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Sibal to lay NIT campus base at Sohra on Oct 12

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By Our Reporter

 SHILLONG: Union Minister of Human Resource Development (HRD), Kapil Sibal will be laying the foundation stone of the National Institute of Technology (NIT) permanent campus at Saitsohpen village in Sohra on October 12.

Chief Minister Dr Mukul Sangma would be present in the occasion as the guest of honour along with Education Minister Prof R C Laloo.

The permanent campus would be housed at the proposed site measuring 200 acres which has been allotted by the State Government in the heart of Sohra.

In a statement issued here on Tuesday, NIT director Prof DK Saikia said the institute is expected to acquire an additional 73 acres of land from the State Government.

The NIT, Sohra has been established by HRD Ministry as an institute of ‘national importance’ to play a catalyst role in the development of the State, Prof Saikia said, adding that NIT, Sohra is one among the 30 NITs in the country.

“The activities in the institute of the State started in temporary campus in Shillong in November, 2011 with the joining of a regular director,” Prof Saikia said.

According to the director, the NIT permanent campus in Sohra shall have a state of the art infrastructure for education and research and amenities to attract the best of talents to make it a world class institute in the fields of Science and Technology.

He further said that the institute is expected to play a significant role not only in the development of quality human resource but also in the development of technology through research and innovation.

Meanwhile, the HDR has awarded the contract for construction of the permanent campus of the National Institute of Technology (NIT) in Meghalaya to the Central Public Works Department (CPWD).

“The CPWD is expected to start construction of the permanent campus shortly,” a senior government official said here on Wednesday.

Informing that the Union HRD Ministry has sanctioned an amount of Rs 180 crore for construction of the permanent campus, the official said that the fund has been awarded for development of various infrastructures and construction of the retaining wall all along the 200 acres of land in Sohra where the permanent campus would come up.

 

Govt officer kidnapped in Tikrikilla

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From Our Correspondent

 TURA: Unknown armed persons kidnapped a government officer working in the Sericulture department while he was on his way to his work place from Tikrikilla in West Garo Hills to Bajengdoba in North Garo Hills district on Monday morning.

The officer from the Meghalaya Sericulture department, Bipul Saha, aged 45, was posted in Bajengdoba. He was returning to work after spending the holidays with his family when the incident took place.

The vehicle carrying the officer was moving from Tikrikilla towards the Bolsong state road when a group of masked men, between 5-6 individuals, with weapons came out of the bushes at Gapuli reserve forest, near Tikrikilla and kidnapped the officer. The incident falls under the Bolarbita police outpost jurisdiction.

Suspicion has fallen on the Garo militant outfit GNLA and even Assam-based NDFB (Ranjan Daimary faction) that operates in the area. The police have also not ruled out the involvement of local criminals in the kidnapping since a similar incident took place in July, close to the area, when a cashew industry accountant was kidnapped by criminals from near the same area.

 

GNLA chief

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By Our Reporter

 SHILLONG: The GNLA chief Champion R Sangma was produced in court on Tuesday. However, the matter could not be taken up due to the absence of court staff and the lawyer Sujit Dey. The court will take up the matter on Wednesday.

 

What more from the Congress?

Editor,

The Congress has done it again! Rs 20 crore for a Congress ticket! Is this about legislation or for trading in the Assembly? Well, what more can be expected after the 2G scam, CWG, Coalgate allocation, FDI, fuel hike and inflation. The State Congress too has proven that it does not stand with the common man for very few people of calibre to become legislators would also have so much money to throw around. How can anyone who is not a coal miner or a cement dealer earn Rs 20 crore unless it is by fraudulent means? The question is whether those with the money to burn also be good legislators, or will they legislate to multiply their investment of Rs 20 crore a hundredfold?

