08 October 2013

Aizawl Thunders Set To Storm Myanmar


Aizawl, Oct 8
: The Aizawl Thunders, India's first Bullet club, is scheduled to hold a "once-in-a-lifetime experience" ride to Myanmar. As hosts of the 5th edition of the North East Riders' Meet (NERM), the Thunders plan to lead a ride from Zotlang in Champhai district in Mizoram to Tahan in Myanmar in an event from October 21 to 26, 2013, in which over 300 bikers are expected to take part.

"There can't be a better proposition for any adventurer than to ride a majestic Bullet meandering through one of the most beautiful but little-known mountain paths of the world," said Lalrinchhana Tochhawng, the chief of the Aizawl Thunders.

Popularly known as Rcho among his peers, Tochhawng said the ride would start from Zotlang, cross the Mizoram-Myanmar border river of Tiau - better known as the Indo-Mynamar border trade outpost - and enter the hermit country.

"I'm sure it will give many of us a chance to see our next door neighbour and extend a hand of friendship," Rcho said.

The Aizawl Thunders is leaving no stone unturned to make the meet a once-in-a-lifetime experience for their fellow riders.

They have almost completed their project to build a 'real' life traditional Mizo village for the bikers' rendezvous in Zotlang, known for its scenic beauty, on the outskirts of Champhai.

The participants will be put up in the traditional bamboo huts where they would be treated to exotic Mizo cuisine and cultural programmes.

"We want to make it the most memorable of NERM meets and want to give our friends our best," said Rcho.

"We'll have cultural dances, besides the best of music, food and to cap it all a with novelty ride to a foreign land," he said.

The venue for the meet is set to be done up in a manner to make the participants feel like a traditional Mizo village.

There will be dances, a peep into the Mizo way of life, food and beverages, to stir one's taste buds, games with attractive prizes, music from top Mizo bands and a never-before-experienced ride to Myanmar.

'Come home to where it all started' is the warm welcome the Aizawl Thunders want to extend to all Bullet clubs and Enfield lovers across the country.

Aizawl Thunders are well known across the state for their grand rallies and numerous charity rides to support various organizations and issues such as "Clean Mizoram', "Forest Fire Prevention', 'AIDS Awareness" etc.

James Lalhmingliana who at 70 is the oldest member of the club has been a Bullet lover ever since he can remember - is a founder member of the Thunders.

The Aizawl thunders also proudly claims to have a female member, Rosalyn Lianhmingthangi, a school teacher who is actively involved in the club.

Mizoram Goes Ahead With AADHAR ignoring SC

By Linda Chhakchhuak

Aizawl, Oct 8 : Has the Congress-led Government of Mizoram committed contempt of court in the Supreme Court (SC) by going ahead with the biometric enrollment IUD or AADHAR claiming it as ‘mandatory’?

At the same time, many observers wonder if the project being inaugurated at this time with the Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla flagging it off by being the first person to be registered under AADHAR in the State breaks the Election Model Code of Conduct (EMCC).

Elections was announced on October 4. The State Information and Public Relations department issued a press statement along with photographs of him and his family at home where their biometric data was taken by the AADHAR team. When asked about this, the Jt Chief Electoral Officer Lalengmawia told this reporter that they would discuss this issue with the Election Commission of India before giving a reply.

Even as the SC recently ordered that the AADHAR 12 digit number is not ‘mandatory’ and cannot be linked to a citizen getting access to essential services, the State Government here has issued a press release in which it claims that getting this number is ‘mandatory’ for a person to gain access to all services, including gas, bank accounts, mobile phones, registration of marriages, etc.

The press release was splashed as headlines in most of the dailies here. The press release in the local language went so far as to warn that (translated) “those who do not register themselves within the specified time and do not have the AADHAR 12 digit UID number would not be marked in the National Population Register and hence would not be regarded as citizens of India.”

On September 23, the top court ruled that the Centre or States must not insist on Aadhar cards for providing essential services. “No citizen should suffer for the want of Aadhar cards”, the court had said on a petition questioning the constitutional validity of the Unique Identity Card scheme. The Supreme Court had said Aadhar card is not mandatory and no person should be deprived of any government schemes for want it.

