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The Lamka Times

Friday, July 30, 2010

Violence mars CCpur bandh, curfew on

By S Singlianmang Guite

Police and security forces out to control the mob
Lamka, Jul 29: The 12-hour bandh called by COP- TAM to protest over-lap- ping census and manipu- lation of hill district boun- daries was marred by iso-lated violence forcing the district administration to im- pose prohibition under 144 (2) CrPC within the area of Kangvai, a frontier village.
A spate of lashing and stone pelting was reported since early today in Kang-vai and Phougakchao area as angry mobs attacked some members of Chura-chandpur District Stu- dents' Union allegedly for removing the PWD signboard at Kangvai village. The signboard had displayed in bold letters 'Wel- come to Bishnupur District.'
At least nine members of the union, including four of its executive members suffered injuries in the incident.
High ranking security officials from Churachandpur and Bishnupur had to intervene to subdue the mob that had gathered at Kangvai after the attack on the union leaders. A local cable network reporter also allegedly insulted and slapped during the commotion.
A stand-off ensued in the inter-district boundary thereafter for about a couple of hours but the police and an Army team managed to control the crowd that were in confrontation mode.
Soon after, the district administration of Churachandpur imposed restriction under 144 (2) CrPC 1973 to check any untoward incident.
The restriction passed 'ex parte' until further orders was imposed following information received from various sources and police that, there is likelihood of breach of peace and tranquility within Kangvai village jurisdiction in Churachandpur district in connection with the inter-district boundary, said the magistrate's order.
The CDSU, it is learnt has meanwhile issued a 24 hour deadline to two individuals and the line bus transporters, whom it accused of instigating the attack on them, for tendering apology. 'If they fail to do so, we will decide our future course of action,' sources in the union said.
COPTAM's bandh that ended at 6 pm today was relatively calm and total in other parts of the district.(TSE)


Zomi rights body flays
IMPHAL, Jul 29: The Zomi Human Rights Foundation has strongly condemned assault of CDSU functionaries by some individuals belonging to the majority community at Kangvai area today.
A Foundation release issued by its Information and Publicity Department said apart from manhandling the CDSU functionaries who were enforcing the 12 bandh call, the rowdy elements damaged 4-5 vehicles used by the student leaders.
The rights body also took serious note of alleged 'overlapping census operation' in Sadar Hills, Chandel, Tamenglong and Churachandpur districts with the assertion that these districts had never been under the jurisdiction of the 'valley district administration'.
While highlighting that rights of indigenous people are recognised by the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and clearly enshrined in the Indian Constitution, the Foundation alleged that successive Governments of manipur had been ignoring existence and rights of the indigenous peoples.
It also demanded that informed consent of the indigenous people with due respect to tribal people and their lands be obtained and to restore original jurisdiction of the district administration of the hill districts. (IFP)



12 hr bandh affects normal life in CCpur

By From Joseph Joute
Churachandpur, July 29
: The 12 hour bandh called by the Committee for Protection of Tribal Areas in Manipur (COPTAM) and supported by the Churachandpur District Students' Union (CDSU) affected normal life in the district today.


All shops and private institutions were closed and the roads wore a deserted look except for some pedestrians and small vehicles used by the bandh supporters or volunteers. The bandh started from 6 am and concluded at 6pm today.
All educational institutions except Rengkai Govt High School and Vimala Raina High School where Hindi examination was going on remained closed. Mediapersons, medical and some other essential public services were exempted from the purview of the bandh.

The bandh called to protest the overlapping in General Census 2011 was more or less peaceful except an incident at Phoubakchao/Kangvai, around 9 km from Lamka PS on Tidim Road where the CDSU, on hearing that there was some trouble, rushed to the spot. A scuffle followed and about 15 CDSU members were injured in the incident, according to an official report.
The incident occurred when some bandh supporters tried to remove the signboard displaying "Welcome to Bishnupur District" at Kangvai, and put it at Phoubakchao Lamkhai, which they said is the rightful boundary of the district, according to the source.

Some local reporters of  TC Network and Hornbill Network were also assaulted by the villagers, and told them not to capture the incident, and tried to snatch their cameras, according to a source.

The CDSU President and some members reportedly sustained minor injuries. Churachandpur police rushed to the spot and tried to bring the incident under control. Some personnel of Moirang police allegedly used abusive words like, "You will later know whether Kangvai comes under Bishnupur district or not" to the CDSU leaders.

"Such a abusive words from the police will not solve the problem but may enlarge the boundary dispute to an even more serious situation," commented a CDSU leader.

It may be mentioned that the bandh was called to protest the overlapping in the General census 2011. Sources said that more than 84 villages from four hill districts have been included in the valley areas. The bandh supporters were demanding from the respective DCs/SDOs of the valley to hand over the Hill Land Records to their respective hill DCs/SDOs.
It may also be recalled that DC, Churachandpur, Ms Jacintha Lazarus, IAS, has assured that the district boundary disputes would be looked into by a Committee formed with the Chief Secretary as the chairman, and appealed to people not to hinder the census process.

In respect of Churachandpur district, more than 30 villages have been included in the valley district, according to a source.
Meanwhile, the CDSU in a briefing to the local pressmen strongly condemned the action of the Moirang police commandos, and appreciated the Churachandpur district police led by SDPO Manimohan for timely intervention. The CDSU leaders along with some local Memembers of ADC discussed further course of action.(Hueiyen News Service)



Chakka bandh in Ccpur today

From Kaimuanthang

Lamka, Jul 28: Protesting the existence of overlapping census in the exercise for 2011 at many parts of the state and condemning the attempt at changing district boundary, a complaint has been raised through the newly formed Committee on Protection of Tribal Areas, COPTAM, and a 12-hour Chakka Bandh called on July 29.

The bandh is to start from 6 am tomorrow. Medical services, electricity, water supply and the media have been exempted from the bandh.

Meanwhile, backing the Khuga dam local contractors in their fight for securing payment of their bills by the state government, the CDSU issued a press statement today stating that the Khuga dam had not been completed even after a lapse of 28 years.

The government instead of making efforts to ensure completion of the dam have sidelined it time and again.

The demands of the contractors and the manner of handling the issue had enraged all concerned with the result that the progress made in the construction was very tardy, it said.

All works at the dam site had stopped since April 20 this year, it further said adding due to the long-pending completion many of the dam structures had broken and needed repair.

Many undesireable incidents may take place if the government continues to remain silent towards the demands of the contractors, it said.(IFP)


Thursday, July 29, 2010

Massive asteroid could hit Earth in 2182

London, July 29 (IANS): A massive asteroid might crash into Earth in 2182, scientists have warned. The asteroid, called 1999 RQ36, has a one-in-thousand chance of actually hitting the Earth at some point before the year 2200, but is most likely to hit on Sep 24, 2182.

The asteroid was first discovered in the year 1999 and is more than 1,800 feet across. If an asteroid of this size hits the Earth it would cause widespread devastation and possible mass extinction, reports the Daily Mail.

Scientists say that any attempt to try and divert the asteroid will have to take place at least 100 years before it is due to hit to have any chance of success.

If the asteroid had not been spotted until after 2080 it would have been impossible to divert it from its target, the scientists warned in a new research paper.

While the odds may seem long, they are far shorter than that of the asteroid Apophis, which currently has a one in 250,000 chance of striking the Earth in 2036.

A competition was launched in 2008 by the Planetary Society for designs for a space probe to land on Apophis and monitor its progress.

Maria Eugenia Sansaturio and scientists from the Universidad de Valladolid in Spain have used mathematical models to calculate the risk of the asteroid hitting the Earth anytime between now and the year 2200.

The impact from the asteroid that created the famous Chicxulub crater in Mexico would have caused 'mega-tsunamis' many thousands of feet high.

It is believed that this asteroid led to the extinction of the dinosaurs. Scientists around the world have long been discussing ways of deflecting potentially hazardous asteroids to prevent them from hitting the Earth.

One of the more popular methods is to detonate a nuclear warhead on an approaching asteroid to deflect it from its orbital path.

Last month, physicist David Dearborn of the Lawrence Livermore National Lab in the US argued that nuclear weapons could be the best strategy for avoiding an asteroid impact - especially for large asteroids and with little warning time.

Factfile on deflecting asteroids

Three ways of deflecting an asteroid:

* Nuclear blast: A large nuclear explosion on an asteroid might be enough to deflect an asteroid but has significant political and ethical problems. And what if we just blew it into smaller pieces?

* Using mirrors: A fleet of spacecraft carrying light-reflecting mirrors might be able to vapourise the asteroid's surface using the Sun's rays. The gases from its surface would create a tiny amount of thrust - enough to divert it

* Gravity tractor: Crashing a spacecraft into the asteroid's surface would certainly be the cheapest option. The ship's own tiny gravity would then help move the asteroid's path. But this option would take a long time to make a difference.

