Wednesday, December 26, 2012


HIMALAYAN GUARDIAN     Wednesday Dec 26-Jan 1, 2012  
Sikkim declared ‘Best Small State’, gets Diamond State Award
Gangtok, Dec 25: Sikkim has been declared India's 'best small state' by the jury of the IBN7 Diamond State Award, 2012, an official statement from the Sikkim government said on Sunday.
Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar presented the award to Sikkim Chief Minister Pawan Chamling in a ceremony in New Delhi on Saturday night.
Goa and Uttrakhand were declared second and third runners-up in the category of Best Small States.
Sikkim was declared as best State in the country in the category of small states in overall achievements and the State was also declared best State in the country in citizen security, environment and water and sanitation categories
"Sikkim was declared as the best state in the country in the category of small states for its overall achievements. The state was also declared best in the country in citizen security, environment and water and sanitation categories," the statement said.
Exiled Tibetan govt hopeful on Japan PM-elect on Tibet issue
I will do everything in my power to change the situation in Tibet: Shinzo Abe
Tibetan spiritual leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama presents a khada to Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister-elect, in    
     Tokyo on November 13, 2012. (Photo/AP/Itsuo Inouye)Add caption

Dharamsala, Dec 25: The exile Tibetan administration last week congratulated Japan’s new prime minister-elect Shinzo Abe on winning the parliamentary elections and expressed hope for his “continued support” on the issue of Tibet.
Exiled Tibetan Prime Minister Lobsang Sangay also thanked the people and government of Japan for the “long-standing support” for the non-violent struggle of the Tibetan people.
“On behalf of the Tibetan people, I would like to congratulate Mr Shinzo Abe on winning the elections and wish him all the best as the next prime minister of Japan,” Sangay said. “I thank the people and government of Japan for their long-standing support for democracy and non-violent struggle of the Tibetan people. I look forward to your continued support for the issue of Tibet.”
Tibetan Parliament-in-exile also issued a congratulatory letter to Abe, appreciating his support for the cause of Tibet, phayul.com reported.
“We have been very appreciative of your support for the cause of Tibet in general and the commitment that you showed during the visit of His Holiness the Dalai Lama this year to Japan," Deputy Speaker Khenpo Sonam Tenphel said.
"We wish you all the success in your endeavours and appeal to you again to play a pro-active role in reducing the current grave situation inside Tibet and in finding a lasting mutually beneficial solution to the issue of Tibet.”
Earlier in April, Sangay met and had cordial exchanges with Abe on four separate occasions during his visit to Japan.
The exiled government expressed its “sincerest thanks” to the prime minister-elect for his “word of support and for co-hosting His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s recent Japan visit.”
The Tibetan spiritual leader, during his visit to the island nation last month, made a historic visit to the Japanese Parliament building and addressed more than 230 Japanese parliamentarians and their representatives.
Following the meeting, Abe, who was then the leader of Japan's main opposition party, the Liberal Democratic Party, had promised to “do everything to change the situation in Tibet.”
“I swear I will do everything in my power to change the situation in Tibet where human rights are being suppressed,” Abe told reporters in Tokyo. “Tibet seeks freedom and democracy and we agree on those values.”
Abe had earlier served as Japanese prime minister between 2006 and 2007.
Editorial
POLL VICTORY
Good Economics Is Good Politics
Industry captains have hailed Assembly poll victories in Gujarat as well as Himachal Pradesh. They feel that the mandate provides “great opportunity” for development of infrastructure and industrial growth. Political stability would surely enhance confidence of the industry and herald new investments. While Narendra Modi’s supporters have hailed the three-time Chief Minister as “an epitome of good governance and path-breaking development” there is no doubt that Gujarat has made remarkable progress during the course of last decade. Though the Congress party managed to snatch back the hill State with a wafer-thin majority – securing 36 seats in the 68-strong House – industrial houses have expressed confidence that the State will be able to achieve its development target under the Congress.
Poll pundits feel that ‘even if Modi is not the next Prime Minister, he would certainly continue to be one of India’s key leaders, and not just in Gujarat.’ During his election campaign Modi was always mindful of the fact that ‘good economics is good politics’ and this was equated with ‘good governance’. The real significance of Modi’s third consecutive victory in Gujarat, on the campaign theme of development, is that it has the capacity to dramatically alter the political discourse in the lead up to the 2014 election.
The success of Modi’s campaign pitch of reaching out to the aspirational sections of society, eschewing the politics of religious or caste identity, holds enormous significance for the economic and political discourse as it will likely be framed for the 2014 elections. Now that Modi has firmly laid his future politics on economic development his next focus should be to set high standards on the democratic process in all spheres of activity.
Shillong Fashion Week brings Northeast designers to limelight
“North-east India can be a new fashion hub in future”
Shillong, Dec 25: Shillong Fashion Week (SFW) 2012, the first-ever fashion week to be held in the State of Meghalaya, has opened doors for the Indian fashion icons to explore the fashion concept of Northeast India.
The Shillong Fashion Week provided an opportunity to amateur designers from the region to learn more about national and international fashion industry.
Ritika Gupta, one of the leading Indian designers and a participant in the SFW, told fibre2fashion, “The fashion sense of people in north-eastern part of India is very good and when we talk about western dresses it is more prevalent in this region than in any other part of the country.”
“North-east India can be a new fashion hub in future,” she adds.
Talking about the benefits amateur designers accrued through SFW, she says, “SFW provided an opportunity for the amateur designers in the region to learn about conducting a fashion show, market requirements and the show provides new opportunities for them.”
According to Nathaniel W Rynjah, the main focus behind the fashion show was to expose the weavers and the textile sector in north-east India.
“We had about nine local designers who participated in SFW and for most of them it was the first time in a fashion show,” he informs.
An American university student is the new Miss Universe
Miss USA Olivia Culpo is crowned Miss Universe 2012 Wednesday night.

LAS VEGAS — An American university student is the new Miss Universe, defeating dozens of contestants from six continents to bring the crown back to the U.S. after a drought of more than a decade.
Twenty-year-old Olivia Culpo won the title on Wednesday night at the Planet Hollywood casino on the Las Vegas Strip, replacing outgoing champion Leila Lopes of Angola.
The Boston University sophomore’s coronation ends a long losing spell for the U.S. in the competition co-owned by Donald Trump and NBC. An American had not won the Miss Universe title since Brook Lee won in 1997.
