03 November 2010

Manipur Militants Credit Scheme, Pumping in Rs 30-40 Lakh

UNLF militants manipurImphal, Nov 3 : Manipur based UNLF militants, which is still outside the peace process, has been successfully running a unique co-operative saving and credit banking system (Phunga Marup) since 2009, a report in a regional daily revealed.

The report while saying that the saving and credit banking system was part of outfit’s bid to spread its tentacles in the Northeast India.

The scheme came to light during the interrogation of its secretary M Nongyai arrested by security force in Assam recently.

Security forces recently stumbled upon the outfits’ activity while interrogating the arrested secretary, M Nongyai.

According to security forces, the main objective of the outfit is to win over the hearts of the local populace by lending them money and in return taking safe shelter in villages.

The system is in operation in four districts of Manipur and Cachar, Hojai sub-division in Nagaon which has a sizeable Meitei population, the report revealed.

The outfit is believed to be pumping in about ‘ 30 to ‘ 40 lakh per annum in this core finance system.

According to information revealed to security forces by the arrested UNLF cadres, the outfit through the Marup system has been financing villagers to be self reliant through weaving, handicraft and other means of livelihood.

The loan amount to individual varies between ‘3000 to ‘ 4000 for a period of four to five months with interest rates varying from 0.5 to 1%.

“The UNLF forms self help groups consisting about 15 members and there are about 45,000 beneficiaries of the finance system,” a source said, according to Times of India reports.

The money used by the outfit to finance the rural populace is collected through extortion from different areas in Manipur.

Importance of Being Tribal

By Patricia Mukhim

northeast india militancyThis article is not an adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of being Earnest, a farcical comedy in which the protagonists maintain fictitious personas in order to escape burdensome obligations.

In the Northeast, leaders of militant outfits all construct romantic facades about themselves. In the region, Che Guevera is our hero but only in so far as the name goes. The actions of our homegrown supermen are far removed from that of the legendary Argentine Marxist revolutionary with several remarkable qualities, none of them fictitious. Che was a physician, author, writer and an intellectual par excellence. So comparisons cannot only be odious but ludicrous as well.

Recently, there was a media splash detailing the material acquisitions of Jewel Garlosa’s Dima Halam Daogah. The media took vicarious pleasure in giving a blow-by-blow account of Garlosa’s possessions, like a watch costing over a lakh of rupees, etc, and his facial maintenance regime. This information was, of course, shared by India’s premier sleuths, the National Investigating Agency. I found this undue haste to sensationalise Garlosa’s wealth ranking somewhat phony. Garlosa is already a discredited man. You can do no further harm to a guy who is down and out. However, there is a certain gaucherie in the NIA’s actions, which reek of bellicosity. It feels pretty much like the state landing a final punch on one of its baiters.

Why is the NIA not so gung-ho about giving us an inventory of possessions of other more powerful groups like the NSCN(IM), the Ulfa and the National Democratic Front of Boroland? If the DHD(J), which is just about a few years old, could have amassed so much affluence, think of the amount Ulfa has accumulated in its more than two decades of militancy which nearly pulverised the tea industry and other economic sectors of Assam.

Garlosa has accomplished no mean feat. He has only walked the path of his mentors (NSCN-IM), so what’s the big deal about publicising his ignoble deeds? Now that a number of Ulfa leaders have either surrendered or been arrested, why are similar seizure lists not made public? Let us also have a public exposure of Ulfa’s wealth, including its numerous bank accounts and its strategic investments. Let’s not fool ourselves that the swish malls and shopping plazas that have turned Guwahati into a mall city have been created with “duly accounted for” private wealth. Those glittering malls and the huge real estate industry are examples of what you can achieve with “black” money in a situation where no one, not even the Income-Tax sleuths, bothers to ask questions. It is easy for the NIA to kick a man who is already down and out, but how about taking on the Ulfa or the NSCN? A crime is a crime is a crime. The state should not use different sets of lenses to view different militant outfits.

