09 May 2013

Canadian Delegation Discusses Swine Breeding in Northeast India




Guwahati, May 9 : As a follow up of Livestock and Poultry India Summit organized by Indian Chamber of Commerce (ICC) in here during the month of February, a Canadian delegation Tuesday discussed issues relating to swine breeding in Northeast India.

The Canadian delegation included Senior Veterinarian Officer, Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Charlene Harradine; Counsellor, Agriculture & Agri-Food Canadian High Commission in India, Kathleen Donohue; President, Polar Genetics Canada, Alfred Wahl and Business Development Manager, Polar Genetics India, Sikandar Singh.

The Delegation on their arrival in here, went to National Research Centre on Pig at Rani and met Director NRC-P, Dilip Sharma and Principal Scientist, Madan Tamuli and officials of NRC-P.

Later the team arrived at ICC North east Regional Office, Guwahati and had an interaction on Swine Breeding with Assam government representatives and other stakeholders.

Dr. Charlene Herradine made her deliberations on swine breeding and bio-security protocols and shared her presentations with officials and said that she is interested in having an exchange of views on swine breeding in India.

In her speech, Kathleen Donohue said, "These efforts are to help advance a breeding project under the National Mission on Protein to advance swine breeding in India, particularly the North East."

"Under the MoU between Canada (AAFC) and India (MoA) in Agriculture Cooperation, we have proposed a Swine Value-Chain project which is focused on providing technical assistance and swine genetics to establish a boar station and Artificial Insemination centre for swine breeding purposes," Donohue added.

Director, Department of AH&V, Assam Govt., Mrinmoy Das spoke on the possibilities of setting up of boar station and AI centre in Guwahati catering the state while Director, NRC on Pig, Dilip Sharma was of the opinion that eight northeastern states should have separate unit.

ICC will play a role of nodal agency for Canada in implement the project as agreed up in Tuesday's meeting.

Sr. Asstt. Director ICC, Anuradha Goswami urged the Canadian team to invite Northeast Indian for expertise study packaged tour so the eight NE states can travel and get hands on experience and she offered ICC to be nodal chamber in co-coordinating organizing the tour.

From Arunachal Pradesh, a Tribe Offers Lessons in Ecology

Farmers belonging to the Apa Tani tribe transplanting paddy in the Lower Subansiri district of Arunachal Pradesh.
Courtesy of Brian Orland
Farmers belonging to the Apa Tani tribe transplanting paddy in the Lower Subansiri district of Arunachal Pradesh.
ZIRO VALLEY, Arunachal Pradesh — The end of April is planting time for the women of the Apa Tani tribe. Their 50-square-kilometer valley is a meticulously groomed jewel of green conservation, compared to the flood-beset Assam plains below or the slash-and-burn plots that neighboring tribes cultivate in the shrinking forests of the surrounding hills.

Field dispatches from a climate change researcher in Northeast India.
Here in Ziro Valley, teams of rice planters have already finished the annual refurbishment of the intricate network of interlinked irrigation channels. Now women laboriously transplant rice seedlings by hand, one at a time, in the paddy fields. Sun-wrinkled grandmas, adorned with traditional face tattoos and nose plugs, bend to the task. Crouching right alongside them, their giggly granddaughters sport knock-off designer sweaters.
A farmer untying a bundle of saplings in Lower Subansiri district.
Courtesy of Brian Orland
A farmer untying a bundle of saplings in Lower Subansiri district.
The divergent costumes of the women signal lifestyle shifts that now confront the Apa Tani just as climate change heightens the challenges facing their Himalayan paddy paradise. Can they salvage the system of cooperative leadership and reciprocal labor-sharing that has delivered them such bountiful paddy harvests for the past 500 years? Or should they seize the opportunities of higher education, political party patronage and diversification into cash crops?

