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Djokovic through in China, Ivanovic falls

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BEIJING: Two-time champion Novak Djokovic reached the China Open quarterfinals after dismissing Carlos Berlocq of Argentina 6-1, 6-3 on Wednesday.

Djokovic rushed through the first set then lost his serve twice in the second before winning the second-round match.

The Serb faces Jurgen Melzer on Friday after the Austrian defeated Alexandr Dolgopolov 7-6 (9), 2-6, 6-1.

Germany’s Florian Mayer also made the last eight.

Women’s defending champion Agnieszka Radwanska needed more than two hours to put away Spanish qualifier Lourdes Dominguez Lino of Spain 2-6, 6-1, 6-4.

Second-ranked Maria Sharapova downed Sorana Cirstea of Romania 6-2, 6-2, and Slovenian qualifier Polana Hercog beat Ekaterina Makarova 7-6 (5), 3-6, 7-6 (3).

Ana Ivanovic and Jelena Jankovic were knocked out of the third round.

Ivanovic was ousted 6-4, 6-3 by Romina Oprandi of Switzerland. Jankovic fell apart after leading 5-2, going out to Carla Suarez Navarro of Spain 7-5, 6-4.

Meanwhile, in Tokyo, Andy Murray advanced to the quarterfinals of the Japan Open by beating Lukas Lacko of Slovakia 6-1, 6-2 also on Wednesday.

Stanislas Wawrinka also advanced, beating Jeremy Chardy 7-6 (1), 6-7 (6), 7-5. C

Also, Janko Tipsarevic rallied to beat Gilles Simon 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 in the first round, and fourth-seeded Juan Monaco defeated Bulgarian qualifier Grigor Dimitrov 6-2, 6-1. (AP)

Sexual abuse and Sundays

Editor,

Let me be the first to admit that I really do not care about most matters relating to the esoteric. Of Church and churches I care only about their social and political dimensions. However, I would like to share my reactions towards the arrest that was made recently. Reverend Miller was arrested over the weekend and really, I was not surprised. The charges brought up against him were rape and molestation. Again, it came as no surprise. The reason for this is probably because I get suspicious when men over 50 surround themselves with girls under 25. Similarly there are a number of flashy public figures who like to be photographed with young girls (and boys). Look and ask about what is the truth behind these associations. Now is the time for other similar stories to make the front page.

Miller’s New Life Church has many of the classic elements of a cult. There are many of these smaller, newer and more ‘personal’ churches mushrooming every day within the state. The majority of them foster an in-group spirit among members; loud music is high on the list and call for a total submission of the individual before an overwhelming feeling (which they call the holy spirit). The New Life Church was one of the most prominent churches in the whole tide of evangelical revival that we had a few years back. They averaged a possession/revival a day among their “flock”. I know because I was dating someone whose sister happened to be one of “lucky ones”. Let me tell you that when she got possessed/revived, she and the others (all girls) were taken away from their residences and were forced (in my opinion) to stay in seclusion together. Now when I think about it, what is that if not infringement on the right to liberty? I think that the police should have a close look at the finances of this group as well as questions some of the members about the behaviour of the senior members towards them. All this took a long time to culminate in the arrest but now is the time to ask serious questions about the nature of these types of organisations, whether Christian or Hindu, Muslim or Flying Spaghetti Monster.

This church was one of the first in Shillong to seriously have a business plan about how to sell god to their main demographic, namely, young people. It has always positioned itself as a church for the young with its tech-savvy musicians and its trendy spokes-people and its overall urbaneness. Coincidentally and just for controversy’s sake the New Life Church houses itself in one of the buildings of St Edmunds’ College – run by the Christian Brothers. For many Naga and Mizo students studying away from their own homes, the New Life Church has professed to be a caretaker and a guardian. This then is the context that the recent news must be understood from. The gravity of Miller’s crimes is that he abused his position of power over the young. For that he is as good as any of the fearsome cult leaders who come into our minds. He is the first point of contact for many students who looked up to him for support and guidance, a father away from home. Indeed he is sometimes inescapable especially if you happen to live in one of his hostels – everyday, 24 x7, Miller-time – indoctrination at its most invasive. Miller is a well connected man but I hope that he pays for his crimes.

