21 militants lay down arms

Mail News Service Imphal, Dec 24: Twenty militants laid down arms and ammunitions today at military headquarters of 57 Mountain Division at Leimakhong. Those who laid down arms to DGP Manipur Y Joykumar and GOC 57 Mountain Division , Maj Gen Binoy Ponnen included four cadres of NNC, 16 cadres of NSCN (K) Unification and […]

Mail News Service
Imphal, Dec 24: Twenty militants laid down arms and ammunitions today at military headquarters of 57 Mountain Division at Leimakhong. Those who laid down arms to DGP Manipur Y Joykumar and GOC 57 Mountain Division , Maj Gen Binoy Ponnen included four cadres of NNC, 16 cadres of NSCN (K) Unification and one of PREPAK
They surrendered six rifles, two Sten Guns, 10 pistols, one revolver and two Carbines, The effort to motivate the cadres to lay down arms was dedicated to 3 Mahar and 39 Assam rifles .
DGP, Manipur Y Joykumar Singh welcomed them into the national mainstream and on behalf of the government, assured them and their families an honourable rehabilitation at the earliest. Major General Binoy Poonnen, GOC praised the cadres for their courage and wisdom in choosing to become responsible citizens of the state and contribute to progressive realization of people’s peace aspiration. He assured that army will continue to encourage all endeavours by insurgents and shall continue to act as a facilitator in their rehabilitation

Read more / Original news source: http://manipur-mail.com/21-militants-lay-down-arms/

Book fair begins

The 20th Imphal book fair 2011 jointly organized by the state central library Imphal, National book trust Indian and Raja Rammohun Roy library foundation Kolkata was gegan today at Hapta Kangjeibung palace compound. P. Parijat minister agriculture Manipur and RK Jhaljit Padmashree graced the occasion as chief guest and president respectively. More than one hundred […]

The 20th Imphal book fair 2011 jointly organized by the state central library Imphal, National book trust Indian and Raja Rammohun Roy library foundation Kolkata was gegan today at Hapta Kangjeibung palace compound. P. Parijat minister agriculture Manipur and RK Jhaljit Padmashree graced the occasion as chief guest and president respectively. More than one hundred stalls of different book farms including outside Manipur are taking part at the book fain. It will continue till Jan 1 next. Children’s spot painting competition, North east poets, state level symposium on reading habit, meet the eminent singers, meet the film artists, narration of Manipur short stories, state level quiz on art and culture of Manipur are the main programmes of the fair.

Read more / Original news source: http://manipur-mail.com/book-fair-begins/

Over to Parliament

By B.G. Verghese Speculation has ended with the tabling of the Lok Pal and related… more »

By B.G. Verghese
Speculation has ended with the tabling of the Lok Pal and related Bills. Now it is for Parliament to take over and whatever it adopts with or without amendments,will go forward. Even thereafter, shortcomings in the light of the Lok Pal’s actual working can be made good through subsequent amendments. So nothing is written in stone. The pontifications and histrionics we have had these past weeks have provided more entertainment than enlightenment, with the focus on party politics rather than on real substance.

If the Opposition wants its pound of flesh it may block the related Constitution Amendment Bill. But that can come later.

Many arguments made have been based on absolute and total suspicion of government, any government, as a genre, as it has been painted as a necessarily dishonest and self-serving institution. The prime minister, leader of the opposition and chief justice cannot be trusted says the BJP as the first two aspire to office and the third is part of the establishment, and none wishes charges of corruption to be probed too deeply. Why cannot the CBI be administratively under the government’s control if the Comptroller and Auditor General, Central Vigilance Commission, Chief Election Commission, Chief Information Commissioner, National HRC and the UPSC are appointed by it and function independently? The absurdity is palpable. These institutions have by and large served the country well and have refused to be suborned. What is important is the autonomy granted to and exercised by these institutions, their transparency and public support for them.

The BJP has again argued that the direction for constituting Lok Ayuktas in the States contained in the Lok Pal Bill undermines federalism. This is specious. The Centre has sufficient powers under the Concurrent List to do so while leaving detailed superintendence and control over this tier to the States. This has been true of the Right to Information Act and NREGA. The contrary argument by Team Anna that all functions, powers and jurisdictions be completely centralised under a gargantuan Lol Pal would be authoritarian and a danger to democracy and liable to crumble under its own enormous bureaucratic weight.