Culpo, who beat out 88 competitors, wore a tight navy blue mini-dress with a sequined bodice as she walked on stage for the event’s opening number. Later in the night, she strutted in a purple and blue bikini, and donned a wintery red velvet gown with a plunging neckline.
No one was more surprised than Culpo’s family when told them she was entering the Miss Rhode Island contest last year, her father Peter recalled.
“We didn’t know a thing about pageants,” he said.
She won that contest in a rented $20 dress with a hole in it and then began working out, dieting, and studying current events on flashcards to compete for the Miss USA crown
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Tuesday, December 18, 2012


HIMALAYAN GUARDIAN     Wednesday Dec 18-25, 2012   
jigmenkazisikkim.blogspot.com
Arunachal part of India: US Ambassador Powell
India-China border row: US sticks to McMahon Line
Guwahati, Dec 18: US ambassador to India Nancy J Powell on Friday said the US still adopts the 1962 policy of recognizing the McMahon Line regarding the India-China border dispute. She said the US recognizes Arunachal Pradesh as an integral part of India.
On China's repeated claims that Arunachal Pradesh as its territory, Powell said, "This is an issue between India and China. It has to be resolved bilaterally by the two countries." She added that the US always encourages talks between India and China on all issues.
Commenting on China's rise as a global power, Powell said the US does not consider China's fast economic and military growth as a cause of rivalry. "We don't think it is a rivalry. The US will continue to work with China, along with other friendly countries. We are for investing in China and engaging them in trade," she added. She said the US has good relations with China and have a lot of investment in that country. She, however, said India's own interests are similar to that of the US as both countries believe and practice democracy, The Economic Times reported.
Powell said the geo-political situation in South and South-East Asian region has changed now and the India's northeast region has become an important area. "With Myanmar opening up and trade links with Bangladesh improving, the northeast today is at a critical juncture," she added.
"The northeast joins the ASEAN countries with the Indian sub-continent. It is a geographical junction of the new silk route," said Powell, explaining how the NE region has become very crucial for trade ties between India and ASEAN countries.
Sino-Indian border deadlock raises tensions; ambiguity of past accords hinders settlement
Sikkim in Indo-China border dispute
Indo-China border in east Sikkim
London, Dec 18: Indian national security adviser Shivshankar Menon went to Beijing the week before last to have his last formal meeting with his Chinese counterpart, State Councilor Dai Bingguo, who will be retiring in March next year.
When they had met earlier this year in January, the two had decided to come up with a joint record of negotiations and to look at the future trajectory of these talks. The aim of the latest talks was to ensure continuity with Dai's successor.
After the meeting, Menon suggested that the two sides have now reached a "common understanding" on the progress made so far in the border talks that will provide a framework for drawing a "fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable" boundary, The Japan Times reported.
More significantly, India acknowledged China's sovereignty over Tibet and pledged not to allow "anti-China" political activities in India, while China acknowledged India's 1975 incorporation of the former monarchy of Sikkim by first agreeing to open a trading post along the border with the former kingdom and by later rectifying official maps to include Sikkim as part of India.
In 2005, both sides established the Political Parameters and Guiding Principles for the Settlement of the India-China Boundary Question Agreement — broad principles to govern the parameters of any dispute settlement.
China has expressed its desire to seek a fair resolution to the vexed boundary issue on the basis of "mutual accommodation, respect for history and accommodation of reality."
Since then China has vigorously asserted its old claims along the border with India and has combined it with aggressive patrolling, which New Delhi views as a violation of a 1993 agreement.
Even as India considered the Sikkim border issue settled, repeated Chinese incursions in the "finger area" in northern Sikkim in the past few years are aimed at opening a fresh front against India. Concerns are growing about covert intrusions into the Indian territory to strengthen Chinese claims over the disputed border areas.
Forces of the People's Liberation Army also regularly intrude into Bhutanese territory at the junction where the three countries meet and destroying Indian Army posts. These incursions are strategically directed at the Siliguri corridor that connects India with its northeast states.
Issue provisional ration cards to Nepalese: HC
Shimla, Dec 18: Himachal Pradesh High Court directed the district controller, food civil supplies and consumer affairs, Kullu, to provide provisional consumer cards/ration cards to Nepalese applicants and other migrant labourers in Kullu district and supply all the essential articles to them as are given to other ordinary ration card holders for six months.
The directions were issued by a division bench comprising Chief Justice Kurian Joseph and Justice Rajiv Sharma during the hearing of a petition filed by Mool Pravah Akhil Bharat Nepal Ekta Samaj, Kullu, seeking directions to government for supplying ration cards to Nepalese residing in Kullu so that they could purchase essential commodities from fair price shops.
District controller, food civil supplies and consumer affairs, Kullu, in his reply, had stated that there was no provision in HP Specified Articles (Regulation of Distribution) Order, 2003, to issue permanent ration cards to such persons, a national daily reported.
However, under its Clause 10(4), temporary ration cards could be issued to those persons, who have no fixed or identifiable place of dwelling, on payment of required fee. He also informed the court that the state government had sought clarification from the Central government in this regard five years ago and a response was still awaited.
The court directed the Central government to give clarification to state government and to file a reply within two months and also directed the director, food and civil supplies, Himachal Pradesh to provide required quantity of essential articles to district controller, food, civil supplies and consumer affairs, Kullu.
Concerns raised over Chinese activities in Ladakh, PoK
New Delhi, Dec 18:  Concern was expressed over Chinese activities in Ladakh region and presence of Chinese troops in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir(PoK) during a meeting of Parliamentary Consultative committee of the Home Ministry.
Intelligence Bureau Director Nehchal Sandhu, however, while briefing the MPs, said a close watch was being maintained along the India-China border and that there was nothing to be worried about, official sources said, PTI reported.
Participating in the meeting held here last night, some MPs had voiced their concern at the repeated incursions by Chinese troops in Ladakh region and their growing presence in PoK, the sources said.
According to official data presented in Parliament earlier this year, there were nearly 500 Chinese incursions in the last three years. Of this, 218 was in 2010 and 213 in 2011. There were 64 such incursions till April this year.
Intelligence agencies have been reporting presence of around 4,000 Chinese troops across PoK. Army Chief Gen Bikram Singh had said in September that Chinese soldiers were present in PoK to provide security to its railways and road projects.
In an official release issued by the Home Ministry, it was stated that the Consultative Committee of MPs attached to the Ministry reviewed the security situation in Jammu and Kashmir.
The meeting was chaired by Union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde.