And that is precisely the point of this article. Every armed outfit needs an alibi to convince a gullible public. That alibi comes in the form of an ideology built around people’s aspirations. In general, people are disillusioned by the absence of governance and the dwindling opportunities for equitable growth. People see that only those in the favoured list of the powers that be enjoy the fruits of development while the rest languish in the black hole of poverty and destitution. This frustration and disillusionment is the fertile ground that militancy needs to sow its first seeds. After that, the ideologues who have mastered the art of demagoguery in colleges and universities can simply collect their spoils.

When the Ulfa started out it drummed up support for its cause by demonising “India” and othering it as the “state” that treated Assam like a colony in the same vein that the British treated India. Choruses of exploitation of Assam’s rich natural resources by mainland India and the humungous influx of Bangladeshis from across the border were themes constructed by those who led the pre-Ulfa movement or the Assam agitation of the late ’70s and early ’80s. Everyone joined the chorus. Ironically, when a young and dynamic group wrested political power and entered Dispur, one would have thought things would change. Nay, it led to another trajectory in Assam’s tumultuous politics. The “boys” at Dispur seemed to have failed to rein in the dark forces. When the Ulfa, with another set of “boys”, was baptised it received the blessings of every hardliner Assamese who believed that there was need for a counter-force to challenge an insouciant state. By then the “state” encapsulated all who held the reins of power at Delhi and Dispur. After all, Dispur was only an extension of Delhi. The rest, of course, is history, which need not be narrated ad nauseum.

But if the Ulfa came up on an anti-India slogan and a demand for sovereignty, the other militant outfits, mainly from the “tribal” areas of Assam, raised their ugly heads as a protest against Dispur’s perceived apathy towards their cause. It started with Rajiv Gandhi’s famous accord with the All Assam Students’ Union, which was later perceived by the other groups to be “exclusively” with and for the Assamese people. By then the Bodos and other tribes realised they were out in the cold and that the Assam movement did not actually embrace their aspirations. The Bodo insurgency, then, is a cantankerous reaction to the Assam Accord.

It was only a matter of time before other contumacious groups would come up. The Karbi and Dimasa militancy are also based on the same analogy as that of the Bodos. Dispur became the bashing board and rightly so because development was inherently skewed. Even today all development indicators in the tribal areas of Assam are akin to those of sub-Saharan Africa. This is not to say that other areas of Assam are not equally in the doldrums. But ethnic aspirations and the politics of identity had by then become very lucrative for the plains tribals.

The Bodo Accord, which actually gave the Bodo leadership (not the people) unparalleled access to power and pelf, became the model for the Karbi and Dimasa groups as well.

The much-vaunted Rs 1,000-crore development package for the North Cachar Hills came as a result of the senseless violence wreaked by DHD militants on the state. This is Delhi’s way of responding to the sulks and complaints of the North-east. Those who rule this country believe in the philology of “Money Talks”. It is patronage democracy at its crudest. The Centre believes today that the only way to actually shut people up and get on with the Delhi-based governance model is to throw a few crores of rupees here and there and let the rest take care of itself. It is not Delhi’s heartache how the money is used. The underlying idea is to corrupt the belligerent trumpeters of different hues to the point that they develop a fatty liver and ultimately die of the disease. But what of the new contenders to leadership?

It’s not as if militancy will die with its leader. Delhi does not care about such repercussions. It is our own illusory ideas that make us believe that the North-east matters to this country. Yes, the region matters only to the extent that the natural resources here still make business sense. That’s it!

It is unfortunate that this region has not imbibed the lessons of self-reliance and autonomy. We have learnt instead to dance to Delhi’s tune. As a result, those we elect are subservient to the Delhi Durbar. This region used to be the land of proud people with rich cultural values. Now all that is in the past. We have been corrupted to the core and now all of us are exposed in the same manner that Jewel Garlosa is. Garlosa’s shame is our collective shame because what the NIA is trying to tell us (the tribal leadership of all persuasions) through the expose is that “you people come up with high-falutin slogans but are rotten to the core”. Indeed, the word “tribal” is today equivalent to being backward, sloppy, intellectually vacuous, morally bankrupt and politically cacophonous. This is how Delhi understands the “tribal” mindset. That’s because over time our engagements with Delhi have been more about “money” and less about pragmatic development paradigms.

The Jewel Garlosa story is a sad denouement to what could have been an intelligent assertion for more equitable development, better governance and better infrastructure creation in Dima Hasao or the “land of the Dimasas”.