The Meghalaya Pradesh Congress Committee (MPCC) chief later retracted his statement and blamed the media for misquoting him. The MPCC then spelled out that winnability was the only criteria for Congress to issue tickets to its aspirants. But is it not true that winnability is also measured by a candidate’s ability to spend money for himself and for the party? This will reduce the financial burden on the Congress. This ticket for money issue needs to be taken seriously and the public should reject such candidates otherwise our state is doomed because people will be trading us eventually. The Election Commission has set a ceiling of Rs 20 lakhs as election expenses for state assembly elections. Anything beyond this amount is illegal. However, the EC is not strict or watchful about the pre-election spending that has been going on. Now, if to get a party ticket one has to pay huge ransom plus the additional election campaign expenditure, how can one recover all that from the salary and perks that the MLA would get. The Rs 5 crore MLA scheme is actually meant for constituency development which the MLA uses according to his/her discretion. Schemes are usually floated through tender works. Now if the task of a legislator is to legislate laws and make policies then why are these so called businessmen after politics? Is it to bring development? Or to trade more openly at the expense of the common man?

Yours etc.,

Wankitbok Pohshna

Shillong -11

 What mining policy this!

 Editor,

At long last State mining policy has come out. The outcome of this policy is that State Government has won but the worst loser is mother earth. Mr Bindo Lanong in his first defence, stated that rat hole mining poses no threat to the earth’s crust as these rat holes would subsequently be filled. Wisdom in the right sense takes time to develop and after few weeks, sensing the impracticality of filling these holes he had a new statement to make. In his imagination, he forsees a war from the so called ‘poor miners’ if rat hole mining is banned. Little does Mr Lanong realize that war from the poor can never take place. Procuring two square meals a day is already a huge battle front and now war on mining policy from the poor is unthinkable especially when the other party is the government. The future of our state in the coal and limestone belts is dark and gloomy. When things appear hopeless for the common man, the only ray of hope is to meet the rich and powerful coal miners face to face with a fervent prayer that they should have some compassion for their own children yet unborn. It is no secret that scientific mining demands more rupees per ton of coal. But if we think dispassionately for our grand children and great great grandchildren who have to have their dwelling place on a solid and strong foundation, they would soon learn with joy that sacrifice of wealth though big is worth it. If that could be accepted we would once again see cattles and goats grazing by the side of paddy fields left unattended for almost a quarter of a century and the rivers almost dry will bounce back to sustain life and a pastoral society will co-exist with a materialistic one.

Yours etc.,

Wandell Passah

Nongkrem.

 Rat hole mining

 Editor,

Few weeks back, there was a strong argument in defense of rat hole mining. The earth’s crust is in no danger as these rat holes could afterwards be filled to render the crust strong and stable. It makes one to picture a very heavy traffic of coal laden trucks in opposite direction with rat hole filling trucks. Who would enter these holes to ensure jam-packed filling, remains a big question. Then on the Sunday paper ST dt.16-9-12 a new argument in defense of rat hole mining appeared. Rat hole mining has to stay for fear of war from the ‘poor miners. Let us remember that for the poor, getting two square meals a day is already a huge war front and to apprehend the poor to open up another front and that also against the government is unthinkable. Let it also be made clear that this write up is not for the authorities to react. Rather it is my fervent prayer that if miners in coal belts who are more privileged and wealthier, could foresee the threat rat hole mining (if not stopped) poses to the generation of our own, yet unborn and come up in the open to discontinue it of their own sweet will, then the situation, though a bit late, could still be saved. It is no denying that more extra rupees per ton would be involved. But if we really value the lives of our great grand children who are to inherit this mother earth then sooner or later we will realize that our sacrifice though not insignificant is worth it. And once again this mother earth though badly mishandled will turn into a beautiful landscape for both the rich and the poor. A materialistic society will live side by side with a pastoral one. They would have a stable earth crust to lay their homes with potable water, free of cost and the damaged paddy fields neglected for over a quarter of a century with their feeder rivers would once again sprout back to life.

Yours etc.,

Wandell Passah

Retd. H.O.D., St. Edmund’s College

 

No life without wife

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The CPI (Maoists) bans marriage between men and women members. It is a big worry for rebels who have no specific cause to pursue. This has caused a significant attrition in the Maoist cadres. Even the gun-totting rebels feel that there is no life without a wife, as the song goes. A large number of youth have deserted the Maoist camps and are joining splinter outfits which have a liberal attitude to marriage. Some of them are surrendering to integrate with the mainstream. All this has led to a leadership crisis in the shrinking areas where Maoists are in control. Whereas they held sway in 182 districts a few years ago, the number has gone down to 50. One major reason is the stringent law on marriage which prescribes punishment or demotion for cadres who get married defying the ban. That also applies to sex out of wedlock.

