24 November 2011

CBI Names 2 Politicians in NC Hills Chargesheet

cbi nc hillsGuwahati, Nov 24 : The CBI on Wednesday filed chargesheets relating to financial scams during 2008-09 in three departments of the NC Hills Autonomous Council at the court of the special judge here.

A CBI spokesman said the entire quantum of financial irregularity in one single year in the NC Hills Autonomous Council was Rs 52 crore. "The NIA, while investigating the NC Hills Autonomous Council case for siphoning of development funds to militants, found allegations of white collar crimes too and, subsequently, the state government handed us five cases in 2010 and another four in 2011. We have been given the mandate for an inquiry into the scam committed during 2008-09 only in these nine departments," the spokesman said.

The NC Hills scam was reported to be worth Rs 1,000 crore, spanning over a period of 10 years from 2001, and there were allegations of involvement of politicians of the state. The CBI chargesheet has named just two politicians, both former heads of the council, Depolal Hojai and Mohet Hojai. The spokesman said, "No other politicians were questioned as we had to go by the strength of the FIRs lodged by the police."

The CBI chargesheets submitted on Wednesday are on investigations into siphoning of funds worth Rs 1.74 crore in the PWD department of the council; Rs 1.98 crore in the public health engineering department and Rs 25.75 lakh in the agriculture department.

Nine persons, including Depolal Hojai and four engineers, have been named as accused in the scam in the PWD while five others, including Mohet Hojai, have been named in the scam in the PHE and another two in the agriculture department.

"We are investigating the remaining six cases and the chargesheets in these will be submitted soon," the spokesman said.

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) had earlier completed investigation in the militants-politician-bureaucrats nexus in diversion of public funds from the council and found fraudulent withdrawals of Rs 16 crore, which was siphoned off to Dima Halam Daogah (Jewel) from two departments between 2008 and 2009. The diverted funds, meant for development in the district, were used for buying arms and ammunition by the outfit.

The NIA investigation found that the funds siphoned were "channelized through hawala operators at Guwahati and Kolkata to reach armed smugglers, who smuggled in arms and ammunitions and supplied it to DHD(J) to commit Acts of terror and violence and to wage war against State with a view to overawe its legitimate authority."

The NIA in its charge-sheet in 2010 named 16 persons as accused , including Mohet Hojai, former deputy director of social welfare department in the council, Md Redaul Hussain Khan, DHD (J) chief Jewel Garlosa alias Mihir Barman alias Debojit Singha Mizo gun runners Vanlalchhana alias Vantea alias Joseph Mezo, Malsawmkimi and DHD (J) c-in-c Niranjan Hojai besides many contractors entered into criminal conspiracy during November 2008 at Haflong to divert the funds.

23 November 2011

As Parliament Meets, What About Manipur?

By Jyoti Malhotra

People walked past empty trucks parked on the outskirts of Imphal, Nov. 8.

When India’s Parliament opened for its winter session on Tuesday to the sound and fury of ideological attack and retreat, neither the treasury benches nor the opposition spared much thought for a corner of northeast India that has been reeling under severe shortages for nearly four months.

Since August 1, two ethnic groups — the Kukis and the Nagas — have in turn blockaded two major national highways that connect the state of Manipur to the rest of the country, because they have clashed over the federal government’s decision to create a separate Kuki-majority district called the Special Area Demarcated Autonomous Region, or SADAR, out of the existing Naga-majority Senapati district.

Earlier this month, federal Home Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram gave in to the Kuki demand and agreed that SADAR would be created. The Kukis gave up their protest, but it was now the turn of the Nagas to retaliate with their own blockade of the same highways.

As a result, Manipur has virtually been shut off from the rest of India. Trucks bringing in essential supplies from the plains now travel only once a week, under police protection, into the capital Imphal.

That means prices of essential commodities have gone through the roof. Cooking gas cylinders cost nearly 2,000 rupees ($39), which is about 10 times more than before the blockade began. The sale of fuel is restricted to five liters a day per person, hospitals are running out of drugs, and fresh fruit and vegetables are either prohibitively expensive or simply not available.