NAGA ISSUE
Peace With Honour
 The Joint Legislature Forum (JLF), a forum floated by the 60 Nagaland Legislative Assembly members, recently indicated its willingness to resign from the House to pave way for an honourable solution to the vexed Naga political problem. However, their stand on the issue is conditional: no resignation before solution. Taking a bold stand on the Naga issue, Chief Minister Neiphiu Rio has pointed out that “our adversaries had divided and placed us in four Indian states and in two countries - India and Myanmar." He says early resolution to the Naga issue is crucial to the implementation of various developmental plans in the State. To resolve the Naga issue at the earliest, the JLF has decided to consult all political parties, civil society and church leaders.
The Centre has been holding talks with NSCN-IM since 1998 to find a solution to the Naga problem. In July, the Centre and the NSCN-IM had announced that they "narrowed" down differences and were working out a settlement in the "shortest possible time". Responding favourably on resolving the Naga issue, the Opposition Congress party in Nagaland is likely to urge the Government of India for deferment of the State Assembly elections due in March 2013 till a solution is arrived at. The Centre now needs to take a serious view of the situation. Although talks between the Government of India and the NSCN-M are underway the Centre needs to focus its attention on the issue in view of the changed situation. NSCN-M leaders – Chairman Isak Chsi Swu and General Secretary Thuingaleng Muivah – are  likely to be in Nagaland during Christmas before they proceed to New Delhi next month to resume the talks.
Statehood demand raised in GJM meet
Be patient, make GTA successful: Gurung
Darjeeling, Dec 18: While keeping the statehood issue alive Gorkha Janmukti Morch chief Bimal Gurung said all Gorkhas must ensure the success of the recently-formed Gorkha Territorial Administration (GTA).
This appeal was made during the GJM’s first national conference held here on Sunday. GJM's unit representatives from twenty-two states participated in the conference, which also dwelt on security of Gorkhas living in the country.
Realizing the touchy issue of adopting a fine balance between the GTA and the statehood demand, Gurung said, "We cannot achieve anything if we lose patience. The state government has given us the responsibility to run the GTA and we are doing that. But if they dishonour the resolutions we take in the GTA Sabha, then we will have to opt for the route of agitation."
The statehood demand was one of the four resolutions adopted during the conference. The other three were conferring tribal status to the entire Gorkha community except for scheduled castes, giving linguistic minority status to Darjeeling Hills and inclusion of Terai and Dooars in the GTA.
GJM's unit representatives from twenty-two states, not much clear about the political polices being taken up by the central committee in Darjeeling Hills attended the conference, with the common question - what after the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA).
"The subject of a separate state should not be closed, even if the GTA is a stepping stone for it," said a member from Arunachal Pradesh.
While the GJM president said prolonged dialogues were needed to pursue the state for the demand of Gorkhaland, Gurung said he would not abandon the Terai and Doors region at any cost.
GTA to form Lepcha Development Board
Darjeeling, Dec 18: The Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA) Sabha on Friday adopted resolutions to take measures to protect the interest of different tribal communities living in the hills of Darjeeling. Among these is the formation of a Lepcha Development Board within the ambit of GTA.
The marginalized Lepcha community, the sons of the soil of Darjeeling, had been demanding for some time that a development council be formed to take measures for their protection. They had held agitations on several occasions, in Darjeeling as well as in Kolkata, in support of this demand.
The board/council will not have any territory assigned to it but will function as an independent body to protect the ethnic identity of the Lepchas.
The Lepchas have been holding agitations demanding an administrative mechanism to protect their identity, as they claim to be the aboriginal tribe of Darjeeling.
The state backward classes welfare department is believed to have submitted a proposal to set up a Lepcha Development Council to chief secretary Samar Ghosh recently.
The proposed council is aimed at protecting “the language, cultural traits and help in economic development of the Lepchas”.
The council will act as a coordinating agency to undertake various projects for the welfare of the Lepchas. It will approach the concerned departments, for example, about building new roads, providing drinking water, setting up schools, and improving the Lepcha-dominated areas.
Lepchas have complained that their identity and culture has always been dominated by the majority Nepalese community.
Sikkim girls bag silver medal in national basketball tourney
Captain Nim Doma Bhutia gets ‘most valuable player’ award
Gangtok, Dec 18: Eklavya Model Residential School (EMRS), Gangyap, west Sikkim,  finished runners-up with silver medal at the CBSE under-19 National Basketball Championship held recently in Jaipur.
APS Noida, last year’s runners-up beat the Sikkim team by 11 points in the finals. However, the ‘most valuable player’ was awarded to the captain Nim Doma Bhutia of the EMRS team. This is the second time she has been awarded this title in national tournament.
EMRS girls had won the title last year. The Sikkim girls defeated Madhya Pradesh 57-37 in an exciting semifinal.
Impressed with the Sikkim team, the members of Basketball Federation India, an official release informs, have asked the team to participate in the junior nationals through Sikkim Basketball Association.
Other members in the team include Rinchen, Tshering Eden, Dikim Doma, Binu Hangma Subba, Nim Lam Bhutia, Pem Choden Lepcha, Manita Subba, Deechen Bhutia, Bimochen Tamang, Kinchmit Lepcha and Lakchung Lepcha.
Tini Tshechu, the team manage, is aided by Darren Van Biois as assistant coach, and Siddarth Yonzone as coach.
Darjeeling’s reunification with Sikkim will make us ‘Sikkimese, not Gorkhas’: Moktan
Kalimpong, Dec 18: Gorkhaland Task Force (GTF) Coordinator R. Moktan said in the event Darjeeling-Sikkim demand comes through the inhabitants of the new state will be called ‘Sikkimese’ and not ‘Gorkhas.’
Highlighting the statehood demand, Moktan said the demand for formation of Gorkhaland state is aimed at catering to the need of the Gorkha community in the country for a homeland of their own and to safeguard their identity.
“Through merger we will be called Sikkimese, not Gorkhas,” Moktan said, Mungpo News reported. He has urged everyone to stand united for creation of Gorkhaland.
Moktan’s reaction on Darjeeling-Sikkim merger comes at a time when the issue is hotly debated in Sikkim and by a section of politicians in Darjeeling.
BJP will demand 'Frontier Nagaland' in Parliament: Gadkari
Kohima, Dec 18: In a move which could stoke secessionist ambitions elesewhere in the region, BJP President Nitin Gadkari assured to the people of eastern districts of Nagaland that BJP would carve out a separate state of Frontier Nagaland if it came to power in Lok Sabha elections in 2014.
