19 September 2012

Mizo School Asks Parents To Pay Salaries Of Teachers

Aizawl, Sep 19 : Mizo Government High School, one of the oldest educational institutions in Mizoram, has been asking students' parents to pay the salaries of six private teachers. Prominent citizens of the state, including chief minister Lal Thanhawla and education minister Lalsawta, studied at the school.

In a letter to parents of students, the principal of the school, Zairemveli, asked them to contribute Rs 500 each for 2012-2013 so that the school can pay the salaries of the six teachers.

Earlier, Zairemveli had asked the parents to contribute Rs 250 each, but later doubled the amount as Rs 250 would not be sufficient to pay the teachers for a year.

She said that the total salary of the six teachers amounted to Rs 56,000 per month, but the contribution by the parents of 1,250 students at the rate of Rs 250 per head would only be Rs 3,12,500, which would cover only for six months' salaries.

The principal explained that the need for contribution from the parents of the students arose due to shortage of teachers for subjects like Mizo, English, history, home science and education, and posts lying vacant due to promotion of three teachers to the post of vice-principal elsewhere.

"The government did not provide teachers to teach Mizo and English during the entire 2011 academic session," she said, adding that the institution has hired seven teachers and has been paying them from the funds allotted to the institution for other purposes. Since the institution could no longer afford to pay them, the school authorities appealed to the parents to contribute for the sake of better education for their children, she said.

All Northeast Clash in Under-17 Girls Subroto Cup


New Delhi, Sep 19
: Mizo girl Offee Lalmingahualpuia continued her superb form in the tournament as she scored her fourth hat-trick in five matches to take Government Mizo High School, Aizawl to the Under-17 final of the 53rd Subroto Cup Football tournament on Tuesday.

Lalmingahualpuia struck in the 25th, 40th and 50+1 minute as the Mizoram school thumped Ramakrishna Saratha Higher Secondary School, Tamil Nadu 4-1 in the first semifinal of the girl's tournament.

Lalmingahualpuia had got her name in Subroto Cup record books as the first girl player to score a hat-trick in the tournament and had scored 11 goals before this match.

The summit clash on Thursday will be an all-Northeast affair with Government Mizo High School, Aizwal taking on Oriental English School, Manipur who got the better of Government High School, Haryana 2-0 in the other semifinal on Tuesday.

J Revathi scored the consolation goal for Tamil Nadu in the 18th minute.

Talking about her goal scoring spree, Lalmingahualpuia who idolises French great Zinedine Zidane said, "I play because I enjoy playing and I don't think much. Guess that is the reason I get to score the goals."

In the second semifinal, K Tony gave the Manipur school the lead in the 18th minute before S Ranjana scored the second goal in the 39th minute to seal a berth in the final.

Meanwhile, the league matches for the boys U-17 started on Tuesday.
14 September 2012

Demand To Suspend Corrupt Officials in Mizoram

Aizawl, Sep 14 : Twenty-six organisations in Mizoram, including six political parties, have demanded the immediate suspension of the government officials involved in misusing road-maintenance funds.

The groups and political parties like the BJP, MNF, Mizoram Peoples’ Conference Party and Peoples Conference Party, have also sought the personal appearance of the two top PWD officials, including the engineer-in-chief, a retired engineer-in-chief and a senior accountant in court on September 20 for hearing their bail plea in a corruption case.

Senior office bearers of the Mizoram PCC have joined the anti-graft bandwagon demanding the suspension of the officials dragged to court by the state anti-corruption branch.

Zokailiana, one of the secretaries of the Mizoram PCC, supported the campaigners against corruption at a public meeting today.

At another meeting last week, senior general secretary of the Mizoram PCC, C. Chawngkunga, had also supported the anti-corruption campaigners. “Corruption can only be beaten with the biggest of sticks,” he said.

