Legal tangles in VAW

Violence against women and children has become a nightmare in the State today. In the past three-four years, the State has witnessed a rapid rise in the number of women

Violence against women and children has become a nightmare in the State today. In the past three-four years, the State has witnessed a rapid rise in the number of women murdered cold-bloodedly or subjected to several forms of violence especially sexual in nature. At the same time there is always the fear and apprehension of many more such cases going unreported. Unfortunately, the number of conviction rates in such reported cases is almost negligible. Except for a few high profile cases like the U-Morok rape case, victims and their families continue to hope for justice in most cases as in the alleged murder and rape case of a mother and daughter duo from Phayeng. Three years on since their 38-years old daughter-in-law and teenaged granddaughter were allegedly killed after being raped, an octogenarian and his wife continue to yearn for justice. At the same time, the two are looking after the three children left behind by their daughter in law whose husband had long died in another unfortunate incident. Without going much deeper into the wounds of the family, and reopening old cuts which are still fresh in the minds of the young children left behind and the elders awaiting justice, it is safe to assume that this family is one of many such families suffering a similar fate.

It is a shame that women continue to suffer in a society that takes pride in its meira paibis and ema keithels, and where the likes of Kunjarani, Mary Kom and Rani Gaidinliu had rose to fame through courage, valour and hard work. As much as the increase in such crime rate is a concern, the fact that conviction rates in such crime are very low is also an area of major concern. According to All Manipur Bar Association president Khaidem Mani, the failure to deliver justice in such cases can be attributed to the lengthy and deplorable investigation conducted by the police, lack of witnesses, failure to file charge-sheet in time and lack of evidence in cases where charge-sheets have been filed, as was reported earlier by the IFP.

People should no longer be subjected to any more delay in the delivery of justice and at the same time encourage the government to be zero tolerance towards such crimes. The government should use it`™s machineries to their full potential and ensure speedy trials in such cases. However, as noted earlier, the system works in a much intricate process and any delay in any stage would mean the whole process is delayed. The witnesses need to understand their responsibilities as much as the government machineries like the police and the judiciary in bringing a speedy trial. While the primary prerogative for protecting the rights of the people lies with the State, it is also the duty of the people to support the smooth functioning of the government machineries. However, the solution to the problem lies within the society itself and in fact the process could start from the family by incorporating into the young ones the idea of gender equality.

Leader Writer: Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/11/legal-tangles-in-vaw/

Surviving Chaos

It is unlikely the multidimensional conflicts in Manipur would go away immediately. This is in spite of so many other conflict-ridden places in the neighbourhood going through a healing process.

It is unlikely the multidimensional conflicts in Manipur would go away immediately. This is in spite of so many other conflict-ridden places in the neighbourhood going through a healing process. Sad as the case may be, it is essential the people assert their will to keep the place afloat and away from insanity. This will entail keeping all the essential survival qualities of a society intact. Above all, it will be an absolute necessity for the place to continue honing its competitive skills and spirit in pace with developments outside. This is not an easy task even in normal times, and will definitely be uphill for a place immersed in conflicts. But, there is no other way than to do it, if survival as a society is important. Surely, none of us want the state to be reduced to impoverishment and despair beyond recovery. The apprehension that such a scenario may become a reality in our state is very immediate, considering it is slipping in many spheres of activities needed to keep an economy going. Its education is in the pit. Most of the thousands of graduates churned out by our colleges and universities are today employable only by the government which grades qualification standards for jobs by academic degrees alone, and not by the market worth of skills candidates possess. Because the market has remained stunted thus, job seekers with worthy skills probability would leave the state for greener pastures elsewhere. In the absence of a government with substance, or more importantly moral authority, policy matters continues to be decided from the streets. All these say very little for the shape of Manipur`™s not so distant future. The vision of a weak and vulnerable people left to fend for themselves amidst the blinding rush of the competitive world, cannot fail to eerily haunt anybody who dares to imagine what Manipur`™s destiny might be, given our present situation.

There is no doubt the place has done well in sports and performing arts. But these may actually be a direct consequence of the violence and conflicts that have enveloped our society. In fact, to use a Freudian interpretation, they may actually be the manifestation of the same violence, but in a sublimated way. The angst within the soul that has been the driving force behind all of the violence may actually also be the materials that form the building blocks of our sports and arts. But in enumerating and evaluating the achievements of a society, there are things that go far beyond. The erstwhile East Germany and the Soviet Union were sporting powerhouses and havens for the arts. Their failure to survive should be evidence enough these are essential but hardly enough. So let the state not rest content with the laurels earned in these fields alone. There will have to be more, much more.
One needs only to look around to discover how many people are actually absolutely incomeless even in the state capital. The traditional family structure has been providing the cushion to absorb the devastation this could have caused. The welfare state that our polity is supposed to be by definition, even if it is a begging one, has also helped. If not anything else, it has been providing close to a lakh direct government jobs, justifiably or not, with hansom salaries, which have been managing to keep the fluidity of our markets, artificially or otherwise. The question is, how much can the family system and the welfare government buffers keep the place from imploding under the surmounting pressures? At this moment, remove these buffers and there will be very few props on which the economy can stand on. Hence the insurrection and the political uncertainty as an excuse for the chaos must end. Whatever the outcome of the conflicts, at the end of it, the people must still have the legs to stand on, and this can happen only if they make the extra effort to prevent the economy from grinding to a halt in the meantime.

Leader writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/11/surviving-chaos/

Manipur Medical Council

The Manipur Medical Council becoming functional after two years of its inception is welcome news. Though the nod to the Manipur Medical Council Act was given by the president of

The Manipur Medical Council becoming functional after two years of its inception is welcome news. Though the nod to the Manipur Medical Council Act was given by the president of India in 2012, it has taken two years for the institution to become serviceable. The MMC Act empowers the Council with a wide ranging power and functions. It is a statutory body whose functioning is almost like the Medical Council of India. The only difference would be in their reach: MMC has its jurisdiction limited to the state whereas MCI has its jurisdiction over the whole country. Much like the MCI, MMC`™s primary business is to set standard of medical practice in the state. Maintaining live register of medical practitioners is one of the means to that end. In absence of a medical council of the state, medical practitioner had to rely on other state medical councils like the Assam Medical Council. From now on medical degree holders will no longer undergo the hassle of registering outside the state. As reported, MMC has constituted four committees namely `“ Public Relation Committee, Prevention of Quackery Committee, Accreditation of Continuing Medical Education Committee and Medical Ethics Committee. We believe, of all the committees, the Public Relation Committee has a more challenging task ahead. It is common knowledge that there have been ugly incidents of patient-party turning violent against doctors for their alleged negligence or misconduct while discharging their duties. The most recent publicised incident took place at Raj Medicity, a private clinic located at North AOC, Imphal. In that incident the patient-party went berserk following the unfortunate demise of a patient who underwent surgery in the private clinic. In such cases there are always indications of communication gap or miscommunication between the patient-party and the hospital authorities. This is despite the fact that private clinics maintain a certain level of public relation unlike the government hospitals. One can guess what would be the scenario in government hospitals where public relation efforts are almost non-existent. One can hasten to point out that such situations occur even though public relation officers are duly appointed in these hospitals. The Regional Institute of Medical Sciences in Imphal is one government hospital in which there have been numerous reports of unwanted incidents taking place mainly because of the lack of public relation effort in the right way, at the right time. Another issue that has to come under the scanner of MMC is that of doctors serving in more than one hospital at a time. It has been a contention that government medical practitioners are not able to give needed time to their patients in the hospitals in their haste to make themselves available in private clinics as well. Needless to say, this kind of practice is blatantly against the ethical code of the noble profession. It is against the service conditions of a government servant; so far the state government has been blind to this widespread conduct. The newly instituted MMC has given hope that it will pay attention to grievances of the public against misconduct or negligence of medical practitioners, and that it shall act against such instances. It is, however, important to note that prerogative of the MMC is binding only to those practitioners who are registered under it. As the institution is in its initial stage most of the medical practitioners at present are beyond its purview. We hope the MMC will grow into a mature institute in the days to come, and set healthy standard of the medical profession and its practice in the state.

