17 December 2010

PC Urged to Create Autonomous Tribal State in Manipur

By Sobhapati Samom

P_ChidambaramImphal, Dec 17 : Union Home Minister P Chidambaram has been urged to create an Autonomous Tribal State (ATS) within Manipur as enshrined in Article 244 A of the Indian constitution.

Zomi Council (ZC), an apex body of various tribes based in Churachandpur district submitted a memorandum in this regard during the minister's visit to the district on Wednesday.

The memorandum urged the visiting home minister to amend the power and functions of the proposed ATS to cater to the present and future needs of the tribal people of Manipur.

“The Sixth schedule of the Indian Constitution should be extended to the existing six autonomous district councils of Manipur (hill areas) under the proposed ATS,” the memorandum said.

Meanwhile, some of the Kuki armed groups including Zomi Re-unification Organisation (ZRO) and Kuki National Front (KNF) also submitted separate memorandums to the visiting home minister in Churachandpur and Imphal.

ZRO’s secretary information and public relations Kenneth Muana in a release here expressed happiness over the home minister’s visit to their designated camp in Churachandpur district.

“The proposition made by the organisation was found to be realistic and pragmatic for which he assured to take up the matter at the Prime Minister’s level,” the memorandum said.

KNF’s general secretary Aaron Kipgen said that he expects a positive response from the visiting minister during their follow up meeting in New Delhi soon. “We remain firm in our demand for creation of Kukiland within the framework of Constitution of India,” KNF memorandum said.

“As a matter of fact, we would like to request the government of India to recognise that the Kukis only demand those districts and areas in Manipur that are predominantly inhabited by the Kukis for the formation of Kukiland.”

Both ZRO and KNF are among 16 Kuki underground organisations that have suspended their operations after signing a tripartite agreement with the Central and State governments on August 22, 2008.

Earlier, Home Minister had a series of meeting with the public leaders and NGO representatives at Khuga dam site in Churachandpur and Raj Bhavan in Imphal before his departure to Delhi. He also met selected members of All Manipur Working Journalists Union at Raj Bhavan here.

Assam Govt. Not Opposed to Bail For ULFA Chairman

Rajkhowa_0Guwahati, Dec 16 : Jailed chairman of the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) Arabinda Rajkhowa is all set to step out of prison as the government prosecutor Thursday did not oppose his bail petition, a step seen as an official attempt to pave the way for peace talks.

'The government of Assam is planning to facilitate the release of the jailed ULFA leaders in a phased manner by not opposing their bail petitions to pave the way for peace talks, and so is the case with Arabinda Rajkhowa,' Pradip Kumar Gogoi, special public prosecutor, told IANS.

The court has fixed Dec 20 for final hearing of the bail petition of Rajkhowa, jailed since Dec 5, 2009, after he was handed over to India by Bangladesh upon his capture in that country.

'Peace talks would start only when we are all released from jail,' the ULFA chairman told journalists outside the court premises.

Barring ULFA's elusive commander-in-chief Paresh Baruah, the entire top brass of the outfit is in jail. The imprisoned leaders included chairman Rajkhowa, vice chairman Pradip Gogoi, publicity chief Mithinga Daimary, deputy commander-in-chief Raju Baruah, self-styled foreign secretary Sasha Choudhury, finance secretary Chitrabon Hazarika, cultural secretary Pranati Deka, and political ideologue Bhimkanta Buragohain.

With demands for releasing the jailed ULFA leaders gathering momentum so as to pave the way for peace talks, the government has embarked on a strategy not to oppose the bail applications of the separatists in court.

The process began and one by one five top jailed ULFA leaders have been released on bail - the government prosecutor not objecting to their bail applications in court.

The first to be released on bail were Pradeep Gogoi and Mithinga Daimary, followed by Raju Baruah and Pranati Deka, and last week the veteran Bhimkanta Buragohain. Rajkhowa is likely to step out to freedom next week.

ULFA general secretary Anup Chetia, however, is in Bangladesh since his arrest there in 1997.

There are chances of Chetia now being extradited to India to help him take part in the proposed peace talks due to start soon once the three remaining jailed leaders are released on bail.

'Now that talks are yet to begin, there is no question of a ceasefire. But once talks begin, then only operations from either side would stop,' Rajkhowa said.

16 December 2010

Chidambaram Visits ZRO Camp in Manipur

P-Chidambaram11_3Churachandpur, Dec 16 : Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram visited the designated camps of an ethnic group called Zomi Re-Unification Organisation (ZRO) here on Wednesday and said that there cannot be development without peace.

He also said that political evolution in the state would take time, but, the vision for a peaceful state was still intact.

