27 May 2014

Drugs worth Rs 98 Lakhs Seized in Heart of Aizawl, half kilo opium seized in southern Mizoram

Aizawl, May 27 : Mizoram Police on Monday seized more than 24 lakh tablets of narcotics worth Rs 98 lakhs from a pharmacy in the heart of Aizawl.

Andrew Lalawmawia, proprietor of LD Drug Store in the state capital’s upscale Dawrpui neighborhood and a close relative of a well-known industrialist, has been arrested in connection with the case.

The 2.4 lakh strips of illegally possessed pseudoephedrine, used to manufacture party drug methamphetamine, was recovered from within the pharmacy near the Aizawl Civil Hospital late in the afternoon.

Aizawl district additional SP Rex Zarzoliana Vanchhawng said investigations regarding the source of the drugs is on and police have already identified some suspects.

In a separate operation on Sunday near the southern town of Lawngtlai, police also seized half a kilogram of opium worth Rs 70,000 from a man identified as Lalneiha, who was also arrested.

Lalneiha is an accused in a 2000 bank robbery case at Lawngtlai.

Police say he had received the opium consignment from a trafficker in Manipur, and that he has been involved in peddling the drug for sometime.

British Musician Collaborating With Naga Band


Kolkata, May 27
: After assimilating folk tunes of Nagaland in rock music to make it catchy, Alobo Naga and The Band (ANTB) is now collaborating with eminent British music producer Tim Palmer for their new album.

"We play contemporary progressive rock music but put Naga folk tunes into it because it is very catchy and sounds different," the Dimapur-based band's lead vocalist Alobo Naga told PTI here.

Their first full-length album 'All We Have is Now', due to release later in the year, will have 3-4 songs mixed and mastered by the Grammy-nominated Palmer.

Naga said folk tunes of the north-eastern state, which has a rich musical tradition, gels well with rock music and creates a distinct sound making it very popular with the youth.

Having won the 2012 'Best Indian Act' at MTV Music Awards, the band had risen to fame with their video single 'Painted Dreams' and also got premiered in Vh1 channel.

The five-member band was in Kolkata recently to participate in the '100 Pipers Vh1 Sound Nation' concert.

The lyrics of their album is based on social issues and dreams of the youth.

'All We Have is Now' is based on the prevailing political scenario in the world where the privileged class gets all the opportunities while those who work hard have to struggle for existence.

"Our another song is called 'Let Her Live'. This is against the increasing instances of crime against women and children in India. This is our way of raising awareness on the issue," Naga said.

They also have a youth anthem in the album which tries to give voice to the rights of the young generation.

"We are giving positive messages to society as music is a very powerful tool," the songwriter said.
26 May 2014

Chin-Mizo Cultural Festival Celebrated in US

By Katherine Klingseis



Actors act out the history of the Chin-Mizo people at the Chapchar Kut festival at Seven Flags Fitness event center, 2100 N.W. 100th St. in Clive, Sunday. (Photo: Katherine Klingseis/The Register)

Hundreds of Chin-Mizo people from across the United States gathered to celebrate one of the culture’s greatest festivals in Clive on Sunday.

This was the first year the Des Moines branch of the Mizo Society of America hosted Chapchar Kut, an event that celebrates the annual clearing of forests for rice paddies to be planted.

Chin-Mizo people are originally from the Burma-India area. Many Chin-Mizo immigrated to the United States as refugees from Burma in 2007.

Now, there about 3,000 Chin-Mizo people living in the United States and about 300 in the Des Moines area.

More than 800 people from the Mizo Society of America’s 13 branches celebrated Chapchar Kut in the Des Moines area Saturday and Sunday.

“There are more guests than we could’ve expected,” said Lal Rin Sanga, a member of the Des Moines-area Chin-Mizo community.

The event’s first day was devoted to sports, particularly soccer. The second day featured a cultural program that included music, dance and acting at Seven Flags Fitness event center, 2100 N.W. 100th St. in Clive.

