07 February 2011

Meghalaya Students in Relief Camps Stare at Board Exams

Meghalaya Board of Secondary EducationShillong, Feb 7 : Authorities in Meghalaya are scurrying to ensure that the scores of students displaced in the recent ethnic clash do not miss their ensuing board exams.

According to official estimates, there are over 200 students in the relief camps at Meghalaya's East Garo Hills district and the neighbouring Goalpara district of Assam, who would appear for their class X or XII board examinations slated to begin from the first week of March.

Top officials of the Meghalaya Board of Secondary Education (MBoSE), led by its president, are scheduled to visit the violence-hit Mendipathar area of East Garo Hills district on Thursday and would hold a meeting with representatives of various schools to assess the situation.

They also plan to meet school inspectors on Friday in a bid to chalk out plans to ensure that the students hit by the clashes do not lose an academic year. Deputy Commissioner Pravin Bakshi said the board would first make provisions for duplicate admit cards to the students and may consider setting up a special examination centre for the displaced students.

An additional district magistrate of Meghalaya would be visiting Assam's Goalpara on Wednesday where several families have fled in the wake of violence. He would prepare a list of the students taking shelter in the relief camps there, the DC said, adding a similar survey of the students is also being carried out in Meghalaya. About three schools were burnt down by miscreants during the clashes between January 1 and 9 in Meghalaya.

Meanwhile, the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights has also asked for a status report of the children in the relief camps. Officials said the commission would pursue aid and assistance from the Centre for these displaced children.

Currently in East Garo Hills district, there are eight relief camps housing 1774 people. Around 8,000 people who have fled to Assam are yet to return and are in relief camps there.

Meanwhile, the Red Cross has also done a survey of the relief camps and is expected to extend aid to the displaced. Ram Krishna Mission is also helping the relief work. The DC said government compensation of Rs 10,000 to each family and CGI sheets would be distributed within a couple of days.

At least 12 people were killed and over 50,000 displaced in the ethnic clashes in both the neighbouring districts of Assam and Meghalaya.

7 Best Browsers For Your Smartphone

7 best browsers for your smartphone

Mobile Web browsers are fast catching up with their desktop counterparts in terms of functionality and features.

Until a few years ago, internet access on the cellphone mainly meant being able to chat or send and receive e-mail on your handset.

Yes, you could browse the Web on your phone as well, but screens were small and the browser - the software that let you access websites - was not really designed to let you see websites in all their glory, but instead showed you watered down “mobile-friendly ” versions of the originals.

All that changed with the arrival of the iPhone with its powerful Safari browser. This not only signalled an era of larger phone screens, but also positioned the handset as a device that was as capable of browsing the Web as a computer.

The iPhone’s popularity led to not only more touchscreen devices (which is another story altogether), but also spurred a significant improvement in cellphone browsers.

Prior to the iPhone, browsers like Opera Mini had managed to deliver a decent browsing experience on handsets, but had often been hampered by relatively small (2 or 2.2 inch) displays.

All this has now changed and the first thing that many users do when they get a cellphone is often to download a new browser to be able to surf their favourite websites with minimum fuss - ironically, the default browsers in most smartphones (barring the iPhone and Android devices) still remain on the weaker side.

Here, then are some of the mobile browsing options available for those wanting a slice of the Web on their phones:

Opera Mini

Opera Mini

It can claim credit to having started the mobile browsing phenomenon when it allowed users to access desktop versions of websites on their handsets as far back as in 2005. Since then, it has gone from strength to strength and now even comes pre-installed on many handsets.
One of the reasons Opera Mini works so well is that it uses a server to compress Web pages and then sends them to a handset - this can wreck havoc with images, but more often than not provides a very quick browsing experience, even on relatively slow connections.

Recent years have seen additions like tabbed browsing, an icon-driven interface, the ability to share bookmarks with desktop browsers, and support for just about every phone (including the iPhone) in town being added. All of which make it the best mobile browsing option on a handset to this day, notwithstanding the absence of support for Flash websites.

In fact, it is so good that it has overshadowed and at times even cannibalised a sister product, Opera Mobile, which provides similar functionality, but runs totally off the phone and does not access pages through a server!

