Fifth Critical Mass – Manipur Cycle Club

MANIPUR CYCLE CLUB JUPITER YAMBEM CENTER, PAONA INTERNATIONAL MARKETPAONA BAZAR, IMPHAL, MANIPUR – 795001 Email:mancycleclub[at]gmail.com webpage: www.mancycleclub.blogspot.com PRESS RELEASE Dated: 28th August, 2011 The Manipur Cycle Club (MCC) organized the… Read more »

MANIPUR CYCLE CLUB

JUPITER YAMBEM CENTER, PAONA INTERNATIONAL MARKETPAONA BAZAR, IMPHAL, MANIPUR – 795001

Email:mancycleclub[at]gmail.com

webpage: www.mancycleclub.blogspot.com

PRESS RELEASE

Dated: 28th August, 2011

The Manipur Cycle Club (MCC) organized the fifth Critical Mass of cycle enthusiast cycling together onthe streets of Imphal. The Mass first met at 3 PM at Keishampat Bridge after one and half hour thecyclist took a collective ride and ended in with a refreshement sponsored by Boss Juices, NahakpamFood and Beverages, Sagolband. Miss Soma Laishram, brand ambasador of Boss Juice, Nahakpam Foodand Beverage express her concern about the raising number of motor vehicle and inflation of fuel pricesand opined bicycle is the best alternativefor transportation inside the city. Since its inception about 5months back, Critical Mass is slowly gaining momentum in Imphal city. Nearly around 70 cyclist took part the event.Routes: Keishampat Junction – Kwakeithel Bazar –Tera bazar –Naoremthong road- Sagolband. Finallythe cyclist will converge at Boss Juices and disperse.

 

Fifth Critical Mass – Manipur Cycle Club ( Photo Credit: MCC )

CHECK OUT THE EVENT IN PICTURES

WHAT IS CRITICAL MASS?

CRITICAL MASS is a gathering of cycling enthusiasts in a place and then have a ridein a city or town. It is critical for the environment, critical for promoting cycling as an alternative source of transport,critical for making the motorized traffic aware of our existence, and most importantly, critical for the cycling communityto come together. Critical Mass has no leaders. It’s a bicycling event. There is no national group that licenses localrides. In every city that has a CM, one or more cyclists just picked a day and time and started handing out fliers. You don’t need anyone to authorize your ride. You just do it.

Your sincerely,

Niranjan Thongbam

Secretary,  Manipur Cycle Club (MCC)

The above Press Release was sent to KanglaOnline.com by Niranjan Thongbam ( niranthongbam[at]gmail.com)
FULL PRESS RELEASE

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/fifth-critical-mass-manipur-cycle-club/

Book Release (Aug 30): Freedom from India: A History of Manipur Nationalism. By Malem Ningthouja

Invitation You are cordially invited to kindly attend the release of the book FREEDOM FROM INDIA: A History of Manipur Nationalism Authored by Malem Ningthouja Published by Spectrum Publications, Delhi… Read more »

Book Release (Aug 30): Freedom from India: A History of Manipur Nationalism. By Malem Ningthouja

Book Release (Aug 30): Freedom from India: A History of Manipur Nationalism. By Malem Ningthouja

Invitation

You are cordially invited to kindly attend the release of the book

FREEDOM FROM INDIA:
A History of Manipur Nationalism

Authored by Malem Ningthouja
Published by Spectrum Publications, Delhi

Tuesday, 30 August 2011, at 3 p.m.

At the Lecture Hall, Department of History,
University of Delhi (North Campus)

The author is a civil rights activist and Ph. D student in the Department of History, University of Delhi. The book is based on his M. Phil Dissertation. He is available at +91 98 999 25345 or mningthouja (at) yahoo.com

ABOUT THE BOOK

The perception of globalisation as an integral phenomenon of modernity has at times identified nationalism with parochial conservatism. The author argues for nationalism as an integral component of modernity with comprehensive politico-cultural expressions which continue to have material and spiritual implications in the age of globalisation.

He identifies Manipur in a theatre of contest where different nationalist forces articulating parallel nationalism contest one another. He draws a parallel between the British colonial rule and the Indian State after 1947.

The author shows a bent on historical materialism in making a critique of nationalism and opens up the debate on the national question in India. While nationhood is being defined as an objective condition, the Manipur example in particular has been cited to show a condition where nationalism was preceding nationhood in the strict Stalinist definition of the term.

The author predicts that mechanical approaches of using military force and administrative manoeuvrings in the name of name of nationalism to serve the vested interest of the few at the cost of the exploited and marginalised would lead to revolt. This is the root cause of instability.

Political scientists and students and historians and policy makers at the helm of affairs, are bound to find much food for thought in this work.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Having pursued BA and MA in History from Hindu College, Delhi, and obtained M. Phil (History) Degree from University of Delhi, Malem Ningthouja has contributed theoretical articles and papers at national and international levels on issues centred on the nationality question in India. His doctoral thesis Parallel Nationalisms in Post Colonial India (c. 1947-2000): A Study of Nation Formation and National Contests in India With Special Reference to Northeast submitted to the Department of History, University of Delhi, is the nucleus of the present work now in book form.

An activist from his high school days onwards, he had played roles in local clubs in Manipur and civil society organisations in Delhi, and has continuously associated with the Manipur Students’ Association Delhi for more than a decade. He has played important roles in several protests in Manipur and Delhi that were directed against State terrorism and forced displacement and marginalisation in the name of development.

Malem is currently a member of the Editorial Board of the journal Revolutionary Democracy, and is the founder cum chairperson of Campaign for Peace & Democracy (Manipur), a democratic platform that strives to establish Development, Peace and Unity in Manipur. He is the founder cum managing trustee of Labour Research and Organisation Foundation. He is also a member of International Coordination Committee of International League of People’s Struggle.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/book-release-aug-30-freedom-from-india-a-history-of-manipur-nationalism-by-malem-ningthouja/

OBFUSCATION OF SADAR HILL ENTANGLEMENT

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh Karl Marx (German political philosopher and revolutionary, 1818-1883) said History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce. … One does not have to read… Read more »

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh

Karl Marx (German political philosopher and revolutionary, 1818-1883) said History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce. …

One does not have to read books such as The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776-1788) by Edward Gibbon, to find out. The Romans were ignorant of the extent of the dangers and the number of their enemies.

The greatness of something always led to its eventual collapse. Take USSR. People forget the chance that the other side of the coin being gold. What you see is not really what you get.

The Bourgeois ruled the world. Revolutions arose, killing millions of people. The Proletariat
came to power, destroying thousands of people and now back to the Bourgeois. This is what Karl max famously described.

Forget Karl Max. History is repeating here in such a short time in Manipur. It is an extremely important epoch in Manipur’s history when the Big Brother (Meitei) having learnt from the mistakes of their forefathers, are trying to integrate with other inhabitants of Manipur in an equal footing , with freedom from discrimination and equal share of prosperity.

History does not have to repeat itself. History repeats itself because the world doesn’t learn.
As George Bernard Shaw said: if history repeats itself, and the unexpected always happens, how incapable must Man be of learning from experience?

History gives good lessons to those who are willing to listen. Nehru’s Hindi-Chini-Bhai-Bhai diplomacy was the death of him. For those who are not listening, a bit of history is about to repeat at the door step of the Naga of Manipur.

Meitei shed some blood on June 18 2001 uprising. So did two Mao Naga boys in May 2010. Is it necessary for the Tangkhul or kuki to spill some more blood likewise? There is a greater likelihood of a settlement without resorting to violence. Mediation can take place. If proper steps are taken then a future disaster could be avoided.

Only the big problem is the question of ‘proper steps’.

The Sadar Hill entanglement draws parallel with the Kosovo crisis. Like in Kosovo, tensions between the Tangkhul and Kuki simmered throughout the second half of the 20th century with occasional eruption into major violence from both sides. The present crisis needs
to be nurtured in its embryonic state.

If the Americans had condemned Kosovo Liberation Army violence, and taken action to stop the supply of weapons over the Albanian border, there would have been greater likelihood of a settlement. And this might have encompassed a multi-ethnic community with autonomy for Kosovo within Yugoslavia.
In the beginning of the 21st century, Manipuri Naga’s demand of ceding the Naga-inhabited areas of Manipur and merge with Nagaland was politically unacceptable to the non-Naga inhabitants of Manipur.

Ibobi Government has since introduced autonomous district councils that will lead to further freedom of organising themselves. The more recent demand of a complete secession of Naga-inhabited area from Manipur has brought the ongoing tripartite talk.

The Kuki have been asking for a separate revenue district of Sadar Hills in the Senapati District within Manipur itself for about forty years – not secession, unlike the Naga demand.

This is similar to the 2011 demand of a separate Phungyar District in Ukhrul in Manipur itself, for a better administrative structure, assessment of needs, and inventory of resources and definition of priorities.

Knowing the deep emotive issues that exist between the Kuki and the Tangkhul it seems cogent to me that the Kuki ask for a small separate district. They are not taking away that bit of land elsewhere.

The United Naga Council does not want to lose even an inch of Naga land but any inch of their land is not going anywhere. Besides, there is no such thing as Nagaland, Meiteiland or Kukiland in Manipur. Manipur belongs to every one of us, in as much as Imphal belongs to all the communities.

At a recent rally organised by the UNC, the Tangkhul Katamnao Long et al announced a firm declaration that not an inch of Naga’s land can be touched nor severed for creation of Sadar hills district without ‘the consent of the Naga people’.
The Tangkhul strongly condemned the alleged ‘divisive policy of the Ibobi Government to sow the seeds of communal hatred among the tribals who have been otherwise co-existing in harmony’.
In fact, successive Manipur governments have been resisting the creation of Sadar hill district for some forty years. The Kuki women are not fasting to death for Ibobi’s divisive policy. It is the other way round.
Perhaps, it’s time that the gutsy Iboby Government should stop musing – “To be or not to be” like Hamlet. It’s time to act. There will always be opposition to any project or any economic development by some groups of people or the other.

The Tangkhul called upon the Government to respect the various MoUs signed between the Government of Manipur and Naga social organisations. They claim that More than 47 Tangkhul-Naga villages are situated within the boundary of the proposed district.
They stress that the Naga have been living in the land of their forefathers since time immemorial, unlike the Kuki who allegedly migrated mostly from Chin-Burma (Myanmar) province. It cautions the Government of Manipur to look into the issue thoroughly and ‘not to take any hasty decisions’.

There is truth in their statement. It is also true that the Kuki have been fighting side by side with the Meitei to keep Manipur independent. Indeed, we all belong to this old country of Manipur.
I am glad about the Tangkhul statement such as “without the consent of Naga people” and “not to take any hasty decisions” because they give room for a concerted negotiated settlement.
It must not be forgotten that the Meitei are not sitting on the fence to watch the bull fight. They are facing tremendous hardship because of the blockade, which is now nearly four weeks old.
(3)
Blockading the Highways – the lifelines to the existence of the Manipuris has become an easy gambit for the tribal in the hills, to get their baroque demand granted by the government.
It’s like killing a fly with a sledge hammer. It shows lack of humanity compassion for any demurrer to let innocent and ill people suffer, in their attempt to influence the policy of the government. The end does not always justify the means.
CM Ibobi should convene a tripartite meeting of the representatives of the Sadar Hill Kuki and Tangkhul, he acting as a mediator to get the views of the Kuki and Naga. Then he should make a decision with the Manipur Legislative Assembly; come what may.
Creation of Sadar Hill District will serve as a precedent to Phungyar and Jiribam.
It’s hard to convey a feeling that permeates a generation. Both the Tangkhul and Kuki should think in terms of peaceful coexistence in Manipur, along with the Meitei, Pangal and other tribes. We are going to live together in Manipur whether one likes it or not.
I have a gut feeling that Manipur will stay intact within India. Nagaland will stay in India with some select autonomy while Kashmir will stay divided as it is. With this in mind, I think of Manipur where all the tribes live with freedom to choose their own religions, stay in a Swiss-style peaceful coexistence with equal share of the economic advancement and progress that are inevitable.
Old wounds heal very slowly. What different tribes do to each other today will remain smouldering under the ashes for generations to come. The wound of the ancestor Meitei treatment of other tribes is still a hot potato.
The showdown between French and English armies, headed respectively by generals Marquis de Montcalm and James Wolfe, was fought on a wide expanse of land outside Quebec City’s fortified walls that became known as the Plains of Abraham. It still has a particular negative significance in the French-Canadian collective consciousness.
The wounds of the genocide massacres by both sides during the Partition of India have not healed after an entire generation of Indians and Pakistanis.
I dream of a time when any of us living in Manipur is proud to say I am a Manipuri instead of I am Manipuri Meitei or Manipuri Naga or Kuki.

