Tuesday, December 23, 2014
Friday, December 19, 2014
Sikkim Hermonites pay rich tributes
to former Mt. Hermon School Principal DG Stewart
(L to R) Jigme N Kazi, Arthur Pazo, Raaj Bangar, Punam Agarwal, Uttam Pradhan, NK Pradhan, Tempo Bhutia, Udai P Sharma, Ram Gopal Pradhan, Shuva Pradhan and OT Bhutia. (Pix by Tashi RN Kazi)
Sikkim Hermonites paid rich tributes to their former
Principal Rev David Garth Stewart, who passed away peacefully in Auckland, New
Zealand, on December 12, 2014.
At a condolence meeting held in Gangtok (Sikkim) on December
16, 2014, grateful Hermonites, alumni of Darjeeling’s Mt. Hermon School (founded in 1895), said Rev. Stewart who
passed away at the age of 91 was a ‘man of God’ , whose dedication and
commitment to the school when he was its Principal (1953-1963) raised the
standard of the school and brought it to
becoming the best boarding school in India in 1961-62.
Former Minister and senior Hermonite NK Pradhan said Rev Stewart was not only a
towering personality, a great orator, but cared for each and every individual
in the school. “We are what we are because of MH (Mt. Hermon) and we are
grateful to Mr. Stewart for his love, affection and care.”
Reading from the Bible (Psalm 23), Jigme N Kazi, President of
Hermonite International, said Rev Stewart, like King David in the Bible, was a
“man after God’s own heart”.
Kazi, who also taught in MH, said, “God sent him to MH in
the 1950s when the school was floundering and by the time he left it in 1963
our school was adjudged the best boarding school in India.” He added, “If we as
Hermonites have contributed anything significant to society it is because we
have been touched by this mighty man of God.”
Arthur Pazo, grandson of Gangtoks Pastor, Late CT Pazo, and
Ram Gopal Pradhan prayed for the departed soul while Udai P. Sharma and Sikkim
Hermonite Association (SHA) Vice-President Uttam K Pradhan also spoke on the
occasion.
Among those present during the condolence meeting, where a
two-minute silence was also observed, were Tempo Bhutia, Raaj Kumar Bangar,
Punam Agarwal, OT Bhutia and Shuva Pradhan.
SHA President Karma Bhutia attended the funeral service in
Auckland on December 16.
A Tribute
Rev. DG Stewart: A Man
After God’s Own Heart
By Jigme N. Kazi
“Surely goodness and mercy shall
follow me all the days of my life; and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord
for ever”. (Psalm: 23)
“Jigme, Can you tell me anything about the present
situation? I seem bereft of
information. I heard an indirect report
that the school had started again this year, but with only 100 boarders, and
that it was deeply in debt.”
This is what Mr. Stewart wrote to me on June 27,
2012 in my email. He was concerned about Mt. Hermon (MH) thereafter, too, and
perhaps till the very end.
I am happy and proud of the fact that I was in MH in
class 2 during his last year as Principal in 1963. I believe it was him or Mr.
Murray who asked me, “Do you like the school?” when I entered the school
building for the first time in 1963 from the front porch. I said, “Yes.”
And for 16 short years (1963-1972 – student
(1974-1975 – TTC) and (1976-1979 – teacher) I lived in MH and had a good time.
I am a part of MH and MH is a part of me.
I remember him as a football referee – he was very
strict – and when he used to come to the school dining room to announce the
name of the Saturday night movie. When he used to say, “And the movie is
technicolour” he used to get a loud applause from us. Those days most of the
movies were black & white.
When Mr. Stewart visited MH in the latter part of
1970s he spoke about the need to have men and women of ‘integrity’ in today’s
world in the school chapel. He was a great speaker and he spoke with much
conviction.
I spent more time with him when he came for the
school’s centenary celebrations in 1995. Mr. Stewart, along with other former
teachers and students, wanted the school Managing Committee to seek induction
of Hermonites in the Committee to help the school to forge ahead.
Thereafter, we kept in touch with each other till
the very end.
When I think of Mr. Stewart I often compare him with
King David of the Old Testament. Like the warrior-king of Israel Mr. David
Stewart, too, was “a man after God’s own heart”.
God sent him to MH in the 1950s when the school was
floundering and by the time he left it in 1963 our school was adjudged the best
boarding school in India.
If we as Hermonites have contributed anything
significant to society it is because we have been touched by this mighty man of
God.
Monday, December 15, 2014
A Tribute to Rev. DG Stewart: A man after God’s own heart
“Jigme, Can you tell me anything about the present
situation? I seem bereft of information. I heard an indirect report
that the school had started again this year, but with only 100 boarders, and
that it was deeply in debt.”
This is what Mr. Stewart wrote to me on June 27, 2012 in my email.
He was concerned about Mt. Hermon (MH) thereafter, too, and perhaps till the
very end.
I am happy and proud of the fact that I was in MH in class 2
during his last year as Principal in 1963. I believe it was him or Mr. Murray
who asked me, “Do you like the school?” when I entered the school building for
the first time in 1963 from the front porch. I said, “Yes.”
And for 16 short years (1963-1972 – student (1974-1975 – TTC) and
(1976-1979 – teacher) I lived in MH and had a good time. I am a part of MH and
MH is a part of me.