"There can be no development, without peace and there can be no good governance. Therefore, my plea to everyone is while the political evolution will take time, there must be peace. I have made clear in my speech in Parliament and elsewhere whatever vision for Manipur is, that vision remains intact," he added.

Chidambaram also said that crime is yet to be completely stopped in the State.

"It cannot be said that extortion has stopped, it cannot be said that kidnapping is stopped, it cannot be said that non-Manipuri especially people who have come here to work are not being targeted. So, there are still problems here, these have to be addressed, they can be addressed only with the cooperation of the elected people and particularly the young people," he added.

During his two-day visit to Manipur, he took stock of the law and order situation.

Earlier, while interacting the students here, Chidambaram said: " The Union government respects the boundary of Manipur. There had been apprehension among the people in the backdrop of persisting demands by militant organisations for the division of the State.

He also addressed the issue of discrimination practised in the rest of the country against the northeastern citizens.

"Sometimes misguided people discriminate against you (students). For well-meaning people, among the educated young people, you are welcome in every part of India. And your have done extremely well, especially, in certain areas, which require a good and an out-going personality," he said.

Earlier, Chidambaram expressed satisfaction that several militant outfits of North East have entered into negotiations with government-appointed interlocutors.

Addressing the passing out parade of the North East Police Academy here, Chidambaram said: "I am happy to report that almost all groups or organizations are in talks with government-appointed interlocutors."

Orange Produce Declines in Manipur

orange festivalGuwahati, Dec 16 : Despite Orange production being promoted in a big way in Manipur with even the annual Orange Festival, mass decline in Orange production is being experienced with even many orange growers shifting to a new avenue with their Orange orchards in Manipur’s Orange district -Tamenglong- steadily withering away.

Tamenglong, the Orange district of Manipur is likely to lose this famous juicy fruit if urgent counter measures are not undertaken right away. Although Orange growth is still visible in the district, the orchards are fast disappearing.

According to the Orange growers of the largest Orange producing district of Manipur, their orchard are steadily dying due to wide spread disease.

Most of the orange orchards are dried up and crop production has decreased to over 80 percent.

This massive decline of the orange plantation is a terrible blow to Manipur’s most underdeveloped district.

With the economy of the orange farmers severely affected, the district administration is keen to devise ways to rejuvenate the Orange production in the District through training orange growers in scientific plantation and management by roping in experts of Soil Conservation and horticulture dept and central agriculture university.

According to the experts, the current predicament of the Orange growers of Tamenglong is a direct result of the negligence of the growers themselves and their lack of scientific management.

Most orange plants grown in the district are suffering from nutrient deficiency and unscientific method of management make them susceptive to disease and insect-pest attack, resulting in the massive withering of plants.

According to Manipur Horticulture department, out of the total produce of about 31,968 metric tonnes of oranges in Manipur, Tamenglong contributed 17,311 metric tones in 2008-09.

If the findings of the experts are true, Orange production of Tamenglong can go up if growers adopt scientific method of plantation and management.

However, bottlenecks such as transportation, lack of organized marketing opportunity and frequent bandhs and blockade continue to plague the orange growers of Tamenglong.

While the State govt’s participation in the Orange festival is encouraging, the administrative should look into the many grievances of the Orange growers of the district and take up concrete steps to address them so that the resource of the state can be hardness for economic betterment of its people.

Abduction Cases Rise Steeply in Manipur

Kidnapping in manipurImphal, Dec 16 : In another case of kidnapping of government officials in Manipur, a doctor was kidnapped from Bishenpur district of the state on Monday.

However, he was rescued later. If it wasn't for the timely action of Bishnupur Police Commandos, Dr. W Nabachandra would have had to spend days in captivity until the health department or his family gave in to the demands of his captors, usually of money or of lucrative government contract orders.

Fortunately, Dr. Nabachandra was rescued by the police commando while his captors were bringing him to their hide-out in the periphery of Loktak lake in Bishnupur district.

According to the doctor, there were five persons who were involved in his abduction. Out of those, two were armed and one of his abductors was a woman.

He was working in the Leimapokpam Primary Health Centre under Nambul Police Station when they came into the health centre and took him away at gun-point at around 1:30 pm on Monday.

This is not the first time that doctors and nurses, working in the rural areas are abducted for ransom and probably will not be the last.

Such cases of abductions are also one of factors that doctors and nurses hesitate to accept posting in far-flung areas to serve the rural health mission.

Sony Launches World's Smallest, Lightest Interchangeable Lens Digital Camera

Sony launches World

K. Teshirogi business head of Sony Corporation's Alpha division,during a press presentation of the new Alpha NEX-3 (L) and NEX-5 (R) series in Mumbai on wednesday.

Leading consumer electronics manufacturer, Sony India, is targetting a 40 per cent share in the total camera market in India by FY12, with the introduction of its alpha NEX series cameras.

