Meritorious award distributed at Citizens Club, Soibam Leikai

Late Okram Lukhoi and Saratlata Memorial Meritorious Award sponsored by Okram family was distributed today at Citizens Club, Soibam Leikai Source The Sangai Express

Late Okram Lukhoi and Saratlata Memorial Meritorious Award sponsored by Okram family was distributed today at Citizens Club, Soibam Leikai Source The Sangai Express

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Another case of fraud resurfaces

Another case of a fraud company collecting huge amount of money after convincing land owners and contractors to instal BTS towers in the name of an internet service provider has surfaced again Source The Sangai Express

Another case of a fraud company collecting huge amount of money after convincing land owners and contractors to instal BTS towers in the name of an internet service provider has surfaced again Source The Sangai Express

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Ward Members left high and dry

A strong allegation has been raised that the newly elected Ward Members of Imphal Municipal Council IMC are neither recognised by the Government nor by the Council and what is more they are not allowed to assume their duty Source The Sangai Express

A strong allegation has been raised that the newly elected Ward Members of Imphal Municipal Council IMC are neither recognised by the Government nor by the Council and what is more they are not allowed to assume their duty Source The Sangai Express

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ISBT, Capitol Project set to see light of day ahead of the 10th Assembly election next year Prime Minister’s date with State likely in December

Ahead of the 10th Manipur Legislative Assembly elections, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh is likely to visit Manipur in December this year Source The Sangai Express

Ahead of the 10th Manipur Legislative Assembly elections, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh is likely to visit Manipur in December this year Source The Sangai Express

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Ward members of IMC decry – KanglaOnline

Ward members of IMC decryKanglaOnlineIn a press conference that was held today at Manipur Press, the members of the Forum had denounced that if the concern authority fails to define their roles and responsibility at the soonest, then they have high pos…

Ward members of IMC decry
KanglaOnline
In a press conference that was held today at Manipur Press, the members of the Forum had denounced that if the concern authority fails to define their roles and responsibility at the soonest, then they have high possibility to surrender their

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Committee alleges of `conspiracy` in Bishwajit`s case – KanglaOnline

Committee alleges of `conspiracy` in Bishwajit`s caseKanglaOnlineThe executive members of the committee drew the attention of the Chief Minister of Manipur to intervene into the alleged conspiracy and fulfill the aspiration of the people to restore the…

Committee alleges of `conspiracy` in Bishwajit`s case
KanglaOnline
The executive members of the committee drew the attention of the Chief Minister of Manipur to intervene into the alleged conspiracy and fulfill the aspiration of the people to restore the true spirit of democracy in the Thongju assembly constituency.

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Headless for six months: Comi-tragedy at MU – E-Pao.net

Headless for six months: Comi-tragedy at MUE-Pao.netAnd it is certainly not a buffoonery scene disguised as a comedy which was lifted from one of those Bollywood flicks but is very much a real life farce presented on the lawns of Manipur University wit…

Headless for six months: Comi-tragedy at MU
E-Pao.net
And it is certainly not a buffoonery scene disguised as a comedy which was lifted from one of those Bollywood flicks but is very much a real life farce presented on the lawns of Manipur University with the people of Manipur having to bear the agony of

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Editorial – Fragile Valley Ecology

A lot many water bodies have died out from the Imphal Valley. In their footsteps may follow the rest of the remaining natural water bodies in the valley, including we… Read more »

A lot many water bodies have died out from the Imphal Valley. In their footsteps may follow the rest of the remaining natural water bodies in the valley, including we dare say, the Loktak. Purely from common sense, the lifespan of a lake in a land-locked valley, with little or no drainage system to flush it in a continual process, cannot be that very long. For regardless of whether a river system drains water away from a valley, there will always be more rivers that drain into it bringing down tonnes of silt perennially from the surrounding mountain catchments areas. It can quite well be imagined why the battle to save fresh water lakes in small valleys have been almost always a losing battle. The best that have been done is to delay their deaths, but the cause for optimism is, advancements in science have come up with ever better techniques to increase the longevity of these lakes. Perhaps someday, it will become a reality when this delay of lake decay can be perpetual. But the fact remains that without this radical sort of intervention of science, valley lakes cannot live forever. This is what Manipur should be cautious about, and in fact be ready to face.

It needs no experts to tell us rivers can change their courses, and so when silt raises their bed high enough for the water to find another alternative path of least resistance, it will take the latter path. This phenomenon is not altogether unknown even in Manipur’s recorded history. In fact there have been records of artificial dredging of river beds through compulsory contributory labour under various kings, and even of artificial diversions of river courses. Considering the sizes of the rivers here, these projects could not really have been too awesome or daunting. All the same, although of a totally different dimension, the current talks of river linking etc, in the larger context of the vast Indian sub-continent are not any logic that escaped the notice of good administrators in the state’s history. Even now, in spite of what the critics of the river linking project say, we do feel it will be an experiment worth the while in Manipur. Just one case should suffice to illustrate. Diverting the Nambul River from the heart of Imphal city would do miles to the health of the river as well as in flood control within the Imphal municipal area. The water too may acquire more irrigational value in the process. The stretch of the river bed thus dried up can become part of the master plan of an Imphal city sewerage project, as and when such a project comes up.

