Missing Poumai boy dies of injuries, family alleges foul play

IMPHAL, December 5: A student from the State, who went missing on November 29 after being allegedly threatened by five people on a running train, died at a hospital in

IMPHAL, December 5: A student from the State, who went missing on November 29 after being allegedly threatened by five people on a running train, died at a hospital in Odisha.

The deceased student has been identified as L Poumai, 23 from Purul, Khabung Karong village in Senapati district.

His family claimed that he could have been pushed out of the running train by goons leading to his death.

L. Poumai boarded Dibrugarh-Bangalore City Express (train number 15902) from Dimapur, Nagaland, on November 27 night towards his destination Bangalore. He made a distress call to his family members in Manipur at around 3 pm on November 29, complaining that five persons had threatened him and even said that they got angry on seeing his face, according to a source.

The source informed he last spoke to his elder brother Stephen at 4.55 pm of the day wherein he told his brother that he was not even allowed to move by the gang of five people. His mobile phone was switched off thereafter.

The train reached Bangalore on November 30 as scheduled but Poumai was found missing. An FIR was filed at Bangalore Railway Police Station on December 1 and investigation was initiated by the police, it said.

While waiting for Bangalore police’s first update on the incident scheduled for December 5, president of Poumai Students’ Union Bangalore received a call on December 3 evening that L. Poumai had died and was asked to claim the dead body from Capital Hospital Bhubaneshwar, Odisha, according to the source.

The call to claim the dead body came almost five days after the victim was found despite documents like Aadhar card and driving licence are with the victim which the police have access too, according to the source.

Meanwhile, police have claimed in their report that Poumai had committed suicide by hanging. Local newspapers of Odisha published stories on December 2 claiming that the victim was found on November 29 after jumping off a train and admitted to a hospital with minor injuries but escaped the hospital on December 1 and killed himself by hanging with his shirt tied to the branch of a guava tree inside the compound of a government official.

The reports said added that a couple going on a morning walk spotted him and alerted the police.

However, family of the victim has claimed that the incident is a hate crime and that L. Poumai died after being pushed off the running train after robbing him of all his belongings including mobile phone .

They claimed that authorities are trying to cover up the brutal crime with fabricated stories, questioning why authorities took almost five days to inform them of the incident. They also alleged that there could have been a ploy to cover up the inhuman crime but couldn’t after a FIR was filed.

Suspecting foul play on the death, the deceased’s family questioned why didn’t the police contact family and friends of the victim when they found him on November 29 with the help of information provided in his Aadhar Card and driving licence recovered from him.

They also questioned why it took almost four days to inform the victim’s family, saying that the police could have informed Senapati DC, SP or the State government.

How can Poumai possibly hang himself to death on a small branch of guava tree that clearly can’t hold his weight and when his feet are firmly grounded?, the family asked.

The family of the victim also claimed that some forces are trying to victimise the victim with fabricated stories and are taking up the case seriously to ensure that people from north east travelling by train don’t face such inhuman incident in the future.

Several organisations in the State have expressed their support to fight for justice to the incident.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/missing-poumai-boy-dies-of-injuries-family-alleges-foul-play/

CM inspects power sub-station

IMPHAL, December 5: Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh today inspected the ongoing works of the 400 KV power sub-station set up near Thoubal College, which is set to become the

IMPHAL, December 5: Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh today inspected the ongoing works of the 400 KV power sub-station set up near Thoubal College, which is set to become the largest power sub-station in the State.

The CM inspected the construction work of the retaining wall and drainage system of the power sub-station and asked the concerned officials to finish the work at the earliest.

Commissioner (Power) Vinit Joshi; Managing Director of Manipur State Power Distribution Company Limited N Sarat Singh; DC Thoubal; SP Thoubal and several other government officials were also present at the inspection tour.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/cm-inspects-power-substation/

CM inspects power sub-station

IMPHAL, December 5: Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh today inspected the ongoing works of the 400 KV power sub-station set up near Thoubal College, which is set to become the

IMPHAL, December 5: Chief Minister Okram Ibobi Singh today inspected the ongoing works of the 400 KV power sub-station set up near Thoubal College, which is set to become the largest power sub-station in the State.

The CM inspected the construction work of the retaining wall and drainage system of the power sub-station and asked the concerned officials to finish the work at the earliest.

Commissioner (Power) Vinit Joshi; Managing Director of Manipur State Power Distribution Company Limited N Sarat Singh; DC Thoubal; SP Thoubal and several other government officials were also present at the inspection tour.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/cm-inspects-power-substation/

AR assaults Chandel KSO president, two village chiefs

CHANDEL, December 5: Three individuals including the president of the Kuki Students’ Organisation Chandel (KSO) have been hospitalised after they were allegedly assaulted by 24 Assam Rifles personnel at Khudengthabi

CHANDEL, December 5: Three individuals including the president of the Kuki Students’ Organisation Chandel (KSO) have been hospitalised after they were allegedly assaulted by 24 Assam Rifles personnel at Khudengthabi check post in Chandel District today.

The victims are identified as Doumang Haokip, president KSO Chandel District; Seiboi Haokip, Chief of Lamphei Village and Koparsing Lamkang, Chief of Kotal khunthak village.

Speaking to media persons, Doumang Haokip, informed that the incident happened at Khudengthabi AR check post around 4pm in the evening while they were returning towards Imphal from Moreh.

He alleged that an Assam Rifles JCO of the post verbally abused one of the student’ representatives in front of a crowd following which a brief altercation broke out between both sides.

On hearing the altercation one Major Manish Sharma of the post came out, said the KSO president adding that he approached the major to settle the matter amicably at his table as the commotion started to draw larger crowd.

Instead of trying to settle the matter amicably, the major reportedly went up to his Barrack and came back along with his jawans and brutally assaulted the victims with the rifle`s butt, kicking with their boots.

The KSO president alleged that the major even threatened to kill the victims brandishing his gun at them besides adding that he has plenty of guns at his disposal to place it besides their bodies.

Meanwhile, the KSO president was brought to KCC Hospital Imphal late at night as his condition deteriorated.

According to hospital authority, he suffered blunt injury most of which are internals including a seriuos back injury.

While a case a formal complaint has been lodge with the Tengnoupal police station, the KSO has warned to confront the issue tooth and nail until justice is delivered.

