14th callenge cup veteran football

IMPHAL, April 14: UVSA defeated UMO by 4-2 in the 14th challenge Cup Veteran football… more »

IMPHAL, April 14: UVSA defeated UMO by 4-2 in the 14th challenge Cup Veteran football tournament at Mapal kangjeibung. N Gandhi scored 3 goals and N Sagor scored 1 goal for UVSA and Md Asraf and K Kishorchand of UMO scored one goal each. N Sagor (UVSA) was booked a Yellow card during the game.

In the second ground, NAVSA defeated ISAV by 1-0, where MS Alicn Chiru scored the lone goal of the game.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/14th-callenge-cup-veteran-football/

Getting It Right

By B.G. Verghese As the Army charade grinds on, sections of the media have displayed a… more »

By B.G. Verghese
As the Army charade grinds on, sections of the media have displayed a lack of sensitivity in upping the ante, howsoever inadvertently.  An extravagant five deck, seven column banner headline in a leading paper hinting at an unauthorised “march on Delhi” during a particularly delicate period of strained civil-military relations, was by its very display alarmist. Although the idea of a coup was dismissed, the story ominously pointed in that direction after 11 weeks of investigation.  The Allahabad High Court is mistaken in ordering a ban on publication of troop movements at any time. But what is at issue is not troop movements per se but the hint of something more sinister. An editorial or op-ed commentary on the lack of coordination and communication would have better served the intended purpose. And that is probably the real issue that needs to be addressed.  

More importantly, the Government has introduced legislation to bar manual scavenging, cleaning septic tanks or handling shit. This ignominious and degrading caste calling has been a blot on India’s civic life and an assault on the constitutional right to a life with dignity. The draft Manual Scavengers and Rehabilitation Bill, 2012, however, calls for the conversion of all manually-handled (insanitary) latrines into sanitary ones within nine months of notification, or their demolition. Implementation is to be monitored by the National Commission of Safai Karmacharis and sanitary workers are to be trained in new skills and assisted to start alternative occupations.  

It has taken unconscionably long to do something that Gandhiji and national pride would have had us do within the first decade of Independence. Bindeshwar Pathak of Shaulabh Shauchalaya stands out among the very few who tried to do something to remedy the situation through his sanitary pour-flush latrines.  Will the proposed official Bill work, even if it is allowed to go forward?

The enormity of the task has been spelt out by the Centre for Science and Environment in its latest State of India’s Environment Report, No.7, “Excreta Matters”. This focuses on the parlous state of water and sanitation in urban India, based on a 71-city survey. The findings are grim. India’s urban population, currently 340 m, will rise to 600 m or 40 per cent of the population by 2030, with 68 million-plus cities.  Though the Government claims that 90 per cent of urban India has access to safe drinking water and 64 per cent to sanitation facilities, water quality is cause for increasing worry with untreated sullage and open defecation spreading contamination. Quantitatively, agriculture still consumes over 70 per cent of available water while industry, municipalities and ecological uses demand more. City supplies are coming from ever more distant and tenuous sources as a supply-side solution while untreated waste and return flows, leaking pipes and taps, unregulated groundwater pumping and inadequate toilet facilities are spreading pollution.  Low flows are converting rivers into drains.

Growing urban-rural discord is being manifest in water allocation and demand management leaves much to be desired. Water allocation, pricing and treatment norms vary across and within states with water having long been considered a free social good, rather than an economic good. The State is prone to outsource its municipal water and sanitation functions  and the well-to-do often make do with better facilities and allocations or have the option to buy water at higher rates or depend on the Rs 2000-crore plus bottled water industry. Slum colonies and shanty towns are worst off in terms of water availability, sanitation and pollution. Sewage treatment is disconnected from water supply           

In 2008, the Government resolved that that by 2015 it would correct the shame of one in six urban dwellers and overall 60 per cent Indians defecating in the open, 26-50 per cent urban households being denied adequate sanitation, with only 30 per cent having access to sewerage and 37 per cent of all wastewater being left untreated.  In many areas flushed toilets empty out into nullahs/rivers while decreasing flows have decreased the assimilative capacity of streams. A lot more money has been allocated for sewage treatment, drains and river clean-up under urban renewal programmes. But merely upgrading infrastructure in the city does not mean that good, treated water is returned to rivers and aquifers. The CSE argues that water supply and sewage treatment remain disjointed and faecal flows pollute rivers. States and municipalities cannot carry the burden while well-to-do people and districts are subsidised.

