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Golden Globes 2017: ‘La La Land’ shines with 7 awards 

IANS | Los Angeles |

Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone-starrer musical comedy "La La Land" clinched as many as seven honours at the 74th Golden Globe Awards, where celebrities including the legendary actress Meryl Streep took a dig at President-elect Donald Trump. Popular Indian actress Priyanka Chopra made a glittering debut at the gala as a presenter.

Hosted by Jimmy Fallon, the awards show — organised by Hollywood Foreign Press Association — took place at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills on Sunday night.

Directed by Damien Chazelle, "La La Land" follows a romantic relationship between a dedicated jazz musician, Sebastian (Gosling), and an aspiring actress, Mia (Stone), who are struggling to make ends meet in Los Angeles. They cross paths and embark on a romantic relationship while exploring the joy and pain of pursuing their dreams.

The film won in categories like Best Motion Picture — Musical or Comedy, Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy (Stone), Best Director – Motion Picture (Chazelle), Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy (Gosling), Best Screenplay, Best Original Score – Motion Picture and Best Original Song – Motion Picture.

After making India proud with her red carpet appearances at the Oscars and Emmys last year, Priyanka, who found global popularity with American TV show "Quantico", made heads turn in a golden glided Ralph Lauren gown with a plunging v-neckline, as she joined actor Jeffrey Dean Morgan on the stage to present the award for the Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama to "Goliath" actor Billy Bob Thornton.

The 74th Golden Globe Awards paid a tribute to late actresses, mother-daughter Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, by showing clips of some of their memorable roles.

Streep was honoured with the Cecil B. DeMille Award, and she was applauded for her bold speech in which she slammed Trump.

Apart from Streep, British actor Hugh Laurie and Fallon also poked fun at Trump, whose inauguration ceremony is due for January 20.

While Fallon poked fun at Trump by comparing him to "Game of Thrones" character King Joffrey during his opening monologue, Streep slammed him by stating that one "performance" that stood out this year was when Trump mocked a disabled reporter at a rally.

Laurie said that he feels happy to be honoured at the "last ever Golden Globes" and even indirectly called Trump "psychopathic billionaires" while accepting his award.

While "Moonlight" won the Best Motion Picture — Drama award, actors Cassey Affleck and Isabelle Huppert took home the award for Best Actor and Actress in Motion Picture – Drama for their roles in "Manchester By The Sea" and "Elle".

The Best Supporting Role – Male and Female Awards were given to actors Aaron Taylor-Johnson ("Nocturnal Animals") and Viola Davis ("Fences").

"Zootopia" was declared as the winner for Best Motion Picture – Animated.

In the television categories, "The Crown" was announced as the winner for Best Television Series – Drama, while "Atlanta" was given the Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy award and the Best Television Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television trophy was given to "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story".

Other big winners of the night included Tom Hiddleston, who won the Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television for his role in "The Night Manager"; Sara Paulson, who was given the Best Performance by an Actress in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television for "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story"; and Olivia Colman and Hugh Laurie, who got the best supporting actor honours in the Series, Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television category.

The award show also witnessed a surprise entry by actor Brad Pitt, who is currently fighting for the custody of their six children: Maddox, 15, Pax, 13, Zahara, 11, Shiloh, 10, and 8-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne.
 

Golden Globes 2017: ‘La La Land’ shines with 7 awards 

IANS | Los Angeles |

Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone-starrer musical comedy "La La Land" clinched as many as seven honours at the 74th Golden Globe Awards, where celebrities including the legendary actress Meryl Streep took a dig at President-elect Donald Trump. Popular Indian actress Priyanka Chopra made a glittering debut at the gala as a presenter.

Hosted by Jimmy Fallon, the awards show — organised by Hollywood Foreign Press Association — took place at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills on Sunday night.

Directed by Damien Chazelle, "La La Land" follows a romantic relationship between a dedicated jazz musician, Sebastian (Gosling), and an aspiring actress, Mia (Stone), who are struggling to make ends meet in Los Angeles. They cross paths and embark on a romantic relationship while exploring the joy and pain of pursuing their dreams.

The film won in categories like Best Motion Picture — Musical or Comedy, Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy (Stone), Best Director – Motion Picture (Chazelle), Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy (Gosling), Best Screenplay, Best Original Score – Motion Picture and Best Original Song – Motion Picture.