The company on Wednesday launched the NEX series cameras -- NEX -3 and NEX-5 -- in India. "Currently, Sony has a 35 per cent share in the total camera market.

But with the launch of the NEX series, we expect it to grow to 40 per cent by FY 12 and expect the sales of Sony's digital cameras to go up to Rs 900-crore from Rs 600 crore," Sony India Managing Director Masaru Tamagawa told reporters in Mumbai.

The company aims to sell 40,000 units of the NEX series in the next one year and has earmarked Rs 25-crore for sales promotion, he said.

"We are targetting 15 per cent contribution of the NEX series sales in the total Sony's camera business," Tamagawa said.
While the NEX-5 is priced at Rs 34,990, the NEX-3 will be available at Rs 29,900, he said.

The cameras are equipped with background de focus function, full HD movie, 7fps high speed shooting and 3D sweep panorama.

Sony launches World

K. Teshirogi business head of Sony Corporation's Alpha division,during a press presentation of the new Alpha NEX-3 (L) and NEX-5 (R) series in Mumbai

Sony launches World

Sony launches World

Sony launches World
Sony launches NEX series

Meet The Dr No of Development

Jairam Ramesh challenges India on green development

Meet the Dr No of development

New Delhi: India's environment minister has blocked the construction of mines, power plants and dams. He's held up a new airport and describes diesel cars as criminal. He's even taken Harry Potter to task for promoting threatened owls as pets.

Just a year and a half into the job, Jairam Ramesh has turned a once-marginal Environment Ministry into a powerful gatekeeper on India's road to prosperity. He's been called an eco-crusader, a "Dr. No" of development and even a buffoon, angering so many investors and politicians that there are constant rumors of his impending dismissal.

But his tenacity has fuelled an environmental debate that many say is long overdue. After two decades of unbridled development, India risks becoming a victim of its own success. It is now the world's third-largest greenhouse gas emitter, with rivers the World Bank has described as fetid sewers and cities listed among the world's most polluted.

"Many people in India, particularly the elitist classes, still think 'Grow now, clean later.' We cannot repeat the mistakes of other countries," Ramesh told The Associated Press in a recent interview. "I'm no eco-evangelist, but are we serious about implementing our environmental laws or not?"

The U.S.-educated technocrat-turned-politician insisted his job, adversarial by nature, is to help correct India's development course by enforcing long-ignored environmental laws. He takes Mohandas Gandhi, the Indian independence leader and advocate of sustainable living, as his touchstone.

"A country whose father of the nation is Mahatma Gandhi cannot but be an exemplar to the world on environmental matters. I find it hypocritical for us to chant and pay obeisance to him like we do and forget the essence of what he stood for," the 56-year-old minister said.

Meet the Dr No of development

His readiness to upset investors may reflect a wider shift in government priorities that would explain how he is tolerated under a prime minister who prizes development.

In a speech last month, Sonia Gandhi, the leader of the ruling Congress Party, quoted her late husband, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi: "Whenever the environment is damaged, a bit of India dies."

When Ramesh was appointed environment minister in May 2009, India was seen as petulant and stubborn in global climate change negotiations. He has since promoted India as a mediator during U.N. climate talks in Cancun, Mexico, and was credited with helping to break a U.S.-China deadlock over how emissions cuts might be measured and verified.

Ramesh suggested this week that India might commit to cutting emissions, saying all developing countries should consider doing so.

The comment, like so many by Ramesh, triggered a media storm in India, with the opposition accusing him of unilaterally changing India's policy of refusing to limit growth while digging out of poverty.

In a country where success is defined by bald numbers -- nearly 9 percent economic growth, $274.7 billion in reserves and an income per capita that has risen to $3,200 last year -- many consider Ramesh anathema to progress. While economic growth has lifted millions out of poverty, hundreds of millions remain mired in the poorest conditions. A rising economy is crucial for small-time entrepreneurs and slum-dwellers alike.

"Growth to fight poverty is perhaps the highest priority," said Amit Mitra, secretary-general Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce Industry. "If you create an atmosphere where you hold up hundreds of projects, and solutions are not found, that is not the healthiest outcome."

Meet the Dr No of development

Business analysts say it looks bad, even chaotic, that Ramesh has overturned Environment Ministry permits allotted before he took charge. His motives look even murkier amid allegations that the government may be using the environment to settle political scores in opposition-run states, which Ramesh vehemently denies.

"There has been a little bit of excess zeal that is not warranted," said Surit Bhalla, managing director of Oxus Research and Investments. "It's good news that we are discussing the environment like never before. But why can't we go about doing it in a fair fashion?"

