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May 08-14, 07 |
Jharkhand may offer equity to displaced
The Jharkhand rehabilitation and resettlement policy, expected any day now, is likely to include a proposal to offer equity to the displaced villagers as an option for compensating them for the loss of land.
According to the draft policy, the displaced villagers would either have to be given one job per family or a lumpsum, half of which could be in the form of equity in the projects.
The policy is also likely to make the approval of gram sabhas a must for identifying land for the projects.
"The collector will determine the market rate and the compensation advisory committee will consider the collector's recommendation," the draft policy says. A rehabilitation advisory committee would suggest relief packages for the displaced.
The policy will make various MoUs between the state government and industries a reality. Many companies, sources said, could not acquire land due to the absence of such a policy.
Jharkhand government sources indicated that many projects—Tata Steel, Jindal Steel & Power, Hindalco—were at the land acquisition stage.
However, this is not the first time a state government is considering grant of equity in projects as compensation. Orissa's rehabilitation policy has a provision for issuance of convertible preference shares to the displaced.
The value of the shares can be up to 50 per cent of the one- time cash assistance. The West Bengal government is also considering the option for its future projects.
However, industry executives say the displaced are unlikely to opt for equity as they will not know what to do the shares.
http://www.business-standard.com/common/storypage.php?autono=284530&leftnm =3&subLeft=0&chkFlg=
Ensure peace, Jharkhand told after Reliance Fresh protests (LEAD)
Ranchi, May 13 (IANS) The Prime Minister's Office (PMO) Sunday asked the law and order agencies in Jharkhand to ensure peace and calm a day after the protests by vegetable vendors over the opening of Reliance Fresh shops here turned violent.
Thirteen people were arrested for violence Saturday and two policemen suspended for dereliction of duty following the attack on three shops of Reliance Fresh - a project promoted by Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries.
According to official sources, the PMO contacted officials in Chief Minister Madhu Koda's office to immediately look into the matter and issue necessary directions to ensure peace and calm in the state.
The union home ministry has also contacted Jharkhand police chief J.B. Mahapatra over the violence, for which five reports were lodged in two police stations - three in Lalpur and two in Bariatu, the sources added.
Among the 13 arrested is Uday Shankar Ojha, leader of Lok Janshakti Party (LJP), who was reportedly taken into custody on the directions of the chief minister. At least two-dozen protesters were injured in a police baton charge, following which security at the outlets was enhanced, officials said.
According to a Reliance official, the protesting vendors damaged property worth Rs.5 million. One Reliance Fresh shop in Morabadi was badly ransacked and the protesters looted dry fruits and damaged vegetables and other commodities.
The vendors were unhappy with the arrival of Reliance to retail vegetables. 'We have been selling vegetables for generations. Reliance Fresh is a threat to our very survival and causing employment problems,' said Phulmani Devi, a vendor.
'We will starve to death if Reliance is not stopped from selling vegetables.'
This was the second time in a week that vegetable sellers took out processions to protest the opening of Reliance stores.
The group buys the produce directly from farmers at comparatively higher prices and since middlemen are eliminated, it retails it at much lower rates compared with roadside vendors.
http://news.monstersandcritics.com/india/news/article_1303880.php/Ensure_peace_ Jharkhand_told_after_Reliance_Fresh_protests%0A_LEAD_
Five Maoist rebels killed in Jharkhand
Five Maoist rebels have been killed by police and paramilitary forces in Jharkhand's Garwah district, police said on Sunday.
A gunfight took place on Saturday night between the rebels and the forces in a jungle area of Garwah, around 130 km from ranchi. Five guerrillas, including two women rebels, were killed in the gun battle that lasted for over four hours.
"We got a tip off and raided a Maoist hideout, where around 35 rebels were camping. While five were killed, the rest managed to escape," said a police official.
Four self-loading rifles (SLR), one AK-47 and more than 500 cartridges were recovered from the guerrillas, the official said.
Maoist rebels are active in 16 of Jharkhand's 22 districts. Nearly 600 people, including 290 security personnel, have lost their lives in Maoist violence in the last six years.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?id=de72ace7-a957-456e-8 0d0-ab3e570a9bfe&&Headine=Five+Maoist+rebels+killed+in+Jharkhand
Reliance ready to roll on
Ranchi, May 13: Vandalism by local vegetable vendors at four newly-opened Reliance Fresh outlets yesterday has not deterred the company's plans for Jharkhand.
"So far, customers are only buying fruits and vegetables. They would soon get the opportunity to pick up clothes and dress material from our Reliance Digital and Reliance Hyper Market — the new entrants in the state capital," announced top officials over phone from Mumbai.
"Our plan is to open one outlet for every 3,000 household in the country and Ranchi will be a part of it," they added. Giving details about its expansion, the Reliance officials said a new outlet would be coming up at Bahu Bazaar for non-vegetarian items.
Reliance Fresh today carried out its business as usual in three of its four outlets in the city —SPG Mart in Bahu Bazaar, Laxmi Narayan Market at Tharpakhna and Rathore Tower on Circular Road.
The Morabadi outlet could not function because the vendors yesterday had damaged it badly during their protest against venture of big companies in the vegetable and fruit retailing.
Company officials at this outlet were seen busy assessing the damage with insurance surveyors throughout the day.
The police, who had failed to act promptly yesterday, too, were seen on vigil. Despite being Sunday and courts being closed, the city police produced the miscreants before the chief judicial magistrate at his residence and later forwarded them to Birsa Munda Central Jail.
Those arrested included a peace committee member and JVM leader Uday Shanker Ojha, who had led the vendors in the protest. Ojha said supporting the vendors was his personal decision and the Jharkhand Vikas Morcha had nothing to do with it. "I was invited to lead the vendors in my personal capacity," he added.
Meanwhile, in response to a bandh called in the city today, few vendors were seen at Lalpur, Bahu Bazaar, Kutchery and Naga Baba Khatal market. Daily Market remained normal.
Senior police superintendent M.S. Bhatia said more arrests are possible.
Chhatarpur MLA and JD(U) leader Radha Krishna Kishore visited the Reliance Fresh outlet on Circular Road and H.B. Road to express his solidarity with the company and build a public opinion against the Koda government.
