10 March 2014

Mizoram Wins first-ever Santosh Trophy title, beat Railways 3-0 in final!

A bunch of unheralded diminutive footballers took the Santosh Trophy by storm and maintained their brand of fast-paced attacking football in the Final to deservingly win their maiden Nationals crown sweeping aside Railways 3-0 in the 68th National Championships for the Santosh Trophy here at the floodlit Kanchenjunga Stadium on Sunday evening.

A brace from Zico Zoremsanga either side of half-time and a second half injury-time strike from F. Lalrinpuia capped a brilliant tournament for the Northeastern outfit who went from strength to strength as the competition progressed. Courtesy their triumph, Mizoram bagged a purse of Rs. 500,000 (5 lakhs) while runners-up Railways got richer by 300,000 (3 lakhs).

Railways, who had not won the Santosh Trophy since 1966, came closest in the 43th minute when Rajesh S's close-range header came off the crossbar.

Present on the occasion were AIFF Senior Vice-President Subrata Dutta and Menla Ethenpa, the AIFF's Competitions Committee Chairman and Executive Committee Member.

The match started at a good pace with both the outfits looking for an early goal. Railways earned three quick corners to keep the rival defence on their toes while at the other end their goalkeeper Ehtesham Ahmed - oozing confidence after his penalty heroics in the semifinals - spread his body wide to keep Lalnunmawia and Lalbiakhlua's shots at bay.

With Railways missing their first choice centre-backs Vimal Kumar and Rajiv Boro due to suspension, Mizoram looked to take advantage but first-timers Akhil Rajbanshi and makeshift stopper-back Dipankar Das stood firm. David Larinmuana found Lalnumawia free on the left with a good-looking ball from midfield but the latter was well marked by Dipankar and right-back Y. Raju Singh.

Lalbiakhlua then tried to be cheeky minutes after the half hour mark, trying to dink Ahmed from just outside the box on the right flank. But the hero of the previous night had his near-post covered with the attempt also landing onto the roof of the net. It was end to end stuff with the action mostly concentrated in the final third.

The match's best chance fell to Railways when striker Rajesh S. hit the bar from close. Kisku tried his luck from the rebound but his effort was blocked. Moments later, Mizoram took the lead. F. Lalrinpuia crossed to Zico inside the box. The striker who has found the back of the net three times already in the tournament trapped the ball and swiveled past his marker to slot home into the far corner with the goalkeeper at full stretch.

It was Mizoram who called the shots after the break. Three minutes into the half, Lalrinpuia unleashed a powerful left-footer which was fisted-out by Ahmed but only as far as Lalnunmawia who side-netted his close range effort off the rebound. But the red shirts who have been the flavour of the 68th Santosh Trophy did not have to wait for long to double their advantage and take a giant stride towards their maiden title.

Zico was in the thick of things again as Mizoram broke on the counter. Lalbiakhlua teed up the goalscorer who did exceptionally well to round the goalkeeper and shoot into an empty net. The second goal deflated Railways' spirit and the three-time champions looked to have thrown in the towel with their high-flying counterparts dominating possession.

F. Lalrinpuia pinched their opponents' emotion at the death with a third goal from close in injury-time to complete a memorable victory for Mizoram.
 
source: arunfoot.blogspot

Hill Couture

A UK-based label uses traditional weaves from the North-East to create handbags 

A model wearing Arunachali necklace, with a handbag made from a Naga warrior shawl. 

By Seema Chowdhry

She is not looking to infuse her own design sensibilities into the traditional colour palette or weave patterns that make up the body cloth for a man from the Konyak Naga tribe or the Ao Naga warrior shawl, Mangkotep Su. Stacey Aydeniz, who runs the UK-based label Little Hill People (Littlehillpeople.com), specializes in bags that use traditional weaves and beaded jewellery from the seven sisters (Mizoram, Meghalaya, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur and Tripura). She says in an email interview:

“I use the designs and colours created by artisans from the North-East and work them into my products. I do not direct artisans to produce a particular colour or pattern, as I don’t want to spoil our beautiful traditional styles.”

