23 August 2010

The YouTube Stars Making $100,000 a Year

By William Wei

community-channel-natalie-tran-waving

Natalie Tran probably earned around $101,000

There are 10 independent YouTube stars who made over $100,000 in the past year, according to a study done by analytics and advertising company TubeMogul.

From July 2009 to July 2010, TubeMogul used their viewership data to estimate the annual income for independent YouTube partners, which they define as anyone who is not part of a media company or brand.

Here's how they got their estimates:

  • Revenue only comes from banner ads served near content (we ignored pre-roll or overlay since we can't easily isolate by publisher).
  • Since YouTube banner ads have a two-second load delay, we estimate 2.59% of viewers click away before an ad loads based on separate research.
  • Ads were served near all videos that loaded (since there are partners, this is generally true).
  • CPM for the banner ads was $1.50 (Google auctions a lot of this inventory off; we rounded this 2009 estimate down to be conversative).
  • YouTube is splitting ad revenue with partners 50-50.

Basically, take their views from the past year, assume a few don't stick around long enough for an ad to load, divide that number by 1,000, multiply by $1.50 and divide that number in half.

Conservative estimates? Sure. But with that math, you get a pretty decent estimate of how much these YouTube celebrities are making from just the banner ads on their channel.

So, without further ado, here are the highest earning YouTube stars!

Click Through The Richest YouTube Stars HERE >

via Businessinsider.com

China Tries in Vain to Keep Bellies Buttoned up

Beijing has been on a manners kick for the last few years, but on the hottest summer days, there is no stopping men of all ages and shapes from rolling up their shirts and exposing their tummies.

Chinese men expose belliesWhen temperatures soar, many Chinese men raise their shirts in an attempt to stay cool. The practice is increasingly considered rude but that hasn't stopped the "bang ye" -- or exposing grandfathers. (John M. Glionna, Los Angeles Times / August 20, 2010)

By John M. Glionna

In the sweltering heat of summer, when the refreshing breezes desert the city, Hu Lianqun absent-mindedly reaches for a solution: He rolls up his shirt to expose his belly, often fanning himself with the garment to create his own air conditioning.

From the countryside to sophisticated urban centers such as Beijing, men of all ages, social standing and stomach sizes resort to a public display of skin, a hot-weather fashion faux pas that's the Chinese equivalent of knee-high black socks with shorts.

They're known as bang ye, or "exposing grandfathers"(despite their age range). In the hottest weather, bang ye seem to be everywhere, striding among the tall buildings in Beijing's business district, playing chess in parks, holding children's hands at the zoo and negotiating crowded alleyways.

There are precious few washboard abs among the lot. Still, many fail to notice that they're drawing smirks from fashion-conscious passersby. Most just don't care.

"I don't know, it just feels cooler," says Hu, perched on a park bench on a sultry weekday morning, the temperatures already into the 90s, the humidity soaring. "Look, you just shake your shirt to create a breeze. I don't see anyone laughing at me."

In the sports attire section of a nearby department store, Qi Tong scoffs at such reasoning.
"It lowers Beijing's standing as an international city," the 21-year-old says. "I go without a shirt sometimes at home, but never in public. If my dad reaches for his shirt when I'm out with him, I threaten to go home. It's just too embarrassing."

Says a shopper in the men's suits section: "I'd never do it. It's uncivilized."

In recent years, China has shown a keen awareness of its public image. Before the 2008 Summer Olympics, Beijing's Spiritual Civilization Steering Committee railed against such bad manners as spitting, cursing, cutting in line, urinating in public, sleeping on park benches and loudly slurping food.

During this summer's World Expo, the mayor of Shanghai has urged residents to stop running red lights and strolling the streets in pajamas, a popular summer attire.

But male belly-baring has proved a tough habit to beat. Years ago, men often did the full Monty with their shirts, taking them off completely, as a way to beat the heat, prompting fashionistas to put their foot down.

In 2002, one Beijing newspaper even sponsored a campaign to drive home the point that going shirtless was gauche. Each day, the Beijing Youth Daily ran candid pictures of shirtless men, often with bellies bulging, in an effort to shame offenders into compliance.

