Submit books

IMPHAL, Mar 31: The school education department has asked writers, publishers and suppliers recommended by… more »

IMPHAL, Mar 31: The school education department has asked writers, publishers and suppliers recommended by the Book Purchase Committee to submit their books published in 2009 to the department.

The department will also buy 49 per cent of their books published in 2010, a release said.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/submit-books/

KSO election

IMPHAL, March 31: Election of the post of president, vice-president, general sectary and finance secretary… more »

IMPHAL, March 31: Election of the post of president, vice-president, general sectary and finance secretary to the office of Kuki Student’s Organization, General Headquarter for the term 2012-14 cum General Assembly 2012 is scheduled to be held on April 7 at 9 am at Kuki Inn, Imphal. Individuals intending to file nomination paper for the said posts are informed to immediately contact the KSO Standing Committee for further details.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/kso-election/

Waiton Condemns Bomb culture

IMPHAL, March 31: Several civil society organizations of Waiton have strongly condemned the placing of… more »

IMPHAL, March 31: Several civil society organizations of Waiton have strongly condemned the placing of a bomb (which was found hanging) at the gate of Maibam Ibomcha Singh, FA, veterinary department yesterday at around 12:40 pm. Decrying the threat, a sit-in-protest was held today from 10 am – 5 pm in front of his residential gate.

Further, organizations including Waiton Women Nisha Band Assn., Ideal Club, Prince Club, Youth Development Assn, Youth Development Council, Meira Paibee Assn, appeals not to repeat such acts in the future stated a press release.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/waiton-condemns-bomb-culture/

Thang Leitangee Workshop

IMPHAL, March 31: Huyen Lallong Manipur Thang-Ta cultural Association, Irilbung and Sangeet Natak Akademi, New… more »

IMPHAL, March 31: Huyen Lallong Manipur Thang-Ta cultural Association, Irilbung and Sangeet Natak Akademi, New Delhi are jointly organizing a Thang Leitangee Workshop at the premises of Huyen Lallong Manipur Thang-Ta cultural Association from April 4 to 21, 2012.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/thang-leitangee-workshop/

Health camp at Aigejang

IMPHAL, March 31: Medical team of 35 AR of 26 Sector under HQ IGAR (S)… more »

IMPHAL, March 31: Medical team of 35 AR of 26 Sector under HQ IGAR (S) organized a medical camp at Aigejang village in Chandel district yesterday.

A total of 225 patients from Aigejang and nearby areas were diagnosed and provided medicines.

In another occasion, 18 SIKH of 9 Sector under HQ (S) provided ration to Oinam Ibohal Polyclinic School, Keishampat which is a computer training centre with boarding facilities for the physically handicapped and the blind.

Similarly, 36 AR of 26 Sector under HQ IGAR (S) distributed sports items to the ‘Evergreen English Medium School’, Philen.

The items were handed to the school authority during a function held at Phopilen village on March 29.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/health-camp-at-aigejang/

CRPF recovers grenade

IMPHAL, March 31: Two sections personnel of 69 Bn, CRPF under the command ofHelal Firoz… more »

IMPHAL, March 31: Two sections personnel of 69 Bn, CRPF under the command ofHelal Firoz 2nd in command alongwith Deepak Singh cordoned and conducted a search operation at Khongampat jungle area near State botanical garden under Sekmai PS on March 31 in between 2:15 and 4:30pm and recovered one Chinese hand grenade with detonator and three rounds of 7.62x39mm, three rounds of 9mm and one round of 7.65.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/crpf-recovers-grenade/

Real Hero Award for Manipur Trainer

IMPHAL, March 31: Physical Trainer RK Viswajit of Khoyathong Polem Leikai, Imphal received the prestigious… more »

IMPHAL, March 31: Physical Trainer RK Viswajit of Khoyathong Polem Leikai, Imphal received the prestigious Real Heroes Award in the category of Health and Disability for this year, in a glittering ceremony held at Grand Hyatt, Mumbai on March 24.

The recognition which carries a cash award of Rs 5 lakhs and a memento was handed over to him by cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar in the presence of Nita Ambani, Reliance Foundation and Rajdeep Sardesai, Editor-in-Chief of CNN-IBN.

RK Viswajit was one among 24 reciepents of the prestigious award.

Real Heroes, an initiative of Reliance Foundation and CNN-IBN described Viswajit as an individual waging a war against addiction through body-building in a state which is a deadly cocktail of isolation, violence and drugs.

Viswajit has reformed addicts through a combination of workout, meditation and campaigning, its official website Real Heroes said.

It further said, Viswajit’s next target is the rural areas of Manipur where he plans to set up gyms and create awareness at the grassroots level.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/real-hero-award-for-manipur-trainer/

Travel/Myanmar is Opening up – II

By Pradip Phanjoubam The proposed and much awaited Imphal-Mandalay has a number of hurdles to… more »

By Pradip Phanjoubam
The proposed and much awaited Imphal-Mandalay has a number of hurdles to overcome. The most obvious of these is the highway that is to be used. From Moreh to Kalemyo it is a two-lane highway named Indo-Myanmar Friendship Road, built and maintained by India’s Border Road Orgainsation, BRO, and though a little narrow for a highway, especially for heavy vehicles, it is still good. Moreover, at the moment, there is hardly any traffic on it so drive on it is comfortable.

However, beyond Kalyemo as the road takes to the hills alongside the Chindwin River (Ningthi Turel), towards Monywa, the condition of the road deteriorates to a very dusty dirt road. During the monsoons, it will be almost a 200 km stretch of slippery mud track difficult for motor vehicles to negotiate.

Not only this, all along this road there are numerous weak bridges which cannot be used by heavy vehicles. During the dry seasons this is manageable for buses and trucks can descend into the dry or nominally wet river beds and cross them. This would be impossible during the rainy seasons when the rivers are in spate. India is planning to extend its generosity beyond Kalyemo and stretch its BRO-built friendship road to Monywa and ultimately to Mandalay. Once this is done, Mandalay would be a pleasure drive away from Imphal. So too important cities like Pagan, often described as the Pagoda jungle, predicted to become a major international tourist attraction no sooner than Myanmar opens up.

Mandalay onwards, connectivity is a different story altogether. Today the city is connected to the custom built still half empty brand new Burma’s capital city of NayPyiTaw and further to the country’s once seat of power and today its commercial capital, Rangoon (now Yangon), by a state-of-art concrete expressway, four lane most of the time, but broadening to as much as eight lanes near cities. This expressway is the country’s one and only, and as of today there is virtually no traffic on it.

