18 May 2012

Zoramthanga Banks On Asom Gana Parishad's Comeback

Guwahati, May 18 : The region's biggest regional party, Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), learnt some important lessons and got a big morale boost to establish regionalism strongly from Zoramthanga, the former lieutenant of the late Laldenga of the Mizo National Front and former chief minister of Mizoram, who is a staunch supporter of regionalism with a nationalistic outlook.

At the ninth convention of the AGP here, chief guest Zoramthanga spewed venom at national parties ruling in states. "Regionalism means governance by owners of the land and not by parties born from Delhi's womb, which is not the owner of the land. I wish to see Assam administered by the sons of its soil, the real owners of the land."

The former militant leader, who went on to become the leader of the Mizo National Front and chief minister of Mizoram for two terms after giving up arms, pushed the regional party to strive harder to make a comeback. "Do not despair. Regionalism with the sprit of nationalism has a habit of coming back. It will come back in Assam as well as in Mizoram."

Well aware of the inner party problems which have plagued AGP for long, Zoramthanga had a piece of advice for the new leadership of the party that took charge on Thursday. "Bury all the differences in the leadership. We too had differences in the MNF but we erased all of them. You may have problems here and there but do not let these problems get magnified."

He said like AGP in Assam, MNF in Mizoram is a symbol of nationalism, and both parties have quite a lot in common. "MNF was born of a movement and so was AGP. We are in the same boat," he said.

The Mizo strongman brought out another common issue being pursued by both parties. Like AGP, the MNF too blames the Congress of manipulating electronic voting machines to win elections.

"There is a tradition of helping each other in times of need. Both the parties have gone through the same hardships. If we strive together, we will make a comeback. Let this brotherhood be extended to other regional parties in other states. We may open the window for the breeze to come in but let us close the doors on all national parties or else they will uproot us," he said.

The Business Of Nagaland

Aided by India’s growing outreach with both Myanmar and other Naga rebel groups—Nagaland’s future will continue to be India-led, and Myanmar-blessed

By Sudeep Chakravarti

There was a buzz about Nagaland this past week, at least in regional security and political circles, and even for those who eye business in this part of India abutting Myanmar, where political temperatures appear to be cooling and India’s make-nice diplomacy to counter-balance China appears to be paying off.
Lafarge SA. Photo by Bloomberg
Lafarge SA. Photo by Bloomberg
A group of ambassadors from the European Union countries swung by for a three-day tour of Nagaland earlier this week. They met top officials and various power centres of Nagaland in Kohima, the capital set deep in the Naga Hills; and ended their quite unusual visit with a meeting in Dimapur—the state’s flatland commercial hub—at the local chamber of commerce. The envoys spoke of the possibility of their countries and the European Commission facilitating development, commerce and investment.Local power circles were abuzz too that Lafarge SA is in preliminary discussion with Nagaland’s leadership for establishing a limestone and shale mining facility in south-eastern Phek district of Nagaland to feed a planned cement plant in nearby contiguous Myanmar. This “bilateral” model could be a template of Lafarge Umiam Mining Pvt. Ltd, a subsidiary, with its quarrying operation in Meghalaya to feed by conveyer a Lafarge-controlled cement plant across the border in Bangladesh. Representatives of several hydrocarbon businesses, both Indian and overseas, too have been nosing around, as talk builds up about the state government considering the exploration of petroleum in three districts of Nagaland.

Loud as these buzzes were, the loudest was over implications of a major Naga rebel group, National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Khaplang), whose reclusive leader, S.S. Khaplang, an “Eastern” Naga, operates out of a base in Myanmar, signing a ceasefire deal with Myanmar’s authorities in April. The deal replicates the arrangement this faction has with the government of India within the boundaries of Nagaland. But the Myanmar deal goes farther. There is even talk of an autonomous region for Eastern Nagas.
Insiders also mention a corollary deal—unwritten—by which the Khaplang faction will cease to offer support and sanctuary in Myanmar to two key Manipuri rebel groups, the United National Liberation Front and the People’s Liberation Army. This will directly bolster India’s security construct.

