Planting of bomb plant at school denounced

Condemning planting of bomb plant as well as the monetary demand served to Regular English High School at Kwakeithel Heinoukhongnembi, Imphal West by unidentified miscreants on May 25 around 6 Source Hueiyen News Service

Condemning planting of bomb plant as well as the monetary demand served to Regular English High School at Kwakeithel Heinoukhongnembi, Imphal West by unidentified miscreants on May 25 around 6 Source Hueiyen News Service

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ChoitharKhangkhui PMGSY road under scanner, MSRRDA inspects

After the competent court passed an interim order to verify the completion report submitted to the relevant department on the PMGSY road from BRTF road to Khangkhui Khullen via Choithar, Manipur State Rural Roads Development Agency MSRRDA rushed to t…

After the competent court passed an interim order to verify the completion report submitted to the relevant department on the PMGSY road from BRTF road to Khangkhui Khullen via Choithar, Manipur State Rural Roads Development Agency MSRRDA rushed to the work site to inspect the project status along with members of Tangkhul Naga Contractors Association TNCA Source Hueiyen News Service Pamreiso Shimray

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Scribes boycott

Taking strong exception to RIMS media advisor Iboyaima Laithang bam’s derision of the journalists fraternity of Manipur by using such terms as impolite, illiterate, sub standard etc, the All Manipur Working Journalists’ Union AMWJU has decided to bo…

Taking strong exception to RIMS media advisor Iboyaima Laithang bam’s derision of the journalists fraternity of Manipur by using such terms as impolite, illiterate, sub standard etc, the All Manipur Working Journalists’ Union AMWJU has decided to boycott all news items related to RIMS until the media advisor is removed Source The Sangai Express

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State BJP celebrates Modi’s oath taking

As Narendra Modi took oath as the 15th Prime Minister of India on Monday the ecstatic State unit of BJP joined the rest of the country in celebrating the occasion here at the party office Source Hueiyen News Service

As Narendra Modi took oath as the 15th Prime Minister of India on Monday the ecstatic State unit of BJP joined the rest of the country in celebrating the occasion here at the party office Source Hueiyen News Service

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June 28 anniv

As in the previous years, fitting tributes would be paid to all mar tyrs of the mass movement of June, 2001 at their Kekrupat memorial complex Source The Sangai Express

As in the previous years, fitting tributes would be paid to all mar tyrs of the mass movement of June, 2001 at their Kekrupat memorial complex Source The Sangai Express

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Horticulture Training begins

A two day training programme under amelioration of acid soils in horticulture crops NEC Scheme, 2013 14 has started today at Lambung village in Chandel district Source Hueiyen News Service

A two day training programme under amelioration of acid soils in horticulture crops NEC Scheme, 2013 14 has started today at Lambung village in Chandel district Source Hueiyen News Service

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Students flay

Deno uncing bomb threat to Regular English High School, Kwa keithel Heinou Khongnembi, suspected to be linked with monetary demand, students and teachers staged sit in protest at the School gate today Source The Sangai Express

Deno uncing bomb threat to Regular English High School, Kwa keithel Heinou Khongnembi, suspected to be linked with monetary demand, students and teachers staged sit in protest at the School gate today Source The Sangai Express

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RIMS nurses on strike, health care services affected

All services in the premier medical institute of the region here have come to a halt from today following the cease work strike launched by RIMS Nurses’ Association, Lamphelpat charging Director Dr Shekharjit with superseding seniority list in promotio…

All services in the premier medical institute of the region here have come to a halt from today following the cease work strike launched by RIMS Nurses’ Association, Lamphelpat charging Director Dr Shekharjit with superseding seniority list in promotion of some nurses Source Hueiyen News Service

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Modi sworn in as 15th PM

Narendra Modi, India’s 15th Prime Minister, took oath on Monday at a ceremony held in the open at Rashtrapati Bhavan and attended by the Who’s Who of the nation, including political leaders, business honchos, ce lebrities and leaders of religious faith…

Narendra Modi, India’s 15th Prime Minister, took oath on Monday at a ceremony held in the open at Rashtrapati Bhavan and attended by the Who’s Who of the nation, including political leaders, business honchos, ce lebrities and leaders of religious faiths, as well as leaders of neighbouring countries Source The Sangai Express Agencies