Little Hill People currently sells totes, feather clutches, long fringe hobo bags, handbags with charms, as well as beaded necklaces, hairclips, earrings, and bangles made from bamboo. Aydeniz, who grew up in Shillong and now lives in north England, set up the website in 2012 and largely sells to a UK-based clientele.

“The people who buy from me are aware of the amount of time, dedication it takes to make a single item and understand that their purchase means sustainable income for the artisans, who are mostly women from the North-East.”

While she designs the bags herself, even though she is not a trained designer, she says the jewellery is sourced directly from artisans but can be used in different ways. “For example, there is a ceremonial neckpiece of the Khasis called paila and it is worn by both the male and females. I think it makes for a terrific beaded headband and that is how the model on my website wears it,” she says.

Or take the Mesemyok, a necklace made of carnelian beads alternating with miniature, trumpet-shaped metal ornaments worn by women of the Ao Naga tribe. This design inspired her to create the Asang handbag. “Ornaments are very important to the Nagas.

I wanted to showcase the traditions of the Ao tribe and in the Asang handbag made from cotton and hemp, the necklace design is imprinted on it.” She adds that she has sold a lot of Naga and Arunachali neckpieces.

“These are multilayered and have geometric shapes in contrasting colours. They make good statement pieces to wear to a dinner party.” Currently Aydeniz sources the weaves from self-help groups, not-for-profits and individual “mumpreneurs” like herself.

“The ones I constantly work with are associated with NEN (North East Network). I source ready-made weaves from the artisans.” Though Aydeniz would like to source from all across the North-East, she says she is mainly “using weaves from Naga, Garo, Mizo tribes and some Manipuri textiles because of their bold and bright patterns. Among my favourites is the Naga Warrior Bag and the Eli bag which I named after a friend who gifted me her puan (the main garment of the Mizo women, which means ‘cloth’).

She was very excited to see it being converted into a fashionable handbag.” While Aydeniz favours cotton and hemp weaves, sometimes the label uses wool and silk. “The Imchen is a Naga weave and uses wool. I use this to make the Imchen bag, while I have made the Runu and Zovi bags from Garo weaves. I even use silk from Assam, mostly Muga and Eri though.” As for adding new products to her line, Aydeniz says she is considering creating laptop bags, spectacle cases, wallets, and iPad sleeves “for the tech-savvy people who love ethnic stuff too”.

Another area that interests her is working with fabric made of bamboo fibres. “Did you know that fabric made from bamboo has many fantastic properties? It breathes, has a nice lustre, is extremely soft, absorbs water fast and is antibacterial. It has a natural sheen that feels like silk or cashmere. I want to work with this fabric.”

At present, the label does not sell in India. “All the stock is with me (in the UK ) and it is not cost-effective for the customer to order from the UK because of shipping costs. We, however, do consider special requests from India since our manufacturing unit is there (in Mumbai).

Mock Quake Drill in Northeast India

Shillong, Mar 10 : Meghalaya, Assam and other states in the seismically-active North East region are all geared up for the replication of 1897's 8.7 magnitude Shillong earthquake next week, the biggest mock drill in South East Asia, aimed at assessing multi-state disaster preparedness, an official said here today.

The drill will identify gaps while responding to such a calamity, National Disaster Management Authority official Tripti Parule said.

The simulation will be done simultaneously in all state capitals across the North east and also the state's next big town except for Assam where the mock drill would be conducted in three cities in two phases, she said.

The scientifically developed earthquake scenario will bring out the anticipated impact on lives and property and alert the government agencies on the challenges to be met, she said.

On Monday, Shillong, Guwahati, Itanagar and Gangtok besides one district headquarters each of Meghalaya, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim would face the earthquake like scenario at 11:30 am.

The mock exercise for the rest of the state capitals and five other district headquarters will be held on March 13.

Over eight lakh casualties and more than 55 lakh people would be injured in the entire region in case a tremble like the 1897's jolt occurs in the near future, Parule said.

"We have set up the staging area, an incident command post and all government department heads are actively participating in the drill," H B Marak, executive office of the SDMA told PTI.

One Battalion of the National Disaster Response Force will be arriving tomorrow to assist the state disaster response force and other forces which will be participating in the national event, he added.

Dimapur Police Busts Call Girl Racket

Dimapur, Mar 10 : Dimapur police busted a call girl racket and apprehended three persons in connection with the illicit trade being run in Dimapur and in bordering Lahorijan area of Assam.