We only have to look at Meghalaya to see how a small section of the tribal elite has enriched themselves on Delhi’s largesse even while millions live on the brink of dispossession, to understand that tribal politics has sunk to its nadir and so has the character of its Delhi-driven rulers.

**The writer is editor, The Shillong Times, and can be  contacted at patricia17@rediffmail.com

Get to Know: Tamara Moss

Top Indian model and 20-yr-old Tamara Moss is half-Indian & half-Dutch.

At the recent WIFW, we caught up with her.


Tamara Moss
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A World Full of Holes

Big, small & ugly — these holes have caused many a traffic jam and damage to the residents. Sink holes are increasingly becoming a fashion, the latest being the one in central German town of Schmalkalden.

A world full of holes

The residents of the quiet, central German town of Schmalkalden got a huge early morning surprise Monday when a crater nearly 100 feet across and 70 feet deep opened up in the middle of a residential area, according to several news reports. None of the town's citizens were injured.

A world full of holes

Wolfgang Peter, a resident, said he was awakened by a roaring sound at 3 a.m., reported Der Spiegel, a German news magazine. "First I heard the rushing of water and then it sounded as if a dozen gravel trucks were being emptied," Peter said, adding that when he went outside to investigate he suddenly found himself standing on the edge of a giant crater right next to his house.

A world full of holes

The Associated Press reports that 25 people and six houses were evacuated from the scene. Although authorities have yet to determine the exact cause of the hole, most news reports indicate it was natural causes and not mining that led the soil to collapse.

A world full of holes

A spokesman for the Environment and Agriculture Ministry in the Thuringia State, which contains the town of Schmalkalden, told Der Spiegel that the region is prone to landslides because of its geological makeup.

A world full of holes

The spokesman pointed out a similar case in the town of Tiefenort where five houses became uninhabitable when a crater more than 6-and-a-half feet deep opened up in January.

A world full of holes

Authorities plan to fill the hole with gravel, the AP reports.

A world full of holes

Cars are seen parked in their garages next to the crater in the eastern German town of of Schmalkalden on November 1, 2010. 25 residents were evacuated from the area but no was was injured.

A world full of holes

Aerial view shows the crater in the eastern German town of of Schmalkalden on November 1, 2010. 25 residents were evacuated from the area but no was was injured.

Football Promotes Unity in Diversity in Northeast India

By Vaschipem Kamodang

football northeast IndiaJorhat, Nov 3 : Football is to Northeast India what cricket is to the rest for the country. The passion for football among the people of the north-east has led to opening of various football clubs here.

One of such football clubs is located in Jorhat. The buddying players are keen to learn the skills of the game.  

Jail Road Sports Club, established in 64 years ago in Jorhat, is a major draw among aspiring football players from all across the region.

At this football club there are over 200 students aged between 8 to 18 who enjoy playing football together with enthusiasm, regardless of their caste, creed or ethnicity.

Here it looks players belonging to different tribes like the Nagas, Meitei's, Bodo, Mishing or even Bengali, all have associated themselves to one religion - football.

This club displays how oneness can be promoted through football.

"Sports can bring people together; I am from Nagaland and studying in Assam. I do not know what people talk about me, but I like to play football and through it I have got to know people of Assam well and I have made a lot of friends," said Chuba Aier, one of the Naga players.

"Through sports we can promote brotherhood and friendship. When we play together at a tournament, we get to meet people from other areas," said Ranjan Khangenbam of Manipur.

The youth in north-eastern states are passionate about football and most of them wish to emulate popular players like Baichung Bhutia, Sunil Chetri and Gaurmangi Singh.

Players from the north-east have a significant presence at the national level and they represent a variety of clubs.

The craze for football in north-east is growing. This is evident from the emergence of as Shillong-based Lajong Football Club that became the first club from the region to qualify for Indian football's Elite I-League.

By visiting the north-east region, one learns that the players here have immense talent.
"People from north-east have capability and talent and they can do really well for their country," said Chuba Aier, a Naga.

Sports has emerged as the best-career option
"Young students should focus on studies as well as sports because it keeps them healthy. It also translates into jobs for many who go on to play at state level or national level," said Bhubon Borah, a technical coach.

