26 November 2012

NESO To Pitch For NRC For Entire Northeast


Guwahati, Nov 26
: In its fifth general conference, the North East Students' Organisation (NESO) will, for the first time, pitch for a National Register of Citizens for the entire northeast in view of the unchecked flow of illegal migrants to the region.

The three-day general conference, with the theme 'Our Resources-Our Future', is scheduled to be held from November 27 to 30 at Kohima, Nagaland. It will also focus on a constitutional status for the region, besides other important issues ranging from education to illegal foreigners.

This will be for the first time that various student bodies of the region under Neso pitch for an NRC for the entire region. At present, only Assam and Manipur have NRCs with a prescribed base date.

"The region has had been given a raw deal by the Centre, which has different attitudes towards the western part of the country which shares its border with Pakistan and towards the northeast. The border there has been sealed and even in Jammu and Kashmir, fencing has been done in the most difficult terrain. The conference will be aimed at a comprehensive policy for the whole of northeast," said Samujjal Bhattacharjya, chairman Neso.

The conference will explore how to intensify discussions on the burning issues faced by the region. Issues like repealing of the Afspa, a special economic zone for the region, stapled visa issued by China for Arunachal residents, India-Bangladesh land swap, mega dams, declaration of floods and erosion as a national problem, inner line permit for states where there is none, land rights for the indigenous people, implementation of the Assam and Manipur accords and others will be at the forefront of discussion.

Bhattacharjya, raising his rhetoric against the state government, said, "While other state governments want foreigners out of their states, the Assam government wants to protect them. It was decided long ago that we won't take the load of foreigners who have come after 1971 and indigenous people needs to be saved. Foreigners are now entering other states as well, and a state-wide, comprehensive policy is what we need to curb this problem."

New Railway Project To Link India And Bangladesh

Agartala, Nov 26 : India and Bangladesh would soon sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to set up a railway link between Tripura capital Agartala and Bangladesh's southeastern city of Akhaurah, officials here said Friday.

At a cost of Rs.271 crore, India will build a 15-km railway track linking Agartala with Akhaurah which is an important railway junction connected to the Chittagong international port, resource-rich Sylhet and Dhaka.

Of the 15-km rail line, five km of track falls in the Indian territory and the remaining in Bangladesh.

A six-member inter-ministerial team, led by Radhika L. Lokesh, joint secretary in the external affairs ministry, is now on an on-the-spot final study in Tripura.

"The inter-ministerial team after visiting Tripura would submit a report to the government of India. Then, the Indian government would approach the Bangladesh government to sign the MoU," a Tripura government official told reporters.

"After signing the MoU, the actual works of the railway project would start," the official said.

The new railway project to connect the two neighbouring countries was decided by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Bangladesh Premier Sheikh Hasina during her visit to India in January 2010.

"The Indian Railway Construction Company (IRCON) would lay the new railway tracks on both sides of the border," an official of the Northeast Frontier Railway (NFR) said.

"With the establishment of the new railway link, northeast India would be connected to the Chittagong international sea port by rail," he added.

Surface connectivity is an important factor as the landlocked northeastern states are surrounded by Bangladesh, Myanmar, Bhutan and China and the only land route to these states from within India is through Assam and West Bengal. But this route passes through over 70 percent hilly terrain with steep roads and multiple hairpin bends.

For ferrying goods and heavy machinery to the northeast from abroad and other parts of the country, India has for long been seeking land, sea and rail access through Bangladesh.

Agartala, for instance, is 1,650 km from Kolkata and 2,637 km from New Delhi via Guwahati and West Bengal, whereas the distance between the Tripura capital and Kolkata through Bangladesh is just about 350 km.

The NFR is now laying tracks to connect Tripura's southern most border town Sabroom, 135 km south of here. From Sabroom, the Chittagong international sea port is just 72 km.