The Hmarphei Zirlai Pawl (HZP), one of the major political parties in the state, had filed an RTI to find out the financial situation of the Serkhan-Bagha Road. The RTI had revealed the irregularities in the PWD accounts.

The case has succeeded in bringing together a large number political parties and organisations, which have raised the issue of corruption in high places and the seeming inability of the Congress government to do anything about it.

The Society for Social Action president, S.L. Sailova, said it was the government’s duty to suspend the officials under investigation and that there was no reason to wait for the court to tell them to do that. Leaders from the other organisations also criticised the government’s inaction in this case and many others.

Cachar, A Smugglers’ Paradise

Aizawl, Sep 14 : Cachar has become a hub of narcotics smuggled across the Indo-Myanmar border in Mizoram, according to BSF sources.

The BSF’s Cachar-Mizoram frontier sector headquarters in Masimpur cantonment arrived at this conclusion after quizzing heroin and other illegal drug runners arrested during the past three months in Mizoram and south Assam districts.

A source in BSF intelligence today said nearly 1kg heroin has been seized in both states by the BSF and police recently in the course of a few joint operations.

The source said the smuggled heroin is usually from the Golden Triangle of Thailand, Laos and Myanmar. The smugglers make huge profits with 1kg cent per cent pure heroin, valued at Rs 75 lakh.

On August 15, a joint team of BSF and Assam police attacked a smugglers’ den at Sonatala village under Karimganj district and seized 300gram heroin.

BSF sources said the heroin-smuggling network in Patherkandi of North Tripura is now led by a Khasi man with links in Myanmar. The BSF also seized 30gram heroin on August 7 after two Myanmarese smugglers were arrested on August 7 in Aizawl.

The smugglers were identified as Lalbiatsan and Lalbiakchunga, both Myanmarese Mizos with their residence in Tahan town in Chin Hills state in Myanmar. A BSF official said the arrests have revealed only the tip of the iceberg and the big fishes usually manage to evade arrest.

In India, the Music Fest Comes of Age

By Isha Singh Sawhney

Crowds at the NH7 festival 2011 in Pune, Maharashtra.

Courtesy of Kunal Kakodkar
Crowds at the NH7 festival 2011 in Pune, Maharashtra.

Music festivalgoers in India are a happy lot these days. After spending the last decade looking enviously westward, and bemoaning the lack of Coachellas and Glastonburys at home, festival options now crowd India’s social calendars.

Revelers can pick from travel-worthy destinations including a desert, an oceanfront, the ubiquitous Indian hill station and a handful of cities. For example, would you rather be: drunk on rice beer in Arunachal Pradesh’s beautiful paddy fields with the Radiohead-inspired singing of Sky Rabbit’s lead, Raxit Tewari, or wine-soaked in the vineyards of Nashik, fueled with copious amounts of live music from another Tewari – Ankur Tewari and the Ghalat Family?

India’s music devotees are hopeful that the shoddy organization and short performer lineups that once characterized music “festivals” here are a thing of the past.


“The term ‘music festival’ was often misused by Indian promoters,” said Arjun S. Ravi, a festival fixture and an acerbic music critic who runs the webzine Indiescision, which is sponsored by the music site NH7. Any event with “two or more artists on the bill, cheap drinks and a willing club” was billed a music a festival, he said.

But in recent years, professional management groups have been putting together smoothly run, skillfully executed festivals, like Only Much Louder’s highly successful NH7 Weekender in Pune and Invasion in Delhi, Bangalore and Pune and Percept’s Sunburn, a three-day electronica festival, in Goa.

Competition among these groups has meant more “long-term planning and better curators and audiences,” said Vijay Nair, Only Much Louder’s chief executive. “People now expect all the things that come together to make a music festival,” he said, including big lineups, multiple stages, film tents and food courts.

The Indian music industry’s newest bedfellows, big corporate sponsors, have helped make these expectations possible. For years, big brands in India feted only Bollywood and cricket. Now they have “woken up to a large demographic of the youth that’s finding Bollywood crass,” said Ankur, the front-man and lyricist of the indie-rock band Ghalat Family.