Hence it makes sense to place Category C and D government staff, all of them below the decision-making level, under the Vigilance Commissioner and to hive off the Citizen’s Charter as a separate body to deal with the grievances of the common man. Since manufacturing grievances by denial, short-charging and delay is a means of generating corruption, the Grievance Commissioner is in some ways likely to play a  more important role in ensuring good governance and public satisfaction than even the Lok Pal.

One can nit-pick at many aspects of the Lok Pal Bill but it is overall a good measure and can reflect a wider consensus and perhaps be improved through amendments debated and adopted by Parliament. The duration of the session has been extended for three days post-Christmas and can and should be further extended into the New Year if necessary. The charge of “undue haste” goes ill with the counter-charge of “waiting for 44 years from 1967”. Few pieces of legislation have been debated so intensively and so long, with resort to unusual consultative processes, as in the case of the Lok Pal Bill. Democracy cannot mean endless debate in the streets and in the media but no legislative decision. 

Anna and his Team remain obstreperous but have become increasingly irrelevant demanding that nothing but their own view shall prevail. They did capture a mood of public anger but became vituperative and now seem to have lost the plot, getting back to blackmail. Anna will fast, Anna will call for jail bharo and Anna will campaign against the Congress and all other parties that do not support a truly “strong and effective” Lok Pal, whatever that means. Finally, Anna is prepared to die, he repeats time and again. This is low farce. Attempted suicide is a criminal offence and Anna must know that the IPC too can be “a strong and effective Act”.  The man should now be ignored, and if he and his followers seek to trigger violent protest – and that is the unspoken threat – then the law must take its course to prevent anarchy.    

The media too must eschew embedded journalism and bogus polls which have magnified the Anna phenomenon beyond its true worth. Similarly, the term “strong” Lok Pal needs to be divorced from a particular form of words to something that works well. The proof will be in the pudding and not in competitive rhetoric.

One issue on which the Government has again succumbed to coalition pressure is that pertaining to four of nine members of the Lok Pal panel being drawn from among SCs, STs, OBCs, women and minorities so that the weak and oppressed are represented. His is a fallacious principle that skirts merit in favour of a populist division of any cake even when forms of affirmative action such as in relation to education and employment opportunities are not at stake. If this principle is accepted then why not mandate quotas in the cabinet, the courts, among ambassadors and PSU heads? Sensible politics in a plural society always emphasises inclusiveness but not at the cost of merit and integrity. So this matter of composition is best left to the prescribed selection committee. The issue is not one of constitutionalism but of common sense. The BJP has again got it wrong.

This leads to the conduct of the BJP in the entire Lok Pal debate. It is trying to play all sides, running with the hare and hunting with the hounds. It held up matters by preventing Parliament from functioning for many days, initially demanding that its business priorities be changed and then barracking the Home Minister for not tendering his resignation on its bidding. For the BJP, any charge made by anybody stands proven without investigation or trial except when the charge lies against its own henchmen when more than due process is demanded with masterly doublespeak. It has repeatedly stated that the onus of letting the House function rests on the Government. This is a strange plea, though it is true that the Congress too has on occasion been guilty of unruly behaviour, poor floor management and mishandling critical issues. 

The UPA alliance partners are likewise all demanding their pound of flesh. Mamata Bannerjee has again forced postponement of introduction of the Pension Bill on the plea that government employees must get a minimum fixed percentage return on their pension earnings. The Food Security Bill, just introduced, underpins the wellbeing of those most prone to hunger. This will cost the exchequer about one lakh crore rupees.  Nevertheless this may be construed worthwhile as malnutrition is a scourge. Reform of PDS delivery is promised but there is some risk in carrying welfarism to the point where is becomes a crutch and diverts funds from stimulating agricultural growth and employment as, by and large, food is even now available but cannot be accessed. The same notions of status quoist “protectionism” led to the FDI multi-brand retail, which would give a fillip to farming and the rural economy, being put on hold.            
www. bgverghese .com

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/12/over-to-parliament/

As the Year Ends…

By Chitra Ahanthem Well!FOOTNOTES has missed its Sunday date with the IFP page for two… more »