Proposed 'Kuki State' Map Irks Nagas

Imphal, Nov 26 : The Chandel Naga People's Organization (CNPO) has expressed shock over the inclusion of "Nagas' ancestral territory" in Chandel district in the proposed map of "Kuki state" released by the Kuki State Demand Committee (KSDC).

KSDC's proposed map of "Kuki state" covers the whole of Churachandpur and Chandel districts, Sadar Hills in Senapati and large chunks of land in Tamenglong and Ukhrul.

In pursuit of its demand for creation of a separate Kuki state in Manipur, the KSDC imposed an indefinite roadblock in Kuki-inhabited areas from November 17. It suspended the strike on Thursday evening following an agreement with the state government.

The state government representatives, headed by deputy CM Gaikhangam, said a political dialogue between the 26 Kuki militant organizations, which are signatories of the ongoing Suspension of Operation (Soo) with the government, would be started after Parliament's winter session.

Gaikhangam said a team of central official would be visiting Manipur to chalk out modalities for initiating talks with Soo signatories which are also demanding a separate Kuki state.

On the other hand, the United Naga Council (UNC), of which the CNPO is a constituent unit, is campaigning for an alternative administrative arrangement for the Nagas in Manipur outside the state government pending the Naga political solution.

The CNPO, a conglomerate of all Naga civil bodies in Chandel district, said that it would preserve and defend the Nagas' "ancestral land". During a meeting convened by the CNPO on Thursday, all frontal organizations of Chandel district resolved to defend their land at any cost, a CNPO statement said. Since time immemorial, the Nagas have been living in their respective land and governed themselves with a set of traditional administrative system protecting their right to land, natural resources, custom and culture, the statement said. "There was no contest over our historical land ownership by any other community," it said. tnn
24 November 2012

Public Hearing Fails To Resolve Tipaimukh Oil Project Impasse

Churachandpur, Nov 24 : A public hearing held on Wednesday at Sibapurikhal in Churachandpur district of Manipur on oil exploration in the state failed to clear the roadblock to a proposed project.

The public hearing was organised by the Manipur Pollution Control Board at the Sibapurikhal community hall where various social organizations representing the ethnic groups of the state opposed the proposed oil exploration programme by an overseas company. The hearing was organised with specific reference to seismic aspects of oil exploration and drilling in the state.

Jubilant Oil and Gas Pvt Ltd, based in the Netherlands, was offered exploration rights in two blocks of Manipur by the Union ministry of petroleum and natural gas in 2009 for 3,957 sq km in the Churachandpur, Tamenglong and Imphal East districts, sources said.

Representatives of Joint Action Committee, All Rongmei Welfare Association, Jeme Human Rights Foundation, Hmar Inpui (Hmar Supreme House), Village Authority Association of Tipaimukh subdivision of Churachandpur district and other indigenous village organizations expressed their opposition to the proposed oil exploration and extraction. hey expressed their "serious concern with the manner in which oil and gas exploration projects have been pursued in vast areas of the state."

The organisations said they were not provided with prior information and, therefore, the proposed exploration did not bear the consent and knowledge of the indigenous people. They said the life of the people of the hills, the forests and rivers will be affected due to exploration. This is a new design by the authorities to pollute the virgin environment. They said the Manipur government had given permission to JOGPL for oil exploration and drilling on November 15, 2010. But it failed to take care of the concerns of the locals, the Autonomous District Council and the Manipur Hill Areas Committee, said Hmar Inpui chairman Laloilin Hmar.

However, deputy commissioner (Churachandpur) Jacintha Lazarus during the public hearing ensured the villagers that the proposed exploration would not harm the environment of the region.

Tejendra Paul Singh, asset manager of Jubilant Oil and Gas Pvt Ltd, said the places of exploration will not be disturbed. "We will not enter the reserved forests either," he said. Singh expressed his company's commitment for corporate social responsibility for the region in question.

