An Open Letter to AMMIK : Kapilarambam.blogspot

Very respected Apunba Manipur Matam Ishei Kanglup, in the name of holy traditions of the land, I’m sending you my deepest regards. I hope you are doing well and I

Very respected Apunba Manipur Matam Ishei Kanglup, in the name of holy traditions of the land, I’m sending you my deepest regards. I hope you are doing well and I believe I’m not disturbing you in your daily raga recital. The last time I heard about you was when you insisted the government to declare Sana Leibak Manipur as the state anthem just after the demise of the legendary Bachaspatimayum Jayentakumar Sharma who penned the song. Unfortunately the authority is indifferent as always but lesser than that of the people, who are assured that this song would evoke the false pride in you. That’s another story.tapta

You have made a bolder step this time. But why would you act like the army and issue diktats? As far as we know, you are a group of contemporary singers just as your name suggests; and neither would anyone believe you are a fascist organisation. Didn’t you feel getting out of tune when you write out that Tapta cannot sing anymore simply because he is not a member of your organisation? Probably you don’t. That’s why you have not only boycotted him but gone ahead and made your terrifying royal promise of banning the film as well of which he is a playback singer. Perhaps the film, Keishal, under the banner of Plus Media Production, might never see the light of the day. This is considering that you can summon artistes for negotiation in rebel camps or pay the police to do what they do best: threaten the people. However, there are so many things at stake here. Truth be told, your name must remain as it was: like a band of Nazi-inspired musicians but in a non-existential zone or wherever far from a sane society. Today, you might not mind it, you have never. You would not care that you have become the laughing stock in the whole town these days. A real musician would have produced a fine work from such humiliation but we know you are callous. Your fascist ideology—if there is any other such thing beside sheer stupidity behind your organisational workings—is only as good as your crappy tabla-harmonium music. If there is one thing that is so typical in the world of artistes, it is their love for freedom and liberty. But clearly you have become blind and you cannot see beyond your overbearing octave. For that matter, Tapta is more popular than all of you combined, yes, he also performs better than the combination of all your rule-obsessed, cheesy singing mates. Doesn’t this give you some clue why people are calling you all sorts of names because you are blindly trampling on the people’s choice of music and professional affiliation? Tapta is creative, independent and politically engaged—all of which you are not. We can see these issues would be too much because for you, art should be only for art’s sake. You have nothing to do with the diktats from both the state and non-state actors, which have shoved us into a corner of collective listlessness. Of course, nothing can be more important than obtaining a visharad degree from your alma mater located in faraway Agra and Gwalior and others; and yes, flaunting your power in this land of no master.   tapta-ammik

Again, Tapta is more popular than your organisation. This fact might be a source of great disturbance to your inflated ego. Why don’t you go and sing on the radio if it is not the music season in the town? There are lots of issues at hand that the people should care about. For instance, in one eastern corner of the land, in Chadong, hundreds of families have been displaced from their homes. The government’s myopic plan of building a dam has backfired though the authority is nonchalant as ever. The rhythmic patterns of violence and underdevelopment have already imprisoned us in a time warp of nothingness. In this kind of situation, your diktats and boycotts have become an unnecessary pain in the ass.

We are grateful to you for keeping up the Manipuri language. Albeit, everybody knows your disciplined approach to learning and practising music is doing much harm than helping it. Have you watched the film Western Sankirtan? You should ask your big brother, the Film Forum Manipur, if you have not. To explain briefly, the theme of the film is about going back to our roots, but while ignoring or too stupid to know that Sankirtan can never be a marker of our identity. It is no less different from your borrowed ragas and khayaals. And oh, your mates are tired of your adopted microtones and semitones: now they are aping the shittiest music from all over the world. I presume you like Ranbir Thouna. I like him too but I cannot tell how AR Rahman sounds so much like him. I’m kidding, I don’t like him but the mention about AR Rahman is true. (Footnote: Last year, the Forum banned six actors for not taking part in an Inner Line Permit protest. So apparently, the authoritarian madness run in the blood!)

In the last few days, metal-inspired Eastern Dark has also come out with their stories of intimidation. Incidentally like Tapta, this band is known for its socially relevant music just in case you had missed it in your self-righteous ride to conquer the music world in the stupidest ways. Pop stars from the olden days including Sanaton and Naba Volcano were the closest you can get but they are gone a long time ago.  eastern-dark

If copycats, alien music styles and unquestioning loyalty are the foundation of your world, you might as well boycott yourself and excuse us for some time. We know what our choice of music is and you cannot dictate what it should be. Please admit you are a fascist organisation and you are all powerful. We might be able to boost your ego and help do away with your talentless struggle, or, probably show you how it takes fans and supporters—and not primitive aggression and high-handedness —to raise an art form.

Finally, you are only strong as a group and, for your kind consideration, there is an adage: those people who cannot work outside a group or on their own, they are a nobody when they are alone. For all the talents you don’t have, it seems you are making up with your illegal dictatorial rules. Please do go to Agra and improve your skills. You might become a better singer some day. Who knows?!

Yours sincerely,
An anonymous music listener
Date: 3 July 2015
Place: Laphumakhong near Moreh

PS: Do send postcards from Agra. Don’t show off that your leader is an old-timer in the field. The general is just a piece of rotten ass with all the annoying, talent less foot soldiers.

Source : kapilarambam.blogspot

http://kapilarambam.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/an-open-letter-to-ammik.html

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/an-open-letter-to-ammik-kapilarambam-blogspot/

Special Category Status For Manipur

  By : C. Doungel The placement of Manipur among comparatively developed states by a committee appointed by the then Union finance Minister in 2013 has very much upset and

 

Manipur

Manipur

By : C. Doungel

The placement of Manipur among comparatively developed states by a committee appointed by the then Union finance Minister in 2013 has very much upset and disappointed the intelligentia of the state. There is apprehension that this will deprive the state from entitlement of 90% grant of plan fund enjoyed by backward states belonging to the special category. Accordingly, some persons had pleaded not to remove Manipur from the Special State Category with the 14th Finance Commission when they last visited Manipur. The pattern of fund devolution had since changed considerably with the award of 14th Finance Commission which has reinforced the apprehensions. The final picture will emerge with finalization of exercises initiated by NITI AYOG at the instance of Prime Minister. We do not know what are the exact parameters adopted by the committee in determining the same placement of state as developed. Nevertheless, by taking a long shot, we may assume that the committee must have drawn conclusion based on the impressive reports submitted by the State Government. They must have also relied on favourable statistics churned out by Government.

Let us now discuss some valid reasons for continuance of Manipur in the special category. Topographically Manipur is a land-locked hill state situated at the very tailend of the country. The Imphal valley is situated about 3000 feet above the sea level and for all purposes, Manipur should be considered a hill state. This does not however necessarily make it a tribal state. Being a princely state, no worthwhile development took place except the Old Secretariat, residence of the Political Agent (now used as Raj Bhavan) and the DCs residence {now used as Chief Ministers residence). They were constructed as symbol of the British Raj than anything else.

Amongst others, some of them for example, may be as follows : Water Supply, the number of villages / towns covered under this would be very high. Rural electrification coverage must be almost cent per cent. Construction of roads in terms of kilometers would not only be impressive but connectivity of villages would be excellent on paper atleast. Areas brought under irrigation including double cropping would be impressive. Control of Jhum and resettlement of jhumias and areas brought under plantation would be very high. Distribution of rice, kerosene and sugar under public distribution system would rate as excellent. Report about welfare schemes like mid-day meal and functioning of Anganwadi Centres would make very good impression. So also, reports about providing housing schemes under Tribal Development, Minority Schemes and Indira Awaj Yojna would also make impressive reading. Even in matters of law and order, killings and booking of criminals would show great progress according to statistics provided, though there is actually no improvement in law and order. Little did they realize that these can boomerang. Drawing some comparision with similarly placed states like Meghalaya, it inherited Shillong which was the erstwhile capital of undivided Assam having good road connection from Gauhati Railhead situated at a distance of 120 kms. Manipur`s disadvantages are manifold. It suffered badly from the ravages of 2nd World War. In fact most of the fiercest battle between the Allied Army and Japan/INA armies were fought in Manipur. It has now come to light that the battles around Maibam Lokpa Ching was the fiercest battle in the South-East Asian Front fought between a regiment of British army who were strongly dug in and another regiment of Japanese army. The causalities were one of the highest. Fierce battle were also fought at Bishnupur, Kanglatongbi, Kangpokpi and Jessami. Jessami was one place where the newly raised 1st Assam Regiment was deployed to stop Japanese advance to Kohima. The names of Jem. Thanghem Kuki decorated with Military cross and Jem. Satkhosei Kuki (Jangi nam) were some of the heroes known to us. Capt. M.K. P.B. Singh was one of the first officers to have built up the regiment. For estraordinary bravery, subedar, Nar Bahadur Thapa was awarded Victoria Cross for having faught very gallantly in the battle of Bishnupur. Imphal as also other places like Churachanpdur, Kanglatongbi and Kangpokpi were heavily bombarded. I recall that as a boy of six years in 1946, we used to swim in ponds created by bomb craters at Kangpokpi Mission Compound. The intensity of fighting in Manipur and Naga Hills necessitated construction of Air fields at Kakching and Koirengei.

The Dimapur – Manipur cart road was converted as motorable in early forties mainly for use of British army for transportation of supplies and equipment of war. The biggest disadvantage of Manipur however is the acute transport bottle-neck. Of the 236 km. long road from the railhead of Dimapur more than 100 kms. pass through the State of Nagaland which is equally disturbed and also at times hostile. Besides, the road is narrow and sharply winding at many points that transportation of heavy and bulky or long material are difficult. Passing through young mountains, landslide and sinking places are many. Added to this is the misery of blockades. Improvement of the so called alternate road through Jiribam and Tamenglong district is progressing at snail speed. If there is trouble in Bihar, Bengal, Assam or Nagaland, we suffer most. Cost of transportation perhaps is the highest for Manipur. Not much worthwhile infrastructure had been built since independence except construction of symbolic buildings like Assembly, High Court, New Secretariat which had benefited outside firms and the Ministers/beauraucrate who got their cuts. The poor people have not benefited out of these. Further, whatever little infrastructure of road, bridges etc. were built have either deteriorated and broken down.

There is hardly any scope for big industries and the main scope of self-employment is by accelerating economic activities through trade and commerce. The look east policy now, act east, is not yet able to make much impact. If power supply improves, small industries for making electrical goods like stabilizers, making steel almirahs, grills for windows, electric switches and plastic goods etc. can be established as people from Manipur have natural flair and skill. Construction of Tipaimukh Hydro Power Project which will make us power sufficient is stalled for reasons other than economic by psuedo experts spreading alarmist disinformation about it. Such negative attitudes are also stalling construction of other hydro power projects and taking up oil drilling and mining activities. Revival of traditional industries like handloom, weaving, furniture making (wooden, cane and bamboo) and pottery etc. could also go hand in hand.

Most convincing argument would however be to make use of the contentious merger agreements where there are stipulations that Manipur will be given special consideration in matters of development and job opportunities. I think we should profitably use this to convince the Government of India. For, the circumstances and backdrop under which small states in the North East or elsewhere were crated are indeed unique. Historical, political and ethnic reasons are the prime considerations leading to creation of these states. Treating them at par with advanced and viable states would not only be unfair but will also amount to penalizing them which will only put back the clock. The whole approach based on overestimated and false assumptions will rather jeopardise the whole gamut of developmental activities. It is, therefore, necessary to correct the aberrations and restore status quo ante so that a pragmatic approach is possible and the future of small states are safe.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/special-category-status-for-manipur/

War tourism in india: The 70th anniversary commemorations of the Battle of Imphal

By Col VY Gidh, VSM (Retd) `A Nation That Forgets It`s Past, Has No Future` – Winston Churchill Introduction The 70th Anniversaryof The Battle of Imphal and Kohimawas held from

Photo: WW II Imphal campaign foundation

Photo: WW II Imphal campaign foundation

By Col VY Gidh, VSM (Retd)

`A Nation That Forgets It`s Past, Has No Future`
– Winston Churchill

Introduction

The 70th Anniversaryof The Battle of Imphal and Kohimawas held from March to June 2014. It was 70 years ago that Manipur and Nagaland were witness to an epic battle between the British-led Allies and the Japanese and the Indian National Army (INA). Unfortunately not many in India remembered these twin battles and except for a few stray reports, the Commemorations or commencement of War Tourism in India were hardly noticed by our national media. It was a wonderful experience visiting Manipur to participate in some of the events during these Commemorations.

The Battle of Imphal and The Battle of Kohima were voted as `Britain`™s Greatest Battles`™ in a contest conducted by Britain`™s National Army Museum in London in April 2013, beating others like Normandy and Battle of Trafalgar. The result surprised people in England who thought Waterloo was their greatest feat. And yet, many Indians are unaware of these battles, and that Manipur and Nagaland were the key battlegrounds during the Second World War. Field Marshal WJ Slim, Commander of the British 14th Army during the battles, was voted as the best British general of all time with Duke of Wellington, they were both schooled in warfare in India.

70th Anniversary Commemorations

The 70th Anniversary Commemorations of The Battle of Imphal were organized by the Manipur Tourism Forum and 2nd World War Imphal Campaign Foundation from 23rd March to 28th June 2014. The programme involved a series of events to mark and commemorate key dates from the Battles of Imphal. The aim was to draw attention to the extraordinary events that took place across Manipur from March to July 1944 andpay tribute to the martyrs who died fighting during these fierce battles.

The Eastern Heritage Trails, Imphal has recently introduced a series of guided tours focused on the Battle of Imphal. An initiative of MrHemant SinghKatoch, son of a retired Army officer and an ex-United Nations and Red Cross official, it isthe first-of-its-kind of War Tourism in India.Having undertaken field assignments in conflict regions like East Timor and Congo while in the UN, Katoch wanted to come back to India and research about the World War II battlefields in India, when he realized the possibility of War Tourism in India. These half or full- day tours cover prominent sites in and around Imphaland across Manipur related to this historic battle. They include the Battle of Imphal Tour-a half day tourin and around the city of Imphal; the Tiddim Road, the Shenan Saddle, the Battle of Sangshak, the INA and Victoria Cross Tours. The most popular Battle ofImphal Tour includes the Second World War era airfield-Koirenge; the two War Cemeteries (Imphal Indian Army and the Imphal War Cemetery), which commemorates the memories of theIndian and British soldiers who died during the War; battlefield visits around Imphal and the colonial era Gen Slim`™s Cottage, which is now a heritage property in Kangla Fort Complex. It was once the headquarters of the British 14th Army Commander from where he planned and initially fought the Burma Campaign.

Sketch of Battle of Imphal

The Battles of Imphal and Kohima

The Battles of Imphaland Kohimapitted 1,20,000 British-led Allies against 70,000 Japanese and 7000 INA soldiers in some of the bitterest fighting seen during the Second World War. `Fought between 07 March and 18 July 1944, the Battles of Imphal and Kohima were the the turning point of one of the most grueling campaigns of the Second World War. The decisive Japanese defeat in Northeast India became the springboard for the Fourteenth Army`™s subsequent re-conquest of Burma`: National Army Museum, London.

The two battles were the result of the 1944 U-Go Offensive of the Japanese 15th Army under Lt Gen RenyaMutaguchi. The plan was to conquer India and use it as a launch pad of future Japanese military campaigns. It initially involved the capture of Imphal, cut off the key Imphal-Kohima-Dimapur road and prevent any British invasion of Myanmar (now Burma), which Japan had controlled since 1942. During the battle, 70,000 Japanese soldiers marched to Manipur to fight the Allied forces. Imphal, which was heavily invested by the Japanese 15th and 33rd Divisions of the Japanese 15th Army, was defended by the IV Corps of the British Fourteenth Army, comprising the 17th, 20th and 23rd Indian Infantry Divisions, including the 50th Indian Parachute Brigade.

While 16,000 on the Allies side were either killed or wounded at Imphal-Kohima, 12,000 of them died during the Battle of Imphal. An estimated 30,000 Japanese soldiers died due to fighting or disease in the simultaneous battles of Imphal and Kohima, and on the retreat back to Burma.Soldiers carried the injured back towards the Chindwin river. Those who could not be carried were left behind. The fingers of many of the dead were cut to be cremated back home. It was the greatest defeat on land in Japan`™s history and the vast majority of casualties occurred during the Battle of Imphal. Among the 7000 INA men who accompanied the Japanese till Moirang, about 400 were killed in the battle, while 1500 died of disease and starvation during their withdrawal towards Burma. Till this day skeletons presumed to belong to the dead soldiers are found in Manipur.

The British military historian Dr Robert Lyman who played a prominent role in preparing the case for the Battle of Imphal and Kohima, notes that Imphal-Kohimawas one of the four turning-point battles of the Second World War; the Battles at Stalingrad, El Alamein, and in the Pacific between the US and Japanese navies were the other three. The Victoria Cross (VC), the highest British military decoration for bravery, was awarded to five personnel during the Battle of Imphal and two during the Battle of Kohima.

The ProgrammeDuring the Commemorations

The Inauguration Ceremony held on 23rd March 2014 was attended by several dignitaries including the Japanese Ambassador to India, Mr Takeshi Yagi. Thecommemoration of the prominent battles started with the `Battle of Sangshak`™ on 26th March, where troops from 152 ParaBn with 4/5 Maratha held the garrison against a strong Japanese force. While 152 Para Bn later fell back to the Imphal plains, 4/5 Maratha (now 4 Maratha LI) was ordered to hold the defences around Sangshak. The delay imposed by the battalion on the advance of the Japanese Army enabled the Allies to land forces by air at Imphal and reinforce Kohima by land, thereby saving the fall of these two important locations. The first battle fought on Indian soil from 21-26 March 1944, it was a prelude to the famous battles of Kohima and Imphal. The next was the `Start of Imphal Siege`™ at KanglaTongbi on 7th April, where the Japanese forces planned to capture the large supply depot. A handful of non-combatants of mostly Ordnance soldiers belonging to the Advance Ordnance Depot led by Maj Boyd repulsed a series of attacks of the Japanese forces before troops from the erstwhile 14 Punjab and 9Jat Regiments could arrive. This epic stand enabled the Allies sufficient time in moving back 4000 tons of war-like stores.The Depot was selected to accompany the British Commonwealth Occupation Force to Japan after the war. Today KanglaTongbiWar Memorial is a revered shrine visited by all. A tradition still followed by all young AOC officers is that upon commissioning they first visit the memorial at KanglaTongbi. The DG Ordnance Services and Senior Colonel Commandantalong with WW II veterans and their families from Britain and Japan laid a wreath on 7th April.

The `Battle ofNungsigum`™ was commemorated on 13th April, where Jemadar Abdul Hafiz of 9 Jat Regimenthad won the first VC on Indian soil at Runaway Hill on 6th April 1944. This 1000 feet massif located North East of Imphal town which dominated several road junctions and the vital Koirenge airstrip, was recaptured by the Allies on 13th April after its fall to the Japanese forces.

