11 December 2013

MC Mary Kom’s Autobiography ‘UNBREAKABLE’ Officially Launched By Amitabh Bachchan



M.C. Mary Kom, who bought laurels for the country in the Olympics, has been saluted legendary by none other than megastar Amitabh Bachchan himself, for contributing immensely in breaking stereotypes pertaining to women from the north-eastern regions of India.

This is what the actor had to say about the athlete while unveiling her autobiography Unbreakable - “Mary Kom is already a legendary figure in the country, loved and admired by all.

She has made innumerable contributions in breaking stereotypes about women, more so from the northeast.

The book beautifully brings out her indestructible spirit and is an inspirational read for everyone.” Him and Mary even donned golden boxing gloves as they posed for the media.
Mary Kom Unbreakable autobiography
Mary speaking on the occasion, said- “My struggle has been one that many in our country face, especially women. The reason I decided to pen my story down was so others could read it and feel that if I could achieve what I have, so can they.”
Mary kom amitabh bachchan unbreakable autobiography
The autobiography is a candid confession and narration of Mary’s various struggles and wins encountered during her journey as an Indian boxer. A truly inspirational account.

You may order the book from Flipkart here:

Chilli-eating champion: Chetie Khiamnungyan eats record 18.5 chillies in 20 seconds in Nagaland

Indians love for spicy food is well known but a competition in north east India is taking it to a whole new level.

Each year, the strongest stomachs from across the world come to the Nagaland Chilli Eating Competition to compete for the title of Chilli-Eating Champion.

The region is home to the Naga chilli which rates a staggering 1.04 million on the Scoville Heat Unit, the universal measurement for spicy peppers.

Every December, a handful of brave Nagas and some foreigners put their stomachs to the test by seeing how many chillies they can eat in 20 seconds.

This year, Chetie Khiamnungyan overthrew reigning champion Namluai Rongmei by eating 18 and a half chillies.

Mr Rongmei, a 25-year-old rice farmer, only managed to stomach 12 chillies this year.

"I ate 14 pieces last year. It was painful in my mouth and stomach, but it is not a problem," he said, adding that he has never had to prepare for such competitions as he consumes chilli daily.

The winner takes home 25,000 rupees, which is about $US 400.

This year the competition has drawn a record crowd.

Some of the competitors, like Israeli backpacker Omri Adini, worry about what they have gotten themselves into.

"I am really terrified but it is going to be a fun experience," he said.

Chilli-eating is serious business in this part of the world and organisers have some of the best doctors on standby at the competition.

Last year, two contestants in the Nagaland competition were taken to hospital.

But this year, only one was rushed to the hospital.

Video available here: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-12-10/a-chilli-eating-competition-in-india-has-drawn-a/5148330

Myanmar Starts Biggest SEZ Project

Yangon, Dec 11 : Myanmar began implementing the first phase of the Thilawa Special Economic Zone (SEZ) project, the country's largest SEZ of its kind of international standard, on the outskirts of Yangon.

The first phase of the project covers 400 hectares out of the overall 2,400 hectares.

The Thilawa SEZ is jointly developed by Myanmar and Japan. Two Myanmar companies and two Japanese companies have established a joint venture under the name of Myanmar-Japan Thilawa Development Co Ltd in Tokyo to operate the project, reported Xinhua.

The company's share ratio is 51 percent by Myanmar and 49 percent by Japan.

The project includes factories, high-tech industry, textile, labor intensive industry and manufacturing industry.

Hornbill Festival concludes

Miss Nagaland Benjongmenla Jamir lighting the bonfire at the Hornbill closing ceremony, Kisama.

Kohima, Dec 11
: The 10-day-long Hornbill Festival culminated at the Naga Heritage Village at Kisama, 12 km south of State Capital Kohima, with a grand finale today.

The biggest indigenous festival and the annual tourism promotional event of Nagaland government ended with 17 Naga tribes performing the ‘Unity Dance’ around a bonfire lit by Miss Nagaland Benjongmenla Jamir in the presence of a number of dignitaries. The tourists joined the cultural troupes in dancing to the tune of Naga drum beats around the bonfire.

Chief Minister Neiphiu Rio said that Nagaland has become a favoured destination to experience a culture closest to the nature. “This was proved by the increase in the number of visitors to the Hornbill Festival this year,” he stated.

Rio said, “The Hornbill Festival is the festival of festivals, because this is the coming together of all the tribes of the State at one place to showcase the cultural and traditional vibrancy of the Naga people.”

