31 October 2013

‘Mizoram, Not Gujarat, is Role Model’: Faleiro

Aizawl, Oct 31 : Congress general secretary and Congress Working Committee member in-charge of northeastern states Luzinho Faleiro on Wednesday took a dig at BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi and said that in Gujarat "some microscopic minority are living on islands of prosperity amidst an ocean of poverty, whereas in Mizoram it is an ocean of prosperity because Mizoram has taken everybody together".

Faleiro sought to project the state as one where growth in "inclusive", and attacked Modi's and the BJP's development claims. "There are some prime ministerial aspirants from other political parties like BJP who are shouting from the rooftops of their economic growth of their states, like Gujarat, for example. Yes, Gujarat has developed as far as industries and the development of Gujarat is creation of few crorepatis. Mizoram may not have created crorepatis, but I am saying Mizoram is a role model," he said.

"When the state (Mizoram) was born the per capita income was less than Rs 8,000. Today, as per 2012 census, the per capita income has crossed Rs 15,000. It has multiplied."

"You see the literacy rate in Gujarat, you see the literacy rate in Mizoram. Although it is a smaller state, you have got a higher rate of literacy here. In Gujarat, the literacy rate has gone down. In a democracy if you want to empower the people you empower them through good education and good health. In this regard, I must say, you have done a commendable job in providing education to the masses and providing livelihood to farmers," he said.

Faleiro also sought to debunk Gujarat's rapid industrialisation. "In Gujarat the farmers' land are taken hardly for 15 paise and 20 paise and given to the corporates or industrialists. See, the farmers are crying, the corporates are praising. In Mizoram, the government's endeavor is to take everybody forward, to increase per capita income. Therefore Mizoram is a role model for the country."

Sonia visit on Nov 18, Rahul, PM to follow

AIZAWL: Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and PM Manmohan Singh are scheduled to visit Mizoram in November, according to party general secretary Luizinho Faleiro. Sonia is expected to address a rally in Lunglei town on November 18. Rahul is expected to address a rally in Champhai, close to the India-Myanmar border, on November 21, and then address a rally in Kolasib town. PM's date of visit has not be finalised yet.

Tripura Troopers For Mizoram Assembly Polls

Aizawl, Oct 31 : Tripura State Rifles (TSR) would be deployed in the November 25 Assembly elections in neighbouring Mizoram, officials said.

The troopers are being sent to Mizoram following requests from the Union Home Ministry as some battalions of TSR work as India Reserve Battalions (IRB) and the Centre deploys them as per requirements, officials said.

The TSR, which was raised about two decades ago in the pattern of BSF and Assam Rifles as counter insurgency force and nine battalions of the total twelve battalions are India Reserve Battalions, was earlier deployed during Commonwealth Games in New Delhi in 2010, and in elections duties in Assam, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Bihar and West Bengal.

Election department in Tripura has also geared up its machinery in view of Mizoram Assembly polls so that the internally displaced Bru refugees sheltered in Tripura camps could participate in the elections, officials said.

Election Commission has convened a meeting in Delhi next week to discuss logistical support to Mizoram.

About 35,000 Bru refugees are sheltered in six evacuee camps in Kanchanpur subdivision of North Tripura district. They entered Tripura following ethnic clashes with the Miazos since 1997.

NTPC Signs MOU for Kaladan Hydro Electric Power Project in Mizoram

NTPC
A 460 MW hydroelectric project will be set up by state-run National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) in Mizoram, officials said.

A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed between NTPC and the Mizoram government to commission the Rs.30 billion power project in Sahia and Lawngtlai districts of southern Mizoram.

The Kaladan Hydro Electric Power Project (KHEPP) on the Kaladan river will be NTPC's first hydro power project in the northeast and the second power project in the region after the 750 MW Bongaigaon coal-based thermal power project in Assam.
"The power project would be commissioned by 2013 and the surplus power would be supplied to neighbouring northeastern states after meeting the requirement of Mizoram," secretary of the Mizoram power department K. Lal Nghinglova told media.