Each of these development paths has its proponents among the 28,000-member tribe. But both sides agree on the need for strict environmental conservation in such a compact, densely populated and intensely cultivated tribal homeland, so traditionalists and innovators alike have joined forces to foster customary Apa Tani communitarian values.

It’s an uphill struggle, according to Tage Kanno, a 45-year-old pediatrician of Tajang village. As young people go off to college, farmers forsake rice for more remunerative crops and families move out of the tightly packed villages for spacious surroundings.

Traditional Apa Tani dwellings clustered together in cramped household units as a safeguard against factionalism. Common concerns were aired openly in the lapang, a covered platform in the village square. Ultimate authority rested with the bulyang, a council of elders.

These days, though, the lapang does not see much serious discussion, and the bulyang has been reduced to ceremonial functions. Instead of the steady hand of a collectivist leadership, political parties now vie for slots in the panchayat, or local village council, and a single seat in the state legislature.

Even the bogo, the collective institution that oversees the privately owned paddy fields, is losing strength, Mr. Kanno said. Granted, this is largely due to government efforts to pave over the irrigation channels, which reduces the need for yearly maintenance, thereby conserving labor. But even this boon can undermine Apa Tani cohesion, he warned. (Earlier bogo members would collectively repair the main channels of the irrigation system, but with paved channels that community work is no longer necessary.)

To guard against such dangers, Mr. Kanno — although educated and worldly (he’s been as far as Washington, D.C., and Machu Picchu in Peru) — chooses to live in a modest house in his ancestral village.

His fellow tribesman, Hibu Tatu, 45, has made the opposite choice. He lives in a large house, by Apa Tani standards, on a consolidated hectare of land some four kilometers away from the cramped village of Hong.
There, he earns handsome profits from crops like broccoli, okra, apples and, most recently, a 30-meter greenhouse full of roses. To plant, weed and harvest his cash crops, he employs seasonal migrant workers from the tea tribes of Assam. His wife is now a member of the gram panchayat, or local government, having run uncontested for the female quota seat.
Mr. Tatu’s shift to cash crops was simply making a virtue of a necessity. He consolidated his holdings in the outskirts of Hong when neighbors there started abandoning fields in favor of paddy closer to the main village. But, as the outlying farmers dwindled, the local irrigation networks fell into disuse, forcing a switch to rain-fed farming, which better suited vegetables and flowers.
Such adaptability is the distinguishing feature of the Apa Tani, according to Sarit Chaudhuri, an anthropology professor at Rajiv Gandhi University, just outside the state capital of Itanagar. Of the 25 Arunachal tribes he studies, he said he finds the Apa Tani “one of the most progressive.”
But with climatologists predicting accelerated hydrological stress due to climate change, Arunachal will face growing challenges in precisely the area that has been the tribe’s forte: water management.
So core Apa Tani ecological values will matter more than ever: never leave fertile land fallow, fertilize only with waste, harvest trees only for firewood and house construction and then plant a new one for each tree harvested. How will these values be passed on, even as the bulyang’s influence wanes?
To this end, Mr. Tatu and Mr. Kanno have joined forces under an organization called Ngunu Ziro, or “Our Ziro.” It supports women’s self-help groups for income generation and organizes eco-camps to teach Apa Tani children about their natural environment. Its current campaign, dubbed “Zero Waste,” encourages ecologically friendly waste management practices like segregating trash into its recyclable components.
Beds of paddy seedlings in Lower Subansiri district.
Courtesy of Brian Orland
Beds of paddy seedlings in Lower Subansiri district.
Such efforts seem to help bridge the generation gap, at least for now, as attested by the mixed groups of women transplanting paddy. Ankle-deep in mud and water, they looked up from their work one recent April afternoon to observe a political rally pass by on the nearby road — dozens of motorcycles and 10 white S.U.V.’s, horns blaring and party flags streaming. The women gave it barely five seconds of consideration before they returned to their tedious, vital task of planting the paddy.