On 14th April, the INA day was commemorated at Moirang. Col Shaukat Ali Malik of INA had hoisted the Indian tricolour for the first time in India at Moirang on 14th April 1944, where the INA Memorial and Museum stands today. The INA`™s 1st Division had participated in the Battle of Imphal, which included the Gandhi, Subhash and Azad Brigades, as well as INA Special Groups attached to the Japanese Divisions. The other battles commemorated were the `Battle of Tengnoupal`™ near the Indo-Myanmar border on 19th May;`MaibamLokpaching`™(Red Hill) on the Tiddim Road on 29th May, where Sergeant Hanson Victor Turner of West Yorkshire Regiment and RfnGanju Lama of 7th Gurkha Rifles won their VCs at Ningthoukhong on the Tiddim Road; and `Silchar-Bishenpur Track`™ on 25th June, where NaikAgansingRai and Sub NetraBahadurThapa of 5th Gurkha Rifles won their VCs on 26 th June 1944.Some old Manipuri elders who had witnessed these battles as children, also narrated their experiences at many locations.

Since our Battalion, 14 Punjab (Nabha Akal) had served in Manipur during late 1990s`™ while insurgency was at its peak, we have very fond memories of our two years tenure in the Imphal Valley. MaibamLokpaching (Red Hill or Point 2926) was located in the unit area and I proudly recollect meeting Viscount Slim (son of the famous Field Marshal) in April 1998, when he visited Imphal with a British delegation comprising of 50 war veterans of the 14th Army and wards and sons of men killed in the War. The Viscount`™s son, Dr Hugo Slimwas also among the group. MaibamLokpaching was the scene of one of the bloodiest battles involving hand to hand combat fought on the hillock code named Red Hill, adjacent to the Imphal-Tiddim Road. Fought in the last phase of the Imphal Campaign in May 1944, this battle turned the tide of the war in favour of the Allies. Red Hill was later Gen Slim`™s Tactical Headquarters during the initial stages of the Burma Campaign.

The Japanese War Veterans had constructed `India Peace Memorial`™ at the bottom of Red Hill in 1977 in memory of the Japanese martyrs who sacrificed their lives in the battle. The memorial`™s gate faces Japan and is a pilgrimage for Japanese tourists who pay homage to their fallen comrades.

The Closing Ceremony of the three-month long programme held at the Imphal War Cemetery on 28th June 2014 was attended by representatives from Britain, the United States, Australia and Japan. Dr Hugo Slim, grandson of Field Marshal Slim was among the dignitaries. The highlight was the presence of few World War II veterans including 93 year old Sokhojang, who had fought in the Battle of Imphal.

AtSangshak, 84 year local YA Shishakproudly showed us his museum set up at home. It contains rare Allied, Japanese and INA artefacts, photographs, medals, flags, paintings besides other collected items from the World War sites. The SangshakWar Memorial honouringthe valour and sacrifice of the martyrs of 152 Para Bn, 4/5 Maratha and locals of Sangshak village was made many years back, while the Japanese have recently constructed a War Memorial in honour of their martyrs who died during this battle. In Imphal, we were delighted to visit a similar war museum set up at home by one of the founding members of the 2nd World War Imphal Campaign Foundation.

Importance of the Battles

Dr Slim says, `The India/Burma Campaign was long known as the `Forgotten Army`™ in the UK. In the British popular image, the greatest battles and heroes were all in Europe. Scholars the world over are recognizing the significance of the Campaign as the beginning of modern integrated mobile warfare (air supply etc) and a model of defensive and offensive warfare. The Campaign is now taught in the UK and US military academies. Imphal is now recognized as the longest battle of WW II and the combination of so many different nationalities in the XIV Army makes it an important example of what today is called diversity.`

Louis Allen in his book `Burma `“ The Longest War`™ writes, ` Imphal`¦the last place on earth one would choose as the venue of a vast military campaign. Yet it was here that Japanese, British, Indians, Gurkhas, arrived in 1944 to kill other in their thousands. The Japanese were driven by the dream of invading India: the others by the need to stop them.`

Unfortunately, we in India seem to have forgotten these famous battles. Independent India has never shown any care or concern about these war veterans, as they are a living memorial of India`™s colonial past `“ men who fought a `foreign war`™ for a foreign government.It was for the first time that the Indian Army fought a foreigner invader on Indian soil. And it was for the first time the seemingly invincible armies of the Emperor of Japan were decisively beaten by Indian soldiers. It makes us proud of the contribution of our Armed Forces. As per one of our war veteran `“ `Victory in the Second World War has been, by far, our biggest military achievement, yet hardly anyone in India talks about it. The country that sent the largest voluntary Army in history to fight the war, has forgotten the sacrifices of our soldiers`. Fortunately, this seems to be changing with the Indian government gradually acknowledging the significant role played by our Armed Forces during the World Wars.

The Indian Army During the World Wars

During the First World War, 1.3 million Indian soldiers played a major role in the fighting in European, Mediterranean and Middle East theatres. They won 11 Victoria Crosses, while 74,000 soldiers died and 66,000 were wounded. 2014 also happens to be the Centenary year of First World War.

During the Second World War, the Indian Army began the war in 1939 numbering just 2,00,000 men. However by the end of the war, it became the largest volunteer Army in history, rising to over 2.5 million men. It fought gallantly in North Africa, Middle East and Italy, though a major force was committed to fighting the Japanese Army. Their valour and grit was recognized with the award of 31 VCs. These campaigns cost over 36,000 lives, whilst 34,354 were wounded and 67,340 became Prisoners of War.

War Tourism

Many Western countries and some South East Asian countries have preserved the World War sites.`The Battle Box`™ is one of the most important WW II sitesand premier tourist attractions in Singapore. War Tourism is a flourishing industry in Europe with Tour Operators conducting `battlefield tours`™ of World War sites and War Memorials for scholars, tourists and families of war veterans. The 70th Anniversary Commemorations of WW II at Monte Cassinoor Normandy in May and June, or the Centenary Commemorations of WW I this year are fine examples. The visit to Imphal for the 70th Anniversary was enriching, given this was the first-of-its-kind of War Tourism in India. Among the distinguished visitors I could interact with in Imphalwere a group of British scholars, wards of war veterans and the Curator of The Kohima Museum at Imphal Barracks, York. They later left for Kohima to visit the battlefield sites and pay homage to their martyrs at the famous Kohima War Cemetery.

We had a fine taste of War Tourism last year, when we visited the Italian battlefields where our 257 year old unit, 14 PUNJAB (NABHA AKAL), the erstwhile NABHA AKAL INFANTRY had fought with distinction against the Germans during WW II. It was very heartening walking through some of the remote locations and villages in Italy where our troops had served, and the locals speaking well of the Indian soldiers who fought during the War. We later paid homage to our unit and other Indian soldiers commemorated in the famous Cassino War Cemetery and other War Cemeteries in Italy.

Conclusion

Manipur and Nagaland have great potential for tourism in terms of natural beauty,adventure, culture or tribal celebrations.Manipur, knownas `Jewel of India`™ by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, has inspired descriptions such as the `Switzerland of the East.`™ Famous for its indigenous sports and sportsmen, it has produced icons like Mary Kom. The `Manipur Sangai Festival`™held in Imphal from 21`“30 November and the `Hornbill Festival`™ in Kisema, near Kohima from 01-10 December every year draws many tourists from India and abroad. The 6th and 7th Manipur Polo Internationals were conducted in Imphal during November 2012 and 2013 respectively with teams from the US, Germany, some South East countries and India participating. This new form of `Polo Tourism`™ was a big success. There have been British and Japanese tourists who come to visit the war cemeteriesand memorials in Imphal and Kohima.The successful culmination of the 70th Anniversary Commemorations in Imphal this year shows that War Tourism is one area where these states can focus on.The British Fourteenth Army was a multinational force and the Battles of Imphal and Kohima provide us an excellent opportunity to project ourselves to the rest of the world and reach out to those countries which fought in these battles. The 75th Anniversary of these famous battles will be commemorated in 2019 and we should plan to conduct the same in a befitting manner. War Tourism would not onlyhelp in curbing insurgency by providingall round development in the region, it would also assist in promotion of India`™s `Look East-ActEast Policy`™.

(This article by the author had originally been published in The Infantry (India) Journal, December 2014 issue and is reproduced here with permission.)

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/war-tourism-in-india-the-70th-anniversary-commemorations-of-the-battle-of-imphal/

Forgive us Sanatomba; we could`nt mourn for you then

By YambemLaba On the 30th of June 1993 the day R.K.Sanatomba was shot dead by suspected UNLF activists the bulk of journalists who mattered in Manipur was in Darjeeling as

By YambemLaba

On the 30th of June 1993 the day R.K.Sanatomba was shot dead by suspected UNLF activists the bulk of journalists who mattered in Manipur was in Darjeeling as a part of AMWJU trip to Arunachal Pradesh,Sikkim and Darjeeling.PradipPhanjoubam and Pokanapham`™sEigyaGopal were also there besidesme.We got the news the next day through an agency despatch that got carried in the Calcutta papers.

Not many of us knew who Sanatomba was but I knew that he was R.K.Nemai`™s brother and for about half an hour we discussed about who the assailants might have been but when it was told that he was Editor of a journal called KanglaLanpung we knew that it had something to do with the on-going strife brewing up in the UNLF,the one led by R.K.Meghen aka Sanayaima now interned in Gauhati Jail and he once trusted aide NamoijamOken.We did not even stood in silence for a minute then in memory of the departed soul maybe because he was not a member of the All Manipur Working Journalists Union or maybe because we were not just sensitive enough to the scenario opening up for scribes in Manipur.

Sanatomba was not a numberedmember of the UNLF that he should have been caught in the fratricidal wave that was sweeping across Manipur was not thinkable then..He was just another youth who loved Manipur and was caught in the cross currents of the turbulent history of Manipur and maybe he followed the lateAchouToijamba too closely and became the founder general secretary of the Manipur National Federation or the Man Federation as it was known then.AchouToijamba or Tachou as we used to call him during the Pan-Manipuri days used to spend a lot of time at our household as my cousin was the late YambemTejendra former General Secretary of the Pan Manipiuri Youth League and Editor of the Lamyanbajournal.Tachou is no more with us today but he was a master organiser and later became the founding Chairman of the KYKL when it was finally formed in January 1994 amalgamating factions of the KCP and Prepak and UNLF Cadres who chose to follow Oken.The killings did not stop with Sanatomba and the KYKL hit back with full gusto culminating in the killing of ArambamSamarendra founder General Secretary of the UNLF .He was killed on the 10th of June 2000 and the KYKL later owned up responsibility for the action.Sometime later thanks to the efforts of the Prepak hostilities between the UNLF ceased and everyone heaved a sigh of relief.

However the killings of journalists did not cease.Itspreaded to the hill areas and A Lalrohu Hmar editor a Hmar Language daily ,Shan was shot dead by the Hmar Revolutionary Army in October 1999.Then came the turn of 70 years old ThounaojamBrajamani Editor of the Manipur News.He was shot dead on 20th August 2000 by an armed organisation who did not own up the Killing.The same group that did away with Brajamani is also believed to have fired the fatal shots that killed YambemMegha an upcoming social activist and a correspondent of the North East Vision a TV channel on 14 October 2012.
.Again there was no owning up.And all that the scribes could do was to stage a day long dharna in front of the Keishampat Power house on both the killings.The police registered their mandatory FIRs and all was forgotten soon.

Then came the killing in 2008 of Konsam Rishi Kanta a young scribe with the Imphal Free Press by suspected Manipur Police Commandos.This time the journalist fraternity really woke up and put enough pressure on the State authorities that they were compelled to order a CBI probe into the killing. In January 2012 anothert journalist in Churachandpur by the name of KhupkholinSimte was also gunned down.He was the editor of Lenlaimagazine.Then came the killing in the not so recent past of another fellow TV journalist,NanaoThangjam in the line of duty when he was shot dead by police personals in Tangmeiband on 24 December 2012.This time the entire who`™s who of the State machinery turned up at the Press Club to pay their last respect to our slain comrade as a fallout of the infamous molestation case of budding Manipuri film starlet Momoko in Chandel.The Press now a much more cohesive body the AMWJU was able to wrest out a big compensation for his killing and a government job for his widowed wife.

While the Press could stand up against wrongs done to its fraternity it still could not get away from the vortex of the non-state actors.On 9th February RatanLuwang then General Secretary of the AMWJU was shot at by one of the numerous factions of the KCP who wanted a quick and easy name for themselves as a deadly force perhaps to ease their path to extortion and labelled baseless charges against Ratan to justify their action-which was not only contradicted by himself in person but also by the KYKL.Ratan survived the deadly attack but had to undergo intensive medical treatment and is today a national leader of the Press fraternity.

The Press continues to be part of the game plan of the numerous group of `patriotic`™ armed non-state actors many of whom have not even fired a catapult(Naori) shot even at an unarmed home guard personnel but is active in planting bombs at residences of SOs,Pradhans and contractors all in the name of liberating Manipur.They would like to diktat their terms of what to print or not to print or broadcast prompting the AMWJU to come with a set of `working rules` and as a result the then President of AMWJU AhongsangabamMobi got a bomb hurled at his house which incidentally exploded.

I was present on Sanatomba`™s 12th Death Anniversary-this being the first time I was invited and listened to Prof.RajendraKshetri`™sdiscourse on Media and Contemporary Manipuri Society as a part of the observance.He was full of praise for the Manipuri media but I found him lacking in the role of the Press in Manipur as the 4th Estate in the literal sense of the term.I recollect running a column called the Acute Angle in the Imphal Free Press which was actually playing the role of the opposition in the State Assembly revealing scams after scam.The opening salvo of the Acute Angle was entitled `Potrait of a Minister as a Conman` and a series of articles thereafter contributed in my humble opinion to the fall of the then Rishang Government in 1997.While Nipamacha could garner enough votes on the Assembly Floor to topple Rishang the public opinion against Rishang Government was built up by the Acute Angles.I am mentioning this because Prof.Rajendra had mentioned about how ArunShourie`™s article led to the dismissal of the A R Antulay Government in Maharastra.

Then there is also the infamous case of the Lottery Scam-when the then Finance Minister in the NipamachaGovernment ,H.Lokhon attempted to wave Rs.1.67 crores due to the State from three Lotery Agents of Manipur all in the name of resource mobilisation.OjaNipamcha was forced to withdraw the waiver order and constituted a Cabinet Sub-Committee to probe the Lottery dealings in Manipur.Then after sometime the sub-committee was constituted I had a very surprised visitor at my office in the form of former fellow scribe and then a Cabinet Minister in the Nipamacha ministry, PuT.N.Haokip-he was a member of the Cabinet sub-committee and came to me with a request to me to make available copies of the Government documents in my possession ,for according to him the Finance Minister had burnt all the documents relating to the lotteries in Manipur.This then was and is still Manipur, a failed State which for us scribes is a `Reporter`™s Paradise`.

Relating to the coverage of the National media on affairs in Manipur I cannot speak about other national media but The Statesman for which I had served as a Special Correspondent between 1990 -1998 was more pro-active in coverage of events in Manipur than many of our local media.For instance two articles which I wrote,the first entitled `UNLF`™s Long March to Geneva` and the second was` PLA:A New Dawn` was according to many legal experts could have been termed seditious in nature was published in The Statesman.And also during the Naga:Kuki killing days I got three by lined headlines stories printed on three consecutive days in my paper.Also how one handles the head office either in Calcutta or Delhi can determine how they treat our despatches-for where in India do you find MLAs armed with guns in hand seeking out to kill the Speaker in the Assembly building except in Manipur and how we package our story with a national relevance is what matters for coverage in the national media in my most humble opinion.
I took a 14 years Sabbatical from active journalism during which I had served as a Member in the Manipur Human Rights Commission and later also as Director of the Jawaharlal Nehru Manipur Dance Academy but in 2012 I returned as the Special Representative of The Statesman and am currently facing a Rs.50 Croes defamation suit from UtlouChaoba President of the Manipur BJP for exposing his corrupt deeds at RIMS and elsewhere.

Anyway thanks to the efforts of Sanatomba`™s elder brother R.K.Nemai who by his own account is one of the most incorruptibleand steadfast officer that Manipur has seen in recent times Sanatomba lives on in the minds and memories of Manipur and also lending recognition and encouragement bestowing an award to a selected scribe thereby encouraging and supporting the media fraternity in the State.

At this juncture my humble appeal to the powers that are at the All Manipur Working Journalists Union is to put up a scroll of honour at the Press Club depicting the names of the journalists who had been killed in their line duty beginning with Sanatomba and ending with Nanao irrespective of whether they members of AMWJU or not, with a lot of space below for more journalists might be shot dead in the near future still

And as for me all that I can say and that too I think represents the feelings of many of my fellow scribes is `Sanatomba,forgive us for we could not mourn for you,when you died`

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/forgive-us-sanatomba-we-couldnt-mourn-for-you-then/

National Doctor`s Day 1st July 2015

By Dr. Khetrimayum Kala Singh `Doctors perform vital diagnosis, treatment and care 365 days per year, this is the day to honor them` Introduction Doctor`™s Day is observed to pay

By Dr. Khetrimayum Kala Singh

`Doctors perform vital diagnosis, treatment and care 365 days per year, this is the day to honor them`

Introduction

Doctor`™s Day is observed to pay tribute to Dr. B.C. Roy and salutes the spirit of his dedication. The red carnation was chosen as the official symbol of doctors Day because of the color of the flower is in spirit of characters of medical profession. It represents adoration, charity, sacrifice, bravery and audacity.

When is the National Doctor`™s Day in 2015

The national Doctor`™s Day is always observed in the United States of America on the 30th Day of March each year. in India it is observed on 1st July every year.

The origin and History of the National Doctor`™s Day

Following overwhelming approved by the United States Senate and the House of Representatives, on October 30, 1990 President George Bush Signed March 30th as `National Doctor`™s Day`.

Doctor`™s Day in India was established by the Government of India in 1991 to be recognized and celebrated every year on 1st of July as National Doctors day. It is celebrated on 1st of July on the birth and death anniversary of the most famous physician of India Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy (Dr. B C Roy) to pay lots of honor and tribute. He was honored with the great Indian civilian award called Bharat Ratna on 4th of February in 1961. He was born on 1st of July in 1882 in the Patna, Bihar. He had completed his medical graduation from Calcutta and returned to the India in 1911 after completing his MRCP and FRCS degrees in London and began his medical career as a physician in India in the same year.

Later he joined the Calcutta Medical College as a teaching staff and afterwards he moved to the Campbell Medical School and then to Carmichael Medical College. He was a most famous physician and renowned educationalist as well as a freedom fighter as he joined the Mahatma Gandhi during Civil Disobedience Movement. Later he became Indian National Congress leader and then Chief Minister of the West Bengal. He passed away on his birthday means 1st of July in 1962, after 80 years of his great service in this world. Behind his name, Dr. B. C. Roy National Award was instituted in the year 1976 to pay honor, respect and tribute.

