15 October 2014

Foreign Tourists inflow into the Northeast India Has increased by 27%

Shillong, Oct 15 : Foreign tourists inflow into Northeastern states has increased by over 27 per cent last year against a national growth of only 5.9 per cent, a top Union Tourism department official said here today.

"The number of foreign tourists visiting the Northeast region has increased by 27.9 per cent in the past one year," Union Tourism Ministry Secretary Parvez Dewan told reporters at the sideline of a third International Tourism Mart – 2014 held here.

A jump of 12.5 per cent was registered in foreign tourist visits (FTVs) to the northeast in 2012 as against 2011, which further rose by more than 100 per cent to register a growth of 27.9 per cent during 2013 in comparison to 2012, he said.

There were a total of 58,920 FTVs to the northeastern states in 2011 with the figure going up to 66,302 in 2012. That number further increased to 84,820 in 2013.

Among the eight states, there is a sudden growth in the flow of foreign tourists to Manipur, one of the eight states in the Northeast region in the past one year, they said.

"About 154 per cent of foreign tourists visits Manipur during 2012-2013 which is keenly followed by Arunachal Pradesh with a growth of 111 per cent," Dewan told reporters at the sideline of a 3rd International Tourism Mart– 2014 held here.

Tourist inflow to Tripura increased by 51 per cent, Nagaland – 33 per cent, Meghalaya – 27 per cent, Sikkim – 19 per cent and the least was Mizoram with 9.25 per cent only, he said.

In 2013, Foreign Tourist Arrivals (FTAs) to India were 6.97 million with a growth of 5.9 per cent as compared to 6.58 million during 2012, a data of the tourism ministry said.

Stakeholders in the industry had suggested that state governments should facilitate field visits by embassy officials of those countries who issued travel advisories to their nationals against visiting these states in the region.

Ebola Scare in Manipur, High Alert in The Northeast

A Japanese tourist currently living in Manipur has been kept in isolation for showing symptoms akin to Ebola. Alerted by this development, all state governments of the North East have increased their screening procedures for immediate detection of cases of Ebola and have also started keeping a close watch on the entry of foreign nationals in the states.

According to a news report published in downtoearth.org.in, 27-year-old Kawakubo Yuko entered Manipur from Myanmar. She suddenly developed fever and was hospitalised. The doctors soon raised the red flag suspecting her symptoms were identical to that of Ebola and immediately admitted her to the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences (JNIMS) in Imphal nearly a week ago. Her blood samples have been sent to the National Institute of Virology, Pune, and the results are yet to come in.

A scientist at NIV (who does not wish to reveal his name) said, "There are samples of Ebola which come in like the sample from Manipur. Though no positive samples have been found as of now, the result for Manipur samples will also be coming in a few days".

NIV has a team of 15 scientists working on the samples of Ebola coming from Pune, Mumbai and other parts of the country.

In the meanwhile, the Manipur government is taking no chance. It has set Ebola screening gates for passengers at the Imphal airport and at the international border with Myanmar As an additional layer of security, the state is also screening people at its borders with Nagaland and Assam.

The biggest worry at this moment is the state government may be extremely ill-prepared, infrastructure wise, in case of an outbreak. Thus the state is in overdrive to take all kinds of precautions.

Other states like Assam are also on alert. There is already a pre-existing method of screening foreign nationals for the last few months. Their travel details are also been looked into. Footballers from Africa have also been checked, according to the news report. Tripura has also implemented a search protocol.

Though there have been earlier Ebola scares in cities like Mumbai and Delhi, so far, all the cases have turned out to be negative.
14 October 2014

Government’s Bid To Import Rice From Myanmar Flounders

By Sandip Das

New Delhi, Oct 14 : The government's attempt to import about one lakh tonne of rice from Myanmar for the Targeted Pubic Distribution System (TPDS)

The government's attempt to import about one lakh tonne of rice from Myanmar for the Targeted Pubic Distribution System (TPDS) in Manipur and Mizoram may not succeed, with the Food Corporation of India (FCI) getting bids far higher than the expected price.