Brian Orland, a Fulbright-Nehru Fellow, is studying climate change adaptation along the Brahmaputra River, where the environment challenges the region faces are likely to be repeated in other parts of developing Asia. His dispatches will appear regularly in India Ink. Last month, he wrote about the search for new crops and farming methods in Assam.
08 May 2013

Mizo Students Against Bru Rehabilitation

Aizawl, May 8 : The Mizo Zirlai Pawl (MZP), the apex Mizo student body, has advised the Mizoram government not to undertake the repatriation of Bru refugees, proposed to begin by the end of May, unless the refugees promise in writing that they are willing to return to Mizoram.

The MZP leaders, while addressing a press conference in Aizawl, said that the Brus migrated from Mizoram to Tripura and settled in the North Tripura district of their own will and refused to return despite the concerted efforts of the Centre and the Mizoram government.

"The Union ministry of home affairs and the governments of Mizoram and Tripura worked out a road map and set the dates for repatriation in 2012 as April 26, May 4, May 8, May 11 and May 15," the student leaders said, adding that, the refugees failed to return despite elaborate arrangements being made and rehabilitation and resettlement packages in place.

Pleas of the then Union home minister, P Chidambaram, to the Bru communities in the relief camps also went completely unheeded, they said.

If the Brus continue to refuse to come back, their names should be deleted from the Mizoram voters' lists and should be enlisted in Tripura's electoral rolls, the MZP said. The student leaders also said that armed goons belonging to the Bru community have been sending extortion notes to Mizo villagers in the areas along the state's border with Tripura and Assam.

"While the Brus are indulging in criminal activities and are whipping up communal tension in the northwestern belt, it is not advisable to resume the repatriation process," they said.

Meanwhile, the state government, following the directions of the Centre, made arrangements to bring back the Bru refugees by the latter part of this month.

Neighbour Beats 3 Manipur Youths For 'Spitting' in Delhi

New Delhi, May 8 : Three youths from Manipur sustained minor injuries after they were allegedly beaten up by their neighbour and his son for "spitting" in front of their house, police said.

The incident was reported from south Delhi's Munirka on Tuesday afternoon where Ronny, 25, Seijan Guite, 23, and Samson, 25, were thrashed by their neighbour Adarsh Kumar, his son Ashish and some others.

Ronny told police that he had accidentally swallowed a mosquito and immediately spat it out. "When Adarsh saw it, he assumed that Rony had deliberately spat and started thrashing him and his friends along with 7-10 other locals," police said, citing Ronny. According to the victims, the accused thrashed them with wooden sticks and iron rods.

The three youth were taken to Safdarjung Hospital for a medical test. Doctors said that they all have received minor injuries. However, Seijan said a doctor told him that his eardrum was busted and he needs to undergo minor operation after some days . A case has been against Adarsh and others at the Vasant Vihar police station.
Neighbour beats three Manipur youths for \'spitting\'Seijan said a doctor told him that his eardrum was busted and he needs to undergo minor operation after some days .

Lisu Hunting Expertise Put To Use in Namdapha Reserve

By Naresh Mitra

Guwahati, May 8
: For long, the traditional hunting practiced by the Lisu tribe of Arunachal Pradesh in the 1985-sq km Namdapha tiger reserve of the state has been considered a potential threat to wildlife by the authorities. However, the attitude towards the community is changing with the tribe now coming forward to protect wildlife in Namdapha. The Lisus are now being engaged in protection squads in the tiger reserve, Arunchal Pradesh chief conservator of forest (southern circle) SJ Johnsam said.

"Following dialogues with the Lisu community, there has been perceptible change among the community members living in and around Namdapha. They are now cooperating in conservation activities. We are paying Rs 2,500 per month to Lisu volunteers for helping the forest department in conservation," Johnsam said.

Arunachal Pradesh deputy conservator of forest P Ringu said that there have been no reports of major poaching activities in Namdapha in the last 14 months due to the cooperation of the Lisus. "Lisus are also coming forward to help the forest department as informers and guides. This is a positive change indeed," Ringu said.

