26 November 2010

Rice Shortage in Mizoram

rice shortage in mizoramAizawl, Nov 26 : Shortage of rice, the staple food of Mizos, has affected the common people of Mizoram and also hampered the process of repatriation of Bru refugees from six relief camps in neighbouring Tripura.

General Secretary of the Bru Coordination Committee (BCC) Elvis Chorkhy today said the state officials found it difficult to provide free ration to the repatriated refugees due to shortage in rice stock in government godowns.

“We were told by the officials that the repatriation process would not be resumed now due to shortage of rice,” Chorkhy said, adding that they apprehended that if the repatriation resumed now, they would face scarcity of food.

Since the first phase of repatriation began on November three, 101 Bru families have returned to Mizoram and were re-settled in Mamit district, on Mizoram-Tripura border.

They were provided with free ration of around 600 grams a day for each adult and 300 grams for each minor.

Scarcity of rice also plagued the whole state, which was attributed to transportation problems faced in Assam and Mizoram by the Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs department.

“Though the situation is not that alarming to the extent of facing famine, we have to distribute whatever stock we have,” one official said.

Northeast India Girls Battle Racial Slurs, Feel Like Aliens

By Ambika Pandit

northeast India Gurgaon-victimNew Delhi, Nov 26
: Reena, a Delhi University student from the northeast, was on a cyclerickshaw when four bikers brushed past, feeling up her thighs and snatching away Rs 15,000 that she was carrying.

And after all the fight she put up she was literally dragged by the bikers for some distance she reached the police station only to see the constables smirk at her. They simply asked her to give a written complaint and leave.

This was one of the many similar incidents shared during a group discussion organized by NGO Jagori as part of its `safe cities' programme.

The vulnerability of women from the northeast and the sexual harassment faced by them in Delhi has been catalogued in the international four-city study labelled "Learning from Women to Create Gender Inclusive Cities'', which was presented at the three-day international conference on safe cities for women in the capital that concluded on Wednesday.

The study takes into account the vulnerability of women working in call centres in Delhi.

The Delhi chapter of the study has a section, `Place of origin', highlighting that students and young women from the northeast states reported facing particular forms of discrimination. Young women reported being called names such as "chinki'', "momos'', "thukpas'' and "noodles''.

"The findings are an outcome of a focussed group discussion carried out as part of the study to understand the concerns of women from the northeast states of the country who come to Delhi to study or work,'' pointed Kalpana Viswanath from Jagori.

The discussants comprised six young women, aged between 19 and 22, from Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya and Manipur, who are studying at DU. They stay in private hostels or PG accommodations mainly along with other men and women from their states.

The study points that since they have different racial features from north Indians, they are subjected to humiliation, molestation and sexual violence.

Everyone in the group agreed that Delhi is unsafe for women, particularly those from the northeastern states. "People perceive us as different. They have preconceived notions about women from the northeast and brand them as `untraditional, easy, and available for sexual favours','' said one of the participants.

"When I wear salwar kameez people stare. If I wear shorts they say `she is ill mannered'. No matter what we wear people always comment,'' Tina from Manipur said.

The Delhi chapter also looks at safety of women working in BPOs. A focus group of nine female employees aged 23-28 years working at a BPO at different times of the day were interviewed. They said they feel secure wearing I-cards so that they're not misunderstood if they are out waiting for their cabs at night.

Significantly, crowded places seem to be as unsafe as deserted places. One of the participants shared how she was teased while waiting for her 11pm cab in a market.

Another employee revealed that her cab with only female passengers on board was followed and asked to pull over by strangers who banged on the windows. This, too, occurred in a marketplace and not a secluded spot.

Names of participants have been changed.

Assam Traders Say No To Donations

donations assamGuwahati, Nov 26 : Trade and industry bodies in Assam today came out strongly against the demand for donations by various organisations and said this would send a wrong signal to prospective investors in the state.

The Assam Chamber of Commerce even said only dishonest traders were giving donations to students and other organisations to hide the dirty side of their business and asked the “honest” businessmen not to succumb to such demands.