He said each of the Naga tribe celebrates its festivals in their respective district and the Hornbill Festival is the only place where all the tribes perform together and one can witness the vibrancy of Naga culture and tradition in one place.

He said that as on the eighth day of the festival this year, over 1.50 lakh visitors attended the festival.

“Over the years, we have improved and the number of visitors has also increased accordingly and I hope this will get bigger and better in the days to come,” he added.

Declaring the Hornbill Festival close, Nagaland Minister for Tourism EE Pangteang acknowledged the participation of cultural troupes and visitors for making the festival a grand success.

The Hornbill Festival, which coincides with the statehood golden jubilee celebrations, was officially launched by President Pranab Mukherjee on December 1.

Pic Source Nagaland Post
10 December 2013

Landslide win in Mizoram saving grace for Congress

By Sushanta Talukdar



Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhalwa with Congress supporters in Aizawl. File photo: Ritu Raj Konwar
Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhalwa with Congress supporters in Aizawl.Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla.


The Congress has retained power in Mizoram with a landslide victory in the Assembly elections held on November 25, the results of which were declared on Monday.
In the elections to the 40-member Assembly, the Congress has won 33 of the 39 seats declared so far.
Chief Electoral Officer of Mizoram Ashwani Kumar told The Hindu that the results of Lawngtlai East constituency would be announced only on December 12 as re-polling would be held on December 11 in one polling booth where the Electronic Voting Machine failed.
In the 2008 Assembly polls, the party returned to power, ending a 10-year MNF rule, by winning 32 seats.
Now, the Opposition Mizo National Front (MNF)-led Mizoram Democratic Alliance (MDA) of three regional parties has won six seats. The MNF won five seats. Of the two other MDA constituents, the Mizoram People’s Conference (MPC) won one seat, while the Maraland Democratic Front (MDF) drew a blank. The MDA put up common candidates with the MNF contesting 31 seats, the MPC eight and the MDF one. In 2008, the MNF won three seats, the MPC two and the MDF one.
The Zoram Nationalist Party, which had two seats in the outgoing Assembly, contested 38 seats this time but is yet to open its account. The Bharatiya Janata Party contested 17 seats but failed to win a single seat this time too.
Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla won from both Serchhip and Hrangturzo seats. In Serchhip, he won by a margin of 734 votes, defeating his nearest MNF rival C. Lalramzauva, while in Hrangturzo he defeated his MPC rival Lalthansanga by a margin of 1,528 votes. Mr. Lal Thanhawla described his party’s victory as “a positive mandate by the people of Mizoram for good governance, running a corruption free government, for success and continuation of the New Land Use Policy (NLUP) — the flagship programme of his Government — and for preventing insurgent elements from using Mizoram as a safe haven.”
“The people have rejected outright the baseless campaign by Opposition parties that there had been corruption in the State. This mandate is also for our flagship programme NLUP because we have successfully implemented it achieving the targets promised and set by us,” Mr. Lal Thanhawla told The Hindu on telephone from Aizawl.
Mr. Lal Thanhawla said the Congress Legislature Party would meet on Wednesday to elect its leader, who would be sworn in as Chief Minister. Party sources said electing Mr. Lal Thanhawla would be a mere formality. If elected, it would be his fifth term as Chief Minister.

No woman makes it to Mizoram House yet again

Aizawl: Though women voters outnumbered their male counterparts in Mizoram, no woman once again made it to the state legislature in the election held on November 25.
Two women candidates belonging to major political parties - Tlangthanmawii of the INC and Lalmalsawmi of the MNF - were defeated by male candidates.
Three women candidates belonging to BJP were in the bottom, while the lone woman Independent nominee B Sangkhumi, former President of the Mizo Hmeichhe Insuihkhawm Pawl (MHIP) or Mizo Women Federation also suffered loss.
No woman makes it to Mizoram House yet again

Mizoram poll counting on Monday

There had been no woman legislator in Mizoram during the past 25 years.

Lal Thanhawla becomes Mizoram CM for record fifth time (Profile)

By Sujit Chakraborty

Aizawl : Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla, all set to assume office for a fifth time after leading the Congress party to a huge electoral win in the state assembly polls, is an acknowledged, tall political leader in the northeastern state for over a record four and half decades.

Assiduous and tenacious, Lal Thanhawla established the Congress base in the tribal and Christian dominated state literally like a lone ranger, with his untiring and determined effort since he joined the party 46 years ago.

"Due to his years of exceedingly hard work, sterling leadership quality and a deep commitment to the cause of people, Lal Thanhawla has become the most admired leader of Mizoram," said veteran Congress leader Birajit Sinha.