The danger is that we might say that this is the first and only time something like this has happened. Rumours fly about a lot but we must investigate them further, and not simply get angry. If they are wrong they can be falsified if not than they have some truth which needs to be explored. Question the “better” schools or ask the Presbyterian Church how many cases of sexual abuse and molestation they have known of. They will keep mum for pride’s sake, as though pride will heal wounds. This fatal flaw of Christian organisations – their un-Christ pride – is going to undermine their righteousness in the long run. The sad thing is that there are very real victims and every time they deny, they wound the person still deeper.

Yours etc.,

Babet Sten,

Vie email

 

Life expectancy up

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Average life expectancy in India went up by 4.6 years in the decade upto 2008, according to the latest data released by the Registrar General of India. It was the heyday of economic reform. So it belies the idea that economic reform benefits only a small minority. Life expectancy of the average Indian was 66.1 years by 2008. This is very close to the Biblical saying, “Seventy years is all you have”. The gains have been inclusive. Women and the rural population made more substantial gains than the male counterparts in urban areas. Till the 1980s, women were behind men in this regard. The rise in life expectancy is attributed to greater availability of nutritious foods, better health care and hygiene. Women’s life expectancy has gone up because mortality rates of the girl child have dipped. The increase in longevity in rural areas proves that economic growth benefits village people as well.

This knocks the bottom out of the strident argument against reform, especially resistance to the entry of foreign companies and greater competition in domestic markets. Of course, the government must ensure that reform is for the greatest number. Business should be easier to carry out. Investment should go up spurring growth. Labour laws should be made more flexible. Skills development should forge ahead. Infrastructure should be expanded to generate more employment. However, the darker side cannot be ignored. One must think of the large BPL population, farmers’ suicides and callousness at health centres. And a long life is not necessarily a happy and prosperous life. India is low down in the United Nations Happiness Index, as Amartya Sen will bear out.

The ILP debate

By Morning Star Sumer

In a panel discussion convened by the NEHU unit of KSU on 28th September, 2012, on the question of implementing the ILP in Meghalaya, I was astonished to hear RG Lyngdoh, former Home Minister in Meghalaya saying that the ILP was devised for the protection of outsiders, not of the indigenous people in the area! The senior citizens who were present were aghast at his apparently outlandish interpretation of the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation, 1873. When challenged by one of them, his arrogant explanation was an insult to the intelligence of those who were forced to listen to his shameful gobbledygook, trivializing the issue. He was not even ready to produce a copy of the Regulation to satisfy those who wished to hear what the law says! The senior citizen commented to me that it shows lack of preparation. They said that in their times panelists would come prepared and ready to produce their materials; but here, panelists nonchalantly dismissed the call for producing a copy of the Regulation without a care in the world. They also commented that if this ex-Minister is a sample of what we have in the state to govern us then truly we have been betrayed and are still being betrayed!

The time allowed was not sufficient to enable the panelists to express their individual views on the subject. However, I still could manage to express my view that the ILP is not a law by itself. It is merely a mechanism like any Permit, Licence or Pass, for implementing the provision of a law: that law is the Bengal Eastern Frontier Regulation, 1873.

It was the recognition of just one incontrovertible fact that had induced the erstwhile British Colonial power in Bengal to enact the Regulation, not for controlling us, as some say, but to protect us from exploitation and invasion of our land by hordes of people from across our borders, internal as well as external. That incontrovertible fact is that, influx by non-indigenous persons would inevitably lead to demographic imbalance at the expense of the indigenous. Under the authority of that Regulation, a state government may notify an area by drawing a line, to be known as “The Inner Line”, which a non-indigenous person may not cross without the permission of the authorities administering the area. Who were and, are, the authorities administering the area? The answer is, the government having jurisdiction to govern the area. Obviously, the answer to cover the period since then till now is, initially, the Secretary of State for India in Council through his officers in India – the Governor General in Council, the Lieutenant Governor of Bengal through their officers in the Province of Assam – and, after the Reform of 1935, till now, when, it is the state governments of the North Eastern States, including Assam and Meghalaya. So, a state has all the authority under the law to invoke the Regulation of 1873 without seeking central consent.