Stranger still is the eerie silence from New Delhi, confirming the widely-prevalent feeling in Manipur, as well as in the rest of the northeast, that distance dulls the Centre’s interest. Even after Mr. Chidambaram’s visit to Manipur earlier this month, neither the Kukis nor the Nagas have been invited by the state’s chief minister, Okram Obobi Singh, for talks to settle the problem.

In an editorial earlier this month, the Imphal Free Press, an independent newspaper in the Manipuri capital, asked: “Has the Central government lost its plot in the Northeast? At this moment there seems to be an utter lack of focus on its dealing with the Northeast. It has special full-fledged ministries and departments meant to look after the Northeast Region….Yet, there seems to be such an abysmal lack of coordination or a composite blueprint to which each can contribute.”

Ira Joshi, home ministry spokesperson, told IRT that the central government is still waiting for a report from Manipur on the district reorganization committee.

“In a democracy things takes time, you have to take everybody along,” she said.

Political observers in Delhi and Imphal, who spoke to IRT on the condition of anonymity, believe that the reason for the blockade either reaches back into the decades-old conflict between the Nagas and the Kukis, or is simply a cynical political game masterminded by the Congress chief minister and the party high command in Delhi to keep the Nagas and the Kukis politically divided so that a third ethnic group, the majority Meitei's, remains in control.

According to the first school of thought, the federal government’s decision to carve up Senapati district constitutes a big blow to the decades-old Naga demand for a Greater Nagaland, which in its ideal version would tag parts of Manipur – like Senapati district -, and parts of Arunachal Pradesh and Assam to neighboring Nagaland.

Not surprisingly, the Kukis as well as the Meitei's, who are mostly settled in the valley around Imphal, are dead against the idea of dividing up Manipur.

Pradip Phanjoubam, editor of the Imphal Free Press, told IRT that the “deep-seated conflict between the Nagas and the Kukis goes back such a long way that choosing one over the other, for example on the matter of creating a separate district, amounted to choosing between the devil and the deep sea.”

Mr. Phanjoubam also indicated that there was more to the crisis than met the eye. For example, he asked, why wasn’t the federal government, “which controls the two national highways leading to Manipur, not able to break the blockade and bring succor to the hapless people of the state?”

According to a seasoned analyst of the northeast region with close links to the governments both in Delhi and Imphal, Manipur’s chief minister Singh has persuaded the party leadership in Delhi to give him a free hand to deal with the crisis, arguing that it will benefit the party when elections are held in February 2012.

According to this analyst, who spoke on condition of anonymity, “Ibobi Singh, a Meitei himself, believes that the crisis over the Kuki-Naga division of Senapati district will anger the majority Meitis to such an extent that they will vote for the Congress to restore stability.”

Between them, the Kukis and the Nagas only control 20% of the 60-member state Assembly, while the Meitis largely control the remaining 80%, the analyst said.

Moreover, Congress high command “had bought the plot and even told Mr. Chidambaram to go slow on cracking down on Ibobi Singh,” the analyst added.

A federal home ministry official, who asked not to be named, told IRT that the ministry had sent a message to the state government to try and break the blockade by sending in additional convoys carrying essential commodities and fuel, but that the state government had taken no action so far.

The federal home ministry didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment.

But former home secretary G. K. Pillai told IRT: “This is a cynical political game all sides are playing.”

Mr. Phanjoubam pointed out that the current crisis was a fit case for dismissing the state government and imposing President’s rule, which would give the central government control of the state and allow it to break the blockade and restore normalcy.

“The constitutional clause invoking President’s rule is often abused by federal governments especially when they want to dismiss a state government which belongs to another political party. But in this case, when we need President’s rule in Manipur, nobody’s bothered,” Mr Phanjoubam said.

Jyoti Malhotra is a freelance journalist based in New Delhi. She writes for India’s Business Standard daily and for Pakistan’s Express Tribune.

What Makes Assam's Muga Silk As Expensive As Gold!

By K Anurag

Guwahati: A dazzling traditional dress (mekhela chadar) woven with 'Muga' silk is indigenous to Brahmaputra Valley in Assam. In fact, it is one of most expensive gifts an Assamese young man can pick to win the heart of his woman. Why, not? This silk is simply magnificent, and almost as worthy as gold!