After making India proud with her red carpet appearances at the Oscars and Emmys last year, Priyanka, who found global popularity with American TV show "Quantico", made heads turn in a golden glided Ralph Lauren gown with a plunging v-neckline, as she joined actor Jeffrey Dean Morgan on the stage to present the award for the Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama to "Goliath" actor Billy Bob Thornton.

The 74th Golden Globe Awards paid a tribute to late actresses, mother-daughter Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, by showing clips of some of their memorable roles.

Streep was honoured with the Cecil B. DeMille Award, and she was applauded for her bold speech in which she slammed Trump.

Apart from Streep, British actor Hugh Laurie and Fallon also poked fun at Trump, whose inauguration ceremony is due for January 20.

While Fallon poked fun at Trump by comparing him to "Game of Thrones" character King Joffrey during his opening monologue, Streep slammed him by stating that one "performance" that stood out this year was when Trump mocked a disabled reporter at a rally.

Laurie said that he feels happy to be honoured at the "last ever Golden Globes" and even indirectly called Trump "psychopathic billionaires" while accepting his award.

While "Moonlight" won the Best Motion Picture — Drama award, actors Cassey Affleck and Isabelle Huppert took home the award for Best Actor and Actress in Motion Picture – Drama for their roles in "Manchester By The Sea" and "Elle".

The Best Supporting Role – Male and Female Awards were given to actors Aaron Taylor-Johnson ("Nocturnal Animals") and Viola Davis ("Fences").

"Zootopia" was declared as the winner for Best Motion Picture – Animated.

In the television categories, "The Crown" was announced as the winner for Best Television Series – Drama, while "Atlanta" was given the Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy award and the Best Television Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television trophy was given to "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story".

Other big winners of the night included Tom Hiddleston, who won the Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television for his role in "The Night Manager"; Sara Paulson, who was given the Best Performance by an Actress in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television for "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story"; and Olivia Colman and Hugh Laurie, who got the best supporting actor honours in the Series, Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television category.

The award show also witnessed a surprise entry by actor Brad Pitt, who is currently fighting for the custody of their six children: Maddox, 15, Pax, 13, Zahara, 11, Shiloh, 10, and 8-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne.
 

Vibrant Gujarat Summit to begin on Tuesday

PTI | Ahmedabad |

A host of foreign leaders and top global and Indian CEOs will attend the 8th edition of the Vibrant Gujarat Global Summit, which will be inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday.

This time, the state expects to receive investment proposals of more than Rs.25 lakh crore during the Summit, which was launched by Modi when he was the chief minister of Gujarat.

In its last addition in January 2015, Rs.25 lakh crore investment proposals were received by the state.

Around 20 heads of state and ministers from across the world would attend the event this year.

Nisha Desai Biswal, an Indian-American serving as Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs in the United States Department of State, will remain present along with large US business delegation.

Other prominent dignitaries are – President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta, President of Rwanda, Paul Kagame, Prime Minister of Portugal, Antonio Costa, PM of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, Deputy PM of Russia, Dmitry Rogozin, first Deputy PM and Minister of Culture and National Heritage, Poland, Poitr Glinski.

Modi will interact with some of them ahead of the formal inauguration of the Summit.

This time, 12 nations have agreed to become partner countries for the event- USA, UK, Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Japan, The Netherlands, Poland, Singapore, Sweden and UAE. Representatives of these countries will come with large business delegations.

After the inauguration, Modi will attend CEO's conference, which will be participated by top global and Indian industry leaders.

Out of these top 50, 25 are from India and the rest from countries like USA, Japan, France, UK, Netherlands and Taiwan among others, said Additional Chief Secretary (industries and mines) P K Taneja.

They include Chairman of technology giant Cisco, John Chambers, who also leads a US business delegation, President of Boeing International Bertrand-Marc Allen and CEO of French electricity giant EDF, Jean-Bernard Levy.

Apart from more than 1500 national and international delegates, heads of state and industry leaders from across the world, as many as 12 central ministers including Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitely will attend the event.

Seminars on key topics including GST, in which Jaitley and RBI Governor Urjit Patel will participate, have also been planned on the sidelines of the event.

Vibrant Gujarat Summit to begin on Tuesday

PTI | Ahmedabad |

A host of foreign leaders and top global and Indian CEOs will attend the 8th edition of the Vibrant Gujarat Global Summit, which will be inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday.