"What can we expect from the government, which failed to provide security to vegetable outlets in the city," he said, demanding proper compensation for the businessmen who were targeted during Reliance Fresh outlet attacks. Kishore said his party leader George Fernandes would be coming tomorrow to express his solidarity with the company and highlight the administrative failure of the state government. Jharkhand Pradesh Mahila Congress president Prat-ibha Pandey also visited the outlets.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070514/asp/jamshedpur/story_7774250.asp
Malaria cases rises in Jharkhand
With plasmodium falciparum malarial cases registering a definite rise in Jharkhand, the State's health authorities are finding it hard to cap the steadily increasing spread of malaria through most of the State's 22 districts.
Not too long ago, the Government of India had sounded an alarm after seven Jharkhand districts were found in its list of 100 'highly endemic' districts countrywide.
The State Health department, hampered by resource and staff crunch, is up against a Herculean task trying to cap the spread of the dreaded epidemic.
What complicates the issue further is the fact of detection of an inordinately large number of drug resistance cases being reported from the endemic zones as also by the fact the disease is being detected the whole year through. Normally, malarial instances are at their 'highest' during the post-monsoon period.
Despite the Centre pumping in several crore rupees every year there seems to be no check on the vectors. Over 75 per cent of the cases in the highly endemic zones are said to be of the 'Plasmodium Falciparum' strain, which, as is known, often leads to the worst kind of cerebral malaria.
Nearly 100 per cent of the malaria cases in Simdega have been found to be of the Falciparum variety while 90.24 per cent cases in Jamtara too are from the same dreaded category. Falciparum cases were recorded to over 75 per cent of the total cases in Gumla, West Singhbhum and East Singbhum.
Moreover, certain primary health centers in the affected districts have reported resistance to drugs leading to a second line of treatment in these areas.
State Malaria Officer In-charge Dr P. Baskey told HT that, "1.91 lakh people were reported positive in the State during the last year from the 20.56 lakh blood smears examined. The total slides collected during the year were 20.74 lakh".
Dr Baskey pointed out that there had been only four confirmed deaths, while some 18 patients were put under the 'suspect' category. However, the number of deaths, as per unofficial figures, is said to be fairly high.
The Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences (RIMS), Apollo Hospital, Seva Sadan and Gurunanak Hospital officials admitted to a rise in malaria cases.
What makes the scenario worse is that the State lacks the proper infrastructure and manpower to tackle the disease. This, despite the Centre for Tropical Medicine & Parasitoloy (CENTROMAP), Kolkata Advisor Dr A. Nandy warning the State that recent findings had indicated biological modifications in the plasmodium vivax parasite making it life threatening on the pattern of the falciparum cases.
State Malaria Officer Dr AK Upadhyay said proper measures had been initiated. "There are sufficient stocks of drugs supplied by the Centre," he said.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?id=b346e040-8acf-47ba- 88ee-e94a09568029&&Headline=Malaria+cases+rises+in+Jharkhand
Progress path for reform & growth
- IIPA in charge of training talks about development plan
Interview
In an attempt to provide trained manpower for the management of PSUs, the then Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, set up the Indian Institute of Public Administration (IIPA) in 1958.
IIPA, now headed by Vice-president of India Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, provides training to IAS, IPS and top government officials. The institute is all set for its first regional office in Ranchi. Vice-president and in-charge of training at IIPA, N.P. Singh talks to Rudra Biswas on the institute's future plan for Jharkhand.
IIPA has regional offices in every state. Are you planning to set up one in Ranchi?
We have plans to set up a regional office in Ranchi. State industries secretary Santosh Kumar Satpathy as returning officer has been given the responsibility to set up our office in Ranchi at the earliest.
What plans do you have for Jharkhand?
IIPA has already proposed to conduct a weeklong intensive training programme for its cabinet ministers. The training programme would cover administration, poverty, development plans and disaster management. A second course has been outlined for all IAS officials in the state.
Why has IIPA chosen to train Jharkhand ministers in the first instance?
Over the past four years, the state government has signed more than four dozen MoUs with national and international entrepreneurs. However, procedural problems continue to stand in the way of implementation. Our initiatives would help the state transform all its MoUs into reality.
What other plans does IIPA have for the state?
IIPA, at the national level, is promoting the concept of a Special Agriculture Zone for the states, which needs to take precedence over Special Economic Zones. We intend to pass on IIPA's studies on special agriculture zones to Jharkhand so that the state can harness its farm potentials.
You have recently headed an IIPA delegation to China. Haw can your China experience help Jharkhand?
IIPA intends to share its China experience with the state government. IIPA's study on an east China province called Guizhou would be most relevant to the state. This eastern China province resembles Jharkhand to some extent in terms of mineral deposits, industrial base and its dependence on agriculture. An opening up policy, freedom of investment, reforms, development and cultivation of talents pursued by the Chinese government has worked wonders for Guizhou. The state government can imitate the similar experience to suit its requirements.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070514/asp/jamshedpur/story_7774021.asp
East new hotspot for state students
Ranchi, May 13: With the examination season drawing to an end, students are bracing for admission into colleges. And a paradigm shift has been witnessed over the past few years in the academic preferences of Jharkhand students.
Keeping in mind the changed scenario, Association of Professional Academic Institutes, Calcutta, along with Educatif Heritage, Ranchi, has organised a two-day career fair for the first time at Capitol Hill today.
"The fair aims to bring the best colleges of eastern India on one platform for easy choice of the students," said S.S. Singh, chairman, Educatif Heritage.
Bypassing old favourites Maharashtra and Karnataka, eastern India has once again emerged as a much sought-after destination for Jharkhand students.
Priyanka Raj of DAV Jahanabad, who aspires to pursue BBA, said: "I would prefer an institute in Jharkhand or Bengal since the cost of living is affordable."
Colleges in the south and west used to be the traditional preference of students from Jharkhand, but performance in joint entrance examinations has ceased to be the yardstick for admission there. Now, only candidates capable of paying huge donations are taken in, acting as a turn-off for students from other states.
Abhishek Kumar of Hatia, said: "Though I qualified in the Maharashtra joint entrance examinations, I was asked to pay a hefty amount as donation for admission. This generally does not happen in colleges in Orissa and Bengal."