I remember him as a football referee – he was very strict – and when
he used to come to the school dining room to announce the name of the Saturday
night movie. When he used to say, “And the movie is technicolour” he used to
get a loud applause from us. Those days most of the movies were black &
white.
When Mr. Stewart visited MH in the latter part of 1970s he spoke
about the need to have men and women of ‘integrity’ in today’s world in the
school chapel. He was a great speaker and he spoke with much conviction.
I spent more time with him when he came for the school’s centenary
celebrations in 1995. Mr. Stewart, along with other former teachers and
students, wanted the school Managing Committee to seek induction of Hermonites
in the Committee to help the school to forge ahead.
Thereafter, we kept in touch with each other till the very end.
When I think of Mr. Stewart I often compare him with King David of
the Old Testament. Like the warrior-king of Israel Mr. David Stewart, too, was “a
man after God’s own heart”.
God sent him to MH in the 1950s when the school was floundering
and by the time he left it in 1963 our school was adjudged the best boarding
school in India.
If we as Hermonites have contributed anything significant to
society it is because we have been touched by this mighty man of God.
“Surely goodness and mercy shall
follow me all the days of my life; and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord
for ever”. (Psalm: 23)
My family with Mr. DG Stewart in
Darjeeling during Mt. Hermon School’s centenary celebrations in 1995. My wife
Tsering, son Tashi and daughters: Yangchen and twin daughters Sonam and Kunga
(only part of the head of one of the twins is seen in the pix) are seen in the
picture.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
SIKKIM
OBSERVER Saturday Dec 13-19, 2014
Golay missing as Chamling celebrates his rule in
Sikkim
Gangtok, Dec 12: As the ruling party celebrates its 20-year rule in
the former kingdom Opposition leader Prem Singh Golay seems to have gone
missing again.
Sikkim Krantikari
Morcha (SKM) President and legislator’s disappearance and his reluctance to
keep in touch with his party leaders and MLAs has resulted in a serious
leadership crisis within the party.
Many within the
top rank of the party, realizing Golay’s inability to take on the Chamling
Government head-on, are believed to be looking out for another person to lead
the party, which has 10 legislators in the House of 32. Some members of the party leadership,
including some MLAs, have expressed their willingness to join the BJP. However,
the BJP, while having an alliance with the SKM, doesn’t seem too interested in
fishing in troubled waters.
Presently, SKM
legislators have camped themselves in Delhi. One reliable source said they have
or will petition the Supreme Court requesting the apex court to allow the CBI
to probe into corruption charges against Chief Minister Pawan Chamling and his
Cabinet colleagues.
Despite Golay’s
lack of presence in the State his MLAs have done remarkably well in voicing
public grievances ranging from water shortage, bad roads to ‘organic Sikkim’.
While the Congress
party in the State has almost become non-existent, the Sikkim National People’s
Party (SNPP) seems to be reduced to making occasional press statements. And in
the meanwhile the Sikkim Liberation Party (SLP) leader DN Nepal is quietly
going to the rural people with its message for change to safeguard ‘Sikkim for
Sikkimese’. (also see page 3)
Khambu Rais to demand ST status during winter fest
Siliguri, Dec 12: The Khambu Rights Movement under the aegis of the All
India Kirati Khambu Rai Association has decided to celebrate the community’s
traditional winter festival ‘Sakela’ at Dudhay under Kurseong sub-division on
December 14 in keeping with their demand for Scheduled Tribe status under
Article 342 of the Constitution.
The Khambu Rais of Sikkim and the Darjeeling hills and also
Assam, has been demanding the central government for tribal status.
At a press
conference held on Thursday at the Siliguri Journalists’ Club, All India Kirati
Khambu Rai Association national convener Mahesh Rai said the objective behind
holding the festival is to showcase the community’s rich culture and tradition
as well as to demand for ST status, The
Echo of India reported.
Thousands of
Khambu Rais from across the nation will be participating in the festival and
performing Sili Dance, Bhumi Puja and worshipping Mother Nature. According to
Rai, the association has submitted a deputation to the Union Tribal Affairs
Ministry and the Registrar General of India on the tribal status issue.
When asked if they
are willing to accept the development board being offered by the state
government, Rai said, “Tribal status is conferred by the central government.
Hence we are demanding for such a status and have not thought about accepting a
development board.
Editorial
TWO DECADES
Nothing Has
Changed
As Sikkim’s Pawan Chamling completes 20
years in office this week the measure of his success or failure must be seen by
what he initially set out to achieve and what the people expected of him in the
early 1990s. Chamling himself realized why people supported him even as they
were becoming more and more restless and frustrated with Nar Bahadur Bhandari’s
fourteen-and-half years’ (1979-1994) ‘misrule’. The Sikkim Democratic Front (SDF)
chief made no secret of his desire to liberate Sikkim from dictatorship,
communalism and corruption. Alas, twenty years down the line the Chamling
Government is accused of the same things; the only addition being that casteism
has been added to the chain of accusations leveled against the present
dispensation.
The saddest thing to note at this point of
time is that even after the SDF’s claim on restoration of democracy, when it came to power on December
12, 1994, the democratic rights of the Sikkimese people on Assembly seat issue
have not yet been met. It was expected that after democracy was restored
democratic and constitutional rights of the people should also be restored.
