Sangakpham and Beyond Confronting Illegitimate Violence

By A. Bimol Akoijam In our times, empirically and theoretically speaking, terrorism has been an illegitimate child of a legitimate politics. The so-called “Islamic Terrorism” is a classic example. It’s… Read more »

By A. Bimol Akoijam
In our times, empirically and theoretically speaking, terrorism has been an illegitimate child of a legitimate politics. The so-called “Islamic Terrorism” is a classic example. It’s a part of common knowledge today that it is a phenomenon which was initiated and groomed by the Western Powers, particularly the United States, in their effort to counter the erstwhile Eastern Block. So is the case of the Tamil nationalist outfit LTTE, which was initially groomed by none other than peace loving Indian State. Now, going by the allegation of the Govt. of Manipur, perpetrator of the terrorist violence at Sangakpham turns out to be a “legitimate” organization.

Therefore, there is enough ground for us not to turn a blind eye to the nature of the unbridled violence — of which terrorism is only one side of the coin — that has come to subvert a civilized life in Manipur. In other words, the State must be equally subjected to our critical scrutiny for its role and complicity in perpetuating “illegitimate” violence on us.

This does not deny the fact, however, that terrorism shall remain an expression of illegitimacy precisely because its violence is naked and exclusively a product of a decision unmediated by established norms and institutional mechanisms. It is illegitimate because the acts, its violence and intimidation, are not accountable to the people, particularly to its victims. The violence that struck unsuspecting citizens at Sangakpham is one amongst a series of expressions of terrorism that the state has witnessed over the years.

Scourge of Illegitimate Violence
Make no mistake, planting bomb in public place and killing civilians can only be the handiwork of those who want to destroy Manipur and de-legitimize those who seek and work for the wellbeing and dignity of the people of Manipur. And given that NSCN (I-M) being an organization that does not recognize Manipur as it exists and arguably do not enjoy legitimacy amongst the people of Manipur, except in the eyes of some organizations and sections of the population, it may not be answerable for their acts, including for the alleged one at Sangakpham, to the people of Manipur. But, arguably the Government of India is answerable; in fact, far more than the alleged involvement of the NSCN (I-M), the Government of India must be held accountable for the death and destruction at Sangakpham. After all, those who died at Sangakpham are “citizens” of this country and NSCN (I-M) is a recognized “entity” by the Government of India with which it has been in “political talks” and a “cease-fire” has been in place between the “two entities” for more than a decade.

It must go without saying that the violence, or to use Max Weber’s expression “physical force”, that is deployed by the State is “legitimate” insofar as it is mediated by the established norms and institutional mechanisms. This has been the imperatives of a civilized polity, particularly represented by the democratic ethos. If the violence of the state does not commensurate with such normative and institutional mechanisms, it is not legitimate. 

This is another reason as to why we must bring the State into our scrutiny. The culture of an unmediated and illegitimate violence has been initiated, groomed and sustained by the state in Manipur for decades. The reality of the violence perpetrated on the people by the security and law enforcing agencies of the state is only a symptom of a deeper subversion of the normative and institutional mechanisms by the State itself. The notorious AFSPA is a classic example of that ethos. Allowing the military, an institution that is primarily there for war, to operate as a law enforcing instrument to deal with the “internal affairs” of the state for decades has encouraged a culture that seeks to deploy brutal violence as a means of addressing political and other issues. Incidentally, the illegal and unconstitutional character of such an approach could only be sustained when the Supreme Court in its Judgment on the Act pronounces that the “disturbed” condition wherein the Act has been enforced is not due to “armed rebellion” (or in Manipuri, “khutlai paiba lalhouba”)! It even goes on to say that the disturbance is not of such a “magnitude” so as to say that it constitutes a “threat” to the “security” of the nation. Had it admitted that the “disturbed” condition is due to “armed rebellion” and threatens the security of the nation, AFSPA would have been unconstitutional for there is Article 352!

Consequently, under this legal fiction, the deployment of militaristic violence and its ethos have been allowed to get entrenched in the state as a part of administrative mechanism. The price of that subversion of the normative and institutional mechanisms of a civilized constitutional order has been what we have been paying all these years. The inability to judge “legitimate” and “illegitimate” violence in the state is not unrelated to this subversion.

Thus, let not this tragedy at Sangakpham become an opportunity once more for those who treat the public, their sense and sensibility, with contemptuous behavior of Feudal Lords to subvert a historically rooted political issue, which they have been trying to turn into a question of “crime” in the sense of taking it as an issue of “law and order”. Indeed, let it be known that the grotesque world wherein illegitimate violence rules our life in the state was inaugurated, nurtured and sustained by that decades-old approach.

