03 May 2012

Mara People Vote on May 3

Aizawl, May 3 : The 32898-strong electorate in the Mara autonomous district council in southern Mizoram will exercise their franchise to elect their representatives to the 25-seat council on May 3.

"All election officials have reached their respective duty posts and everything is in place for peaceful conduct of elections," state election commissioner said.

There are 67 candidates, including two women, for the 25 seats. While Congress party is contesting all the 25 seats, the Mizo National Front is contesting 12 seats and its ally Maraland Democratic Front is contesting 12 seats.

The Zoram Nationalist Party has floated candidates in three seats while 15 candidates are fighting on independent tickets. Candidates from both Congress and MNF-MDF included a good number of newcomers.

Prominent figures included former Lok Sabha member Hiphei, who fights on Congress ticket from Tuipang-II constituency and Zakhua Hlychho, former minister, who contests from Maubawk seat on MNF ticket.

Sources said both are projected for CEM by both forces. Interesting constituencies included Romibawk where MNF district headquarters president C Lalmalsawma Zasai and Mara district PCC president R T Zachawnaw are at contesting.

Girls Outsmart Boys in Mizoram Class 12 Results

Aizawl, May 3 : Girls outshone boys in the HSSLC examinations by securing 61.16 pass percentage against boys' 59.84 pass percentage. A total of 5603 girls appeared in all the four streams - arts, science, commerce and vocational -of which 3427 were declared passed while 3395 boys out of 5673 were successful.

The Mizoram Board of School Education (MBSE) declared the results of Higher Secondary School Leaving Certificate (HSSLC) Examination 2012 on Tuesday, which saw a 60.50 pass percentage in all the streams, a slight decline from last year's pass percentage of 60.63. In the arts, science, commerce and vocational streams, 11276 students appeared, of which 6822 passed, 65 in distinction, 992 in first, 2036 in second and 3729 in third divisions. As many as 591 candidates got compartmental chance.

In arts stream, 7937 students appeared and 4712 were declared successful, with a pass percentage of 59.37 percent, compared to last year's 58.95 percent.

R Lalrinmawii, of Government Chaltlanh HSS, Aizawl stood first with 426 marks out of 500, and Lalfakzuali, of Home Missions School, Aizawl, and Lalramdini, of Synod HSS, ranked second by scoring 400 marks each. Lotera Lalrinpuii, who scored 395 marks, stood at third position.

Female pass percentage in arts stream is 60.98 against boys pass percentage of 57.61. In science stream, 2230 students appeared of which 1326 were declared passed, a making a pass percentage of 49.46, against last year's 62.41 percent. Sujata Sharma, Vishwanidh Singh and Sajid Mashroor, all from St Paul's HSS, Aizawl, ranked first, second and third positions by scoring 444, 441 and 430 marks respectively.

Female pass percentage in science stream is 57.11 against boys pass percentage of 61.34. In commerce stream, 628 students appeared and 382 students were declared successful registering 60.83 pass percentage, a decline from last year's 67.95 pass percentage. Janet C Rosemawii, of Oikos HSS, Aizawl (407 marks); Akshay Kumar, of St Paul's HSS (406 marks) and Mimi Lalzarpuii, of Oikos HSS (394 marks), occupied first, second and third positions respectively.

Girls secured 65.09 pass percentage in commerce, against boys' pass percentage of 57.51. In vocational subjects, a total of 481 students appeared of which 402 passed, making a pass percentage of a whooping 83.58 percent, a significant increase from last year's 66.59 percent.

Vocational subjects include computer technique, computer software application, commercial garment design & making, horticulture, medical laboratory technician, automobile engineering technology, sericulture and office secretaryship.

In the management-wise performance, deficit schools are on the top securing 82.60 pass percentage in arts, 90.82 pass percentage in science and 88.89 pass percentage in commerce. Private schools performed better than government-sponsored schools in arts and commerce with 79.49 pass percentage and 78 pass percentage, compared to government schools' 72.11 pass percentage and 62 pass percentage respectively.