It helps of course that surrogate-advertising laws ensure that festivals are the only (and probably coolest) way alcohol brands can advertise. For liquor companies, sponsoring music festivals and concerts is a way to tout their wares without violating the 1995 Cable Television Network Act, which bans advertisements that “promote directly or indirectly production, sale or consumption of cigarettes, tobacco products, wine, alcohol, liquor or other intoxicants.”

“The greatest boon to the music industry has been the ban on alcohol advertising,” said Anup Kutty, Menwhopause’s bass guitarist.

Mr. Nair estimates that endorsements from alcohol sponsors account for about 60 to 70 percent of festival revenues. Finding a music festival to append to their name gives big brands much more mileage than any tie-ups with soda companies or releases of music compilations on compact discs.
More bands and better financing sources leads to more festivals, said Lalitha Suhasini, the editor of Rolling Stone India. She said organizers are now also offering audiences an entire new festival experience, which could involve “backpacking to a hill station for a festival to getting a band tattoo at a tattoo stall in the festival bazaar.”

Mahesh Madhavan, president and chief executive of Bacardi South Asia, which is the chief sponsor of the Invasion and NH7 events, said the liquor brand has longstanding ties to music in India, dating from the 1990s, and has brought international bands like Bob Sinclar, Flo Rida and Basement Jaxx to the country.

Mr. Madhavan wouldn’t give exact budgets earmarked for festivals like NH7, but said that a festival costs “anything between $800,000 to $1 million.”

Bacardi paired an individual brand with each festival it sponsored: Dewar’s scotch with NH7 Weekender in Pune, which featured mattresses in the sun and slow, acoustic music, and Eristoff vodka at Invasion in Noida, Pune and Bangalore, which featured electronica, laser lights, the dance music group Prodigy and the D.J. David Guetta.

Musicians like Mr. Kutty of Menwhopause say they have also found friendly governments as sponsors. He has enlisted the Arunachal Pradesh Department of Tourism for the Northeast’s first big mainstream music festival, Ziro. The founders of the Ragastan festival in Jaisalmer are partners with Incredible India, the central government’s tourism campaign.

Still, a handful of festivals remain proudly independent, eschewing sponsors altogether, like Happily Unmarried’s Music in the Hills, which celebrate its eighth year this April. Happily Unmarried avoids sponsors to keep the festival small and focused.

To help you decide where you want to wear your neons/Wellies/Ray-Bans and wave your lighters and jump around in mosh pits, we have listed the festivals of the season.

Ziro town in Lower Subansiri district, Arunachal Pradesh.
Courtesy Ziro Festival of Music
Ziro town in Lower Subansiri district, Arunachal Pradesh.
What: Ziro
Where and when: Ziro, Arunachal Pradesh, Sept. 14 to 16
Tickets: A three-day pass is 2,500 rupees ($45)
Getting there: By bus or taxi from Itanagar, by rail from the North Lakhimpur Railway Station, or by air from Guwahati.
Ziro will see local bands and big names from across the country come together for what’s being touted as the Northeast’s first music festival, in this green hill station. Expect performances from Digital Suicide, Dirty Punk, Vinly Records, Alisha Batth, Trisha Electric and Peter Cat Recording, among others.

Partnered with NgunuZiro, which works for the sustainable development of Ziro valley and empowerment of local communities, the festival promises to respect local Apa-tani tribe ethics. Sponsors are the state tourism board and local businesses. Food stalls by Apa-tani tribe villagers will offer dishes like fermented bamboo, many kinds of meats and many more kegs of rice beer. Of the 2,000 expected attendees, most are likely to come from the northeast.