They said the Manipur government had given permission to JOGPL for oil exploration and drilling on November 15, 2010. But it failed to take care of the concerns of the locals, the Autonomous District Council and the Manipur Hill Areas Committee, said Hmar Inpui chairman Laloilin Hmar.

However, deputy commissioner (Churachandpur) Jacintha Lazarus during the public hearing ensured the villagers that the proposed exploration would not harm the environment of the region.

Tejendra Paul Singh, asset manager of Jubilant Oil and Gas Pvt Ltd, said the places of exploration will not be disturbed. "We will not enter the reserved forests either," he said. Singh expressed his company's commitment for corporate social responsibility for the region in question.

Mizoram Broomsticks Draw Exporters

Aizawl, Nov 24 : The made-in-Mizoram broomsticks were centre of attraction of exporters at the ongoing India International Trade Fair 2012 at New Delhi's Pragati Maidan. Hnam Chhantu Pawl, major broomsticks manufacturer in Mizoram, who are displaying locally-produced broomsticks at the Mizoram pavilion, have received a number of business queries, an official statement said here today.

Hnam Chhantu Pawl has made formal agreements with exporters from Delhi, Bihar, Maharashtra, Punjab and UK. " Each exporter would need at least one truckload of broomsticks per month, " the source said.

Mizoram have brooms, which are natural grass in the hilly state, in abundance. Experts said brooms found in Mizoram are in great demand in the international market. Mizoram made the first major broomsticks export when a consignment of 40,000 broomsticks was sent off to Russia in the early 2011. The market was facilitated by monitoring cell under the state government's flagship programme New Land Use Policy.

Mizoram Broom Industry Ltd has already tied up with five companies to market the Mizoram-produced broomsticks.

But the industry is yet unable to meet the companies demand. Broom cultivation is the most opted trade under the NLUP soil & water conservation sector. In Serchhip district, 265 families are engaged in broom cultivation, and produced 293 quintals of brooms during last year. "

We are hopeful that the annual product would double this year, " an official in the Soil & Water Conservation department said. Kolasib district in northern Mizoram, which has the largest number of families doing broom cultivation, has produced 5428 quintals of broomsticks, 3918.19 quintals in green form and 1510.67 in dry form. As many as 965 families in 43 villages in Kolasib district are engaged in broom cultivation.

Extra-Judicial Killings: SC Slams Manipur Over Response

By Utkarsh Anand

New Delhi, Nov 24 : The Supreme Court on Friday questioned the “orientation” of the Manipur government over extra-judicial killings in the state and reprimanded it for drawing a parallel with the states of Gujarat and Maharashtra, which are already under the court’s scanner over contentious encounters.

“What do you mean when you talk about Maharashtra and Gujarat? Are you saying that since people are getting killed there, so people will get killed in your state too?,” questioned a Bench led by Justice Aftab Alam, expressing its displeasure at the stand by Manipur in its affidavit.

Manipur, in its response to a PIL which alleged 1,528 extra-judicial killings in last 30 years in the state, had requested the court to consider this matter along with two other pending cases relating to encounter killings.

In one case, the SC is adjudicating a plea over 99 encounters in Maharashtra between 1995 and 1997 while in the other, the Gujarat government has filed a writ asking for framing a uniform national policy to independently investigate all the encounter cases in the country and further direct such an agency to probe all encounters in the past 10 years.

The Bench, however, termed Manipur’s affidavit as “strange”. It also expressed displeasure over another submission pointing that militancy, and its difference from ordinary law and order problem, also necessitating a law like the Armed Forces (Special) Powers Act.

“Is there a war going on in your state? Your men killing theirs and their men killing yours? Is this the orientation of the state?,” asked the Bench.

It also disapproved of an attempt to offer National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) as an “alibi” while requesting the court to interfere only if it was of the view that the NHRC, which has already dealt with the instances cited in the PIL, has failed to perform its duty.