Meanwhile, Kuki Chief`s Association ( KCA ) Tengnoupal Block and Kuki Students ’ Organisation ( KSO ) Tengnoupal Block strongly condemned the brutally assaults of two village Chiefs and President of KSO Chandel by a Major Manish Sharma and personnels of 24 Assam Rifles posted at Khudenthabi today.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/ar-assaults-chandel-kso-president-two-village-chiefs/

AR assaults Chandel KSO president, two village chiefs

CHANDEL, December 5: Three individuals including the president of the Kuki Students’ Organisation Chandel (KSO) have been hospitalised after they were allegedly assaulted by 24 Assam Rifles personnel at Khudengthabi

CHANDEL, December 5: Three individuals including the president of the Kuki Students’ Organisation Chandel (KSO) have been hospitalised after they were allegedly assaulted by 24 Assam Rifles personnel at Khudengthabi check post in Chandel District today.

The victims are identified as Doumang Haokip, president KSO Chandel District; Seiboi Haokip, Chief of Lamphei Village and Koparsing Lamkang, Chief of Kotal khunthak village.

Speaking to media persons, Doumang Haokip, informed that the incident happened at Khudengthabi AR check post around 4pm in the evening while they were returning towards Imphal from Moreh.

He alleged that an Assam Rifles JCO of the post verbally abused one of the student’ representatives in front of a crowd following which a brief altercation broke out between both sides.

On hearing the altercation one Major Manish Sharma of the post came out, said the KSO president adding that he approached the major to settle the matter amicably at his table as the commotion started to draw larger crowd.

Instead of trying to settle the matter amicably, the major reportedly went up to his Barrack and came back along with his jawans and brutally assaulted the victims with the rifle`s butt, kicking with their boots.

The KSO president alleged that the major even threatened to kill the victims brandishing his gun at them besides adding that he has plenty of guns at his disposal to place it besides their bodies.

Meanwhile, the KSO president was brought to KCC Hospital Imphal late at night as his condition deteriorated.

According to hospital authority, he suffered blunt injury most of which are internals including a seriuos back injury.

While a case a formal complaint has been lodge with the Tengnoupal police station, the KSO has warned to confront the issue tooth and nail until justice is delivered.

Meanwhile, Kuki Chief`s Association ( KCA ) Tengnoupal Block and Kuki Students ’ Organisation ( KSO ) Tengnoupal Block strongly condemned the brutally assaults of two village Chiefs and President of KSO Chandel by a Major Manish Sharma and personnels of 24 Assam Rifles posted at Khudenthabi today.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/ar-assaults-chandel-kso-president-two-village-chiefs/

High Court disposes petition filed by Robinhood’s father

IMPHAL, December 5: A double bench comprising of Chief Justice, LK Mohapatra and Justice, N Kotiswar Singh, High Court of Manipur, has disposed off the writ petition filed by Sapam

IMPHAL, December 5: A double bench comprising of Chief Justice, LK Mohapatra and Justice, N Kotiswar Singh, High Court of Manipur, has disposed off the writ petition filed by Sapam Robinhood’s father into his son’s death citing emergence of parallel investigation in the wake of an ongoing enquiry for the same incident.

The bench however directed the officer in-charge of Porompat police station, to take necessary action prescribed under section 154 of the CrPC if any cognizance offence is found based on the enquiry constituted by the State government.

It may be recalled that Robinhood’s father, Sapam Romesh Singh had filed the petition following the failure of the Porompat police to register an FIR case when he (Romesh) had approached the concerned OC on July 16.

He was of the view that the report in the Suo Moto case registered by the concerned police station was based on fabricated report.

In his petition he pleaded the court to direct the authority concerned to lodge an FIR against the Manipur Police to book the police personnel involved in ‘unjustified’ firing of rubber bullet resulted in the killing of his son. At the same time, to entrust an independent enquiry like the CBI to investigate the incident.

Subsequent upon the WP, the respondents filed a counter affidavit before the court elaborating on measures taken up in the aftermath of the incident including informing that an enquiry has been constituted to enquire into the causes and circumstances leading to the death of Sapam Robinhood Singh.

In the affidavit, the respondent mentioned that the inquiry was instituted under the commission of Inquiry Act, 1952 instead of registering an FIR on the basis of the written report submitted by the petitioner.

It said the inquiry will investigate the causes and circumstances leading to the death of Ronbinhood, identify instances of any excesses or lapses on the part of security personnel on duty and identify and to recommend corrective measures on duty and remedies to prevent recurrence of similar incidents in the future.

The double bench after examining the claims and counter claimed submitted by the petitioners and respondents, observed that the allegation made by the petitioner was not mentioned in the affidavit filed by the respondents.

The order while referring to the counter claims (affidavit) submitted before the court that an enquiry is being conducted into the incident, observed that the registration of the FIR at the present stage will amount to two parallel investigations in the same incident.

It uphold that under the 154 of the Cr.P.C prescribes that every information relating to the commission of a cognizable offence, if given orally to an officer in-charge of a police station, shall be reduced to writing as aforesaid, shall be assigned by the person giving it, and substance thereof shall be entered in a book to be kept by such an office in such as form as the State Government may prescribed in this behalf.

Therefore it was the duty of the Officer in-charge of the Porompat police station, to examine the complaint given by the petitioner to find out any cognisable and dealt with in the manner prescribed under section 154 Cr.P.C.

However, the exercise has not been undertaken by the OC Porompat said the order despite having received the complaint. The order also cited to be taken note so far as protection to public servant u/s 197 of the Cr.P.C is concerned.

Given the circumstance, the bench disposed off the Writ Petition directing the OC of Porompat Police Station to examine the report of the enquiry and take action accordingly.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/high-court-disposes-petition-filed-by-robinhoods-father/

High Court disposes petition filed by Robinhood’s father

IMPHAL, December 5: A double bench comprising of Chief Justice, LK Mohapatra and Justice, N Kotiswar Singh, High Court of Manipur, has disposed off the writ petition filed by Sapam

IMPHAL, December 5: A double bench comprising of Chief Justice, LK Mohapatra and Justice, N Kotiswar Singh, High Court of Manipur, has disposed off the writ petition filed by Sapam Robinhood’s father into his son’s death citing emergence of parallel investigation in the wake of an ongoing enquiry for the same incident.

The bench however directed the officer in-charge of Porompat police station, to take necessary action prescribed under section 154 of the CrPC if any cognizance offence is found based on the enquiry constituted by the State government.

It may be recalled that Robinhood’s father, Sapam Romesh Singh had filed the petition following the failure of the Porompat police to register an FIR case when he (Romesh) had approached the concerned OC on July 16.

He was of the view that the report in the Suo Moto case registered by the concerned police station was based on fabricated report.