This time, the state expects to receive investment proposals of more than Rs.25 lakh crore during the Summit, which was launched by Modi when he was the chief minister of Gujarat.

In its last addition in January 2015, Rs.25 lakh crore investment proposals were received by the state.

Around 20 heads of state and ministers from across the world would attend the event this year.

Nisha Desai Biswal, an Indian-American serving as Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs in the United States Department of State, will remain present along with large US business delegation.

Other prominent dignitaries are – President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta, President of Rwanda, Paul Kagame, Prime Minister of Portugal, Antonio Costa, PM of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, Deputy PM of Russia, Dmitry Rogozin, first Deputy PM and Minister of Culture and National Heritage, Poland, Poitr Glinski.

Modi will interact with some of them ahead of the formal inauguration of the Summit.

This time, 12 nations have agreed to become partner countries for the event- USA, UK, Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Japan, The Netherlands, Poland, Singapore, Sweden and UAE. Representatives of these countries will come with large business delegations.

After the inauguration, Modi will attend CEO's conference, which will be participated by top global and Indian industry leaders.

Out of these top 50, 25 are from India and the rest from countries like USA, Japan, France, UK, Netherlands and Taiwan among others, said Additional Chief Secretary (industries and mines) P K Taneja.

They include Chairman of technology giant Cisco, John Chambers, who also leads a US business delegation, President of Boeing International Bertrand-Marc Allen and CEO of French electricity giant EDF, Jean-Bernard Levy.

Apart from more than 1500 national and international delegates, heads of state and industry leaders from across the world, as many as 12 central ministers including Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitely will attend the event.

Seminars on key topics including GST, in which Jaitley and RBI Governor Urjit Patel will participate, have also been planned on the sidelines of the event.

Spinner O’Keefe pulled out of Big Bash for India tour

O'Keefe, alongside Lyon, is expected to form the the core of spin department in India.

PTI | Sydney |

Cricket Australia (CA) has pulled out left-arm spinner Stephen O'Keefe from the ongoing Big Bash League to give him more practise time with the red ball ahead of the tour of India in February-March.

O'Keefe was named in the Sydney Sixers alongside senior Australian spinner Nathan Lyon for Monday's game against Melbourne Renegades but he will now focus on the five-day format with the tough Test tour to the sub-continent round the corner.

He, alongside Lyon, is expected to form the the core of spin department in India.

CA's Executive General Manager of Team Performance, Pat Howard, feels O'Keefe needs more practice with the red-ball.

"Post the Sri Lanka tour last year we have been in talks with Cricket NSW and Steve on the best way for him to prepare for the tour of India," Howard said.

"After his recent injuries, which have caused him to miss Sheffield Shield matches this season, he has had a lot less red ball match practice than other players that are likely to tour India and it is important he gets as much bowling in the format he is going to play.

"His focus will now be on Grade and Futures League cricket before likely being one of the first players to depart for Dubai (camp ahead of India tour) in late January."

Australia are looking to improve their Test record in India, having been whitewashed 4-0 in their previous outing.

The first Test of the four match series begins in Pune from February 23.

Spinner O’Keefe pulled out of Big Bash for India tour

O'Keefe, alongside Lyon, is expected to form the the core of spin department in India.

PTI | Sydney |

Cricket Australia (CA) has pulled out left-arm spinner Stephen O'Keefe from the ongoing Big Bash League to give him more practise time with the red ball ahead of the tour of India in February-March.

O'Keefe was named in the Sydney Sixers alongside senior Australian spinner Nathan Lyon for Monday's game against Melbourne Renegades but he will now focus on the five-day format with the tough Test tour to the sub-continent round the corner.

He, alongside Lyon, is expected to form the the core of spin department in India.

CA's Executive General Manager of Team Performance, Pat Howard, feels O'Keefe needs more practice with the red-ball.

"Post the Sri Lanka tour last year we have been in talks with Cricket NSW and Steve on the best way for him to prepare for the tour of India," Howard said.

"After his recent injuries, which have caused him to miss Sheffield Shield matches this season, he has had a lot less red ball match practice than other players that are likely to tour India and it is important he gets as much bowling in the format he is going to play.

"His focus will now be on Grade and Futures League cricket before likely being one of the first players to depart for Dubai (camp ahead of India tour) in late January."

Australia are looking to improve their Test record in India, having been whitewashed 4-0 in their previous outing.

