted that it was not necessary to always talk about being suppressed by the Meiteis and challenged the Nagas in Manipur to work in such a way that they exert themselves as a force.

Stating that this time they are contesting in only 14 constituencies, he however pointed out that the hill area has 20 seats and if all can come together and work together then 20 people in a 60 member house will become a formidable force. They can make their presence felt in the Assembly, their voice will be heard and that is all we want, the NPF president said.

Altogether 55 out of the total 56 aspiring candidates including two women who had applied for NPF party ticket from 14 different assembly constituencies of Manipur attended yesterday’s function.

All aspiring candidates made a public pledge to remain loyal to the NPF party’s ideologies and support those who would eventually get party tickets.