Available on www.m.opera.com


Bolt

Bolt

It is a relative newcomer to the world of mobile browsers, but Bolt has already started making a name for itself with its extremely fast browsing and the fact that it allows users to access streaming Flash websites like YouTube and MySpace.

Bolt also lets you use Web applications like Google Docs and games like Mafia Wars, all with minimum loss of formatting. There is also a widget platform for those who would like to access sites without the fuss of typing out URLs (never an easy task on handsets).

Top that off with the fact that the browser runs on any handset that runs Java (it does not run on the iPhone and while Android versions are being tested out, it is not on the Android Market) and you can see why the browser is gaining so much popularity. It still loses out to Opera Mini in terms of sheer speed and stability though.

Available on www.boltbrowser.com


SkyFire

SkyFire

There are many who complain about its (lack of) speed, its tendency to shut down abruptly at times and its less-than-intuitive interface. But all said and done, Skyfire has made a name for itself as being, perhaps, one of the most powerful browsers to run on a cellphone.

It is one of the few browsers that lets you access a number of Flash sites without too many hassles (there’s even a workaround for this on the iPhone which does not support flash) and gives near desktop-style performance for almost all websites on most popular smartphone platforms.

What holds it back from cellphone browser domination is its tendency to be buggy and the fact that it is a bit of a resource hog - it can really slow your phone down sometimes. For this reason, it works best on devices with a little more power under the hood.

Available on www.skyfire.com

Dolphin HD

Dolphin HD

There are many who will frown at the need for getting a third-party browser on an Android handset, which generally has a version of Google’s mobile Chrome running on it.

It, therefore, speaks volumes of just how good Dolphin is, that many consider it a must-have application for Android users.

Apart from handling Flash and HTML 5 sites very well, it also brings in the convenience of gestures, letting you access websites by just drawing a shape on the screen.

For example, you can assign the letter ‘F’ to access Facebook. Draw the shape on the screen and you’ll instantly be taken to that site. There are also various addons and extensions available; a password manager and screen capture to add further functionality to the browser, if need be.

For example, it also supports downloading of YouTube videos. A pity it is available only for Android devices running software version 2.0 or later.

Available on Android Market

Firefox Mobile

Firefox Mobile

Do not get fooled by the name. The mobile version of Firefox has, so far, failed to match the performance (and hence, popularity) of its desktop counterpart. While it does offer a fair bit such as support for HTML 5 and add-ons, it has been found wanting in several departments, most notably those of speed and stability.

When it does work, though, it works very well indeed. Alas, it has been a work in progress rather than the finished article for way too long. So far, it is available only for Android and Maemo devices.

Available on www.mozilla.com/en-US /mobile


iCab Mobile

iCab Mobile

For many iPhone fanatics, downloading an additional browser when they have the superb Safari broswer pre-loaded on the device seems like a waste of time.

However, iCab Mobile has emerged as one of the main challengers to Safari on the iPhone, just as it continues to be one of its rivals on the Mac OS platform.

iCab Mobile brings tabbed browsing, three finger scrolling, and most interestingly, a download manager that can not just be opened by apps on the iPhone, but can also be transferred to a computer.

The built-in search function can be extended by adding more search engines, just like a browser on a PC. It also has some unique features like filters to block ads or other unwanted elements on a webpage.

One of the two browsers in this feature to come with a price tag ($1.99), but in terms of performance, iCab is one of the best we have seen.

Available on Apple App Store


Xscope

Xscope

Xscope is not just a Web browser for Android devices; it also functions as a task killer (to help close apps running in the background) and as a file manager.

You can long press on a link or an image for additional options like downloading. It is noticeably faster in rendering pages as compared to the default Android browser.

Additionally, tabbed browsing is possible, and you can switch between tabs by simply swiping left or right on the tabs toolbar. Like Dolphin HD, Xscope also allows you to download YouTube clips for later viewing.

Other features include pinch-to-zoom, various customised skins and URL sharing. You can share the link to any website you visit using G-mail, Facebook or SMS; just long press on the URL bar and the sharing options come up. The latest version only works on devices running Android 2.1 or later.

It is priced at $2.99 on the Android App Market, but there is a free, lite version available too. The lite version has all the browser features, but omits the task killer and file manager.