Why National Doctors Day Is Celebrated

National doctors day is celebrated every year all across the India on 1st of July to provide honor to the most famous and legendary physician as well as 2nd Chief Minister of the West Bengal, Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy.

It is a great observance in India which helps in fulfilling the actual need of doctors and physicians in the lives of everyone as well as their significant roles and responsibilities. The annual celebration of this awareness campaign helps common public to get aware about the roles, importance and the precious care of the doctors.

Large population crowd of the India depends in many ways on the physicians and their quality treatments which show the remarkable improvements and progress in the cure and treatments methods. Annual celebration of the doctors day has been proved as a way of encouragement and big eye opener for all the physicians and doctors of the India to wake up from their failing career due to the lack of commitment towards their profession.

National doctors day celebration has been marked as the day of respect for entire professional doctors who have made their great efforts in saving the life of patients. Doctors day means a whole day which has been dedicated to the medical profession especially for doctors and physicians to commemorate their efforts and roles. It is a day to say them vote of thanks for their love, affection and priceless care of their patients.

National Doctors Day Celebration

National doctors day is being celebrated for years by the government and non-government healthcare organizations in order to get familiar with the doctors contributions. Staff of the healthcare organizations organizes variety of events and activities for the campaign celebration. `Rotary Club of the North Calcutta and North East Calcutta Social & Welfare Organization` organizes big event every year for the grand celebration of the doctors day.

A discussion program is organized to discuss about the various aspects of medical profession such as health check-up, cure, prevention, diagnosis, proper treatment of the disease and so many. Rotational medical services by the doctors are also promoted and encouraged in the community for better and healthy social development. Free medical checkup camps are organized at many health centers and public places by the health care organizations to promote quality medical services without cost among common public.

General screening test camps are also organized to assess the health status, health counseling, health nutrition talks and chronic diseases awareness among poor people and senior citizens. Free blood test, random blood sugar test, ECG, EEG, blood pressure checkup and etc activities are organized to aware people about the priceless roles of doctors in everyone lives.

Some of the activities at the schools and colleges level are also organized for encouraging more youth students toward the dedicated medical profession. Discussion on the medical topics, quiz competitions, sports activities, availing scientific tools to students for the creative knowledge, implementing new and effective educational strategies for making the medical profession strong and more responsible.

On the 1st of July patients greet their doctors by distributing greeting cards, appreciation cards, Ecards, giving them bunch of flowers or bouquets, greeting messages through the mails and etc. Special meetings, party and dinner are organized at the health centers, hospitals, nursing homes or at homes by the doctors in order to commemorate importance of day and contributions of doctors towards medical profession.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/national-doctors-day-1st-july-2015/

LTTE created cyanide cult

(Book Review: Sri Lanka The New Country) By Anil Bhat Theravada, `the teaching of the elders` or `the ancient teaching`, the oldest surviving Buddhist school `” founded in India and

(Book Review: Sri Lanka The New Country)

By Anil Bhat

Theravada, `the teaching of the elders` or `the ancient teaching`, the oldest surviving Buddhist school `” founded in India and considered to be relatively conservative, and generally closest to early Buddhism `” has, for many centuries, been the predominant religion of Sri Lanka, accounting for about 70 per cent of the population.

Following the exit of the British, Sinhala Buddhist nationalism gradually gained ground to the extent of becoming discriminatory against minorities, particularly Tamils , as reflected by the Sinhala Only Act passed in 1956. While colonisation of the Eastern Province inhabited mainly by Tamils had already begun in the 1950s, the Republican Constitution adopted in 1972, according Buddhism privileged status and denying the protection to minorities as the earlier Constitution did, came as a further shock. Shortly afterwards, `standardisation` of marks for university admissions, meaning non-Sinhalas had to get higher marks, added further insult to injury. With the response by the State to peaceful protest by Tamils often being violent, the last straw that broke the camel`™s back `” the rise of Tamil militancy `” was the Black July killings of 1983.

On July 23, 1983, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE also known as the Tamil Tigers), a separatist militant organisation under Velupillai Prabhakaran began its bloody insurgent fight aiming to create an independent Tamil state named Tamil Eelam in the north and the east of the island.

When escalation of level of the conflict in Sri Lanka led to the pouring of refugees into India, in 1987, the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, took the decisive step to push the Indo-Sri Lankan Accord through and on the request of then Sri Lankan President J.R. Jayewardene, the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF), formed under the accord`™s mandate, was inducted into Sri Lanka.

Maj. Gen. Raj Mehta was serving in directorate general of military operations, Army Headquarters, when the IPKF was sent to Sri Lanka and maintained his interest. Lost Victory is the result of his sustained incisive research.

As per the terms of the accord, IPKF`™s main task was to disarm not just the LTTE, but also all the different militant groups. It was to be quickly followed by the formation of an Interim Administrative Council. IPKF was initially not expected to be involved in any significant combat, but within a few months, it became embroiled in battle with the LTTE to enforce peace. The differences which cropped up owing to LTTE trying to dominate the Interim Administrative Council and also refusing to disarm, a pre-condition to enforce peace in the island, and soon led to the LTTE attacking the IPKF. The prolonged 32 months of IPKF`™s Operation Pawan was fought at a disproportionately high cost of the lives of over 1,100 Indian Amy personnel. This was largely because of a flawed political approach, hurry and adhocism which also meant lack of preparation and lack of vital and even basic intelligence and maps for IPKF in the face of the LTTE, which was highly trained in guerilla warfare, extensive use of explosives and motivated as well as its ruthlessnes of using women and child soldiers to fight. Following the election of the Vishwanath Pratap Singh government in India and on the request of the then newly-elected Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa, the IPKF de-inducted from Sri Lanka in March 1990. Whereas Rajiv Gandhi visited Sri Lanka during Operation Pawan and even escaped a crude attack by Sri Lankan Navy sailor, what was most disgraceful was the government`™s cold reception to the IPKF, when it returned back home.

For almost 26 years, the insurgency brought misery upon the people, ruined the environment and economy of the country and took a toll on 80,000 lives. 32 countries, including the United States, India, Australia, Canada and the member nations of the European Union declared LTTE a terrorist organisation. After two decades of fighting and three failed attempts at peace talks, a ceasefire was declared in December 2001, with its agreement, facilitated by international mediation, signed in 2002. Then again, hostilities were renewed in late 2005 and the conflict intensified. This time major military offensives against the LTTE beginning in July 2006, drove the LTTE out of the entire Eastern province, after which it declared to `resume their freedom struggle to achieve statehood`. In 2007, the offensive shifted to the north and on January 2, 2008, the Sri Lanka government formally announced its withdrawal from the ceasefire agreement accusing the LTTE of repeatedly violating it. Thereafter, Sri Lanka`™s Armed Forces became quite effctive by destroying a number of LTTE`™s large arms smuggling vessels and an international crackdown on the funding it. Eventually, the entire area previously controlled by the Tamil Tigers, including their de-facto capital Kilinochchi, main military base Mullaitivu and the entire A9 highway, was captured leading to the LTTE to finally admitting defeat on May 17, 2009.

Velupillai Prabhakaran of Velvettithurai, inspired by his teacher, Venugopal, began his fight, creating the cult of the cyanide capsule necklace and `blow yourself up` suicide bombers and believing in `Nature is my Friend, Life is my Philosopher and History my Guide` became a larger-than-life figure. Over the years he became extremely elusive and even callous enough to remain very safe himself, sending thousands of his cadres, including young boys and girls, to die. Ironically, he is reported to have died without the cyanide capsule on his neck. Over 60% of LTTE cadres were below the age of 16. So, when Padma Rao Sundarji got to meet Prabhakaran and asked him about recruiting/forcing underage youth into LTTE, his denial was an outright lie.

While the LTTE under Prabhakaran`™s directions killed Rajiv Gandhi, an interesting finding of the Jain Commission as recorded in Justice Milap Chand Jain`™s conclusion, reads `Ramesh Dalal`™s (author of Rajiv Gandh`™s Assassination: The Mystery Unfolds, UBS) evidence does establish the involvement of Chandraswami in the assassination.` He also recommended a further probe and subsequently, the Central Government tabled the Action Taken Report (ATR) in 1998 and constituted the Multi Disciplinary Monitoring Committee (MDMA) in 1999.

The book, in four parts, with 22 chapters packed with lots of details and thereby quite useful for reference, ends with a copy of the letter of resignation of Sri Lanka`™s former Army Chief, Gen. G.S.C. Fonseka, who stood against President Mahinda Rajapakse in the country`™s presidential elections held on Tuesday.

Anil Bhat, a retired Army officer, is a defence and security analyst based in New Delhi

Last month and for the first time since the end of the war in May 2009, I returned to Sri Lanka. Of course I could hear the drumbeats. The UNHRC, human rights bodies, Tamil Nadu politicians, the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora but even New Delhi drawing rooms: Everyone outside Sri Lanka was caught in the throes of loud, vociferous rage.

`Damn Sri Lanka, damn the Rajapaksas and damn the Sri Lankan Army `” all three for `genocide`, the Indian head of a US foundation in Delhi told me firmly. Did she mean all 2,00,000 casualties of the war were inflicted by the SLA? Or the reported 40,000 war refugees killed during the last two weeks of the civil war in Mullaithivu? Did she know that the LTTE killed anyone who tried to surrender and pushed human shields ahead of them, firing as they retreated and prompting the Army `” as any fighting force would do against armed terrorists `” to retaliate ? That those poor people who were killed may have been victims of `collateral damage`™? Why didn`™t the UN conduct its own forensic tests on the material provided by a private television channel as `evidence`™ of human rights abuse by Sri Lankan troops, instead of accepting it as the Gospel truth? Why didn`™t the person who distribute the pictures do so to all those interested so we could conduct our own investigation and then comment?

Is the Geneva Convention only applicable to the Sri Lankan army, because it happens to be the only one available, since Sri Lanka is a signatory and the LTTE leadership is dead? What about the LTTE`™s overseas support groups who funded its weapons? Why not try them? For supporting a group which sent children into combat in suicide vests and with cyanide capsules around their necks? The lady had no clue. No, she had never set foot in Sri Lanka but how did that matter? I should shut up.

My trip to Sri Lanka last month was full of surprises. The North and Northeast are being developed at an astounding pace. My driver was a former SLA soldier. In the staff quarter of my Mannar hotel, he had to share a room with a former Tamil Tiger. Four years ago, the two boys would have killed each other without remorse. Now they played carrom, ate together and `” awkwardly embraced, when we left.

In Jaffna, I caught up with Daya Master, the former LTTE spokesman and with many other Tamil acquaintances. I asked everyone about the Rajapaksas. Opinion was like in any other country: Some liked him, others didn`™t. But all claimed `he deserved his second term because he had brought the war to an end.` Agree or disagree, it`™s their country, their vote.

But what about the international Tamil diaspora`™s dangerous persistence with Eelam?

`All blah-blah`, said Daya Master dismissively, like the others I spoke to. `They have done nothing for us and neither has Tamil Nadu. They should leave us alone now.`

Last month, I filed three stories for prominent Indian media houses. Two were interviews (with the Sri Lankan Foreign Minister and Daya Master, who incidentally is a free bird). The third was an opinion.

Abuse flew. I am a `paid`™ journalist, I was a `guest`™ of the Rajapaksas (I wish! I am still reeling from my credit card bills in increasingly expensive Sri Lanka), a Tamil-hater, a Sinhala-hater, etc.

An Indian publisher displayed great enthusiasm for a book on Sri Lanka. I sent a proposal. The reaction was predictable. They only wanted one which did not `gloss over the truth`™. (Read: A `truth`™ that would ensure good international sales, never mind the small matter of veracity and what Sri Lankans are thinking themselves).

On 12 August 2005, around 2300 (UTC+6), Kadirgamar was shot by an LTTE sniper in Colombo as he was getting out of the swimming pool at his private residence in Cinnamon Gardens. Early reports indicate he was shot twice in the head, once in the neck, and once in the body. He was rushed to the Colombo National Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. His hospital report indicates that he died as a result of his wounds. Kadirgamar on many occasions mentioned the LTTE`s threats to his life. Speaking to The Hindu on 29 July 2005, he said “They (LTTE) can get me anytime. I get very serious reports things are hotting up According to Asian Tribune, on 5 September Sri Lankan police arrested two Tamils, Muttiah Sahadevan alias Devan (Kadirgamar`s neighbour`s gardener) and Isidor Arokya Nathar alias Babu. The website alleged that they have confessed to having met Charles of the LTTE intelligence and helping out two alleged assassins. The website further claims that this is seen in some quarters in Sri Lanka as proof that the LTTE was behind his assassination.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/ltte-created-cyanide-cult/

Humane act from music lovers from Manipur

  Humane act from music lovers from Manipur “We started off our donation campaign this afternoon in the scorching heat at around 1 PM from Singjamei Super Market at Imphal

07-Collage-Photo

 

Humane act from music lovers from Manipur

We started off our donation campaign this afternoon in the scorching heat at around 1 PM from Singjamei Super Market at Imphal in Manipur. As we accessed from one shop to another for the fund collection, we came across a lot of good people with good hearts and the response was immense. But we felt a bit discouraged when some people didn’t respond well as we were assumed to be a group of cons; but still we stuck to our motive and moved on with those who helped us.
remarked a group of music lover from Manipur on 9th May 2015.

On 25th April, a massive earthquake hit Nepal, and like all of us this group of boys saw what we all saw in the newspapers and TV – the devastation and the lives lost in Nepal. But this group of four (metal) music lovers – Albert Nongmaithem, Niranjan Sanjenbam, Ranjan Yendrembam and Vavanda Khumukcham, didn’t sit idle like most of us when civilians in the neighbouring country suffered a lot due to the deadly natural calamity. This team of four stood up wanting to do something to help the helpless people. They launched a campaign by the name – ‘Help NEPAL by music lovers of Manipur’, and started to collect money from fellow friends, from the music community, from shops in and around Imphal.

The donation they got are not from the elite class but from the common man (music fans/ supporters, bands, jam room/ recording studio owners, musicians, music community, vegetable vendors Emas (mothers), auto rickshaw drivers, etc), just meagre amounts of 10 Rs, 20 Rs, 30 Rs and 50 Rs. After a month now, they gathered Rs 38,092/-, and have sent to Nepal as a relief fund for the affected people.

They are very transparent, nothing is concealed. The contribution list – names of donors and amounts they donated are all listed on their Facebook page. The transaction details of the amount sent to Nepal (the recipient is Sang Thiling Sherpa, of Bhenchen Monastery, Nepal) are put up on the social network.

The rock music community of Manipur, India, salutes this humane act of this group of music lovers from Manipur. In far away Switzerland too, there are a bunch of music lovers spearheaded by Randy Schaller, under the banner “Metal for Nepal” who are playing concerts, recording songs to raise fund for the earth quake victims of Nepal. These are few examples amongst many people around the world, who walked an extra mile to help fellow human being, beyond borders and race.

We hope these selfless acts will spread the love and compassion for one another, will inspire people to be more humane and act to help one another.

In a post of May 13th 2015, this team of music lovers from Manipur wrote, “As we were heading toward Deulaland, Imphal, Manipur, in an auto rickshaw, this brother Irabot who was driving asked us about the campaign. When we reached our destination and was about to give him the fare, he refused and said it was a help from his side to the cause. We were moved thinking that if this person who is merely an auto rickshaw driver could donate then why can’t everyone else????


Ringo Pebam, on behalf of (RMM) Rock Music Manipur.
20th June 2015
(ringo.p@gmail.com)

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/humane-act-from-music-lovers-from-manipur/

China`s Military Power: A Net Assessment

Maj Gen (Dr) GD Bakshi, SM, VSM Knowledge World and CLAWS 376 Pages in hard cover Price: Rs. 980/- Reviewed by Anil Bhat Following the massive earth quake in China`™s

Maj Gen (Dr) GD Bakshi, SM, VSM
Knowledge World and CLAWS
376 Pages in hard cover
Price: Rs. 980/-

Reviewed by Anil Bhat

Following the massive earth quake in China`™s Sichuan region in 2008, reportedly thousands of radiation technicians were sent there. When TV pictures showed oddly collapsed hills across the province, officials eventually admitted there was a network of tunnels underneath, dubbing it their `Underground Great Wall`™. A three year long study conducted by a Georgetown University student translating secret military documents and blogs revealed that China could have as many as 3,000 nuclear warheads, a whole lot more than current estimates of between 80 and 400. The yet unpublished 363-page study, has been discussed in Congress and circulated among defence officials. Researchers at Georgetown University, led by a former senior Pentagon official, concentrated on a 3,000-mile network of tunnels dug largely in Sichuan province by the Chinese Second Artillery, a secretive unit responsible for protecting the country`™s nuclear weapons.

While reported assessment of nuclear weapon stockpiles of the US and Russia is 5000 and 8000 respectively,, China`™s holdings are known only to the concerned Chinese military/civil personnel and political leaders.

China`™s Military Power: A Net Assessment, by Maj Gen entre for G.D. Bakshi, SM, VSM (Knowledge World and Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS)), compiles a mind-boggling mix of China`™s hegemonic military aims, policies, weaponry etcetera, which the author claims that has already raised hackles amongst the many Apologists for China in India`™s political, academic and some media circles.

This book is about the one threat that is nibbling the minds of security planners the world over `“ the looming threat from a rising and increasingly assertive China. The Net assessment has been done by a combat soldier of great experience and a hands on and no – nonsense approach that puts aside all peace slogans and tells us to get ready to face a very aggressive and increasingly hostile China in the years ahead. China`™s grant of $ 46 billion to Pakistan for its energy and infrastructure gives away its hostile intent and strong commitment to build up Pakistan as a major check on India and keep it confined to South Asia. What is a far more direct message is China`™s proposed sale of 8 Yuan class Air Independent Propulsion Submarines and 100 JF-17 Jet fighters to Pakistan. The Yuan Submarines are to provide a nuclear second strike capability to Pakistan. China is also building three more Plutonium plants in Pakistan to further enhance its nuclear arsenal ( which has already crossed India`™s). Could China be more hostile than this? Where China is concerned , Bakshi advises, we should not go by its convoluted white paper language of its peaceful intentions etc., but what by what it does on the ground, air, sea and even more menacing, underwater.

Emerging as a global superpower and a regional hegemon, China`™s economy which grew at a scorching, double-digit pace for two decades and now slowing down, what does the current phase of Chinese aggression against all its neighbours signify? Will China engage in conflict? If so when and where could that conflict occur? Will the main weight of any future Chinese attack be in Arunachal Pradesh or Tawang? China keeps talking of Tawang but a careful analysis of China`™s orbat (order of battle) opposite India by the author,indicates that the Lanzhou Military Region (MR) opposite Ladakh is far stronger than the Chengdu MR opposite Arunachal. Besides in Ladakh- both China and Pakistan can attack India jointly. This is the most pertinent revelation of Bakshi`™s book.

