ZU flays UNC’s decision on Charenamei

Zeliangrong Union Assam, Manipur Nagaland has stated that it is sadden by UNC’s decision to boycott the former Outer MP Mani Charenamei and said that it does not support such decision Source Hueiyen News Service

Zeliangrong Union Assam, Manipur Nagaland has stated that it is sadden by UNC’s decision to boycott the former Outer MP Mani Charenamei and said that it does not support such decision Source Hueiyen News Service

Read more / Original news source: http://e-pao.net/ge.asp?heading=34&src=060714

Shyamkumar petitions Speaker, Disqualify 3 more MLAs

After written applications seeking disqua lification of Trinamool Cong ress MLAs Kh Joykishan and Th Bishwajit on the charge of anti party activities were submitted, Trinamool Cong ress State Unit President Th Shyamkumar has sought disqualification of…

After written applications seeking disqua lification of Trinamool Cong ress MLAs Kh Joykishan and Th Bishwajit on the charge of anti party activities were submitted, Trinamool Cong ress State Unit President Th Shyamkumar has sought disqualification of other party MLAs O Lukhoi, M Kunjo and K Sarat through a fresh written complaint submitted to the State Legislative Assembly Speaker Source The Sangai Express

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Dharmasala International Film Fellows

To promote independent filmmaking in the Himalayan region, Dharmasala International Film Festival DIFF has announced the first DIFF Film Fellows programme targeting the young and upcoming filmmakers from the Indian Himalayan regions, a release of the…

To promote independent filmmaking in the Himalayan region, Dharmasala International Film Festival DIFF has announced the first DIFF Film Fellows programme targeting the young and upcoming filmmakers from the Indian Himalayan regions, a release of the DIFF said Source Hueiyen News Service

Read more / Original news source: http://e-pao.net/ge.asp?heading=30&src=060714

Crimes against women up in NE

Crimes against women in six of the eight Northeastern states in creased significantly in the last year compared to the year before as Assam led the list, although Manipur and Mizo ram registered a downward trend Source The Sangai Express Press Tru…

Crimes against women in six of the eight Northeastern states in creased significantly in the last year compared to the year before as Assam led the list, although Manipur and Mizo ram registered a downward trend Source The Sangai Express Press Trust of India

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PFA rescues animals, birds

Members of People for Animals PFA , Thoubal have rescued a beautiful green pigeon commonly known as Thick billed Green pigeon from Awang Sekmai in Imphal East today Source Hueiyen News Service

Members of People for Animals PFA , Thoubal have rescued a beautiful green pigeon commonly known as Thick billed Green pigeon from Awang Sekmai in Imphal East today Source Hueiyen News Service

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Rumblings within Congress party Cong MLAs confer on reshuffle demand

Congress MLAs who have been demanding replacement of all the incumbent 10 Cabinet Ministers including the Speaker held a meeting with a motive to find out what AICC president Sonia Gandhi told Chief Minister O Ibobi and Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam…

Congress MLAs who have been demanding replacement of all the incumbent 10 Cabinet Ministers including the Speaker held a meeting with a motive to find out what AICC president Sonia Gandhi told Chief Minister O Ibobi and Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam on the matter Source The Sangai Express

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CM to meet agitating Cong MLAs

In an attempt to placate the agitating party MLAs who are demanding replacement of at least 10 Ministers from the existing Council of Ministers, Chief Minister O Ibobi has called a joint meeting with all agitating MLAs on July 7 at 10 am Source Huei…

In an attempt to placate the agitating party MLAs who are demanding replacement of at least 10 Ministers from the existing Council of Ministers, Chief Minister O Ibobi has called a joint meeting with all agitating MLAs on July 7 at 10 am Source Hueiyen News Service

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GoI’s response would determine course of action

After a massive protest rally was taken out at different parts of the State yesterday, the Kuki Inpi Manipur KIM has categorically stated that their next course of action would be determined by the Government of India’s response Source The Sangai …

After a massive protest rally was taken out at different parts of the State yesterday, the Kuki Inpi Manipur KIM has categorically stated that their next course of action would be determined by the Government of India’s response Source The Sangai Express

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Long term town plan on Govt agenda

In order to address the problem of traffic congestion in Imphal city, the Government of Manipur is working on a long term plan which would remain effective even after 50 years from today Source The Sangai Express

In order to address the problem of traffic congestion in Imphal city, the Government of Manipur is working on a long term plan which would remain effective even after 50 years from today Source The Sangai Express