Nagaland, where BJP only has 2 legislators out of total 60, also goes to assembly polls in 2013.
Slamming the ruling Naga People’s Front and the main opposition Congress for their lack of sensitivity towards the political aspirations of the people of Tuensang and Mon districts, Gadkari said on Sunday that BJP would initiate a demand for ‘Frontier Nagaland’ in the Parliament, dailybhaskar.com and Nagaland Post reported.
“Nagaland attained statehood in 1963. It should not have remained like this for 49 years,” he said at Mon Town Hall  pointing to the severe lack of economic development in the eastern districts of Nagaland. “Both Congress and NPF have failed the Naga people,” said the BJP President.
Also, addressing a mammoth gathering here at local ground Tuensang, BJP chief said the party has recognized the ‘uniqueness’  of the eastern Nagas and pointed out that they have understood the problems and grievances being faced in this part of the country in various developmental aspects.
Giving an air of credibility to his assurances, Gadkari revealed that he had even met leaders of Eastern Nagaland People’s Organisation ENPO) in Delhi and referred them to few MPs for redressing their grievances.
ENPO has been demanding a separate state comprising of eastern part of Nagaland, ascribing it to lack of development and opportunities under different regimes that came to power in the past.
However, unlike other secessionist and statehood movements which plague the north-eastern region, ENPO’s means of achieving separate state have largely remained peaceful.
Notably, Gadkari’s visit was to the state was coordinated by ENPO, thus sparking hopes of BJP-ENPO alliance in 2013 assembly elections.
INTERVIEW Lobsang Sangay
“China ought to have a new perspective on the Tibet issue”
In an interview with The Times of India recently, Tibet’s exiled Prime Minister Lobsang Sangay says there will be no compromise on democracy and non-violence to achieve Tibet’s goals. Excerpts:
Times of India: What is the Tibetan government-in-exile doing to highlight the increasing number of self- immolation cases in Tibet?
Lobsang Sangay: We have declared 2013 as 'Solidarity-with-Tibet Year'. Starting December 10, which is commemorated as Human Rights Day, we will organize events, rallies, conferences, and discussions in different cities across the world, such as New York, Geneva and New Delhi, which have strong UN presence. We have also launched a website, solidaritywithtibet.org, which consists of a six-minute video on atrocities committed by China in Tibet, and links to social networking sites to create awareness on the cause.
Q: The present border conflict between India and China regarding MacMahon Line was drafted between British India and Independent Tibet in 1914. Do you think the Tibet and border issues have some common ground?
A: These issues are very much connected. The treaty was negotiated between British Indian representative, the then Tibetan PM and a Chinese representative. China didn't sign the final draft as it had border issues with Tibet. But the Tibetan government-in-exile's stand is that McMahon Line should be acknowledged as it was a treaty signed by Tibet.
Q: What is the current state of negotiations between Dharamsala and Beijing?
A: Our envoys met their Chinese counterparts nine times between 2003 and 2009, and presented the memorandum of genuine autonomy within the framework of Chinese constitutions. But since then, there has been no contact from the Chinese side.
Q: Are you comfortable with the regime change in China following the conclusion of 18th Party Congress?
A: We will have to wait till March 2013, when there will be a change of guard for top Chinese political positions. We feel that with the induction of new people there ought to be a new perspective on the Tibet issue, given the tragedy in Tibet and failure of the Communist party's hardline policies in the region.
Q: What are your expectations from Xi Jinping whose father was considered a liberal Communist leader?
A: Xi Zhongxun, Xi Jinping's father, was close to the Panchen Lama and knew the present Dalai Lama, and was very liberal in his political approach. Whether the son will be like his father is yet to be seen.
Q: Do you think the middle path approach for Tibet is still relevant today?
A: The middle path - which is asking for genuine autonomy within the framework of Chinese constitution - is the official policy of our administration based on the resolution passed by Tibetan Parliament-in-exile. Democracy and non-violence are two basic and uncompromising principals we believe in to achieve our goals. The concept of freedom is becoming a global trend and we believe China will come around at some point.






SIKKIM OBSERVER        Dec 15-21, 2012
Panchayat polls, ‘black month’ are over, Mr. Golay, where is your party?
Opposition leaders want Golay to join alliance

Gangtok, Dec 14: The time has finally come for the rebel ruling party leader and legislator PS Golay to form his new political outfit. His key aides said earlier that the new party would be formed after the recent panchayat polls which were over early last month.
The reason for delay in formation of the new party was attributed to the fact that according to the lunar calendar it was a ‘black month’ in November-December. However, the ‘black month’, not an auspicious period to make new beginnings, ended yesterday.
With the start of the Sikkimese harvest festival, which began today (Dec 14 – the first day of the 11th month of the Tibetan calendar), the ‘black month’ is finally over.
The need to form his own political party has become more urgent in the light of the new political development in the opposition camp. While Congress President Nar Bahadur Bhandari is believed to have hit the campaign trail for ‘parivartan’, former Lok Sabha MP and Convenor of Concerned Society of Sikkim (COS) has urged Golay to join the Democratic Alliance of Sikkim – a platform being floated for all opposition parties – to take on the ruling Sikkim Democratic Front.
Golay reportedly has been camping in Delhi for quite some time now.  
Sikkim with national mainstream: Chamling
Gangtok, Dec 14: Chief Minister Pawan Chamling reminded the people that during his 18-year rule in the former kingdom Sikkim has come a long way in integrating itself with the national mainstream.
“We have been able to integrate Sikkim into the mainstream in a more meaningful way,” the Chief Minister said in his carefully-worded message on the occasion of the 19th Anniversary of the SDF Government Formation Day on Wednesday (Dec 12).
“Now we are part of the North East Council. Limboo and Tamang communities are Scheduled tribes. The traditional Nathula pass is re-opened… Income Tax exemption to Sikkimese has been granted by the Government of India,” Chamling said.
Chamling added, “On December 12, 1994 the people of Sikkim installed, for the first time, a truly democratic government responsive to the needs and aspirations of the people and ever since this party and the government have continued to enjoy the confidence of the Sikkimese people winning public mandate after mandate in each subsequent elections held thereafter.”
“This, I believe, is the result of good governance based on people-centric programs and policies with both short-term and long-term goals.”
The Chief Minister also expressed his “heartfelt thanks and gratitude to the people of Sikkim for their continued support and confidence on our governance and also congratulate them for their responsible decision to strengthen democratic institutions, promote socio-economic prosperity, peace and security, communal harmony and development in the State.”