However, government schools did better in science stream with 72.22 pass percentage against private schools' 71.43 pass percentage. As many as 20 schools, with no government school among them, witnessed cent percent pass. The cent per cent pass schools included the newly established Lal Thanhawla HSS at Serchhip. There are four government schools among 17 schools which recorded less than 40 percent pass percentage.
02 May 2012

Meghalaya CM Demands Law For Safety Of Northeast Students

Meghalaya CM demands law for safety of N-E students


















New Delhi, May 2 :
Meghalaya Chief Minister Mukul Sangma Monday called for a stringent law to address the safety concerns of students from the Northeast and to regulate the behaviour of the authorities at educational institutions.

Sangma was in the capital to raise the issue of the death of his niece and Amity University student, Dana Sangma, who committed suicide last Tuesday after allegedly being insulted by an invigilator during an examination.

"Institutes often focus on making money and building their brand, pressurising the students and ignoring the issues of their safety and balanced development," he claimed.

Apart from Dana, two more students from northeastern states have died in the past few weeks. While Delhi University student Samiran Saikia of Assam committed suicide, seemingly due to examination pressure, Bangalore student Richard Loitam hailing from Manipur was allegedly beaten to death.

Loitam's death has led to protests in several cities, including the capital, with the protestors accusing his college and hostel authorities of racial discrimination and delaying justice.

Sangma also stressed the need to prevent issues of racial profiling of students from northeastern states and said that 'the growing marginalization of people from the Northeast in different walks of life is a trend that needs attention and careful consideration'.

'Instances of discrimination and atrocities have lots of negative impact and are a threat to the integrity and harmony of the nation,' he added.

Cops Send Dana Sangma Exam Paper To Forensic Lab

By Hakeem Irfan
Dana Sangma
Meghalaya CM Mukul Sangma's niece Dana Sangma. 

Gurgaon, May 2: The Gurgaon Police, soon after filing a case under the SC/ST Act in connection with the suicide of Meghalaya CM's niece Dana M. Sangma, have sent her answersheet to the forensic lab for examination.

Dana committed suicide in her room at Amity University's Pachgaon (Manesar) campus earlier this week after she was expelled for cheating in an exam.

"Dana's answersheet has been sent to FSL Madhuban to clarify who wrote what on it and check for other details," a Gurgaon policeman said.

The National Commission for Women has also constituted a four-member team for an independent inquiry into the incident.

Meghalaya CM Mukul Sangma will arrive in the Capital on Saturday and meet government officials to take up the issue of discrimination against people from the North-East in Delhi and NCR. He will also reportedly take up the suicide case with the National Commission for Scheduled Caste and Tribes.

"This unfortunate incident has not happened in isolation. Such incidents are triggered because of the psyche of people who label people from the North-Eastern states as inferior.

Whenever I interact with students from these states studying in Delhi, they complain of racial discrimination," Sangma said over phone.

According to the CM, the invigilator had noted that Dana's mobile phone was found in "switched on" mode in her pocket. "It does not infer that she was cheating. Besides, if she was thrown out of class just for this, then something more must have happened to force her to commit suicide," he said.

Amity University, meanwhile, clarified in a detailed statement that Dana was surfing the internet during the exam.

The administration officials said some personal reason might have forced Dana to take the extreme step.

According to the statement, the invigilator took away Dana's paper and asked her to leave the examination hall.
30 April 2012

1 Lakh Seek Justice For Manipur Youth

Justice for Loitam Richard on Facebook




Justice for Loitam Richard on Facebook
 
By Dipanjan Sinha
 
Bangalore, Apr 30 : A campaign that gets the support of more than one lakh people in a span of a few days, be it in the virtual world of Facebook, clamours for attention.

The one lakh-plus people who have registered support for the Facebook campaign, Justice for Richard Loitam, whose death and subsequent efforts to pass it off as an accident has stirred up a hornet's nest, are angry.

As the group acquires leviathan proportions, the administrators, fearing fiery outpourings, had to close it from external comments.

Richard, a 19-year-old from Imphal West and a student of architecture at Bangalore's Acharya Institute of Architecture, allegedly died of cerebral hemorrhage in his sleep on April 17, hours after he got into a brawl with a fellow student over the remote control while watching an IPL match.

The FIR, however, has no mention of a fight. And a few loose statements on suspicion of drug abuse by Richard only made matters worse.

The thousands who seek justice for Richard are far from satisfied with the proceedings of the investigation. For many others, the incident has served as an eye opener on the way justice can be denied.

