Beauties

Mizoram Aims Green Revolution

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H Liansailova Aizawl, Sep 2 : Mizoram Agriculture Minister H Liansailova today said the state government was aiming to achieve an agricultural revolution with the ambitious New Land Use Policy (NLUP) to boost the state's economy.

''We need to revolutionise our agriculture to boost the state's economy. We need to revive this world's oldest trade and the people must wake up to the same,'' the minister said at a two-day workshop on 'sustainable agriculture revolution in Mizoram' which concluded today.

The workshop turned out to be a grand success, thanks to the DDK, Aizawl, which live telecast the entire programme.

Thousands of farmers all over the state were glued to their television sets to listen to the lectures and power-point presentation of agriculture experts, an official statement said.
The event concluded with a live phone-in programme during which farmers from across the state sent their queries via phones.

The workshop, organized jointly by agriculture, AH and Vety, fisheries, horticulture, minor irrigation and soil and water conservation departments and All Mizoram Farmers' Union, aims to make agriculture and allied sectors the backbone of the state's economy.

The workshop doubles as an exhibition showing projects and achievements of the participating departments.

The agriculture minister hoped that the workshop would prove instrumental for the successful implementation of the flagship NLUP programme.

UN to Support Mizoram in Dealing With HIV/AIDS

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Print Aizawl, Sep 2 : The United Nations (UN) will support Mizoram in prevention of HIV/AIDS and in management of prisons in the northeastern state, an official said here Thursday.

Cristina Albertin, representative of the New Delhi-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime - Regional Office for South Asia (UNODC-ROSA), made the announcement while addressing a week-long training-cum-brain storming session which began Thursday.

The session, inaugurated by Mizoram Home Minister R. Lalzirliana, is aimed at improving skills of jailors, inmates and health workers to deal with HIV/AIDS patients, fellow inmates and vulnerable citizens.

Albertin said complex issues such as anti-retroviral therapy (ART) treatment and counselling for HIV/AIDS patients should be focused upon, and the training will be beneficial to treat the inmates affected by the killer disease and be accepted in the normal society.

She also said, "Northeast has been facing problems of smuggling of drugs through the Golden Triangle and often Mizoram territory has been used as corridors."

The Golden Triangle is one of Asia's two main illicit opium-producing areas and covers an area of around 950,000 km overlapping the mountains of four countries of Southeast Asia -- Myanmar, Vietnam, Laos and Thailand.

The Mizoram home minister said that a remote state like Mizoram now faces problems of deadly diseases like HIV/AIDS and cancer, which are spreading despite efforts taken by the government.

"Prison should not be a place of punishment but of reformation. Prisons in Mizoram should be clean and comparable with prisons in developed countries," the minister said and welcomed the UNODC steps taken for prevention of HIV/AIDS in Mizoram.

With an average of 100 fresh cases of HIV detected every month, the Mizoram State AIDS Control Society (MSACS) has stated that the AIDS scenario in the state is "disturbing" after Manipur, where the situation is "very alarming".

According to the MSACS, 4,721 people have been tested HIV positive so far since the first case was detected in 1990, from 112,438 blood samples.

"Of the 462 AIDS cases in Mizoram, 171 people, including 72 women, died during the last 20 years," an official of the MSACS said.

Indian Govt After Scientists Who Worked on Superbug

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Govt goes after scientists who worked on superbug studyNew Delhi: The government’s licensing authority for medical drugs has served notices on the Indian scientists involved in the ‘superbug’ study published last month, asking them to explain how they collected samples for the research and transported them abroad.

The Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal published the study on a new 'superbug' identified in several patients who had travelled to India for medical treatment, and said there were virtually no drugs to treat it. An international team of researchers, including eight scientists working in Indian institutions, isolated a gene called 'New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase', or NDM-1, which they said makes bacteria resistant to even the most powerful class of antibiotics called 'carbapenems'.

The study was trashed by the Indian government and members of Parliament, who took offence to the name 'New Delhi', and suggested the study was an attempt by vested interests to hurt medical tourism in India.

Govt goes after scientists who worked on superbug study

Now, the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) has sent letters to the Indian scientists in the research team, asking for details about the "form and manner adopted in collecting human and biological material from various sites within the country and transferring them or exporting them to another country".

