Showing posts with label north-east. Show all posts
Showing posts with label north-east. Show all posts

Manipur economy growing at 9 per cent: Governor


A session of the Manipur Assembly began with Governor VK Duggal addressing the house of 60 members today. The session will have six sittings till March 3. Governor Duggal in his hour-long address said that the State economy is continuing to grow at a reasonably good pace. The growth rate was about nine per cent during the 2012-13 financial year which is higher than the average of 6.5 per cent registered during the 11th Five Year Plan. He also said the State’s finances are showing signs of improvement.
Manipur has been awarded “Krishi Kramman Award” by the Government of India in small State category for the second consecutive year for foodgrain production, Duggal added. He informed a Manipur Bhavan will be constructed in Bengaluru while a Ima (ladies) market will be set up at Imphal to accommodate 2,000 women vendors at a cost of Rs 49.34 crores.

Source: e-pao
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Manipur mother’s 5.9kg baby India’s heaviest

IMPHAL: A woman from Manipur's Thoubal district has given birth to a girl weighing 5.9 kg at the state-run Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences (JNIMS) hospital in Imphal East, setting a record for delivering the country's heaviest baby.
M Shenu Devi (37) gave birth to the baby, her fourth child, on Friday night around 7.25 pm through caesarean section. The team that helped her deliver the baby was headed by Kh Paikhomba Singh, assistant professor at the department of obstetrics and gynecology.

"Considering the extraordinary size of the baby, our team, including the anesthetist, another gynecologist and nurses, performed the caesarean section with utmost care. We were successful," Paikhomba said.
"No congenital anomaly has been detected in the baby girl whose body length (height) is 56 cms. Both mother and child are in sound health," Paikhomba said, adding that the previous national record was set in 2010 by a Surat-born baby girl weighing 5.7 kg.
The normal weight of a newborn baby in the country is around 3 kg, Paikhomba said. He added that the formalities to officially declare the Manipuri baby as the heaviest are being processed.

The mother, a housewife, will be discharged within the next few days. Her husband Maipakchao (45) of Kakching Khunou village teaches at a private school. The parents expressed heartfelt gratitude to the team of doctors for successfully performing the surgery. A large number of people, mostly hospital staff and people visiting other patients, assembled to get a glimpse of the record-holding baby.

The heaviest baby ever born in the world weighed 10.8 kg (23 Ib 12 oz) in Canada in 1879, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. Sadly, the baby died eleven hours later.

Source: TOI
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Some recent incidents on NE people

Collections of unwanted incidents among the North East people in Delhi and NCR collected from Facebook group North East Support Centre & Helpline...


NE girls molested by landlord
Two chakma girls from Arunachal Pradesh was molested in Gurgaon on 13/02/2014 night by the landlord and his friends. The girls ran away and in the morning the landlord came again and tried forcing one of the girl's friends to sign a paper. Tigra Village, Gurgaon where the girls stay falls under Sadar Police Stations. Heard that FIR already lodged. (Source: Seven Sister's Project).

NE Girl Robbed in Delhi

A staff nurse from Manipur, who works in GB Pant hospital, was robbed by unknown man near the hospital last night. The incident occurred while she was returning home at around 9.30pm on 12/02/2014.

The man forcibly snatched away her mobile phone and her bag [which contained important documents and money/Rs 7000].
 

"This incident happened in a busy place. While our sister was confronting the man face-to-face, there were many people around her who simply stared at her. No one helps her during the scuffle took place. Atlast the man decamped with her things,” sources told NE Helpline few minutes ago. FIR lodged.
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'Racial' heat on Doordarshan

The Telegraph | Sumi Sukanya | New Delhi, Feb. 11:

Acting on a complaint filed by a group of Delhi University teachers and students hailing from the Northeast — who accused Doordarshan of being discourteous towards them and showing “racial bias” after inviting them for a talk show on DD News — Prasar Bharati has formed a fact-finding committee to look into the allegations.

“We were told that the teachers would be put on the panel but on reaching, the studio we were told that they just wanted us to be part of the audience as they had already selected six panellists. When we protested, they started insulting us. The DD staff, particularly anchor Sharma and producer of the show Subhash Jain, were discourteous and they misbehaved with us.

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Delhi Police to create FB, Twitter pages for NE people

Faced with criticism over its perceived lack of sensitivity and outreach to the northeast community in the capital, Delhi Police is set to launch a Facebook page and a Twitter account for people from the northeast where they can post complaints and suggestions.