The indignation is symbolised in a way by Yogesh Thangjam, who studies in Salem in Tamil Nadu and has travelled to Bangalore to participate in a public protest for the first time tomorrow.

"Brought up in an army background, I have never participated in any political activity. This incident, however, shook me. What happened and the way things are being covered up is scary," he said.

Like Yogesh, thousands from Manipur and other parts of the country will hit the streets in Bangalore, Delhi, Imphal, Pune and Hyderabad tomorrow, said Monika Khangembam, the organiser of the campaign in Bangalore and an administrator of the Facebook campaign.

Justice for Loitam Richard

"We are expecting over a thousand people to turn up in Bangalore. We hope that with the very first move, we can at least make the authorities understand our discontent. Following Sunday's programme, we plan to send a petition to the Prime Minister, demanding a proper investigation," she said.

The campaign is unlikely to end on this note and Monika is battle ready. "We are aware that the going will not be easy, as the institute will try to safeguard its reputation. But we will not give up," she said.

The Imphal chapter of the protest, comprising a candlelight march from Richard's house at Uripok Yambem Leikai till Kangla Gate, will serve another important purpose ' to put pressure on the Manipur government to take an initiative in the case.

State home minister Gaikhangam has written to his Karnataka counterpart R. Ashok to ensure justice, as the incident has scared off other Manipuris residing there.

Anita Sougaijam, who is co-ordinating the movement in Imphal, is confident of a huge turnout.

"We will definitely have a lot of people turning up tomorrow. I hope the government acts on this issue. Government intervention is crucial to bring it to the notice of the higher authorities," she said.

In Delhi, the Manipuri Students' Association, the largest body of Manipuri diaspora in the country, has given a call for a sit-in at Jantar Mantar, followed by a candlelight vigil.

The number of people assuring participation in all these cities is increasing steadily, with numerous rights activists joining in.

Binalakshmi Nepram, founder, Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network, and secretary general, Control Arms Foundation of India, said on Facebook that they would leave no stone unturned to ensure justice.

"We must pursue that the institution is held accountable, culprits caught, the roommate and other witnesses interrogated by police and their testimonies kept and the case fought strongly. I also requested Richard's mother to draft a memorandum to be submitted to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Sonia Gandhi, the home minister, the Karnataka chief minister, and others. The fight will be long," she said.

People from all walks of life from across the country have joined the group. Many people from Calcutta, where any programme is yet to be planned, are eager to join this campaign for justice.

Journalist Sreecheta Das, who joined the group last night, is hooked to the wall for updates.

So is Pranaadhika Sinha Devburman who wants to initiate the Calcutta chapter of the campaign. The presence of a Prerna Purohit, an Ayesha Siddiqui or a Kunal Ghotge makes it clear that the issue is not just that of Manipur or the Northeast but a larger quest for justice.

Justice for Loitam Richard on Facebook
29 April 2012

'Te Amo' Will Showcase Real Picture of Northeast: Rebecca Alemla Changkija

By Raymond Ronamai

Some dream big, some dream small. Some live their dreams while others not. Rebecca Alemla Changkija, from Changki, Mokokchung, Nagaland is one girl who is living her dream big. She is foraying into Bollywood as a producer through the film "Te Amo", which has gone to the floors. She thinks nothing is impossible in life if we really try.

In an exclusive interview to IBTimes, the hard working girl from Nagaland says she will expose the beauty of Northeast through her film. Here are the excerpts from the Interview with Rebecca Alemla Changkija.

You are perhaps the first person from Nagaland state or even maybe from Northeast India to produce a Bollywood film. How is Bollywood treating you?

I feel really honoured. Since my 2nd standard, I used to dream about Bollywood. Well those days, serials like "Chandrakanta," "Mogli" and "Cinderella" used to be my favourite, so it's truly like a dream come true (to be in Bollywood).  It does not matter at all whether I am the first producer from Nagaland or from Northeast. At the end of the day, what matters is 'wisdoms from God' and how you make your 'dreams possible'. Nothing is impossible in life if you give your 100 %. Of course I sincerely enjoy the love and care from my well wishers and my loved ones.  Working in Bollywood really needs lots of hard work, passion and patience, and I have a long way to go, still learning and yet to learn a lot. I am just like a new born baby here and I wanna gown up really big here in Bollywood as a good human being and a great filmmaker.