Today the Chamling Government has forgotten the Assembly seat issue even as the
Sikkimese people face an uncertain future. We still live in fear and the rule of law has
been replaced by one-man-rule once again. Chamling’s recent move to safeguard
the rights and interests of bonafide Sikkimese – an initiative that has been
applauded in certain quarters – should have begun twenty years back. Many even
doubt his motive and method on the issue. Chamling’s claim on development and
peace are two areas that the ruling party may want to boast about but only the
Sikkimese know how hollow these claims are. And yet the farce goes on and the
Centre, even under Modi, continues to reward the Chamling Government in more
than one way. Perhaps the people, who do nothing about the way things are and
expect someone to free them, deserve the government they get. In Sikkim,
nothing has changed since 1975, 1979 and 1994.
China Never Signed The Simla Accord
By
NORMAN LEACH
The Simla conference 1914 |
For the British,
with an empire “on which the sun never set”, there were always treaties to sign
and allies to work with. The gathering war clouds in Europe could not be
allowed to interfere with trade and commerce in the rest of the empire.
On 24 March 1914
the British, Tibetans and Chinese sat down to formalize an accord that had been
in the works since early 1913. Negotiated between the representatives of
Britain, China and Tibet- the Simla Accord (named after the region where it was
signed) was to establish the borders of Tibet and China and the form of
government in Tibet.
Tibet first came
to the attention of the British in the mid-19th century as they laid out the
borders for north-east India. Tawang, an important trading town, was discovered
to be within the borders of Tibet. The government in London, recognizing the
importance of the town attempted to come to treaty arrangements with both China
and Tibet.
There was some
hope this could be accomplished as the British had earlier formalized treaties
with the Qing regime in China confirming the boundaries between Tibet, Burma
and Sikkim. The challenge for the British and Chinese was that the Tibetan
government did not recognize China as having sovereignty in the country and
rejected the treaties.
Britain responded
by sending troops into the country in 1904 to force a treaty with the Tibetan
government. By 1907 Britain and Russia had officially recognized Chines
suzerainty (not full control but controlling influence) over Tibet.
The region settled
into a routine, relatively independent existence until the Qing government sent
troops into Tibet in 1910 to establish full Chinese control. The British
responded with their own troops moving into the Arunachal Pradesh to rule the
region under the North-East Frontier Agency. Through treaties with various
tribal leaders the British effectively surrounded and limited Chinese rule in
Tibet until the fall of the Qing Dynasty in 1913. Tibet then declared itself
independent, expelling all Chinese government and military personnel.
Sir Henry McMahon, 1862-1949. |
The new government
in China rejected the Tibetan declaration of independence and the British
quickly pulled together a conference in Simla to resolve the issues. The
British delegate, Sir Henry Mcmahon proposed dividing Tibet into “inner Tibet”
and “outer Tibet.” Inner Tibet included Tibetan-inhabited areas in Qinghai,
Gansu, Sichuan and Yunnan provinces, and would be under the jurisdiction of the
Chinese government. The rest of the country “Outer Tibet,” would remain
autonomous.
The Accord also
proposed boundaries between China and Tibet and between Tibet and British
India.
The Chinese
government and its representative Ivan Chen had grave concerns about the
borders between Tibet and China as defined in the agreement. When Chen returned
to China for consultations the British sign a separate trade agreement with
Tibet.
Chamling completes 20-year rule
PM Modi
congratulates Chamling: “admirable accomplishment”
Gangtok, Dec 12: Chief Minister Pawan Chamling completes 20 years in
the office today. He formed the Sikkim Democratic Front (SDF) government on
December 12 in 1994 after defeating the Sikkim Sangram Parishad and Congress
party.
He is also set to
become the country's longest serving chief minister, breaking the record of
late Communist leader Jyoti Basu who was chief minister of West Bengal for more
than 23 years.
Prime Minister
Narendra Modi on Friday congratulated Pawan Kumar Chamling on completing 20
years as the Chief Minister of Sikkim.
"I
congratulate Shri Pawan Kumar Chamling on completing 20 years in office as
Sikkim CM. It is truly an admirable accomplishment," Prime Minister Modi tweeted,
ANI reported.
The ruling SDF has
won 21 out of a total 32 seats on the plank of promoting peace, security and
development. Ten seats have gone to Opposition Sikkim Krantikari Morcha (SKM)
while one is an independent.
Chamling was born
on 22 September 1950 in Yangang, South Sikkim to Ashbahadur Chamling and
Asharani Chamling. Chamling is also a Nepali language writer and recipient of
the Bhanu Puraskar (2010) awarded by Sikkim Sahitya Parishad.
He was elected as
the president of Yangang Gram Panchayat in 1982. In 1985, he was elected to the
Sikkim Legislative Assembly for the first time. After being elected for the
second time from Damthang constituency, he became the Minister for Industries,
Information and Public Relations from 1989 to 1992 in the Nar Bahadur Bhandari
cabinet.
After a series of
major political upheavals in Sikkim, Chamling formed the Sikkim Democratic
Front on March 4, 1993. The Sikkim Democratic Front won the 1994, 1999, 2004
and 2009 State Assembly elections under his leadership on the plank of peace
prosperity and development.
NCERT book shows Sikkim, JK as separate countries
Gangtok, Dec 12: The NCERT social science book for Class VI, Social
and Political Life-I, has redrawn the map of India in a way the Pakistani
generals and Chinese mandarins would approve of.