Whatever else may be said of the military junta that ruled the country for half a century before making way for a nominally democratic government last year, it did build and maintain its road infrastructure. Other than the NayPyiTaw expressway, most of the other highways, except for some like the Monywa-Kalemyo stretch, are not in too bad shape. The methodical military planning is also visible everywhere. For almost all of the 10 days we drove in the country, we say the highways constantly covered under a canopy of trees planted on both sides of the highways. Not only did this provide cool shade to the highways but also makes for very pleasant and green sights. The roads too are built well and would compare well with most highways in India. There has to be a qualification here for in states like Manipur, where thievery is considered as service perks by the almost universally corrupt officialdom. Just a look at the cement road around the newly built BT Flyover would testify this. These cement blocks should have lasted a lifetime as no heavy vehicles ply on them but in a matter of only a few years, there are already washing away. At the cost of the public, we can only wonder how many expensive cars, and marble mansions were built out of the money siphoned off. Manipur indeed has become a land without remorse.

We hope as Burma opens up, and predictably overtakes Manipur in terms of infrastructure and general quality of life, we hope our powers that be learn the lesson. But back to Burma. The country is rightly described as the land pagoda and rightly so. There is hardly any place without a grand pagoda. But of all these Pagan strikes you as out of this world. If ten days ago before I had set foot at this place, I were to wake up here by some chance, I would have been left to believe I had been abducted by extra terrestrials and left in an alien planet. 2000 pagodas, many of them aeons old, packed in about 45 square miles is a sight that would awe anybody. These ancient structures, most of them in disuse and therefore in varying states of decays, stand there silently haunting the place like benign ghosts from a past era.

Not all the pagodas wear the ancient look. Many of them, though old, look spanking new because of continuous upgrading and renovation. Why shouldn`t they be? These include the majestic Shewdagon in Rangoon. These pagodas are still in use as houses of prayer for devotees first and not primarily for tourists and tourist dollars. There are many other unused temples which can be done up to suit the taste of tourists looking for the exotic orient so why should these live monuments, still forming an important part the present Burmese population be treated like museums for the benefit of tourists and sensibilities of Western conservationists. Hence the Buddha image at Shwe Sandaw Pagoda, Pyay is made of gilded wires frames and is transparent. A kitschy halo of LED lights gives the impression of the image transmitting energy. I see no use objecting. The present is part of history and has a right to contribute to it.

At pagan, the first thought that struck me was that generally discontinued practice of erecting Phura amongst the Meiteis as memorial structures for deceased loved ones is probably a spill over of this stupa building tradition in Burma.

Pyay town where we halted a night was another fascinating place. This is where the capital of the Pyu kingdom was and there is a museum and an excavation site close by. I visited the place with a few friends, and to my surprise, the bricks used for restoration of some of the excavated walls, our guide told us were acquired from Moreh in Manipur. There was also a mass grave excavated at another place within Pyu bearing evidence of secondary burial, as in the case of the mass grave excavated near Sekta village in Imphal East. In secondary burial, the dead body is buried in the ground directly without coffin, and after the flesh have rotted and turned into dust, the skeleton is exumed, washed, embalmed and reburied in earthen pots. The Incas and Aztecs are also supposed to have practiced this form of disposal of the dead.

Inside some of the abandoned pagodas, below the statue of the Buddha were texts inscribed on stone in the ancient Pyu text. Prof. Ch. Priyoranjan of the Manipur University said the script of the Pyu, a kingdom which preceded the Pagan, was very similar to Manipuri and proceeded reading it. Our Burmese guide was surprised the professor could actually do so quite accurately. Obviously, there would have had to be some connection somewhere between the place and Manipur of the medieval times.

The structural technology of the dome is still remote in practically all of the stupas and pagodas in Burma. This is the inside of a minor stupa at Pagan.

The Chindwin, known to Manipur as Ningthi Turel near Kalemyo. This river had been the boundary between the Ava kingdom and Manipur once, and many in Manipur speak of it fondly.

In distance is the bridge over the Chindwin that would take you to the road to Monywa and beyond to Mandalay if you go by road from Imphal.

Civic sense of the Buddhist is admirable. A pot of clean drinking water placed on a small ledge secured to the trunk of a tree on the highway just outside Monywa town. The guy in the rear view mirror is yours truly.

Petrol and diesel on sale on the highway. The colour of petrol is different from ours. Petrol. I took permission to open a bottle and smell and the vendor thought I was an addict so was suspicious. Petrol sniffing apparently is a scourge here too.

A roadside eatery. You can have your choice of insects, sparrows and other small wildlife fried whole in these stalls. Very tasty (shhh…as a wildlife enthusiast, I shouldn`t be saying this).

The Majestic Shwedagon Pagoda where three strands of hair believed to be of the Buddha is preserved. I took the picture against the sun to create an ambience of abstract spiritualism.

A Rangoon Street from the 14 floor of my hotel. Rangoon reminds you of Calcutta, but as all SE Asian cities, much cleaner and kempt.

Burmese wages are very low at the moment. Even college lecturers get as low as 250 dollars a month (Rs. 12000), making it difficult for most to make pilgrimages to India, tbe birthplace of Buddhism. This is an enlarged picture of the bunyan tree at Bodhgaya under which the Buddha is said to have attained enlightenment, installed at the Shwedagon complex for the benefit of devotees who cannot afford a trip to India.

It is however not uncommon to see expensive cars like this Nissan Fair Lady parked outside upmarket restaurants in Rangoon, Mandalay and of course the custom made capital city, NayPyiTaw — the spanking new, virtually empty city of swanky shopping malls and flower beds lined avenues.

The Mandalay-NayPyiTaw-Rangoon expressway. Here our vehicles` speed limits were being tested. As you can see, we were the only vehicles on the road. It is, as some explained, a matter of getting ready for the future.

There were also roads like this with very weak bridges. Heavy vehicles cannot use them and have to drive on the river beds. Our vehicles were also virtually the only ones on these roads too.

Plenty of girls take to blue collar jobs in Burma. These girls manning a petrol pump are in a Mandalay suburb.

The starting point of the BRO built, Indo-Myanmar Friendship Road at the Moreh-Tamu border. That`s me again in the rear view mirror.

Shwe Zigon/Onzedi pagoda at Pagan. Temples such as these which still are used as houses of prayer are spanking new because of constant upgradation and renovation. Why shouldn`t they be? These temples are first and foremost for the devotees and not for tourists and tourist dollars. There are many other unused temples in various states of decay. They can be done up to suit the taste of tourists looking for the exotic orient. Just my thoughts.

A monk at the entrance of Shwedagon in Rangoon. This temple too looks brand new, and even has a lift service for visitor.

A view of the giant Buddha installed just outside the Shwesandaw pagoda at Pyay. This pagoda too looks brand new and also has a lift service.

In the next decade, when as predicted Burma changes and international tourists flock to the country, I hope the country retains its inner spirituality so evident and not sell itself too much as many SE Asian countries have. I hope sex tourism is not encouraged, I hope no ethnic parks where tribal communities are asked to surrender their privacy and make tourists watch their lifestyles for a fee begin to sprout.