The example of Chennai is cited. Here the Cooum and Adyar rivers and Buckingham Canal are cesspools despite considerable investment in sewerage. Yet the State Pollution Control Board counts 423 industrial effluent and excreta outfalls emptying into the city’s waterways. The cost of total water supply in the city is Rs 13 per kilo-litre but gets inflated to Rs 17 per kl if leakage losses are taken into account.    

A large volume of water is required just to transport excreta from individual toilets to sewage treatment plants/outfalls. More economic flush toilets have been designed. Better still would be to design eco-toilet systems where transportation and distant discharge are avoided and valuable chemicals contained in excreta and urine residues are recycled as organic manures. 

Scavenging must go but water-sewage-excreta disposal must be built into a viable and partly self-sustaining system on the basis of equitable user charges. It must also mesh with the draft National Water Policy that is poised for adoption. This clutch of issues is as urgent as any from an economic, health and right-to-dignity point of view.

Meanwhile, four years after the passage of the Right to Education Act, the Supreme Court has upheld its validity and applicability to all but unaided minority schools and boarding schools for children in the age group of six to fourteen.  This is a child rights act that the state should have endeavoured to deliver by 1960 in accordance with Article 45 of the Constitution. However, the new urgency will be welcomed though the State should assist private unaided schools to meet the additional liability and, more generally, ensure a sufficiency of trained teachers, books and infrastructure to ensure that all round quality marches with quantity.

The Education Commission had in 1966 advocated common schools to promote social and cultural mixing in a highly plural society with huge income differentials. Cultural barriers are more likely to break down at an early age when children are less conscious about class, caste, colour and community. In any event it is a constitutional mandate that must be fulfilled as a step towards building Fraternity and equal opportunity.  

Simultaneously, the harshest punishment must be awarded to the killing of the girl child and female foeticide. The battering to death of Baby Afreen in Bangalore is only the latest in a despicable story of mass murder. Poverty and “sentiment” cannot justify such evil.

Finally, Mamata Banerjee’s megalomania constitutes a danger to democracy. She is becoming increasingly authoritarian and partisan and is fast losing public and, one must suspect, her own party’s support by her errant and arrogant conduct.  
www.bgverghese.com  

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/getting-it-right/

Kamlesh Salam and the Bamboo World

Kamesh Salam, who is at present in Belgium attending the bamboo world congress; former president… more »

Kamesh Salam, who is at present in Belgium attending the bamboo world congress; former president of World Bamboo Organisation, Bamboo and Environment consultant to not only India but also Austria and Bhutan, and many other organisations. At present serving as the executive Director of South Asia Bamboo Foundation, he is a busy man. Here is an interview of him, of his art and his concern of environment taken through e-mail by Imphal Free Press.

IFP:Tell us something about your education, of your days in Ram Krishna Mission and Punjab  University?

Kamesh:My schooling in RKM , Purulia and my college in PU has broaden my exposure to the rich and variant India culture that shaped my career. My curricular activities in fine arts in School learning under renowned gurus have help in my creativity. My association with International community students as the President of Jaycees Continental Club, Chandigarh has also help in developing my networking skills with international Community. The industrial exposure obtained while I was working as a student also helped me to shape my work culture.

IFP: What prompted you to get interested in Bamboo and Environment by and large? Any inspiring event/individual worth mentioning?

Looking back to my state or the region, I wanted to promote some materials which is not imported from outside but can provide gainful employment through value addition. It is bamboo. My maternal Grandfather Shri Keisham Tombi Singh who was one of the founders of handicrafts and handloom in the state has influenced a lot in my early childhood days. He did a lot to promote pineapple and woolen fiber etc. in the state. But not of a success. As such I found bamboo and cane as an alternative apart from the environment benefits we all know.

K: You were also member of the All India Handicraft Board before you zeroed in to bamboo. Tell us more about it?