But as on the catwalks of Paris, style evolves. In Beijing, it soon morphed into the rolled-up-shirt look. Some go even further to beat the heat, rolling up their pants legs.

Many defend the practice, insisting that history is also on their side: During the Cultural Revolution, when good manners were condemned as bourgeois, it was considered a compliment to be called a dalaocu, or "a rough old guy."

Chinese men haven't looked to their leaders for guidance on proper etiquette. Mao Tse-tung often scratched himself in public, and Deng Xiaoping, a notorious spitter, often kept a spittoon nearby when meeting with world leaders.

Although many men proclaim the health benefits of exposing their stomachs on hot days, one Eastern medicine practitioner says he doesn't want to be blamed for the practice.

"Exposing one's belly has nothing to do with Chinese medicine's theory about maintaining a person's health," says Yan Zheng, who has been practicing Chinese medicine for more than 40 years.

"People chose to expose their belly because they feel too hot in summer but feel embarrassed to take off their shirts completely."

Cai Keqing says he doesn't worry about embarrassment. Taking a break from his retail sales job, the 24-year-old slouches on a park bench, shirt hiked up, and smokes a cigarette.

He's heard all the arguments about skin-exposing men. "Right now, I couldn't care less about my public image," he says. "It's just too hot."

via latimes.com
Tommy Yang in The Times' Beijing Bureau contributed to this report.

To Curb Population Boom, India Tries Paying Couples Who Delay Kids

India Tries Using Cash Bonuses to Slow Birthrates

By JIM YARDLEY

SATARA, India — Sunita Laxman Jadhav is a door-to-door saleswoman who sells waiting. She sweeps along muddy village lanes in her nurse’s white sari, calling on newly married couples with an unblushing proposition: Wait two years before getting pregnant, and the government will thank you.


Dr. Archana R. Khade, left, and a nurse, Sunita Laxman Jadhav, right, explained incentives to delay childbirth to a new bride near Satara this month.

Mahesh Waghmale and his wife, Sarika, outside their home near Satara. The couple could not wait to have children because of family pressure.

It also will pay you.

“I want to tell you about our honeymoon package,” began Ms. Jadhav, an auxiliary nurse, during a recent house call on a new bride in this farming region in the state of Maharashtra. Ms. Jadhav explained that the district government would pay 5,000 rupees, or about $106, if the couple waited to have children. Waiting, she promised, would allow them time to finish their schooling or to save money.

Waiting also would allow India more time to curb a rapidly growing population that threatens to turn its demography from a prized asset into a crippling burden. With almost 1.2 billion people, India is disproportionately young; roughly half the population is younger than 25. This “demographic dividend” is one reason some economists predict that India could surpass China in economic growth rates within five years. India will have a young, vast work force while a rapidly aging China will face the burden of supporting an older population.

But if youth is India’s advantage, the sheer size of its population poses looming pressures on resources and presents an enormous challenge for an already inefficient government to expand schooling and other services. In coming decades, India is projected to surpass China as the world’s most populous nation, and the critical uncertainty is just how populous it will be. Estimates range from 1.5 billion to 1.9 billion people, and Indian leaders recognize that that must be avoided.

Yet unlike authoritarian China, where the governing Communist Party long ago instituted the world’s strictest population policy, India is an unruly democracy where the central government has set population targets but where state governments carry out separate efforts to limit the birthrate. While some states have reacted to population fears with coercion, forbidding parents with more than two children from holding local office, or disqualifying government workers from certain benefits if they have larger families, other states have done little.

Meanwhile, many national politicians have been wary of promoting population control ever since an angry public backlash against a scandal over forced vasectomies during the 1970s. It was considered a sign of progress that India’s Parliament debated “population stabilization” this month after largely ignoring the issue for years.

“It’s already late,” said Sabu Padmadas, a demographer with the University of Southampton who has worked extensively in India. “It’s definitely high time for India to act.”

The program here in Satara is a pilot program — one of several initiatives across the country that have used a softer approach — trying to slow down population growth by challenging deeply ingrained rural customs. Experts say far too many rural women wed as teenagers, usually in arranged marriages, and then have babies in quick succession — a pattern that exacerbates poverty and spurs what demographers call “population momentum” by bunching children together. In Satara, local health officials have led campaigns to curb teenage weddings, as well as promoting the “honeymoon package” of cash bonuses and encouraging the use of contraceptives so that couples wait to start a family.