Examining the growth of Chinese military power in an Indo-centric context with emphasis on how it primarily affects India, the book analyses how India must respond. It has an exhaustively researched section on how the Chinese Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) has performed in actual combat since 1949. Actual combat performance is a critical component for accurately forecasting about the PLA`™s future. Any serious endeavour to understand where the PLA is going must also appreciate where the PLA has been .This book provides deep insight into Chinas – India War in 1962.There is a detailed analysis of the evolution of China`™s Military Doctrines and Strategic Culture. With this as a backdrop, there are elaborated chapters each on the structure and modernization of the PLA, PLAN (PLA Navy) and PLAAF (PLA Air Force). The most dangerous for India is the exponential growth in PLAAF`™s airpower. China has already changed Asia`™s balance of power. The Gulf War in 1990 had made China realize how backward it was in terms of military technology and weaponry. What followed was a radical transformation in Chinese military thought and practice. From the Maoist era emphasis on huge levels of motivated military manpower, and an exaggerated emphasis on man over machine, we see once again a transformation towards introduction and absorption of latest technology. This has been accompanied by what appears to be a great reduction in manpower-from over 4 million to about 1.6 million and continuing cuts continue to support modernization. Such an actual reduction is too good to be true. The reduced manpower of PLA has most likely been converted into border police. The dynamic unleashed by the Chinese has prompted the biggest military buildup in Asia since World War-II

The chapter on the Second Artillery Corps (SAC) examines China`™s nuclear force structure and employment doctrines. There is a full chapter devoted to China`™s military industrial complex and China`™s experience of indigenous military production. Though India has lessons to learn, the current Chinese weakness lies in the design and production of engines for jet fighters, tanks and naval ships.

The crux of this book is in the concluding chapters on Alternative Economic and Military Futures for China that could emerge. Whether China will engage in conflict seems not so much a question of `if` but `when`. It will largely be dictated by the performance of the Chinese economy. A sudden disruption may result in an earlier choice of conflict. However, If the Chinese economy continues to boom, it will fuel the military modernization. China may then initiate conflict when it feels its Comprehensive National Power (CNP) has become sufficiently strong in relative terms. This could well happen by the mid of next decade, i.e. 2025, as a Chinese Maj Gen has written.This book is a must read for military professionals and laymen alike. The chorus of protest and laments this book has raised amongst the apologists of China is a clear indication of its very practical and operational analysis of China`™s growing Military capabilities. The growing Air Power of China should be the most worrying factor `“ especially when seen in the light of the steep decline in India`™s squadron strength. Whereas India`™s fighter/ground attack aircraft tally of 815 in 1996 declined to 763 by 2006, China has 2421 of these, apart from 222 bombers which India did away with decades ago..

This book is yet another wake- up call- and most urgent-for India`™s defence.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/chinas-military-power-a-net-assessment/

Russia Involves India In Observing 70th Anniversary Of WW II

By Anil Bhat The Embassy of the Russian Federation held a series of events in New Delhi to mark Russia’s victory in The Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). which was a

By Anil Bhat

The Embassy of the Russian Federation held a series of events in New Delhi to mark Russia’s victory in The Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). which was a major factor for the Allied victory in World War II.

The first event on 24 April 2015 was the inauguration of a five-day film festival, jointly organised by the Russian Centre of Science and Culture (RCSC) and the Citizens’ Film Forum. Each of the five films beginning with inaugural film The Brest Fortress were excellent productions poignantly portraying the ethos and plight of the Russian people in those years of great suffering.

A pleasant surprise was Russia reaching out to the Indian military to be part of the celebrations in New Delhi and Moscow. While many Indian Army veterans were invited to the events in the capital, the spectacular Victory Day Parade at Moscow’s Red Square included an impressive contingent of Indian Army’s Grenadiers Regiment. The chief guest and guest of honour for the inaugural event were retired Maj Gen GD Bakshi and this writer.

In his welcome address, Fedor Rozovskiy, Director of Russian Centre of Science and Culture, recalled the massive devastion caused to Russia by Hitler’s offensive and the huge loss of 27 million Russian people.

Bakshi, dwelt at length upon the heaviest human toll and massive destruction that the erstwhile Soviet Union underwent in comparison with the alliance partners, and appreciated the important role of the country in saving humanity from fascist menace once and for all.

Sergey Karmalito, Senior Counsellor of the Embassy of the Russian Federation in India, thanked the organisers of the function in commemorating a historical landmark event which changed the destiny of mankind.

This writer lauded the glory achieved by the Red Army and the people of the country through sheer sacrifice and sufferings taking a lead among the allied forces in defeating the Germans, particularly their armour of Panzers with Russian T-34 tanks. He also expressed the need of consistent research in bringing out truths and exploding the myths revolving around global wars.

Vimal Mehta, Honorary Secretary, of Citizens’ Film Forum, underlined the need for more film festivals to educate youth on the consequences of wars and the imperative of containing them for development and progress. Aakshat Sinha, Joint Secretary of Citizens’ Film Forum, moderated the programme.

On 27 April there was a fuction at the RCSC to inaugurate a photo exhibition of the Great Patriotic War, again attended by many Indian military veterans.

On 09 May, the Russian Embassy together with the Embassies of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, organised the Great Victory Day celebration at the RCSC. Speaking on that occasion, Russian Ambassador Aexander Kadakin welcomed Indian President Pranab Mukherjee’s visit to Moscow to attend the Victory Day celebration, saying “Russia highly values and welcomes President P.K. Mukherjee’s participation in the celebrations of our victory in the Great Patriotic War against Nazism (1941-1945). It is a telling gesture towards my country of such a long-time and tested friend, as Mr. Mukherjee, as also a symbol of solidarity of the people of India in grateful remembrance of the 27 million lives my country laid on the altar of the Allied Victory. Russia also cherishes India’s active role in the last World War and the sympathy of the most illustrious founding fathers and all sons and daughters of this great land showed for the heroic efforts of the former S
oviet Union. Both Russia and India stood at the cradle of the United Nations Organization. Amity and affection are the only words to describe our friendship for almost seven decades…”

Following a minute’s silence to honour the memory of those who sacrificed their lives in the war, a video of the Victory Day Parade in Moscow shown. Marching with Russian troops down the Red Square, was a contingent of the Indian army’s Grenadiers Regiment, in ceremonial dress with their distinctive white hackles. An Exhibition of Historical Photos of World War II, Links of Time and “Great Patriotic War in Paintings, Graphics and in Human Destiny” was on display at the RCSC, along with photos from Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan.

For 70% of arms and of India’s Armed Forces supplied by erstwhile USSR from the late 1960s onwards, its break-up in December 1991 had resulted in major problems of spares for the various systems. Rediscovering their strategic value to each other and renewing the relationship with a major change from buyer-seller to partners in a joint venture, the first significant step was India and Russia signing an agreement in February 1998, to design, develop, manufacture and market BrahMos missiles. Coined as a combination of Brahmaputra and Moscva rivers, this is a versatile supersonic cruise missile system launchable from submarines, ships, aircraft or land, which was successfully accomplished by 2006. At speeds of Mach 2.5 to 2.8, it is the world’s fastest cruise missile, about three and a half times faster than the American subsonic Harpoon cruise missile.

On 20 January 2004, India’s then defence minister George Fernandes and then visiting Russian Defence Minister, Sergei Ivanov signed India’s biggest-ever defence deal with Russia for the purchase of the aircraft-carrier, Admiral Gorshkov, along with deck-based MiG-29K fighter aircraft and other systems, including torpedo tubes, missile systems and artillery guns, all valued then at $1.5 billion (over Rs. 7,000 crores). The agreement was yet another milestone in Indo-Russian defence cooperation. Speaking at the widely attended joint press conference held in the rear lawns of South Block , both Defence Ministers said talks were on to take the buyer-seller relationship to a higher plane that will include joint research and development of military hardware.

However, not much later in 2004, the shrewdly timed Tehelka sting / leak shattered the deals made by the NDA government with Russia and the UPA’s tenure marked a steep nose-dive in decades old Indo-Russian ties.In April 2013,Russia’s displeasure at India awarding multi-billion dollar military contracts to other countries was expressed through Ambassador Kadakin, who reportedly stated to a daily: “We know what gimmicks are used to manipulate deals…Sometimes, terms of tenders are crafted specifically to get the required results.” He also added that his country may not bid for Indian military tenders in the future. Reminding that Russia had stood by India when strictest sanctions were imposed on it after it conducted nuclear tests and acknowledging that India, as “an emerging superpower”, had the right to build defence ties with other countries, he also pointed out that unlike “some newly-acquired partners”, Russia had never hesitated to transfer the most sensitive defence technologies to India. Referring to the
Akula-II nuclear-powered attack submarine leased to India by Russia in 2012, Mr. Kadakin had asked “Name a country that will lease you a nuclear submarine. Will the Americans, the British or the French lease you such a platform?…This is the unique character of our privileged strategic partnership. Your people have to realise this.”

On 14 June 2014, Prime Minister Modi spent a day on board INS Vikramaditya (formerly Admiral Gorshkov), the largest aircraft carrier inducted into the Indian Navy. Watch this space after his visit to Russia, in July this year.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/russia-involves-india-in-observing-70th-anniversary-of-ww-ii/

ON THE QUESTION OF THE ALIENATION OF THE NORTHE EAST AND THE PROBLEMS

Interview by Bhoopesh, Associate Editor, the Tehelka Weekly, New Delhi. Respondent: Dr. Malem Ningthouja, the Campaign for Peace & Democracy (Manipur).   10th June 2015   1 After more than

Interview by Bhoopesh, Associate Editor, the Tehelka Weekly, New Delhi.
Respondent: Dr. Malem Ningthouja, the Campaign for Peace & Democracy (Manipur).
 
10th June 2015
 
1 After more than 60 years, there seems to be a feeling of alienation for the North East? What do you think the reason for this? How the Indian mainland’s attitude has contributed to this?
 
(a) Experts say that the Indian neo-liberal political economy system functions through perpetuation of caste, tribe, communal and racial differences, consciousness and corresponding sectarian assertions at various levels. In this scenario, certain sections of the ‘mongoloids’ in the Northeast, for various historical reasons, identified themselves with differently imagined ‘nations’. They perceive that their respective ‘nation’ have been racially discriminated, subjugated and oppressed by the Indians whom they depicted as a homogenous entity and identified with a different nation. Many ‘mainland’ Indians too perceive and treated the ‘Northeast’ with racial otherness and doubt the latter’s loyalty to India. But the so called ‘mainland’ is a metaphor; it is not a homogenous ‘nation’ freed from sets of complexities, constraints, rebellions and unrests within itself. Therefore, the alienation of the Northeast vis-à-vis India, if there is, is a reflection of the structural constraints of the Indian political economy.
 
2 Now different groups have come together under the umbrella of united liberation front of western south East Asia. How far do you think this association be able to represent the different social sections of the society of the North Eastern region? Will this sign a new phase in the insurgency?
 
(a) Recently, a common platform called the United National Liberation Front of Western South East Asia (UNLFW) was formed by some rebel parties in the Indo-Myanmar border regions. I don’t know exactly the terms and conditions agreed upon among the member organisations. To me, it seems to be a mere casual defensive tactics vis-à-vis counter-rebellion and for propaganda purpose. On the one hand, I am not sure, if the parties have any common revolutionary perception and strategy. Over the decades we have seen sporadic protracted armed guerrilla assaults in different times in spaces. But I have not seen, other than sectarian and mutually exclusive patriotic campaigns, any effective revolutionary programme across communities. There is comparative absence of consistent and collective mass democratic movement for a revolutionary change. On the other hand, I believe, the societies or communities or nations that these parties claimed to represent, in the ground reality are perplexed with political confusions, mistrust, complexities, and exclusive assertions. When the peoples are not being organised on common revolutionary goal; I am not sure how effective the UNLFW will be in either striking defeats to the Indian army or overthrowing their ‘enemy’ regimes. I am equally uncertain about how long the mechanically anchored tactical collusion will last.
 
(b) The past substantiates my doubt. What had happened to the tactical alliances that were formed from time to time: (i) the Revolutionary Joint Committee (1990) formed by the Revolutionary People’s Front, the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak and the Kangleipak Communist Party; (ii) the Indo-Burma Revolutionary Front (1991) formed by the United National Liberation Front, the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Khaplang) and the United Liberation Front of Assam; (iii) the United Liberation Front of Seven Sisters (1993) and the Self-Defence United Front of South-East Himalayan Region (1994) formed under the leadership of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (IM); the Manipur People’s Liberation Front (1999) formed by the United National Liberation Front, the Peoples’ Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak and the Revolutionary People’s Front; (iv) the Joint Coordination Committee (2009) of the United National Liberation Front and the Kanglei Yaol Kanna Lup; (v) the Coordination Committee (2011) formed by the Kangleipak Communist Party, the Kanglei Yaol Kanna Lup, the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak, the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (Progressive), the Revolutionary People’s Front, the United National Liberation Front, and the United People’s Party of Kangleipak. Why were they formed, what they did and how they ended?
 
3 The Indian state seems to have viewed problem of North Eastern people as a law and order problem? Do you think the negotiations that the government had with different groups can be started again? And how the laws like AFSPA has contributed to the worsening of the situation?
 
(a) Various problems exist in the Northeast. Among these, the government views the armed rebellion and democratic assertions against the ongoing neo liberal ‘projects’ by the affected peoples as law and order problems. Arbitrarily superimposed projects are being protected by military and paramilitary forces. Democratic protests are being ruthlessly suppressed by the police. In the past, even the demand for Manipur Statehood within the constitutional framework was viewed as law and order problem. Anything that is deemed obstruction to the immediate interest of the rulers is termed a threat to the nation and law and order problem.
 
(b) For some years the Government have been successful in entering into peace negotiation with some rebel groups in the Northeast – separate ceasefire agreement, memorandum of understanding and suspension of operation have been signed with different rebel groups. This has reduced armed conflict and casualty amongst them. I want to term it tactical peace. However, I am not sure, if the tactical peace have reduced the structural constraints of the political economy, which is largely responsible for various forms of grievances and unrests. On the contrary the tactical peace have not reduced the onus of subjection and terror on the people. My point is, I am more concern about the peace, security and development of the people. If the tactical peace do not address the legitimate issues of the people, I don’t care at all about either extension or abrogation of the tactical peace.
 
(c) AFSPA, created State terror and supress many in the name of counter rebellion. The blame of State terror is on the Indian army or any forces for violation of human rights with impunity under the provisions of AFSPA. However, AFSPA is an effective political instrument of killing and torture to supress in order to ensure that there is no resistance against the constraints created by the system. AFSPA is a mere legal surrogate to fulfil the objectives of rule of law, which is founded on the basis of the ideological framework of certain relation of production. The ‘rule of law’ has been comparatively fulfilled by AFSPA, but there continues the constraints of the political economy. AFSPA deals with syndrome and became a syndrome of the system; but it is not an appropriate means to root out the material foundation of unrests and armed rebellions. My understanding is that if the Indian nation exists at all, AFPSA is a threat to the peoples that constitute the ‘nation’. In that sense AFSPA is anti-national. Relatively, those who intentionally hold on AFSPA are anti-nationals. Those who blindly hold on AFSPA are misguided peoples. The fight against AFSPA, therefore, in reality, is a fight against the anti-nationals who use legal camouflages and propaganda tools to cover up the crimes they committed in the name of ‘national security.’
 
4 What do you think should be the democratic way to solve the problems of the North Eastern people?
 
(a) The big stakeholders of the neo-liberal regimes have exposed India to the global finance capital. They are reluctant to make India stand by its own economic feet in the global economic order. They discourage ‘national’ industrialisation as this will take time, require lots of efforts and could be at the cost of their quick profit. When India is on sale by a few powerful, leading to the inequality and underdevelopment of the productive forces; the question is – are the rulers really concern about the development, equality and welfare of the peoples ruled by them? Aren’t they using communal and divisive tactics to divert the attention of the people, so that they retain control over the politics and economy? In this scenario, if there is a democratic model that can solve the problems faced by the peasants, workers and minorities in North India; I think, that same model can be effectively applied in the Northeast as well. When the problems of those who are ‘loyal’ to India have not been democratically addressed, how will the problems of the ‘disloyal’ will be democratically addressed? The rulers know the problems and the democratic solutions as well. The problem is: they are in power, they enjoy it and they know how to govern undemocratically in the existing manner. Are they ready for a democratic solution? When democratic voices are ruthlessly suppressed the desperate sections will automatically look for other modes of rebellion. This is what is exactly happening in India. My puzzle is whether there will be a magical divine intervention, to change the mind-set of the rulers, so that they voluntarily uphold a democratic solution or should they be forced upon to do it. History will tell.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/on-the-question-of-the-alienation-of-the-northe-east-and-the-problems-2/

ON THE QUESTION OF THE ALIENATION OF THE NORTH EAST AND THE PROBLEMS

Interview by Bhoopesh, Associate Editor, the Tehelka Weekly, New Delhi. Respondent: Dr. Malem Ningthouja, the Campaign for Peace & Democracy (Manipur). 10th June 2015 1 After more than 60 years,

Interview by Bhoopesh, Associate Editor, the Tehelka Weekly, New Delhi.

Respondent: Dr. Malem Ningthouja, the Campaign for Peace & Democracy (Manipur).

10th June 2015

1 After more than 60 years, there seems to be a feeling of alienation for the North East? What do you think the reason for this? How the Indian mainland’s attitude has contributed to this?

 (a) Experts say that the Indian neo-liberal political economy system functions through perpetuation of caste, tribe, communal and racial differences, consciousness and corresponding sectarian assertions at various levels. In this scenario, certain sections of the ‘mongoloids’ in the Northeast, for various historical reasons, identified themselves with differently imagined ‘nations’. They perceive that their respective ‘nation’ have been racially discriminated, subjugated and oppressed by the Indians whom they depicted as a homogenous entity and identified with a different nation. Many ‘mainland’ Indians too perceive and treated the ‘Northeast’ with racial otherness and doubt the latter’s loyalty to India. But the so called ‘mainland’ is a metaphor; it is not a homogenous ‘nation’ freed from sets of complexities, constraints, rebellions and unrests within itself. Therefore, the alienation of the Northeast vis-à-vis India, if there is, is a reflection of the structural constraints of the Indian political economy.

2 Now different groups have come together under the umbrella of united liberation front of western south East Asia. How far do you think this association be able to represent the different social sections of the society of the North Eastern region? Will this sign a new phase in the insurgency?