Leader Writer: Senate Kh

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/11/manipur-medical-council/

Systemising Imphal Addresses

Imphal city is rapidly growing. Even before our very eyes, signs of this growth are starkly visible. To those who have been away from the state for longer than a

Imphal city is rapidly growing. Even before our very eyes, signs of this growth are starkly visible. To those who have been away from the state for longer than a year at a time, quite understandably, these changes appear to be happening in leaps and bounds. New restaurants, new hotels, new gymnasiums, new shopping centres, new automobile showrooms, catering to different strata of economic classes are opening up as if in a race with each other. Horizontally the city is expanding too. What once were outskirts have been absorbed into the city core. Satellite townships like Mantripukhri and Canchipur have today come to be contiguous with the main Imphal city. There has not been too much vertical growth, but it would be reasonable to predict this too would begin to happen sooner than later, particularly because there is now hardly any space left to expand horizontally without encroaching into farmlands, a prospect which the people fear and the government now has shown resolve not to allow. Paucity of space would also soon probably ensure apartment style accommodations are the new norm that replace Imphal`™s familiar homesteads. We saw this happen in Guwahati in just a matter of two or so decades. In the Northeast, in all likelihood, Imphal, currently struggling to manage its growing congestion would be next to transform similarly.

Call this new adversity or opportunity as you will, but the fact is, this is poised to be Imphal`™s new reality. This being the case, the only way to come to terms with it is to be prepared for the eventuality. Expectedly, there would be many challenges, including some very major ones. To name a few, these would be in areas of traffic management, drainage, waste disposal, clean water supply and many more. As of today, even in handling these few named challenges, Imphal has been miserably failing. The city has not even come up with a comprehensive solution to how it would manage its own waste. Since much of this waste constitute of non-degradable synthetic waste, the problem is even more compound. Sure no house can be considered beautiful if it does not have a clean toilet facility. Sadly and strangely, the irony of the situation still does not seem to have sunk in with the authorities. However we still hope they will soon. We also hope they will wake up to the reality of the other challenges as well. In this regard, it must be mentioned that the tough initiative of the current Congress government to widen Imphal roads, even though it caused dislocation of many, is laudable.

There is one other area where the authorities can begin work immediately. This one is hardly likely to cause the usual heartburns of acquisitions and demolitions. The authorities must in a systematic way, reorganise the mailing addresses of the city. Name the streets, leiraks and residential blocks, give a number to each house in each block, street and leirak. The old way was good enough once, when everyone practically knew each other. Today as the city grows, not only the population of permanent residents are growing, but also a floating population of company executives from other cities, workers, professionals etc. Many of them end up virtually without a reliable mailing address. Two decades ago, as one sat by the local road in the morning when people headed out for work, or in the evening when they returned home from work, one could recognize practically every single person who passes by, and close to 90 percent of them one was obliged to exchange greetings. Today, watching the same road at the same hours, chances are not even one is an acquaintance. Like it or not, this is the transformation Imphal is undergoing.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/11/systemising-imphal-addresses/

Sharmila’s Anxiety

Sharmila has just returned from Delhi where she had been summoned to appear before the Patiala House Court, in a case slapped against her for hunger striking in Delhi’s Jantar

Sharmila has just returned from Delhi where she had been summoned to appear before the Patiala House Court, in a case slapped against her for hunger striking in Delhi’s Jantar Mantar against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, AFSPA 1958. The charge has nothing to do with the AFSPA though. It is on the other hand about her imagined attempt to commit suicide. Some see this charge as absurd, but there obviously is more than meets the eye. The situation tells further of the uniqueness of Sharmila’s protest, and how even the notion of suicide is called upon to be redefined after her. Interestingly, this is a question raised by the acts of someone from a past generation, Mahatma Gandhi. Can a person who decides to willingly give up a vital bodily survival need – that of nutrition – in support of a cause, even if it is the most just, be guilty of suicide attempt. If it does, it never applied to Gandhi, for he was never arrested, detained or force fed, as Sharmila is being subject to for this act. Maybe it is the approaches of the government then and now. Maybe Sharmila’s arrest is not born out of any State venom, and that it is just another way of not allowing her to die. This of course involves a morally uneasy acknowledgment that what she is fighting for is in vain.

It is never going to be an easy answer. There is also unlikely ever to be an honest answer either, precisely because such an answer is next to impossible. Given the fact that condemnable though the AFSPA may be, it is unlikely to go just as yet, should the right approach be to free Sharmila and let her starve to death, or should she be made to live, under detention and force-feeding? No wonder the idea of an ultimate resistance has never ever been dissociated altogether from its fearsome companion – death. From Jesus to Sharmila, this idea has remained. This being the case, the feeling that swell in you cannot be more ambiguous. You feel guilty to encourage her in her struggle, for would amount to asking her to give up so much, including life. You feel guilty not to support her either, for there cannot be a more just cause than hers.

If those who support and care for Sharmila are in this Catch-22 dilemma, it is almost beyond imagination what struggles Sharmila must be going through herself in her lonely 14 year super human odyssey. It is however sad to notice an increasing anxiety in her that she is not getting the kind of support for her struggle as she would like. This was again indicated in her statement to the media recently upon her return from Delhi. Here too, it is difficult to imagine what is expected of all who claim to place their solidarity with her. Are they expected to also decide to join the hunger strike? Should they also be willing to give up their lives? While such expectations would rank as unrealistic by any standard, we believe there are ways of extending this moral support in a substantive ways that go beyond the lip service of condemning the AFSPA. Let her spirit of sacrifice be imbibed by all so they too may be willing to sacrifice in ways within their capacity. It would for instance be in this spirit if the people, for their own greater common good, decide to give up the selfishness of corruption, so that the society may begin to be fair and just, where honesty and industry are rewarded, thus making way for the fountainhead of creativity to be unchained again. This would take the society a long way towards a final resolution to so many of its vexed problems. This would also, we are sure, rekindle hope in Sharmila’s heart in her heroic struggle.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/11/sharmilas-anxiety/

Is Patriarchy Responsible?

The spate of an unprecedented cases of rape reported in the State is a major cause of concern as it is symptomatic of how a dyed-in-the-wool patriarchal society is finding

The spate of an unprecedented cases of rape reported in the State is a major cause of concern as it is symptomatic of how a dyed-in-the-wool patriarchal society is finding it difficult to come to terms with questions of gender equality and women empowerment. Even if it is farfetched to attribute even the sexual coercion on minors to a systemic patriarchal order, it can only be said that men who for far too long have been riding roughshod over the fairer sex and enjoying the freedom to force themselves upon women without their consent under the social sanction provided by age-old traditions like Nupi Chenba are finding it hard to come to grips with the women of today who are more likely to take their own decisions.

Even if our society is extremely conservative, the winds of change are blowing as more people from the State are being exposed to different cultures. Cultural influence, here, is a double edged sword as people tend to pick up both what is worth emulating with what should be discarded.

The easy access to pornography is often cited as a reason responsible for encouraging men to force themselves on women. However, this observation is contentious as in some countries like Japan where there is a spurt in pornographic consumption, violence against women are reported to have declined.

Some biologists maintained that the tendency of sexual coercion among men is due to the human evolutionary process. Sexual coercion, or to put it more bluntly: rape, is believed to be widely prevalent among some of our nearest primates. A study done on more than 150 societies at the University of Pennsylvania revealed that men who were conditioned to respect the female virtues of growth and the sacredness of life were least likely to violate women. The study also made an observation that rape is rare in those societies where nature is held sacred.

It is for the trained sociologists or psychologists to find out the root cause of the spurt in reported cases of rape incidents across the State. We want to set the ball rolling in discovering why cases of violence against women, including minor girls, have increased exponentially these days.

Having said that, a small observation of our society will suffice to find out how poorly represented the fairer sex are in economic and political decision making. Even if we showcase Ima Keithel as a symbol of the freedom enjoyed by women in our society, they still occupy a low status. The fact that we have only two elected women legislators in the 60 member Manipur Legislative Assembly is evidence enough. The Meira Paibis are an aberration which in the ultimate analysis is not a cause of celebration. Meira Paibis are celebrated all over as symbols of true emancipated women but nothing can be further from the truth.

Coming back to the increasing incidents of reported rape cases, law enforcement agencies are to be blamed to a great extent as rapists are seldom convicted in the State. As a result, potential rapists are emboldened as they are confident of walking scot free.

