Thursday, April 19, 2012


HIMALAYAN GUARDIAN      April 18, 2012
China must reform to avoid another ‘cultural revolution’: Dalai Lama
Honolulu (Hawai), April 17: The Dalai Lama said on Monday there are hopeful signs that China will push through political reforms in China and Tibet in order to avoid another 'cultural revolution.'
  But the exiled Tibetan leader warned that there were still 'worshippers of the gun' in Tibetan areas of China, where more than 30 protestors -- many Buddhist monks and nuns -- have set themselves alight since March 2011.
"The same cultural revolution is returning that was the cause of a crisis in 2008 when several hundred people were killed or disappeared," he said in Hawaii, where he spent the weekend before a trip to the US mainland.
"Now the time has come that the Chinese authority must investigate the causes" of Tibetan protests, the Dalai Lama said.
"The local (Chinese) authority (in Tibet) I think ... are worshippers of the gun, as Chairman Mao Zedong once expressed that power comes from the barrel of the gun. Unfortunately some hardliners still believe that," he said.
The Dalai Lama said he sees hopeful signs in statements last month by outgoing Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, that China has no way forward but through economic and political structural reform.
Wen said on March 14 that China could see a repeat of the Cultural Revolution's deadly chaos without 'urgent' political reform, in a dramatic parting shot at his final news conference as premier.
The exiled spiritual leader is due to fly to San Diego, California this week, before visiting Los Angeles and Chicago. From there he will travel to Canada and on to Europe.
‘Dethroned ex- king Gyanendra will be jailed’
Kathmandu, April 17:  A top Communist leader has threatened to jail Nepal's dethroned king Gyanendra, weeks after the former monarch was accused by Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai of conspiring against the landmark peace process.
66-year Gyanendra, who has increased his appearances at public and religious functions over the last few months, has been targeted by Nepalese political leaders amid growing speculation over his future plans at a time when the country's peace process has been delayed due to deadlock among the parties, PTI reported.
Madhav Kumar Nepal, the former Prime Minister and senior leader of CPN-UML, warned the Gyanendra that he would be sent to jail if he tried to disrupt the 2006 peace process and drafting of a new constitution.
"If the former King is found conspiring against the peace process and constitution drafting, he would be directly sent to jail," Nepal said at a programme in the capital this week.
"Anyone who goes against the achievements of the People's Movement of 2006 will be obliterated," he warned.
Last month, Bhattarai had accused Gyanendra of conspiring against the peace process.
The prime minister had said Gyanendra's 'activism' is not a good sign at a time when the country's transition is set to be concluded.
China invites Japan, South Korea to build observatory in disputed Aksai Chin
Beijing, April 17: China is pushing Japan and South Korea to establish an astronomical observatory in Aksai Chin, a remote part of Jammu & Kashmir that Beijing occupied after the 1962 war and had Islamabad cede parts of the region to it a year later.
A Chinese scientist on Sunday said the East Asia Core Observatories Association -- with China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan as it members - has recommended the site for the observatory. Yao told the official Xinhua news agency that the association had also surveyed sites in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and the Pamirs Plateau in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, but the new observatory is likely to be established in Tibet (Aksai Chin) this year.
The association's website shows one of its proposed sites in Aksai Chin (Shiquanhe in Chinese) in Tibet.
"EACOA directors reached a consensus that a review and evaluation meeting are urgently needed among regional excepts, aiming to update EACOA on relevant site survey progress, particularly focus on the site-testing metrology, instrumentations, procedures and data analysis performed on the candidate site at Ali (Aksai Chin) Tibet," it said about a recent meeting.
Ali in Tibet's Ngari Prefecture falls within Aksai Chin, which India claims to be its own territory.
The move comes as Beijing has been asking India to pull out of oil exploration from the disputed areas of the South China Sea off the Vietnamese coast. Both China and Vietnam claim the South China Sea.
China feels that the presence of India and Russia, which recently entered the area, will further complicate the territorial dispute. Experts see the Chinese proposal for the observatory as an attempt to complicate the Aksai Chin dispute by drawing in Japan and South Korea, who are members of the Japan-based EACOA.
The observatory will carry out research on planetary science, star formation, gamma-ray bursts and other astronomical projects. It will conduct around-the-clock observations of certain celestial bodies.
The move, if successful, will legitimize Beijing's claim over the disputed area and make it difficult for New Delhi to establish its rights over it.