“This is how population stabilization will come,” said Rohini Lahane, an administrator in the district health office.

India averages about 2.6 children per family, far below what it was a half century ago, yet still above the rate of 2.1 that would stabilize the population. Many states with higher income and education levels are already near or below an average of two children per family. Yet the poorest and most populous states, notably Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, average almost four children per family and have some of the lowest levels of female literacy.

“An educated girl is your best contraception,” said Dr. Amarjit Singh, executive director of the National Population Stabilization Fund, a quasi-governmental advisory agency. He said that roughly half of India’s future excess population growth was expected to come from its six poorest states.

Maharashtra is not in that category, but its population is still growing too fast. A farming district ringed with green hills, Satara has three million people. A 1997 survey found that almost a quarter of all women were marrying before the legal age of 18, while roughly 45 percent of all infants and young children in the district were malnourished.

In response, the district began a campaign to reduce the number of child brides and more than 27,000 parents signed a written pledge agreeing not to allow their daughters to wed before age 18. Within a few years, the marrying age rose and the rate of child malnutrition dropped. Today, officials say about 15 percent of children are malnourished. But if couples were marrying a little later, they were usually producing a child within the first year of marriage, followed by another soon after. So in August 2009, Satara introduced its honeymoon package as an incentive to delay childbirths. So far, 2,366 couples have enrolled.

“The response has been good,” said Dr. Archana Khade, a physician at the primary health care center in the village of Kahner. “But the money is a secondary thing. It’s about the other things, for better future prospects.”

Now, health officials in other states have come to Satara to study the program. Every day, auxiliary nurses like Ms. Jadhav canvass villages to disseminate information about family planning and solicit new couples for the honeymoon package. In India, a new couple usually resides with the family of the groom and it is the older generation that represents Ms. Jadhav’s biggest challenge.

“The first time I go, they always defy you,” she said. “They say, ‘No, we don’t want to do that.’ The older generation believes that the moment a couple gets married, they want a baby in their house.”

On a recent afternoon, Ms. Jadhav and Dr. Khade made their pitch to a 20-year-old bride, who stared silently down as her mother-in-law hovered in an adjacent room of their farmhouse.

“You can delay your first pregnancy,” Dr. Khade said. “Have you talked to your husband about family planning or when you want to have a child?”

“He doesn’t want to have children early,” the bride answered, almost in a whisper.

“Do you think your in-laws will be happy with your decision?” Dr. Khade asked.

The young bride was silent. Her in-laws did not know that she was already using birth-control pills.

Many experts emphasize that easing India’s population burden will require a holistic response centered on improving health services and teaching about a full range of contraception.

Many rural women know little about family planning, and female sterilization is the most commonly used form of birth control. During the 1990s, officials in the state of Andhra Pradesh advocated sterilization of mothers after a second child, an approach that brought a sharp drop in the birthrate but was criticized as coercive in some cases.

In Satara, the birthrate has fallen to about 1.9 children per family, partly because of the honeymoon package, with many women opting for sterilization after their second child. Problems persist, such as a sharp gender imbalance in Satara and many other regions of India because of a cultural bias toward having sons. With more pressure to limit families to two children, female fetuses are often aborted after a couple sees an ultrasound.

Yet the idea of waiting appeals to many women. One new bride, Reshma Yogesh Sawand, 25, said she and her husband wanted to wait to have a child — and only one — in order to save money and move to a bigger city.

“If I have just one,” said Ms. Sawand, who is taking a computer course and has a job selling insurance policies, “I can take better care of it.”

via NY Times

After Hybrid Rice, Its Veggies For Nagaon

By Sarat Sarma

vegetable What’s next?

Nagaon, Aug 23 : Buoyed by a successful stint with hybrid rice farming, the Nagaon agriculture department now plans to go for large-scale cultivation of hybrid vegetables in the central Assam district.

The initiative under the Horticulture Mission for North East and Himalayan states aims at involving around 10 groups of farmers in an area of 100 hectares. Each group will comprise 10 farmers.

The department plans to incur an expenditure of Rs 33 lakh to cover hybrid varieties of all vegetables under the centrally sponsored scheme.