NTPC will execute the project on build, own, operate and maintain basis. Work will start within six months."Power tariff and the power-sharing formula would be determined by the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission in consultation with the NTPC, union power ministry and the Mizoram government," Nghinglova said.

"It was decided that the electricity generated would be provided to the affected families (people displaced due to construction of the project) free of cost for 10 years from the date of commissioning."

According to the MoU, all the recruitment of the workforce would be done from among the affected families and in case of non-availability of suitable personnel among them, the recruitment would be done from other parts of Mizoram.

Imphal Airport Get International Status


New Delhi, Oct 31
: The Union Cabinet on Wednesday gave approval for declaring Imphal airport as international.

"Declaration of these airports as international airports will offer improved connectivity, wider choice of services at competitive cost to air travellers resulting in boosting international tourism and economic development of the region and the country,’’ an official statement here said.

The grant of international status to Imphal airport holds significance because of Manipur's proximity to neighbouring Myanmar.

It is expected that with India becoming more aggressive in its `Look East policy’ and Myanmar opening up, Manipur could become a key regional hub for international flights to South East Asian countries.

Imphal Airport, which belongs to Airports Authority of India (AAI), is suitable for 'C' type (Airbus 320 or 321) of aircraft operations in all-weather conditions.

It has facilities for night operations, 2,746 metre-long runway, apron to park three A-320s and an ATR-72 at a time. AAI had modified the terminal building, having an area of 6,592 sq m, to integrated terminal building.

Film Pitches for Manipur

Mirra Bank’s documentary ‘The Only Real Game’ examines the popularity of baseball in the troubled North-Eastern state

By Mridula Chari
A still from ‘The Only Real Game’
A still from ‘The Only Real Game’ One of the jokes about the Major League Baseball World Series is that only one country participates: the United States of America. While this is factually inaccurate, commentators might soon be able to add India to the relatively short list. The Only Real Game, a new documentary by American film-maker Mirra Bank, showcases Manipur’s unlikeliest products: young baseball enthusiasts.

America’s cricket, rather than India’s national game, captured the imagination of Manipuris during World War II. US troops posted in Manipur during the war set up makeshift pitches to pass the time between battles, and while they were at it, taught the game to Manipuri children. Today, there are about 27 teams with 300 players across the state.
Muriel Peters, one of the documentary’s producers, first heard of baseball players in Manipur in 2004. “I’ve known Muriel for 25 years, and when she told me she was about to go to Manipur, and that there might be baseball there, I said, take a camera,” says Bank. “There is a film there.”

photo
The documentary won an award in New York
Once she reached Manipur, Peters realized that the game there was underdeveloped, and that the players relied on locally sourced equipment of questionable quality. She set up an organization, First Pitch, which promotes baseball collaboration between Manipur and the US. One of their goals, to bring Major League coaches to Imphal, is the subject of The Only Real Game.

For now, baseball aspirants in Imphal have to settle for an uneven and rocky pasture they share with football players and cows. Though promised a pitch about five years ago by Jarnail Singh, chief secretary of Manipur at the time, this is yet to materialize.

One of the aims of First Pitch is to take Manipuri children to New York to meet Major League baseball players. “We really wanted them to come to New York,” says Peters. “We even put mortgages on our own houses to stand as security for them.” Though all but one of the four or five applicants shown in the film were denied visas, Peters is still optimistic.

“We had initially wanted to take younger children to New York, but the Manipuri baseball associations selected older ones who are considered primary flight risks by visa officials.” They plan to try Bank began shooting The Only Real Game in 2006—the shooting continued intermittently for five-and-a-half years. The film, made on a budget of around $300,000 (Rs.18.3 crore), was shot at a time when foreigners were restricted from travelling to Manipur and permits were given for only 10 days at a time.

While the crew wasn’t prevented from shooting, they were accompanied at all times by armed guards. “It was almost comical at some points,” says Bank, talking of how an entire military convoy was organized to escort them to a lake in the interiors, out of the safe zone.

“It wasn’t difficult to shoot, but they were overdetermined.” The documentary is not silent about Manipur’s long-running insurgency, and intertwines depictions of a handful of sports enthusiasts being trained by two American coaches with externally-sourced footage of violence caused by insurgents and the military. “If you make a film about baseball, that’s one thing, but if you make a film about a place like Manipur, to me, it would be completely artificial and unreal to do it severed from the context,” Bank explains.

