21 March 2014

Pre-monsoon Rains in Mizoram, Houses Damaged

Aizawl, Mar 21: Pre-monsoon rainfall accompanied by strong squall hit many places in Mizoram on Wednesday evening leaving trails of destruction in a number of places, disaster management and rehabilitation department sources said.

Southernmost Lawngtlai district was the hardest hit with around 50 houses damaged in Lawngtlai town and surrounding villages, the officials said. While 12 houses were damaged in Chanmari-II locality of Lawngtlai town, 11 houses were damaged in Bungtlang South, and about 80 houses south of the town. Power supply lines were damaged causing power failure in many villages and telecommunication was also severely affected. The Mizoram Assembly today passed the Supplementary Demand for 2013-14 amounting to Rs 2,658.47 crore and vote-on-account for expenditure for the first four months of 2014-15 (April to July, 2014) amounting to Rs 2,381.08 crore. The Budget was presented in the state legislature by finance minister Lalsawta on last Tuesday.

Both the Supplementary Demand and the Vote-on-account were passed after a brief discussion after Lalsawta explained that detailed and demand-wise discussion would be held when a regular budget would be presented in the state legislature. During his budget speech, he underscored the need for improvement and augmentation of the state's own tax and non- tax revenues through any possible means and at the same time reduce non-plan revenue expenditure whenever possible though he did not propose any specific new taxes on increase in the rates of existing taxes.

Lalsawta had to seek vote-on-account as the Planning Commission was yet to allocate the annual plan outlay for Mizoram. He said though the Planning Commission was yet to finalise the state annual plan outlay for 2014-15, the Budget estimates for the next fiscal were projected at Rs 3,325 crore. "As and when the annual plan for 2014-15 is finalised, I will seek approval of this august House for the regular budget," the finance minister said.

Megadams: Battle on the Brahmaputra

Brahmaputra river
China and India have their eye on the energy potential of the vast Brahmaputra river. Will a new wave of "megadams" bring power to the people - or put millions at risk? Navin Singh Khadka reports from Assam, India.
On the banks of the Brahmaputra it is hard to get a sense of where the river starts and ends. It begins far away as a Tibetan mountain stream. On the floodplains of Assam, though, its waters spread as far as the eye can see, merging with the horizon and the sky.

From here it continues through north-eastern India into Bangladesh, where it joins with the Ganges to form a mighty river delta.

For centuries the Brahmaputra has nourished the land, and fed and watered the people on its banks.
Today, though, India and China's growing economies mean the river is increasingly seen as a source of energy. Both countries are planning major dams on long stretches of the river.

INTERACTIVE
map× map for mobile
  • Source of the Yarlung Zangbo

    × Source of Yarlung Zangbo
    The river, known as the Yarlung Zangbo in China and as the Brahmaputra in India, starts its 1,760 mile (2,840 km) journey beneath Mount Kailash, high in the Tibet region of the Himalayas.
  • Zangmu dam

     Zangmu dam
    China is constructing the Zangmu dam to provide hydro-electric power. The project began in 2009 and has caused concern downstream in India. Three other dams are planned nearby.
  • The Great Bend of the Yarlung Zangbo

      The Great Bend
    Before the Yarlung Zangbo leaves China to flow into the Arunachal Pradesh region of India and become the Brahmaputra, it makes a dramatic turn to the south, known as the Great Bend.
  • Assam tea gardens

      Assam tea gardens
    Many of Assam's tea gardens are irrigated by the Brahmaputra. They are vulnerable to flooding and erosion by river water.
  • Subansiri dam site

      Subansiri dam site
    India is also building dams on the river – many more than China. The Lower Subansiri Dam, on a tributary of the Brahmaputra, has been stalled by protests for several years.
  • Guwahati - city on the river

      Guwahati
    In Guwahati, Assam's biggest city, anti-China sentiment is growing and some say the river level has dropped in recent years.
In Assam the plans are being greeted with scepticism and some fear.
The fear is that dams upstream could give China great power over their lives. And many in Assam worry whether China has honourable intentions.
Brahmaputra voices: What next for their river?
Brahmaputra stories: The businessman, the activist, the expert and the official
After a landslide in China in 2000, the river was blocked for several days, unknown to those downstream.
When the water forced its way past the blockage Assam faced an oncoming torrent. There was no advance warning. There are concerns this could happen more frequently.
Some also believe that China may divert water to its parched north - as it has done with other southern rivers.
India's central government says China has given them assurances about the new Tibetan dams.
"Our foreign ministry has checked with China and we have been told that the flow will not be affected, and we will make sure that the people's lives are not affected by the dams," Paban Singh Ghatowar, minister for the development of north-eastern India, told the BBC.