In another move, a 24-hour Delhi Police helpline will be publicised widely by their social media websites.
The decision was taken by Delhi Police in the wake of an alleged “racist” attack on Arunachal Pradesh student Nido Tania that led to his death and a furore among people from the northeast region.
Delhi Police already has a committee, formed in 2012 and headed by a joint commissioner of police, to tackle problems faced by students and other people from the northeastern states living in Delhi. It is currently being headed by Joint Commissioner Robin Hibu, who hails from the region.



“A Facebook and Twitter account of Delhi Police will be launched soon where students from the northeastern region can put forth their grievances and suggestions,” a police officer told IANS.
He said the accounts will be monitored regularly by a police team with good knowledge of social media and computer handling. “Delhi Police will take note of the posts and act upon them.”



“We will also post the action taken by Delhi Police on the complaints and suggestions,” he added.
Delhi Police will also publicise its 24-hour helpline number - 1091 - on the website of the ministry of development of north east region (DoNER) as well as its Facebook and Twitter pages.



It will also encourage northeast students to pen down their thoughts and experiences on wattpad - an online community themed around writing and story-telling on which users can post articles, stories, and poems about anything.


The DoNER ministry has already launched a support centre for students from the northeast following the death of Tania.


The decision was arrived at after a joint meeting between Delhi Police and officials of DoNER Feb 5, said another police official.


The support centre has been opened at the NorthEast Council Guest House in Chanakyapuri in central Delhi. Professional counsellors will be hired on contractual basis to deal with problems and issues raised by northeast students at the support centre.


In another step at outreach, Delhi Police is planning to conduct half-day seminars once a month that will see professional counsellors and northeast people discuss issues and problems faced by them. In this move, the DoNER ministry would also chip in.



Delhi Police holds meetings once in two months with students and people from the northeast in the seven police districts of the capital. The minutes of the meetings are forwarded to Hibu and the Delhi Police commissioner, said an official.

Source: Nagalandpost
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24-year-old boy from Manipur stabbed in Delhi's Saket

New Delhi: A day after two Manipuri boys landed up in hospital after being attacked, another youngster from the Northeastern state has been attacked in the national capital on Tuesday morning.

In an apparent robbery attempt, the victim, a 24-year-old man, was stabbed in the stomach by unknown men. The incident took place in Delhi's Saket at around 4 am when he was returning from work.

He was rushed to a Saket hospital where he is condition is reported to be critical.
Prima facie it appears to be a case of robbery as his mobile phone was snatched by the assailants.

Delhi Police Commissioner has reached the spot and investigation is on.

This comes a day after two Manipuri boys in their early 20s were attacked in Delhi's Ambedkar Nagar area. As per the latest reports, one of the victim is still in hospital undergoing treatment.

Source:ibnlive

Clips from FB-zogam.com:

Delhi a North East mi dawt liam om zel.
Tuzing kal dak 4:30 velin na sem khin a hong kiik unaupa Khupsiangen Thangkhal vai ten Saket ah tem in ana dawt. A dawt na uh centimeter 1 vel a thuuk chi uh. Roberry case di dan a muanmoh ahi. Tu in amah Saket City Hospital ah kikem lel. Poi petmah hizel.

Mulam Thang Amah nasep khin hlou in Praise and worship zankhua vak a The New Generation Church te kianga vatel in zingsan chianga nasem d ahiziak a 3am vela a inn zuan akik a accident um hzaw h
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Days after Nido Tania's death, two more boys from North East attacked

New Delhi:  Two boys from the North East were allegedly beaten with sticks last night at a south Delhi neighbourhood, less than two weeks after the death of Nido Tania in what his friends described as a racist attack. The boys, who belong to Manipur, were allegedly attacked at Madangir in south Delhi by a biker.

Courtesy: NDTV.com
One of them, Ginkhansuan Naulak, is still being treated at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS). 

The incident surfaces at a time several groups from the North East are protesting the death of 20-year-old Nido Tania, a student of Arunachal Pradesh, after being beaten with iron rods and sticks at south Delhi's Lajpat Nagar market on January 29. 

Nido was found dead in his bed hours after he was allegedly beaten by men who allegedly ridiculed him for his blonde hair and shouted racist slurs at him. An autopsy report has confirmed that he died of injuries to his head and face as a result of that attack. Nido's parents had maintained that he died due to the beating, but the police said they could act only after a medical report.

Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal joined protesters demanding justice for him at candlelight vigils last week.