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Moirang Lai-Haraoba

A visit to Moirang Lai-Haraoba (Ibuthou Thangjing): Kids dressed up in front of the Lai-Haraobung. Photo: Chitaranjan Thoudam

A visit to Moirang Lai-Haraoba (Ibuthou Thangjing): Kids dressed up in front of the Lai-Haraobung. Photo: Chitaranjan Thoudam

A visit to Moirang Lai-Haraoba (Ibuthou Thangjing): Kids dressed up in front of the Lai-Haraobung.
Photo: Chitaranjan Thoudam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/05/moirang-lai-haraoba/

State BJP places hopes on Modi to solve Manipur issues – KanglaOnline

State BJP places hopes on Modi to solve Manipur issuesKanglaOnlineImphal, May 26: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Manipur Pradesh has high hopes from Narendra Modi who was sworn-in as India's Prime Minister today. The state chapter of the saffron…

State BJP places hopes on Modi to solve Manipur issues
KanglaOnline
Imphal, May 26: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Manipur Pradesh has high hopes from Narendra Modi who was sworn-in as India's Prime Minister today. The state chapter of the saffron party expects Modi to solve Manipur's issues and problems in the …

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNEiFSRCvvYKCduRCskS6lKgCKbT9A&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&ei=6j2GU5L3HIaM8QGzloCYBA&url=http://kanglaonline.com/2014/05/state-bjp-places-hopes-on-modi-to-solve-manipur-issues/

Tamenglong Headquarters As The Summer Capital of Manipur: From bleak to … – KanglaOnline

Tamenglong Headquarters As The Summer Capital of Manipur: From bleak to …KanglaOnlineCharles Dickens wrote the Bleak House where: “Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green aits and meadows; fog down the river, where it rolls def…

Tamenglong Headquarters As The Summer Capital of Manipur: From bleak to
KanglaOnline
Charles Dickens wrote the Bleak House where: “Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green aits and meadows; fog down the river, where it rolls defiled among the tiers of shipping and the waterside pollutions of a great (and dirty) city.

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNGy9xqtCvo7YSeI4RsheWU81wdLLg&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&ei=Mn2GU6nyG4iH8gHv5oCoCw&url=http://kanglaonline.com/2014/05/tamenglong-headquarters-as-the-summer-capital-of-manipur-from-bleak-to-hope/

Why Should We Conserve Biodiversity?

By Dr. R.K. Ranjan Singh Biodiversity? The living organisms are found almost everywhere on earth. Hot desert, extremely cold places, like north and south pole, high mountains, deep oceans, dark

By Dr. R.K. Ranjan Singh

Biodiversity?

The living organisms are found almost everywhere on earth. Hot desert, extremely cold places, like north and south pole, high mountains, deep oceans, dark caves etc. are all inhabited by one or other kind of organisms. The types of organisms found on different places differ from one another. For example, plants, animals, insects etc. living in pond are different from those on land. Likewise plants, animals and even human beings found in different parts of the world differ in many ways. The planet earth is thus repository of innumerable varieties of living organisms ranging from very small microscope such as bacteria, which cannot be seen by naked eyes, to very large macroscopic like elephants, whales, giant banyan tree etc. The richness of variety of life forms is termed as biological diversity, popularly referred to as biodiversity.

Life has existed on Earth for over 3.5 billion years. Over 95% of the species that ever existed have gone extinct. So why should we be concerned about current extinction rates and conserving biodiversity?

Currently the planet is inhabited by several million species in about 100 different phyla (Dirzo& Raven 2003). About 1.8 million have been described by scientists (Hilton- Taylor 2008), but conservative estimates suggest that there are 5-15 million species alive today (May, 2000), since many groups of organisms remain poorly studied. Over 15,000 new species are described each year (Dirzo& Raven 2003), and new species are evolving during our lifetimes. However, modern extinction rates are high, at 100 to 1000 times greater than background extinction rates calculated over the eras. Although new species appear, existing species go extinct at a rate 1000 times that of species formation (Wilson 2003). Many biologists agree that we are in the midst of a mass extinction, a time when 75% or more of species are lost over a short geological time scale (Raup 1994). The last great mass extinction was 65 million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous, when the dinosaurs went extinct. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature estimates that 22% of known mammals, 32% of amphibians, 14% of birds, and 32% of gymnosperms (all well-studied groups) are threatened with extinction (Hilton-Taylor 2008). Species that were abundant within the last 200 years have gone extinct. For example, passenger pigeons, which numbered three to five billion in the mid-1800s (Ellsworth &McComb 2003), are now extinct.

