23 February 2010

India Census 2011 Preparation Begins

india_world_population New Delhi, Feb 23 : The preparations for Population Census 2011 has commenced with the formal notification of the intent of the Government of India to conduct population count with March 1 reference date.

The Census operations are conducted in two phases. The first phase which is Houselisting & Housing Census precedes the population enumeration by about 8 to 9 months, said junior home minister Ajay Maken in written reply to a question in the Lok Sabha Tuesday.

The main purpose of the Houselisting Operations is to prepare the frame for undertaking population enumeration, besides providing host of data on housing stock, amenities and the assets available with each of the household.

The Houselisting & Housing Census would be conducted from April to Sep 2010. The time schedule in each state is being notified.
In the second phase population enumeration, data on various socio-economic and demographic parameters like age, sex, literacy, religion, languages known, economic activity status and migration etc. is collected in respect of each individual. Population Enumeration will be conducted in Feb-March 2011.

As has been the practice during the past Censuses, a full dress rehearsal called Pre-Test of the Census was conducted during June 28-August 05, 2009 in 1181 Enumeration Blocks of the country. Based on the feedback of pre-test, the questions to be canvassed during Houselisting & Housing Census in 2010 have been finalized by the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC).

The Government has approved the final set of questions. The questions to be canvassed during the Population Enumeration will be finalized by the TAC in their next meeting.

In Census all areas including tribal areas in the country are covered. Special Tables on Schedule Tribes are also brought out.

Reason Triumphs Over Bt Brinjal!

By embargoing Bt brinjal, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh may have done a greater service to democracy than he intended, says Praful Bidwai.

India has done something unusual in defying the long-established trend of capitulating to corporate power.

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh must be complimented for imposing a moratorium on the commercial release of genetically modified (GM) brinjal (or baigan, also called aubergine and eggplant) developed by Mahyco-Monsanto in collaboration with two Indian agricultural universities.

He deserves encomiums for consulting stakeholders in major brinjal-producing states like West Bengal, Orissa and Andhra Pradesh. This public consultation approach sets a good precedent. It deserves to become a model for governmental decision-making on all issues that concern people's livelihoods.

To appreciate the moratorium rationally, one need not go as far as former director of the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology P M Bhargava did in euphorically describing it as "the single most important decision taken by any minister since Independence".

Yet, it couldn't have been easy to take in the face of feverish lobbying by Monsanto, one of the world's most powerful multinationals.

Monsanto, which controls 84 per cent of the global GM seeds market and has a long reach in the United States and Indian governments, lobbied for Bt brinjal in league with other biotechnology companies and groups of plant breeders with a stake in developing GM foods.

They were backed by major sections of the corporate media which fervently campaigned for Bt brinjal and celebrated all GM technology as safe and unproblematic and as the key to India's food security.

Monsanto is an aggressive MNC, known for sailing close to the wind, and bypassing or not waiting for official clearances before genetically manipulating seeds and cultivating them on varying scales.

It has also used a Trojan Horse strategy: working through Indian agricultural universities and laboratories under the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, as well as Mahyco, a Maharashtra-based company with close links with Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar, of whose equity Monsanto owns a 26-per cent share.

The argument against allowing Bt brinjal -- a vegetable into whose genetic code a gene from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis is inserted to produce pesticidal properties -- is compelling. Science simply doesn't know enough about the long-term health and environmental effects of GM foods to certify them as safe.

The risks from the insertion of alien genes on the recipient organism, the likelihood of transfer of those genes to human systems -- and hence the impact on health -- are a grey area.

The risks of introducing into the market GM seeds of a vegetable like brinjal, of which 2,200 varieties are grown in India, with a total output of 8.4 million tonnes, remain unknown.

The studies on the basis of which Mahyco-Monsanto sought clearance for Bt brinjal from the Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (later renamed 'Appraisal' Committee out of embarrassment at the blatant statement of purpose) have all been done by Monsanto and its collaborators. Most of them only look at acute toxicity and allergic reactions such as irritation of the skin.

There are very few studies on a far more important phenomenon: chronic toxicity, or long-term effects of eating Bt brinjal. These are limited to 90-day tests on rats, rabbits and goats, which Monsanto claims, are equivalent to 21 years of human life.