The Khaplang-led Naga rebel faction has also upped rhetoric aimed at its chief rival, National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Isak Muivah, or NSCN (I-M), the largest and most powerful Naga rebel group led by Isak Chishi Swu and Thuingaleng Muivah, which with near-impunity runs parallel governments in most Naga regions in India. The I-M grouping, sometimes called “the mother of all rebel groups” for its propensity to nurture, train and supply rebel groups in the North-East to upset India’s equilibrium as well as keep up a stream of influence and revenue, is also in ceasefire mode. But it has for long held out with its demand for a greater “Nagalim” that, besides Nagaland, would include the contiguous Naga-majority regions in Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh and Assam.

In a distinct departure from its arch-rivals, leaders from the Khaplang group have made statements about Nagaland and Naga regions elsewhere having their unique needs and futures—a stand that pleases India and Myanmar. A third Naga rebel faction, NSCN (Unification), also in talks with India, has made similar noises this past week. The NSCN (I-M) group, sensing a flanking manoeuvre—it openly accuses India of helping things along—has hit back with strong comments, putting in doubt an already faltering reconciliation process among various Naga rebel groups. The Forum for Naga Reconciliation, a church- and civil society-led initiative, has planned a reconciliation meeting on 21 May at Chiang Mai in northern Thailand, the site of earlier reconciliation meetings—even photo-op soccer matches in 2008 and 2009 among various factions. The meeting early next week is in jeopardy, with both the I-M and Khaplang factions declining to attend.
Indeed, I heard talk among Naga security watchers in Kohima and Dimapur earlier this week that some hardliners and “next generation” leaders in NSCN (I-M) are so upset with the recent play of its rivals and Indian’s security mandarins that it has prepared Plan B: breaking away from the ceasefire and setting up safe bases along the border with China, parts of Myanmar and Bangladesh. Should this happen, conflict will be intense and severely affect civilians.

Equally, however, there is a parallel sentiment that with NSCN (I-M) relatively cornered—aided by India’s growing outreach with both Myanmar and other Naga rebel groups—Nagaland’s future will continue to be India-led, and Myanmar-blessed. Alongside, with Manipur’s rebels under pressure, it’s a major step to secure the region.

Sudeep Chakravarti writes on issues of conflict in South Asia. He is the author of Red Sun: Travels in Naxalite Country and the just-published Highway 39: Journeys through a Fractured Land.

Murder Ruled Out in Richard Loitam's Case: Police

Bangalore, May 17 : Police probing the recent death of Manipuri student Richard Loitam here have ruled out that he was murdered, a top official said today.

"The doctors' opinion based on the histopathalogical and forensic reports which were received by us late last night, show that it is not a case of murder or culpable homicide," Superintendent of Police Bangalore Rural District, D Prakash told PTI.

Quoting the doctors' report, he said, "Visible injuries noted at the time of post-mortem examination, both external and internal are individually or collectively, not sufficient to cause death."

According to the report, he said, chemical examination revealed the presence of paracetamol to the extent of 27 mg in the blood, which is not sufficient to cause death.

The expert opinion from the pathology department revealed "there is a pathology in the heart, which has started well before the usual age, probably due to hereditary cause".

The doctors' report further says "based on the facts available, opinion as to the cause of death is undetermined".

However, based on the opinion furnished by the pathology department, further examination of the heart may throw more light on the disease of the heart, the report said.

Prakash said the doctors' report shows that it was not a case of murder or culpable homicide, adding "however, further investigation into the case is on".

Nineteen-year-old Richard, a second semester student of Acharya NRV School of Architecture, was found dead on his hostel bed on the afternoon of April 18.

While police initially termed it as a "death under mysterious circumstances", his parents alleged it to be a case of murder.

The death sparked off nationwide protests with students demanding justice for Richard.

Meanwhile, Potsangbam Dhanakumar Singh, an IPS officer deputed by Manipur government as liaison officer to assist Bangalore Police in the case, said the final autopsy report by a team of doctors ruling out physical injuries leading to his death can be questioned in a court of law.

Victoria Hospital doctors, who submitted their final findings to city police, have indicated cardiac ailment as the cause of death.

"The doctors are of the opinion that he died of heart ailment, which can be questioned in a court of law," he told PTI.

Dhanakumar said he would submit a report to Manipur government about the recent development in Richard Loitam case before deciding on next course of action.

To a question, he said it was left to Bangalore police to decide whether to close the case or not.

