Unacknowledged Revolutions of the Mundane

By Pradip Phanjoubam Great ideas provoke further thoughts, and therefore debates. The Thingnam Kisan memorial lecture by well known public intellectual, theatre director, brilliant scholar and untiring social activist, Aramabam

By Pradip Phanjoubam

Great ideas provoke further thoughts, and therefore debates. The Thingnam Kisan memorial lecture by well known public intellectual, theatre director, brilliant scholar and untiring social activist, Aramabam Lokendra, last Thursday was one such. The topic which he chose to speak on was “Women, Society and Performance: A Peep into Manipur History,” and true to expectations, he conjured up a convincing picture of why though modern history has been largely silent on the role of women, the Manipuri women’s role has always been anything but insignificant. He drew from the places rich traditions of folklores, myths and ancient textual records (of which Manipur is happily quite well endowed), to build his argument. It was a delightfully fascinating conducted tour of records maintained in oral story tradition and rare books such as Leimaren Laichat, Panthoibi Khonggul, Naothingkhong Phambal Kaba, Thawan Thaba Hiran, Chainaro,l and the mentions of women in these texts.

The chronology of these records is important. The continual transition of the society and its values through the ages became quite apparent. As for instance, the shifting structures of the social institution of family was evident in such facts as the virtual absence of widows in a society in which wars with neighbours were endemic. Obviously sexual mores and taboos were a lot different, and widow remarriage was not an issue at all. Maybe the logic worked the other way around as well. Maybe it was the wars, which obviously would have made male deaths frequent and perennial, which defined morality of issues such as these. Necessity knows no law they say, but it can equally be said necessity defines not just the shape of law but also morality.

I have no intention of critiquing the entire one hour lecture. First, because it would be virtually impossible considering the fund of rich ideas flagged, each deserving further debates and discussions. Indeed this was the case too, delaying the conclusion of the programme far beyond the scheduled hours. Instead I would just pick up the threat of some of the issues and extremely incisive observations which surfaced in the discussion hours pertaining to the virtually disappearance of women from public life in modern times. The biggest evidence of this is the fact that there have been so few women in the state legislature in the state’s entire modern legislative history. In the current Assembly, of the 60 MLAs, only two are women. This meagre representation has been true of most of the past Assemblies, and in some of them, there were no women at all. The question that evoked passionate interventions from the audience was, why is this so?

There was much to be said of the oppression of a patriarchal legacy and how this has meant the systematic subjugation of women through the gradual but definite evolution of a seemingly innocuous value system meant precisely to institutionalise the patriarchal order. No argument about this at all, for this is a reality before everybody today. As one among the audience observed (a woman for sure), a childless woman is considered a curse and bad omen, and though to a lesser degree, a woman who has not given birth to a male heir too.

To the list of atrocious disregard of the self esteem of women in the Manipur society, I would add the social allowance given to eves teasing, as if this was a natural thing, and that boys will always be boys, and by implication, girls will be girls. The moral status quo would have been okay had the scale on which gender equation stands was equitable. This not being the case, what is sought is the institutionalisation of a blatant inequity.

This is also the same skewed moral universe constructed by the patriarchy which criminally gives allowance to polygamy and mistress keeping. It is amazing this society cannot imagine what insult this would mean for the women. As a recent article in The Guardian, London, pointed out of the obnoxious sexual harassment of young girls being masturbated at in public places in Britain, and the society turning a blind eye to the crime, this “like rape, is a crime that is about power and control. This is about men feeling entitled to sexual ownership of women’s bodies in public spaces, about a sense that they are powerful and in control and a belief that they will not be punished. It is also about the normalisation of sexual offences within a culture that suggests women should just shut up and get used to it.”

It is no consolation that things are not as bad as this in Manipur. It is also no consolation that unlike in some other states of India no politician has had the temerity to say “boys will be boys and rape is sometimes natural”. The government should then, without further delay, make eves teasing and the practice of keeping mistresses and polygamy, strictly enforced punishable offences. But then, in such a circumstance, the guillotine would fall on the necks of so many men of power.

Another observation on the absence of women in politics in modern times was interesting for the everydayness of the inhibitor named. The observer, again a woman, said modern Manipuri women are trapped in their homes by household chores, leaving them little time to be in charge of the public arenas. They therefore need to be released from this responsibility, and her suggestion was that men should share the responsibility equally for this to become a reality.

This is well said and perfect from the standpoint of fairness, but there is a point to be raised. Sharing responsibility would lessen the burden on one half, but not reduce the aggregate burden to be borne. Strictly from a mathematical calculus, it is still a zero sum game, and what one gains would be the loss of the other. This is okay if we were to see the man-woman equation always as a binary, as if the two were enemies out to suppress the other. This we know is not always the case. Take my individual case. I have two daughters and no son. I grew up with three sisters and no brother. There is therefore no way I would want a social legacy which subjugated women.

In this regard, before coming out with my own problem solving strategies, I want to refer back to another point raised in Arambam’s lecture. He referred to how technology has always been a big catalyst in the evolution of the State. The yoking of two bulls to pull a plough was one of these landmarks on the road to State formation and consolidation. This invention he said augmented agricultural productivity radically and therefore resulted in surplus food. And the State, as we have seen, is in essence a mechanism for surplus management.

Other than technology enhancing productivity, I can think of another important contribution of technology, quite relevant to the answer I seek on the issue of sharing household chores responsibilities. Imagine the agrarian society again. The yoking of bulls to pull the plough would made agriculture more productive, but equally important, it would have released manpower from agriculture. The amount of labour 20 men/women would have had to put in on the paddy fields, would then have been done by one or two only, thereby freeing 18 men/women to engage their energy in other activities. This would have resulted in the birth of varied professions, so essential in any State building project.

It is only to be imagined how other technological advancements such as the arrival of the wheel, bullock cart, steel, horse, pulley, would have multiplied capabilities and with it manpower availability.

On the household chores issue then, perhaps the role of technology should also not be underplayed, although this is not to say the responsibility should not be shared. It should be, but it would be great if the burden to be shared can be reduced. In this sense, it would not be too far from the truth to say inventions such as the pressure cooker, LPG cooking gas and the washing machines etc are revolutionary. In the Indian social reality where household chores generally are so unfairly left with the women, it can veritably be said that the pressure cooker and the washing machine have made the emergence of the modern career women possible. Let there be a change in the social values that weigh down on the women, but let us not discount the problem solving possibilities technology can offer.

Let us also not forget that the responsibility of dismantling the patriarchal order or for that matter the burden of the guilt of its institutionalisation should not be men’s alone. We often overlook the fact that often women are the watchdogs of this order more than men and many men are more feminists than many women.

If the arts are the language of the heart and soul, then evidences of this anomaly are abundant in our literature, our cinema, our theatre, even our folktales and myths from our pre-literate days. Why otherwise would stories of the cruel stepmother-stepdaughter sagas, or the cruel mother-in-law haranguing daughter-in-laws or vice versa, be almost a pattern in our literature and other arts. Recall the story of Sandrembi and Chaishra, if still not convinced. Likewise, in the modern times, degrading moral policing of so called women of loose morality are more often than not done by women vigilantes. The oppressed are often more cruel to other oppressed, as Fanon tells us. For the oppressed sees his/her own degraded self image in other oppressed, and in seeking to destroy them, he/she is hitting out against his/her own degradation.

Gender emancipation is a must. Women must be given an equal standing in society, both in material as well as moral terms. But in doing so, it would be wrong to pit men and women as binaries, and therefore adversaries of each others. Such an approach would prove retrogressive for everybody.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/unacknowledged-revolutions-of-the-mundane/

Fire tenders for Imphal East

The devastating incident of a gas cylinder bursting into a blazing fire injuring people and destroying properties in one of the most congested neighbourhood in the heart of the city

The devastating incident of a gas cylinder bursting into a blazing fire injuring people and destroying properties in one of the most congested neighbourhood in the heart of the city at Majorkhul has flung open the door to many a debates. The devastating fire had roared on for more than a few hours before it could be controlled, subdued by the fire tenders from the Fire Service headquarter with help arriving from other neighbouring districts. Many have pointed fingers against the fire department’s failure to identify the urgency to respond to the emergency and arriving late for the devastating consequences of the fire. Voices of dissent after such calamities like the June 24 inferno are but expected. However, what is perhaps less immediately striking and more interesting in the present scenario is the Chief Minister and the other heads of the State acknowledging the lack of manpower in the State fire department just before leaving the scene of devastation as was reported in most local dailies. Does this mean that the State heads were unaware of the lack of manpower in one of the most crucial and important department as the Fire Service until devastation struck? Or was it lack of communication between the Fire Service and the government, or did the latter’s authorities failed to inform the government of the lack of manpower? Whatever the reason was, a fire broke out in the middle of the city barely a kilometre away from the Manipur Fire Service headquarter and roared on for three hours, devastating homes and families in its wake. Someone needs to provide answers. The government owes an answer to its public.