The first Test of the four match series begins in Pune from February 23.

Vijayan speaks tough, IAS officials cancel mass leave

IANS | Thiruvananthapuram |

IAS officials in Kerala called off a planned protest mass leave on Monday after Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan warned them not to cross a line.

The officers wanted to proceed on leave to protest against what they said was Vigilance chief Jacob Thomas' "vindictive attitude".

After meeting a delegation of eight top IAS officials on Monday, Vijayan told the media that the government had taken a serious view of the protest.

"Such a thing is happening for the first time in Kerala and the way they went about taking leave can be termed a 'strike'. We view this very seriously," the chief minister said.

The Indian Administrative Service (IAS) Officers Association took the leave decision on Saturday after Thomas, who holds the rank of Director General of Police, indicted senior IAS officials in vigilance cases.

The latest to come under the scanner was Additional Chief Secretary Paul Antony, who has been named the third accused in the appointment of a nephew of then Industries Minister E P Jayarajan to a government job. An outrage sparked by the appointment led to the minister's resignation.

Vijayan said the immediate action which prompted the IAS officers to go on "strike" was the ongoing probe against some officials.

"This is a probe against some IAS officials. It has happened earlier where in certain cases officials have been suspended.

"I have made it very clear to them that their justification for the 'leave' is not legitimate," added Vijayan.

"The people who are supposed to run the government but resorting to this sort of action is not good. The officials said they have nothing against the state government," Vijayan said.

Asked if the IAS officials had submitted a complaint against Thomas, Vijayan said no complaint had been received.

"There were some cases against Thomas, of which some were cleared by the state government and some by the courts. Right now, there is only one case that is going on," he said.

Akali-BJP’s mismanagement of Punjab unprecedented: Manmohan

IANS | New Delhi |

Accusing the Akali Dal-BJP government of "unprecedented mismanagement" of Punjab, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday urged voters to return the Congress to power in the state.

"Punjab has tremendous all round potential but it has not been exploited because of mismanagement by the government in the last 10 years. The fiscal situation has been mismanaged in a manner which is unprecedented," Manmohan Singh said at the Congress headquarters here.

Releasing the Congress manifesto for the Punjab assembly polls here, the noted economist said the Narendra Modi government's decision to demonetise Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 notes had significantly reversed the country's GDP. 

He said the note ban would be an important issue not only in Punjab but in the other four states as well which face elections. 

Punjab, Goa, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Manipur will vote in February and March. 

"This manifesto is a visionary document which promises to the people of Punjab that we will undo the damage done by the government in the last 10 years," Manmohan Singh said. 

"It points to the tremendous potential of Punjab in agriculture, manufacturing, services, infrastructure." 

He said the November 8 demonetisation had significantly affected the gross domestic product (GDP). 

"I have said in Parliament about demonetisation having its effect on GDP and it has already been established. According to Central Statistics Office estimates (for 2016-17), the GDP growth will be 7.1 per cent as against the targeted 7.6 per cent. 

"But this estimate doesn't take into account the effect of demonetisation on the system. If (that is done), you will see a very significant reverse effect on GDP." 

Singh described Punjab's Congress Chief Ministerial nominee Amarinder Singh as a visionary leader and said Punjab needed a government under his leadership to develop and progress.

Double-digit increase in tax collection: Jaitley

IANS | New Delhi |

The currency squeeze in November and December has failed to hit revenue mop up, with direct and indirect tax collection from April to December showing a double-digit increase, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Monday.

"Since there has been a considerable debate as to the impact of currency squeeze in November and December, the revenue data becomes relevant. The direct tax collections for April-December period have increased 12.01 per cent year-on-year," Jaitley told the media here.

"The indirect tax data for April-December (2016), compared to the same figure (in 2015), has seen an overall increase of 25 per cent.

"Individually, the central excise has shown a 43 per cent increase, service tax 23.9 per cent increase and customs duty has increased by 4.1 per cent," he added.

Direct and indirect taxes for the first three quarters of current fiscal has moved up significantly, he said.

Jatiley said the demonetised notes had no role to play in the tax collections for December as people were allowed to pay taxes in the spiked currency only in November. 

"In December, payment of taxes in old notes was not allowed."

Jaitley said over 99 per cent central taxes were paid by digital mode. 

Compared to November, the indirect tax collection in December had seen a growth of 12.8 per cent.