Aaranyak wildlife biologist Udayan Borthakur, who is currently engaged in tiger estimation work in Namdapha, said it would be impossible to protect the tiger reserve without the support of the local community.

Some conservationists are of the opinion that more efforts are needed to bridge the gap between the Lisus tribe and the forest department. "As of now, the relation between the two sides is not very strong, but there has been considerable improvement. A lot more has to be done to narrow the gap," a conservationist said.

Officials said the Namdapha tiger conservation and management plan will be submitted to the National Tiger Conservation Authority this month. "Once the plan is approved, we will get funds for eco-developmental activities. This will further encourage participation of the Lisus tribe in conservation work," an official said.

Namdapha in Changlang district is located in the eastern most of part of the state. The vast part of the reserve is virtually inaccessible because of its location in a difficult terrain.

The Lisus tribe is known for their excellent hunting skills. However in earlier years, they resorted to retaliatory hunting due to their poor relation with the forest department. They were even hostile to conservationists in the past.

In 2005, the Union ministry of environment and forest's tiger task force ( TTF) suggested that the Lisu community's hunting expertise be used for protection of Namdapha by making them stakeholders in conservation of the reserve as they know the terrain better than the regular forest guards.
07 May 2013

Bru Refugees Likely To Return To Mizoram

Aizawl, May 7 : Despite uncertainties among refugees, the Mizoram government has agreed to resume the rehabilitation of over 40,000 tribals who had sought refuge in Tripura for about 16 years, a home ministry official said Monday.

In view of the growing ethnic troubles, the Tripura government has been repeatedly telling the centre that the long stay of the immigrants was causing socio-economic and law and order problems.

In contrast, refugee leaders have been insisting that without a formal agreement between the governments of the states of Mizoram and Tripura, the union government, and tribal leaders, the rehabilitation of refugees would remain uncertain.

"Mizoram government's core committee on refugee repatriation headed by Parliamentary Secretary for Home Lalrinmawia Ralte last week held a meeting and decided to resume return of refugees this month-end," a Mizoram home department official told IANS.

The official said: "The core committee has asked the district administration of the Mizoram's Mamit district to finalise the schedule of the return after discussion with counterparts in Tripura."

The official said the union home ministry has asked the Mizoram to re-start the stalled rehabilitation of refugees, in coordination with Tripura.

The issue was also taken up at the chief ministers' meeting with union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde in New Delhi last month.

Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar told the meeting that the continuous presence for over 16 years of about 41,468 tribal refugees from Mizoram has been a matter of concern for his state.

"The long stay of the refugees in Tripura has its own socio-economic and law and order implications. The state government is providing necessary support for early repatriation of these families. However, the process has been extremely slow," Sarkar told IANS.

According to an official report of the union home ministry, the central government had sanctioned Rs.17.86 crore to the Mizoram government during the past two years for the rehabilitation of refugees in their original areas in Mamit district, western Mizoram.

Mizoram Bru Displaced People's Forum (MBDPF) president A. Sawibunga said: "We would not create any impediment in the repatriation process, but a large number of common refugees are not fully influenced by the verbal assurance of the central and Mizoram governments."

The refugees, lodged in camps in northern Tripura, 180 km north of Agartala, have sent several memoranda to the prime minister and union home minister and occasionally organised protest rallies in support of their 18-point demands.

The 18-point demands of the refugees include a written agreement between the Mizoram, Tripura and the central governments and refugee leaders, ensuring livelihood to the Reang tribals in Mizoram, and constitution of a monitoring committee to supervise the settlement of home-bound refugees.

Since October 1997, over 41,000 Reang tribal refugees, locally called Bru, have taken shelter in six camps in north Tripura's Kanchanpur sub-division, adjacent to western Mizoram.