No More Rhetorical Justification
It must also be equally understood that for those people who fight against an ethos that encourages the dictum, “kill the dog and give him a bad name”, a much more dangerous ethos than the classical example of lawlessness communicated by the saying “give a bad name to the dog and kill him”, must not keep on asking for the “reason” or “explanation” following such crimes as we have seen at Sangakpham. Whatever reasons that might come cannot be the rationales for justifying what is essentially indefensible “legitimate” violence. Be it under the cloak of AFSPA or counter-insurgency or in the name of “revolution” or “liberation”, one must be able to recognize an illegitimate violence for what it is. 

In a similar sense, we must be careful of the expression “collateral damage”, an atrocious term introduced by States rather than non-state entities, which suggests that the killing is “unintended” while not denying the premeditated awareness that the victims will be part of the dead beforehand. Let no rhetoric of “revolution” or “liberation” be allowed to deploy as a smokescreen for the crime which can be committed only by people without any ideological commitment, both in the ideational and instrumental senses of the term “ideology”.

Only then, can we meaningfully mourn and rejuvenate to say “Dear Aping alias Neha (10) d/o Basanta of Sangakpham Awang Leikai, Imphal, and Philaso (10) d/o Kachipkhui of Marou village, Phungyar sub-division, Ukhrul, you come from different communities, young souls of class III, fast friends that you were on earth, so will be in heaven too; Rest in peace but come back again; we will ensure your place Manipur become a peaceful place where you two can walk hand-in-hand once again!

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/sangakpham-and-beyond-confronting-illegitimate-violence/

It was just another bomb blast right?

var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″By: Sanatombi Angomcha It was just another bomb blast right? Rupees 50,000 each for the injured victims and Rupees 1 lakh as ‘Asiman’ for…

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var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″By: Sanatombi Angomcha It was just another bomb blast right? Rupees 50,000 each for the injured victims and Rupees 1 lakh as ‘Asiman’ for…

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Sainik School Imphal Students Revolt Against Principal

IMPHAL, Jul 25 : For the second time in two years, students of Sainik School, Imphal staged an open revolt against the school authority, disrupting normal functioning of the institution. On November…

read the full article at manipurhub.com


IMPHAL, Jul 25 : For the second time in two years, students of Sainik School, Imphal staged an open revolt against the school authority, disrupting normal functioning of the institution. On November…

read the full article at manipurhub.com

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Flood flashback

Chitra Ahanthem The rains it seems are good only in films. The languorous pitter-patter of rains over the past week in Imphal has led to the inundation of small lanes… Read more »

Chitra Ahanthem
The rains it seems are good only in films. The languorous pitter-patter of rains over the past week in Imphal has led to the inundation of small lanes and many roads across town. On a happier note, the rains have not spared anyone but merrily mired people in slush and mud, regardless of social hierarchies and flooding embankments and residential areas and office complexes. Whoever thought rain could turn out to be a great social leveler? The rich and the powerful with all their might and the grandeur of their homes have to face the ignominy of having their homes encroached upon by water from nearby drains that in turn have become mere slivers of water being clogged with plastic and other rubbish. Drains have more or less disappeared from sight over the years following the concrete jungle fixation, the greed for more land and the presence of the evil plastic bags that everyone seems to love throwing everywhere.
And while nothing about floods can be romantic, the current situation of flash floods arising out of water deluge following brief showers brings back the memories of excitement associated with floods, and a big one at that. The 1989 floods happened sometime in summer, which makes that spectacle more than two decades old. We were in school then, a period that was yet to be marked by internet or mobile phones or even cable TV. Doordarshan and All India Radio were the only means of entertainment and news but our own inherent tendency for kumhei meant that people would go out in droves and move about town taking stock of how the flood was advancing. They called it “eeshing chaoba yengba”  and it was more or less effective in warning people about when to pack things in the house and get ready for the flooding. Sometimes, people would set up their fishing nets in places where there was flooding and come back boasting about their catch. In most cases, it was the news that came from this ventures that would warn people much before the local news on AIR!

Nude wires over the Nambul river, plastic garbage in background Photo credit: Chitra Ahanthem

Looking at it now, it is rather strange that before my own experience of the 1989 floods, we had only the hearsay of our own parents of their flood experiences during their own childhood. This gave it the rose tinted outlook: floods sounded like so much fun! That would be an understatement in more ways than one. For starters, my father ended up joining his friends for a “eeshing chaoba yengba chatba” expedition and it was while he was away that the floods decided to come calling! As my younger siblings slept through the night, I was slogging with my mother: we had to pack books and clothes and keep them on higher locations inside the house. We had to wedge in bricks under the hen-coop and repeat the same exercise for the small thatched granary that we had at home. Father came in home after we had done the first stocktaking and calmly said, “the floods have come.” It was as if we still had that fact to be pointed out to us when we had been already been scrambling about with water swirling around our ankles in the house!