Speaking to this reporter over phone today, retired Justice KS Puttaswamy, who filed the Public Interest Litigation against AADHAR being made mandatory by executive order, told this reporter that the SC ruling is binding on the Central Government and all State Governments. Any government that does not take this ruling into consideration is committing contempt of court, he said.

He also said that the Central Government has moved the Supreme Court to modify its ruling to make it mandatory for certain beneficiary based welfare schemes. It is coming up for hearing tomorrow (October 8).

As it is AADHAR and the biometric scheme is already controversial here in the state where people have some beliefs based on Bibilical prophecies that warn against such establishment enumeration. They believe that this is a numbering by the devil who would control the population of the world by giving them IUDs and refusing those who do not have this number. This has spread fear and insecurity among believers which cannot be a good atmosphere especially during polling time.

Mizoram Enter U-14 Subroto Cup Final

New Delhi, Oct 8 : Govt Chawfianga Middle School, Mizoram edged out NCC (NER) by an injury-time goal to enter the final of the U-14 category of the 54th Subroto Cup on Monday.

It was a battle of equals for the most part but it was heartbreak for NCC right at the end as Ramfangliana (70+2) popped up seconds before the final whistle to punch in a cross.

The winners will face-off with Betkuchi High School, Assam in the clash for the title.

In the U-17 boys' event, Govt Model School, Chandigarh, thrashed Goa 10-0. Gurkirat and Anil scored a brace each for Chandigarh.

Indian School, Oman were handed a 2-0 defeat by St Stanlisus of Bihar. The Oman team, which comprised entirely of sons of Indian immigrants, had a hard time in their opening match.

The boys from Bihar were much fitter and despite enjoying a substantial height advantage, Oman were on the backfoot for the most part.

Among the girls, Ratanbala Devi scored four goals as RMSV Vidyalaya, Manipur, swamped Ahlcon Public School, Delhi 7-0. Sunita Devi, Hemolata Devi and Ranajans Chanu also found the net for Manipur.

Results:

Dona Paula High School, Goa 4 (Anika Coelho 11th, 25th, 55th; Simran Faterpekar 58th) 4 defeated Ahlcon Public School, Delhi 1 (Tanvi Singh 42nd) (Girls)

RMSV Vidyalaya, Nambad, Manipur 7 (Sunita Devi 52nd; Hemolata Devi 33rd; Ranjana Chanu 15th; Ratanbala Devi 30th, 31st, 36th, 45th) defeated Burguri High School, Assam 0

Bihar vs Indian School, Oman (U-17) NCC (NER) vs Government Chawmgfianga Middle School, Mizoram (U-14 SF)

MP 5 vs The Air Force School 0 (Girls) Government Model School, Chandigarh 10 beat Kortaleen School, Goa 0.
07 October 2013

The Child Miners of Meghalaya

Thousands of children risk their lives to work in "rat hole" mines in northeastern Indian state, earning $60 a week.