By Chitra Ahanthem
Well!FOOTNOTES has missed its Sunday date with the IFP page for two consecutive Sundays now. The first Sunday space was made up by the translation of Irom Sharmila’s message which she had handed over to me as I was waiting to talk with her on behalf of a journalist who came down in Imphal. The second Sunday date miss out happened thanks to electric load shedding, which happens to be a pet peeve. Everyone without a VIP electric line connection lives through a close to 18 hour or more electric cut in a 24 hr cycle. This means that people like myself who work from home have to resort to near cases of hair pulling (my own self) while trying to meet submission deadlines. I have resorted to walking into people’s offices and their homes (on a rotation basis so I don’t over extend their hospitality!) after checking on the “on” and “off” of electric supply. One time, I sat down at the lobby of the government-run Hotel Imphal, pretending I was invited for some seminar and/or waiting for someone, just so I could charge my laptop!

But to come to the year end period, it is time to look at how the year rounded off without going into what happened on a day to day or episodic happening. Rather, we will look at some specific happenings that took place this year from the nature of my association with them. The year 2011 began by taking away two major cultural and historical icons of Manipur- Imashi MK Binodini and N. Khelchandra. I only had only one personal interaction with the later while accompanying a camera crew that had come down from Mumbai in 2004. The project was to look at linkages between dance and symbolism and I remember a certain goose bump moment when the film director was asking whether there are any linkages between dance and martial arts. Pandit Khelchandra started answering with a “yes” and started to explain a bit and then he simply stopped himself and started to show the connection between the two.

With Imashi, I had a close and longer interaction lasting for 8 years. I came back home one day to find that Imashi had called me up. When I called back, she asked me if I could translate a radio play that she had adapted from a short story that another person had written. There would be no money in the translation, I was told. I went ahead anyway because I was aware that Imashi Binodine was very particular about her works being translated into English. I wanted to know whether she would be satisfied with my efforts. I would like to think that I was able to satisfy Imashi’s artistic sensibilities for in 2006 (or was it 2007?) I and another former IFP colleague were approached to work on translating “Maharaj Churachandgi Imung” a book that is a collection of her memoirs of her royal family. Again, there was hardly any money to the venture: my former colleague and myself were paid a thousand rupees each and we set out to translate half the book between ourselves. We were also made to understand that our names would be acknowledged as first draft translators but we went ahead because we wanted a connection with Imashi. Thanks to the fact that my house is not that far from Imashi’s house, I was able to spend quite some time after Imashi Binodini became bed-ridden and I will treasure all my moments of talking with her. The memory of her soft, “Ibemma, you are so tiny. I have seen you on TV and you look a bit large there”, stays with me as the year comes to an end shortly.

The blockade in 2011 made it to the record books because of its length. The length of queues for petrol remained the same though the petrol cost went a bit further than when the 2010 blockade happened. Another marginal difference was the presence of national and international media following up with the blockade spectacle in the state. While it was encouraging that what happens in the state is being spotlighted (though not to the desired level) in the national media platforms, I have my own doubts of whether journalists who come in for a few days at the most and end up speaking to only a few people they are recommended to speak to (and often, they speak to the same set of people too) can do a real study of the situation.

End-point:
The year ends on the buzz over the assembly elections happening in January. Many thought that the elections would be sometime in February but now with the election dates having been announced for a single polling, what happens in the few days to the year wrapping off and the new year coming in will be worth a watch.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/12/as-the-year-ends/

For the first time in years, I`m actually looking forward to Christmas

Christmas gets grumpy when people make far too much effort, then get resentful when it… more »

Christmas gets grumpy when people make far too much effort, then get resentful when it is not appreciated enough. So don’t bother

By Deborah Orr
If there has ever been a Christmas that I’ve made fewer preparations for, then I can’t remember it. I’ve done no frantic spending on expensive gifts, or on expensive cards, or on wrapping paper. I’ve bought no party dresses. I’ve thrown no parties, or even been to many.

I’ve bought no particularly special food, apart from a leg of lamb off the internet, delivered to my mum, in Scotland.

I haven’t even left the house on a specifically Christmassy mission, unless you count taking my son to see The Nutcracker, which was wonderful. I’ve made one small effort — to lower expectations, offering the payback of lower expectations in return. This deal has invariably been accepted with enthusiasm. The result of this seeming indifference is that I’ve never looked forward to Christmas more. For such a long time I’ve seen the holiday as a stressful chore, one that I need another holiday to recover from (ho, ho). Suddenly, I’m thinking of it as … a holiday, pure and simple.