US hints at joint engagement with EU over Tibet
Dharamsala, Dec 14:  In what could be seen as a further push for establishing an international mechanism on the crisis in Tibet, US cited Tibet as an area where the EU and US can partner on “common strategic engagement.”
The remarks were made by US Under Secretary Maria Otero in her statement at the European Union's Human Rights Day Event in Washington DC on Tuesday.
Delivering the statement on behalf of Otero, Deputy Assistant Secretary Daniel Baer said the Obama Administration wants Europe to engage more in Asia along with the US, “to see the region not only as a market, but as a focus of common strategic engagement,” phyaul.com  reported.
“And as a good example, European governments, including Germany, UK, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and Poland, have joined the call for Chinese authorities to address the worsening human rights conditions in Tibetan areas,” Baer said. “The United States is deeply concerned and saddened by the continuing violence in Tibetan areas of China and the increasing frequency of self-immolations by Tibetans.”
Otero, who is also the US Special Coordinator for Tibet, noted that Chinese authorities have responded to these tragic incidents with measures that tighten already strict controls on the freedoms of religion, expression, assembly and association of Tibetans.
“Official rhetoric that denigrates the Tibetan language, the Dalai Lama, and those that have self-immolated has further exacerbated tensions.”
Last month, France called for the promotion of policy coordination in the EU for “coherent actions” to support the Tibetan cause and advancing human rights and freedoms of Tibetans.
The upper house of the French Parliament, Sénat, on November 27, adopted a resolution in view of the deteriorating human rights situation inside Tibet and called on the EU to give priority to Tibet issue within the mandate of its recently appointed EU Special Representative for Human Rights.
Harvard-educated lawyer Hem Lall Bhandari to edit Pro-Sikkim

Gangtok, Dec 14: A week after he launched his Pro-Sikkim English weekly activist-editor Tenzing Bhutia was killed in a tragic car crash near Adampul in Rumtek, east Sikkim, on December 5. On the day of his funeral on Sunday (Dec 9) Bhutia’s friends and well-wishers were able to bring out the second issue of the paper, which the late editor had prepared just before his demise.
Now, the burden of bringing out the much-sought-after tabloid has fallen on the Harvard-educated lawyer Hem Lal Bhandari.
The former Congressman and professor, who has been hibernating in his home in Rawtey-Rumtek for quite some time now, seems keen and eager to carry on with his pro-Sikkim activities.
An alumni of St. Joseph’s College, Darjeeling, Bhandari is not only a lawyer but also a trained journalist in Bombay, where he did his LL.M and Diploma in Journalism. He has written for a number of publications, including Indian Express and Sikkim Observer. 
SNPP to oppose Sikkim-Darjeeling merger move
Merger was forced on us: Biraj
Gangtok, Dec 14: The Sikkim National People’s Party (SNPP) has vehemently opposed the reported move to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim. It said it would oppose the move “with all the power at its disposal and appeals to all Sikkimese people to do the same.”
SNPP President Biraj Adhikari said his party had a thorough discussion on a report carried in a local daily regarding “conspiracy being hatched by the Central Government and the Sikkim CM (Pawan Chamling) to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim.”
“The party discussed the fact that this would yet be another excellent example of betrayal by the Central Government after signing the 8th May agreement with the people of Sikkim in the year 1973,” a press statement by SNPP said.
Adhikari said the Centre “forcefully enforced the 36th Amendment without the people’s consent.” This act of the Parliament led to Sikkim’s merger with India in 1975. Since then the Centre is “hell bent” on erasing the “identity of the Sikkimese people forever.” 
While condemning “the sinister efforts” of the Centre and Chief Minister Pawan Chamling to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim, the SNPP has called for formation of Gorkhaland state without further delay.
OPINION
Sikkim-Darjeeling merger talks will lead to demerger demand
‘Sikkimese are subjects of the former Chogyal’
  By Shiva Kumar Sharma
I read the newsitem ‘Centre keen on Sikkim-Darjeeling merger’, which was published in local dailies dated December 7, 2012. After going through the newsitem, I have learnt that the present Central Government has set the agenda of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger and some senior Indian Congress leaders like Gulam Nabi Azad and Oscar Fernandes are in favour of bringing about this issue.
Despite the known facts of Sikkim’s merger with the Union of India in 1975, which was done based on 8th May 1973 Agreement, the Central Government is just adding fuel to fire by bringing the issue of annexing Darjeeling with Sikkim. Even after merging with the Union of India, Sikkim continues to hold a different history, culture, ideology and ethos maintaining a strong bonding and relation with all sections of the communities.
No one has any right to break the rhythm of sanctity and tranquility that Sikkim is bestowed by nature. Sikkim’s propriety and identity are further protected by the Article 371F of the Constitution of India. Therefore, we Sikkimese have all rights and inherited abilities to have our own distinction within India. The Centre cannot trespass into what we Sikkimese have in Sikkim.
Chief architects of Sikkim’s merger: BB Lal and Kazi Lhendup Dorji Khangsarpa at the Raj Bhawan in Gangtok
The agenda of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger is a conspiracy hatched out by the Central Government to completely betray the people of Sikkim. I can smell the role of some disgruntled persons within the Congress party in Delhi to bring about the issue of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger. These disgruntled persons have addictions of doing dirty politics and cannot see the prosperity achieved by Sikkim and Sikkimese after merging with India. Secondly, for the Sikkimese, Sikkim-Darjeeling merger is a non-issue, which only creates hostility among the common language speaking communities and invites an unprecedented threat of regional disharmony and disintegration.
As a concerned and educated person of Sikkim, I would, at first, vehemently condemn the agenda of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger as it has been moved by the Central Government. This move also indicates the Centre’s secret plan of diluting the agenda of Gorkhaland. At any cost, the demand of Gorkhaland should not be amalgamated with other constitutional demands of the Sikkimese. Furthermore, the fraternity factor that Sikkimese share with the people of Darjeeling does not imply that these two separate entities need to unite into a single unit. Darjeeling was a part of Sikkim as Pakistan of India, as Bangladesh of Pakistan, etc. A threshold limit of unification does not exist here; it is now a fact of history. For example, Pakistan and Bangladesh cannot be united with India; Darjeeling, too, cannot be united with Sikkim in future.