Often dressed in a traditional white kurta with his two-toned hair swept back, Ramesh has become a media darling with his ready soundbites and sharp criticism of the Western way of life. Despite his education at Carnegie Mellon and the Massachusetts Insitute of Technology, he blasted the American lifestyle last month as the world's most unsustainable.

Already there is nervous speculation about whether he will decide this month to revoke clearance for a $12 billion steel plant by South Korea's Posco -- India's biggest-ever foreign investment project.

But Ramesh, a former minister of power and commerce and adviser to the finance and industry ministries, dismisses the idea that his tactics are scaring away investors.

"If anything, I think investor sentiment will be driven by an idea that laws are being implemented. The genuine long-term investors should welcome a law-oriented society," he says, noting that most projects do get approval, and those that don't just need an eco-friendly redesign. For example, his objections to a second airport in Mumbai were lifted last month after the site was shifted away from a stand of mangrove trees.

Meet the Dr No of development

Ramesh and his bosses in the Congress Party are keenly aware of the political currency to be won by protecting forests, coastlines and fresh water sources.

Some 250 million people live off India's forests covering 270,000 square miles (700,000 square kilometers) -- an area larger than Texas or France. Another 7 million coastal families subsist on fishing, while a full 70 percent of the country survives on agriculture.

In October, the Environment Ministry blocked London-based Vedanta Resources' plan to expand an aluminum refinery and power plant in the eastern state of Orissa after finding construction had started without environmental clearance. The next day, Sonia Gandhi's son, Rahul, was on the ground in Orissa, shaking hands and taking credit for securing the land.

In another case, Ramesh halted construction of a dam in the Himalayan region of Sikkim after a local tribal group complained it would submerge an ancient Buddhist site. "Should I ignore them because they're just a few thousand people?" he said. "Should I be party to the destruction of a holy site for the sake of 100 megawatts?"

Ramesh has also launched an environmental tribunal to spring some 5,000 green cases from the country's backlogged court system, and secured payment from Pepsi Co. for coastal fishermen in exchange for harvesting seaweed.

"There's no question it's partly about getting votes, but that's not entirely a bad thing," said Mahesh Rangarajan, an environmental historian at the University of Delhi who has advised the ministry on forest and elephant preservation. "Enforcing India's forest laws has helped the underclass to have some defense against what was a very arbitrary bureaucracy."

A few weeks ago, the ministry shut down a planned lakeside community about 125 miles (200 kilometers) outside of Mumbai -- a project in which the agriculture minister's daughter once held a stake. The website for the Lavasa project shows drawings of families frolicking near lavish homes.

The ministry said the construction lacked environmental permits and was higher than the 3,000 feet (900 meters) above sea level allowed. Lavasa, which had been weeks away from a public offering, insists it had clearance.

"This is shocking," Lavasa said in a written response, accusing Ramesh of bias and "ulterior motives" in appeasing activists. Ramesh said his critics are overreacting and missing the key message -- that eco-friendly solutions are possible, even preferable.

"What pains me most is the attempt being made to paint me as an obstructionist," he said, adding that he was among the first politicians to argue for the economic liberalization that unleashed India's economic growth in the 1990s. "To be honest, this is a thankless job," he said. As he said it, he was laughing.

Source: Associated Press

Hottest Women in Food Television

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If you love to cook.  You’d love these ladies cooking and steaming up the shows.  If I’m gonna learn to cook a roast, I want the perky voice of a Rachel Ray or the sexy body of a Cat Cora showing me the way.

With that said, here are the hottest women in food television.

Aida Mollenkamp

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Where you’ve seen her:  She’s on the Food Network with her own show called Ask Aida.

Why I like her: Because I think Ask Aida means I can ask her sexual questions as well.

Ingrid Hoffman

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Where you’ve seen her:  Hosts the series Simply Delicioso on Food Network and the Spanish show Delicisio on Galavision

Why I like her:  She’s Colombian and knows Martha Stewart.

Sandra Lee

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Where you’ve seen her:  Semi Homemade Cooking on Food Network

Why I like her:  Cougar – 43-years-old

Giada DeLaurentiis

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Where you’ve seen her:  She’s all over the Food Network hosting 5 shows and looking good all the time

Why I like her:   She looks just like the hooker from Crocodile Dundee

Rachael Ray

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Where you’ve seen her:   Maxim and if you haven’t seen her by now you’re an idiot.

Why I like her:  She seems like an adult version of Punky Brewster.

Cat Cora

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Where you’ve seen her:  Iron Chef

Why I like her:  She’s over 40 and she’s a lesbian.  Thanks Cat!

Nigella Lawson

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Where you’ve seen her:  NigellaExpress

Why I like her:  The way slurps hot chocolate…umm…She eatable raw..

Padma Lakshmi

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Where you’ve seen her:  Host of Top Chef

Why I like her:  She’s a hot Indian lady.