I was one of the first member of AIHB of ministry of Textiles but my contribution was as it was mostly a policy making body and meetings were erratic my inputs were not significant . But during the NDA government I was made the Board of Director of the North Eastern Handicrafts and Handloom Development Corporation Ltd. (NEHHDC) for five years, where I did contributed a lot for the promotion of handicrafts and handlooms of the region. But to be frank, this corporation is working only for the bigger states and states like Manipur, Nagaland, Mizoram etc. are totally ignored in their promotional programs in spite of my repeated inputs.

IFP: How is your collaboration with the Manipur Cycle Club? We heard that you have purposely come from Guwahati for a workshop? Could you share a bit about the workshop?

K: I have found a dedicated team in the MCC and that’s how I came in touch with them. My exposure in West Africa and my interaction with Bamboo cycle designer Mr. Mc Calfree in San Francisco during the American Bamboo Society Annual Meet in November 2008 has made me exposed to bamboo cycles. Also MCC had plans in its agenda to promote bamboo bicycle as such I found them a good partner in this venture. For this workshop bamboo has been procured from Katlamara, Tripura called “kanakias” in local language. We have also engaged renowned Manipur Designer Mr.Sukumar Haobam, first NID Graduate from Manipur, Mr. Lishram Bhubol Singh, Bamboo expert and State Awardees and a group of talented artisans and glass fiber technologist under guidance of Mr. Kula Singh of Manipur museum. Also with inputs of the dedicated MCC team the workshop has been a great experience and an experiment.

IFP: What are the achievements of World Bamboo Organization particularly during your tenure as the president of the organization?

K: In my tenure I did tried to bring the researchers close to the developmental programs as such instead of discussing only scientific research papers, developmental agencies were also given platform at the bamboo congress. Also during my time I did tried to make world Bamboo congress as self-sustaining programs as it’s difficult to get government funding for such activities. Also another issue was to project bamboo development outside China.

IFP: What are the main issues which are to be addressed in the coming world Bamboo conference, to be held in Belgium this April?

K: The 5 day event will include lectures divided into distinct categories relating to Science and Society (culture and economics) and Bamboo Design, Innovation and Architecture (constructions and products). Focus will be on current status and future potentials include Regional Reports and conclude with a workshop entitled, “Bamboo – a 50-year Perspective”. Another day will consist of optional tours of interest. The investment meet will be attended by the policy makers, bamboo experts, Officials from EU and UN, investors, Apex Chamber of trade and industry associations, bamboo Industrial groups etc. from South Asia and Europe and America. High level delegations from Indian states are attending the meet to focus investment in their states including the Chief Minister of Meghalaya.

With a rapidly increasing interest in bamboo products and materials along with skyrocketing demand for information related to bamboo, the World Bamboo Congress will be the VENUE for people seeking information about bamboo as well as progressive corporations with focus on new bamboo products for the green market. The World Bamboo Congress is positioned as a catalyst for dissemination of the most current scientific and field research information available worldwide in order to effectively expand the world’s current bamboo plantations as well as planting areas where selective species will flourish.

IFP: How is India faring with the international Bamboo movement?

K: India has 20% of World’s bamboo resources but has not done well in all fronts as far as bamboo development is concern. The present system of cultivation and harvesting is still unscientific and the utilization is also mostly for paper and pulp, house hold and domestic consumption, illegal exports, handicrafts etc. With the lack of a clear policy by the Indian Government there is no proper direction in the bamboo development growth in the country. On the other hand China and South East Asian countries are doing very well, as such we need to look toward east if we have to develop the Indian bamboo or the North Eastern part where more than 50% of Bamboo resources of India are available.

IFP: Why is the National Bamboo Mission under the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperation? Has not the Ministry of Environment and Forest any role to play in this regard?