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By engaging in a race to dam the Brahmaputra as quickly as possible, China and India will cause cumulative environmental impacts beyond the limits of the river's ecosystem”
Peter Bosshard International Rivers Network

Beijing says the dams it is building on the Tibetan stretch of the river will ease power shortages for people in that region.
"All new projects will go through scientific planning and feasibility studies and the impact to both upstream and downstream will be fully considered," China's foreign ministry told the BBC.
It said three new dams at Dagu, Jiacha, and Jeixu were small-scale projects: "They will not affect flood control or the ecological environment of downstream areas," the foreign ministry said.
Despite the statements, there is no official water-sharing deal between India and China - just an agreement to share monsoon flood data.
Experts and interest groups remain as sceptical as local residents.
'Rivers unite us, but dams divide us," says Peter Bosshard, of the International Rivers Network.
He criticises India for ignoring the rights of Bangladesh even as it deals with China's claim on the river.
"By engaging in a race to dam the Brahmaputra as quickly as possible, China and India will cause cumulative environmental impacts beyond the limits of the river's ecosystem, and will threaten the livelihoods of more than 100 million people who depend on the river."
It is hard to know where the truth lies. The dams are hidden from view, on remote valleys and in deep mountain gorges. It is there that the never-ending tension between politics, development and environment is now being played out.

Football: ‘Work needed at grassroot level’

foot.jpg

India’s north-east has long been touted as the nursery of its football. With two clubs from Shillong representing the region in the I-League and Mizoram winning their maiden Santosh Trophy in Siliguri earlier his month, defender Gouramangi Singh feels this is the best phase of the sport in the region. Gouramangi speaks about the transition of football in the region and his club Rangdajied FC. Excerpts:

Is this the best soccer phase for the north-east?
As of now, you can say that. There are two clubs from Shillong in the I-League and there are also Royal Wahingdoh, who are in the second division league final round. So there is plenty of representation from Shillong as far as the I-League is concerned.
Not to forget Mizoram, who recently won the Santosh Trophy and a lot of their players are being looked at by I-League clubs. However, I hope this can only get better and spread over to other states as well. We need professional clubs from Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland and Assam to come into the I-League at some point.
Shed some light on the transition there.
The north-east has always been a hot bed for talent, but never for clubs. In the past two decades, if you see most clubs would have had at least two to three players from the north-east in their teams in the National Football League and the I-League.
However, with the emergence of clubs from Shillong, presently there are more options for a player. Nowadays, a footballer from the area need not necessarily venture out to play outside his region. Personally, I hope for a full transition and wait for the day when all Manipuri players can play in a Manipur I-League club and so on.
How do you assess the current talent from the region?
We have good players but need to do much more work at the grassroot level. With the 2017 Under-17 Fifa World Cup approaching there should be plenty of academies, football schools of excellence etc. in the region. Schools should also tie up with academies to make better educated players, who excel in the game and also have a back-up career from education.
Your take on the likes Lalnunpuia, David Ngaihte, Munmum Lugun, etc?
All of them are very talented but need to keep upgrading ourselves. We need to train hard and put in 100 per cent both on and off the field. Talent alone cannot win you anything. Systematic training, development and education are of paramount importance too.
What has been at the heart of Rangdajied United’s incredible run of form of late?
We have won three macthes on the trot. Since I joined the club in November 2013, I have always maintained that the squad have quality players and after getting to know each other, we have started working well as a team.
A few more additions in January including that of Ranti Martins have made a difference. If you look carefully, each member is playing his role. Even when Subrata Paul was here, though only for a short stint, he made a difference with a couple of match-winning performances.
20 March 2014

Mizo ATM Attackers caught Through WhatsApp in Bangalore

By Arun Dev

BANGALORE: A series of forwards on WhatsApp gave police a crucial tipoff, leading to the arrest of two men who had on Tuesday morning attacked a security guard inside an ATM kiosk in Kammanahalli.

Using Smartphone technology to their advantage, city police stitched up the case with the arrest of Thangya Su, 20, and Ausang Thang, 19, natives of Aizawl district of Mizoram, within 24 hours.