Even last year, when I was having chemotherapy, and feeling like death warmed up, I dragged myself out to the shops, heaving bags around, clutching lists, fretting. There was no need.

People weren’t touched by my efforts. Actually, they were slightly horrified. The reason Christmas Day can be so grumpy is that people make too much effort, then get resentful when it is not appreciated enough, as if it ever could be.

People always joke about how the children got more fun from the box the present came in. But, a number of times I’ve had to actually think up an unrequested “big present” for my children, when they’d have been happy with something pretty modest. What idiocy. A celebration had become a test, a quite unnecessary one only I knew the questions or answers to, or even cared what they were.

During the boom, when people were maxing out their credit cards all year round, and drinking champagne because it was Friday night, it was hard to make Christmas special. On the contrary, hanging out with your family, when there was all that fun to be had out in the non-stop partying, big-wide world, seemed specially inconvenient, self-denying and dull. It was a mad time, really, that 20-year period of illusory plenty, in which a lot of perspective was lost, and a lot of simple pleasures were mocked. But relaxing, playing a few board games and watching a bit of telly after a nice meal, all in the company of the people who mean the most to you – what, really, could be nicer, or more easy to organise? Christmas is a grim time for people who have no family, or have no money. What’s really telling, however, is how little it’s enjoyed by so many people who have both. That’s a shame. Season’s greetings.
Courtesy: The Guardian, London

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/12/for-the-first-time-in-years-im-actually-looking-forward-to-christmas/

I don`t believe in God, so why is it that I don`t want to be labelled an atheist?

By Ian Jack A couple of weeks ago, a nurse stood beside my hospital bed… more »

By Ian Jack
A couple of weeks ago, a nurse stood beside my hospital bed with a pen and a clipboard. After the questions about allergies and next of kin came the one about religion. None, I said, when she asked which one. Her English was hesitant. “You are … what do you call it … an atheist, then? Shall I write that?” “Please just write ‘none’, or ‘no religion’,” I said.

I don’t know why I jibbed at the word atheist. It may have been Jonathan Miller’s argument that non-belief in God is a narrow and entirely negative self-description that ignores all the other things you might either believe in or not, from homeopathy through necromancy to the Gaia theory. As a definition it belongs to the same dull category as “non-driver” or “ex-smoker”; not driving or no longer smoking, just like not believing in God, is an inadequate guide to the self. There are so many richer and more positive ways, or so you hope, to summarise your behaviour and beliefs and what you might add up to when the counting is done.

But after the nurse left with her questionnaire, I wondered about other motives for denying a truth about myself. Had it to do with social cowardice, or some ridiculous notion of politeness on my part? Three other men shared my bay in the ward, and who knew what beliefs they held? “Atheism” has such a scorning ring to it. I wouldn’t have wanted them to think (though, of course, they wouldn’t have cared less) that, as I lay beside them, I was quietly cackling at their misplaced faith in the other life to come. As it turned out, two of them may have declared at least the name of such a faith to the nurse, because the next day a visitor came into the ward and made a beeline for their beds, and talked briefly and earnestly to each man in a low voice.

The men were originally from Mayo and Dublin (I wrote about Joseph last week), and I can say only that their visitor seemed like a missionary woman, or my idea of one. She had cropped grey hair, a blue cardigan and flat shoes, and she looked like someone who ate sparingly and cared for God very much.

This visit, too, had a consequence. A priest came next. He may have been an Anglican or a Roman Catholic. As there was no religious content in what he said, and as I have a poor knowledge of clerical uniform, it was hard to know which. “How are you feeling? I don’t want to disturb you when you’re needing rest. It’s good that you’re feeling stronger, or so the nurses tell me. I’ll be off now and leave you to your tea.”

That was more or less what he said to each man. They nodded in return, and then the priest backed away.

Of all the people who came near our beds in any official capacity, he was the most deferential. What you might call the carer-patient discourse in a British hospital is marked by a certain robust chumminess. You hear all kinds of surprising things. A young nurse from Essex will put her arm around an elderly Muslim and tell him to “Cough it up, Abdul sweetheart, cough it up.” An equally young woman doctor of good Indian parentage will ask: “Any trouble with the old waterworks?” as though she had stepped out of Carry On Corporal. But the priest seemed to have found no way of introducing his specialism, the awkward subject of God, even as a euphemism.