83 Villages in Assam-Meghalaya Border Take Oath To Fight Insurgency

Villagers blame underdevelopment in the Garo Hills region for the rise in insurgency
Ratnadip Choudhury
Guwahati
At a time when the villages on the Assam-Meghalaya border are witnessing a rise in insurgency, people from 83 villages in the Garo Hills, inhabited mostly by the Garos, took an oath on 16 May to fight insurgency.

“We want to put a stop to insurgency, which brings nothing but misery. We have already suffered a lot and the bitter experience is still alive in our minds. It is resurging after 16 years and we cannot allow it to destroy our future,” said locals Benedict Areng and Xavier Sangma at Kinangaon, a nondescript village near lower Assam’s Boko town.

The Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA), which is fighting for a separate Garoland in Meghalaya, the Rabha Viper Army, a rebel group of the Rabha tribe and the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) have been abducting people and extorting money. A section of the Achik National Volunteer Council (ANVC), has been violating ground rules of ceasefire in the area.
“We know the rebels would not be happy but whatever we are doing, it is to ensure better education, healthcare, food security, and to increase our earnings. Hence, we will not allow the rebels to recruit anyone from our villages, provide shelter to them or agree to their extortion demands. Else the villagers will seek the help the law,” Areng added.
“Nobody, not even the poor, are spared,” Xavier alleged, “and that’s why we have decided to fight back. We have only one weapon that is our will power and the rebels will have to step back. This area is underdeveloped has thus has turned into a breeding ground for insurgency.”
It is becoming a huge challenge for the Garos to keep up with growing extortion demands of the rebel outfits of both Assam and Meghalaya. “When a person cannot sustain his family, how will he pay the extortion money? They blame the Assam government for the rise in insurgent activities along the border. Here, students stop going to schools after class 8 as there are no high schools,” Mintu Sangma, a local said.
For 84 Garo hamlets in the area, there are only two provincial high schools—Gohalkona High School and Hahim High School—and students have to undertake a 20 km trudge every day. Ten out of 14 sanctioned posts are lying vacant in Gohalkona High School.
However, this fight against the rebels in the area is not new. In 1996, the villagers of Kinangaon had reportedly captured a group of militants and handed them over to the police.
This time as well, the villagers are sure the rebels will retaliate but they are resolute that they will drive the insurgents away.
With inputs from Kishore Talukdar in Boko.

Northeast Alienation: Sangma Offers Country Chance To Make Amends

By Akshaya Mishra


The President of India has to be the perfect mix of symbol and substance. Let’s put it without any hesitation. PA Sangma fits the bill perfectly.

Let’s not put him in comparison with other likely contenders for the President’s job. Comparison is a hopelessly reductionist exercise — it distorts complete people by reducing them to measurables. Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is a brilliant candidate as is Vice President Hamid Ansari. Both are people of great learning and both command great respect among peers. If former President APJ Abdul Kalam comes into picture at some point, the country gets a rich variety of choices for the top job.

PA Sangma’s credentials are no less significant. Former Speaker of Lok Sabha, former Chief Minister of Meghalaya and a member of the Lok Sabha for eight terms — all this is qualification enough to put him in the league of other possible contenders. Given the present political equations and the arrangement of numbers, the NCP leader does not appear to have much of a chance. However, his candidature offers a great opportunity to the country.
Reuters
It is not important that he is a tribal and no tribal ever became President of the country though Sangma himself would like to emphasise on it. In him the rest of the country has a chance to build bridges with the North-East, the vast, strategically important region which stays under the nation’s radar all the time, either by default or by design. He could be instrumental in bringing the region to national focus.
The physical and psychological alienation of the people of the region from Delhi has a long history, beginning with the transfer of the capital of British India from erstwhile Calcutta to Delhi in 1911. Post-Independence, the distance has grown progressively with the northern states dominating the political space and virtually drowning out the voices from the North-East. Economic and cultural disparity between the two Indias has been stark. What has aggravated matters is the lack of efforts at the government’s level to facilitate communication between the both.
Things have come to such a pass that for many in Delhi, states Sikkim, Meghalaya and Arunachal Pradesh exist in another planet. Many in the North-East believe they don’t belong to India. The recent spate of attacks on students of North-East in Delhi and other states is the manifestation of the deep distrust. The country needs to address the situation fast. Otherwise, it might end up losing all influence in the region.
If parties decide to choose Sangma as President, which, of course, is a near impossibility, it would go a long way in arresting the growing sense of alienation in the North-East. It would bring back the region into national consciousness besides serving to reduce the bitterness it harbours towards the rest India. The affable leader would be a great facilitator in normalising relations all around.
Symbolism may look an empty exercise but it is not without its uses. Let’s face it, the selection of Presidents in India has mostly been about symbolism. Pratibha Patil was made President because India never had a woman head of the state, APJ Abdul Kalam was Muslim, Zail Singh was a Sikh and so on. Nothing exactly wrong in that though political calculations plays big role in it. It reflects the inclusive character of our polity and the ability to acknowledge the presence of neglected sections.
The fundamental purpose is to send a message. Sangma’s election as President would serve that precise purpose. However, the only parties backing him now are the Biju Janata Dal and the AIADMK. Other parties must see the opportunity in it.
17 May 2012