The post-War Manipur is on the brink of adolescence and in the ongoing journey to stretch our wings towards self-definition and identity we need an effort to stress Manipuri values of pluralism, mutual respect and understanding.

A peaceful negotiation is the only way out. Let the history of Kosovo not repeat in Manipur. Let us not obfuscate the Sadar Hill entanglement with tragedy of the fasting Kuki women or as a farce with bloodshed from both the parties.

As the 2011 is skittering to an end, let’s advocate engagement not disruption. Let’s stand on the Promised Land of integration. We must learn to live together as brothers in a Manipur society, or we will perish together.

The writer is based in the UK. Email: imsingh@onetel.com
Website: www.imsingh.uk.co.uk

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/obfuscation-of-sadar-hill-entanglement/

Three hunger strikers arrested on charges of attempted suicide

IMPHAL, Aug 28: Three women hunger strikers who were hospitalized at Gamphajol primary health centre (PHC) have been arrested by Gamnom Saparmeina police today after they refused to take the… Read more »

The women hunger strikers demanding the creation of full-fledged Sadar Hills district being hospitalized at Gamphazol PHC on Sunday.

IMPHAL, Aug 28: Three women hunger strikers who were hospitalized at Gamphajol primary health centre (PHC) have been arrested by Gamnom Saparmeina police today after they refused to take the medical aid.

The arrested women have been identified as Hatlam Haokip, 47, w/o Yanglal Haokip, Nengngah Kipgen, 47, w/o of Tongmang and Neihling, 52, w/o Chungthang Kipgen.

Sources said that the women were produced before the court on charges of attempted suicide and subsequently taken into judicial custody. They are now admitted to the security ward of JNIMS, Porompat.

Seikhothang Haokip, spokesperson of Sadar hills districthood demand committee (SHDDC), informed that the President of India and Union Home Minister have acknowledged the demand of the committee as genuine and assured to convey the message to the Chief Minister of Manipur.

Subsequently the leaders of the committee came to Imphal and met the Chief Minister of Manipur. During the meet the Chief Minister asked the committee to give three months time to resolve the issue and appeal to relax their agitation, he said.

He further asserted that the committee however remained adamant on their stand urging the Chief Minister to resolve the issue within a week.

In the meantime, he warned the government that if it fails to meet the demand of the committee to declare Sadar hills to full fledged district at the earliest time, the agitators are prepared to launch mass hunger strike ‘unto death’ and asserted that the CM will be held responsible in case of any fatality arising due to the hunger striker.

The committee has also convened a mass public meeting tomorrow at Gamgiphai to discuss the prevailing issue of the Sadar hills. MLAs, member of ADCs of the Sadar hills area is likely to attend the meeting.    

Meanwhile, talking to IFP, Haokam Kipgen, a hunger striker staging ‘fast unto death’ agitation at Saparmeina, demanding full fledged district for Sadar hills district said “We desire our mortal remains to be sent to the Chief Minister of Manipur if we pass away during our fast unto death agitation”.

He asserted that it has aggrieved the people of Sadar hills that the struggle for a full-fledged district has blind see and the deaf hear however the strikers are willing to make necessary sacrifices until the demand is fulfilled.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/three-hunger-strikers-arrested-on-charges-of-attempted-suicide/

Who Will Bell The Cat?

By N. Arunkumar “A cat may go to a monastery, but she still remains a cat.” Once again the National Highway is under siege. The hapless people of Manipur are… Read more »

By N. Arunkumar
“A cat may go to a monastery, but she still remains a cat.”
Once again the National Highway is under siege. The hapless people of Manipur are strategically at a disadvantage undeniably, due to the geographic terrain loaded heavily in favour of a few bandits on the route of the sustenance of Manipur, the NH – 39. Time and time again, this piece of real estate has been abused by all and sundry, on matters sillier than sound, and put the people of Manipur under all kinds of unspeakable despairs. The costs of basic necessities are steadily rising today due to this latest siege on this highway. And, once again, the solutions to this problem are a vexed issue, and not something that can be resolved hastily. The demands in this case, are of a constitutional nature, which cannot be worked out in just one sitting of the Assembly or approved by the Central leadership instantly either. Carving out a different district is as much a question of an all encompassing consensus between various administrative arms of the system, and not a one off government decree.

It requires ratification from various government institutions, including the defence and revenue collection nodal agencies of the country. Whatever grievances the people of the region may have in terms of administrative lacunae in the present circumstances, leading to this throttling of the people of Manipur, needs to be thought out sensibly so as to get the sympathies of the people here too. But, making the people suffer to this extent only distances the people of Manipur from the issues of the agitations, and creates disdain within them.

For this reason, no compassion will be forthcoming from the people of this region for the people of that region, believe me. After all, we are all living in a world where we respect the laws of survival, and the more the people of Manipur are subjected to this torture, the more durable will become their resolve to rise up and resist giving in easily to the threats being posed by such strong arm tactics. We don’t want a war between us, do we? We are peace loving people, remember?

The central leadership is scarcely bothered to ensure that the vital conduits of the NHs are maintained safely and without thuggery of this kind. We are undoubtedly completely upset with the attitude of the central leadership in their lack of resolve to protect this lifeline of Manipur and, continue to meekly watch as mute spectators while citizens of the land continue to degenerate and face countless hardships due to irritants of such nature. Where are the security forces now, when the time for real security has arisen? Are they under any standing instructions not to interfere in the matter and let the situation go its own way to teach the people of Manipur a lesson in docile submission?

Honestly, it seems evident that they are under some such covert instructions under ‘top verbal secret’. Why are they not going after the perpetrators of this crime against the people of Manipur, and ensuring that the National property like the NH – 39 is kept free from thugs who are having a free run on it? Is it not the duty of the security force to provide real security in real time in such situations? Or is the proxy war a genuine ideal of the army, paramilitary and the police agencies of the region?

So many questions and no answers! The puzzle becomes a riddle and the riddle rids our mind of sanity at the moment. We are angry. We are despondent. Are we to suffer this shame silently and still wear plastic smiles on our faces as patriotic citizens of this country? Why are we being treated like dirt? Are we second class citizens? Hey, these are more questions without answers. And, now the cost of living in Manipur is among the highest anywhere today, and for being so, we are to be a rich land. Yes, we are rich in many ways, but at the moment we are rich with dilemmas, inconveniences, and misfortunes. The Chief Minister seems silent on the issue, and strangely all the other leaders are silently watching the drama of miseries unfold without condemning or taking steps to ensure that we are sheltered from these misfortunes.

No one seems to be taking this issue seriously, or working towards a solution to the problems being heaped on the people. We are damned, and let us stay damned seems to be the attitude of the government too. To whom do we turn now for an end to this crisis? Are there no leaders worth some dignified thought in that area either, to talk to the perpetrators sensibly and appeal to them to desist from such cardinal sins? Or, do they also support this pogrom like instrument in treating the people of Manipur so shabbily?

This is a crime against humanity, and needs to be loathed not only by the people of Manipur who are the noticeable sufferers, but also by the national and international communities too. How can a handful of people be allowed hold an entire state to ransom to find redress to their issues? This is a belligerent situation indeed. It is a grave crime against the people of Manipur. In fact, the leaders of this agitation should be tried for crimes against humanity, in the normal course of distinguished human values.

However, nothing of the sort will happen. Everyone concerned will let the callous people who orchestrated this indignity go scot free and a solution will be cobbled together for some sort of temporary reprieve. The moot problem of letting the National Highway remain a lethal armoury to be used against the people of Manipur will remain status quo after all. A permanent solution to this has to be found out as quickly as possible, so as to prevent these series of total chaos in the Manipuri society. We are indeed in the doldrums otherwise and will remain ever vulnerable to the threat of humiliations being heaped on us, time and time again. In fact, the Home Ministry has to answer for these lapses in governance in the final analysis. But, the question remains as to `who will bell the cat`?

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/who-will-bell-the-cat/

Had Gandhiji Been Born In The Land Of Sharmila `¦. ?

By: Seram Neken “If Irom Chanu Sharmila fasted for corruption and if Septuagenarian Anna Hazare protested against AFSPA, the matters would have been different. If Sharmila hails from mainland India… Read more »

By: Seram Neken
“If Irom Chanu Sharmila fasted for corruption and if Septuagenarian Anna Hazare protested against AFSPA, the matters would have been different. If Sharmila hails from mainland India and if Hazare is a native of Manipur, the vice versa of what is being strongly addressed by the government might have happened. This time, Sharmila expressed her whole-hearted moral support to Anna Hazare’s protest following the latter’s invitation. Had the invitation for joining the protest come from Sharmila to Anna Hazare, would the latter have responded readily ? ”

Great personalities are created where there is respect for human values. The dignity the British attached to Gandhiji as a freedom fighter helped him gain the fame worldwide and glorify his non-violence. Had MK Gandhi been born in a place like Manipur or had he undergone his protests against a government such as that of today’s Manipur, Gandhijis non-violence would not have gained its fame and he would not have been recognized as the father of the nation. Indifference of the rulers might have jeopardized his cause half-way or he might have ended his life in the bullets of mindless security people of this land. 

The strikers whom politicians, media persons and the intellectuals are attentive to or glorify most, are considered as strong revolutionaries fighting for the people’s cause. If Irom Chanu Sharmila fasted for corruption and if Septuagenarian Anna Hazare protested against AFSPA, the matters would have been different. If Sharmila hails from mainland India and if Hazare is a native of Manipur, the vice versa of what is being addressed by the government might have happened. Let us examine the importance of the two causes between corruption and human rights, and let us compare the personalities of Sharmila and Hazare. Personality cult seems to out-do the issues. Sharmila has readily extended her support to the cause of Hazare’s protest following the latter’s invitation to join him. However, the nation has not responded to the call of Irom Chanu Sharmila for over ten years.

Sharmila has now become a symbol of peace, in the true sense of the term. She has earned the reputation of having the strongest will and heart for protection of human rights around the globe. She is not a mere striker, but a model of truth and justice. Gandhijis non-violence has been glorified by her personality in the twenty first century. It is not politically motivated and her demands represent the general will of the hapless people residing amidst the draconian laws of democratic India. In spite of neglects and indifference of the rulers for more than a decade, she never goes back. It is natural that Anna Hazare invited Sharmila to join his crusade against corruption. It is more natural that the Iron Lady expressed her moral support to the cause, but declined to join the fast in New Delhi for the Hazare cause. She rather blamed the nation for its indifference to the cause of human right violations.

The national media is highly discriminatory as did the government and political parties at the national level in regard to the dual cases of Sharmila and Hazare. Both strikers have been fighting for the social good, both have been following the non-violent means of fasting. However, Sharmila has almost crossed a decade of fasting, while Hazare’s appearance on the scene is quite recent as compared to the former. However, the national media have been disproportionately viewing the two protests. Intensity of the protests and the causes themselves have to be considered in balance while reporting to the people and drawing government’s attention.

Meanwhile, Dr. Manmohan Singh has written a nice letter to the septuagenarian protester with the highest concern for the latter’s health. In the letter, the Prime Minister says : “Over the last few days, I have watched with increasing concern of your health. Despite the differences between the government and your team, I don’t think that anybody is or should be in any doubt about the deep and abiding concern  which I and our government share about your health, arising from your continuing fast. I have no hesitation in saying that we need your views and actions in the service of the nation, from a robust physical condition and not in the context of frail and failing health……..” The emotional care of the leader of the nation towards a Gandhian as shown in the letter is indeed envious and courteous, and highly expected of a leadership where the father of the nation was born. It is really lamentable that during the last more than a decade of Sharmila’s fasting, not a single courtesy of such kind has been exhibited towards her from the end of a nation’s leadership. Barring independent writers, political motivators and select media personalities, the nation has been keeping mum on her cause and protest. Now that Anna Hazare and his cause have gained widespread media coverage and government attention in a comparatively short duration, has reflected some kind of nostalgia in the hearts of the so called Indian citizens residing in the far border hilly state of Manipur. Let us uphold human rights while fighting against corruption at all levels.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/had-gandhiji-been-born-in-the-land-of-sharmila/

The Government and the NGOs

By Chitra Ahanthem Missing out two Sun day pages of the IFP is no fun at all for when one gets to writing, there is a sudden backlog of thought… Read more »

By Chitra Ahanthem
Missing out two Sun day pages of the IFP is no fun at all for when one gets to writing, there is a sudden backlog of thought strands trampling on one another to be written down. Two weeks is a long time and more so the past 14 days, which has seen
the Anna spectacle in New Delhi and the muted after effects of the economic blockade of the highways on life in the state. The two weeks took me to two places: one was a 4 day stay in an NGO site at Mohuda village, Berhampore in Ganjam district of Orissa. The second trip was for an exercise on capacity building process at Bangalore. The two experiences were profound and this column today will try and shift through the multi layers of thought processes that they triggered off.