K: As a person who was one of the architects of formulating the National Bamboo Mission, by preparing the Detail Project Report under the Planning Commission of India; the recommendation was to put bamboo under the ministry of Agriculture, so that is taken like any other plantation crop such as tea, rubber, coffee, jute, spice, coconut etc. Structurally, the National Bamboo Mission is chaired by Agriculture Minister. The highest decision making body of NBM includes the Minister of Forest and Environment. Below, there is the official-level National Steering Committee chaired by the Agriculture Secretary. Similar bodies have been created in the states as well. NBM funds released to the Forest Departments for Commercial Plantation of Bamboo are in the form of 100% grant. In almost all the states of India the National Bamboo Mission activities are being implemented by the State Forest Department. Practically you can say that the Agriculture Ministry provides fund to forest department to implement the Bamboo Mission activities. Also the National Bamboo Mission Cell , the Ministry of Agriculture has no technical staffs to run the mission as mandated.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/kamlesh-salam-and-the-bamboo-world/

Manipurs homegrown script – Indian Express

Indian ExpressManipurs homegrown scriptIndian ExpressThe people of Manipur are passionate about two things: one, standing for elections and the other, making movies. The people of Manipur are passionate about two things: one, standing for elections (ev…


Indian Express

Manipurs homegrown script
Indian Express
The people of Manipur are passionate about two things: one, standing for elections and the other, making movies. The people of Manipur are passionate about two things: one, standing for elections (every third person in the state including the

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFfcZRYbGvewi3s4oWIg5nK9g5U1g&url=http://www.indianexpress.com/news/manipurs-homegrown-script/936838/

Movements for Human Rights in Manipur – KanglaOnline

Movements for Human Rights in ManipurKanglaOnlineThe Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has admitted AFSPA as inhuman in addition to Justice Jeevan Reddy's recommendation to scrap the military Act, the civil societies demanded the Government o…

Movements for Human Rights in Manipur
KanglaOnline
The Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has admitted AFSPA as inhuman in addition to Justice Jeevan Reddy's recommendation to scrap the military Act, the civil societies demanded the Government of India and the Government of Manipur to repeal AFSPA

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHLw1H8LjRh9HNrmoU3n-FWxIF5-w&url=http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/movements-for-human-rights-in-manipur/

Movements for Human Rights in Manipur

By Benjamin Gondaimei India is the world largest democracy; a sovereign socialist republic with a… more »

By Benjamin Gondaimei

India is the world largest democracy; a sovereign socialist republic with a comprehensive charter of rights written into its constitution; a signatory to most international covenants of human rights; a country in the forefront of the international struggle against colonialism, imperialism and racism. Rarely do many of us realised that underneath this impressive veneer and national pride about our 3000 year old civilizational legacy, lies a history of systematic violation of basic democratic, and human rights of large sections of our population.1 It was only with the declaration of the state of Emergency, in June 1975, that the fragile basis of even our constitutional rights was brought home to us. After 1975, many civil and democratic rights groups were formed and since have been functioning all over the country. Every year, publishing investigation reports particularly about violation by the state of its own Laws, registering cases under the provision of public interest law, holding press conferences, and issuing statement, as well as demonstrating against state repression of various kinds of draconian laws have become common fare. So also has the discussion on Indian Constitution ans its laws and justice machinery. This would have us believe that the movement for human rights of which this specialized activity of the civil and democratic rights groups is a part, is alive and kicking. Equally on e can be lead to believe that the activities of the different political parties and related mass organisations, of the hundreds of voluntary, social-action groups working with and for the oppressed and downtrodden as also a far more conscious citizenry would together have contributed to a powerful growing movement for changing the sub-human conditions in which large proportion of our citizens alive.

If anything, reports of gross violations by the state machinery in the form of torture, illegal detention, unprovoked firings, encounter killing, legislation of more repressive laws are now common than ever before. Alongside is the growing feeling of ineffectiveness and powerlessness in various human rights related groups, not only the specialised civil democratic rights groups, but also the different base level or support groups working among different constituencies ad involved with the struggle for a radical transformation of the Indian situation. There is a growing realisation that a weak and insecure state cannot only turn more fascist in its method, but can help generate a mind-set, particularly amongst the slightly better off of its citizens, that all such dissent and protest activity is seen as anti-state, anti-national, inherently destabilizing, and therefore to be put down with a heavy hand. We see not only the structures and the instrumentalities set up by the state to provide justice to its citizens, but also the mass, media and section of the intellengentia, collaborating in a wide ranging process of ruthlessly enforcing the status quo for even further regression from the status quo.  The relative inefficiency of the Civil Liberties and Democratic Rights movements in the country can be understood a t many level, the changing context within which the movement attempts to define itself, a shift in the nature of issues that the movement addresses itself to, the integral organisational dynamics of the movement, the strategies employed etc. All of them are post-facto explanations, that the movement is weak because the state is repressive.