Citing 10 specific cases of extra-judicial killings that the PIL described as most glaring, the affidavit read that the state had furnished reports to the NHRC and in none of these, the commission recorded violation of human rights.

“You are using NHRC as an alibi. We cannot allow this,” said the Bench, while calling a senior law officer from the Centre. After an Additional Solicitor General arrived, the Bench, asking him to take this matter “in all seriousness”, said it will hear the matter on December 6 and hence by December 4, the Centre should also file its response to the PIL.

Korea Out Of Kohima

By Devjyot Ghoshal

New Delhi Nov 24 : Nagaland ’s fascination with all things Korea n is a thing of the past. Japanese fashion and Bollywood movies are now the in thing with the fashion-forward Naga youth. Devjyot Ghoshal finds out what led to the disillusionment with Seoul.

The steep streets of Kohima , that once reverberated to everything Korean, are now a smorgasbord of different influences as the current generation of Naga youth, who have grown up in the afterglow of India’s oldest insurgency, attempts to piece together a distinct identity.

Theja Meru , a 42-year-old entrepreneur and musician, was the improbable matchmaker of Nagaland’s short-lived romance with Korea and its cultural paraphernalia. At its climax, in the last few years of the past decade, the father of two says that Korean culture had permeated into Nagaland's social fabric so deeply that he was able to convince the state government to open its coffers for the India-Korea Music Festival in 2008.

Some 7,000 people had poured out into the streets at that event. Korean musicians strode on the stage; the state’s political leadership stood in attendance; and it looked as if there could actually be a platform for Nagaland’s young people to connect with a large cultural entity other than India. Then it all slowly crumbled away. “My regret is that it didn’t go in the direction it could have,” Meru admits, his usually animated face suddenly quiescent. “It never reached the size it could have.”

The darkened college-side teashops and kerbside gatherings in Nagaland cities are no longer dominated by Korean cuts or clothes. Instead, the street now harbours aficionados of punk, emo, rock and metal. In the trend-setting corridors of high schools, Tokyo has taken over from where Seoul walked out; from Manga-inspired hair to graphic shirts, there's a new subculture brewing.

Ramshackle barber shops, swank clothes outlets and dank second-hand garment markets have all adjusted. For the latter, it is the nature of imports from Bangkok that has changed. In the numerous CD and DVD shops, Korean films and soaps must now compete with Thai, Japanese or even Bollywood productions.

And more institutionalised entities, such as a Korean club in Kohima that Meru started in 2007 and the Korean language classes that were held there with government backing, too, have either failed or are about to. At the Hornbill Festival, the state's big December festivity that was a former showcase of this unusual cultural interaction, other preoccupations have taken centrestage.

The Korean monopoly stands broken. Nagaland is over Gangnam Style, even as the world today swoons over PSY's billboard topping song.

* * *

The Koreans have a word for it: Hallyu, the Korean wave. It describes a seemingly unstoppable surge of Korean entertainment, fashion and music. The Hallyu started trickling into Nagaland through Arirang TV, a Korean television channel, about a decade ago. Then, it turned into a torrent as Arirang clearly became, with no official validation, the state’s most watched television channel.

No one is quite sure exactly how and precisely when it happened, but Akum Longchari , publisher and editor of Morung Express, one of Nagaland’s largest English dailies, suspects it had to do with the state’s relative isolation. “The media became the window for the Nagas to the outside world. When we were closed [during the height of the insurgency] the window to the world was television.”

Although Indian television existed throughout, including lacklustre Doordarshan, when stability returned to Nagaland, there remained a sense of animosity towards the “mainland”, often used to refer to sub-continental India. The presence of a strong oral tradition that kept alive the Nagas’ memories of the bloody and painful insurgency ensured that they did not have “a natural liking for the mainland”, explains Meru. “So there was a natural search for an alternative, especially for the urban population.”