But first, a brief about the NGO at Mohuda village: started about 30 years ago GRAM VIKAS is everything that NGOs in Manipur are not. They actually work WITH the government in the sense that the NGO has been working to strengthen the implementation of Central and State welfare schemes. Take for instance the scheme under which people are given financial aid to build toilets and latrines. In the meantime, let us not bother with the names of the schemes: they are such boring names anyway! To come back to the said scheme, I am yet to see any decent toilets and latrines that has been constructed and used through it in Manipur. All I have seen are foundations being constructed and then topped up by ramshackle extensions. All I have heard are complaints of how government officials and local body leaders divide the money given under the scheme among themselves and filter down an abysmally small amount to the person it is meant for resulting in the said scenario. It does not help too that people seeking the support of the scheme will only take the money but not construct toilets or latrines citing the fact of the “money trickling down to little more than nothing” on one hand and the high construction costs on the other. But in the villages covered by GRAM VIKAS, there was an interesting synergy at work that ensured their construction. A twin toilet and latrine enclosure for each house would be built in the village in batches at the same time. This way, the families would pool together and then draw the materials needed for the construction, thereby saving time and money. The labour needed for the construction was drawn up from the village itself as a form of collective social work, saving construction costs in the process. The running water needed for the toilets and latrines were supplied round the clock on a non-stop basis with the aid of another central scheme that undertakes to provide rural villages with clean drinking water. Contrast this with urban Imphal where taps are dry in most pockets and people have to buy water brought home in tankers from God knows where!

What strikes one about the work that GRAM VIKAS and other NGOS are doing in many parts of the country and the way it works out in Manipur is the way things get done. Here, it is mainly about venting angst against the government and not about partnering with state mechanisms, which in the long term only erodes the dysfunctional government agencies. In the process, a lot of stereotypes gets enhanced: number one being that Government agencies and officials are corrupt and that it is either the NGO or the other “concerned higher authority” that the deprived must go to seek justice and redressal of their grievances. But let us first tackle the corruption factor since there is no denying it. The way to fight corruption is NOT to support Team Anna at Ramlila Ground in New Delhi or to click on a “like” button on social networking sites with the “fight against corruption” and then hitch the vehicle in a “no parking” area and then argue over paying fines or even park in a parking area and then arguing to be let off without a fee.

One effective way is to file an RTI application when it comes to departmental corrption. Another simple way is to put the spotlight on the demand for the extra bit for “chaaga kwaga” (chai and paan) so the other gets shamed (remember the   Gandhigiri scenes from Lage raho Munnabhai?).

This reminds me about an anecdote that needs to be shared. An MLA inaugurated a tailoring center for women living with HIV/AIDS in one district. And since he was there, everyone was there as well: department officers and district heads and his party workers. Some widows were getting a one time Rs. 10, 000/- under some scheme (am very bad with scheme names) and the said sum was being given in brown envelopes with much flourish and being captured by the print and local visual media. But an alarm bell of doubt went off in my grey cells, which turned to be right when the women agreed to open their envelopes before me: they contained 1000/- less! Well, so the cat was out of the bag and the women did not want to make “a big issue out of it” since they had at least got 9000/-each. You could have really heard the pin drop when during a tea break for the media, the MLA and his troupe; I said “Sir, it seems whoever was counting the money before it was put in the envelopes did not know how to count beyond Rs 9000/- .” T
here were lots of angry glances exchanged among the gang around the MLA, who wriggled out of the spot by pulling out his wallet and then giving the missing sum of Rs. 1000/- to each of the women.

End-point:
To come back now to the NGOs functioning in Manipur. How is it that all one gets to hear from them is about how Government systems are not functioning and then total silence with no effort to make those very systems work? How is it that the same cries are being voiced every year nonstop with no attempt to engage in addressing the said gap? Would that be because if people learnt to stand on their own two feet, the NGOs would not have their “targets” to work for? (hence, no more funds). The Government and its agencies are there to ensure the welfare of the people and when it fails, it is indeed the NGOs that can and should step in to flag off the failings of the system. But there is one critical fact: NGOs cannot and will never be the government itself in terms of mandate, resources and its life-span. NGO support to causes and people depends on project funding and donor demands and when they end up looking at people as “program targets/beneficiaries/clients” there is a grave fundamental mistake somewhere.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/the-government-and-the-ngos/

Demise of Productive Institutions and Rise of `Social Workers`: Manipur Tragedy

By Amar Yumnam There is an interesting Latin phrase as “absentee la edit cum ebrio quilitigat”. When translated into English, it runs as: “to quarrel with a drunk is to… Read more »

By Amar Yumnam
There is an interesting Latin phrase as “absentee la edit cum ebrio quilitigat”. When translated into English, it runs as: “to quarrel with a drunk is to wrong a man who isn`t even there”. Everything happening in relation to Manipur seems to exactly fit into this phrase. Look at the governance, and it is so difficult to find any agency administering governance in Manipur. Look at the behaviour of any population group, one cannot help feeling that it is no different from the drunk man in the Latin phrase. Indeed, it is as if Manipur is just not there. There simply does not seem to have any meaning in endeavouring to reason with the administration. In name, there is a government, but the social and functional reality of its existence is doubtful except in areas of systemic corruption or, in terms of the Latin phrase, it seems to be drunk all the time with cheap liquor. As the government has been drunk all the time, all these years and in all functionality, the people too have been made drunkards lock, stock and barrel.

Democracy Recalled: Since we presumably follow the country-wide pattern of democracy, it would be in place to recall the functions which the elections serve in a democracy. First, it is a selection process for political actors who are supposed to enact policies and programmes keeping the interests of the constituents in mind. Second, elections are a mechanism for establishing accountability and punish corrupt politicians. Well these are functions which are best practised in circumstances where both the elected political actors and the electorate are conscientious as well as conscious. The misfortune of Manipur has been the absence of and also the non-attempt to generate these circumstances. Even worse is that the political class has become fully conversant with the mechanism for personal aggrandisement by exploiting the system while simultaneously making the people drunk with political liquor. In the process, the very incentive for enacting good policies for social upliftment has disappeared, and this has been accompanied by the murder of the mechanism of accountability. Since the public too are drunk, the system for establishing accountability as a constraint on political misbehaviour has collapsed.

In fact, something has gone terribly wrong in the process of indigenising the democratic process in Manipur and the establishment of modern administrative system. There is every reason to believe that most of the contemporary political economic problems are to be traced to this failure. So also the large scale emergence of opportunistic “social workers” should be traced to this lapse in the absorption of a new political system to the home soil. The relentless pursuit of non-endogenous policies with no attempt to contextualise and contextu-ally evolve programs has played havoc with the society and polity of Manipur.
1960s Recalled: Here we need to remember one wonderful social capital which once characterised our land. In the 1960s and very early 1970s, we had our own fully home grown concept and practice of social service. It was pure, fully grounded on
the home soil and ensured absolute mass participation of all. Social services in the schools (we invariably went to the local schools) were full of fun, satisfying and ego-boosting as collective as well as individual promoters of cleanliness and hygiene. Besides these had the positive components of encouraging collaborative work, fostering team spirit and generating a joint responsibility in sustaining our own physical environment. The same was true for every local environment as well. For any locality requiring a new approach road, we had the collective social service which gave pride individually as well as collectively. For any locality requiring a new school building, we had our social service to do that. One could name any socially productive requirement, and we had our social service to rise to the occasion. But today, all these have died to such an extent that even funerals demand huge volume of Sekmai for smooth conduct of business.

We should however immediately emphasise here that this social capital did not have a natural death, but it was murdered with strangulation. The 1960s and the 1970s experienced the inroads of state in the economic and social functioning of the people and society. These happened without prior or simultaneous information to the general population. Policies and schemes evolved non-locally started floating into the administration, and only those close to it were aware of these. Among these there were many which were meant to finance schemes which the local population were naturally performing through the social services. The people who were close to the administration stealthily pocketed these funds while the general public were happily engaging in their usual social services. These happened for some years. After some time, the general public became aware of what had been happening over quite a few previous years.

This realisation had two very deleterious effects. One, the very indigenous social service was murdered at one go. Second, the anger and consequent helplessness taught the people that the best practice, pragmatic one at that, is one where everyone should attempt to strike closeness with the administration and thus suck public money in the name of social service.

It must be because of the second impact that there now prevails an absolute disconnect between social issues and the electoral outcomes. It has gone to the heart and mind of the people that, as it had happened in the case of social services in the 1960s, any involvement in community service has to be pretentious and the innate desire should be to extract maximum personal benefits at any cost. It is this disconnect between genuine concern for the people and the manifest services in the name of the people which has led to the recent large-scale birth of “social workers” in the social scene of Manipur. It is as if anybody can getaway with anything. This is the most dangerous social trend and the biggest challenge to the future sustenance of Manipur as a society.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/demise-of-productive-institutions-and-rise-of-social-workers-manipur-tragedy/

How long she is going to fast?

By KanglaCha 4th November 2000, marked the start of great, yet unfinished, journey of a brave lady named Irom Sharmila and more popularly known as “Iron Lady” of Manipur. She… Read more »

By KanglaCha

4th November 2000, marked the start of great, yet unfinished, journey of a brave lady named Irom Sharmila and more popularly known as “Iron Lady” of Manipur.

She has won many international awards and every year the numbers of awards are adding on the list, some to show solidarity to her lone struggle and some to grab the limelight. But, very few of them are brave enough to join her struggle in the true sense and spirit.

A decade on fast, forced feed and confined inside a hospital ward is enough to break someone’s courage and will, but she is different. She stood the test of time, will and courage. Every day she is becoming stronger and stronger. Mahatma Gandhi himself would be embarrassed to see the treatment meted to her in this free and largest democratic nation.

But, no one is really helping her in the fight to remove the dreaded Armed Forces Special Power Act (AFSPA) from Manipur. There are many civil organizations, NGOs, Human Rights organization, etc. who have pledged support to her, but none is coming out in the true sense when it really counts.

Symbolic protests, bandhs and hunger strikes have been called many times in the past for many years and will continue to do so in the days to come in the name of her or removal of AFSPA from Manipur. However, none of them is going to bear any fruit.

A person of even ordinary common sense can easily realize and say that AFSPA is here to stay in Manipur and Sharmila will fast for years to come until the issue of militancy is resolved or atleast come to a negotiation table.

Revocation of AFSPA from Imphal municipal council areas inspite of disagreement from Union Govt. is the sign of trust by State Govt. However, we seem to be not ready to take its advantage and help in removing it all over from Manipur. Beyond this, State Govt. is helpless unless its people cooperate.

But, all the citizens of Manipur have seemed to abandon her and her struggle for betterment of Manipur.

Look at the number of militancy group in Manipur – mind boggling 39 (or more) in number, each one of them pursuing the same goal. For a population of roughly 27 lakhs, these seem to be too many. Something is seriously wrong.

The news of extortion, kidnap, ransom, bombs and guns (even in schools, hospitals) have become a part of normal life and news. None of us are doing enough to stop these. GK Pillai (Union Home Secretary) once rightly described the militancy in Manipur as “cottage industry for extortion”. I couldn’t disagree with him.

Meghen (arrested leader of UNLF) always talked about plebiscite. But, he needs to do introspection to his own party cadres and see what is really going on. Many of them are with the party for their own purpose and greed. People have lost faith on you and your party.