“That situation changes every day, but at the time we were there, this was the context our characters were living. We see this as necessary for people in the US as well. They know little about India, let alone about Manipur.”

The primary focus of the film-makers was to “portray an unsentimental version of India”, Bank says. “The term I use is ‘dropping down’—you don’t try to impose your vision, but you get close to people where they live emotionally, in their everyday lives, with their children, their dreams,” she says.

“As much as you can, you stay with them and you listen.” The Only Real Game, which won the award for the Best Documentary at the New York Indian Film Festival this year and was also shown at the recently held Mumbai International Film Festival, will travel to various cities in India, including Manipur where an invite-only event is being held today.

Major League coaches have visited the troubled state only twice or thrice after production finished in 2011, and the hope is that the documentary will revive interest in supporting the sport.

The film-makers hope that they will be able to use the game as a message of peace for insurgents as well. “This is a story of hope,” says Bank. “The reason the film took so long to make is that we wanted to find a story that honours the people and their spirit.

We wanted it to be about their future, their joy. In a way—and not that I would recommend this—the things they don’t have validate that they still do what they love.”

The Only Real Game will be shown on 31 October at 4pm, Classic Hotel, Imphal (011-46018541); on 5 November at 3pm, Press Club of India, Delhi (46018541); on 7 November at 6pm, Bangalore International Centre Auditorium, Teri Complex, Domlur (9886599675); and on 8 November at 7pm, Suchitra Film Society, BV Karanth Road, Banashankari, Bangalore (26711785). Click here for details.

After Arunachal, Mizo Govt in Soup

By Sandeep Ashar

MumbaiThe contentious plot in Vashi. Narendra Vaskar

Mumbai, Oct 31 :  It's not just the Arunachal Pradesh government that brought in a private player to exploit commercial space on land allotted to it at subsidised rates in Navi Mumbai by the Maharashtra government. It turns out that Mizoram government has taken a similar route.

It has tied up with US Roofs — the same company that Arunachal government picked up for developing its plot — to build a state guest house and market the balance space commercially. On March 9, 2010, CIDCO had signed a lease agreement with the Chief Secretary of the Mizoram government allocating a 21,348-sq ft plot for the guest house. Like in Arunachal Pradesh's case, the agreement bars the Mizoram govermment from transferring or assigning rights or using the plot for any other purpose.

Citing financial constraints, the Mizoram government, however, involved USR in the project.

Mizoram's acting chief secretary M Sathiyavathy said a formal agreement was yet to be signed with the developer. An official communication to CIDCO in 2011 by the Mizoram government, however, spells out the details of its arrangement with USR.

On November 1, 2011, K T Lalrikhuma, Deputy Secretary, General Administration Department, Mizoram, informed the CIDCO Managing Director that as per the draft agreement between USR and his government, the developer will be allowed to exploit 75 per cent of the built-up space while constructing the guest house at his cost on the remaining space. In response, the Manager (Town Services) of CIDCO, on November 30, 2011, said, "While any such BOT (build-operate-transfer) arrangement had no relevance since the lease agreement prohibited it, the Mizoram govermment was free to award a contract for the purpose on terms it deemed fit and suitable."

Newsline found a display board indicating that USR was a "contractor" for the Mizoram Bhavan (see pic). On Tuesday, The Indian Express had reported how the Arunachal Pradesh government found itself in the dock for sub-leasing the 26,375-sq ft Navi Mumbai plot it had received at subsidised rate. Documents obtained under the Right To Information (RTI) Act reveal that authorities of Mizoram and Uttarakhand, too, were firming up plans to allow private developers to commercially exploit lands similarly allotted to them.

However, the developer's official website has advertised the property as commercial and available for sale or lease. Building plans, accessed under RTI, show that the total construction proposed was over 50,000 sq ft. The Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation is yet to grant commencement certificate for this work. Local realtors confirmed that the current market rates for commercial properties in the region was Rs 25,000 per sq ft.