Arirang TV fed that hunger. “Maybe there are similarities in values; the tension between generations, for instance,” reflects Longchari. But much more conspicuous are the shared Mongoloid phenotypic traits. For a young Naga, the physical resemblance to a Korean pop-star is much stronger than, say, that with Anil Kapoor or any other Bollywood star. And in a state that is predominantly Christian, where the older generation doesn’t speak Hindi, the family dramas of a Gujarati or Marwari household were alien. “Arirang came straight into their houses and young people here probably felt ethnically connected to the Koreans,” reasons Himato Zhimoni, Nagaland’s commissioner and secretary for tourism, art & culture.

Meanwhile, in neighbouring Manipur, local insurgent groups seeking to safeguard indigenous culture banned Hindi films and music. The substitutes, pirated CDs and DVDs, poured into Moreh, a small border town, from Myanmar and found their way into Nagaland. These were cheap — and remain so, at about Rs 80 for a DVD — and well-packaged, with beautiful young actors on the covers. “Korean soaps started doing very well. They were family dramas, emotional with lots of crying and sometimes 30 or 40 episodes long. And with English subtitles,” recalls Meru, “People would watch them through the night.”

Alongside came K-Pop, Korea’s home-grown popular music genre, which caught on fast in this society imbued with the Western musical sensibilities that proselytising Christian missionaries brought with them. Seoul-born entertainer Rain became bigger than Mumbai’s Himesh Reshammiya. That was followed by the arrival of distinctly Korean hairstyles, perfected at local barbershops and salons, and clothes, flown in from Bangkok, to craft that perfect “look” that Nagaland’s fashion-forward teenagers demanded. And so, the Hallyu was embraced.

* * *

“Initially, it was just a lifestyle thing,” says Meru, “But we wanted to get into it and channelise it, instead of condemning it. Korea isn’t just about fashion and entertainment. It’s an economic powerhouse, with a strong work culture and business skills. We wanted to bring that here.”

For young Nagas, thus, this fascination with Korean culture was a sort of rebellion from “mainland” India. “They symbolise progress, development and sovereignty. It’s everything we dream of. Korean culture was very big. Almost everyone was into in,” acknowledges Vizono Khesoh, a 20-year-old sociology student at Kohima’s Baptist College, “It is about our desire to be different.”

In 2007, Meru founded the Arirang TV Fan Club, a platform for young people with an interest in Korea. At its peak, the club had over a hundred registered members, many of who helped create and manage a separate Korean Pavilion at the Hornbill Festival in 2007. The Nagaland government sponsored a few to even travel to Kolkata, the nearest metropolis, to learn Korean and subsequently, language classes were started at Dream Cafe, Meru’s coffee shop in Kohima. “The government support was massive,” he says.

So massive, in fact, that Nagaland’s chief minister, Neiphiu Rio, himself travelled to the Arirang TV headquarters in Seoul to plan an India-Korea Music Festival, which was eventually hosted during the Hornbill Festival in December 2008 at the cost of some Rs 25 lakh. The Arirang brass, too, attended. All this, with an informal understanding, Meru claims, that Naga artists would be invited to perform in Korea the following year. “But the next year, Korea didn’t really respond,” he says, “And I came under pressure.”

The state government, having been cold-shouldered by its East Asian counterpart, eventually lost interest, and by the middle of 2009, Meru stepped away from the Arirang TV Fan Club. Those who had led the Korean language classes also moved on. “If only their government had invited people from here, it wouldn’t have ended like this,” laments Meru. Without institutional support, the Hallyu waned.

* * *

Yet, the Naga search for an identity continues, and in it lies an opportunity for the “mainland” to re-engage with young people here who often feel left out on the fringes, both psychologically and physically.

“We are still very confused about ourselves. From a society of head-hunters, we directly shifted into a modern, Western society. We are in the middle of an identity crisis,” says final-year college student Anen Molungnenla.

