13 September 2013

Preparation Started For Mizo Assembly Poll

Aizawl, Sep 13 : Mizoram chief electoral officer (CEO) Ashwini Kumar today said that the state election machinery has been making preparations for the coming 40-member state assembly polls likely to be held during November this year.

Addressing a press conference here, Kumar said that the number of polling stations from 1,068 was increased by 58 after rationalisation of the enlisted voters.

He said training have been conducted in the state level as well as in the district levels for election officials and first level check on electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) was conducted in the presence of representatives of the political parties and NGOs.

A plethora of new activities to ensure free and fair elections would be introduced during the coming polls, Joint CEO H Lalengmawia, who accompanied Kumar, said.

Lalengmawi made special mention to the proposed deployment of static surveillance teams, flying squads, expenditure and accounting monitoring cells, and video surveillance teams.

He said that the services of internet and cell phones, especially SMSes would be employed to the maximum in the electoral process.

Cooling Conflict in Manipur

Peace cannot return to Manipur till cures arrive for policy ills

By Sudeep Chakravarti
A file photo of Maoists. Photo: Noah Seelam/AFP

It was bizarre even for Manipur, a state at the forefront of India’s intended push into Myanmar and farther south-east, an increasingly important security and geo-economic brick in this regional house of dreams. It also highlighted how charged the process of conflict management is.

On 10 May, several cadres of a faction of the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) assaulted security guards at a district hospital south-west of state capital Imphal. The guards had prevented the entry into a ward by Ningthoujam Nongdren Khomba, leader of the faction. The rebels left after a while in a flurry of off-road vehicles.
The good news: the leader and cadres were fortunately unarmed during the visit. They had formally signed a memorandum of understanding with the state and central governments only the previous day, 9 September, to enter into peace talks. As a gesture, 44 members of this KCP faction had given up 22 automatic and semi-automatic weapons, and were evidently housed in a nearby camp of Assam Rifles.
Technically, such memoranda amount to ceasefire, not formal surrender, as a lengthy prelude to rehabilitation and integration. (Such absence of conflict is taken by government to mean peace.) This face-saver—sometimes through the strangely-worded “suspension of operations”, or plainly worded “ceasefire”—is designed to defang what in jargon are non-state armed groups. There are several dozen in various states of play in Manipur, a roiled geography of wounded ethnicity, religion, ideology and ego. A state half the size of Haryana on most days makes administering the vastly larger Assam—home to similar conflict—look like a walk in the park.
There have been notable successes in curbing conflict in the past three years. On 9 September, the state and central governments also signed pacts for suspension of operations with two major groups of Kuki rebels, the Kuki National Liberation Front and the Kuki Revolutionary Front, and a few rebels of the Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup. This last like KCP is also faction-ridden, and belongs to what the security establishment terms VBIG, or valley-based insurgent groups. It’s a moniker for rebels largely of Meitei extraction, and resident of the vast Imphal valley ringed by hills. These hills form the redoubts of the tribes, among them Kukis and Nagas. While three major Naga rebel factions squabble over domination in Manipur, they are generally ranged against other ethnicities.
A total of 155 rebels came to ground with an impressive amount of arms and ammunition on 9 May. This followed earlier rounds of agreements over the past several months with rebel groups and factions involving several hundred rebels. This is in addition to arrests and deaths. In 2012, more than 600 rebels were arrested, and more than 300 either surrendered or entered into creatively worded deals. Many rebels were killed.
Several leaders have also been arrested, the most high-profile being Raj Kumar Meghen, chairman of the United National Liberation Front (UNLF), in 2010. Meghen, better known by his nom de guerre Sana Yaima, was apprehended with the support of authorities in Bangladesh—for decades a haven, like Myanmar, for several North-East Indian rebels groups.
The combination of a relatively India-friendly government in Bangladesh, cultivation of Myanmar by India, increased security pressure in India, and even local disenchantment with rebel groups has triggered such interdiction, arrest and deals. But while weakened, UNLF is still a force, though not perhaps as influential as the People’s Liberation Army, a left-wing group that has deepened relations with the Communist Party of India (Maoist). At any rate, relative success in Manipur led the home ministry to declare in its report for 2012-13: “…these (valley-based) groups are in a state of disarray and the likelihood of their shunning the path of violence has increased considerably.”