Perhaps it wasn’t the right time. Perhaps that time would be later. As things stood, what Tony from Mayo and the Londoner in the next bed hungered for wasn’t religion, but tobacco.

They were in their 60s, with bad lungs. Soon after breakfast, Tony would begin to agitate for a porter who could put him in a wheelchair and take him down in the lift to street level, where he could join a dozen others in a row on the pavement outside, smoking and staring at the traffic in the Euston Road. If no porter was available, then Tony would fret till the afternoon, when a visiting relative would wheel him away for an hour or so. The doctors went pretty easy on him. They gave a harder time to the Londoner, who, in between his trips to the pavement, had regular bottles of oxygen.

“You’ve just got to co-operate and stop smoking, otherwise you’re going to be in hospital until you die,” I overheard the consultant telling him, which is as grim and certain a prognosis as you can hear. But the Londoner – let’s call him Ted – seemed not to hear it. According to him, all that being told not to smoke did was to make him smoke more: “It’s the stress you see, doctor.”

“In any case,” as he said later, “I’m not going to stop smoking so that they can make money out of me.” “They” were the hospital and, according to Ted, who may well have been right, the hospital was rewarded for every patient it turned into an ex-smoker. But why didn’t he want the hospital to make a little more money? After all, it was looking after us rather well. “Because it was built on one of them lend-lease deals,” Ted said, meaning one of the largest PFI schemes in England, “and the government was stupid and got taken for a ride.” So Ted’s position, as I understood it, was that he’d continue to curtail his life because to do otherwise would be in some minute way to subsidise a public-private partnership of which he disapproved.

This was probably no more than a labyrinthine excuse for the next John Player Special, but in its notions of foolish self-sacrifice (“He was a martyr to his cigarettes”) Ted’s conversation had a religious dimension that I never heard anywhere else in the hospital. Talking with him reminded me of the arguments I used to hear on the doorstep when anyone called with a Bible in their hand and my father got at them with his ferocious knowledge of scripture that had been acquired in his youth at Baptist Sunday school. My father was of a generation that imbibed God, took him seriously, and then found him wanting. Books by the Rationalist Press and the Thinker’s Library (with Rodin’s Thinker in profile on the spine) stretched across a shelf of his bookcase and promised the joys of atheism, agnosticism and an open mind.

If he were alive now, I think he would be surprised that writers such as Richard Dawkins and the late Christopher Hitchens had become famous partly through their attacks on religion. The New Atheism? Surely those intellectual battles had been fought and won long ago – even by the 1960s, my father had found it hard to find a door-knocking Christian who was properly equipped for a decent debate. Resurgent Islam and America’s evangelical Christianity may provide a new focus for atheism – hence Dawkins and Hitchens – but here in Britain, believers move among us with diminished power, more shyly and uncertainly, so that it almost seems rude to say “atheist” in the kindness of a hospital ward. Not that I am not one, you understand – among other things.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/12/i-dont-believe-in-god-so-why-is-it-that-i-dont-want-to-be-labelled-an-atheist/

Flashback: The Rise of the Moguls

By Subir Ghosh The consolidation of the Hollywood Studio System could not have happened without… more »

By Subir Ghosh
The consolidation of the Hollywood Studio System could not have happened without the power exerted by the moguls. There were many, among them being two Jewish immigrants from Russia – Joseph and Nicholas Schenck. In their heydays, the two brothers between them ran two major studios; while Joseph operated from behind the scenes as first as the head of United Artists and later that of Twentieth Century-Fox, Nick ran Leow’s Inc and its world famous subsidiary, Metro-Goldgwyn-Mayer.

The Schenck brothers migrated to New York City in 1892, and entered the entertainment business operating concessions at New York’s Fort George Amusement Park. In 1903, sensing the money-making potential that cinema had, they purchased Palisades Amusement Park. The Schenck brothers subsequently ventured into the film industry as partners with Marcus Loew, who owned a chain of movie theatres across the United States. So involved were they that Joseph even married Norma Talmadge, one of the top young stars with Vitagraph Studios.