However, many scientists question this and argue for a different testing protocol. They say normal brinjal has several natural toxins, which could become more potent if the genetic material is tampered with. Scientists don't know if the toxin produced by the inserted gene (Cry1AC) in the brinjal breaks down in food or in the human gut.

Even Monsanto admits that it might remain active in an alkaline environment. And the human digestive system is mildly alkaline, not acidic.

Given this, it is imperative to adopt the Precautionary Principle -- no approval for a potentially hazardous technology unless it is satisfactorily established to be safe for plant, animal and human life and for the environment. Until then, its development must be confined to the laboratory level.

As Harvard geneticist Richard Lewontin puts it: "We have such a miserably poor understanding of how the organism develops from the DNA that I would be surprised if we don't get one rude shock after another." We must avert such shocks.

To uphold the Precautionary Principle for Bt brinjal is not to take a stand against GM technology as such or to support the more extreme claims advanced by some activists who purport to oppose all plant biotechnology in the long-term interest of farmers.

They miss the point that farmers have for centuries practised seed selection and grafting to domesticate cultivable varieties of wild races of food plants. In this case, the Precautionary Principle mandates that Bt brinjal must not be commercially released.

Biotechnology industry representatives like Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw of Biocon have reacted angrily to the decision, saying it will discourage private sector research and hence investment in GM food. This is incorrect.

The private sector hasn't been barred from research in GM food. It has only been told that it must do so responsibly. In fact, Mr Ramesh has been soft on the GEAC, which failed to note that Mahyco-Monsanto bypassed procedures for importing genetic material and cultivated Bt brinjal before proper guidelines were in place.

The Bt brinjal case should help focus public attention on some related issues -- most importantly, corporate control of seeds, effects of GM plants on biodiversity, and independence of scientific research. Corporations make GM seeds such that the farmer cannot reproduce them and must return to the companies year after year.

They also want an intellectual property rights regime under which the farmer cannot even reproduce seeds for his/her own use. This is unacceptable. Decisions about rejecting or approving a GM crop must take into account the control issue, besides safety.

Preserving biodiversity -- nature's bounty to India, which is one of the world's great centres of origin of plant genetic resources -- is a high priority. We simply cannot afford genetic contamination of our plants and risk transmission of alien material to plants that have existed in their pristine natural form for centuries. GM crops potentially pose that risk.

Multinational companies like Monsanto take advantage of our ICAR laboratories and agricultural universities, many of which are mismanaged and under-funded, and some of whose researchers are eager to get easy funding from corporations.

This leads to a conflict of interest, which is particularly worrisome in industries like pharmaceuticals, seeds and pesticides. If the researcher isn't independent, the quality and integrity of his output may be questionable.

We cannot afford that in an area that directly concerns our daily nourishment and sustenance. We have a right to safe food and to an environment not threatened with genetic contamination or biodiversity loss.

There must be close multi-stage peer-group monitoring and verification of corporate-funded research, especially in respect of food.

It's wrong to argue that rigorous scientific scrutiny standards must be lowered because GM is vital to India's food security. It isn't.

If India is to have sustainable, climate-responsible agriculture development, it must be overwhelmingly based on its natural endowments and constraints, including dependence on rain-fed agriculture for half our farmers.

There is a larger lesson to be learned from the Bt brinjal case. The process of consultation that went into the decision offers a healthy model.

Thousands of people who are liable to be affected by GM crops -- including farmers, consumers, and other legitimate interest-groups like scientists, food safety and security activists, environmentalists and ordinary citizens -- were given a chance to express their views in public assemblies.

This is a far superior way of reaching decisions or making policy than the prevalent closed, opaque, bureaucratic procedure. It involves eliciting and collecting a range of opinions from social classes which are normally excluded and made invisible by governments.

Marginal groups are not allowed any role even on matters that vitally concern them. This is profoundly anti-democratic.

We must apply the public consultation process to all areas where the welfare and rights of the underprivileged might be affected -- employment, minimum wages and food security laws; land acquisition for development projects in mining, industry, irrigation and infrastructure; and energy and water projects which have adverse potential environmental impacts.