Why should we be concerned about this loss of biodiversity? The answer lies in the fact that, for the first time in Earth’s history, single species, HOMO SAPIENS, could cause a mass extinction, precipitating its own demise. The primary cause of today’s loss of biodiversity is habitat alteration caused by human activities. Let’s think about the meaning of biodiversity. Most people understand that biodiversity includes the great heterogeneous assemblage of living organisms. This aspect of biodiversity is also known as species diversity. Biodiversity includes two other components as well- genetic diversity and ecosystem diversity.

Biological Resources:

Biological resources are those products that we harvest from nature. These resources fall into several categories: food, medicine, fibres, wood products, and more. For example, over 7,000 species of plants are used for food, although we rely heavily on only 12 major food crops. Most of the human population depend on plants for medicines are chemicals produced by pharmaceutical companies, but the original formulas were often derived from plants. For example, opiate pain relievers are derived from poppies, aspirin is derived from willows, and quinine for treating malaria come from the Chinchona tree. The rosy periwinkle (Vincarosea) and Pacific yew (Taxa brevifolia) both provide substances used in chemotherapy to inhibit the cell division of cancerous cells. Fibers for clothing, ropes, sacking, webbing, netting and other materials are provided by a large number of plants, including cotton plants, flax plants (linen), hemp (cordage and sail canvas), Agave plants sisal), Corchorus plants (jute), bamboo and palms. Tress provide the wood products used in making homes, furniture, and paper products.

In addition, living organism provide inspiration for engineers seeking better and more efficient products. The field known as bio-mimicry is the study of natural products that provide solutions to human needs. For example, shark skin provided the model for hydrodynamic swimming suits. The glue used by Sandcastle worms (Phragmatopoma-californica) to cement together their sand particle shells was the inspiration for a glue that mends fractured bones in the aqueous internal environment of the body. Finally, scientists are using the chemical nature of spider’s silk to design strong, lightweight fibers.

Ecosystem Services

Ecosystem services are processes provided by nature that support human life. These services include the decomposition of waster, pollination, water purification, moderation of floods and renewal of soil fertility. Ecosystem processes are often overlooked and are not generally valued as part of the economy until they cease to function. When economic value is assigned to these services, it is often startlingly high. For example, inspect pollinators help produce many commercially important fruits such as almonds, melons, blueberries, and apples. The global economic value of pollination services performed by insects has been value at $ 217 billion per year (Gallai etal. 2009). How does a process like water purification work? Rain water is filtered by soil and by microbes that can break down nutrients and contaminants, and reduced metal ions, slowing their spread into the environment. Wetland and riparian plants absorb nitrogen, and trap sediments that decrease water quality. Human construction and development disrupt natural environments, but most habitats have an extraordinary ability to recover when given the chance. This is because dormant seeds in the soil can germinate, stabilize the soil, and initiate successional events that restore vegetation which provides food and structure for other colonizing organisms. Native plants like fireweed can help re-vegetate an area after fire.

Social and Spiritual Benefits

Throughout most of human history, conservation has involved protecting nature for the spiritual gifts it provides, and protecting sacred places in the local landscape. Stories of indigenous people incorporate detailed knowledge of the animals and plants that make up their world. The heterogeneity of the world’s mythology, folk art and folk dances show the effects of biodiversity on cultural development and contribute to the richness of global arts and literature. Different cultures developed in different landscape that influenced activities, occupations, diet, language and architecture. Cultures adapted to local environmental challenges by growing local domestic crops, developing irrigation and terracing systems, hunting, fishing and gathering. Biodiversity provides a sense of place. Countries and states have flagship animals and plants that are a source of pride and highlight the uniqueness of each habitat. Travel, which provides great pleasure to many people, is motivated by the desire to see this combination of cultural, landscape and biological diversity.