The three accused have been arrested for their involvement in the illegal flesh trade. Police sources said the three accused have been dealing with call girls from Dimapur to satisfy customers in nearby Lahorijan area in Assam.

The three arrested have been identified as Hari Kumar Debbarma alias Rahul, 27, son of Usha Ranjan Debbarma of Doyal Sanghpara village under Sonamura district in Tripura and presently residing near Sunday Bazaar in Burma Camp Colony, Suken Das, 36, son of Narayan Das of Longka village under Karimganj district in Assam and presently residing at Signal Bosti, Dimapur and Anil Baishya, 35, son of Makan Baishya of Nagaon district in Assam and permanently residing at Lahorijan near Sunday market.

Two of the traffickers, Hari Kumar and Suken Das, were arrested from Dimapur on March 3 along with a group of Naga girls considered to be victims of sex trafficking while their accomplice Anil Baishya was caught the next day by a team of Dimapur police.

All the three accused have confessed to their crimes, police sources said. It was learnt that the three traffickers were involved in the illicit business for almost a year.

According to police, the three arrested pimps started as contact persons of girls from Dimapur, but later they set up their own network as autonomous pimps after building better contacts with call girls. The pimps used to take their share of money both from the clients and call girls.

The arrested pimps disclosed to police that the price varies from Rs 1,000 to Rs 10,000 per customer, depending on the beauty and age of the call girl. The younger and more beautiful the girl is, higher the charge, they said. The customers are both from Assam and Nagaland.

The girls involved in the sex racket were said to be mostly Naga girls who run after easy money and comfortable lifestyle. Even some college going students were reportedly earning easy money by involving in the lucrative business.

It has also come to light that the business had not only been a night affair, but even a day hang-out affair in hotels and restaurants at Lahorijan and nearby areas on a daily basis.

The three arrested traffickers are now in Dimapur police custody.

Meet The People Who Want To Go To Mars And Never Come Back

Two-hundred thousand people applied to participate in a project called Mars One. It’s a private enterprise to establish a permanent human settlement on Mars and film a reality show along the way. The thing is, right now the technology can only get them there.
07 March 2014

The Rape of Meghalaya

DSC00200By Shweta Taneja

Eight hundred dumper trucks filled to the brim with coal and limestone stand on the Indian side, patiently waiting to cross the border into Bangladesh and dump their load. That’s all they do, day in and day out. Pick up limestone and coal, dug out from the mountains of Meghalaya, head to the border at Dawki, cross into Bangladesh and dump it there. To be exported to China or be made into cement. Who knows? Who cares? The politicians, the landowners, the people of Meghalaya are making money. They are beginning to buy bigger cars and other good things in life.

The mountains of Meghalaya, are old, more ancient and wiser, more mysterious but also kinder than Himalayas.  Perhaps that is why they do not protest to being drilled, cut, stripped of their soil and stone. Maybe because it’s all legal: as in each truckload is given a wadload of paper, stamped by the government. Papers, dead trees license the owners to cut and grab and gobble.

‘The people who own the mountains are selling them,’ a guide we meet on the way to Dawki informs us. We stand on a high road, for a chai break with the valley on one side and the lush green curvaceous mountains behind. His voice is one of acceptance. ‘They were the ones who made gold by buying when the government was selling the mountains. Now, they sublet it to the contractors and they sell the land.’

By selling the land, the guide means, mining it away, selling the raw materials that might be lying in the womb of the mountains, that had been created and took hundreds of years to be created. All to be gone, in twenty years of senseless human greed.
DSC00199
DSC00205
(Trucks and trucks some more. All off to Bangladesh with loads)
‘Ten years ago, there was less of this, but it’s been increasing. The government wants it and the people who own the lands want to do it. ’

‘Doesn’t any of you protest against this?’

‘It’s not ours. The landowners are selling their land. Who’s to stop them?’