After continued persuasion by the Mizoram and union home ministry officials, around 4,500 refugees of 850 families have returned to their villages in 2010 and 2011. After that, the process of return of refugees stalled.

The tribal refugees had fled their villages in Mizoram after ethnic clashes with the majority Mizos over the killing of a Mizo forest official 16 years ago.
06 May 2013

MBA Takes Exception To Burning Down of Mizoram Hamlet

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi-ziptN4HiUoTQSWxzwOFGkCttKfHRzF7MfSh30a62pfqWPhehwe-iKbdVF0D8S630RJ99SWbonH2M4_jS1ZqhEvAl1cqYbbWYu_e1D7kndCM1anrCGfsv8RQcvR6C3tSCyuVnCcl8HuNW/s1600/vaphai,+mizoram.jpgAizawl, May 6 : Mizoram Bar Association (MBA) has taken strong exception to the burning down of Mizoram-Myanmar border Saikhumphai hamlet in Champhai district on April 29 and intended to file charges of criminal contempt of court.

A top leader of the MBA told PTI that the villagers of Vaphai village not only took law into their own hands while ravaging Saikhumphai, but also acted against the verdict of the Gauhati High Court Aizawl Bench.

The lawyers also questioned the 'inaction' of the state government in preventing violence in Saikhumphai where more than 40 houses were completely gutted.

"It could be perceived that the state government instigated the Vaphai villagers to take law into their own hands against the inhabitants of Saikhumphai," the MBA leaders alleged.

Condemning the threatening letter sent to their colleague J C Lalnunsanga, an advocate who represented the Saikhumphai villagers in the Gauhati High Court, the MBA demanded that the person who sent the threatening letter should be found and punished.

Meanwhile, Aizawl-based Human Rights and Law Network also condemned the 'barbaric' acts of Vaphai villagers against the inhabitants of Saikhumphai and blamed the state government for the incident.

Mizoram Asked To Boost Industry Through Local Resources

Aizawl, May 6 : The Planning Commission has asked the Mizoram government to create an investor-friendly environment to promote handloom, handicrafts, food and bamboo based industries in the northeastern state using locally available resources, an official said here Saturday.

The suggestion was made during a meeting between Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia and Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla in New Delhi Thursday.

"Ahluwalia told Lal Thanhawla that Mizoram's industry sector is at a nascent stage now. To promote industrial growth, state government should create an investor-friendly environment to push investments and industrial growth for the creation of job prospects, besides better using of the local resources," a Mizoram planning department official told reporters.

Quoting Ahluwalia, the official said: "Emphasis must be given on village and small enterprise sectors comprising handloom, handicrafts, food and bamboo-based industries for which raw material and skill is locally available."

In the meeting, the annual plan size for 2013-14 fiscal for the state has been finalised at Rs.2500 crore, Rs.200 crore more than last year.

The Planning Commission deputy chairman said that the state has performed satisfactorily in various social sectors including health, education and agriculture.

The official said that the plan panel has appreciated Mizoram government for its achievements under NULP (New Land Use Policy) scheme and was assured more support to carry forward the programme.

The Mizoram government launched the Rs.2,873 crore NLUP in 2010 to solve food scarcity by moving away from 'Jhum cultivation' (slash and burn method of shifting cultivation) to permanent farming.

The NLUP aims to support 120,000 "Jhumia" (shifting cultivators) families over five years to settle in stable agriculture.

The planning commission has pointed out that irrigation coverage of net sown area is found to be very low and asked the state government to accelerate it.

"Bench terracing may be a viable alternative towards water management under agriculture enhancement strategy. There is a need to develop a horticulture hub in the state to revamp the sector. Animal husbandry, veterinary and dairy sectors including fisheries and aquaculture may be promoted through Self Help Groups," the official said, quoting Ahluwalia.

According to the official, the Mizoram Chief Minister has sought the Planning Commission's financial support in evolving a workable rain water harvesting programme for the mountainous state.