The 71-year-old Lal Thanhawla first became the chief minister of Mizoram in 1984 when under his leadership the party swept the assembly polls in the state, which shares unfenced borders with Myanmar (404 km) and Bangladesh (318 km).

Son of Hmartawnphunga Sailo and Lalsawmliani Chawngthu, Lal Thanhawla completed his matriculation in 1958, his Intermediate in Arts in 1961, and his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1964.

Starting his career as a recorder in the office of inspector of schools, Thanhawla did a brief stint in the Assam Cooperative Apex Bank as an assistant. At a young age of 24, in 1966, the restless Mizo was drawn to the Mizo National Front (MNF), a militant outfit floated by Laldenga that sought resolution of the region's problems through resort to armed conflict. As secretary of the MNF, he was subsequently arrested by the security forces and incarcerated in jails.

A year later in 1967, he was released from jail in Silchar in southern Assam, and joined the Congress party. He was soon appointed as the chief organiser of the Aizawl District Congress Committee.

Six years later, in 1973, Lal Thanhawla, a music lover and the founder president of the Mizo Journalists Association, was elected the state Congress president, the post he is still holding after 40 long years, a record.

Mizoram, one of the large districts of Assam, was accorded the status of a Union Territory in 1973, and in 1978 and 1979 Lal Thanhawla was elected to the state assembly. In 1984, under his leadership, the Congress party stormed to power and he became the party's first chief minister.

When June 30, 1986, the most significant bi-partite peace accord was signed between the government of India led by then prime minister Rajiv Gandhi and the separatist outfit MNF, he gave up his chief ministership following the request of the central leadership in favour of rebel supremo and MNF chief Laldenga.

In the first state assembly elections after mountainous Mizoram become a full-fledged, 23rd state in February 1987, he was elected the chief minister again and continued to serve in that post after being re-elected in the 1989 and 1993 polls.

Since 1978, Lal Thanhawla, a close friend of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, has been elected to the state assembly for a record nine times from different assembly constituencies. His winning streak was, however, broken when he was defeated in the Serchhip constituency in the 1998 assembly polls.

The surprise defeat impelled the northeastern state's five times chief minister to get himself elected from two assembly constituencies in central Mizoram since 2008.

Writer, scholar and historian Sekhar Datta said: "His critics may differ, his rivals for power may deny, but the incontrovertible fact remains that Lal Thanhawla personifies the Congress in Mizoram, having built up the party from scratch brick by brick."

"This tiny northeastern state looking on the map of India like the hood of a cobra had a chequered and crisis-ridden history since the late '50s when it was part of the composite state of Assam - designated as the Mizo district council," Datta told IANS.

He said that in the '60s when the Congress party was little known to the Mizos and the region was in the throes of food crisis and other scarcities, an inspired and idealist youth Lal Thanhawla set in motion what then appeared to be an impossible task - of building a solid base for the Congress party ruling at the national level.

"Scaling high hills with a small bag containing a water bottle and the bare necessities, the sturdy, handsome young man commenced reaching the doorsteps of his brethren and impressing upon them the need for solidarity and integration with the larger and multicultural India," said Datta, who studied the northeast politics very closely.

He said: "Perhaps Lal Thanhawla is the lone Congress leader in India to address Rajiv Gandhi by first name. He has been the living symbol and spirit of the Congress in Mizoram for over four decades."

Lal Thanhawla is the father of a son and two daughters, and his wife Lal Riliani is a social activist and a strong crusader against use of tobacco products in the state and the northeast.

Climate change hits bamboo production in India


A child walks along a bamboo fence in northeast India. THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/Stella Paul