What is your film "Te Amo" all about?
"Te Amo" is based on the story of young boys who are trying to make it big in the music industry. Although the backdrop of the movie is musical entertainer with youth comedy, the movie basically is an emotional love story of the main lead singer and his childhood friend. It will be shot in North Eastern states like Shillong (Meghalaya), Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh, and I hope it becomes a big hit. It has more than 10 songs for today's youth with music by real time musical bands. More than four music directors are composing the tracks for the movie.

"Te Amo" is a Hindi film but the title draws lots of curiosity as it is a Spanish word meaning 'I Love You'. Any special reason behind the title of the film?
"Te Amo" though a Spanish word is a song from "Dum Maro Dum" and youth knows that very well. As far as other viewers are concerned, we are having the words "I love you" in the posters which will make it clear that it's a Hindi movie. We wanted a title different from the regular movies.

You said the film will be shot entirely in Northeast. It will be sort of a visual treat from Northeast for Indians who haven't visited the region.
Oh Yes, many people do not know how beautiful Northeast is - rich culture, hospitality etc. Hope "Te Amo" brings the real picture of Northeast for those people who have less knowledge of the region.

Do you think you can capture the beauty of the region better than the others (Bollywood filmmakers), you being from the region?
Since I am from Northeast, I have a better knowledge of the locations out there, which are still unexposed in Bollywood. Moreover, I have a very creative team who are involved in this movie project. They make simple location look beautiful. So now, since we have a lovely location, my hopes are doubled that they will capture the entire place better than any other films made till date.

Please tell us about the cast of your film?
The lead actor is Panhk Awani. He was Mr Chhattisgarh 2011 and holds more than 25 titles to his credit. Actor and model Asif Khan and Japanese supermodel Ayoko play main supporting roles. Naga actor Chuzho Zhokhoi and singer Alobo Naga are also in the cast. Two rock bands from Northeast will also perform in the movie. However, the casting for the lead actress is still on.

Casting a person from Northeast in the lead role could give a different feel to the film. What do you say?
Well, according to our script, lead role from Northeast will not suit, but yes we have few actors from Nagaland. Hope "Te Amo" brings lots of love and peace among us.

Tell us something about the director of the movie.

Writer and director Shiraz Henry is into fashion photography and also the chief of photography for an international Bollywood magazine BNA Germany. He has a long record of capturing ads, photographs etc. and is a successful photographer in Bollywood . His first movie '"Beyond the 3rd Kind", which is aimed for film festivals across the globe, has been completed. "Te Amo" is his second movie and he plans to shoot it like a Hollywood movie with songs, dance, comedy and youth. He is working in few more projects which have already been launched and will be shot after "Te Amo".

The first song of the film was recorded with singers Shahid Mallya and Pamela Jain. Has the song come out good?
Oh yes, our first song is been recorded successfully very romantic and melodious song. Working with them was an amazing experience.

The first song was composed by Abuzar Rizvi. How was it working with him?
Music Director Abuzar Rizvi and lyricist Anjaan Sagari of "Welcome" fame have done excellent job. Can't ask for more. Hats off to both of them.

Are you roping in well known singers and musicians for the film?

Bollywood well known singer Shaan and Alobo Naga & Band from Nagaland will grace with their melodious voice.

Do you think small-budgeted films without star actors can be successful at the box office?
Someone has rightly said that 'there is no such thing as small budget or big budget movies; a movie is either good movie or a bad movie'. As far as new faces in lead roles are concerned, these days movies like "Pyaar Ka Punchnama", "Tere bin Laden" etc have done good business at the box office though they didn't have established actors. We are making this movie for the youth with 'out and out comedy', music and romance that no youth would like to miss.

Any projects in offing from your production house Find Studioz?
Find Studioz is currently producing a movie for film festival titled "The Horizon & The Adopted" besides "Te Amo". Then there is a commercial Hindi film titled "Vampire Sucks", which is an out and out comedy with international actor Brandon J.Hill playing the vampires role. This project will be shot in the exotic location of Cherapunjee and will have humour of different genre.

To report problems or to leave feedback about this article, e-mail: r.ronamai@ibtimes.com

Does Attire Define A Woman?