The annual festival is “very important” to the Chin-Mizo people, Sanga said.

“First, we wanted to keep up the good things of the culture of our country,” Sanga said. “It’s also the only event where we can meet friends from our old country who live in other states.”

Ro Dinga, vice president of the Mizo Society of America, said the festival has three main purposes: to maintain their forefathers’ tradition, to gather Chin-Mizo people together and to preserve their culture.

“It’s to encourage people not to forget their motherland,” Dinga said.

Chapchar Kut serves as a way for adults to teach children the Chin-Mizo culture. It also encourages the Chin-Mizo people to work together, Sanga said.

“It’s to remind our people we are from one community,” Sanga said. “We can achieve things with the community that we cannot do alone.”

Source: desmoinesregister.com

Mizo Woman Bleeds To Death As Blood Bank Runs Dry


Aizawl, May 26
: A 25-year-old woman bled to death at Saiha civil hospital in southern Mizoram after she gave birth to her firstborn Saturday morning, due to absence of blood in the blood bank, official sources said today.

Dr K Rakhu, medical superintendent in charge of the hospital, said the woman A Lalrinngheti, wife of John William, a resident of Siata village in Saiha district, was brought to the hospital at 7:15 pm on Friday to deliver a baby. She had low hemoglobin, which was 6.2 g/dL (gram per decilitre).

"As there was no stock left in the blood bank, she was given six units of blood from emergency blood donors. Even though the doctors and nurses tried their best to save her life, she died at 2:30 am on Saturday," the MS in-charge said. Saiha MLA Dr K Beichhua, who immediately rushed to the hospital, expressed deep sorry over the maternal death, which became rare in India and abroad, occurred in Saiha government hospital. He said the death was a result of low level of awareness in healthcare and lack of properly equipped blood bank. Had there been adequate stock in the blood bank, her life could be saved, he said.

Further expressing the high rate of infant mortality rate in Saiha district, the MLA urged the doctors and nurses to take more efforts to reduce IMR and maternal mortalities. Saying that Saiha has the highest IMR in Mizoram, the MLA pointed out that 97.3 infants out of every 1000 infants died in a year. He expressed grave concern over absence of gynecology and pediatric specialists in the government hospital in Saiha.

494 Bru Families Verified For Repatriation To Mizoram


Aizawl, May 26
: Altogether 494 Bru families have been verified and they are confirmed as the genuine residents of Mizoram. The verification work was conducted earlier this month.

Meanwhile, in a bid to bring back these Reang (Bru) 494 families refugees living in Tripura to Mizoram, the government of Mizoram is presently working out with repatriation process for some of the Bru families living at six camps.

According to staff of Bru Repatriation Cell at Mamit deputy commissioner office, the required fund has been sanctioned for the repatriation of these Bru families. Accordingly, the Mamit district deputy commissioner has started the process of repatriation. Initially around 494 families have been verified and are ready for repatriation. The verification work will continue further.

This is going to the 6th phase of repatriation for Reang (Bru) refugees living in Tripura. The actual time and date for repatriation would be decided on Tuesday in a state level meeting under the leadership of the state chief secretary.

Each of the families would be given a rehabilitation of Rs. 80,000 for house construction, Rs. 5500 for conveyance and Rs. 2000 for makeshift. They would also be provided rice free of cost for one year.

It is worth mentioning here that the relationship between the Mizos and the Brus has not been going well in the past 15 years.

Hundreds of Brus had left Mizoram in 1997 and in 2009. The first case was triggered when Bru militants murdered two Mizos who were forest guards on October 21, 1997. The second case happened after a 17-year-old Mizo boy was killed by the Brus near Bungthuam village on November 13, 2009. When the Brus left Mizoram they had driven out some Mizos in villages of Sakhan Hill Range in Tripura like Sakhan Serhmun, Sakhan Tlangsang, Sakhan Tualsen and Upper Dosda which had kicked up much ruckus in Mizoram then.