Rosanna Lyngdoh of NGO Impulse with 11-year-old coal miner, Lakpa Tamang [Karishma Vyas/ Al Jazeera]
Jaintia Hills, Meghalaya: Pemba Tamang slides on his bright red gumboots, fits a torch to his head and says a little prayer. "God, please bring me back out alive."
He walks out of his tarpaulin shack wielding a pickaxe and swaggers across monsoon green hills to a 15-meter-deep pit dug crudely into the earth.
He will spend the next seven hours here, crouched deep inside a "rat hole" less than a meter high digging for coal. "You have no control over your life here,” he says. "Because you never know when you’re going to die."
Death is not something most 17-year-olds think about, but it has lingered over Pemba ever since he was eight, when he first came to Jaintia Hills in India’s northeast to work in the coal pits.
His father had just died from tuberculosis. Still nursing a five-week-old baby, Pemba’s mother moved the family from their dirt-poor village in neighbouring Assam state to the lucrative mines of Meghalaya so she could earn money selling food to truck drivers and labourers.
But it was never going to be enough to feed her three growing boys, and soon Pemba and his older brother started working in the "rat holes", earning about $60 each a week to support their family.
Impulse, a local NGO fighting child labour in Meghalaya state, estimates there are around 70,000 children like Pemba who work in the mines, either digging for coal or loading thousands of trucks bound for the energy-hungry industrial sector across India and into neighbouring Bangladesh.
Illegally trafficked
Hasina Kharbhih, the founder of Impulse, says she’s discovered children as young as five working in Jaintia Hills.
The mines are so small and narrow that only someone the size of a child can squeeze inside to extract the coal.
Web Exclusive: Indian child miner tells his story
Most of the under-age workers have been illegally trafficked into the region from Nepal and Bangladesh by agents working for mine owners.
Desperate families are promised handsome salaries in exchange for their children’s work, but they often have no idea that they will end up living in dangerous, slave-like conditions in Meghalaya.
"Many of the families out there are still looking for their children," says Kharbhih. "They haven’t heard from them for the last two or three years."

Some of these families at least will never see their children again. A few years ago local newspapers reported the discovery of skeletons inside mine shafts. They are believed to be those of children who worked there, but there has been no inquiry or arrest.
Many of the families out there are still looking for their children
Hasina Kharbhih, founder of Impulse
"Children have been dying in these rat holes and the dead bodies are not actually being taken back because it’s not possible. There’s no way they can get them out. And they are not being reported because in the context of our state, they’re illegal migrants," says Kharbhih.
Pemba is terrified of suffering the same fate.
"I’ve seen four accidents," he says squatting on a pile of coal. "There was this one guy who would always sit there in the mine chewing betel nut. One day this enormous rock fell on him and crushed his head. We sent his body back to the village. He had a wife and two kids."
Pemba laughs out loud when asked about compensation for the man’s family. "The owners give money to the managers and the most the managers give in compensation is Rs5000 ($80) or Rs6000 ($96). This man lost his life. What can you do with this much money?" he says.
"I’ve seen guys break their legs and crack their heads open. I don’t want these accidents to happen to me because then I’ll be crippled."
Pitch dark and dangerous
But there’s little Pemba can do to protect himself. Armed with his red boots and a pickaxe, he disappears into a black cave that has been carved into the side of a mountain. He struggles to pull a large wooden crate as he walks crouching further into the mine.
Inside, it is frightening. The workers say they can almost feel the weight of the mountain above bearing down on their bodies. It’s damp, pitch dark and dangerous.
With only a small head torch to guide him, Pemba picks coal off the walls and fills his crate, all the while struggling to breath in the sulphur rich air. The ceiling touches his head even as he squats. The only thing holding it up is a strategically placed wooden log.
Children as young as five work in Jaintia Hills [Karishma Vyas/ Al Jazeera]
It is common for these "rat holes" to suddenly flood, or for parts of the mine to cave in altogether. Workers, including children, have been buried alive, or trapped without any hope of rescue.
Activists say these conditions are inhuman and inexcusable. Coal mining generates millions of dollars a year in Meghalaya and contributes up to 10 percent of the state’s gross domestic product.
Yet, there is no investment in the industry or in the workers, who labor without safety equipment, health cover or insurance.
Child rights advocates are demanding mine owners use modern, mechanical methods to dig for coal, so children would no longer be needed.
Despite requests for interviews with several state government representatives, including the ministers for social welfare and labour, no official was available to answer questions about the children working in Jaintia Hills.
Polluting state resources
However, Dolly Khonglah, a local coal exporter and the secretary of Meghalaya’s International Exporters Chamber of Commerce, struck a belligerent note.
She seemed furious that her industry was being criticised for polluting the state’s natural resources and for putting lives at risk.
"We have the stock of minerals that is God-gifted in our own private land," she said, surrounded by pro-mining protesters waving placards. "With this we are exporting to Bangladesh, we are fetching foreign exchange for the government of India, we are paying royalty. We are fetching revenue for the state government. We are providing employment to all the boys and girls."
Parents often have no idea that their children will end up living in dangerous, slave-like conditions [Karishma Vyas/ Al Jazeera]
But when asked about children working in coal mines, she denied any knowledge.
"Under limestone in Nongtalang elaka (village) there’s no child labour at all. You can quote me in any international news I don’t mind that," she insisted.
"We are not concerned with coal mining because we are dealing only with limestone."
Al Jazeera visited three out of the 5000 individual coal mines that operate across Jaintia Hills and met several child miners aged below 18 years.
The youngest was 11-year-old Lakpa Tamang from Nepal whose own father had died in a mine accident.