India-Myanmar pact on combating terror hailed in NE

Guwahati, July 29 (IANS): A strategic pact signed between India and Myanmar has been hailed here in the Northeast as a major step forward in combating terror and boosting trade and commerce between the two neighbouring nations.

"The agreement between the two countries to offer mutual legal assistance in criminal matters would surely help in tackling insurgency in the Northeast with a number of militant groups active in the region having bases inside Myanmar," Biren Singh, senior Manipur Minister and State government spokesperson, told IANS.

The pact was signed in New Delhi on Tuesday during Myanmar military ruler Than Shwe's visit.

"Normally what happens is that after carrying out violent attacks in our region, militants sneak back to their bases in Myanmar and that complicates the matter. Now with both the countries agreeing to cooperate on combating terrorism, Northeast rebels would find it tough to take refuge in Myanmar."

India and Myanmar share a 1,640-km long unfenced border, allowing militants from the northeast to use the adjoining country as a springboard for hit-and-run guerrilla strikes on Indian soldiers.

At least half-a-dozen militant groups from India's northeast, where numerous tribal and ethnic groups are fighting for greater autonomy or independence, have training camps in northern Myanmar's thick jungles - all of them sheltered there under the patronage of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Khaplang (NSCN-K).

Among the Indian separatist armies operating out of Myanmar's northern Sagaing Division, apart from the NSCN-K, are the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), the United National Liberation Front (UNLF), the People's Liberation Army (PLA), and the People's Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK).

India and Myanmar Tuesday signed five pacts - primary among them being a treaty on mutual legal assistance in criminal matters that that could enable India get access to insurgents from India's northeast states operating out of Myanmar.

The treaty also aims at deepening bilateral cooperation in combating transnational organised crime, terrorism, drug trafficking, money laundering and smuggling of arms and explosives.

The pacts were signed between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and visiting Myanmar's military ruler General Than Shwe in New Delhi.

"Bangladesh and Bhutan had already cooperated in rooting out northeast rebel bases from their country and now with the treaty with Myanmar, we could see some results very soon in terms of military crackdown on militant bases in that country," Assam government spokesperson and Health Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said.

Combating terrorism apart, India has offered credits worth millions of dollars to Myanmar - $60 million line of credit for development of railways, another $60 million for revamping of the Rhi-Tiddim road to enhance connectivity to northeastern states, $10 million for procurement of agricultural machinery and $6 million to upgrade the microwave link between Moreh and Mandalay in Myanmar.

The 225 km Rhi-Tiddim road connecting Myanmar to Mizoram is considered a vital lifeline in terms of boosting trade and commerce - a trade centre at Mizoram's Champai district would be the direct beneficiary after the road opens.

"If the Rhi-Tiddim road opens, it would surely boost bilateral trade between the two countries. Now with poor road communications on the Myanmar side, there is literally zero business at the trade centre in Champhai," a Mizoram government official said.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

State to take up power networking project with loans from World Bank

By Hueiyen News Service

Imphal, July 20: Manipur government has given approval to the Composite Scheme of Development of Intra State Transmission and Distribution Network in the North Eastern states in power sector proposed by the Union Ministry for implementation with loan from the World Bank will be implemented in the state.

Union Power Ministry is proposing a project for improving the power transmission and distribution network among the states of the north eastern region. The cost of the project is Rs 9890.16 crore and is to be taken up with a loan from the World Bank.
The total cost of the proposed project is to be shared among the eight states of the region, Manipur (Rs 727.67 crore),
Nagaland (Rs 1209.19), Assam (Rs 2710.87 crore), Meghalaya (Rs 1363.76 crore), Mizoram (Rs 714.01), Tripura (Rs 970 crore), Arunachal Pradesh (Rs 1180.27 crore) and Sikkim (Rs 680.29 crore). The rest Rs 333.73 crore will be inter-state share.
Once, the Composite Scheme of Development of Intra State Transmission and Distribution Network in the North Eastern states proposed by the Union Ministry is implemented the existing system of power transmission and distribution network in the region will improve remarkably enhancing its reliability in the region tremendously, the source believed.

States of the region including Manipur have agreed 'in principal' to participate in the proposed venture. Others states like Assam and Tripura have already moved ahead for implementation of the scheme, the source said.

Manipur government had also agreed to the proposal for implementation of the scheme in the state by availing loan from the World Bank considering the poor transmission and distribution network in the state and an increasing demand for power in the state.

Manipur would be strongly connected with the neigbhouring states once the project is implemented. The capacity of the existing transmission and distribution network is not sufficient to meet the demand of the state for the next decade or so. The network in the state is already weak and more than 20 years old and will not be able to handle the ever increasing demand of the state.

The proposed scheme shall ensure a reliable and a very strong transmission and distribution network in the state sufficient to handle the demand for the next 20 year, or so, officials maintained.

The cost component for the state will be Rs 727.67 crore and the component of loan being Manipur's share to be posed to the World Bank for the scheme is Rs 618.52 crore which is 85% of the project cost. The balance Rs 109.15 crore will be the equity of the project which constitute 15% of the total tentative project cost for the state.

Out of the proposed World Bank loan of Rs 618.52 crore, according to the prevailing policy of government of India to support special category state like Manipur, Rs 556.67 crore which is 90% of the loan amount will be converted as grant and balance 10% amounting to Rs 61.85 crore will be remain as loan component of the project for Manipur.

The scope of the scheme is stringent power transmission of 495 km of new 132 KV line, installation of 4 numbers of 132/33 KV new sub-stations at Thoubal, Tipaimukh and Gamphajol including augmentation of existing sub-station with capacity addition of 185 MVA, stringent of 2291 km of new 33 KV line and installation of 54 nos. of 33/11 KV sub-stations including augmentation of existing sub-stations with capacity addition of 244 MVA, the sources said.

Rs 9890.16 Cr power project for NE

IMPHAL, JUL 20(NPN):
Union Power Ministry proposed a project for improving the power transmission and distribution network among the states of the north eastern region costing Rs 9890.16 crore, official source here said Tuesday.
The total cost of the proposed project would be shared among the eight states of the region, Manipur (Rs 727.67 crore), Nagaland (Rs 1209.19), Assam (Rs 2710.87 crore), Meghalaya (Rs 1363.76 crore), Mizoram (Rs 714.01), Tripura (Rs 970 crore), Arunachal Pradesh (Rs 1180.27 crore) and Sikkim (Rs 680.29 crore). The rest Rs 333.73 crore will be inter-state share. Once, the Composite Scheme of Development of Intra State Transmission and Distribution Network in the North Eastern states gets implemented the existing system of power transmission and distribution network in the region would be improved and enhance reliability in the region, the source believed.
Manipur had agreed "in principal' to participate in the proposed venture. Others stated like Assam, Tripura had already moved ahead for implementation of the scheme, the source added. Further, Manipur government had agreed for availing loan from the World Bank considering the poor transmission and distribution network in the state.
The proposed scheme would ensure a reliable and strong transmission and distribution network in the state and would be sufficient to handle the demand for the next 20 years or so, official of the power department maintained. Reiterating that the cost component for the state is Rs 727.67 crore and as the component of loan being Manipur's share to be posed to the World Bank for the scheme is Rs 618.52 crore which is 85% of the project cost and balance Rs 109.15 crore would be the equity of the project which constitute 15% of the total tentative project cost for the state.
Out of the proposed World Bank loan of Rs 618.52 crore, according to the prevailing policy of government of India to support special category state like Manipur, Rs 556.67 crore which is 90% of the loan amount would be converted as grant and balance 10% amounting to Rs 61.85 crore as loan component of the project for Manipur.
The scope of the scheme is stringent of 495 km of new 132 KV line, installation of 4 numbers of 132/33 KV new sub-stations at Thoubal, Tipaimukh and Gamphajol including augmentation of existing sub-station with capacity addition of addition of 185 MVA, stringent of 2291 km of new 33 KV line and installation of 54 numbers of 33/11 KV sub-stations including augmentation of existing sub-stations with capacity addition of 244 MVA, they said.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

JMG acting against UGs under SoS: Ibobi

IMPHAL, JUL 19: The Joint Monitoring Group (JMG) of Suspension of Operation (SoO) is not idle and action has been taken up against those underground groups violating the SoO ground rules, Manipur chief minister O Ibobi Singh said in Manipur Assembly today. He also informed that disciplinary action has been taken against the Zomi Revolutionary Army (ZRA) by suspending their monthly stipend since April following unearthing of their involvement in the Rs 4 crore scandal which was withdrawn from UBI, Churchanpur branch.