But there is general feeling here that the region can bring out many players, provided, there is proper infrastructure to groom the available talent.

"Players do not have good infrastructure. During the national games that were held in Assam, there was some development in the infrastructure for sports but the facilities are still far from what they should have been," says Nobin Borah, coach of the Jorhat Sports Club.

The State Governments are becoming conscious of the need to encourage sports and changes are taking place in the region.

Arianny Celeste Playboy Pictorial (NSFW)

Here's the sultry and sexy Arianny Celeste strip down her clothes for Playboy magazine November issue.
Her pictures are creating a big sensation delighting many MMA fans worldwide.
They have been waiting for naked pictures of her for a long time. Arianny announced in September that she would be fully nude in Playboy's November issue.
She has posed in various magazine in the past but has never fully expose all the goodies before.
arianny celeste Playboy cover photos 2

One in Four Young Australians Now Has a Tattoo

I'm inked therefore I am: Why tatts have left a mark on Gen Y

By Brittany Stack

  • One in four young Aussies have tattoo
  • Designs are getting bigger and brighter
  • No stigma attached and parents get it 

An image of a Japanese Koi fish painted in orange ink on the arms, an Italian love phrase scrawled across the ribcage, or praying hands on the chest are hits with 16- to 30-year-olds across Sydney.

Most parents hate them and recruitment agencies tell young job-hunters to cover them or risk missing out on a job - but Generation Y's love affair with tattoos is exploding.

The Sunday Telegraph spent a day in popular tattoo parlours at Bondi and Penrith, west of Sydney, seeking to answer the question on an older generation's lips: why?

Matthew Sammut, 21, got his first tattoo last Wednesday - a colourful replica of the graphics illustrating the video game Street Fighter now covers his right arm from shoulder to wrist.

tattoo

Kate Perriman, 29, got her first tattoo aged 21 - a cherry blossom on her back. Now 40 per cent of her body is covered in tattoos. "It is artwork, another form of expressing yourself." Picture: Tim Hunter Source: The Sunday Telegraph

An hour into his five-hour, $750 session at Penrith's Wicked Ink, the fitter from Fairfield was wincing in pain.

But Mr Sammut, whose 16-year-old brother is covered in tattoos, said it was worth it.

"It's artwork, and it looks cool," he said.

"My mates all have sleeve tattoos. It's a big thing these days, and I really wanted one."

Mr Sammut said "plenty of guys" in his industry were "covered in ink" and he wore protective clothing on the job.

"So I'm not worried about the tattoo for work," he said.

Tattoo experts say A-listers including Angelina Jolie, Megan Fox, David and Victoria Beckham and NRL stars such as Benji Marshall and Todd Carney have helped make inking acceptable.

The indelible markings are now so commonplace that youngsters are pushing the boundaries, opting for the biggest, brightest designs to cover an entire arm or leg, the neck, chest, back or torso.

The tattooed generation say that despite obvious styles and trends, tattooing is art - a way to express their individuality.

Social researcher Mark McCrindle estimates about one in three Australians in their mid-30s has a tattoo.

He says Gen Y is the first generation in which tattoos have become mainstream.

"Tattooing is ubiquitous, and we haven't seen a whole generation get tattoos in such prominent ways, then move through their 50s and 60s," Mr McCrindle said.

John Tadrosse, the owner of Bondi Ink, said celebrities had glamorised tattoos, which were no longer associated only with motorcycle gangs.

He said many young Australians viewed tattoos as a way in which they could express their "star quality".

"The exposure tattooing is getting is huge, and it's appealing to young people," Mr Tadrosse said, while filming a reality television show about Bondi Ink.

"It's rock 'n' roll, it's surf culture. All the movie stars are getting tattoos now.

"And they're not little tattoos, they're huge.

"We did Nate Myles from the Roosters - and then his mother and his sister came in to get tattoos."

Mr Tadrosse said there was no longer such a stigma attached to tattooing or tattoo parlours. "It's not bad to walk into a tattoo shop any more," he said.

Vanessa Morgan, the editor of Inked Australia/NZ magazine, said reality television shows in the US - including LA Ink and Miami Ink - had "demystified the whole experience" of getting a tattoo, making it more appealing to young people.