Recent raids (on charge of having connection with UNLF) by NIA on Lamyanba Compound (a civil organization) and other prominent people / places have raised many uncomfortable questions. There will be many more civil organizations in their list to be raided in near future.

Even a common man of Manipur is aware of connection between the outlaws and many civil organizations. It is understood that without some kind of backing from one of them, even running a shop is difficult.

There is also alleged connection between the Students’ Union, MLAs, ministers and so-called UGs. It is an open-secret.

It shows that there is deep connection between our civil societies established under the framework of Indian constitution and outlaw organizations. And these civil societies (or many individuals) happen to support the cause of Sharmila in a big way in some way or other. Then, how do you expect the Union Government to look into her cause? My sincere request to these civil organizations (and many individuals) will be – please stop doing double talks and acts.

Perhaps, time has come for the common man to tell these self-style freedom fighters – enough, enough of fooling around common man in the name of motherland and freedom. And time has also come for the civil societies to come clean.

Only then, AFSPA will be revoked automatically and Sharmila will return to her normal life, else her effort and sacrifice is going waste.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/how-long-she-is-going-to-fast/

THE MARTYR –HAIPOU JADONANG MARANGMEI

Puilon, a small Rongmei village, located in Nungba Hill Range under the Tamengrong District of Manipur, where a promising baby, Jadonang, was born in 1905.He was the younger of the… Read more »

Haipou Jadonang Marangmei Memrial Park

Puilon, a small Rongmei village, located in Nungba Hill Range under the Tamengrong District of Manipur, where a promising baby, Jadonang, was born in 1905.He was the younger of the three sons of Thiudai Marangmei and his mother was Tabonliu of Dangmei clan. The full name of Jadonang was Jadonang Marangmei.Madunang Marangmei was his elder brother and Tiningam Marangmei was his younger bother. But he had one younger sister, Sunlunglu Marangmei.

Jadonang Marangmei lost his father when he was a child. He grew up under his mother’s care. His brother; Madunang loved him dearly and never let him feel the absence of his father. He was descended from a very simple and cultured family. His mother foresaw him as an extra ordinary child. But at the same time she was afraid of all mysterious happening to him. She had some intuitions and believed that some day Jadonang would lead the Makam-mei (Makam means Zemei, Liangmei, Rongmei & Puimei) to the highest.

When Jadonang was around four years of age, while sleeping on the mat at the portico of his house, a cyclone came and he was swift away. Later he was found in the noon, unharmed, lying on a fresh and cozy shrubs near his house. The mother was over joy with relief.

At the younger age of five, young Jadonang went into trances for hours, even for four to five days.Somtimes for ten days. His trance was manifested as “Talking and meeting with Haipou Ragwang” (the Supreme God, the creator of Heaven and Earth).His long sleeps or trances were termed by his grandmother and maternal family as he was suffering from a dreaded disease like epilepsy. He underwent deep meditations or trances quite often as he grew older. This phenomenal behavior of Jadonang worried his mother very much and helpless. He was awakening one day due to shouting and weeping of his mother. He specifically told his worried mother not to disturb his trance or deep meditation. He further clarified and consoled his mother that his trance was nothing but meeting with Haipou Ragwang, who imparted him spiritual knowledge. His mother believed he would become a Mhu (a priest).Gradually he began to foretell the future of an individual or the village, which proved to be true. His undisputed spiritual discussions with the elderly persons proved his godly quality.Inspite of his young age, he suggested the elders to change the traditional way prevalent his village such as religious and social prejudices and superstitious beliefs. As a child, he was soft spoken and gentle, truth loving and serious in thoughts.

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Occasionally he used to walk in the forest and found talking friendly with the unseen being. It was said that the unseen being was not other than Lord Vishnu. Sometimes in the forest he spent deep meditation for hours. His mother was greatly amazed by an incident, while returning home from the jhum field. The mother unloaded the basket containing the vegetables. The boy picked up the ripe chilies and pieces of ginger and told her not to collect the vegetables from other fields which did not belong to her. The mother was ashamed of but she was glad to see true nature and divinity of her son. The condition of the family began to improve as he grew older. He and his elder brother Madunang sometime had to carry belongings of British officials. From his childhood, he had seen British army passing through his village, since the village road connected with Silchar and Imphal.He was aware of Kuki Rebellion of 1917-1919 and had seen the movement of British Platoon in his village.He was aggrieved with the British oppression and exploitation over Makam people.During the Rebellion, the British failed to protect the Makam people who were not at war.The Kuki migrants of nineteen century separated the Native land of Makam leading to The KUKI-ZELIANGRONG FEUD.

There was a great famine in Puilon due to the flowering of bamboo.Jadonang was barely twelve years old at that time of famine. He told the elder people of the village that wrath of the divine famine could be saved through performance of religious rite by offering a mithun.The villagers offered a mithun to Haipou Ragwang.There after no such famine was heard but received a good and bountiful harvest during the life time of Jadonang.His proximity to Haipou Ragwang, prediction through deep meditation, healing all evils and calamities in the society, finding the root cause of diseases and traditional methods of treatments made Jadonang popular among the Makam communities. Many believed him that he was the God sent Messiah for Makam people. Jadonang was ordained as Mhu or priesthood after performing customary rite known as Raren loumei.Puilong village became a centre of religious institution of Makam communities.

JADONANG AS A RELIGIOUS AND SOCIAL REFORMER.

Jadonang worshipped Lord Bisnu or Bonchanu ( not to confuse with Hindu God-Vishnu) or God of Pubon or Bhuvan Hill in Binnakandi in the District of Cachar.The discovery of Bhuvan Cave had a great influence in Zeliangrong’s religion. The cave of the Bhuvan Hill was known as the abode of Lord Bisnu. Jadonang received divine power and enlightenment from Lord Bisnu. He propounded the indigenous religion of Zeliangrong as Heraka Religion. He inspired this name when he was in Bhuvan cave. He spread Heraka Religion to the Rongmei dwellers in Cachar also. He treated the sick people and prayed for the dead people. He frequently contacted Lord Bisnu in his deep meditation and received advices from Lord Bisnu. He visited the holy places. He was seen communicating to the

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unseen being several times by his followers on the way to Bhuvan cave. His followers did not know what the conversations made with God was. He advised his followers to pray for what they wanted. Gaidinliu Pamei,a young girl from Nungkao (Longkao) village, came to know Jadonang in her dream journey to Bhuvan cave. She also became the follower Jadonang at the age of thirteen.

Zeliangrong people believed that Zeilad lakes are holy lakes. There are four Zeilad Lakes.These lakes are natural water bodies in the west bank of Barak in between Puilon and Chingkao and Bhuvan cave. The four Zeilad lakes are (1) Zeilad, the biggest lake among four lakes, (2) Goiphop-jei, the lake of tortoise because of abundant of tortoise, (3) Rou-jei, the cursed lake and (4) Nap sham-jei, the lake of paddy. Zadonang also undertook a journey to Zeilad Lake, which was believed to be a store of holy water and a store house of magical weapons. According to Gaidinliu, the deity of Zeilad Lake appeared in the form of a python. If they wished to possess the secret and magical weapons of sword (Khonchaibang) and a spear (Phentubui), they should sacrifice the head of a female mithun to the deity of Zeilad Lake. But the magical weapons were not received by them.

In those days, no temples were constructed by the Makam people. It was Jadonang,who reformed the traditional religion by constructing two temples at Puilon,one at Kekru Naga and one at Binnakandi in Cachar.Gaidinliu also constructed one at her birth place,Nungkao.This worshipping place was known as Kelumki.He enriched the Heraka Religion and removed the prejudices, orthodox ideas. He instructed the people to worship only one God, the Lord Bisnu. He was greatly emphasized on the physical and spiritual holiness at the time of worshipping in the temple. He advised his people to take bath before entering into the temple. A restriction was made for those who did not take bath.

Makam community were very discipline and strict in observance of age old customary gennas and taboos (Neimei, Rongmei language meaning Genna; Nuhmei, meaning Taboo).Temple (Kalumki) became the place of congregation for religious and social activities. In the temple Jadonang introduced to abolish certain social taboos and gennas. He abolished the taboos of first birth of a child in an individual or in a village, first birth of piglet,pup,chicken , dog climbing and vulture sitting on the roof of a house, delivery of still born baby, death of a woman after five days of delivery, first rain or hailstorm of a year, earthquake etc.He also asked the people to observe the following gennas like genna for good harvesting good crop, genna for protection of corn from rats and rodents and birds etc.He was not only a social and religious reformer. He was also a great composer of devotional and patriotic songs at the same time he composed new dance forms. It was said that most of the songs were composed when he was with Gaidinliu at the Bhuvan cave.

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JADONANG AS A FREEDOM FIGHTER.

Makam Communities were gradually converting into Christianity mostly in the hills District of Tamengrong and its surroundings.Jadonnag was very aggrieved and pained to see his fellow people discarding the ancestral religion. The Christian Missionaries under the British administration were propagating Christianity all around the villages. Their policy was to promote Christianity and to establish the British Rule in Manipur. Above all, they wanted to suppress the Movement of Jadonang. They diverted all resources-man and money towards Rongmei, Zemei, Liangmei and Puimei.They won the confidence over some sections of native and converted them to Christianity. Some section of Christian belonging to Makam communities turned hostile to Jadonang and his Religion. Jadonang did not loss heart, rather he gained more spiritual energy. He encouraged construction of temples, KARUMKI, in Makam dominating areas and organized the people to avoid such conversion. He emphasized to follow the ancestral custom and to believe in the Heraka religion. He established Heraka Army,known as Riphen.

Jadonang was not pleased with the British for imposing House Tax in the Hills and forced labours to be rendered to the Government Officials, when they were on tour in the hills. He and his people opposed the two laws of Pothang Bekeri and Pothang Senkhai.The first law of Pothang Bekari stated that the villagers in the hills had to carry the goods and luggages of the Government Officials free of cost while they were on tour to the areas. In case of refusal they whipped the villagers and forced to carry the loads. The Second laws stated the villagers had to contribute money to feed the touring officials and other employees of the Government.

A regular massive training was imparted by him to the youths of Army (Riphen).The training consisted of catching cattle, cultivation of agricultural crops
and military training like gun shooting, gun powder making, spear hurling and making of traditional weapons etc. The young girls were trained by Gaidinliu.On getting the people’s momentum; Jadonang announced his objective of establishing, “Makam Gwangdi”, which meant Makam Kingdom. He coined the objective that Kacharies had their own King, so as Manipuris; what was wrong if Makammei had their own king. The exciting slogan of Jadonang was –“Makammei rui Gwang Tupuni” (meaning Makam People will be the rulers) which was inspired and believed by the masses. Gradually Makam people began to accept the idea of an independent state. They refused to cooperate with the Government’s orders. They denied to pay house tax to the British and did not participate in any executive works etc.However; Jadonang did not declare his policy of freedom movement, but he started a political movement under his trend of religious and social activities against the British Rule in Manipur,particulary in the hills region of Tamengrong.

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Jadonang came to know about the Freedom Movement of the Indian National Congress under the able leadership of Mahatma Gandhi on his frequent visit to Binakandi and Lakhmipur in Cachar.Takhenang of Binakandi was his agent and mediator, who supplied all sorts of information to him. In 1926, after AICC Session at Gauhati, Gandhiji was scheduled to visit Silchar in January1927.Jadonang arranged a cultural dance programme in honour of Gandhji by taking 100 boys and 100 girls in Silchar.He could not meet Gandhiji because Gandhiji had postponed his tour programme to Silchar.He gained milestone in his movement against the British and he openly neglected the foreign policy. He did not salute Mr.S.J.Duncan,SDO of Tamengrong even if he met Mr.S.J.Duncan on the way in Tamengrong.Mr.Duncan could not tolerate the insult and decided to punish him.Mr.Duncan issued a warrant to Jinlakpou on 22.11.1928 to arrest Jadonang on charge of Independence.Jinlakpou was working as Lambu (peon cum messenger) and a petty road mohori under British Administration in Manipur.Jadonang was arrested along with his friend Namdichung on 6th Dec.1928 under the pretext of spreading the news he was the king and declaring the end of the British Raj.He was sentence to rigorous remand in jail for seven days. But he was released on third day on the ground of religious and social reformist. The imprisonment did not cow-down, instead he gained more mileage in his freedom movement. He ordered to procure more fire arms from the plains of Cachar.He engaged some blacksmiths to manufacture traditional fire arms and weapons. All the policies and activities were kept secret.Jinlakpou informed about the movement of Jadonang to his Kuki friend, Lhoupa, who was also a Government employee as Mauzadar in Naga Hills. Lhoupa informed about the political movement of Jadonang to Mr J.P.Mill,D.C. of Naga Hills on 5th January 1931.He took the opportunity to take revenge for the Kuki Rebellion of 1917 -1919 against the Zeliangrong people.Mr.J.P.Mill perceived the danger of Jadonang’s Revolt. He invited Mr.J.C.Haggins, an experienced administrative officer.Haggins was subsequently appointed as Political Agent in Manipur.