A source in the agriculture department said all kinds of technical and financial support would be provided to the farmers, who would also be groomed in phases as and when the need for such training arises.

Nagaon district is known for its vegetables, which are supplied to markets in Upper Assam throughout the year.

According to the source, though a section of farmers uses hybrid seeds, lack of awareness about the new concept of cultivation coupled with inadequate infrastructure, stand in the way of satisfactory returns.

“Our aim is to acquaint farmers with the new concept of vegetable cultivation apart from the usage of sophisticated infrastructure in their fields,” the source added.

Nagaon has an area of 1,45,000 hectares for agriculture, of which 25,000 hectares are used to cultivate vegetables.

“Normally, our farmers produce 10 to 12 tonnes of vegetables per hectare. If hybrid varieties are used, the output from each hectare would go up to 32 tonnes. But for that, the farmer has to be sincere in adhering to the new concept of cultivation,” said senior agriculture development officer Lalita Borua.

The Nagaon agriculture department embarked on large-scale cultivation of hybrid rice under the National Food Security Mission — a centrally sponsored programme — in 2008. Three hybrid rice varieties — Arise 6444, Pac 832 and Arise Ghani — have already been popularised among the farmers under the mission.

“The results have been very satisfactory. This year, production of the Arise 6444 variety rose to 153 quintals per hectare,” said mission consultant Arunima Devchaudhury here.

Along with hybrid vegetables, the agriculture department aims to allot 100 hectares each for lemon, turmeric and banana under the horticulture scheme.

The department received Rs 1.5 crore to implement the scheme in the district during the financial year 2010-2011.

“Preliminary work like selection of farmers and training will be carried out soon. This will be followed by work like land preparation, purchase of seeds, fertilisers and nutrients. But such work depends on receiving the first phase of the fund, which will be released within September,” a department source said.

“Normally, we find that only a section of farmers, having strong political as well as administrative background, is benefited by these schemes. These programmes might have a far-reaching impact if the common farmers are involved,” said Najrul Islam, a Bengena-ati farmer.

Meeting on Bangla Border Fence Deadline

border1 The border fence at Bhogdanga in Dhubri district. 

Guwahati, Aug 23 : The Opposition’s rising pitch on non-implementation of the 1985 Assam Accord has prompted Dispur to call a meeting where all agencies involved in fencing the state’s border will thrash out solutions to meet the December deadline.

Though the state’s Implementation of Assam Accord department had convened such review meetings on the accord in the past, sources in the department today said the August 27 meeting assumes significance because it is rare for all agencies to meet together on the issue.

Assam shares a 267.330km of border with Bangladesh, of which 160.130km is on land and 107km is riverine.

Besides the state PWD, two central agencies — the National Building Construction Corporation Limited (NBCC) and the National Projects Construction Corporation Limited (NPCC) — are involved in the work.

Fencing the border is necessary to check influx — a key clause of the Assam Accord.

The need for the high-level meeting arose after the agencies missed two deadlines — March 2009 and March 2010 — to complete the fencing.

This time, minister Bhumidhar Barman has asserted that fencing work would be completed by December and all clauses of the Accord would be implemented within three years, after the Opposition began targeting both Dispur and Delhi for having failed to implement the pact signed 25 years ago.

The review will strive to find the “exact” position of the progress, the “hurdles” in carrying out construction activities and offer “practical” solutions to overcome these.

“As on day, only 10 per cent of the work remain. But we want to find the exact status because there is always a gross mismatch between answers provided in writing and answers provided during face-to-face interaction. We hope the meeting will help prepare an effective roadmap so that it (fencing) can be completed within the set deadline or else it could boomerang on the government in the election year,” a source said.

Besides senior officials from the home, industry and commerce, PWD and water resources departments, BSF IG R.C. Saxena, group general manager of the NBCC, R.L. Mehra, and zonal manager of NPCC, V.P. Mishra, will be part of the meeting.

The deputy commissioners of three border districts — Dhubri, Karimganj and Cachar — have also been invited for the stock-taking session.

Since 2006, NBCC and NPCC have been engaged in construction of new roads, fencing and reconstruction of damaged parts.