Muga silk (Muga Paat) or the golden silk is not only a nature's gift to Assam, but also a symbol of rich Assamese culture. It represents the brilliance of traditional attire of the region. The most significant characteristic of 'Muga silk' is its golden bright hue.

Its name is derived from Assamese word 'Muga', which means yellow. The fabric is superior in every respect in comparison to the normal white silk that available all over the world. It is also much more durable.

With time it only becomes more beautiful. Muga silk's brightness improves with every wash. It's no wonder that Muga silk is one of the costliest silks available in the world. Today, the cost of Muga silk is so high that for a middle-class woman in Assam it has become a prized possession, just as her gold ornaments.

Assam received the Geographical Indication (GI) tag for Muga silk in 2007. It was estimated that over 27,878 people were involved in the entire process of production of Muga silk and dress materials at that time.

The GI tag is registered in the name of Patent Information Centre, Assam Science Technology and Environment Council (ASTEC). It is valid for 10 years.

Handweaving of Muga silk

There are two kinds of registration under the GI Act - registered proprietor and registered users. While the registered GI is the ASTEC, there are hardly any registered 'users', even though there are plenty of traditional Muga silk worm farmers, fabric manufacturers and weavers in the state.

"There has to be about 27,000 registered users at the time of renewal of the GI Tag for Muga silk, otherwise the tag will be taken away from Assam," said an official of the ASTEC.

He said 'users' primarily mean families involved in cultivation of cocoons, weaving and post production work. The user has to apply in a prescribed form along with prescribed fee to the GI registry in Chennai.

"The lack of registered users is basically due to lack of awareness among people who are traditionally involved in production, manufacturing of Muga silk. We are taking steps to reach out to these people and enlighten them about the need for registration as users so that GI tag for Muga protected," the official said.

Muga is produced from cocoons of 'Antheraea Assamensis' which is available only in Assam. Muga worm ('Muga Polu' in Assamese language) also has the same lifecycle as that of a silkworm.

Traditionally Muga silk is used to make mekhela - chadar for women/girls and kurtas for boys and dresses made of Muga silk is considered most sophisticated and are expensive in Assam.

Antheraea Assamensis moth's eggs are laid out on the Som tree leaves to hatch out into caterpillars of about 2mm long. They grow rapidly, eat voraciously and grow as along as 30 mm in length after four to five weeks.

During this time, they change their skin four times. After the final skin change straw frames are provided, the silkworms make its cocoon in it.

The making of cocoon then takes eight more days. The worker interferes this life cycle at the cocoon stage to obtain the dream golden silk thread, which is used by the artisans to weave the enchanting Muga fabric.

"The demand of Muga silk is rising every year. As of date average quality Muga silk mekhela chadar or saree costs minimum Rs 10,000 in Assam. The price only rises when it is sold outside the state," said Hasna Shyam, an expert tribal weaver who has been in the business for years.

According to Shyam, the cost has shot up as the production of Muga silk has declined in comparison to its rising demand.

"The key reason for decline in production is because of the hazards posed to rearing of Muga polu in Som plantation under individual holding, due to rampant use of pesticides in mushrooming small tea gardens in the state," Shyam said.

Emily Scott Plays in the Backyard

emily-scott-sprinkler-4
Australian hottie Emily Scott has one of the finest bodies on the market. So when that rare set of images of Ms.Scott hit the net I just gotta grab em and show em off!

emily-scott-sprinkler-1emily-scott-sprinkler-2emily-scott-sprinkler-3emily-scott-sprinkler-6emily-scott-sprinkler-7emily-scott-sprinkler-8emily-scott-sprinkler-9emily-scott-sprinkler-10emily-scott-sprinkler-11

12-Hour Traffic Bandh in Aizawl

aizawl trafficAizawl, Nov 23 : The 12-hour traffic bandh in the Mizoram capital town began at 5 am today hitting movement of vehicles.

Aizawl district SP Lalbiakthanga Khiangte said traffic was thin in the town as most of the vehicles kept off the road fearing damage by protesters.

A few buses and taxis were sighted as the owners have not supported the bandh.

There were, however, no bandh supporters in the streets after 15 volunteers of bandh-sponsor Mizoram Motor Vehicle Taxation Refinement Demand Coordination Committee (MMVTRDCC) were arrested, he said.