"The number of companies coming for campus placement to colleges of Bengal and Orissa, too, is greater as compared to those coming to institutes in other states," said another student.
"This encourages me to select colleges belonging to this part of the country," she added. "If we can get quality education in or around our hometown, why do we need to go to other states?" said Payal Mazumdar.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070514/asp/jamshedpur/story_7774024.asp
Pied pipers' of Deogarh rid town of monkeys
KALAMATI: They are being hailed as 'pied pipers' of Deogarh, their subjects being monkeys. If locals are to be believed, the simians simply dread their presence.
They not only exercise absolute control over the animal species but also relish their meat. They have the extraordinary capability to trap monkeys by nets and have a feast.
Residing in hutments a stone's throw away from the busy Howrah-Mumbai National Highway 6, they behave and look savage, as if cut off from the civilised world.
Neither do they understand Oriya nor Hindi and communicate in language that is incomprehensible to the locals. They are now being identified with Munda tribals of Jharkhand.
Forest dwellers by nature, it has been barely a decade that they have settled here after moving around in dense forests of Jharkhand and Bonai in Sundargarh.
Since then, their small hamlet comprising 42 families has been referred to as 'Mankadia Sahi' in acknowledgement of the special relation they share with monkeys.
This apart, 10 families also stay in Shantinagar within Deogarh block. When Deogarh was hit by monkey menace and even forest officials failed to tame them, these Mankadias were called in.
Their words of 'Dalo, Dalo, Halo, Halo…' still reverberate in the ears of the residents who recall the event with gusto. Latika Tripathy recalled how monkeys had invaded the town destroying crop, injuring people, breaking virtually everything they could lay their hands on.
It was such tough a time that people refused to come out of their homes in fear of the simians. And the moment the Mankadias landed and shouted the words, monkeys lined up like the rats akin to the 'Pied Piper story' and vanished from the scene.
The community still maintains a primitive lifestyle depending on the jungles for food and sustenance.
They make ropes and nets out of the leaves and bark of Siali plants to use them for trapping monkeys. The members of the tribe wear minimal clothes with children wearing nothing.
The administration, however, has started efforts to integrate them with the mainstream.
http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItems.asp?ID=IEQ20070514013759&Page=Q&Titl e=ORISSA&Topic=0
Breaking away from the confines of her small town helped realise her Bollywood dreams
Two films in two weeks - now that's what being in business means. And Tanushree Dutta is lapping up every moment of her days now, touring the country to promote her films.
"I have a different look and role in each of my three forthcoming films. From a tomboy in Good Boy Bad Boy to the girl-next-door in Dhol and the negative character in Raqeeb, I have been given the opportunity to try out such diverse roles. I am really thankful to my directors and producers for that," says Tanushree.
The former Miss India also claims that she is now consciously moving away from her ultra-glamourous look and looking for meaningful roles.
"Age is on my side and I feel this is the right time to experiment with different roles. That is why I did not hesitate to accept the negative character I play in Raqeeb.
With age, artistes develop set images which are sometimes difficult to break. So I am trying out a wide variety of roles at the moment," she says.
Tanushree has also decided to abstain from any more intimate scenes in her films. "It's a strict no-no as far as on-screen kissing or lovemaking scenes are concerned.
Featuring the kissing scene in Chocolate, I was very unwilling to do it and even wanted to quit the film because of it. But I was convinced by the director that the scene was integral to the film's plot and so I agreed. And later, it was just chopped off.
So what was the need for me to enact that scene? That incident was my first learning experience in Bollywood. Although Aashiq Banaya Aapne also had a kissing scene, it was necessary to the film's plot, so I don't regret doing it.
But I felt really bad when I was watching the film with my family. I come from a very conservative background, no one in my family is a filmstar and for them to accept those bold scenes was tough. So I have now decided that I will not do any scene which will offend the sensibilities of my family," says Tanushree.
Hailing from the small town of Jamshedpur, Tanushree believes that she has taken a quantum leap in achieving what she has today.
"I did my schooling there, but shifted to Pune for my senior school and college, though I did not finish my college education. In hindsight, moving out of Jharkhand was the best move of my life.
I always had such high expectations from life and people in that protective environment just thought that I was dreaming beyond possible horizons.
But I had a lot of faith in myself and that has helped me a lot," reminisces Tanushree. She also takes the criticism that her acting and personal styling have faced in her stride.
"I am learning, give me time. When I first came here, I did not even know how to put on lipstick properly. But I have progressed and try to improve my way of dressing and make-up all the time.
I have not been blessed with a makeover the way, say, Manish Malhotra did for Karisma Kapur. I know my personal wardrobe has ample scope for improvement, but I have learned a lot more about styles and the latest trends than when I first joined this industry," says Tanushree.
Though she is open to having a personal stylist, Tanushree says no one has approached her yet! She is also confident that she will find her niche in Bollywood without the help of any godfather.
"I will not deny that it is great if you have a godfather in this industry in that it makes the path a little smooth. But there is no sweat if there is no one. Talent and hard work ultimately pat handsome dividends in this line.
And I am confident that I will be able to make it. Initially my parents were not happy with my decision to join films. We had frictions and debates on this issue.
"Very few people from Jharkhand and certainly no one from my family are in Bollywood and my parents had other dreams for me. My dad wanted me to be an MBA and my mom wanted me to be an IAS officer.
But when they saw how hard I tried to excel in Bollywood, how I did not let failures bog me down, they gave in and realised that this is what I am destined to be. Today my parents are my biggest critics and drive me to excel," says the happy daughter.
Apart from Bollywood, Tanushree is open to working in regional films as well, and says that she is willing to give Bengali films a try, if she gets a good script and good banner to promote the film.
"See, I am a director's actor. I am dependent on the director to extract the best performance out of me. And a good banner is a must because a film needs to be promoted. So, I have no qualms about working in regional films.
"But at the moment, I am keeping my fingers crossed that my forthcoming Hindi films do well and people appreciate all the hard work I, and my whole team, have put into the making," says Tanushree, as she rushes off to catch a flight to another city to promote her films.
http://www.indiafm.com/features/2007/05/14/2639
Hi-tech landmines baffle Jharkhand Police
Ranchi, May 10 : When some Jharkhand cops succeeded in tracing a radio signal-based landmine this week, they considered themselves lucky. For, Maoists in the state are increasingly going high-tech with their landmines, resulting in heavy casualties in the police force.