Commenting on a private members’ bill introducing the Inner Line Permit ( ILP ) in Manipur, and passed by the State Assembly, the Union Home Minister, Sushil Kumar Shinde, reportedly stated , ” Our Constitution will not allow such things”, while his ministry is reported to have intimated the Manipur Government of the Centre’s opposition to the ILP as, “there is no provision for the introduction of ILP in Manipur”. Mr Shinde’s statement is intentionally vague while the Home Ministry’s statement is clear. We can understand Mr. Shinde’s intentional vagueness to intimidate us and also the Ministry’s reason which, however, should not prevent the Centre extending the provisions of the Regulation of 1873 to the State. Manipur was not covered by the Regulation of 1873 because, before 26th January, 1950, it was being administered as if it were a Chief Commissioner’s Province, and had its own passport system which continued till the end of 1949. After 1949, the State could have opted for being covered by the provisions of the Regulation of 1873 by simply seeking the approval of the Centre which, then, would have the option of doing what would be necessary to enable the State Government to use the provisions of the Regulation of 1873. So, we see the Home Ministry’s expression of its reason for opposing the ILP in Manipur as a case of hedging because we know of no Constitutional objection to the Manipuris’ aspiration to keep maintaining their state as an indigenous people’s state within the Union. In fact, every state should be able to protect itself from being encroached upon by non-indigenous people including Indian citizens from other Indian states, despite the fact that the Constitution had failed to provide for it, by simply extending the Regulation of 1873 to each state as maybe required by the states themselves. The metropolis of Mumbai and the surrounding state of Maharashtra are just some of the current examples of where the need for such a provision ought to have been realized and seriously debated.

Since we now still have the Regulation of 1873 to empower us to issue ILPs, why have successive state governments been dallying in taking steps to arrest and reverse the influx? All it has to do is, notify the invocation and issue ILPs in which the terms and conditions are set down according to law. The law states, “It shall not be lawful for any person, not being a Native of the districts to acquire any interest in land or the product of land beyond the said ‘Inner Line’ without the sanction of the State Government or such officer as the state Government shall appoint in this behalf”. The important caution the authority issuing the ILPs should observe, is, to ensure that the spirit of the law is not violated thereby/in the process.

In spite of the explicit provisions in the Regulation against non-indigenous persons’ acquiring “interest in land or the product of land”, non-indigenous and traitorous/disloyal indigenous persons unashamedly misinterpret the law, even to the extent of reversing the unequivocal intent of the law, to suit their diabolical schemes. Their insidious motive is unveiled when they say that the ILP is an obstacle to globalization! The ILP is concerned solely with ownership, possession and alienation of land and trading in products of the land: everything else is beyond its ambit. Globalization may be acceptable, but we should hasten slowly, lest we get engulfed by it. If, in the spirit of globalization we pitch a Shillong football team against global football giants like Manchester United or Real Madrid, our Shillong team may get drummed out of contention. We are not yet ready for globalization. However, the ILP has nothing to do with it. The argument that ILP would strangle/stifle trade and activities in various fields of progress and development is a specious one at best. All development projects will prosper or fail, in spite of, not, because of, ILP, FPP et al. In the light of these arguments, it seems to me that only a body of perverse and bullheaded legislators holding the reins of government would seek to block invocation of the ILP. Such people seem to be in cahoots to enable non-indigenous persons to own land and exploit its resources at the expense of the indigenous citizens.

The power and strength of the ILP is in the crucial element of land possession and ownership as stated above. Once the letter and spirit of the element is incorporated in the ILP, it is done; so land would remain in the possession of the indigenous tribals always. But, that is now nullified before hand by the present state of the Meghalaya Transfer of Land (Regulation) Act, 1971. It is interesting to note that the indigenous tribals in government have disfigured and nullified the original principal Act viz The Meghalaya Transfer of Land (Regulation) Act, 1971 by amendments in 1991and 2010 et al. At the outset the original Principal Act was flawed only by omission of the most crucial word “indigenous” before the word “Scheduled” in the statement of intent for introducing the relative Bill of the Act. As a result, Section 2, Definitions of term in the Act was incomplete. Were it not for these omissions, the Act was perfect to prevent invasion of our state by immigrants internal as well as external, provided, of course, that the State governments do their job honestly. Since 1990, I had labored , in vain, to draw the attention of those who have been holding the reins of government till now, to those facts as expressed in my booklets, write-ups and articles, in the newspapers; but the powers that be have been showing themselves as being obdurate, obstinate, intransigent, deaf, dumb and blind, all at once. If they have not been and, are still not, aware of these, even now, the DIPR may be to blame.