Mr.S.J.Duncan, S.D.O. of Tamengrong shifted his office to Imphal as directed by Mr. Haggins.He minutely analyzed the information conveyed by Duncan about the declaration of Jadonang that the British Raj would come to an end and Makam Gwangdi would establish soon.Jadonang frequently visited to Cachar and had been distantly inspired in Indian Congress Movements.Mr.Duncan conveyed the exaggerated words of census enumerator to Haggins that 1931 census could not be conducted due to the opposition of Jadonang.Mr.J.P.Mills,D.C. of Naga Hills also partook in conspiracy against Jadonang on the ground of involved in Congress Movement of Delhi.Kukis also directly conspired with British to root out the native movement.Haggins sent a telegraphic message to Chief Secretary of Assam,Mr. W.A.Crosgrave,on 12th February 1931 that a Kabui Naga, named Jadonang, from a Puilon had announced The Naga Raj and would become stumbling block for a peaceful administration of British Rule in Manipur.

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In the early early part of 1931, Mr.Haggins deputed some Manipuri and Rongmei soldiers along with Manipuri and Rongmei’s Lambus to Puilon to arrest Jadonang.They could not arrest him since he was on a holy pilgrimage to Bhuvan cave with Gaidinliu and other followers. This was his last pilgrimage and last communion with Lord Vishnu. He had a mind to announce the arms struggle after his return to Puilon.Mr.Haggins informed Mr.Christoper Gimson, D.C. of Cachar to arrest Jadonang while returning from Bhuvan Hills.Jadonang had already perceived from Lord Bisnu that his days were numbered and would not live to eat the new crops.

Mr.Imtiaz Ali, a police Officer of Assam of Lakhimpur Police Station had an easy plan to arrest Jadonang.He, in civil dress, invited Jadonang to his house on the pretext of consultation over some matter.Gaidinliu suspected a fault play over the invitation and suggested him not to visit.Takhennang, a trusted follower of Jadonang, was also a friendly with the Muslim Police Officer. He insisted and convinced his native leader to accept the invitation. Jadonang was arrested on 19th February 1931 on the river bank after crossing the Barak River. He never resisted. His associates escaped taking shelter in the hills and forest. He was remanded in Silchar jail and this matter was informed to Mr.Haggins.Mr.Haggins telegraphed to Mr. Gimson to extradite the Rebel leader and he would come to Jirighat to receive him. He was accompanied with a platoon of Assam Rifles headed by British officer,Mr.Bulfield and a Gurkha Officer along with 190 coolies.They reached Puilon on 2nd March 1931.The message of arrest was already reached to the native
village before the arrival of British Officials. The villagers were panicked and desperate to revive the movement without their leader.Haggins and Bullfield tortured the harmless and innocent villagers and burnt down the templs.Haggins shot dead one python of Jadonang and other escaped. Jadonang was taken to Imphal via Jiribam under strict security. On the way to Imphal, he was exhibited to the people in different Zelianrong villages to incite in their psyche that the king was
arrested. He was enchained from hand to feet, without shirt; but a small stole on his shoulder and a wrapper around his waist. He was taken along the Imphal Kangchup Road to Khwairamband Bazar and then to Imphal jail. It was said that he was made to halt for a few minutes at Khwairamband Bazar( near the present site of Shamu Makhong Statue), where the female folks of Rongmei from Imphal brought soft drinks to be offered to their hero. As per oral information of Chungbilu Panmeilu (Golmei clan) of Kakhulong, she personally offered local soft drink to him. He said, “Sister, you have quenched my thirst”. He thanked the people.

Jadonang was lodged in Imphal Jail on 29th March 1931.After forty days of his arrest, Mr.Haggins conducted a legal proceeding in his court. He interrogated minutely about his Religion, his God of Bhuvan, his temples, his social reformation,

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the proposed war against the Government and the Kukis.He denied all the allegations as baseless. Though Haggins understood about the idea and freedom movement, but he could not execute a death penalty in absence of evidence. The cunning British Officials did not sympathize on him, inspite of lack of concrete evidences. Particularly, J.C.Haggins, a political Agent and S.J.Duncan, the SDO, created false confidence and promise to the under-trial prisoners of being releasing them if they blamed Jadonang for murder of betel leaves traders from Imphal, that happened in Puilon in 1930.There was a genna of Di-nei (worship of mother earth) at Puilon and lighting of fire in the evening was strictly prohibited on that day. On the day of observing village’s genna, four betel traders put up in the rest house located in the village gate provided by the Government. Unaware of village genna, the traders lit up the candle and were cooking in the rest house at night. The village people protested lighting of fire. Dispute and hit up argument started between the traders and people from different villages and killed the traders. At that time, Jadonang was at Nungkao( Longkao).

Jinlakpou, a Rongmei Christian from Tamengrong Village, was an old enemy of Jadonang strongly involved conspiracy with the British.He did want the popularity of Jadonang and his new religion.Perhaps, another reason was that Gaidinliu refused his proposal of marriage and she became the active follower of Jadonang.He tried to convince the family of under-trial prisoners that the whole blame of murder four traders was to be put on to Jadonang alone. He suggested, other might acquit from death penalty.However, he could convince Lurungpou of Mukti Khullen, one of the accused and king pin in the murder.Lurungpou later on persuaded other inmates.

In fact, Jadonang was not involved in the murder case of four betel leaves traders from Imphal.At the time of the crime, he was at Nungkao Village, visiting Gaidinliu’s father,Lothonang Pamei.He was teaching dance and sing songs to the young boys and girls for the Taraang ceremony.

On the other hand, Mr.Duncan and Haggins made, Jadonang’s elder brother, Modunang to speak that Jadonang instigated the murder and also involved in it. This was the most tragic part of Jadonang; his own brother had forsaken him. All the love they had been sharing from childhood to manhood turn to killer venom. In this way, Haggins declared Jadonang a murderer and ordered death sentence because he was also a threat to the British in Manipur.

Finally, an average height of around 5 ft, medium built with tough physique, innocent and courageous personalities but a simple village young man of 26 years, Jadonang was taken to the gallows in between the two mango groves behind the Imphal Jail, on the east bank of Nambul River, to the south a residency of

-8-

Mr.J.C.Haggins,political agent of British in Manipur. Not only Rongmei, many sympathizers from different communities gathered around the site of gallows to have the last glimpse of their social and religious leader, Jadonang.There was a dark cloud on that day. Among the large crowd of people his two helpless wives, Khunjinliu and Kushinglu and his younger sister Sunlunglu were present with tears in their eyes and sobbing in their throats. The born Hero, Jadonang, stood calmly on the gallows altered the last words; “I am not guilty. I am not the Makam Gwang.The Makam Gwang will come after me.” The hangman covered Jadonang’s face with black clothe and put a noose around his neck. The crowds hold their breath in pin silence.Jadonang was hanged. There was outburst of cries that shook the atmospheres on 29.08.1931 at 6.00 A.M.The Makam HERO died as a Martyr’s death. But his divine soul lives on.

HIS SILENT AND LAST JOURNEY TO PUILON.

Fully committed young man of 26 years, Jadonang Marangmei, was declared dead by the civil medical surgeon from the site of gallows. The clear morning sky was suddenly overcast with dark clouds, as if Heraka God disagreed the extradition of divine soul of Jadonang.The eye witnessed said – Jadonang was calm and fearless while going to towards the gallows. The motionless body was taken down and laid into a coffin. Funeral rites as per Rongmei tradition was performed to Jadonang.Rongmei youngsters mostly from Kakhulong,Keishamthong,Majorkhul etc. put to rest the death body of their Hero in the coffin and was lifted and set out for Puilon and the en-route village’s youths took over their Hero. They carried from one village to another till they reached his birth place at Puilon.His mother, Tabonliu, received her dead son’s body and put to rest in the grave with full traditional rituals and Highest Honour of His Return. The whole people accepted his life was sacrificed for sake of religious and cultural reforms and for his motherland. The Makam HERO died as a Martyr’s death. His death was a glorious death, not for Makam alone but for whole Manipur. He died but his spirit lives on as HAIPOU JADONANG. (Haipou means Highest Honour or Revered or Lord in Rongmei’s term).

Death Anniversary of Haipou Jadonang is observed on 29th August every year. The Death Anniversary Celebration Committee of Haipou Jadonang is formed for observance of His death annivarsary.One of the elders of Rongmei offers oblation of holy local brewed wine to Haipou Ragwang on that day at the site of gallows at 6 A.M, where Jadonang breathed his last. Makam people living in Manipur and many sympathizers pay a humble homage by offering floral tributes, they lit up inscent sticks and candles. Every family of Makammei living in and around Imphal light up candles in the evening in their houses. He shall be remembered as HAIPOU JADONANG MARANGMEI today and forever, lest tomorrow Generation will forget his complete name.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/the-martyr-%E2%80%93haipou-jadonang-marangmei/

Who Benefits SC/SC Status, Facilities on Whose Struggle?

By Madhu Chandra Introduction Any Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe when they get the SC/ST status reservation facilities should ask this question, `Who benefits SC/ST status facilities on whose struggle?`… Read more »

By Madhu Chandra
Introduction
Any Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe when they get the SC/ST status reservation facilities should ask this question, `Who benefits SC/ST status facilities on whose struggle?` Many of the young SC/ST generations, when they enjoy the presidential reservation facilities for underprivileged section of Indian societies, do not realize how and whose struggles, these privileges are provided. It will be very true to our north east India community from SC/ST background and other reserved categories all over the country as well.

The struggle between High caste and oppressed communities of India has reached its crucial juncture. The presidential reservation facilities preserved in Indian Constitution is most precious gift given to Indian oppressed class community. This most precious gift to protect and preserve the underprivileged communities of India has been under attack again and again by high caste minority ruler of the country.

This short write up is attempted to bring awareness among the SC/ST communities, particularly to those who have benefited SC/ST status facility yet failed to realize the importance of joint effort to safe guard of the constitutional right of the provision for Dalit communities.

Who Are Dalits And Dalit-Bahujans?

Three reasons why reintroduction of Dalit is needed at this hour: First, there is strong feeling that the North East Indian Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribe (ST) are different from the rest of SC/ST of the country. Secondly, there is no difference between SC/ST of North Eastern India with the rest of SC/ST communities in their definition. Thirdly, the north eastern SC/ST communities rarely know the plights of being SC/ST communities in rest of the countries.

Dalit movement has been widely known today all over India. American and European countries started to hear the plights of Dalit atrocities in India. For the first time United Nations heard the issues of Indian Dalits in 2002.

To understand clearly what the Dalit movement is all about, it will be essential to know what the word `Dalit` actually means. After knowing the definition of Dalit, we may fully understand what is happening among the SC/ST communities in Indian villages, towns, cities and forests. This will also help the SC/ST communities in north east India to understand what means to be SC/ST in India society.

Dalit is the very term that Indian SC/ST communities named themselves sometimes in 1960s when SC/ST of Maharashtra protested to leave Hinduism to get liberated from Hindus Caste system. It is derived from Sanskrit word `Dal` meaning for `Oppressed,` `Crushed,` or `Defiled.` Dalits are not included in Hindu`s four Castes – Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas, and Shudras developed by Brahmin forces ever since Aryans invented in Indian soils in 1500 BC.

All SC/ST communities in India including the SC/ST communities in north east India are known as Dalit Communities by definition in the way how SC/ST communities are oppressed by Indian`s upper caste communities. To define it in larger term by including Others Backward Classes (OBC), whole low caste and back class communities are politically termed as Dalit-Bahujans (Bahujan means majority) which represent 85% of Indian population.