Politicians across parties have vowed to work with activists and students from the North East to address their recurring concerns of being racially targeted in Delhi and other cities.

Source: ndtv.com
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BJP prime ministerial candidate’s wishes are unlikely to be fulfilled in North East

Industry insiders say lack of technical manpower & infrastructure 
hurts IT growth in Northeast
HARICHANDAN ARAKALI & INDU NANDAKUMAR
BANGALORE

Narendra Modi may want information technology companies to flock to the Northeast but software services firms are saying the BJP prime ministerial candidate’s wishes are unlikely to be fulfilled any time soon.

The absence of technical manpower, exacerbated by the lack of infrastructure, prevents development of IT in the Northeast, insiders in India’s $108-billion outsourcing industry said, reacting to Modi’s exhortation.

“Why can’t Manipur be made into an IT hub,” Modi asked, in a speech in Imphal, blaming the Congressled government for the Northeast’s woes, including crumbling infrastructure and persistent “insurgency.”

“There is no harm in considering the Northeast. In fact, wherever IT industry goes, it gives people highpaying jobs,” said Rostow Ravanan, chief financial officer at Bangalore-based Mindtree, which is setting up its largest training centre in Bubhaneshwar.

However, “at this point of time, I don't see many IT firms setting up their centres in the Northeast because there aren't too many engineering schools,” Rostow Ravanan said.

The reasons for the IT industry shunning the region are fairly simple, according to industry insiders: “It is no rocket science ... beyond the existence of an airport, if there aren’t good schools, hospitals and entertainment that the IT talent looks for,” the region won’t attract the industry, said one executive, who didn’t want to be named.

“Forget the Northeast, there’s hardly any IT presence in Kolkata,” the person said. Sops Key for Expansion for Technology Firms
As long as smaller cities don’t offer the type of availability of talent and infrastructure needed for the IT industry, young people will continue to flock to bigger centres such as Bangalore or Hyderabad.

“It’s primarily because of the physical and social infrastructure and the availability of talent and opportunities. The opportunity actually feeds off on the first three and then it becomes a cycle ... because there is a lack of opportunity the other three don’t develop, so it’s a little bit of a tricky situation,” the person said. 

This means, once people decide not to move, then it’s impossible to achieve scale in an industry such as the IT sector. Given the right incentives, however, not just India’s large technology firms but even midsized companies would be willing to expand to tier-2 cities, which often bring their own advantages, such as people staying longer at their jobs, being more satisfied as they stay closer to their families and so on.

The lack of technical manpower is the single most important reason for the industry to shun the region, and concerns such as less-than-stable governance seem to be more secondary.
“The challenge lies in attracting large pools of technical manpower in the Northeast,” said Ganesh Natarajan, CEO of Pune-based Zensar Technologies.

“The Centre should first set up four large universities in Guwahati, Shillong, Manipur and Arunachal, focused on employable skills,” Natarajan said.

Between 2011 and 2021, the region will have close to 17 million job seekers and only 2.6 million jobs, half of which will be in Assam alone, according to a January 2013 report by the Indian Chamber of Commerce and the consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The National Association of Software and Services Companies, the industry’s lobby, has tried getting the central government to consider a two-tiered incentive policy to encourage the IT industry to push deeper into smaller cities and towns. Such a policy is yet to materialise.
Incentives could include support on capital investments, tax holidays and employment-generation based subsidies. India could even follow what China is attempting in trying to develop its interior provinces, where for each person a company hires, the government offers some incentives, industry insiders said.


One executive, who didn’t want to be named, said “we don’t need incentives to work in Hyderabad, Bangalore or Chennai anymore. The industry needs incentives to work out of a Bhopal or Bhubaneswar and then gradually even a place like Guwahati may start looking attractive, but by choice I have no illusions about the industry moving to the Northeast anytime soon.”

Source: Economic Times, Bangalore 10/2/2014
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Protests in Imphal against attacks on NE people in Delhi

IMPHAL: Imphal witnessed sporadic protests on Sunday as several organizations took to the streets in various parts of the city, protesting against the rise in crime against north east people in the national Capital.

The renewed attacks on NE people began with the assault on two Manipuri women by local goons at Kotla Mubarakpur on January 25, followed by the killing of an Arunachal Pradesh student, Nido Tania, on January 29, allegedly by some shop keepers at Lajpat Nagar market in Delhi. Friday night's alleged rape of another Manipuri minor girl at Munirka compounded the anger of NE people.