The emerging scenario of the politics of human rights in India is becoming increasingly complicated and problem ridden, given the growing brutalisation of the state in its relationship to civil society as well as the increasing availability of the apparatus of the state to dominant interests keen on maintaining and augmenting levels of oppression and terror. On the other hand when it comes to the growth of the human rights movement, most of this tend to hold back, keen on retaining their specialized identities and afraid of being swamped by a generalised platform or body. Many of the human rights activities have themselves contributed to such an image by insisting that a human rights body should confine itself to fighting against atrocities committed by the state, not in dealing with the sources of these atrocities in the structure of the state and of civil society. While individual activists may involve themselves in political activities, including in party politics, it is not the role of the human rights bodies to get so entangle.

There has taken place an unprecedented polarisation of the Indian society following the rapid spread of communalism and the systematic build up in the media of the extremist and terrorist, threat to the country’s integrity and unity. This has polarised the human rights community too. Alongside, there has taken place a striking decline in the independence and objectivity of the judiciary and the press, partly due to the overall polarisation of society but due to more comprehensive conditioning of the middle class mind that anything that appears to weaken the government at the Centre weakens the Indian state, and anything that weakens the state weakens the constitutional fabric of democracy. The paradox is almost tragic: the greater the incident of oppression, the more widespread the span and location of resistance from civil society, which in turn produces the sense that the state is under attack and must be protected. This inturn is reflected in the fact that increasingly the relevance of human rights activist and organisations is reduced to holding protest meetings and rallies, and to registering and fighting court cases which also amount to little more than protesting, as nothing much come out of the writs and petitions anyway. This has made human rights endeavour even more segmented and specialised, reducing to lawyers and orators.

India has a record of flagrant violation of rights at every level. From a situation of lawlessness created by the state through undemocratic legislation, to arbitrary acts of both policy and intervention, successive governments have attempted to maintain policies that deny to a majority of citizens the right to civilized human existence.

Struggles of the Civil Societies in Manipur

Liberal theory considers civil society to be a property of democratic states. The presence of civil society ensures democratic states, because among the values of civil soceity are those of accountability of states, and limits on state power. Civil society affords a rule bound space independent of the state yet protected by the state, where right-bearing individuals pursue their private interests in peaceful association with others. For the Marxist, the liberal conceptualization of civil society as a sphere of rights legitimizes the domination of the capitalist classes. Civil in the Marxist perspective, is the arena for selfish competition, wage-linked exploitation, and class in equality. Marxist theory has consequently seen civil society as the sphere for the buying, selling and reproduction of labour power.  The state in this perspective by maintaining the fiction of equal rights and freedom actually guarantees the depredation and moral squalor of civil society. Liberals concentrate on the oppressions of the state, but they do not inquire into the oppressions of civil society, and Marxist concentration upon the oppressions of this sphere has led them to neglect any analysis of the institutions and values of the civil society. The privileging of civil society as the sphere where democratic politics can be constructed has major implications. It involves the recognition that the right to hold states responsible and to ensure political accountability resides not only in institutions and constitutions, laws and regulations, but is a part of the social fabric.2 Firstly the notion of the public sphere of civil society implies that people come together in an arena of common concerns. The public is not only what pertains to the whole society, it is the vital mechanism which brings together individuals and groups located in private discourses, into a discourse based on shared and common concerns. The transfer from the private to the public takes place through the formation and dissemination of public opinion. The second implication is that it is desirable that, the debate and discussion is public in the sense of being accessible to all. Nobody should be barred on the grounds of his/her location in class or other structures. The third implication is that a space should exist outside officially prescribed channels of communication provided by the state where this free and public discussion and debate can take place.

 

On the other hand, he practices of civil society which are exposed most powerfully are the works of Hegel, Marx and Gramsci, which inhibits the process of democracy. Civil society has provided both the space for democracy and acted as a constraint upon it.