The two men had barged into the Corporation Bank ATM and stabbed the security guard Murugan, 38, on his arms and neck. When he raised an alarm, they fled, leaving the ATM machines untouched.

Police got to work, retrieving CCTV footage clearly showing the faces of the two men. And the hunt began. Teams fanned out across the city, visiting hotels, spas and other businesses where people from the northeast community are usually employed; however, the search wasn't fruitful.

"The kitchen knife was crucial in the investigation. It gave us hunch that these two men were working in some fast food chain or hotel in the city. So we sent these photographs to all the hotels and restaurants we knew, that employed people from the north-east," PS Harsha, deputy commissioner of police, east.

According to DCP PS Harsha, photographs of the men were sent to at least 1,000 restaurants and hotels either physically or digitally.

Throughout Tuesday, members of the community shared the pictures on WhatsApp, until finally, the strategy hit home. The pictures reached a hotelier in Jayanagar, who paid little attention to them until Tuesday evening, when the men walked into his hotel, looking for jobs. He reached for his phone and tapped on the image, and aha! the picture revealed the truth, in all its megapixel clarity.

He knew he had to act fast. He asked them to wait in a room in the hotel, and quickly rang up the cops. Investigating officials are keeping the identity of the hotelier a secret.

During interrogation, the young men said they had come to Bangalore a year ago and were between jobs. They admitted they had set out to rob an ATM after one of their friends gave them the idea on making a fast buck. Around 1am Tuesday, they located a kiosk where the security guard was asleep and attacked him with a kitchen knife.
19 March 2014

Mawi Keivom - Rani Punk

Mawi Keivom on how her tribal heritage has given her an edge as an international accessories designer
By Rachana Nakra

Mawi Keivom | Rani punk
Designer Mawi Keivom
A decade after launching her label at the London Fashion Week, Manipur-born accessories designer Mawi Keivom showed her collection at the Lakmé Fashion Week last week, pairing it with designer Gaurav Gupta’s clothes. Her collection, MAWI’s Indian Odyssey, was a retrospective of the iconic pieces created by her in her earlier seasons. A celebration of Keivom’s favourite pieces, the name of this collection was a reference to her homecoming.
Models in braided mohawks glided down the runway in Gupta’s designs with an alien spaceship suspended overhead. Mawi’s stunning ultra-glam pieces added to the otherworldly ambience.
Beyond the ramp, from Rihanna to Priyanka Chopra, her art deco and punk-inspired unique statement pieces can be seen on fashionistas globally. She tells us how travel and her own rebellious streak inspire her designs—and that you might be able to buy MAWI shoes in the future. Edited excerpts from an interview:
photo

How often does India find its way into your designs?
My Indian and tribal heritage is a constant source of inspiration. I respect Indian tradition, craftsmanship and aesthetics. India has such a beautiful, diverse heritage and my work always has an undercurrent of that running through its veins. In the past I have created collections such as Punk Rajah, Gypsy Rani and India Rose, which all took inspiration from my roots.
Where else do you find inspiration for your designs?
I also find many of my ideas come from youth subcultures and industrial design, as well as futuristic, traditional and contemporary references. My work is always about combining these diverse elements. I seek influences from a wide variety of sources, ensuring my designs remain multidimensional, innovative and exciting. I also feel fortunate to have been able to travel and experience many different cultures. Certainly this exposure has contributed to my overall aesthetic.
How has your personal style inspired your jewellery line?
MAWI jewels are definitely a true embodiment of my style. My personal aesthetic encompasses bold statement pieces, industrial and futuristic elements as well as vintage jewels. I have a rebellious streak running through my veins, which translates through my designs.
Do you plan to expand your product line? Shoes or clothes perhaps?
My ultimate aim is to create an aspirational lifestyle brand that offers everything from jewellery, bags, shoes, clothing, perfume, etc. Having set up the foundations for global expansion, the next decade will focus on growing the online business, while also expanding the retail arms and opening more stores. We want to immerse our followers in the MAWI world, we have a vision of developing the MAWI philosophy across the board and we are in this for the long haul.
Which Indian celebrity would you like to see your designs on?
There are many trend-setting celebrities in India who wear MAWI and I’m always delighted to see them wearing our creations. Aishwarya Rai (Bachchan), Priyanka Chopra, Deepika Padukone and Kareena Kapoor (Khan) have all been spotted in our jewels. These women add their own individual style to the pieces and I am so excited to see who chooses to wear MAWI next. It’s so rewarding knowing someone has specifically chosen to invest in a piece they absolutely love.
Do you think you will ever create dainty, delicate pieces?
We are known for creating statement jewels, however these pieces often feature delicate components and features that would translate beautifully into more dainty designs. I wear a lot of delicate jewels myself and my jewellery box is full of beloved dainty pieces that have been handed down through my family. I like extremes, and mix and match so many aesthetics that there is always the possibility to design smaller, delicate jewels, particularly when we eventually come to launch a fine jewellery range in the future. It is not on the cards yet but the avenue to create precious MAWI jewellery is always open.