Leader Writer: Svoboda Kangleicha

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/11/is-patriarchy-responsible/

College Teachers Transfer Policy

The state government has announced the transfer policy of teaching faculties for technical and higher education. As per the new approved policy, teaching faculties of the government colleges and other

The state government has announced the transfer policy of teaching faculties for technical and higher education. As per the new approved policy, teaching faculties of the government colleges and other institutes of higher education including engineering colleges and polytechnic, will no longer be transferable. The faculties will be allowed to serve at their currently assigned posting till retirement. Though, we do not have access to the policy document for a closure scrutiny, the policy as revealed by the government spokesperson through the media gives the impression of neither a flawed rationale nor a refreshing change. The policy comes with both advantages and disadvantages. Advocates of this new policy would assert that it will put an end to ‘punishment transfer’ raj, as it has been a practice in the government establishment to transfer teachers to unfavourable postings, whenever there is friction between the higher-ups and their subordinates, or when the authorities wishes to flex their muscle to reaffirm that they are the boss. This is not to demean our teaching community, but it has been a common practice for some teachers to lobby about the power corridors, either to stop or to move a transfer. Not to mention that teachers have even been resorting to seek the influence of student union to censure transfer orders. It has also been opined that the new transfer policy will help the teachers in developing a sense of belonging with their particular college or institution, which will help them serve better. In this regard, we hope the policy will serve its purpose, for it is important to have a sense of belonging with an institution for it to develop and progress.

On the flipside, as per the government statement, regular teachers will be allowed to make their choice of college before the official promulgation of the new transfer policy. In all likelihood, overwhelming preferences will be for the ‘elite’ colleges in Imphal. The Dhanamanjuri College will be among the top picks, which has already been tagged as premier college. And above all, this college, sooner or later, is to be upgraded into a state university. Among the preferred list, DM College will be followed by Ghanapriya Women College, Imphal College, Manipur College and some other colleges in the twin districts of Imphal. The official statement said that a committee will look into the choices of institutions offered by the teachers, taking into consideration their seniority and availability of post. The move is deemed to create the committee into a lobbying room for preferred postings, which will in turn negate the transfer policy itself. Moreover, the possibility of teachers preferring postings near their residence cannot be ruled out. In that scenario, disproportionate posting of teachers in colleges across the state will be an additional problem to be dealt with. The colleges in the far-flung areas and the hill districts are already facing shortages of teaching faculties, though new recruitment of teachers had already been announced by the government. To suggest an alternative transfer policy, there should be a mandatory rotational transfer system on the basis of two-three years posting at a college. That would allow wider exposure of our teachers, who would get the opportunity of learning from different experiences besides their academic exercises. Another option would be to create exchange programme of the teaching faculties between the colleges. We hope the authorities would give a thought into these aspects to enrich the policy.

Leader Writer: Senate Kh

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/college-teachers-transfer-policy/

Let the Dice Roll

It is indeed an interesting sight involving the festival of lights beside the usual fireworks. To the residents of the Imphal city, it is a familiar sight of the signature

It is indeed an interesting sight involving the festival of lights beside the usual fireworks. To the residents of the Imphal city, it is a familiar sight of the signature `Lagao`™ dice game being played in every nook and practical cranny. When the years were back, one could witness the lagao dice gambling being strategically perpetrated and positioned, i.e. to flee at the first sight of any approaching police personnel.

Now, times have changed and we witness during the Diwali festival that the cops who are supposed to be practically banning the gambling act and enforcing the law are very much `taking the law into their own hands`™, in a manner of speaking and translative , several policeman in their ivory maruti gypsies and motorbikes are doing the rounds of Imphal city for a singular purpose ; which is to collect a `lagao tax`™ or protection money. The dice master waves at the police with a note and the latter with a smile on his face accepts the offering and signals that the game be resumed. No one loses except the public.

The acceptance of this game in our society inclusive of the `Housie` or bingo game must obviously point to the fact that our society does accept gambling in a way or other. It is not a sin to have a go at the dice game and is viewed more of an entertainment. In fact, beside the gamblers, the dice game is being organized by women. It may be a form of women empowerment and suggest that times have indeed changed. An amusing sight to see the taxing policeman`™s awe when the ringmaster turn out to be women shouting the symbols of the dice and calling out odds against the gamers.

Back then, some years back. The public were made to part with their hard or easily earned money by scamsters. The frauds operated pyramid schemes or Ponzi schemes by such names of TVI, Visarev, Forex, Global Index Daily etc. and offered the proverbial pot of gold without working up a sweat. Many were duped by the schemers and the masterminds got away scot-free. There were no arrests made and again, it is only the public that loses.

Similarly, when the national highways are supposed held up by the organized highwaymen of the modern era; their reasons mostly based on ethnic lines. Essential commodities like fuel and cooking gas become scarce and prices skyrocket. A business cannot do business on loss, but he rather hikes the price to balance his loss. Here, the public also loses.

Times of election and once again , the drums beats a signal of free food, drinks and pocket money. It is an open secret that politicians woo voters with money. The amount is taken with such ethical standards that the person is obliged to vote for the person who has bribed him. Ultimately, the big time scamster having enough finances wins the election game. It may be akin to the lagao game now. The public is paid off just like the diwali policeman to turn a blind eye and the politician like the master gamer thumps his dice on the ground. But, unlike the dice which is unpredictable, the politician has already laid his cards or dices in his own way and the `House`™ never loses. The Manipur Assembly sittings may harbor such gamesters who with money, power and a tough hide have gained the people`™s mandate for a span of time. And candidly, the gamblers shout foul when their money is lost. Sometimes, we do not just lose money in Manipur but lives also.

AFSPA has taken away much. It is the gambling for all the wrong reasons that the public has ended up in the cesspool dug by themselves only.

But, with the new generation, one hopes that they gamble and bet on the right circumstances and true leaders to bring about a profitable future. In that way, let the dice roll.

Leader Writer: Paojel Chaoba

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/let-the-dice-roll/

Sarita Unfairly Victimised

Although this was expected, or rather feared would be the consequence, the news that another of Manipur`s ace boxers, who have also been world champion in her weight category, Laishram

Although this was expected, or rather feared would be the consequence, the news that another of Manipur`s ace boxers, who have also been world champion in her weight category, Laishram Sarita, along with her coaches and chef de mission of the Indian contingent to the Incheon Asiad earlier this year were provisionally suspended by the International Boxing Association, IABA, still came as a big shock. We had imagined the IABA would not be so harsh in its judgment chiefly for two reasons. One, upon the advice of authorities, Sarita had unconditionally apologised for her open rebellion at the widely perceived injustice she was subjected to by the boxing judges at Incheon, and the IABA had accepted the apology. Two, thanks to the widely available video recording of the quarter final match, it is almost universal knowledge now that she was made to lose despite clearly dominating her Korean opponent in at least the last three rounds of the four rounds fight. Commentaries by expert eyewitnesses of the fight also had unambiguously come out in support of Sarita, both in the opinion that the fight should have been awarded to her, and also that her protest was within understandable limits, if not befitting. Under the circumstance, it would not be altogether unreasonable to presume the IABA should have instead been induced to be more keen to set its own house in order, and work towards reforming the rules that govern boxing umpiring, and more importantly, devising measures to ensure umpires come under no influences of the scourge which has been the bane of all sports which command passionate spectators involvement `“ that of match fixing.

It is unlikely, the IABA authorities were unaware of all the suggestions that organised match fixing was very likely to have been the case in Incheon. Consider these statistics from the Incheon boxing ring. The Mongolian team not only lodged an official complaint when one of their boxers lost to a Korean fighters in what they believed was also very unfairly ruled in favour of the Korean, but they also officially threatened a walk out by their entire boxing contingent at the Games. According to reports, they did tone down their protest later, and refrained from such a walk out. Again, another Indian boxer, Laishram Debendro, was also visibly on the receiving end of another “grossly unfair” ruling in a bout with a Korean boxer, but he, although sorely disappointed, unlike Sarita, tamely accepted the verdict. Furthermore, in the case of Sarita, after she made public her strong displeasure, her Korean opponent, Ji-Na Park, honestly conceded that even she was embarrassed by the verdict and she too felt Sarita was the real winner of the bout. Under these circumstances, the IABA, though it is quite understandably upset by the extreme and public nature of Sarita`™s protest, ought to have seen the entire episode as one calling for introspection into its own functioning, rather than think of punishing the victim of its failings for daring to protest. We do hope the apex international amateur boxing governing body is capable of some measure of humility and ultimately withdraws its decision to award this harsh penalty to Sarita and her coaches.