The damage is already done, and we have learnt a lesson. With the Chief Minister and his deputy already acknowledging the lack of manpower in the department, which perhaps is the first acknowledgement of responsibility for the incident, it is understood as well as expected that the government would work on it at the earliest. Now what is also expected of the State is a clear cut vision to annihilate any inadequacy which could provide room for similar devastations. And the sooner it gets done, the better it will facilitate in reinforcing and restoring the public’s trust in the State. The government has already made the assurances, but at the same time it has a notorious reputation of failing to turn assurances into actions. What the people could expect is assurance accompanied by action that the State is ready for any such eventuality. When a gas explosion barely a kilometre away from the headquarter of the State Fire Service could be so disastrous, it is anybody’s guess as to what could be the consequence, if any such eventuality were to happen on the eastern side of the Imphal River. Now, Imphal East has no fire service of its own, and ever since Sanjenthong has been closed down to give way to a newer version, connectivity between the two twin districts of Imphal East and Imphal West has been utterly chaotic. In such a scenario the best option could be installation of a few fire tenders in the district. The government is already under much criticism as it is, therefore proceeding along the people’s line of expectation on the present issue could help it garner a brownie point or two.

Leader Writer: Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/fire-tenders-for-imphal-east/

Call for Sensible Urban Planning

The tragic incident of Majorkhul fire in the heart of the Imphal was something waiting to happen. It is one of the most congested area as it is a residential

The tragic incident of Majorkhul fire in the heart of the Imphal was something waiting to happen. It is one of the most congested area as it is a residential place with sprawling density of populace, and as well as a junction bustling with all kinds of commercial activities. Predictably enough, the Fire Service could not reach the spot in time. This is because of the narrow lanes, and above all the stumbling block of vehicles parked on the lanes occupying half of the available space. The fire reportedly was sparked off after an explosion of a domestic gas cylinder, followed by a chain of similar explosions in the congested neighbourhood. Such was the intensity of the fire that two heavy duty fire tender vehicles from Imphal failed to douse the inferno. It was eventually brought under control with the help of additional fire tenders from the neighbouring districts. There were complaints from the residents that the fire tenders were late to arrive. There must be plenty to complain about the deficiencies on the part of the fire service, but in this case there were other reasons which were not the department’s part. One of the biggest problems is the parked vehicles on the narrow lanes. It is worthwhile to recall a noble idea that the Imphal West traffic police had earlier experimented in this regard. A few months back, parking along the streets of Thangal and Paona Bazar was prohibited in order to facilitate a smooth flow of traffic. But the idea met an untimely dead, as we believe, there was disapproval from the people who have business establishments in the said areas. The indicative argument was that the then prohibition of vehicles along the two streets of Paona and Thangal Bazar purportedly affected sales margins. We would say there is no better time to learn lessons than from calamity such as the Majorkhul fire incident, to ponder over and to relook into those selfish arguments promoted by narrow vested interests. IFP had welcomed the idea of prohibiting vehicles along the two streets then. We stand by it still.

IFP carried an exclusive interview with the director (in-charge) of the state Fire Service department in April this year, in the backdrop of the Fire Service Week that was organised by the department. The department has been functioning without a full-fledged director for the last 10 years. Although equipped with modern fire-fighting implements, the state headquarter with its meager staff of 20 people is given the responsible to not only cover the twin districts of Imphal, but also to areas like Nambol, Sekmai and peripheries of the Imphal districts. The Fire Service Week was to give awareness to the people about fire safety. The director has been honest to admit the helplessness of the department while giving strictures of fire safety norms to the public, and more particularly to the business establishments. People do not simply follow safety norms unless and until they are force to do so. IFP in this column had recurrently warned of such calamities, like the recent one waiting to happen. It could have happened at other semi-commercial places, which also are residential areas like Nagamapal, Keishampat, Uripok and Wahengleikai; these areas are fast growing in terms of population density plagued with congested physical structures. If ever a major fire breaks out in these places with narrow lanes, the loss would be devastating. The state chief minister, his deputy and other VIPs have witnessed the unfortunate Majorkhul fire incident, and now should be aware of the lurking time bomb. It is expected that immediate action plan to prevent such incidents will be taken up without wasting any time. Revamp the Fire Service Department. Bring back the traffic prohibition in the two streets of Paona and Thangal Bazar. For a long term planning, we suggest minimising the commercial activities in these areas. Relocate the commercial activities to some other places. On the whole, follow wise urban planning.

Leader Writer: Senate Kh

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/call-for-sensible-urban-planning/

Avoidable Political Vendetta

The BJP led NDA government’s very public message nudging all political appointees of the previous government to gracefully relinquish their respective offices, obviously to make way for the new government’s

The BJP led NDA government’s very public message nudging all political appointees of the previous government to gracefully relinquish their respective offices, obviously to make way for the new government’s own appointees, exposes another embarrassing fact of the Indian Constitution. This is particularly true when it pertains to the matter of high Constitutional posts of Governors of the states and indeed the President of India. The NDA government is not alone to blame for this. They have only made public what was common knowledge all the while, but seldom said aloud out of a false deference. The fact is, though the President of India and Governors of the states are constitutional heads, and deemed to be at the apex of the power structure of the Indian State, they are so only by proxy. That is, they act on the advice of respective cabinets, the Union cabinet in the case of the President of India, and the state cabinets in the case of the Governors of the states. The Indian Constitution’s profile of the institution of the state Governors is even more intriguing. The Governor’s post is tenured and is for a fixed term of five years at a time. Yet, Article 156 of the Constitution ensures the “Governor shall hold office during the pleasure of the President”. The President in turn acts on the advice of the Union Cabinet. In other words, the Governor remains in office as long as he or she enjoys the pleasure of the ruling party at the Centre.

The Constitution therefore leaves ample rooms for these Constitutional heads to be political nominees, as indeed they are, nominated as well as dispensed at the sweet will of the political powers that be at the Centre. The current development, it goes without saying, must be extremely humiliating for all Governors appointed by the previous Congress led UPA government. Though the President of India, Pranab Mukherjee, a former very senior leader of the Congress party, is unlikely to be shown the door similarly, his job at this juncture probably would rank as one of the most unenviable, having to tow the lines of a ruling party which was and still is the arch rival of his own parent party. When critics of Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, parodied Modi’s response to the Presidential address to the first session of the Parliament last month after the UPA government was installed as Modi reacting to Modi, alluding to the fact that the Presidential address was as per tradition, prepared and preapproved by the government, it cannot have missed Mukherjee that ultimately, the joke was on him.

The situation is pitiable, as the UPA government’s message to these political appointees to gracefully resign must have amounted to putting the incumbents on the rack, leaving many of them unsure of what step to take next. Surely there would be many observers who share the opinion that the more graceful thing to do for the BJP government would have been to allow the incumbents to bear out the remainder of their tenures in silence and obscurity. The meanness involved in humiliating these ceremonial heads may serve the ends of political vendetta but it also in equal measures, threatens to demean the public esteem of these venerated Constitutional institutions. These institutions would have been best left as above politics and personal profits as Article 158 indicates. It is clear the Constitution envisioned these men and women of acknowledged eminence in the varied fields of the arts, sciences, literature, culture… as above the quotidian realities of salaried jobs, therefore Governors do not even have a salary and instead draws only emoluments, allowances and privileges. As it is, the UPA had no longer to worry about the misuse of power conferred to the Governors under Article 365 to destabilize state governments, as the provision of President’s Rule have been effectively checked. Invocations of Article 356 now have been made open to judicial reviews following the landmark S. R. Bhommai versus Union of India case, 1994.

The Governors of the states have another function which was once deemed very important to the nascent modern Indian State, as Constitutional expert Fali S. Nariman points out in his latest book “The State of the Nation”. Apart from being the Constitutional head in the states, his role is also to be the eye and the ear of the Centre. The Governors are to send regular reports of the political situation in the states to the President of India, which actually means the Union Cabinet of which the Prime Minister is the head. This Constitutional provision betrays an inherent existential suspicion of the states by the Centre, and in the beginning understandably too considering modern India was formed by yoking together 560 princely States, many of whom were unwilling to join India. At the time the Constitution was being written, the country had still not recovered from the cataclysmic trauma of Partition, and there was the real threat of it further disintegrating too. But those days are long gone and India is a radically different country today from what it was six and a half decades ago. It needs no longer suffer from the insecure hangover of its birth pangs, for the ‘original intents’ of most of these clauses of the Constitution have in the time that has passed by become anachronistic and redundant. Nariman has a recommendation. Since changing the Constitution’s basic features has become virtually impossible after a post-Emergency remedial amendment, these now redundant features of the Constitution should be allowed to remain only in theory, but never to be put into practice again. The renowned legal luminary’s emotional appeal to the “brooding spirit” of the law needs to be listened to attentively to save further eroding of the public esteem of the Constitution.