(a) Recently, a common platform called the United National Liberation Front of Western South East Asia (UNLFW) was formed by some rebel parties in the Indo-Myanmar border regions. I don’t know exactly the terms and conditions agreed upon among the member organisations. To me, it seems to be a mere casual defensive tactics vis-à-vis counter-rebellion and for propaganda purpose. On the one hand, I am not sure, if the parties have any common revolutionary perception and strategy. Over the decades we have seen sporadic protracted armed guerrilla assaults in different times in spaces. But I have not seen, other than sectarian and mutually exclusive patriotic campaigns, any effective revolutionary programme across communities. There is comparative absence of consistent and collective mass democratic movement for a revolutionary change. On the other hand, I believe, the societies or communities or nations that these parties claimed to represent, in the ground reality are perplexed with political confusions, mistrust, complexities, and exclusive assertions. When the peoples are not being organised on common revolutionary goal; I am not sure how effective the UNLFW will be in either striking defeats to the Indian army or overthrowing their ‘enemy’ regimes. I am equally uncertain about how long the mechanically anchored tactical collusion will last.

(b) The past substantiates my doubt. What had happened to the tactical alliances that were formed from time to time: (i) the Revolutionary Joint Committee (1990) formed by the Revolutionary People’s Front, the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak and the Kangleipak Communist Party; (ii) the Indo-Burma Revolutionary Front (1991) formed by the United National Liberation Front, the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Khaplang) and the United Liberation Front of Assam; (iii) the United Liberation Front of Seven Sisters (1993) and the Self-Defence United Front of South-East Himalayan Region (1994) formed under the leadership of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (IM); the Manipur People’s Liberation Front (1999) formed by the United National Liberation Front, the Peoples’ Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak and the Revolutionary People’s Front; (iv) the Joint Coordination Committee (2009) of the United National Liberation Front and the Kanglei Yaol Kanna Lup; (v) the Coordination Committee (2011) formed by the Kangleipak Communist Party, the Kanglei Yaol Kanna Lup, the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak, the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (Progressive), the Revolutionary People’s Front, the United National Liberation Front, and the United People’s Party of Kangleipak. Why were they formed, what they did and how they ended?

3 The Indian state seems to have viewed problem of North Eastern people as a law and order problem? Do you think the negotiations that the government had with different groups can be started again? And how the laws like AFSPA has contributed to the worsening of the situation?

(a) Various problems exist in the Northeast. Among these, the government views the armed rebellion and democratic assertions against the ongoing neo liberal ‘projects’ by the affected peoples as law and order problems. Arbitrarily superimposed projects are being protected by military and paramilitary forces. Democratic protests are being ruthlessly suppressed by the police. In the past, even the demand for Manipur Statehood within the constitutional framework was viewed as law and order problem. Anything that is deemed obstruction to the immediate interest of the rulers is termed a threat to the nation and law and order problem.

(b) For some years the Government have been successful in entering into peace negotiation with some rebel groups in the Northeast – separate ceasefire agreement, memorandum of understanding and suspension of operation have been signed with different rebel groups. This has reduced armed conflict and casualty amongst them. I want to term it tactical peace. However, I am not sure, if the tactical peace have reduced the structural constraints of the political economy, which is largely responsible for various forms of grievances and unrests. On the contrary the tactical peace have not reduced the onus of subjection and terror on the people. My point is, I am more concern about the peace, security and development of the people. If the tactical peace do not address the legitimate issues of the people, I don’t care at all about either extension or abrogation of the tactical peace.

(c) AFSPA, created State terror and supress many in the name of counter rebellion. The blame of State terror is on the Indian army or any forces for violation of human rights with impunity under the provisions of AFSPA. However, AFSPA is an effective political instrument of killing and torture to supress in order to ensure that there is no resistance against the constraints created by the system. AFSPA is a mere legal surrogate to fulfil the objectives of rule of law, which is founded on the basis of the ideological framework of certain relation of production. The ‘rule of law’ has been comparatively fulfilled by AFSPA, but there continues the constraints of the political economy. AFSPA deals with syndrome and became a syndrome of the system; but it is not an appropriate means to root out the material foundation of unrests and armed rebellions. My understanding is that if the Indian nation exists at all, AFPSA is a threat to the peoples that constitute the ‘nation’. In that sense AFSPA is anti-national. Relatively, those who intentionally hold on AFSPA are anti-nationals. Those who blindly hold on AFSPA are misguided peoples. The fight against AFSPA, therefore, in reality, is a fight against the anti-nationals who use legal camouflages and propaganda tools to cover up the crimes they committed in the name of ‘national security.’

4 What do you think should be the democratic way to solve the problems of the North Eastern people?

(a) The big stakeholders of the neo-liberal regimes have exposed India to the global finance capital. They are reluctant to make India stand by its own economic feet in the global economic order. They discourage ‘national’ industrialisation as this will take time, require lots of efforts and could be at the cost of their quick profit. When India is on sale by a few powerful, leading to the inequality and underdevelopment of the productive forces; the question is – are the rulers really concern about the development, equality and welfare of the peoples ruled by them? Aren’t they using communal and divisive tactics to divert the attention of the people, so that they retain control over the politics and economy? In this scenario, if there is a democratic model that can solve the problems faced by the peasants, workers and minorities in North India; I think, that same model can be effectively applied in the Northeast as well. When the problems of those who are ‘loyal’ to India have not been democratically addressed, how will the problems of the ‘disloyal’ will be democratically addressed? The rulers know the problems and the democratic solutions as well. The problem is: they are in power, they enjoy it and they know how to govern undemocratically in the existing manner. Are they ready for a democratic solution? When democratic voices are ruthlessly suppressed the desperate sections will automatically look for other modes of rebellion. This is what is exactly happening in India. My puzzle is whether there will be a magical divine intervention, to change the mind-set of the rulers, so that they voluntarily uphold a democratic solution or should they be forced upon to do it. History will tell.

The sender can be reached at malemningthouja@yahoo.com

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/on-the-question-of-the-alienation-of-the-northe-east-and-the-problems/

How To Create Enemies And Alienate People

Recent attacks by armed rebels put the spotlight yet again on the Indian State’s failure to engage the people of the Northeast in an inclusive way, writes NK Bhoopesh, Tehelka

Recent attacks by armed rebels put the spotlight yet again on the Indian State’s failure to engage the people of the Northeast in an inclusive way, writes NK Bhoopesh, Tehelka

War crimes: The Indian Army has allegedly deployed rape as a counterinsurgency tool in the Northeast

War crimes: The Indian Army has allegedly deployed rape as a counterinsurgency tool in the Northeast

Connected to the rest of India by a narrow 22-km strip of land aptly called ‘chicken’s neck’ (also known as the Siliguri Corridor), the Northeast has long had a precarious connect with the collective consciousness of the mainland. To the average man on the street in New Delhi, for instance, the region is first and foremost an “integral part of India” — the phrase he hears repeated ad nauseam every time a major militant attack on the security forces or a massive protest against army atrocities hits the national headlines. He believes in it despite the numerous instances of racist attacks on migrants from the Northeastern states in several parts of the country, including the national capital. This paradox throws light on the unfinished of integrating the people of the Northeast into the idea of India over the decades and through umpteen policy flip-flops between “win hearts and minds” and “hit them hard where it hurts”. And it was brought back spectacularly — and brutally — into the public imagination by the 4 June ambush on an army convoy by a band of insurgents in Manipur’s Chandel district bordering Myanmar. Eighteen personnel of the 6 Dogra Regiment were killed in the attack.

This remoteness of the Northeast from the national consciousness, however, is not in sync with the way the New Delhi establishment views its strategic and economic importance. The “seven sisters”, a popular epithet for the states comprising the Northeast, is seen as a bridge between South and Southeast Asia, and therefore, quite significant for India’s Look East policy. Interestingly, this policy has been the central motif of the country’s diplomatic and trade relations with Southeast Asian countries since 1991 when the then Congress regime at the Centre announced pathbreaking economic measures that set the course for what came to be known as “liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation”.

As a foreign policy initiative, the Look East policy was a success thanks to the economic resilience the Southeast Asian economies exhibited during the financial crisis in the first decade of the 21st century. Trade with these countries has touched $70 billion and is expected to cross $100 billion by the end of this year. But the robust trade stats have not translated into economic development for the Northeast as the bulk of the transactions were routed through the Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean. Little effort has been made to remove the bottlenecks in the way of trade-based connectivity between the region and the Southeast Asian countries.

So, have the governments at the Centre since then been pursuing the Look East policy without giving sufficient thought to the geographical region that could have been key to its success and, in turn, benefitted from it? For had it been otherwise, the root causes of the alienation of diverse ethnic groups in the Northeast from the people of the rest of India would have been addressed, bringing the curtains down on the insurgency that has plagued the region since it was declared a part of independent India in 1947. The recent resurrection of insurgent groups brings into sharp focus this persistent blind spot in New Delhi’s Northeast policy. In April, the Khaplang faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (NSCN-K) walked out of a 14-year ceasefire with the Indian government and launched a series of attacks on the security forces culminating in the 4 July ambush. The attack triggered calls for vengeance from the establishment leading to the cross-border army raid in Myanmar that reportedly ended with what sections of the media and human rights activists have called a “massacre” of the militants allegedly involved in the ambush. Reportedly, not a single shot was fired at the armed personnel who carried out the raid inside the neighbouring country.

Re-emergence and Regrouping

The Chandel ambush has an interesting backdrop: the coming together of an array of insurgent groups in the Northeast on a common platform, which has been christened the United Liberation Front of Western South East Asia (UNLFWSEA). The platform was floated reportedly after four years of consultations that started in 2011 and comprises four insurgent groups — the NSCN-K, the United Liberation Front of Asom (Independent) (– I), the Kamatapur Liberation Organisation (KLP) and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (Songbijit) (NDFB-S). Twelve groups had participated in the initial discussions, but most of them pulled out later citing one or the other reason.

Formed on 17 April, the UNLFWSEA is headed by NSCN-K chief SS Khaplang and-I chief is said to have played a key role in the process of its formation. A press statement released soon after stated that the platform would lead a “united struggle” for the “liberation of the ancestral homes”. A few days later, the Manipur-based groups declared the formation of a separate platform called CorCom (Coordination Committee).

Namrata Goswami, research fellow at the New Delhi-based Institute of Defence Studies and Analysis, tells TEHELKA that these moves by the Northeastern rebel groups would significantly impact the course of the insurgency. The common platforms would help groups that represent diverse ethnic groups and do not necessarily agree on all their aims and methods to share intelligence and plan joint operations against the security forces stationed in the Northeast. “This will help them to extend their footprint beyond their current areas of influence,” she says.

This, however, is not the first time that various insurgent groups have come together. Way back in 1986, the , the Manipur-based United National Liberation Front (UNLF, whose armed wing is called the Manipur People’s Army) and the NSCN tried to forge a common platform but the efforts fizzled out soon. Again, in 1990, the Revolutionary People’s Front (RPF, the political wing of the People’s Liberation Army) and the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP), two other insurgent groups based in Manipur, formed a joint committee. A year later, the UNLF and the NSCN-K (which split from the NSCN in 1988) joined hands to form the Indo-Burma Revolutionary Front.

The next attempt to bring all the insurgent groups under one umbrella was made in 1994 with the floating of the Self-Defence United Front of South East Himalayan Region. Then, in 2011, the Manipur-based KCP, RPF, Kanglei Yaol Kanna Lup (KYKL) and People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) formed a coordination committee.

With the insurgent groups joining hands against the Indian State, can it be said that they have buried the differences over ideology, politics and tactics that had so far been preventing them from putting up a united front? Maleem Ningthouja, who heads the Campaign for Peace and Democracy in Manipur, does not think so. “This is just a defensive move in the face of intense repression by the State forces and meant to serve the purpose of propaganda,” he says. “The protracted guerrilla campaign has been sectarian so far. Since each group has a different idea of the ‘nation’ they are fighting for and its boundaries, there is little scope for a radical programme cutting across ethnic groups that would appeal to people across the Northeast.”

Guwahati-based journalist Rajeev Bhattacharyya, who authored Rendezvous with Rebels: Journey to Meet India’s Most Wanted Men, writes in a recent article that the UNLFWSEA’s formation might grow into a cause of serious concern for India and “a safe sanctuary in Myanmar for [the rebel] outfits means that the government’s efforts to put an end to the separatist campaign may not bear results immediately”.

Another twist to the regrouping tale is the suspected role of China that the Indian intelligence agencies have drawn attention to. Media reports have quoted intelligence officials saying that the NSCN-K walked out of the ceasefire at China’s behest. “China has strong connections with the Myanmar-based outfits and clandestinely supports them despite knowing that they trade in illegal weapons and contraband drugs,” says Namrata.

Protracted campaign for self-determination

The insurgency in the Northeast has been raging since the early years after independence and has so far defied both a political and a military solution. The accession of a vast array of diverse tribal communities into the Indian nation-state bred intense discontent that New Delhi is yet to come to terms with. The Naga National Council formed in 1946 was the first group that started a “war of independence” from “Indian subjugation”. Over the years, the insurgent groups have proliferated in the Northeast partly because it is ethnically, linguistically and culturally quite distinct from the rest of the India and appears to be connected better with Southeast Asia than the Indian mainland. Mass protests and armed campaigns against the security forces have led to a heavy-handed military response from the State, which has fuelled further discontent in a vicious cycle.

The division of the Northeast into various states without looking into the cultural and ethnic diversities of areas exacerbated the “cultural alienation”, many insurgent groups have alleged. Many experts on the Northeast have also pointed out that since the British colonial rulers administered the region in a decentralised manner, the people knew no central administration before they were brought under the Indian federal structure. The locals, therefore, did not take kindly to the alleged homogenising approach of the Centre, which alienated them from the Indian State and led to the emergence of numerous insurgent groups.

Insurgency reared its head in Manipur with the formation of the UNLF in 1964, followed by the RPF, KYKL and PREPAK. In neighbouring Assam, the insurgency started as “resistance” against “Indian colonisation” with the formation of in 1979 and several other ethnicity-based organisations in the later years. There are more than 50 rebel groups in the Northeast according to some estimates. While some groups demand complete secession from India, others fight for redrawing of the state boundaries in the region on the basis of ethnicity. The assertion of identity involves staking claim on land not just under different states but even in a foreign country. The Naga insurgents, for instance, are fighting for a separate homeland comprising areas inhabited by them in Nagaland, Manipur, Assam, and Arunachal Pradesh as well as Myanmar. This has created a complex tangle in which rebel groups are often found fighting each other rather than the Indian State with greater zeal.

Indeed, land and demographics are central to the ongoing conflict in the Northeast. Indigenous people consider immigration from rest of the country to their homeland as a threat as they fear being turned into a minority in their own homeland. This has often pitted them against poor migrants from mainland India (or Bangladesh , in the case of Assam) who are seen as “outsiders”. For instance, immigration from Bengal and other parts of the country into Tripura during and after Partition is seen to have altered the demography of the state in the 1960s, making the Bengalis a powerful majority. The widespread scare among the indigenous population that other parts of the Northeast will also go the Tripura way contributed to the formation of identity-based insurgent groups.

A Security Fix for a Political Problem

Largely ignoring the root causes underlying the insurgency, the Indian government has viewed it almost exclusively from the security angle and tried to deal with it through military means by relying on the army. As the armed forces are trained to fight wars and not operate under a civilian administration, their deployment in the conflict zones has required the suspension of the civil liberties guaranteed by the Constitution by declaring the region as a “disturbed area” and imposing the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act ().

The Act, as the name suggests, gives the army extraordinary powers in dealing with the insurgents and their mass base, which translates into impunity for any action carried out in the line of duty even if it violates the “ordinary” law of the land: “Any commissioned officer, warrant officer, non-commissioned officer or any other person of equivalent rank in the armed forces may, in a disturbed area, (a) if he is of opinion that it is necessary to do so for the maintenance of public order, after giving such due warning as he may consider necessary, fire upon or otherwise use force, even to the causing of death, against any person who is acting in contravention of any law or order for the time being in force in the disturbed area prohibiting the assembly of five or more persons or the carrying of weapons or of things capable of being used as weapons or of fire-arms, ammunition or explosive substances; (b) if he is of opinion that it is necessary to do so, destroy any arms dump, prepared or fortified position or shelter from which armed attacks are made or are likely to be made or are attempted to be made or any structure used as a training camp for armed volunteers or utilised as a hideout by armed gangs or absconders wanted for any offence; and (c) arrest without warrant any person who has committed a cognisable offence or against whom a reasonable suspicion exists that he has committed or is about to commit a cognisable offence and may use such force as may be necessary to effect the arrest.”

Introduced in 1954 as a short-term measure to counter the Naga insurgency, was later extended to the rest of the Northeast. “ is an effective political tool that enables the armed forces to torture and kill people with impunity,” says Maleem. “The State has given the army these special powers in order to put an end to the resistance by the people by extreme force and allows no space for addressing the real causes behind the unrest.”

Maleem goes on to denounce as an “anti-national” Act for “it threatens the safety and security of the people who constitute the nation”. “The struggle against , therefore, is a fight against anti-national elements who commit heinous crimes under its garb by citing ‘national security’,” he says.

Many human rights organisations echo Maleem’s sentiment and have identified as one of the main reasons for the continued alienation of the people in the region. “The Act violates provisions of international human rights law, including the right to life, the right to be protected from arbitrary arrest and detention, and the right to be free from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. It also denies the victims of the abuses the right to a remedy,” notes a 2008 Human Rights Watch report titled Getting Away with Murder: 50 Years of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act.

While the government has rigorously pursued the military option, sporadic efforts to bring the insurgents to the table for negotiations have not seen much success. There have been exceptions, though, with several groups agreeing to occasional ceasefires and some even giving up the demand for secession and joining mainstream politics (e.g., the Mizo National Front, which fought the Indian State for two decades since 1966 and eventually signed the Mizo Accord in 1986, contested elections and formed the state government).

Though some Naga groups, for instance, have given up on sovereignty, their demand to integrate all the Naga-inhabited lands cutting across states has further complicated the possibility of a solution that would satisfy the other ethnic groups too. Pradip Phanjoubam, editor of Imphal Free Press, tells TEHELKA that redrawing the state boundaries along ethnic lines could create more problems than it would solve given the sheer complexity of the geographical distribution of various ethnicities.

No wonder Prime Minister ’s recently announced promise to find a political solution to the Naga issue was taken with a pinch of salt by various political parties in Manipur. Reacting to Modi’s statement, Manipur People’s Party leader N Sovakiran asked the state government to ensure that any peace deal with the Naga insurgents should not be at the cost of Manipur’s territorial integrity.

Mainland Prejudice

The racial distance between mainland India and the Northeast has a long history going back to ancient times as the indigenous people of the region could not be sorted within the Aryan-Dravidian binary that is often used to explain the diversity within the mainland. Geography adds to the alienating mix with the region forming part of a block that is more closely integrated with Myanmar, Bhutan and Bangladesh than with the rest of India.