Many students had to walk to attend classes as did government employees, who were instructed by the state government to attend office.

Mizoram Home Minister R Lalzirliana had yesterday warned that firm action would be taken against those who obstructed normal life.

The traffic bandh is being held to protest against the 'unprecedented' hike in road tax and compulsory payment of life time road tax, MMVTRDCC sources said.

Incredible Performance of India's Got Talent Strongmen Who Hit Each Other And Eat Glass

Don't try this at home

Bricks are lined up on a man's head and then smashed into smithereens with a sledgehammer.

Another man pulls a car across the stage using just his teeth - while a third eats glass as if it were biscuits.

Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of the Warriors of Goja - this year's most extreme contestants on India's Got Talent.

Smashing time: The Warriors of Goja made the judges wince with their performance, which saw a man smash a sledgehammer over bricks over his colleague's head

Smashing time: The Warriors of Goja made the judges wince with their performance, which saw a man smash a sledgehammer over bricks over his colleague's head

India's Got TalentIndia's Got TalentIndia's Got Talent

Shocked: The judges were left wincing with the extreme act

The group, who failed to make the final of the competition, left judges wincing as they ran over one of their members with a car and motorbike and jumped through a glass ladder.

One member of the panel covered her mouth in shock as the group set about one of their number - breaking paving slabs on his chest.

Dangerous drive: One of the group was run over by both a car and a motorbike

Dangerous drive: One of the group was run over by both a car and a motorbike

India's Got TalentIndia's Got Talent

Not for children: Members jumped through a ladder of glass (left) and smashed paving slabs against one of their group (right)

In their breathless six minute audition, they also piled on each other, with beds of nails in between.

They ended their jaw-dropping performance, set against a backdrop asking the audience 'Are You Ready?', covered in blood.

'Degrading' Lynx Ads Featuring Lucy Pinder Banned

  • Deodorant manufacturer Unilever in the dock for sanctioning images and demeaning women
  • ASA concludes the adverts were 'likely to cause serious and widespread offence'

Advertisements for Lynx deodorant featuring glamour model Lucy Pinder have been banned for degrading women and treating them as sex objects.

The lads mag model was seen wearing very little and flashing her cleavage in a series of provocative video ads that hark back to the 1970s.

The deodorant is made by multi-national manufacturer, Unilever, which is in the dock for sanctioning the images and demeaning women.

'Demeaning': Lucy Pinder in one of the Lynx adverts which the Advertising Standards Authority says goes too far

'Demeaning': Lucy Pinder in one of the Lynx adverts which the Advertising Standards Authority says goes too far

'Highly unsuitable for children': The ASA found the adverts crossed the line and are offensive to many

'Highly unsuitable for children': The ASA found the adverts crossed the line and are offensive to many

Lynx is marketed using tongue in cheek humour that suggests the men who use it instantly become more attractive, with  beautiful women falling at their feet.

However, in a ruling published today, the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has accused the company of going too far.

One internet video ad showed the model getting dressed, washing a car and eating an ice lolly. In each scene she was wearing different outfits all of which revealed her cleavage.

A second showed the model stripping wallpaper, jogging, applying lip gloss, eating whipped cream off her finger and playing with a light sabre.

On display near schools: Another poster featuring a different model showering on a beach in just her bikini bottoms drew more than 100 complaints

On display near schools: Another poster featuring a different model showering on a beach in just her bikini bottoms drew more than 100 complaints

This Lynx advert for anti-perspirant has got a watchdog hot under the collar

This Lynx advert for anti-perspirant has got a watchdog hot under the collar

A third featured various close ups of her cleavage, while on-screen text invited viewers to ‘Play with Lucy’ and gave the Lynx website address.

A fourth featured an image of the model in her underwear and bending over an oven door. The text stated ‘Can she make you lose control?’.

A poster for the product, which featured another model taking a shower on a beach and wearing only bikini bottoms, drew more than 100 complaints with many upset that it was put up close to schools.

It carried two controversial straplines, reading: ‘The Cleaner You Are The Dirtier You Get’ and ‘Get Dirty This Summer’.