Ibobi, who also holds the home portfolio, revealed in the Assembly that JMG comprising government officials, police, Army, paramilitary and top underground leaders of the SoO has been closely monitoring the activities of underground groups who are under SoO.
Altogether 19 Kuki underground groups are under SoO, of which 11 are within the umbrella of Kuki National Organisations (KNO) and 8 outfits are under United Peoples' Front (UPF), disclosed the chief minister.
KNO has cadre strength of 800 and UPF has 1000 cadres, he added.
Over the stipend matter, Ibobi said that a stipend of Rs 5000 is paid to each leader of the groups and Rs 3000 to each cadre who are under SoO per month.
(Newmai News Network)



Government registered 324 cases against NSCN-IM

Information Service New, 19 July 2010 

 Chief Minister Okram Ibobi today said that the state government has registered a total of 324 cases against the crimes committed by the NSCN-IM general secretary Thuingalen Muivah and his cadres. The crimes were registered between August 1 of 1997 and June of this year. This was stated by the chief minister who also holds the Home portfolio in replying to a called attention motion move by MPP MLA Rk Anand which was supplemented by senior leader O. Joy. The chief minister further informing the house said that out of the total case registered against the outfit, charge sheet of three cases has been submitted so far. FR for 197 cases had been withdrawn while 142 cases remained pending. Sinior leader O. Joy questioning the reason for withdrawing of some of the cases urge the government to table the list of cases against the outfit on the assembly floor. The senior leader also expressed apprehension to the stand of the government towards the outfit. Chief Minister Okram Ibobi clarifying the government stand said that government has been taking up every effort to suppress the activities of any underground organization including the NSCN-IM . Center and Nagaland state might not consider NSCN-IM as an outlawed organization however the state government has been preparing taught to arrest the General Secretary of the outfit had he entered the territory of the state. He said the stand of the government had already been rallied to the home ministry.

In another called attention motion move by CPI MLA N. Mangi, Chief Minister Okram Ibobi said that the 19 Kuki rebel group are presently ensuing suspension of operation with the government. He said among the 19 rebel group 8 belongs to the UPF and 11 belong to the KNO. KNO has total army strength of 800cadres while UPF has a total strength of 1000 cadres. One The government has been providing an honorarium of Rs 5000 to the officers of the outfit while the cadres get an honorarium of  Rs 3000 per month. KNO has 2 designated camp in Churachandpur districtand one each in Ukhrul and Chandel each. UPF has 2 designated camps in Sardar Hills, 3 in Churchandpur and one in Chandel district. On the question of violation of ground rules by the cadres of the outfit which were under suspension of operation the chief Minister said appropriate action will be taken up if any such were found.


Saturday, July 17, 2010

Mizo move on copyright

Silchar, July 16: Mizoram became the first state in the Northeast to have constituted a copyright cell in the home department to prevent piracy of audio cassettes and films produced there.

The chairman of the Mizoram Law Commission, R. Lalrinawma, today said the state government is determined to stop pirates who have the expertise to float in large number of counterfeit copies of the original songs and films, denting the entertainment industry's profit.

He said all music and film producers should get their productions registered with the copyright cell under the state government's home department, which will empower police to independently investigate allegations of infringement of the Centre's Copyright Act, 1972.

Lalrinawma said the decision to form the cell was taken by the state home department recently after detailed discussions between the Law Commission and the association of local producers and artistes.

Mizo singer Zomuanpui said her first cassette made brisk sales when it hit the market in 2007.

But in the following two years, her cassette of both Gospel and love songs proved to be a "flop", after cheap pirated copies flooded the market.

Sangzuala Hmar, a journalist in Aizawl, explained the modus operandi.

He said soon after a cassette is released and becomes popular, its counterfeit copies find their way into the market.

As the counterfeit copies are sold at a lower price, it is famous singers like Vanlupui, Vanlaisailova, Betsy and Mimilalzaniani, who are left to count their losses.

So sweeping is the presence of these counterfeit cassettes in Mizoram, sold in kiosks on the streets, that several music shops were forced to shut down. Rimawi Stores and Ultra Fast, once teeming with music lovers, now wear a deserted look.

Pepe, a music store owner in Aizawl, rued the trend and was considering closing shop.

An umbrella organisation of singers in Mizoram, the Mizo Zaimi Inzawmkhawm, now hope that the music scene in the state will change with the copyright cell promising to rein in the flourishing piracy business.

The development would certainly be music for Assam's ears as well.

According to an insider in the production business in Assam, piracy was rampant in the state and pirated products — both audio and video CDs — are sold at the ratio of 10:1.

While the state has a market for nearly five lakh units for any video or audio CD, piracy keeps legal sales to less than 50,000, he said.

Pabitra Margherita, a director-producer, said Assam "badly needed some sort of legislation to protect the interests of producers, singers and other artistes".

Ban on NH 39 a boon for Senapati

IMPHAL, Jul 16(NPN):
In spite of decision taken by the Transporters' and Drivers' Council (TDC) not to ply trucks and interstate buses on Imphal-Dimapur section of NH-39, many trucks continued to take the route in procuring goods from Dimapur and other places. Number of trucks entering into the state on this route is also increasing day by day in the last few days.
According to police reports, 999 trucks loaded with various items of goods had entered into the state from Nagaland in the last fortnight till today. As recorded at the Mao police check post, 74 loaded trucks crossed Mao gate on July 1, 90 on July 2, 74 on July 3, 25 on July 5, 30 on July 6, 103 on July 7, 47 on July 8, 75 on July 9, 104 on July 10, 97 on July 11, 85 on July 12 and 100 on July 16 (Friday).
Ban on the freight trucks and inaccessible road condition of Imphal- Jiribam section of the NH-53 made markets at Senapati district headquarters and Kangpokpi as important supply points of essential commodities and petroleum products in the state.
Commercial vehicles like mini tata, 307 trucks and other four-wheeler light vehicles thronged Kangpokpi and Senapati bazar Friday to collect essential commodities with the end of the 72-hour chakka bandh imposed by ANSAM yesterday evening at 6 pm.
No truck crossed Mao gate from Nagaland side on this route during the last three days owing to the chakka bandh imposed by the ANSAM in Naga inhabitant areas of the state.
Most of the trucks entering the state on NH-39 did not proceeded upto Imphal but offloaded at Senapati and Kangpokpi as per their conveniences, sources said adding from their businessmen and traders collected the goods by mini tatas and 407 DI trucks to reach Imphal.
In the same manners vehicle fuel, Petrol and diesel, and also fertilizers were also procured by small time traders from these two market places and sold at Imphal and other places at higher prices.
Traders bought petrol and diesel at barrels at the rate of Rs 55 to 60 a liter from Senapati and Kangpokpi and distributed to the grey marketers at the rate ranging from Rs 70 to 75 and sold at Rs 90 to 100 to the customers.
Likewise, rice, fertilizers and other highly demand commodities are procured from these two markets places to sell at higher prices in Imphal and other places of the state.
On the other hand, during the same period, only 342 goods freight trucks had arrived Imphal on the Imphal-Jiribam section of the NH-39. As recorded in the police entry post at New Keithelmanbi at hill and valley jurisdiction of the highway, 50 loaded trucks crossed the gate on July 1, 100 on July 2, 50 on July 3 and after a gap of around two weeks, 142 loaded trucks arrived at Imphal today.
Less number of trucks arrived at Imphal on this route as the road was closed for repairing during the period and with near completion of the repairing works carried out by the PWD, a total of 142 trucks stranded at various places on the highway reached Imphal today, reports said.
It is pertinent to mention here that after the state PWD minister, K Ranjit offered apology to the people of the state after he failed to keep his promise to complete the repairing works of the NH-53 through the members of the state Assembly in the ongoing Assembly session, state consumer affairs, food and public distribution minister, Y Erabot also admitted government failure to replenish stocks of the rice and other PDS items and petroleum products in the state.
While admitting the failure of dealing with the situation, he said grey marketers are sending free hands as for the time being it will not be possible to supply enough stocks to the retail outlets.
Coinciding with the repairing works and three day chakka bandh of ANSAM, no truck entered on this route too in the last two days.
The uncertainty situations in both the main national highways in the state, the two marketing places of Senapati district of Manipur have been turned into important supply points of essential commodities to other parts of the state, though it was at higher prices.
Today, after three days of suspension of plying of vehicles on this section of the NH-39 due to 72-hour chakka bandh imposed by the ANSAM, medium and four-wheeler light vehicles thronged the two market places at Kangpokpi and Senapati to procured essential commodities and vehicle fuel.