A boy selling quail eggs somewhere near Pyay town. Poverty is dehumanising, but selling one`s soul for a few dollars is even more so. Whatever else Bhutan has done to discredit itself, at least in this regard, this tiny country has not sold itself or its inner integrity. I hope Burma takes the lesson.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/travelmyanmar-is-opening-up-ii/

A Reflection on the Forum for Naga Reconciliation Meeting, Feb, 29th

By Abraham Lotha The assembly of about 50,000 people at the Forum for Naga Reconciliation… more »

By Abraham Lotha
The assembly of about 50,000 people at the Forum for Naga Reconciliation (FNR) Meeting on Feb. 29 at the Agri Expo Centre, Dimapur, is perhaps the largest gathering in Naga political history so far. The dust has settled, the chairs have been folded up, the stage dismantled, and light showers have come and washed away the footprints of the gathering. The Morung Express was very optimistic when it claimed that “the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle are falling into place and we are almost there.” Commentators such as Thepfulhouvi Solo described the gathering as “dark clouds and thunderstorms but little rain.” Other words of appreciation have been said and done. Now is the time for reflection and analysis.

So, did the 50,000 people who attended the FNR meeting come to pray or to be preyed upon?

I was keen to attend the FNR Meeting partly because of the urgency of the moment, but more importantly, to learn what the FNR intended to do there. The purpose of the meeting, from the FNR emails and press releases, was twofold: one, “to report to the Naga people the status of Naga Reconciliation,” and two, an invitation to the Underground leaders “to stand before the Naga people and share their views on Reconciliation and their vision on a shared Naga future.” 

I sensed an air of hope and optimism as I sat and waited for the meeting to begin. It seemed like the Oriental Theological Seminary choir was the harbinger of these sentiments, with their rendition of ‘Healing of our Spirit,” and “Long, long night is over, Freedom shall be coming, Praise and sing to the Lord.” Because of the optimistic atmosphere, people did not mind the delay in starting the meeting.

Dr. Anjo’s scripture reading and sermon, Evali Swu’s special song about “God you are in control of everything, We surrender, Lord you reign,” Isak Swu’s “Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,” Muivah’s “Until we do God’s wish, we cannot do anything,” and the hymn Bring Them In led by the OTS choir inviting those who’ve gone astray to harken to the Shepherd’s voice, made one feel like we were at a religious revival meeting.

For the most part, the meeting was quite focused. Messages from the civil society such as Naga Hoho, United Naga Council, Dimapur Naga Council, Naga Mothers Association, and from Naga elders such as Niketu Iralu, Hokishe Yepthomi were all in unison for reconciliation as a forward and upward way.

True to form the FNR Meeting on Feb 29th was a report card. The FNR deserves a distinction when one judges it for its relentless effort and commitment to reconciliation. According to the FNR report, from March 2008 to February 2012, the Forum did the following meetings and events: six important Naga gatherings with a maximum attendance of 49 Naga organizations, 82 meetings with combined Naga political groups, 12 meetings with the Joint Working Groups outside the country, 12 highest level meetings with Naga political leaders, 11 combined tours to different parts of the Naga areas, 11 other special programs and events, 278 meetings with individual Naga political groups, and 5 meetings with Khaplang. Nagas should be grateful to the FNR for such dedication and commitment to the cause of reconciliation. It only proves that Nagas have the will and commitment to pursue unity.

Secondly, even as recently as in 2008 and 2009, underground members were dying like the Dimapur flies, but the activities of the FNR resulted in a decrease in factional killings. We have to be thankful to the FNR for saving the lives of many Nagas youth, underground and overground.

Thirdly, the fact that at least the leaders of three factions shared a stage without fighting is noteworthy. It was encouraging to see the faction leaders praying together. This is a big step in the right direction from Isak’s and Muivah’s earlier stance: “Reconciliation in Christ is possible but politically,

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/a-reflection-on-the-forum-for-naga-reconciliation-meeting-feb-29th/

Man Vs Net

By Manas Maisnam The news of Mary Kom & L. Sarita winning gold medals at… more »

By Manas Maisnam
The news of Mary Kom & L. Sarita winning gold medals at 6th Asian Women Boxing Championship, held at Ulaanbaatar was flashed in the local newspapers of the city on 26th March 2012. By afternoon, an idea for a cartoon started to evolve in my mind. Immediately after reaching home from work, I went on to make the cartoon. As it was to be a night of load shedding, with electricity coming at 10:00 PM, I planned to use the generator to operate my scanner & laptop, once the drawing is over. So, I sent an SMS to Tammo Pradip, the editor of IFP informing him about my desire to submit a cartoon through email with a deadline from my side at 9:30 PM.

I ultimately went on to draw the cartoon amidst darkness, using a worn out ‘Moreh’ lamp with a constant tension in my mind about the 9:30 deadline. By 9:00 PM, the drawing was completed. Then, I put on the generator. It roared & gave bright light. With an extreme sense of satisfaction, I was about to plug my scanner to the generator output point when it fizzled & refused to give output current. I tried many times with my limited knowledge of checking plug etc. But everything was in vain. That machine simply stopped giving output, even though it was running!!.

Extremely frustrated, (it was already 9:15 PM), I dared to disturb Tammo Pradip and enquired whether submission of the cartoon at 10:30 PM be OK for publication on the 27th March edition. He gave a positive reply and even informed me that he will instruct his staff to wait for a cartoon till around that time. That statement lifted my spirit on an otherwise dark & gloomy night.

With great eagerness I waited for 10:00 PM and added further small details to my cartoon. Luckily, the electricity dept showered its kindness to me and light came exactly at 10:00 PM (remember, every minute counts by then!). I immediately went on to scan the cartoon and gave finishing touches in computer. By the time everything was completed, it was 10:35 PM. I felt so contended that I could keep the ‘revised’ deadline. Then using my mobile broadband connection, I was all set to send the cartoon to IFP by email. But, tragedy was waiting for me just at that juncture. Even though there was net connectivity, the speed was so slow that I was unable to attach my cartoon (hardly 200 KB file size). Side by side, I was trying to upload a smaller version of the cartoon for my FB. Both failed. I made numerous attempts. Disconnected the net & connected again, removed the dongle & inserted it again. But nothing was working. The clock was ticking slowly and it was 11:00 PM. With time literally running out of my hand, I was cursing the broadband company, pulling off my hair….. In short, my frustration was beyond control!! After a number of attempts & tense minutes, the net connection could finally attach the cartoon at around 11:35 PM, wasting a full one hour. It was ultimately sent to IFP, by which time the pages must have been ‘put to bed’ (ie, approved by the Editor & awaiting printing process).

Today morning (27th March), when I looked at the newspapers, the cartoon didn’t appear in IFP. A cartoon on the same subject, drawn by my friend W. Sadananda appeared in Poknapham. As far as I know, he did not use scanners, laptops or emails. The only consolation was my cartoon has been shared on my personal wall of FB, Mary Kom Home Page of FB on yesterday night itself, ahead of Sadananda!!

(Here is the link to my cartoon http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=351514344884073&set=a.123071701061673.8524.100000765316361&type=1&ref=notif&notif_t= photo_comment&theater)
In the battle of Man Vs Net, Net has won in this case!!!