By Rebika Laishram All the northeast States have a very rich culture… a testimony to this is the Hornbill festival held annually in Nagaland. — File Photo: Ritu Raj Konwar

In a land of salwar kameez and sarees, a young Mongoloid damsel walking around the streets in her shorts with a flip-flop and a fringe cut is almost looked down as someone who has defied all moral sanctity.

If clothes don't make a man, why do women from the northeast in their short skirts raise so many eyebrows?

They often seem to bear the brunt for not adhering to the Indian standard cultural norms of an ideal woman's clothing. Those spotted with short skirts and sleeveless dress are quickly branded hussies. If this is the yardstick, moral values would entail nothing more than a few more yards of clothes draped around a woman's body.

A fully clothed woman is neither the moral custodian nor epitome of society. The question is, should one be demonised based on one's attire?
It is only a matter of cultural ignorance that women from the northeast are often accused of encouraging promiscuity. An insight into the northeastern culture would unveil that the society is equally conservative and traditional like elsewhere in India. All the northeastern States have a very rich culture and each is represented by its very own intricate traditional attires: Innaphi (Manipur), Eking (Meghalaya), Puan (Mizoram) Rina (Tripura), Naga shawls (Nagaland) Mekhala and Chadar (Assam).
Unlike in mainland India, traditional dresses in the urban northeast are not an everyday wardrobe like a saree or salwar kameez. They are worn elegantly on festive occasions, with the exception of Mekhala or Phanek (wrap-around), which are mostly worn by women across the region. A testimony to the vibrancy of the northeast culture is the Hornbill festival held annually in Nagaland.
Being predominantly Mongoloid inhabited, the northeast has a strong allegiance to other Mongoloid culture. The strongest of all cultural influences has been the Korean culture. Over the last couple of years, the Korean fad has been creating a bandwagon effect among youth in these States. Style is something very inherent in the culture; adoption of the Korean hairstyle or clothing is common in the region. Short skirts are clothes that women wear to workplaces or even to congregations like Sunday churches. So, a man getting excited on seeing the display of few more inches of a woman's skin in mainland India is quite an unknown phenomenon in the northeast.
Even when they step outside their region, the women carry the style element with them gracefully and comfortably. But due to the stark cultural difference in mainland India, there is often an indisposition to accepting them, especially the northeast women living in metropolitan cities.
On the other hand, these women have a cultural shock when they come to metropolitan cities; they are constantly harassed because of their distinctive Mongoloid features, additionally fuelled by their choice of attire. In a land of salwar kameez and sarees, a young Mongoloid damsel walking around the streets in her shorts with a flip-flop and a fringe cut is almost looked down as someone who has defied all moral sanctity. But if we are a country that takes pride in being multicultural and multiracial, who actually is a cultural misfit is a question that looms at large.
If we take a closer look at what makes some women intentionally dress up as glam dolls, giving ultra exposure to their body, it would reveal that it has nothing much to do with any region-specific culture. It is rather more of a social norm that when one is away from the safeguards of home, one often tends to exert one's subjugated independence. This holds true for both men and women, irrespective of their regional and cultural background.
According to research findings, around 66 per cent of people in the northeast migrate to other parts of India for higher studies and 30 per cent for employment. With the increasing exodus, the northeastern woman's short skirt could very well be seen through a lens other than racial. Much stands common between a northeast girl's skimpy skirts, a Sikh youth's spiked hair or a Brahmin yuppie's fascination for beef or pork.
These could very well be symbols of rebellion against the values they have grown up with, but never believed in the discovery of their selves which might have been hiding somewhere for fear of their daddy's heavy hand. They are aspirations and expressions which failed to take wing back home; or, for that matter, they could symbolise anything at all but what they surely do not symbolise is that the pretty lady in hot pants is hooking around just because she is wearing hot pants.
What is questionable is the outlook of people who, on the pretext of morality, prowl around in dark, empty streets to pounce on vulnerable women. Had casing the northeast woman in the whole nine yards been the solution, then perhaps a law to that effect could have been implemented. But such a suggestive code of conduct could only mean the end of any progressive society. What is required is the taming of social bestiality of racial discrimination and not penalisation of the women of the northeast for falling short of a few inches of their skirts and sleeves.
What is nudity and not socially acceptable is not the bare skin of these women but the exhibition of vulgar virility in mainland India. The machismo is manifested in the eagerness to grope these women knowing that they are immigrant-outsiders, less resourceful and easy prey. If caught in the act, it's easy; you can always get away by saying kapadey hi aise pehentay hai ye chinki ladkiya (These girls with small eyes wear such sort of dress).
What you wear is a matter of personal choice; it cannot be a social dictum. The length of a woman's skirt cannot be the foundation for society's moral values.
(The writer is Senior Manager, Communications, Sambodhi Research and Communications. Email: rebika.laishram@gmail.com)