Peace in Asia depends on China-India ties
Dharamsala, April 17:  The Tibetan PM in exile Kalon Tripa Lobsang Sangay recently inaugurated ‘Tibet: The Third Pole & Its Global Significance', a one-day conference organised by the Tibet Policy Institute at Gangchen Kyishong in Dharamsala.
The chief guest at the inaugural session was Dalip Mehta, a former Indian ambassador to Bhutan and various other Central Asian Republics of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.
Sangay said, “The idea behind the formation of the Tibet Policy Institute (TPI) is to create an intellectual hub here in Dharamsala where experts will be invited to speak on a weekly or monthly basis. Since its launch, TPI has organized many seminars but this is the first conference where a panel discussion is being held. Soon, we will have two panel discussions a year, a day-long conference and another major conference which could be two-three days long.”
"Unlike the Antartic and the Arctic, Tibet has major global significance because when Tibet's ice melts, it converts into fresh water and contributes to about 10 major rivers of the world including the Brahmaputra, Indus, Mekong, Yangtze and the Yellow river which is the basis of China's civilization," he added .
He also questioned the benefits and the risk factors associated with the damming of many of the Tibetan rivers by the Chinese government.
He concluded by saying the significance of Tibet's environment transcends much beyond our national borders and added that saving Tibet is saving yourself.
 Mehta, the chief guest, spoke about the relevance of Tibet from the point of view of regional security.
"It is unacceptable to say that peace in Asia, to a very large extent, depends on the relationship between India and China," he said.
‘Until China invaded Tibet in 1949, Tibet throughout its independent existence, had been a zone of peace and a source for regional stability being an effective space between Asia's two largest and most populous nations namely China and India.'
"The geopolitical reality changed after Tibet's occupation by China. India and China now shares a long and dangerously militarised border of over 4500 kms with claims and counter claims, and which had led to a war between these two nations in 1962," he said.
"Today, India and China are both nuclear powers with regional and global aspirations with Tibet no longer as the buffer state. And herein lies the significance of Tibet in India's relation with China," he said.
The conference also featured other speakers like Matthew Akester, an independent researcher who spoke about the rampant mining in Tibet, Tsering Dhondup and Tenzin Norbu, researchers from the Central Tibetan Administration's Environment Desk, as well as Thinley Jigme, Tenzin Dheden and Prof. Ngawang Phuntsok.
Report against ‘Pre-1953’ status for J&K
New Delhi, April 17: Attempts to seek autonomy on the lines of “pre-1953” status in Jammu and Kashmir would be unwise, the interlocutors on J&K have suggested in their report.
Central laws should be applied to Jammu and Kashmir after a review by a constitutional committee and be then ratified by Parliament and the state assembly by a two-third majority, the interlocutors have said.
The report, prepared after seeking views of a cross-section of opinion including political parties in J&K, said any attempt to pitch for autonomy on the lines of the "pre-1953 situation" will create a dangerous constitutional vacuum.
The report's recommendations seek to explore the scope for enhanced autonomy and inclusiveness without moving into politically sensitive terrain that can be seen as a concession to hard-line separatists. Its emphasis is on a political process that will build consensus by involving both Parliament and state legislature.
The report suggests that once the review process is ratified by Parliament and state legislature, the House would make no new laws applicable to the State unless these relate to the country's internal and external security and its vital economic interest.
The report also suggests replacing the word "temporary" from the heading of Article 370 with "special" as has been used for other states under Article 371 and proposes that the governor be appointed from a list of names prepared by the state government in consultation with opposition parties. Fresh elections should be held within three months, if Article 356 is used.
The report has also pitched for making the LoC between India and Pakistan "irrelevant", suggesting the door can also be open for Pakistan and separatist Hurriyat Conference to join the peace process if stakeholders in J&K are willing to accept a permanent settlement.
The home ministry had formed the team comprising Dileep Padgaonkar, Radha Kumar and M M Ansari in the wake of youth unrest in J&K in 2010. The interlocutors had submitted their report to the ministry in October last year.