The killing of 20-year-old Nido Taniam two years ago in New Delhi in a racist attack brought to the fore the prejudice that much of mainland India harbours against people of the Northeast. That was just one of several such incidents across the country that gave rise to serious doubts over whether India is yet to make the Northeasterners its own.

In 2007, the Delhi Police had published a booklet advising migrants from the Northeast to avoid wearing “revealing clothes” and cooking native recipes (e.g., those including bamboo shoots) because it might annoy their Indian neighbours with unfamiliar smells.

Assam-based author Mitra Phukan tells TEHELKA that racial prejudice against people from hilly and densely forested regions such as the Northeast is deeply ingrained in the mind of a large section of Indians. Others like Maleem look at the alienation and prejudice as a reflection of “the structural constraints of the political in India”.

Economic backwardness intertwined with issues of identity and ethnicity has turned the problems of Northeast into a knotted tangle that has so far proved nearly impossible to unravel. Attempts to solve the complex crisis by crushing the resistance through military means have only added to the alienation and the consequent rage against the organs of the Indian State. In the bargain, a region with a high concentration of indigenous people and an amazing diversity of ethnicity and language continues to remain largely outside the ambit of Indian democracy.

United Liberation Front of Asom ()

Formed on 7 April 1979; Outlawed in 1990.

Area of Operation: Assam

Stated Goal: To liberate Assam through the armed national liberation struggle from the clutches of the illegal occupation of India

Major counterinsurgency operations: Operation Bajrang (November 1990-June 1991), Operation Rhino (September 1991-January 1992)

? In the initial years, raised the issue of illegal immigration from Bangladesh and it helped the organisation to gain popular support. It allegedly received assistance from Pakistan’s ISI (Inter Services Intelligence), Bangladesh’s Directorate General of Forces Intelligence and China’s People’s Liberation Army

? In 2003, a military operation in Bhutan dislodged many camps

? In December 2009, chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa and deputy commander-in-chief Raju Baruah were arrested in Bangladesh and handed over to India

? In 2010, a section of under Rajkhowa dropped the demand for Independence, paving the way for the talks with the Centre

? The first formal meeting between the government and took place in 2011

? O n 3 September 2011, a tripartite agreement for suspension of operations was reached between , the Assam government and the Centre

National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB)

Formed in 1986 as the Bodo Security Force; was renamed after rejecting the Bodoland agreement with the Centre, signed by the All Bodo Students’ Union and the Bodo People’s Action Committee.

Area of Operation: Assam

Stated Goal: A sovereign nation for the Bodos

?  The 2003 crackdown on its camps in Bhutan forced the organisation to give up its demand for Independence and agree to peace talks with the Centre within the ambit of the Indian Constitution

?  The decision to hold talks with the government led to a split in the NDFB

?  NDFB-R leader Ranjan Daimari was arrested in 2010 in Bangladesh and handed over to India; Daimari was released on after his faction agreed to drop the demand for Independence

?  The first round of talks with the pro-talk faction was held on 29 September 2009, leading to a ceasefire that has been extended several times

?  The last round of talks was held in November 2013

National Socialist Council of Nagalim (NSCN)

Formed in January 1980.

Area of Operation: Nagaland and Manipur

Stated Goal: Establishing a sovereign nation by unifying all Naga-inhabited regions in the Northeast and Myanmar

?  The NSCN was formed in protest against the Naga National Council’s decision to accept the Indian Constitution

?  Divisions among the Nagas led to a split in the NSCN. The Konvaks clan broke away under the leadership of the Khole Konyak and SS Khaplang, leading to the formation of the NSCN (Khaplang) in 1988, while the Tangkhul clan formed the NSCN (Isak-Muivah). Each organisation accused the other of working for the Indian government

?  The NSCN-IM started peace talks with the Centre in 1997. Both sides agreed to an indefinite ceasefire

?  The NSCN-K began negotiating with the Centre after “modifying” its demand for sovereignty even as it opposed the dialogue between the NSCN-IM and the government. The Khaplang group agreed to a ceasefire in 2001 and stuck to it until April 2015

United National Liberation Front (UNLF)

Formed in 1964.

Area of Operation : Manipur

Stated Goal: A sovereign, socialist Manipur

?  The first insurgent organisation to be formed in Manipur, its armed wing is called the Manipur People’s Army

?  It was initially said to be patronised by Pakistan, which allegedly provided military training to many of its cadre. There were also reports of China extending it help

? In 2006, the UNLF came out with a four-point charter of demands, included a plebiscite under supervision on the question of Manipur’s Independence and withdrawal of Indian troops from the state. It also offered to surrender its arsenal to a peacekeeping force, but the Manipur government and the Centre rejected the proposal

People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK)

Formed in 1977.

Area of Operation: Manipur

Stated Goal: A sovereign Manipur

? The organisation split in the 1980s due to factionalism. Some of the splinter groups merged with other insurgent outfits

? PREPAK later engaged in campaigns against “social evils” such as alcoholism, and drug addiction

? In 2007, the organisation set itself the deadline of 2015 to achieve its objective, failing which it claimed it would leave the path of armed revolution

? PREPAK has strategic relations with the UNLF

Kangeli Yaol Kanna Lup (KYKL)

Formed in 1994.

Area of Operation: Manipur

Stated Goal: A utopian Manipuri society “free of all vices”

? The organisation split in 1996 into two factions, one led by Noonikam Oken and the other by Achu Toijamaba, and reunited in 2002

? It is believed that it runs several camps in Bangladesh and Myanmar

Achik National Volunteer Council (ANVC)

Formed in 1995; Outlawed in 2000.

Area of Operation: Meghalaya (Garo Hills) and Assam (Kamrup and Goalpara districts)

Stated Goal: A sovereign homeland for the Garo tribe

? In 2004 the outfit signed a ceasefire agreement with the Centre, which was extended indefinitely in 2008

 

(Published in Tehelka Magazine, Volume 12 Issue 26, Dated 27 June 2015) the author can be reached at bhoopesh@tehelka.com

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/how-to-create-enemies-and-alienate-people/

AMWJU`s silence deafening

Dear Sir I have read the article written for the EPW by the Editor of the Imphal Free Press, which was also carried on the Sunday edition in full. The

Dear Sir
I have read the article written for the EPW by the Editor of the Imphal Free Press, which was also carried on the Sunday edition in full. The redoubtable Editor has hit two nails on the head in a single blow.

While asserting the extremely complicated and sensitive political issues, indeed trans-national dimensions, concerning the armed conflict situation in Manipur and the North East Region, he also hit hard at his own media fraternity for serious transgressions regarding ethics especially by the national media. The implications in terms of sustained national policy and views on Manipur and her people vis-à-vis the increasingly blurring national polity were clearly enunciated in his article. The plethora of denials from the armed non-state organisations in the region and he Myanmar government exposes the ill-thought and now exposed as bogus propaganda hype that India embarked upon with so-called `surgical strikes`.

I visited Paraolon Village and another nine in Chandel District yesterday on a joint mission with the Indian Red Cross Society, Manipur State Branch and the Disaster Relief Committee Manipur (DRCM). As we had the `blessing` of the MHA and IGAR (South), we encountered little problems in reaching the remote villages. Many of these villages, especially Paraolon were completed or largely deserted. Not a single person was found in Paraolon Village, only some abandoned dogs, cats and chicken! During our drive from Tengnoupal to Paraolon, we encountered exactly six persons! A large population of our tribal people of Manipur simply disappeared within a few hours of the clinical 4th June ambush of the 6 Dogra Regiment convoy at Paraolon. And the Indian intelligence and state administration has no clue where they went! I am deeply concerned about this population, about their whereabouts and their present situation, on humanitarian and human rights grounds. The government of Manipur does not seem to be concerned at all about its own population. Any central government operation of such a serious nature must obviously have the consent and cooperation of the state government. Yet, our Chief Minister and Home Minister are in a state of total denial.

At the ambush site, less than a kilometre from Paraolon Village, we encountered the Indian army (6 Dogra Reg) still holding fort. The infantry sepoys were ill-equipped, with drab uniforms, canvas jungle boots that can be bought in the Imphal bazaar and outdated small arms `“ even our Manipur Police are better equipped! The officers we met were most resentful. It is clear that the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act of 1958 has run its full course, and it is now a curse for both the central armed forces and the people of Manipur.

What I miss in the well researched article `India`™s was against itself` is an overwhelming human concern for the ordinary citizens of Manipur`™s remote areas who are caught between a rock and a hard place! The role of the All Manipur Working Journalists Union (AMWJU) in this tragic episode in Manipur`™s history is most unfortunate.

Yours Sincerely
Dr Laifungbam Debabrata Roy
Yaiskul, Police Lane, Imphal

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/amwjus-silence-deafening/

At border village, recalling Army’s Myanmar operation: ‘We heard shooting, explosions… boom, boom, boom’

“Suddenly, we heard a lot of shooting and bombs going off in the near distance. Boom, boom, boom. We were wondering what was happening,” 55-year-old Hemlet Guite, a village elder,

“Suddenly, we heard a lot of shooting and bombs going off in the near distance. Boom, boom, boom. We were wondering what was happening,” 55-year-old Hemlet Guite, a village elder, said.

myanmar759

Angko Chingbo hill, 15 km inside Myanmar, where villagers say 3 insurgent groups have their camps; (inset) Hemkhoshei, 65, a minister of the Phaikoh village council. (Source: express photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum)

Esha Roy, Phaikoh(Indo-Myanmar border), 14 June 2015:

In this last Indian village in Manipur’s Ukhrul district, there is no telling where India ends and Myanmar begins. The boundary is not demarcated visibly, and the small teak huts standing on wooden stilts could be in either country. On the morning of June 9, sleepy, isolated Phaikoh was jolted by the sounds of Indian soldiers attacking Naga militant camps in the area in retaliation against the June 4 ambush of the 6 Dogra Regiment.

“Suddenly, we heard a lot of shooting and bombs going off in the near distance. Boom, boom, boom. We were wondering what was happening. We didn’t see any soldiers go through our village or in the surrounding jungles. We assume they must have gone very quietly at night, on foot,” 55-year-old Hemlet Guite, a village elder, said.

It was approximately 8 in the morning when Phaikoh first heard the “sounds of the battle” — around the time its 16 schoolchildren had just begun classes at the village school.

“We did see them coming back, though,” Guite said. “In the afternoon, it must have been two or three o’clock, a stream of Indian Army soldiers started walking into the village. Then the helicopters started coming. They landed on our football field, and the soldiers started to get on. It looked as though there were at least a hundred soldiers. There were two helicopters, and each made three trips. Some of the soldiers left on foot,’’ Guite added.

Sixty-five-year-old Hemkhoshei, a minister of the village council, said it was the first time he saw an Army chopper. “I was very excited. One Armyman told me to shut my eyes because there would be a lot of dust as the machine landed,” he laughed.

Sauntering easily into Myanmarese territory, stepping over the shallow, muddy trench that marks the border, Hemkhoshei pointed to the grey-blue hill rising above the treetops, its peak surrounded by wispy white clouds.
“That is Angko Chingbo hill,” he said. It is about 15 km inside Myanmar. The UNLF, PLA and KYKL have their camps there. That is where the Army went that day.

“We have heard that nothing is left of the PLA camp now. But we do not know if the Army managed to reach the UNLF camp. It is on the other side of the mountain, and very difficult to reach,” Hemkhoshei added. According to him, the PLA camp had more than a hundred residents.

Residents of Phaikoh said insurgents often traveled to border villages on the Indian side “for patrolling”. Cadres of the UNLF were the most frequent visitors, they said. “They come at least once a month, sometimes more often. They talk to us, eat their lunch, and go back. But we never have to feed them. They give us money to buy rice, and cook for themselves. Twenty, or even 40 insurgents come at a time. We haven’t seen any since Tuesday (June 9), though,” said Janghen Jangkhohem, secretary of the village council. Guite said the villagers have a good rapport with the UNLF. “There is no doctor or pharmacy in the village. So the UNLF insurgents sometimes give us medicines. Malaria is endemic here, and they often hold medical camps in the village, to which they bring a doctor. In return, they ask us for information — on who comes here, and what we hear about the Army. Last Christmas, the UNLF gave us money to buy a pig or cow for a feast,” Guite said. Hemkhoshei said UNLF cadres sometimes held meetings with the village council or elders. “They talk to us of development… roads, better schools, medical facilities, electricity. They have told us that they would help us get all these things,” he said. No resident of Phaikoh has ever visited any of the camps, however. What they know about them is based on what they have heard from friends in Myanmar who visit the camps to sell their wares to the insurgents. “Since Tuesday, Myanmar has completely sealed off the border. We can’t even go to Mongjang, the neighbouring village on the other side. But hopefully, the restrictions will be lifted soon,” Guite said. Across a range of three hills closer to the Indian side of the border, at the village of Nampisha, villagers recalled the happenings of June 9. “Helicopters were flying in and out. Huge helicopters. We could here gunfire in the distance. We gathered at the church and I told my congregation to pray. I warned them not to stray far from the village. Not to even go out hunting. To just stay indoors and pray,” said pastor Akhui Kamkara. The 44 Assam Rifles has an outpost at Nampisha, villagers said, and they had tightened their vigil. No one was going towards Phaikoh, villagers said.

Published in The Indian Express.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/at-border-village-recalling-armys-myanmar-operation-we-heard-shooting-explosions-boom-boom-boom/

India`s war against itself

Pradip Phanjoubam (This article was first published in the Economic and Political Weekly. We are using the same introductory summary of the article the magazine used. Delhi`s chest thumping journalists

Pradip Phanjoubam

(This article was first published in the Economic and Political Weekly. We are using the same introductory summary of the article the magazine used.

Delhi`s chest thumping journalists have become mere stenographers of power, forgetting to ask questions and interrogate official narratives. A journalist from Manipur recounts the events leading up to and around the 9 June 2015 `surgical strikes` by the Indian Army against insurgents and explains the event in its contexts.

Pradip Phanjoubam is editor, Imphal Free Press. His book on the geopolitics that shaped the physical map and psychology of Northeast India is due to be published later this year.)

There is something very strange about the ongoing operations against the National Socialist Council of Nagaland, (Khaplang), NSCN-K, and other Northeast militants in the wake of the June 4 devastating ambush on a convoy of the 6-Dogra Regiment which left 18 soldiers dead and 14 more injured. All news of these operations, including the surgical commando strikes deep into Myanmar territory on June 9, emanate from New Delhi and are loudly relayed through the many 24-hour TV channels and columns by Northeast experts based in the city.
Virtually nothing of these is known in Manipur or Nagaland, where the operations are launched from. Even the state governments are left in the dark, as the chief minister of Manipur, Okram Ibobi said in a candid reply to a query from a journalist in the sidelines of an official function on June 11. `We have been depending on what is revealed to the media in New Delhi for information` he had said.
Maybe, the chief minister is being dutifully discreet, for these are supposed to be swift and secret operations, and at stake is the country`™s diplomatic relation with Myanmar, but his act of discretion is appearing ridiculous amidst all the loud celebratory drumbeats and chest thumping in New Delhi. Some resourceful journalists and commentators are apparently even privy to the battle plans used by the elite strike forces, and the latest satellite imageries shared between Indian and Myanmar government authorities immediately before the operations were launched etc.

The other scenario is, if Ibobi`™s government is actually being left in the dark, nothing can be more humiliating. Nothing can be a louder commentary on the Centre-state relations with regards to the North eastern states too. This should place even the AFSPA debate in a new perspective. Who can now say it is up to the Northeast states to do away with the draconian act merely by not extending the Disturbed Area Act in their states?

There are other unexplained points as well, and the longer these remain unexplained, the cloud over the surgical strikes will thicken.
One of these is, no clinching evidence of the two strikes, such as a picture of the destroyed camps, or those of dead militants etc, have ever been provided. If pre-strike satellite imageries were available to be shared with Myanmar government as some columnists were so sure they were, there should also be post strike satellite imageries of these destroyed camps too. Especially after the unending orgy of celebratory drum beats and chest thumping in New Delhi, the secrecy argument to keep them from public view can hardly be convincing now.

Furthermore, the Myanmar government is now denying there were strikes within their territory. They did not do so immediately, probably because they too were unsure, as the areas where the strikes took place have very thin Myanmar government presence. Up north in the territory where Khaplang holds sway, government presence is virtually nil which is precisely why Khaplang can provide safe sanctuary for Northeast militants. But in the past few days, quoting its northern army posts, Myanmar government is saying, quite definitively too, that the Indian operations did not spill into its territory.

On June 9, the local media in Manipur and Nagaland on their usual beats were also confirming these reports from their own sources, chiefly the police and local army spokespersons. The army sent out a brief press release in Imphal saying there were encounters along the international border during operations, but did not specify numbers of casualties or whether the international border was crossed.

Local newspapers also contacted police stations in the border area, and only the Chassad police station reported hearing sounds of gunfire exchanges from the direction of the border on the morning of June 9. Villagers of Bhaiko under their jurisdiction reported army helicopters landing near their village. Seventeen kilometres from this village is Ningsom village near which along the international border an encounter took place, but this was with cadres of the Revolutionary People`™s Front, RPF, whose armed wing is People`™s Liberation Army, PLA. This encounter has since been corroborated by the RPF/PLA in press releases to the local media with photographs of what they claimed were ammunitions left behind by their attackers. They denied casualties on their side as well.

Known rebel groups from Nagaland and Manipur have all clarified either through press releases or else phone calls to the press that they know of no such attacks on their camps. As it is, in the Kabaw valley most of them do not stay in camps, but in the townships, merging with the local populations and only reassemble when duty calls.

From Chassad and adjacent Kamjong hilltop villages, and further north Chinghai, you can see deep into the Kabaw valley and the Angoching range flanking the other edge of the valley. You can also see the Somra Tract in the north. At night you can see the flickers of lights in the townships and villages. This region is not altogether abandoned by the Myanmar security establishment. Understandably, Khaplang`™s sway also does not extend here, and probably this is the reason why the Chandel ambush was not a sole NSCN-K mission. This being so, the surgical strikes by Indian troops and destruction of rebel camps here would also have come to be known within hours. And if there is anything burning it would be seen from Chassad police station too.

Up north where the Patkai Range watershed is the international boundary in the Nagaland-Arunachal Pradesh sector, the mountainous region east of the Patkai is more wild and out of reach of the Myanmar government. Two journalists from Assam who had two years ago trekked there to meet ULFA chief Paresh Baruah and Khaplang, confirmed this among others. If the surgical strikes had been in this region, it is likely to have missed official notice for long. From the reports so far however, this is not where the strikes were, at least not one of them.