Members of the Manipur unit of Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) staged a protest at Nagamapal traffic point in the heart of Imphal.

The serial attacks have raised serious doubts about the Indian citizenship of NE people, rued an ABVP leader. The ABVP leaders demanded that the Centre should take stringent measures to ensure no such incident takes place in the national capital in future and sought fitting punishment for the perpetrators.

The New Generation Youth Wing, Manipur, held a candlelight march at Tiddim ground here. The members sought measures to ensure no racism, no discrimination and no harassment against NE people in other parts of the country. Members of the Royal Riders Manipur (RRM) organized a motorcycle rally in the capital city protesting against racial discrimination.


Parents here are now apprehensive about sending their children to Delhi for education or employment in view of the serial attacks on the NE people. "Since Delhi is not safe for us, we have now decided to send our children to other cities for pursuing education. We feel Delhi is the crime capital," said Tomba Sharma, an Imphal resident.

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Letter to Mother India

(The author is Kimi Colney, a blogger and a patriot at heart who doesn’t mind 
giving a piece of her mind to anyone who looks down upon or talks ill of the people 
from Northeast India – Editor)


Dear Mother India,

From the day I was born, you were the first sight I saw. My first steps were in your soil. I spent a month memorizing your national anthem. Recited it with pride among my peers in second grade.

Ever year, I celebrated the Republic Day and Independence Day. Watched all of Gandhi’s movies and a few of Bhagat Singh’s.  Learnt of our rich history of the Mughal Empire and the Maurya dynasty.

I visited temples and villages, beaming with pride for the nation I belong to. I walked the marble stones of the Taj Mahal and wondered about the great minds of our ancestors.

On meeting people from another country, I’d tell them with pride, there are 28 states in my country. We may not be economically strong, but we are strong, culturally. We have so many kinds of people, all so beautiful, so many distinct dances and festivals, we are a close-knit family.

I wrote articles about you hoping people would read and get a taste of Incredible India.
But even though I love you still, today I must say goodbye to you. Though my passport is Indian, though my birth certificate claims I’m Indian, and though I’ve lived in these soils all my life, I am not Indian.

To be considered part of a family, you must be accepted by the members of the family. And today, clearer than ever, we have been shown that we are not. Though the country talks of progress, broad minds and acceptance, everyone from street vendors to employees in the biggest MNC’s, a small part of your heart will always discriminate.
The saddest part is what you discriminate upon – our looks. How many times have we read and recited the words, “Don’t judge a book by its cover.” Well, DEAR INDIA, that’s what you do everyday.
I wear a sari to work with a patriotic feeling, tugging the ends with difficulty, and all along the way, I hear chants of ‘Chinese model, Chinese model’. I hang out with my friends in a Chinese restaurant, I’ve known them for months, explained to them that I am FROM the country, but half of the conversation goes like, “this is Kimi’s restaurant, order anything  you want….” At outings I get introduced as the Chinese friend. In trains I am referred to as “that Nepali”.

In every city, every town, this is what we go through everyday. We have looked by, hoping and thinking, they will understand and learn of us someday. But such a thing as death, for someone of such a young an age as 20 for reasons relating to his hairstyle, is not something that can be looked by.

Well, I have just one question for you India, are you ashamed of us? Do your rather wish we were foreigners of another country then one of your own land. Even after knowing we are your fellow citizens, why does your taunting never stop?

And what is so wrong in our face? Our eyes are a little small, we are a little fairer, we like experimenting with our hairstyles, does that make us any less a part of India? Or, would you like us all to go through plastic surgeries making our eyes bigger, changing our features, and having oil-slick hairstyles to be deemed citizens of the country?

Are you ashamed that we are of the “scheduled tribe” section of the country? Because in a land where caste says everything, it wouldn’t be surprising. But, just so you know, though we may not have many railroads, looming malls or corporate giants, though a large part of our population may still depend on farming, each day we wake up as Indians. WE toil through India’s soils, we watch Indian channels, we eat and drink India’s food.

Each day we read newspapers of India, checking up on politics, wondering who will be a good leader for what we have for so many years called our country. But now you make us wonder, is it really?

Goodbye India,
A Proud Northeast-ern

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UNC calls 48-hr general strike in Naga areas of Manipur

Imphal, Dec.11, 2013[TOI] --- Hill-based United Naga Council (UNC) has called a 48-hour 'general strike' in Naga-settled areas of Manipur from midnight tonight for formation of a separate administrative unit, UNC sources said. 