Meanwhile, a couple of years ago, head count conducted by the MBDPF found that there had been 31,703 Brus in the relief camps belonging to 5,448 families who were bonafide residents of Mizoram.

The repatriation of the 1997 batch of Bru refugees was underway until it stalled by the November 13 killing.

In the year 2011, conglomeration of major NGOs in Mizoram had submitted a joint memorandum to the then Union Home minister P Chidambaram to rehabilitate displaced Mizos in Tripura and stall the ongoing repatriation of Brus from Tripura to Mizoram. The memorandum was signed by representatives of four large NGOs in the state--the Young Mizo Association (YMA), the MZP, the Mizoram Upa Pawl (MUP) or elders association and the Mizo Hmeichhe Insuihkhawm Pawl (MHIP) or the women's federation and four political parties.

The memorandum had mentioned that more than 80 Mizo families displaced from Tripura's Sakhan Hill range in 1998 after being threatened by Bru militants should be adequately rehabilitated by the Centre, otherwise, the repatriation of Bru refugees from Tripura relief camps should not be allowed.

Delhi University Student From Northeast Catches Molester

New Delhi, May 26 : A Delhi University student belonging to the northeast community was molested inside North Campus by an outsider who had sneaked in posing as a student, police said.

The accused has been arrested and sent to jail. He has been identified as Jagdish, a resident of outer Delhi's Narela.

The incident took place near the English Art faculty around 10.30am on Friday. According to the FIR filed by the 25-year-old, Jagdish approached her and tried to shake hands. Before she could sense his intentions, he tightened his grip and pulled her to one side. He then tried to misbehave.

The young woman resisted and raised an alarm following which he pushed her and tried to escape. However, she displayed courage and nabbed him by his collar after a short chase. Soon, students and guards assembled on the spot and caught hold of Jagdish. Police were called in and he was handed over to them.

A case of molestation and sexual harassment under sections 354 and 354A of Indian Penal Code has been registered and the man sent to judicial custody. Investigations are in progress.

Wild Elephants Raid Villages For Food

Mirza Shakil, Tangail
A herd of elephants graze on the hills at Poragaon union of Nalitabari upazila of northern Sherpur. This and two other herds entered several villages looking for food. The photo was taken recently. Photo: Courtesy
A herd of elephants graze on the hills at Poragaon union of Nalitabari upazila of northern Sherpur. This and two other herds entered several villages looking for food. The photo was taken recently. Photo: Courtesy
It's a battle for survival.

Loss of habitats and food sources has forced at least three herds of around 60 to 70 wild elephants of Tangail's Garo hills to march to adjacent villages in search of food, triggering a conflict with villagers.

These mega-herbivores, that can consume a year's harvest in just a few days, are raiding the croplands and gardens of toiling people of around 60-kilometer area of Nalitabari, Jhenaigati and Sreebardi upazilas.

According to Sherpur district administration, a herd of about 15 to 20 wild elephants entered the Garo hills in Bangladesh from Meghalaya of India's Assam in 1997. They did not go back as the hills offered them abundant food and habitat.

However, things started being different as these Elphas maximuses bred and tripled their number over the past years while men continued to increase the encroachment on the wildlife habitats.

A highly intelligent species, the elephants are now returning what the humans did to them.

Almost every night, the crop-raiding giants come down the hills and choose croplands as an easy source for their nutrition. People of the areas, however, are certainly not glad about this.

"How can we survive if they (elephants) destroy all our crops?" said a farmer of Nakugaon village in Sherpur's Nalitabari. The elephants rampaged through at least 20 acres of rice fields in the village last week.

"We have stopped doing everything except guarding our farmlands from dusk to dawn," said Saheb Ali, a farmer of Tarani village of the same upazila.

Hundreds of farmers like him are spending sleepless nights with spears, torch and sticks to protect their only source of livelihood from these largest land mammals that too are badly in need of food.
Worse still, the villagers fear for their lives every day as more than 50 people were killed by the marauding elephants in the past 17 years, according to the district administration.