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/man-vs-net/

Signs Of The Times – This Week`s Column

By Humra Quraishi Though I’m no fan of Anna Hazare or of Arvind Kejriwal but… more »

By Humra Quraishi
Though I’m no fan of Anna Hazare or of Arvind Kejriwal but do quite agree with their latest outburst against the politicians and civil servants of this country. Those occupying the top slots .At the helm of affairs .Those supposedly running the very governmental machinery .

Earlier this entire evening – that is , before I started writing this column – I sat for a considerable stretch , trying to come up with even one name from the who’s who in the establishment , whom one could genuinely respect . None . No , I couldn’t think of even one name from the present lot of men and women running this country …Yes, the only exception are those few IPS officers of the Gujarat cadre who have had the guts to take on chief minister Narendra Modi and expose the mask(s ) behind the 2002 massacres.

The rot in the system, amongst the top brass gets murkier by the day . Weeks back three Karnataka ministers were viewing porn right inside the State Assembly . And now comes in news of a repeat – this time in the Gujarat Assembly. Bogus explanations are getting flung about, more as a gaudy cover up . The truth , of course , lies in the fact that sub -standard and third raters sit fitted in the system . Imagine , C.C Patel – the man in charge of the Women and Child Welfare ministry of the Karnataka Government was said to be busy watching porn right inside the Assembly. Perhaps, now, after all this hue and cry , just about changed the place of porn viewing – maybe in a hotel suite or at some farm house … And porn viewing shows the very attitude of these men and that in itself relays nothing but a terribly frightening scenario …

And focusing on the communally tainted politicians the list is long. Perhaps , not ample space to offload those details. Right now just about this – the two main players in the Babri Masjid demolition and with that in the divisive politics at work – LK Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi – continue to hold sway in every possible way …Few years after that demolition , LK Advani was made deputy prime minister of this country and Joshi was made the HRD minister .

Look around and see for yourself the controversies brewing all over . General VK Singh , the Army chief of this country , is sitting flinging out goodies at this ripe old age ,at this near retirement stage. Call them distractions if you must . First his age battle. And now going overboard detailing the bait thrown at him. It seems he’d been taking a nap on both these fronts – could have had the age date controversy settled years back and if he was so disturbed by this bribe offer he could have raised an alarm right then – in 2010 .Why now , in 2012 ?

Everyday scandals are finding their way out . From every possible ministry and those who sit manning them .And it would be a folly of the worst sorts if only the politicians are blamed for this loot or rot or whatever term you’d like to use for this ongoing mockery of the very system..

What about their hand – in – glove partners : the civil servants! Without their able support no politician would be able to find his way , towards any of those ‘gates’.

ATLEAST WE CAN HONOUR THEM …

Whilst on the civil servants, there could few exceptions. Needless to mention that instead of we honoring their grit , they sit sidelined . No, no Padma awards or any of the other governmental awards for their integrity and sheer bravery .And a pity that even the powerful IAS and IPS associations do apparently little to protect these upright officers …

But the good news is that at least one of them -’92 batch IPS officer Rahul Sharma of the Gujarat cadre has been honoured by IIT Kanpur , with the Satyendra Dubey memorial award . The award, was set up by the IIT Kanpur alumni in memory of their student Satyendra Dubey, a whistle-blower who was killed for exposing corruption in the National Highway Project., rightly goes to Rahul Sharma .

And there’s this rather detailed backgrounder to this upright police officer’s role in trying to take on the Modi government, which is important to share with you readers .Let me quote from it – ‘ The Modi government has charge sheeted Rahul Sharma … Rahul Sharma is locked in a battle with the Modi government over a CD of phone calls which he submitted to the Nanavati Commission, which the government says he did without official clearance The IPS officer had been reportedly asked to assist the police in investigations of Naroda Patiya, Naroda Gam and Gulbarg Society 2002 riots cases. Sharma, who holds a B Tech in electrical engineering from IIT Kanpur and a law graduate, procured the cellphone call details of that period from Cellforce and AT& T, the telecom service providers in the city at that time.

… The explosive call details had created a stir since it implicated many bigwigs of the state polity as well as the bureaucracy. The CD then mysteriously went missing from police records. However, sensing the value of the evidence he had collected, Sharma had kept a copy of the call details while sending the original CDs to his senior P P Pandey, who headed the Ahmedabad crime branch then. He later submitted the call details before the Nanavati Commission as well as to the Justice U C Banerjee Commission, which probed the burning of the train.

While the state government had questioned the authenticity of the CDs submitted by Sharma, these call details corroborated with other evidence led to the arrest of at least two senior leaders accused in the riots — Maya Kodnani, a former member of Modi’s cabinet and VHP leader Jaydeep Patel…In less than a week after he procured the CDs, Sharma was shunted out of the probe and sent to 11 State Reserve Police at Vav near Surat. This was after the riots. Even during the riots, Sharma had played an important role as DSP of Bhavnagar. He had ordered his men to fire and had dispersed mobs that had gathered to kill Muslim children in a madrassa. Because of him, over 200 Muslim children were saved. Ironically, he had been posted just a day before in Bhavnagar. He was earlier SP, Baroda division, with the Western Railways. This was the division under which Godhra fell where the Sabarmati Express had been torched and 59 kar sevaks had been killed. After sidelined postings, Rahul took a central deputation offer and was
DIG, economic offences wing, CBI and was posted in Mumbai. He came back in 2009 and since then has been on a sidelined posting as DIG of arms unit in Rajkot…Rahul performed his duties according to the provisions of law to serve the society, used the technology innovatively, and underwent a sequel of humiliation and harassment but upheld his value systems with exemplary sacrifices. This was why he was selected for the prestigious Satyendra K Dubey Memorial Award.”

KL SAIGAL’S 108 BIRTH ANNIVERSARY – 4 April

New Delhi based former diplomat author Pran Nevile never misses a date with those personalities of yesteryears …They could be long dead , buried or cremated , but Pran Nevile is passionate about reviving , bringing to the very fore, their musical genius …And the latest in this series is a concert to be held here, in New Delhi ,on April 4 , in memory of KL Saigal’s haunting voice, those melodies …After all , its his 108 birth anniversary.