Nicholas rose to the preidency of Leow’s, a position that he held for a quarter of a century. Joseph, on the other hand, was more independent.

The two brothers soon parted ways, though only in terms of staying together, and Joseph Schenck moved to the West Coast. Initially, he managed the careers of Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle, Buster Keaton and the three Talmadge sisters. The Schenck-Keaton-Talmadge extended family became one of the most powerful in Hollywood. Within a few years, Schenck was made the first president of the new United Artists. In 1933 he partnered with Darryl F Zanuck to create Twentieth Century Pictures that merged with Fox Film Corporation in 1935.

As chairman of of this big corporation, Schenck became one of the most powerful and influential people in the Hollywood film business. Zanuck was gradually eased out, thanks to the financial support that Joseph Schenck got from brother Nicholas at Leow’s. Joseph remained behind the scenes and expanded Twentieth Century-Fox’s chain of theatres worldwide. During his tenure as chairman, he established equal pay rates for animals used in filming and more representative speaking roles for women and African Americans. He held clout, and used it too.

Later, caught in a payoff scam to broker peace with trade unions, Schenck was convicted of income tax evasion and spent time in prison before being granted a presidential pardon. Following his release, he returned to Twentieth Century Fox where he became infatuated with a young actress named Marilyn Monroe and played a key role in launching her career.

The payoff scandal remain the blot on Schenck’s career. Throughout the Great Depression of the 1930s, Schenck and other studio heads (including Nicholas) paid bribes to Willie Bioff of the projectionists’ union to keep their theatres open. This payoff practice was in due course unearthed by government investigators. Bioff was convicted. One of the studio heads too had to take the fall – Joseph Schenck did. He was convicted of perjury and spent four months in jail, till he was pardoned by US President Harry Truman in 1945.

One of the founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, in 1952 he was given a special Academy Award in recognition of his very significant contribution to the development of the film industry. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6757 Hollywood Blvd.

Schenck retired in 1957 and four years later suffered a stroke from which he never recovered.

Among the moguls, Schenck was one who got a raw deal in terms of remembrance. He and his brother had a substantial role to play in the structure called Hollywood that became rock solid over the years. The payoff scandal in which Schenck had been indicted came at a time when Hollywood was beginning to reel under the impact of the Great Depression.

The 1920s had been a decade of tremendous growth for Hollywood – in terms of production, distribution and exhibition. So robust was the industry even with the advent of the talkie, that Hollywood even called itself “depression-proof” when Wall Street collapsed momentarily in 1929. In fact, the best year of the industry came in 1930. But as the economic downturn started taking its effect on the film industry, Hollywood’s Big Three – Columbia, Universal and United Artists – fared better than others. The first thing to be curtailed was production. But that was not enough. Schenck and others did what they felt necessary to keep themselves afloat.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/12/flashback-the-rise-of-the-moguls/

Source: The Sangai Express – E-Pao.net

Source: The Sangai ExpressE-Pao.netImphal, December 24 2011: Rev L Simon Raomai, pastor, Manipur Baptist Convention Centre Church gave his warm wishes to all the people of the State on the occasion of joyous Christmas and forthcoming New Year 2012 . Th…

Source: The Sangai Express
E-Pao.net
Imphal, December 24 2011: Rev L Simon Raomai, pastor, Manipur Baptist Convention Centre Church gave his warm wishes to all the people of the State on the occasion of joyous Christmas and forthcoming New Year 2012 . The Reverend further expressed his

and more »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNF2x6Ak_q8b8pvnG9-M9HDXN8uGxg&url=http://www.e-pao.net/ge.asp?heading=Snipp1&src=251211

Assembly elections 2012: The big game hunt begins – Times of India

The HinduAssembly elections 2012: The big game hunt beginsTimes of IndiaChief Election Commissioner SY Quraishi addressing at a press conference in New Delhi on Saturday to announce the dates for the assembly elections in five states – Uttar Pradesh, P…


The Hindu

Assembly elections 2012: The big game hunt begins
Times of India
Chief Election Commissioner SY Quraishi addressing at a press conference in New Delhi on Saturday to announce the dates for the assembly elections in five states – Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Goa and Manipur. NEW DELHI: Election Commission on
Assembly polls: Litmus test for UPA, Oppn, AnnaHindustan Times
EC announces Assembly poll dates for five statesZee News
Elections announced in five states, UP set for 7-phase pollingNDTV
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Assembly elections 2012: The big game hunt begins – Times of India