Meanwhile, the Indian Olympic Association must also wake up. For long this has been either a den of corruption, or else an extension of the Babudom, where its executive body, a mix of bureaucrats and elected members, rather than take keen interests in the sports and sportsperson they are in charge of, treat their offices as opportunities to grab free travels to exotic sporting venue all over the world. Had the IOA officials who were at Incheon taken a proactive role in the entire episode, and instead of Sarita having to resort to individually fight the boxing establishment, they had taken the initiative to lodge official protests through official channels just as the Mongolian boxing contingent did, things may not have got so ugly and damaging for the Sarita`s as well as her coaches` careers.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/sarita-unfairly-victimised/

Festival Fever Untreated

The festival of light is already here to be celebrated with fervor and merriment. It will be immediately followed by another awaited festival of Ningol Chakouba. As curtain raiser to

The festival of light is already here to be celebrated with fervor and merriment. It will be immediately followed by another awaited festival of Ningol Chakouba. As curtain raiser to this festival, every year, fairs are organised at different pockets, in and around the town. Exhibitions and sales of handloom products under the initiative of the State government and its department have already begun. The Fishery department has announced that it will showcase indigenous varieties of fish, especially on the eve of the Ningol Chakouba. Besides the big commercial establishments doing roaring business, this is also time for small traders, self-help groups, and marginal entrepreneurs to try their hands in earning small profits for subsistence. The festive fever is evident at Khwairamband Keithel with shoppers bustling; bursting at the seams. This festive spirit would have got slightly subdued had the All Tribal Students`™ Union of Manipur (Tombing group) continued with their economic blockade along the highways of the State. With the oil stations closing down even before the blockade had started, public had begun to make beeline with their vehicles near the outlets. Over this, a senior journalist in a lighter vein had observed in a television discussion that our public is crazy about riding vehicles. He said the first thing that public do is to stand near the oil stations as soon as the news of any highway blockade is announced. Public gives priority to vehicular fuel rather than foodstuff, he added. At an average, more than fifty two-wheeler vehicles get registered at the Imphal West registration office every day. This small index of vehicles sold and registered could warrant the argument of our craziness for riding vehicles. We may also add that the act of queuing up at the oil stations could be manifestation of a deep seated insecurity. It appears this insecurity hinges on our inability to come out of the comfort zones. We are terrified of surrendering the comfort of reaching a particular destination on our vehicles. We are also terrified of compromising our `status`™ by travelling on passenger vehicles, not denying the fact that public transport system is in a shabby state in Manipur. The Manipur State Road Transport Corporation is almost nonexistent today. Modern low-floor buses which were allocated to the State under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission are now lying idle after a brief run, in and around the Greater Imphal. These buses were seen plying with good numbers of passengers when they were in service. The reason behind the withdrawal of the bus service demands attention.

Coming back to the argument of collective `craziness`™, the current festive session indicates one crude example of it i.e., our craze for gambling. Diwali or Jibanita is perfect time for gambling popularly known as Lagao. One can see it on the roadsides, at the leikai corners. Lagao mushrooms in these places when daylight fades. Here, people of all ages across-the-board take part. This reveals that there is a kind of social sanction attached to the game `“ the game of earning quick and easy money. Besides Lagao, we also have the Housie taking place in most parts of the valley, with wide ranging quantum of prize money. Within the last decade or so, Housie had started to take a different form, so much so that there were reports of Housie cartels getting busted by the police. The irony is that foot soldiers of the State police take equal part in gambling such as Lagao, that too in the name of controlling it. There is no sign of this collective `craziness`™ getting treated in the festive sessions to come. If one were to take cue from the anthropologist Clifford Geertz, who takes such instances of public gambling as more than what meets the eye, one could say that Lagao is an expression of, an enactment of a story that we tell ourselves to understand ourselves. This delineation would take us far afield, but it should suffice, for our purpose here, to say that the story that we tell of ourselves through Lagao cannot be a very happy story. Since this is a story that we tell of ourselves, this sad story, sad to say, shall continue.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/festival-fever-untreated/

Responding to HIV and AIDS

With the detection of the first HIV infection case in the country in 1986, the National AIDS Committee was constituted in the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare the following

With the detection of the first HIV infection case in the country in 1986, the National AIDS Committee was constituted in the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare the following year. Various steps were taken up to address HIV and AIDS on a national level with India`™s first National AIDS Control Program (NACP) being launched in 1992 and the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) set up to implement the program. The objective of NACP-I (1992-1999) was to control the spread of HIV infection. The main component of the program at this stage was prevention, another major step taken up was the initiation of the HIV sentinel surveillance system. Following this first phase, the second NACP (1999-2006) was focused on intervention programs with measures being taken up for what was known as targeted interventions for high risk groups of sex workers, men who have sex with men, injecting drug users, truckers and migrants. This second phase included the earlier program components but also put in new elements of behavior change communication, setting up voluntary counseling and testing facilities etc. Free anti-retroviral therapy was initiated in selected Government hospitals across the country while equal importance was given on developing policies to aid the work on the ground.
With the NACP third phase, the focus is on integration and mainstreaming where HIV and AIDS programs and services are to be owned by community based bodies and Government machineries taking the lead. This phase is where all the work covered under the earlier two phases are being tested as Government machineries in the country, have never been known to have functioned effectively, qualitatively and with transparency. Of course, a generalization would be far off the mark for there are states where Government Departments have taken the lead in mainstreaming HIV and AIDS programs. An example of this is Tamil Nadu where even before the third phase of NACP began, the state Transport Department ensured that people who were traveling to ART centers to get medicines were exempted from paying their fares. It was also in this state that people living with HIV and AIDS were given the benefit of various social welfare schemes.

The first HIV positive case in Manipur was reported in February 1990 from the blood samples of October 1989 among a cluster of Injecting Drug Users (IDUs). The state began strong with a State AIDS Policy being adopted in 1996, becoming the first state to do so. The range of programs and best practices taken up in the state have in fact been replicated in other parts of the country but these were mainly the initiatives of the non government sector and specifically those taken up by affected communities. They have not only taken the lead with regard to initiatives on the ground but have also been the ones who have been most vocal when it comes to loopholes in the HIV and AIDS programs and policies being implemented by the state government. Hence it comes as no surprise that such a body, the Community Network for Empowerment (CoNE) along with another body called the MACS Partner NGOs Forum (MPNF) has stepped in to make a poignant plea to the state authorities not to keep shuffling officials in charge of the state AIDS control program. Their positioning is that Government officials take time to be sensitized about HIV and AIDS and the communities affected by it, and that constant shuffling affects the pace of work on the ground. The Government has its ways of functioning but that does not mean that it shies away from ensuring that officials aware and sensitized about HIV and AIDS are the ones who lead programs.

Leader Writer: Chitra Ahanthem

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/responding-to-hiv-and-aids/

Hiyanglam Litmus Test

The bye poll to the Hiyanglam Assembly constituency ultimately went to the ruling Congress. Though only for a single seat, and that too with only a little over two years

The bye poll to the Hiyanglam Assembly constituency ultimately went to the ruling Congress. Though only for a single seat, and that too with only a little over two years left for the term of the current Assembly to end, the contest was unusually hot. The main contenders were the ruling Congress, already in a dominant position in the House, the BJP, shining on the reflected halo of charismatic Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, the Trinamool Congress, the second largest party in the Assembly but currently under severe internal strife, as well as the MPP, now only a shadow of what it was once. This was expected though, for the main stake was whether chief minister Okram Ibobi`™s government, which enjoys an absolute majority, would actually be able withstand the Modi wave sweeping the country, demolishing his party the Congress almost with systematic certainty. Till Sunday, this BJP storm proved unstoppable, with Maharashtra and Haryana Assembly going the BJP way convincingly. Hiyanglam was therefore important for more reasons than numbers. Ibobi however has once again proven the Northeast is an exception, most of the time preferring the Congress over any of its major rivals, although signs of the Congress caving in to BJP pressures were already visible in Assam in the last Parliamentary election.