“Business is a cut-throat competition in the current environment and there are still many honest businessmen. I do not see any reason to demand donations from the businessmen who are earning money by adopting honest means. If earning money is the only reason for giving donations, then the salaried class would also have to do the same. As a businessman I have never given any donation to any organisation,” the state convenor of the chamber, Rupam Goswami, told The Telegraph.

Asked to comment on the ongoing conflict between the AASU and Vishal Mega Mart, Goswami said the management of the business outlet should have protested at a time when the AASU had demanded donations. He said it seems that the Vishal’s management tried to politicise the issue, which was unfortunate.

Mahavir Jain, president of the Kamrup Chamber of Commerce, said forceful donations were illegal and anyone resorting to such practice must be brought to book. He, however, said businessmen donate a portion of their profits to different organisations for social causes.

“I don’t want to comment on donations by making the conflict between AASU and Vishal Mega Mart a case study. I am worried that if the business community is harassed or intimidated in the name of donations, it will send a very wrong signal about the present state of affairs of Assam to outsiders,” Jain said.

The business community in Jorhat did not want to comment on the issue.

“Please don’t drag us into this. But what is happening is very unfortunate,” an office-bearer of the Upper Assam Chamber of Commerce said on condition of anonymity.

Bikash Gogoi, convenor of the Dibrugarh district unit of Assam Chamber of Commerce, said donations demanded by various organisations hadbecome a nuisance for the business community in the state and it would affect the economic growth of Assam.

At a time when Assam is faced with the burning unemployment problem, it couldn’t afford to tolerate hooliganism in the name of donations for “social causes”, he added.

Via The Telegraph

Mohun Bagan to Help Soccer Development in Northeast India

Mohan Bagan KolkataKolkata, Nov 26 : City soccer giants Mohun Bagan Thursday joined hands with Assam Football Association (AFA) in a first of its kind venture in Indian sports to help in the overall development of the game in the north eastern state.

As per the memorandum of understanding (MOU) signed Thursday, Mohun Bagan would help Assam Football Association in various administrative and technical aspects of the game.

‘The club will also send its technical experts to AFA from time to time to guide the association in the coaching camps for the Assam state teams. The club will also send its administration and management Experts to AFA to conduct workshops, seminars and courses,’ said Mohun Bagan general secretary Anjan Mitra, one of the signatories of the deal.

‘Mohun Bagan will train talented footballers of Assam in the club’s soccer academies,’ he added.

AFA, on its part, will help the club in recruiting talented footballers of the northeastern states for its academy and team,’ said AFA secretary Ankur Dutta, who also signed the MOU.

Mohun Bagan also agreed to arrange friendly matches during exposure trips of the Assam sides in Kolkata with their club team. In return, the club would also send its different age-group teams to Assam for exposure trips and tournaments, Dutta told media persons here.

25 November 2010

More Delhi Cops in Areas Where Northeast Girls Live

New Delhi, Nov 25 : Expressing shock and dismay at the abduction and rape of a Mizoram girl in the capital, Minister of State for Women and Child Development Krishna Tirath today sought more PCR vans and extra police posts in areas where women from the Northeast India live in large numbers.

Tirath said that she would take up the issue with the Home Ministry.

"I am very much concerned about these incidents happening to the girls from Northeast India.

I had already taken up this issue and I am going to reiterate this issue with the Home Ministry that they should have extra kiosks and PCR vans in all police stations in areas where there is a concentration of girls from Northeast India," she told reporters here.Delhi-Police northeast girl

She said that there was a need to ensure safe working conditions for women. "I am also asking the police to hold gender sensitisation workshops in every police station so that police personnel at all levels are adequately sensitised to these problems".

"Our Ministry is shortly going to inaugurate a working women's hostel in Jasola for the girls from North-East," the Minister added.

The 30-year-old victim was walking towards her home in Moti Village in south Delhi early yesterday morning along with one of her colleagues when four men in a vehicle abducted her and took turns to rape her.