Of the 46.35km of fencing assigned to the NBCC, it has completed around 39km and of the 34.45km road, it has completed around 25km.

Both agencies are also at their task of reconstructing 144.781km of damaged fence, of which around 88km has been completed. Work on 58km is under way.

“The state PWD has completed the fencing assigned to it except for a small stretch of less than a kilometre that involves bridges/sluice gates,” a source added.

AIUDF backs NRC update

5 Hottest Qwerty Phones

5 Hottest Qwerty phonesFor those looking for a handset that is ideal for using messenger services or writing emails, full QWERTY cellphones offer the comfort of quick and easy typing.

These new breed of phones not only come with dedicated buttons, but also offer spacious keyboard for drafting long messages and emails

Here’s looking into top 5 full QWERTY handsets from Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Acer, BlackBerry and Palm.

Sony Ericsson X10 Mini Pro

Sony Ericsson X10 Mini Pro

The X10 Mini Pro is the smallest here and could be the dinkiest smartphone we’ve ever handled. A flick of a thumb is enough to slide the screen up with a satisfying snap to reveal the surprisingly roomy QWERTY.

In our tests it proved a fine platform for speedtyping, but those with larger digits than ours may find it more challenging. Beneath the responsive capacitive touchscreen is an Android-based interface that’s been tweaked to accommodate the small screen size. If you’ve previously been put off QWERTY handsets by their size, the Mini Pro could change all that.

Verdict: A lesson in smartphone miniaturisation that’s incredibly user-friendly

Specs: OS: Android 1.6; Display: 2.6-in, 320x240 capacitive touchscreen; Camera/video: 5MP/VGA@ 30fps; Storage: 128MB + microSD; Battery: 3.5hrs talk, 360hrs standby

Palm Pixi Plus

Palm Pixi Plus

Thanks to Palm’s flexible webOS, the entry-level Pixi Plus is a multitasking demon. No rival QWERTY handset can switch between apps and features so effortlessly.

It’s very slim, light and well made, and while the keyboard looks cramped it’s great to use. The soft rubbery domes are very tactile, you get dedicated full stop and comma keys, and the phone’s slender profile means you can easily tap out messages one-handed. This frees your other hand to use the responsive capacitive touchscreen or the gesture pad.

Verdict: This multitasking smartphone has more appeal than its entry-level status suggests

Specs:
OS: webOS 1.4.1; Display: 2.63in, 320x400; Camera/video: 2MP/VGA@ 30fps; Storage: 8GB; Battery: 5.2hrs talk, 350hrs standby

Acer neoTouch P300

Acer neoTouch P300

The Acer’s 3.2-inch widescreen display is a beauty. Unfortunately, this Windows Mobile-powered phone doesn’t follow through with performance to match. The sliding keyboard is spacious and geared for drafting long messages and emails.

Flush to the surface with an almost pressurepad action, each key is distinguishable by a smooth rubberised finish. The same can’t be said of the resistive touchscreen. It copes fine with aggressive taps on the main menu icons, but swipe and scroll and it becomes temperamental.

Go off-road from the main menu and you’ll be grabbing the stylus to negotiate the fiddly sub-menus. Also, the processor seems to have trouble if you throw it a quick volley of taps or swipes, needing time to catch up. Ultimately this lack of response overshadows the fairly impressive set of features.

Verdict: A great QWERTY is let down by a moody touchscreen and sluggish processor

Specs:
OS: Windows Mobile 6.5; Display: 3.2in, 240x400; Camera/video: 3.2MP/320x240@30fps; Storage256MB+microSD; Battery: 4.4hrs talk, 400hrs standby


BlackBerry 9700 Bold

BlackBerry 9700 Bold

In terms of design and ergonomics, the BlackBerry’s keyboard is the finest on test. Inspired by the frets on a guitar, it has reasonable-sized keys that are ridged to help your thumbs keep their bearings.

It’s a pleasure to use and great for instinctive typing, even in the absence of standalone punctuation keys. Like the Nokia E72, the Bold is a traditional messenger, so there’s no touchscreen but there is a touchsensitive optical trackpad. Teamed with its splendid keyboard, for pure messaging the BlackBerry is hard to beat.