Pemba Tamang, who is not related to Lakpa, knows that children work in the coal pits because he’s one of them.
He had dreamt of a very different future, but his aspirations have been tempered by fate. Now, his only dream is to own a small piece of land that he can farm. Out in the open air, far above the mines.
"In my heart I still feel like going to school but what can I do?" he shrugs.
"I wanted to be a really good doctor, but fate didn’t let me do all this."

Mizoram Polls: Biometric enrolment Begins, Church Leaders Oppose Dates

Aizawl, Oct 7 : Biometric Enrolment for National Population Register with respect to Mizoram state has begun from Saturday under the supervision of Registrar General of India (Census), Ministry of Home Affairs, New Delhi, Aizawl District Magistrate and Central government Census Office, Aizawl.

Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla and his family members were the first who were enrolled through Biometric Enrolment system, an official report here said.

Coming from RGI, Deepak Kumar Gupta, Dy Director and representatives of Aizawl DC and Census officials Aizawl were present on the first day of the biometric enrolment today. In the Biometric Enrolment system, the enumerator collects the biometric details of every citizen of India by way of capturing the Iris of both eyes and the fingerprints of both hands.

Every Indian above 5 years of age shall be enrolled through the Biometric enrolment for NPR. However, this is not for attainment of citizenship. Those enrolled through the biometric enrollment will be provided uniquely designed Identity Card called Unique ID (UID), having 12 digits called Aadhar Number. This Unique ID Card can be used by the individual for verification and proof of identity in banking, mobile phone connection, ration card, passport and for other government affairs throughout the country.

National Population Enrolment has been carried out in other states too. It takes time as it requires not only personal information but even physical details too.

After enrolment was done with Chief Minister and family at his official residence, it was continued from Zarkawt locality here in Aizawl. The enrolment will be continued in all the villages of the state by organizing enrolment camp two times each, during which officials will carry out the enrolment task.

Those who fail to register themselves during such enrolment camps will have to approach a particular place which will be arranged later by the government. Any individual who fail get enrolled during stipulated time will be left out from the National Population Register such that they shall not be regarded as residents of India.

Two Enrolment Agencies namely, LYRA Consultancy Service, Kolkata (LCS) and Integrated Systems & Services (ISS), Guwahati are being engaged to carry out the biometric enrollment task in Mizoram.  LCS will carry out the task in 5 Mizoram districts, while the rest 3 districts will be taken up by ISS.

Church leaders oppose voting, counting dates


Church leaders here have objected to the dates fixed for polling and counting of votes for the Mizoram Assembly elections, saying it will cause inconvenience to community members and hurt their sentiments.

A four-member team of the church leaders led by Rev Lalzuithanga, Executive Secretary of the Mizoram Synod of the Presbyterian Church of India, met state Chief Electoral Officer Ashwini Kumar and told him that on December 4, the voting day, a council meeting of the highest authority of the church is to be held.

Rev Lalthangmawia, statistician of the Mizoram Synod, said, "We informed the CEO that if the polling is held on December 4 as announced by the Election Commission, not less than 3,000 people, including priests, church leaders and delegates from all over the state, would not be able to cast their votes."

The church leaders further said that December 8, the day of counting of votes, is Sunday, which is a holy day for Christians. If the counting is held on the day, it will be inconvenient for the community and will also hurt the sentiments of the people in the Christian-dominated state.