Civil society is not a once and for all phenomenon which can be constructed and left to fend for itself. The freedom of civil society is precarious and has to be guarded against any violations of the autonomy principle. it is perceived that the state had become much more powerful than desired. Indeed the modern state, with its apparatus of power and surveillance, posed a greater threat to human freedom than earlier states which did not possess the same range, modicum and mechanisms of power. Arundhati Roy said “our strategy should be not only to confront empire, but to lay siege to it. To deprive it of oxygen. To shame it. To mock it. With our art, our music, our literature, our stubbornness, our joy, our brilliance, our sheer relentlessness and our ability to tell our own stories. Stories that are different from the ones we’re being brainwashed to believe”.

The values of civil society are those of political participation, state accountability, and publicity of politics. The institutions of civil society are associational and representative forums, a free press and social associations. The inhabitants of this sphere are the rights bearing and juridically define individually.

The Armed Forces Special Powers Act, is more of a nuisance than a solution. “Irom Sharmila Chanu’s protest and campaign to repeal the AFSPA must be heard and consider as a democratic non-violent protest.” The Act which gives extra-ordinary power to the security forces was imposed in some States of North East India with the noble intention of controlling militancy but ended up leasing an undeclared State of emergency for undefined reasons and for an unlimited period, it alleged. “The Act has been misused by the security forces by taking advantage of counter insurgency operation in every nook and corners in the North Eastern States. People had undergone several abuses due to the excesses repeatedly committed by the Security Forces throughout the years. It has repeatedly violated the right to life, liberty and security of person.” The foundation also called for incorporation of the list of ‘dos’ and ‘don’ts’ as laid down and propounded by the Supreme Court of India and immediate review of the Act from the entire North East India.  The Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has admitted AFSPA as inhuman in addition to Justice Jeevan Reddy’s recommendation to scrap the military Act, the civil societies demanded the Government of India and the Government of Manipur to repeal AFSPA without any further delay.  the Government of India responded with all the urgency when Ana Hazare fasted for just 11 days whereas New Delhi has been paying no attention to Sharmila’s 11 years old fasting, the partial attitude of the Government of India is being decried.

Former union home secretary G.K. Pillai said, Irom Sharmila’s fasting for the repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), must ”reach out to people across the country” like anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare to make Irom Sharmila cause known, says AFSPA enables security forces to shoot at sight and arrest anybody without a warrant if an area is declared disturbed.  “It is a question of how you reach out to people. AFSPA is applicable only in Jammu and Kashmir and in the northeastern states. Corruption is pricking people everywhere and that’s why Anna Hazare had a high moral ground,”  “She (Sharmila) has to reach out to the people across the country. She has to say why she is on fast,”  “AFSPA should be repealed and the government should have a humane law,” AFSPA was passed in 1990 to grant special powers and immunity from prosecution to security forces to deal with raging insurgencies in northeastern states and in Jammu and Kashmir. The Act is a target for local human rights groups and international campaigners such as Amnesty International.

Home Minister P Chidambaram made a fresh attempt is being made to build consensus within the Government to amend the controversial Armed Forces Special (Powers) Act (AFSPA). He said “I am trying to revisit AFSPA but as you know one needs to build a consensus within the Government before amendments can be brought before Parliament.” He said in J & K there was a consensus within the Central Government that if the state withdraws the Disturbed Areas Act, AFSPA will automatically go. “In Kashmir, the state government to was asked to review the application of Disturbed Areas Act and if that act is reviewed, then automatically if the DA does not apply to areas in Kashmir, the AFSPA is not applied to that area in Kashmir. In a statement of the Prime Minister (Manmohan Singh) said that we will replace the AFSPA with a more humane act.  On the other hand the army has conveyed its apprehensions to the Defence Ministry that replacement of AFSPA or any dilution could hamper its operational capabilities to effectively deal with militancy and insurgency. “On the first route (in JK) there is a consensus at the Centre. Now at the operational level, the JK government would have to, in the Unified Command, agree to review the application of Disturbed Areas Act. “If they are able to lift the DAA from, say five places, then AFSPA would not apply to those five places. So that is something which they have to do and I am in touch with the Chief Minister (Omar Abdullah),” Chidambaram said, adding Omar has to “weigh the pros and cons and then decide when to do it, where to do it. That is for them.”Omar’s government in the state has already constituted a Committee earlier this year to review the DAA. The Committee comprises Director General of Police, Home Secretary and Corps Commander of 15 Corps (for Kashmir) and Corps Commander of 16-Corps (for Jammu).