Stripping: A New Form of Feminist Protest (NSFW)


The Femen activist group has made headlines around the world by baring their...
AP
The Femen activist group has made headlines around the world by baring their breasts to protest against prostitution, exploitation and corruption. Here, a November 2011 protest in Vatican City.

Femen activist Alexandra Shevchenko gets seized by policemen outside the...
AP
Femen activist Alexandra Shevchenko gets seized by policemen outside the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev.


Here, Femen activists condemn the April 27 bomb attacks in the city of...
REUTERS
Here, Femen activists condemn the April 27 bomb attacks in the city of Dnipropetrovsk and criticize the security services' preparations for the Euro 2012 soccer championship at the entrance to a metro station in Kiev on May 3.
 
The group also protests outside their native Ukraine. Here, a protest at the...
AFP
The group also protests outside their native Ukraine. Here, a protest at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in the Swiss resort of Davos in January 2012.


A Ukrainian Femen activist gets dragged away by police during a protest in...
DPA
A Ukrainian Femen activist gets dragged away by police during a protest in Istanbul on International Women's Day, March 8, 2012.
 
Femen activist Oksana Shachko is a professional icon painter and lives in a...
Valeria Mitelman/ DER SPIEGEL
Femen activist Oksana Shachko is a professional icon painter and lives in a run-down studio apartment in Kiev with greenish mold on the ceiling.


Anna Hutsol is one of the group's main ideologues.
Valeria Mitelman/ DER SPIEGEL
Anna Hutsol is one of the group's main ideologues.


During the Russian presidential election on March 4, Femen tried to seize the...
AFP
During the Russian presidential election on March 4, Femen tried to seize the ballot box containing Vladimir Putin's vote in Moscow.


The group is also protesting against the Euro 2012 football championship, which...
AFP
The group is also protesting against the Euro 2012 football championship, which Ukraine is co-hosting.


A protest against political repression in Kiev (August 2011). Can the naked...
DPA
A protest against political repression in Kiev (August 2011). Can the naked stunts change anything, or are they just providing images for a sex-obsessed media?


A protest in Belarus was one of the riskiest the group has done. "The reaction...
DPA
A protest in Belarus was one of the riskiest the group has done. "The reaction to a nude protest is a measure of freedom in a country," says one Femen activist. "We were not arrested in Switzerland, but we were almost killed in Belarus."

No Free Treatment in Assam's Government Hospitals

By Kaushik Deka

The Gauhati Medical College HospitalThe Gauhati Medical College Hospital

Recently, Assam was shaken by the news that a couple was forced to sell their baby to clear the medical bills in a government hospital.
An India Today investigation into the case found that even those patients who are below poverty line (BPL) are forced to buy medicines and surgical equipment in Assam's premier government hospital - the Gauhati Medical College Hospital (GMCH).

When asked, Health Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma admitted that the government is able to provide only 50 per cent of the medicines required for the delivery of a child in a government hospital. He blames lack of funds for this. At the same time, and for reasons best known to Sarma, the state health ministry's budget has remained static at Rs.42 crore since 2006.