In a map on page 30, Jammu and Kashmir appears
to be outside the periphery of the Indian state, shaded as it is in a colour
similar to that used to mark neighbouring countries like Nepal, Bangladesh and
Bhutan, India Today reported.
On the preceding page, Sikkim and the
North-east are marked as separate nations.
It may be
mentioned that while JK became part of India on October 27, 1947, Sikkim joined
the Union on May 16, 1975.
Says Lokesh
Chandra, the recently appointed head of the Indian Council for Cultural
Relations (ICCR), "These are factual errors which shouldn't be looked at
through any ideological prism. The mistake should be corrected without delay
and those responsible for it cornered."
NE body demands more incentives for hotel industry in
Sikkim
Gangtok, Dec 12: Hotel & Restaurant Association of Eastern India
(HRAEI) has demanded more fiscal incentives from the Sikkim government to make
the State attractive destination for hotel investments.
HRAEI had
organised an interactive meeting of hoteliers and restaurateurs of Sikkim in
Gangtok recently to understand the
issues of the industry in the State as part of the Association’s third executive
committee meeting.
Citing the good
example of Assam, which has recently announced their Industrial Policy 2014,
Sudesh Poddar, President, HRAEI urged the Sikkim government to follow suit so
that the State can become a favoured destination for tourism investment. He
demanded VAT exemption, luxury tax exemption, and entry tax exemption for goods
brought into the State from outside for construction of hotels.
“Tourism is one of
the most important vehicles for economic growth of Sikkim. God has gifted this
State with limitless natural beauty and it is one of the most sought after
tourism destination in India. Thus, we intend to draw the attention of the
state government to key issues which are stumbling blocks to growth of
hospitality industry in the State.”
Kailash Mansarovar: route better through Uttarakhand
than Sikkim, Rawat tells Swaraj
Dehradun, Dec 12: Chief Minister Harish Rawat on Tuesday met Union
Minister for External Affairs Sushma Swaraj in Delhi and informed her about the
State’s concerns on start of the new route to Kailash Mansarovar Yatra in the
country other than the traditional route from Uttarakhand.
The Chief Minister
asked Swaraj to ensure that the State does not lose its sole right to conduct
the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra. He said Uttarakhand was capable of providing
better Kailash Mansarovar yatra route to pilgrims than the newly opened Nathula
route from Sikkim, The Tribune
reported.
The Chief Minister
pointed out that it was only through the Uttarakhand route that pilgrims come across
Chotta Kailash and Om Parwat, which are part of the traditional pilgrimage and
thus, the Uttarakhand route holds much of religious significance.
Rawat disclosed
that Uttarakhand was trying to reduce the distance of trekking route in the
Kailash Mansarovar yatra, which will reduce the total travel time by four to
six days. He said two new roads were also being built to facilitate the travel
of pilgrims. “The state is also considering the start of Heli service for the
Kailash Mansarovar pilgrims during the rainy season,” he said.
Rawat said regular
helicopter service could also be provided to pilgrims from Pithoragarh district
headquarters to Nabidhang.
PEOPLE & PLACES Sikkim
Winter fest to fetch maximum tourists
Gangtok, Dec 12: With a winter carnival and a film festival lined up
this week, the tiny Himalayan state of Sikkim is trying to turn December into a
peak tourist season.
Organised by the
state Tourism Department, the six-day Sikkim Winter Carnival will start from
December 14 where various cultural events, music shows, arts and crafts
exhibitions and adventure activities like para-gliding, mountain biking and
rock climbing would engage tourists.
Coinciding with
this would be the 'Small Town Film Fest' which will showcase over 26 films by
independent film-makers from all over the world over a four-day period.
Organised by Cafe
Fiction, the festival also features works of three directors from Sikkim.
Another
unforgettable moment for travellers would be the showering of flower petals
from a helicopter flying over the Himalayas during one of the events.
Tourism department
officials said they are expecting a 30 per cent increase in tourists this
December.
"December is
not our peak tourist season but we want to portray Sikkim as a round-the-year
tourist attraction. The Himalayas have a different charm in the winters and we
are banking on that. With so many activities planned for tourists we are
expecting a 30-40 per cent hike in the number of tourists in December,"
Pema L Shangderpa of the department of tourism and civil aviation, PTI
reported.
Contact:
OBSERVER BUILDING
Nam Nang Road, Gangtok
SIKKIM
SIKKIM
OBSERVER Saturday Dec 13-19, 2014
ENTERTAINMENT
Sudhanshu Saria’s His
New Hands gets Remi Gold award
Siliguri, Dec 12: Budding filmmaker
Sudhanshu Saria’s His New Hands was
recently awarded the prestigious Remi Gold prize for Best Dramatic Short at the
47th WorldFest-Houston festival.
The film had its World Premiere in
Competition at the 38th Hong Kong International Film Festival 2014 recently.
Siliguri’s Sudhanshu Saria, or
Suds, has worked as an entertainment
executive in Los Angeles for the past seven years. In his various positions handling
acquisitions – development and distribution
– he has helped bring various film and television projects such as The
Tudors
(Showtime/BBC), Fragments (Kate Beckinsale, Forest
Whitaker), The Ideal (William H Macy,
Meg Ryan) to fruition.