Editorial
AUTONOMY DEMAND
Meet Genuine Aspirations
The demand for ‘self-rule’ is not limited to countries seeking full independence; even areas/states within a country are seeking limited freedom and autonomy with a view to preserving their own traditional culture and distinct identity. The people of Tibet, Sikkim and Jammu and Kashmir’s reference to ‘distinct identity’ and protection of their ‘special status’ are blatantly being ignored by Beijing and New Delhi. The Dalai Lama believes that the solution for the Tibet issue would be to grant ‘genuine autonomy’ as promised in China’s constitution. The case for Sikkim is very much the same. Ever since its takeover by its protecting power in 1975 the Sikkimese people have been demanding preservation of their distinct identity within the Union as reflected in Article 371F and the historic Tripartite Agreement of May 8, 1973.
  New Delhi, however, seeks to further assimilate Sikkim with the mainstream by craftily pumping money into the State to buy people’s consent for self-destruction. It should note that in the long run such a policy would be counterproductive, particularly when Sikkim lies in a strategic and vulnerable border region. A three-member report on J&K have rejected the demand for ‘pre-1953’ status while recommending ‘enhanced autonomy’ for the State. Its emphasis on involving both Parliament and State legislature without catering to the genuine aspirations of the people will not work. The experience in Tibet, Sikkim and J&K in the last few decades show that elected representatives of the people hardly represent the people. The political process in these regions are a farce imposed on the people but for how long.
WB govt to hold talks on inclusion of plains area in GTA
Siliguri, April 17: The state government today is likely to hold talks with representatives of organisations which have called a strike in Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri districts on April 18 and 19 for the inclusion of the Dooars and Terai in the set-up for the hills.
The invitation for the talks at Writers’ Buildings was sent to John Barla, the convener of the Joint Action Co-ordination Committee that has called the strike. The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha is a constituent of the committee.
North Bengal development minister Gautam Deb said the government would request the leaders of the committee to withdraw the strike as disruptive activities would hit the economic growth of the region. “The government is relentlessly trying to dissuade all organisations from calling strikes. We will hold talks with the John Barla group (of the Akhil Bharatiya Adivasi Vikas Parishad) and other associations tomorrow and request them to call off the strike,” said Deb.
“We would like to tell them that the government is not against rallies and other forms of agitation, but they should refrain from strikes or any other disruptive activity which will have a negative effect on the region’s economy or will deteriorate law and order.”
The committee had called the strike in response to a shutdown announced by a forum of outfits on April 10 and 11 to protest the demand to bring the Terai and Dooars under the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration. However, the anti-GTA forum scaled down the strike to one day (April 10) at the request of industries minister Partha Chatterjee.
“We have received an invitation from minister Gautam Deb. A seven-member delegation will sit with ministers and officials. If the government appeals to us to withdraw the strike, the delegates will consult with other leaders before making any announcement. They will ask the ministers to promise us in writing that 349 mouzas in the plains will be made a part of the GTA,” said Barla.
Singh lays foundation stone for ‘Gorkha Museum’ in Darjeeling
  Darjeeling, April 17: The first of its kind Gorkha Musuem is all set to come up in Darjeeling in West Bengal, depicting primarily the martial aspect of the Gorkhas, known throughout the world for their bravery.
Pegged at Rs. 1 crore, the museum will be located adjacent to the Gorkha War Memorial at the
Jaswant Singh, Lok Sabha MP, Darjeeling laid the foundation stone for the museum here recently.
A personal initiative has actually paved way for this museum. 58-year-old Hemant Kumar Pradhan has been collecting war artifacts (medals, photographs, weapons, uniforms) related to the Gorkha regiments since he was 17 years old. Having managed a sizable collection of these rare artifacts, he has been running from pillar to post sharing his idea of a Gorkha war museum. Pradhan has even organized numerous exhibitions of his personal collection, national daily reported.
“Pradhan’s initiative truly fascinated us and we decided to work on it” stated Amar Singh Rai, Chairman Darjeeling Municipality. “With the idea being floated, we approached various persons including the MP. He was very receptive to the idea and assured us of all cooperation” stated Saumitra Mohan, District Magistrate, Darjeeling. Singh will be contributing Rs. 25 lakhs from the MP Local Area Development Fund for this project.
Incidentally Pradhan inspired by his mother carefully preserving his father’s “Burma Star” (a medal,) started taking deep interest in war artifacts. His collection now includes 200 medals (including Shamana medal of 1891; Tibet medal of 1903-04; Abor expedition medal of 1911-12 along with first and second world war medals,) photographs, uniforms and a surrendered Samurai sword.
“A museum has been my dream since 1972. Finally after 40 years of hard work my dream is all set to come true” stated Pradhan.