Available on Android Market

Now, CAG Suspects Scam Bigger Than 2G

The Comptroller and Auditor General suspects a scandal bigger than 2G in the allocation of S-band spectrum.

The loss purportedly runs into Rs 2 lakh crore, while the 2G spectrum scandal, which cost A Raja his job as telecom minister, is believed to have cost the nation a little less, at Rs 1.7 lakh crore.

The Department of Space and ISRO are under the scanner because the CAG has found that the deal was awarded without competitive bids being invited.

The Hindu reports: "Hard on the heels of its explosive investigations of the 2G spectrum allotments made in 2008 by the Department of Telecommunications, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has started inquiries into a 2005 agreement between the Indian Space Research Organisation's commercial arm Antrix Corporation Ltd. and Devas Multimedia Private Ltd."

The company that allegedly benefited from the deal, Devas Multimedia, is headed by Dr M G Chandrashekhar, who was earlier scientific secretary at ISRO.

"Under the deal, Devas Multimedia is to get access to 70 Mhz of broadband spectrum in the 2500 Mhz band. This was once used by Doordarshan to deliver programmes by satellite to all parts of the country but is now considered to be of enormous commercial value for high-speed, terrestrial mobile communications. In 2010, the Union government got nearly Rs. 67,719 crore from the auction of just 15 Mhz of similar airwaves for 3G mobile services," The Hindu says.

The CAG was alerted because unlike in earlier contracts, ISRO placed no restrictions on Devas Multimedia for onward leasing of spectrum. That means the company could make huge amounts of money by sub-leasing its privileges.

This is said to be the first time that S-band, which ranges from 2500 to 2690 Mhz, has been opened up to the private sector. The Hindu group's business paper, Business Line, is credited with breaking the story.

The CAG is concerned that ISRO's internal procedures were flouted, while the Prime Minister’s Office, the Cabinet, and the Space Commission were not fully informed about the contract, including the underestimation of ISRO’s costs, The Hindu reports.

Northeast India Regional Parties Moot Forum

zoramthangaAizawl, Feb 7 : Influential regional party leaders of the Northeast have agreed to form a strong regional party forum.

Mizoram’s largest and oldest regional party the Mizo National Front said, in a statement, here today its president Zoramthanga had a meeting with Nagaland Chief Minister Neiphu Rio and former Lok Sabha speaker P A Sangma at Nagaland House in New Delhi on February 2 where they mooted the idea of forming a strong forum for the regional parties in northeastern part of the country.

The meeting agreed to hold a preliminary meeting at New Delhi on February 20 where all regional parties and members of parliament from the Northeast will be invited, the statement said.

The regional party leaders tentatively planned to launch the new forum before the forthcoming Assam state assembly elections during March, the source stated.

There are little more than ten regional parties in the entire Northeast region, which play major role in their respective states.

''If all these regional parties can come under one umbrella, it could have influence in the national politics,'' opined an MNF insider.

Bringing It All Back Home (To Shillong)

By Vivek Menezes

Bahlou2
Our first glimpse of Lou Majaw comes just outside the Guwahati airport – his face is building-sized, emblazoned high above the multi-lane expressway to Meghalaya, on an advertisement for Star Cement. These billboards turn out to be ubiquitous along our route. By the time we’ve wound our way up from the Brahmaputra floodplains into the cloud-wreathed Khasi hills, the legendary rocker of the North-East seems a reassuringly familiar fixture of the landscape, even the toddler in our midst chortling with glee every time his flowing silver hair looms up ahead, instantly recognizable even in the fading light that slowly obliterates the thick pine forests that line the steep, curving road to Shillong.

But when we set out to find him the very next morning, the man seems as elusive as the fast-rising mists that are a permanent fixture of life in his hometown. We knew that Lou Majaw doesn’t go on the Internet, but now we learn that he doesn’t have a permanent contact number, or even a particularly fixed address. Then we discover that you can’t buy a copy of any of his albums in any of the music stores in Shillong either.

One day goes by, then two, no signs of the Khasi cowboy in his signature cut-off jeans, and we console ourselves with innumerable platesful of smoked pork and fermented soybeans from the jadoh stall on the corner of the street in Laitumkhrah that’s known as his stomping grounds.