Political parties should accept a common minimum economic agenda

By J. D. Sethi

The performance of the Indian economy in 2011- 12 was so disappointing that it makes us wonder whether India’s growth story has come to an inglorious end. But look at the current euphoria about the prospects of India’s growth. There have been dramatic developments in policy making during say a week beginning September 14. First, the government increased the price of diesel by Rs. 5 per litre from September 14. This measure is designed to cut down the fiscal deficit which is threatening to reach or even exceed 6 per cent of GDP. The original target of 5.1 per cent is simply not feasible. Second, there is the package of policy reform permitting FDI in multi-brand retail and civil aviation. Optimists expect around $ 16 billion of FDI would flow into retail in the next three years.

The Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government drew criticism from all quarters for its failure on economic reforms. In its attempt to please all the constituents and supporting political parties, the Congress was literally forced to put all reforms on a back burner. In addition to economic slowdown, the atmosphere was filled with scams, kickback and corruption. Prime minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh received flak from industry circles for being a silent spectator presiding over a drowning economy. The foreign media too did not spare Dr. Singh for staying inactive with mouth closed and eyes shut to the reality.

It is against this background that the Congress government finally got up from its long laziness and sleep. As a first step, the government hiked the prices of petrol and recently of diesel. I feel there is no other alternative, other than hike in prices considering the economic reality. These items are already heavily subsidised in our country and the public exchequer cannot afford to bear additional burden of subsidy. This was followed by opening the Indian economy to foreign domestic investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail. India has already allowed FDI in single brand retailing. Multi-brand means retail outlets in all consumer goods that is, electronics to fruits and vegetables. These are not big game-changers for the economy. However, even for these marginal kinds of reforms, UPA had to wait for four years for a consensus, finally without any success.

Corporate India was expecting this liberalisation of retail markets long back. After India moved into the era of economic liberalisation starting from 1984, I feel there is absolutely no point in holding back reforms in retail sector. I know that FDI in retail has also negative side to it. But, the gains in terms of investment, employment generation, empowerment of the producers including farmers and competitive prices to consumers would outweigh any negative effect. Investments at the back-end and front-end of the retail sector would provide sunshine days to producers and competitive choices to consumers. The perceived threat to small store owners and Kiranawallahs is actually blown out of proportion. The Indian market is too big and nobody will be thrown out by the big retailers. The Marts, the Big Bazars, the multinational retail chains, the malls can never be at war with the Kirana market segment. The consumer segment for everybody is different. The kiranawala will continue to dominate the neighbourhood customers. The kiranas in rural India are totally safe from multi-brand retail competition as it is economic suicide for such corporates to establish their shops in villages. At the most, there could be some setback for the middlemen, that is, those who are into pure trading. These are those who neither add value to the producer or to the consumer. They exploit producers and farmers by offering low prices and sometimes even starvation rates for their produce. They also exploit the consumers with high prices. Indian markets are traditionally known for the middlemen taking the major slice of the cake, as high as 45 per cent share of the price of Fast Moving Consumer goods (FMCG) and food products keeping producers poor and consumers unhappy.

We should also read the warning signals depending on the experience of multinational players in retail markets. In the beginning, the foreign investors and big retail chains encourage producers by eliminating the hold of middlemen. The traders i.e. the “bania” would still be there to provide services to the big and small retailers. They would compete with the multi-brand retail corporates. The multi-brand retail chains find it profitable to establish direct relationships with the producers. This improves the productivity of farmers, puts more purchasing power in their hands and improves their quality of life. It is really a big multiplier effect in terms of employment and self-employment. But, after a lapse of years, the business strategy of the multinational retail operators is bound to change. Once the producers are dependent on these big corporates in retail markets, there is a danger that these corporates take the place of the middlemen and could behave like the Indian traditional “banias”. The probable problems of the future should not stop us from FDI in retail. Even as the situation stands today, the producers stand exploited and they do not get the fair return for their effort. It is only initiatives like Amul in Gujarat will stand as monuments of empowerment of dairy farmers which later are replicated in other parts of the country. FDI in retail does not mean that foreign capital will dominate our retail markets. We also have purely domestic players with retail chains which would grow due to the growing new segment of consumers for multi-brand retail shops.

With FDI in retail, things can only shine for the Indian economy. They cannot be gloomy. How far they can shine would depend on the response from the producers and farmers. In addition to the initiatives from the retail industrialists, the state governments should also have an agenda to orient and assist the rural producers in terms of their capacity building to take the advantage of liberalised retail markets.