Shut Down Air India? Who Else Will Fly To Northeast India?

http://static.ibnlive.in.com/ibnlive/pix/sitepix/03_2010/air-india-28310630.jpgAirlines in the red, rising airfares and a sick industry - civil aviation minister and Rashtriya Lok Dal chief Ajit Singh may have run into rough weather in his new job, but the pressures of his work sit lightly on him.

He tells Shobha John that though this happened because of too-fast growth, it's a passing phase as aviation is at take-off stage with a growing middle-class demand and great potential in tier 2 and 3 cities.

Airport charges in Delhi have been hiked greatly. What's the use of privatization if passengers are going to be burdened further?

These charges go up over a five-year period. For the last three years, they didn't . So the airport is trying to recover them now and there will be a steep rise. Meanwhile, in less than two years, user development fees will be non-existent.

Air India has been given a Rs 30,000 crore equity infusion. Will it give the much-needed impetus for a turnaround ?

AI's equity and interest rate ratio was skewed. Its interest burden should go down by Rs 1,000 crore a year with this infusion. But don't forget, this is a service industry and the customer is king. AI has to change its culture. It had an excellent reputation but we have to infuse fresh spirit. Of course, the merger of AI and IA created problems. But there will be parity in pay scales between both after implementation of the Dharmadhikari report. And no one will be laid off.

What are your plans for AI's turnaround ?

We have set stringent milestones. We cannot keep pouring public money into AI. With Rs 43,000 crore debt, no one will buy this airline. Its ontime performance has to go up from the present 72% to 90% in two years, passenger load factor should be 73% by 2015 and teams will be appointed for speedy monetization of its assets, be it property or paintings. They will decide whether to lease or sell them.

We hope to generate Rs 5,000 crore in 10 years this way. As regards fleet utilization and yield, by 2013-14 , the difference between AI and the market leader should not be less than 3% and 5% respectively. And while its employee/ plane ratio is considered high, it's similar to airlines in France and the UK.

Also, don't forget the services AI offers --ground handling and engineering MRO (maintenance, repair and overhaul) facilities. With both expected to be hived off, AI can service other airlines too.

But there are calls for AI to be shut down.

We cannot shut it down. If we did, what would happen to connectivity to the north-east ? Who would do the uneconomical routes? People don't realize the consequences of shutting down AI. This is not a free-market enterprise.

Will FDI in aviation take off or flounder like in retail?

I am hopeful. We want other airlines to invest here. The commerce ministry hasn't got any objections in this regard . FDI in retail is different as it affects far more lives than aviation does.

Detractors say FDI is being brought in to favour Kingfisher.

People said the same thing when we allowed import of ATF ( aviation turbine fuel). But which was the first airline to do so? SpiceJet. Policies aren't meant for one airline alone. Already, there is 100% FDI in cargo and 74% in non-scheduled operations. Routes will also be vetted by the home ministry, so where's the problem? We've also given licenses to eight regional airlines.

You said Kingfisher can't be closed down just because it's making losses . But shouldn't tougher action be taken if passengers suffer?
Yes, Kingfisher didn't stick to its promises twice but when the government said it won't bail it out, the airline came around. It needs capital infusion but it's for the owner to decide.

But the real reason for floundering airlines is high ATF prices and sales tax on it. If Chhattisgarh and Kerala can reduce sales tax from 32% to 4%, why can't others?
We have appealed to states but haven't got much response. We will keep at it. States should realize that reduced sales tax will increase business and tourism.

Some foreign carriers want to increase flights to India after exhausting their bilateral rights. Will India ask for similar rights?

We have given the okay for 250 new flights to countries such as Kazakhstan and in a few months, this will go up to 400. Until India exhausts its bilateral rights, we won't give more to foreign airlines. India should have become a major aviation hub by now.