The fall in the number of Maoist rebels is due to other factors as well. Public support has ebbed away. Besides, the offensives mounted by security forces have led to an exodus. Frustration has set in among young rebels without a cause. The strict law enforcing celibacy is not derived from Mao’s precepts nor is it in sync with the permissiveness often associated with revolutionary organisations in the history of the terrorist movement in India. Indian literature on armed revolutionaries in the country is tinged with romance. Netaji Subhas Chnadra Bose remained a bachelor till his forties but did not enforce bachelorhood on his followers. The Maoist attitude is reminiscent of the militant sannyasis in Bankim Chandra’s ‘Anandamath’ which shows how two errant leaders had to court death in battle. All things considered, whatever may be the reason, the decline in Maoist strength should be welcome to the authorities and civil society.

Dissolution of NDA is a possibility

Modi’s success can be BJP’s failure
By Amulya Ganguli

The BJP faces a curious situation wherein neither the success nor the failure of Narendra Modi in the Gujarat elections is conducive to the NDA’s political health. If the Hindu hriday samrat wins, as seems likely, then he will set off the process of the NDA’s dissolution, since there is no way that Nitish Kumar can accept the possibility of the Gujarat strong man emerging as a prime ministerial candidate.

Yet, the same dismal fate may overtake the alliance if Modi loses, since the resultant boost to the Congress’s prestige will undermine the NDA even more dramatically than the 2004 and 2009 defeats. Moreover, the Bihar chief minister may reconsider his future in it as the West Bengal and Odisha chief ministers did in 2009.

The BJP’s hope, of course, is that the party itself will fare well enough in 2014 to keep the NDA afloat. As one of its spokesmen has said, if it can get 150-plus seats, then it will act as a magnet for some of the others. This confidence is reflected in the party’s Bihar chief, C.P. Thakur’s assertion that it will contest all the 40 parliamentary seats in Bihar this time.

But, there are several imponderables. One is that the BJP may not find it easy to return to the days of the 24-member coalition in Atal Behari Vajpayee’s time since none of the party’s present leaders can match the former prime minister’s stature as a pan-Indian personality despite all their pretensions.

Although Vajpayee’s moderate image was described as a mukhota or mask by, among others, a saffron ideologue, K.N. Govindacharya, the former nevertheless inspired a sense of trust even among his opponents because he was seen as a gentleman. Since there is virtually no one in the BJP today who can measure up to this standard, the chances of the NDA-plus, as it has been called, crossing the 272 mark in the Lok Sabha do not seem all that bright.

It has to be remembered that even Vajpayee could not save the NDA once it began to unravel in the aftermath of the Gujarat riots. So, if the “modern day Nero”, as Modi was called by the Supreme Court of India in the context of the riots, is seen as a prospective leader of NDA-plus – even if someone else is chosen as a stopgap replacement to rally the ditherers – then the alliance is unlikely to be stable.

It is possible, therefore, that L.K. Advani’s expectation – or hope – that a prime minister will emerge from a non- BJP, non-Congress party will come true with the rath yatri of 1990 anticipating that he will be seen as a possible answer since neither Sushma Swaraj, who is Bal Thackeray’s choice, nor Arun Jaitley has a mass base.

As for Modi, his first target in the ensuing elections in Gujarat will be to ensure that the BJP gets at least 117 seats (out of 182), which it won in 2007. Anything short of that will mean that his popularity is waning. Since the party won 127 seats in 2002, even the figure of 117 denotes a marginal slide, especially when the much discredited Congress raised its tally from 51seats in 2002 to 59 five years later even as its vote share remained static – 39.2 in 2002 and 39.6 in 2007.