Leader writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

 

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/avoidable-political-vendetta/

State Health Mission & A Christmas Gift

On a very optimistic note, the director of the State Health Mission, under the National Rural Health Mission recently declared that all the Primary Health Centers in the state will

On a very optimistic note, the director of the State Health Mission, under the National Rural Health Mission recently declared that all the Primary Health Centers in the state will be made functional 24 x 7 with delivery services before Christmas. This is indeed a loud claim on the part of the SHM director. With the primary objective of providing effective health care to the rural people throughout the country, the National Rural Health Mission was launched in the year 2005. It is mentioned in the policy document of the Mission that special focus should be given on the states, which have weak public health indicators. In this aspect, special guidelines are being provided by the Indian Public Health Standards for the health sub-centers like the Primary Health Centers, Community Health Centre and District hospitals. The guidelines are a set of uniform standards envisioned to uplift the quality of health care delivery in the country. From the look of things, it seems the director of the SHM has been taking a proactive role. It is learned that the SHM is taking stock of the ground situation, more particularly from the hill districts of the state. Reports of health surveys conducted by different agencies are being fed to the SHM. One remarkable analysis is the ‘gap analysis’ based on the report of the field surveys. The gap analysis according to director of SHM is to bridge the gap in health care related issues. Emphasis is being given to child birth and its delivery systems. This is indeed a practical step taken up by the SHM, which is in sync with the guidelines.

Having said that, there are hurdles that the SHM have to cross for the Mission to achieve its objectives. The director has categorically mentioned the success stories of Thoubal and Churachandpur District hospitals. As for Thoubal District, needless to say that it is under the close scrutiny of the authorities by virtue of being located at the home constituency of the state chief minister. Churachdpur District hospital was declared as one of the best district hospitals by a team of doctors from Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital who visited the hospital. Now, the hospital is facing the same problem that we all face in Manipur, which are water scarcity and the erratic power supply. The same reason may be cited for the nonfunctional operation theatre of Senapati District hospital even after its inauguration. Though there are also other infrastructural deficits that have become synonymous with most of the public institutions in the hill districts of Manipur. According to the guidelines given by IPH Standards, without delving too deep into the specifics, the PHCs should provide 24 hours emergency service and 6 hours of OPD. The PHCs should give care on maternal and child health care along with family planning on a priority basis. Health care facilities including the monetary cost of investigations, medications, CS delivery as when required and all other related services should be given free of cost to the public under the NRH Mission. Besides, distribution of manpower in tandem with the guidelines is another major hurdle for the SHM. It is a known practice among the employees to lobby for a place of posting of their choice. Moreover, the NRHM funds from Delhi are directly transferred to the state nodal agency as per the Scheme’s guidelines. Maintaining administrative transparency and accountability of the funds are the two big hurdles that the Mission must cross to reach its destination. Actualisation of the tall promise that 85 PHCs in the state will have 24 x 7 child birth delivery system before Christmas this year is not going to be that easy. The accomplishment of the Mission will only be certain when pregnant women, in dehumanising condition, are no longer seen lying on the corridor floors of the government hospitals in Imphal. The success of the Mission will be a priceless Christmas gift.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/state-health-mission-a-christmas-gift/

NGOs under the scanner

Following the leaked reports regarding NGOs and their funding by the Intelligence Bureau (IB), another news report in the New Indian Express mentions an investigation by the Research and Analysis

Following the leaked reports regarding NGOs and their funding by the Intelligence Bureau (IB), another news report in the New Indian Express mentions an investigation by the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW or R&AW) into ‘shady dealings of NGOs’, saying that there are funding patterns that links to insurgent groups in the Northeast. It mentions of a Netherlands-based group, Landlijke India Werkgroep (LIW) which is funded by CORDAID, earlier named in the IB report and says LIW maintains close contact with a number of dissident groups from the Northeast, including the NDFB and ULFA. It helpfully mentions that both the armed outfits have been designated as terrorist organizations by the government. What it does not mention is that both are in talks with the Government with whom it has ceasefire agreements. By pulling up instances of NGOs in the region having their licenses cancelled due to financial irregularities (with 125 NGOs in Manipur getting the axe in 2012 alone), the New Indian Express report smacks of an attempt to color all NGOs in the state and the region with one stroke that says ‘wrong.’

Some have begun to question the timing of the media leaks given that in the midst of all the scampering to defend the track record of NGOs and their activities, the Government has taken the decision of raising the height of the Narmada dam, a move that has been vehemently protested by activists and the NGO community. Another decision is that of easing off rules with regard to the Forest Rights Act and Forest Conservation Act to step up economic activities (that would definitely mean extensive mining, deforestation of forest reserves which have been in the control of indigenous tribal’s) in Naxal-affected states. The earlier Government that was mulling these decisions were met with active protests and agitations from the NGOs but with this very timely leak, the BJP Government is effectively closing the door on an active and unified civil protest. The very clever manner in which ‘national interests’ have been raised by pointing an accusing finger at ‘foreign donors’ means that there will be a lot more voices calling for NGOs who have been in protest mode to go into mute mode.

There is a need to question why protests aimed at major hydro-electric projects that will snatch the livelihood and safe haven of indigenous population, not to mention wrecking the flora and fauna of the area; or those against rampant mining and drilling of forest reserves should be called going against ‘national interests’. Aren’t indigenous populations part of the nation whose interests also need to be ensured or are they just collateral damage all in the name of progress and development? If there is no easy way to answer which is the lesser evil between maintaining forest reserves and other natural resources on one hand and pandering to the needs of energy generation for a booming population, then perhaps the answer lies in whose interests such actions are being taken. If the natural resources of a region or area are to be tapped for the commercial profit of the private corporate and passed on to the more better off region of the country, there would need to be a serious rethinking of whether citizenship is a class-tist phenomenon.

Here, it must be added that NGOs also need to factor in transparency and accountability in terms of its area of activities and operations. But more than not, the NGO sector has also come to take on the nature of a cottage industry with more and more hoardings coming up day by day. Many are run like family enterprises with power of control being in the hands of family members while a great many NGOs are fronted by family members of serving or retired Government officials, bureaucrats and even MLAs and Ministers. Perhaps if either the IB or the RAW had come up with an extensive report on just how many NGOs have links with Government functionaries and how much of funds are being actually translated into action, that would have been more welcome and been an indication of intent to make things work for improving the quality of life for the common man and women. In any case, India’s spy organizations have never been known to work in tandem but in close competition against each other and the RAW investigation could also be an exercise to score a brownie point since the IB has got its own score.

Leader Writer: Chitra Ahanthem

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/ngos-under-the-scanner/

For a Souji time in lieu of ‘Social Service’

The Japanese are known for their cleanliness. In the ongoing football World Cup matches that are being played in different cities of Brazil, littering by thousands of football fans inside

The Japanese are known for their cleanliness. In the ongoing football World Cup matches that are being played in different cities of Brazil, littering by thousands of football fans inside the stadium is one of the major concerns of the organiser. Volunteers are specially assigned to manage the litters left scattered by spectators after every match. The volunteers were amazed when Japanese football fans joined them in clearing up the rubbish. It is very much a common practice in Japan to collectively clean a place. Most Japanese schools do not employ janitors. The point is not to cut cost by not employing a caretaker. It is said that the practice is rooted in Bhuddhist traditions that associate cleanliness with morality. Every day, in a Japanese school, there is a special time for the students to come together for cleaning time, known as Souji time. The students would pull out buckets, mini-brooms and other equipment to clean up their surroundings. It includes not only mopping up the floors, but also cleaning the toilets as well. Japanese scholars have maintained that the practice is also a kind of meditation, a chance to reflect on and purify not only their school surroundings, but their internal minds as well. Emphasising that education is not only classroom teaching but also cooperation with others, it is also very much about ethics, a sense of responsibility and above all public morality. The Japanese fans who joined the volunteers in cleaning up the litters in the World Cup stadiums, beyond doubt, have all grown up with the values that were instilled early from their school days.