Sources told FE that MMTC and STC, which floated the global tenders on behalf of FCI for importing rice, got average bids of around $600 per tonne against the expected $400 per tonne. The corporation got $ 588 and $ 680 per tonne respectively for Manipur and Mizoram for rice import from Myanmar. “We received bids (for rice import) much higher than our anticipation of $ 400 per tonne,” an official said.

Last month, the government had approved import of one lakh tonne of rice in the next five months from Myanmar to the north-eastern states in view of disruption of grain supplies due to commencement of long-pending railway gauge conversion work on the 220-km Lumding (Assam)-Badarpur-Agartala (Tripura) line.

A food ministry official said the government has to now plan out an alternate model for meeting the demand for rice for TPDS in the north-eastern states during the gauge conversion work.

The cost of transporting rice from surplus states like Punjab or Andhra Pradesh to Tripura and Mizoram works out to about R3,200 per quintal, taking into account FCI’s economic cost at R2,755 per quintal. "As against this, importing rice from Myanmar would be more economical at around R2,400 per quintal ($400 per tonne), including the cost of transportation from the border," an official had earlier said.

Food ministry officials said although the railways has proposed to complete the gauge conversion work by March 2015, it might be delayed. “Since more than 70% of transportation of foodgrain from Assam to the rest of the north-eastern states is done through the railways, the government is importing rice to increase grain stock so that TPDS distribution is not disrupted,” an official had said.
13 October 2014

Lost Child-Tracing Portal Hit By Poor Infrastructure in Northeast India

Guwahati, Oct 13 : Lack of computers in many police stations and poor internet connectivity have stopped police in many northeastern states from uploading data in TrackChild, a national portal aimed at searching missing children, say officials.

Representatives of state governments in the region raised the issue during a consultation on TrackChild, organized by the union women and child development ministry under its Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS).

"Children going missing and trafficking is a very serious issue in Assam and rest of the northeast but our police stations have not been able to make proper use of the portal yet," said Assam Social Welfare Secretary H.K. Sarma.

"One of the reasons could be that many police stations don't have a proper computer system in place. Even if they have one, it is used in the daily activities of fighting militants and criminal activities. If the ministry can financially support our police stations to buy computer sets and put in place a proper system, things will move for the better," he said.

Launched by the ministry in January 2012, TrackChild was aimed to offer a common digital online platform to put up details including photographs of missing children and assist police, NGOs and other child care institutions across the country to track them.

It was designed and developed adhering to the guidelines provided in the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2000 and Model Rules 2007 and the provisions laid down in the ICPS.

One of the tasks entrusted under ICPS to the state governments is the setting up a system to facilitate data entry and matching of missing and found children, and also enable follow up of the progress of children who are beneficiaries of the scheme. The portal also ensures proper monitoring and welfare of the children under the scheme.

"Poor internet connectivity in the region is also another problem for police and officials concerned in using TrackChild and this also hampers the investigation process," said Sarma.

"Records of northeastern states in tracking the missing children is bad so far. Data of missing children are uploaded in TrackChild only at the CID headquarters in Guwahati, instead of police stations in the districts," he said.

Sarma said about 9,500 children went missing from Assam alone between 2007 and June 2014 of which only 3,840 have been recovered from different places in the country either by police or NGOs working for children.

The northeastern region has however have lagged with only 190 of about 850 police stations in its eight states - Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram, Tripura and Sikkim - putting up data of only 1,427 missing children, since the portal's launch.

Manipur, where children often goes missing or trafficked out of the region is even yet to start the project in the state.

"Infrastructure (computer and internet) is still a problem but we a re trying to start it soon," said an official of Manipur social welfare department.

Many children belonging to poor families in Assam and Manipur have been rescued from children home in south Indian states such as Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala in the past.

They are normally taken out with the promise of good education and care but were many times found living in uncongenial atmosphere. Many children even faced physical, sexual and emotional harassment.