KUMARGHAT, India (Thomson Reuters Foundation) — Changing rainfall patterns are slashing bamboo production in northeast India, leading to losses of jobs and businesses.
Erratic rainfall and dry spells have led bamboo to flower more frequently, then die back afterward, local people say. That has hurt families who are dependent on the grass for their livelihoods and even for food.
Savita Datta, 37, a former bamboo artisan from Unakoti district in India’s Tripura state, once split bamboo into sticks to supply incense factories. She and her husband earned a profit of 15,000 to 20,000 rupees ($240 to $320) every month, she said.
But starting in 2007 bamboo growers began reporting a record drop in production. As the supply of raw material fell, prices began to rise, climbing from about 15 rupees ($0.25) per bamboo cane to as much as 50 rupees ($0.80).
After struggling for a year, Savita and Ramapada finally had to shut down their business. She now works as a domestic servant and he pulls a rickshaw for a living.
“Some farmers said that all their bamboo plants had died because of sudden flowering, while others said that their bamboo shoots were not growing well due to heat and excessive rain,” Savita recalls
Amol Dutta, a manager at People’s Cooperative Society, a state government initiative that promotes rural entrepreneurs, estimates that at least 18 bamboo-stick-making units have closed in the past five years in North Tripura district alone. Those still in business have either moved their base elsewhere or are planning to do so.
Anuj Chakravarty, a resident of Emrapasa village in North Tripura, has been selling bamboo furniture for the past 20 years.  Last year he relocated his business to Mumbai.
“A thousand bamboos (bought at bulk rate) now cost over 4,000 rupees, which is more than triple the price we paid even five or six years ago. At this rate, we can’t run a business. So we decided to move out,” he said.
Besides offering a bigger clientele, Mumbai has another attraction, says Chakravarty: cheaper bamboo imported from China.
“Local suppliers gave us more varieties in raw material and design,” he admits. “With Chinese bamboos, you don’t get that. But they are two or three times cheaper.”
DECLINE OF THE BAMBOO HUB
The decline in bamboo production, and the import of cheaper Chinese products are signs of difficulty for a region of India that has traditionally been known as the country’s bamboo hub. Almost 56 percent of India’s bamboo production comes from the eight hill states of the northeast.
People here not only grow the grass for money, but rely on it extensively for sustenance too:  tender shoots are eaten as a delicacy, while mature bamboo branches are used to build fences, houses, furniture and household goods such as  baskets, grain containers and cutlery.
Pannalal Dhar, 47, of Sonamara village, has been growing the plant all his life. But this year, for the first time, Dhar was unable to re-fence his house because he was unable to harvest a single branch. The same is true of all 52 families in Sonamara.
“Earlier, I harvested bamboos that were as fat as a log. People bought them to use as pillars in their huts. Now all I get is sickly, thin bamboos that are useless,” says Dhar, pointing at the bare patch of land by his pond that until recently was his bamboo field.
According to Dhar, the decline is partly due to the bamboo’s natural cycle of flowering and dying, but it has been worsened by irregular rain and dry spells. Bamboo shoots require warm but moist soil to flourish, and the monsoon used to be predictable, with gentle rain followed by fierce rainfall for three or four weeks.
But for the past six or seven years, it has rained very hard from the onset of the monsoon in early June, followed by dry spells that last for weeks.
“Normally, before the monsoon, I would build a mud bank around the bamboo plants. This would trap moisture and help the shoots grow even when the sun came out. But now the showers are so severe, the mud banks are getting washed (away) quickly. The tender shoots are getting exposed to the sun,” Dhar said.
The climate in northeast India has been changing fast. According to a report by the government of India, average annual rainfall in the region, which was 2,450 mm a year, is now decreasing at a rate of 11 mm per decade.
Bamboo plants in northeast India usually flower only about every five decades. After flowering, the bamboo dies back, but a dramatic side effect of the blossoming plants is a huge increase in the local population of rats, which feed on the flowers and then go on to destroy other crops, further jeopardizing the residents’ livelihoods.
Suhagmani Deb, an 81-year-old bamboo farmer in Kumarghat, says that in her lifetime she has seen bamboo plants flower only three times, but the last two occasions have been in the past six years.
The recent flowerings have been irregular, occurring in different parts of the region at different times, and have seriously disrupted the bamboo supply. The region’s only paper-producing factory, the Cachar Paper Mill in Hailakandi, Assam, is one of the larger businesses affected. With an annual production capacity of 100,000 tonnes, it requires up to 350 tonnes of bamboo daily. Shortages of bamboo have stopped operations at the mill at least five times this year after the states of Mizoram and Tripura failed to provide their anticipated supply.
Lalnan Puii, a senior official in Mizoram’s department of agriculture, says that since the large-scale flowering in 2007-2008, bamboo production has fallen by half. Changes in climatic conditions have worsened the crisis, he adds.
“The gap in production should have been filled by now. But there are too many dry spells these days which is affecting the growth of the bamboo,” Puii says.
He adds that the government is trying to help farmers by exempting them from income tax and excise duties, and subsidising their electricity. It has also banned the sale of bamboo shoots.
While these measures are designed to help large farmers, small growers have few reasons to be hopeful. Some, like Deb, are already planning to stop farming bamboo, and feel increasingly uncertain about the future.
 “Nobody knows if the weather will be normal again in the coming days. So how do I know everything will be alright again?” she asks.
Stella Paul is a multimedia journalist based in Hyderabad, India.