We want more Bhaichung Bhutias in Sikkim:  AIFF
Gangtok, April 17: The All India Football Federation (AIFF) could set up one of its eight regional residential academies in Sikkim if the state comes up with the required infrastructure.
I-League CEO Sunanda Dhar said the AIFF was setting up eight regional residential football academies in different parts of the country by the end of 2013 and one was likely to be set up in Sikkim.
However, he added, it would happen if the AIFF gets a ground and other required infrastructure in the State, The Times of India reported.
"We want Sikkim to develop more football infrastructure to create more Bhaichung Bhutias in the State," AIFF senior vice-president Subrata Dutta said.
Besides, he told reporters at Paljor Stadium that the SFA should pay attention to training of coaches and referees and said the AIFF would back SFA in its endeavours.
Dutta and Dhar were in town to inspect the organisation of the Gangtok leg of the final round of the second division I-League.
Sikkim 2012-13 annual plan is Rs 1500 cr
Gangtok, April 17: Sikkim annual plan for the year 2012-13 has been fixed at Rs 1500 crore.
The annual plan was finalised in a meeting between Chief Minister Pawan Chamling and Deputy Chairman Planning Commission Montek Singh Ahluwalia in meeting held in New Delhi on Monday.
While speaking about the annual plan Chamling said that the plan is 100 crore higher than current plan size.
 He told that sikkim has achieved growth rate of 8.95% during 11th plan which is higher than national average.
Chamling said the State Government  has launched a scheme called Chief Minister’s Free Scholarship Programme under which  students enrolled in top 20 international  universities of the world  provided full sponsorship by the State Government.
The Chief Minister said work on Rs. 735 crore 575-bedded multispeciality hospital has been started and construction of the building will be completed in 2014.
No one homeless in Mizoram
Aizawl, April 17: Land-locked Mizoram has scored a high in housing and household amenities - the northeastern state does not have any homeless people, revealed the 2011 census for housing, household amenities and assets.
According to official figures, the state has a total of 221,077 households - 65.8% live in their own houses while 31.8% have rented accommodation. The rest live in staff quarters. The figures suggest that 2.8% live in houses marked dilapidated.
Mizoram has also set a benchmark in sanitation. As many as 2,03,185 families of the total 2,21,077 families in the State have toilets on the premises of their houses, while 3,342 families use public toilets and 14,550 people defecate in the open.
In sharp contrast, the more accessible Meghalaya cuts a sorry figure - 34.3% of its 5,38,299 households do defecation out in the open.
The problem for another northeastern state, Manipur, has been the lack of access to fuel for cooking. According to the latest census, 65% of the state’s 6.09 lakh people are dependent on firewood. However, amazingly, 57% of them possess cell phones.
At total of 65.7% of the households in Manipur are firewood users.
The national average is 49%. The census data revealed that 29.7% of the people in the state use cooking gas while 0.2% households use kerosene for cooking.








Wednesday, April 11, 2012


SIKKIM OBSERVER         March 31, 2012
India not to allow anti-China activities by exiled Tibetans
India has “recognised Tibet as an inalienable part” of China: Beijing
New Delhi, March 30: China on Friday said it welcomed commitments made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during talks on Thursday that India would neither participate in any “containment strategy" aimed at China nor allow anti-China activities by exiled Tibetans.
The Indian Prime Minister conveyed that “India has no intention and will not participate in any strategy aimed at containing China" in Thursday’s meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao in New Delhi on the sidelines of the BRICS (Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa) Summit, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said at a briefing.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry highlighted Singh’s comments as suggesting an increase in political trust between the neighbours.
Chinese officials and analysts have in recent months expressed concern that the U.S. “pivot" to Asia and strengthening of alliances with countries in the region was aimed at China. Many commentaries in the
Hong said Singh had also stated that India “recognised Tibet as an inalienable part of Chinese territory and will not allow Tibetans to engage in anti-China activities”.
Protests against  Hu’s visit by Tibetans in India, including a self-immolation that claimed the life of 27-year-old Jamphel Yeshi, reflected the continuing sensitivity of the Tibet issue amid on-going unrest in Tibetan areas in China, which have seen at least 30 self-immolations in the past year.
While Chinese officials and State media have blamed the exiled Dalai Lama for the protests, Indian and Chinese officials have said both sides were working hard to "manage" the issue to insulate bilateral ties from it.