We Sikkimese hope that the Centre is fully aware of the above facts and discards the agenda of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger.  Instead, the Central Government should develop other better models like Uttarakhand had adopted for creating a separate statehood to the people of Darjeeling if the current model of Gorkhaland statehood is not working as per the Constitution of India.
All Indian citizens must know one fact that Sikkim is for Sikkimese only and not for others. Sikkimese were the subjects of the Chogyal of Sikkim before the merger with the Union of India in 1975 and only the Sikkim Subject Certificate holders and their descendants are Sikkimese and shall remain the same.
At the time of merger with India, the 36th Amendment of the Constitution of India that repealed the 35th Amendment has enshrined certain privileges, including the 371F, to the subjects of Sikkim. The Centre cannot breach its own Constitution. But, if the Centre moves ahead with this merger issue, we Sikkimese strongly press for demerger of Sikkim from India. Sikkimese shall not tolerate being dominated, humiliated and looted by any one in future. If the Centre fails to protect the rights and privileges of Sikkimese the consequences would be terrifying.
EDITORIAL
OPPOSITION UNITY
Towards A Common Destiny
The reported move by opposition leaders in Sikkim to forge a united front against the ruling Sikkim Democratic Front in the ensuing Assembly elections in early 2014 is a welcome move given the fact that a disunited opposition will surely pave way for SDF’s fifth consecutive term in office. The fact that over 40 per cent of votes polled in the recent panchayat polls went to independent candidates is an ample indication that the SDF’s hold among the people is waning. Pro-opposition supporters ought to take comfort in the fact that in the 2004 and 2009 Assembly polls votes polled by the opposition is around 35 per cent although this did not tally with seats won by the opposition in the 32-member Assembly.
What is most important for the long-term interest of the State’s opposition is for the leaders to come together on basic issues that concern the people. If the opposition’s only   agenda is to unseat Chief Minister Pawan Chamling in the next Assembly polls it is only half the battle won. Ousting Chamling is not enough; there has to be a common blue print for Sikkim’s future that opposition leaders must agree and come together. Genuine unity cannot come if we have leaders who differ with each other on basic political and economic issues that plague Sikkim. The Sikkimese people, by and large, deserve good political leadership. They have been betrayed for most part of the post-merger era.
SIKKIM SCOUTS
Guarding Our Borders
If reports are to be believed at least1,000 bonafide Sikkimese will be recruited by the Army in the ‘Sikkim Scouts’ battalion in the next few years to guard Sikkim’s sensitive and strategic border in northern and eastern parts of the State. To be formed in the lines of ‘Ladakh Scouts’ and ‘Arunachal Scouts’, Sikkim’s new battalion is expected to be formed by mid-2015. New Delhi’s policy of engaging ‘sons of the soil’ to guard its northern frontier across the Himalaya is a step in the right direction. Acquisition of territory – Sikkim was annexed in 1975 - cannot alone guarantee safeguard to nation’s security interest in the region. The people must be taken into confidence to ensure that its frontiers are safe and secure.
Raising a battalion to guard high passes and mountainous regions of Sikkim alone is not enough to fully safeguard India’s territorial integrity. Ultimately, it is the common people who are the best bet for a country’s security. New Delhi ought to know by now that bonafide Sikkimese people have now only one more Assembly elections to ensure genuine change in the former kindom. Wily and corrupt politicians no matter how many political battles they may have won cannot alone guarantee genuine peace and tranquility in any part of the country. The peace that you see in Sikkim is the peace of the grave. People’s peace is secured through money or through reign of fear. The situation cannot last more than 2015-16.
PEOPLE&PLACES Sikkim
Losoong: A Sikkimese Harvest Festival
By Sonam Deki and Kunga Chukie
Though Losoong (celebration of the year) is annually celebrated as a harvest festival in Sikkim the occasion is also traditionally regarded as the Sikkimese New Year. The event  normally falls in the month of December and towards the end of the 10th month of the Tibetan lunar calendar and is basically celebrated by Sikkimese Bhutias. However, the Sikkimese Bhutias who live in the northern regions of Lachen and Lachung, Losoong is normally celebrated in the month of January.
 At the close of the year the farmer's rejoice and celebrate their harvest. Losoong marks the end of the harvest season and is a traditional celebration to thank the gods and each other for the good harvest and to offer prayers for the next season.
The festival is marked by Chaam (masked) dances at several monasteries in Sikkim. The dances symbolize the exorcizing of the evil spirits of the year and the welcoming of the good spirit of the New Year.
They also make offerings to the gods, both in the monasteries and in their domestic shrines.  It is best to see this festival in rural areas of Sikkim, where it is celebrated more pompously with traditional archery competitions and other events.




Thursday, December 13, 2012


HIMALAYAN GUARDIAN     Gangtok Wednesday Dec 12-18, 2012  
Pro-Sikkim editor Tenzing Bhutia’s death ‘mysterious’, unacceptable: Sikkim Liberation Party
Prince Tenzing, Tashi Topden, Chukie Topden died under similar circumstances 
Tenzing Bhutia (left)
Gangtok, Dec 11: The Sikkim Liberation Party (SLP) has taken a serious view of the untimely death of Tenzing Bhutia, political activist and editor of the recently-launched Pro-Sikkim English weekly, who died in a car crash in Rumtek, east Sikkim, on December 5.
SLP Convenor and journalist-cum-writer DN Nepal said Bhutia’s death was “mysterious” and his party has taken a serious view of how and why he died.
“It is a clear fact that any person taking a pro-Sikkim stand have met with this kind of mysterious death in accident,” Nepal said in a press statement.
Nepal said Sikkim’s Prince Tenzing, former Secretary Tashi Topden and social activist Chukie Topden, who were pro-Sikkim, died in a car crash “in similar circumstance.” 
(L to R) Nari Rustomji, Chogyal Palden Thondup and Prince Tenzing
While Prince Tenzing died in a car crash in Nam Nang (Gangtok) on March 11, 1978, Topden and his sister Chukie died after their car went down the road near Rabong, south Sikkim, on April 6, 2009.
SLP feels these deaths have “sinister and diabolic design,” and as such the party is not ready to accept Tenzing’s death as a “normal incident.”
Nepal said while pro-Sikkim Nepalese leaders were either sidelined or lured to luxurious living, pro-Sikkim people among the minority Bhutia-Lepchas faced “mysterious and fatal death.”
Tashi Topden
Nepal also noted that the timing and manner of the Sikkim-Darjeeling merger issue presently raised in the local media and by politicians has further added to the “mystery” of Tenzing’s death.