Brahmins dominated whole Indian society by placing them on top of all castes that also enjoy and control all Temple power and temple economic. The education was designed only for Brahmin societies. Kshatriyas placed in second row of Hindu caste system designated to enjoy and control over authorities and enjoy tax economic collected from whole society under the influences of Brahmins.

Vaisyas placed in third caste row designated to control and enjoy trade economic and power under the influences of their superior Brahmins and Kshatriyas. Shudras placed in fourth caste row designated to serve their three superior Brahmins, Kshatriyas and Vaisyas. They performed lowest works such as removing the human night waste from upper caste homes. The first three castes are known as UPPER HINDU CASTE and the fourth as low caste.

Where the Dalit communities do falls within Hindu caste structure? Dalits actually does not fall within any of Hindu`s four caste system! Dalits are casteless people because they are not counted as fellow human beings. They are defiled communities. Their shadow on upper caste is considered even defiling. To erase their footsteps they were forced to tight a broom on their backs. Dalits are not to learn Sanskrit, if they happen to hear a Sanskrit phrase, theirs ears are to be poured melted tines. If they happen to remember a Sanskrit phrase, their tongues are supposed to be cut off according to Manu Smriti, the Law of Manu, on which Hindu caste system is built upon.

People hearing the plights of being Dalits will surprise that caste apartheid still happen in twenty first century in far and near corners of Indian societies. In 2002 five Dalits were skinned alive for skinning a death cow. It proved that a death cow is more worth than five Dalits. In 2005, fifty Dalits homes were burnt down in the presence of police forces and district authorities in Gohana 70 km away from Indian capital city – Delhi.

In 2006 March, a Dalit man`s both the hands and leg amputated in Punjab by upper caste when he fought back the gang rapists of his minor daughter. A seven years old girl thrown into burning bush for crime of walking in front of upper caste home in a village close Agra in 2008. Every 18 minutes, a crime is committed against a Dalit, Every day 3 Dalit women are raped, 2 Dalits are murdered & 2 Dalits Houses are burnt in India, 11 Dalits are beaten and every week 13 Dalits are murdered, 5 Dalits home or possessions are burnt, 6 Dalits are kidnapped or abducted. The story like this never cease in daily print and electronic media. Many went unreported injustice.

What Are The SC/SC Status Benefits?

SC/ST known today as Dalit communities in India was known as `Depressed Class` and `Untouchable` by British before independent. In 1937, for first time, the British termed `Depressed Class` or `Untouchable` as Scheduled Caste and Tribe. Special consideration for their social, economical and educational uplift was considered even before the independent of India.

After Independent, in framing of Indian constitution through initiatives of Dr. Bim Rao Ambedkar gave special provision for SC/ST communities and the Presidential Order of SC/ST was listed in 1950. SC/ST status benefits was not the original demand of Dalits, it was optional choice at Pune Pact on September 24, 1932 after Mahatma Gandhi opposed separate electorate for Dalits demanded by Ambedkar and granted by British round table at London.

Majority of SC/ST communities of North East India see SC/ST status facilities in the terms of employment and educational reservation privileges. The SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Acts 1989 amended in 1995 seem to be not fully understood by SC/ST communities of north east Indian which is much beyond educational and employment provisions. Special Acts under SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Acts 1995 has been provided to prevent atrocities against SC/ST communities anywhere of the country. The provision given to any SC/ST communities includes some of the followings:

Special provision of employment in Central and state sectors, educational provisions by seat reservation and monetary helps, SC/ST land protections, Atrocity prevention Acts and remedies to the victimized SC/ST communities such as legal punishments, compensations etc. (SC/ST Prevention of Atrocity Acts 1995 is available in concern offices)

Who Struggles For SC/ST And Who Benefits It?

Many SC/ST communities take the SC/ST Status beneficiaries for granted that it naturally came itself to be included in Indian Constitution. It is included in Indian Constitution not without somebody struggling for that. Dr. Bim Rao Ambedkar was one of many who struggle for SC/ST communities in India and many others after him. For the service Ambedkar has done for Indian SC/ST society, he could have been equally given the father of Nation as it is given to Mahatma Gandhi.

Therefore, in this short write up, a question is being asked `Who benefits SC/ST status facilities provided in Indian Constitution on who have struggled?` Those who get the SC/ST status benefits must realize the need of helping those who are involved in the struggle to ensure SC/ST cause.

Differences between Being SC and ST!

Scheduled Caste communities are at the receiving end of Hindu caste system. They are considered to be part of Hindu Caste system but upper caste did not allow them to worship their gods in the same temples, they are considered defiled. They are socially, economically, educationally, politically oppressed. The freedom to choose their faith and religions is denied. The movement they convert to any other faiths and religions different from Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism, they are denied all the Presidential Order of SC status facilities.

Scheduled Tribes are little bit different in the nature they are oppressed. They suffer educational, economic and developmental backwardness for being geographically far away in forests. ST communities are not oppressed like SC when they change their faiths and religions. They are given the ST status benefits even if they convert to other religions different from Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism.

Scheduled Caste origins converted to other faith and religions different from Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism are fighting for their birth, fundamental and constitutional rights to enjoy SC status even after conversion. ST communities will need to realize that their same brothers and sisters of SC communities, who are oppressed under the same stigma of Hindu caste system, need the constitutional rights to be included in presidential order list of SC/ST 1950 even after their conversion to any of their choice.

What is the SC/ST Situation in India?

There is huge lie against SC/ST from general and upper caste communities that reservation provided to SC/ST communities has not done any good to them. It is open fact that without SC/ST status provision provided in Indian Constitution and reservation facilities, SC/ST communities could never have come up to what they are today. If the reservation facility provided to SC/ST today are denied then they will pushed back to what they were before.

Mushrooming of Private sectors is another great challenge for SC/ST because once all the governmental sectors converted into Private Sectors, they will not be any post left for SC/ST communities because, the Private Sectors do not have the reservation system in employment. Mushrooming of Private sectors may not be able to stop from it`s ever growth.

However there can be one possible hope for SC/ST that legally and politically challenges the private sectors to provide reservation for SC/ST communities, which is deadly protested by Private Sector owners. All India Confederation of SC/ST Organizations (www.scstconfederation.net) headed by former IRS officer Dr. Udit Raj and many others have been campaigning for private sector reservation. A national campaign demanding to enact private sector reservation is called on November 29, 2010 at Jantar Mantar by All India Confederation of SC/ST Organizations.

Conclusion

Although SC/ST communities do not realize who struggled for very benefits of SC/ST, there is a group of people like Dr. Bim Rao Ambedkar and his followers who still struggle to ensure SC/ST status benefits. Educated and empowered SC/ST often forgets their SC/ST brothers and sisters who are still in the need of help for their total liberation from caste oppression.

SC/ST status beneficiaries must be guarded even after mushrooming of private sector. It is high call from SC communities to ST communities to stand united especially constitutional denial of SC status facilities when they are converted to other faiths and religions different from Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/who-benefits-scsc-status-facilities-on-whose-struggle/

GOI `“ NSCN (IM) `“ GOM

By Heigrujam Nabashyam Political pundits from Plato and Kautilya to the modern-day gurus say: politics sans principle and morality is self-destructive. In a democracy people are sovereign. They elect their… Read more »

By Heigrujam Nabashyam
Political pundits from Plato and Kautilya to the modern-day gurus say: politics sans principle and morality is self-destructive.

In a democracy people are sovereign. They elect their representatives to take charge of the affairs of the State and govern themselves.

A recent statement issued jointly by New Delhi’s interlocutor and the General Secretary of the NSCN (IM) at Delhi appeared to have questioned this basic tenet of democracy. The joint statement stated that “while the differences between the two parties have narrowed, some of the proposals would require further negotiations to reach a mutually acceptable solution”. The communiqué seems to sound out the dump SPF government and the people regarding their “mutually acceptable solution”.

Although the prospect of finding a solution to the decades-old issue of Naga insurgency is welcome, a sense of doubt and suspicion in the minds of the public – and not without reason – is created by the secretive nature of the talk between the two parties. It was suspected that the Government of India and the NSCN (IM) had put Manipur on the table, although India government had from time to time reassured that they would not do anything against Manipur. Fact is, the Indian government has no moral right and authority to confer with any party or people in any manner that may affect Manipur without the approval and participation of the Manipur Government. This in the best tradition of democracy, is the rule of the game.

As the wise Gurus said, the government of India cannot practice diplomacy and play game without political morality; but only at its own peril. It is a different matter if the GOI requires a long diplomatic rope and hopefully the Lakshman Rekha be not crossed. However the telltale signs tell something unholy which is never a good presage.

The talk it is reported, have entered the final phase and arrived at a crucial stage – the logistics seen of NSCN (IM) and company may be an indicator to it. But one wonders the position and preparedness of the Ibobi government, except for its love of pushing the panic button occasionally whenever it believes Manipur is under threat – according to its myopic vision and strategy – from NSCN(IM) and company.

However after nearly a decade of firm rule by the O. Ibobi Singh government, Manipur seems rather dangerously uncontrollable. Its chief minister is protected 24×7 by hi-tech multi-security-rings of Special Forces from great dangers. The chief minister says even the ADCs (Autonomous District Councils) are threatened and therefore they have to be sheltered in Imphal under tight security away from the Districts’ H.Qs.

Truly, many things in Manipur – man, land, ADCs, and so on have become endangered species in spite of an indomitable leader ruling, since the last decade. We are engulfed with a sense of loss and the situation is made more and more funny too, by the development shenanigans of the government – a clever ploy of the SPF leadership to distract attention from its wrongdoings.

However, according to some development economists O. Ibobi’s government excels the record of all previous governments. The experts it seems, have identified development of Manipur with the multi-million rupees never-completing-projects funded by the Centre for this unlucky state. Interestingly this opinion of the experts is contradicted by none other than the former chief minister, Mr. Rishang Keishing, the towering Congress leader, who had said that despite the huge Central funding “we do not see any development as the funds meant for development works are being misused”.

One may remember the basic indicators of development are the measure of consumption of energy or electricity, water supply and services in roads and transport, health sector and education, etc. But sadly a cursory look at these indicators show dismal performance in most fronts despite the huge funds pumped in. The claim of achievement by the Ibobi’s government is ridiculously illiterate.

Looking at the achievements and its service records, one honestly feels that the O. Ibobi government’s understanding of governance despite it’s nearly decade’s rule seems rather unbelievably limited. Unfortunately its unimaginative and unlettered rule has caused deep communal divide for which the NSCN (IM) and company should be very thankful to Mr. O. Ibobi Singh and his men. This I believe is the greatest achievement of the SPF government.

Nevertheless every player in the game must remember that Manipur is home to no less than three dozen indigenous groups of people living intertwined in all areas of the hills and the valley. And it is in the best interests of each one of us not to raise the bogey of exclusive land rights or somebody’s ancestral land, etc. because no one would agree to it. And it would be futile to attempt to rewrite the history of this ancient land.

And it should also be in the wisdom of government of Manipur to restrain the Centre from doing anything inimical to this symbiotic relationship between the indigenous peoples in this part of the earth.

But one wonders how the O. Ibobi Singh government would deal with the GOI and the NSCN(IM)!

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/goi-nscn-im-gom/

Editorial – Of Mental Blockades and Economic Blockades

Leader Writer: Paojel Chaoba It is fact that State now suffers, the economic blockade imposed by the Sadar Hills Districthood Demand Committee (SHDDC) which is nearing a month have taken… Read more »

Leader Writer: Paojel Chaoba
It is fact that State now suffers, the economic blockade imposed by the Sadar Hills Districthood Demand Committee (SHDDC) which is nearing a month have taken its toll on the populace. The UNC openly opposes the district status demand and counters it by imposing an indefinite bandh along all national highways and Naga inhabited areas. The MLAs representing both communities in their contrasting stances have fired verbal bullets along the issue at the State Legislative Assembly sittings presently going on.

The state government also seems caught in a dilemma between the demand and the counter demand. Yet, the formation of a District Reorganization Committee by the cabinet seems to be the only ace up the government’s sleeve in addressing the impasse and the murky state of affairs.

Demarcation of district boundaries and the call for time (three months) to execute the workings is offered from the government, in reciprocation to the districthood demand. Maybe, after the process has been implemented, the UNC and the SHDDC may also arrive to an understanding, hopefully. The SPF governance needs to act fair and square as the issue of land is the major point of contention and has been the cause of many a communal uprising.