Congress Party’s scion Rahul Gandhi believes that army is no solution to insurgencies either in Kashmir, North East or Chattisgarh and bated for a political solution to problems. “We need to talk and the political process must begin.  “Army is no solution to the problem of insurgency. Army is meant to fight with the enemy and not with our own people.”

It is pathetic that the Indian State has not toed the democratic norms. Rather, on security point of view, the Indian state either simply copied the draconian laws of the colonial or even made new extraordinary and harsher laws in maintaining law and order and tackling insurgency movements in the country. Some of these laws that have been quite abusively used – Punjab Security of State Act, 1953, The Assam Maintenance of Public Order (Autonomous Districts) Act, 1958, The Terrorist and Disruptive (Prevention) Act, 1987, The Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance (POTO), 2001, repealed etc, etc. It has been experienced oft and again that these extraordinary laws do not solve the problems of people’s dissent and insurgency movements. Instead the common people have been the victims of the atrocious laws. While the Terrorist and Disruptive (Prevention) Act, 1987 has lapsed after wide protests, the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 is still being promulgated in various states, particularly, the North East India. Sharmila has been undergoing fast unto death for complete removal of the Act. Scores of concerned civil society organisations including Sharmila Kanba Lup and the intelligentsia among others have been launching movements against any further promulgation of such Act, the authority has ever been arrogant. Thus, we experienced gross violation of human rights of the common peoples and subjugation has become the political culture. It is an empirical fact, that Manipuris have been protesting against even the British regime, can be clearly known from events, the First and Second Nupilals, Anglo-Manipuri War, Anglo-Kuki War, Irawat’s and Zeliangrong movements. Despite this situation, merger of Manipur to the Indian Dominion had added fuel to the fire, as a setback there came up the secessionist movements.

1 Harsh Sethi and Smithu Kothari, “Introduction”, in Rethinking Human Rights: Challenges for Theory and Action, edited by, Smitu Kothari and Harsh Sethi, (Delhi: Lokayan, 1989),1.

2 Neera Chandoke, State and Civil Society: Explorations in Political Theory, (New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1995), 61.

 

Posted: 2012-04-14

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/movements-for-human-rights-in-manipur/

Manipur Cycle Club – Bamboo Cycle fabrication workshop

From 1st-4th April 2012, Manipur Cycle club in collaboration with South Asia Bamboo Foundation and… more »

From 1st-4th April 2012, Manipur Cycle club in collaboration with South Asia Bamboo Foundation and support from Manipur Skill development society(MSDS) organized a Bamboo Cycle fabrication workshop at the premises of the office of Manipur CYCLE CLUB LOCATED AT PAONA BAZAR. It was inaugurated by South Asia Bamboo Foundation (SABF) founder Kamesh Salam and National Bamboo Mission, state chapter Assistant Mission Director Nongmaithem Somorendro.

On the closing session of the 4 day workshop, Mr N. Kipgen, Chief Conservator of forest and also Director, Manipur state Bamboo Mission, Mr Homeshore, Director, Department of environment and ecology wing attended alongwith other executive members of the club as well as media personnel who had a preview of the three prototypes of bamboo cycles that were made during the four day workshop with Mr. Haobam Sukumar, as the main designer. 14 participants were trained in the skill of identifying bamboo exclusively for making cycles and how to treat the bamboo and in assembling the cycle.