AN OFFBEAT FOCUS –

Though I could not attend Dr Vibha Joshi’s talk on ‘ The reverberative nature of the global network of Christianity : the Nagas of North East India ‘ , but found the topic rather offbeat , so let me quote from this detailed backgrounder to her talk held earlier this week at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library …her talk which focuses on – “ global networks of religion with special reference to Christianity in Nagaland, northeast India, especially the efforts of the Church to bring a peaceful solution to the protracted Naga national movement for independence from India and to heal the conflict-ridden society. It seeks to produce a comparative framework for studying similar processes and attempts at reconciliation elsewhere, in which international sources of influence are intrinsic to local peoples’ political religiosity and their wider religious understanding. …A common feature of postcolonial globalism is the way in which Christianity, having been imported into subject areas under colonialism, has in recent decades been exported back to the original donor societies. This reverberative feature of the Christian global network is a kind of ecumene in Hannerz’s terms, though less of a generalized ‘culture’ and more of locally varying beliefs and practices connected to each other across the world by being identified as Christian. A further tendency also found elsewhere in the world, for instance southern Africa, is for Naga Christians to see their role as healers not just of individual bodies but of the community as a whole. They seek ‘reconciliation’ between combatant groups and try to heal the wounds of war. This is quite unlike the role of early Christian missions (American Baptist) which targeted key individuals for conversion and tried to spread the gospel of ‘peace and love’ in a community by using such converts as religious examples and leaders. Put briefly, while the individual was the starting point then, the community is so now. …”

And Joshi seems focused – She recently guest-curated a major exhibition on the Naga at the Museum der Kulturen Basel. She has co-edited, Naga: A Forgotten Mountain Region Rediscovered, in 2008, and The Land of the Nagas, in 2004. ‘Christianity and Healing: The Angami Naga of Northeastern India’ is her forthcoming title.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/signs-of-the-times-this-weeks-column/

Travel: Driving Through Myanmar-I

By Pradip Phanjoubam “Can we help you?” said the front office manager at the hotel… more »

By Pradip Phanjoubam
“Can we help you?” said the front office manager at the hotel in Kalemyo town, our first halt in Myanmar, who looked in his mid 30s approaching me with two young assistants probably in their teens, as I tried to unload my two-piece baggage, one a flexible bag containing clothes and toiletries, and the other my large camera backpack, from the Xylo SUV vehicle I drove from Imphal on the day. “We are new so excuse us if we slip. Let us know how we can improve,” he said politely in not so good English and in local accent. Evident in this apologetic humility was an eagerness to learn. No, eagerness does not convey the complete sense. It was more akin to a hunger of a long famished society to open up and catch up with the rest of the free world. This hunger combined with the visible natural diligence of the people by and large, gives you the sense of a place already on the move and ready to take on anything that comes its way. It is everybody’s speculation today that in another 10 years, Myanmar would join the league of other vibrant South East Asian economies, and rise to unprecedented heights.

For the record, between March 11 and March 22, a total of 68 motor enthusiasts, government officials and a five member strong dance troupe, drove from Guwahati in Assam to Yangon in Myanmar and back in 17 vehicles, as part of an Indo-Myanmar Friendship Car Rally, organised by the  North East Federation of International Trade, NEFIT, and sponsored by the NEC. The rally drew participation of motor sports lovers from all over India, including Mumbai, Chennai and Delhi. There were also four participants from Myanmar.

Myanmar is opening up. There is no doubt about it at all. You can sense this everywhere even as the country today is preparing for by-elections to 46 seats in its two houses of Parliament Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, and two seats in two of its state assemblies on April 1. The country’s famous charismatic leader, Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy, NLD, has also agreed to participate in these by-elections. Her party boycotted the last general elections causing a split with those eager to participate leaving her and forming the National Democratic Force. The NLD now cannot hope to form the government in the current term even if it wins all the seats in the by-elections, but it now obviously wants a presence in the Parliament in preparation for a contest for state power in the next general elections. It remains to be seen if this party is still as relevant to the popular imagination of Myanmar’s future in the radically changed and continuing altering political and thereby economic environment in the country. But let politics be for the time being. We can only wish the country success, not without any self interest though, for Myanmar rising will have profound significance on the future of Manipur and indeed the entire Northeast region.

Burma strikes you as a deeply religious country. The landscape is littered with Buddhist pagodas of all sizes and age. Each of these is thronged perennially by devotees of all ages. Some of them like the Shwedagon in Yangon, where three strands of the Buddha are said to be preserved, command the grandeur comparable to any of the best architectural marvels of the world. However, what also becomes striking as you move on from one region of the country to another, especially in the great Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) River Valley, amidst the universal evidences of immense creativity inspired by what is seemingly an unparalleled religious passion shared by everyone, is the absence of any secular art or architecture worth the name with the sole exception perhaps of the magnificent Mandalay Palace, made famous amongst followers of fiction writing in India by Amitabh Ghosh’s “The Glass Palace”. Every road seems to lead to the Buddha and his way in this country. You cannot help wondering if inherent in this homogenous psychological landscape is a hegemony, one which has flattened variety and dissent in the core of the country and fomented rebellion in the outlying States, home to the country’s numerous of ethnic nationalities. Yes non-Bamar population, most of them non Buddhists, though some like the Shans and Mons are, are referred to as nationalities and not tribals as in India.

But this speculation of underlying politics notwithstanding, the pacifism of Buddhism shows up in many positive and endearing ways. In Mandalay the crime rate is zero we were told. Some think this is inspired by fear and subjugation of half a century under a military junta, but then there are military juntas around the world where crime rates have not dropped – not at least to zero percent. I took a walk after a reception at the swanky Mandalay Hill Resort on one side of the great moat around the Mandalay Palace, at well after midnight to my hotel, Mandalay Swan, on the opposite end of the moat, a distance of about five kilometres, just to see how it feels like to be out alone in the night in a crime free environment. There were very few people on the road, but among those still there, returning home on light large-wheeled, fuel efficient two wheeler vehicles so popular throughout South East Asia, were women and young girls. There were also some policemen on parked motorcycles on the road staring at me as I passed by with bewildered looks, but dropping their eyes when I looked back. The sense is one of absolute security, and I must say there were only few other walks I ever had that I enjoyed as much.

The other thing strange about travelling in Myanmar for a Manipuri, and I could see this was the case of all of us from Manipur in the rally, is that you did not feel you have moved out of Manipur even in the heart of the country. This sense is even more than what I have felt in other South East Asian countries. Not only is this about similarity of faces and features with people there, but also of mannerisms, accents and intonations of language, aromas and flavours. If not for the lungis they wear, it would have been impossible to distinguish many of us from the market crowds there where we went sightseeing and shopping. Interestingly, our local guides notice this too. They eat a lot more meat, in fact you notice more than anywhere else that unlike India where it is so easy to be a vegetarian, it is practically impossible to be one in Myanmar. Vegetarian food here literally means the same non-vegetarian food with the meat pieces removed. Meat, I discovered however, tends to be overcooked making them too soft and almost falling off the bones as you lift them. For those who love to sink their teeth and tear flesh, this is no fun. But then, it would not be fair to pretend to be a good judge of cuisines of a place in just ten days of travel through it.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/travel-driving-through-myanmari/

NSCN`s Mockery Of Peace

On 10 January 2012, NSCN-IM chairman Isak Chisi Swu and general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah were… more »

On 10 January 2012, NSCN-IM chairman Isak Chisi Swu and general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah were on their way from their camp at Hebron to Swu`s home town, Zunheboto in a large convoy of about 70 vehicles, when they were stopped and prevented to go any further by Assam Rifles personnel.

Expressing anger over the development, former `military chief` of NSCN-IM VS Atem in a press conference few days later in Dimapur such a restriction by Ministry of Home Affairs amounted to violation the ground rules of the ceasefire.

