04 April 2010

Vacancies in Manipur Youth Affairs and Sports Department

Introduction
Yuva Krida Aur Khel Abhiyan The main objective of the Youth Affairs programme is to encourage and support active participation of youth in the March of socially valuable & nation building activities and development of personality of the youth. The Senior Youth Officer from the Department is assisted through 75 Youth Officers in implementing multifarious youth welfare courses of study. The following are the details of the activities. Yuva Krida Aur Khel Abhiyan (PYKKA) and also to allow for the higher budgetary support to sport in their respective country budgets

Vocational Training
At present, the complying training is being conducted through the Department. Application forms are available in every district offices. The selection of the trainee is treated a District Selection Committee with the Territory Youth Affairs & Sports Officer concerned as the Chairman.

Computer Training
The main objective of the training is to create computer awareness among young people especially to those young people from rural and remote country.

Important Dates
The Youth Affairs and Sports Department, Manipur publishes all the application dates and other important data in local media or newspapers.

Application form

The candidates can download application form from official website. The candidate submitted their filled in application forms for Youth Affairs and Sports Department, Manipur in available on online.

Contact Details
Department of Youth Affairs and Sports, Manipur
Manipur State Unit
Room No. 79, New Secretariat Building
Imphal, Manipur
Email: – sio-man@hub.nic.in

Indian Govt Considering Replacing Armed Forces Special Powers Act

Itanagar, Apr 4  : On a visit to Arunachal Pradesh, Home Minister P Chidambaram said the recommendations of the Justice Jeevan Reddy Committee and the Second Administrative Reform Commission on replacing the controversial the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) with a more humane law would soon be placed before the Cabinet.

"There was a statement by the Prime Minister that he will take steps to replace the AFSPA by a more humane law.

Following that, the Justice Jeevan Reddy committee was appointed. That committee has made certain recommendations. The 2nd administrative reforms commission has also made some recommendations.

Considering all the recommendations, the Ministry of Home Affairs has finalized its view and has submitted a note to the Cabinet," he said.

The AFSPA is in force in some northeastern states and in Jammu and Kashmir.

He said provisions of the ceasefire agreement with NSCN factions in Nagaland did not apply to militancy-affected districts of Tirap and Changlang in Arunachal and security forces would act if ultras from Nagaland and Assam were found to be active there.

Asked about the Centre's stand not to press for ADB or World Bank for loans for watershed projects in Arunachal Pradesh following objections raised by China, which considers the state as its territory, Chidambaram said ".

If we need loans from ADB and WB we will seek them. But, if we don't need them, we will not seek them. After all they are loans, not grants.        "I can assure you that projects in Arunachal Pradesh will not suffer for want of funds."

Asked about the strategy against militants in the northeast who were using Arunachal Pradesh forests as a corridor to their bases across the Myanmar border, he shot back "We can't discuss strategy and tactics against militants at a press conference.

Whatever needs to be done will be done. Decisions have been taken, but you can't expect us to divulge them."

On steps are being taken to seal the Myanmar border to thwart attempts by militants to cross over from camps in Myanmar, Chidambaram retorted "What do you mean by sealing? Are we waiting with some wax to seal the border?"

Replying to another question on demands for renaming the Rajiv Gandhi Central University incorporating the name of the state, which required a constitutional amendment, Chidambaram said he had received a representation and would pass it on to the ministry concerned.        

On the inter-state boundary dispute between Assam and Arunachal, he said "a new judge Tarun Chatterjee has taken over as chairman of the Boundary Commission and we will act after it submits its report."

Man With Half a Body Defies The Odds by 'Fathering a Child'

Despite only having half a body, Kenny Easterday insists he can live the life of a normal man.

Now he appears to have proved it after claiming he has fathered a child.

Easterday, 35, was born with a rare condition called sacral agenesis, which prevented his spine from developing normally.

kenny easterdayDefying expectations: Despite having half a body Kenny Easterday has lived life to the full

Defying the odds: Kenny Easterday is living a normal life beyond expectations in Virginia

When he was just six months old, doctors amputated Kenny's legs and used part of his shinbone to complete his partially-formed spine.

Kenny is so small he can fit inside a suitcase but that hasn't stopped him playing pool, bowling, working - or having a love life with fianceƩ Nicky, 33.

Affectionate: Kenney Easterday with Desiree, the seven-year-old who could be his daughter

Affectionate: Kenney Easterday with Desiree, the seven-year-old who could be his daughter

In an American television documentary, he and Nicky revealed that they were together seven years ago - after which she became pregnant with her daughter, Desiree.