This is the latest in several incidents of sexual assaults in the city where girls from the North-East were at the receiving end.

MBA Seats For Cash: This is India

IT dept raids Welingkar's Director

MBA seats for money: IT dept raids Welingkar's DirectoIn raids that stretched for almost 48 hours, the Income Tax (IT) authorities over the November 20 weekend searched the residences and office of Dr Uday Salunkhe, Director of Welingkar Institute of Management, Matunga, Mumbai. While it is learnt not a lot of cash was found, documentary evidence has been seized to help with further investigation.

The raids that started on Saturday were apparently spurred by a lone complaint filed by a student last year, that of being charged illegal capitation fee for a seat in the institute's MBA-equivalent program. However, this complaint was made a year ago during the 2009-10 admission season but for want of time and other pressing matters, no action was taken then. "This student was persistent over the months and so the decision to raid was finally taken," said an IT official on the condition of anonymity.

The Income Tax raid was spurred by allegations that Dr Salunkhe, an engineer-MBA and a PhD who holds important positions at the Mumbai University, was charging capitation fees and admitting students through the backdoor instead of through the normal process of entrance exams and interviews. IT officials were not willing to admit or deny that Salunkhe's bank lockers in both Pune and Mumbai had been sealed. One IT official told us that the Director had totally denied amassing any ill-gotten wealth and had claimed that whatever wealth was seized from his residence or the Welingkar campus belonged to the trustees of the institute. IT officials have also questioned some more staff of the institute.

MBA seats for money: IT dept raids Welingkar's Directo

According to sources, the board of trustees of Welingkar Institute of Management have been embroiled in bitter rivalry since some time. "There is already an issue brewing among the trustees and some licenses were revoked a couple of years ago when similar raids were carried out," added the IT official. In 2004 and in 2008, the IT department had carried out similar raids and discovered irregularities in the trust's functioning.

Both the IT officials as well as sources from Welingkar Institute of Management told us that the raids were linked to the internal rivalry among the institute's board of trustees. "For years now, there have been factions in the trust and all these raids have happened at a time when elections in the trust are round the corner," said an official from the college, implying that such tipoffs to the IT department were part of the rivals' gameplans against each other.

"It is easy to target Dr Salunkhe since Welingkar Institute is the most famous of all the institutes run by this particular board of trustees and nets in the highest revenue. Those who want to gain control will naturally want to target Dr Salunkhe," the official added.

MBA seats for money: IT dept raids Welingkar's Directo

LN Welingkar Institute of Management Development and Research is part of the Shikshana Prasaraka Mandali, Pune. The charitable trust SP Mandali manages 43 educational institutions in Maharashtra including the well-known Ruia College and Poddar College in Mumbai.

While media reports have stated that huge sums of money were found in the residences of Dr Salunkhe and some of the other Welingkar staff, IT officials refused to confirm or deny it. "We cannot tell you what we have found or its quantity but it is enough for us to investigate further." IT sources told us that had the raids been carried out during the admissions season, may be the find would have been different.

For now, the IT officials are concentrating on unearthing clues from documents and email correspondences of the institute. Further evidence garnered through such investigation will decide the future course of action.

"Emails and other important correspondence is usually stored in servers abroad which make our job difficult. But we have learnt to combat these issues as well," said the IT official. The IT person adds that what they have got as evidence until now could probably be just the tip of the iceberg.

MBA seats for money: IT dept raids Welingkar's Directo

The IT official, from his experience in dealing with such issues, said that in IT violation cases related to education, things get complicated as so many educational institutes are run by politicians or influential people who find it easy to flout the law. "And besides, there are those institutes not run by government and do not get government aid. If these want to start something new or advance the existing facilities, they don't see any way out but to charge capitation fees. Since capitation fees are not legal in our country, people find alternative ways to collect them."

Rajasthan-based Atul Bapna, who is a career counsellor and is also in the business of facilitating management quota seats says that except for very few b-schools, most in the country charge capitation fees.