The scientists have been given 15 days to list the rules, regulations and guidelines they followed while carrying out the study.

Govt goes after scientists who worked on superbug study

Dr V M Katoch, chairman of the screening committee under the Health Ministry, said the Indian scientists did not seek the mandatory government permission before collaborating with international scientists.

"The records show that no permission was taken to conduct such study by the scietists," Katoch said.

Govt goes after scientists who worked on superbug study

Karthikeyan K Kumarasamy of the Department of Microbiology, Dr A L M Post-Graduate Institute of Basic Medical Sciences (PGIBMS) at the University of Madras, confirmed having received the DCGI notice.

"We are discussing the matter with our superiors and other scientists involved in the study," said Kumarasamy, the lead Indian author of the paper. "Some of the isolates were exported, but we did not know that we were to take any permission. We will sit together and send them a reply soon."

Govt goes after scientists who worked on superbug study

Another scientist who is at the Banaras Hindu University and was involved in the study, said, "The government is asking the wrong questions to the wrong people. Most of the processing was done in laboratories here. We did not export the isolates to any other country."

Govt goes after scientists who worked on superbug study

Scientists based in five Indian cities were involved in the study: University of Madras and Apollo Hospital in Chennai; Pandit B D Sharma P-G Institute of Medical Sciences in Rohtak, Haryana; Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences in Kochi, Kerala; Apollo Gleneagles Hospital, Kolkata, and BHU, Varanasi.

Source: The Indian Express

Big B ‘Proud Mumbaikar’

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After metro row, Big B says he is proud MumbaikarMumbai: Under attack from political parties for his comments on Mumbai metro, Bollywood megastar Amitabh Bachchan on Wednesday said that being a "proud Mumbaikar" he never opposed the development of the city.

The 67-year-old star claimed that his comments on his blog regarding the proposed metro track invading his privacy were misinterpreted by the media.

"Mumbai as a city has given my family and me a place in their hearts besides recognition and respect. My family and I have never, and at no point of time would ever, like to disregard the conveniences of my fellow Mumbaikars and the development being undertaken for a better future for the city and them," Bachchan said in a statement posted on his blog.

He said his post on the matter clearly talks about the "general happiness" that metro will bring to the commuters.

After metro row, Big B says he is proud Mumbaikar

"Indeed I have ended the piece by saying welcome 'fellow passengers'. By fellow passenger I include myself as one," said Bachchan, adding, "I am proud to be a Mumbaikar and I welcome the changes which are being seen in the city."

Bachchan said that he requested everyone visiting his blog to read it in it's entirety rather than pick up words and fabricate stories which create unnecessary sensation.

In the post that created such furore, Bachchan had said: "It is finally happening. The Metro rail being laid over the metropolis called Mumbai, some under the ground, some above over large tracts of cement structures is taking shape.

After metro row, Big B says he is proud Mumbaikar

There is general happiness from the commuters, for, the misery of crowded locals and the uncertainties of the three-wheeler or the yellow-black cab shall hopefully be greatly reduced.

"But here is the killer! it's going to roll over Prateeksha! So bye bye privacy and hello fellow traveller."

But after his comments were published in the media, they drew flak from political parties such as Shiv Sena, Congress and MNS.

After metro row, Big B says he is proud Mumbaikar

Mumbai suburban guardian minister Naseem Khan of Congress said, "His remarks are very unfortunate. He should care for interests of other people also. Why should the convenience of one person take precedence over that of lakhs of commuters."

Shiv Sena leader Sanjay Raut said everyone wanted privacy but convenience of the people cannot be ignored.

MNS spokesperson Nitin Sardesai said development projects could not be stopped for the sake of an individual. If Bachchan did not object when the project was approved, then why is he doing so now, he asked.

After metro row, Big B says he is proud Mumbaikar

The Maharashtra Government has decided to build the 32 km long Charkop-Bandra-Maknkurd metro route through MMRDA and 22 lakh passengers will benefit.

"Bachchan is a celebrity. But is it okay to criticise the entire project just because it hampers one's privacy? His bungalow is not being affected. It is just that the route will pass through the area," Khan said.