The year 2002 was, of course, the crucial year for Modi. If the BJP won the highest ever number of seats in the state in that year, the reason was the surge of support that the party received from the communal-minded Hindus. Ever since then, however, Modi has been distancing himself from the riots, which won him the support. Instead, he has been focussing on his developmental record and even sought to erase the past by going on sadbhavna or goodwill fasts in aid of social harmony.

But, none of these efforts has been of much help in refurbishing his image. As a result, even if the BJP wins 117 seats or more, the “modern day Nero” will remain in the doghouse so far as the secular camp is concerned, which includes the Janata Dal (United). Normally, a third successive victory is an occasion for special celebrations, especially for a chief minister who has a wide base of support in his party and among a sizeable section of the population as well as the corporate sector.

But, in Modi’s case, it will entail intense political calculations by both friends and foes because his success is expected to create problems rather than provide solutions. And the reason is the shadow, which will be cast over his victory by factors which are at odds with the country’s pluralistic ethos. The pride, therefore, which the BJP once used to take in presenting Gujarat as a model state for its experiments with Hindutva is no longer very relevant for the party. (IPA Service)

Will Rajan succeed where Kaushik Basu failed?

By M. N. Minocha

In Indian economic calculations two and two doesn’t make four like in other countries. It is a challenging task for anyone to put Indian economy on even keel in view of varied political and ideological pressures. One needs to congratulate Raghuram G. Rajan, who gave a speech to a group of graduating Indian students in which he criticised the country’s policymakers for “repeating failed experiment after failed experiment,” rather than learning from the experiences of other countries. A week later, he assailed the government again, this time in a speech attended by prime minister Manmohan Singh. But instead of drawing a rebuke from India’s often thin-skinned leaders, he got a job offer. In August, Singh, who has frequently sought Rajan’s advice, called and asked him to take a leave from his job as a professor at the University of Chicago to return to India, where he was born, to help revive the country’s flagging economy. Within weeks, he was at work as the chief economic adviser in the finance ministry.

The appointment of an outspoken academic like Rajan, along with the recent push by New Delhi to reduce energy subsidies and open up retailing, insurance and aviation to foreign investment, signal that India’s policymakers appear to be serious about tackling the nation’s economic problems. Rajan has advocated for reforming India’s financial system, which is dominated by state-owned banks, by among other things loosening government restrictions on foreign banks and other financial institutions. He has also been critical of the country’s crony capitalism, likening its business tycoons to Russia’s oligarchs. He has argued that India needs to build stronger, impartial agencies to make the allotment of licences and natural resources more transparent.

Economists say Rajan, and his boss, the recently reappointed finance minister, Palaniappan Chidambaram, face daunting challenges in their effort to revive the slowing economy, which is expected to post growth of 5.5 per cent this year, down from an average of 7.7 per cent a year over the last decade. The credit rating agencies Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings have warned that they may downgrade India’s sovereign debt to junk status if it doesn’t bring its ballooning budget deficit under control.

Many of the government’s reform proposals, including reduced subsidies for food and fuel, are deeply unpopular. Moreover, the governing alliance, led by the Congress Party, recently lost its majority in the lower house of parliament, which will make it hard to enact legislation.

Most emerging market governments only carry out reforms when they have their backs to the wall.

Though Rajan’s current post does not carry any executive authority, his return to India has attracted attention because many policy analysts consider him to be the leading candidate to take over the top job at India’s central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, next year when the current governor, Duvvuri Subbarao, retires. Rajan, 49, became famous in the economics profession for his prescience in warning about the growing risks in the financial system at a Federal Reserve conference in 2005, three years before the failure of Lehman Brothers.

He argued that innovations and deregulation appeared to have made the global financial system riskier, rather than safer and more stable as many economists and top policymakers like Alan Greenspan then believed.

The son of an Indian diplomat, Rajan grew up around the world and in New Delhi, earning degrees from prestigious Indian universities before studying economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His first big policy job came when he was appointed the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. Since 2008, he has been an external adviser to Singh, who is his highest placed champion in India and who also asked him to lead a committee to propose reforms to the country’s financial system.

Rajan has made no secret of his distress with the slow pace of change in the country in recent years. But friends and associates say he believes that policy makers now feel under pressure to speed up the country’s transition to a more liberal economy because growth has slowed sharply ahead of the next national election scheduled for 2014.