GOSPEL GOES GLOBAL

By: Lunminthang Haokip

Introduction: The Gospel was there even in the Old Testament times in the implied sense in the shadow of the shape of things to come. Among other things that decorated Eden garden, the Creator left the masterpiece of His creativity in the form of Adam, and later, in Eve. However, Eve's refusal to take divine warning seriously led to the subsequent fall of all the descendents of the original parentage. Adam wasn't pro-active enough to get the lure of sin shut out in time. Banking heavily on falsity and fishing in the troubled waters of Eve's vulnerability, the devil won in Eden and set up dens of its control over human affairs then, and  even in the present times. But the baiter could never upstage the Maker. The Word of God, potent as ever, in the shade of moments, had always proved for all the world to know that it is He who "rules over the affairs of men (Daniel 5:21)" and have the final say in every situation in this mad bad world. The Gospel was the guideline and the means for the Almighty's master-plan to restore the fallen nature of humankind, bind the adversary, write a new law on the table of a  wretched heart and find a way out for a sin-bedevilled soul to be harmoniously re-linked to the real Author of life.

`    Global Gospel: It all began in the Bible land – the places Lord Jesus treaded upon in his brief life-time. The "God who sees us"( Gen. 16:13) saw through appearances. Unlike in the present century, smartness and upward mobility were no plus points when Christ chose His disciples. In the hard-working fishing brothers, Peter and Andrew, the Master saw potential that if they followed Him, the unlettered duo could be made fishers of men (Matthew 4:19). Except for Judas Iscariot who betrayed Him at the end of the day, the rest of the chosen Eleven had no proper grounding in formal education. The sagacious parables and other-worldly utterances of the Man from heaven needed proper recording. So, the wisdom of the Son of God felt the need to have a pen-pusher by His side to write down the historic miraculous events. The void was filled by Matthew, the pen-wielding Collector, Matthew, "Follow Me. And he arose and followed Him (Mt. 9:9)". The hated tax collector, who could have ended as a mere wealthy local mortal, gave up worldly privileges, heeded the Saviour's call and got His writing on  the Gospel eternally etched in the all-time best seller, the Holy Bible.

    Universality of the Gospel: Jesus was a Jew hailing from the Middle-East. But the
four Gospels on his action-packed earthly sojourn were  meant for all the races settling in the four quarters of the globe - the North, the South, the East and the West. "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost (Mt. 28:19)". In the  Words of the Lord, one can feel the universal love, concern and empathy that endearingly match His command and authority. To a believer, the urgency to make the last Commandment the first commitment, is the be-all and the end-all of the Gospel. Nothing meets the needs of men better than the "Good News" does. The mirage-like answer that the most revered  philosopher, atheist and scientist search in vain, if penitently sought, can be found with a revelation in the verses of the Holy Scripture. Nationalities and communities may dissect,  divide and classify humanity and their nature. But the basic model-type of the mind in all  the reasoning beings  of the continents is the same. The Maker set the bytes and bit-rates of the cardiac beat in such a way that until or unless the mooring, emoting  and yearning  of the heart is in tune with the teaching of the Gospel, men will never have a soul-satisfying good spell .

     Global Trouble: Kingdoms came, but were  tamed, sooner or later. Dynasties ruled and got literally ruled out by another. But it's amazing to delve upon the glaring historical fact that no force on earth could stop the spread of the "Good News" to establish Christ's kingdom worldwide. Prophet Isaiah revealed the mind of God on the future of His Son's reign 700 years before Christ was born. "Of the increase of His government and peace, there shall be no end (Isaiah 9:7)". Money had been lavishly spent to blunt the cutting edge of the Gospel. No trick and ploy had been left unemployed to nib Christianity in the bud by the likes of Herod the great, the High Priests and the 20th century non-believers of the 'Word of life'. But every move to throttle the Voice of the Saviour was calamitously met, action for action,  with an earthquake, a spell of darkness, a breaking up of United Republics, a super-cyclone, a Tsunami, a Katrina or a Nargis in different regions of the globe. The disasters could have been avoided had the writing on the wall in Romans 1:18 been trusted by all concerned in letter and spirit, "For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness".

    Gospel Went Global: What we called accidents of history, to the Supreme Ruler, were stage-managed plots to promote  the cause of the Gospel further in the global orbit. The Roman empire had been nudged from above to construct roads in Bible-land towards the fag end of the B.C-era. In the first century A.D, St. Paul and the other Apostles used the same roads to drive the message of the Good News home. When Science and Technology  were in mind-boggling doubt as to whether the earth was round or flat,  Christopher Columbus was divinely guided, around the close of the 15th century, to locate and find the answer in Isaiah 40:22, "It is He that sitteth upon the circle of the earth". This singular verse led the adventurous marine hero to ultimately discover America. USA, in turn, was prepared to be strong enough to leave no stone unturned to see the teachings of Jesus go global. Faithful servants of God were equipped with savoir faire and skill to win souls for their Lord among the nations of the world. D.L Moody for USA and UK, John Wesley for England, David Livingstone for Africa, William Carey for India,  Adoniram  Judson for Burma etc. were raised with the  purpose to save sinners from hellfire.

    Global Technologies: Great preachers like Billy Graham and Joshua Daniel trotted the globe preaching the Good News in the 20th and 21st centuries. To convenience preaching from country to country through air-travel, the master Engineer put in inputs, in the beginning of the 20th century, in the minds of the God-fearing Wright Brothers to take heavy loads in the sky and not fall. The indelible imprint of the Creator was there in every technological discovery and its advancement. Be it Wireless set, motor engine, remedial medicines, radio and TV, printing machine, audio and visual devices, satellite TV or the Internet, despite men's unfortunate misuses, were heavenly inspired and invented to speed up the pace of passing on the Good News that majority of the citizens of this ultra-modern world do not know is their prior and basic  need. The Lord of Host, could even use wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to send devout Christians in the rank and file of US and South Korean Armies to witness in the battlefields and save souls to the uttermost.
    Gospel and North East India: The Word of God had been given in ample doses for the past one and a half century to the people of North East India. Heathen cultures and traditions, that initially challenged the smooth inflow of the Spirit's work, had undergone a drastic overhauling. Outlooks changed, lifestyles were given a lift, education dispelled and rediscovered ignorance, superstitious leanings gave way to institutional learning, Church buildings came up chock-a-block in earlier places of pagan worship and in government of states like Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram and parts of Manipur, the Church was seen flexing its influential muscles in the right spirit in Civil Administration process. Musically-inclined state like Mizoram, thanks to the pioneer Presbyterian missionaries' lyrical bent of mind, took to Gospel singing as Mumbai does to movie-making, and qualified itself to be dubbed the "Music capital of India." At the same time, labourers in the  Lord's vineyard have a lot to do, and pray for, to revive the spiritual wasteland of the churched region to make the will of God prevail over the will of the flesh. In some cases, the universal Truth of the Gospel took a beating under the suppressive impact of traditional norms to force  the Gospel to go, but tribal. There were moves to intimidate professors of the Faith. Yet, the cheering words of Isaiah  54:17, "No weapon formed against thee shall prosper" had steered clear God's children out of danger zone.

    GOSPEL GOES GOBAL Video Album: To salute and celebrate the globalisation of the Word, this obscure author, who also writes Gospel songs out of the overflow of a heart grateful for the Divine gift to piece words together in a readable manner and partly to unwind himself gainfully from the additional burdens of provincial administration, in a bid to make his writings read globally, scribbled down many songs. Eleven of the songs had been recorded in Hauhnar studio, Aizawl, Mizoram, India and shot in avi video format in the picturesque natural landscapes of the peaceful hill-town. Talented tune composers like JH Vanlalngheta, R. Lalbiakthanga, Chris MS Dawngkima, Mama, and Seigoumang Lhouvum had showcased their flairs in songs like, Gospel Goes Global Aids song, Go Gospel, Holy Marriage, Lonely in a crowd, I grieved Thee first, Hail North East, Kut, Light of life, Aizawl city and 50 years of blessing. The video cam-men, Zova and Patea, took the shots in professional proficiency around Mizoram's capital hill-top city-of-cheer. The Gospel Goes Global audio CD and video DVD, produced by Mrs Nengkim Haokip under the banner of Go Gospel Ministry International, L. Thinglhangphai, Manipur, India is ready for worldwide release in the month of August, 2010. OM Books, Hyderabad will take care of sales in their network of Book stores across the globe except in parts of NE India and North West Myanmar. VIBES, Goa is to push sales of the DVD album within Goa state.