Ecotourism is travel with the desire to view, sustain and support natural ecosystems and local cultures. Support from ecotourism can reduce habitat destruction, preserve species that suffer from poaching and illegal trade in the pet market, plus provide jobs for the local economy. For example, the Wasini Island project in Kenya has been a major ecotourism success story. Coral reefs and mangrove forests were suffering degradation from development, agriculture and from exploitation of reef species. Support from the Biodiversity Conservation Programme made it possible for the local community to build boardwalks and other features that facilitate viewing wildlife. Local people were trained as guides and in administration and they now run a profitable ecotourism operation. Money from tourism helps the local economy, provides incentive to maintain the habitat and provides funds for the local health clinic and scholarships for local students (Peopleandplanet.net2009). In recognition of the aesthetic value of nature, in 1892 the US Congress set aside the first national park “for the benefit and enjoyment of the people” (NPS 2010). Frederick Law Olmstead, who in the 1800s designed and managed park system and urban parks such as Central Park in New York City, believed in the rejuvenating powers of nature. He felt that contemplating nature’s grandeur allowed man to put is life into perspective. In modern times, with increasing urbanization, people seek out local parks, open space and trails, and travel to national parks and wild places where they can enjoy nature. Birding, hiking, fishing, hunting, gardening, and other forms of recreation in nature are popular activities and are economically important.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/05/why-should-we-conserve-biodiversity-2/

Tamenglong Headquarters As The Summer Capital of Manipur: From bleak to hope

By Amar Yumnam Charles Dickens wrote the Bleak House where: “Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green aits and meadows; fog down the river, where it

By Amar Yumnam

Charles Dickens wrote the Bleak House where: “Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green aits and meadows; fog down the river, where it rolls defiled among the tiers of shipping and the waterside pollutions of a great (and dirty) city. Fog on the Essex marshes, fog on the Kentish heights. Fog creeping into the cabooses of collier-brigs; fog lying out on the yards, and hovering in the rigging of great ships; fog drooping on the gunwales of barges and small boats. Fog in the eyes and throats of ancient Greenwich pensioners, wheezing by the firesides of their wards; fog in the stem and bowl of the afternoon pipe of the wrathful skipper, down in his close cabin; fog cruelly pinching the toes and fingers of his shivering little ’prentice boy on deck. Chance people on the bridges peeping over the parapets into a nether sky of fog, with fog all round them, as if they were up in a balloon, and hanging in the misty clouds. …Gas looming through the fog in divers places in the streets, much as the sun may, from the spongey fields, be seen to loom by husbandman and ploughboy. Most of the shops lighted two hours before their time — as the gas seems to know, for it has a haggard and unwilling look….The raw afternoon is rawest, and the dense fog is densest, and the muddy streets are muddiest near that leaden-headed old obstruction, appropriate ornament for the threshold of a leaden-headed old corporation, Temple Bar. And hard by Temple Bar, in Lincoln’s Inn Hall, at the very heart of the fog, sits the Lord High Chancellor in his High Court of Chancery. ..Never can there come fog too thick, never can there come mud and mire too deep, to assort with the groping and floundering condition which this High Court of Chancery, most pestilent of hoary sinners, holds this day in the sight of heaven and earth.” But he also wrote the Great Expectations. He as well wrote in David Copperfield thus: “Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show. To begin my life with the beginning of my life, I record that I was born (as I have been informed and believe) on a Friday, at twelve o’clock at night. It was remarked that the clock began to strike, and I began to cry, simultaneously.” The description of the fog in the Bleak House is like the road leading to the Tamenglong headquarters. But we cannot afford to allow this situation to continue forever, and the time is now for a rebirth and a new clock to strike.

The timing is important. The results of the recent elections to the Indian Parliament have assured the ushering into an era of hope and change. The necessity and compulsions for taking the mountains of Manipur along in this journey are now much more compelling than ever for social, political and economic reasons. Today I would take up the case of the headquarters of the Tamenglong District. Tamenglong Town is the most difficult district headquarters of Manipur by any yardstick. Within the district, it is the most difficult one to reach from any village in any direction within. It is also structured in a very diverse way; we can have linkages from Tamei, Tousem and Khoupum Tampak as examples.