Hiyanglam is just one seat, and theoretically even if this seat had gone to the BJP, the party would have had only one seat in the House of 60, and therefore should still have remained insignificant. But the insecure and extremely selfish nature of politics in the State being such, even a tiny chink in the Congress armour could have led to major breaches ultimately causing dam bursts, and through the once rampant but now subdued culture of political defection, the State BJP`™s bluff could actually have transformed from a paper tiger to a real menace. This would have been so, especially if the Governor of the State ceased to be a neutral arbitrator and became the BJP`™s cheerleader. In view of the manner in which State Governors were shunted or removed upon the BJP ascending to power at the Centre, there was reasonable suspicion amongst the people this could actually prove to be the scenario, unfortunate as this would have been for the future of Indian politics. But this was just a conjecture, and as things are turning out, quite unnecessary as well. In any case it is unfair to presume the State`™s new Governor would have a BJP tilt. Under the circumstance, the only thing which could have been still predicted with reasonable accuracy would have been the eagerness with which our MLAs would have switched sides for personal gains, should they have perceived a possible change in the political power equation in the State. Unfortunately for them, the Hiyanglam result has not given them this opportunity.
There were however more reasons why the ambitions of the political chameleons amongst our ruling MLAs, as well as the State BJP`™s vaunts of an imminent entry into a position of dominance in the Assembly by the back door without winning the people`™s mandate via the election process, would have proven elusive. The Central BJP under the leadership of Narendra Modi, currently riding high on a popularity wave, winning convincingly in actual political arenas one after another in the country, do not need to be stooping to this extent just to lap up small State Assemblies. In fact, Modi probably would not even want to risk entering controversial territories of politics so routine in the past, and tarnish his formidable reputation, at least just as yet.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/hiyanglam-litmus-test/

Skin deep or widespread

The violent attacks on people from the Northeast first in Bangalore and then in Delhi last week by gangs of hooligans, though in cities separated by over a thousand miles,

The violent attacks on people from the Northeast first in Bangalore and then in Delhi last week by gangs of hooligans, though in cities separated by over a thousand miles, were too close to each to not see a pattern. The expletives and abuses, the victims said they were subjected to, also clearly indicate hatred on the basis of race. In the Bangalore incident where an engineering student and his two colleagues, all from Manipur were attacked, the victims said they were reminded that this was India and not China when they were unable to speak in Kannada. In the first of the Delhi incidents, the two men from Nagaland were told they were being beaten up because they were from the Northeast and that they and all others from the Northeast must leave the colony or else face the consequences. Curiously, they were also told they were spared death because they were not from Manipur. Manipur it seems is the new Nepal in the larger Indian psyche, and anybody Mongoloid looking is now a Manipuri and no longer Nepali. The second incident, where a Mizo girl was killed in her flat, does not seem to be racial in nature, though little is known yet as the victim did not survive to tell her tale. The needle of suspicion however is on her live-in non-Mizo boyfriend with whom neighbour said she had a quarrel on the previous evening of the day her lifeless body was recovered.

Something obviously is seriously wrong here, and what is even worse is, there have not been enough voices against these incidents from the respectable sections of the larger civil society in these cities. And we say `respectable section` in the optimistic belief this racism is limited to only lumpen elements constituting largely of migrants themselves, who see a threat of losing out jobs and wages to the migrants from the Northeast. It would have been reasonable to presume this was the insecurity leading to these racial hate attacks for indeed Northeasterners are migrating to these cities in a big way, either as students or else to seek low to mid level jobs in the service sectors, and this would be resented by competitors for these same jobs. As always and everywhere, it is also true that migrants who are normally the more desperate job seekers, always manage to bring down wages in the local markets, angering local workers of the same class. This friction is there in the Northeast too, where locals resent the usurping of the local service market by migrants, and in fact this is one of the openly stated reasons for the demand for the ILPS in places where this was not previously in vogue. This would have been a very plausible explanation if not for this deafening silence of the so called saner sections of the society in these places. So far, the only voices reverberating on the matter are those of Northeasterners in candlelight vigils in the metropolises, with pathetic appeals they are not outsiders to seemingly indifferent audiences.

This absence of any strong moderating voice probably is an indication that the racism evident in the recent attacks is not just skin deep, and that the malaise is much more widespread. Unlike in the new and congested colonies where migrants flock to and where these racial incidents are frequent, in the upper strata of the society it is likely the venom is much more nuanced and channelled in manners that make legal interventions difficult if not impossible under the current laws, therefore not easily visible. This possibility should not be ruled out, so that remedial measures, such as those recently recommended by the M.P. Bezbaruah committee, are compelled to take them into consideration, rather than merely respond to the sporadic violent attacks in the lower income colonies. It is quite unthinkable what a remedial recommendation could be if this latter scenario is true, but it is definitely a challenge which nobody serious enough to resolve this scourge can afford to ignore.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/skin-deep-or-widespread/

Alcohol and festivals

Manipur enjoys a year-long season of festivals. As scarce as means of entertainment is in the State, we have a healthy dose of festivals to keep us entertained throughout the

Manipur enjoys a year-long season of festivals. As scarce as means of entertainment is in the State, we have a healthy dose of festivals to keep us entertained throughout the year. While this comes as a welcome excuse for celebration, it is also generally understood that festivals and alcohol go hand in hand. A delightful characteristic of the State is its multi-ethnicity, with each ethnic group bringing in their own festivals for the State to celebrate together. However, like everything else, this characteristic too has its own pros and cons. While it has at times been detrimental to the collective development in the State, it has, at times, showed hopes of binding the groups together. Multiple communities mean that people tend to draw more towards one`™s own community discarding the collective good of the society, whereas at times, the festivals provide a common platform for the whole society to come together and strengthen their bond.

Although Manipur has a dry State status since 1991, it is never a surprise when one easily finds a bottle of liquor. It would however be a big surprise if one fails to get a bottle anyday. During a budget session in July earlier this year, local dailies had reported the State Chief Minister of stating that even though there is a ban on liquor; India Made Foreign Liquor is continuously being brought into the State from other States. Unavailability of the high spirits in Manipur is never an option, as bootlegging ensures free flow of the high spirit throughout the year. Villages where the prohibition is exempted have also helped in the easy availability of liquor. The prohibition is exempted in some villages like Sekmai, Andro and tribal populated pockets in Imphal for customary purposes.

Alcoholism, as any other issues, could not be contained or checked by merely implementing a ban or conducting raids and arresting defaulters.
Considering the dire need of entertainment avenues today in the State, it is no big surprise that people especially the younger lot seem to be taking to the glass for a few hours of enjoyment and abandonment before life`™s ups and downs comeback haunting once again. Unemployment has also ensured that several individuals find solace in the bottle for their failure to achieve their perceived goals or better still a decent lifestyle. Drinking among the youths heightens during the festivals and this is when it gets rowdy and violent. Groups of young kids in inebriated conditions racing along the pothole filled roads on their bikes become a concern. Any misunderstanding among such groups could easily end up in bloody fistfights. Unless properly implemented bans and checks can only act as catalysts for many to satisfy their adrenaline rush by going against the law. In order to encourage the State to recuperate from all such issues and herd the youth away from the problem, there is the need to first understand the issue.

Leader Writer: Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/alcohol-and-festivals/

Tracking Moving Targets

The 6th Schedule of the Constitution was, as we have noted earlier, meant for the formerly undivided Assam on the peripheral hills of which lived many different, till then backward

The 6th Schedule of the Constitution was, as we have noted earlier, meant for the formerly undivided Assam on the peripheral hills of which lived many different, till then backward tribal communities. As the agitation for the implementation of the Inner Line Permit System in the State in the last few months have brought to the fore, the idea of delineating the unadministered Assam hills from those administered by modern laws was already a concern even during the British days. The Bengal Inner Line Regulation of 1873 was the first official documentary statement of this concern. This line as we now know was drawn roughly along the foothills of Assam`™s peripheral hills, and by this system, British subjects were required to take special permission to enter these hills. By the Government of India Act 1919, these hills would come to be designated as `Backward Tracts` and by the Government of India Act 1935, they would be further delineated into `Excluded` and `Partially Excluded` areas. The `Excluded` areas, constituting of the Naga Hills and Lushai Hills, were under the direct administration of the British Governor, while the `Partially Excluded` areas, constituting of the Khasi-Jantia Hills and the Mikir Hills (now known as Karbi Anglong) were given some representations in the Provincial Assembly through nominated members and therefore partially responsible for their own governance. After Indian Independence, the former `Excluded` and `Partially Excluded` areas were the ones sought to be given special administrative facilities under the 6th Schedule of the Constitution. The rest, including what became of the original 6th Schedule ADCs, is now history, and discussed in some details in another recent IFP editorial. As to why Manipur never had either the ILP or 6th Schedule from the beginning is because it was never part of British Assam.