Each and every demand made in a democratic set up, however justified needs to be negotiated and tabled according to the circumstances prevalent. The Sadar Hills demand has encompassed more than four decades, what will be the harm for waiting another three months, in the interest of the public, one ponders ? It would be a more mature stance and yet still provide a breathing space to the suffering public. Besides, the National Highway 39 can anytime be again subjected to economic blockades or indefinite bandhs as usual if the government’s promise fails to deliver. It is understood that, the will of the Sadar Hills brethren need not be questioned, as one has observed the condition of the inhabitants of the area bearing the brunt of the blockade more than their valley counterparts. The ‘mass exoduses ‘ by the villagers due to complete breakdown of transport braving the harsh elements, lack of medical facilities, affect on educational institutions and want of essential items have taken its toll more in the striking Sadar Hills area.

Nevertheless, the SHDDC must weigh the pros and cons and address the issue in a humane manner, as since the attention of the government has been drawn. It is questionable to hold one own people at ransom when a solution of sorts has presented itself. The right to life of the public of the state should not be compromised.

Interestingly enough, when the human rights of the entire citizenry is at peril, the so called ‘defenders’, represented by various individuals and ‘organizations’ adopt a ‘wait and watch policy’. A minimal effort of sending out a press communiqué appealing to all concerned to resolve the impasse is not had at all. Many of them in their monocular vision seem content with addressing press conferences with bravado and the idealism of upholding the rights of the people, while remaining blissfully unaware of the ground reality. Maybe,it is due to the fact that their workings are objective to HIV/AIDS, environment, children or AFSPA and the sufferings of the public as a whole is inconsequential. The funds pouring in through their Foreign Contribution Regulations Act number in Euros and dollars must have to be utilized in a marginalized area. Money definitely talks and attending conferences abroad are more significant.

As of late, the concentrated outlook of many an activist, self styled intellectuals etc. nowadays lies in comparing the Anna Hazare issue to that of our own Iron Lady. Irom Sharmila , a living legend, her determination, a testament of the prowess of a Manipuri woman. Compare her with Aung San Suu Kyi  or Mahatama Gandhi or any notable figure, but positively. Mentioning that Sharmila’s struggle has been sidelined whereas Anna’s is reciprocated by the centre may be a means of propagating her stance and showing the lopsided attitude of the Union Government towards the North East, but it also shows the weakness of a society to rally to her just cause. One can’t help but feel that her agitation has been more or less ‘commercialized’ by NGOs while forgetting the actual protest stance.

But for every reasonable demand, it may be creation of the Sadar Hills district, removal or AFSPA, endeavor for a less corrupt sub continent, needs to be endorsed by the public and the concerned. Those who are rallying behind must drop their masks, rethink their myopic mindset. Let us be rid of the economic blockades and most importantly, our own mental blockades.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/of-mental-blockades-and-economic-blockades/

HAD GANDHIJI BEEN BORN IN THE LAND OF SHARMILA …. ?

By: Seram Neken “If Irom Chanu Sharmila fasted for corruption and if Septuagenarian Anna Hazare protested against AFSPA, the matters would have been different. If Sharmila hails from mainland India… Read more »

By: Seram Neken

“If Irom Chanu Sharmila fasted for corruption and if Septuagenarian Anna Hazare protested against AFSPA, the matters would have been different. If Sharmila hails from mainland India and if Hazare is a native of Manipur, the vice versa of what is being strongly addressed by the government might have happened. This time, Sharmila expressed her whole-hearted moral support to Anna Hazare’s protest following the latter’s invitation. Had the invitation for joining the protest come from Sharmila to Anna Hazare, would the latter have responded readily ? ”

Great personalities are created where there is respect for human values. The dignity the British attached to Gandhiji as a freedom fighter helped him gain the fame worldwide and glorify his non-violence. Had MK Gandhi been born in a place like Manipur or had he undergone his protests against a government such as that of today’s Manipur, Gandhijis non-violence would not have gained its fame and he would not have been recognized as the father of the nation. Indifference of the rulers might have jeopardized his cause half-way or he might have ended his life in the bullets of mindless security people of this land.

The strikers whom politicians, media persons and the intellectuals are attentive to or glorify most, are considered as strong revolutionaries fighting for the people’s cause. If Irom Chanu Sharmila fasted for corruption and if Septuagenarian Anna Hazare protested against AFSPA, the matters would have been different. If Sharmila hails from mainland India and if Hazare is a native of Manipur, the vice versa of what is being addressed by the government might have happened. Let us examine the importance of the two causes between corruption and human rights, and let us compare the personalities of Sharmila and Hazare. Personality cult seems to out-do the issues. Sharmila has readily extended her support to the cause of Hazare’s protest following the latter’s invitation to join him. However, the nation has not responded to the call of Irom Chanu Sharmila for over ten years.

Sharmila has now become a symbol of peace, in the true sense of the term. She has earned the reputation of having the strongest will and heart for protection of human rights around the globe. She is not a mere striker, but a model of truth and justice. Gandhijis non-violence has been glorified by her personality in the twenty first century. It is not politically motivated and her demands represent the general will of the hapless people residing amidst the draconian laws of democratic India. In spite of neglects and indifference of the rulers for more than a decade, she never goes back. It is natural that Anna Hazare invited Sharmila to join his crusade against corruption. It is more natural that the Iron Lady expressed her moral support to the cause, but declined to join the fast in New Delhi for the Hazare cause. She rather blamed the nation for its indifference to the cause of human right violations.

The national media is highly discriminatory as did the government and political parties at the national level in regard to the dual cases of Sharmila and Hazare. Both strikers have been fighting for the social good, both have been following the non-violent means of fasting. However, Sharmila has almost crossed a decade of fasting, while Hazare’s appearance on the scene is quite recent as compared to the former. However, the national media have been disproportionately viewing the two protests. Intensity of the protests and the causes themselves have to be considered in balance while reporting to the people and drawing government’s attention.

Meanwhile, Dr. Manmohan Singh has written a nice letter to the septuagenarian protester with the highest concern for the latter’s health. In the letter, the Prime Minister says : “Over the last few days, I have watched with increasing concern of your health. Despite the differences between the government and your team, I don’t think that anybody is or should be in any doubt about the deep and abiding concern  which I and our government share about your health, arising from your continuing fast. I have no hesitation in saying that we need your views and actions in the service of the nation, from a robust physical condition and not in the context of frail and failing health……..” The emotional care of the leader of the nation towards a Gandhian as shown in the letter is indeed envious and courteous, and highly expected of a leadership where the father of the nation was born. It is really lamentable that during the last more than a decade of Sharmila’s fasting, not a single courtesy of such kind has been exhibited towards her from the end of a nation’s leadership. Barring independent writers, political motivators and select media personalities, the nation has been keeping mum on her cause and protest. Now that Anna Hazare and his cause have gained widespread media coverage and government attention in a comparatively short duration, has reflected some kind of nostalgia in the hearts of the so called Indian citizens residing in the far border hilly state of Manipur. Let us uphold human rights while fighting against corruption at all levels.

(The writer is a freelance journalist)

The article was sent to Kanglaonline.com by Seram Neken.

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Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/had-gandhiji-been-born-in-the-land-of-sharmila-%E2%80%A6/

Hmar students claimed three positions in NEHU PG exam

Shillong, August 25, 2011: Three members of the Hmar Students Association (HSA) in Shillong claimed three positions in the recently announced Post-graduate examination held under North Eastern Hill University (NEHU)…. Read more »

Shillong, August 25, 2011: Three members of the Hmar Students Association (HSA) in Shillong claimed three positions in the recently announced Post-graduate examination held under North Eastern Hill University (NEHU).

The three successful students are Mr. J. Lalhmahruaia (S/o Lalruatthanga, Phuoibuong, Mizoram) who is ranked 5th Position in M.A (Economics), Mr. Simon L Infimate (S/o Lalpansang Infimate, Parbung/ Shillong) ranked 8th Position in M.A (Geography) and Miss Jocica Lalhrietpui Buhril (D/o (L) L.H. Tluonga Buhril, Shillong) who also claimed the 8th Position in M.A (Lib. Info. Science).

Results for other subjects of the PG exams is expected to be declared this month.

The above notice was sent to Kanglaonline.com by Lalremlien Neitham  {alremlien[@]gmail.com}

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Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/hmar-students-claimed-three-positions-in-nehu-pg-exam/

Meghen charges Indian govt of creating communal tension

GUWAHATI, Aug 25: The Indian government has long been plotting and sowing seeds of communal disharmony in the state to hinder development, stated UNLF chairman RK Sanayaima alias Meghen while… Read more »

UNLF chairman RK Meghen coming out of NIA Court in Guwahati on Thursday.

GUWAHATI, Aug 25: The Indian government has long been plotting and sowing seeds of communal disharmony in the state to hinder development, stated UNLF chairman RK Sanayaima alias Meghen while speaking to media persons at Gauwahati NIA court complex today.

He further asserted that the Centre has adopted different outlooks to the states of the nation and some are treated in a step motherly basis, which has created rifts between the various communities inhabiting it.

Meghen also appealed that it is time for the communities residing in both the hills and valleys to come together and find means to coexist in harmony, especially during chaotic times.

He maintained that there has been almost no proper demarcation of district boundaries since the days of British rule. The districts boundaries should be properly chalked out to bring about uniform development, he said. The public of the state should endeavor towards economic development to be self reliant instead of depending on the national highways.

There has been scant development in the state for the last 65 years under the Indian governance, the elected representatives of the people are busy among themselves in striving for power and to cater to the whims of the centre, this is another cause for the underdevelopment prevalent, he said.

The Loktak Project which was commissioned with the promise that there will be no dearth of power supply in a state turns out to be a farce and instead burdens the farmers and disturbs the ecological balance. He stated that the public of the state should remain wary of the dubious intents of the centre. The different communities should come together and not fall prey to the underhanded politics initiated by the Indian government, he said

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/meghen-charges-indian-govt-of-creating-communal-tension/

A Different Attitudanal Journey

By Anindya Kanti Biswas & Uddalok Pal Birla Academy of Arts and culture recently held an unique exhibition of paintings from 2nd to 7th of August 2011. The artists formed… Read more »

By Anindya Kanti Biswas & Uddalok Pal
Birla Academy of Arts and culture recently held an unique exhibition of paintings from 2nd to 7th of August 2011. The artists formed together a group named “Neo-gene: contemporary Artists Manipur” and they have displayed 45 works of theirs in the show. The exhibition has focus on the current trends of visual arts movements of the contemporary times. The techniques, styles and concepts of the North East, particularly the artists of Manipur have exposed their talents to the National Mainstream through this exposition. On the right hand side of the entrance nine works of Ch. Lalil Singh has been displayed. Amongst them the works entitled ‘Two Dancers’, ‘ Doll Seller’, ‘under one umbrella’, ‘Gopis’, and ‘Waiting’ are remarkable. The work titled as ‘Gopis’ has been divided in two halves; in the technical terminology this is known as ‘Dyptich’ Amongst the for divisions of Manipuri dancing Lalit has depicted the ‘Raas Lila’ format in this presentation. Lalit’s brush moves like a whirlwind on the canvas. Having worked over a decade with this technique now comes to him spontaneously in a effort less manner; such is his mastering of the style. He shows a new approach to the medium by using opaque and transparent colours. Lalit observes minute details of human life especially the dances and other activities (like the daily market scenario) and others.

On the left hand side G. Gandumpu has displayed his eight paintings. The only artist belonging to the Kabui Naga community gives ample proof of his traditional lineage in the presentation of his works. A perfectionist regarding technique (which can said to be bordering almost near obsession) his portrayal of the traditional dance movement of the men and woman of his community is unique and eye-catching. He is more attuned towards ‘capturing the motion’ rather than the figurative definitiveness-infact he has sacrificed the latter aspect in order to do full justice to the former. One is bound to be surprised at the prolific case with which he plays with statuesque dynamicity of this brilliant dance form. Of course, being a member of the community, he understands the psyche of it in a perfect manner. However, a small point keeps on nagging; had the artist utilized and explored the medium of ‘oil’ on canvas in these portrayals he perhaps would’ve been able to bring out more out of such vivacious effervescence typical to the dance form. If it has been possible to bring out the beauty of the young female faces-why not same could’ve been done to the male and female forms in total? We are all aware of the physical allure of the dancers (both male and female) in such communities. Gandumpu’s hometown in Manipur are full of different dance styles belonging to the communities of Kabui, Kuki and so on. His works reflects his affection for them. Most probably memories and experiences shared with this dance activities have gradually become the core and content of his work.