Scene in the heart of Imphal: Paona Bazaar. Photo credit: Chitra Ahanthem

But that frantic rush as it turned out later, was not enough. My treasured comic collection was sogged and so was a large part of the granary. My younger brother who had been besotted by two small ducklings and had them in a small cage was heart broken to find later that the waters carried away the ducks: cage and all! Much later after the water receded, the paddy that got wet developed white moulds but the price of rice had gone up after the floods. So we ended up eating pungent smelling rice for a long time and I pestered my parents asking whether our paddy had turned to the huikap breed (it is said that huikap is so called because the taste is so vile as to make even dogs cry!) because of the floods. This would come later but after the scrambling, there was the element of fun that started out with the first morning after the floods came: the sight of an uncle and a cousin rowing on a raft made of the trunk of banana plants. Of course, the lanes in our locality will no longer fit such a contraption now but back then lanes within Leikais were broad and people asked about the welfare of their neighbours. Uncle was telling us that people had started packing their belongings and taking shelter in his building and other tall structures. He sent in a rickshaw to ferry my siblings and myself and we spent 3-4 days with our extended family in their building, a tall one that was still being constructed.
The most vivid memory of that time is the picture of all of us surrounding grand-father as he would tune into the local news on AIR and hearing about when the flood level would go down. There was great excitement and chaos when some snakes came out crawling and the usual circus following naughty children trying out water adventures: the later got taken care of through some trashing! But the fun times did not last long: we had two doctors in the family and they promptly vaccinated all of us children so we did not get any funny infections (am not sure what those injections were about still). Then my maternal grand mother came to fetch us to her home at Kakwa, which was not touched by the flood. I stayed with her for 2 weeks till it was announced that schools would be open once again. That brought the end of all excitement but the after effects of the flood was still around when we got back. We came home to the sight of our mother scrubbing the mud off the hens!
End-point:
That was then and much has changed. While there are many places around Imphal and its outskirts that stay under flood for a day and more, thankfully they do not remain submerged for days on end. Having said that though, it would be disastrous to remain complacent about floods. The sight of nude electric power lines and cables hanging oh so near above the water surface on the Nambul river is enough to give me ulcers. The flash floods that happen after every brief downpour also continues to be an eye-sore and speaks volumes of how we are not taking care of waste disposals and drainage and sewerage around our houses. Most houses have got added height in their ground floor structures following ground leveling but if each of us can care enough to also think of what lies beyond our own homes, then we could actually get down to living without the slush and the mud. So long as drains remain clogged with plastic or worse, get to vanishing point, the sight of concrete surrounded by slush will remain.

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Higher Education: For a better Manipur

Written by: Khuraijam Jibankumar Singh, FLS (Founder and Managing Trustee) North East Centre for Environmental Education and Research, Imphal Every year colleges in different Universities across the country are increasing… Read more »

Written by: Khuraijam Jibankumar Singh, FLS (Founder and Managing Trustee)

North East Centre for Environmental Education and Research, Imphal

Every year colleges in different Universities across the country are increasing their cut off marks for admission to under graduate courses. Students of states like ours are facing difficulty in getting admissions in good colleges like St. Stephen College, Sri Ram College of Commerce due to low aggregate in their marks in Board Exams. Only a few get admissions in reputed colleges and the remaining had to settle for correspondence courses or had to go for some certificate or diploma courses.

Students of our state are very good in studies, extra –curricular activities and are well aware of the happening across the country or globe. In spite of all the turmoil in the state as the result of the prevailing situation in the state, students are still not losing their hope to achieve their dreams. We need to give them support, encouragements, appreciation and proper guidance. Not only these, our teachers and education system should change their approach in giving marks or grading system. Our students are second to none but are still facing problems in getting admission after XIIth. Manipur Education Board and Council should encourage teachers to give marks according to what the students deserves. Every year thousands of Manipuri students couldn’t get admission due to low grade in Board/Council Exams. However, the situation is different for students studying in other boards like CBSE, ICSE.  Does it mean that students studying in CBSE, ICSE are better than students of Manipur Board/Council? Take example of Manipuri students (not only Manipuri students) studying in Assam Valley School (CBSE) in Assam get admission in colleges easily as compare to students studying in schools of Manipur Board. The only difference is marks/percentage.

Every year Manipuri students topped in colleges and university somewhere or the other across the country. We have several Gold medallists and toppers in every field of sciences, arts, engineering, medical and commerce. However, the number could be increased if all the talented students get proper education and this can be achieved if they get admission in good colleges and universities. Manipur Government/Education Departments should hold regular meetings and interaction programmes with teachers, officials of Board/Council and principals to address the situation and problems faced by the students of the state in getting admission for higher education.

Encourage students to pursue higher education for better Manipur. Education will bring peace and development to the state.