In other words, these were administrative arrangements fashioned by the British and then the nascent modern Indian State, to govern formerly ungoverned or little governed areas of undivided Assam. Times have changed, and changed unrecognizably in the context of the Northeast. Out of the former Assam, four hills States have been bifurcated, making the Northeast a sisterhood of seven States, or eight including Sikkim after Sikkim was incorporated within the purview of the NEC. The Inner Line is now the boundary of many of these relatively new States, and the 6th Schedule thereafter become redundant and either was abandoned or retained in parts in most of these former districts of Assam. It is amidst these that the demands for the implementation of the Inner Line Permit System and the 6th Schedule are rearing their problem laden heads in Manipur. No argument about it that needs for similar legislations could have arisen again and therefore the urgency of bringing them back to the State`™s discursive forums, but the trouble is, those who feel so seem to think simply bringing back these archaic laws is the panacea for all problems the state is faced with. These instruments of governance had unique historical contexts, and these contexts are hardly likely to have remained intact, therefore the extreme likelihood of these instruments being outdated and unfit for the present times. Indeed, there were many who have had an experience of the Inner Line System, including the Chief Minister of Nagaland, saying how toothless this system is today. There are an equal number of people, say for instance in Meghalaya and Mizoram, who hold similar opinions about the 6th Schedule. Yet those demanding these systems insist on having them as they were.

The moot point is, it does not have to be these archaic laws, already bending under the weight of decades and even centuries of troubled existence. Instead, the better approach would be to take the spirit from them and make new laws which are fit to current purposes and needs. It is a truism that times change continually, which is why each era has its own needs and makes its own demands. Ability or otherwise to recognize these needs, and make adjustments to meet the new challenges, has always been the defining criteria for survival or collapse of societies. To hit shifting targets, the need is also to shift aims correspondingly. Let it also be remembered that the tides of time not only change, but also wait for nobody.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/tracking-moving-targets/

6th Schedule Debate

The 6th Schedule debate is once again rearing its head in the State. Not surprisingly, a clear pattern of its cyclic recurrence is now more of less established. It would

The 6th Schedule debate is once again rearing its head in the State. Not surprisingly, a clear pattern of its cyclic recurrence is now more of less established. It would normally come about when the politics of the Assembly variety sinks into a lull midway into its term, and the dreary mediocrity of issueless politics begins looking for new issues to arrest people`™s imagination in order that the elected politicians may have something to save their political careers. This pattern of State politics is not exclusive to the 6th Schedule issue but equally true of so many others, the territorial integrity issue for instance. It is often said threats of war unite the people, and therefore politicians periodically employ sabre rattling as a strategy to achieve this effect whenever the public are restive and the politicians are insecure about their political careers. This is however not to say these issues are trivial.

It is also unfortunate the 6th Schedule issue has also been appropriated by vested interests and made to look like an offshoot of the hill-valley friction in the State. Indeed, because of the consistent portrayal thus, it has become such, thereby something those in the hills must blindly support and those in the valley blindly oppose. This is unfortunate, and must cease to be so. Those of us who have watched politics in the state for at least the last two decades will remember that the 6th Schedule was almost a fiat accompli in the late 1990s, at about the same time the 1997 landmark Naga ceasefire agreement was signed. Rishang Keishing was chief minister, Meijinlung Kamson was the Union minister of state for internal security and O.N. Srivastava was the Governor. There were some token opposition from the valley communities, but not to the spirit of the Schedule but in anticipation of a compromise of the territorial integrity of the State. Rishang had managed to reassure the people the territorial integrity would not be put at jeopardy under any circumstance, and he had begun land surveys to demarcate the territories of the Autonomous District Council, ADCs, to give the 6th Schedule a tangible shape. It was here the stumbling block was encountered. The question was whether there would be six ADCs, (five hill districts plus Sadar Hills), or only five ADCs (with Sadar Hills as part of Senapati district). There was also a third proposal, whereby there would be only two ADCs, with the four `Naga districts` as one ADC and Churachandpur district as the other ADC. Bitter opposition to either of the models was actually what proved the undoing, and not so much valley opposition, as many now so eagerly want it to be seen as.

There is no reason why there should be so much ado over the 6th Schedule. It is an autonomy model for islands of small ethnic communities buried within a larger community. They would be governed by the laws of the State as well as those of the ADCs. Introduced in 1952, it was meant for the former undivided Assam, where the lands and communities roughly beyond the Inner Line, falling within what the British classified as `Excluded Area` (Naga and Lushai Hills) and `Partially Excluded Area` (Khasi and Jantia Hills and Mikir Hills) were given protection under the Schedule`™s provisions. Nagaland refused the offer for the Naga leadership then under A.Z. Phizo thought it was a compromise to their demand for complete sovereignty, which is why Nagaland still does not have the 6th Schedule, though so many in Manipur think it does. The Lushai, Khasi, Garo, Jantia and Mikir Hills were put under the Schedule, but after these original 6th Schedule areas became States in their own rights, the ADCs lost their relevance considerably. In the Lushai hills, (Mizoram) it was abolished for most part but retained in three tiny non-Mizo pockets, namely the Chakma, Lakher and Pawi (Poi). In Assam, Mikir Hills (Karbi Anglong) is still under the Schedule. In Meghalaya too the Schedule is still maintained as it was, so the three ADCs of Khasi HIlls, Jantia Hills and Garo Hills almost totally overlap with the Meghalaya government`™s administrative jurisdictions with the exception of the Shillong capital area which has been de-Scheduled. Some see the Meghalaya arrangement as a problem nonetheless it should be an eye opener for Manipur. If the 6th Schedule must be implemented, it can actually be to the entire State and not just the hills. Let each district have an autonomous ADC administration and let the State administration bind all these autonomous ADCs under a larger roof. As in the case of Shillong, perhaps the Imphal municipal area too could be made the only de-Scheduled cosmopolitan area. This would be a novel experiment in federalism too, but more in later editorials.

Leader writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/6th-schedule-debate/

Sinking Nobel Credibility

The 2014 peace Nobel Prize has been jointly awarded to Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzay, an Indian and a Pakistani, both for their commendable work towards ending child labour. At

The 2014 peace Nobel Prize has been jointly awarded to Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzay, an Indian and a Pakistani, both for their commendable work towards ending child labour. At only 17 when she was announced the winner of this coveted but now increasingly controversial prize, Malala has set another record for being the youngest ever to receive the award. She is a courageous campaigner for education of the girl child, and for her work which offended the Taliban, she was shot and left for dead, but was eventually flown to England for emergency treatment and successfully rescued. Since then, she has in defiance of all Taliban diktats, been continuing with her good work of advocating education for girls in her beleaguered homeland. Quite without doubt, she deserves the prize and all the goodwill of the world she has earned. Kailash Satyarthi, the man who shared the Peace Nobel, has also been a tireless worker for children education and for an end to the widespread atrocity of child labour in India. The 60 year old man however has drawn some flak for being associated with evangelical missions in his work, but this is immaterial and he should be judged by the quality of his work and dedication to his mission alone. Of this, nobody who has known him and his work, has complained so far.

Deserving as the two winners may be, this year`™s Nobel Peace Prize has drawn a lot of criticism not so much for any doubt about the credibility of the winners, but for the West biased politics quite evident in the choices. As many knowledgeable observers have pointed out, had Malala been a child victim of the war the West has been waging on the Taliban region of Pakistan and Afghanistan, probably she would have remained ignored by the Western media and therefore out of reckoning for the Nobel Prize. The fact also is, there have been and there continues to be numerous indiscriminate children victims of the continuing Western Drone strikes on these countries. Malala could easily have been one of them. Alternately, these observers also point out that Malala would have equally remained ignored and unknown had she been campaigning not against the Taliban, but against the terror of the West`™s Drone strikes on her homeland. They argue that Malala fitted well into the racist narrative which interprets these Western interventions in Afghanistan and Pakistan as the White Knights rescuing the damsels in distress from the hands of the evil and savage war mongers, therefore the sympathy for her. The reality of the destruction caused by the West itself to the lives of thousands of innocent children in these countries is conveniently forgotten. Kailash Satyarthi too has his part in this new `Great Game` as Arundhati Roy calls it. The instability of Pakistan is making the West look for firmer grounds to launch its assaults on its enemies, and India is a candidate on its radar.