Both the number of the elephants and the people of the area have multiplied since 1994. An ever-increasing population is destroying the habitats and grazing zones of the elephants, forcing the giants to raid the villages, says local green activist Mannan Sohel.

The wild elephants cannot return to the forests of Meghalaya either as India has erected barbed fences on the border, say local foresters.

In a desperate bid to rid themselves of elephant attacks, locals want electricity connection to the villages immediately, as elephants fear light at night, Mokhlesur Rahman, chairman of Sherpur's Nalitabari upazila parishad, told The Daily Star.

Zakir Hossain, deputy commissioner (DC) of Sherpur, however, said the administration was working to find a way to ensure peaceful coexistence of the elephants and humans.

“The lives of the wild elephants are valuable but the lives of people are more valuable. Though it is tough to ensure a peaceful co-existence, measures are being taken to save both,” he said.
Different organisations, with the help of local administration, are conducting awareness programmes among the locals to keep them from harming the animals.

When asked about the demand of the environmentalists to create a sanctuary for the endangered species in the area, the DC said, “Where will I shift the people then?" -- a question that reveals a disturbing picture of the severely damaged equilibrium of nature; a question that has no easy answer.

Come September, Sound of Music at ‘Ground Ziro’

Top rock bands from across the country to participate in four-day extravaganza in Arunachal

By PULLOCK DUTTA

A band performs at last year’s Ziro Festival of Music.

Jorhat, May 26 : Top rock bands from across the country would descend at “Ground Ziro” in September to participate in the four-day Ziro Festival of Music at the picturesque Ziro valley in Arunachal Pradesh — the land of the dawn-lit mountains.

Dubbed the country’s biggest outdoor music festival, it will host hundreds of musicians, artistes, travellers and creative people from across the country and some from abroad as well.
The third edition of the festival will begin on September 25.
Randeep Singh, a member of the organising committee, told The Telegraph that the festival would probably be the most fun-filled outdoor music event in the country to be held in an open arena surrounded by lush greenery and hills.
“We are also making arrangements for camping facilities for visitors,” Randeep said.
He said the organisers were in touch with a few internationally famous rock bands and at least one could be expected to take part in the festival this year. “If Shillong can host the Scorpions, why can't we?” Randeep asked. He, however, refused to name the bands the organisers were in touch with as “nothing has been finalised as of now”.
The last two editions of the festival had featured stellar acts from around the world, including Lee Ranaldo & Steve Shelley (SONIC YOUTH -USA), Northeast’s own Bob Dylan, Lou Majaw, from Shillong, Menwhopause, Shaa’ir n Func, Whirling Kalapas, Sky Rabbit, Peter Cat Recording Co and Guru Rewben Mashangva among others.
He said the music festival is organised with the aim of providing a platform to the musicians from the region to mingle with those from other parts of the country. “Music makes us one — is the theme of the festival,” he said.
The festival, he said, would give an opportunity to the musicians to exchange ideas and work together for peace.
Randeep said the bands would play primarily rock music, which is very popular in this part of the world. “There would be folk music by local musicians of the region also,” he said.
He said the festival would begin in the afternoon and would continue till late night each day and the first day would be free entry for all. “There will be tickets for the three other days of the festival,” he said.
He said the Arunachal Pradesh government has been providing logistical support to host the festival.

“We are also getting tremendous support from the local people,” he said.
Randeep said though hotels were available in Ziro valley, local residents would also make arrangements for home stays.
Ziro valley, primarily the home of the Apatanis, is the district headquarters of Lower Subansiri district of Arunachal Pradesh and is located about 167km from Itanagar. It is one of the oldest towns in the state and is a valley at a height of over 5,500 feet above sea level, surrounded by misty mountains. Keeping company are Indian bisons, locally known as mithuns, which are common in the area.