    The Main Vocalist: The name is C (Chongthu). Lalhmingmawii. She sings Gospel numbers like Jaci V, looks stunningly Latino and emotes like B. Mori. Her first Mizo audio album, "Kumsang Bithar" was a total sell-out. 30,000 copies bought across the NE Indian states in 2001 was no mean feat by regional standards. Yet, success never went to her head nor failure, to her heart. Her second and third ventures, "Remna Palai" and "Kachakna Lalpa" made her a household name in greater Zoram and NW Myanmar. With her twanged Yankee accent, picked up from her musical tour of 22 states, with a choir of kids in concert, in the western coast of US of A from August 2002 to July 2004, she recorded her first English audio, VOG's "Go Gospel" in 2007 and GGMI's "Gospel Goes Global" in 2010. Inspired by Mariah Carey internationally and nearer home, by the old-time Mizo female crooner, Lalduhawmi, Mami,  as she is popularly known, in year 2001, added another feather in her musical cap. She won the coveted  Rimawi Khawvel - "Best new Artist Award". Accolades and applauses thundered every event the dusky husky new singer in town sang in, ever since. But the typical Piscean that she is, the level-headed Mami never bit the bait of ultra-glam offers that came her way to be an air-hostess, sing secular songs  etc. Tempting though the lucrative offers on the surface were, the fish would not come out of water.

    Christian Life: Well-groomed by her spiritually savvy daddy, C. Lalhmingmawii never strayed out of the bounds of Church activities and in-service values. Forenoon and evening time callers to her bsnl number  usually get no response. She'd be either teaching in school or  seated  on a church-pew hearing a sermon . This pretty well-self-managed itinerary vocalist, when she is not lighting up Christian bashes in Manipur, Mizoram and Guwahati and Shillong, goes to take class 6 times, and to Church service 5 times in a week, sings hymns with the Vengchhak Presbyterian KTP-choir, helps mom in household chores and relaxes with country gospel music tuned on in her cozy ITI veng home. Emotionally attached to her dad and kid brother, Mami is proud of being a Mizo, loves to wear the locally woven wrap-around called 'Puan', delights in savouring Indian and Chinese dishes and dots on Psalm chapter 37 reading which gives her the spiritual succour to take on the sad side of life. Her burgeoning fan-following, that includes top-notch mandarins of the bureaucracy, may look her up as a star-performer. But  Mami's main ambition is down-to-earth. As a daughter, she wishes to settle down via a holy marriage with a pliable, reliable, amenable and honest man who can read her moods and let her live a hassle-free life ever after.

    The shooting of GGG: To make the video shoots of Gospel Goes Global songs look visually eye-catching, Mami took a month's leave from duty in June, 2010.  A perfect motivator and organiser that she is, she called the shots over locations, dresses to be worn, shot-angles and participation of back-up artists. It speaks well of the social good-will she enjoys that Vengchhak choir, on her request, willingly put up with the patience-taxing retakes for 'World Aids Day' shoot. She also managed to get permission from the state's Arts & Culture department to shoot Kut song in the latter's otherwise prohibited premises. The toil and sweat paid off well. The previews were commented upon in glowing terms. The Aids song which had been already uploaded on Youtube is the vocalist's favourite. Mami also thinks highly of the tune-composition style of the title song by Chris, Gospel Goes global. Barring 3 songs of the album in which Abea provided the back-vocals and duet-partnership, it was Mami's show all the way. Watching the ace performer act out and voice the  high-flown words of this song-writer with poise and ease, without missing a beat, like a duck takes to water, it will not be a mismatch  to sub-title C. Lalhmingmawii as  AVZ –Amazing Voice of Zoram.

    If God blesses the songs  of this nondescript North East Indian Gospel album to actually go global, the credit should go to the hard work rendered by the Tune-Composers, the Studio Technicians, the Videographers and Editors, the Distributors and specially to the main Vocalist who gave the brilliant shots that made the song wordings come alive in video frames.

    Reproduced hereunder is the wording of this Song writer's poetic take on God's globalisation of the Gospel:

      GOSPEL GOES GLOBAL
               
God told Adam not to eat the fruit,
    Eve got sold on lies that hid the Truth;
    Win for Satan, heaven was saddened,
    Sin of Eden gave men a burden;
    The good that he wants, he cannot do,
    The evil he hates, he cannot spew.

        We do what we like and guilt we get,
        We rue o'er our lot and for sin fret;
        The Word is grave but the world's naive,
        The Lord in Love calls His own to save;
        Coz God wants to sin in all dispel,
        The old Gospel is going global.

To the globe's ends His trained the Lord sent,
    That them who grope and faint may repent;
    The Spirit moves, good- spell goes global,
    Here creed dupes and Gospel goes tribal;
    It's time to re-link self with soul's thirst,
    Let's rethink and put things of God first.

Crises have men bold, led down and fall,
    Jesus loves souls and shed blood for all,
    That all who life had pained to lose hope,
    May come back to Him and regain hope;
    That at home the Good News each may get,
    God made Word go global in the net.





No hasty decision on Tipaimukh dam: Pala

SHILLONG, JUL 16(NPN):
Union Minister of State for Water Resources, Vincent H Pala Friday said opinions of all sections of people will be taken into confidence on the proposed construction of 1,500-MW Tipaimukh hydel power project in Manipur.
The mega-power project, one of the largest in northeastern India, is vital for meeting the increasing electricity demand in northeastern India has been opposed by environmental groups and opposition parties in neighbouring Bangladesh.
Views of the local indigenous people in those areas will be taken into confidence on the project, Pala told journalist here
However, Manipur Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh had told legislators in the Assembly (july 12) that his government is committed to go ahead with the controversial Tipaimukh project.
The public sector power utilities National Hydroelectric Power Corp (NHPC) and Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam (SJVN) would develop the Rs.8,138 crore (Rs.81.38-billion/$1.7-billion) Tipaimukh project.
The project, located on the Barak river in western Manipur, is under attack from opposition parties and environmental groups in Bangladesh, which say it could cause desertification downstream in their country. Part of the Brahmaputra river system, the Barak bifurcates into the Surma and Kushiyara rivers on entering Sylhet district in eastern Bangladesh.
The Sinlung Indigenous People Human Rights Organisation (SIPHRO), an anti-dam group in Manipur maintained that any plans to build large hydro dams (Tipaimukh) should take into consideration the recommendations of the World Commission on Dams (WCD).
Indigenous peoples in different parts of the world have already disappeared due to sea-water rise and erosion and have also become environmental refugees due to big dams, SIPHRO Secretary, Lalremlien Neitham said.
Bangladesh Nationalist Party Chief Khaleda Zia had sent a letter to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh asking him to abandon the project.
A 10-member Bangladeshi parliamentary delegation conducted an aerial survey of the Tipaimukh dam last July after opposition over the hydel projects possible ecological impact intensified in Dhaka.
Even Prime Minister (Manmohan Singh) has categorically assured that no hasty decision will be taken on the issue. India would take into confidence Dhaka before going ahead with the project, so as not to hamper the friendly India-Bangladesh ties, Pala said.



Centre okays Rs 2,873-crore Mizoram project
NEW DELHI, July 16(EMN): The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) has approved a comprehensive and integrated socioeconomic development project for Mizoram, involving Rs 2,873 crore over a period of five years.
The programme that is set to benefit 1.20 lakh families will be implemented under the new land use policy of the State Government, Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni said.
It envisages switching people involved in jhum (shifting) cultivation to permanent livelihood activities with ownership of land, access to link roads, irrigation and water harvesting and all these at a remunerative price for produces.
Jhum cultivation or shifting cultivation is a practice prevalent in the north-eastern States and it involves clearance of forest on sloppy land, drying and burning debris and cropping. After harvest, land is left fallow and cultivators repeat the process in a new plot designated for the year for jhum cultivation.
The integrated socio-economic development project for Mizoram under new land use policy seeks to increase income by 7-10 times through agri-horticultural activities, animal husbandry, fisheries, agro forestry etc. The overall growth of the economy in the State would increase to 16 per cent from 6 per cent at present in the next 10 years, the minister added.

Fake NBFCs defrauding people in Mizoram


 AIZAWL, July 16 – There were 21 fake financial institutions in Mizoram having offices in the State capital Aizawl indulging in financial fraud, Chief Secretary Van Hela Pachuau said yesterday.

Such non-banking financial institutions (NBFCs) have cheated the people taking advantage of their ignorance, Pachuau told a seminar of government and police officials on the Regulation of Unauthorised Elements of Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) and Un-incorporated Bodies (UIBS) in Mizoram.

"Majority of these institutions are from outside the State and we, the Mizo people, help them in their surreptitious intentions due to our greed," he said.

He urged the law enforcement officials to strictly enforce the laws prohibiting such nefarious activities by unauthorised institutions.

The seminar was jointly organised by the State Finance department and the Reserve Bank of India and attended by RBI officials, top Finance department officials and senior police officers. – PTI

Friday, July 16, 2010

Government to recruit 170 top administrative posts through MPSC

IMPHAL, July 15: The state cabinet meeting held this evening under the chair of the chief minister approved creation of some 170 posts of MCS/MPS/Jr.MCS/MFS/SDC/SO along with rescheduling of the preliminary examination of the combined competitive examination of 2008 conducted by the Manipur Public Service Commission (MPSC).