The government hasn’t yet gathered courage to acknowledge the master chefs of Manipur’s alphabet soup: successive governments of India and Manipur, and the security establishment. From the late 1960s, a steady infusion of political and policy arrogance, administrative mismanagement and increasing corruption-fuelled heartburn. UNLF, which demands a United Nations-monitored plebiscite to decide the fate of Manipur, was only the first manifestation. China and Pakistan—and later Bangladesh—stirred the pot for their own geopolitical ends.
It continued to be peppered by India’s security establishment, which played off one ethnicity or group or faction against the other. Then there are those who thrive on the economy of conflict.
And so, while it is a fine thing to lessen conflict, peace cannot return to Manipur till the cures arrive for such ills of policy, of governance.
Sudeep Chakravarti is the author of Red Sun: Travels in Naxalite Country and Highway 39: Journeys through a Fractured Land. This column focuses on conflict situations in South Asia that directly affect business.

source: Livemint

Arunachal Pradesh Beats Karnataka in Investment

By Asha Rai
Bangalore, Sep 13 : Karnataka is a classic case of a state supposedly set on a trajectory of fast growth finding itself decelerating. In this sense, it mirrors India's growth story where projections for sustained, long-term growth have been abruptly reversed.

According to RBI data for the fiscal 2012-13 , Karnataka was placed a miserable 12th in terms of attracting investments, slipping from its second position the year before and fourth in 2010-11 . Last year, Karnataka managed to attract just 20 projects and accounted for just 1.5% of the envisaged cost of projects for which institutional assistance was sanctioned in 2012-13 against 12% the earlier year.

It's galling that a small state like Arunachal Pradesh, more in the news for Chinese incursions than for industrial enterprise, is two ranks ahead of Karnataka in the investment sweepstakes. Worse, neighbouring Andhra Pradesh - which is being split into two, and which has been racked by violent protests - has consistently stayed in the top 5.

Andhra Pradesh has managed to remain at the top in terms of attracting investment in the past four years, whereas Karnataka has slipped in and out of the list.

The reasons for Karnataka's fall from grace as a favoured investment destination and a showcase for modern India are not far to seek. Policy paralysis and political instability the state has witnessed in recent times are coming home to roost.

In particular, the past two years have been bad as the state has had no administration to speak of. With the BJP government trying to hang on to power at any cost amid ballooning corruption scandals, a jailed chief minister and a breakdown in civic services, there was no interest in governance. With politicians engaged in survival, the bureaucracy went into slumber, resulting in the current pathetic scenario.

It looks like the second rank in 2011-12 was courtesy the empty hype of the Global Investors' Meet of 2010. As TOI reported earlier, it transpires that less than 5% of the total Rs 4 lakh crore investment was actually implemented. The story of the second edition of GIM (in 2012) is worse: less than 0.5% has been implemented.

Doing business in Karnataka is getting increasingly difficult, says industry. Single-window clearance, in reality, means approaching more than a dozen agencies; it takes 4-6 months to get a company started; and land acquisition is well nigh impossible. The South Korean giant Posco pulled out its $6-billion steel investment due to a gridlock over land acquisition.

"It's becoming practically impossible to do public-private partnership projects honestly at scale. There have been dishonest ones at scale and honest ones that are popcorn stands. But the grid box of honesty at scale is missing," says Manish Sabharwal, chairman, TeamLease Services, a temp-staffing company.

The government's failure to be an enabler is another issue. Says civic analyst Ashwin Mahesh: "In the past, we used to focus on enabling investments by the state - in science and technology, infrastructure, policies -and left it to others to develop the society and economy using these inputs. In recent years, this has changed. Now, the state itself wants to be the developer of the economy, or leading politicians in the state government want to do it themselves. This is mired in illogic and conflict of interest."

It's not a stretch to link this lack of enablement with the massive scams our politicians have found themselves mired in recently.

All of which means that the country's seventh largest economy is less attractive than those of its less-fancied neighbours. Instead of spurting ahead, Karnataka will first have to pull itself out of the hole that it has dug for itself.

Sikkim United, Mohammedan Sporting win in Durand Cup

Riding on two goals from Adelaja S, Sikkim United beat Assam Regiment Centre 3-1 after coming from behind in the first encounter at the Ambedkar Stadium.

New Delhi:  A spirited performance from Sikkim United and Mohammedan Sporting Club help them register victories in their respective quarterfinal league round matches of the 126th Durand Cup Football tournament, here on Thursday.

Riding on two goals from Adelaja S, Sikkim United beat Assam Regiment Centre 3-1 after coming from behind in the first encounter at the Ambedkar Stadium.

In the next game, Mohammedan Sporting too came out from an early set back to trounce Army Green 4-2.

S Adelaja (40th and 59th) and MD Lepcha (89th) scored for the Sikkim team after TS Workham Anal (19th) gave lead to the Assam side.


Playing in the Durand Cup for the first time since 2006, star-studded Mohammedan Sporting rode on twin strikes from Tolgay Ozbey (27th and 36th) and a goal each from Collin Abranches (61st) and Penn Irechukww (90th).