On May 12, Sarmila Basumatry and her husband Suniram Basumatry had to sell their newborn baby to a childless couple to clear a bill of Rs.7,400 at the Rupnath Brahma Civil Hospital in Kokrajhar. A doctor in the hospital, Jaynal Abedin, forced the couple to buy medicines from a private pharmacy saying that the necessary medicines were not available in the hospital. The doctor was later arrested after Pradeep Hajela, Director (Assam) National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) filed an FIR at the office of Kokrajhar superintendent of police.

Under the Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakaram launched by NRHM, Assam, in December 2011, a pregnant woman admitted to a government health institution is entitled to free and cashless delivery, including caesarean section, medicines and consumer durables, surgical items, diagnostics tests such as blood, urine and ultrasound, free nutritional diet and supplements and free conveyance from home to a health institution and free drop home after delivery. The patient is provided with a free kit of drugs and consumables for the delivery.

"The medicines included in this kit are not sufficient and cater to 50 per cent of the total requirement. This is a new scheme and came into effect from March. We are reviewing this kit on May 18 to include more medicines," Sarma told India Today.

No wonder then that when the India Today team visited GMCH, it was discovered that almost every patient had to buy several medicines and consumer durables from outside the hospital campus. "We know we are entitled to free medical care. When we called the hospital, they did send the pick-up van and provided some free medicines. But we have been asked to buy some medicines on our own as well," says the husband of a pregnant woman. The couple did not want to be named. India Today is in possession of several documents to establish that several patients, including some from below the poverty line, bought medicines from outside the hospital.

Ramen Talukdar, superintendent of GMCH, said that there had been instances when patients were asked to buy medicines. "It happens only when there is a short supply of medicine from the Department of Health & Family Welfare," said Talukdar.

Our team also found out that even though BPL patients are entitled to free surgery in government hospitals, orthopedic and neurological patients are routinely forced to buy surgical equipment worth a couple of thousand. "Some of the items such as plates and screws required in these surgeries are not available in the hospital and we ask the patients to buy those," said Talukdar.

Pointing to the increasing footfall in government hospitals, Sarma says, "The indoor patients in government hospitals have increased from over two lakh in 2006 to 10 lakh in 2011 while outdoor patients have increased from over 5 lakh in 2006 to over 20 lakh in 2011. This has put huge stress on our infrastructure and existing facilities."

Mary Kom Loses in Quarters, Olympic Berth in Fate's Hands

Qinhuangdao (China), May 17 : Indian woman boxer M C Mary Kom's Olympic ticket will be decided by fate now after she lost in the quarterfinals to world number two Nicola Adams in the World Championships here today.

The five-time world champion will return empty-handed on the medal front for the first time since the event's inception in 2001 but she still has a chance to get the London berth if Adams goes on to win her semifinal bout.

Women's boxing will make its Olympic debut in three weight categories in London -- 51kg, 60kg and 75kg. Asia has two slots in the 51kg division and one of them has already been taken by Asian Games gold-medallist Ren Cancan of China.

The 29-year-old Manipuri went down 11-13 in a fiercely-contested battle in which she was tied with Adams on points in two of the four rounds.

Mary and North Korea's Hye Kim have ended up on the losing side in the quarterfinals and their respective opponents -- Adams of England and Elena Savelyeva of Russia -- will be facing off in the semis now. The winner of the bout will decide which among Mary Kom or Kim goes through to the Olympics.

Mary Kom conceded a point's lead each in the first and third round, which ultimately proved decisive in the bout.

"I gave my best but still lost, what can I say? I don't know if I have a chance or not. I don't want to think about it," a dejected Mary Kom told PTI after her bout.

"It's difficult, I have to rely on luck which is not what I wanted to. I wanted to win it all by myself," she added.  Devi (60kg) are on the same boat and will know if they have got the Olympic berth only after the semifinal stage.

There was some good news for India in the non-Olympic categories as Kavita assured herself of a medal by advancing to the +81kg division semifinals. She beat Turkey's Semsi Yarali 15-14 to make the medal round.

But there was disappointment elsewhere as Pinki Jangra (48kg) went down to world number two Svetlana Gnevanova of Russia 11-13.

In the 81kg division, former world champion RL Jenny lost 11-18 to Hungary's Timea Nagy.

In the 64kg category, Meena Rani lost to American Mikaela Mayer 10-27