According to a reliable source, the cabinet meeting held today approved direct post creation of some 80 new posts of MCS/MPS/Jr.MCS/MFS/SDC/SO in addition to the previous 92 approved posts and the preliminary examination of combined competitive examination held in 2008 would also be rescheduled with age relaxation of those candidates who have already appeared in the said preliminary examination.

The cabinet also approved that the rules of MPSC regarding the quota system of SC/ST that any SC/ST candidate securing marks at par with the general candidates shall be placed in the general category as against their reserved seats would be applicable to the pre-medical test conducted by state health services.

The cabinet meeting further discussed the amendment of Manipur Essential Service Act, 1984 that would be placed before the ongoing assembly session with the inclusion of another sub clause regarding the safety measures to be taken up to ensure essential public service.

The ex-post facto of the appointment of advisor of JNIMS was also approved by the cabinet along with the decision to appoint 15 sweepers on contract basis for Khuman Lampak Sports Complex.

The cabinet meeting also approved setting up of an engineering cell for the department of Minority and Other Backward Classes for which the executive engineers would be appointed on deputation from other engineering departments.

The creation of 17 posts of National Sports Academy including graduate teachers of various subjects, coaches, drivers and peons was also approved by today's cabinet meeting.(IFP)

No breakthrough yet on death of St Edmund's College student from Manipur

By Rining Lyngdoh
SHILLONG, July 15: Meghalaya police are yet to make any headway into the death of a college student from Manipur who was found murdered on the night of July 13 in Shillong even as four persons believed to be the friends of the victim were picked up for questioning in this regard.

The victim - Allan Mark Haominlen Chongloi (19) fondly known as Romeo was a student studying BA first year at St. Edmund's College here and belonged to the Kuki community.

"We are waiting for the postmortem report to ascertain the cause of death and investigation is on to trace perpetrators who perpetrated the crime," Deputy Superintendent of Police (Crime) Vivek Syiem said today.

Postmortem was conducted on Wednesday and the body was handed over to the family members on the same day and taken to Manipur for the last rite.

A case has been registered with Madanrting Police station. 

"We are yet to make any breakthrough and the case is being investigated from various angles to find out the motive and the perpetrators involved in this crime," Syiem said.

The DSP said that the four persons picked up for questioning were released after execution of Personal Release bond but did not reveal anything.

However, question is being raised against the police for detaining them for over 12 hours which tantamount to their arrest.

Doubt also circled on the claim of police that the body was found by some passers-by who later informed Madanrting police station about an injured person lying nearby.

The 19-year-old boy went missing for several hours on July 13 after attending a dance practice for the upcoming freshers' meet of his college till his body was found late in the night near Madanrting Police station.

Chongloi resided at Jingkieng Nongthymmai and was allegedly attacked and stabbed to death by miscreants on his way home after returning from the dance practice session at a Kuki worship service church near Madanrting.

Chongloi was rushed to Shillong Civil Hospital but was declared brought dead. He and his siblings were staying along with their mother at Jingkieng.

Meanwhile the Kuki Students' Organisation (KSO), has strongly condemned the brutal murder of Chongloi who was also KSO member and shared their sorrow with the bereaved family.

The KSO also expressed its utter dismay at the inhuman and heinous manner in which Chongloi was murdered at Shillong, which is one of the important centres of learning in the North East.

The KSO also urged the Meghalaya government to take all necessary measures to ensure safety of students hailing from other states studying at Shillong and to prevent such incident from recurring in the city.

Demanding the Meghalaya government to take up the murder case on priority basis and bring the culprits to book, the KSO also urged the Manipur government to intervene into the matter to guarantee security to the students from Manipur in the city at his capacity.(IFP)



UKLF concerned by emergence of new militant group within KNO

IMPHAL, July 15: The United Kuki LIberation Front, UKLF, in a statement, has expressed strong concern over emergence new militant outfits within the folds of the KNO mutating a communal flares up within the groups which are under the SoO with the government.

Stating this, JM Zou, secretary publicity and information of UKLF said in the quest of peace and equal development the outfit had decided to cease all sorts of hostile activities against the government with the signing of the Suspension of Operations (SoO).

However, to the party's dismay, it was found that the state and central governments have been indulged in adopting double standard policies while dealing with the Kuki rebels. Contrary to the SoO ground rules, there has been sudden birth of unwanted new armed outfits namely the PRA, UMLA, KNLF, KLA(T), ZRF, UKLA(MC) etc which are purely founded on the basis of clan and tribe calculation by the KNA/KNO. The ultimate consequences of such unwanted birth of armed  outfits given by the surrogate mother - KNO further encourages clannism and divisiveness besides worsening 'financial burden' upon the poor Kuki masses, the statement added.

It further said the UKLF is wondering why the concerned government authorities allows such formation of new armed outfits within the fold of KNO.

The UKLF also expresses its disappointment at the government's inactive and insensitivity to the suffering voices of the affected land owners of the Moreh Itegrated Check Post, whose shares of compensation had been fraudulantly and forcibly deducted amounting to more than twenty crores of rupees by the KNA/KNO.

The the SoO ground rules forbids extortions, the UKLF said and asked as to why government failed to take action in time and threatened affected land owners (Pattadars).

The UKLF calls upon the government both the state and central for sincerety and effective implementation of SoO ground rules in letter and spirit instead of blaming and pinpointing the Kuki rebels alone.(IFP)

MOREH: A SPEED BREAKER ON ASIAN HIGHWAY?

                                                                                     By: Lunminthang Haokip

 

Introduction: For more than a decade, there was talk of one of the Asian Highways passing through the state of Manipur before it exits through Moreh, the state's border trading point, to Myanmar or the other way round. Villagers and small town dreamers  residing on the Mao – Moreh stretch of India's NH-39 knew little about the preparation of the road, serpentine in most parts, and adjacent to their houses, for the big cross-country thoroughfare. Ignorance, however, did not stop them from hoping that, one day, the value of the land-holding under their possession, even if acquired for the ASEAN purpose, will shoot up. Some had started the mental plan to open eateries, motels, shops etc along the  'imaginary' AH that would  be passing through their premises, if the Lord tarries. But, like the title of Harold Robins' best seller novel, dreams die first. As of now, for the locals, trans-national highway is still a 'notional highway', highway lorry rubbery, a costly drudgery and 'Look-East' policy, just a 'hook-minds' policy in power-point presentations.

 

Advantage Tamu:  The big picture of the total coverage of the concept of Asian Highways is to link the whole of Asia by road . China had already made its trading presence felt in almost all the ASEAN countries. The resurgent and reformed communist nation, projected to overtake the US in economic growth by 2050, not only floods the world market with its cleverly manufactured and heavily under-invoiced consumer goods, but has Mandarin as the language spoken by the largest number of people. Myanmar's proximity to China provides the oxygen of trade for its citizens. Making capital on daily sale of such stuff, sprawling Namphalong market, built at the edge of the border opposite  Moreh's gate no.2, does a trading arm-twist on the hitherto thriving Moreh markets to leave the latter with  few or no visitors, like materialism does to the Churches of England.

 

All roads lead to Moreh: The glut of consumer durables at Tamu,  Moreh's richer twin-brother, is with thanks to Asian Highway-3 that vertically runs into China from Mongolia to Myanmarese towns, Mongla. Taunggyi , Meiktila, Mandalay and  Tamu. Yet another roadway to be marked AH-4 goes north from Mandalay to Lashio to enter southern China through Myanmar's border town, Muse. It's for nothing that Burmese tourism had advertised their land as "the home of Asia". Four Asian highways run into the "Golden Land" as they give a second name to their country. AH-1, starting from Tokyo in Japan takes a long winding route through South Korea, eastern and southern china, Vietnam, Cambodia and Bangkok to finally enter southern Myanmar to Yangon. Then it turns north touching Toungon, Meiktila, Mandalay and  Tamu. AH-2, in turn, takes off from Indonesia,  cuts across Singapore, Malasia, Thailand to finally exit into Myanmar through northern Thai town, Mae Sai. The awesome good news for Manipur is that all the four highways to be stretched from China and Thailand, to wind through Myanmar, will meet at Tamu and Moreh first, and then link various towns and cities of Bangladesh, NE  and mainland India.

 

The Commercial Equations: Formed on 8 August, 1967, step by step, ASEAN, the Association of South East  Asian  Nations (for economic development)  roped in in its fold 10 nations – Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia. ASEAN take 10% of India's exports mainly through the sea route. The 8 North East Indian states populated with 45 million people, only 11 millions short of Myanmar's total of 56 millions, are by and large landlocked. Despite abundance of natural and human resources, NE Indians cannot have a share in the nation's sea-route business. Of course, there is a proposal to connect Sittwe  port in the western coast of Myanmar with Aizawl, Mizoram's capital and other NE Indian states  through river and road transport. The project may take years to complete. So, in the given situational paradox, the most logical means to push up the economic growth of NE India to be on par with the national average, is to speed up the proposal to build the 7603 KM long road network in the back-block regions of NE by 2003, and having done so, get cracking in do business with ASEAN.