Source:Agencies

Lifting The Weight of a Scandal

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Monika Devi has shrugged off a two-year doping ban to emerge as India’s best lifter ahead of the Commonwealth Games

By Rudraneil Sengupta

monika devi Laishram Monika Devi, 28, smiles widely, waving at friends and colleagues passing by the quaint coffee shack opposite the women’s hostel at the Netaji Subhas National Institute of Sports in Patiala. She asks for a strong coffee, ties her hair back with a rubber band, and is ready for the interview.

She looks content and happy, which is no mean feat for a woman who, just two years ago, could not stop crying. Her blossoming career as India’s best weightlifter had almost come to an abrupt and scandalous halt just as she was ready for the big stage.

Everything was going well for Monika Devi before the 2008 Beijing Olympics—she had finished 11th in the 2007 Weightlifting World Championship, ensuring her qualification for the Olympics, and in the 2008 Asian Championship she was the only medalist for India.

“I was the only athlete to qualify for weightlifting at the 2008 Olympics,” she says. “I was completely confident. A month before Beijing, I saw the international qualifying results on the Net, and I was up there with the best.”

Then a series of curious incidents followed. The evening before her flight to Beijing, the Indian Weightlifting Federation (IWF) told her over the phone that her journey had been postponed, and they wanted her to come to the federation office in the morning for a felicitation. “I was puzzled by this sudden change in plans,” she says, “but I had no idea what was in store for me.”

She sensed something was wrong the moment she got to the federation office on the morning of 5 August 2008, because there was a large crowd of reporters outside the building.

“When they saw me, they began screaming—‘Tell us about the doping incident! What happened, Monika?’ I was in complete shock. I had no idea how to react,” she says.

What really happened was this—the Sports Authority of India (SAI) sent results of an out-of-competition test to the IWF, declaring that Monika Devi had tested positive for a banned substance. The IWF criticized the report, saying that it had no details about the sample tested or the banned substance that was found, but it had no option but to cancel her trip to Beijing. She broke down in front of TV cameras, protesting her innocence. Manipur chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh rushed to Delhi and asked the Prime Minister’s office to intervene. A few days later, on 9 August, the Indian Olympic Association cleared her name citing irregularities in the report, but conceded that it was too late to send her to the Olympics.

Harbhajan Singh, president of the IWF at the time, confirmed that the weightlifter had gone through 30 tests in 18 months before the Olympics, and that they were all clean.

“That’s what made this result really surprising,” says Singh, “Even though we have faced a lot of doping problems, we were really confident that Devi was clean.”

Monika Devi, meanwhile, quietly left for her home in the village of Nachou in Manipur.

“I slept for days. I was numb with depression,” she says. “My father let me be for a few days, but then started forcing me to get out in the morning and work out.”

For a whole year, she could not put her mind to training, and felt she had lost all focus.

“I’d train for a month, then leave it completely for another month, and reluctantly go back to it for another month,” she says. “It was a terrible time for me, because I thought that I’ll never get out of this rut.”

Her family kept pushing her to keep her in training, and to take her mind off the incident.

“People advised me to emigrate to Australia,” she says. “They said that the training facilities are better there, you’ll become a world beater.”

Monika Devi was almost ready to pack her bags.

But she finally managed to get back into a proper training rhythm in early 2009, and made a conscious decision to rid her mind of all thoughts and conversations of the scandal. “I just felt happy as my strength and focus started coming back to me,” she says.

This is not the end of the doping story though. A special anti-doping disciplinary panel set up to inquire into the doping charges against her got her B-sample results from a Tokyo laboratory in March 2009. It returned positive as well, showing traces of an anabolic steroid that boosts testosterone. Despite this setback, India’s national weightlifting coach Harnam Singh still thinks Monika Devi is innocent.

“Athletes need to use legal strength-building supplements to compete in the top flight,” he says, “but you need to have a really good doctor or nutritionist monitoring exactly what supplements an athlete is taking, but we didn’t have the best advisers then, and we still don’t have it. It’s very easy for an athlete to take a supplement laced with steroids and not know about it.”

The IWF banned her for the mandatory period of two years (given to first-time offenders), but was lenient in starting the ban period from June 2008, the date her positive sample was first tested. This meant that her ban ended in June, giving her a chance to get back into competition for the 2010 Commonwealth Games.