Hindu Business LineAssembly elections 2012: The big game hunt beginsTimes of IndiaChief Election Commissioner SY Quraishi addressing at a press conference in New Delhi on Saturday to announce the dates for the Assembly elections in five states – Uttar …


Hindu Business Line

Assembly elections 2012: The big game hunt begins
Times of India
Chief Election Commissioner SY Quraishi addressing at a press conference in New Delhi on Saturday to announce the dates for the Assembly elections in five states – Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Goa and Manipur. NEW DELHI: Election Commission on
Litmus test for UPA, Oppn, Anna as dates for polls in 5 states declaredHindustan Times
7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4IBNLive.com
Poll dates out, EC says 'money power is a serious matter'Economic Times
Daily News & Analysis –NDTV
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Litmus test for UPA, Oppn, Anna as dates for polls in 5 states declared – Hindustan Times

Hindustan TimesLitmus test for UPA, Oppn, Anna as dates for polls in 5 states declaredHindustan TimesChief Election Commissioner SY Qureshi announcing assembly poll schedule for five states – Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Manipur, Punjab and Goa, in New …


Hindustan Times

Litmus test for UPA, Oppn, Anna as dates for polls in 5 states declared
Hindustan Times
Chief Election Commissioner SY Qureshi announcing assembly poll schedule for five states – Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Manipur, Punjab and Goa, in New Delhi. Agency photo The Election Commission on Saturday announced the dates for assembly elections in
Assembly elections 2012: The big game hunt beginsTimes of India
Seven-Phase UP Assembly election clashes with Budget DayEconomic Times
7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4IBNLive.com
Daily News & Analysis –NDTV
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21 ultras lay down arms in Manipur – Assam Tribune

21 ultras lay down arms in ManipurAssam TribuneLEIMAKHONG, Dec 24 – Barely 10 days after 57 cadres of 17 different underground outfits surrendered before Manipur Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh at the Assam Rifles complex, a homecoming ceremony was orga…

21 ultras lay down arms in Manipur
Assam Tribune
LEIMAKHONG, Dec 24 – Barely 10 days after 57 cadres of 17 different underground outfits surrendered before Manipur Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh at the Assam Rifles complex, a homecoming ceremony was organised at Leimakhong, about 20 km north of Imphal,

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Bomb found

A bomb weighing about 3.5 kg and remote control IED bomb was found wrapper in a cartoon box at the road median of Ghari this morning around 11.40 a.m. A team of 18th Sikh Regiment found the bomb. In a similar incident, some unknown persons gifted a Chinese hand grenade at the residence of one […]

A bomb weighing about 3.5 kg and remote control IED bomb was found wrapper in a cartoon box at the road median of Ghari this morning around 11.40 a.m.
A team of 18th Sikh Regiment found the bomb. In a similar incident, some unknown persons gifted a Chinese hand grenade at the residence of one Ranjan Sanasam ( 57) Rechu Lampak today around 2.16 p.m.
Ranjan is at present serving as executive engineer (EE) at engineering cel, Manipur University.

Read more / Original news source: http://manipur-mail.com/bomb-found-2/

Poll dates out, EC says ‘money power is a serious matter’ – Times of India

IBNLive.comPoll dates out, EC says 'money power is a serious matter'Times of IndiaNEW DELHI: Elections will be held in Goa, Manipur, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand between Jan 28 and March 3, 2012 in a battle involving 137 million voters…


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Poll dates out, EC says 'money power is a serious matter'
Times of India
NEW DELHI: Elections will be held in Goa, Manipur, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand between Jan 28 and March 3, 2012 in a battle involving 137 million voters. The votes will be counted March 4. It will be the biggest test for political parties in
7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4IBNLive.com
Litmus test for UPA, Oppn, Anna as dates for polls in 5 states declaredHindustan Times
EC announces polling in 5 states, UP staggered over 7 phasesDaily News & Analysis
NDTV
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Manipur girls reign havoc at the Inter-Zonal Championship – Times of India

Manipur girls reign havoc at the Inter-Zonal ChampionshipTimes of IndiaNEW DELHI: Manipur girls reigned havoc in the rings of the Anna Thidal Sports Complex at Puducherry in the 3rd Inter-Zonal Senior Women Boxing Championship with an enthralling displ…