Suds received his Bachelor of Fine
Arts degree in Film and Photography from Ithaca College, New York, USA. His
previous work, premiered at film festivals like Hollyshorts and the Oscar
qualifying Rio De Janeiro International, has taken him to the Berlinale Talent
Campus and gotten him featured on shows on NPR and Good Morning America.
Sudhanshu Saria |
His New Hands, his most recent short, had its
World Premiere in Competition at the 38th Hong Kong International Film Festival
2014 and most recently was awarded the prestigious Remi Gold prize for Best
Dramatic Short at the 47th WorldFest-Houston festival.
It was screened at Sarasota, Omaha, Chennai
and Johns Hopkins Film Festivals, was selected by the makers of the Red camera for their annual showcase of the best
films shot on their camera, and was awarded the Best Cinematography prize at
the Kala Ghoda Arts Festival in Mumbai.
His New Hands, “ featuring acclaimed actor Andre Royo ( The Wire, The Spectacular Now),
is a Faustian tale about the price of pursuing one's dreams set in the
Old South,” says Saria and adds “The film was funded via crowdfunding and our
donors are from all over the world. We shot the film in Los Angeles area and
post-produced it entirely in Mumbai.”
I Am Here, a feature-length screenplay he
wrote, was selected for the International Finance Forum at the 2013 Toronto
International Film Festival.
Love , his feature writing and
directing debut, is currently in post-production. As he climbs from peak to
peak, Suds will surely live up to his college, founded in 1892, motto: “Commitment
to Excellence.”
Friday, December 5, 2014
HIMALAYAN
GUARDIAN Dec
3-9, 2014
Nepal Maoist leader forms new party,
calls for ‘armed struggle’
Netra Bikram Chand |
Kathmandu, Dec 2: Former secretary of the Mohan
Baidya-led CPN-Maoist Netra Bikram Chand on Monday officially announced the
formation of a new party, the fourth Maoist party to enter mainstream politics
since the former rebels joined the peace process in 2006.
The new party, Communist Party of Nepal Maoist
CPN (Maoist), declared Nepali Congress as its prime enemy. Chand blamed UCPN
(Maoist) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal and CPN-Maoist Chairman Mohan Baidya of
undermining the bloodshed of more than 10,000 people and deceiving commoners by
joining hands with ‘enemies’ to weaken Maoism within the country.
The
party, leaders said, was the need of time to sustain the legacy of ‘people’s
war’ after the UCPN (Maoist) and CPN-Maoist ‘diverted from their principles’.
The leaders claimed that the party could go as far as undertaking an ‘armed
struggle’ in order to protect ‘national unity, integrity, sovereignty and
rights of people’, The Himalayan Times
reported.
Chand’s
document on ‘unified struggle’ talks of launching a new revolution with the
support of rural peasants and urban working class (middle class) along with
other marginalised communities.
Nearly a
third of the CPN-Maoist leaders, mostly young ones from the People’s Liberation
Army, have joined the party.
The
party further demanded an ‘all party conference’ to resolve contentious issues
of the constitution writing process. The party also asked to nullify all
unequal treaties signed between Nepal and India, including the1950 treaty.
Build
centres of learning, not temples: Dalai Lama to RSS
New Delhi, Dec 2: Sharing dais with RSS chief
Mohan Bhagwat and VHP patron Ashok Singhal at an event recently, Tibetan
spiritual leader Dalai Lama said India should remember and reinforce its great
tradition of tolerance and religious harmony and think about why it has more
temples than centres of learning.
The Dalai
Lama was speaking at the inauguration of the three-day World Hindu Congress
(WHC) organized with support from RSS and VHP. The conference was organized with the objective of bringing
together Hindus at a time "when the community is beset by very serious
challenges and is standing at a critical crossroad".
"We
are all equal. Born the same way. Sometimes we forget the sameness of humanity
and talk of divisions. In terms of we and they... We need sense of oneness among
seven billion people of the world," the Tibetan leader said. He pointing
out how all wars and violence are created by man and "unfortunately
religious faith also causes problems".
Dalai
Lama credited India for all the knowledge that Tibet and Buddhists have, but
said, "Ancient India was our guru. Not modern India, it is too westernized
... It is not enough to carry on puja and rituals. This nation produced great
thinkers. Now in every corner there is a temple. But places where one can think
or discuss are rare."
TO MT. KAILASH THROUGH NATHULA IN 2015
Gangtok, Dec 2: Indian pilgrims would be able to
visit Kailash Mansarovar in Tibet through the new route of Nathula in east Sikkim
from next year, state tourism department officials said here on Saturday.
Things
are progressing at a very fast pace and the Centre and the Sikkim government
are aiming at having the first batch of pilgrims visiting Kailash Mansarovar
using this new route in June 2015, the official claimed, PTI reported.
India
and China had signed a bilateral agreement on the Nathula alternative route on
September 18 this year. The route through Nath la will augment capacity and
reduce hardship and journey time, enabling many more to undertake the yatra,
the official said. More than 1,600 pilgrims, moving in 10 batches, are expected
to take the Sikkim route next year and preparations are underway to ensure that
the June deadline is met, the official informed.
Two senior
officials from the ministry of external affairs were recently in Sikkim to
examine the state’s infrastructural preparedness and to finalise other
nitty-gritty.