In his petition he pleaded the court to direct the authority concerned to lodge an FIR against the Manipur Police to book the police personnel involved in ‘unjustified’ firing of rubber bullet resulted in the killing of his son. At the same time, to entrust an independent enquiry like the CBI to investigate the incident.

Subsequent upon the WP, the respondents filed a counter affidavit before the court elaborating on measures taken up in the aftermath of the incident including informing that an enquiry has been constituted to enquire into the causes and circumstances leading to the death of Sapam Robinhood Singh.

In the affidavit, the respondent mentioned that the inquiry was instituted under the commission of Inquiry Act, 1952 instead of registering an FIR on the basis of the written report submitted by the petitioner.

It said the inquiry will investigate the causes and circumstances leading to the death of Ronbinhood, identify instances of any excesses or lapses on the part of security personnel on duty and identify and to recommend corrective measures on duty and remedies to prevent recurrence of similar incidents in the future.

The double bench after examining the claims and counter claimed submitted by the petitioners and respondents, observed that the allegation made by the petitioner was not mentioned in the affidavit filed by the respondents.

The order while referring to the counter claims (affidavit) submitted before the court that an enquiry is being conducted into the incident, observed that the registration of the FIR at the present stage will amount to two parallel investigations in the same incident.

It uphold that under the 154 of the Cr.P.C prescribes that every information relating to the commission of a cognizable offence, if given orally to an officer in-charge of a police station, shall be reduced to writing as aforesaid, shall be assigned by the person giving it, and substance thereof shall be entered in a book to be kept by such an office in such as form as the State Government may prescribed in this behalf.

Therefore it was the duty of the Officer in-charge of the Porompat police station, to examine the complaint given by the petitioner to find out any cognisable and dealt with in the manner prescribed under section 154 Cr.P.C.

However, the exercise has not been undertaken by the OC Porompat said the order despite having received the complaint. The order also cited to be taken note so far as protection to public servant u/s 197 of the Cr.P.C is concerned.

Given the circumstance, the bench disposed off the Writ Petition directing the OC of Porompat Police Station to examine the report of the enquiry and take action accordingly.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/high-court-disposes-petition-filed-by-robinhoods-father/

JAC Ccpur to mark 100 days of anti-bills agitation

CHURACHANDPUR, December 5: A joint consultative meeting of tribal leaders from across the State has resolved to mark the “100th day of agitation against the act of injustice meted out

CHURACHANDPUR, December 5: A joint consultative meeting of tribal leaders from across the State has resolved to mark the “100th day of agitation against the act of injustice meted out to the tribal community and insensitivity of the State government towards the mortal remains of the nine tribal martyrs.

JAC formed against the three bills said it was also decided that as already agreed in principle in a previous joint consultative meetings, the JAC should set up a Road Construction Sub-Committee and begin the construction/repairing of important roads linking Churachandpur district and neighbouring States.

The meeting further resolved to appeal the Ministry of Home Affairs to translate its press release on November 9, 2015 into action at the earliest.

The meeting was convened by the JAC Churachandpur at the YPA Hall, Hiangtam Lamka.

A statement of the JAC said a mass prayer will be held at the Lamka Public Ground on December 9.

It said during the meeting it was also decided to make an appeal to all tribal across India and the world to organise similar mass prayers to show support for the tribal movement and to light candles outside their respective homes.

It said the JAC also appreciates the ongoing untiring efforts of the Manipur Tribals Forum Delhi and highly values their contribution to the tribal movement for our land and rights.

It also said that the JAC along with the innpis/tribe leaders and other CSOs shall organize awareness campaigns across the hill districts of Manipur on the issue of tribal land and their rights and that the innpis/tribe councils shall get in touch with the sitting Member of Parliament (Outer Manipur), Thangso Baite and advice him to speak out during this winter session of the Parliament in regards to the three anti-tribal bills (viz. the Protection of Manipur People Bill 2015, the Manipur Land Revenue & Land Reforms (Seventh Amendment) Bill, 2015, and the Manipur Shops & Establishment (Second Amendment) Bill, 2015) and its related issues.

In case the JAC finds it necessary to initiate any form of agitation in the coming days, the tribe leaders are requested to support the actions of the JAC, it said.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/jac-ccpur-to-mark-100-days-of-antibills-agitation/

JAC Ccpur to mark 100 days of anti-bills agitation

CHURACHANDPUR, December 5: A joint consultative meeting of tribal leaders from across the State has resolved to mark the “100th day of agitation against the act of injustice meted out

CHURACHANDPUR, December 5: A joint consultative meeting of tribal leaders from across the State has resolved to mark the “100th day of agitation against the act of injustice meted out to the tribal community and insensitivity of the State government towards the mortal remains of the nine tribal martyrs.

JAC formed against the three bills said it was also decided that as already agreed in principle in a previous joint consultative meetings, the JAC should set up a Road Construction Sub-Committee and begin the construction/repairing of important roads linking Churachandpur district and neighbouring States.

The meeting further resolved to appeal the Ministry of Home Affairs to translate its press release on November 9, 2015 into action at the earliest.

The meeting was convened by the JAC Churachandpur at the YPA Hall, Hiangtam Lamka.

A statement of the JAC said a mass prayer will be held at the Lamka Public Ground on December 9.

It said during the meeting it was also decided to make an appeal to all tribal across India and the world to organise similar mass prayers to show support for the tribal movement and to light candles outside their respective homes.

It said the JAC also appreciates the ongoing untiring efforts of the Manipur Tribals Forum Delhi and highly values their contribution to the tribal movement for our land and rights.

It also said that the JAC along with the innpis/tribe leaders and other CSOs shall organize awareness campaigns across the hill districts of Manipur on the issue of tribal land and their rights and that the innpis/tribe councils shall get in touch with the sitting Member of Parliament (Outer Manipur), Thangso Baite and advice him to speak out during this winter session of the Parliament in regards to the three anti-tribal bills (viz. the Protection of Manipur People Bill 2015, the Manipur Land Revenue & Land Reforms (Seventh Amendment) Bill, 2015, and the Manipur Shops & Establishment (Second Amendment) Bill, 2015) and its related issues.