There is yet one more area of cloud. The insurgents are not faceless people. They are in many ways prodigal children of families in Manipur and Nagaland, and their families are always in deep anxiety about their individual fates. Families do everything to woo their children back, and whenever there are news of encounters, they head for the mortuaries in town to identify bodies. Many mothers are known to suffer anxiety disorders. This is why insurgents are compelled to announce deaths of their cadres promptly, otherwise the families and communities of the dead fighters would turn against them. In the June 4 ambush, two militants, one Naga and another Meitei, also died. Within a day, they were both identified. If 15 to 100 militants had been killed in the border area of Myanmar on June 9, it is unlikely this would have remained unconfirmed through this channel by now, unless all 15 to 100 insurgents killed are from Myanmar.

This could also be if the borders are sealed watertight, but this hardly the case. This border, except in the Manipur sector where there are 38 boundary pillars erected in 1896, hardly have exact markers.

In the Manipur sector, the border was officially made in 1834. After ending Ava (Burmese) occupation of Manipur and Assam in 1826 at the end of the first Anglo-Burmese War and the signing of the Treaty of Yandaboo, the Chindwin River was deemed the boundary of British protectorate Manipur, putting the Kabaw valley under Manipur. But in 1834, upon repeated complaints by Ava, and seeing that the valley could be much better administered from Mandalay (Ava capital) than Imphal, the British persuaded the Manipur king that a new boundary should be negotiated, and Capt. R. Boileau Pemberton as the Boundary Commissioner drew what came to known as the Pemberton Line along the foot of the `Murring Hills` on the western edge of the Kabaw valley. In 1881, this boundary was realigned by the then British Political Agent in Manipur, Maj. James Johnstone. The objective was to contain the then restive Chassad Kukis, against whom punitive measures were becoming difficult because they would claim to be domiciles of Burma when pursued by Manipur and vice versa when chastised by the Burmese (Alexander Mackenzie: History of British Relationship with the Frontier Tribes of Bengal). Maj. Johnstone`™s line included the Chassad Kukis settlements in Manipur. In 1896, another British Political Agent in Manipur, Col. Maxwell, put 38 boundary pillars along this boundary which then came to be known as the Pemberton-Johnstone-Maxwell Line. In the Naga Hills sector, the Patkai Range watershed was considered as the boundary by the 1834 demarcation. The boundary between the Lushai Hills (Mizoram) and Chin Hills (Chin State in Myanmar) were demarcated in 1901 with minor readjustments in 1921 and 1922. The boundary between India and Myanmar was ratified by the two independent countries on March 10, 1967 in Rangoon.

Khaplang`™s importance

The June 4 ambush has suddenly awoken the Government of India to the fact that it has to take every player in this conflict theatre on board for a comprehensive peace formula in the Northeast. There are now allegation that the current crisis is a result of a misconceived plan of some officials of the Ministry of Home Affairs to sideline the NSCN-K, so it can come to a settlement with NSCN-IM led by Khaplang`™s rivals Thuingaleng Muivah and Isak Swu, both from the Indian side of the border. The GOI has been on a truce with both factions; with the NSCN-IM from 1997 and NSCN-K from 2001. The GOI has also been holding peace talks with the NSCN-IM but not with the NSCN-K, a fact resented by the latter.

The allegation is, the MHA engineered a split in the NSCN-K and patronised the faction opposed to Khaplang to ensure that the latter leaves the peace process with the Government of India. There are two reasons for suspecting this. First, Khaplang being a Myanmar domicile, it would have been out of the question for the GOI to think of reaching a political settlement with him. Second, the NSCN-IM wanted the Khaplang faction out of the equation. The MHA officials probably wanted to wash its hands off with Khaplang, leaving him to settle his scores with the Myanmar government.

Things, it is proving now, were never so straight forward. Khaplang, as the two Assamese journalists who trekked to his camp noted, is reverentially referred to as Baba, and is a very respected leader in his home grounds in the upper Sagaing Division of Myanmar, and his territory is today virtually a liberated zone where only his writs command respect. In an interview to the journalists he revealed he has an interest in the presence of many rebel soldiers of the Northeast, for the size of fraternal troops on his land is a deterrent for the Myanmar Army. His call for a united liberation front of Western South East Asia, therefore was readily accepted by all in his sanctuary. The MHA and the Indian intelligence should have read this possibility. Had they done so, they probably would not have gone so wrong in assessing the threat potential of Khaplang and writing him off so casually.

Embedded media

In the aftermath of the June 4 ambush and the surgical strikes by Indian troops within Myanmar territory, another reality has dawned. The days of the media as the tough and uncompromising interrogators of established authorities are on the way out.

The 17 deaths in the ambush was tragic, and there cannot have been anybody whose heart did not bleed seeing pictures of the families of these soldiers in Himachal Pradesh. In Manipur, there would not have been many who did not curse the attackers, except for the incorrigibly bitter who probably have had personal misfortunes at the hands of the security forces, a prospect not so uncommon or unimaginable in a land torn by conflict and subjected to oppressive laws. When the combing operations and manhunts for the militants began and Chandel district was sealed off by the Army, people waited in bated breaths praying that no collateral damages may result. Fortunately, nothing of this sort has happened to the extent known so far.

On June 9, there was the newsbreak emanating from New Delhi of the surgical strike by special commandos neutralising (the sanitised term for kill) `a significant number of militants`. Nothing abnormal so far; this is war and in a war, it is natural for combatants to fall, was the general reception of the news in the state. But from here on, the media in New Delhi, in particular the TV channels took over. The `significant number` began to have definite two digit figures. Some even pushed it to three digit figures quoting unnamed authoritative sources. Talking heads were rushed to studios and the mood everywhere was one of celebration. The blood thirst in the key words in the running headlines would have also made anybody shudder: `revenge`™, `retribution`™, `you hit us we hit back harder`™. Many of these words soon became the adjectives for Manipur and Nagaland, making residents of these states uneasy and embarrassed, and on cooler reflections, furious.

In the evening of the same newsbreak day, when newspapers in Manipur also sat down to take stock of things, they had with them just two press releases from the PIB Defence Wing and the state police to depend on. Neither had anything that signified hot pursuit into Myanmar territory, so local papers wrote their stories accordingly, though the bolder amongst them used the stories from the websites of these TV Channels to make their stories juicier.

In all the TV shows, there was not a single voice that exercised or recommended healthy doubt which all students of journalism are trained to imbibe. Nobody questioned these sources, and instead simply joined the celebration `“ of deaths. This thought itself was gory, even if those killed were enemies. Gone was also the notion that insurgency is a tragic internal war, in the words of Sanjib Baruah, India against itself. If American journalists were accused of being embedded with their military in their invasion of Iraq in 2003, who can now say Indian journalists, in particular the frenetic TV channels are not guilty of the same objectionable practice.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/indias-war-against-itself/

Northeast India : Only a frontier, nothing covert about it

Nitin Sethi, New Delhi June 12, 2015: My sister in Itanagar made me realize it yet again. For most of us living in the mainland, India’s northeast is only a

Nitin Sethi, New Delhi June 12, 2015:

My sister in Itanagar made me realize it yet again. For most of us living in the mainland, India’s is only a border. It is India’s territory. It is no one’s homeland.

Four days ago she posted on Facebook: schools have been ordered shut for three days in Arunachal Pradesh’s capital because of incessant rains. I checked for news and came to know from regional newspapers: nearly 80,000 had been people displaced in Assam by then because of incessant rains and rising water levels in Brahmaputra. No Delhi media had reported it by then.

At current rates, the numbers shall range between 1-2 lakhs by the time monsoon peaks in the region. By then, in the entire northeast, villages will be inundated, cities will be flooded. Roads will get washed away, bridges collapse. Forget villages, even district headquarters will be cut off. Lives shall be lost and societies will be stranded out of reach from rest of humanity with little access to basic amenities for long periods as rains pour down.

We in Delhi and in the mainland shall hear near zilch about it. There is a good reason why.

The media beams stories from the region to us as they should from a post. Militants from the borders ambush Indian army. The Indian army strikes back in the deep dark jungles of the eastern sector. For us, ‘the civilised’ in the rest of the country, these stories fit our need to hear some stories about the others’ lives on that wild eastern frontier.

When life caught in the cross-fire becomes unbearable for tribals in central India, a rare few national political leaders make some noise about protecting the innocent crushed in the conflict and not look at a purely militaristic solution. I don’t remember even these few leaders coming out to show the same symbolic sympathy for ‘our fellow citizens and children’ in the northeast as combing operations make people run from their homes in fear and set an entire state anxious about what awaits them.

Ideas that we deem morally abhorrent for citizens of the mainland are exported to the region, such as army controlling civilian life or bumper-to-bumper dams.

Take the case of dams in Himalayas. The religious value of Ganga for us in the mainland forces governments to at least pretend to save the river and the people around it from the contract and concrete driven madness.  But the same governments do not think twice about displacing entire cultures that flourish in the Brahmaputra basin building the same bumper to bumper dams on the Brahmaputra basin, bending rules regulations and policies for ‘strategic interests’. The irony is lost on us when we cordon leftover lands of these cultures in ‘compensation’ for the loss of ‘India’s’ wildlife and forests to the inundation that follows.

We govern their homelands like a frontier – sending out-of-favour governors and officials on punishment postings. The only government institutions that keep a constant vigil on the region are the home ministry, the defence ministry and the intelligence establishment. For much of the rest, it’s that dark pit where funds are sent (after the due share is cut) to disappear without a record or a road to show.

When a state erupts in anger against the killing of an innocent fifty plus woman activist, as Manipur did just a few days before the militant attack, we remain blind (Until of course the women of the region shame us and our government naked). Killed soldiers are rightly called martyrs. The innocent frontier-dwellers killed, raped, tortured or caught in the teeth of a combing operation are collateral damage who can hopefully be ignored at the altar of national security.

Did the above sound like an emotional angry rant rather than an analytical and well-argued journalistic piece? Sorry. I thought of people I go back home to in the region and it upset me.

In Delhi today, the newspapers (with few exceptions) told me the rainfall so far, on average, is near normal – suggesting that there is hope 2015 may not be a drought year for India.

Media and the government are all preparing for a possible drought in the mainland. Lakhs who live on the country’s northeast frontier are preparing for the regional shut down and the damage torrential rains shall cause. By today nearly one lakh people are reported displaced in Assam.

Sorry chaps, life is always tough during border postings. And you are posted at India’s northeast frontier for a lifetime.

Source: Business Standard

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/northeast-india-only-a-frontier-nothing-covert-about-it/

Annexation or Merger of Manipur

By: Lt. Col. H. Bhuban Singh The following is an article by Lt. Col. H. Bhuban, author of the book `Merger of Manipur` . We are reproducing this article published

Once Upon A Time in Manipur-SanaLeibak-Set One-4

By: Lt. Col. H. Bhuban Singh

The following is an article by Lt. Col. H. Bhuban, author of the book `Merger of Manipur` . We are reproducing this article published in the IFP 15 years ago as a homage to the respected ex-Army officer, who was also minister under the Wahengbam Nipamacha Singh MSCP ministry, a state party which is now defunct. The maverick who is also known for his scholarly researches into the history of Manipur of the colonial period,breathed his last recently.

There has been a strong notion of recent origin in Manipur that the State became independent from midnight of 15 August 1947, when the suzerainty of His Majesty (of the United Kingdom) over Indian states lapsed and further that this independent status was lost from the noon of 15 October 1949, when Manipur got merged into the erstwhile Dominion of India. There is no denying that Maharaja Bodhchandra Singh was coerced into signing the Merger Agreement after long and tiresome parleys of four days (18-21 September 1949) at Shillong. In fact, he was virtually put under house arrest at his Redlands Palace, Shillong by a guard of Jat Regiment, on the pretext of VIP security. His plea that he did not need Army Security, since he brought his own guard of State Military Police, fell on deaf ears.

The strongest point of argument of Manipur independence theorists is that any agreement/accord/confession made under duress or pressure is illegal and untenable in the eyes of law. Hence, Manipur Merger Agreement signed by the Maharaja under house arrest was and is still untenable and unlawful, since Maharaja Bodhchandra Singh was coerced into signing it.

The main point of the Maharaja`™s reluctance to sign on the dotted line was that he needed to go to Manipur to consult his people and apprise his government, since a constitutionally elected government existed in Manipur. He promised to come again to Shillong, soonest.

On the other hand, the pressure of Delhi on Shillong was that time for execution of Merger Agreements for the last three Princely States (Manipur included) was fast running out and that the Manipur Merger Agreement should be got signed immediately and now, and that the Maharaja should be allowed to leave Shillong. This hurry was necessitated because the Dominion of India was to become Republic of India on 26 January 1950, which was just four months away. There were lots of loose ends to be tied up like the number of parliamentary seats in Lok Sabha and in Rajya Sabha from Manipur, the status of Manipur after merger, the kind of administrative arrangements for Manipur in post merger period etc.

Obviously, Delhi was in a frantic hurry. The meeting with Governor Sri Prakasa on the first day, 18 September, ended abruptly, as the Maharaja got emotionally super-charged, when Nari Rustomji, Advisor to Governor unceremoniously and abruptly produced the Manipur Merger Agreement (first draft) for signature. The Maharaja was in the same plight as experienced by Dr. Ha`cha, the President of Czechoslovakia, when he was bullied by Hitler for signing the merger of his country into Germany, on the morning of 15 March 1939. Dr. Ha`cha fainted and Nazi leaders and doctors go panicky that he might die. It was possible that Sri Prakasa might have panicked or felt embarrassed.

On the second day, 19 September, despite an appointment, the Maharaja did not go to meet the Governor. On the contrary, His Highness informed Sri Prakasa of his intention to go back to Manipur. Thereafter, a ding-dong exchange of letters took place between Governor Secretariat and Red Lands Rajbari. Ultimately, by evening the Maharaja gave up his plan of returning to Imphal and agreed to meet the Governor on the next day (20 September) as proposed. Incidentally, it may be mentioned here that neither the Red Lands Rajbari nor the La Chateau Rajbari in Shillong had telephones.

In the evening of 19 September, one Sri Das Gupta, who was earlier Superintendent of Police, (whole of) Manipur, called on the Maharaja. He was, at that point of time, S.P. (CID) at Shillong. Das Gupta politely informed the Maharaja that if he did not agree to sign the Merger Agreement, the Dominion Government of India could and would make someone else as Maharaja, who would sign the Merger Agreement. So, the loss would be that of Bodhchandra, in person. Das Gupta was right because the Dominion Government of India as successor to the earlier British Government of India inherited all rights, privileges and obligations to Treaties/Agreements/Grants/Sufferances/Usages etc. and hence Maharaja Bodhchandra Singh could be removed on account of disloyalty to India and he be replaced by someone.

As per the Sanad granted to Churachand (father of Maharaja Bodhchandra) to be the Chief of Manipur State (after Manipur lost the Anglo-Manipuri War of 1891), vide Government of India, Foreign Department Notification No. 1862 E, dated Simla, the 18 September 1891, it was clearly stated that `the Chiefship of Manipur State and the title and salute will be hereditary in your family and will descend in the direct line by primogeniture, provided that in each case, succession is approved by Government of India ……………. Be assured that as long as your house is loyal to the Crown and faithful to the conditions of this Sanad, you and your successors will enjoy the favour and protection of the British Government.`™ This notification was signed by H.M. Durrand, Secretary to Government of India. It is believed that Das Gupta told his story with tears in his eyes. Whether Das Gupta was planted by Rustomji or he acted voluntarily, being sincere to his old master, the Maharaja, it is difficult to say now. But the fact is, even acting as a double agent he was honest to both parties and stood to gain from both. The Maharaja trusted his advice and Nari was happy with Das Gupta`s performance.

The meeting at Government House, Shillong on 20 September was eventful in many ways. The entire battalion of the Jat Regiment was paraded inside the Government House compound. Policemen swarmed the area. The Inspector General of Police, Assam, in full uniform was displayed. His Highness realized the exhibited threat, but suppressed his anger and joked about the tamasha (show) to Nari. Perhaps because of the advice tendered by Sri Das Gupta, the Maharaja agreed to examine articles of the Merger Agreement in detail. The articles were again drafted and redrafted several times. Though the Maharaja did not commit anything, the meeting ended in a cordial atmosphere.

But time was running out and pressure of Delhi was mounting. Sri Prakasa was in a fix. He had known the Maharaja since August 1934, when he was young and Yuberaj as well. Bodhchandra was banished by his father for attempting to ascend the throne through the worship and grace of a sylvan deity, when the father, His Highness Maharaja Sir Churachand Singh KCSI, CBE, was away on pilgrimage to Nabadwip. Yuberaj Bodhchandra Singh spent about three years in exile under the patronage of Sri Prakasa, a nationalist politician of Benares, now known as Varanasi. The relationship between Governor Sri Prakasa and Maharaja Bodhchandra Singh was like that of a father and son. The Maharaja addressed Sri Prakasa as Baba.

Suddenly, the Governor decided to cash on this relationship and made up his mind to pay a lone and private visit to the Maharaja. Though he sent a note to Rajbari that he would come around 5 pm, he went earlier without escort and personal staff. When the Governor arrived at Red Lands Rajbari, the Maharaja was enjoying his afternoon nap. The Governor told the servants not to wake up the Maharaja. He waited in the Gol Kamara (round room). When Bodhchandra came in, His Excellency stood up and lovingly said, `Hai, Bodhchandra:`, not `Your Highness`. The Maharaja replied, `Haa, Baba`. Sri Prakasa continued `I have come as your Baba, not as Governor`.

Then, Sri Prakasa requested the Maharaja to send all his officers out of the room so that he could have a heart to heart talk. He told the Maharaja that New Delhi would not permit any delay. Sri Prakasa told the Maharaja that he was prepared to resign his Governorship, but a new Governor would forcibly affect the merger under terms and conditions more harmful to Manipur and to the Maharaja. The Governor said, `Mein bhig mangne aya (I have come to beg)`. Then the Maharaja agreed to sign the Merger Agreement. They stood up and embraced each other. The Manipur Merger Agreement was signed on the next day, 21 September 1949, and Manipur got officially merged into India on 15 October 1949.
Now, in a topsy-turvy manner let us examine if Manipur was, indeed independent at midnight of 14-15 August 1947. The Indian Independence Act, 1947 passed by the British Parliament on 18 July 1947, allowed the setting up of ONLY two independent Dominions in India to be known respectively as India and Pakistan. There was no room for a third Dominion. If any ruler wanted to be free, he would be inviting that blessed thing called`war`. Indeed, war was actually fought over Nizam`s Hyderabad, a war-like show of force was displayed over Junagadh (in Gujarat), a public outcry with an impending use of force over Travancore and an on-going, three times fought Indo-Pakistani War, over Jammu & Kashmir. In sum, the Instrument of Accession, 1947 and the Standstill Agreements, 1947 decided the fates of Princely States as regards which Dominion they had to join and the Merger Agreements were simply for transfer of administration from Native Rulers to the concerned Dominion, like Chief Commissioner etc.