In Manipur, unfortunately, cleanliness has been taken over by the term “social service”. The term is so deeply ingrained that its wrong use of the lexicon has been overlooked, and now it has become a socially accepted practice. This practice is very much common among the Meitei community. At a community level, a cleanliness drive in and around a leikai is called “social service”. The same is with the larger social group as well. We find press handouts from social organisations that a “social service” camp was carried out at a particular place. We also find news reports with the “social service” headlines. And if the reports are carried with pictures, we would certainly find people with brooms and spades. To put it straight, the wrong lexicon is a reflection of our collective failure to understand what actually a social service is. A broom and a spade can serve to clean an area or a surrounding. But it should not as a whole replace the idea of social service. For the record: the Encyclopedia Britannica defines social service as: ‘any of numerous publicly or privately provided services intended to aid disadvantaged, distressed, or vulnerable persons or groups. The term social service also denotes the profession engaged in rendering such services.’ There are also different concepts of ‘social service’ propounded by different social thinkers. Here, we would limit to its lexical aspect in the specific context of Manipur that is being used loosely as a popular vocabulary. It is also important to note that the wrong use of the lexicon has led us to a wrong sense of direction while rendering service of social import. A fresh example would be the ‘social services’ of cleaning the Kekrupat once a year during the month of June. Not to suggest that one should prescribe entirely to the definition given above, if we are to put in place the understanding and practice of social service, we can start from simple efforts. We should begin by avoiding littering in the public places; at the Shumang Leelas, at the cinemas, at the schools and colleges, at the offices. And more importantly on the roads, by doing so, we can emulate the Japanese Souji time at least at a different microscopic level, if not for the entire gamut of its value.

 

Leader Writer: Senate Kh

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/for-a-souji-time-in-lieu-of-social-service/

The State of the Fourth State in the State

Leader Writer: Svoboda Kangleicha The much maligned fourth estate in spite of being owned by big businesses has enough elbow room to come up with journalistic coups once in a

Leader Writer: Svoboda Kangleicha

The much maligned fourth estate in spite of being owned by big businesses has enough elbow room to come up with journalistic coups once in a while. The credibility of the Indian media which hit the nadir by its failure to detect anything amiss in the logbooks of an IT company despite having eight business newspapers at its disposal was restored when an English daily with a limited circulation unearthed a massive scam in the allocation of 2G spectrum involving business bigwigs, powerful ministers and influential media professionals. However, that hard earned credibility has now taken a beating as those selfsame tainted journalists have brazened it out all and are back in business, some more prominent than ever. The jury is still out on whether a witch-hunt among its own ranks would have done wonders for the credibility of the Indian media.

Closer home, the publication of a news story more than a fortnight ago by a vernacular newspaper of some women making Loktak Development Authority (LDA) officials fight shy of continuing with their forced evictions by running out of their huts without any clothes on and the fierce rebuttal by a civil body of the incident ever taking place put the state of the fourth state in the state at the crosshairs of general scrutiny. The incident has made it amply clear that reportage, at least in some sections of the vernacular media, remains shoddy, and reveals poor or little coordination between reporters and the news desk. Some probing questions from the news desk would have save the newspaper from carrying the story without being corroborated by evidence. Having said that the subsequent blackout of that news story by almost all the newspapers without any follow up stories on what exactly transpired is puzzling.

Sweeping the blooper committed by one of our own under the carpet is good for keeping the fraternal feeling intact but bad journalism. Journalists are responsible to truth, barring some exceptions, and nothing else. This is not to suggest that we should launch a witch-hunt against the newspaper for its poor reporting but we as journalists owe to the people to tell the real story. Elsewhere, a stringer of a national newspaper had made derogatory statements about the quality of the scribes in the state. In these circumstances, the journalists’ body of the state must realise that we can’t blame others before we put our house in order.

What the journalists’ body asked for from other newspapers was a form of censorship: self-censorship. George Orwell has written about the damages of self-censorship in any democratic society. The first priority of journalists is to unearth the truth and if they start exercising self censorship than truth is going to be the first casualty.

We need to emulate and achieve the journalistic heights set by people like Rodolfo Walsh who never flinched while performing his duty as a journalist. Many credited the military genius of Fidel Castro for defending Cuba during the CIA backed invasion by some mercenaries in the Bay of Pigs invasion but it was this journalist who decrypted the telex about plans to invade Cuba that prepared the former for withstanding the attack.

We need to imbibe the spirit of that intelligent and intrepid scribe like him.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/the-state-of-the-fourth-state-in-the-state/

The Boss is Always Right

The recent IB report insinuating that NGOs receiving foreign funds work against national interest is comic as much as it is outrageous. It is also reminiscent of the days of

The recent IB report insinuating that NGOs receiving foreign funds work against national interest is comic as much as it is outrageous. It is also reminiscent of the days of institutionalized xenophobia when the mysterious “foreign hand” was conveniently used to explain away every social disorder. The Northeast, where grievances were numerous, ranging from simple demands for statehood under the Indian Constitution to complete sovereignty from it, was a prime focus of this glare of the intelligence establishment. For some years now, it had seemed a new era of liberalism based on trust and respect of the voices of democratic dissent was dawning, but now this optimism seems belied.

The men behind the IB, as many observers have already pointed out, are mere playing to what they believe is the taste of their new boss in Delhi’s corridors of power in the tradition of bureaucratic sycophancy so familiar in the Indian officialdom, otherwise this allegation should have been their conclusion long ago as there is nothing new about foreign funds for social activism. Adding credence to this hypothesis is that the foreign funds singled out for the insinuations are those that support ecological conservation, human rights, anti-mining campaigns, gender equality, indigenous peoples’ rights etc. Ironically, the report has nothing to say of foreign funds that flow liberally into the mining sector, dam building, and other private businesses and enterprises which fall into activities categorized by the State as progressive investments.

The hypocrisy however does not end here. Foreign funds for instance are also available in terms of scholarships and fellowships for studies abroad. It will not be a surprise at all if some or many of those very same IB officers who have put together the report on foreign fund flow into the social sectors of the country, have their children studying abroad on foreign scholarships and thereafter working in the countries where these funds originated from. It would indeed be very interesting to do an assessment of the number of top bureaucrats and functionaries of the Government of India, who would fall into this category. This is important, for if NGOs can be influenced by foreign funds to soft peddle the vested interests of the countries these funds originate from, top bureaucrats also obviously would become soft towards the counties which availed fellowships to their children, and thereby opening up employment avenues for them there. People in positions of power, capable of determining the country’s policy directions in a profound way, coming under the influence of the soft diplomacies of foreign powers this way obviously should be seen as compromising the interest of the country much more than NGO environmentalists and human rights defenders.

There is one more interesting inference to be made from the IB report controversy. It has exposed the abject lack of the spirit of philanthropy in this country. That NGO activism is a vitally essential part of the democratic polity is beyond argument. Indeed the United Nations is the mother of all NGOs. The Geneva Conventions, The Hague Laws, etc would all fall within this broad wing of democratic governance, sometimes even referred to as the fifth pillar of democracy. Their birth and existence were all premised on the assumption that while the State is inevitable, there is nothing to presume the State can do no wrong, and in fact, left unchecked the State can do immense wrongs. An adversarial role for themselves against the State hence is the logic of their very existence – not to destroy the State but to prevent it from doing wrongs in their “nationalizing” and “developmental” projects. But NGOs are not authorized to levy taxes to raise their own money. This is the sole prerogative of the State. They are not businesses of profit either. They therefore have to depend on charity to run their campaigns.

The stark and shameful fact is, there is virtually no such funds independent of the government within the country. This is precisely because the notion of donating to charity is alien to the ethos of this country. The country has so many Fortune 500 billionaires today, but not a single worthwhile charity under their names. So if activists in the country want to work towards alleviating poverty or the misery of AIDS, or fight deforestation, check degradation of land by mining, conduct media sensitizing programmes… they would have no choice than to look to the philanthropies of the likes of Gates, Ford, Fulbright,

Agassi, Rockefeller, CARITAS, CORDAID etc, for help. This is a country where the rich are interested only in dodging taxes and not donating to public funds. Few or nobody believe in giving back, they only believe in taking.