What: Sunburn
Where and when: Delhi, Unitech Golf Course and Country Club, Noida, Oct. 7; Goa, Dec. 27 to 29
Tickets: Regular ticket 2, 500 rupees and VIP ticket 6, 000 rupees for Noida
With the dance music evangelist Nikhil Chinapa at the forefront, Sunburn kicked off in 2007 on Goa’s Candolim beach as a three-day festival, and since then the festival attracts over 100,000 people each year. This year, the festival has been on the move, first to Mumbai in April, and then Delhi and Colombo, Sri Lanka, in October.

Previous Sunburn lineups have included big acts like Axwell, Above & Beyond, Gareth Emery, Markus Schulz, Pete Tong and Infected Mushroom. Expect magnificent pyrotechnics and trippy visuals of the Delhi audio-visual deejays BLOT, both in Noida and Goa.  This year’s big names include Dutch deejay Afrojack and German EDM deejay Moguai, other than Indian heavyweights Jalebee Cartel’s Arjun Vagale and Ash Roy and DJ Pearl .

What: Bacardi NH7 Weekender
Where and when: Noida, Ground D, Budh International Circuit, Oct. 13 to 14; Pune, Amanora Park Nov. 2 to 4; Bangalore, Dec. 15 to 16 (venue to be announced)
Tickets: For Delhi tickets will cost between 1, 500 and 3, 000 rupees for Pune and Bangalore tickets still to be announced.
Getting there: All three cities are well connected by air, road and rail.
Now in its third year, the NH7 Weekender is expanding to Delhi and Bangalore despite skepticism by festivalgoers that the event can be successfully repeated outside of Pune. Delhi, in particular, has gained a reputation for mishandling big concerts by international artists like Bryan Adams, Akon and Metallica.

But Mr. Nair of Only Much Louder said he believed that the best crowds will be in Delhi. The company has also promised that no acts will be repeated in the other cities.

In Pune last year, more than 25,000 people visited five stages, featuring everything from punk, metal and electronic dance music to folk rock, dubstep and acoustic gigs. NH7 Weekender’s last act has usually been headliners like Imogen Heap and Asian Dub Foundation.

This year one more stage, Fully Fantastic, has been added in homage to the great ol’ Daddy of Indian rock who passed away earlier this year, Amit Saigal.  The lineup includes the Kaiserdisco, Solstice Coil, Parikrama. Shafqat Amanat Ali and the Music Basti Project.

The Mehrangarh Fort in Jodhpur, Rajasthan.
Keith Bedford for The New York Times
The Mehrangarh Fort in Jodhpur, Rajasthan.
What: JodhpurRIFF
Where and when: Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur, Oct. 26 to 30

Tickets: Full donor passes are available for 4,900 rupees here
Getting there: Regular flights, trains and buses to Jodhpur.

High up in Mehrangarh Fort, this folk music festival brings bands from Egypt, Paris and San Francisco together with the most formidable names of Rajasthani folk music. The festival is made for those who love the idea of an innovative mélange of jugalbandi (literally “entwined twins”, an Indian classical music term for a duet) collaboration, under the backdrop of the year’s fullest, brightest moon.

What: Ragasthan
Where and when: Kanoi Village, Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, Nov. 16 to 18.
Tickets: 4,000 to 5,000 rupees
Getting there:Regular flights, trains and buses are available to Jaisalmer.
Harley bikers and buses of artists will head to the rolling sand dunes of Kanoi Village, where local Rajasthani folk musicians and experimental artists from all over the world will enthrall attendees against the awesome backdrop of Jaisalmer’s desert.
The festival, attracting an estimated 5,000 to 6,000 people, features three stages, the Morio Main Stage, Ammara Electronic Stage (complete with visual performances with dancers and artists) and a World Stage (collaborations with different embassies include music from Iceland, Britain and Norway). Visitors will be able to stay in tents in the desert, go stargazing and enjoy a nighttime movie at the Ujalo film tent.