Kejriwal defiant, says 163 MPs have ‘criminal background’ and 14 Union Ministers are ‘corrupt’
New Delhi, March 30: Striking a defiant note, Arvind Kejriwal on Friday replied to the privilege notices served on him for "insulting" Parliament, saying how can he respect the institution which has MPs with "criminal background".
The Team Anna member alleged that all the parties are responsible for bringing Parliament to disrepute as 162 MPs with criminal background have managed to get into it.
"There was a Parliament in which Lal Bahadur Shastri resigned (from the post of railway minister) following a train accident. I would like to sacrifice anything for such a Parliament but how will I respect Parliament of present days," Kejriwal said in the letter.
He also alleged that industrialists, who were not known for any public service, have managed to get into Parliament with the help of various parties.
"They enter Parliament to further their business interest. If this is not misuse of Parliament, if this is not insult to Parliament then what is it?," he asked.
Besides Congress MP Sajjan Singh Verma, RJD MPs Rajniti Prasad and Ram Kripal Yadav had served a privilege notice against Kejriwal for calling MPs "rapists, murderers and looters" during an election campaign rally last month.
Earlier in September last year, Kejriwal was served a notice for making "derogatory" remarks against parliamentarians during Hazare's agitation in Ramlila Maidan.
"In this Parliament, 163 members have cases of heinous offences against them. In this Parliament, rapists are sitting, murderers and looters are sitting. How can you expect Jan Lokpal Bill to be passed by Parliament? How can you expect that you can get reprieve from poverty and corruption," Kejriwal had said on February 25.
Talking to reporters today, Kejriwal also said that Team Anna will soon write to the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh providing evidence against 14 Union Cabinet ministers whom he had named as "corrupt".
Hazare had set a deadline of August to register FIR against these ministers and warned the government that they will launch 'jail bharo' agitation, if it is not done.
 Tibetan activists stage protest against Hu Jintao in Delhi
New Delhi, March 30: Eleven Tibetan activists on Friday staged a protest near Oberoi Hotel here against Chinese President Hu Jintao, who was leaving India after attending the BRICS Summit.
The protesters led by Dorjee Tsetan, National Director of Students for a Free Tibet-India, were detained by police as they jumped out of a bus and started shouting slogans against Hu Jintao.
The activists had painted slogans across their chest such as 'Swaraj My Birth Right' and 'Free Tibet'.
It took place about an hour before Hu Jintao was to leave for Cambodia after the BRICS Summit.
"Just as the Indians successfully threw off the chains of British rule, we Tibetans are protesting here today for the freedom of our homeland from China's colonial oppression," Tsetan said.
"The dignified mantra of the Indian independence movement 'swaraj is my birth right' rings true for us as we struggle to achieve the right to Tibetan self-rule," he said.
Tibetans were protesting against Hu Jintao's visit to Delhi as part of the struggle for freedom for their homeland.
A group of Tibetans protesters were detained from near Taj Palace Hotel where Hu Jintao was attending the BRICS summit.
A 27-year-old Tibetan died here two days ago after setting himself ablaze during a protest against Hu Jintao.
Rebel Gorkha leader gives up Gorkhaland demand
I feel betrayed. It seems the people are happy with GTA: Chattrey Subba
Darjeeling, March 30: Rebel Gorkha leader Chattrey Subba has decided not to revive his Gorkha Liberation Organisation (GLO) to pursue the demand for creation of Gorkhaland.
According to reports, Subba’s decision follows poor response from his supporters on the statehood issue.
“Agitation and politics are two different issues. Till now I have always been a part of an agitation for Gorkhaland but my supporters have let me down. I have decided to keep away from any form of Gorkhaland agitation. However, politics is a separate issue altogether, it is a means of livelihood” was Subba said, a national daily reported.
“It was on public demand that I had decided to re-launch the GLO for Gorkhaland. Public had opined that people’s aspiration for Gorkhaland cannot be compromised. I had visited my supporters throughout the Hills and had asked them to assemble today at Kalimpong where I would hand them the GLO party flag. Now I know that it is not Gorkhaland that the public want. Earlier they were satisfied with the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council and now with Gorkhaland Territorial Administration. It is all about money. I feel betrayed,” Subba said.
Subba, 71, was supposed to float a new party yesterday, for which he had called a public meeting in Kalimpong. However, the meeting could not be organized as both the venues for which Subba sought permission from the administration were occupied by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) and very few supporters turned up for the meeting.