There is news from the BJP for the 2014 elections. BJP has announced that they would scrap FDI in retail if returned to power. The political opposition of BJP to the Congress is natural and should always exist. But, our national political parties should consider economic reforms as a continuous process. There is need for all political parties to accept a common minimum economic agenda. Talk of reversal looks good for the ear but may not be sound for the health of our economy. It should not so happen that politicians and political parties win and the people lose. INAV

(The writer is a former member of the Planning Commission)

Govt orders probe

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Shillong jail irregularities: DM Wahlang to head inquiry panel

By Our Reporter

 SHILLONG: The State government has instituted a magisterial inquiry into the irregularities in the Shillong district jail where arrested GNLA chief Champion R Sangma is lodged.

“An appropriate inquiry is instituted to go into few developments which took place over the last few days (in the administration of the district jail),” Chief Minister Dr Mukul Sangma said on Wednesday.

The decision to this effect was taken during a meeting between Dr Sangma and Dr RC Laloo, Minister for Home (Jails), here on Wednesday.

The inquiry will be headed by Additional District Magistrate DM Wahlang. The officers from Accounts department will assist him.

The terms of reference are the need to examine the financial irregularities in the Shillong District jail, to find out the reason which led to the strike of the jail staff and the alleged bribery by Champion’s lawyer Sujit Dey.

The Shillong jail hit the headlines last week when the DG (Prisons) Kulbir Krishan, in a confidential report, alleged that the GNLA chief’s lawyer had bribed the jail staff including the Jailor seeking a preferential treatment for his client Champion.

It may be mentioned that the staff of the Shillong district jail have already issued a 10-day deadline to the government demanding removal of Kulbir Krishan alleging highhandedness on part of the senior police official.

Krishan had said, some of the jail staff were hand in glove with the prisoners “running a parallel administration,” which has been busted.

“They were giving preferential treatment to some of the prisoners after taking money. This has been brought to the notice of the administration and action taken,” he said.

ANVC-B now demands ‘maintenance cost’

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From Our Correspondent

 TURA: A teacher of Adokgre School, who was kidnapped by suspected ANVC-B militants on September 27 from his house at Resubelpara, was released on Tuesday night.

According to sources, the teacher — Christopher G Momin-was kept confined in a hideout of the rebels in Bajengdoba region.

The ANVC-B militants kidnapped the 38-year-old teacher believing that he was working as a police informer and demanded Rs 7 lakh for his release, police said on Wednesday.

After realizing that they had kept captive a wrong person, the militant group released him.

However, they demanded a sum of Rs 1 lakh from him as a ‘maintenance cost’ for the period he was kept as captive, police sources from North Garo Hills said. It is not known whether the amount was paid or not.

Meanwhile, intelligence agencies have revealed that the ANVC-B is suspected to be using Bajengdoba area as a command and control centre for its activities.

“The outfit has been issuing commands from Bajengdoba region for quite some time now and it suits them since the area is not densely populated and shares a porous border with neighbouring Goalpara district of Assam,” said one intelligence officer.

Lapang offered upto Rs 20 cr for Cong ticket

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By Our Reporter

 SHILLONG: Meghalaya Pradesh Congress Committee (MPCC) president DD Lapang has claimed that he was offered crores of rupees by several ticket aspirants from Ri-Bhoi district.

“They (ticket aspirants) have offered me an amount ranging between Rs 10 to 20 crore to give them the party ticket,” Lapang said while addressing the supporters of the West Khasi Hills District Congress Committee president Boldness L Nongum, a ticket aspirant for Mawthadraishan constituency, on Tuesday night.

It may mentioned that a number of businessmen and coal barons including Nehlang Lyngdoh and Ngaitlang Dhar have sought Congress ticket to contest in the 2013 Assembly elections from Ri-Bhoi.

Both Lyngdoh, a sitting MLA from Rymbai in Jaintia Hills and Dhar, brother of another sitting legislator Sniawbhalang Dhar (Nongbah-Wahiajer, Jaintia Hills) are planning to contest from Umsning and Umroi respectively.

The MPCC chief said he outrightly rejected the offer “since I am not holding this position for making money”.

“Had I accepted this money it would have been an insult to the chair I am holding”, Lapang said adding that he has been made the MPCC chief to serve the party to the best of his abilities.

Lapang further said that no person could bribe him to get the party ticket.

He made it clear the party would be allotting tickets adhering to the mandatory procedures which are required to be followed.

“The party leadership would not be biased or favour any aspirant while allotting the ticket,” Lapang assured.