This is something she does not want to talk about. It’s a closed chapter, she says. The Commonwealth Games, she hopes, will put an end to the whole doping saga. She can’t wait for them to begin, to step into the arena and compete again.

“I won silver in the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne,” she says, “but this time I have the strength to go for gold. My form is peaking again now, and I’m happy with the amount of power I’m generating.”

Her results at the trials for the Commonwealth Games, held last month, back her statement—she came out far ahead of her rivals with a combined lift of 229kg (102kg in snatch, and 127kg in clean and jerk). She hopes she can do better at the Games, because it will be a gift for her father who, in 1996, took a 14-year-old Monika to the SAI training centre in Imphal, introducing her to what would become a lifelong passion.

rudraneil.s@livemint.com

HIV Prevention in Mizoram Prisons

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Lalzirliana Aizawl, Sep 2 : Mizoram Home Minister R Lalzirliana today launched a training series for prison staff on drugs driven HIV/AIDS in Mizoram, a joint project of the state home department, Society for HIV/AIDS Lifeline Operation Mizoram (SHALOM) and the UNODC.

Representative of United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime - Regional Office for South Asia (UNODC- ROSA), Cristina Albertin witnessed the launching function held at the Information Departments conference hall.

In his inaugural address, the home minister asserted that Mizoram, despite being one of the remotest places, is not free from the menace of drugs and AIDS, which are spreading despite efforts taken by the government.

Saying that prison is not a place of punishment but of reformation and he wanted the prisons in Mizoram to be clean, the home minister welcomed the UNODC initiatives for prevention of HIV/AIDS in Mizoram’s prisons and stated he is hoping for collaboration in more areas.

Cristina Albertin explained the problems faced by North East India against smuggling of drugs from the Golden Triangle and the challenges for Mizoram regarding smuggling and health implications.

She mentioned drug trafficking and human trafficking are trans-national organized crime and reiterated the need for a comprehensive and balanced approach to drugs production, trafficking and abuse. Ms Albertin stated five district jails in Mizoram would participate in the training for the prison staffs and inmates. ''Complex issues such as ART treatment and counseling should be focused upon, and the training will be beneficial to treat the inmates,'' she said.

Dr Eric Zomawia, project director of Mizoram State AIDS Control Society (MSACS), described the support of joint United Nations programme in the ongoing Mizoram State AIDS Control Programme. Dr Chawnglungmuana, SHALOM project officer also explained the importance of prison intervention and the steps taken by SHALOM since 2002.

More Forces Deployed For NH-39 and NH-53 in Northeast

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2008030151720301 New Delhi, Sep 2 : Union Home Minister P.Chidambaram said here on Wednesday that the Centre has deployed 12 additional companies of Central Paramilitary Forces (CPMF) for security of National Highways 39 and 53 on request of Manipur and Nagaland governments.

The 12 CPMF comprise six companies of Central Reserve Police Force and six companies of Border Security Force.

Speaking on the issue of internal security, the Home Minister informed reporters about the North East, Jammu and Kashmir, and on the issue of Left Wing Extremism.

About northeast, the Home Mininster informed that a committee has been set up on August 10, 2010 to examine various issues related to Chakmas / Hajongs, which include their settlement in Arunachal Pradesh and grant of Indian citizenship to eligible members.

A tripartite agreement was signed with a Meitei outfit in Manipur, the Kangleipak Communist Party (Military Council) - Lallumba faction on August 6, 2010, he said and added: "As a result, 114 cadres surrendered with 81 weapons."

The Home Minister said, "Measures are being taken to rehabilitate all surrendered cadres."

He also informed that the tripartite SoO (Suspension of Operations) with the Kuki National Organisation (KNO) and the United People's Front (UPF) was extended by 45 days on August 22, 2010.

"This agreement has been in effect since August 22, 2008," Mr. Chidambaram informed this today while presenting the report card for the month of August.

Speaking about the Amarnath pilgrimage held in Jammu and Kashmir, the Home Minister said: "The annual Amarnathji Yatra concluded on August 24, 2010. Since July 1, 2010 a total of 458,000 pilgrims visited the shrine. Full security was provided to the yatra and no incident of violence was reported." (ANI)