But what is unfortunately more pressing right now is the linkage with the headquarters of the province with those of the district. We can reach Tamenglong Town from Imphal through two routes – one from Imphal via Kangpokpi and Tamei, and another via Khongsang. The first route is longer, and so the people generally opt for the second one. Now how does the second one take us from Imphal to the district headquarters town of Tamenglong? We have to start from Imphal by the Imphal Jiribam Road (it is said that it is a National Highway and going to be an Asian Highway. But I am not sure about it for it does not have any of the accepted indicators of a National Highway. Of course, it is marked by irritating halts and checks by an army self-described as “Friends of the Hill People”. It is also taken care of by a roads construction agency of the country who have assured work for themselves for at least the next century looking at the way their workers work/don’t work on the roads.) One hundred and seven kilometres from Imphal towards Jiribam, we would reach the diversion at Khongsang. This would take from two to two and half hours. From Khongsang to the Tamenglong Town is a stretch of forty kilometres. It would take the same number of hours as it took for travelling from Imphal to Khongsang. The stretch wears the same condition as it was in the past – two decades, one decade or whatever – with no sign of improvement.

Now the question before us is how do we attend to this issue of non-improvement in the linkages between Imphal and the Tamenglong Town? I can think of three strategies. First, there is an imperative need for evolving a special policy for dependable connectivity between Imphal and all the district headquarters of Manipur. This would be incomplete unless we frame this as a package-programme accompanied by the dependable linking up of the district headquarters with all the block headquarters within. Tamenglong can be accommodated within this framework on a priority basis. Second, the Imphal Jiribam Road should be handed over to an international construction agency, preferably a Chinese, in order to learn timely completion, quality construction, working pattern and reliable delivery of the projects in hand after completion. While these would be good but would not be enough for Tamenglong. The forty kilometre stretch from Khongsang to Tamenglong Town and the difficulties being faced in the town itself are such that there is need for a more comprehensive and aggressive intervention. This takes us to the third strategy of developing Tamenglong Town as the Summer Capital of Manipur. This would have two very positive spin-offs. The necessary infrastructure development would inevitably come up. Further if it is developed as the province’s Summer Capital, the authorities would have the ability to ride roughshod over the disturbances being faced now. In any case, time is now for giving a fillip to development in the mountains of Manipur, and Tamenglong needs more than any other area.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/05/tamenglong-headquarters-as-the-summer-capital-of-manipur-from-bleak-to-hope/

Walllowing in Delusion

By B.G.Verghese The Congress Party’s review of its massive electoral drubbing last week shows that it has learnt nothing despite the plain results of its follies,flawed leadership and outdated ideology.

By B.G.Verghese

The Congress Party’s review of its massive electoral drubbing last week shows that it has learnt nothing despite the plain results of its follies,flawed leadership and outdated ideology. India needs a party like the Congress with its century-old tradition of service in nation building but which has latterly come to assume that the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty constitutes the nation.

Sycophancy is ingrained in our politics and Ambedkar long back warned against the danger of “bhakti” which, he said, may be all right in the practise of religion but all wrong in the conduct of politics.Dev Kant Barooah arrogantly claimed in 1975 that “Indira is India and India is Indira”. This puerile notion has not been exorcised and seems to be playing out once again with a failed Rahul and a politically tired and stale Sonia assuming or being accorded a divine right to rule by a coterie that long back abandoned inner party democracy and, removed Fraternity as a founding pillar of the state, reducing the idea of secularism to an empty and divisive slogan for vote-bank politics in a feudal society.

The Congress, with its once hallowed leadership and ideals, is part of the nation’s political and social heritage and not a private club. It is no surprise that the charade played out in the post-poll Congress stocktaking has left party workers and supporters confused and angry. The swelling undercurrent of resentment is being increasingly reflected in statements by members calling for accountability, revamping of the leadership and a review of what the Congress stands for in a fast changing India within a fast changing world.