Official sources said the 48-hour general strike was likely to affect the movement of essential items-laden trucks from outside the state as both the national highways (Imphal-Jiribam-Silchar and Imphal-Dimapur-Guwahati) pass through Naga-settled Tamenglong and Senapati districts. 

The sources said additional forces would be deployed along the highways to enable the trucks pass through the highways smoothly. 

The strike was also likely to impact the yearly 'Orange Festival' at None in Tamenglong on December 14 causing disappointment to hundreds of farmers who would not be able to sell their fruits. 

UNC sources said they would impose a 'ban very soon' on the construction of all national projects being implemented in the Naga-setted areas of the state. 

Official sources said representatives of UNC, central and state governments had earlier held tripartite talks on the demand of the UNC but no solution could be arrived at because the Naga body 'almost wanted to break up' the territority of the state to have 'an alternative arrangement' (separate administrative unit for the Nagas).
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Congress wins in Mizoram

Aizawl, Dec 9, 2013 [IANS] --- The Congress retained power in Mizoram for the second consecutive time, winning 21 of the 40 seats as the vote count progressed Monday.

Congress leader and Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla, 71, was elected to the state assembly for a record ninth time. He contested from two places in central Mizoram and won both seats.

This is for the fifth time the Congress has come to power in the northeastern state of Mizoram, which shares borders with Myanmar and Bangladesh. In the outgoing assembly, the Congress had 32 seats.

"Congress candidates are leading in six more seats over their opposition nominees," Mizoram Joint Chief Electoral Officer H. Lalengmawia told IANS.

Thousands of Congress activists celebrated here and across the state as election results began to pour in.

According to election officials, Congress candidates won 21 seats and were leading in six seats while the opposition three-party alliance Mizo National Front (MNF)-led Mizoram Democratic Alliance (MDA) has won two seats and was ahead in three seats in this state of over one million people.

Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla, also state Congress chief, contested from two constituencies and won both Serchhip and Hrangturzo seats defeating his nearest MNF and Mizoram People's Conference (MPC) rivals.

Lal Thanhawla, who with this election has been elected to the state assembly for a record nine times since 1978, defeated his nearest MNF rival C. Lalramzauva, a lawyer and a three-term former legislator, in Serchhip by a margin of 734 votes while he retained the Hrangturzo seat beating MPC opponent Lalthansanga by 1,628 votes.

State Industries and Tourism minister S. Hiato lost his Saiha constituency to MNF nominee K. Beichhua by a narrow margin of 222 votes.

Officials said that Mizoram Home Minister and Congress candidate R. Lalzirliana won the Tawi seat defeating MNF nominee Lalmalsawmi by 947 votes.

Mizoram's Law and School Education Minister and Congress nominee Lalsawta retained his Aizawl East II seat defeating his nearest MNF candidate Sailothanga Sailo by a margin of just 177 votes.

Food, Civil Supplies, Environment and Forest Minister and Congress candidate H. Rohluna retained his Lengteng seat in southern Mizoram defeating his MNF candidate L. Thangmawia by a narrow margin of 167 votes.

Only non-Mizo Congress candidate and Chakma tribe leader Buddha Dhan Chakma won the Tuichawng seat in southern Mizoram beating MNF nominee Rasik Mohan Chakma by a big margin of 8,726 votes.

"In the South Tuipui seat, sitting Congress legislator John Siamkunga retained the seat defeating opposition ZNP (Zoram Nationalist Party) nominee J. Lalchhuana by a margin of 1568 votes," officials told reporters.

Senior Congress leader S. Laldingliana retains his Lunglei South seat defeating his nearest MNF candidate K. Pachhunga by 450 votes.

Unlike the last assembly polls in 2008, the Congress did well in both southern and northern Mizoram which shares borders with Myanmar and Bangladesh.

MNF candidate Lalrinawma wrested the Tuikum seat defeating Congress aspirant K. Lianzuala by a thin margin of only 14 votes.

Monday's vote count would decide the political fate of 142 candidates, including six women.

"Under tight security blanket, counting of ballots have been under way in eight district headquarters simultaneously since 8 a.m. Final results are likely to be out by late afternoon or by evening," Mizoram Joint Chief Electoral Officer H. Lalengmawia told IANS.

Over 81 percent of the total 690,860 voters exercised their franchise across the state Nov 25 to elect a new 40-member assembly.
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Manipur: Thang-Ta set to debut in school syllabus

IMPHAL, Dec 9, 2013 [The Sangai Express] --- All relevant processes and preparations for introduction of Thang-Ta, the indigenous martial art form, as a school curriculum from the next academic session have been completed, said Syllabus Committee co-ordinator T Parijat.