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Chit- Fund (Marup) culture in Manipur

By: Sanatombi Angomcha I personally do not have any idea about the origin of chit-fund in Manipur- what we usually call ‘marup’ in Meiteilon. However, I find it one of… Read more »

By: Sanatombi Angomcha

I personally do not have any idea about the origin of chit-fund in Manipur- what we usually call ‘marup’ in Meiteilon. However, I find it one of the interesting cultural norms passed on from one generation to another since time immemorial. From my childhood’s memory bank, Leisabis (unmarried girls) used to start various chit-funds in and across the various leikais. Sometimes a fanek marup, sometimes a mompaak fidak marup or sometimes a paisa marup, I have personally come across many elderly leikai eche (s) helding many ‘marups’ on monthly basis. Ney Indira from Kshetrimayum Kolup of Wangkhei Meihoufam Lampak used to be one of the pioneer marup houbi leisabis in our leikai (as per my memory bank). I remember her visiting our koijam kolup almost every month to collect the marupki-senkhais. My mom even had two-three shares of marup that was held by ne Indira. If we minutely study the norms of marup culture in Manipur, it is an interesting and exciting subject of discussion. For an unmarried leisabi, marup is more or less a preparedness for her D-day- ‘the luhongba numit’. Luhongba Marups serve the purpose for various leisabis and their awunpot requirements. Though it would not mean much for a rich family, for a leisabi from a middle or below middle class, a luhongba marup or any marup means a lot to her as she cannot readily afford all the necessities during her ‘luhongba’.
In modern Manipur, Marup-culture has gone through various drastic changes. The essence of conventional marups has gradually faded. And there is a dearth of elderly leisabis who are keen to organize many marups. Modern chit funds are mostly official ones (held in the various offices amongst the employees mostly money-centric ones).Que sera sera, with whatever trails of this culture left behind, I am glad to associate myself with this passed-on norm of gathering up every month at a particular place, getting excited whether it would be one’s turn to take home the anticipated ‘amount or commodity’- what we call ‘marup faoba’. Once I am in Manipur, I am pretty sure to join many marups to be held amongst my ‘etas’.

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A crumbling memory of ‘Shamu Makhong’

      By:  Sanatombi Angomcha Granny had this tiny ‘pokfam’ right beside the ever famous landmark in Kwairambandh Keithel- ‘shamu makhong’. She used to sell mangal, chana, heingaan ladoo,… Read more »

 

shamu makhong manipur

Present state of Shamu Makhong Manipur

 

 

By:  Sanatombi Angomcha

Granny had this tiny ‘pokfam’ right beside the ever famous landmark in Kwairambandh Keithel- ‘shamu makhong’. She used to sell mangal, chana, heingaan ladoo, heimaang matum etc. Visiting kwairambandh keithel as a child was such an exciting experience especially with this very anticipation of having ‘mayoms’ of mangal or chana and my favourite hei-ngaan-ladoo often offered by ‘Keisampatki Abok’(my granny).
The nearer I would follow ‘Mumma’ towards the ‘Shamu Makhong’ to visit her, the thuds in my heart would continuously grow with exhilaration. She sometimes used to give me pocket money. Though Mumma used to forbid her from giving that pocket money, for me it meant everything (when I say everything I mean everything). The crowd at the Shamu Makhong used to excite me further. The ‘kwa mana’ selling non-Manipuris, the various wholesale shops of various snacks, granny’s fellow pokfam fambi eney, endon and abok-like ladies- these are some vivid memories I can recall about the surroundings at ‘Shamu Makhong’, Sometimes, it would be yet another experience taking a close look of the ‘unattended statue of Shriyuut Bhagyachandra’ and his sorry Shamu and of course the pasted posters on it. Though elders used to tell tales about how that great king caught that elephant right at that spot and in honour of his bravery how the statue was created there, I was least interested to find out the historical connotations. For me, that was one favourite spot for me in the entire Kwairambandh Keithel because that’s the very landmark beside which my skinny-granny had her ‘pokfam’.
Last time, when I visited home and went to Kwairambandh keithel, a nostalgic feeling engulfed me. I saw the fly-over, saw the renovated shamu-makhong, Shriyuut Bhagyachandra was infact wearing a new paint, and his shamu was also repaired. But I felt no envy or happiness to see the ‘changed Shamu Makhong’, I was sadder not to see my granny or her fellow Pokfam fambis around.  I am not sure about others but for me this crumbling memory of ‘Shamu Makhong’ will forever and ever stay in my heart.