“Just chill out there in the evenings, and you’ll see him walking down towards you before too long,” we’ve been told by more than one of his old friends, and so we return at sunset again and again, trailing happily up the hill past the churches and colleges packed in densely in this buzzing neighborhood of young people from across the region; schoolgirls resplendent in matching cardigans and kilts, teenagers head-to-toe clones of Soho hipsters.

Trudging steadily past the looming, gigantic Cathedral, the toddler on my shoulders grows suddenly silent as we catch the soaring sound of a choir in full voice. I realize with a start that it is Sunday, and we hesitate on the hillside until the throbbing Khasi hymn comes to an end.

**

The story of western music in the North East of India starts with the church, more precisely with one very unusual missionary from Wales named Thomas Jones.

In 1841, the young Weshman clambered up into the Khasi hills from the opposite direction from the one we had taken along the Guwahati-Shillong highway. At that time, the capital of Assam was the ancient Khasi stronghold of Sohra (Cherrapunjee), and this is where Jones headed after a long boat ride from Calcutta, up the Hooghly and the Sunderbans to Sylhet far below the tribal highlands.

Thomas Jones is pure paradox. He belonged to a rigorous and conservative missionary order, but never converted anyone in his years in the Khasi hills. Eventually, he was considered disreputable by his own order, which expelled him, and he died in a kind of disgrace in Calcutta, where his tomb lay abandoned until the Khasis came looking for it.

Jones earned the permanent loyalty of the tribals of the Khasi hills by introducing a series of path-breaking innovations in agriculture, masonry, carpentry, accounting, and especially, in the use of locally mined coal to fire limestone kilns. He kick-started the industrial revolution in the region: Sohra immediately prospered.

Most important from the Khasi viewpoint, Jones dedicated himself to bringing their (previously unwritten) language into the modern era by casting it in the Roman script. He started to translate the Bible, as well as a famous Welsh novel ‘Rhodd Mam’, and compiled a dictionary and reader in Khasi.

This energetic son of distant Montgomeryshire was compelled to leave the hills by 1847, and died almost immediately after. So he never saw the epic wave of conversions that followed his death, as the Garos, Mizos and Nagas each sought to emulate the perceived success of the Khasis - each tribe in turn seizing on to the Roman script for their language, and converting to Protestant Christianity nearly en masse. It’s eye-poppingly ironic to note that Jones denomination – the Welsh Presbyterians – have more than 100 members in the Khasi hills for each solitary one back in Wales.

After Jones, there broke out a lasting scrum over conversions, as a range of European denominations raced to recruit the Khasis and other tribals of the North East. From the beginning, colonial observers commented about the tribal facility for music, especially chorale singing. But instruments required by church music proliferated fast as well: the very first Khasi who ever went to Europe was an expert violin player who is remembered for getting to shake the hand of Benito Mussolini. Leviticus Rapthap played for more than 50 years in that same Laitumkhrah Cathedral, a lifelong member of the choir that caught the ears of my toddler on a crisp May evening.

**

And that is just when we see him, head thrown back and laughing, intent in conversation in the middle of a busy sidewalk, with a stream of quick-moving college students forking around his broad back. The toddler leaps with delight on my shoulders: “Loulie! Loulie! Lou Majaw!” We walk up excitedly, shake his hand and tell him, “we’ve come up to Shillong all the way from Goa just to celebrate Bob Dylan’s birthday with you!”.

But Lou’s not looking very thrilled at all, “they’re coming from all over ” he tells me finally. But I want more, I tell him I would like to hang out with him before the concert, and all day on the 24th of May. I want to bring my sons to the kids concert on the slope of Jaiaw, to also attend the show-stopper in Police Bazaar in the centre of town on that night. I want to photograph everything, too, and I’ve got a little Flip to video everything alongside. All this blurted out and the rocker is still just looking at me, impassive and unmoved. Then I can see something occur to him, and he looks me straight in the eye to communicate it. “Hey man,” says Lou Majaw with a little smile and shrug of indifference,” it’s a free country.”