State election department officials reportedly told the church leaders that the matter is in the hands of the Election Commission and the only thing they can do is convey their sentiments.

The church leaders said that they would send a representation to the Election Commission on the issue by next week and would also meet the Chief Election Commissioner VS Sampath and other Election Commissioners when they visited the state to oversee poll preparedness.

Pragmatism Over Politics

By Nayanima Basu & Aditi Phadnis

New Delhi, Oct 7 : This Saturday, India reached out to Bangladesh through a link which is the first of its kind between two countries in South Asia. It started supplying electricity to its power-crunched neighbour through a new transmission line, making it the first such high voltage, direct-current interconnection between two nations in the region. For Bangladesh, this help comes at a critical time when power outages are resulting in a loss of annual industrial output worth $1 billion.

With relations between the two countries getting better and better, India too is looking at hitherto unexplored avenues, such as transporting foodgrain to the Northeast via Bangladesh. As of now, Food Corporation of India transports foodgrain from Punjab and Haryana for public distribution by rail. It's a long, time-consuming journey which is often interrupted by natural calamities. The route via Bangladesh's Ashuganj port would be a useful alternative.

Bilateral trade and investment ties between India and Bangladesh have grown in leaps and bounds in the last five years. This has happened mostly because of several trade liberalisation initiatives taken by India under the South Asia Free Trade Agreement, or SAFTA, framework. What's more, this has happened despite the compulsions of domestic politics.

Take the example of Bangladesh's young foreign minister, Dipu Moni, who belongs to the post-liberation generation of politicians in that country. She is considered very close to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and is seen as a star of Hasina's Awami League party. Moni is conscious of how much she has achieved at a very young age, and like many young people, tends to believe she has the answer to all problems. That was until she met West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

Banerjee initially went along with the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government on the proposed agreement between India and Bangladesh on the sharing of the Teesta river waters. Conscious that water sharing is an intensely political issue, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh sent a succession of persons to persuade Banerjee that the agreement would not rob West Bengal of any water. Banerjee kept making noises that she understood and the then water resources minister, Pawan Bansal, as well as National Security Advisor Shivshankar Menon thought they had swung the deal.

Banerjee claims she saw the fine print in the agreement only on the eve of the Prime Minister's Bangladesh visit in 2010. The agreement could not be signed because Banerjee threw a hissy fit and the PM had to tell a deeply disappointed Hasina that last minute problems had prevented India from agreeing to water sharing.

Moni thought she would have a stab at resolving the issue. So during a visit to Bangalore, she decided she would also visit Kolkata and meet Banerjee. Indian officials tried to dissuade Moni, saying this was a bad idea. But the young woman had made up her mind. She met Banerjee and argued aggressively for Teesta waters. "We thought you were a friend of Bangladesh? What has happened to you?" she asked Banerjee who was furious at being ambushed and declared publicly that she would not give Bangladesh even a cusec of Teesta waters.

Future generations of policy analysts will ponder gravely about how domestic political issues influence and impede foreign policy. But in South Asia, the best of India's foreign policy intentions can fall a victim to competitive domestic politics. Bangladesh is no exception. Yet, the two countries have succeeded in tiding over these issues.


* * *

During the prime minister's 2010 visit to Bangladesh, although the Teesta waters agreement could not be signed, he announced that all 46 textiles lines which are of interest to Bangladesh would be taken off India's negative list, thereby reducing the applicable duty rate to zero.

Some of the major items that India exports to Bangladesh are cotton, vegetables, automobiles, iron and steel, mineral fuels, cereal and organic chemicals. On the other hand, India imports from Bangladesh paper yarn and woven fabrics, fish, cement, copper and copper-related products, inorganic chemicals, raw hides and fertilisers.

Bangladesh is now India's largest trading partner in South Asia and twelfth largest in the world, with bilateral trade reaching $5.14 billion in 2012-13 from $3.78 billion in 2011-12 and $3.24 billion in 2010-2011.