Hek raises Garo Hills flood alarm in Delhi

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From Our Special Correspondent

 

Union Water Resources Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal shakes hands with Meghalaya Minister for Water Resources AL Hek at the conference in New Delhi on Wednesday. (ST)

New Delhi: Meghalaya Minister for Water Resources AL Hek on Wednesday raised a high pitched alarm against recurring floods in Garo Hills area of the State while demanding for scientific management of water ‘which is both scarce and plenty’ in the hill state.

Over one lakh people have been affected after Brahmaputra and Jingiram rivers submerged over 100 villages in West Garo Hills district of Meghalaya this week. The worst-affected areas are Phulbari, Rajabala, Bhaitbari, Paham.

“Both the hill and plain areas of the states bordering Assam and Bangladesh have been affected with flash floods which has caused severe damage to life and property,” Hek said at a conference of the state irrigation ministers here. The Water Resource Minister also sought adequate Central assistance and permanent solution to the flood problem in Meghalaya.

“The State has initiated a plan to control floods in Wahumkhrah and Umshyrpi rivers,” he informed.

It may be mentioned that for the first time the entire plain belt area from Hallidaganj to Nidanpur along the Jingiram river was completely submerged.

“The areas of maximum impact are Bhaitbari and surrounding areas including Morasuti, Phershakandi, Anderkata and some villages in Rajabala”, Hek said adding that 14 relief camps were set up in the plain belt areas of West Garo Hills and the authorities have requisitioned boats for rescuing people.

Earlier, addressing the conference, Union Minister of State for Water Resources Vincent H Pala said water is a scarce natural resource, fundamental to life, food security, livelihood and equitable and sustainable development. “India has to support 18 per cent of the world’s population with just 4 per cent of the world’s fresh water resources. Our water resources are characterized by the large temporal and spatial variations which necessitate a transparent water information system”, Pala pointed out.

NGOs call for stern action against Rev Miller

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By Our Reporter

 Shillong: Several NGOs including the Lympung ki Seng Kynthei, the convening body, the Civil Society Women’s Organisation (CSWO- Agnes), the Khasi Students’ Union, Domestic Workers Union besides many other concerned individuals met at the Step by Step School on Wednesday to discuss the issue of alleged rape and molestation by Rev SK Miller of New Life Ministry.

The NGOs condemned the series of incidents of molestation indulged in by Miller and called for strict legal action against him. The meeting also urged the Child Welfare Committee of the Social Welfare Department which is questioning the children who have been abused and raped, to speed up the process and file the statements taken before a judicial magistrate at the earliest.

The NGOs also called for immediate removal of the present management from the Ministry so that free and fair investigations can be carried out.

Earlier, a US citizen, who said he had spent three years in Shillong and was part of the New Life Ministry, said that all the elders who are part of the Ministry but had chosen to remain silent about Miller’s acts of commission deserved to be booked because they are complicit by their silence.

Others suggested that the hostel – New Life Home– should be shut down at once and the financial affairs of the Ministry be prised open to find out how destitute children have been used as child labour in the Home even while donations were being sought from foreign donors for their upkeep.

Earlier, Angela Rangad, social activist, informed the gathering that Meghalaya did not yet have a Child Protection Act (CPA) which states like Goa have legislated on. “This Act would have provided avenues for protection of abused children and child labourers who are growing in numbers in the State,” Rangad said, adding that people who run hostels for school and college students should be asked to register with an authority like the CPA. She cited instances where boys have been abused in certain hostels in Shillong but they did not know where to seek help.

The NGOs present at the meeting have called on all children who are abused, molested, raped and do not know how to seek help, to call ChildLine at 1098.

Meanwhile the meeting also called on the law enforcers to handle the Miller case with the rigour it deserves.

“Rape and molestation charges are non-bailable offences but Miller is known to be an influential person. He should in fact have been arrested and we need to know what his health status actually is,” some NGO members observed.

Others pointed out to the random opening of hostels in Shillong without any supervision about how they are run. The meeting urged the Government to come down heavily on these hostels and to maintain strict vigil on how these are being run because they felt that similar instances of abuse and rape of young girls might be happening in other hostels as well.

It is learnt that the parents of the abused children have arrived at Shillong and have been whisked away by the relative of Rev Miller. They have later decided to take their children back home.

“We should ensure that the statements of these children are recorded before a magistrate, before they are allowed to leave Shillong,” Angela Rangad said. She also called upon the investigating agencies to seize the computers and mobile phones of the managers of New Life Ministry to find out the modus operandi on which the Ministry is run.