As compared to December 2015, the customs declined by 6.3 per cent in this December because gold imports during the period crashed, he added. 

"However, central excise, related to manufacturing, has increased by 31.6 per cent in December when compared to the same month last fiscal. Service tax during the month increased 12.4 per cent."
 

B-Town praises Meryl Streep’s Golden speech

IANS | Mumbai |

Bollywood celebrities like Anurag Kashyap, Gauri Shinde and Hansal Mehta have lauded Hollywood veteran Meryl Streep's 74th Golden Globe Awards speech in which she slammed US President-elect Donald Trump.

Streep, who was was honoured with the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the gala, said: "Hollywood is crawling with outsiders and foreigners, and if you kick us all out, you'll have nothing to watch except for football and mixed martial arts, which are not arts."

Praising her courage to put forth her views, filmmaker Anurag Kashyap tweeted: "We in our film industry don't even need to give a speech like Meryl Streep… If we just start standing up with those who actually speak up."

Filmmaker Gauri Shinde said: "Let's copy their grace, their guts, not their films. Meryl Streep the real true hero, the star. Golden Globes."

Actress Neha Dhupia tweeted: "All hail the queen…When Meryl Streep talks…Hollywood the foreigners the press and the world shuts up and listens! Golden Globes."

Composer Vishal Dadlani wrote: I wish we had someone with the courage to feel so deeply, and speak so openly and clearly, here as well. Thank you, Meryl Streep .

Filmmaker Hansal Mehta hailed her as a "goddess".

Actress Dia Mirza wrote: "More reason to love Meryl Streep. 'Active empathy' is a choice that few make. Respect", while Sophie Choudry commented: "I love you so much Meryl Streep… Golden Globes bonafide legend."

Heavy snowfall blankets Queen of Hills

Archana Phull | Shimla |

Heavy snowfall since Friday night in Shimla and around has thrown life out of gear in the state capital, exposing gaps in preparedness of authorities to manage things in the wake of much expected snow.

It is just the season’s second snowfall in Shimla (which saw a light spell of snow on Christmas) that has made the locals shiver without power over last two days in the biting cold, with water supply scrapped, to compound their woes further.

The administration was not able to restore electricity in majority areas, including hospitals in Shimla, till the filing of this report on Sunday evening, making it worse for tourists too, who had no option but to crib and pack off their bags in disappointment.

Many were frantically calling up tourism authorities to rescue them from hotels and rest houses ahead of Shimla as snow filled roads made it difficult for them to drive back. “We are ready to pay even for the snow cutter. We didn’t know that we will get stranded with children in snow like this,” said GM Bansal, a tourist from Haryana, who had gone to Shimla for a leisure trip, but only had to curse the government for promoting Himachal as ‘all weather tourism state’.

The patients suffered the most as the emergency ambulances too could not ply with over two feet snow on roads in the city, which was not cleared even by Sunday evening in majority areas, barring few lanes where the VIPs live.

The local buses and bus routes to upper Shimla remained suspended since Friday night.

Deputy Commissioner, Shimla,Rohan Chand Thakur, when contacted, told The Statesman, “We are continuously on the job. The power supply could have been restored yesterday itself, but for more snowfall. Many trees (the number still not known) got uprooted in two days snowfall that damaged the electricity lines. Our first priority is to restore power in hospitals.”

Thakur said Shimla saw heavy snowfall after a long period so the problems were more.

The locals, however, are upset. “The policy makers lack vision to handle snowfall in Shimla. The city faces similar problems every year whenever it snows,” said some irate residents. “They spend lakhs of Rupees on disaster preparedness or disaster management trainings. But where is their plan to tackle snowfall, which is a normal phenomenon. Shimla is not a remote or tribal pocket that snow should snap all the basic amenities here,” they hastened to add.

If one goes into the mess-up reported in snowfall in Shimla all times in the past, snow always brings along century old basic problems in the Queen of Hills, which has, ironically, been vying hard for the smart city status to get itself updated to modern times.

The successive state governments have simply failed to work out alternative systems in the state capital to keep the basic amenities like power, water supply and road connectivity alive in snow.