In case the JAC finds it necessary to initiate any form of agitation in the coming days, the tribe leaders are requested to support the actions of the JAC, it said.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/jac-ccpur-to-mark-100-days-of-antibills-agitation/

Palliative care: Live and let live

By Margaret Ningthoukhongjam Humans are mortal and death is inevitable. Whether we take the long way or the short cut, our sole destination remains the same. How we choose and

By Margaret Ningthoukhongjam

Humans are mortal and death is inevitable. Whether we take the long way or the short cut, our sole destination remains the same. How we choose and which one we choose is predestined, most importantly, by our fate and our idea of responding to it. Life is unpredictable and living points / discloses the tentative thread that binds one’s life with death. Since time immemorial, hope continues to be the greatest medicine that strengthens this thread and prolongs one’s journey. Our advanced and triumphant medical system and culture are also the basic precursors which are instrumental in culturing hope.

Our fate I would say, works in its own unique way and it alters its role individual wise. Fate makes life unpredictable. Let’s take the example of a woman who had never smoked a cigarette or had never lived with a smoker throughout her life and still suffers from lung cancer, while a chain smoker leads a healthy life without any problems. Similarly, some people suffer from severe illness which can be cured by undergoing proper medical treatments and surgeries while some suffer from chronic incurable illness like cancer, AIDS and mental illness like Schizophrenia, Multiple personality disorder, depression etc, Paralysis of limbs, mutilation memory loss due to accidents may also occur. Either way suffering is painful and exhausting. Life becomes miserable for them and their families. Hope is deprived as living becomes meaningless and they start doubting their existence. Let us also consider the live of elderly people. They are the most unfortunate as they are at the most tender stage of life. Their bodies are 80 -90% degraded and are prone to certain physical as well as mental illness. Love and care is the most essential to allow them live their remaining days the way they like and experience a pain free death with no regrets is their only desire. However, it is easy to provide care and motivation to patients who are suffering from illness which can be cured but when it comes to those who are terminally ill and are suffering from incurable illness, the process demands a static and a very delicate approach. This new level of care is collectively known as palliative care – providing care, help and motivation to dying and bedridden people socially, physically, mentally, financially and spiritually so that they can cherish their remaining last days of their life. All these aspects of living are mandatory for the psychological and physical well being of a terminally ill or bedridden person and thus improve their quality of life.

Palliative care is a genuine approach which provides love, care, relief, motivation and help to depressed and dying people while rejuvenating their hope once again. Palliative care volunteers ignite the life of these people by putting themselves in their shoes and taking part in their despair. They take the patients’ problems overhead and directly reach out to their hearts. Their main purpose is to make the other person feel loved and contented and to walk hand in hand at all times. Palliative care givers should be honest, optimistic, trustworthy, patient, caring, loving, hardworking, understanding, empathetic, alert, should possess good communication skills, be tactful and loyal. They should be responsible, diligent, very firm with their objectives and avoid distraction due to factors like sex, religion, race, caste, politics, etc, Impartiality and altruism are also important determiners. To extend support, spread love and guarantee happiness is a divine act and this approach is patient centered and not disease / problem centered.

Our instinct to survive works in a miraculous yet, simple way and it is this force that drives us to strive for the same. Darwin’s “Survival of the fittest” theory explains about the various curriculums that promote a person’s ability to adopt to the ever changing surroundings and comforts him to act accordingly. He observes, interprets, thinks, interacts, evaluates and responds in the most reliable way. Like I mentioned earlier, people choose different ways and get into hard and long fights to avoid the obvious result. They sometimes, put their life at stake and trust the erstwhile medical system. But “death” being the ultimate enemy, it will knock at each door sooner or later. The long way might give you more time and meanwhile make you weaker and weaker, unconscious about your very existence but still you will breathe and still survive. Appreciating life and being conscientious about it implies living. Literally, ‘to live’ and ‘to survive’ are synonymous but psychologically, there exists a fine differentiation between these two prospects. Subjectively, ‘to survive’ is to avoid death at any cost while ‘to live’ is to inhale the real essence of life and embrace death as a part of it.

According to Maslow’s need hierarchy, the five basic needs required for living are physical needs, safety needs, social needs, need for self – esteem and self – actualization. These deficiency needs and growth needs are the main sources of motivation and are fundamental for a person to live.

Palliative care givers aim on providing all these needs and at the same time, motivating and encouraging them through thick and thin. Moreover, the volunteers are developed spiritually and psychologically. They are trained and preordained to face the reality of life to be compassionate, be objective and subjective when required, be faithful and enhance their prosocial behavior. Their outlook and views of life becomes more realistic.

The working of palliative care is easily accessible if the system is well – established. Herein, trained doctors nurses along with volunteers visit the patient’s palace; study their problems and provide quality help and care. This system was first established in Kerala 23 years ago and since then, has taken a firm root. At present, there are more than 1000 Palliative Care centers in Kerala. As part of the plan, Manipur has come foreward and the Palliative Care Society, Imphal has been founded on 16th April, 2015. Many doctors, nurses, other professionals, teachers and more than 100 students from different colleges have enrolled as volunteers. They are well trained personnel. However, regular training programmes and meetings have been organized for new volunteers. The Palliative Care Society, Imphal has adopted Thangmeiband Assembly Constituency for its pilot project in Manipur and started home visit based Palliative Care. The society has taken a step closer to fulfilling its aim of extending unconditional support and care to hate inflicted souls. Various awareness programme, fund raising programmes and regular discussions have been organized for the sole aim of expanding and strengthening the society’s objectives.

The energetic and audacious volunteers / workers of the society has marched a cycle rally on 20th September 2015 and a walk on world tourism day for fund drive and awareness

The backbone of this system is the student volunteers and the success of the project wholly lies in the hands of the media, the community, their co – operation and most importantly, the zeal and enthusiasm of the volunteers. Such a project is a humane approach; is “one of a kind “and a ‘boon’ in disguise for the people. Their main objective is to enlarge their project; sensitize people and help as many patients, requiring Palliative Care as possible. The meaning of life is well experienced and defined through this process.

On November 19 and 20, 2015 Palliative Care Society, Imphal organized an International Conference on Palliative Care at Imphal which attracted more than 500 delegates from all walks of life. Several experts on Palliative Care from within the country and abroad deliberated during the conference. Such conferences will indeed help widen the awareness among our public.

Therefore, Palliative Care allows a person to live and also helps others to live. The Palliative Society is a society for the society. It is impossible to move on without the support and consent of the people. The society is by far the greatest contributor for success. This is the genuine call for the society by the society. Palliative Care is at the mercy of the society and it is our duty as a social being to feel responsible and join hands this very moment.