Tripura Rebels Demand Rs 30 Lakh Ransom To Release 11 Non-Tribals

Aizawl, Oct 13 : Tripura’s NLFT rebels and a group of Bru militants, who allegedly abducted 11 non-tribals from Mamit district on the Mizoram-Bangladesh-Tripura border, have demanded Rs 30 lakh ransom for their release.

Mamit DSP C Lalnunmawia said  the abductors, now suspected to be inside Bangladesh jungles, called up relatives of the hostages in Patharkandi, demanding Rs 30 lakh for the release of the 11 people. “It seems the militants thought the victims to be contractors, but later found out that they were manual labourers working under local small contractors,” he said.

Eleven non-tribals were abducted by suspected NLFT and Bru militants combine from a place near Rajiv Nagar village on Mizoram-Bangladesh-Tripura border in Mamit district on Friday night, the SP said.

Lalnunmawia said 12 militants, 10 of them armed and wearing camouflages, abducted 15 people at around 9.30 pm on Friday, but later released four people belonging to Chakma community .
The abducted persons were manual workers engaged in the construction of RMSA school building at West Phulpui village, he said.

The official said a massive combing operation was launched by the state police but the abductors together with the victims had crossed the Bangladesh border taking advantage of the darkness and the thick forests.

Relic Hunters To Search for WWII Aircraft Wrecks in Manipur

New Delhi, Oct 13 : A search team is set to salvage the wrecks of Japanese and British military aircraft which crashed in a north-eastern Indian lake during fierce fighting in the Second World War.

Two Japanese fighter aircraft and a British bomber plane sank in 1944 in Loktak lake in the state of Manipur, home to one of the heaviest but largely unknown battles of the war.

The exact location of the wrecks had been uncertain for decades.

It was recently discovered after a war foundation in the Manipur’s capital Imphal studied official records of the fighting.

“We have been gathering information about the crash from locals and eyewitnesses for about a year. We are ready for the real expedition now,” said the campaign’s co-founder, Yumnam Rajeshwor Singh, on Wednesday.

“We have been doing excavations like this for a long time. It is our passion and hobby.”

The two Japanese planes, known as Oscar, were shot down by British forces on June 17, 1944 but later on the same day, one of their own bomber jets called Wellington crashed too.

A team of 50, led by 10 researchers, will begin excavating “as soon as possible” by going to the middle of the lake that spreads across 285 square kilometres and using GPS and underwater equipment.

Mr Singh said that, according to witness accounts, residents of the area had sold off the planes’ wings, tails and lighter aluminium chunks as scrap metal soon after the crash, leaving behind the heavy parts, including the 600-kilogram engines.

He plans to place the rusty wreckage on display in his foundation’s war museum.

A quiet pocket of British India until then, Manipur was the scene of devastating fighting in the Battle of Imphal from March to July 1944 when the Japanese advanced westward after they captured Burma, backed by a rebel Indian force.

Tens of thousands of soldiers were killed in the fighting, with the Allied victory a major turning point in the Asia campaign that was voted as Britain’s greatest battle by the National Army Museum of London in last year.

In 1942, Japanese forces routed the British in Burma, now Myanmar, which brought them to India’s eastern border from where the attack was launched.

More than 70 years after the end of the war, around 100 British and American aircraft wrecks are believed to be scattered across the jungles of India, Thailand and Malaysia, along with the remains of their crews.

Kiren Rijiju Assures Safe Environment for Northeast People

New Delhi, Oct 13 : Union Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren Rijiju today assured people from North-East that the Centre will take adequate steps so that they get a safe environment in every part of the country.

Rijiju, while speaking at the 51st annual function of Naga Students Union in Delhi, said that the Union Home Ministry would ensure safe working environment for North-East citizens "like it is for others".

"I have been a part of Naga Students Union, Delhi for long and it is a matter of pleasure that the Union has been working tediously for the students and people of North-east in Delhi," Rijiju was quoted as saying in a BJP press release.

Delhi BJP President Satish Upadhyay said that the party would ensure that students and people of North-Wast region get "congenial atmosphere" to study and work in the national capital.

He also said that BJP would work for "assimilation" of North-East people in the main stream.