Speaking to newspersons at the Palace Compound office of kanglei Indigenous Martial Arts and Cultural so-ciety (kimacs) yesterday Parijat informed that the new sylla-bus will make its debut as an optional subject in class IX.

Syllabus preparation as well as text book printing work for the said subject has already been completed by the Board of Secondary Education Manipur, he said adding that the book will be named Thang-Ta Sindam Lairik-I.


Under the objective of preserving and promoting the traditional martial art form through its introduction as an academic curriculum from school to university level of education Kimacs had been making concerted effort for the past many years, said the coordinator who also pointed out that special session of academicians, intellectuals and civil society organisations convened at Kangla on January 1, 2007 resolved to initiate preparation for adding Thang-Ta as a common syllabus.

As follow up action, the Art and Culture Department set up a 15-member committee on August 15 the same year to finalise the curriculum preparation, Parijat maintained and appealed to CBSE-affiliated educational institutions in the State to adopt the new curriculum.

Noting that introduction of Thang-Ta as school curriculum will facilitate the younger generation understand the traditional martial art form along with ensuring physical wellbeing of the students, he further urged the Government to depute subject experts at the earliest.

He also conveyed gratitude to scholars and exponents of the martial art form for their contribution towards introduction of Thang-ta as a school curriculum from the academic session.
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Prince William invited to Manipur polo tourney

IMPHAL: Prince William, the second in line to the throne of England, has been invited to attend the 8th 'Manipur Polo International' next year.

Organized by the Manipur Horse Riding and Polo Association (MHRPA), the mega event is being held to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the first modern polo exhibition match between a Manipuri polo team and a British team in Kolkata in March 1864.

A formal invitation has been recently sent to Prince William requesting him to attend next year's mega event here, MHRPA president S Budhachandra Singh told TOI on Thursday.

"We will also invite at least six foreign teams to take part in the event for which a decision will be taken by the association soon," Budhachandra, who is a retired IAS officer, said.

He said the state government is likely to take necessary steps to ensure that the historic Mapal Kangjeibung is declared a world heritage site.

Polo, which is regarded as symbol of peaceful co-existence between man and animal, is said to have originated in Manipur. According to the 1991 Guinness Book of World Records, the origins of polo can be traced back to 3100 BC when people in Manipur state played the sport as Sagol Kangjei (horse stick).

The 7th edition of 'Manipur Polo International' concluded at Mapal Kangjebung - regarded as the oldest polo ground in the world - on Thursday. The final match was played between a team from the US and one from Manipur. Five teams - two from India and one each from the US, Germany and Thailand - took part in the tournament this year. The tournament was held as part of the ongoing Sangai festival, the biggest state-sponsored tourism festival in Manipur.

Meanwhile, chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh said sufficient budget would be allocated for preserving the rare Manipuri ponies, known as 'original polo pony'. The MHRPA is currently manning a pony breeding farm at Lamphelpat here with the primary aim to ensure that the animal does not become extinct.

During a visit of the proposed Pony Sanctuary Park at Ibudhou Marjing Polo Complex at Heingang area in Imphal East on Wednesday, the CM said that the pony sanctuary development work has began after the state government gave its nod.

Currently, the park development work is on in a 23.5 acre area. Efforts are on to acquire another 500 acres, including the adjoining area in the foothills, for the proposed pony sanctuary, the chief minister said, adding that development of a race course to attract tourists is also one of the project's components.

Singh pointed out Manipur Polo International tournament has been made a regular feature of the Manipur Sangai Festival as part of the state government's vision to protect and increase the pony population from the present number of about 700.

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The Mobile Store Set to Dial Franchisees for Northeast Play

India’s northeastern states, racked by militancy, are set to get a better communication network and an array of handsets. India’s largest modern trade mobile phone seller The Mobile Store will begin setting up franchise stores in the seven states, a model it has chosen to tap uncharted territory. Chief executive Himanshu Chakravarti told ET that the company was earlier reluctant to get into the franchise model due to challenges around management of supply chain, logistics management and security. “Northeast is one of the big opportunity areas, but it’s a troublesome territory to approach. We will have several franchisees and master franchisees for some of the states,” he said. The retail chain currently owns 800 stores that sell multiple brand handsets with 10% on the franchise model. The company’s move fits well with the telecom regulator’s proposed . 2,918-crore investment plan to boost voice and data coverage in the northeastern states, where connectivity is much lower than the national average. 