(The author is: MA Psychology student in Punjab University, Chandigarh)

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/palliative-care-live-and-let-live/

Adverse effects of using pesticides, insecticides mooted on World Soil Day

IMPHAL, December 5: Agricultural soil has been greatly affected due to over use of chemicals to accelerate agricultural products. The soil absorbs the remains of the pesticides and insecticides sprayed

IMPHAL, December 5: Agricultural soil has been greatly affected due to over use of chemicals to accelerate agricultural products. The soil absorbs the remains of the pesticides and insecticides sprayed on the plants and vegetables for speedy and enhanced productivity to meet market demand, which turns to slow poisoning, Additional Chief Engineer of CADA, Manipur K Manoranjan Singh observed today.

He was speaking at the ‘World Soil Day, 2015’ organized by the Department of Agriculture at the department’s conference hall.

Speaking as chief guest, Manoranjan stated that there is a need to educate farmers on the importance of cultivating more organic products rather than inorganic for healthy consumption.

He agreed that many of the farmers utilise more than sufficient chemicals making the agricultural products less nutritious and unhealthy for human consumption.

Advanced countries nowadays promote organic agricultural products keeping healthy consumption on priority, he said.

Additional Director of Agriculture Ph Rajendra Singh who presided over the function stated that World Soil Day is being observed since 2013 in other parts of the world, but in India, the observation has commenced only this year following an initiative from Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

He maintained that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had also initiated steps to introduce Soil Health Card in the country under which soil samples will be tested to cultivate the most suitable variety of agricultural products for better production.

India has the target to test 1 crore soil samples to facilitate better cultivation of suitable agricultural products. From the State of Manipur, 11, 000 soil samples will be put up for the test, he said.

He informed that the Agriculture department has been able to complete soil testing of 600 samples.

Informing that Agriculture Department has three mobile soil testing vans to meet the target of soil testing in the State, he declared that by the month of February 2016 a soil testing laboratory will be set up at Porompat area to be equipped with larger capacity for soil testing.

As part of the programme, dignitaries distributed Soil Health Card to farmers who took part in the World Soil Day 2015 observation.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/adverse-effects-of-using-pesticides-insecticides-mooted-on-world-soil-day/

Long lost friends…

By Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh As I sat on my balcony, environed by the afternoon breeze, looking over the far horizon, where the Baruni peak meets the winter sky, my mind

By Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh

As I sat on my balcony, environed by the afternoon breeze, looking over the far horizon, where the Baruni peak meets the winter sky, my mind drifted off on its own to the past, moving fast across cities I had been to, rivers I had crossed, skies I had flown over bringing back the faces I had met and known but long lost as life’s pages turned. Then my mind stopped at a certain point, and I couldn’t help but smile at the memories from long time back.

Some time back, a dear old friend had shared with us this photograph on a social networking site, igniting old memories among many of us friends.

The old picture, taken of our class in MPS way back in the early 1990’s, ignited a chain of thoughts that particular afternoon, breaking the monotones of an otherwise dull afternoon and encouraged me to write this.

What made it all the more endearing was that it was shared on a platform – where almost all of those in the frame could see it and relive the past, share memories from what has long been forgotten and forsaken and most importantly bring back together old classmates.

The photograph took me back into time when the open fields were our only playgrounds before the TVs and the video games replaced them, and I could safely assume that it ignited the same feeling of nostalgia among my former classmates.

It took me back into the time when we were still concern with what our mothers must have loaded our tiffin-boxes with and with whom to share them and less with what we were going to learn in school.

I sat and remembered of the times when we still had the energy to run across the grounds until our faces turn a crimson red and fold our hands to drink with all cares forsaken from the common water tank.

Life started off pretty simple. I was once a toddler my parents told me. You ran after the butterflies and tried to catch the rainbow and your own shadow, my mother smiled remembering my early years.

From the vague memories I could still remember, I made friends with the toad, tied a piece of cloth around my shoulder to become the super hero that I dreamt of becoming one day and protect my limited world from my imaginary villains.

“And then one fine day you went off to school and came back with a bag full of queries and dreams; that was when your life became intense and demanding,” mama sighed.

According to mama, with each passing year, my queries became more intense and difficult to answer until it became almost impossible.

Now that I am looking for answers on my own and working to realise my dreams, how I wish to be a toddler again when I was oblivious of life’s seemingly unreasonable demands.

Life could be pretty harsh was the first of many advices my parents offered me and my brothers and sister.

“Time and tide waits for none” was the second or so.

Preparation for my life ahead had begun the day I was born and lay on my mother’s lap as she sang my first lullaby.

Nevertheless, school was where I learnt a lot and where I met them all… where we met our first best friends and for many their first innocent crushes… and a few were even lucky enough to have found their soulmate.

Coming back to my memories, a decade and a half has passed since we shared the same fear for exams, exchanged class notes, shared pakoras at the canteen, etc. And like the many friends who had grown apart for long and came face to face once again we dreamt on to have a get-together, see what we have all missed out from one another’s life.

We sure had made plans to meet, set a date, a venue where we could all be once again the child we can never be again.

The plan is yet to see the light of day but nonetheless the photograph had already done its bit and ignited the desired camaraderie among us long lost friends and we continue as of today to meet as much as we are allowed to meet online.

This means that now many of us are in touch and are involved in frequent and long indulgences in a series of group and individual chats on the internet on a daily basis as if on a mission to catch up for all the lost time. The chats are often long and many a time just a friendly banter but at times it does wander into interesting topics.

This time around we started off with inquiring about one another, how life has been treating us, unlike in the past when we were finger led by our parents and teachers into the classroom.

To cut a long story short I would quote a beautiful song of The Carpenters’ “Yesterday Once More”, one of a few personal favourite “All my best memories come back clearly to me, some can even make me cry, just like before. It’s yesterday once more.”

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/long-lost-friends/

Long lost friends…

By Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh As I sat on my balcony, environed by the afternoon breeze, looking over the far horizon, where the Baruni peak meets the winter sky, my mind

By Wangkheimayum Bhupendra Singh

As I sat on my balcony, environed by the afternoon breeze, looking over the far horizon, where the Baruni peak meets the winter sky, my mind drifted off on its own to the past, moving fast across cities I had been to, rivers I had crossed, skies I had flown over bringing back the faces I had met and known but long lost as life’s pages turned. Then my mind stopped at a certain point, and I couldn’t help but smile at the memories from long time back.

Some time back, a dear old friend had shared with us this photograph on a social networking site, igniting old memories among many of us friends.

The old picture, taken of our class in MPS way back in the early 1990’s, ignited a chain of thoughts that particular afternoon, breaking the monotones of an otherwise dull afternoon and encouraged me to write this.