What: Lost
Where and when: Pune, Nov. 23 to 25; Delhi, dates to be announced
Tickets: To be announced
Getting there: Regular flights, trains and buses are available to Pune.
The Bollywood actor and nightclub owner Arjun Rampal and Shailendra Singh, an executive with the marketing giant Percept, have joined forces to create the Lost festival. The two are major players in the country’s music scene, having brought Lady Gaga to India’s first Formula One race in December and the Sunburn festival to Goa.

Though not much has been announced about the lineup at Lost, Mr. Rampal promises this festival will be that “light at the end of the tunnel” for “rock stars and musicians in this country that are lost and don’t have anything to do.”

Despite all that rhetoric, if Mr. Rampal’s and Mr. Singh’s track records are anything to go by, we’re sure Pune is in for another winning festival. Promising 50 artists over two days including 20 international artists, the Lost festival will move bag and baggage (installations, artwork, everything) from Delhi to Pune. Word from the organizers is that they’re hoping their very deep pockets might attract the likes of the Smashing Pumpkins, Jesse J or Porcupine.

Family Budgets Go Into Tailspin: Diesel Price Hike Of Rs 5.62 A Litre

The Manmohan Singh government has finally bitten the bullet. It has increased the price of diesel by Rs 5.62 per litre and capped the number of subsidised LPG cylinders for each family to six a year, in a move aimed at cutting the losses of oil companies and reducing the subsidy burden on its shoulders.
The price of diesel in Delhi has increased to Rs 46.95 per litre from Rs 41.32 a litre.

However, branded diesel such as Xtra Mile will be sold at the market price, which could be around Rs 15 more than normal diesel and, in fact, quite close to the price of petrol.

New diesel price - Rs 46.95 per litre. Old diesel price - Rs 41.32 per litre
New diesel price - Rs 46.95 per litre. Old diesel price - Rs 41.32 per litre
The number of subsidised LPG cylinders available to each domestic household till March next year (end of current financial year) will be three cylinders.

While subsidised LPG will continue to be available at Rs 399 per cylinder in Delhi, the market rate of LPG cylinders at non-subsidised rates will be notified by the oil marketing companies on a monthly basis.

For a household it means more pain as it will grapple with a price spike across the daily purchase vector. For a family using diesel cars and gas cylinders, the cost of living has escalated all of a sudden.

But from an economic standpoint, the decision was imperative as oil marketing companies were bleeding profusely. Indian Oil registered a net loss of Rs 22,451 crore in the first quarter of this financial year. Similarly, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum piled up a loss of Rs 8,840 crore and Rs 9,250 crore respectively.

The daily loss on subsidised fuel for the oil marketing companies is a scary Rs 560 crore. Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum claim that they are currently losing Rs 347 on each LPG cylinder sold to households.

Going by this estimate, the current market price of an LPG cylinder in Delhi would work out to Rs 746. The government had decided not to increase the price of petrol although the current underrecovery on petrol is about Rs 6 per litre.

The consequent loss to the oil companies will be offset through a reduction in excise duty on petrol by Rs 5.3 per litre. The difference in the price of petrol and diesel will now come down from around Rs 27 a litre to around Rs 21 per litre.

Oh dear!
This differential was being exploited by those driving expensive diesel cars, leading to the increasing dieselisation of the economy. Over the last one year, the passenger car market has seen an upheaval with diesel cars accounting for 50 per cent of the market.

According to the official statement, the price of diesel has been increased by Rs 5 per litre, excluding VAT which is charged by the state governments.

Out of Rs5, as much as Rs 1.5 per litre is on account of an increase in excise duty. The balance increase of Rs 3.5 per litre will reduce the under-recovery of oil marketing companies by about Rs 15,000 crore for the remaining part of the current financial year.

The under-recovery on the sale of diesel during 2012-13, even after this price hike, is estimated to be above Rs 1,03,000 crore.

The restriction in the supply of subsidised LPG cylinders to each consumer will help in reducing the under-recovery of the oil companies by about Rs 5,300 crore for the remaining part of the financial year.