As for me, I want to be citizen of the strongest nation of the world. I want to feel as proud as the Americans are now, or as the Chinese are beginning to feel, recently. Though I am no lover of Punjabis, but instinctively, I feel very thrilled when Jeev Milkha Singh does well in international golf circuit. The bond of love between Jeev and me are our Indianness. Similarly, I shed exhilarating tears when our Manipur contingent picks up medals in National Games. Let us all be good human beings and hope that we will soon belong to the greatest and most powerful nation of the world.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/annexation-or-merger-of-manipur/

The lioness in me

By Urmila Chanam There was an old Australian couple in their sixties who chose life in Africa- left their Queensland home for a small house in the wilderness.They had grown

By Urmila Chanam

There was an old Australian couple in their sixties who chose life in Africa- left their Queensland home for a small house in the wilderness.They had grown tired of making safari trips every summer over the years and their love for animals made them finallymake Africa their home.

After 7 years in the region, one day in the forest they found a cub lying next to a dead lioness and got her home.Toby,the husband knew how to tend to motherless cubs and said,`In 7 months she will be ready for living on her own but needs some care now.`™ It sounded good to Kimberley.

So the cub became their own. Seven months stretched to one year.It was soon all of two years since the cub first came to their house and none of them was complaining.

This however came with a price tag. Their friends had long ago stopped coming over. They were not comfortable walking around the house with a fully grown lioness in proximity.But Toby and Kimberley couldn`™t ask for more.Their family was complete. They loved Sheeba, the cub,so much!

One day on their returning home they found the kitchen door that opened to the backside of the house and to the forest beyond,open.Toby was the first to realize what might have happened.Sheeba was gone.

Gone without a word. No prelude. No goodbyes.No explanation.Just gone.

Only Kimberley cried.They sat down to think of all the possibilities ofSheeba`™sleaving but came up with no satisfactory explanation. Toby was not sad. He accepted Sheeba`™s decision to move out.He had nestled and nursed her. He was her dad.

Years passed by. One day there was a huge flood and the couple heard that wildlife was affected in the forest. A flood of such magnitude that it would one day go down in the pages of Africa`s history bringing in death and doom in equal proportion.There were corpsesand there werecarcasses.There were fragments of what used to be once people`s homes along with vegetation and stench. The catastrophe was accompanied by a rise in the instances of crime in the small settlement.Homeless,displaced people and orphaned children transformed into thieves, burglars of scraps of food and moneyovernight and used the knife to open cans and stab people who resisted them.

Toby and Kimberley entered their house stealthily when they found signs of human presence within it. Few furniture pieces had been noticeably disturbed and there was mud on the carpets. From one room to another they waded carefully, preparing for confrontation with the imposter anytime when the sound of movement came from the kitchen.

Toby motioned to Kimberley to take position behind him as he drew out his shot gun.He had to protect the two of them. With one decisive movement both entered the kitchen and pointed the gun to the imposter.

They found no imposter but three tiny cubs not older than five months in the middle of the chaos in the kitchen, battling over an open milk can which lay on the floor of the kitchen. There were other opened cans and split milk everywhere. Toby and Kimberley had their minds racing and ran to the bedroom upstairs where Sheeba used to sleep before. They found her sleeping quietly near the bed overlooking the window. The lioness they had brought up had come back. Sheeba woke up with the noise and looked at them as if to say,

`I am home. And I got my kids.`™

Sheeba had walked for days to bring her cubs to a place where she was confident they were safe.

Toby and Kimberley rejoiced that day and they spent each and every moment around Sheeba and her cubs looking after them. But this time around they were prepared to have Sheeba leave the day the crisis was over. That day came nine months later and when it did arrive both were prepared to let her go.

This is a story of every lioness- a lioness within each woman who is a mother.She lives within me as well. And we wade through life and its many floods along with our cubs. The option to desert them is not even an option for the lioness. We know which house has a Toby and a Kimberley and which has a backdoor to the kitchen. We take shelter when the floods threaten to consume our cubs. While our cubs are the most wonderful thing that ever happened to us, they are also the very same thing that make us the most vulnerable. We subdue our dignity, our comfort, our hobbies and interests and our choices just so that we can manage a home for them where they are safe and where they are happy.

There are also empowered women worldwide who advocate the right of women to birth control to regain the power over their own vulnerabilities. According to them women if and whengiven the means and the power to control birth of children- whether to have them or not, when to have them, how many to have, with who to have them with, will give them opportunity to control their situation as per their own capacity.

In the transition between the ordinary women to the empowered lives a lioness in me.

(Urmila Chanam is a consultant of knowledge management in HIV/AIDS working for a multilateral organization, FHI 360, managing a USAID project for Orphaned and Vulnerable Children. She also heads a global campaign `Breaking the Silence`™ which is about menstrual hygiene management and banishing taboos around menstruation.Arecipient of the National Laadli Award on Gender Sensitivity in 2015, she has been working with agencies like World Pulse (USA), WSSCC (Geneva), Voices of Human Rights (USA), Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS),World Bank and the National AIDS Control Organization (NACO). Her singular effort in all her work is to connect with the grass-root and take forward real issues to a platform from where she can influence policy decisions.)

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/05/the-lioness-in-me/

How McMahon Drew His Line and Why the Chinese Want It Changed

By Pradip Phanjoubam Prime Minister, Narendra Modi was virtually silent on the vexed border issue during his just concluded visit to China, belying expectations of many in Arunachal Pradesh. While

By Pradip Phanjoubam

Prime Minister, Narendra Modi was virtually silent on the vexed border issue during his just concluded visit to China, belying expectations of many in Arunachal Pradesh. While there were 24 bilateral agreements signed, a majority of them business related, both the countries for the moment seem to think the border issue can wait. Hence, in the eastern sector, India will continue to consider the McMahon Line as its undisputed boundary, and China will continue to treat the line as illegal. Arunachal domiciles intending to travel to China will also have to continue be content with stapled visas.

There is more to China`™s claim over Arunachal Pradesh than mere contest to possess this large strip of sparsely populated mountainous territory. The state is where almost all of the major tributaries of the mighty Brahmaputra originate from, and therefore controlling it would virtually amount to possessing a vital handle in controlling not just the rest of the Northeast, but also Bangladesh. And China`™s yearning for an easier access to the Indian Ocean, and from there on to Africa and the Arabian Peninsula is well known. Besides its tremendous hydro electric potential, these mountains then are also important geo strategically.

That said, China`™s assertive claim to Arunachal Pradesh is relatively recent, and probably influenced by works of Western scholars like Alastair Lamb, who were of the opinion that the Bengal Inner Line Regulation of 1873, which created what came to be known as the Inner Line, along the foot of the mountains that surrounded the plains of its new territory of Assam acquired in 1826, was actually the extent of the British territory. Lamb claims there was also an Outer Line, and it was at most places identical to the Inner Line. This despite the fact the British were always careful to qualify that the Inner Line was not the international boundary and that it was only a line to demarcate its revenue from its non-revenue territories. At the time, the tea industry was beginning to boom and tea planters, always covetous of land, were constantly encroaching into the hills, getting into confrontations with the `wild` hill tribes. The British saw the prospect of perennial punitive expeditions into the hills wasteful, therefore thought of this line to ensure British subjects went beyond it only with official permits. Others like Neville Maxwell, author of `India`™s China War`, went farther to say that the Inner Line was the Outer Line, and that this Outer Line was pushed to where the McMahon Line is by the British only in 1913-14 during the Simla Conference. If this argument is allowed to hold, then the contiguous territories of Nagaland which is also beyond the same Inner Line, and further south, Mizoram, should also be outside India.

Beyond this confusion over the Inner Line, created deliberately or otherwise, the claim that Arunachal Pradesh is South Tibet has little basis, except perhaps in the narrow Tawang tract, contiguous in the west with Bhutan, Sikkim and Kalimpong-Darjeeling tracts. Tibetan Buddhism`™s or cultural influence in the rest of Arunachal Pradesh is virtually nil.

At the start of the Simla Conference in 1913, as Parshotam Mehra notes, the Chinese plenipotentiary, I-fan Chen, was unsure where the Indian boundary was when McMahon asked him, and could only come up with an answer the following day and this too using French maps as evidence. The Chinese at the time also had no presence in Tibet, as they had been thrown out by the Tibetans in 1911, immediately after the fall of the Qing Dynasty in the wake of the Republican Revolution in China. The Chinese were at their weakest and it has been argued that they were invited to the Simla Conference only in view of a technical necessity of a treaty the British signed with the Russians in Saint Petersburg in 1907. This treaty, literally forced by the British on the Russians, weakened at the time by a humiliating defeat at the hands of the Japanese in 1905, prohibited the British or the Russians from entering into any agreement with Tibet, and if any negotiation became absolutely necessary, this was to be done through Chinese mediation.

It must be recalled here that British Tibet policy at the time was determined not by any fear of the Chinese, but of the Russians, in what is referred to as the Great Game. It is known how the British claimed the barren white dessert of Aksai Chin with the aim of blocking any Russian push into Tibet. Not content with this, it also signed the 1907 treaty to further ensure Russia was kept at bay, even though Russia on the eve of the WWI had become an ally of the British. But, as Lamb notes wryly of the 1907 treaty, as in judo, the Russians used the weight of their opponent to defeat them, and indeed, the British ended up tying themselves up hopelessly with this seeming victory. To their dismay, the British also found out soon enough that the Russian could still exercise their influence in Tibet through Mongolia which was under its shadow then, and particularly because the trans-border Buddhist Buriat tribe lived both in Siberia and Mongolia. And Mongolia, to quote Lamb again, was then under the `Tibetan Buddhist Church`.

China did briefly become a threat to British complacency towards 1910, during the Qing Dynasty`™s last desperate burst of imperial energy which still confounds analysts, pursuing a very aggressive forward policy in Tibet, just before its ultimate fall. After entering Lhasa, the Chinese started probing neighbouring principalities of Sikkim, Nepal and Bhutan. Sikkim was a British protectorate, Nepal had a robust army, but it was Bhutan the British were worried of. At the behest of Charles Bell, a civil servant and Tibet expert, the British quickly paid the Bhutan king a visit, and had him agree to renegotiate a 1865 treaty to ensure China cannot take the kingdom. The 1865 treaty essentially was an understanding by which the Bhutias were not to raid the Duars plains for which the British would annually compensate them, a system obviously modelled on the Posa in which Ahom kings allowed hill tribes to levy tax (Posa) in kind from certain villages in the foothills on the understanding there would be no raids. The Ahoms bought their peace in the manner, acknowledging the subsistent economy in the hills would compel the hill tribes to raid the richer plains in the lean seasons regardless of punitive measures. The 1910 Bhutan Treaty merely added one paragraph to the 1865 treaty putting Bhutan`™s foreign affairs in the hands of India. The British were however saved of further anxiety for the Qing Dynasty fell soon thereafter.

These then were the British urgency to call the Simla Conference. The Chinese ultimately did not sign the Simla Agreement, but as it was, I-fan Chen was kept in the dark while the McMahon Line was being drawn. The Chinese was taken into confidence only in the discussions on the proposal for creating an Inner and Outer Tibet, on the Mongolian model. The McMahon Line was drawn through secret exchanges of notes between the Tibetan plenipotentiary, Lonchen Shatra and the British team under Henry McMahon. But the Simla treaty was not published immediately in the Aitchison`™s Treaties, the Government`™s official record book, paving the way for a long bitter controversy. Some argue this was an acknowledgment by the British of the illegality of this treaty, pending ratification by China. Others say this was again solely for fear of displeasing Russia as the Saint Petersburg Treaty made Chinese mediation of any settlement with Tibet mandatory. The treaty was ultimately published in 1938 by Olaf Caroe. By then, Tsarist Russia had fallen and the new Communist regime abrogated most of the treaties concluded by the Tsarist regime. The controversy over the McMahon Line however still refuses to go away.

The McMahon Line followed the watershed principle of map making and to the extent possible ran along the highest ridges of these eastern Himalayan ranges. The exception was at Tawang which as on the Tibetan side of the watershed. The British felt that leaving this tract, which comes too close to the Assam plains, would be too dangerous for India, therefore negotiated to have the McMahon line north of it. The Tibetans agreed, believing this was a bargain that the British would guarantee a boundary between Tibet and China. However, even though Tawang was put on the Indian side of the border, recognizing the cultural and ethnic affinities of Tawang with Tibet, the border was left open and Lhasa was allowed to collect its traditional levies from Tawang. When Communist China entered Tibet in 1950, the equation altered. In a plan hatched by civil servant Nari Rushtomji, and executed by Maj. R. Khathing, a Tangkhul Naga from Manipur in 1951, this traditional tributary relationship was put to an abrupt end. India only notified the Tibetan Government at Lhasa and not Peking of its intention to take over Tawang. China nonetheless made no protests, and Neville Maxwell cites this episode in `India`™s China War` as evidence of China`™s willingness to settle with the McMahon Line as the international border, given New Delhi`™s willingness to negotiate.

(The writer is editor, Imphal Free Press. His book, written as fellow Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla, on the geopolitics that shaped the physical map as well as psychology of the Northeast is due to be published later this year.)

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/05/how-mcmahon-drew-his-line-and-why-the-chinese-want-it-changed/

Manipuri theatre in a disappointing stage: Padmashree Kanhailal

IMPHAL, May 13: Padmashree Heisnam Kanhailal is the founder of the Kalakshetra Manipur, an institute that started the tradition for an alternative theatre and that distinguished the maestro from his

IMPHAL, May 13: Padmashree Heisnam Kanhailal is the founder of the Kalakshetra Manipur, an institute that started the tradition for an alternative theatre and that distinguished the maestro from his peer.

He is often described as the man who broke the new trend of theatrical expression in contemporary Indian theatre.

Since the inception of Kalakshetra in 1969, he has been continuing experiment with tradition for an alternate theatre. In the process his alternative theatre could be indentified with the live theatre that he ultimately conceived as the `theatre of the earth`™.

Some of his remarkable experiments that redefine the conventional theatrical expression were the Nupilan (women`s war against British) in 1978, Sanjennaha (cowherd) in 1979 with villagers at Umathel, a remote village in South Manipur. He also worked with the Paite community in Churachandpur district and produced Thanghou Leh Liandou in 1980.

In his first ever `Nupilan`™ production, Kanhailal gathered 100 market women of Imphal and inspired them to perform a non-proscenium act in an open air environment, re-enacting the confrontation of Manipuri women against the British soldier. The performance was performed at Johnstone school campus in the heart of Imphal and overwhelmed on lookers.

His journey through time to achieve what he is today was not an ordinary tale like many of those great artistes who have carved a niche for themselves.

He quit his Government job in pursuit of his theatrical dream which was later realised through the Kalakshetra.

A rendezvou with the maestro.

IFP: Congratulations on your recent achievement. What an incredible journey it has been from being a salesman at a Bata showroom in Imphal to winning the Padmashree and now the Mahindra Lifetime Achievement Award. When you look back, how do you think Manipuri theatre has changed over the years?

Heisnam Kanhailal: Indeed it has been a remarkable journey and very challenging too. I can see a lot of changes but not in not in a positive way but in a negative manner when we talk about the Manipuri theatre. It has been overwhelmed by commercialisation and it is at a very disappointing stage. What we are witnessing today is more of a salesmanship with less `artistic value`™. The integrity of the word theatre is diminishing fast.

IFP: It is a well-known story that you were expelled from NSD for not taking leave of absence after due permission. How do you think packing your bags and moving back to Imphal impact your theater? And how did the setting up of Kalakshetra happen?

H Kanhailal: The NSD episode I should say was the biggest point of my career. Had it not been for that incident I could have been stuck with the conventional theatrical wisdom and there might not be Kalakshetra. The rejection and subsequent frustration had led to the discovery of my intuition. I gradually started to evolve from my experiences. The semi-urban environment of the life of Imphal back then, the nature and traditions that surrounded me gave a vision and nostalgia beyond the mundane world. In order to translate my vision I started applying on my theatre. However I needed a concrete base to device by plan which later came in the form of `Kalakshetra`™. Many of my like-minded friends help me out in this venture especially my wife Sabitri who is one of the major collaborator as an actor.

IFP: You are seen as one of the group of alternative theatre directors who have embraced theatre as performed locally instead of being influenced by mainstream trends? How did this consciousness to move away from the mainstream happen? And how has this affected Manipuri theatre?

H Kanhailal: With regards to my alternative thinking I have already made myself clear. But, how much it affected the Manipuri theatre is the same as much as it has been in other part of the country.

IFP: What does the future spell for Manipuri theatre? Is it now possible to live by your trade?

H Kanhailal: Judging by the current trend as I have mentioned earlier about the `salemenship`™ I feel that the future of Manipuri theatre is very bleak. The present generation has lost the track and it is too late to rescue it. But, it does not mean that all hope is lost if we sincerely put our effort the Manipuri theatre can be revive afresh in the next generation.

IFP: In your entire career have you ever come across a promising `Theatre Directors`™ from the Northeast region?

H Kanhailal: Yes, indeed. In my entire career I have travelled many places with my Kalakshetra team. But, the dedication I see in some of the youths in Rabha tribal youths of Assam has amazed me. I have associated with the youths for 15 years now they have earned their name and ever expanding their own group. My followers like Sukracharjyo Rabha and Rayanti Rabha have been awarded Yuba Puraskar by Central Sangeet Natak Akademi, Delhi, are some name from the Northeast who can help spread my legacy.

IFP: What according to you is the play one should not miss this year?

H Kanhailal: There are few plays that I directed that I would like to suggest any theatre lovers to see like `Pebet`™, `Kabui Kei Oiba`™ `Dag Ghar`™ (Ranbindranath Tagore). But, if it comes to the one play one should not miss this year it obviously will be `Pebet`™ (1975) as it is still in Demand. Our Kalakshetra team has been invited to perform it in Hyderabad later this year.

IFP: Can you please name some of your favourite Actors?

H Kanhailal: My wife Sabitri, of course because she always has been a major collaborator of institute and the other one is Nasheerudin Shah. He is the only actor who is sincere enough when it comes to finding the artistic quality in an actor.

H Kanhailal has conducted 15 major workshops in the last twenty years for the actors from different cultural backgrounds in the country. The workshops so far conducted were particularly concentrated on his actor training system for live theatre. Workshops were organized nationally and regionally in different locations both city and rural as sponsored by National School of Drama and other cultural institutions/agencies. Thus he could produce a great following in the country. Since last ten years he and Sabitri have been conducting workshops for the second year students of NSD every year on his system of acting.

He conducted short term programmes on exposition of his system particularly for the young practitioners and academics. He could draw the academic attention of the young research scholars of the country and their participation in the practice thereof. He is the only theatre practitioner in the country on whose work young research scholars have been working for their M. Phils and Ph. Ds particularly from JNU, Jamia Milia Islamia, Assam University, Hydrabad University and so on.

Since 2012 he has been training young practitioners from France, Sweden, America, South Africa, etc.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/05/manipuri-theatre-in-a-disappointing-stage-padmashree-kanhailal/