The Mizoram master plan that Indian football needs

By Pulasta Dhar

"The best way for Mizoram to make a name for themselves in a country as big as India is football." That is Mizoram Football Association secretary Mr. Lalnghinglova Hmar's primary motivation to develop football in his state. Over the last three years, he has made it his mission to make Mizoram a football superpower — and his crowning glory came when they won the Santosh Cup this month.

But while much has been said about their rise, what is forgotten is the struggle — the nitty-gritties, the foundation, the hard work and the initial thrust that is so hard to come by.

Hmar has been the mastermind behind the plan to take Mizoram to new heights — and as he said, to make them noticed through a sport that is secondary in the country. Hmar isn't even a full-time employee of the Mizoram FA. He is in fact a business editor at a vernacular daily — but has shot to the limelight in football administration after creating a brilliant football system in the state.

So, what is this blueprint? How does it work? Where does the money come from? Here's breaking down the Mizoram master plan: Infrastructure "Mizoram doesn't have any natural grass." What? "Yes, there's too much rain -- we play in the mud." So how do your teams play such fluid football? "Artificial turfs." Mizoram has three artificial turfs in the state — two in Aizwal and one in Lunglei. Another one is coming up in Champhai in two months time. Hmar tells us that the state government has spent about Rs 4 crore on every turf — that's a Rs 16 crore investment right away in turfs. "This is a football-friendly state. The government has been very supportive in developing the game.

It eventually comes down to a solid support system," Hmar says. So how hard is it to get kids to play the game? "You know, playing football in recesses during school doesn't happen here. That's not the culture. Schools don't have playgrounds here — football in Mizoram is an after school activity where children play in parks. Considering it is the most popular sport in the state, it isn't hard to attract people.

Maybe initially to the Mizoram Premier League, but not to play." Football players of the Mizoram team celebrate after winning the final match of the 68th National Football Championship for the Santosh Trophy 2014. AFP Football players of the Mizoram team celebrate after winning the final match of the 68th National Football Championship for the Santosh Trophy 2014.

AFP Grassroots Much has been said about FIFA's grassroots programme being implemented in India by the AIFF. One cannot judge on whether it has worked or not — at least not until the under-17 World Cup in 2017. But one things is for sure — as an AIFF source told Firstpost, no one 'checks' whether coaches learning grassroots training are implementing the programme in school or their coaching sessions.

In Mizoram, it's different: "There's constant checking whether grassroots coaches are applying what they learn in grassroots development programmes. Even the remotest areas are checked -- but work still to be done. We're now going to start grassroots programmes in sub-towns to bring more coaches from rural areas -- our development officer makes sure one style of football is followed throughout the state."

Any state football association can conduct a grassroots programme — but Mizoram makes sure it doesn't stop there. The checking part is where the seriousness shows. The smaller the state, the easier to develop football? "Bhaichung Bhutia said in a recent meeting that Sikkim, despite being smaller couldn't do what we're doing here. It's not about the size of the state — maybe the open expanses and culture makes it easy — but money-wise we're a poor state.

It's all about planning and constantly thinking about the future," Hmar says. There was a time when a state would be compared to Goa or Kolkata when it came to football.

Now it's all about Mizoram: "Well, I admit bigger and richer states will do better if they replicate our system." The system "Eight districts -- eight FAs. As for tournaments, we hold a sub-junior (U14) and junior (U17) tournament every year. Then there's the MZFA Cup and the Mizoram Premier League," Hmar rattles off. There's also an inter-village tournament where more than 200 teams take part. So how do you spot talent? "All these are scouted. We don't have paid scouts but we have a technical committee made up of coaches and ex-players. Every tournament, every game is seen."

If you happen to be in Mizoram watching a league match, don't be surprised to see a few I-League suits sitting there to spot talent too. The Mizoram Premier League This is the money-spinner if you want to think of it that way. The Mizoram Premier League is what Hmar is most excited to talk about. "We always wanted to start a league since we don't have an I-League team of our own (this is next on his wishlist).