Even without reading too much into the new `Great Game` theory and how even the Nobel committee is party to this, what is evident is, only those fighting the enemies of the West can hope to win the Nobel Peace and so too the Literature prizes. Gandhi, although acknowledged internationally as the undisputed messiah of peace, never received it for he was fighting the British. Leo Tolstoy never received the literature prize too though considered by many to be the greatest novelist the world because his native Russia has always been for most part of its history at cold war and sometimes open wars with the West. Dalai Lama and Aung San Suu Kyi received it for they were pitted against the ideological enemies (then) of the West. Quite controversially again, Henry Kissinger who was behind some of the world`™s worst and murderous bombings in Vietnam and Cambodia, received the peace prize. This being the case, one of the obvious conclusions for us in Northeast India for instance would be, if this bias were not there, there is every likelihood Irom Chanu Sharmila`™s campaign against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, AFSPA-1958, a draconian law which has been on so many occasions declared as untenable under the International Humanitarian Law, would have been a very likely candidate to win this prize. Sharmila not receiving the prize is just a Northeast centric thought, but we do hope the Peace and Literature Nobel Prizes, undoubtedly the most important and controversial of the five (six including later addition economic sciences, the other three being Chemistry, Physics and Medicine) are able to recue themselves from this sinking lack of credibility.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/sinking-nobel-credibility/

Crime and Punishment

The trader involved in the cooking oil adulteration case has been let off with Rs. 2 lakhs penalty for his crime by a ruling yesterday of the Court of Adjudicating

The trader involved in the cooking oil adulteration case has been let off with Rs. 2 lakhs penalty for his crime by a ruling yesterday of the Court of Adjudicating Officer (Food Safety) and Additional District Magistrate, Imphal East. The trading company, M/S Ajay Traders, owned by one Mulchand of Thangal Bazar, it may be recalled was caught red handed in the midst of his crime on June 9 earlier this year during a raid at their godown at Khambam Lamkhai by a joint team of the Food Safety and Narcotics, and Affairs of Border. Quite surprisingly, the case remained a low key affair all the while, though nobody would have any doubt the crime is frightening, perhaps even more so than all the gun violence the state put together. For one, this is an indiscriminate assault with nobody in particular as target but everybody in general as the target. The unwritten doctrine of business being what it is, the motto too would have been `the more the merrier`. Children, men, women, athletes on gruelling exercise regime to shape their bodies, ailing senior citizens, nursing mothers…, anybody would do, so long as profit is assured.

The second reason why this crime should be considered more dangerous than the overt gun violence the state has been witnessing is that while the latter variety of crimes, heinous and condemnable as they may be, are at least open about their intent. Perpetrators of these crimes as well as their victims are unlikely to be under any illusion these acts are not punishable under the law of the land, and indeed they are committed in defiance of the law. Unlike this, the former criminals are wolves in sheep clothings, therefore their crimes can penetrate much deeper into the lives of ordinary citizens. Mustard oil was what the trader was systematically adulterating and selling to unsuspecting customers. This cooking oil being popular in Manipur, the extent of the population of the state who would have been exposed to the risk to health and life with the blessing of this trading company is only to be imagined. From our own readings of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act & Rules (as on 1.10.2004), the penalties for such crimes can be far more severe. It can be imprisonment for a few years to even life. Yet, our courts are honourable and must know better why such criminals deserve to be let off so leniently. The ruling is even kind enough to show the criminal the official routes to return to his business again. The Rs. 2 lakh penalty under the circumstance, to the laymen on the streets, would have seemed like an unqualified pronouncement of innocence. In the oil business, the amount would probably be considered even cheaper than peanuts devotees feed to the monkeys at the Mahabali Hanuman temple on the banks of the Imphal River each day.

Even more confounding is the fact that the case remained subdued even in terms of media coverage. There were few press statements from the officials about the progress of the case in all the four months which elapsed after the raid on the godown, and few pressmen too seemed keen to sniff for follow up stories. The IFP did carry some more, but they too were tame, largely because concerned officials were not too eager to divulge information. One of the reasons is, like everybody else, the media too are easily sidetracked by the more overt and sensational incidents of gun violence which have become the state`™s staple. The routine grenades left at people`™s gates, obviously to intimate and make those ostensibly protected by these gates part with money, and the daily empty rants and mudslinging of politicians, continued to hog the headlines, while more sinister crimes, such as this food adulteration case, ended up obscured from public view and consciousness. It must be admitted this is a weakness of the state media, and one which the fraternity must fight and overcome so as to deserve the lofty responsibility of being the watchdogs of the society which the public have entrusted them so generously.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/crime-and-punishment/

Entering the ILP territory

By Pradip Phanjoubam The Inner Line introduced by the British colonial administration under the Bengal Inner Line Regulation 1873, in its territory of Assam, relatively newly acquired in 1826 with

By Pradip Phanjoubam

The Inner Line introduced by the British colonial administration under the Bengal Inner Line Regulation 1873, in its territory of Assam, relatively newly acquired in 1826 with the signing of the Treaty of Yandaboo, concluding the First Anglo-Burmese war, in which the Burmese were conclusively defeated, is a notional line demarcating roughly the fertile agricultural and thereby administered plains of Assam from its “wild” hills. The coordinates of this line have had to see several scores of alterations with the British bringing more and more of the foothills into its administered area to meet the growing demands for land by a rapidly expanding tea industry at the time. All these alterations were done with simple gazette notifications without the trouble of putting this piece of `law` through the tedious process of law amendment through legislative debates.

This was possible because the ILP is not an Act of the legislature, but a `Regulation` introduced by the executive. The number of times the ILP has been shifted in this manner, tabulated from the files available in the British archives is indicated in an essay “When was the postcolonial?” by Assamese scholar, Bodhisattva Kar, in a collection of essays titled “Beyond Counter-insurgency” edited by another Assamese intellectual, Sanjib Baruah. In fact, the tea garden lobby had always wanted the ILP either abolished so that all the hill regions of Assam would come under direct British administration, or else for the British to open police posts beyond the Inner Line, so that they can expand their tea gardens into the hills and have the administration`s protection (Amalendu Guha). The British, being the supreme revenue managers they were, never were convinced such a move would bring profit to them (after all, they were still the East India Company, and as a company the primary motive of their administration was to augment profit). Therefore this demand of land-speculators amongst its subjects, were never complied fully, and they were instead simply told to keep within the Inner Line and keep out of trouble with the hill tribes.

It is interesting that today, this archaic regulation is coming back into the discursive forums of almost the entire Northeast long after the British have left, and equally interestingly for reasons not quite similar to the one the British colonial administration meant the regulation to serve. Yes the ILP is coming to be an issue not just in places where this Regulation is not in force currently, such as Meghalaya and Manipur, but also where it had always been in place, such as Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland. It is also curious that there are talks of Assam joining in the demand for its implementation in Assam. Some even say, the ULFA talks is likely to come to conclude in an accord much sooner than the Naga talks as the demands being negotiated are much more tangible, and if this does happen, the implementation of the ILP or a similar regulation in Assam, to address the fear of the Assamese of being demographically marginalized in their ancestral land, would be one of the agreements.

In Arunachal Pradesh, the ILP discussion is manifesting differently, nonetheless in its own ways, with profound implications and portents for the future. No, I am not referring here to anything remotely to do with more drama sparked by China`™s claim to this Northeast hill state. Instead it is precisely about the ILP. The state capital has now been newly brought into the railway map of the country, with a train chugging into the Naharlagun station at the outskirt of the state capital Itanagar earlier this year on April 12, but it is quite likely this momentous development may not see too happy a transition. The next move of the NDA government`™s commendable initiative is to reach the elite passenger carrier, the Rajdhani Express, to the state, but signs are this decision is not going to be accepted readily by the state. Students and other civil organisations are already restive about the rail line itself, fearing uncontrolled influx of outsiders into the state, but the idea of the Rajdhani Express may actually be opposed if the modes of issue of ILP to non-Arunachalee passengers is not first sorted out. At the moment, prospective visitors to the state by the Rajdhani Express are being promised ILP on arrival and not pre-acquired ones from designated government counters in different cities which have an Arunachal Bhavan, a proposition civil bodies in the state are not too happy about. Many even fear if the matter is not resolved amicably in advance, the Rajdhani Express and indeed the entire railway project in Arunachal Pradesh may end up as another damp squib.