In Tuesday's incident in Bokaro district, the landmine was recovered when a police party was on long range patrolling. The rebels had fitted an antenna in the landmine so as to blast it by activating a wireless set.
Landmine blasts have claimed the lives of more than 170 security personnel in Jharkhand in the last six years - and the high number of deaths is partly attributed to the different types of landmines used by the rebels on tarred as well as non-tarred roads.
"So far Maoist rebels have used wires to blast landmines, claymore landmines, camera flash landmines, mobile landmines and radio signal landmines," a senior police involved in anti-Maoist operations told IANS.
"Maoist rebels change the technique of landmines to ensure a high casualty."
In mobile landmines, for instance, cell phones are fitted in the landmine and an explosion is triggered if a call is made to the phone. In the camera flash landmine, a flash can cause the blast.
Even Jharkhand Director General of Police (DGP) J.B. Mahapatra admitted that the Maoists were equipped with the latest technology to detonate landmines.
"Maoist rebels use different methods to detonate landmines. The latest is radio signal technology which is detonated with the activation of wireless sets," he said.
In Jharkhand, the guerrillas of the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) have planted landmines on both tarred and non-tarred roads. Landmines on tarred roads are usually planted by alluring workers and contractors or threatening them.
Police have stopped long range patrolling during night due to the threat of landmine blasts. Security personnel have also been directed to get down from their vehicle on non-tarred roads.
Police officials involved in operations against Maoists say they do not have the latest technology to detect landmines.
http://www.newkerala.com/news5.php?action=fullnews&id=27602
Jharkhand officials irked by tribal language decree
Ranchi, May 10 - The Jharkhand government's move to make knowledge of at least one tribal language mandatory for government officials has triggered anger among the mass of employees.
The promotion, increment and salary of government officials in Jharkhand will henceforth depend on their knowledge of one of four tribal languages - Ho, Mundari, Kurukh and Santhali.
Officials have been directed to learn one of them within 18 months and take a test to prove their proficiency. The results would determine promotions.
In Jharkhand, tribals constitute 27 percent of the state's 27 million population. No tribal language has been given second language status in the state. But books exist in all tribal languages.
A senior officer says there is nothing new in the order.
'The government has just implemented the undivided Bihar government order formulated in 1953. The order had directed gazetted employees posted in the then southern Bihar to learn a tribal language,' said P.C. Hembrom, joint secretary in the personnel department and a tribal.
The language rule will affect all employees.
The officials argued that such orders were strictly implemented in states like Tamil Nadu and West Bengal.
'In Tamil Nadu, only those IAS - officers who have a knowledge of Tamil are posted in districts. In West Bengal, knowing Bengali is a must,' said another government official.
Government business in Jharkhand is now conducted in Hindi. Officials say the move is aimed at creating better understanding between the officials and tribals so that development work can be expedited.
Most officials are not happy with the directive.
'The move is just a way to appease the tribals. The order is motivated by vote bank politics. The ministers should first learn the tribal language as they are public representatives,' said a furious deputy secretary who is originally from Bihar.
The officials also pointed out that any one tribal language is not spoken all over the state.
'Santhali is spoken and written only in the four districts of Santhal Parganas. Ho, Kurukh and Mundari are spoken at different places. Employees are transferred from one district to another on a regular basis. How will learning one language help?' asked the official.
http://www.rxpgnews.com/india/Jharkhand-officials-irked-by-tribal-language-decree_ 27264.shtml
Burnpur Cement plans 1mt plant in Jharkhand
KOLKATA, MAY 9 : Burnpur Cement Ltd (BCL), a West Bengal-based cement manufacturer, has tied up with ThyssenKrupp Industries India for setting up a million tonne plant at Patratu in Jharkhand with an eye on the 8-9% demand growth.
While the country's installed capacity for manufacturing cement is around 165 million tonne per annum, demand is going up by 16-17m tonne every year.
ThyssenKrupp India is a subsidiary of ThyssenKrupp AG of Germany, manufacturing boilers, sugar, cement and other plant machinery.
Ashok Gutgutia, vice-chairman and managing director of BCL, said the plant, to be set up in two phases, will involve a total investment of Rs 500 crore, of which Rs 120 crore will be invested in the first phase expected to be complete by 2008.
Gutgutia said BCL has already entered into an agreement with a consortium of eight banks led by the State Bank of India for term loan. It has also submitted the draft prospectus to the Securities & Exchange Board of India for an initial public offering to raise around Rs 25 crore.
BCL, which already has a 0.3m tonne grinding plant in Asansol, will also set up a clinker plant along with ordinary portland, portland puzzolana and portland slag cement units in Patratu, said Gutgutia.
The Patratu project is aimed at catering the cement-starved eastern, north-eastern and Nepal markets. Setting up a clinker plant in the eastern part would enable supplying quality cement to these markets at a lower cost, as it would save 15% on transportation.
At present, BCL as well as other cement manufacturing plants in eastern India bring clinker from Chhattisgarh that adds up to the cost.
http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=163744
100 cops held hostage
Dumka, May 13: Nearly 100 police personnel, including an inspector and officers-in charge of police stations, were being held hostage by angry villagers in this Jharkhand district and were yet to be freed when reports last came in.
Along with the police personnel, the block development officer and circle officer of Ramghar block under Dumka district have been held captive for over 11 hours today.
The trigger for the hostage drama occurred around 8 am yesterday, when a police team led by Rakesh Mohon Sinha, inspector of police of Jarmundi circle, went to Kuam village to clear a blockade on the Dumka-Ramghar road.
The village is located under Ramghar police station, some 40 km from the district headquarters. The villagers had organised a road blockade since midnight in protest against a step by Ramghar police, which they felt was a blatantly unjustifiable move. Ramghar police had reportedly set free one Sonoti Besra, a 20-year-old woman, from the police station. The villagers accused Sonoti of being involved in the murder of a 24-year-old villager, Lobin Hembrom, on Wednesday night.