Saving our lakes, most particularly the Loktak, will be a far more difficult proposition. But perhaps this will also have to be linked up with a river management project. Perhaps the solution is in devising a way to have our rivers safely deposit their alluvium loads they bring down from the hills in special reservoirs along their meandering courses before they empty into the Loktak. But it is not only silt or the fate of its lakes that the ecology of Imphal Valley is threatened by. The inescapable fact also is, whatever material is introduced into its soil will remain there forever precisely because there is very little draining out of the valley. Take for instance chemical pesticides or chemical fertilizers, or for that matter chemical effluents from factories in the future. Most of the residues from these are simply going to continue to accumulate in the soil. Who knows what effect such residues will have on the soil in a couple of hundred years. Just suppose it begins turning acidic or alkaline, or in the worst case scenario, poisonous. Considering pesticides are poisons, this is not altogether impossible. Again in the absence of a flushing mechanism, it will take eons before these soil conditions can be neutralized. This will indeed be a nightmarish scenario. Abolishing chemical pesticides or fertilizers can also mean present day disasters and it would indeed be stupid to recommend such a measure unthinkingly. What must however be done is to make sure that to the extent possible, only bio-degradable alternatives are used. Or even if there are no real substitutes to chemical agriculture boosters, their long term consequences must be closely monitored and regulated. While we all celebrate the fecundity of the alluvial soil of the valley and its salubrious climate, have the obvious fragility of the valley ecology ever been part of any serious reflection in official policy making or the general understanding of the issue? We are afraid to say there have been very little of it and this is most unfortunate.

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AIR Imphal News -24th July 2011 7.30 Evening

Source:- AIR Imphal; Recorded by:- KO in public interest.

AIR News 7.30 p.m Source:- AIR Imphal; Recorded by:- KO in public interest.

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4 militants held in Manipur – Assam Tribune

4 militants held in ManipurAssam TribuneIMPHAL, July 24 – Four militants of the banned Kangleipak Communist Party-Lalheiba group (KCP-L) were arrested during search operations in Imphal West district of Manipur today, official sources said. Search op…

4 militants held in Manipur
Assam Tribune
IMPHAL, July 24 – Four militants of the banned Kangleipak Communist Party-Lalheiba group (KCP-L) were arrested during search operations in Imphal West district of Manipur today, official sources said. Search operations were launched at some places

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Flood flashback

Chitra Ahanthem The rains it seems are good only in films. The languorous pitter-patter of rains over the past week in Imphal has led to the inundation of small lanes… Read more »

Chitra Ahanthem
The rains it seems are good only in films. The languorous pitter-patter of rains over the past week in Imphal has led to the inundation of small lanes and many roads across town. On a happier note, the rains have not spared anyone but merrily mired people in slush and mud, regardless of social hierarchies and flooding embankments and residential areas and office complexes. Whoever thought rain could turn out to be a great social leveler? The rich and the powerful with all their might and the grandeur of their homes have to face the ignominy of having their homes encroached upon by water from nearby drains that in turn have become mere slivers of water being clogged with plastic and other rubbish. Drains have more or less disappeared from sight over the years following the concrete jungle fixation, the greed for more land and the presence of the evil plastic bags that everyone seems to love throwing everywhere.
And while nothing about floods can be romantic, the current situation of flash floods arising out of water deluge following brief showers brings back the memories of excitement associated with floods, and a big one at that. The 1989 floods happened sometime in summer, which makes that spectacle more than two decades old. We were in school then, a period that was yet to be marked by internet or mobile phones or even cable TV. Doordarshan and All India Radio were the only means of entertainment and news but our own inherent tendency for kumhei meant that people would go out in droves and move about town taking stock of how the flood was advancing. They called it “eeshing chaoba yengba”  and it was more or less effective in warning people about when to pack things in the house and get ready for the flooding. Sometimes, people would set up their fishing nets in places where there was flooding and come back boasting about their catch. In most cases, it was the news that came from this ventures that would warn people much before the local news on AIR!

Nude wires over the Nambul river, plastic garbage in background Photo credit: Chitra Ahanthem

Looking at it now, it is rather strange that before my own experience of the 1989 floods, we had only the hearsay of our own parents of their flood experiences during their own childhood. This gave it the rose tinted outlook: floods sounded like so much fun! That would be an understatement in more ways than one. For starters, my father ended up joining his friends for a “eeshing chaoba yengba chatba” expedition and it was while he was away that the floods decided to come calling! As my younger siblings slept through the night, I was slogging with my mother: we had to pack books and clothes and keep them on higher locations inside the house. We had to wedge in bricks under the hen-coop and repeat the same exercise for the small thatched granary that we had at home. Father came in home after we had done the first stocktaking and calmly said, “the floods have come.” It was as if we still had that fact to be pointed out to us when we had been already been scrambling about with water swirling around our ankles in the house!