Verdict: Its thumb-friendly keyboard makes this BlackBerry a top-class messenger

Specs:
OS: BlackBerry 5.0; Display: 2.4in, 480x360; Camera/video: 3.2MP/480x352@30fps; Storage: 256MB + microSD; Battery: 6hrs talk, 408hrs standby

Nokia E72

Nokia E72

The E72’s multimedia skills beat all the others here. It’s very stylishly built, flaunting an elongated profile and a robust metallic rear battery bonnet. The keyboard’s domed buttons (which include dedicated punctuation keys) are easy on the thumbs, feeling almost ceramic to the touch, although not as distinct as the BlackBerry’s.

The Symbian S60 interface is a bit dated but highly customisable. The push email set-up rivals the BlackBerry for ease of use, and while Nokia’s Ovi Store isn’t overflowing, it offers a decent choice of apps and games to download.

Verdict: With outstanding media and SMS talents, the E72 is the best all-round QWERTY phone

Specs: OS: Symbian Series 60; Display: 2.4in, 320x240; Camera/video: 5MP/VGA@ 15fps: Storage: 250MB + microSD; Battery 6hrs talk, 576hrs standby

‘Private’ With a Price Tag

By Patricia Mukhim

meghalaya Dwindling Resources

Among the indigenous community, forests, land, water and other natural resources used to be known as common property resources. Everyone could access land, foray into the forest to collect fuel wood and biomass and other non-timber forest products such as mushrooms, medicinal herbs, honey and resin. Women used these partly to earn some income for the household and partly for their own nutritional needs. This was before land, forest and water were commodified.

With the creation of infrastructure by the state and the entry of market forces, there is a price tag on forests and all that it yields on land and on water. More and more watersheds and aquifers are acquired by private owners without there being any discussion in society. The logic seems to be that the wealthy can have it all.

Even in a state like Meghalaya drinking water is sold in tankers. Those who do brisk business supplying water to households also buy their water from someone who owns a source. Hence, bottled water is not the only mode through which water is converted into a saleable commodity. So how did a common property resource like a spring or an aquifer become private property and who authorised the sale of a socially owned property?

In Meghalaya, we have different categories of land such as private land or Ri Raij (land owned by the community but allocated to individual members of the community which is then developed and owned by them until such time they live and farm in that land). Normally such land cannot be sold or alienated. If the holders leave the land untilled or unattended for a period of three years or more, the land reverts back to the community or Raij.

We also have land that was at a time not owned by anyone and hence appropriated by certain clans (jaka skut) which they later sold off to private individuals at a price. Land acquired by purchase is called Ri Kynti. Much of the land within city limits today has become Ri Kynti.

The heads of traditional institutions or the Dorbar Shnong, (village dorbar) Dorbar Raij (dorbar of clusters of villages) and Dorbar Hima (dorbar administering over the Rajis also called the Syiemship) are all male-dominated.

Male bias

Women are excluded from these traditional political institutions and therefore have no voice, leave alone decision-making powers. In Khasi society, women are made to feel they enjoy some sort of social liberties or social rights merely because lineage is from the mother’s clan line and because the youngest daughter is the custodian of ancestral property. British administrators who never understood the nuances of the customary practices of the Khasis say that the youngest daughter inherits the property of her parents, but the youngest daughter (khatduh) is neither the owner of the property not does she control its use. Control lies with maternal uncles, brothers and if married, then the husband. The ancestral house is not the khatduh’s home only but a hearth where unmarried brothers and sisters can continue to live in for as long as they choose to. Ancestral property, moreover, cannot be sold. It is handed over from generation to generation. But if at all it has to be sold then everyone in the family has to have a say and the proceeds shared between both sons and daughters.

Lafarge lesson

But let’s come back to the issue of common property resource. How did our forests, water and other entitlements get privatised? Those who wield power in the traditional political institutions have in the last 20 years rapidly alienated community land to privately owned coal and limestone mining companies and individuals often without the knowledge of the larger community.