The Naga question

Statesman News Service |

Around 1947 when the British were leaving India and Angami Zapu Phizo was contemplating on questioning the concept of Indian nationhood and raise the banner of an independent Naga nation, he approached Major R Khathing, popularly known as Major Bob Khathing, and broached the subject. Khathing asked Phizo if he was contemplating a concept encompassing the entire Northeastern region. Phizo replied “No” and added that the primary concern was for the Nagas only. Khathing then told him that he was sorry that he could not go along with him on the Nagas-only policy.

Khathing, like the NSCN chief Th Muivah, was born in Ukhrul, Manipur and belonged to the Tangkhul tribe. While Phizo went into the bush later on, Khathing went on to become a minister in the interim government that ruled Manipur between 1947 and 1949 when it was made to merge with India. Khathing then went on to liberate Tawang for India from the Tibetan authorities in 1952, ultimately retiring as India’s ambassador to Burma. The Khathing cue for a unified Northeastern region struggle was later picked up by SS Khaplang, the man who now heads the NSCN(K). RK Sanayaima of the United National Liberation Front and Ulfa’s Paresh Barua came some 50 years down the line.

Chronologically speaking, the Nagas have missed two important historical buses. The first was in 1953 when Prime Minister Nehru, accompanied by then Burmese Premier U Nu, visited Kohima. That was the time the Nagas ought to have impressed upon Nehru to have the Hukong Valley in Burma and what is termed as eastern Nagaland, merge with the Naga Hills district of Assam. There was a strong possibility that U Nu could have agreed, for Nehru had just given up all Indian claims on the Kabaw Valley in Burma, that earlier belonged to Manipur. The then Assamese deputy commissioner of the Naga Hills, did not allow a Naga delegation to meet Nehru to submit a memorandum. In protest, the spectators started leaving the meeting Nehru was addressing. After that incident Nehru never visited the Naga Hills, even after it attained statehood in 1963. They missed the second bus in 1963. That was when Nagaland became the 16th state. That was the time when they should have bargained with Delhi to also include Naga-inhabited areas of Manipur for, after all, the Tuensang area of then North East Frontier Agency (now Arunachal Pradesh) was being amalgamated with the Naga Hills district of Assam. Nothing much would have happened in Manipur save for a satyagraha led by the late Moirang Koireng and perhaps a lathi charge or there would have been some casualties. The matter would have rested there.

But the next year, in 1964, the United National Liberation Front was formed. It had a Kuki as its chairman, a Naga as vice-chairman and a Meitei as its general secretary. And the UNLF took up arms to liberate Manipur from the “Indian occupational forces” and this included areas which, Muivah and company are today claiming to be part of greater Nagalim. Therein lies the problem and it has been further compounded by the fact that the Imphal valley saw the emergence of groups like the PLA, Prepak, KCP and the KYKL by the late 1970s. Later, all of them, fought for the liberation of Manipur, including the Naga-inhabited areas. Although these groups entered into urban guerrilla warfare, they were equally apt at making the hills their hunting ground, once the preserve of the Naga insurgents.

It is said that when Muivah was studying in Gauhati University he once befriended a Meitei Brahmin academic who would not permit him to step inside his house. I believe that was the moment when he started hating the Meitei commnity. Little does Muivah realise that all the Meitei Hindus are still subjected to the same “sacred and profane” of the Meitei/Manipuri Brahmins stance, where social relations with the non-Brahmin Meiteis are concerned. I recollect that my father, who by virtue of being the first engineering graduate of Manipur, had held a very high position in society, but when he hosted a community feast at home, his driver would sit ahead of him because he happened to be a Brahmin by birth.

Last year I met two important Nagas of Manipur. One hailed from Ukhrul and was an academic before becoming a minister and the other was a cabinet minister in numerous ministries in Manipur. To the second one, who hailed from Senapati district, I asked “Tell me what wrong have the Meiteis have done to the Nagas so as to blame them for all the ills of the community. And as a former PWD minister you know that there exists a Tribal Sub-Plan in the planning documents of the state and also that all contract works in the Naga areas were only given to the Nagas.” He laughed and said, “If we don’t blame the Meiteis for our plight what else can we tell them while asking for votes.”

To the academic-turned-politician, I recollected how during my tenure as a member of the State Human Rights Commission, I had toured Ukhrul and registered over 20 cases in two days all relating to cases of non-completion of school buildings, road constructions abandoned half-way and, dispensary buildings left incomplete. And while issuing notices to the state authorities over these issues relating to Right to Education, Healthcare, good communication, sanitation and safe drinking water, we had specifically asked them to include the names of the contractors concerned to whom these tasks were initially handed over to. Then, I told him that all the contractors turned out to be local Tangkhuls who had made their fast bucks and left the area to settle down in Imphal.