In those “foreign countries” with huge charitable funds, even teenage stars like Taylor Swift and Matt Damon donate selflessly to public charities. In India, as an India Today story put it, even potential Bharat Ratna and unparalleled cricket star, Saching Tendulkar, entered his profession as an actor in the income tax return form, claiming he has acted in TV commercials, so he can save a few crore rupees. The list of Indian billionaire tax dodgers is intimidating. But of course, how would IB report writers be interested in these mundane affairs. They only want to change their hues in keeping with the change of bosses.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/the-boss-is-always-right/

June 18: For a Broader Viewpoint

The National Democratic Alliance was in power when the ‘June Uprising’ in Manipur took place in 2001. Atal Bihari Vajpayee headed the government as the Prime Minister then. His deputy

The National Democratic Alliance was in power when the ‘June Uprising’ in Manipur took place in 2001. Atal Bihari Vajpayee headed the government as the Prime Minister then. His deputy Lal Krishna Advani was the Home Minister when the infamous “Bangkok Declaration” flared up intense agitation in Manipur. The people of Manipur were apprehensive that the territorial integrity of the state was on peril, as specifically the words “without territorial limit” were included in the agreement signed between the government of India and the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak- Muivah) group in June 14, 2001. The geographical extension of the ceasefire evoked protests from people not only from Manipur, but also from Assam and Arunachal Pradesh as they feared that the NSCN(I-M) would use the clause “without territorial limits” to legitimise its demand for a “Greater Nagaland”. Widespread agitation escalated with demonstrations on the streets. In Manipur 18 lives were lost during the agitation. The then regime of the NDA had to retract “without territorial limit” from the agreement. Now in 2014, the same NDA is back in power at Delhi, with a new a Prime Minister and a Home Minister. The All Manipur United Club Organisation in its recent demonstration held a few days back has made their statement loud and clear. AMUCO has maintained that the “Bangkok Declaration” was a ‘divisive policy’ of the government of India. Expressing apprehension that the same government is back, AMUCO urged that the people of Manipur have to be alert. The organisation has drawn attention on the possible outcome of talks with the NSCN-IM and other underground groups under the Suspension of Operation; that the talk should not compromise the territorial integrity of Manipur.
13 years have passed since then. One may disagree with the observation made by AMUCO as misapprehension on their part, that with the coming of the NDA back in power the past would repeat. Yet, one must acknowledge their sense of retention in identifying the party who were the regime in-charge, who bungled with the words “without territorial limit” while engaging with the NSCM-IM. On a positive note, this year’s observation saw the joint effort of United Committee of Manipur and AMUCO. This is the second observation that the two apex bodies have joined hands. The issue of territorial integrity has its primacy, and it will continue to have as long as the ongoing talk does not come to a logical end. Here, we might also add that while the issue of armed conflict in the region is left, seemingly unaddressed on the part of the Indian government, there have been other new developments in the past one decade or so. For instance, the issue of climate change demands a joint understanding and collective action of all countries disregarding of political boundaries and geographical location. In the same manner, the opening up of the Northeast to the market economies of the world demands a collective serious attention of the states sans ethnic affiliations. The Trans Asian highways sooner or later are going to be a Northeast reality. The World Bank and the Asian Development Bank have already invested huge money in the Northeast for developing infrastructures. Multinational companies have begun its work to explore the mineral resources in the reason. Moreover, the Indian government has already decided to pump in huge amount of money for transforming the Northeast into a tourism destination. A major chunk of the money has been earmarked for the state of Manipur. All these developments are going to have a paramount impact on the socio economic and cultural firmament of the Northeast region. The people of the region have to be prepared for this. For that, a joint effort and collective understanding of the issues are very much needed. An isolated approach from an ethnic vantage point will take us nowhere.
Leader Writer: Senate Kh

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/june-18-for-a-broader-viewpoint/

Bye to Red Light Beacon: Bye to Haughtiness

The state cabinet’s resolution to comply Supreme Court’s directives on limiting the use of red light beacon with flashers on vehicles is certainly welcome. Following the directives, the state cabinet

The state cabinet’s resolution to comply Supreme Court’s directives on limiting the use of red light beacon with flashers on vehicles is certainly welcome. Following the directives, the state cabinet has decided that red beacon flashers will be narrowed down to five dignitaries only. They are the Governor of Manipur, Chief Minister, deputy Chief Minister, Speaker of the Manipur Legislative Assembly and Chief Justice of the Manipur High Court. It may be recalled that Supreme Court had directed all states to restrict the number of VIPs using the red beacon. A Bench of Justice G.S Singhvi and C. Nagappan gave the ruling on December 2013, on a writ petition from Abhay Singh, directing the states to amend their respective Motor Vehicle Rules to limit the use of red beacon. The ruling further directed to impose exemplary fine on those who misuse it. The Bench maintained: “The red lights symbolise power and the stark differentiation between those who are allowed to use them and the ones who are not. A large number of those using vehicles with red lights have no respect for the laws, and they treat the ordinary citizens with contempt. The use of red lights on the vehicles of public representatives and civil servants has perhaps no parallel in the world democracies.”

The Court ruling traced back the origin of the red light beacon to the days of the British Raj. Clearly, the ruling is against those people who misuse power mostly on roads. We, as common commuters on road have been witness to ‘power plays’ of VIPs whenever they pass with their cavalcade. Some of us have not just been witness, but also have been victim of their abuses. In Manipur, one might say, the removal of the red light beacon would bring a little change. This is because even if you remove the red light beacon, the haughty nature of VIPs will perhaps never change. Most importantly, the vehicles of the VIPs must be made to maintain a speed limit. On any given day, no matter how congested the traffic is, one can sense the arrival of the VIP from a good distance. Blaring horns from their cavalcade would scream endlessly at the commuters around. In most cases, the security vehicles leading the cavalcades are the primary source of nuisance. They have little sense of respect for the common commuters on the road. With no sign of any possible remedy of the traffic chaos that we witness everyday on the roads, a VIP cavalcade adds woes to the already perturbed commuters. Should we also remind that haughtiness on the road by those in ‘power’ does not confine to VIPs alone. The army and the paramilitary forces, along with the state police regularly flex their muscles on the roads. Needless to explain that their jobs demand swift actions, for instance, reaching a place of crime without wasting any time. Their service to the people is important, no doubt. But that should not be a license to harass the common commuters. The haughty attitude must also go away along with the removal of the red beacon. As for the horns, the Court ruling also mentions of regulating the multi-toned horns on the roads. The state cabinet must also pay attention to the directive of amending the existing Motor Vehicle Rules. We suggest it should address the perennial problem of traffic congestion, along with other problems on the roads. Let the removal of the red light beacon be a symbolic beginning for a good planning and a robust execution.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/bye-to-red-light-beacon-bye-to-haughtiness/

A Suitable Rank for Bembem

Oinam Bembem as a young girl started playing football with the boys of her neighbourhood. Her talent in the game was not ordinary even when she was young. The Young

Oinam Bembem as a young girl started playing football with the boys of her neighbourhood. Her talent in the game was not ordinary even when she was young. The Young Amateur Welfare Association, a club based in Imphal was quick to identify Bembem’s talent. That was Bembem’s first ever footstep into professional football tournament. Today Bembem is undoubtedly the face of Indian women football. She is the first women from Manipur to bag the title of ‘Best Footballer’ for two times. The title is awarded by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for the year 2001 and 2013. Yet Bembem’s journey from the YAWA club to the international tournaments has not been a smooth one. Right from her early days Bembem had to swim against the tide. Her parents were not encouraging. This is rather typical for most families. Though it is proudly claimed that the state of Manipur is the powerhouse of games and sports; respectable and sustainable livelihood for their children is the priority of parents. Parents are doubtful that their children’s choice of career in sports would guarantee them a sustainable income in the future. Bembem’s parents were no different from other parents. Their perpetual advice for Bembem was not to divert her attention from formal education. Bembem has however proved that her parents were wrong by her achievements in due course. Yet one can imagine how Bembem must have struggled fighting against all odds. It must have been challenging for Bembem to fight her ways, particularly without the backing of her family. And it is not surprising, that today, Bembem parents are proud to have a star daughter in the family.

Bembem’s career as a women footballer has been a remarkable one indeed. She is an attacking midfielder known for her prolific goal scores, who having scored more than fifty international goals. She was already a name in the 10th Asia Football Championship which was held at Malaysia in 1995. Having represented the country since she was 15 years of age, Bembem has captained the Indian women football team and has brought laurels too. In an interview with Sportskeeda, a sports website, Bembem opined that the Indian men’s football team gets much better facilities than its women counterpart. This is despite the fact that the men’s team is ranked below 150th ranking in the world, whereas the women’s team is ranked 52nd. Needless to say, women football in India has not got its due recognition till today. But one has to be optimistic like Bembem. In 2012, a delegation of FIFA including a consultant on women’s football visited Manipur. Bembem had then urged the delegation to set up academies for women footballers. We have to wait and see whether Bembem’s request materialises or not. Moreover, the employment opportunities for women footballers, particularly in the state are very few. Women footballers are employed mostly in the Indian Railways. Bembem cites the example of Y. Kamala, L. Naobi and N. Montessori who left Manipur because of their jobs in the Indian Railways. Bembem is currently an employee of Manipur Police. In a recent interview with the IFP, Bembem was reluctant to divulge her position in the professional hierarchy of the state police. She deserves the same rank with that of N. Kunjarani in the Central Reserved Police Force and Mary Kom in the state police. The fact that she has not appeared in world championships or Olympic Games in an individual event should not be the soul criteria. Now, Bembem is going to reach her retirement age in professional football as an active player soon. She wishes to serve as a coach after that. The state police should give her suitable rank as a retirement gift.