The pair are soon to found out if Desiree is actually Kenny's child. And they hope to start a new family to join Nicky's two children.

nicky

Together: Kenny with fianceƩ Nicky in a still from the American TV documentary

Kenny's greatest dream is to have a child, he revealed in the documentary.

'I want a child to carry my name, someone that can carry my legacy and be able to say 'Well that's my daddy',' he said.

Rare: Kenny's legs were amputated when he was six months old and a part of his shinbone was used to complete his spine

Rare: Kenny's legs were amputated when he was six months old and a part of his shinbone was used to complete his spine

Kenny was not expected to live past 21.

As a boy Kenny was offered prosthetic legs but he hated wearing them and preferred to use his hands or a skateboard to get around.

'My dad pretty much taught me how to walk on my hands,' said Kenny, from West Virginia, USA.

kenny

Active: Kenny uses his arms to prop himself up as he plays pool, in a still from a documentary on his life

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He is also a fan of bowling, as seen in this clip from the American TV documentary

'I just told him to walk behind his mother, because she walks like a duck so just walk like her,' Kenny's father said in documentary made about his life.

As a child Kenny starred in the 1988 film, The Kid Brother, a dramatised version of his early life.

'If I'm handicapped it's because of these damn legs,' Kenny said in the film as he pushes over his prosthetic legs.

See Kenny in the TLC documentary here

IIM-Shillong First B-School to Webcast Convocation

Pranab Mukherjee Shillong, Apr 4 : The Indian Institute of Management (IIM) in Meghalaya is set to be first business school in the country to webcast its first convocation ceremony live April 3.
“We will be the first business institute to webcast our convocation ceremony to attract students to join the institute,” Director of IIM-Shillong Ashoke Dutta said.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has consented to be the chief guest for the first convocation of the youngest IIM named after former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

That apart, Dutta said, the postal department will also release a special cover to commemorate the historic convocation ceremony of the institute, which got job offers for its students, with an average annual salary of around Rs.10 lakh and the highest pay package worth a whopping Rs.34 lakh.

Top recruiters included Deloittes, E&Y, KPMG, PwC, Ogilvy & Mather, Viacom, Warner Brothers, AC Nielsen, Cadbury, Citigroup, HDFC, Standard Chartered, Axis Bank, Tata AIG, SBI Cap, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Siemens, Bosch, Ford, Honda, Lafarge, Hero Group and ONGC.

“We are already surging ahead with long and strong strides towards sustainable development, keeping its commitment intact towards development of society and environment,” Dutta said.

He said IIM-Shillong’s convocation is going to reflect the high-spirits of the institute as 63 students of the two-year flagship post-graduate diploma programme are going to be awarded their diplomas and certificates in presence of the board of governors, the director, the faculty members and the proud parents. Four students will also be awarded medals.

IIM Shillong follows a unique concept of winter internships. Under this, students go for internships in the months of January and February.

The institute took in its first batch of students in July 2008 and is looking at increasing the number of seats to “anything between 90 and 120″ this year. It started in 2008 from a makeshift campus and still functions out of an interim facility.

Surrounded by pine trees, lush green lawns and mountains in the backdrop, the institute is functioning from the Mayurbhanj Complex — the erstwhile summer palace of the kings of Mayurbhanj, Orissa.

The Meghalaya government has allotted a 120-acre plot on which work is under way for a state-of-the-art academic-cum-residential campus.

The institute will also hike its annual fees for the next academic session. The board of governors will take the decision in April.

“Our main thrust is on innovation, inclusiveness, adaptability, hunger for entrepreneurship, energy, agility, drive, networking, technology leadership and to achieve excellence by synergising complementary competencies within the team and the organisation charged with the aspiration for a broader vision and a higher purpose,” Dutta said.

Northeast India Peace Claim

By Archis Mohan

Untitled New Delhi, Apr 4 : The Centre has claimed that India’s Northeast has never been as peaceful this century as it has been since January 2009. The “peace”, however, appears to have flowed from the barrel of a gun.

The last 15 months have witnessed the lowest number of civilian and security force casualties in the region since January 2000, according to Union home ministry data for six northeastern states (minus Mizoram) released today.

At the same time, the security forces have eliminated a large number of militants in 2009-10, particularly in Assam and Manipur. The ministry data show that 571 militants were killed in 2009 — behind only 2008 (640 killed), 2001 (572) and 2000 (586). Some 81 rebels have been killed till March 15 this year.

The state-wise break up suggests a sharp drop in violence in Meghalaya, Nagaland and Tripura.