On Thursday, the villagers apprehended Sonoti and handed her over to Ramghar police. But the police set her free, without any clear or cogent reason. The villagers claimed that the murderers were close friends of Sonoti and had come to the village to kill Hembrom. The villagers are also holding Soni Murmu, mother of Sonoti, hostage along with the police and administrative officials. Dumka deputy superintendent of police Charu Lakra rushed to the spot this evening.
Similar other allegations have been levelled against the local police earlier as well.
Jarmundi police on Thursday also set free another youth, Raju Kumar Khatic, who had been accused of raping a woman inside Basukinath Temple on Wednesday.
The woman, along with her husband and a sibling, came to the temple from Saraiyahat block for a special ritual. According to the norms of the ritual, the devotee was supposed to stay in the temple complex for a few weeks.
In the dead of the night, when the couple was sleeping in the temple premises, Khatic and two others allegedly sneaked into the temple precincts and raped the woman.
Other devotees present at the temple that night woke up on hearing the victim's screams and nabbed Khatic. The two other youths involved in the incident, however, managed to escape. Khatic was handed over to police personnel on duty at the temple.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070514/asp/frontpage/story_7773708.asp
Vehicle check woes
Ranchi, May 13: The owner of a commercial vehicle could consider himself extremely fortunate if he can manage to get hold of a motor vehicles' inspector (MVI) to get the mandatory fitness certificate.
With MVIs hopping from one district to another — as more than a district has been assigned to them — there is no check on the fitness of vehicles. Sample this: contrary to the provisions that each district should have at least one MVI, the state has five MVIs at present to furnish fitness certificates to commercial vehicles.
Under the motor vehicles rules, each commercial vehicle should undergo a mandatory fitness test every year to ensure that everything within the vehicle is in order.
Two decades ago, Ranchi had two MVIs as there was a huge demand for such tests. But over the years, though the number of public vehicles has increased, the strength of MVIs have reduced from two to one.
The Jharkhand Bus Owners' Association had shot off two letters to the transport department demanding appointment of more MVIs in the state. But there has been no response from the government.
There are some apprehensive commercial vehicle owners who fear that the scarcity of MVIs is a deliberate move as a lot of money can be collected illegally from vehicles plying without the certificates. And the fitness certificate cannot be got unless one meets the MVI.
The joint transport commissioner, Mathius Burh, said the scarcity of MVIs is posing problems for the smooth functioning. But denied that there are ulterior motives in not filling up the vacant posts of the MVIs. The department, he said, had authorised private parties to carry out fitness tests of commercial vehicles in 11 districts. This helps in providing fitness certificates.
But bus owners' association general secretary Kishore Mantri said: "The fitness verification centres are of little help. Even the certificates issued by the centres have to be countersigned by the MVIs."
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070514/asp/jamshedpur/story_7774251.asp
Jharkhand cops play matchmaker
Ranchi, May 8 - Police stations are turning into cupid's corners in Jharkhand, with cops solemnising marriages of couples whose matches are not acceptable to their parents or to society.
Take Shankar Munda, a resident of Sikidiri block in Ranchi. His wife deserted him three months after their marriage and eloped with her lover.
Munda recently got married to his wife's younger sister. The police station turned into a wedding pandal where the marriage was solemnised with all rituals.
'We managed everything with the consent of the villagers and family members of the bride,' said Ashok Kumar, an officer at the Sikidari police station. The marriage took place on May Day.
Another much-in-love couple was united by the Namkom police station here. The parents were against the marriage till the cops came to the couple's rescue.
'The marriage was arranged by the police after looking into the legal aspects. If the law permits, then the police step in to facilitate such marriages,' said M.S. Bhatia, the senior superintendent of police, Ranchi.
In recent times, 10 such marriages were organised by the police in Jharkhand.
According to police, before arranging the marriage, they verify the couple's age, job and other things.
'We also try to get the girl's statement recorded in court on whether she had come away with her lover with her own consent or not. If an adult girl runs away and wants to marry against the wishes of the family, then the police play the role of facilitator,' said a police official.
http://www.rxpgnews.com/india/Jharkhand-cops-play-matchmaker_26970.shtml
The Taj is waiting
The bamboo here is solid and strong, but the Assam product sells more in Dhanbad, Resham Mukherjee wonders why Bamboo that's found in the forests of Parasnath-Giridih ranges bordering the Dhanbad district is special. It's strong and solid and far more difficult to carve and chisel than the hollow and flexible bamboo which the artists of Assam use.
And its products cheaper, since the price does not add up because of transportation cost and VAT charges. But in Dhanbad it's the costlier Assam product which sells better. Simply because the local market has not been built up. Not just that, a lot of this bamboo is even smuggled out of the state by the bamboo mafia, which exploits the poverty of the local people to get its work done.
Bamboo thieves
It's been almost a decade since the gangs started operating, and continue to stalk the Dhanbad-Giridih borders. According to the divisional forest officer Sanjeev Kumar, over half a dozen cases are registered every year. The gang hand over the contract of bamboo felling to the poor, who are ready to take it on for a paltry sum of Rs 30-50 per day. The trekkers are armed and outnumber the forest guards. Bamboo is tied in bundles of 20-30 and brought down. Treated with fumes, they take off for the mandis (markets)of Kanpur, Varanasi, Rajasthan and Delhi. The Giridih-Parasnath hills and hills of Tundi, Topchanchi and Beriomorh bordering Dhanbad are abodes of a special quality of bamboo, not easily found elsewhere. Earlier, it was auctioned by contractors but that discontinued from 1980. Later, forest officials took over. As production fell, contract business was stopped. And bamboo fellers raised their heads.
The quality of the bamboo apart, the artisans have been innovative in their designs as well. The replica of the Taj Mahal at the department of industries and commerce (DIC) in Dhanbad district is proof of that. Completed in eight days, it costs Rs 2,200. Anywhere else it might have found buyers. Not here. For not many even know it's waiting to be bought. This, in spite of an ambitious government of India funded bamboo development project chalked for Jharkhand, which is worth Rs 1825.16 lakh, for the years 2000-2001 to 2010-2011. It was a project that hoped to generate employment among the poor tribals of the forest areas of Dhanbad and Giridih borders, easy victims of the mafia gang, who hire them to cut the bamboo from the forests for meagre payments. Its good quality has taken it places, with vendors sitting along the Grand Trunk Road, leading to Varanasi, not going without business. DIC officials admit that it has also been drawing a good number of buyers in fairs outside Dhanbad, including Delhi haat and the Udyog mela in the state capital.