 

The Road-block: Blockade or no blockade, the condition of the roads between Mandalay and Kalemyo in Myanmar,  Moreh to Pallen and Kangpokpi to Mao in Manipur is bad, and nowhere near ASEAN standards. Contractors are on the job of the first phase. Unless the second phase follows suit swiftly, the bad portion, though helps in making the motor work-shop owners get fat, will remain a blot on the otherwise  smooth run of the trans-Asian highway. The BRTF-paved 160 KM Tamu to Kalewah passage may be motorists' delight but provides no total solace. A chain is as strong as its weakest link. The present focus is on the 1639 KM Guwahati – Bangkok surface route. It is no big deal compared to the 1959 KM distance between Guwahati and Delhi. The deplorable condition of the above stretch also slowed down, and threatened  to bring to a screeching halt, the pace and volume of the well-begun Indo-Myanmar Trade Agreement. In also accounts for the pathetic state of affairs at Moreh border town. Once nick-named the El Dorado of  North East India, Moreh, today, at its best, may be described as the proverbial cow which every visitor milks but forgets to feed.  

 

Can Moreh carry the international Load?: That's the million rupee question. Crores of rupees had been pumped in for development of the cutting-edge township. Buildings, hospitals, super-markets and guest houses had come up in good measures. Yet,  tourists are naturally inclined to side-step Moreh and go to the well-planned Myanmarese counterpart, Tamu, for a sight-seeing or quality shopping. And they have reason to do what they do. Tamu simply is several times better-prepared to burn holes in its visitors' pockets than our old-fashioned Block head quarter. The buzz across the border among Burmese traders is, "let us work hard like the Chinese, save money like the Marwaris, but let us not eat and make merry like the Burmese". The wisdom in the resolve may smack of taking a dig at themselves, but it works wonders. With no high technology, no liberty and no big industries, they had put the high tech of India to shame in trading, at least in the twin towns of the  disorderly  border. If  Tamu is leader, Moreh cannot be a follower; if Kate, the latter is a duplicate. With all the natural resources of river water, forest products, minerals, educated manpower, proximity to a teak-rich neighbour and with the might  of an IT-super power sub-continent at its beck and call, Moreh still is the poorer  brother of a conjoined inter-dependent twin-township. At this rate, the change-resisting and discipline-hating de-globalised citizenry of this potential ASEAN destination  will soon be treated by its affluent better-half like a back-water step-brother.

 

            Action Plan: As a mid-level Administrator of sub-district governance in this far-flung part of my great country who, for no fault of his,  is often treated like a "Tulsi" plant in  Independent India's own  "Angan" (courtyard), I strongly feel Moreh needs immediate attention. The burgeoning urban settlement that does a daily business of tens of millions of Rupees and that attracts domestic tourists like a misplaced piece of broken cake does to hungry ants, demands restructuring on  war footing. The success of  ICP, Integrated Check Post, at the periphery of Moreh's Gate no. 1 calls for the deep checking of our mental gate no. 1 –the mind, and gate no. 2 –the heart, amenability to better sense and imaginative response to out-of-the-box vision. Fiddling pretence must give way to a permanent sense of belongingness to the place  we live in and will die in. Our education should challenge us. Why is Moreh the worst ill-planned future stop-over on the Asian Highway? When Bangkok can build skyscrapers, Mandalay has  neat star hotels, Tamu has wide roads and spacious restaurants, China can make many things out of bamboo, and South India produces weather-proof hollow bricks out of sand and cement, why can't we? And why shouldn't we? Are we born to buy and watch only? It's the will that charts the way. The blocking letters in the word 'IMPOSSIBLE' is I M meaning I am..

 

            Connectivity: The be-all and end-all of the concept of Asian Highway is connectivity. Air, water and railway connectivity are the props but not the main issue here. The aim is road linkage. Along with it will come people, culture, media, technology and  religion connectivity. Dietary tastes differ from country   to country. International business transactions at the meeting point of 4 AHs will be unbecoming without the operation of Nationalised and Scheduled Commercial banks at the action station. So, it goes without saying that if trans-Asian Highway is not a joke played on us, which we know is certainly not, it's high time we start building infrastructure commensurate  with the shape of things to come,  shortly.

 

            Air Connectivity: A stitch in time saves nine. Flights save a lot of time. If Moreh is to take on the trade load of  ASEAN and NE India, deals will be clinched at the rate of  mobility of the trading functionaries across the nations in the fray. On road signs, we see warnings like, "Better to be Mr. Late than Late Mr." It amuses commuters. But the road-side philosophy will find no takers in trans-national conferences. Mr. Late will cause delay for others and take business backwards in reverse gear. Delays, experience reminds,  have dangerous ends. As a self-styled social analyst for  the liveable border town I would like to, God willing, spend my retired life with re-tyred vigour in, I think it is not asking for too much to demand Aizawl's Lengpui Airport-like airstrip at Moreh. Whether we like it or not, Moreh is not only the best port of call for Indian Chambers of commerce  to export and import trade items to and from ASEAN through surface transport, but is the only corridor for the nation. The route of Asian Highways is no more up for negotiations at this stage. Unless we  want to see ourselves caught napping and don't desire to see NE India catching up fast with the rest in modernisation, all concerned  will do well to give a serious fresh attention to the infrastructural requirements of the Region's only inlet and outlet to boom-time.

 

            Wholesome Approach: A port has a hinterland. A river is joined by its tributaries. To promote Moreh as the happening place, the importance of road connectivity of the border destination with other key towns of Chandel  and the neighbouring districts should not be soft-pedalled. The construction of the 60 odd Km DC road from Moreh to New Samtal in the south easternmost corner of Manipur is already underway. Likewise, black-topping of the Chandel – Sugnu – Chakpikarong – Lonpi – Joupi –Khengjoy – road that ends at Molcham near Myanmar's Zohmun will move things faster and lighten the burden of Moreh. Widening and improving the BRTF road from Tengnoupal to Machi and Ukhrul district will connect the hill districts  better and enhance people to people contact. But all these ongoing proposals and projects will sadly miss its target unless Moreh becomes accommodating enough to welcome all the communities of North East India with open arms and psalms like, for example, Goa does to its own prosperity.

 

Love is the Greatest: All said and done, the Bible that we swear by, commands us to love our neighbours, to love strangers in our land and take good care of them. All the ASEAN metros prosper in direct proportion to the warmth of the hospitality they exhibit to strangers in their cities. God warned the Israelites that they too were strangers in Egypt when he planned their way out. Let us always remember that "Giving never empties the purse and loving never empties the heart". Foreigners go again and again to Singapore, Bangkok, Kerala  etc. because they know they  will be treated well.  Moreh ought to take the initiative to create an investment climate for big cash to flow in. Let us not be narrow-minded but be Nehru-minded.

 

 

 

Thursday, July 15, 2010

MIC gives green signal for JNIMS

By Hueiyen News Service

Imphal, July 13: The Medical Council of India has given green signal to the establishment of Medical College at Imphal by Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences, Porompat from the academic session 2010-11.

The Board of Governors of the Medical Council of India in its Letter of Indane (LOI) has recommended 100 seats for the academic year 2010-11 in response to the requests received for establishment of the new medical colleges / renewal of permission for starting / increase of seats in respect of the following Institutions wher³e assessment was carried out in the month of June 2010 by the Council's Assessors, an official source said.

Mention may be made that Manipur government has been pressing the MCI for granting permission for establishment of the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences (JNIMS), Porompat for last around three year.

MCI team had also inspected the infrastructure developing at JNIMS which the development works is being monitored by a Cabinet Committee.

Recently, state cabinet has approved to transfer all matters relating to JNIMS including budgeting, manpower, etc. which would be routed through the Finance Committee for approval of JNIMS executive council considering the shortage of manpower required for the medical hospital.

KUKI CHIEF-SHIP: LOOKING EAST OR WEST?

By: Lunminthang Haokip

 

Background: The issue merits a  heated debate till the sun goes cold. To the Kukis, chief-ship is age-old. Long before democracy replaced monarchy in India, in the Kuki-inhabited regions of the sub-continent's north-eastern states and its Military-ruled neighbour, Myanmar's north-western  frontiers, an unique method of hill-village governance evolved out of environmental compulsions. Good or bad, the situation in the tribal settlements demanded a semblance of self-rule in the near-total absence of proper connectivity to better-civilized societies. That's how every Kuki village had a chief in the helm of administrative affairs, and the forest-land a chief and his villagers could possibly lay their hands upon came under a particular chief-ship. Attachment to it was   purely voluntary.