Chukie Topden
SNPP appeals to all Sikkimese to oppose Sikkim-Darjeeling merger move
Centre has betrayed Sikkimese, violated merger terms: Biraj
Biraj Adhikari
Gangtok, Dec 11: The Sikkim National People’s Party (SNPP) has vehemently opposed the reported move to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim. It said it would oppose the move “with all the power at its disposal and appeals to all Sikkimese people to do the same.”
SNPP President Biraj Adhikari said his party had a thorough discussion on a report carried in a local daily regarding “conspiracy being hatched by the Central Government and the Sikkim CM (Pawan Chamling) to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim.”
“The party discussed the fact that this would yet be another excellent example of betrayal by the Central Government after signing the 8th May agreement with the people of Sikkim in the year 1973,” a press statement by SNPP said.
Adhikari said the Centre “forcefully enforced the 36th Amendment without the people’s consent.” This act of the Parliament led to Sikkim’s merger with India in 1975. Since then the Centre is “hell bent” on erasing the “identity of the Sikkimese people forever.” 
While condemning “the sinister efforts” of the Centre and Chief Minister Pawan Chamling to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim, the SNPP has called for formation of Gorkhaland state without further delay.      
Issue of rights violations in Tibet raised in Lok Sabha
New Delhi, Dec 11: On the occasion of International Human Rights Day, BJP yesterday raised in the Lok Sabha the issue of rights violations in Tibet, while CPI(M) alleged that similar problem exists in Jammu and Kashmir.
BJP leader Yashwant Sinha said the Chinese have been carrying out the "grossest" violations of human rights in Tibet over last 60 years because of which 81 Tibetans have committed suicide during this period, PTI reported.
66 Tibetans have committed self-immolation since January this year and "worse, the response of the Chinese is more repression", Sinha, former External Affairs Minister, said in Special Mentions during the Zero Hour.
He said Tibetans were troubled because of "excessive use of military force", religious restrictions, disappearances and detentions, removal of nomads and degradation of ecological system in the region under Chinese rule.
Sinha wanted the House to express "deepest heartfelt condolences" over Tibetans' plight and call upon the Chinese to "listen to the anguish" and "ensure people (in Tibet) get their rights".
"I call upon Parliament to speak up," he appealed.
Immediately after, CPI(M) leader Basudeb Acharia rose to allege "blatant" human rights violations in Jammu and Kashmir by security forces.
He referred to the demand for withdrawal of Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) from Jammu and Kashmir and said the central government had not taken any decision even after recommendation from the State Government.
Nepal: only two days to form unity govt
Kathmandu, Dec 11: As Nepal's main parties struggled to form a national unity government, President Ram Baran Yadav on Friday gave them another six days to strike a deal, the second such extension to the original November 29 deadline.
Yadav's move came a day after crucial talks between the ruling alliance comprising UCPN-Maoist and Joint Madhesi Front and opposition Nepali Congress (NC) and CPN-UML on naming a consensus prime ministerial candidate failed, despite being given an extra seven days to do so after they missed the original deadline.
It was the second time that the president had extended the deadline issued to political parties to form a national consensus government that would replace the incumbent government led by Premier Baburam Bhattarai of UCPN-Maoist.
Earlier, NC had nominated its President Sushil Koirala as the candidate for prime minister after the UCPN-Maoist and the CPN-UML asked it to recommend its candidate.
Exiled Tibetan govt to launch ‘Solidarity with Tibet’ campaign
New Delhi, Dec 11: Cautioning Asian nations about the threat emanating from Beijing’s ambitions of a Greater China, the Prime Minister of the Tibetan government in exile, Lobsang Sangay, on Saturday appealed for worldwide support to “solidarity with Tibet” campaign in 2013.
Speaking to media persons here, he said he would visit the Tibetan settlement at Mundgod, near Hubli, on December 10, 2012, the Human Rights Day, to launch the campaign.
The worldwide campaign would help create awareness and mount pressure on China at a time when the country was attempting to demonstrate that it had the upper hand over territorial disputes by releasing a map of Greater China.
“Despite the increasing number of self-immolations, the international community remains largely unaware of what is going on inside Tibet. The Chinese government has responded to the self-immolations with further repressive policies, and sentencing of individuals suspected of having shared information regarding the self-immolations with the outside world. We will provide accurate information about events in Tibet to everyone during our campaign. I appeal to the international community and governments to stand for justice by answering the universal aspirations of Tibetans in Tibet: the return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama to Tibet and freedom for Tibetans,” he added.
Asked about unsuccessful Sino-Indian talks in recent years,  Sangay remarked “We have dealt with China, and know exactly how the leaders react. Our delegations also had similar experience with the Chinese government. Passports issued recently with a map of Greater China are based on ethnology, and shows a major portion of Nepal as part of Greater China. Now, even the people of Nepal are apprehensive about the designs of China,” he added.
Sangay said the “solidarity with Tibet” campaign would build on lobbying efforts initiated in 2012 through parliamentarians and organisations such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Reporters’ Without Borders, and the US Congressional Executive Commission on China.
Chorten Nyima: Another Hidden Valley
Chorten Nyima - a mountain range and a mythological 'hidden valley' (beyul) lies within a remote region of the Tibet-Sikkim Himalayas at the junction of three countries, Tibet, Sikkim and Nepal. Pristine and untouched, this pilgrimage site is virtually unknown to outsiders and its scenic beauty rivaled only by Karchu Lapchi and Tsari. From the complex, snow fields and glaciers are only an hour's walk away.
Today, this ancient retreat in south Tibet again draws a constant flow of pilgrims; for some Nyingmapa followers, Chorten Nyima is perhaps a greater spiritual prize than Mt Kailash, mainly because of the sustained spiritual activities of Guru Rinpoche in the area. It is regarded as the North Gate of the magically powerful Dremojong Beyul (Sikkim), a 'hidden valley' situated deep within the Tibet-Sikkim divide. This beyul, together with Pemako and others, functions as a paradisiacal refuge for all Tibetans in times of great national stress.
Sikkimese threatens to raise demerger demand
“Sikkim is for Sikkimese only”                                             
Gangtok, Dec 11: The reported bid to merge Darjeeling with Sikkim has evoked radical reactions from the Sikkimese. Dr. Shiva Kumar Sharma, Population & Conservation Geneticist, has threatened to demand Sikkim’s demerger if the Centre goes ahead with the reported plan.
In a press statement circulated widely among local journalists, Sharma said “… if the Centre moves ahead with this merger issue, we Sikkimese strongly press demerger of Sikkim from India.”