What made it all the more endearing was that it was shared on a platform – where almost all of those in the frame could see it and relive the past, share memories from what has long been forgotten and forsaken and most importantly bring back together old classmates.

The photograph took me back into time when the open fields were our only playgrounds before the TVs and the video games replaced them, and I could safely assume that it ignited the same feeling of nostalgia among my former classmates.

It took me back into the time when we were still concern with what our mothers must have loaded our tiffin-boxes with and with whom to share them and less with what we were going to learn in school.

I sat and remembered of the times when we still had the energy to run across the grounds until our faces turn a crimson red and fold our hands to drink with all cares forsaken from the common water tank.

Life started off pretty simple. I was once a toddler my parents told me. You ran after the butterflies and tried to catch the rainbow and your own shadow, my mother smiled remembering my early years.

From the vague memories I could still remember, I made friends with the toad, tied a piece of cloth around my shoulder to become the super hero that I dreamt of becoming one day and protect my limited world from my imaginary villains.

“And then one fine day you went off to school and came back with a bag full of queries and dreams; that was when your life became intense and demanding,” mama sighed.

According to mama, with each passing year, my queries became more intense and difficult to answer until it became almost impossible.

Now that I am looking for answers on my own and working to realise my dreams, how I wish to be a toddler again when I was oblivious of life’s seemingly unreasonable demands.

Life could be pretty harsh was the first of many advices my parents offered me and my brothers and sister.

“Time and tide waits for none” was the second or so.

Preparation for my life ahead had begun the day I was born and lay on my mother’s lap as she sang my first lullaby.

Nevertheless, school was where I learnt a lot and where I met them all… where we met our first best friends and for many their first innocent crushes… and a few were even lucky enough to have found their soulmate.

Coming back to my memories, a decade and a half has passed since we shared the same fear for exams, exchanged class notes, shared pakoras at the canteen, etc. And like the many friends who had grown apart for long and came face to face once again we dreamt on to have a get-together, see what we have all missed out from one another’s life.

We sure had made plans to meet, set a date, a venue where we could all be once again the child we can never be again.

The plan is yet to see the light of day but nonetheless the photograph had already done its bit and ignited the desired camaraderie among us long lost friends and we continue as of today to meet as much as we are allowed to meet online.

This means that now many of us are in touch and are involved in frequent and long indulgences in a series of group and individual chats on the internet on a daily basis as if on a mission to catch up for all the lost time. The chats are often long and many a time just a friendly banter but at times it does wander into interesting topics.

This time around we started off with inquiring about one another, how life has been treating us, unlike in the past when we were finger led by our parents and teachers into the classroom.

To cut a long story short I would quote a beautiful song of The Carpenters’ “Yesterday Once More”, one of a few personal favourite “All my best memories come back clearly to me, some can even make me cry, just like before. It’s yesterday once more.”

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/long-lost-friends/

Manipur’s problem is primarily one of an abdication of moral and civic responsibility by its elite

By Pradip Phanjoubam In many ways, Manipur has forgotten to celebrate. It only knows how to observe days of gloom carefully selected from its recent and past experiences. If there

By Pradip Phanjoubam

In many ways, Manipur has forgotten to celebrate. It only knows how to observe days of gloom carefully selected from its recent and past experiences. If there is anything as a dark era, this must be it for the state. The illuminating fire of optimism and hope has receded and in its place are images of suffering, protests, blockades, bandhs, mindless violence, ethnic tensions, xenophobic campaigns… and the list can go on.

While this tells of a somewhat omnipresent oppressive atmosphere that elicits a dark and pessimistic response, it also speaks volumes of the dark mindset of people of this state, kept alive either by memories of trauma and oppression of the past, or else careful reconstruction and reorganization of these memories by people with genuinely warped vision or else vested interest in keeping this perennial public angst alive.

It is as if the place has never seen anything worthwhile in its secular arena to celebrate in its recent history. It celebrates religious festivals no doubt, but these are not historical markers. On the other hand they tell a universal tale of faith and beliefs.

In its secular world the mindset is nothing short of uncanny. Even in areas where victory and defeat are juxtaposed in close proximity of each other, the place has picked out the defeat to make it an occasion to observe and neglected the victory. One is reminded of the ridiculous situation captured in the phrase, ‘snatching defeat from the jaws of victory’ when contemplating Manipur’s predicament.

Obviously Manipur’s history, both of the pre-colonial as well as post-colonial periods would have been marked by trauma, and indeed both its official historical records in the royal chronicles as well as in its myths and fables, evidences of these are abundant.

The notion of a golden age therefore is largely absent. The best known kings of yore are those with military a reputation of invading neighbouring countries, King Pamheiba or later Garibaniwaj, 1709-1748 being arguably the foremost. He was an able successor of his father Charairongba,1697-1709, also known for his military prowess.

There will be those who argue, the reign of King Pamheiba’s grandson, King Chingthangkhompa, 1759-1760, more popularly known as King Bheigyachandra, is Manipur’s golden age. But even King Bheigyachandra had to continually face invasions after invasions from Ava (Burma), and a good part of his kingship was in exile. He did bring about a cultural transformation of his kingdom, most importantly choreographing the Ras Lila, which was, according to the myths associated with the dance form, revealed to him in a dream by his God, Krishna.

There is a phrase in Manipuri “Chahong-Ngahongba” (plenty of rice and fish) or roughly paraphrased as time of plenty, but this is more of a prayer and a wish of the community, and is associated with the deity Imoinu. What is unfortunately missing is, this prayer for a time of plenty, has seldom been recorded as having translated into secular administrative will to ensure such a condition of plenty. Circumstantial evidences point to the fact that war preparedness apparently was primary to the kingdom’s survival. Some explain this to be the reason why women play such a major role in keeping the economy floating, tending the paddies or peopling the marketplaces, men being for most of the time engaged in military duties.

Manipur’s history indeed is replete with invasions by Ava, the most devastating ones coming ever since the installation of the Konbaung Dynasty after the exit of the Tungoo Dynasty. Historians now say constant raids by peripheral states, most importantly Manipur, contributed to swift slide of the Tungoo domain into disintegration. This is probably why the founder of the Konbaung Dynasty, King Alaungpaya, upon ascending the Ava throne in 1752, raided Manipur and he himself took part in the campaign. That campaign too was also apparently devastating, and probably would not seen a parallel had not his grandson, King Bagidaw, 1819-1837, outdid him in the sweep as well as cruelty with which he invaded Manipur and Assam, leading ultimately to the Treaty of Yandaboo, 1826, a treaty pivotal in the modern history of the entire Northeast region.