After that, a few men from Maharashtra, whose guide we have been speaking to, mutter about politicians and rich people and their greedy hearts. Their tea is finished. They try to throw the plastic cup across into the valley, but we point to a dustbin. The mountains, standing infront, look at it all, at us with our meaningless conversations as tourists who are equally disruptive on their ecology, at the trucks that roll heavy over them filled with stolen chunks of them and remain silent, patient. How can someone own the mountains? But then, how can we own anything of the land? But we do, don’t we?
At the border, at Dawki, the roads are mere trails of mud covered with long lines of trucks filled to the brim, waiting to cross the border and an equally long line coming from Bangladesh emptied of their load. We walk through the slush, dust clinging to everything. There are no tourists here, only silent eyes of men, labourers, or truck drivers. On our side, a long series of huts, with chairs and tables and typewriters and printers. To make the stealing official. To give it a seal, the seal of India’s government. To show, to cry out, to the mountains perhaps, that it’s all legal. That they’re all good men.  We are hesitant, even afraid, not sure how far we can walk. after all, the tourist stays in similar spaces, with other tourists. This is not that space. This is business, this is industry, this is supposed to stay hidden in dusts.

The border ends in a valley. A gate at one side, welcoming people to Bangladesh. We stand at ‘our’ side. The policeman in the hut, looks up.

‘What you want?’

‘We want to see.’

‘Ok,’ he says, to our surprise asking the BSF fellow with a gleaming, polished gun to show us the ‘border’. The BSF jawan is helpful, from UP, and waiting for just such an opportunity to jabber. He tells us how people across the border wait, day in day out, young men to cross the border.
‘Illegal immigrants?’ I ask.

‘No, no. They want to get booze. You see Bangladesh is a Muslim country and drinking is not allowed. Poor fellows want to drink. Sometimes they beg us to look the other way so that they can cross the border, get a fix and return. But I do wish that there was a fence between the borders. Right now, all there is are marked stones. It makes manning these fields rather impossible. But who’s to say. The upper echelon bosses want it this way.’

Cows graze in the flatland between the two countries, moving seamlessly from one side to another. No passports required for them, unlike us. A family from Bangladesh with a suitcase approaches the Indian side. Tourists, we are informed. ‘You can also go to the other side. It’s visa on arrival for both the countries,’ says the BSF guard. We, the city people, crib about how the government is mining the mountains away and no one seems to care.

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(The border at Dawki)
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(Our helpful BSF jawan)

‘The government is too greedy. they can make cement here, in Meghalaya, give work to more people, but they dig and sell the motherland away in peanuts. From Bangladesh it goes to China, the raw material, the earth. Why don’t they make cement here? She’s our mother, but no one cares about the mother now,’ he says wisely. ‘They don’t understand that we will lose the vantage point, the height of the mountains. Then they will attack and enslave us all. You see, madam, in a generation, we will be desperate to enter their country like the Bangladeshis want to enter ours now.’ We nod, and see and click pictures refusing to shrug off the tourist in us. He poses for us, still proud of his country. Not the people, but the country—his mother. He’s been trained to be proud.

Back in Shillong, my heart is still somewhat heavy. Even the lovely cottage I stay in, doesn’t cut it. I chat with the owner of the cottage, a lady who lives in Shillong and Bangalore.

‘Is there any activism in Meghalaya at all? Is anyone protesting this mining away of hills like in Karnataka?’

‘No one, dear,’ she says, kindly. ‘They don’t seem to see beyond the riches. What you saw was legal. The Jaintia hills have illegal mining of the forests and mountains by terrorists and we have no idea how much, since there’s no tracking, no paperwork.’

Me, with my privileged outlook, do not understand why. Why do those with trees and mountains and fresh air want to sell it off? Not hoard it, make love to it, cherish it. A college-dropout from Manipur, who meets me in the airplane back home, gives me the answer.

‘We want development,’ he says.

‘What kind of development? Jobs? What else?’

‘Jobs, yes. But development. More.’

He cannot express it but when he talks about Bangalore, a city of malls, traffic, people, energy, colour, human bustling, his eyes shine. For him, from Manipur, from Imphal, from the quiet mountains, the city life is the lure. He craves for that, just like me. I have lived in cities all my life and I love it. Can I live in Dawki? I don’t think I can. But I do dream of mountains and greenery and forests and trees. And a part of me wonders if we, the human race, with our greedy cravings, are going terribly wrong, somewhere.