Chidambaram, the finance minister, said he had come to expect unvarnished advice from Rajan. “I’ve known Raghu for quite some time,” he said, “and when he joined the office here I told him one thing: ‘You are the adviser. You just tell us the truth.’ I think Raghu will do exactly that. He will tell the people of India the truth.”

Rajan and Singh had discussed his return to India for several years. While he dismissed the speculation about the Indian central bank job, he said he saw his new position in the government as an “open-ended opportunity,” not a short-term stint. He says he put aside plans to write a book on democracy and capitalism to take his new job. He is committed to teaching classes in the fall quarter in Chicago but plans to move to India full time in December. His wife and his son will join him at the end of the school year; he also has a daughter in college.

“I feel I owe something to the country,” he said. “Also, I think the chance of even having some small influence that, helps that is multiplied by 1.2 billion lives, it’s such an immense opportunity.”

Rajan said he would like to focus his efforts on three big themes: liberalising India’s financial system; making it easier to do business, particularly for entrepreneurs and manufacturers; and fixing India’s dysfunctional food distribution system, which wastes a lot of food even as many of the country’s poor are malnourished.

But the Indian bureaucracy’s resistance to new ideas, which he highlighted in his April speech, may well stymie Rajan, just as it did his predecessor, Kaushik Basu, an economist from Cornell University who was recently appointed the chief economist of the World Bank.

Rajan needs to learn quickly “on the job in a situation where learning is not very easy,” said Rajiv Kumar, who heads the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry and is a former Indian government economist. INAV

No takers for NE women’s hostel in Delhi

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From CK Nayak

 New Delhi: A six-storied 500-bedded hostel constructed in the national capital for working women from the North East has found no takers yet.

Tagged as a ‘home away from home’ for girl students and women from the region, the hostel located opposite the landmark Apollo Hospital has found few takers even after one year of completion, thus baffling the Centre and State governments which had started the project with much fanfare.

The hostel constructed at a cost of over Rs 17 crore was meant for single women from the region including students and was a joint initiative of the Ministry of Women and Child Development and Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region with active help from the North Eastern Council (NEC).

The Ministry entrusted the Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA) to manage the hostel given its expertise in the field and the charges were initially fixed at Rs 3000 per month for a bed which further came down to Rs 1300 per month after subsidies. Located close to the Jasola Metro Station, the 167-room hostel is well connected with public transport facilities in the national capital. Apart from well furnished living rooms and round the clock security services along with power and water back up, the hostel also boasts of a crèche. The hostel also has a guest room besides sports and recreation facilities.

The primary aim of the hostel is to allow accommodation for working women whose monthly income does not exceed Rs 30,000.

Despite all the add-ons, the lack of takers till date is gradually forcing the YWCA to take a call on its association with the hostel.

Lack of publicity and awareness among the students and working women was considered to be the main reason for the disinterested response initially, which prompted the Centre and the respective state governments to run full page advertisements in newspapers in order to attract women from the region to avail of the facility. The State Houses and Bhawans were also roped in to generate attention but in vain.

Each State from the NE region was allotted a quota of seats as per the population and other factors.

But the irony is that none of the NE states have availed their share in the hostel.

There are thousands of girls and single women from the region who are staying in the national capital, either studying or doing jobs, but very few have shown their interest in putting up at the hostel specially meant for them.

“It is baffling that there are hardly any takers despite lack of proper accommodation across the city,” a source said.

“One of the reasons could be the distance of the hostel from central and south Delhi where most of the Northeasterners reside. The other factor could be the reluctance of the inmates to share rooms with others,” the source added.

The YWCA has also decided that if the situation persists, it would be forced to allot the hostel rooms to needy girls and women from other states, which in turn would defeat the entire purpose of the ambitious project aimed at providing a secure and safe accommodation to the fairer sex from the region.

W Garo Hills conferred highest TSC achiever in State

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From Our Correspondent

 TURA: West Garo Hills district was on Tuesday conferred the award for the highest achiever in Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC) under the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan.