Q1 losses
The under-recovery on sale of domestic LPG during 2012-13, even after this measure, is estimated to be above Rs 32,000 crore. Any number of cylinders will be available over and above the cap of six cylinders at market rate.

The decision, though inevitable, has exposed the UPA to the tirade of the Opposition and allies alike. Most Congress leaders have gone underground to avoid media queries.

A senior party leader declined to comment saying 'we do not have the details' while some others switched off their mobile phones. Trinamool Congress (TMC) has demanded an immediate roll back.
'We are unhappy and astonished that in spite of the formation of the UPA coordination committee after a long time, such a decision was taken without consulting us,' said West Bengal chief minister and TMC leader Mamata Banerjee.

She said she is ready to withdraw support to the UPA government but that would not serve the purpose.

'If people do not mind, I will be most happy to withdraw support (to the UPA). If I withdraw support then other parties will provide support to them. And, then ask why we left the UPA which led to its collapse. People had misunderstood us when we had withdrawn support earlier.

Therefore, we are having a detailed discussion in the party on these issues,' she said. DMK leader T.R. Baalu also said 'we will oppose the hike'.

Describing the hike in diesel prices as a cruel joke and a mortal blow to the common man and farmers, the BJP accused the government of conspiring with petrol 'mafia' and said it will take to the streets to oppose the hike.

Senior leader Yashwant Sinha said the hike will have a cascading effect on prices and will contribute further to inflation. 'Steep increase in diesel price is going to hit the common man, farmers and labourers.

The Congress has sprayed diesel in coal fire,' said party general secretary Ananth Kumar. CPM leader Basudeb Acharia said: 'This is an added burden on the people. We had suggested reduction in the taxes on petroleum products but instead the government has increased the rates. We condemn this move.'

Decision on 49% FDI in retail and airlines expected today

by SPS PANNU
The government is finally moving to break the deadlock over big bang economic reforms. Major announcements are expected on Friday for allowing FDI in multi-brand retail of up to 49 per cent, permitting foreign airlines to acquire 49 per cent share in Indian carriers and raising the FDI ceiling in direct-to-home (DTH) broadcasting and cable service infrastructure to 74 per cent.

On what is scheduled to be an actionpacked day, the cabinet committee on economic affairs is likely to clear a proposal for the disinvestment of five major public sector companies as well.

These include blue-chip aluminum major Nalco, Oil India Ltd, Hindustan Copper, Neyveli Lignite and NMDC.

The finance ministry expects to rake in Rs 10,000 crore through the sale of shares of these companies to help it contain the runaway fiscal.

The government was forced to put the cabinet decision allowing foreign investors to own 51 per cent in Indian supermarkets on hold following protests from its allies.

To appease them, a notification is now expected to be issued permitting 49 per cent FDI in multi-brand retail.

The government has veered around to the view that states which are keen on going ahead with the decision should be allowed to do so. Several Congress-ruled states, including Delhi, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand, have already written to the Union government expressing willingness to implement the decision.

The department of industrial policy and promotion (DIPP) has proposed that the FDI limit in broadcast carriage services providers, including DTH, Head-end in the Sky (HITS) and cable TV, must be uniform.

HITS is a satellite multiplex service that provides TV channels for cable operations. At present, 49 per cent FDI is allowed in cable TV and DTH, while it is 74 per cent in HITS. These will now be brought to the same level.
13 September 2012

Kuki Inpi Manipur To Observe ‘Kuki Black Day’

Imphal, Sep 13 : Defying the joint appeal made by three Kuki based armed groups against observing “Kuki Black Day”, Kuki Inpi Manipur, the apex body of Kukis has decided to celebrate the occasion on Thursday.

Kukis in Manipur has been observing September 13 every year to remember thousand of Kukis, who were victims of the nearly half decade long Naga-Kuki clash in the hill districts of Manipur.