Initially it was very hard to extract money from sponsors. They support football but when it comes to money, a product has to be good to sell. And it's here that we struck a unique sponsorship plan with Zonet cable." It's basically genius, this deal — Zonet pays Mizoram's FA Rs 25 lakhs a year (they've committed to five years) and holds all the commercial rights of the league.

Zonet goes and sells their ads to make money. They also broadcast all the matches live. As Hmar puts it, it's a 'win-win'. What about the clubs? "The prize money for the league is Rs 7 lakhs. Every game the winning team gets Rs 3000 and the losing team gets Rs 2000.

The FA and the two participating clubs split the gate receipts 50-50. So there is incentive to play," Hmar tells us. Tickets are priced at Rs 30 for an adult and Rs 10 for a child.

A Village Brings Down Its Hills as Lure of Mining Grows

Alldrina Nonglamin's mine is one of hundreds of brand new pits near Meghalaya's border with Bangladesh.Himanshu Khagta Alldrina Nonglamin’s mine is one of hundreds of brand new pits near Meghalaya’s border with Bangladesh.

NONGTALANG, India — “Bomb, bomb, bomb!” shouted the miner, and his warning echoed off the walls of the decapitated hillock. Seconds later, an explosion sliced off yet another chunk of limestone, which crumbled into a pile somewhere near where the center of the hill used to be.
The mine’s owner, Alldrina Nonglamin, 40, barely noticed the explosion. On that morning in early January, she wore her bed slippers and a sarong tied over her shoulder as she surveyed the pile of rock that had once underlaid her orange and betel nut garden, her former source of income.
Proudly showing off the mounds of ammonium nitrate she uses as an explosive, she said, “I want to finish the hill quickly so I can level the land and build a big house. It might take 20 years, but maybe less also.”
Ms. Nonglamin is one of the many new mine owners in the Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya State who were surprised to find out that the pile of rocks they were living on might as well be made of cash. In the last few years, her village of Nongtalang, like so many other communities across this hilly northeastern state, has become home to an increasing number of family-owned limestone mines, whose owners are seeking wealth unheard of in a region accustomed to subsistence farming.
Hundreds of limestone mines now line the 60 kilometers, or 40 miles, of highway that lead through this region toward the border with Bangladesh.
Ms. Nonglamin took loans of more than $150,000 to purchase mining equipment after seeing the profits her neighbors were unearthing. In just one year, she has paid back more than half of the initial loan.
Alldrina Nonglamin, 40, a mine owner in Nongtalang in the Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya.
Himanshu Khagta
Alldrina Nonglamin, 40, a mine owner in Nongtalang in the Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya.
“My earnings are now 100 times better, and the loans are easily paid. My kids go to private school in the city. I’m a businesswoman with more than 100 employees, when before I was a farmer and sometimes a tailor,” she said.
With so many villagers rushing to mine the hills, small-scale miners are now extracting more rock per year all together than massive multinational corporations would in a smaller network of bigger mines, environmental activists say, and with little to none of the regulations those big companies are normally subjected to.
Just under 1,000 trucks of the low-grade rock are exported from the small mines to Bangladesh daily, where the world’s largest cement manufacturer, the French company Lafarge, buys most of it, processes it and churns out the fine cement powder that is ultimately transformed into the building blocks of that country’s infrastructural development.
Very few in this village of 2,000 resist the lure of mining in these hills, but those who do say runoff from the mines often goes straight into rivers that provide drinking water. Helpme Mohrmen, a local Unitarian minister who has organized poorly attended local protests and traveled to Delhi to speak to distant advocacy groups, refers to himself as “The Lone Ranger.”
Helpme H. Mohrmen, who refers to himself as the
Himanshu Khagta
Helpme H. Mohrmen, who refers to himself as the “Lone Ranger” in the fight against mining in the Jaintia Hills in Meghalaya.
“Our people have always had a deep reverence for nature,” Mr. Mohrmen said. “We give our rivers personalities. We call the animals our brothers and sisters. Each plant carries some meaning. I cannot understand why we have gone about killing our rivers for this mining, but now no one will join me because they don’t want to fight against their clan members.”
Tribal society in this part of Meghalaya is structured around clans, which often form political blocs and share economic interests. Those who open mines often employ fellow clan members, or at least spread the wealth earned through mining in the form of lavish gifts and parties. Clans also traditionally have viewed land as communal among members.
“There is this idea that we, as tribals, have inherited our land and have the right to do as we want with it,” Mr. Mohrmen said. “But no one can own a river.”
Nongtalang is Mr. Mohrmen’s home village, but he can count his allies there on one hand. One is Brightstar Pohsnem, 26, an elementary school teacher and the president of the one-year-old Nongtalang People’s Unity Movement, which has about a dozen members. They contend that the village can survive on farming alone and that the mines are not sustainable.
“In this village, we get our water straight from the river,” Mr. Pohsnem said. “As soon as the mining started, the water became undrinkable. Now they say they have stopped mining near the river, but they have buried the headwaters of the streams already. Maybe with the money they make from mining, they can buy clean water, but that is not a solution.”
Workers in the mine can earn as much as 3,000 rupees a day, or $50, all year round. That is on par with what they could earn on a market day selling oranges or betel nuts if they are lucky, but markets are held only once a week and only during the harvest period.
Mr. Pohsnem said villagers constantly lobbied him to recognize the value of mining. “People offer to buy me coffees, clothes or to go on picnics with their mining money,” he said. “But I know that is just how they became interested in mining, because of all those things you can get with money. They are not thinking properly about what they are doing.”
Yet the immediate benefits of the newfound wealth abound. Dolly Khonglah, a mine owner who also heads the Meghalaya International Exporters Chamber of Commerce, was able to fly her son to an upscale, private hospital owned by the Apollo Hospitals group in New Delhi, where he underwent a liver transplant.
“We have been interior-type people, so we are happy to see changes,” she said during an interview at the hospital.
“The limestone is a blessing of the land. Ten years ago, we couldn’t even go to Shillong,” she said, referring to Meghalaya’s capital. “Now we can come to Apollo.”
As the new prosperity brings advantages like access to better health care and a higher standard of living, even Mr. Pohsnem’s closest kin have questioned his stance. “My best friends from school and my neighbors have stopped talking to me,” he said. “They don’t understand why I am against mining.”
Looking at the floor in his small home, Mr. Pohsnem said that his feelings about mining boiled down to a fundamental difference in how he saw the future of his village. He does not imagine that the wealth, or the rock itself, is sustainable.
“We used to have deer and bears around here, but even the squirrels ran away after the mining. If they cannot drink the water, then how can we?” he asked. “It’s no use fighting — better that we buy a place elsewhere where there’s no mining.”
He laughed, mostly to himself. “The sad thing is that the mine owners are the only ones who have the money to do that.”
Both Ms. Khonglah and Ms. Nonglamin dream of passing on their mines to their children, but when Ms. Nonglamin was reminded that she had earlier said there might be only 20 more years of rock left, she said, “I cannot imagine that day. I haven’t thought about it.”
Ms. Khonglah admitted, “It is true. The rock may not last.”
Max Bearak is a freelance journalist based in New Delhi. Follow him on Twitter @maxbearak.
14 March 2014