I've known hunger since I was ten

Loneliness is my good friend

I've learnt to laugh when I feel sad

When I see good times turnin' bad

I’ve known love and hatred too

The pain of dreams that don’t come true

But I’m on the other side now

Of this sea of sorrow

Because I can see the light now

And I know how the wind blows

(Sea of Sorrow, Lou Majaw)

Despite lacking regular airport and rail connections to the rest of the world, and its unusually remote location in the tabletop mountains of Meghalaya, itself connected (like the rest of the North –East) to India only by sheer happenstance (and a tiny strip of territory called “the chicken’s neck”), Shillong retains an outsized sense of self-importance.

This is because of its historical status - for more than 100 years right until 1972, it was the all-important administrative capital for colonial Assam, which was a huge swathe of territory including the present-day states of Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur and Mizoram.

So even when Lou Majaw was born into a poor Khasi family in 1947, there was a sense of connection to the greater world distinguishing this city from others in the region. Shillong was cosmopolitan, and markedly more westernized than most of the rest of the subcontinent, with a large contingent of Europeans in permanent residence.

So it’s not at all surprising that there was a sustained appetite for the latest music from abroad - Majaw has often spoken about the life-changing moment when he heard the irresistible beat of Bill Haley and Elvis Presley’s music blaring from the hi-fi at a neighbour’s house (his own family was too poor to afford a radio).

The young Khasi started haunting his school music room to practice on the guitar that was stored there, and from the beginning, he schemed to form his own bands. The moment he’d saved up enough money to take the chance, Majaw made out for Calcutta to try and make it in the music scene there.

He worked a series of dead-end day jobs while playing in bands like the Dynamite Boys, Supersound Factory, and Blood and Thunder. And then in 1966, the young musician heard an album called The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.

“Everything changed then,” Majaw has often repeated, “Dylan opened my mind to new possibilities.” He turned back to Shillong, and started to play only his own compositions. In 1980, he founded Great Society - still probably the greatest original Indian rock band of all time – also dedicated exclusively to original music. By then, he’d already celebrated Bob Dylan’s birthday with a free concert in Shillong for 8 years in a row.

**

Like much of the rest of Shillong, the residential neighborhood of Jaiaw feels instantly familiar, but as you keep looking you can see that it is actually like no other place on earth.

The architecture feels quaint and old-world, like a low-budget movie set version of Edwardian London. But then you see the women in the streets are wearing jainsems, the iconic toga-like drape of the Khasis, and their cheeks bulge with betel-nut. And all the while the mists rise to slick the blacktop, leaving the visitor with the distinct sensation of having entered another realm of existence altogether.

That sense of disorientation continues as we enter the gates of the Pearly Dew school on May 24, 2010, where blazered and kilted students are lined up in bleachers at the side of the basketball court, under the watchful eye of their school principal. I find myself remembering how subversive rock music has been considered almost all through its existence, how unlikely this whole scene is, and then up to the mike bustles Lou Majaw with thanks to Kong Ibari (the school principal, now beaming), and then, just like a ritual invocation, “Happy Birthday Bob Dylan, wherever you are and God bless you. Thank you for everything that you’ve done for us, and especially for Lou Majaw.”

And now is when we really start to realize how unusual this place is – the first ringing chords of ‘Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right’, and we can immediately feel a wave of sound coming from the audience all around us. We look left and right – dozens of children are singing along intently, they all know the words. How do they know all the words?

We see the teachers lined up along a balcony overhead – they’re singing too. Out of the corner of my eye, there is Kong Ibari, singing lustily as well, eyes closed and head rocked back. It’s surreal beyond measure, and I blink a few times to ensure that it’s not a dream, but still it gets wilder. Now the entire crowd of North-Eastern tribals is singing along to every line of ‘Knocking on Heaven’s Door’ as though it’s the Khasi national anthem. Is it the Khasi national anthem?

And then a band of adorable, rosy-cheeked kiddies troops on, smiling bashfully like all little kids do when they’re about to do something embarrassing . But when the guitar starts up, my remaining hair stands on end as they burst into a scorching version of ‘Man Gave Names to All The Animals, ” this score of irresistable tribal tykes headbanging authentically like so many miniature Ramones.