CIDCO's Joint MD V Radha had said violations in the case of all such plots were being examined.
Uttarakhand Chief Minister Vijay Bahuguna has written to Maharashtra counterpart Prithviraj Chavan for permission to undertake development on public private partnership basis on the plot allocated to it. Newsline has a copy of this communication.
30 October 2013

Mizoram Elction Update: Oct 30


EC instructs Mizoram election department for VVPAT system in 10 constituencies

Aizawl, Oct 30 : The Election Commission has instructed the Mizoram election department to use Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail System (VVPAT) system in 10 Assembly constituencies in the coming elections to the 40-member state legislature to be held on November 25.
The instruction was issued yesterday to introduce VVPAT with the electronic voting machines (EVMs) and would be used in 10 seats out of the 11 seats within Aizawl city, state Joint Chief Electoral Officer H Lalengmawia said here today.
"The constituencies where the VVPAT system would be introduced would be decided by the state election department," he said, adding that being a new equipment, the Election
Commission wanted the VVPAT with EVMs to be introduced in the urban area where it would be easier to be monitored.
Earlier, the opposition Mizo National Front (MNF) had expressed doubts about the reliability of the EVMs and suggested to the Election Commission that the EVMs might have been manipulated in the 2008 Assembly polls which resulted in the unprecedented victory for the Congress which bagged 32 seats.
The major opposition parties - the MNF, the Mizoram People's Conference (MPC), the Zoram Nationalist Party (ZNP) and the BJP state unit recently submitted a joint memorandum to the Election Commission seeking introduction of the VVPAT with EVMs.
The parties expressed the desire that the voters would be able to exercise franchise without having doubts and with transparency. 

Mizoram CM likely to contest from two seats

Aizawl, Oct 30 : Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla is likely to contest the November 25 Assembly polls from Serchhip constituency from where he has won five times and also from Hrangturzo, Congress sources said.

Lal Thanhawla has successfully contested from Serchhip for five times since 1984.

He lost from the constituency only once in 1998.

Earlier he had won from Champhai seat in 1978 and 1979 assembly polls. But since 1987, the seat became the home turf of MNF chief Zoramthanga.

Mizoram Opposition Parties Form Alliance

Aizawl, Oct 30 : The Mizo National Front (MNF), Mizoram People’s Conference (MPC) and Maraland Democratic Front (MDF) today entered into a pre-poll alliance for the state Assembly polls that are just 27 days away.

According to the agreement reached between the three parties, the MNF will contest 31 seats, the MPC will contest eight seats and the MDF one.

The seat-sharing formula was announced today at a news conference attended by MNF vice-president Tawnluia, MPC party executive general secretary Kenneth Chawngliana and the lone sitting MDF legislator P.P. Thawla.

According to the seat-sharing arrangement, the MPC will contest from Aizawl North 1, Aizawl North II, Aizawl East I, Champhai South, Hrangturzo and Lunglei East constituencies. The MDF will get the constituency it already holds — Palak.

The MNF will contest the rest of the seats with support from the MPC and MDF.

The MNF, which is considered the “main” Opposition party in the state has to claw its way back after it was virtually wiped out by an anti-incumbency wave in the 2008 Assembly elections — managing to win only three seats.

The wave swept the Congress party to power — giving it 31 seats. But the MNF got 30.6 per cent the total votes while the MPC got 10.38 per cent.

The Congress, on the other hand, got 38.98 per cent of the total votes but won 80 per cent of the seats. So, leaders of the MNF, MPC and MDF probably figured that forming a coalition would give them a winning formula.

The three-party front would release its joint manifesto shortly, Tawnluia said.

The Zoram National Front (ZNP) that fared poorly in the last elections, getting only two seats, is still trying to work out its strategy for the coming elections.

At the same time, a newcomer to the political scene, the Zoramthar Duhtute Pawl (ZDP), has already declared its intention to contest the Assembly polls but has not revealed from which constituencies it will contest.

These two parties could sink the plans of the MNF-MDF-MPC trio.

The Congress party leaders, including chief minister Lalthanhawla, are currently camped in New Delhi to get the stamp of approval for their list of candidates, party sources said.