“In Nagaland, the renewed peace talks from 2008 between the Centre and the NSCN-IM have made a difference,” an official said. The rebel outfit and the Centre’s interlocutor, R.S. Pandey, are now holding the 67th round of the talks, started in 1997.

Nagaland has not reported a single insurgency-related death in 2010 yet. The death toll in 2009 was a low 31, which did not include any security personnel. In 2008, Nagaland had reported 213 deaths, including that of 140 extremists.

In Assam and Manipur, the situation remains relatively grim, with a marginal fall in insurgency-related violence and fatalities. Assam reported 424 incidents and the deaths of 174 civilians and security personnel in 2009. The forces eliminated 194 extremists, the highest since 2003.

This “peaceful” period has coincided with P. Chidambaram taking over as the Union home minister in December 2008 after the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

Ethnic Heartburn on NC Hills New Name

By Umanand Jaiswal

Guwahati Apr 4 : Call it decentralization of power, recognition of ethnic identity, or just a way of helping militants come over ground with a face-saving measure — an essential element to avoid a backlash from the public who have suffered grievous losses while being led up the garden path with utopian promises — but the name of North Cachar Hills being changed to Dima Hasao yesterday through an Assam government notification could have ramifications of its own, including serious opposition to the move from other ethnic groups, including the Zemes and even the Nunisa faction of the Dima Halam Daogah (DHD).

The Dimasa community itself has tried to play it safe. Barring a few firecrackers, celebrations in the district were largely restrained through the day today, officials of the district administration said.

“That was done to reassure the other tribal communities in the region,” explained Dethang Naiding, president of the Jadikhe Naisho Hoshom (JNH), the apex body of the Dimasas, who had pressed for the name change, among others.

“We ourselves called up the police to keep an eye on our youth to ensure that no one goes overboard and hurts others’ sentiments. The change in name is merely symbolic. Fifty per cent of the unrest in the district would be taken care of by this welcome gesture of the government but we should not send out wrong signals to other communities which, I feel, are unnecessarily opposing the move. The clarifications couldn’t have come a day too soon.”

Jona Zeme, general secretary of the Zeme Council, told The Telegraph this evening that they had moved the Prime Minister as well as the Union home minister against the change in nomenclature.

“We have in our memorandum told them that they can go ahead with the move provided they bifurcate the district,” Zeme said.

The Zeme Council has now decided to hold a protest in Haflong and Guwahati on Monday against the move.

Added to this, the Indigenous People’s Forum, another group representing around 18 non-Dimasa communities, is planning to bring out a procession in Haflong to oppose the name change.

The coinage itself, it is understood, was a climb-down from Dima Hasao Raji, or “Kingdom of the Dimasas” which was originally proposed, something the government didn’t want to take a chance with given the presence of the other ethnic groups. Even the decision to settle for Dima Hasao, or “Dimasas of the Hills” came after the government was convinced by various groups that it would be difficult to stop militants of the dreaded Jewel Gorlosa group of the Dima Halam Daogah (DHD) from returning to the jungles unless the administration gave in to at least one of their main demands.

Given the political stakes involved, the Dilip Nunisa faction of the DHD, which is in a ceasefire, has also come out in protest against the move, which it said was a case of “misplaced priorities”.

“Instead of restoring peace through negotiations, the government is concentrating on changing names,” said Dilip Nunisa, its chairman.

Not surprisingly, Dispur’s declaration yesterday too was a low-key affair — a two-line press note released in the evening.

Question is, will the government now succeed in preventing ethnic unrest (which, for example, the Zeme Council apprehends) in a region that is known to be volatile when it comes to matters of ethnicity.

Revisiting The Northeast With Sonnets

By Madhusree Chatterjee

Dancing Earth Book: 'Dancing Earth: An anthology Of Poetry From Northeast India'; Publisher: Penguin Books-India; Price: Rs. 350

The northeast has long been on the fringe of mainstream literary consciousness, edged out by its complex socio-politics, crisis of identity and the prolonged rule of the gun.

The literature from the region is a mirror of the angst.

'The Dancing Earth: An anthology Of Poetry From Northeast India', edited by Robin S. Ngangom and Kynpham S. Nongkynrih, is a saga of life as experienced by the seven sisters in the northeast and by Nepal, and told in blank verses and sonnets.

The collection brings together some of the best-known poets from the region irrespective of the state to which they belong in English translations.

The poems manage to bring out the style and the essence of the emotions of the original sonnets.

They draw from narrative folklores, songs, social rites, ethnic religions, individual memories, suffering, volatile politics, terror and the loneliness of a breed of young poets.