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Street vendors protest, urge for appropriate policy

Urging for the twin demands of enacting an appropriate street vendor policy and enforcement of the Street Vendor Act 2014, street vendors of Khwairamband Keithel today staged a protest demonstration at Moidangpok Source The Sangai Express

Urging for the twin demands of enacting an appropriate street vendor policy and enforcement of the Street Vendor Act 2014, street vendors of Khwairamband Keithel today staged a protest demonstration at Moidangpok Source The Sangai Express

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Touring NRI lawyeractivist arrives to spread message against casteism

Mounting pressure on the government, Senior Indian Lawyer KK Sarachandra Bose is on a pioneering all India expedition to spread the message against casteism and root out the deep old malady from the nation Source Hueiyen News Service

Mounting pressure on the government, Senior Indian Lawyer KK Sarachandra Bose is on a pioneering all India expedition to spread the message against casteism and root out the deep old malady from the nation Source Hueiyen News Service

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Vanamahotsav

The 65th State level Vana mahotsava was observed today at Thoubal College, Thoubal under the aegis of Principal Chief Conservator of Forest, Government of Manipur Source The Sangai Express

The 65th State level Vana mahotsava was observed today at Thoubal College, Thoubal under the aegis of Principal Chief Conservator of Forest, Government of Manipur Source The Sangai Express

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KIM sets record straight on UNC’s comment

Reacting to United Naga Council UNC ‘s comment on the July 4 Kuki Inpi Manipur KIM sponsored rallies in various parts of Manipur including Imphal, KIM leaders today clarified that the Friday rallies were not against any community or organisation but…

Reacting to United Naga Council UNC ‘s comment on the July 4 Kuki Inpi Manipur KIM sponsored rallies in various parts of Manipur including Imphal, KIM leaders today clarified that the Friday rallies were not against any community or organisation but the Kukis were expressing their resentments against denial of justice by the Government of India to the victims of the criminal and genocidal acts perpetrated by NSCN IM in 1990s Source Hueiyen News Service NNN

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DESAM

Calls for making education a ‘disturbance free zone’ reverberated once again with DESAM organising different campaigns on the issue today Source The Sangai Express

Calls for making education a ‘disturbance free zone’ reverberated once again with DESAM organising different campaigns on the issue today Source The Sangai Express

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‘Draft Rules on land acquisition should be published in Manipuri too’

The Indigenous Perspectives IP and Centre for Organisation, Research Education CORE on Saturday said there is no good reason in publishing the Manipur Draft Rules, 2014 on the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehab…

The Indigenous Perspectives IP and Centre for Organisation, Research Education CORE on Saturday said there is no good reason in publishing the Manipur Draft Rules, 2014 on the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 only in English language by Manipur Government Source Hueiyen News Service

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MGNREGS falls short of target, expectations

Although MGNREGS, one of the many flagship programmes taken up by the Government of India, set a target of giving job for 100 days in a year, 81 days is the highest target achieved so far Source The Sangai Express

Although MGNREGS, one of the many flagship programmes taken up by the Government of India, set a target of giving job for 100 days in a year, 81 days is the highest target achieved so far Source The Sangai Express

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CNPO suspends stir, DBE to be reviewed

Following an understanding reached between the agitating CNPO and Chandel ZEO during a meeting convened by Chandel ADC Member L Kashung on Friday, CNPO has suspended the agitation of keeping the office of the ZEO shut down with immediate effect from to…

Following an understanding reached between the agitating CNPO and Chandel ZEO during a meeting convened by Chandel ADC Member L Kashung on Friday, CNPO has suspended the agitation of keeping the office of the ZEO shut down with immediate effect from today Source Hueiyen News Service

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Turning memories of war into yearnings for peace

By Pradip Phanjoubam Is Manipur’s spring on the way? Is the state and its people coming out of dark days and beginning to open up to the outside world for

By Pradip Phanjoubam

Is Manipur’s spring on the way? Is the state and its people coming out of dark days and beginning to open up to the outside world for a breath of fresh air? Is there any room for optimism that better days are ahead?