King Bagidaw’s occupation of Manipur is remember as the Chahi Taret Khuntakpa (Seven Years of Devastation 1819-1826) when Manipur was occupied and ravaged almost completely.

Funnily, this genocidal occupation is observed in Manipur, while the victorious campaign of King Gambhir Singh and his cousin Nara Singh who succeed him in later years after the sudden death of Nara Singh, which ended the Burmese occupation is ignored. Something surely is wrong in the mindset of the place, and it is high time to call for a correction.

There is an element of what Italian Marxist theorist Antonio Gramsci called “hegemony of idea” in this. Gramsci’s proposition is a little more nuanced and in fact he is of the opinion that political ideas, and indeed idea itself, more often than not carry with them an element of coercion.

Re-interpreting Gramsci, it would appear that as much as the missionaries of cultures and religions were guilty of this when they set about conquering the “uncharted” world of the uninitiated “natives”, aggressive revivalism born as resistance to these forces cannot claim innocence either.

In Manipur, while the former has mellowed with age and maturity, it is the revivalist movements that have acquired all the characteristics and fundamentalist zeal of new converts. This cannot be good either for the revivalist movements themselves or for the society at large, for the human spirit is such that whatever is forced, always elicits a reciprocal and opposite reaction, almost by a direct application of Newton’s Third of Inertia.

The reactions may not come open immediately, but they would definitely accumulate within, incubating till they are mature enough to do so. The best way of conquering minds, it needs no sermons, is through the free exercise of rationale, a faculty all humans are gifted with.

Let nobody be so presumptuous as to think that the general masses are unaware of what is good or bad for them, especially in a literate society, and must be taught and administered pre-concocted prescriptions. Hence, constructive social agendas ought be designed to engender an atmosphere conducive for the continual, free growth and maturing of rationality and not seek to intimidate and bind this faculty.

There is tremendous energy and passion in Manipur. But unfortunately, the sense at the moment is one of an impending implosion, rather than this energy finding creative outlets. It is for this reason that one cannot help proposing a more liberal approach in which the society pays more attention to its triumphal moments too, and celebrate them with as much fervor as it recalls religiously its moments of defeats and tragedies.

Let the society realize that its children must be allowed to grow up to be outward looking and positive, rather that be grudging, embittered, angry, negative thinking denizens of the future. For the good of everybody, all must have to pitch in their effort to defuse at least some of the suffocating implosive energy that now envelops all.

Let the place its fall moments in perspective, and also bring out its triumphant marches out of obscurity. Both are part and parcel of any given society, but the difference is in how each manages to cope and sublimate them.

The once agrarian society had harvests and the first rains of April heralding spring, among others to celebrate. Surely, the modern Manipur society must also have its springs and autumns, apart from its winters and scorching summers of discontent. Let not the cherished fight against oppression become an instrument of oppression itself.

The agrarian society had harvests and the first rains of April heralding spring, among others to celebrate. Surely, the modern Manipur society must also have its springs and autumns, apart from its winters and scorching summers of discontent. Let not the cherished fight against oppression become an instrument of oppression itself.

Much of the responsibility for this state of affairs, if not blame, must go squarely to the place’s elite, or would coterie be the better word to describe them. Indeed any thought of the profile of the elite here would bring up images of corrupt and opulently rich circle of evil, constituting largely of ministers, bureaucrats and government contractors.

If a survey were to be done, probably, amongst them, they would possess 90 percent or more of Manipur’s entire wealth. Together they have managed to mess up practically all important functions of the government, therefore our roads are in a mess, our cities and townships are buried in filth, education standards have plummeted and in facts a greater section of B.A. and M.A degree holders, churned out by our colleges each year are unemployable, except in the government services where paper degrees and bribes, rather than job merit are the qualification.

How long can this be allowed to carry on? Why have our elite continued to abdicate their social responsibility of running the state and setting the trend for a free and fair society? They seem to be only interested in continuing the organized looting of public exchequer, amassing wealth, teaching their children Manipur is unlivable and sending them away. Until they come to acknowledge they are responsible for the chaos and only they can undo it, this oppressive mindset is unlikely to leave.

Why can’t they realize they are in the same boat as the beleaguered masses, and if the boat does sink, as it seems to be at the moment, they too would drown? Can’t they see the desertification of Manipur happening right before their eyes? A generation or two from now, if our elite continue to slumber, bothered with nothing else but plundering the state, a likely scenario could be Manipur becoming a land of geriatrics, with all its young, bright and employable, leaving the state to look for greener pastures elsewhere.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/manipurs-problem-is-primarily-one-of-an-abdication-of-moral-and-civic-responsibility-by-its-elite/

‘State has maintained low IMR for three consecutive years’

IMPHAL, December 5: Chief Minister, Okram Ibobi Singh maintained that the health sector tops the State government’s priority list, and that Manipur has its goal to serve in this sector

IMPHAL, December 5: Chief Minister, Okram Ibobi Singh maintained that the health sector tops the State government’s priority list, and that Manipur has its goal to serve in this sector to the neighbouring country.

The Chief Minister stated this during the inaugural function of XXII East Zone PEDICON 2015 & XIX MANIPEDICON 2015 under the theme ‘Holistic Approach to Child Care: Advancing Forward’held at City Convention Centre organized by the East Zone Academy of Paediatrics.

Ibobi further said that State government has also given top priority to health sector in terms of manpower and infrastructure. The government has recruited specialist doctors and other supporting medical staffs to extend health facilities to all districts and the remotest corner of the State.

He further said that the Infant Mortality Rate and Maternal Mortality Rate of Manipur is 10 per 1000 live births and 60 per every one lakh live births. The State has achieved this feat consecutively for last three years, the Chief Minister added.

Moreover, Manipur has also received awards from the Times Group of news agencies for best performing State in Health Sector in the small State category, for this the credit goes to all doctors’ fraternity and other supporting staffs, he said.

He appreciated that the association has brought together leading specialist from public and private organizations to share knowledge and skills with an objective to provide quality healthcare in the country especially in child care.

Indeed this conference is an opportunity to take stock and to see where you have been and to plan where you must go and the outcome of this deliberation will inform the policy framework development of the country, he said.

Children are not miniature adults, they are different in hysiological, physical, emotional and social aspects from the adults, the Chief Minister observed.

Therefore while caring for a child we should not address only the physical illness but the whole aspects of the developing child to make him a responsible ·person in future. Indeed in many cases we have to take a 360 degree look while caring a child, he said.