As in all such civil society debates, there are indeed moderating voices here too which try to think through the issue and seek a reconciliation of radically divergent opinions by carefully assessing and calibrating the points raised by all sides of the argument. The dominant refrain in this circle is in summary, the baby must not end up thrown away with the bathwater. Nobody denies the ILP is necessary to ensure the major power handles in the state remains in the hands of the numerically and economically weak indigenous communities. But they are also quick to note that a major public misconception of the purpose of the ILP is that it is meant to keep out illegal migrants. They point out that although Arunachal Pradesh today has the ILP, the state is continually witnessing the influx of illegal migrants, and in this way the ILP is being rendered toothless. The conclusion is, ILP or no ILP, the illegal migrants will find a way to be where they can make a living, but what the ILP will end up damaging is the confidence of perfectly legitimate visitors. This is exactly what is seemingly unfolding in the Rajdhani Express offer for Arunachal Pradesh.

Since the ILP issue is hot in Manipur too at this moment, viewpoints from these vantages must also be factored into the exploration by the committee now studying the suitability of the ILP or an equivalent Act in the state. Migrants, illegal or otherwise, come to the state for there are vacuums in the service markets they can fill. The best way they can be dissuaded from heading to the state is to have locals fill up these vacuums. Simply shutting the gates will not help, for the demands for these services within the state, as its economy invariably and unavoidably grow more complex, will not only always be there but increase exponentially with the passage of time. The most effective way to meet this challenge is for a change in the work culture of the place. Under normal circumstances, in a state with unemployment rates closing in on the 30 percent mark, all available jobs should have been absorbed by the locals leaving little for immigrants from outside. But the culture promoted directly or indirectly in the new age economy of the state is for job seekers to consider themselves employed only if they have a government white collar job. Few do move out of this trap, but seldom in those sectors of the job market which bring in immigrants. The shameful fact is, a lot of the youth who call themselves unemployed and hang around doing nothing in the leikais would rather remain unemployed and hang around doing nothing in the leikais than to be in the jobs the immigrants take up. Therein lies the crux of the state`™s problem.

But if this is what is on one extreme of the problem, the other extreme must also not be ignored. Just as many often cite the examples of Tripura and Sikkim as lost for their indigenous populations, in the other Northeast states, Shillong and Imphal are often cited as lost for the locals, and therefore predicaments to be feared by them. It perhaps is no coincidence that Meghalaya and Manipur are two states which does not have the ILP but are now demanding its implementation. The moderated approach to the problem then, as I have said in these columns before, it quite exemplarily shown by none other than a bureaucrat of unquestionable integrity and dedication to the region during the mid 20th Century, Nari Rushtomji, author of two important books on the Northeast. In short, he prescribes empathy for the apprehension of small and weak communities of the Northeast of being marginalised by influx of populations from outside, but also suggests Northeast locals to be open to the forces of change though at a pace that they can absorb without detriment to their general health as social organisms.

ILP`™s other legacies

Among the many motive attributed to the British by modern day scholars for drawing the ILP, apart from the officially stated purpose of the British administration of the time, is that the regulation was introduced to separate the revenue from the non-revenue regions, law and no-law territories, taxpaying from the non-taxpaying subjects, sedentary from the nomadic, modern from the primitive peoples, agricultural plains from difficult hill terrains etc (Kar).

The British are now long gone and the colonial economy too has long been dismantled and replaced by democracy. Though not perfect, as indeed nothing ever can be, at least the genuineness of the effort to modernise and democratise the region is unmistakable. It is the practice of democracy which is allowing even this discussion on the ILP to continue in earnest. The ILP still exists where the British drew it but its spirit is no longer the same. The line does not any more divide the law from the no-law regions of the former undivided Assam, and instead has become roughly the boundaries between the present state of Assam and other states bifurcated from it (in particular Nagaland, Mizoram and Arunachal Pradesh) decades after India became independent. But anybody who has travelled across the ILP by road would not have missed the remnant of the original spirit behind line, still haunting.

There is law on both sides of the ILP today, yet nuanced manifestations of respect of the rule of law, the internalisation of the traits of valuing `enlightened self interest` as a survival instinct, are markedly different. The modern economy has been absorbed with far less detriment to the social organism (in the words of Rushtomji) in Assam than in its former territories beyond the ILP. Nobody will argue Assam is free from corruption. But in the execution of public work, such as laying of roads, the respect for the `enlightened self interest` shows up prominently. Despite its rural poverty, unemployment, official corruption, Assam`™s contractors, engineers and ministers, it seems have not compromised its `enlightened self interest` altogether and still make their roads much more to specifications. Its society too, in very many ways has succeeded in keeping intact a much higher degree of egalitarianism. As you move across the ILP, the public infrastructures begin to visibly sink in standards, roads are broken and unrepaired, the coterie who are in positions of powers in the new economy have become vulgarly rich, while the general populations have been left practically where they were when the British were around, thereby the two classes have come to live in entirely different worlds.

Manipur was never part of the British ILP divide, not only in physical terms but in the spiritual sense as well. It always belonged to the side of the law and civilisation, therefore once had an internalised universal respect for the `greater common good`. The `enlightened self interest` in which the individual is ready to give up some in the belief that this will add ultimately to everybody`™s welfare, including his own, was once very prominent. Even just one or two generations ago, rather than think of plundering public properties in mindless shows of despicable narcissism, there were elders who took it upon themselves to come out voluntarily each morning and sweep the streets adjacent to their homes. Nobody had to tell them dusty streets next door inconvenience the commuters but inconvenience them more. Yet, it is sad to note, the state is rushing to the zone of what the British saw as no-law territories. The unrestrained plunders of public funds by those in positions of power at severe costs of the state`™s public infrastructures is just the most visible testimony.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/entering-the-ilp-territory/

Look East Policy – a boon or bane

India`™s Look East Policy evokes different response from different quarters. First, there is the Panglossian school of thought in which many presume that the policy in its wake will bring

India`™s Look East Policy evokes different response from different quarters. First, there is the Panglossian school of thought in which many presume that the policy in its wake will bring all round development to the North-east region. Then there are the opinions of those who are asking for a more cautious approach towards the policy which is being bandied around. Buying into the rosy picture adumbrated by foreign policy mandarins would prove catastrophic as the people of the region, the most important stakeholders of the policy were not either taken into confidence or consulted despite the assertion that the policy was initiated for their development. A panoptic critique is the need of the hour as in its current form the policy looks detrimental to the people of the region. Proactive deliberations by various stakeholders will prove prudent in the long run. Those enchanted by the policy are soft selling it as a precursor to the good times that will follow in the region. The State, devoid of any proper medium or big scale industry, is all geared up to be promoted as a tourist destination. However enticing the idea may sound, a proper mechanism is yet to be put in place in the State where carbon footprints left by tourists can be measured. The Thailand model of tourism development is gaining traction with a lot of policy makers. We also need to take into account that the South-East Asian country, compelled to rely on tourism as a major source of income, was chastised for pushing its children into prostitution by the then visiting American Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright, aftermath the Asian financial crisis. The land of the white elephant which now earns 70 percent of its foreign exchange from tourism was compelled to turn into a tourist destination rather than by choice. We need not go into why Thailand is a popular tourist destination. A distinguished East Asian and South East Asian foreign policy expert had posited in an international conference held at the Manipur University that the North-east was `the e
picenter of the Look East Policy`. He had also added that India would promote anything in which ASEAN was the pivot drawing attention to American President Barack Obama`™s suggestion some years ago during his visit that the country should “act east instead of looking east`. Bertil Lintner in his book, Great Game East: India, China and the struggle for Asia`s most volatile frontier, has insinuated that the region will act as an important theatre of engagement between the new emerging world powers. The two taken together sheds light on how India`™s foray into the east through the North-east is not only out of a sheer concern for the development of the region but a compulsion made more urgent by Beijing making rapid strides in spreading its tentacles around its southern neighbour. We agree that the country with its ever burgeoning population needs to tap into the huge ASEAN and North-east Asian market; besides, many foreign policy pundits see little difference between foreign policy and economic policy. The trilateral highway connecting India, Myanmar and Thailand begins in Imphal and many consider it as an indication of the primacy the state enjoys in India`™s Look East Policy. But, training young students with proper formal education as masseurs and spa therapists is not a great way to begin with. The new Silk Route may pass through Imphal but we must not reduce ourselves to those travellers across the deserts who take a mirage to be an oasis all too often.

Leader Writer: Svoboda Kangleicha

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/10/look-east-policy-a-boon-or-bane/