"Previously, people were worried about walking into those alleys and into something they didn't understand," Ms Morgan said.

"Now they understand and aren't scared of the process."

Ms Morgan reckons about 25 per cent of under-30s have at least one tattoo.

"Even parents understand it now, so they're not so worried about their kids going out and doing it," she said.

Despite the wider acceptance of tattoos, Kelly Services recruitment agent Emma McClure said the agency advised those seeking jobs in the corporate world to cover up their tattoos.

Mr McCrindle said the growth of the tattoo-removal business indicated there would be regrets down the track.

"I think it's approaching ubiquity and will start to wind back a little," he said. "We won't see generation after generation now getting tattoos."

What girls want

Feminine floral and swirl patterns

Lettering or flowers on the feet

Large roses and tiger lilies

Lettering that follows the contours of the body

The most popular placement is the ribcage, feet, biceps and neck

What guys want

Religious iconography such as the Virgin Mary

Oriental designs such as Koi fish

Biomechanical and robotic designs

Mexican skulls depicting the Day of the Dead and gangster-style tattoos

The most popular placement is covering the back and arms

via The Sunday Telegraph

China's Boom Town... With No People

Chinese City Has Many Buildings, but Few People

By DAVID BARBOZA

ORDOS, China — By many measures, this resource-rich city in northern China is a fabulous success.

It has huge reserves of coal and natural gas, a fast-growing economy and a property market so sizzling hot that virtually every house put up for sale here is immediately snapped up.

There is just one thing largely missing in the city’s extravagant new central district: people.

Ordos proper has 1.5 million residents. But the tomorrowland version of Ordos — built from scratch on a huge plot of empty land 15 miles south of the old city — is all but deserted.

Broad boulevards are unimpeded by traffic in the new district, called Kangbashi New Area. Office buildings stand vacant. Pedestrians are in short supply. And weeds are beginning to sprout up in luxury villa developments that are devoid of residents.
Pics: Adam Dean for The New York Times

A worker built a pathway in front of a construction site in the exclusive Jinxia Hill gated compound where most of the complexes are already sold but lie uninhabited in Ordos, Inner Mongolia.

“It’s pretty lonely here,” says a woman named Li Li, the marketing manager of an elegant restaurant in Kangbashi’s mostly vacant Lido Hotel. “Most of the people who come to our restaurant are government officials and their guests. There aren’t any common residents around here.”

City leaders, cheered on by aggressive developers, had hoped to turn Ordos into a Chinese version of Dubai — transforming vast plots of the arid, Mongolian steppe into a thriving metropolis. They even invested over $1 billion in their visionary project.

But four years after the city government was transplanted to Kangbashi, and with tens of thousands of houses and dozens of office buildings now completed, the 12-square-mile area has been derided in the state-run newspaper China Daily as a “ghost town” monument to excess and misplaced optimism.

As China’s roaring economy fuels a wild construction boom around the country, critics cite places like Kangbashi as proof of a speculative real estate bubble they warn will eventually pop — sending shock waves through the banking system of a country that for the last two years has been the prime engine of global growth.

Just Tuesday, China surprised analysts by slightly raising a benchmark lending rate, apparently to dampen speculation in the property market. But within China, analysts doubt the small increase in lending rates will slow the incredible building bonanza that is reaching even remote regions, like this one.

Kangbashi was projected to have 300,000 residents by now. And the government claims that 28,000 people live in the new area. But during a recent visit, a reporter driving around for hours with two real estate brokers saw only a handful of residents in the housing developments.

Analysts estimate there could be as many as a dozen other Chinese cities just like Ordos, with sprawling ghost town annexes. In the southern city of Kunming, for example, a nearly 40-square-mile area called Chenggong has raised alarms because of similarly deserted roads, high-rises and government offices. And in Tianjin, in the northeast, the city spent lavishly on a huge district festooned with golf courses, hot springs and thousands of villas that are still empty five years after completion.

It might all seem mere nouveau riche folly were it not for China’s national goal of moving hundreds of millions of rural residents to big cities over the next decade, in the hope of creating a large middle class.