He opined that the conference will provide a platform for the exchange of fast developing medical knowledge in child care including a wide array of Continuing Medical Education, guest lecture, orations, award sessions etc and also cultural and emotional exchanges among the paediatricians of East Zone comprising of 12 States (Odisha, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Bihar, Assam and North Eastern States).

The government is looking some serious issues that are facing in the field of health services especially in women and child health care, he said and added that India is becoming an important centre in the aspect of Health Tourism and Manipur has its goal to serve in medical sector to the neighboring country.

He urged the medical fraternity and other leaders in health industry to emphasize with the ailing patients and their anxious parties while discharging their valuable services and to keep up the spirit of humanity and kindness which are true traits of healer.

Organizing chairperson of the conference, Dr Shyamkuamr Laishram said the care to child and mother is very much need for the stronger future. Under this to enhancement the conference is being organizing along with several pediatricians from various part of the country.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/12/state-has-maintained-low-imr-for-three-consecutive-years/

Manipur hosts International Polo tournament – Business Standard

Manipur hosts International Polo tournament
Business Standard
Manipur recently hosted an international polo championship to popularise the game in India and rest of the world. The modern game of Polo has its roots in Manipur. Today, the sport is played professionally in over 16 countries. Manipur’s capital Imphal

and more »

Manipur hosts International Polo tournament
Business Standard
Manipur recently hosted an international polo championship to popularise the game in India and rest of the world. The modern game of Polo has its roots in Manipur. Today, the sport is played professionally in over 16 countries. Manipur's capital Imphal

and more »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNF8NkKfoWCc2_feyJRcj5RacXlAwQ&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779004750232&ei=RgxkVvi2NNHJ3gGK67CoDA&url=http://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ani/manipur-hosts-international-polo-tournament-115120600412_1.html

Sangai festival held in Manipur to promote culture, adventure tourism – Business Standard

Sangai festival held in Manipur to promote culture, adventure tourism
Business Standard
Once neglected because of militancy-related violence, Manipur is projecting itself as a hub of culture, adventure tourism and sports. In a recently concluded 10-day Sangai festival, the tourism department showcased the state’s rich cultural heritage, …

and more »

Sangai festival held in Manipur to promote culture, adventure tourism
Business Standard
Once neglected because of militancy-related violence, Manipur is projecting itself as a hub of culture, adventure tourism and sports. In a recently concluded 10-day Sangai festival, the tourism department showcased the state's rich cultural heritage, …

and more »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNGUNMTBA3RekOR2gWYlMatQ2mtJSQ&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779004744058&ei=RgxkVvi2NNHJ3gGK67CoDA&url=http://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ani/sangai-festival-held-in-manipur-to-promote-culture-adventure-tourism-115120600379_1.html

Manipur bills: Fresh deadline, fresh tensions – thenortheasttoday.com

thenortheasttoday.comManipur bills: Fresh deadline, fresh tensionsthenortheasttoday.comNEW DELHI: With agitators in the Manipur valley setting a fresh deadline for the state government to implement three controversial bills and the people of the hills …


thenortheasttoday.com

Manipur bills: Fresh deadline, fresh tensions
thenortheasttoday.com
NEW DELHI: With agitators in the Manipur valley setting a fresh deadline for the state government to implement three controversial bills and the people of the hills continuing to vehemently opposing this, renewed tensions have loomed over the
JAC gears up to mark 100th day of stirThe Sangai Express

all 12 news articles »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNEQ9jj9BttBGeVcypb13_xVM_WSHw&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779004319452&ei=RgxkVvi2NNHJ3gGK67CoDA&url=http://thenortheasttoday.com/manipur-bills-fresh-deadline-fresh-tensions/

KSO President, Village Chiefs Assaulted by Assam Rifles in Manipur – NorthEast Today


NorthEast Today

KSO President, Village Chiefs Assaulted by Assam Rifles in Manipur
NorthEast Today
Three individuals including the president of the Kuki Students’ Organisation (KSO) Chandel have been hospitalised after they were allegedly assaulted by 24 Assam Rifles personnel at Khudengthabi check post in Chandel District of Manipur on Saturday.
Brief News – TSEE-Pao.net

all 7 news articles »


NorthEast Today

KSO President, Village Chiefs Assaulted by Assam Rifles in Manipur
NorthEast Today
Three individuals including the president of the Kuki Students' Organisation (KSO) Chandel have been hospitalised after they were allegedly assaulted by 24 Assam Rifles personnel at Khudengthabi check post in Chandel District of Manipur on Saturday.
Brief News – TSEE-Pao.net

all 7 news articles »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNH-vg7SDhwRK-6MlXx4xmQLIGARwg&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779004513028&ei=RgxkVvi2NNHJ3gGK67CoDA&url=http://www.northeasttoday.in/kso-president-village-chiefs-assaulted-by-assam-rifles-in-manipur/

Economic blockades in Manipur, two trucks torched – Times of India


NYOOOZ

Economic blockades in Manipur, two trucks torched
Times of India
IMPHAL: Vehicles carrying essential goods were stranded along the lifelines linking landlocked-Manipur due to the ongoing economic blockades, leading to spiralling of prices of essential commodities. An indefinite economic blockade called by Jiribam …
2 trucks torched, 700 others stranded at Manipur border due to blockadeChronicleDaily.com (blog)
Economic blockades in Manipur, two trucks torched | Imphal NYOOOZNYOOOZ
700 loaded trucks stranded along Manipur’s highways due to blockadesTelegraphTimes.com (blog)

all 26 news articles »


NYOOOZ

Economic blockades in Manipur, two trucks torched
Times of India
IMPHAL: Vehicles carrying essential goods were stranded along the lifelines linking landlocked-Manipur due to the ongoing economic blockades, leading to spiralling of prices of essential commodities. An indefinite economic blockade called by Jiribam …
2 trucks torched, 700 others stranded at Manipur border due to blockadeChronicleDaily.com (blog)
Economic blockades in Manipur, two trucks torched | Imphal NYOOOZNYOOOZ
700 loaded trucks stranded along Manipur's highways due to blockadesTelegraphTimes.com (blog)

all 26 news articles »

Read more / Original news source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNHKDrFv3N9T-y2ts1zYAUN_9f6hlQ&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779003714331&ei=otpjVt3ZHtSc3QGU0oToBA&url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/imphal/Economic-blockades-in-Manipur-two-trucks-torched/articleshow/50061114.cms