In the programme attended by nearly 2,500 North-East students, Naga Students Union President J Maivio said that the organisation would keep working for them in Delhi.

Life in Flashback

This undated photo shows a ceremonial slaying of a gayal. Such photos of traditional Mizo rituals are extremely rare (above);  Lushai (a Mizo tribe) chiefs at Kolkata during a meeting called by the British. The photo is from 1872, soon after the first military expedition into what is now Mizoram, following violent conflict over land rights.
Lushai (a Mizo tribe) chiefs at Kolkata during a meeting called by the British. The photo is from 1872, soon after the first military expedition into what is now Mizoram, following violent conflict over land rights.


By Adam Halliday

Looking at century-old images normally throws up some surprises, but this one was extraordinary.

Joy L K Pachuau points to a photograph, dated 1872, of an open-fronted hut with wooden pillars in the foreground and adorned with articles of ritualistic sacrifices. “There is some mention of it in stories, that it used to stand on the outskirts of villages but we never knew how it looked exactly,” she says.

Pachuau is a Mizo woman who teaches at Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University. But her work with the University of Amsterdam’s Professor Willem van Schendel in collecting more than 20,000 photographs to reconstruct the history of the Mizo community and its neighbours has taught her a thing or two about her own culture.

The duo’s ethnological photo exhibition of a few score images, titled “The Camera as Witness: Capturing Mizo Pasts”, and a book with several hundred more images is a pioneering effort. Pachuau and Schendel travelled for years throughout Mizoram, Manipur and Tripura and dug into the archives of UK’s higher learning institutions for these images.
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This undated photo shows a ceremonial slaying of a gayal. Such photos of traditional Mizo rituals are extremely rare

Unlike some other large tribal groupings in the Northeast such as the Nagas or even the tribes of Arunachal Pradesh, whose material culture and ways of life were extensively documented by anthropologists and keen administrators, Mizos had few such visitors in their midst. “When we think of the old days, it is an imaginary world. There is nothing visual about how we know our past,” says Pachuau.

Schendel points out another aspect. “Joy and I thought that collecting photos was a way of collecting histories. Writing came very late and it was very little at the start,” he says, referring to the fast-receding oral tradition of the Mizos and the creation of the written word by Christian missionaries at the turn of the 20th century.

It is also unfortunate that whatever images did exist, mostly taken by early Mizo photographers, were lost in the fires that erupted when the Indian Air Force bombed  Aizawl’s upper-class neighbourhoods in March 1966. “A lot of the early photos were burned during the troubles,” laments Pachuau, referring the 20-year-period when Mizo separatists fought a guerrilla war with the army.

The oldest images they found date to the 1860s and were the handiwork of early colonial officers, who landed in what is now Mizoram to subjugate the fierce, head-hunting tribes-people, who challenged, often violently, British claims and attempts to convert their traditionally hunting grounds into tea gardens.

These images are an authentic record of the life of Mizos before and around the time prolonged contact was made with communities beyond the dense forests that covered the hills. These include early portraits of Mizo chiefs, warriors and women, memorial shrines and even the process of weaving. One German explorer, Emil Riebeck, who visited briefly, also photographed starving tribesmen gathered at a colonial outpost waiting for handouts during a famine that returns to the hills every 50-odd years.

Later images, mostly taken by Welsh missionaries, show the early changes in baptism methods and church gatherings as well as the first students, some venturing to Silchar and Shillong for higher education. Then came the cowboys — young Mizo men in hats strumming hollow guitars and striking poses reminiscent of James Dean and heroes of grainy-reel westerns. Joy and sadness intermingle even in this section — images of a wedding at a rebel camp, and of a rebel soldier with crates containing the remains of fallen comrades being brought home once peace was declared.

Interspersed in between are images from Myanmar; studio portraits of young musicians who crossed the border to record their songs in a land with better facilities, and bands who came the opposite direction to perform for people who shared common ancestry but who were separated by the realpolitik of borders.

There are plans to take the exhibition to several metros and other Northeastern capitals but schedules have not been fixed yet.