Nepal indigenous groups to unite on
federalism
Padma
Ratna Tuladhar (left) and Nagendra Kumal
Kathmandu, Dec 2: The Nepal Federation of
Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN)) and Padma Ratna Tuladhar-led Adibasi Janajati
Rastriya Andolan (AJRA) have forged a deal to launch a combined agitation to
press for the issues of indigenous groups, including ethnic identity -based
federalism.
The two
sides issued a joint statement informing about their plan to launch an
agitation at a time when the federation is said to have back off from
agitation, Kantipur reported.
In a
meeting coordinated by the Federation of Nepalese Indigenous Nationalities
Journalists Association (FoNIJ) at NEFIN’s office on Monday, Nefin Chairman
Nagendra Kumal and AJRA Chariman Tuladhar have signed the joint statement
issued after the meeting.
“Both
Nefin and AJRA has agreed to join hands for protest programmes to ensure
ethnic-identity based federalism in the constitution drafting process,” read
the press release. The press release has further stated that the subsequent
talks will be held to decide the structure and programmes of the protest.
NEFIN is
an umbrella organisation of 56 ethnic communities while AJRA is a cluster of
various ethnic organisations, sister wing of political parties, Janjati leaders
of other political parties, experts and individuals, among others.
Second
Sino-Nepal trade route opens
The new route is linked with the China’s railway
project
Kathmandu. Dec 2: In a major boost for bilateral
trade between Nepal and China, one more cross-border trading route has come
into operation. With China officially opening the Gyirong Port on the
Rasuwagadhi border on Monday, the second land route has opened for bilateral trade.
For
long, the Tatopani border was the sole trade transit with China. The new route
has historical importance as it was a busy trade link between Tibet and Nepal
during the Lichchhavi and Malla periods. Besides, the newly opened route is
linked with the Chinese government’s railway project.
During the fifth Nepal-Tibet Trade
Facilitation Committee meeting in Lhasa in September, the Chinese side had
agreed in principle to extend the Qinghai-Tibet railway to the Nepal border.
Hari Prasad Bashyal, Nepal’s consular general in Lhasa, and Dong Mingjun,
vice-chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region government, jointly inaugurated
the facility.
The Friendship Bridge connecting China with Nepal. |
China
briefly opened the route in August when the Tatopani border was shut due to
landslides along Araniko Highway. Nepali importers rerouted their shipments
from China via Rasuwagadhi for some time. China closed the route before Dashain
citing the lack of infrastructure on its side. According to Chinese
authorities, the customs, quarantine and immigration offices have come into
operation.
China
plans to scale up its trade ties with Nepal as a new bridge to improve the
connectivity between the two countries through Tibet was to be opened in
October this year.
The
bridge is in Gyirong Valley in the prefecture’s Gyirong county and will also
help revitalise Tibet’s Gyirong Port, Director of Gyirong Customs, Wang Long
told state-run China Daily.
China is
developing Gyirong to make a major land passage between Tibet and Nepal.
Currently, Nepal and China rely on Rasuwa Gadhi bridge built by Switzerland for
trade and also for visitors to cross over.
But the
bridge is not sufficient as trade and travel volumes between the two countries
have increased in recent times.
Besides
the bridge, China also plans to connect its new railway lines being built from
Shigatse up to India, Nepal and Bhutan borders by 2020.
The
Beatles’ ashram in Rishikesh lies in ruins
(Left) Rishikesh
yoga Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and the Beatles.
Dehradun, Dec 2: George Harrison died on November
29, 2001, of lung cancer. He was cremated in Los Angeles and his ashes later
scattered in the Ganga and Yamuna rivers. Much water has flowed down two of
India's holiest rivers 13 years since.
But in a
nondescript ashram, overrun by creepers of Uttarakhand's Rajaji National Park,
one of the defining legacies of Harrison and The Beatles continues to live on.
Situated
by the Ganga, the 'Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Ashram' of Rishikesh — known the world
over as the Beatles ashram — is where the "band more famous than Jesus
Christ" dabbled in transcendental meditation under the tutelage of
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in the spring of 1968. More famously, the Beatles ashram
in Uttarakhand is where the iconic 'White Album' was born. The album sold 9.5
million copies in the United States alone, The
Times of India reported.
Today, a
few Beatles devotees, mostly Western tourists, seek out the ashram to pay their
respects. Chris Cheul from England is one of them. With a guitar in his hands
and 'Dear Prudence' — one of the more memorable singles from the White Album —
on his lips, Chris walks around the abandoned ashram, "soaking it all
in".
"I
am a die-hard Beatles fan," he says, "and I couldn't stop myself from
coming here once I heard that the Beatles were here for three months and wrote
some of their most beautiful songs."
As per
official records, the UP forest department, in 1961, leased out 15 acres for 20
years to Mahesh Yogi to set up the ashram. The lease expired in 1981 but
Maharishi had moved base by then. The land was taken back and, two years later,
handed to the national park. Locals claim it was abandoned around 1977 and has
failed to gain the administration's attention ever since.
Much
like Chris, many people visit Rishikesh just to visit the ruin. A couple from
Australia who learned meditation from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi himself are among
them. "The transcendental meditation works," says John as Sussane
nods her head. "Otherwise we wouldn't have been practising it for the past
41 years. We came to the ashram in 1973. It was beautiful and serene, but now
all that remains is overgrown vegetation. The Beatles association by itself
attracts so many fans to this ashram even today. Something really needs to be
done about it."