The third artists in this group is Robin Wahengbam who has participated his four of his works. Three of them have been done in graphics medium (Etching, Lithograph and Wood cut process) titled as ‘Untitled’. The fourth work which is done in acrylic medium on the surface of canvas is depict a traditional ‘Thang-Ta’ movement where ‘Ta’ movement. The usage of contrasting vermilion and chrome yellow creates a magnificent sharpness. To a certain degree, despite its heroic Tandava stance it creates a soothing effect for the eye. It should be mentioned in this review that Robin is a former student of Graphics department of Kala-bhavan of Santiniketan, his handling of the different techniques of this medium speaks of ease borne out of meticulous and dedicated hard work.

The fourth participants of this show is Ksh. Sarat Singh out of his nine recent works-five have been done with acrylic on canvas. Initially Sarat’s works were realistic but soon he started experimenting with form and sensitive brush strokes. Water colour was his preferred medium during his Santiniketan days but now he handles acrylics with the same case. Individualistic portraits has been mainly featured by him. His technical brilliance regarding his drawings is apparent. Had it been not so, his works (in wood cut graphics) would not have been belied such wonderful interplay of light & shadow which is called in art–terms as ‘Chiaroscuro’.

Leishangthem Ishwor is the fifth participants who has exhibited only two of his recent works. His portrayal of Irom Chanu Sharmila’s long struggle regarding her “fast unto  death” against the “Armed Forces Special Power Act” and other activities of India Government touches a raw point. The viewer is left speechless. The use of light yellow, vermilion and black creates an illusionist. The whole presentation gives the spectator a mystic feeling. The addition of the symbolic elements in his compositions has given the whole presentation a different kind of dimension. His composition entitled as “Hungry for peace I” has been depicted in a ‘diptych’ pattern.  

The sixth participants of this show is M. Thomas Singh. He has exhibited nine of his recent works which includes graphics and paintings. He has used pastel and acrylic for his composition on canvas titled in ‘Nightmare of Nature I, III, & V’ viewers get to the cityscapes where a brilliant simultaneous intermingling of the ‘birds-eye-view’ and the ‘general aerial view’ perspectives has been done. Chiaroscuro effects are the great features of Thomas’s art work. Depth as well as drama has been skillfully projected. His brush strokes are significantly shaped and create magical fantasy. Simply he can create magical fusion with his rendering of brush strokes. His works look to the extremes the lyrical immersion  of nature. Immediacy of the vision is one of Thomas’s culminating point of his creations which leads to a kind of ‘mysticism of light’. He has already explored the enigmatic magic of colour with his fluid, shadowy brush strokes. His use of colour effectively conveys the environment of the alien world.

Our fellow artists from the North-Eastern region have started very recently to come out and present themselves the contemporary mainstream. We would love to have their works exhibited more. It is a pity that we know very less about them and their brilliant presentation.

In conclusion it can be definitely be stated that this exhibition titled “Four Moods” has touched  the visual arts enthusiasts of Kolkata. It has definitely made a point. All the members of this exhibition has viewed and experienced a lot. Some of them are in their early forties – others moving of their fifties-they have been much since their younger days. Their reflective moods and inner turmoil’s leaves us yearning for more.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/a-different-attitudanal-journey/

Featured Blog – Pot Spots by Rajesh Hijam

Kanglaonline.com Team would like to introduce our featured blog Pot Spot’s by Rajesh Hijam.  We would also like to thank Mr Rajesh  Hijam for contributing. Do follow the Pot Spots… Read more »

Pot Spots – featured blog by Rajesh Hijam

Kanglaonline.com Team would like to introduce our featured blog Pot Spot’s by Rajesh Hijam.  We would also like to thank Mr Rajesh  Hijam for contributing. Do follow the Pot Spots blog for more updates.

Since the launch of Leipung.com couple of weeks back by Kanglaonline , apart from the social features, Leipung.com now enable multiple blog sites , presently done on an invite basis, which will be enabled to registered users in coming weeks. So grab the opportunity and register at leipung. If you are interested in having a blog site at leipung.com, please do drop a note at feedback[@]kanglaonline.com or feedback[@]leipung.com. We would get back to you as soon as possible.

Cheers!

 

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/featured-blog-pot-spots-by-rajesh-hijam/

Let us learn from ECONOMIC BLOCKADE

By: Neken Singh Seram “ The more our dependence on outside products, the greater is the importance of national highways. As of the present day generation, almost everything we use… Read more »

By: Neken Singh Seram

The more our dependence on outside products, the greater is the importance of national highways. As of the present day generation, almost everything we use right from the early morning wake-up to the time we return to bed at night comes from outside the state. Right from tooth brush and tooth paste to clothes we wear, from apples to rice and oil, from school bags to Tiffin materials of children, from vehicles and fuel to entertainment gadgets, everything is imported from outside the state. It is high time people of Manipur explored various possibilities to reduce dependencies on the highways and outside markets. We need to learn use of local products instead of products imported from outside.

 

Long queues in front of oil pumps indicate the onset of highway bandh for one or the other demands of people inhibiting along the people’s lifelines. Government always remains hapless in dealing with the frequent highway blockades which harass the general population particularly the poor majority. No befitting action has been taken up against those taking undue advantage of residing along the national highways. The supreme court of India has already ruled that highway blockade is a crime worth punishable. However, till today not a single perpetrator or organisation involved in highway blockade has ever been booked and banned in Manipur. Thanks to the inaction of the incumbent government that does not spare even an old vendor woman of Khwairamband Keithel for her occupying a small space at the roadside, selling vegetables and braving traffic police lathis to feed her families.

 

During the 68 day Naga-sponsored economic blockade last year, the normal social and economic lives of the Manipuris were severely hit. As the LPG gas was unavailable due to blockade, time of cooking depended on the availability of electricity during daytime. We saw widespread use of rice cookers and electric heaters for all cooking purposes replacing use of cooking gas. People started using charcoal with chulaas for cooking at home. The blockade in highways obviously taught a valuable lesson to the Manipuris regarding economical use of fuel at home and outside. Earlier most people recklessly used LPG for domestic purposes keeping aside the electric heaters and rice cookers rusted for long. But, we were forced to repair the electric heaters and chulaas for making tea, boiling water, preparing curries and fries.

Although its negative impacts have hard-hit the inhabitants of Manipur hills and valley people during the last few months, economic blockade is not bereft of intent merits providing durable benefits to the people. Unnecessary roaming on vehicles has drastically reduced as petrol prices in black market sky-rocketed as high as 120 per litre. Long queues have adorned the oil pumps. Besides using public carriers like Auto-Rikshaw and Magic-Tata by office goers, number of cycling and walking people will also rise in course of time. As many vehicles are off the roads due to fuel scarcity, there will be reduction of air and noise pollution in city. Fuel scarcity will certainly make a valuable contribution to the health of many people who walk and ride cycles for their routine businesses by activating body metabolism and controlling body weight. Thanks to blockade sponsors who indirectly help us realized the relevance of simple living.

Dearth of edibles coming in from outside the state will compel many people to use local products made by self-help groups. Most popular are: papad, pickles, chow-chow, Khurman, kabok, spices and juices of various kinds.  It is time to teach our children children to eat Kabok, Laloo, Heingan, Khurman instead of Cakes, Uncle Chips and Lays. Local made eatables may replace Macorni, Maggi and Chow-chow for School Tiffin. The quantum of demands for local products during the economic blockade may be almost double. Hundreds of women who are engaged in ferrying these products from place to place may be benefitted in their business.

One most rewarding merit of the long economic blockade by the various Naga bodies last year was the garner of attention of the government towards improving the conditions of national highway number 53. However, no improvement has been seen as yet. The said alternative lifeline of the Manipur people which had long been neglected by the government will now be put up again as the most debated agenda of the ensuing general elections.

 

Locally available fruits should take the place of apple, grapes, mangoes and pomegranates imported from outside which are expensive and the prices of which often fluctuate due to transport disruptions. Cooking LPG uses may be reduced at the minimum by utilizing the electricity economically and adopting the traditional charcoal/ fuel wood burning. People in general need to popularize walking and cycling for less-hasty and less-distant businesses. It serves the trio-benefit of health improvement, saving fuel and reducing pollution. If we can be familiarized with such habits and practices, the hardships due to economic blockade will not be too grave as before. The simple living and Swadeshi philosophies of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of the Nation have found total relevance in Manipur at this hour of highway blockade.

(The writer is a freelance journalist)

The above article was sent to Kanglaonline.com by Mr. Neken Singh Seram

 

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Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/let-us-learn-from-economic-blockade/

Talks on Sadar Hills bear no fruit, SHDDC to continue with blockade

IMPHAL Aug 24: Talks between the state government and Sadar Hills Districthood Demand Committee for the third time failed to arrive at an understanding today and the impasse will go… Read more »

People of Sadar Hills blocking NH-39 demanding full-fledged Sadar Hills district on Wednesday.

People of Sadar Hills blocking NH-39 demanding full-fledged Sadar Hills district on Wednesday.

IMPHAL Aug 24: Talks between the state government and Sadar Hills Districthood Demand Committee for the third time failed to arrive at an understanding today and the impasse will go on further.

Chief Minister Okram Ibobi met 10 representatives of the demand committee at his official bungalow today morning.

Sources said that among the representatives included three MLAs and the rest comprised of SHDDC representatives. It further said that the Chief Minister negotiated by asking for three months time to settle the issue as a cabinet sitting yesterday had decided to constitute a Committee on Reorganization of Administration and Police District boundary. The CM had said that after chalking out the policies within the purview of the committee by streamlining district boundaries, the demand of the SHDDC could be considered. The SHDDC representatives did not reciprocate the CM’s appeal and demanded that there would be no altered negotiation in the issue and the stance for districthood status is the only resolve.

In this regard a press release by president of SHDDC Ngamkhohao Haokip said that, Government of India had given appropriate directives to the Chief Minister of Manipur for inauguration of Sadar Hills as a full-fledged district of Manipur as mandated by the provision of Manipur (Hills Areas) Autonomous District Council Act, 1971.

In utter violation of the rights of the people, O. Ibobi Singh has once again orchestrated delaying tactics.  The four decades old demand for a districthood need not be delayed further on petty issues, which the chief minister along with his associates have intentionally brought forward to undo the peace and harmony of the state.

Our demand is nothing more or less than full-fledged districthood status. We do not invite anything more than this. Devising extraordinary situations which are clandestinely invented and making a scapegoat out of the SHDDC by the state government is not a positive step. The state government should bear responsibility for any extraordinary situations arising in future, it said.

Meanwhile an unofficial team comprising of senior media persons led by N Rajendro, president of Information Centre for Hill Areas ,Manipur met the SHDDC president at Kangpokpi today afternoon.

Along the NH 39 route, the team met agitating members of the demand committee at Gamgiphai and held a short meeting and took opinions of agitators at other similar protest strongholds located at Saparmaina,Bongmol and Keithelmanbi.

Ngamkhohao Haokip while interacting with the media persons voiced that the demand committee will not settle for anything less than tendering of districthood status.

“We want a full fledged district, but whenever the Sadar Hills demand come to the forefront, the state government comes out with issues of reorganization and demarcation, the boundary issues can come later, but first we want districthood and we know it is a justified demand”.

He further added that there are no communal lines drawn by the demand. “We have Meitei, Kukis,Nepalis,Nagas coexisting congenially within the Sadar Hills area. If any community wants to spearhead our endeavor, we welcome it and I will resign voluntarily, but it is fact that the Kukis have the majority and hence we are at the forefront”.

Meanwhile, another 14 individuals have resolved to carry on with the hunger strike protest as the seven women protesting earlier have been admitted to Kangpokpi CHC due to deteriorating health conditions.

It was observed by IFP that due to complete breakdown of public transportation along the Kanglatombi to Kangpokpi stretch, residents along the highway have to hike on foot braving the elements to meet their requirements.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/talks-on-sadar-hills-bear-no-fruit-shddc-to-continue-with-blockade/