Every year, September 13 has been observed as the Black Day, as on this day 108 Kukis were killed in 1993. However, this year, three Kuki based armed groups, United Kuki Liberation Front (UKLF, Zou Defense Volunteers (ZDV) and Kuki Revolutionary Front (United) have appealed to all concerns to discontinue the observation of the day, asserting that it was not going to do any good.

Despite the appeal, Kuki Inpi Manipur Wednesday, has announced its stand to observe the day (Kuki Black Day) until the case of killing several Kuki civilians in the nineties was settled amicably and appealed to all concerned to go ahead with their planned observation functions.

Meanwhile, the three armed groups, UKLF, ZDV and KRA(U), in a joint statement dispatched to the media today asserted that they had taken the decision not to observe the day considering “the pros and cons and for better understanding in the society for better and healthier society in future and not simply saying for the sake of saying.”

“This is not the time to ponder the past and recalling those grievous days which is casting shame on our face, but this is the time to think for greater and higher objectives for a healthy and wealthy society,” the joint statement signed by general secretary David Haokip of UKLF, president Kamkhenpau of ZDV and commander-in-chief Robinson Thodou of KRA(U) asserted.

Apple Launches iPhone 5; Makes it Taller, Faster, Stronger & Better

After months of speculation and numerous leaks, Apple today finally unveiled the iPhone 5. The phone looks similar to the leaks we have been seeing in the past couple of months and sports an all glass and aluminum design. Apple claims they have changed almost every part inside the iPhone 5. Read on to find out more.

Design: It is an all glass front and an aluminum back casing that comes in white and black. The iPhone 5 is just 7.6 mm thin and is lighter than the iPhone 4S. From photographs and early reactions, it looks stunning. Apple claims it is nothing like what they have ever designed before and it shows.

Display: It sports a bigger 4-inch display with a 1136×640 pixel resolution giving it a pixel density of 326 pixels per inch. It is now a 16:9 aspect ratio, which is the first time Apple has implemented on any iOS device. All of the core iOS apps have been modified to make use of the extra pixels and the home screen will have one extra row of icons. Apps that haven’t been updated will be letterboxed. And yeah, the display does use “in-cell” technology that is thinner and gives much better clarity.

Processor: The iPhone 5 has a new A6 chipset rather than the A5X it used in the new iPad. Apple claims its CPU and GPU are twice as fast as the iPhone 4S, which leads us to believe that either Apple is using a quad-core processor or something similar to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon S4 stuff.

Connectivity: The iPhone 5 will indeed have LTE connectivity but won’t be compatible with 4G LTE networks that are coming up in India. It also does HSPA+ and dual carrier HSDPA. Apple has also added dual-band Wi-Fi 802.11n.

Battery: Apple claims the battery not only matches that of the iPhone 4S but exceeds it, which would be a great feat considering the bigger display, faster processor and LTE connectivity. However, getting more real estate would have helped with accommodating a bigger battery. Apple is claiming the iPhone 5 can do 8 hours of talking or web browsing over 3G, 10 hours of web browsing over Wi-Fi, 10 hours of videos, 40 hours of music or 225 hours of standby.

Camera: The camera remains at 8-megapixel but Apple has added some more bells and whistles. It has backside illumination, a f/2.4 aperture, sapphire crystal and a dynamic low light mode. Apple has also added a panorama mode, the ability to click photographs while recording video and some cool editing features. It remains to be seen how it compares to the Nokia Lumia 920, which we tend to believe has a better camera.

Connector: As expected Apple has introduced a new 8-pin connector it calls Lightning as leaked earlier in the day.

In a nutshell, Apple has taken the iPhone 4S and made it look prettier and at the same time faster, stronger and better. It will be available in the US and eight other countries on September 21, followed by a few more countries on September 28. Apple will be launching it in 100 countries by the end of this year. We are expecting an India launch close to Diwali.