For Army Green, Sanaton Singh (5th) and Subrata Sarkar (52nd) found the net.

The winners of the group qualify for the semifinals.

In India, Apple is actually willing to play the “cheap” card to sell iPhones

Apple made it clear yesterday that it isn’t interested in the low end of the smartphone market. But in India, where the company trails its rivals badly, Apple has in fact been willing to sacrifice margins to boost sales.

The key to understanding Apple’s pricing strategy in India is the rupee, which has declined sharply this year. Most multinational corporations have responded by raising prices on everything from TVs to laptops. Smartphones, too: Market leader Samsung hiked prices by 5% last month.

But not Apple. It is using the falling rupee as a lever to boost its paltry 4% market share. Redington, one of the two distributors for Apple in India, told Bloomberg that Apple is selling its smartphones and tablets this year at the same prices it did in 2012. That’s despite the rupee’s 15% decline against the US dollar since the beginning of 2013.

After years of neglecting India, Apple has adopted a strategy there that’s more like a hungry upstart than global giant. It was the first smartphone maker to introduce buyback schemes in India, a move since copied by competitors like Samsung, BlackBerry, and Sony. It also rolled out a staggered payment scheme earlier in the year. The response has been overwhelming, and Apple’s sales in India surged 400% in the April-to-June quarter, albeit from a low base.

-Share-of-Indian-smartphone-market-June-quarter-_chartbuilder
If Apple demonstrates the same pragmatic approach with the iPhone 5C, it could challenge Samsung’s dominance in the high end of India’s smartphone market. At current exchange rates, the iPhone 5C could be priced around 35,000 rupees ($553), according to consultancy IDC, which would be 16% cheaper than Samsung’s premium offering, the Galaxy S4.

-Smartphone-prices-in-India_chartbuilder (1)
Even at that price, Apple will not be able to compete with local players like Micromax and Karbonn Mobiles, which sell good smartphones for as little as 19,000 rupees. But that shouldn’t bother Apple. With India predicted to replace the United States as the world’s second largest smartphone market by 2017, there will be plenty of room for Apple to grow at the higher end of the market.
12 September 2013

Betel Nut Bridges The Gap Between Rich And Poor in Meghalaya

By Pooja Bhula

Eating paan isn’t new to Indians and in cities such as Mumbai, you’re introduced to it by the graffiti of red spit stains left by many. In Shillong, the capital of Meghalaya, Kwai (paan/betel leaf with lime paste and areca nut) is consumed by all--kids, men and women--and is available everywhere, be it paan shops, people’s houses orconferences.

But Meghalayans don’t leave behind any red trails and it also has a cultural significance. As per the folklore of Khasis, a major tribal community of Meghalaya, it acts as an equalizer between the rich and poor.

As the story goes, a rich man and poor man were childhood friends belonging to the same hills, but the latter moved to a distant village after marriage. Whenever the poor man visited his native place to meet family, the duo spent hours together and the rich man offered him sumptuous meals.

But villagers gossiped that the poor man was merely boasting about having a rich friend, compelling the poor man to invite him home. The rich man promptly agreed, but the poor couple ran out of food. Villagers didn’t spare a morsel and disappointed with nothing to offer, the poor couple killed themselves. That night a notorious thief entered their house and saw the dead bodies. Fearing that villagers would blame him, he too killed himself. Pained at the reason of his friend’s death, the rich man prayed for a way to keep customs alive without causing the poor to suffer.

Since then offering Kwai to visiting friends is a part of Khasi etiquette. The areca nut signifies the rich man; lime paste and betel leaf--the husband and wife, and the place between the lower lip and gum where Khasi women keep the tobacco is the thief’s hiding place.

With inputs from Bindo M Lanong and a book on Khasi folklore

Drug Smuggler Slur on Mizo Health Minister

By Linda Chhakchhuak

Aizawl, Aug 12 : Even as the first Amphetamine Type Substance (ATS) rehabilitation centre is to be opened here to cater to Mizoram’s first batch of meth-heads, a media war is raging between the ruling Congress and the Opposition Mizo National Front (MNF) over the alleged involvement of Health Minister Lalrinliana Sailo in pseudoephedrine smuggling. The MNF had called a 5 am to 5 pm bandh on Tuesday to protest his continuance in the State Cabinet.

But what has become the unlikely ‘victim’ of this mud-slinging is the law and people’s confidence in the government’s ability to pin down criminals, particularly those smuggling drug as their power seems proverbially far-reaching.

Public confidence in the law is at an all-time low in the State, especially after the Health Minister flanked by the Commissioner of Excise Lalbiakmawia and jt director of Health Lalsawma, jointly addressed the press recently with both the senior government officials going all out to defend the politician against such allegations.