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has suggested that the government will require a large investment in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim and Tripura that have an average tele-density of 40%, which reduces to 10% in villages. Trai has recommended 2% discount in licence fee, charged annually for those telecom operators who cover at least 80% of the habitations with a population of 250 and subsidies for installation of solar power units at telecom towers. 

The Essar Group-owned mobile retailer, which holds a 27% share of the modern trade mobile phone retail, is happy with its leadership position in the north, south and eastern regions of the country, but doesn’t have any aggressive expansion plans in the south, which is dominated by regional players. 

Chakravarti said over the next 12 months, the retail store is planning to upgrade around 100 of its existing retail outlets into lounges that allow the customer to try out smartphones from various brands before making a choice. The move will cost the company, which gets around 93% of its sales from smartphones, around . 30 crore which it plans to source from internal accruals. 

The retailer is planning to add around 40 new stores a year, based on opportunities in different states and may look at various funding options through equity and debt, said Chakravarti. “We won’t go in for an IPO though.” It is planning to also aggressively push the sale of post-paid mobile connections, including data plans, as well as of accessories in its stories to boost footfalls, he added.

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Hand Grenade found in Imphal-Guwahati bound passenger bus

IMPHAL, Nov 7[sangaiexpress]--- Police bomb experts safely retrieved a hand grenade from an Imphal-Guwahati passenger carrier from North AOC this morning.

At around 9.45 am the bomb experts recovered the explosive device from underneath Seat No. 21 of the passenger bus, said to be operating under Network Travels travel agency.
It is said that a passenger grew suspicious after spotting an unclaimed item wrapped in plastic bags of eatables (Potato Crackers) and passed the information to persons manning the travel agency, who subsequently contacted the police.

The police team led by Imphal West police station Officer in-charge Shantikumar also carried out further search of the said bus after off-loading belongings of the passengers.

Reacting sharply against the discovery of the hand-grenade in the bus, a passenger urging all concerned to refrain from such undesired act in the future, said that many innocent people might have been killed in case the bomb exploded.

The passenger also reminded that many students and children travel on public carriers.
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Decks cleared for regular Imphal-Mandalay flights from Nov.21

Yangon, November 07, 2013 [sangaiexpress]--- Myanmar's private airline - Golden Myanmar will operate Mandalay-Imphal new chartered flight on November 21 ahead of the Manipur Sangai Festival next month, official media reported Thursday.

After the festival, scheduled for November 21 to 30, Golden Myanmar will operate regular flights to Imphal using A-320, said the New Light of Myanmar.

The new air route operation between India and Myanmar is part of a bilateral air services agreement signed during Indian's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit to Myanmar last year.

Meanwhile plans are under way to operate a bus service between Imphal and Mandalay.

Golden Myanmar Airline, established in 2012, was operating flight routes with Air Bus-320 conveniently.

Meanwhile, a total of 24 international airlines are flying Myanmar and seven airlines are operating domestically.

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Experts rush to study volcanic like hot mud eruption in Manipur

IMPHAL: A team of experts, including geologists, on Monday rushed to Manipur's Ukhrul district to study the unprecedented eruption of hot water mixed with soil at the remote Tusom village bordering Myanmar. So far, no casualty has been reported.

On October 13, following a loud explosion, chunks of hot mud erupted from the hills, streamed down the slopes and got deposited in low-lying areas, including rivers and roads.

The mudslide, besides killing some fishes and damaging a portion of forest land, also blocked the road connecting the village in Chingai sub-division with Ukhrul district headquarters, a source said. He added that there is no report of villagers fleeing their homes after the incident.

He added that the eruption continued till Sunday.

Chingai constituency legislator and deputy speaker MK Preshow told TOI that a team of experts, including geologists from the industries department, rushed to the spot to study the situation and find the cause of the eruption.

Preshow ruled out any possibility of a volcanic eruption. "Since Tousom village is about 3 kms from the spot, there is nothing to fear," he said.

Preshow nevertheless said necessary measures will be taken up for the safety of the villagers if there is likelihood of further destruction in the village. "We have intimated the state environment officials and they are also going there soon. To clear the blocked road, heavy machinery, including earth pullers, have been sent to the village," he said. DC (Ukhrul) S K Chaurasia said the district administration is awaiting a report from the field officers, including the concerned SDO, for doing the needful.