Macabre metaphors are tempting. With apologies to T.S. Eliot, in half jest, dark though it may be, it is difficult to resist asking, have all the bombs unknown miscreants plant routinely at peoples’ gates and market places begun to sprout? Rather than terror growing out of them, is there a promise of an outbreak of a riot of colourful blossoms? Have this flicker of optimism, if at all, left far behind the cynicism of the common denominator of “government contracts” to which politics, bureaucracy, insurgency and business have been reduced to in unparalleled absurdity? Is the inverse proportionality between bad public infrastructure and opulence of these contractor classes coming to earn public indifference and abhorrence rather than awe?

Signs are encouraging, although too early for celebrations. The old ways of the state which put itself and its people in the dark era is unlikely to end in a hurry, but the paradigms of people’s aspirations, goals in life, sense of self-actualisation can shift elsewhere. The corrupt would continue to wallow in their mammon worship, let that be. The new generation of the meek and industrious must find a road independent of the vulgar influences and standards set by the corrupt generation. In this brave new world, achievement must come to be defined by contributions each makes to the fund of creative energy of the society.

Often considered as the manifesto of the Christian religion, the “Beatitudes” of Christ’s “Sermon on the Mount”, have this to say on this matter: “Blessed are the meek: for they will inherit the earth.” Teachings of all religions, most pronouncedly Buddhism, are indeed built around this beautiful idea. Ultimately, it is those who are honest with themselves and their works who will inherit the earth. When all draws to a close, as all must someday, it is work, not lucre, which will be the ultimate worship.

We do have some shining examples of men who have earned towering statures and reputations in society by the creativity and generosity of their work and not by the number of luxurious apartments they own everywhere. We also have numerous small entrepreneurs of artists, artisans, mechanics, and professionals in various services, creating employments, creating livelihoods. It is they, and the aggregate of their individual contributions, however small, which reflect the genuine strength of the places economy.

Of the signs which indicate potential for change and a new churning is the seeming growth of tourism in Manipur in the past two or three years, ever since the Protected Area Permit, PAP, (virtually a second visa) that foreign visitors were required to acquire to enter the state was removed. Foreigners are no longer a rare sight in the hotel lobbies and streets of Imphal. Understandably, there has also been a corresponding growth of quality hotels, and still more are in the pipeline. All this is happening despite those who continue to sow bombs and not paddy.

Two observations about tourism I took notes of from various interviews are interesting. The first pertains to foreign tourists and is made by a spokesman of Japan Chamber of Commerce in Bangkok, one of the few overseas chambers of commerce of the country as we were told, during a luncheon rendezvous in Bangkok for a group of Indian economic journalists organised by the Asian Development Bank. He said for Japanese investors, the flow of Japanese tourists to any place is a valuable litmus test. Wherever Japanese tourists begin travelling, it is more than likely Japanese businesses would also follow, he said.

The thought is interesting not because a Japanese said it, but for its rationale which would quite obviously be understood universally. The general impression of a place where ordinary people in large numbers like to vacation with their families would first and foremost be one of all round security. Such places would also be seen as friendly and welcoming. All of these qualities understandably would be very important to potential investors.

If tourism is an important herald for an investment climate, tourism itself is a revenue making, employment generating industry in its own right. It is in this regard that I want to consider the second observation common among hoteliers and resort owners in many popular tourist destinations in India such as Gangtok, Kullu, Manali etc. For small and medium hotel and resort owners, who incidentally make up the backbone of any tourist industry, domestic tourists are far more important than foreign ones.

In an economy witnessing an unprecedented growth of the middle class, India’s leisure seeking travelling population is huge and still expanding. Young honeymooners, huge noisy joint families often extending three generations, company staff on group excursions… the section of India’s population on the move is formidable, and as in China, its tourism industry can actually thrive even without foreign tourists.

It obviously is for this reason that today in tourist destinations like Darjeeling and Sikkim, many hotels and restaurants run by Tibetans and Newar Nepalis, communities known for their love of beef and pork, do not have these meat items on their menu anymore for fear they would shy away orthodox Indian tourists. I have had to be content with vegetable momos on popular stalls along the Darjeeling highway, once known for juicy steaming pork versions of them.

In other words, Manipur must prepare and encourage both varieties of tourists. Each have their own important places to fill in the growth of the tourism industry.

It is with these considerations in mind that we must look at the three months long state wide celebration of the 70th anniversary of the end of the Battle of Imphal and Kohima which concluded last week. Thanks to the organizers, the celebrations were befitting, with respectably high level official representations from the Britain, Japan, Australia and the USA attending the functions.