While that has meant that foreign cultures are openly embraced, in recent years it has also resulted in sub-continental influences, particularly Bollywood, making deeper inroads into Naga society. “Our fathers lived through and experienced widespread violence. Now, that fear has receded and we are more open, but there’s still some reservation. We don’t know if we’ll be accepted for who we are,” says Anen’s classmate, Vizono.

But the change is slowly becoming visible. In CD and DVD shops, the sales of Bollywood films have increased substantially, say local shopkeepers, and in clothes outlets, demand for branded products is booming. “Five years ago, brands didn’t matter. Now, maybe because of promotions, it’s got into their minds. Everyone wants to buy branded clothes. Even Class VI students want Adidas,” says James, the manager of Gravity. With some 8,000 square feet of display space and 24 staff in the heart of Kohima, Gravity clocks sales worth around Rs 40 lakh every month, he claims.

And college students here, like Anen and Vizono, admit that they spend “almost all of their pocket money” on clothes, accessories and hair. It’s not as if parents don’t show concern, particularly at absurd haircuts and flashy clothes, they add, and the loss of indigenous Naga culture. But in living room conversation with older Nagas, parents admit that they would rather live with their children doing this than with drugs, a problem that was once rampant in Nagaland.

Overriding it all, however, is a latent desire among young Nagas to become part of India’s economic growth story. “We want development. Schools, colleges, hospitals and things like that. There’s so much talent here but no way to expose it,” says Vizono, whose big discovery from a recent trip to Bangalore was “black-topped roads everywhere. This is the best time to engage with us. We want to connect with the mainstream.”

That mainstream, ironically, now swings to Gangnam Style.
23 November 2012

Mizo Body At Loggerheads With Minorities

By Zodin Sanga

Aizawl, Nov 23 : Young Mizo Association (YMA), the largest and most powerful organisation in Mizoram, is at loggerheads with some minorities in the state, who have taken a strong exception to the former’s “integrity” agenda.

Chakma, Lai and Mara tribes who have autonomous district councils in southern Mizoram are up in arms against the YMA’s stiff opposition to granting more administrative power and financial powers to the additional deputy commissioners (ADCs).

Terming the recent resolution of central coordination committee of YMA as “absurd”, a joint meeting of Young Lai Association, Mara Thyutlia Py (Mara youth organisation) and Young Chakma Association (CYCA) at Lawngtlai on Tuesday demanded the YMA to withdraw its resolution failing which they would take “necessary actions.”

The three organisations acc used the YMA of trying to oppress the rights of minorities against the Constitution of India on the pretext of “protecting the integrity of Mizos and Mizoram.”

“The YMA’s agenda violates the Constitution of the largest democracy and fundamental human rights,” the meeting’s resolution said.

In reaction to the joint meeting, leaders of central committee of the YMA met the press on Wednesday where they defended their stand to protect the integrity of Mizos and Mizoram. “The YMA has been working for integrity of different Mizo sub-tribes since its formation in 1935. It is painful to be accused of trying to disintegrate the Mizos,” YMA (central) president T Sangkunga told reporters at his office here on Wednesday, in reaction to the allegations.

The YMA leader accused the three autonomous district councils of getting the lion’s share from the Mizoram state’s budget whereas there is development setback in the rest of the state due to financial constraint. “Despite this, the three autonomous district councils have been demanding Union Territory status and direct funding from the Centre,” he said.

The T Gupta Commission has recommended alleviation of the three autonomous district councils in Mizoram to territorial council, Sangkhuma said. “The T Gupta Commission’s recommendations will ultimately divide Mizoram into smaller pieces. With the political parties unlikely to stand up against such recommendations, there is no organisation other than the YMA to protect the territorial integrity of Mizoram,” he said.

The YMA, in its recent general conference, resolved to end ethnic-based politics in Mizoram in order to protect the unity of Mizos. In pursuance of this, the central coordination committee of the YMA last week passed a resolution against granting m ore autonomy to the three A DCs. It also wanted an end to ethnic-based students’ organisations and church denominations.