Source: TOI
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Israel allows 899 Indian (from North-east) Jews to immigrate

Jerusalem: Israel has allowed 899 Indian Jews from Manipur and Mizoram, the members of the “lost” Bnei Menashe tribe, to immigrate to the Jewish state.

    The cabinet last week decided to allow the immigration of the Indian Bnei Menashe community to Israel in multiple groups with the first batch expected by the end of the year. Bnei Menashe (literally sons of Menashe), a group of indigenous people from northeastern border states of Manipur and Mizoram, trace their roots in one of the ten “lost tribes” of Jews exiled by the Assyrian regime over 2,700 years ago.

    Hundreds of Bnei Menashe are already living in Israel, having made aliyah (immigration) with the help of an NGO, Shavei Israel, dedicated to bringing “lost Jews” around the world to Israel.
    Michael Freund, the founder and chairman of the Shavei Israel organization that lobbied for their aliya, said he wishes to see the entire community come to Israel soon. PTI 

Source: etimesofindia
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Manipur is slum-free state, reveals census

The Registrar General of India has recorded the state's slum population at 1,97,266 - the highest in the northeastern region - while Manipur has been reported as a total slum-free state.

The slum population in the state accounts for 0.63 per cent of the total population of 3,12,05,576 crore, according to a Census report on slums for 2011, which was published recently. Significantly, Arunachal Pradesh, which did not have any slums in the 2001 Census, has recorded slums in the 2011 Census.

Manipur, along with Daman & Diu, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Lakshadweep have not reported any slums in 2011 Census, in which the national slum population is 6,54,94,604.

After the state, the next highest slum population in the region is 1,39,780 in Tripura, followed by 82,324 in Nagaland, 78,561 in Mizoram, 57,418 in Meghalaya and 15,562 in Arunachal Pradesh.

According to the Census report, Assam has 88 towns, of which 33 towns have slum dwellers. In Tripura, 15 of the 16 towns have slum dwellers. Mizoram has 23 towns and only one of them has slums while 11 of 19 towns in Nagaland have slum people. According to the report, the country has 2,613 slum towns in all.

The report also shows that Tripura has the fifth highest population of scheduled caste slum dwellers in the country. Mizoram has the lowest SC population in the country living in slums, but it has the highest scheduled tribe population living in slums in India.

According to the report, Mizoram's slum population has the highest literacy rate (98.1 per cent) in the country followed by Tripura (90.7%) in the third place, Meghalaya (89%) in fourth place and Nagaland (88.8%) in fifth place. 

Source:TimesofIndia
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General strike cripples life in Manipur

Imphal, Oct. 7 2013--- Normal life was disrupted in Manipur on Monday in response to the 12-hour general strike called to highlight the problems stemming out of the construction of the fence along the Manipur-Myanmar border. Contending that the union government has turned a deaf ear to the public outcry, the Committee on Protection of Land in Border Fence called the strike. A number of organisations have extended support to the general strike.

All commercial vehicles were off the roads. Buses plying to long distances and trucks including inter-state services were off the roads. All educational institutes were closed, and thin attendance reported in government offices. Many patients from far off places requiring medical attention could not make it to hospitals in Imphal.

There was no report of untoward incident during the general strike. Trucks and passenger buses coming from other north-eastern states were stranded at the border towns of Mao and Jiribam. The legalised border trade at Moreh in Manipur and Namphalong in Mynmar was also ground to a halt.

Police sources said that it was not possible to provide armed escorts to all vehicles during the general strike.

Brozendra Ningomba, convener of the Protection of Land in Border Fence told The Hindu that his organisation and the Manipur government have brought the issue to the notice of the union government. However, till date there has been no response at all. He said that the general strike is just the beginning and warned of more stirs since Manipur will be lossing large chunks of land once the border fence is completed.

After the completion of the border fence 18 villages in the three border districts will be affected. Choro Khunnou village in Ukhrul district will go entirely to Myanmar. When there were protests the Manipur government set up an official committee to look into the matter. It is in the backdrop of the report that Myanmarese army had intruded to Hollenphai village, 3 km away from the police station at Moreh, the border town. When civil and police officials rushed there the Myanmarese army officer maintained that the area belongs to Myanmar as per maps maintained by the Birtishers.

Suresh Babu, the principal secretary (Home) told reporters that what was being constructed was a security wall and not border fence.

Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam Gangmei said that once the committee submits its report, a ministerial team will visit the border areas.

Keywords: Manipur shutdown, Manipur-Myanmar border row, Manipur protests

Source: TheHindu.com
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