Much has been said of the World War II experience of Manipur, and how although forgotten all this while, this battlefront was one of the most important turning points as well as bitterly fought of the entire war. As Field Marshal Sir William Slim wrote in his book “Defeat Into Victory”, and so many other war historians have endorsed, these crucial and brutal battles were the turning point of the Japanese Imperial Army’s fortune leading to its ultimate defeat in 1945.

Till then, in the Asian theatre, the Japanese were virtually invincible having bulldozed away Allied troops from the entire SE Asia, the last of which was from Burma. They were then not only stopped in Imphal and Kohima but also given a crushing defeat. A total of 45,000 Japanese and INA troops perished. The Allied forces which had almost complete air superiority, lost 17000 troops (figures vary but not radically). The scale of casualties itself is an indicator of the intensity of the battles. The sufferings all involved must have gone through, the Japanese in particular, but also the Allied troops, and not the least the local people on whose soils these foreign wars were fought, is anybody’s imagination.

Unfortunately, for a long time these skirmishes were virtually forgotten, for reasons that had probably to do with the geographical remoteness of these battlefields thereby, a reciprocal psychological remoteness to the empires waging these wars. But quite by coincidence, or providence, or better still ‘karma’ if you prefer, as the 70th anniversary of these battles approached a series of events somewhat broke the decades of silence. Foremost of these was a poll in Britain which voted these battles as the most crucial in Britain’s war history, ahead of even Stalingrad, Normandy and Waterloo.

The second is an awakening to the reality of the history of this war at home, the agent provocateur of which are certain enterprising men behind two campaigns to publicize the matter, first of which is Battle of Imphal and Kohima which runs a website and a WWII guided tour service. Following on its heels is Imphal Campaign WW2, which runs a commendable private museum, a website, and keeps a voluntary team of men to discover WWII battle sites and artefacts.

So much for the brief recap of the run-up to the 70th anniversary celebrations, but the important question now is, what next? While most of the participants in the concluding function engaged in recounting the roles their nations played and heroic sacrifices their soldiers made, one speaker, Dr. Hugo Slim, grandson of the Field Marshal Slim, the chief architect behind turning defeat into victory for the Allied troops here 70 years ago, may have provided a fine clue to the question.

The academic grandson of the army general suggested that the approach should be one of pilgrimage and reconciliation. It is a supreme irony that it was war that brought the world to meet in Manipur 70 years ago he noted, and it is again memories of that war which is bringing the world back to Manipur. The occasions for the two meetings are different yet connected, just as war and peace are different yet integrally related. If the earlier exposes the violence embedded in humanity, the latter demonstrates the same humanity is capable of remorse, therefore still sane. The Manipur chapter of this war experience must now be about promoting this sanity.

Dr. Slim suggested, or bought into the idea of converting the Slim Cottage in the Kangla, the house where his grandfather, Gen. Slim planned out his defeat into victory strategies, into a war museum. Not a museum dedicated any particular nation or army he was quick to add, but to all who won, all who lost, all brave soldiers who died, all victorious soldiers who lived to tell the tale, all non combatants and civil population who were caught in the crossfire, all shattered dreams, all trophies won, all the shames and sufferings of failure, all the joys and rewards of success.

In short, this suggestion is about shaping this museum be a monument to recall the human capacity for reconciliation, remorse and conflict resolution. What a wonderful idea for governments to pick up from and translate into a tangible policy. Indeed, Minister and Deputy Chief of Mission, Embassy of Japan, Y Kawamura, fully agreed and said he would be following up the proposal with his embassy in New Delhi and home government in Tokyo. Hopefully, the Manipur government would also do its own bit of homework and following up.

Last fortnight, three cities of the former Pyu Kingdom in Myanmar were declared as UNESCO World Heritage Sites for the ancient temples located in them. It is worth a consideration why the government of Manipur should not take up initiatives to bring UNESCO to notice the importance of the Imphal-Kohima battle sites and given similarly recognition.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/07/turning-memories-of-war-into-yearnings-for-peace/

Questioning selfless-ness

By Tinky Ningombam They say that you are what you read, what you eat, what you live by. They say that to be the best person you think you can

By Tinky Ningombam

They say that you are what you read, what you eat, what you live by. They say that to be the best person you think you can be, you should never stop realizing yourself to be the best possible version of you. Along the way you make moral choices, pick up life-learnings and rules. And we play out our time here, in this mortal shell, seldom knowing the entire picture. And along these lines, I quote yet again, one of my favourite humorist of all times, Oscar Wilde, who expressed this time tested saying that “Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else’s opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.”