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Drug consignment worth Rs 120.80 crores seized from Imphal based courier agent

IMPHL, June 9: The Narcotic Control Bureau, (NCB) Regional Unit, Imphal, has seized 12,15,800 tablets of ephedrine HCL (15MG) worth approximately Rs 120.80 crores in black market. According to official… Read more »

IMPHL, June 9: The Narcotic Control Bureau, (NCB) Regional Unit, Imphal, has seized 12,15,800 tablets of ephedrine HCL (15MG) worth approximately Rs 120.80 crores in black market.
According to official source, the huge seizure was made under the supervision of VS Shaha Sane, regional director, NCB Imphal.
The consignment consisting of eight cartons containing the tablets was seized on June 5 from the office of the Courier company Blaze Flash Courier Limited having its office at Khoyathong opposite to ABC godown.
The sources said the approximate cost value of the seized Ephedrine in the illicit international market is around Rs 120.80 cores.
During follow up action, three persons connected with the consignment in distribution to Myanmar were arrested, it said. One of them was having firm name MNG Drugs and Biopharma, Imphal, which was non-existent at the address and the counter part was using the license without his knowledge for purchase and sale of the tablet and thereby diverting from legal channel to illegal channel and made huge profit.
Of three arrested persons one is reportedly from Imphal and the two others are from Moreh.
Further, some more quantity of tablets has been seized in other part of the country. The manufacturer of the tablets has also been identified and further investigations are in progress, added the source.
One Maruti van and two wheeler used by the traffickers were also seized under reasonable belief that they are involved in violations under the NDPS Act 1985, it said.

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Apocalypse Imagined

The magnitude of a possible disaster as indicated by the periodic flood situation every monsoon can only be described as terrifying. Tuesday night’s unusually heavy torrents literally flooded half of… Read more »

The magnitude of a possible disaster as indicated by the periodic flood situation every monsoon can only be described as terrifying. Tuesday night’s unusually heavy torrents literally flooded half of Imphal, though thankfully the cloudburst did not last too long and the logged water had time to flow away considerably by morning, although not completely.

This is yet another caution as to how vulnerable the Imphal valley is. Just imagine what would have happened if the rains did not stop for another one week, a scenario not altogether impossible, in fact one which should be expected in the near future if the prediction of global warming and climate change by scientists is anything to go by. The floods caused would then be much more extensive. But more than this, in the event of a much larger volume of flood water inundating the valley, the second scenario is even more alarming.

Up to a certain level, the Loktak lake and other still existing natural wetlands can act as the reservoir and absorb flood waters. That is to say, only so long as the flood water volume is within this limit, flood waters would recede soon as the rains stop, and inundated farmlands and residences would be spared total destruction. But just suppose the flood water volume exceeds this limit in any given years. Since there is very little outflow of water away from the valley, the excess waters would have little or no place to drain away into, and farmlands and homesteads would remain inundated until the water evaporates. A glimpse of such a scenario is already available in the current floods. Long after the rains have ceased, many low lying areas as still flooded as the rivers that brought the waters are unable to reabsorb them. If the freak rains persist every year, then even before the previous years flood waters have receded, more would be incrementally added, ultimately water would reclaim much of the low lying areas, in much the same way it probably was in prehistoric and proto-historic times, memories of which are preserved in some of the folklores and legends of the place.

Even as much of the low lying coastal regions of the world, including Bangladesh, Netherlands, Florida etc, are swallowed up by the sea in the event of global warming leading to the melting of the polar ice caps, much of the Imphal valley too then would be an extended lake from permanent flood waters.
The moot point is, what possible remedies can there be? The first thing that most believers in a supernatural order would do is to pray that the unprecedented downpour this year was a freak occurrence and not a portent of things to come. But still, it would be prudent to prepare for the worst, even if one were to continue hoping for the best. The second, but a rather long term strategy would be to join the global effort to arrest climate change. This would entail first and foremost, trying to understand what this is all about. The last proposition that we would like to suggest has to do with the question of preparing for the worst case scenario.

The Imphal valley is at an altitude of over 2000 feet above mean sea level, which means that given the outlet, gravity would ensure that water drains out of the place. This fact itself should be capitalised into devising a way to ensure security of the valley from a future water disaster in the event of climate change. Apart from the river that flow out of the Loktak lake to ultimately join the river system in Myanmar and ultimately the sea, artificial tunnels of the Loktak Hydro Electric Plant use the same principle of gravity to divert water away from the lake to turn generation turbines and ultimately join the Barak River and the sea. Such artificial outlets could be made to have a double purpose – hydro electric generation as well as emergency water drainage. Just as for instance, the elaborate labyrinths of subway train tunnels deep down into the earth in many American and European cities, were also designed during the Cold War to couple up nuclear shelters in the eventuality of a nuclear holocaust which had become a real threat then. The nuclear holocaust did not happen, but the subway systems are not a waste because they are also fundamentally an important city transport infrastructure. Likewise, climate change and a subsequent water disaster may or may not be Imphal valley’s future, but the hydroelectric tunnels would still be performing their fundamental purpose of producing electricity.