Chief Minister Dr Mukul Sangma presented the award to West Garo Hills Deputy Commissioner Pravin Bakshi besides handing over Nirmal Gram Puruskars (awards) 2011 to 266 villages of East, West and South Garo Hills districts at Tura District Auditorium.

Out of the 365 villages in Meghalaya selected for the Nirmal Gram Puraskar 2011, 266 villages are from East, West and South Garo Hills districts with as many as 216 villages from West Garo Hills alone.

Meghalaya bagged the third position in the country in TSC 2011 while the top two positions were claimed by Maharashtra and Gujarat respectively.

Rural sanitation programme with a new demand- response initiative under the Centrally-sponsored Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC) has been taken up in all the districts of Meghalaya. The programme is implemented on the demand driven mode with active involvement of local villagers for which considerable IEC activities have been carried out.

To encourage the implementation of the programme, the Government of India has instituted the NGP as per the TSC guidelines for those villages which are able to overcome the open defecation system.

The progress of TSC projects in all districts are at various stages of implementation. The main goal includes schools, Anganwadi centres and individual household to be provided with necessary toilet facilities and overall cleanliness of the village by constructing liquid and solid waste management to create hygienic rural environment.

Congratulating the 266 villages of Garo Hills, Dr Sangma said that maintaining cleanliness and hygiene reflects one’s love and concern for the motherland.

He said that Meghalaya has shown tremendous improvement in TSC in the last two years and that the government acknowledges the effort of its citizens. He stated that one of the visions of the government is to make the State ‘green and clean’ and to achieve this goal the participation of everyone is necessary.

Thus, to mobilize the people especially the youth, movements like the ‘Youth for Green Campaign’ has been initiated. He added that cleanliness is beyond just having a sanitary latrine and includes various diverse aspects for a green and healthy living.

Citing the example of Mawlynnong, a village in East Khasi Hills, famed for being the cleanest village in Asia, Dr Sangma said that the village has earned the distinction because they have taken upon themselves the responsibility to clean, conserve and preserve the environment.

Stating that the bandh culture was impeding the development of the State, Dr Sangma urged everyone to maintain peace and assured the gathering that all support towards development in the region would be extended by the government.

Later all the participants took a pledge to maintain cleanliness, preserve and conserve nature and to leave behind the legacy of a green environment to future generations.

Others who participated included GHADC CEM PK Sangma, Co Chairman, State Planning Board, Clement Sangma, Former MLA Billykid A Sangma, Rangsakona sitting MLA Adolf Lu Hitler Marak, former minister Brening A Sangma, East Garo Hills Deputy Commissioner Vijay Kumar Mantri, Principal Secretary, PHED, PW Ingty and officials from the PHE department.

ASEB to start electrification work in Block-I

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From Our Correspondent

JOWAI: In a clear violation of the status quo agreed upon by the Meghalaya and Assam governments with regards to disputed territories along the inter-state border, the Assam State Electricity Board (ASEB) is all set to electrify many Meghalaya villages under the disputed Block-I area.

Sources informed that the ASEB has brought hundreds of electric poles to Moolber village and some of them have already been erected right from Mookhoilum village up to Moolber village.

Pnar people residing in Block-I have strongly opposed the proposed electrification work and have decided to send a delegation to meet the West Jaintia Hills Deputy Commissioner.

“Allowing the ASEB to undertake any electrification process would only indicate that our villages fall in Assam,” a source said, adding that Pnars residing in the area are against any project undertaken by the Assam government.

KSU general secretary (Jaintia Hills), Streamly S Niangti, said, “Both the ASEB and Assam PWD have violated the status quo by trespassing and encroaching in village belonging to Meghalaya in the name of developmental activities.”

“Assam can take up developmental activities in the disputed area only after notifying the Meghalaya Government,” Niangti added.

Jaintia Hills Deputy Commissioner, Peter S Dkhar informed that he was unaware of the ASEB’s activities since no one had informed him of the developments.

It may be mentioned that in February 2011, the Assam PWD had constructed an RCC bridge across the river Wyrjiang despite strong opposition from the NGOs and the Pnars residing in the area.