So with that happy thought today, we shall debate on an all-familiar topic of Altruism. Altruism is the term that denotes the noble act of unselfish regard for or devotion to the welfare of others. Normally associated with an action/behavior which is not beneficial to himself/herself but to others and may or may not be harmful to itself.

Despite my continued efforts, I remain cynical of any goodwill that people do for free, including my own. And it is equally easy to say and believe that everyone is selfish. I will not be faced with a NO.

Everyone is selfish.

Yet we ask – should everyone always be self-less?

There are very few people in this entire world who will have no motive to be purely self-less. We are humans after all. We do good for some reward. Even if it is just to collect brownie points for the afterlife.

My problem however is with this increasing amount of guilt that man-made morality puts on people who are judged by other people based on altruism and the lack of it based on their pre-decided judgement.

My case in point. Every day when I travel in and around the city, I meet poor kids, more than ten times a day, at different traffic lights selling trinkets, selling old flowers, most of them begging for food. There was a time when I used to part the little bit of change I had in my pockets to give them. But overtime I have become nonchalant. I have begun placing my own interests before theirs. I rationalize. I slog throughout the day, run around to earn a decent amount of wage and struggle to keep up with life. Increasingly, I become selfish of my needs before I think of others, but in doing so get riddled with guilt. An altruistic person will say “Do whatever you think you can.” But if I go around distributing my entire material possessions to all the poor people around me, which let us assume is the ultimate self-less deed that I can do, I will definitely become one of the poor. But I do not favor to land up below the poverty line. What we want to pacify is the voice in our head asking “Are you doing enough
?” But do we know how much altruism is enough? Who decides?

To survive truly in my own capacity and to function like a responsible citizen, I have to avoid certain altruistic instincts that my practical mind tells me that I can’t afford. Am I a morally degenerate person for not feeding the poor outside every time I go out to eat? Well, I don’t really know. I might be bombarded with a million accusations after this. “You are one of the privileged people” “There are a million people starving when you eat that lavish lunch”

Therefore, I went about thing to decipher why I should be constantly made to feel quilty for not giving money to the beggars. (who may or may not spend the money on something other than food.) For that matter, if I was a corrupt public servant and I amassed humongous amount of wealth but still donated 25% of those earnings for the needy. Does it make me a morally good person?

Morality is a tricky game. In the whole scheme of things, giving money to the poor is a very small thing if you think about it. Besides,good deeds are not only increasingly driven by self-interest groups but people have come to believe that one act of self-assumed good deed can exempt one to think that they have done their part. If I paid 5 bucks for a cause it is assumed that I have instantly earned my good karma points for an entire year. Or supporting a cause because you think is cool but not actually bothered to understand what you are fighting for.

I didn’t get my answers today and as I struggled through my brain mush, I asked more

• Will one act of altruism free you from “self-ish” acts?

• How much “selfless” is selflessness?

• Is an ideal altruist world possible – should everyone only devote their lives for the lives of others?

• Am I a good person if I do a good deed to earn fame or success or money or a better afterlife bargain from God?

So there was this American psychologist called Abraham Harold Maslow who is known for creating the theory called the Maslow’s hierarchy of needs*. His theory on human developmental psychology described the stages of growth in humans where he has to fulfilled his basic and higher needs. Maslow said a person needs to cross the stages and reach “self-actualization” to be able to truly help people selflessly or become altruistic.

Maslow’s stages have been expanded over the years and in the 90’s, have been listed in psychological studies as the 8 stages.

These are-

1. BIOLOGICAL & PSYCHOLOGICAL NEEDS – air, food, drink, shelter, warmth, sex, sleep, etc.

2. SAFETY NEEDS – protection from elements, security, order, law, limits, stability, etc.

3. SOCIAL NEEDS – Belongingness and Love, – work group, family, affection, relationships, etc.

4. ESTEEM NEEDS – self-esteem, achievement, mastery, independence, status, dominance, prestige, managerial responsibility, etc.

5. COGNITIVE NEEDS – knowledge, meaning, etc.

6. AESTHETIC NEEDS – appreciation and search for beauty, balance, form, etc.

7. SELF-ACTUALIZATION NEEDS – realizing personal potential, self-fulfillment, seeking personal growth and peak experiences.

8. TRANSCENDENCE NEEDS – helping others to achieve self-actualization.

Long story short.