Leader Writer: Senate Khuraijam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/a-suitable-rank-for-bembem/

Rains and blocked drains

For quite a long spell this year, Manipur was reeling under an intense heat wave without any rains, the kind of which has not been seen earlier. The situation was

For quite a long spell this year, Manipur was reeling under an intense heat wave without any rains, the kind of which has not been seen earlier. The situation was long overdue given the nature of growing urbanization, depleting green cover, rising pollution levels and terrible civic sense with our tendency to litter places with plastic and plastic made materials. But what it also showed was that concerned Government authorities and departments do not have any strategic measures outlined for catering to the needs of an urbanized population. During that rainless period, the buzz was on the lack of drinking water even as private water carriers made a killing by hiking up their rates with no guarantee that the water they were giving to their customers was safe for drinking. The scrutiny over the water levels in the Singda dam has been forgotten and kept aside, now that short spells of rain have made its presence in parts of the state while bringing on another headache of water logging.

For all the talks of using foreign technologies of clearing siltation from rivers and unblocking drainages, not much action has happened on the ground. With the sewerage project yet to see the light of day, the piling up of garbage on roads and river banks have only aggravated the situation. There are a few private agencies operating garbage pick up services but without a holistic plan in place with regard to garbage disposal, these services have mostly ended up as being too little in terms of scope and reach, too inadequate in terms of service regularity and too inefficient in terms of making it work. Poor civic sense of the larger public has compounded the situation day by day. This last bit can be seen in the way private homesteads and individuals encroach upon public areas, thereby leaving narrower drains; people using roads and lanes as holding places for their construction materials which in turn lead to clogging up drains and usurping the space meant for public movement etc.

Many road stretches from Pishumthong to Keishamthong, the Uripok main area after the over-bridge and Nagampal area along with many other areas including the Secretariat area in Imphal West and in Imphal East are often inundated by flash floods brought on by water logging. While the initiative of the Government in widening the main roads of the town is note worthy, the spectacle of road side drains being raised much beyond the surface of the roads means that water logging stays on the main roads every time there is a downpour. Lost in the hoopla over widened roads, the powers that be have forgotten to put in drains in a manner that water even if it accumulates on the roads can seep down and flow its course. The basic idea of liquids flowing down from a higher level to a lower one has been turned around, by our learned engineers. It is not clear what purpose this serves but the after effects can be seen in almost all parts of Imphal in the aftermath of any rainfall burst.

Waterlogged areas with clogged drains does not really augur well for the hygiene and sanitation of people living around the said places. It can be a harbinger of diseases and water borne infections, not to mention the risk of contaminating water bodies and pipes carrying drinking water. Also, given the condition of most roads in Imphal with gaping potholes being a common hazard, the risks of accidents in places where water and slush has collected on roads is indeed heightened. But even as the concerned departments and Government authority seem to be unaffected with the water-logging and the flash flooding from drains on the roads and lanes, the common man too seems to be barely concerned beyond having to bother about how they will maneuver the roads they must commute in their day to day lives. If each household were to take the lead and responsibility in cleaning up the drains in their immediate surroundings and invest in water harvesting initiatives, the free fall of rain water and the amount of spill-over would be cut down in some measure. There can be no one single manner of addressing a seasonal occurrence such as water logging or flash flooding as an urban nuisance and characteristic. It tells us that along with the Government agencies, the common man will have to join in by giving more serious attention to the environment around him.

Leader Writer: Chitra Ahanthem

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/rains-and-blocked-drains/

Toppers, rank holders as ad materials

Leader Writer: Ksh Sopen In harmonious with NCERT guideline for holistic approach to education , CBSE and Council of Higher Secondary Education Manipur have declared their respective class X and

Leader Writer: Ksh Sopen
In harmonious with NCERT guideline for holistic approach to education , CBSE and Council of Higher Secondary Education Manipur have declared their respective class X and XII exam results without mentioning the names of the rank holders broadly grouping the students into A1, A2, B1, B2 and so on. This system is known as Cumulative Grade Point Average scoring. This teaching-learning shift has been introduced in India in phase-wise manner so as to make educational activity more enjoyable to the students with a slogan of ‘learning without burden’ irrespective of high graders or low graders. The earlier system only recognises rank holders as students thereby sidelining the low achievers which in turn produce socially disengaged youths and anti-social elements. However, the galaxy of prominent and literary personalities around the world and also in India has are comprised of the low school achievers and average performers. The revised National Curriculum Framework – 2009 opens with a quotation from Rabindranath Tagore’s essay, Civilisation and Progress, in which the poet reminds us that ‘creative spirit’ and ‘generous joy’ are keys in childhood, both of which can be distorted by an unthinking and imaginative adult world.

The holistic approach to education develops students to be critical and confident which aims at making learning more interesting to students as well as to the teachers. It is a process of self-improvement that recognizes the self and the social context of learning and teaching by recognising the needs of the students in the interaction. It recognizes that the exchanges that take place within social action are the foundation for developing critical learning including that of experiential knowledge of learners and teachers to improve the quality of the teaching situation and levels of learners’ achievement. Holistic education is a philosophy that each person finds identity, meaning and purpose in life through connections to the community, to the natural world and to humanitarian values such as compassion and peace. Holistic approach to education aims at calling forth from people an intrinsic reverence for life and a passionate love for learning. Through holistic learning, one will find personal interpretation of the world.

Contrary to the National Curriculum Framework, many private schools of Manipur have been publishing the names of the rank holder students in an advertisement bid to attract students to their respective schools. One can find such advertisements in many local dailies. In the advertisements, the school authorities publish the photos of the rank holders along with the notice of admission opening of their schools. The school authorities never think of the unsuccessful and low grade students. They never express their concerns for such students but a major portion of school income comes from these students. So, customised learning system and necessary academic counselling should be provided to the poor graders. Moreover, the school authorities must give a certain portion of their income to those students whose photos and achievements are used for admission advertisement. In this connection, the concerned students can also claim their share as a right for using their photos and names in the admission advertisement.

On the other hand, the government schools in the state need a magic hand from the government to perform at par with the private schools. In this matter, the management of some selected schools of the existing Manipur govt schools could be transferred to Navodaya Vidyalaya Sangathan or others which have good record of school management. Such school could be run on PPP model but non-residential unlike the residential JNVs as residential schools demand more funds. What is needed is to evolve a new system.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/toppers-rank-holders-as-ad-materials/

Kakching Calling

The agitations that have turned violent at Kakching Lamkhai of Thoubal District on June 12 demands immediate intervention from the state government. Just a few days back residents of Kakching

The agitations that have turned violent at Kakching Lamkhai of Thoubal District on June 12 demands immediate intervention from the state government. Just a few days back residents of Kakching area had blocked the Kakching Lamkhai road to air their grievances. Their complaint was that a group of people claiming themselves to be the members of Laiching Village authority have allegedly destroyed tree plantation at the Kakching Mamangching on May 21. Accordingly the residents of Kakching have demanded an apology from those involved in destroying the plantation at Mamangching. The residents had voiced their anger by calling a road blockade at Kakching Lamkhai early this month as the plantation destroyers remained unrelenting. The 24 hour strike called on June 12 is not an isolated incident. The strikers were also angry because billboards with ‘Chandel’ inscribed began appearing between Kakching Lamkhai and Pallel along the Asian Highway No. 1, though the area is apparently within the jurisdiction of Thoubal district. The recent violent action of destroying the billboards indicates an accumulated feeling of resentment, as it seems. It is learned that the people of Kakching are not particularly pleased with the land demarcation between Kakching and its surrounding areas. Inhabited mostly by Maring community from an early period of time, the traditional inter village demarcation is believed to be the catchment area at Mamangching. The changes brought about by new concepts of town planning in this area have made the highway the demarcating point, instead of the catchment area. And also, uneven urbanisation ensued with the setting up of the greater Kakching area. Landholding values thus have increased randomly in and around the area. The amorphousness in the boundary added confusion and discontentment between the neighbouring villagers, which if not addressed urgently could upset ties among the communities. By saying this, we are not pressing the panic button in any away.