In a ruling published today, the watchdog said: ‘We considered that the various activities that Ms Pinder carried out were presented in a sexually provocative way, and that alongside the focus on Ms Pinder's cleavage … were likely to be seen as gratuitous and to objectify women.

‘We considered that was emphasised by the text ‘Can she make you lose control?’ … and the invitation to ‘Play with Lucy’, which we considered would also be seen as degrading to women.

‘We therefore concluded that the ads were likely to cause serious and widespread offence.’

Criticising the poster, the ASA said the language was ‘clearly intended to imply that using the advertised product would lead to more uninhibited sexual behaviour’.

It added: ‘We therefore considered that the poster would be seen to make a link between purchasing the product and sex with women and in so doing would be seen to objectify women.’

The Parliamentary All Party Group on Body Image has announced an inquiry into the issue of body image and depictions in advertising.

Lib-Dem MP Jo Swinson, who has campaigned on the issue, said: ‘Lynx ad campaigns have a well-known, if rather far-fetched, theme of the product somehow helping young men to have more confidence with the opposite sex. 

‘Sometimes this has resulted in light-hearted and humorous adverts.

'However in this case the ASA has understandably found that using such sexually provocative images, coupled with the invitation to ‘play’ with Lucy, crosses the line, and is offensive to many.

‘These images are highly sexualised, and unsuitable for children.’

In its defence, Unilever said they had no intention to cause harm or offence.

They said the products are designed for men aged 17-27 and ‘had been had been popular over the years for its playful, sexy, tongue-in-cheek take on the 'mating game' narrative’.

Unilever said consumers had ‘come to expect, and were comfortable with, the narrative, tone and content seen in their ads’.

It said the video ads ‘were designed to be playful, sexy and humorous but not to cause offence’.

Imogen Thomas Appears To Mock Her Gagging Order

Isn't the tape supposed to be over your mouth?

She's been placed under a high court order banning her from divulging the lurid details about her relationship with Ryan Giggs.

But that hasn't stopped Imogen Thomas from making light of the whole situation in a new photoshoot.

Imogen, 28, appears in men's magazine Nuts this week where she poses almost nude apart from some strategically placed black tape.

Where's the rest of your dress? Imogen Thomas covers her body with a very small amount of black duct tape

Where's the rest of your dress? Imogen Thomas covers her body with a very small amount of black duct tape

The Welsh glamour model, who won Miss Wales in 2003, is barely contained by the tape as she pulls a series of seductive poses in front of a yellow background.

Baring a slight resemblance to the bizarre 'belt top' worn by Jodie Marsh some years ago, Imogen's duct tape dress does little to 'gag' her silicone-enhanced assets.

The raunchy set of photos were taken by a former glamour model named Zoe McConnell and are accompanied by a predictably suggestive interview.

Under wraps: The Welsh glamour model has been silenced by former lover Ryan Giggs

Under wraps: The Welsh glamour model has been silenced by former lover Ryan Giggs

In the chat with Nuts, Imogen says her rudest night out in the UK would occur in London.

Out now: Nuts magazine is available to buy from today

Out now: Nuts magazine is available to buy from today

She told the men's magazine: 'You can pretty much do anything you like in London and no one bats an eyelid. You can go out without a stitch on and people don’t even notice. Manchester’s a close second.'

Imogen also named Rihanna as her 'sexiest celebrity of 2011', saying: '[It] has to be Rihanna. Everything she does is sexy – her videos, the way she moves, the way she dresses. That girl drips sex!'

Earlier this month the former Big Brother star returned to the High Court, where she tried to lift an order preventing her from revealing details of her relationship with married footballer Ryan Giggs.

She put in a bid to lift a gagging order obtained by the footballer seven months ago.

The former Miss Wales arrived at court with her legal team to ask Mr Justice Eady for the right to make a public statement about the case.

But after almost two hours of legal wranglings in private the judge reserved judgment with no firm date given for his final ruling.

Before ordering the press and public to leave court he said the application was about 'what if anything can be said in public by way of a statement.'

At an earlier hearing Mr Justice Eady said even though Giggs had been named - the injunction was still in place to stop his family being 'engulfed in a cruel and destructive media frenzy.'