And Majaw back again, exhorting the schoolchildren to break ranks. Mayhem at Pearly Dew. The little Khasis tear at him, and he at them. I look around desperately to see if someone’s in control here, cover the toddler’s eyes against the riot in front of us. Now Majaw is urging the kids to sing along. "Everybody must get stoned!" he bellows at them. "Everybody must get stoned!" they chorus back, completely delirious with excitement.

Bahlou3

I locate Kong Ibari in the crowd, formidable straight-laced headmistress, surely she’s going to pull the plug. But no, Kong Ibari has a huge smile cleaving her face, she's a picture of pure pleasure. I watch on in amazement as her lips frame the refrain. "Everybody must get stoned!"

**

No one has quite adequately explained the explosive chemistry that occured when folk, rock and blues music arrived in the North-Eastern states of India.

Many other parts of India have been exposed to the influence of the church (which is often cited as reason number one), and to westerners in general (which is often cited as reason number two), but none of them ended up the same way.

More persuasive (but still not entirely satisfactorily so) is the theory that rock music still retains the ability to be subversive, to sound out alienation and disillusionment. This makes a bit of sense because, despite plenty of competition, there is no place in the subcontinent nearly as alienated and disillusioned as the North East, left threadbare and disconnected by the partition of Bengal, and consistently torn apart since then by state brutality and secessionist movements.

Democracy, to the extent it is practiced here, doesn’t really help very much because all of the North East’s forty-odd million people don't add up to even four per cent of the giant Indian electorate, and this entire, mindbendingly complex region made up of dozens of separate “nationalities” has a grand total of exactly 25 seats out of 543 in the Lok Sabha. To boot, the main characteristics of Delhi’s reign over the past 50 years have been indifference and venality.

But even if no one can properly explain why the North East has fallen so hard for this music born out of the black American experience, no one can deny that it has extended deep roots into the cultural landscape of the region. The Naga folk blues, the protest rock bands of Manipur, they’re all part of the same phenomenon that culminates in the Shillong scene, where the level of fervour is simply impossible to describe, where the world record for largest ever guitar ensemble was set in 2007 when 1721 guitarists got together to play their favourite song, the most famous tune across the Khasi hills.

Er, what was the sole tune familiar to all 1721 guitarists, and to every guitarist in Meghalaya besides? Yup, it was ‘Knocking on Heaven’s Door’ by Bob Dylan. It really is a kind of Khasi national anthem.

***

Much later on the 24th, family tucked safely in bed, I am squeezed in among the sound technicians at the back of a stage erected high on Police Bazaar, watching Lou Majaw project his rock-and-roll personality right across the centre of his home town.

It is typical of the chaotic style of this pulsating, traffic-choked city that the streets that lead on to the junction commanded by the stage are still open, and cars and buses are pouring into the roundabout, honking their way through the throng.

Policebazaar

Several local acts had gone before – almost all of them rather sweetly decked out in cowboy hats and boots - and played some of the most famous Dylan songs, but now it’s just Majaw and the snarling guitars of his backup band, The Bad Monkeys, and now the show is clearly for adults only.

Majaw is all strut and posturing, the crowd can barely contain itself. He strips off his shirt, and stalks the stage with his guitar held triumphantly high. It's badass percussive rock of the kind that fills stadiums the rest of the world over. And so the realization begins to dawn into my consciousness: this is the real deal. Lou Majaw is the genuine article. The Bob Dylan shtick is sincere, but well besides the point. This show has nothing to do with the American, instead it’s all about the Khasi.

**

Steam is still coming off Lou Majaw’s body as he carefully winds his guitar cable in his hands and fires instructions to his crew, while winking across the invitation I've been waiting for. Ten minutes later, I’m in an SUV full of Bad Monkeys, and we’re off to party in Bah Lou’s cottage at the Shillong Club. The boys drop me off and head to pick up the food, and I find myself alone with Majaw, who is now wearing a soft sweater to fend off the chill, and is suddenly looking his age.

This has been his 39th consecutive Bob Dylan birthday concert, and even Bah Lou  must know that he can’t go on doing this forever. He closes his eyes for a minute, and once again I am struck by the sheer uniqueness of what I’ve been witnessing.