While there is every chance that the Minister could be a victim of MNF’s smear campaign, several people spoken to said that the officials defending a politician in such a hot case ‘just stinks.’

The case in point alludes to a seizure of two tablet stripping machines and the arrest of a person Rampanmawia in August 2012. The tablets are stripped and loaded in bags for easy transport and concealment, State Excise and Narcotics sleuths say. He claimed that Sailo had given him a wholesale drug licence which belonged to Sailo’s son Jacob Lalrinpuia, under which he had opened a drug store at Zokhawthar, the trade gateway to Myanmar. Pseudoephedrine can be bought by wholesalers under the strict vigilance of the N & DPSA and used as a cover by people who want to smuggle the stuff out.

An interesting point was added to the whole story when it was revealed at the Health Minister’s press meet that the Excise Commissioner Lalbiakmawia had run to Sailo ‘as soon as Rampanmawia was arrested by the narco-sleuths in whose possession they found Lalrinpuia’s drug license and knowing that Lalrinpuia was the Health Minister’s son, the Commissioner dashed off to report this to the Health Minister.”

The question that is being raised – did the State’s top anti-narcotics officer need to do this? Why did he do it? According to Excise and Narcotics department sources, the Commissioner is trying to explain this point, but has so far failed to satisfy anyone.

The Minister denied giving Rampanmawia the license, but, he too could not explain why and how as the Health Minister of the State he had got issued a wholesale drug license to his son, who was a minor and studying in a school in Delhi in 2010. His son, was neither in the medicine trade nor did he own a firm complete with a qualified pharmacist, which is the main criteria for being issued such a license under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act. Sailo excused himself by assuring that his son’s license had been cancelled due to the controversy. To add to the murkiness, the Jt Director Health told media that no criteria exists for issuing such a major drug license.

Rampanmawia confessed in his statement that he managed to buy prize real estate in the capital worth crores of rupees during 2012 which begged the query as to his source of money, as in the same statement he said his livelihood was trading in tobacco and fertilisers across borders till 2005.

Meanwhile, the MNF revealed that in December 2011, a haul of tablets along with stripping machines was made from his rented residence by the Mizoram Narcotics Cell. But unable to find Rampanmawia, the alleged owner, the case was dismissed by the court as the pseudoephedrine turned out to be fake. But this point fits Rampanmawia’s statement made to the Excise cops in the August 2012 case wherein he has revealed that in December 2012 the tablets he bought turned out to be fake as he was conned by his Silchar contact.

Excise and Narcotics officials, who have nabbed smugglers under the Narcotics & Psychotropic Substances Act (N&DPS), say that they are disillusioned that not a single pseudoephedrine case has been convicted by the courts. Such a dreadful controversy could not have come at a worse time as the State’s young lives are being ruined by the surge of meth from across the international border.

Now A Unique Call Centre For Pregnant Women

Now a unique call centre for pregnant womenBy Vinita Chaturvedi 

Here's a piece of good news for the pregnant women of Assam, which will go a long way in the uplift of the women, if adopted by other states too.


Management and Research Institute (HMRI), an initiative under the Ajay G. Piramal Foundation, in association with Assam National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) have set up a formal and organised call centre for pregnant women in Assam under the Central Government's Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS) scheme. Ghulam Nabi Azad, the Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Govt. of India, formally inaugurated the MCTS Call Centre at HMRI office premises in Guwahati on September 01, 2013.

Other distinguished dignitaries present on the occasion of the launch ceremony were Dr. Partho Jyoti Gogoi , the Regional Director of the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Govt. of India and Smt. Anuradha Gupta, Additional Secretary and Mission Director of NRHM, Govt. of India along with the senior leaders of HMRI and Piramal Foundation.

The call centre pioneers an innovative concept to provide complete services to pregnant women and children in the state of Assam, thereby reducing the Maternity Mortality Rate MMR and Infant Mortality Rate IMR through this initiative. A state-of-the-art application software has been developed by HMRI especially for this project, which will enable the tracking of the progress during the entire pregnancy period of the expecting woman starting from the time a woman conceives up to the time the child is delivered till the immunisation processes are completed.

"The Piramal Foundation supports HMRI in addressing the healthcare needs of the under privileged section of the Indian society. This initiative in Assam further reinforces our endeavor in providing technology enabled mass solutions that can provide health advice and support to the remotest parts of India", said Paresh Parasnis,Head of Piramal Foundation at the inauguration.

As MCTS is a Central Govt. initiative, most of the states in India are in the process of implementing this scheme in cooperation with the respective Central and State Governments.

Other services offered by HMRI in association with NRHM in Assam are the Sarathi 104 Health Helpline, ASHA Helpline, ARSH Helpline and the Complaint Logging System.