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Manipur Cycle Club – Critical Mass II

Photos By:  Manipur Cycle Club Manipur Cycle Club had their Critical Mass II on 29 May 2011. Critical Mass is a cycling event, which happens on the last Sunday of… Read more »

Manipur Cycle Club - Critical Mass II

Manipur Cycle Club – Critical Mass II

Photos By:  Manipur Cycle Club

Manipur Cycle Club had their Critical Mass II on 29 May 2011. Critical Mass is a cycling event, which happens on the last Sunday of every month, where people who cycle and promote cycling as the key means of transport come together to reclaim their cycling space. The event was participated by around 50 cyclists, and the ride began from DM College of Science and passed through Thangal and Paona Bazaar. Then, after passing through Singjamei, the ride ended at Yaiskul Oil pump where a BMX and Skating show took place as a way to attract passerby. Leaflets promoting cycling as a means of transport were also distributed. The next Critical Mass III will be on 26 June and those interested may contact Manipur Cycle Club at 2445134.

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Manipur Cycle Club – Critical Mass II

MANIPUR CYCLE CLUB JUPITER YAMBEM CENTER, PAONA INTERNATIONAL MARKET PAONA BAZAR, IMPHAL, MANIPUR – 795001 PRESS RELEASE       Manipur Cycle Club had their Critical Mass II on 29… Read more »

MANIPUR CYCLE CLUB
JUPITER YAMBEM CENTER,
PAONA INTERNATIONAL MARKET
PAONA BAZAR, IMPHAL, MANIPUR – 795001

PRESS RELEASE

 

Manipur Cycle Club – Critical Mass II

 

 

Manipur Cycle Club had their Critical Mass II on 29 May 2011. Critical Mass is a cycling event, which happens on the last Sunday of every month, where people who cycle and promote cycling as the key means of transport come together to reclaim their cycling space. The event was participated by around 50 cyclists, and the ride began from DM College of Science and passed through Thangal and Paona Bazaar. Then, after passing through Singjamei, the ride ended at Yaiskul Oil pump where a BMX and Skating show took place as a way to attract passerby. Leaflets promoting cycling as a means of transport were also distributed. The next Critical Mass III will be on 26 June and those interested may contact Manipur Cycle Club at 2445134.

Sd/-
Deben Sharma
President, MCC

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IMC Election 2011: College Teachers Decide To Boycott

IMPHAL, May 22: The Federation of College Teachers’ Association, Manipur (FECTAM) has decided to boycott the upcoming Imphal Municipal Council election schedule to be held on May 25 besides launching a series of agitation in protest against the fail…


IMPHAL, May 22: The Federation of College Teachers’ Association, Manipur (FECTAM) has decided to boycott the upcoming Imphal Municipal Council election schedule to be held on May 25 besides launching a series of agitation in protest against the failure of the government to implement the revised UGC pay scale in the state for the college […]

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Manipur storms into Santosh trophy semi final

IMPHAL, May 21: Manipur defeated Chattisgarh, 3-0 in their last quarter final league round match in the ongoing 65th national football championship for the Santosh trophy and move in to… Read more »

IMPHAL, May 21: Manipur defeated Chattisgarh, 3-0 in their last quarter final league round match in the ongoing 65th national football championship for the Santosh trophy and move in to the semi final.
In the last quarter final league match played today at JN Stadium, Guwahati, Manipur took complete control of the match and humiliated Chattisgarh with a 3-0 scoreline.
A release of the AMFA in Imphal detailing today’s match result said striker L Tiken Singh scored first goal for Manipur in the 29th minute while I Nilakumar added another in the 40th minute to lead 2-0 at half time.
In the second half, N Jimmy added another goal for Manipur thereby sealing a place in the semi final.
Manipur topped Group A table with seven points.
Title favourites Bengal finished second with four points after suffering 1-2 defeat at the hands of Tamilnadu.
Manipur will take on the runner-up of group B in the first semifinal to be played on May 26, while a day after West Bengal will lock their horns with the winner of Group B.
The final will be played on May 30.

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DBT Project Positions – Manipur University – Department Of Biology

DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY MANIPUR UNIVERSITY CANCHIPUR Advertisement for the DBT Project Positions May 10, 2011 Applications in plain paper supported by CVs and relevant testimonials are invited for the appointment… Read more »

DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY
MANIPUR UNIVERSITY
CANCHIPUR

Advertisement for the DBT Project Positions

May 10, 2011

Applications in plain paper supported by CVs and relevant testimonials are invited for the appointment of the following temporary positions for implementation of the project under the DBT’s Twinning programme for the NE titled “Discovery of bioactive natural products from microbes especially actinomycetes in niche biotopes in Manipur” so as to reach the undersigned on or before May 24, 2011.