Unless your own basic needs are met, you can never entirely go out to meet the needs of others.

Call me selfish but I do not have a better answer.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/07/questioning-selfless-ness/

The tragedy of school vans

By Chitra Ahanthem The strangest thing about life and situations in Manipur is that the more things change, the more they remain constant. The recent news of the tragic accident

By Chitra Ahanthem

The strangest thing about life and situations in Manipur is that the more things change, the more they remain constant. The recent news of the tragic accident that left an eight year old school student dead and others injured reminded me that as a mother to a young school going child, the issue of the safety of school children as they are ferried in their school vans is constant cause of worry. An earlier Footnotes written way back in 2011 had pointed out how even toddlers are being packed inside vehicles for play school or kindergarten class, no matter if they are too small to be sitting in a vehicle unattended by adults. Most school buses do not have adult supervision and it is often family members who have to monitor their safety while crossing roads or boarding or alighting from the bus. That earlier piece had expressed my disquiet and dismay over how parents and those in authority related to the education department and road and transport (including traffic police) seem to be totally unaware of how much their children are in the face of danger and how rules are not being followed. Some parents may well feel uneasy about seeing their children all cramped inside an Omni van but are often cautious about pursuing the matter pro actively with school authorities, fearing fee hikes or even the possibility of school authorities asking them to drop their children themselves. Most parents today caught up in the rush and demands of their career often do not have the time to drop their children off to their schools while many do not have a four wheeler that is necessitated by the rainy spells in the state. This then means that parents are the first victims to fall prey to the school van service. The second victim(s) that is directly affected are the children. It is all too common to see three or even four children sitting in the front seat, which I am sure is a common sight. At one point of time, I did a headcount of the number of children in my son’s earlier school van and found that there were a total of 21 excluding
the van driver! Such a number flouts basic safety standards as the front passenger seat should have minimum of two kids with the safety belt on or an adult in it. It certainly should not be seating four hyper-active kids! More kids also means that for children studying in a relatively distant place, it would take more time for them to get to school and then back home again.

On May 23 last year, 14 school going children ended up getting admitted to the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences after a fainting spell inside their school van. 3 more children were seated in the front of the van and the fainting spell was more likely caused by suffocation due to crowding and the lack of air circulation. When talks veered towards limiting the number of children in school vans raised its head, van driver associations took affront and went on an emotional trip with ‘how will we feed ourselves?’ backed up by aggressive voices on stopping their services etc. No one thought of calling their bluff pointing out that the lives of young children cannot be compromised in the name of giving a means for earning money. The control of school van associations over the passenger service of school children merits a careful study. Things were not the same about ten years back. The unionization of van services is definitely good for their business but it should not be given the position of calling the shots over the safety of children. After all, school van service also falls under a consumer service and any violation of rules must be reprimanded. School authorities must also take pro active action and be firm about balancing van fee and van seat allocation. The Government can also step in by looking into the Manipur Motor Vehicle Act and going through its fine print. If there is no mention of any regulation for school vans and buses, it is time that proper rules are laid down.

Some serious reading on the subject of school van and bus services led me to various state laws that have laid down the total number of children that can be carried and other safety norms. Also, the Supreme Court issued certain guidelines following a tragic incident in 1997 when a school van carrying 28 children fell into the Yamuna river. The Apex Court had made it mandatory to equip vehicles carrying schoolchildren with first aid boxes, fire extinguishers, grills on windows, school bag tray under the seat and provision for water. Of these items, none is visible in school vans or buses in Manipur: not the first aid box, not the drinking water though the school bag tray is substituted by the luggage rack on top of the vehicles. But then, the luggage racks are there not to ensure children sit in comfort without having to carry their heavy school bags but are a means for their commercial pursuits! More children would fit in without their bags in the way. More children = more money coming in.

End-point:
The manner in which school authorities wash off their hands when it comes to putting a ceiling on the number of children per van or school bus by saying that it is the van/bus association that has the final say in the matter smacks of total indifference and negligence. Such associations should not be given the position or the carte blanche of calling the shots over the safety of children for School transport services also falls under a consumer service and any violation of rules must be reprimanded. Apart from the intervention from the Apex Court mentioned earlier, various state laws are in place limiting the number of children in school buses and vans. It definitely is time the concerned authority in Manipur stepped in to ensure that tragedies involving school children take place.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/07/the-tragedy-of-school-vans/