When I asked how could the Tangkhuls blame the Meiteis for not doing development work in their areas, he parried the question and gave an almost academic answer stating that “Yes it is true that of late some middle-class Naga tribals have been exploiting the ordinary tribals of the area”. He remained silent on the need to blame the Meiteis for it.

I also recollect what the maverick W Nipamacha Singh, who as chief minister of the state, had once told a delegation of the United Naga Council in his office chamber, “You know that our Maharajah Gambheer Singh had conquered Thibomei (Manipuri for Kohima) but Manipur is now not claiming Kohima, then why should you want parts of Manipur to be included in Nagaland?” And he walked out of the meeting.

Now coming to the present crisis caused by the more than two month-old economic blockade imposed by the UNC. It is a group about whom Chief Minister Ibobi Singh had written to the Union Home Minister stating that they are a “frontal organisation” of the NSCN(I-M) and that he should rein them in via Camp Hebron in Dimapur where NSCN(I-M) leaders stay. North Block has not done anything to that effect, hoping the people of the state turn their angst against Ibobi and his Congress government, or in case the matter goes out of hand, use it as a proxy to impose President’s Rule. All with the objective of installing a BJP-led government after the assembly elections on 4 and 8 March.

But all the calculations at Delhi seem to be going haywire. A journalist colleague from Kohima told me that he thought Ibobi was in the ICU but the physicians at Camp Hebron have managed to revive him and is now back on his feet. The UNC, or for that matter the NSCN(I-M), should have realised that Ibobi was scheduled to announce the creation of a Kuki-dominated Sadar Hills District on 1 November — the day on which the blockade began — but he did not. It was only in mid-November when Ibobi’s helicopter came under fire at Ukhrul and prevented him from inaugurating a hospital there, that he made up his mind to create a Sadar Hills District, now named Kangpokpi, and Jiribam. The UNC had initially opposed its creation and that is the raison d’être for the economic blockade but he also added five other new districts, obviously keeping in mind the forthcoming polls.

What the Centre failed to gauge was the fact that it was Ibobi’s act of blocking Muivah from entering Manipur in 2010 that had returned him to power in the 2012 assembly polls. And ever since 2001 when the NDA government extended the Nagaland ceasefire to Manipur’s four hill districts — after the “Bangkok Agreement” with the NSCN(I-M) following which the assembly and several other buildings were torched and in which 18 protesters were killed — Muivah has been a persona non grata in Manipur — at least to the Meiteis. And, the moment Ibobi appears to be opposing Muivah, his popularity takes an upward swing. 

And the Centre seems to have overlooked the presence of the Kukis, the other major tribe of Manipur, whom Muivah had attempted to wipe off the face of the state through his ethnic cleansing pogrom, killing over 1,000, injuring many and uprooting hundreds of villages between 1992 an 1994. And the Nagas in the three new districts of Kamjong, Tengnoupal and Noney are definitely going to vote for the Congress and so are the other new districts. Ibobi seems poised for a historic comeback for the fourth term. And with the UNC refusing to lift the ongoing blockade until their leaders Gaidon Kamei and information secretary SK Stephen, are released from custody, Ibobi Singh’s dream of the blockade continuing till the elections may come true. For if he now signs for their unconditional release, he will be committing political hara-kiri.

(The writer is the Imphal-based special representative of The Statesman)

The Naga question

Statesman News Service |

Around 1947 when the British were leaving India and Angami Zapu Phizo was contemplating on questioning the concept of Indian nationhood and raise the banner of an independent Naga nation, he approached Major R Khathing, popularly known as Major Bob Khathing, and broached the subject. Khathing asked Phizo if he was contemplating a concept encompassing the entire Northeastern region. Phizo replied “No” and added that the primary concern was for the Nagas only. Khathing then told him that he was sorry that he could not go along with him on the Nagas-only policy.