Today, poor Kondh tribals who have guarded Orissa's ecosystem including mountains and conserved biodiversity for centuries are treated as subjects by an imperial state eager to please tycoons whose projects will strip, disfigure, lacerate and destroy the Niyamgiri mountains.

If the Kondhs were treated as citizens, and heard, some government functionaries would at least begin to understand that they too have agency and rationality, and that their dignity and self-worth must be respected.

Governments may yet decide to ride roughshod over their concerns, but they at least would have to record the reasons for doing so.

Why, a high official who has never before been exposed to the dispossessed and underprivileged might suddenly develop sympathy for them and factor in their interests while designing or approving a project.

This would be a good way of promoting participatory democracy, which is sensitive to ordinary people's concerns, respects their rights, and empowers them.

By embargoing Bt brinjal, Mr Ramesh may have done a greater service to democracy than he intended.

Rediscovering Ties - Northeast, Southeast Asia Bridge Gap With Cultural Festival

hmar lam Guwahati, Feb 23 : Cultural troupes from northeast India and Southeast Asia, took part in a mega cultural event, 'Inter-Cultural Dialogue between Northeast India and South East Asia', which was organized here.

The workshop and Festival of Dance was jointly organized by the Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts, North East Zone Culture Centre and Srimanta Sankardeva Kalakeshtra of Guwahati.

Cultural troupes from Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia, apart from local cultural troupes from Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Manipur, Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Assam are participating in the cultural extravaganza.

The organizers say that the idea behind organizing such cultural event is to bridge the gap between northeast India and Southeast Asia, and rediscover old ties between them.

"We have the idea to erect a bridge in between northeast India and South-East Asia. So the cultural exchange between the South-East Asia and northeast India is an age-old relation, and that is what we are going to discover... the age-old relation," said Chabin Rajkhowa, Secretary, Srimanta Sankardeva Kalakeshetra, Guwahati.

Participants from the Southeast Asian countries said they were happy participating in the event.

"I am so happy, I feel very lucky to participate in this programme. Thank you for this chance. I hope we can come here again," said Niwaian Saniassey, a participant from Bali.

Local participants feel that the event would help in promoting peace and harmony.

"These kinds of cultural exchange programs are very important because that helps in bridging the gaps, and I think all we can say is we are thankful to all the organizers for making this event possible, and this will help in promoting peace and harmony," said Anwesha, a participant from Guwahati.

The programme that started in Guwahati, on February 21, will continue till March 12 at Nagaland state's capital Dimapur.

In between, the programme will be held in Shillong, Agartala and Imphal.

Helicopter Service Will Boost Mizoram Tourism, Governance

HELICOPTER service  PAWAN HANS Aizawl, Feb 23 : Mizoram will introduce helicopter services in the mountainous northeastern state to not only take the administration into remote areas but also to boost tourism, officials said here Tuesday.

"Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla held a meeting last week with the top official of state-owned helicopter services company Pawan Hans. Another meeting between officials of the state government and Pawan Hans would be held to finalize the details of the chopper services," a senior Mizoram transport department official said.

"The proposed helicopter services, with subsidized fare, can be used by tourists to visit tourist spots in the picturesque state. Ministers and officials would also be able to make visits to far-flung areas for administrative purposes."

The government-owned Pawan Hans has been operating for the past nine years in the interior areas of Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Tripura and Sikkim with the central government subsidizing fares by 75 percent.

The union tourism ministry in association with state governments has decided to introduce 'Heli-tourism' in the northeastern states by extending chopper services.

"To promote rural tourism, helicopter services would be operated in select tourism spots in northeastern states," said Madhusudhan Bhattacharjee, managing director of Tripura Tourism Development Corp.

Bhattacharjee said that: "The union tourism ministry is scrutinizing the 'Heli-tourism' proposals received from the state governments of the region."

Zoramthanga Under Corruption Scanner

zoramthanga Aizawl, Feb 23 : The former Chief Minister of Mizoram Pu Zoramthanga is now under the investigation of Mizoram Anti Corruption Bureau (ACB) following a PIL filed by the anti corruption organization named PRISM.