1. Research Associate (RA): One (01) post
Essential Qualification: PhD in the relevant disciplines of Biological Sciences/ Biotechnology. Preference will be given to candidates with research experience in Microbial Biotechnology as evidenced by publications in refereed indexed journals. Those who have submitted their PhD thesis are also eligible to apply.
Salary: As per DBT norms.

2. Junior Research Fellow (JRF): One (01) post

Essential Qualification: M.Sc in the relevant disciplines of Biological Sciences/Biotechnology. Preference will be given to candidates who have qualified CSIR/UGC- NET, GATE or other National Level Eligibility Tests.

Salary: As per DBT norms.

General terms and conditions

1. The positions are purely temporary for one year which is extendable on yearly basis subject to satisfactory performance for a maximum period of three years or the tenure of the project, whichever is earlier. The appointment does not confer any entitlement or right over the job and will not be considered as formal service.
2. Applications may also be sent by email to debananda.ningthoujam@gmail.com complete in all respects alongwith relevant documents.
3. The PI reserves the right to shortlist suitable candidates. List of shortlisted candidates shall be displayed on the Departmental Notice Board followed by Call letters through email.
4. No TA/DA shall be paid to the candidates for attending the interview.

Dr Debananda S. Ningthoujam
Principal Investigator
Dept of Biochemistry
Manipur University
Canchipur, Imphal-795003

Cc:

1. SPA to The Vice Chancellor, Manipur University, for information
2. The Dean, School of Life sciences
3. HOD of Biochemistry
4. System Administrator, MU for Publication in MU website
5. Web administrator e-pao / Kangla online Portals.
6. Editors of Local Newspapers
7. Notice Board
8. Office File

 

The above job notification was sent to Kanglaonline.com by Dr Debananda S. Ningthoujam

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Mamata, Jaya crush Left, DMK; Congress sweeps Assam

New Delhi, May 13 (IANS): India was poised to get two more women chief ministers as Mamata Banerjee’s tsunami destroyed 34 years of Left rule in West Bengal while veteran… Read more »

New Delhi, May 13 (IANS): India was poised to get two more women chief ministers as Mamata Banerjee’s tsunami destroyed 34 years of Left rule in West Bengal while veteran J. Jayalalithaa pounded the corruption-tainted DMK in Tamil Nadu in a manner not predicted even by pundits.

The Congress, on the winning side in West Bengal but a loser in Tamil Nadu, managed a remarkable hat trick in Assam after decimating a divided opposition, but huffed and puffed before narrowly overcoming a fighting Left Democratic Front (LDF) in Kerala.

In Puducherry, the last of five provinces which went to the polls in April-May, the Congress was unseated by a breakaway group which had teamed up with Jayalalithaa’s AIADMK.

Although it put up a brave face, there was more bad news for the Congress in the two Lok Sabha by-elections.

The Congress was humiliated in Kadapa in Andhra Pradesh — a development bound to cost the party dearly in the politically crucial state — and defeated by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in Bastar in Chhattisgarh.

In Kadapa, the Congress candidate came second but lost his deposit after Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy, son of the late chief minister Y.S.R. Rajasekhara Reddy, retained the seat with a record margin of 543,053 votes — three times the winning margin of 2009.

‘The Congress will have to introspect very seriously because it must be feeling a southern discomfort,’ political analyst G.V.L. Narasimha Rao told IANS. ‘Assam is very good news for the Congress but it deserves no credit for Bengal. The south seems to be slipping away.’

Southern India had accounted for a solid 60 of the Lok Sabha seats the Congress won in 2009 — a contribution that helped it retain power in New Delhi.

Without doubt, the most dramatic of victories Friday came from West Bengal and Tamil Nadu.

Riding on a wave of discontent against the Communists who had been in power in West Bengal since 1977, Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress delivered a mortal blow to the Left. The Trinamool bagged 181 of the state’s 294 seats while its ally Congress won 42. The Left got 61 seats, one of its worst performances in decades.

As tens of thousands of Trinamool supporters celebrated the fascinating win, particularly outside the Kolkata residence of Banerjee, Biman Bose of the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) admitted it was a rout.

Banerjee, who is expected to resign as the railway minister to move to Kolkata to be the first woman chief minister of West Bengal, met Governor M.K. Narayanan Friday evening.

The Trinamool wave crushed the Marxists all over West Bengal, even in areas where the Communists had never before tasted defeat.
Even Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya, whose aggressive policy of industrialization sparked off protests in rural areas that helped Banerjee to ultimately cripple the Left, was humbled in Jadavpore.

Equally sensational was the AIADMK juggernaut in Tamil Nadu, which swept away the DMK and its allies that included the Congress. After a landslide victory, AIADMK leader Jayalalitha vowed to rebuild the state even as the party made it clear that it would not share power with its allies.