The poetry addresses two important issues: the question of regional identity in a land that has been described as a contiguous swathe with ethnic diversity, who share a common history, and how violence has seeped into the poetry to breed a gut-wrenching contemporary melange of content and poetic metres.

Temsula Ao, a poet belonging to the Ao tribe of Naga origin in upper Assam, has published four books of poetry and a collection of short stories. She was a Fulbright fellow at the University of Minnesota in 1985-86.

Ao's poetry in this book focuses on the lores of the birth of her tribe -- how the rocks, the trees, the earth and the wild have moulded the destinies of the Naga ethnic groups.

Her poem 'Lungterok' that the poet has translated in English literally means six stones.

Ao legends say the 'forefathers of the tribe - three men and three women - emerged out of the earth at a place called Lungterok'.

Some of the stones are still found below a village called Chungliyimti in Nagaland. The poet describes the early Ao elders as 'stone-people. The poetic and politic, barbaric and balladic, finders of water and fighters of fire'.

Poet Navakanta Barua, born in Puranigudam in Assam's Nagaon district in 1926, has written 38 books that include poetry, fiction, critical works and books for children.

His poem 'Measurements' translated by D.N. Bezbaruah in the anthology speaks of the emptiness of human existence.

'It is evening now, Let's go to the tailors to get measured. Measurement of neck, chest, hands and arms, measurement of the thumb... Fresh new measurement, when will someone stich the garment to fit man,' Barua says in his poem.

The sonnet is a sign of the times in northeast - when the prolonged reign of terror and its impact on the socio-economic space bred a fatalism that refuses to ebb despite the redressals.

Rajendra Bhandari, a poet of Nepalese origin, was born in Gangtok.

His poem 'Father and My Birthday..' translated from Nepali by the poet himself is an 'ode to the poet's father who toiled on the fields to make fallow land arable'.

And what the poet definitely knows '...is my features gradually form to resemble my father's'.

The poem written in Wordsworthian style of 'contemplative reflection' is symbolic of the Indian concept of carrying forward the bloodline -- when the son becomes a father -- in an essentially rural hierarchy of heredity.

The volume also comprises poems by Anupama Basumatary, Lutfa Hamum Selima Begum, Soso Tham, Sameer Tanti, Niranjan Chakma and several other poets from the region.

(Madhusree Chatterjee can be contacted at madhu.c@ians.in)

11 Year-Old From Meghalaya Has Designs on Fashion

Naphibanroi Khongstid, an aspiring fashion designer. Shillong, Apr 4 : While other children her age have little idea about what they want to do in life, 11-year-old Shillong-born Naphibanroi Khongstid is already fashioning her fledging career as a designer, even picking up an award.

Shillong, April 2 (IANS) While other children her age have little idea about what they want to do in life, 11-year-old Shillong-born Naphibanroi Khongstid is already fashioning her fledging career as a designer, even picking up an award.

Naphibanroi was awarded the Youngest Designer Award by the National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), Shillong, and at a fashion show organised here by NIFT, six of her designs were exhibited.

'She is an extraordinary girl and full of talent. She is different from other children and her sketches are very mature for an 11-year-old,' Aurineeta Das, an assistant professor at NIFT, Shillong, said.

Naphibanroi, a student of Class 5 at St Mary's, a premier girls' school in the region, is the eldest of three children and her father Malsoma Nongrum is a government servant while mother Bindalin Khongstid is a housewife.

'We are lost for words and we never thought that Naphibanroi would get such an award,' Malsoma said referring to the NIFT award.

'We never expected her to be so talented. I remember how she would ask me to get her a bunch of colour pencils rather than Barbie dolls,' Malsoma said.

However, Malsoma regretted that most of Naphibanroi's sketches drawn in old school notebooks had been sold as scrap by mistake.

Asked how she began her journey of being a young designer, Naphibanroi told IANS: 'I started with drawing cartoons and scenery, but now I like to draw human figures and dresses for them.'

'I wanted to be a scientist, but I hope I will a top fashion designer and create beautiful gowns,' she added.

Naphibanroi's friend Veneta Lyngdoh Nongbri said: 'I can draw a house, but I cannot sketch like her. I am sure she will teach me the art of sketching.'

In fact, it was a well-wisher who noticed Naphibanroi's drawings and alerted NIFT, Shillong.

'It is her calling and she should get a bigger platform to showcase her talent,' Fashion Society Shillong chairman Aldous Mawlong said.

Rosaline Dhar, Naphibanroi's class teacher, said: 'It is a gift and we never expected a child of her age to start designing dresses. She has created a benchmark for the school.'