So here’s a poem to perhaps express what my sentences could not. Perhaps not.

Dirty are the fingernails
Filthy
Not with the earth
But with jaded greed
Dead and dried
Of all emotion
Of everything
But the desire to own.
DSC00058
Shovelling, cutting, whirring away
They claw the mountain side
Screaming in their destruction
Unbinding that which binds
Destroying that which gives life
For something that cannot be eaten,
Cannot be shat out
Cannot sustain life

For the coin, for the note
For the greedy eye.

I do hope this blog, somehow, somewhere, shows me or someone else a way to somehow stop it. With some hope.

Paper trail to be used in Nagaland, Mizoram, Meghalaya

The voter verifiable paper audit trail (VVPAT) system will be used for the first time in the Lok Sabha elections in Nagaland, Mizoram and in one of the two constituencies in Meghalaya, an election official said Thursday.

"We have decided to use the VVPAT system in Nagaland, Mizoram and in Tura parliamentary constituency in Meghalaya for the Lok Sabha elections after much deliberation," Election Commissioner H.S. Brahma told IANS by phone from New Delhi.

Nagaland, Meghalaya and Mizoram go to polls April 9 along with Arunachal Pradesh and one parliamentary constituency in Manipur.

Brahma said the paper trail system was experimented with in 10 of the 40 assembly constituencies in Mizoram besides one assembly constituency in Nagaland.

Induced by experimentation, the Election Commission has ordered 20,000 VVPAT systems to be used in parliamentary constituencies across India during the elections.

The commission is likely to receive these new systems by March 31.

The commission had first tested the VVPAT system in Meghalaya's Cherrapunjee in 2011 and 2012 after repeated allegations that the electronic voting machines (EVMs) are being tampered with to manipulate results.

Under the VVPAT system, when a voter presses a button on the EVM to select the candidate he wants to vote for, a slip of paper bearing the name and symbol of the party will briefly appear for about 10 seconds, after which it will fall into a secure box, thus maintaining a paper trail of all the votes cast.

At present, there are 600 units with the Election Commission.

Currently, a VVPAT-like system is used in Venezuela and some states of the US.

Telangana creation may spur demands from northeast

By Iboyaima Laithangbam
The imminent creation of Telangana State has come as the much awaited shot in the arm for several groups in the north-east which have been clamouring for the creation of new States on tribal lines. However for tactical reasons they are not making a hue and cry as yet.

The long standing demand of the Kukis is that there should be a Kuki homeland in Manipur. On the other hand, the Nagas have been demanding unification of the “Naga areas.” At the moment, the United Naga Council, a frontal organisation of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah) which is holding talks with the Union government after signing a ceasefire 13 years ago is demanding “alternative arrangement” for the Nagas in Manipur. The UNC says that the Nagas don’t want to stay under the “communal government led by Okram Ibobi Singh”.

Some rounds of talks had been held between the representatives of the Centre and State government and the UNC. However there was no positive outcome as yet.

Other major organisations had objected to the demand for the vivisection of Manipur which has a written history since 33 AD. The Kuki organisations are now concentrating on the creation of a new district, Sadar Hills to be carved out of Senapati district. There have been different forms of agitations in furtherance of this demand. The denizens of Jiribam sub division of Imphal east district have been demanding creation of a new district despite the small population and area. There have been demands and counter demands among the people of Jiribam and Tamengkong district on territorial claims. Such turf wars are seen in case of Thoubal and Chandel districts and among some tribal organisations.

After some lull the people of four districts of Nagaland — Tuensang, Mon, Kiphire and Longleng comprising almost half of the State’s population have started their demand for vivisection of the State to create Frontier Nagaland. These four districts which were under North-eastern Frontier Agency (now Arunachal Pradesh) were merged with other parts which were under Assam in 1963 to form the Nagaland state. Public leaders of these four districts say that all these years the Nagaland government has been neglecting these four districts. The only way out is to create a new district.

When the demand had gained momentum the Union government tried to pacify the leaders by offering an economic package of Rs 300 crore for the overall development of these four districts. It was spurned. In the past the Nagaland government could not contain the agitations by the people of these four districts. There are indications that other communities in the northeast are making preparations to intensify their demands for homeland or at least new districts.