Needing 118 seats to form a government, the AIADMK had captured 153 seats on its own while its alliance, which included actor Vijayakanth’s MDMK and the two Communist parties, had crossed the 200-mark.

A stunned DMK retreated into silence.

AIADMK MP V. Maitreyan said the Tamil Nadu vote was against ‘family rule’ — referring to Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi, his son and Deputy Chief Minister M.K. Stalin, central minister and elder son M.K. Alagiri and daughter M. Kanimozhi, a Rajya Sabha MP who faces possible arrest in the spectrum allocation scam.

The only cheer for Congress came in Assam where it bagged 78 of the 126 seats, a vast improvement on the last election, to come back to power for the third consecutive time.

While Congress Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi credited it to good governance, the opposition said the main reason were its divided ranks.

In Kerala too the Congress tasted victory but after many anxious hours — managing a majority of just one seat in a house of 140.

The new chief minister is expected to be Oommen Chandy of the Congress, which heads the victorious United Democratic Front (UDF). Most players in the state credited the Marxists’ stunning show to Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan, who at age 87 proved to be the Left’s biggest vote catcher.

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Woman UG activist arrested

IMPHAL, May 13: The Bishnupur District Police commandos conducted search operation at Nambol Makha Leikai and arrested a women activist of PREPAK, identified as Thounaojam (O) Bhanu alias Remina Devi,… Read more »

IMPHAL, May 13: The Bishnupur District Police commandos conducted search operation at Nambol Makha Leikai and arrested a women activist of PREPAK, identified as Thounaojam (O) Bhanu alias Remina Devi, 38, w/o Th Noren from Kongkham Awang Leikai.

A press release of the Bishnupur Police said ten live rounds of 9mm pistol was recovered from her possession.

It further mentioned that she disclosed that she was involved in extortion of money from Govt. officials and businessmen in Bishnupur District under the command of capt. Erei of PREPAK.

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Preparations Begin For The IMC Election

IMPHAL, May 4: Election code of conduct will be imposed in both districts of Imphal East and Imphal West following the official issuance of the election notification for the election to the 27 wards of the Imphal Municipal Councils today by the State …


IMPHAL, May 4: Election code of conduct will be imposed in both districts of Imphal East and Imphal West following the official issuance of the election notification for the election to the 27 wards of the Imphal Municipal Councils today by the State Chief Electoral officer Th. Chitra Devi. According to the official notification, filing […]

Read more / Original news source: http://manipurhub.com/news-manipur/preparations-begins-for-the-imc-election/

Disease Investigation Lab of Veterinary Hospital To Have Emergency Testing Facility

IMPHAL, Apr 29: Along with upgradation to the level of Bio Security Level-II (BSL-II), the existing Disease Investigation Laboratory of Veterinary Hospital at Sanjenthong is all set to be equipped with the facilities for emergency testing of Swine and…


IMPHAL, Apr 29: Along with upgradation to the level of Bio Security Level-II (BSL-II), the existing Disease Investigation Laboratory of Veterinary Hospital at Sanjenthong is all set to be equipped with the facilities for emergency testing of Swine and Bird flu infections. According to an official source, upgradation of the Disease Investigation Laboratory to the […]

Read more / Original news source: http://manipurhub.com/news-manipur/disease-investigation-lab-of-veterinary-hospital-to-have-emergency-testing-facility/

Good Friday Observed At MBC Centre Church

IMPHAL, Apr 22 : Under the theme “Father forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing”, MBC Centre Church observed Good Friday today. Speaking at the occasion, MBC Centre Church pastor L Simon Raomei said that Good Friday is being observ…


IMPHAL, Apr 22 : Under the theme “Father forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing”, MBC Centre Church observed Good Friday today. Speaking at the occasion, MBC Centre Church pastor L Simon Raomei said that Good Friday is being observed in remembrance of the sacrifice made by Lord Jesus on behalf of […]

Read more / Original news source: http://manipurhub.com/news-manipur/good-friday-observed-at-mbc-centre-church/

Manipur CM Talks Tough Against Panchayat Fund Misuse

IMPHAL, Apr 18: Issuing a stern warning, Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh has stated the Govt has devolved necessary power including administrative and financial power to local bodies at the grassroots level like Autonomous District Council, Zilla Parisha…


IMPHAL, Apr 18: Issuing a stern warning, Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh has stated the Govt has devolved necessary power including administrative and financial power to local bodies at the grassroots level like Autonomous District Council, Zilla Parishad and Gram Panchayats. However, if the fund were misused or the utilisation certificates were not submitted in […]

Read more / Original news source: http://manipurhub.com/news-manipur/manipur-cm-talks-tough-against-panchayat-fund-misuse/