Global capital has turned the tribes into their own worst enemies. In Shella, which lies in the southern belt of Meghalaya, the French cement giant, Lafarge, succeeded in getting 100 hectares of land in its name by working through a few Khasi elite who in turn convinced the Dorbar Raij of that area that they would benefit from the transaction. Needless to say only a few people made money. The rest of the community is now deprived of a verdant forestland from where Lafarge is mining its limestone for the company’s cement plant at Chhatak in Bangladesh. Interestingly, Lafarge succeeded in this mission though Meghalaya has a robust Land Transfer Act which prohibits sale and transfer of land to non-indigenous people and to companies because they are also seen as non-indigenous entities.

What has happened in the Lafarge case is educative. The social and customary values and practices among the indigenous people are fast eroding. Individual rights supersede the rights of the communities. The point that needs to be debated is whether an individual or a clan owning hectares of forestland could simply cut down trees for timber? What about environmental responsibility and accountability? Once a forest is destroyed the biosphere and biodiversity are affected. Climate change with all its negative fall-outs such as flash floods, droughts and unseasonal rains will then threaten the entire farming processes and bring in agrarian distress. This is already happening in the Northeast and in Meghalaya.

The loss of community is evident even as more and more members are alienated from it. The poor and women who are important stakeholders in common property have absolutely no say in how those resources are used. In several parts of Meghalaya, male members decide to cut down forests and grow cash crops like broomstick, which while fetching better incomes destroy the fertility of the soil. Once broomstick is grown, other crops will no longer survive in such spaces. There are those who argue that it is better for farmers to grow cash crops and have the option of buying rice, vegetables and meat from the market. But the mounting price of food grains and the fact that subsidised rice hardly reaches the villages could result in food insecurity. When jhum fields which have been traditionally used to grow multiple crops with organic manure and which in turn provide nutrition to families, are turned into fields for cash crops the impact is tremendous. Once cash crops are grown the marketing falls in the hands of male members of the household. The woman usually no longer has control over agriculture and its returns.

Whither rights?

Water is a source of livelihood for women. Many women in Meghalaya earn between Rs 100 and Rs 200 a day just by washing clothes for a living. But the rapidly dwindling water sources on account of pollution and deforestation and unregulated mining and quarrying purposes have not only deprived women of their traditional livelihood but they also have to travel longer distances to fetch water for drinking and cooking. Now governments are engaged in building hydro-electric projects over many of our rivers. Who are the stakeholders here? Does the government recognise the rights of the community over rivers that it seeks to dam? Can the government compensate anyone for a river that becomes out of bounds to the community?

(The writer can be contacted at patricia17@rediffmail.com)

Women's Problem Same Everywhere, says Agatha

By Nishant Sinha

agatha_sangma Patna, Aug 23 : "I was concerned when the flight in which I was coming along with other women delegates of the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) was being considered to be diverted to Kolkata due to inclement weather in Patna.

However, thanks to the Almighty it did not happen and I did not miss the opportunity of coming to Bihar for the first time," said Agatha Sangma, the country's youngest MP and youngest-ever minister in the Union cabinet, on Sunday.

Agatha, the Union minister of state (MoS) for rural development was here to attend the NCP's National Women's Conference.

"I have never been to Bihar earlier,"said Agatha, adding: "Though I have little experience of public life as of now, including the time spent in my home state Meghalaya, I can say that the problems related to women are of same nature be it Meghalaya, North-East or Bihar".

Touching upon the most contentious Bill, the Women's Reservation Bill, which was first introduced in the Lok Sabha (LS) in 1996 and has been pending since then, Agatha said the NCP is fully supported to the cause.

"Our effort would be to see the Bill being passed in the LS," she said amidst applause from the hundreds of women delegates present at the meet.

She said as the present LS was engrossed in some pressing issues such as price hike, the Bill was not tabled in the LS this session. However, she was hopeful that the Bill would be passed soon.

Regarding NCP giving priority to women in the party, Agatha said her elevation to the post of central minister itself speaks of the party giving its due share to the women community.

Earlier, the Bihar unit of NCP's Women Cell passed a resolution at the meeting demanding passage of Women's Reservation Bill, change in state liquor policy, which the women members termed as destroying the social fabric, opening of women police stations across the state, 33 per cent reservation for women in government jobs and check on spiralling prices of essential commodities.

NCP national general secretary and Rajya Sabha member Tariq Anwar, national president of the party's women's wing Nivedita Mane and Bihar NCP Women's Cell president Nitu Singh were present on the occasion.