Mizos oppose votes by Bru refugees

State election department officials said that there were 11,390 Bru voters in the relief camps

Aizawl, Mar 14 : Several social organisations and student bodies in Mizoram have opposed any move of the Election Commission to enable Bru refugees lodged in six relief camps of Tripura to exercise their franchise through postal ballots in the coming Lok Sabha polls.

Six major social organisations and several student bodies have already decided to organise a 'Protest Day' on March 24 next on the issue, while the Mizo Students Union (MSU) has threatened to boycott the Lok Sabha elections.

State election department officials said that there were 11,390 Bru voters in the relief camps belonging to nine assembly constituencies covering three districts.

Lalbiakzuala, President of the Central Committee of the Young Mizo Association, said yesterday that they had repeatedly urged the Centre and the EC not to allow Bru voters to cast their votes outside the state, but to no avail.

"The Brus migrated to Tripura on their own will and refused to return even after repeated appeals from the Centre, state government and the people of Mizoram," Lalbiakzuala said, adding that there was no reason why they should be repeatedly allowed to vote.

Lalhmachhuana, President of the Mizo Zirlai Pawl (MZP), also said that the Brus who refused to return to Mizoram despite several pleas and repatriation plans should be deleted from the Mizoram voters' lists.

Thousands of Brus migrated to Tripura following violence in 1997 and also in 2009. While many Bru families have returned to Mizoram, the majority of them remained in camps.

Earlier, the EC allowed the Bru refugees to exercise their franchise on a directive of court in 1999.