But as Mithun Choudhary, an artisan at the DIC's training and resource centre, rues, locally the skill goes unrecognised.
Sujit Mukherjee, owner of the only Assam cane products showroom in Dhanbad, says he has never heard about bamboo products made at the DIC resource centre in Dhanbad. He admitted that the cane products from Assam were costlier, especially after implementation of the value added tax (VAT) of 12.5 per cent.
"We hardly get to save. Already, there is a lot of expenditure on the transport. When the product is placed in the market, the price automatically shoots, and customers are not always ready to pay the hefty amount. If the local products are given to us, we can sell them and give them the returns proportionately. It would be profit both ways," Mukherjee pointed out.
It's a project that could well take off, but as of now, even the general manager of DIC, Samrom Barla, admits: "There are no state sanctioned projects as yet. DIC has hired only three craftsmen who make the products. They sell them from the centre itself or make them on order."
As of now, the Taj here has few admirers...
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070514/asp/jamshedpur/story_7774653.asp
'ST girls top enrolment among marginal groups'
Scheduled Tribe girls have far better enrolment in schools than their SC, OBC and Muslim counterparts.
The first national evaluation of Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas in 12 states has revealed that at 31.43%, ST enrolment is ahead of SCs ( 26.36%), OBCs (26.45%), Muslims (4.31%) and below poverty line families (8.75%).
Though Muslim girls have poor enrolment, sources pointed out that a large number of them have been included as OBCs. Further fine-tuning would give the real percentage of Muslim girls' enrolment but there is unlikely to be major change.
The evaluation of KGBV schools — 1,100 out of 1,180 are operational in the country mainly dominated by marginal sections — has also revealed that states in the Hindi heartland like Bihar, Jharkhand and Madhya Pradesh are making innovations to attract girls to schools.
The study, carried out by independent experts for HRD ministry and conducted in Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Gujarat , Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh also revealed that the scheme has received "high priority and political attention".
KGBVs have now become a sub-component of Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan. In fact, Andhra Pradesh has 7.4% more girls enrolled than the capacity since the state has introduced classes 9 and 10 with its own resources.
Bihar has shown some good results and the state is showcasing the success of how five physically challenged 'Musahar' girls going to KGBV in Bochacha block, Muzaffarpur, have become role models for other girls.
The evaluation shows it has other achievements too. With the capacity of 5,500 girls, enrolment is 3,972 out of which 1,948 are SCs, 797 OBCs, 170 BPL and 771 minority girls. Interestingly, SC girls outnumber daughters of politically powerful OBCs.
Bihar lays special emphasis on taking girls of single parents and orphans. Another highlight from Bihar is that girls who had never enrolled have also been welcomed in the KGBVs.
Other best practices have come from AP where detailed micro-planning is done to ensure that all girls are enrolled and child-wise data is available at the mandal level. In UP, MP, Jharkhand and Karnataka, household survey data is used for identification of the children.
Arunachal Pradesh is another success story where KGBVs are running as residential primary schools and a move to convert them into middle schools has already started.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/ST_girls_top_enrolment_among_marginal_groups /articleshow/2030543.cms
Dark side of mining
The reality of Orissa's iron ore mines, where the promise of prosperity is just empty rhetoric.
Hundreds of hectares of forests have been lost to mining over the years in a situation where encroachments are impossible to monitor. The most common illegality is to continue mining long after the lease has ended.
AS the shadows lengthen on Keonjhar's main street, the tube-lit sign above Hotel Arjun flickers to life, illuminating both the entrance to the hotel and the cigarette seller next to it. A traffic policeman walks up to the crossing right outside the hotel and assumes his position at what is the most significant crossing in town.
Fifteen kilometres down the road, the ground shivers as a queue of trucks, over a kilometre long, shudders to life. Engine after engine revs up as several hundred trucks begin the next stage of their 325-km journey from the iron-rich Keonjhar district in north Orissa to Paradip port on the east coast. This has been the practice ever since the District Magistrate issued orders prohibiting truck movement between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Further up, the highway narrows into the first of many bottlenecks, and branches off, capillary-like, into un-metalled paths that lead into the heart of the district's iron ore mines.
Across the Baitarani river, in Joda, Barbil, Deojhar and Thakurani, the low mountains are illuminated by high-powered halogens, as work continues at a relentless pace in the mines - visible as raw, red gashes on the otherwise thickly forested mountainside.
The source of an estimated 35 per cent of India's total reserves of haematite, Orissa produced more than 46 million tonnes of iron ore in 2004-05, of which three quarters came from Keonjhar. Almost all of it was, and still is, carted away in nearly 30,000 trucks from the 119 mines that dot the district.
The trucks move north from Joda, to the Jharkhand border where they supply ore to Jharkhand's rapidly expanding steel industry, and northwest to Haldia port. But the majority move south through Keonjhar town towards Cuttack and cut through to Paradip port, from where the ore is shipped in containers to one of the few countries that have a bigger appetite for steel than India - China.
Initially seen as the engine of an independent India - the first "swadeshi" steel mill was completed in 1920 by the Tata Iron and Steel Company at Jamshedpur in present-day Jharkhand just across the border with Orissa - it was cast into the shadows by the shining "new economy" of the 1990s.
A five-year rally in international prices has seen the iron and steel sector make a strong return on the business pages of newspapers.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pointed out in his keynote address at the India Steel Summit 2007: "In the last five years, the production and consumption of steel has grown at rates exceeding 9 per cent per annum. The pace of growth has further accelerated in the current year to over 10 per cent."
The recently formulated national steel policy has set the production target for 2020 at 110 million tonnes of steel, and a doubling of the present capacity from around 40 million tonnes to 80 million tonnes by 2012.
A buoyant national economy and a booming construction sector are expected to add to the optimism in the steel sector, and nowhere is this felt more than in the office of Padmanabha Behera, Orissa's Minister of Steel and Mines and Planning and Coordination. "We have signed 45 MoUs [Memoranda of Understanding] till date," he told this correspondent, "and production has already started in 23."