“The Government of India wants to solve the Naga political problem.

The Nagas want the solution.

However, if we don`t meet our people for consultation how can we move forward in solving the problem ?” fumed Atem.

Meanwhile, Wati Aier, convener of Forum for Naga Reconciliation conveyed this news to John Sundquist, member of UK based Naga Conciliation Group and Quakers Friends Society and complained about “massive deployment of Indian Army near Hebron Camp….. created difficulties for movement of NSCN-IM cadres to and from the Orthodox Theological Seminary (OTS)” and about him being frisked by the Indian Army twice, on his way to and from OTS every day.  Aier further requested Sundquist to issue a statement widely to media in the name of a groups such as ‘Friends of the Nagas’ or  ‘Naga Solidarity Group’, on the present situation in Nagaland. Interestingly, he specifically requested not to involve the Baptist community while issuing the statement . The suggested draft of the statement was: “The world community has followed the ‘Peace Process’ between the Government of India and the Naga people under the leadership of the NSCN with hope. While we (Friends of the Nagas / Naga Solidarity Group) still remain hopeful of dawning of a new era, the restriction imposed upon the NSCN leadership from traveling to Zunheboto, is ‘undemocratic and contrary to the Cease Fire agreement’…. we urge the concerned government to act favorably”.

While the Centre’s indulgence of NSCN (IM) leaders resulted in over three months blockades in Manipur in 2010 and 2011, not only has the group been trigger happy, but is also very ‘trigger hungry’, so to speak. One of the orders the outfit is pursuing is of 800 wpns worth USD 1.2 million, a deal struck by Anthony Shimray with the Chinese company TCL. The outfit enlisted Frans Welman, Secretary, Naga International Support Centre (NISC), Netherlands to negotiate with TCL on its behalf and has reportedly visited China for the same. This not only makes an utter mockery not only of the peace process and ground-rules of the cease fire, but also of NSCN (IM)’s talk of “honour”, exposes its duality and deviousness of NSCN(IM) and also tantamount to letting down the Naga people.

Not only has NSCN-IM not laid down arms during 15 years of cease fire and peace process, it is also actively pursuing acquisition of sophisticated Chinese weapons for replenishment of its armoury and for selling to Naxal-Maoists, it also continues speaking in different tongues in New Delhi and Nagaland. On January 31, Swu issued a statement at an annual NSCN ceremony in Nagaland, stating: “The integration of Nagaland is our birthright….Every Naga is expected to participate in our struggle for the integration of Nagalim. ”

On February 6, Director General of Assam Rifles Lt Gen Rameshwar Roy, touring the state and talking to reporters on the sidelines of a visit to Sainik School, Pangei,  admitted to regular violations of cease-fire ground rules by cadres of NSCN-IM and stated that the ceasefire is still prevailing baring the intermittent breaches and gave reassurances on the security forces’ commitment to fully enforce the basic guidelines. He said, militants flouting the ground rules have been booked and handed over to right law enforcement agencies as the paramilitary cannot act directly and the established democratic set of laws have to be followed. NSCN-IM cadres were accused of firing, abduction and intimidation in favour of candidates belonging to the NPF during Manipur Assembly elections, held on January 28. Union home minister P. Chidambaram reportedly admitted that the NSCN-IM indulged in kidnapping and other unlawful activities despite holding talks with the Centre.

Some incidents during February 2012 are worth noting.

Assam Rifles arrested six cadres of NSCN-IM during the raid of a house of one `major` Yimkachang of NSCN-IM at Yimyu Ward, Mokokchung District. Three .22 revolvers and two pistols were seized from them. The arrestees were identified as Aluba Ao, Zulu, Among Imchen, Atiba, Wati Lkr and Imli Nochet. SFs arrested one `captain` of NSCN-IM, identified as Kaphung Koi Muinao, from Sewak Colony of Dimapur along with arms and ammunition, for violation of Cease Fire Ground Rules (CFGR), arrested one Mathew while collecting `tax` from Diphupar village and recovered  INR 155,500 collected as tax and collection receipts from him, arrested two NSCN-IM militants identified as Swapon (30) and Shikaya Sema (28) while collecting `tax` from near Sukhavi village.

On February 16, former Union Home Secretary G.K. Pillai reportedly revealed that the policy of politically resolving the Naga issue ongoing on for several decades, would include the entire Naga society. In an interview, he is reported to have said, “all have to endorse the agreement, from the gaon burhas (village headmen) to civil society groups… none should be able to turn around and say after some years that they were kept in the dark and hence would not accept the agreement.” On the talks with the NSCN-IM, dragging since 1997, he added that  a settlement could be expected later in 2012. Considering all ground realities, that sounds rather optimistic.

On February 10, it was reported that  Anthony Shimray, ‘Head of Foreign Affairs of the NSCN-IM’ and nephew of Muivah, was produced before the Special Court of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) at Patiala House, New Delhi for his lead role in negotiating with Chinese intelligence agencies for large supplies of weapons . The Asian Age had elaborated on his arrest by NIA at the Indo-Nepal border in September 2010 on charges of illegal procurement and supply of arms and his revelations.

Several Naga civil society organizations appealed to the Union Government through a joint representation addressed to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, urging for immediate release of Shimray, in “greater interest of peace and respect for his rights and dignity”. The representatives include Naga Hoho (the apex organisation of the Nagas), United Naga Council, Naga Mothers` Association, Naga Women`s Union, Naga Students` Federation, All Naga Students` Association Manipur and Naga People`s Movement for Human Rights. Do his rights include anti-Indian activities?

On January 25, 2011, Wang Qing, a Chinese spy disguised as a TV reporter, was arrested and deported after she reportedly visited the headquarters of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah) or NSCN-IM. Indian authorities said Qing admitted to being a spy for the People`s Security Bureau, a Chinese intelligence agency, and that she had conducted a secretive four-hour-long, closed-door meeting with Thuingaleng Muivah. Qing had apparently attempted to pass herself off as a traveling representative of a Chinese timber concern, a Naga student, or a Hong Kong television journalist, depending on whom she encountered. On inspection of her laptop by Indian authorities, it was discovered she had photos of herself with Muivah, Prachanda, head of Nepal`s Maoists, and members of the Kachin Independence Army, an ethnic separatist movement in Myanmar that Delhi believes has acted as a channel for Chinese arms to Naga rebel armies in decades past. Qing was detained in Dimapur, and transported back to Delhi for questioning. Qing was “quietly” deported back to China rather than be put on trial in India, for obvious reasons. But Qing’s case is only one of several recently that suggest an attempt by Beijing to step up efforts at undermining peace and increasing leverage over India as both countries grapple with sensitive border negotiations.