 

Chief-ship Of The Past: The joke that strikes a chord with the informed citizenry in the hill districts of Manipur is, "Be cautious when you walk on the roads, neo-rich chiefs are learning how to drive. You may get hit". The punch of the joke that saner  thought leaves unsaid, is implied on the upward mobility of purse-prodded chiefs, who, thanks to the recently launched national rural employment guarantee scheme, go madly for consumer durables like a motor car, with a passion usually reserved for religion, but feel ill-at-ease to drive at their advanced stage of ageing. Like Yuppies of NW India, the scheme-savvy heads of villages may enjoy the powers and privileges granted in unlimited doses by decentralised planning. But when it comes to authority over their subjects, they are no patch on the system-backed original village chiefs of the distant past. Like in the case of the CEO of a Pvt Ltd company, it was suicidal not to fall in line with their whims and fancies in back-block management, then.

 

Kuki Tradition: Clannishness was, and still is in lesser degrees, to the hill landlords as casteism was and is to mainland India. The effects of the  ills are as chilling. Exercising absolute authority over land-holdings within his bounds, and his tight grip over life-sustaining pastoral productivity sector, a Kuki chief's lording  was as good and as bad as a that of Rajput landlord in north India. A flip of the fingers can send domestic servants of the moustached masters tottering for cover. The Kuki chief, in his hey days, did not lag much behind. His word was law and in-law deals could be clinched or detached at will. The illogical but mandatory slaughter of the unclean pig to clean up a house 'dirtied' by bloodshed is an unfortunate example of the accident of tradition.

 

Gen-Curses: One can understand the bullying ways of the ruler, and the trembling subservience of the ruled, in the pre-Independence (India) era, over land and customs. Might was right then. But what is unfair is the imposition and tolerance of pre-Christianity curses like male-centric inheritance laws, sub-clan-based new-village creation norms, fine systems, mandatory show of allegiance to clan-heads, laws on marriage and divorce etc. among churched village-folks. This staunch beliefs and practices that run counter to Psalm 24:1, "The earth is the Lords, and everything that is in it...", not only jeopardizes the sense of belongingness to a sub-nation unification process, but also blunts the cutting edge of many vital Bible verses like, "Henceforth, know ye no man after the flesh (2 Cor. 5:16)". Despite rapid globalisation, the Kuki chief-ship neither looks East nor West in transaction of human affairs. With owlish nonchalance, it insists on  inspection and application of the near-insane insinuations of the   past,  whenever a key decision over a serious dispute is to be taken.

 

            Looking West: The crossover missionary labours of the western Christians in the 19th and early 20th centuries paid off rich dividends. The initial preachers of the Gospel doubled up as social reformers too. The valour of the Kuki fighters, exhibited with trademark pride in the 1917-1919 rebellion against the British rulers, had negative historical ramifications to their own isolation in administrative creaming. But they could not achieve an encore in matters of religion. Ironically, the muzzle-loader trigger-happy community's failure to shoot down the  onslaught of Christianity, ultimately, set the progressive pace of development of the mind. Education, imparted with the larger motive of evangelisation of the then heathen and hidden Kukis, made them change their outlook, and moved them to stick their necks out on the look from the narrow apertures of 'pagan culture', for progressive western culture. In matters of housing, dressing, worshipping, marrying, singing and merry-making, the once kinky Kukis, never looked back ever since. No regrets there.

 

            Looking East:            The Kuki chief-ship is a paradox by itself. It somehow legitimizes the vast stretches of hill land a village settles in and feed themselves from. Habitually resistant to the meticulous land survey systems, demarcation of possession by natural boundaries like rivers, ridges, gorges and footpaths serve the short-cut choosing community right. Virgin slopes where various short-term plants can be grown to bear fruits of prosperity are available a dime-a-dozen in the districts of Manipur bordering Myanmar. The "Look East" policy promises a ready market for horticultural products in the ASEAN cities through the Eastern corridor  via Moreh –Tamu route etc. Most portions of the Trans-Asian highways had been multi-laned and paved to take on international trading thoroughfare. North East India, thanks to similarity in features and cultures, fortunately has no problem establishing a people to people rapport with ASEAN nations.

 

The China Factor: The emergence of China as a wholesaler of every household need and a buyer of valuable forest products, albeit in shady deals, of India, will also force  the Kuki entrepreneurs of NE India to rubber-neck towards the East. Two Asian Highways routed from China through upper and eastern Myanmar had already flooded Tamu, Namphalong and Moreh market with trade items at irresistible prices. On the flip-side, chief-ship and its  traditional fixation takes the under-developed community in reverse gear. Undemocratic impositions on helpless landless inhabitants sub-divide a main village into many more hamlet villages which are counter-productive in premature stages. Some are still-born. Horticultural plants and pucca houses are the casualties. The former never grow fully; and the later get dismantled frequently.

 

            The Causes: Chief-ship carries the burden of clan-receptive and change-allergic negative social elements democracy and Christianity can do nothing about. Nothing delights a well-heeled Kuki brother than being declared the chief of a new village or being issued a gun-licence. To him, the two are licences to thrill. He is happier to be a ruler of three households than be a title-less time-passing bugger in  a 100-house village. The tragedy is every man in the small village thinks alike. All wish to be a chief one day, if not by hook, then by crook. So, at the slightest provocation, a rebel-without-a-pause equipped with imaginary cause is born. A fine for breaking wrong-doing is often made a excuse to either shift base or create a hamlet village. No wonder, a Kuki village with 20 houses is looked up with awe and considered a highly well-behaved entity; many big villages notwithstanding.

 

            The Remedy: Looking East or West is not the optional end. The best to look at, to remedy the social malady of village fragmentation in a world where numbers and size matter, is the God-Man from the Middle-East, Lord Jesus,  who said, "Whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant" (Matt. 20:27). This singular verse, applied in letter and spirit, will change the face of Kuki villages and society. A chief's role is of multi-tasks. A good chief must be the chief donor, chief runner, chief orator, chief servant, chief forgiver, chief promoter all rolled into one restless soul with a heart of gold. All these attributes can not be endowed in one man. So, he has to evangelize his village using the Word of God. A believer is much easier to be tackled during crisis than a hardcore atheist. Chief or no chief, an individual can't keep everyone happy. So, the chief should be "shrewd like a serpent and harmless like a dove". If he can't be so, he has to imagine a lot and cultivate a sense of humour. Because imagination is given to man to compensate him for what he is not, and a sense of humour, to console him for what he is. Right?

 

            Conclusion: Like it or not, chief-ship is here to stay. Government recognises the chief as the lowest functionary in a hill district democratic set-up whose mistakes can, of course,  upset the whole. His  performance or non-performance will impact the big picture. Concerned thinkers are invited to share their ideas in the media so that a more potent  village administrative guideline may come up to replace the obsolete present. A paradigm shift in approach is desired. We need to formulate Acts and Rules that would aptly address the basic social structures and super-structures that stop our natural, human and financial resources from peaking. Let us take positive steps to do away with the generational curses that stand between what we should have been and what we actually are. Unless, we use our Scriptural knowledge and academic excellence to make our villages more liveable for gen-next, posterity will, one day, blame us for having used our heads only to keep our earlobes apart.

 

            Poetic Appeal: Hereunder is reproduced a song written by this leisurely pen-pusher (and sung by C. Lalhmingmawii and Abea of Aizawl) wherein he inked his views, in verses, as to how to build up a better North East     India. The poem had been made  a video in the soon-to-be released album, "GGMI's GOSPEL GOES GLOBAL".

 

HAIL NORTH EAST

            

1.      Nearer home is a shire non-lesser,

      A border sapphire that links Myanmar;

      Hills and dales that God's wishes unveil;

      In a no frills county called North East,

      That warm vibes His own may share and fuse,

      The Lord wills firm tribes to dwell in peace.

 

                  We like pride and to the land bring fears,

                  We love fights and to women bring tears;

                  Lure of wealth covers cure of the Word;

                  Word of men rules o'er way of the Lord;

                  Mend your flaws and live God's laws will sail

                  As end-chant to bail and hail North East.

 

2.      Shrewd plans badly moved our own folds ail,

      Good moves sadly proved make the soul wail;

      Life–lifting schemes make us all scheming,

      High-living cream too keep on seeking;

      Will this augur well to thirst for more,

      Here where Christ gave His all and sins bore?

 

3.      The riches the Maker blessed us with,

      The Churches sinners in stress visit;

      Will do less to lift up ties and traits,

      Unless we give up lies in true-faith,

      When the world pants in vain to Look East

      The whole stands to gain most in Look Christ.

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