"We have taken a lot of trade liberalisation measures with Bangladesh and it has also reciprocated, paving the way for a much more enhanced and robust bilateral relationship," says a senior official from the ministry of commerce and industry. "India enjoys a trade surplus of $4.5 billion with Bangladesh, so in terms of financing the widening current account deficit, it is a valuable trading partner," he adds.

India and Bangladesh have also vowed to undertake several initiatives in freeing up trade through the land ports. As a result, India has built a state-of-the-art modern integrated check-post at Agartala, which is expected to become operational by the end of the month or early November. It is also building another integrated check-post at the Petrapole border which will be launched by the middle of next year.

According to the official, both sides are also jointly working towards opening up the sea-route and waterways for a cheaper way of sending goods and reducing congestion at the borders. The two sides are also contemplating reviving railway connectivity for transaction of goods.

India and Bangladesh are also expected to sign a Motor Vehicles Agreement soon. Under this historic agreement, trucks from Bangladesh will be permitted to unload their shipments directly at their destination. Similarly, Indian trucks will be allowed to move inside Bangladesh and deliver goods right at the buyers' doorstep. At present, trucks from both sides are allowed to enter only 200 km inside each other's border.

"We want to enter India's main market with our goods. Today our products are ending up in the Northeastern parts of India. We want to export cement to India but it is subjected to various tests," an official from the Bangladesh High Commission says.


* * *

Earlier this year, commerce and industry minister Anand Sharma met his Bangladesh counterpart Ghulam Muhammad Quader to grant multiple entry visas to reciprocate India's gesture to Bangladesh businessmen. He also highlighted the issue that even though India had allowed investments from Bangladesh in 2007, Bangladesh business had taken little in investing in India. Bangladesh has other complaints. There are problems relating to land customs stations and non-tariff barriers imposed by India, like standard and testing requirements.

According to a study by the Confederation of Indian Industry, infrastructure bottlenecks related to power, ports, energy and telecommunication need to be addressed. These significantly increase the cost of production, impede productivity growth and thus, hamper export competitiveness of Bangladeshi firms.

But all this is insignificant before the political problems between Bangladesh and West Bengal. The land boundary issue is the biggest. Ever since Bangladesh came into being in 1971, there has been a struggle over the land that borders India and Bangladesh. As a result, around 200 enclaves have developed, essentially islands within the boundaries of another country. The people of these areas struggle for identity and, due to a lack of citizenship, often find they have land but are stateless.

India is required to seek parliamentary ratification for a permanent solution to this problem. This is in the form of the Land Boundary Bill, which calls for India to exchange 111 of its enclaves in Bangladesh in return for 51 Bangladesh enclaves in India. Under the agreement, India would give up claims for just over 17,000 acres of land which will be transferred to Bangladesh. In turn, Bangladesh would cede around 7,000 acres, which would then join Indian territory. A land swap agreement would also give citizenship rights to close to 52,000 people: 37,000 on the Bangladesh side and close to 15,000 on the Indian side.

This deal could particularly benefit the Northeast and Assam. Resolving the land issues would enable borders in these areas to be secured. India would be able to talk officially about the issue of migrating Bangladeshis, a thorny problem for Assam for nearly three decades that will only grow.

But all countries are sensitive about giving up land. Both Assam and West Bengal feel strongly possessive about their state boundaries. Hence the Land Boundary Bill is stuck in Parliament.

The cherry on the sundae is, of course, a transit deal with Bangladesh. In 2011, the two countries were supposed to sign an agreement, with Bangladesh offering transit access to India. Had that happened it would have been a historic breakthrough in India-Bangladesh relations. But because the Teesta water sharing agreement failed to be signed, Bangladesh held back on the transit agreement. Transit access through Bangladesh would reduce the cost of moving goods to the Northeast significantly with Bangladesh earning millions of dollars as transit fee.

But despite this disappointment, as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh advised Moni recently, it was better to consolidate the gains of the 12-14 pacts the two countries were able to sign, instead of crying over the two pacts they were not able to. "Why highlight the downside and give a handle to the opposition when you have achieved much that you can be justly proud of?" the PM counselled the Bangladesh Foreign Minister recently.