Nobody knows what Rahul Gandhi stands for since he has failed to articulate a single coherent idea on any subject of national importance in the past five years. Priyanka did better than he did at the hustings but can be no substitute for a democratically elected leader through the AICC, charged with a new mandate for the future. Falling back on lineage will not do. But that precisely is what seems to be planned with the AICC issuing invitations to a national seminar on “Renewing India’s commitment to Jawaharlal Nehru’s Vision”, marking the 50th anniversary of Nehru’s passing to be held on May 27.This is a routine invitation on onereckoning but equally a not-so-subtle bid to evoke a dated past and family nostalgia, with Sonia and Rahul playing leading roles.

Nehru was a great and greatly loved leader who served the nation well. But he was also responsible for some acts of crass folly. We are no longer living in Nehru’s world. What the AICC is seeking to address is not a scholarly assembly but apolitical jamboree. The discussion at its best will be on par with a debate on TodarMal’s land reforms and Asoka’s peace initiative. Interesting historically butotherwise irrelevant.

Meanwhile, the prospective PM has been keeping his cards close to his chest. Perhaps for that reasontoo much has been read of his assumed “master-stroke” in inviting the SAARC leaders and the PM of Mauritius to his swearing-in. This is a purely ceremonial function and is scarcely an occasion for serious talks when his cabinet has to be sworn in and hold its first consultations on policy formulation. A courtesy call and photo opportunity is all that might be possible over a banquet. With Mr Nawaz Sharif coming, a one-to-one courtesy summit has been organised for the 27th morning for 20-30 minutes with each of the visiting leaders. There will be no time and there has been no preparation for serious bilateral talks and so these can at best be breaking-the-ice meetings. A back-channel already exists with Pakistan and has been active. This will probably be directed to continue. Mr Nawaz Sharif will surely invite Mr Modi to visit Islamabad and the new PM will be left wondering how to respond differently from Dr Manmohan Singh after the series of recent cross-LOC attacks and the bombing of our embassy in Herat, events of a kind that were forecast to “test’ the new PM. Symbolism is useful but should not be driven by vanity.

It is necessary give the new administration time to settle down, review and formulate its security and diplomatic policies and then take such measured steps as it deems fit. Cabinet-making has not been easy, with competing claims to one or other of the four “major” portfolios. Many ruffled feathers may need to be soothed. However, it is good that the new PM is in favour of a smaller and more compact cabinet, and proposes to consolidate and rationalise Departments that were fragmented over the years just to accommodate more and more ministers, making for loss of coordination and coherence, avoidable delays and needless turf problems. It is appropriate that departmental secretaries are preparing briefs on nodal issues and action points so as to ensure emphasis on focused goals.

Mr Modi has done well to snub Vaiko and Jayalalithaa who objected to the invitation to the Sri Lankan President to visit Delhi for the swearing in. Such disruptive conduct must rightly be nipped in the bud. Foreign policy cannot be outsourced to the states as has happened hitherto. The Bangladeshi Speaker, representing Sheikh Hasina will surely ask if Mr Modi and hotheads in Assam are going to continue to dictate terms on a Teesta and land boundary accord?

There may be no formal Leader of the Opposition as none has obtained the necessary qualifying strength of a tenth of the membership of the House, or 54 members. However, this need not preclude floor coordinationso that that there is a vigorous and responsible opposition that will not resort to the tactics followed by the BJP and others in the last LokSabha of disrupting the working of the House day after day and for entre sessions.

The length and conduct of the recent polls, gaps in the matter of poll financing, lack of teeth in dealing with the growing menace of paid news, speedier processes for disqualification of those with criminal records, and reviewing the model code of conduct all call for early, collective attention. The electoral system has stood up well to enormous challenges but has to remain ahead of the game.

The regional parties will no doubt review their fortunes and alignments. The AamAdmi Party however appears to be on the path of self-destruction with an irresponsible and quixotic leader in ArvindKejriwal and some of his colleagues who wish to apply different standards to different parties and different occasions. Internal dissensions are growing and the aamjanata is fast tiring of a permanent circuswith far too many clowns. ShaizaImli and Dr Gopinath have quit.The AAP catalysed a certain national mood but is losing the plot.

www.bgverghese.com

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/05/walllowing-in-delusion/