"There is a management quota in every b-school and use is made of that quota to get in the revenue for the college. It is a well-known fact. These things become an issue only when some student or parent does not get the admission at the discussed rate and decides to take action. Such raids does not affect the functioning of any institute. Capitation fees are here to stay," he says.

Bapna adds that the process of admission via the capitation fee route is carried out behind closed doors in these colleges. Lack of transparency in b-schools' functioning aids such activities.

MBA seats for money: IT dept raids Welingkar's Directo

The day the raids were carried out, was also the convocation day for Welingkar Institute of Management's 2010 graduates. Apparently, Welingkar officials had discussed this with the IT officials who first agreed to let the convocation happen. However, the institute and the officials could not sustain that agreement and the convocation got cancelled. "We had students coming from all over the world. They had to just go back. When we were told that we had to cancel so we sent SMS, called and emailed as many as we could to not come to the institute that evening, but so many still did," said an official from the college.

We spoke to students on the Welingkar campus at Matunga. One of them said that while there was a concern among the students about the IT raids, it had not affected their lecture schedule or studies. "Yes, we are wondering what is happening but we are not directly affected by it. Our lives as students are going on as usual."

There has been no official mail from the institute to the students explaining the current situation. Officials from Welingkar said that any such communication is sent out only by the Director.

When we visited the campus on Wednesday, it seemed its usual busy self. There were no hushed tones to be heard nor any alarm on the faces of students. Only the security officials seemed extra cautious and kept me waiting at the security office for a while till the institute gave a green signal for me to enter. Guess, the security guards may have been given strict instructions post the raids, not let in unknown faces, lest they turned out unfriendly too.

Source:pagalguy.com

US Consul General to Visit Nagaland During Hornbill Festival

US Consul General, Kolkata, Beth A PayneKohima, Nov 25 : The US Consul General, Kolkata, Beth A Payne will be attending the inaugural ceremony of the Hornbill festival as the state guest on December 1 next at Kisama Heritage village here.

According to official sources here today, Ms Payne is likely to inaugurate one of the events of the famous tourist festival which would be showcasing the culture and tradition of all the Naga tribes at the Hornbill festival.

The seven-day festival will begin at the Naga Heritage village in Kisama from December 1 next.

She will have a brief press interaction during her stay in Nagaland, official sources said.

Beth A Payne assumed her duties on August 1, 2008, the sources added.

Assam Activists Vandalise Vishal Mega Mart Stores

Vishal Mega Mart shopping malls in AssamGuwahati, Nov 25 : Hundreds of activists of the All Assam Students Union (AASU) Thursday vandalised at least three Vishal Mega Mart shopping malls in Assam. About a dozen students were injured when police used batons to disperse them.

AASU accused the shopping chain of defaming it, two days after a newly floated students' forum released telephonic conversations between a Vishal Mart executive and an AASU leader regarding monetary transactions.

Malls in Guwahati, Jorhat and Dibrugarh were attacked, a police officer said.

'In all the three places, about 100 AASU activists sneaked past security barricades and started pelting stones. They then entered the premises and resorted to large scale vandalism,' he said.

At a press conference Tuesday, the Forum of Ex General Secretary Post Graduate Students Union of Gauhati University released an audio tape where AASU adviser Samujjal Bhattacharya was heard talking about receiving Rs.2 lakh from an official of Vishal Mega Mart shopping chain.

AASU admitted to accepting donations from business houses, and said it was not doing 'anything wrong'.

AASU also forcibly closed down six Vishal Mega Mart malls Wednesday - in Guwahati, Jorhat, Dibrugarh, Tinsukia, Tezpur, and Silchar - and asked the management to tender a public apology before opening the outlets.

'There was no request from Vishal Mega Mart management for providing security. We were caught unawares by AASU activists,' the police officer added.

AASU has warned of more attacks if Vishal Mega Mart did not apologise.

AASU commands the support of an estimated five lakh students in the state. It spearheaded a violent six-year anti-outsider agitation in 1979.

It is active in raising issues of Bangladeshi migrants, mega dam projects, and corruption.