Mr Pillai’s reported remarks on the Chinese connection are noteworthy-. “There was evidence that insurgents from northeast India were meeting Chinese intelligence officials regularly in Yunnan (China) and in Nepal. We tracked top NSCN arms procurer Anthony Shimray who had ordered a massive supply of weapons. The procedures involved in shipment, export orders, regulatory compliances, etc are impossible without China`s involvement,” Intelligence reports say fresh consignments comprising weapons like Heckler and Koch rifles (HK 33), T81 rifles – have landed in the hands of the Northeast terrorist  in substantial numbers.

On January 19, 2011, it was reported that three Chinese nationals were arrested in Uttar Pradesh close to India`s border with Nepal, on suspicion of money laundering and spying on border security camps. Media quoted a local police officer Sanjay Kakkar  saying that the accused, including a woman, said they were employees of Chinese telecoms equipment maker, Huawei Technologies. “We arrested them for trespassing as we found them on Indian soil without a valid Indian visa,” Kakkar said, adding the three were caught taking photographs of border guards installations.

NSCN-IM has also been interfering in Arunachal Pradesh’s political affairs. It played a major role in toppling former chief minister Jarbom Gamlin last year. NSCN-IM forced at least five Congress legislators to desert Mr Gamlin, who shortly afterwards resigned after completing just 180 days of rule. This newspaper had reported that coal mafias involved in rampant illegal mining in the state were alleged to have been instigating the Naga rebels to topple the Gamlin government. If insiders are to be believed, 19 MLAs were genuinely opposed to Mr  Gamlin but another five, who shifted their loyalty from Mr Gamlin, were said to have been under the pressure of NSCN-IM. Congress insiders said that at least 24 legislators, including some ministers, formally approached the party high command, demanding a change in leadership. The Congress has 42 legislators in the 60-member House. Regretting that rampant mining of coal in Kharsang area of Changlang district is the prime source of money that has been feeding Naga rebels besides controlling the politics of frontier state, security sources said that NSCN-IM continues to maintain its domination on Tirap and Changlang districts of the frontier states. NSCN-IM, reportedly pursuing the agenda of coal mafias, came to focus first during former Arunachal CM  Mukut Mithi’s regime as then CM of Arunachal Gegong Apang accused Naga rebels of toppling his government.

If  NSCN-IM’s role in causing two blockades in Manipur over and above continuous extortion and violence are examples of its disruptive activities within the country, its contacts with both Chinese and Pakistani intelligence agencies are serious threats to national security. Need it be re-emphasized that New Delhi must do much, much more to overcome much that it has never done before? 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/nscns-mockery-of-peace/

Free Medical Camp on 1st April, 2012 8am

The Lions Club of Imphal Greater, Lions Clubs International is organising a Free Medical Camp… more »

The Lions Club of Imphal Greater, Lions Clubs International is organising a Free Medical Camp at Leimkhong Mapal, near Lamlai, Imphal East District, Manipur on Sunday, the 1st April 2012. This health camp will be of first kind in this village which will be benefitted by approximately 3000 nos. of people covering 5 villages in and around the venue. In this regard you are requested to kindly associate with us in the interest of poor and needy person. The Health Camp will start from 8 am to 12 noon.
In this regard, I, on behalf of Lions Club of Imphal Greater would like to request you kindly to extend your kind cooperation by covering up this Project.
Programme : starting 8.00 am
Preferred coverage timing: 9.30-11.00 am
With warm regards
Sincerely yours,
(Lion Thongam Arun)
P.R.O.
Lions Club of Imphal Greater

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/free-medical-camp-on-1st-april-2012-8am/

Real Hero Award for Manipur Trainer – KanglaOnline

Real Hero Award for Manipur TrainerKanglaOnlineViswajit has reformed addicts through a combination of workout, meditation and campaigning, its official website Real Heroes said. It further said, Viswajit's next target is the rural areas of Manipur …

Real Hero Award for Manipur Trainer
KanglaOnline
Viswajit has reformed addicts through a combination of workout, meditation and campaigning, its official website Real Heroes said. It further said, Viswajit's next target is the rural areas of Manipur where he plans to set up gyms and create awareness

and more »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHIKSg0E8wgWEOjELJiwzpd3PhjnA&url=http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/real-hero-award-for-manipur-trainer/

A FUTILE JOURNEY OF A MEITEI TO FIND GOD

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh My journey of hopes and dreams of finding a God… more »

By: Dr Irengbam Mohendra Singh

My journey of hopes and dreams of finding a God fell in ruins around me. It was like the Spanish conquistadors of the sixteenth century, who set off to find El Dorado – the mystic city of gold in South America. They never found it.

It had perhaps, been started upon false tracts. What began as a noble spiritual journey ended in the calm realisation that there cannot be a God

St Augustine’s journey to find God in his young adulthood ended in exhausted despair. He reports: “I had lost all hope of discovering the truth.” In the end he said God found him.

I may perhaps, be the first Meitei who set off on a journey to find God, any God. In the last leg of my journey of faith I came to perceive that life is not a journey towards God as I wrote in my book – My Search for God, published in 2003.

The core of religion is God, the provider and moral keeper of suffering humanity. Philosophy plus God is religion. The English word “God” is used by multiple religions as a noun to refer to different deities.

The God who is above scientific thinking and commands religious and political adherence to him and to whom we must pay our gratitude and personal tributes for our proud civilisations, rules humanity from a safe place in Heaven – the eclectic choice for the spiritual philosophers.

I am not a philosopher, nor am I a theologian, nor an atheist. I was simply investing myself into finding a rational view of the concept of God in the light of new scientific discoveries.
Since ‘brevity is the sole of wit’ I will be brief. For a start, I have travailed with the paradigm of God and his existence with such logical arguments in its favour as previously accepted by theologians.

The monotheist Abrahmic faiths – Jewish, Christian and Muslim religions still believe that God created human beings in the Garden of Eden (The Bible Genesis 2:8-14). The 2nd century Christians identified the place, located by the River Euphrates in Iraq, just west of the border between Iraq and Iran and just above the northern shore of the Persian Gulf.

But the present consensus among the palaeontologists and biologists is that human beings evolved through natural processes. The birthplace of humankind, according to the current consensus focuses on North East Africa.

Evolution means there has been ‘a change through time’ in certain lines of organisms giving rise to other lines or groups called macroevolution. The organisms do undergo changes during their lifespan, called microevolution.

While there is still a conflict between human evolution by natural processes, and human creation by God, evolution has now a strong standing power. It has been progressively accepted by researchers, following a series of discoveries in various fields of knowledge, conducted independently.

Even Pope John Paul II issued a message to the Pontifical Academy of Science, reaffirming the Roman Catholic Church’s long-standing position on evolution: that it does not necessarily
conflict with Christianity.
(2)
While there is no evidence for the existence of God there has been no attempt by the theologians to prove that there is a God or the validity of religion. Still there is belief that the Judeo-Christian God created this earth and everything in it.

A book appealing to Christians to accept as a proven fact the Darwinian theory of evolution, titled The Language of God, was published in 2006 by well-known genetic scientist Francis S. Collins, himself a believing non-Catholic Christian.