The Minister foresees a resurgent Orissa, propelled forward by his party's mantra of "progress through industrialisation". Behera believes that Orissa's future lies in using its vast mineral wealth to generate employment and, of course, create wealth. However, not everyone in the State shares this vision.
Privilege and corruption
To understand Orissa's trucks is to understand how privilege and corruption operate along dense, intricate networks where the legal and the illegal often overlap, making it impossible to make a concrete accusation. After all, what is an illegal mine? How can it be identified?
"It is hereby declared that it is expedient in the public interest that the Union should take under its control the regulation of mines and the development of minerals to the extent hereinafter provided," states the preamble to the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, one of a raft of laws and bylaws passed to govern the mining sector.
First enacted in 1957, and amended almost every four years up to 1999, the MMDR Act serves as the central axis on which mining law is framed. The Act classifies minerals into "minor" and "major" lists, lays down procedures for the granting of reconnaissance permits, prospecting licences and mining leases, and classifies violations and encroachments. While States have complete control over all minor minerals such as clay, gravel, sand and building stones, major minerals such as iron ore come under the purview of the Central government. For such minerals, Central permission is required prior to the granting of licence.
Apart from the MMDR Act, mining is subject to The Mines Act of 1952, the National Mineral Policy (amended in 1994), and a slew of laws concerning land acquisition and environmental assessment.
Acquiring a mining lease for a major mineral like iron ore or coal for a particular area is relatively easy now. The process has been simplified over the last 10 years, a development that has coincided with the liberalisation of the mining sector. Mining leases are granted on a `first-come, first-serve' basis, and the foreign direct investment (FDI) policy of 1999 allows for "up to 100 per cent foreign direct investment" in the mining and processing of minerals other than diamond, precious stones and atomic minerals. Thus, mining occupies a unique governmental space that is simultaneously highly legislated yet remarkably free of constraints for mine operators.
Under the laws governing mining, mines could be declared "illegal" on a number of grounds, the most obvious being that of mining in an area without applying for a lease. However, the pressure of rapid industrialisation has forced State governments to curb such practices.
Illegal mines
"No illegal mining is possible without political patronage," says a senior officer in the Directorate of Mines, "and local politicians have realised that the land occupied by illegal miners can just as easily be handed over to giant corporations for similar favours." This is not to say that outright capture of areas for mining has stopped entirely in the iron belt. The most common examples of illegal mining occur on the boundary of legality, where the violator can claim a degree of innocence on the basis of ignorance of the law.
The most common form of illegality is to continue mining long after the lease has expired. A document obtained from the Directorate of Mines under the Right to Information Act provides a complete list of mining leases in Keonjhar. According to the Directorate's own figures, dated December 31, 2005, as many as 52 out of 119 mines, or more than 40 per cent of all mines in Keonjhar district covering 52 per cent of leased area, operate illegally on expired licences. Of these 52 mines, 10 belong to the Orissa Mining Corporation (OMC), a government-owned enterprise, and operate on 7,051 hectares (1 hectare = 2.47 acres) or a fifth of the total area under mining in the district.
Many in the industry argue that the issue of expired licences is not an indication of corruption per se as the government has been dragging its feet for years over their renewal. The failure to renew leases, particularly those held by a State-owned corporation, seems inexplicable until one unpacks the terms of the mining lease.
As pointed out by Ritwick Dutta in a compilation titled "Undermining India", the renewal of mining leases in forested areas has been the subject of much litigation since the enactment of the Forest Conservation Act of 1980. Given that most mines, including those in Keonjhar, fall within the purview of this Act, the key question was whether the renewal of a mining lease required fresh permission of the Central government. The Supreme Court, in successive judgments, particularly in State of Tamil Nadu vs Hind Stones in 1981 and Samatha vs State of Andhra Pradesh in 1997, has ruled that the renewal of a mining lease is actually the grant of a fresh lease. Thus, a good reason for mining companies and associated State officials to go slow on the renewal of leases could be that, theoretically, the company shall have to reapply at the time of renewal and would be subject to monitoring by the Central Pollution Control Board, the Ministry of Environment and Forests and a host of other agencies.
Forest Act and mining
The Forest Conservation Act mandates that the Central government shall after careful examination of the proposal denotify forest land earmarked for mining and the mining company shall be subject to a series of restrictions to minimise the ecological footprint of the mine. It is also a useful tool to ensure that the mining companies stay within the areas allotted to them. Of course, the Forest Act, like any other Act, is only as good as its implementation.
Another document from the Directorate of Mines lists 40 mines in Keonjhar that are operating without clearance from the Forest Department; the OMC, once more, is one of the worst violators. District Forest Officer P.N. Karat says that as of February 2006 all such cases have been dealt with. However, this assessment is impossible to verify independently. In the absence of firm leases, many companies have been granted temporary licences, most of which are issued without guidelines or monitoring.
The absence of adequate monitoring is probably the most disturbing feature of the industry in Orissa. The highly technical language adopted by both the mining companies and the state effectively silences any local articulation of opposition by people directly affected by the projects. Thus, people's testimonies of a change in the colour of groundwater, an increase in the cases of asthma and respiratory conditions and a drop in the fertility of their fields are discounted in favour of Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM) readings collected by the State Pollution Control Board (SPCB) and the findings of groundwater studies conducted by the State Groundwater Board that pollution is present but is within the mandated safety limit.
Barbil, to cite just one example, is a small town in the heart of the mining belt where it is difficult to breathe freely even during the day when the trucks do not run. But a study obtained from the SPCB states that the SPM readings in Barbil are "only" 456 micrograms per cubic metre against a reference value of 500 micrograms per cubic metre for mining areas, and so is acceptable. However, the Central Pollution Control Board reference value for "residential and rural areas" - which villages outside the mines are - is 200 micrograms per cubic metre and for a reserve forest, which could be classified as a "sensitive area" under the SPCB guidelines, it is 100 micrograms per cubic metre. Thus, the same arbitrarily fixed "standards" used to declare mining areas "pollution free" can just as easily be used to declare them unfit for human habitation.