Scene in the heart of Imphal: Paona Bazaar. Photo credit: Chitra Ahanthem

But that frantic rush as it turned out later, was not enough. My treasured comic collection was sogged and so was a large part of the granary. My younger brother who had been besotted by two small ducklings and had them in a small cage was heart broken to find later that the waters carried away the ducks: cage and all! Much later after the water receded, the paddy that got wet developed white moulds but the price of rice had gone up after the floods. So we ended up eating pungent smelling rice for a long time and I pestered my parents asking whether our paddy had turned to the huikap breed (it is said that huikap is so called because the taste is so vile as to make even dogs cry!) because of the floods. This would come later but after the scrambling, there was the element of fun that started out with the first morning after the floods came: the sight of an uncle and a cousin rowing on a raft made of the trunk of banana plants. Of course, the lanes in our locality will no longer fit such a contraption now but back then lanes within Leikais were broad and people asked about the welfare of their neighbours. Uncle was telling us that people had started packing their belongings and taking shelter in his building and other tall structures. He sent in a rickshaw to ferry my siblings and myself and we spent 3-4 days with our extended family in their building, a tall one that was still being constructed.
The most vivid memory of that time is the picture of all of us surrounding grand-father as he would tune into the local news on AIR and hearing about when the flood level would go down. There was great excitement and chaos when some snakes came out crawling and the usual circus following naughty children trying out water adventures: the later got taken care of through some trashing! But the fun times did not last long: we had two doctors in the family and they promptly vaccinated all of us children so we did not get any funny infections (am not sure what those injections were about still). Then my maternal grand mother came to fetch us to her home at Kakwa, which was not touched by the flood. I stayed with her for 2 weeks till it was announced that schools would be open once again. That brought the end of all excitement but the after effects of the flood was still around when we got back. We came home to the sight of our mother scrubbing the mud off the hens!
End-point:
That was then and much has changed. While there are many places around Imphal and its outskirts that stay under flood for a day and more, thankfully they do not remain submerged for days on end. Having said that though, it would be disastrous to remain complacent about floods. The sight of nude electric power lines and cables hanging oh so near above the water surface on the Nambul river is enough to give me ulcers. The flash floods that happen after every brief downpour also continues to be an eye-sore and speaks volumes of how we are not taking care of waste disposals and drainage and sewerage around our houses. Most houses have got added height in their ground floor structures following ground leveling but if each of us can care enough to also think of what lies beyond our own homes, then we could actually get down to living without the slush and the mud. So long as drains remain clogged with plastic or worse, get to vanishing point, the sight of concrete surrounded by slush will remain.

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AIR Imphal News –24th July 2011 7.30 Morning

Source:- AIR Imphal; Recorded by:- KO in public interest

AIR News 7.30 p.m Source:- AIR Imphal; Recorded by:- KO in public interest

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Akademi award for Manipuri dance guru – Times of India

Zee NewsAkademi award for Manipuri dance guruTimes of IndiaGUWAHATI: Phanjoubam Iboton Singh, the pradhan guru of Jawaharlal Nehru Manipur Dance Academy in Imphal was among 38 stalwarts named for the Sangeet Natak Akademi Awards for the year 2010. Vice…


Zee News

Akademi award for Manipuri dance guru
Times of India
GUWAHATI: Phanjoubam Iboton Singh, the pradhan guru of Jawaharlal Nehru Manipur Dance Academy in Imphal was among 38 stalwarts named for the Sangeet Natak Akademi Awards for the year 2010. Vice-president M Hamid Ansari gave away the awards carrying Rs
Sangeet Natak Akademi award to Iboton SinghAssam Tribune

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Imphal remembers ‘fake-kill’ victims – Times of India

KanglaOnlineImphal remembers 'fake-kill' victimsTimes of IndiaIMPHAL: A large number of people on Saturday paid floral tributes to reformed rebels Chungkahm Sanjit and Rabina Devi who were gunned downed by Manipur police commandos in an alleged…


KanglaOnline

Imphal remembers 'fake-kill' victims
Times of India
IMPHAL: A large number of people on Saturday paid floral tributes to reformed rebels Chungkahm Sanjit and Rabina Devi who were gunned downed by Manipur police commandos in an alleged fake encounter at Imphal Bazaar on July 23, 2009,
Police prevent anniversary of fake encounter killingsMorungExpress
Unperturbed by police coercion, homage paid to Rabina, SanjitKanglaOnline

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