In his book Dr. Collins de¬clares that all living organisms have evolved from species to species by means of random change and natural selection without any intervention by God.

That human beings have evolved from lower animals and have not been created by a God has been proven by scientific methods, 150 years after Darwin’s hypothesis of evolution.

A scientific method is the process of proposing a hypothesis, and then testing its accuracy by collecting data on events the hypothesis predicts. If the predictions match the new data the
hypothesis is supported. Generally the best supported hypothesis is considered correct.

Evolution is the result of the frequency of the appearance of alleles in a population of organisms that changes over time. The alleles are the pieces of DNA that cause a particular trait eg “blue eyes” or “flat nose”.

My belief is that evolution and religion do not always contradict with each other except that the literal interpretation of the first chapter of Genesis in the Bible is unscientific and therefore unacceptable to students of evolution. They are not provable like gravity or electricity.

A religious belief can not be tested scientifically as there are no empirical tests that give different results whether the belief is true or not. Religion usually presupposes a driving force – an intelligent designer. This intelligent being is not always predictable and thus experiments judging religious beliefs cannot have predictable results.

Different religions have different names of God. For example: the Meitei Sanamahi religion has Tengbanba Mapu (Lord of the universe). The question whether different names used by different religions are equivalent has been raised and discussed.

Correlation between various theories and interpretations of the name of God, used to signify a monotheistic or ultimate Supreme Being from which all other divine attributes derive, has been a subject of ecumenical discourse between Eastern and Western scholars for over two centuries.

Many of the world’s religions are based on ‘revelations’ eg the final book of the New Testament; Krishna’s revelation in the Gita; Mohammad’s revelation in the Koran; or Yahweh’s in Torah. So are the Meitei revelations in the Puya. Usually these predictions or prophesies can not always be verified.

American creationists are forever trying to build up Christian beliefs around scientific principles. But the belief is no more a fact than painting a brick with gold paint makes it a bar of gold. They are ridiculously claiming that the Grand Canyon in Arizona was created by Noah’s Flood (Bible).

The Biblical narrative is that God became aggrieved when he saw that the earth was polluted by wickedness. He commanded Noah to build an Ark (a vessel) to save himself, his family
(3)
and the world’s animals before he sent a Great Flood to cleanse the wickedness.

What is more ludicrous is that the biblical literalists continue to explore the mountains of Ararat in present-day Turkey where the Bible says the Ark came to rest, in search of archaeological remnants of the vessel, without success.

I have just been to see the Grand Canyon in Arizona. It is 433 Km (277miles) long and 1.6 km (1 mile) deep gorge. It was formed during the six mullion years of geological activity and erosion by the Colorado River on the tectonically upraised earth’s crust.

In my search for God on the principle of free enquiry and with scientific method, the biological science began casting doubts and created difficulties for a teleological view.

I am an agnostic – a believer in the practicality of science. I look the universe in the face with an open mind for conviction. Historically, agnosticism does not merely mean a suspension of judgement. Rather it means intellectual justification for a discard of theology.

Agnosticism rose in the West after the Industrial Revolution as a by-product of the rise in the standard of living measured by GDP and increase in the Human Development Index, measured by longevity, years of education of a typical citizen.

Thomas Huxley in 1869 invented the word ‘Agnosticism’ but it took twenty years for him to openly write his essay entitled – Agnosticism. Agnostic is anti-Gnostic. Gnostic is a believer in the intuitive spiritual knowledge (of God).

An atheist is one who affirms that there is no God but he can not make a dogmatic statement on God’s non-existence. Many famous intellectuals such as George Bernard Shaw, Wordsworth, Shelley and Byron were atheists.

Atheism reared its head in 1811 when Percy Shelley (1792-1822), friend of Byron, wrote a pamphlet – The Necessity of Atheism as an undergraduate at the University College, Oxford. He was expelled from the University. Shelley argued about the development of a distinction between the workings of reason and imagination. He rejected revealed religion and its dogmas.

Many religions have different ideas of what God is and there is a disagreement whether God is male, female or neuter (Islam). The existence or non-existence of a God or Gods is a matter of faith. Our glimpse of God in this world and the next is hierarchical and ordered, and the meaning of the term religion has no single definition.

Every man should be able to give a reason for the faith that is in him, as I do. I know reality can not always been proved by logic, as logic does not always preserve the truth, It simply gives the idea about the subject matter.

And this article is my idea. Unlike St Augustine, God has not found me yet.

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

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/a-futile-journey-of-a-meitei-to-find-god/

singers to attend AIR event for communal peace – E-Pao.net

singers to attend AIR event for communal peaceE-Pao.netManipuri and tribal melodies will meld at the Bheigyachandra Open Air Theatre here tomorrow evening when handpicked artistes from all over the state will sing for communal harmony. “The objective…

singers to attend AIR event for communal peace
E-Pao.net
Manipuri and tribal melodies will meld at the Bheigyachandra Open Air Theatre here tomorrow evening when handpicked artistes from all over the state will sing for communal harmony. “The objective of the concert is not only to bring all the communities

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGsvjYAqFNe1RW5bnoACyMPgH_3Ow&url=http://e-pao.net/epSubPageSelector.asp?src=Manipuri_singers_to_attend_AIR_event_for_communal_peace_20120331&ch=news_section&sub1=News_Links&sub2=News_Links_2012

Post Matric Scholarship MOBC Manipur

Directorate of Minorities, other backward classes and SC, Manipur invites application from OBC students of Manipur studying in Manipur for award of Post-Matrict Scholarship (OBC) for the academic…

Read the full article and articles like this at man…


Directorate of Minorities, other backward classes and SC, Manipur invites application from OBC students of Manipur studying in Manipur for award of Post-Matrict Scholarship (OBC) for the academic…

Read the full article and articles like this at manipurhub.com

Read more / Original news source: http://manipurhub.com/post-matric-scholarship-mobc-manipur/

Thang-ta demonstration posponed

IMPHAL, Mar 30: A Thang-Ta demonstration by the 83 years old renowned Thang-ta exponent Heramot… more »

IMPHAL, Mar 30: A Thang-Ta demonstration by the 83 years old renowned Thang-ta exponent Heramot which was scheduled on March 31 has been postponed due to bandh on April 2 at 2:30 pm at Rupmahal Theatre.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/03/thangta-demonstration-posponed/

Download e-Admit Card for UPSC NDA & NA Exam (I) 2012

Admit Card for UPSC NDA & NA Exam (I) 2012 / Admit Cards for National Defence Academy and Naval Academy Examination (I) 2012 : The Union Public Service Commission will be conducting the National…

Read the full article and articles like this at…


Admit Card for UPSC NDA & NA Exam (I) 2012 / Admit Cards for National Defence Academy and Naval Academy Examination (I) 2012 : The Union Public Service Commission will be conducting the National…

Read the full article and articles like this at manipurhub.com

Read more / Original news source: http://manipurhub.com/download-e-admit-card-for-upsc-nda-na-exam-i-2012/