But then the room fills again with the young musicians of Shillong, and whisky starts to flow. Smoked pork and fermented soybeans make their appearance too. And now there are snatches of songs heard from different parts of the room. The guitar comes out again, and inevitably, more Dylan. Almost everyone who walks in reaches for the instrument and plays something remarkably accomplished.

At some time near 4am, one of Shillong’s top cops comes in, and he too goes straight for the guitar. “Everyone ready”, he says, and then he plays one of the great songs from Nashville Skyline, my favourite of all the Dylan records.

I can hear that whistle blowin'

I see that stationmaster, too

If there's a poor boy on the street

Then let him have my seat

'Cause tonight I'll be staying here with you.

Throw my ticket out the window

Throw my suitcase out there, too

Throw my troubles out the door

I don't need them any more

'Cause tonight I'll be staying here with you.

Note: A considerably shorter version of this essay is in this month's Himal Magazine, availablehere.

YMCA Organises Northeast Cultural Festival

YMCANew Delhi, Feb 7 : To showcase the rich cultural heritage of the northeastern states, Department of Cultural and Tribal Affairs, New Delhi YMCA today organised a cultural festival.

Handicrafts and costumes from Assam, Tripura, Arunachal, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram and Sikkim were displayed here at YMCA.

Playing Sufi songs rock band entertained the audience and smell of brewing tea from Assam and music in the air made people dance to the tunes of the rock music.

Cane furniture, woolen products and other handicrafts were displayed during the festival.

Armed Men Abduct 6 WWF-India Volunteers From Tiger Reserve in India's Northeast

By Wasbir Hussain

northeast india mapGuwahati, Feb 7 : Heavily armed men have kidnapped six volunteers from WWF-India who were counting the tiger population at a reserve in India's remote northeast, an official from the conservation group said Monday.

The three men and three women, all Indian nationals, were abducted Sunday at the Manas Tiger Reserve in Assam state, said Anupam Sharma, a WWF-India official. He said no one has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping.

More than 30 groups in the northeast have been fighting for decades for independence from India or wide autonomy in the region, about 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometres) east of New Delhi. The area near the tiger preserve is a stronghold of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland, a rebel group opposed to peace talks with the Indian government.

Sharma said people living near the tiger reserve reported the attack to other WWF-India volunteers working in the area.

He said the volunteers were taking a census of the reserve's tiger population when they were abducted. The park, which spans into neighbouring Bhutan, has a sizable population of Royal Bengal tigers and wild Asiatic elephants.

A police officer confirmed the abduction. He said police had yet to establish the identity of the kidnappers, but noted the area was home to the National Democratic Front of Bodoland.

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

The militants in the region say the Indian government exploits the region's rich natural resources while doing little for the indigenous people, most of whom are ethnically closer to those in nearby Myanmar and China than the rest of India.

Declare Assamese Our Mother Tongue

assameseGuwahati, Feb 7 : In an effort to bring about a complete assimilation of their community with the people of their adopted land, a literary body representing Muslims of erstwhile East Bengal in Assam has appealed to all members to declare Assamese as their mother tongue during the census that kicks off on Wednesday.

Char Sapori Sahitya Parishad (CSSP) feels the population count operation has given them and thousands of settlers from across, what is now, Bangladesh yet another opportunity to foster greater ties with the indigenous Assamese society.

"Some people of our community may say that Bengali is their mother tongue, but that can't be true. We have been speaking Assamese for ages... We are a part of the greater Assamese society and Assamese is our mother tongue," said CSSP secretary general Master Salim.

An overwhelming majority of Muslims from erstwhile East Bengal have been residing on the islands of Brahmaputra called Char Sapori. Salim claimed CSSP was forced to appeal to their community in order to counter the alleged attempts by some organisations trying to dub Bengali as the mother tongue of Char Sapori Muslim dwellers.

"Our ancestors may be of East Bengal origin, but several generations down the line have well accepted Assamese. Our effort is to make it a vibrant language among different sections of people in Assam. We believe that such an attempt will go on to enrich and strengthen Assamese language," added Salim.

According to CSSP, Assamese has been the language for communication among Char Sapori Muslims since 1902.

"Our community is one of the most backward sections of society and suffers from diverse problems. We do not want any more problems stemming from the language issue... We want to keep Assamese as our mother tongue forever," said Salim.