He said “Sikkimese shall not tolerate being dominated, humiliated and looted by any one in future. If the Centre fails to protect the rights and privileges of Sikkimese the consequences would be terrifying.”
Reacting to a report in a local daily entitled ‘Centre keen on Sikkim-Drjeeling merger,’ Sharma said Sikkim and the Sikkimese people enjoy a distinct status within the Union after the merger and this cannot be taken away.
“The agenda of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger is a conspiracy hatched out by the Central Government to completely betray the people of Sikkim,” Sharma said while adding “As a concern and educated person of Sikkim, I would, at first, vehemently condemn the agenda of Sikkim-Darjeeling merger as it has been moved by the Central Government. This move also indicates the Centre’s secret plan of diluting the agenda of Gorkhaland.”
“All Indian citizens must know one fact that Sikkim is for Sikkimese only and not for others,” Sharma said.
“Sikkimese were the subjects of the Chogyal of Sikkim before merger with the Union of India in 1975 and only the Sikkim Subject Certificate holders and their descendants are Sikkimese and shall remain the same.”
‘Sons of soil’ to guard China border in Sikkim
New Delhi, Dec 11: India’s policy of integrating local soldiers or “sons of the soil” with the Indian Army in guarding the frontier with China will now be extended to Sikkim. This will complete an arch of locally recruited battalions to be integrated with the Army and stationed from Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir in the North to Arunachal Pradesh in the East.
The Cabinet Committee of Security has given its nod to raising a battalion of “Sikkim Scouts” that will be tasked with guarding high passes and portions of the north-eastern part of Sikkim, besides keeping an eye on the routes of ingress, according to reports.
Initially, 28 officers, 44 Junior Commissioned Officers and 862 jawans will form the battalion. The raising of the battalion will cost the government Rs 32. 50 crore, while the annual recurring cost will be Rs 34.45 crore. The battalion will be ready and raised in 30 months i.e. mid of 2015.
It will take time to recruit and train boys from Sikkim to form the battalion of “sons of the soil”, said sources.
The Army has integrated battalions of locally recruited soldiers under “Ladakh Scouts” and “Arunachal Scouts” (two battalions each), “Kumaon Scouts”, “Garhwal Scouts” and “Dogra Scouts” (one battalion each). Battalions comprising locally recruited soldiers hold a strategic advantage. The local recruits have instinctive knowledge of their mountainous terrain, do not require skills training to survive in harsh climatic conditions and can gather information from local population easily.
Over 350 infantry battalions are stationed all over the country and are moved every few years to keep them abreast with different terrains and threat levels.
“Arunachal Scouts” was the last one to be raised. General JJ Singh (retd) had proposed it during his tenure as Army Chief and the Cabinet approved it in 2009. Its first battalion was raised in 2010. The second one was approved later.
ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION
Seal border, check influx: Mahanta
“Illegal migration from across the border was politically motivated”
New Delhi, Dec 11:  The Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) on Saturday demanded immediate steps from the Centre to seal the Indo-Bangladesh border to check unabated illegal immigration from across the boundary.
Referring to the recent spate of violence in Kokrajhar in Assam, AGP President and former Assam chief minister Prafulla Kumar Mahanta blamed the Centre for not taking tough measures. He said the Centre must immediately seal the international border in Assam and deploy enough mechanism to check the exodus.
"There are government records which show the presence of foreigners in Assam. Continuous rise of immigrants have endangered the population of Assamese existence," he said at a seminar on infiltration, ethnic divide and how to bring a solution to the troubled Assam, PTI reported.
The function was organised by the Delhi Chapter of All Assam Lawyers' Association.
Deputy Chief of Bodoland Territorial Council Kampa Borgayari said illegal migration from across the border was politically motivated and supported by religious extremist forces.
"It is not a mere economic migration but it is an invasion and infiltration," he said.
Borgayari said there were many laws in force in the country but none of them have been able to deter or stop the illegal migration.
President of Bodo Women's Justice Forum Anjali Daimari asked the indigenous people of the state to come together to fight the problem of illegal migration.
"The land hungry immigrants have come with political agenda," she said.
Army agrees to domicile certificates for recruitment
Itanagar, Dec 11: The army in Arunachal Pradesh has agreed in principle to consider domicile certificates as valid proof of residence during recruitment rallies. This follows an initiative by Governor Gen (retd) J J Singh to fill up vacancies in the army.
"This consideration is only for the non-Arunachal Pradesh scheduled tribes residents settled in Arunachal Pradesh for long periods and will not affect the reservation quota for the scheduled tribes of the state," a Raj Bhavan communique said here on Saturday.
Singh had taken up the matter with Army Chief General Bikram Singh recently, TNN reported.
In his letter to the army chief, the governor pointed out that as per State Government policy, no permanent resident certificate is issued to non-residents of the State.
As a result, they were not recruited by the army and vacant posts under general are diverted to other states.
With the revised procedure, the State is likely to see more residents getting recruited by the army during the rally, scheduled for December 3-5 at Tezu in Lohit district.
State finance, planning and PWD minister Chowna Mein first highlighted the issue before the Governor and also made concerted efforts to ensure that these residents get their due and maximum representation in the armed forces.
Losoong: A Sikkimese Harvest Festival
By Sonam Deki and Kunga Chukie

Though Losoong (celebration of the year) is annually celebrated as a harvest festival in Sikkim the occasion is also traditionally regarded as the Sikkimese New Year. The event  normally falls in the month of December and towards the end of the 10th month of the Tibetan lunar calendar and is basically celebrated by Sikkimese Bhutias. However, the Sikkimese Bhutias who live in the northern regions of Lachen and Lachung, Losoong is normally celebrated in the month of January.
 At the close of the year the farmer's rejoice and celebrate their harvest. Losoong marks the end of the harvest season and is a traditional celebration to thank the gods and each other for the good harvest and to offer prayers for the next season.
The festival is marked by Chaam (masked) dances at several monasteries in Sikkim. The dances symbolize the exorcizing of the evil spirits of the year and the welcoming of the good spirit of the New Year.
They also make offerings to the gods, both in the monasteries and in their domestic shrines.  It is best to see this festival in rural areas of Sikkim, where it is celebrated more pompously with traditional archery competitions and other events.
To the Sikkimese, Losoong is more of a private affair. People get up before dawn to take bath and wear new clothes. Later, all the family members sit together to perform pujas for peace and prosperity.