Manipur girls reign havoc at the Inter-Zonal Championship
Times of India
NEW DELHI: Manipur girls reigned havoc in the rings of the Anna Thidal Sports Complex at Puducherry in the 3rd Inter-Zonal Senior Women Boxing Championship with an enthralling display of agility and aggression. Reigning Asian and former World fly
Manipur pugilists bag 4 gold on final day, finish runners upMSN India

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Election dates for 5 states announced; 7-phase polls in UP – Times of India

IBNLive.comElection dates for 5 states announced; 7-phase polls in UPTimes of IndiaNEW DELHI: Assembly elections in Goa, Manipur, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand will be held between Jan 28 and March 3, the Election Commission announced on Saturd…


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Election dates for 5 states announced; 7-phase polls in UP
Times of India
NEW DELHI: Assembly elections in Goa, Manipur, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand will be held between Jan 28 and March 3, the Election Commission announced on Saturday. Uttar Pradesh will have assembly elections in seven phases from February 4 to
7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4IBNLive.com
Election Commission announces poll schedule for five statesNDTV
Seven-phase assembly polls in UP, single phase in 4 statesHindustan Times
Economic Times –Wall Street Journal
all 136 news articles »

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7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4 – IBNLive.com

IBNLive.com7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4IBNLive.comNew Delhi: The Election Commission on Saturday announced the dates for the Assembly elections in five states – Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Goa and Manipur. While Uttar Prad…


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7-phase poll for UP from Feb 4, results on Mar 4
IBNLive.com
New Delhi: The Election Commission on Saturday announced the dates for the Assembly elections in five states – Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Goa and Manipur. While Uttar Pradesh will go for a seven-phase election, the other states will have one
Election Commission announces poll schedule for five statesNDTV
Seven-phase assembly polls in UP, single phase in 4 statesHindustan Times
Election dates for 5 states announced; 7-phase polls in UPTimes of India
Wall Street Journal –Deccan Herald
all 192 news articles »

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Manipur assembly passes Lokayukta bill – Times of India

All India RadioManipur assembly passes Lokayukta billTimes of IndiaIMPHAL: The state assembly unanimously passed the 'Manipur Lokayukta Bill 2011' after intense debate on Thursday, the last day of the last session of the 9th assembly. With the …


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Manipur assembly passes Lokayukta bill
Times of India
IMPHAL: The state assembly unanimously passed the 'Manipur Lokayukta Bill 2011' after intense debate on Thursday, the last day of the last session of the 9th assembly. With the primary objective to check corruption and probe into allegations raised
Manipur passes Lok Ayukta Bill 2011MorungExpress
State Assembly unanimously passes Manipur Lok Ayukta Bill, 2011KanglaOnline
Manipur Assembly session concludesAssam Tribune
All India Radio
all 19 news articles »

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Strike shortened to 2 days for Chritsmas – Times of India

Strike shortened to 2 days for ChritsmasTimes of IndiaIMPHAL: With a militant group shortening its three-day general strike in restive Manipur to two days, thousands of Christians thronged the city markets to carry out their Xmas shopping on Friday. De…

Strike shortened to 2 days for Chritsmas
Times of India
IMPHAL: With a militant group shortening its three-day general strike in restive Manipur to two days, thousands of Christians thronged the city markets to carry out their Xmas shopping on Friday. Denouncing the recent abduction and killing of a
Manipur strike to end todayAssam Tribune
Christmas shopping spree picks up in ManipurNagaland Post
People in Imphal protest killing of abducted father and sonNewstrack India

all 15 news articles »

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UNLF mourns Mama’s death – Times of India

UNLF mourns Mama's deathTimes of IndiaIMPHAL: The banned United National Liberation Front ( UNLF), which is fighting to restore Manipur's past sovereignty, has mourned the demise of Ulfa ideologue and political adviser Bhimkanta Buragohain. UNL…

UNLF mourns Mama's death
Times of India
IMPHAL: The banned United National Liberation Front ( UNLF), which is fighting to restore Manipur's past sovereignty, has mourned the demise of Ulfa ideologue and political adviser Bhimkanta Buragohain. UNLF's central committee (CC), in a statement,

and more »

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