Similarly, the only way to verify if a mining area corresponds to the area mentioned in the mining lease is to either refer to detailed contour maps in the possession of the government (and hence unavailable to the general public) or physically plot the coordinates of the mine using a global positioning system (GPS), which no one in Orissa has access to. Such opacity on the part of all privilege-holders in the system makes its impossible to level definite accusations against any party. But, as in all camouflaged sites, in Orissa, too, the veil slips occasionally to offer a glimpse of the arrogance of mining corporations vis-à-vis the law.
Road to nowhere
The road to Deojhar, as with most roads to hell, is paved with the best of intentions. Ostensibly built to connect Deojhar village to the highway under the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana Scheme, it has turned out to be a useful way to connect the mines to the national highway.
Few villagers use this road; there are too many trucks. Of late, the trucks plying on the Deojhar-NH 215 route have had to contend with more than just crater-size potholes - a fleet of bright orange earthmovers engaged in digging deep trenches along the road. These vehicles have been employed by the Jindal company, a consortium of companies with interests primarily in iron, steel and power, to supply water to their 2,000-hectare iron ore mine in the hills above Deojhar village.
"Jindal is laying a nine-kilometre pipeline to draw water from the Baitarani river," says Arjun Saraswat, deputy general manager of Sarda Mines Private Ltd., the company that possesses the lease for the Jindal land. "This water will be made available through the soon-to-be-completed Kanpur dam project." At the time of this article going to print, the digging was almost complete and pipes two feet (0.61 metre) in diameter had been laid along a stretch of 4.5 km.
But has Jindal acquired the necessary permissions for this pipeline?
"The Jindal company's demand for water has been approved `in principle'," says Harish Behera, Engineer-in-Chief (Water Resources) for Orissa. "But the technical parameters are to be worked out. No permission has been granted for any pipeline and, as of now, no project work has begun." Behera is responsible for the allocation of water resources for the entire State, but seems to be unaware that the pipeline work has not only begun but is nearing completion. When confronted with photographs on the project work taken by this correspondent, he said "the matter is currently under litigation".
What sort of litigation? For answers, one is directed to C.V. Prasad, Chief Engineer, Project Planning and Formulation, of the Orissa Water Department (Irrigation). Prasad is more forthcoming. "Jindal has been allotted 1,500 cubic metres of water an hour, drawn in a phased manner, from the Baitarani river project, but the project is still awaiting technical clearance. As of now, the construction is in violation of the law," he says. Prasad adds that his office has written to the company several times asking it to stop construction, most recently on January 16. "We were under the impression that construction had stopped."
Granting a project approval "in principle" is no indication of its merits or demerits; those are only evaluated in the technical approval stage when a detailed project report (DPR) is submitted. "In principle" approval only indicates that the company may go ahead and prepare a DPR. If Jindal's pipeline does not pass muster the company will be forced to remove it. In going ahead with the project, it believes, perhaps, that government approval is a foregone conclusion or that such approval is of little importance.
The Baitarani pipeline also begs another question. At present, where is Jindal drawing its water from? Deputy general manager Arjun Saraswat admits that Jindal is currently drawing water from borewells in their area, but is unwilling to quantify the volume of water drawn every day. "It is only used for domestic purposes," he says. However, officials at the SPCB office in Keonjhar reveal that Jindal uses a 10-kilolitre truck to carry out water sprinkling three times a day in the mining area, that is, 30,000 litres of water a day just for sprinkling.
Apart from this, the scale of the mining operation, with most of the permanent workers living in the mining area, suggests a reasonably high rate of water consumption even for domestic purposes. Even Jindal probably does not know how much water it uses because none of its tubewells is metered. However, one group of people has a fair idea.
Deojhar's sorrow
Down the road from the mines, the residents of Deojhar have seen their streams dry up, the water table fall and the soil lose its fertility in the six years since Jindal began operations. "The very basis of village life has fallen apart since the project began," says Sridhar Nayak, a leader in Deojhar. The crops have died, there is no place to graze cattle, people cannot collect firewood in the project area and the handpumps yield foul, yellowish water. Nayak says the inevitable dust that any project breeds has severely affected the health of the residents, particularly the young, among whom the number of cases of lung congestion has increased.
When the project first began, protests were quelled by a combination of cajoling and coercion. A significant police presence was backed by promises of jobs, economic regeneration, security and "progress". Needless to say, none of it has materialised except, of course, the police, who regularly show up in impressive numbers to threaten `errant' residents.
The promise of prosperity - schools, hospitals, jobs - is usually the classic argument used to justify the well-documented horrors of mining. Minerals are a country's natural wealth, a gift from Mother Nature, a precious resource crucial to a nation's progress. The booming international market for metals has also cast mines and minerals as earners of valuable foreign exchange. It is hard to unpack the cold, hard logic of capital and corporations without sounding like a hopeless rural idealist. However, the people of Orissa are now asking who the beneficiaries of the mining sector really are. What if mining did not benefit the people it affected the worst?
http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories/20070518001604200.htm
Firms show power interest
After 60 years of Independence, villages at remote corners of East Singhbhum district can look forward to electrification.
The Jharkhand State Electricity Board's (JSEB) Jamshedpur circle is implementing the ambitious Rajiv Gandhi Grameen Vidyutikaran Yojana, a central government scheme, which will ensure cent per cent electrification of the rural areas in different phases.
About 170 villages under Ghatshila, Patamda and Jamshedpur divisions of the JSEB will be electrified by October 2008 under the programme which has to be completed within a period of 18 months from the time of commencement.
According to M.P. Chowdhary, the superintending engineer of Jamshedpur circle, the notification for commencement of the scheme here was made in February, but the real work towards its implementation has gaining momentum now.
Chowdhary, who is monitoring its progress, said the project had to be done in turnkey basis and for this three companies have shown their interest.
He pointed out that the companies have conducted a survey of the villages and would shortly meet the authorities concerned of the state power board for going ahead with the rural electrification project.
"According to the scheme, the interested companies have to provide the materials as well as the manpower for carrying out the project. And despite the fact that the project has to be completed within a time-frame of 18 months, the companies have to maintain the standards of rural electrification," he said.
He added that the three companies which have shown interest in the programme are Nagarjuna, Neon and ABL.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070515/asp/jamshedpur/story_7779040.asp
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