But determining whether the Ordos-style expansion and re-engineering of old cities is being driven by smart planning or propelled by speculative madness is a prime challenge for Beijing policy makers.

Fearing inequality and social unrest, China’s national government has struggled to rein in soaring property prices and stem the threat of inflation, even as ambitious local officials continue to draw up blueprints for new megacities.

And if government-run banks balk at providing additional loans to developers, underground, gray-market lenders are only too happy to step in.

Patrick Chovanec, who teaches business at Tsinghua University in Beijing, says the building boom is driven by frenzied investors — not the housing needs of millions of migrating workers.

“People are using real estate as an investment, as a place to store cash — they treat it like gold,” Professor Chovanec said. “They’re stockpiling empty units. This is going on in cities of virtually every size.”

But here in Ordos, in north China’s sparsely populated Inner Mongolia region, there is little second-guessing. Cranes are everywhere, as construction moves ahead on a $450 million financial district in Kangbashi, a site that will feature six high-rise office towers.

Property development here is so hot that last year, housing sales in Ordos reached $2.4 billion, up from $100 million in 2004, according to government statistics. During that span, the average square-foot price of commercial and residential property has risen by 260 percent, to $53.

“This is a city of the future,” Li Hong, a government official, said during a recent tour of Kangbashi. “We are going to build this into a center of politics, culture and technology. That is our dream.”

But the future has not yet arrived, despite Mr. Li’s best efforts to persuade a visitor otherwise.

“You can see there’s real energy here,” he said one afternoon, looking out onto the mile-square town commons, even though only a few dozen people — presumably government workers — could be seen on the vast square, where towering bronze sculptures honor the Mongolian warrior Genghis Khan. The vacant amenities surrounding the square include a theater, an opera house and an art museum.

Only a few minutes earlier, Mr. Li escorted a reporter through an empty 500,000-square-foot convention center and a 12-story office tower that had dark hallways, locked doors and just a few scattered souls.

“The media who said this was a ghost town came and took photographs at 6 or 7 in the evening,” said Mr. Li, noting that many government workers continue to commute from the old town because of the lack of stores and restaurants in the new area.

City leaders may be basing their optimism on the financial windfall in recent years for Ordos, which sits atop one of the world’s biggest reserves of coal, whose price has soared along with China’s voracious energy appetite. Formerly impoverished, the region now has a growing number of coal millionaires and the nation’s highest gross domestic product per capita ($19,679) , with Land Rovers a leading symbol of Ordos’s newfound affluence.

“I started my company in 1988; before that, I was a low-level government official,” said Zhang Shuangwang, 66, chairman of the Yitai Group, one of the region’s biggest privately owned coal and transport companies. “Back then, I had a team. The government gave us $7,500 and then loaned us $60,000 and said, ‘Do whatever you want.’ We bought a coal mine.”

Two decades later, Mr. Zhang is a billionaire, and Wall Street is courting his $4 billion company to help one of its units prepare a public stock listing.

In 2004, with Ordos tax coffers bulging with coal money, city officials drew up a bold expansion plan to create Kangbashi, a 30-minute drive south of the old city center on land adjacent to one of the region’s few reservoirs. Because land auctions are a major source of fiscal income in China, part of the plan’s allure was the prospect of elevating the value of property in an undeveloped area.

In the ensuing building spree, home buyers could not get enough of Kangbashi and its residential developments with names like Exquisite Silk Village, Kanghe Elysees and Imperial Academic Gardens.

Some buyers were like Zhang Ting, a 26-year-old entrepreneur who is a rare actual resident of Kangbashi, having moved to Ordos this year on an entrepreneurial impulse.

“I bought two places in Kangbashi, one for my own use and one as an investment,” said Mr. Zhang, who paid about $125,000 for his 2,000-square-foot investment apartment. “I bought it because housing prices will definitely go up in such a new town. There is no reason to doubt it. The government has already moved in.”

Asked whether he worried about the lack of other residents, Mr. Zhang shrugged off the question.

“I know people say it’s an empty city, but I don’t find any inconveniences living by myself,” said Mr. Zhang, who borrowed to finance his purchases. “It’s a new town, let’s give it some time.”

Bao Beibei contributed research.

via The New York Times