A disappointed Subba told mediapersons at his residence in Kalimpong that for him the movement had ended. He said, “I had called all my supporters and lovers of Gorkhaland for the meeting in Kalimpong to discuss how to take the movement for a separate state forward. But nobody came. It seems the people are happy with GTA.”
Subba, who had a militant background and used to head the GLO after he parted from the group of Subash Ghising in 1988, was arrested in 2001in connection with an assassination bid on Ghising. He was released in 2011 after having spent 10 oong years when the Mamata Government came to power.
Sacred peaks, rivers destroyed in the name of development
For local residents, most Himalayan peaks from Sikkim to Arunachal Pradesh are divine — their might flowing in the form of rivers capable of sustaining life and washing away their ills. One such river is Lohit in Arunachal Pradesh, where Parashuram, an incarnation of Vishnu, was believed to have cleansed himself after beheading his mother.
Today, however, the Himalayas seem to be fighting a losing battle against India's hunger for electricity. "They are raping nature in the name of development," Dawa Lepcha, general secretary of the Affected Citizens of Teesta (ACT), told Hindustan Times from Gangtok.
ACT, an organisation formed by members of the Lepcha community, seeks cancellation of hydroelectric projects that threaten to destroy the region. Most of these projects, which generate about 5,144 MW of electricity, are located on the Teesta river and in Dzongu, the northern part of the area. "In almost all cases, the sentiments of local residents as well as ecological factors were overlooked," said Vijay Taram, spokesperson of Forum for Siang Dialogue (FSD), from Pasighat.
The Siang river, which is one of the three rivers that form the Brahmaputra in Assam, had reportedly dried up earlier this year reportedly due to dams built by China upstream. "The pro-dam lobby say that if we don’t do it, China will," Taram said.
Fearing the adverse impact of dams in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam has been protesting  several projects — including the 2,000 MW Lower Subansiri project. "We don’t need this. Western Assam has already been experiencing flash floods and droughts due to dams in Bhutan," said anti-dam activist Akhil Gogoi. Bhutan is now developing a 4,000 MW dam in a tie-up with a Russian firm.
However, while other northeastern states fight over shrinking glaciers and mega-dams, Nagaland has developed a technology that can tap power without having any adverse impact on nature. The Nagaland Empowerment of People through Energy Development (NEPED) has designed a portable hydroger, which can be installed on mountain streams to generate 3-25 KW of power without affecting the water flow. "At least 125 villages rely on hydrogers," said Takum Chang, a member of NEPED. (Hindustan Times)
Editorial
TIBET ISSUE
India Must Take The Lead
With the Dalai Lama’s absence from the helm of power the Tibetan people seems to be groping in darkness in their vain attempts to set Tibet free. The self-immolation of over 30 Tibetans, many of whom are monks, are acts of desperation. Beijing is jittery over these open acts of defiance and protest but it still refuses to accept the Dalai Lama’s offer of a compromise formula to resolve the Tibet issue. Before more cases of suicide takes place in and outside Tibet good sense must prevail. Chinese authorities must be more reasonable and come to the negotiating table and chalk out a strategy to resolve the issue at the earliest.
The Dalai Lama’s Middle Path proposal is a just and practical solution to come out of the situation. China’s constitution also promises preservation of the distinct cultural identity of Tibet and Tibetans within China. China’s leaders, therefore, must honour its own constitution and give the Tibetans their due share in running Tibet. The newly-elected  Prime Minister, Lobsang Sangay, of the exiled Tibetan government has also stated that he wishes to abide by the path shown by the Dalai Lama. He does not want “independence” but “genuine autonomy” as proposed by the Tibetan spiritual leader. This is a reasonable demand which must be met at the earliest. The international community must come out to support this demand. India must take the lead if it truly wishes to further strengthen Indo-China relations.
CHAMLING’S DILEMMA
Withdraw Destruction Of Records Bill Demand
The Sikkimese people have always been very sensitive about their unique identity which is protected under various laws and rules. Many of these laws are based on certain historic documents such as Sikkim Subjects Regulation (1961), Sikkim Subjects Register, Revenue Order No 1 of 1917, and Article 371F of the Constitution. When the Sikkim Legislative Assembly recently tabled the Sikkim Disposal and Destruction of Documents and Records Bill there was an immediate and justifiable outcry among the Opposition. Opposition leaders got together and opposed the Bill and urged the Governor not to give his assent.