Needless to say, the recent unrest also indicates the poverty of foresightedness on the part of the town planners. A prerequisite practice like public consultation, which is a gem of our democratic ethos, is an alien concept to the town planners. At times their bureaucratic arrogance insulates them from public opinion. The state intervention is painfully late in most of the cases. Reportedly, the residents of Kakching have already appealed to the authorities for correcting the name of the place on the billboards. The fire-fighting approach of the state authorities needs to be changed. The district police along with the municipal authorities tried to bring an understanding with the protestors. But it turned out to be counterproductive, giving ample room for the authorities to learn lesson, that it was not the way as it should be. Timely intervention is the answer. Destruction of property, either private or public by the protestors is also condemnable. For that matter, violent actions should be avoided to register any protest. At the same time, one should also question the role of our civil voluntary organisations for their invisibility in such sensitive cases. This is not to suggest that the organisation should get involved in all sorts of petty disputes in a Leikai. Rather, we expect them to reach out to the people and not vice-versa. The civil voluntary organisation should not distance themselves from the people. To be with the people and to know the pulse of the people are unique advantages of the organisations. More importantly, they should not shy to learn from the people as well.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/kakching-calling/

Soothing Balm & the Iron Fist

The Ministry of Home Affairs, government of India has constituted a special committee headed by MP Bezbaruah, a retired bureaucrat, presently member of the North East Council. Deputy Secretary of

The Ministry of Home Affairs, government of India has constituted a special committee headed by MP Bezbaruah, a retired bureaucrat, presently member of the North East Council. Deputy Secretary of the Ministry of Home Affairs is the member secretary of the committee, joined by four retired bureaucrats as members. It is said that the committee will examine the security concerns and discrimination against the people from the Northeastern states of India. The committee will suggest measures to be taken up by the government and legal remedies to address the issue. Meanwhile, the Delhi Police in the capital is not sitting quite either; they have also rolled up their sleeves by setting up a ‘Special Cell’ to address policing issues especially related with the Northeast. Special helpline to accept distress call from the people of the Northeast has been made accessible. While highlighting an action plan for greater integration of the Northeast with the rest of the country, the National Democratic Alliance’s newly appointed minister for Information and Broadcasting, Prakash Javadekar has recently exhorted that the Northeast should be India’s gateway to South-East Asia and therefore connectivity of television and radio should be strengthen in the region. We are sure the minister is already aware and does not have to be reminded that television connectivity is already here after the satellite television boom in India. We have all kinds of channels in our drawing rooms, but as viewers at the receiving end. DD Northeast is one channel that telecast Northeast programs. Javadekar’s ministry needs to be clear about the core area that requires strengthening. Ideas have also been flaunted that Northeast should be a filming destination and more films from the Northeast should be included in the film festivals. The idea is stimulating, for it purportedly recognises the significance of film as a strong medium. Yet the viability of the filmic idea is left to be seen.

There is nothing new or special about the elaborate arrangement taken up by the MHA and the Delhi Police vis-à-vis the Northeast people in Delhi. On the one hand you try to apply a soothing balm to the wounds of the Northeast people, particularly in the capital region and on the other you control the Northeast region with an iron fist. The government of India’s concern for the Northeast does not end with ‘special committees’ or ‘special cell’ of the police. There is even a separate ministry for the Northeast. Pratap Bhanu Mehta of Centre for Policy Research taking a jibe on the ministry said, “If ever there was a ministry designed to convince the people of a particular region that they were not a normal part of India”, that is the ministry of Northeast. Sanjib Baruah in his hard-hitting essay ‘Generals as Governors’ from his book Durable Disorder gives a critical account of the militaristic mindset that the Indian state has of the Northeast region. Baruah argues that ‘the apex decision-making node (of the Northeast) is the Home Ministry in New Delhi housed in North Block on Raisina Hill. The operational node which implements the decisions consists of the Indian Army, and other military, police and intelligence units controlled by the central and state governments, and involves complex coordination’. The retired army general VK Singh’s appointment as minister of state for Development of North Eastern Region perhaps vindicates Baruah’s argument.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/soothing-balm-the-iron-fist/

Befitting Punishment for Food Adulterators

The joint team of the Food Safety and Narcotics & Affairs of Borers must be commended for their successful search operation and seizure of adulterated edible mustard oil and betel

The joint team of the Food Safety and Narcotics & Affairs of Borers must be commended for their successful search operation and seizure of adulterated edible mustard oil and betel nuts worth around Rupees 50 lakhs. According to a spokesperson of the joint team, the adulteration process has been going on at the seized warehouse for the more than eight months. The warehouse is owned by a trader presently staying at Thangal Bazar in Imphal. He operates under the name ‘Ajay Trader’. Further investigation by the joint team revealed that the oil tins after reaching Imphal are opened, and then they are mixed with adulterants. After that the labourers reseal it with new trademarks to be distributed in the markets of Manipur. As per the information given by the Food Safety team, the edible oil seized is worth around 30 lakhs. It is anybody’s guess what the amount of edible oil that would have been adulterated with that sum of money. It is simply terrifying that large sections of our population have been consuming adulterated oil unknowingly. In all likelihood this could be could be just tip of the iceberg. In all probability edible substances other than oil and betel nuts must have been adulterated and sold into the market by unscrupulous businessman. Needless to say, the adulterated products would have reached our kitchens to be consumed by everyone in the family: including our young children. And while having commended the effort of the joint team of the Food Safety and Narcotics & Affairs of Border, there have been voices from the skeptics too. The skeptics have contended that the authorities have acted too late to unearth the malicious acts practiced by the traders. But it is never too late for such kind of operation. In fact, such kind of operation should be done on regular basis. Surprise raid should be conducted in the warehouses. Moreover such kind of operation should not be the last one. As it is seen in the state, most good things do not last long. They somehow turn out to be a damp squib at the end of the day. If this kind of operation comes to an abrupt end, we are afraid that the public might lost their trust with the agencies. Their inactiveness in the future could give a wrong message to the public that the agencies are working hand in glove with the cartel of adulterators. Therefore, it is important for the agencies to maintain consistencies in unearthing such crimes. This is a big challenge for the Food Safety team. Needless to say that businessmen operating in such trade are very powerful lobbyist. Besides having shrewd business skills, they are also well versed in influencing the people who are in the corridors of power. Yet this should not dampen the spirit of Food Safety team. They should be ready to face any eventualities. As it has come to light that the trader is someone who operates from Thangal Bazar – the commercial hub of Imphal, we certainly doubt that the trader is the only one. There must be other traders who sell adulterated foodstuffs for their illegal gains. There is also likelihood of an organised cartel who earns huge profits by adulterating food products. In that case the authority should waste no time to book them. Those found involved in food adulteration should be given exemplary punishment by the law. We hope the present case will not be swept under the carpet after some clandestine deals.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/befitting-punishment-for-food-adulterators/

Employed: For How Long?

The bleak scenario of unemployment in Manipur has remained stagnant. For the state, it has become a routine affair to publish the latest statistics from the unemployment registered in the

The bleak scenario of unemployment in Manipur has remained stagnant. For the state, it has become a routine affair to publish the latest statistics from the unemployment registered in the employment exchange. Fiscal deficit in the state has not only remained unchecked but increased instead. In simple terms, fiscal deficit is spending more money than one has. What is unsurprisingly peculiar of the government of Manipur is its nonchalant failure to produce utilisation certificates. One does not need hard econometrics to calculate the amount of money that the government gets every year in its begging bowl. No matter how many times you fail to produce utilisation certificates, New Delhi never fail to shower its benevolence with all kinds of funds. Should we take it as a positive sign that the ruling Congress party abruptly wakes up to ‘financial discipline’ and ‘state center relationship’ after the party’s debacle in the 16th Lok Sabha Election? Or is it just a nervous rambling of the Congress party after the National Democratic Alliance have formed its government in the center? The reason could be the both. But with the present economy of the government both at the state and the national level, fiscal deficit seemingly will remained unchanged. The unemployment problem is clearly the problem of employability. This problem became more pronounced after the economic liberalisation policies that India followed in 1991, as economist who are against liberalisation have argued. The impact on employment after liberalisation is one of the most debated subjects among the economist, and it is also an area of research being taken up wide scale. We shall engage with the liberalisation debate at some other point of time though. As far as employment is concern, the government’s explanation is the need for practicing austerity measures owing to the fiscal deficit in the economy. The ban on recruitment in government sector is one evident example. So far Manipur government’s job recruitment is largely concentrated on taking more and more number of policemen in the name of fighting insurgency in the state. Another area of recruitment is the Manipur Public Service, which intake level is meager though the government has announced that there will be regular recruitment in this sector to fill up the required post. Moreover this sector cannot afford mass recruitment because of the limited nature of job requirement. For instance, you cannot recruit not more than a dozen or two civil servants at a time. Other than these two areas, there has been no recruitment at all in the government sector. The centrally sponsored schemes give a small respite. Nevertheless, most of the schemes’ recruitments are solely on contractual basis. Take any name, whether it is the Sarava Shiksha Abhiyan, Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan in education or the recruitment in National Rural Health mission in health sector, those employed through these schemes are all contractual labourers. These employees, though they are employed in a sense, walk with uncertainties looming large in their minds. Contract labourers are not entitled to any sort of social securities, moreover there are ambiguities as far as the legal binding of their jobs are concern. One clear example would be the recent protest demonstration taken out at the gate of the state SSA office. Those protestors were employed in the SSA scheme. They have alleged that the state SSA mission has wrongfully relieved them from their jobs. On the other hand, the authorities have justified the move, saying that their time of contract had already expired in the March this year. It is apparent that those protestors are well aware of the time of expiry of their contract. The scenario is not much different with those who are employed through NRHM. It is learned that some of the employees have already been duped by some imposters, who took away a large sum of money with the promise of regularising their contract. Stories like this one will unfold more in the days ahead.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/employed-for-how-long/