Editorial
UNITY
IN DIVERSITY
Modi Faces A Daunting Task
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi recently urged the people to be vigilant and guard
India's unique unity in diversity, which gave it strength, and asserted that
its rich heritage could never be divided on ideological lines. Modi’s call will
be tested on how his party handles the delicate issue of Article 370 concerning
Jammu and Kashmir. The BJP will be forced to come out openly on this sensitive
issue whether it sits in the Opposition or forms the government after the poll
results are out.
So far
the Modi Government has done commendable job as far as tackling corruption in
high places. Decision making processes are faster, government officials are
made to work and accountability has been sought from appropriate authorities.
Even on foreign affairs Modi has shown the world that he can lead India to a
better future. As the Modi wave sweeps across the country winning many Assembly
polls the real test of his leadership quality would be to build an India that
reflects the age-old heritage of unity in diversity. In a real sense India’s
unity is based on its diversity.
Centre
to form panel on Gorkhaland
BJP, Cong, TMC against division of Bengal
Darjeeling, Dec 2: The Centre’s recent assurances
to Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) on formation of a committee to examine the
demand for Gorkhaland state has given a fresh lease of life to hill politics.
"I
am happy to inform to all our supporters that Shri Rajnath Singh, Hon'ble Home
Minister has agreed to set up a committee to examine our century old demand of
Gorkhaland," said Morcha chief Bimal Gurung last week.
Gurung’s
statement came after a meeting of top level GJM delegation with Union Home
Minister Rajnath Singh, in presence of Morcha-backed Darjeeling MP SS Ahluwalia.
Reacting
to the Centre’s assurance, BJP West Bengal State President Rahul Sinha said, "We
will never support any split within the state."
Sinha knows
well that formation of Gorkhaland statehood may give BJP assured win in
Darjeeling, but, that will ruin BJP throughout the whole state as almost none
in the other 41 Lok Sabha constituencies in West Bengal have any support to
this separate statehood demand, The
Economic Times reported.
Moreover,
the States Reorganisation Commission (SRC) is the specified body constituted by
the Central Government in 1953 to recommend reorganization of state boundaries.
“There should
not be any need of any other committee," said senior Congress leader S
Malakar. Leaders from TMC, the ruling party in West Bengal, have also
criticized Singh's statement.
In
Delhi, Morcha said the delegation reminded the Union Home Minister of the BJP’s
promise in the election manifesto to “sympathetically examine and appropriately
consider” the demand of the hill people.
In
response, the party said, Singh agreed to form the committee and also requested
the Morcha to postpone its Delhi dharna, scheduled to start on December 18.
“On
Rajnath Singhji’s request, the GJM has decided to postpone the three-day Delhi
Dharna and ask the Central Government to expedite the formation of the
committee to examine our demand for Gorkhaland,” Morcha said.
It may
be recalled that former Darjeeling MP and expelled BJP leader Jaswant Singh in
May this year alleged that the BJP was not serious on the statehood issue.
"It
is sad BJP has not fully accepted the statehood demand of the Darjeeling hills.
It is a reality that the state BJP will never agree to a division. Bengal has
already seen two divisions and does not want another,” Singh had said.
St.
Paul’s School celebrates 150th anniversary
The school, founded in Calcutta in 1823, was shifted
to Darjeeling in 1864
St.
Paul's School was founded in Calcutta by Archdeacon Corrie at the instigation
of John William Ricketts, a local Anglo-Indian leader, and opened at 11 Park
Street on May 1, 1823. The school was moved to its present Jalapahar estate in
Darjeeling in 1864 with 31 boarders and a few day scholars. At that time, at approximately
7,600 feet above sea level, it was the highest school in the world. A number of
its students fought in both World War I and World War II.
Bishop
Foss Westcott, Metropolitan of Bengal, Burma and Ceylon, played an important
role in the growth of the school. The Maharajah of Burdwan also made important
donations. Over the years a number of estates were purchased and merged with
the existing school estate. The Mount Vernon Estate, known as Dawkins, was
purchased at the beginning of the 1900s and the Terpsithea Estate in 1955.
The
school's original purpose was "to supply a good education at a moderate
cost to the sons of Europeans and East Indians", and it remained almost
exclusively white until after World War II. After Indian Independence in 1947
it became a school for wealthy Indians and attracted wealthy students from
other Asian countries, as of 1960 especially from Burma, Thailand and Sri
Lanka.
The
school celebrated its 150th anniversary in Oct-Nov this year.
There
is a ‘hidden agenda’ in Sikkim, BL body tells Centre
Gangtok, Dec 2: The Centre has been asked to
take a serious note of the ‘hidden agenda’ of a section of the people in Sikkim
to do away with the former kingdom’s special status within the Union.
A
seven-member delegation of the Bhutia Lepcha Protection Force (BLPF) led by its
President Phigu Tshering Bhutia has urged the Union Government to safeguard
Sikkim’s religious, social and political rights and interests as per Article
371F of the Constitution.
“We have
also appraised the Government in the Centre about the Hidden Agendas to do away
with the rights and benefits enjoyed” by the minority indigenous Bhutia-Lepcha
tribals, a release of the BLPF said.