Those – and there are many – who are not aware of the provisions of the Bill at once doubted the Chamling Government’s intentions. While some Opposition leaders dubbed the Bill as a ‘Black Bill’ to hide ‘black deeds’ of the government, many in the rural areas felt that the government’s main intention in introducing the Bill was to do away with documents relating to the ‘Sikkim Subjects’ and Revenue Order No I. Even if the government’s intentions are clear these are the rumours that are being spread and the authorities are now faced with a delicate situation. Before passing the Bill the government needs to make the people more aware of the real intent of this piece of legislation.
Sherpa to represent Sikkim in Mt. Everest expedition
Gangtok, March 30: Chief Minister Pawan Chamling flagged off  mountaineer  Kazi Sherpa of Indian Himalayan Centre for Adventure and Ecotourism, Chemchey, South Sikkim, here on Tuesday.
Sherpa will be representing the State as a member of the Mount Everest Expedition 2012 from South Col, Nepal. He has been sponsored by the State Government of Sikkim. The expedition will start this month from Nepal and will expectedly summit the Mount Everest by the month of May 2012.
The Chief Minister congratulated Sherpa for being selected as a team member of the expedition and wished him good luck, an official release said.
Also present during flag off function were Minister for Tourism and Civil Aviation, Secretary, Tourism and Civil Aviation and Director GT Bhutia of the  Indian Himalayan Centre for Adventure and Ecotourism, Chemchey.
Sikkim to seek industry aid for quake management fund
Gangtok, March 30: Taking a lesson from the widespread damage and destruction caused by September 18 earthquake last year, the State Government is set to create its own Earthquake Management and Relief Fund to deal with such eventualities in the future. A  Policy resolution to this effect, moved by the Chief Minister Pawan Chamling and seconded by the Lachen-Mangshila MLA TW Lepcha, was unanimously adopted by the State Legislative Assembly recently.
The resolution has recalled that the vast damage to the public infrastructure adversely affected the economy of the State resulting in reduction of employment activities and loss in revenue generation. The resolution calls for strictly adhering to anti-earthquake construction and repair norms as well as keeping the State in a state of preparedness by creating mass awareness about the hazards related to the earthquake and the ways to minimize the damage to both life and property during the crisis.
The amount for the Fund will be generated through compulsory contributions from various power developers, industrial units, hotels and other commercial establishments applying before the State Government for allotment of lands.
A pool of Industrial Land Bank will be created for facilitating land allotment to them. However, before the allotment of land and other permissions and licenses, the concerned investor will also have to contribute, above all the other dues, to the Earthquake Fund. The payment will range from Rs. 5 crore to Rs.50 crore depending upon their capacity and investment. However, the Policy Resolution also provides for an exemption of fifty percent to the local investors. The resolution will come into effect from the date of its gazette notification.
Petition against Chamling in Supreme Court has not been withdrawn: Diley Namgyal
Gangtok, March 30: Sikkim National People’s Party (SNPP) leader Diley Namgyal Kazi said he has not withdrawn his corruption petition against Chief Minister Pawan Chamling from the Supreme Court.
He, however, admitted that he was facing “enormous pressure” regarding the case. Kazi, who returned from Delhi last week, said it was not up to him to fix the next hearing of the case in the apex court.
Kazi’s response follows rumours that the petition has been withdrawn due to money-power.
Earlier, Kazi and Pema Dadul filed a petition before the apex court accusing Chamling and his Cabinet colleagues of gross misuse of power and rampant corruption in the administration.
In January, the Supreme Court sought the Centre and CBI’s response to the allegations. A bench comprising Justices RM Lodha and HL Gokhale issued notice to the Sikkim Government and the Chief Minister on the said matter.
The petition said the CBI’s initial probe into alleged corruption found that Chamling and his colleagues “had indulged in various corrupt practices including commission of criminal misconduct and acquisition of disproportionate assets.”
The SNPP leader’s petition in the apex court follows reports that a similar petition filed before the same court by Congress leaders in the State was withdrawn as the petitioners reportedly succumbed to the influence of money-power. 
Sources said the CBI had begun investigation into allegations raised by Congress leaders against Chamling and Co. but the process of the investigation was either delayed or not taken to its logical conclusion.
Senior Congress leader KN Upreti recently openly accused the petitioners and State Congress leaders of accepting bribe to withdraw the case. The accused have remained mum so far.