India and Bangladesh relations is a story of rapidly improving ties between two countries in South Asia. It is a theme you don't see very often in this part of the world.

Miss Universe Wraps Up Northeast India Visit


Miss Universe Olivia Frances Culpo with Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi at the Save the Girl Child rally in Guwahati on Saturday.


Guwahati, Oct 7 : Miss Universe Olivia Frances Culpo wrapped up her two-day maiden visit to the Northeast by lending her voice and face to the campaign, Value The Girl Child, here today.

She flagged off the campaign with chief minister Tarun Gogoi this morning. Eulogizing Miss Universe’s efforts in taking up the cause of the girl child, Gogoi said, “She is a beautiful woman with a beautiful heart. And she wants to make the whole world beautiful. Also this is a special moment for me because I’ve never met a beauty queen before.”

The event was organised by the Indian Society for Third Party Assisted Reproduction (INSTAR) in association with the Northeast Frontier Railway Women’s Welfare Organisation and a local television channel. It was attended by schoolchildren from the city. Members of INSTAR also held a panel discussion on Continuing Medical Education on Surrogacy in India.

Culpo, on a 10-day debut tour to India, has promoted and propagated issues like celebrating the girl child, eradication of female foeticide, women empowerment and AIDS awareness in various states of the country.

Accompanied by social activist and fashion designer Sanjana Jon, Olivia was in Itanagar yesterday to participate in the curtain-raiser to the International Tourism Mart to be held at Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh from October 18. The Mart aims at promoting the frontier state as a tourist destination in the world.

Clad in traditional Assamese attire (a fuchsia mekhela sador with floral designs embellished in silver thread designed by Bhaskardatta Goswami), Olivia said, “The strength of any nation is based on the healthy livelihood of its citizens. Hence, intensive efforts are required to rid the society of gender and caste-based discrimination. I appreciate INSTAR for bringing about positive response to surrogacy in India.”

She went on to add, “Importance should be laid on maintaining right to privacy of donor as well as surrogate mother by not involving a third party agency.”

Echoing Culpo’s views, Gogoi said concerted efforts were required to protect the girl child. “Society must play a proactive role in saving the girl child and nursing her. There is a decline in sex ratio in the country. Even educationally and economically advanced states like Punjab and Haryana have registered this decline. There is an urgent need to reverse the trend.”

NFR general manager R.S. Virdi, who attended the event, said, “Social transformation is only possible through the medium of education. Because it is through education one can become enlightened about the importance of girls in a society. And educating the girl alone is not enough, her family should be educated also.”
04 October 2013

Mizoram Synod Asks Voters To Shun Poll Prophets

Aizawl, Oct 4 : The Mizoram synod of the Presbyterian Church of India, in its poll message to the masses, urged the voters to reject to reject so-called prophecies and predictions on which party would win the coming assembly elections in the state. The synod said such self-proclaimed prophets did not believe in God.

There have always been some self-proclaimed prophets who announce that they have received God's message that a particular party would come to power in the coming polls.

The late Pastor Chhawna of the Presbyterian Church was the most popular political prophet and his prophecies, published in a book form, was interpreted in different ways by the so-called prophets and commentators owing allegiance to different parties. Besides denouncing such poll prophets, the largest and most powerful church denomination in the state, also appealed to the voters to be wary of those candidates who try to buy their votes. Such candidates should be rebuffed as they are bad politicians, it added.

"The candidates should be carefully scanned by the voters. If any of these candidates are living beyond their means and have movable and immovable assets beyond their known sources of income, the voters should know that such politicians are greedy and dishonest and are unfit to represent the people," the message said.

The church also asked the people to snub politicians and political parties indulging in suppressing the freedom and rights of the public through intimidation, threats and also using character assassination to target their political opponents. "Enrolment of minors in the voters' lists, casting of more than one votes by a voter, impersonation in the polling booths and rigging are not only crime but sin, which believers of Christ should never commit," the message said.

The church also appealed to the people not to be partial towards