His Excellency’s Trips to Development

His Excellency the Governor of Manipur, Vinod Kumar Duggal’s proactive stance on development is welcome. Shri VK Duggal ever since his appointment as the Governor of Manipur in December last

His Excellency the Governor of Manipur, Vinod Kumar Duggal’s proactive stance on development is welcome. Shri VK Duggal ever since his appointment as the Governor of Manipur in December last year has been active with his visible presence in public. Being the ceremonial head of the state under the Constitution of India, he is entitled with privileges. The media of the state do not miss to cover most of His Excellency’s appearance in public life. Whether it may be of his gracious presence in a function, or his tour to the far-flung hill Districts, travelling on road without a helicopter; we cannot commit the blunder of not covering His Excellency. Earlier he had visited Ukhrul district to take part in the Shirui Lily Week. And very recently the Governor visited Chandel District Headquarters and inspected various developmental works taken up in the District. His Excellency has already made it known that he has taken a vow that unless the government sanctions the money required for repairing the District Headquarter roads, he will not visit any of the Districts. As the money has got sanctioned, so was his visit to the District Headquarter. The Governor told the people of Chandel that he could have come by helicopter but he opted to travel by road to experience the hardships faced by the people. One his reminded of the accounts of Mughal emperor Akbar, who ruled Medieval India. The emperor’s love for his people was profound; such was his love that he went in disguise among his people to personally feel their miseries. One is also reminded of a seminar held in 2004, in which the then Governor of Mizoram was speaking of the development work that was supposedly taken up by his government. The Governor of Mizoram told that the roads in his state were in superb condition. All thanks to his active mobility within the state that the government of Mizoram had to repair the roads everywhere he sat his foot. Well, His Excellency VK Duggal the Governor of Manipur is neither the emperor Akbar nor the then Governor of Mizoram. But one can find some similar traits, as far as their love for the people is concern. While addressing the 7th Session of the 10th Manipur Legislative Assembly, which was His Excellency’s first ever address after his appointment as the Governor of Manipur; he conveyed that his government has been striving for ‘all round development’ and ‘delivery of good governance’ for the people. Some commentators might describe His Excellency’s proactive stance as something ‘out of the box’ or an ingenious step towards bringing development in the state. But not to question the good intents of His Excellency or to hurt his privilege, we find it a bit overtly ceremonial on his part. If his idea of bringing about all round development in the state is by traveling on roads to far-flung areas, where development has been bludgeon to death by an unholy nexus of so many ‘players’ in the state, it is certainly not an excellent idea – however ingenious it may sound. Needless to say that the state Chief Secretary had also aired his discontent that roads are repaired only when VIP or VVIPs are on the move, it is just the plain truth that the top bureaucrat had said. If the roads in the state are meant to be repaired for the VIPs alone, then nothing can be as pathetic as the present state of governance. His Excellency should not over emphasise the mendacity of the present government and its governance by throwing himself into ‘development trips’. He can travel all far, and as much as he can in the state. He is welcome to do that. But at the same time, we would like to see him question on how development was bludgeon to death in this part of the world.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/his-excellencys-trips-to-development/

Mediocre Media and its ‘Power’

Leader Writer: Paojel Chaoba Recently, there was an ‘exclusive’ report in a vernacular newspaper Sanaleibak. The story was of an incident which occurred at Loktak lake in which some officials

Leader Writer: Paojel Chaoba

Recently, there was an ‘exclusive’ report in a vernacular newspaper Sanaleibak. The story was of an incident which occurred at Loktak lake in which some officials of the Loktak Development Authority (LDA) approached a settlement area on motorboats and tried to dismantle the huts built on the floating vegetation forcibly. It continued that some 50 women ran out of these huts without any clothes on, thus shaming the LDA officials to shy away.

This report was challenged by the All Loktak Lake Fisherman Union of Manipur (ALLAFUM) and a press conference was held in the regard at Manipur Press Club. The irate womenfolk whose subsistence is derived from the lake were righteously irked with the news. They clarified categorically on the impossibility of such an incident taking place at the lake without their notice, plus it was pointed out that the news report had quoted the source of the news as culled from an LDA official. The women told media persons that the image of the women around the Loktak area were tarnished by the news and demanded a clarification from the concerned publication.

Post the conference, the activists saw the morning editions. Most of the reports were toned down to such a level as akin to killing the story and burying it in the inside pages. Some popular publications even left out the news of the press conference. The local media made it a point that the name of the paper was omitted and politely termed it as a “vernacular paper”, which if not for the strictures by the All Manipur Working Journalists Union, AMWJU, in all fairness and natural retribution should have been clearly mentioned.

The media has a role of providing information to the masses and if possible with strict adherence to media ethics. Ethics in the media is always practiced on a self regulatory basis beside the ground rules laid down by the Press Council of India (PCI). One of the main objectives of a free press is to maintain neutrality and the news to be printed after taking both sides of a story. Though, sometimes this may also be problematic according to the type of news to be culled, as for instance; a bomb may explode and one cannot dig out the perpetrator without the latter claiming the incident though a medium of communication.

However, a story which has merit should be investigated in detail and this should remain a major prerogative of the ethical scribe. All reputed media organizations should guarantee this condition. This is so as to avoid nepotism and to do justice to the story, hence leading to democratizing the media.

But, in this land locked state, the advent of mass communication may have come a long way from Hijam Irabot’s cyclostyled ‘Meitei Chanu’ in 1922 to the new wave printing technology of present.

But, despite the quality upgradation in printing machinery, the same cannot be said of the reportage or editing policies. There seems of a certain lacking with the operations of the local media. The aforesaid reportage of the Loktak dwellers which were obviously not in tandem with the finer ethics of media is an example. The fishers of the lake have a legitimate right to voice their grievances to the papers and further publication, as their statement or allegation against said paper holds much water. As a matter of fact, the said newspaper should have been made compelled by the law to publish an appropriate and proportionate apology at exactly the same spot on the front page that the contested news was published. For this to happen, the complainants should have invoked the relevant law by filing a defamation suit, in a relevant court of law. Such a recourse would have ensured a more legitimate, wider and fuller coverage of the event in all newspapers of the state. Once the matter becomes a legal issue, the media would have been bound by the law’s course rather than be restricted by the AMWJU custom. It would have been legally established beyond all reasonable doubt whether the report by the said newspaper amounted to slander or else the women were making unsubstantiated allegation. However, even if the matter was not taken to this length, it still remains a matter of debate whether the rest of the media should have exonerated the newspaper in question so lightly for what is now deemed to be false and damaging on the reputation of these women.

Indeed, killing the story or burying it unceremoniously just points to the obvious that the some of the heads of the editing staff are not up to the mark and their competency level is just mediocre. It surmounts to such a manner that the media remains untouchable and the media houses need to hug up one another despite making inexcusable mistakes. The local rule laid down by the journalist union that the name of a publication cannot be put in another paper borders on nepotism rather than unity. It bogs down the rightful voices and upholds the sordid impunity of a media organization. Such unprofessionalism and the behavior which makes one look at the media as a ‘mafia’ has to be checked and the some of the top editorial ‘cartels’ needs to be ousted to herald in a free and neutral media.

It is felt that the practice of every principled scribe is also to challenge authority, sometimes to usher in development and do away with corruption, and it cannot be said that the media as a whole is untainted. The media houses should learn to be courageous and be capable to confront the devil himself, provided for the right and just cause. The photos of Rubina and Sanjit who were killed at Khwairamband bazar and the photos of Sanjit’s fake encounter appearing in the Tehelka magazine instead of a local publication exemplifies the bravado of the local media head honchos.

There is a saying in Meitei dialect, “Shaheileitabajaga da kae-gaenayumbioi” or roughly translated means that, “In absence of quality timber,one has to make do with twigs for pillars.” Rampant corruption and mediocrity bogs down our society from ushering in quality development. It is time that the zombic silence of the public be broken and the righteous voices of the masses be heard and echoed to all, to herald in a better tomorrow.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/06/mediocre-media-and-its-power/