BLPF President Phigu Tshering Bhutia |
While
condemning the Burman Commission report, the BLPF said the content of the
report dilutes political rights of all Sikkimese, particularly of the Sikkimese
of Nepali origin. Issues relating to crapping of mega hydel projects in west
and north Sikkim have also been raised with Central leaders, the release said.
The
issue of restoration of the political rights of Sikkimese Nepalese through seat reservation in the Sikkim
Legislative Assembly also figured in the talks and memorandum submitted to
various authorities at the Centre.
Brahmaputra
dam won’t hurt India’s Northeast: Beijing
Beijing, Dec 2: China on Monday promised to take
"full account" of concerns about its new hydropower dam on the
Brahmaputra in the river's downstream areas, which include India's northeastern
region. The dam will not come in the way of flood-prevention efforts undertaken
in the downstream areas, it said.
On
Sunday China had announced the completion of the first phase of construction on
the 500MW Zangmu hydroelectricity dam on the Brahmaputra, in its Tibetan region
across the Indian border. This is one of the five dams China has planned on the
river, which is called Yarlung Zangbo in Tibet, The Times of India reported.
"We'll
take full account of concerns of downstream areas," Hua Chunying, foreign
ministry spokeswoman said. "The hydropower stations that China has built
will not affect flood prevention and ecological systems of downstream
areas."
India
has repeatedly expressed concerns that intense dam-building activity on the
Brahmaputra would make downstream areas, including Arunachal Pradesh,
vulnerable to flash floods. Besides, the dams will give China the powers of a
'water tap manager' in the river's upstream areas. India's position is
especially vulnerable since there is no water treaty between the two countries.
But Hua
said China was in full "cooperation and communication" with the
downstream areas. She said during Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to New
Delhi in September, it was India which "thanked China for the provision of
hydrological data and assistance in emergency handling" of the river
situation. "On the exploration and utilization of trans-boundary rivers,
China has been adopting a responsible attitude, and we ensure exploration goes
hand in hand with protection," she said.
Hua said
China looked at the Brahmaputra issue in the context of the "bigger
picture of China-India relationship". The two countries signed a
memorandum of understanding for enhancing cooperation in the field of
trans-boundary rivers in 2013, Hua said.
China
has built the $1.5 billion Zangmu Hydropower Station at a height of 3,300
metres above sea level on the 'Roof of the World', raising concerns among
environmentalists that damming the river will upset rare water species and
upset the fragile ecological balance in that part of the Himalayas.
ADB
reluctant to fund border road projects in Arunachal, Ladakh: Congress MP
Japan assures China it will stay out of Arunachal
projects
New Delhi, Dec 2: A Congress member contended in
Lok Sabha last Thursday that Japan is
now backing out of funding the border roads in Arunachal Pradesh and Ladakh, a
project on which China has raised objections and questioned what the government
would do now.
Raising
the issue during Zero Hour, Ninong Ering claimed that following an agreement
between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at
APEC, Tokyo has now become against the funding, PTI reported.
He
recalled that the Asian Development Bank has been reluctant to fund the project
due to the Chinese objections.In such a situation, he sought to know how
government would go about early completion of the border roads at a time when
the Border Roads Organisation has drawn a roadmap.
Beijing: China said last Tuesday that it
had received a "clarification" from the Japanese government saying
Tokyo would not involve itself in infrastructure projects in Arunachal Pradesh.
Responding
to reports in India which said the Border Roads Organization (BRO) had given
'strategic' projects to the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) along
the China border, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said the Japanese government had
made clear that it would not involve itself in projects in 'disputed areas'
between India and China. Officials clarified this included Arunachal Pradesh,
which China has territorial claims on.
"China
has noted the report and has checked with the capable authorities,"
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei told reporters, in response to a
question on the issue raised by an official Chinese media outlet at a regular
press briefing. "The Japanese side has clarified that its cooperation with
India is not in disputed areas between China and India," Hong said.
Bhaichung conferred AFC 'Hall of
Fame Award'
Manila, Dec 2: Former Indian national football
team captain Bhaichung Bhutia was Sunday honoured with the AFC Hall of Fame
Award on occasion of the Asian Football Confederation's 60th anniversary here.
FIFA
president Sepp Blatter presented the award to Bhaichung on the Awards Night
here. AIFF president Praful Patel was also present as were a host of other
dignitaries from all over the footballing World.
Moments
after receiving it, Bhaichung said the award was not solely for him "but
for Indian football".
"It
is an honour to be accepting this award not on my behalf, but for football, for
India and for all Indian footballers who have to struggle against all odds to
prove themselves every single day," he told www.the-aiff.com.
"This
is an award for Indian football," he reiterated.
"When
I first started playing football as a kid, I never imagined where the game
would take me. As I moved up through various stages of my playing career - from
a teenager with East Bengal to captaining the national team - I had to face
obstacles at every single step of the journey," he recollected, IANS
reported.
"But
I loved the game. So, I stuck to it and every challenge I faced only made me
push harder. I know most Indian players today still face many of the same
challenges I did, and this award is for the passion and dedication that makes
them continue to play the game," he said.
"Bhaichung
has been the flag-bearer of Indian football in over 100 international matches.
He deserves this award for sure. My heartiest congratulations to him,"
Patel said.
"AIFF
has been keen on using his experience and post retirement, Bhaichung has been
closely associated with AIFF and we expect to work closely for the development
of football in the country,"
Patel
added.
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