Ramananda Wangkheirakpam
Vice President

MANIPUR CYCLE CLUB

JUPITER YAMBEM CENTER, PAONA INTERNATIONAL
MARKET, IMPHAL, MANIPUR, PIN – 795001
PHONE: 0385 2445134
Website: www.mancycleclub.org
Email: mancycleclub@gmail.com

Posted: 2012-04-14

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/manipur-cycle-club-bamboo-cycle-fabrication-workshop/

PRESS RELEASE – “The Forlorn” to open IISFF on Sunday featuring Iconic Bengali actor and Dadasaheb Phalke Award Winner Soumitra Chatterjee

PRESS RELEASE Imphal April 13, 2012 Slated to be the biggest event in North East… more »

PRESS RELEASE

“The Forlorn” to open IISFF on Sunday featuring Iconic Bengali actor and Dadasaheb Phalke Award Winner Soumitra Chatterjee

Imphal
April 13, 2012

Slated to be the biggest event in North East India, the First Imphal International Short Film Festival 2012 (www.imphalfilmfestival.org) that is all scheduled to open its doors this Sunday April 15 at Rupmahal Theatre, Imphal, Manipur has finally announced its opening film at the festival. Directed by Saptaswa Basu – The Forlorn – that has Iconic Bengali actor and Dadasaheb Phalke Award Winner Soumitra Chatterjee in a lead role will open the festival on Sunday.

Directed by Saptaswa Basu, “The Forlorn”, is a psychological thriller centering around a young woman who, after moving into a new apartment, stumbles upon the previous tenant’s diary. This former occupant, a parapsychology researcher, is dead. She becomes obsessed with the diary. Her behaviour becomes increasingly erratic; she sees hallucinations and is tormented by the feeling of being stared at even when she is alone. Soumitra Chatterjee plays the role of a senior psychiatrist who helps his junior Saswata Chatterjee (who recently was seen with Vidya Balan in Kahaani, where he played a simple looking scary contract killer Bob Biswas) deal with the same. Also featuring Rini Ghosh in the female lead, this High Definition digital short film deals with both parapsychology and psychological issues but this is obviously not a supernatural film.

“Besides working in award winning films of Satyajit Ray, Mrinal Sen and Tapan Sinha, Chatterje encourages short film makers,” says Director Saptaswa Basu whose was insistent that Chatterjee can only play the part of the psychologist perfectly. “It was a rigorous process, convincing Chatterjee to take on the role. He is a very busy person and is also very choosy about the roles he is playing,” says Basu. “I met him with my mum… I introduced myself; I said I am going to do this kind of a film and it is very important for you to work with me because the character only suits you.”

This film was premiered at the 8th Kolkata Short Film Festival (International) on 8th December, 2011. This is the first short film in which Saswata Chatterjee has acted in and shared screen space together with Soumitra Chatterjee after a very long time.

According to Mohen Naorem, the festival director, “We were keenly looking forward to have Dadasaheb Phalke Award Winner Soumitra Chatterjee amongst us to motivate young film makers across the global platform on the opening day of the festival. However, he wouldn’t be able to make his presence at the festival due to his pre-commitments. He has however, wished the festival all success.”

A four day cultural event will mark this prestigious festival. Outstanding 40 domestic films and 10 International films has been received for the screenings like Open Doors by Ashish Pandey, Brian’s Gandhi by Ram J Saravanan, Maut Ka Kunwa by Sumant Bapurao Mali from Mumbai, LOC-A Playground by Atul Kumar Sharma from Mumbai, Bengali film Swapno Satyakam by Tomal Chakraborti, Tamil film Sathish Chandrasekaran B.E., MBA by Sathish Chandrasekaran, Malayalam film “Sabdarekha” by Nirmal S, Samvedanam by Methil Komalankutty from Dubai, Iranian film The Bare Foot Leader Zohreh Zamani.

Organized and promoted by “Legend Studio Manipur and Action for Social Advancement (ASA) Manipur” with the support of Film Forum Manipur. IISFF 2012 will witness great short films from around the world.

More Information at:
Mohen Naorem
Festival Director
Imphal International Short Film Festival 2012
Iroisemba Maning Leikai, Imphal Manipur-795001
+919206139378
imphalfilmfestival@gmail.com
WWW.IMPHALFILMFESTIVAL.ORG

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/04/press-release-%E2%80%9Cthe-forlorn%E2%80%9D-to-open-iisff-on-sunday-featuring-iconic-bengali-actor-and-dadasaheb-phalke-award-winner-soumitra-chatterjee/

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