Zoramthanga is suspected to have misused his official powers for personal gain and accumulating assets disproportionate to his known sources of income.

PRISM an Anti Corruption watchdog lodged a first information report (FIR) in June, 2007 with the Mizoram ACB which refused to investigate it.

PRISM filed a PIL at Gauhati High Court against the Government of Mizoram and its investigating agency.

Gauhati High Court passed a judgment that the ACB will investigate the case in 4 months. PRISM has filed 8 PILs and more than 30 FIRs relating to corruptions in Mizoram.

First Mega Independent Power Transmission Project in India

first-mega-independent-power-transmission-project-in-india

New Delhi, Feb 23 : Today Sterlite Technologies announced about the first independent power transmission project in India.

The company also announced about the LoI (Letter of Intent) which it had received from the PFC (Power Finance Corporation Limited) for the development of an interconnecting power transmission project for the Northeast.

This 800 crore project is awarded on BOOM (Build Own, Operate and Maintain). It will connect the states of West Bengal, Bihar and Assam. The lines will be ready within three years.

“The award of this mega project to Sterlite is a great achievement for the Company. This is in line with our Vision to become a leading player in Power Transmission.”

“The award of this Project provides great scope to diversify into the growing sector of Power Transmission with many similar opportunities available in future”, as stated by the CEO of the company.

Assamese Intellectuals Angry Over "Injustice" to Gohain

Dr Hiren Gohain Guwahati, Feb 23 : Eminent intellectuals of Assam have urged the Sahitya Akademi to take action against its regional office in Kolkata for allegedly downgrading Dr Hiren Gohain, one of the four editors of a collection of Assamese short stories, Splendour in the Grass.

In a letter sent to the Akademy yesterday, seven intellectuals alleged that names of three other editors appeared ahead of Gohain when the book, an English version of the Assamese short stories, was published in January this year. Moreover, Gohain was mentioned as Translation Editor.

The letter, made available to the media here, said Gohain, a Sahitya Akademi award winning scholar and critic, besides editing had fine tuned the translations in a workshop at Guwahati. He also wrote the preface to the book.

"We condemn this irrational and unethical behaviour by Sahitya Akademi's Regional office, Kolkata and demand prompt and appropriate action," the signatories said.

The signatories include Jnanpith award winner Indira (Mamoni) Raisom Goswami and literatteurs Amalendu Guha, Nalinidhar Bhattacharjee and Harekrishna Deka.

Frustrated at Govt’s Inaction, Opts For Customary Law

justice AASU to meet AIMSU to discuss on the recent kidnapping

Roing (Arunachal), Feb 23 : Frustrated at the authority for slow pace of action to arrest the culprits involved in kidnapping of Akepi Miuli on Feb 3 last at Sadiya, Assam, the aggrieved family of the victim now wants to take up the matter in accordance to local customary law.

In a meeting held between the victim’s family and the district administration today, the family conveyed that they were loosing faith on the authority.

“Almost a month has passed and the police in Assam keeps repeating the same dialogue of culprits identified, three arrested”, said a family member.

“We are informed that the arrested people are relatives of the culprits and the real kidnappers are still roaming free”.

Giving ultimatum of three days, the family wants the matter to be solved through customary law if the culprits are not immediately arrested.

Accompanying the family members, AIMSU Chief Advisor Tone Mickrow expressing regret over slow pace of action said, “If any person from neighboring state is harmed in Roing, then the culprit is immediately booked. But if any Arunachali is harmed in Assam, then we fail to get justice”.

No loose comments: Ringu
Earlier in a separate meeting with the AIMSU members, Deputy Commissioner YW Ringu asked for all the administrative officials and police officials to refrain from passing any loose comments under any situation.

She was responding after a complaint by Miuli against officials trying to round up the blame of AIMSU’s action in response to kidnapping on him.
Also AIMSU had earlier served ultimatum to police head for passing comments over the union.

AASU Central Committee in Roing
The Central Executive Committee of the powerful All Assam Students Union (AASU) led by its President is in the town to discuss on the recent kidnapping at Assam.

The visiting team will have be having a meeting with AIMSU tomorrow. They will also discuss on dam issue.