Khathing, like the NSCN chief Th Muivah, was born in Ukhrul, Manipur and belonged to the Tangkhul tribe. While Phizo went into the bush later on, Khathing went on to become a minister in the interim government that ruled Manipur between 1947 and 1949 when it was made to merge with India. Khathing then went on to liberate Tawang for India from the Tibetan authorities in 1952, ultimately retiring as India’s ambassador to Burma. The Khathing cue for a unified Northeastern region struggle was later picked up by SS Khaplang, the man who now heads the NSCN(K). RK Sanayaima of the United National Liberation Front and Ulfa’s Paresh Barua came some 50 years down the line.

Chronologically speaking, the Nagas have missed two important historical buses. The first was in 1953 when Prime Minister Nehru, accompanied by then Burmese Premier U Nu, visited Kohima. That was the time the Nagas ought to have impressed upon Nehru to have the Hukong Valley in Burma and what is termed as eastern Nagaland, merge with the Naga Hills district of Assam. There was a strong possibility that U Nu could have agreed, for Nehru had just given up all Indian claims on the Kabaw Valley in Burma, that earlier belonged to Manipur. The then Assamese deputy commissioner of the Naga Hills, did not allow a Naga delegation to meet Nehru to submit a memorandum. In protest, the spectators started leaving the meeting Nehru was addressing. After that incident Nehru never visited the Naga Hills, even after it attained statehood in 1963. They missed the second bus in 1963. That was when Nagaland became the 16th state. That was the time when they should have bargained with Delhi to also include Naga-inhabited areas of Manipur for, after all, the Tuensang area of then North East Frontier Agency (now Arunachal Pradesh) was being amalgamated with the Naga Hills district of Assam. Nothing much would have happened in Manipur save for a satyagraha led by the late Moirang Koireng and perhaps a lathi charge or there would have been some casualties. The matter would have rested there.

But the next year, in 1964, the United National Liberation Front was formed. It had a Kuki as its chairman, a Naga as vice-chairman and a Meitei as its general secretary. And the UNLF took up arms to liberate Manipur from the “Indian occupational forces” and this included areas which, Muivah and company are today claiming to be part of greater Nagalim. Therein lies the problem and it has been further compounded by the fact that the Imphal valley saw the emergence of groups like the PLA, Prepak, KCP and the KYKL by the late 1970s. Later, all of them, fought for the liberation of Manipur, including the Naga-inhabited areas. Although these groups entered into urban guerrilla warfare, they were equally apt at making the hills their hunting ground, once the preserve of the Naga insurgents.

It is said that when Muivah was studying in Gauhati University he once befriended a Meitei Brahmin academic who would not permit him to step inside his house. I believe that was the moment when he started hating the Meitei commnity. Little does Muivah realise that all the Meitei Hindus are still subjected to the same “sacred and profane” of the Meitei/Manipuri Brahmins stance, where social relations with the non-Brahmin Meiteis are concerned. I recollect that my father, who by virtue of being the first engineering graduate of Manipur, had held a very high position in society, but when he hosted a community feast at home, his driver would sit ahead of him because he happened to be a Brahmin by birth.

Last year I met two important Nagas of Manipur. One hailed from Ukhrul and was an academic before becoming a minister and the other was a cabinet minister in numerous ministries in Manipur. To the second one, who hailed from Senapati district, I asked “Tell me what wrong have the Meiteis have done to the Nagas so as to blame them for all the ills of the community. And as a former PWD minister you know that there exists a Tribal Sub-Plan in the planning documents of the state and also that all contract works in the Naga areas were only given to the Nagas.” He laughed and said, “If we don’t blame the Meiteis for our plight what else can we tell them while asking for votes.”

To the academic-turned-politician, I recollected how during my tenure as a member of the State Human Rights Commission, I had toured Ukhrul and registered over 20 cases in two days all relating to cases of non-completion of school buildings, road constructions abandoned half-way and, dispensary buildings left incomplete. And while issuing notices to the state authorities over these issues relating to Right to Education, Healthcare, good communication, sanitation and safe drinking water, we had specifically asked them to include the names of the contractors concerned to whom these tasks were initially handed over to. Then, I told him that all the contractors turned out to be local Tangkhuls who had made their fast bucks and left the area to settle down in Imphal.

When I asked how could the Tangkhuls blame the Meiteis for not doing development work in their areas, he parried the question and gave an almost academic answer stating that “Yes it is true that of late some middle-class Naga tribals have been exploiting the ordinary tribals of the area”. He remained silent on the need to blame the Meiteis for it.

I also recollect what the maverick W Nipamacha Singh, who as chief minister of the state, had once told a delegation of the United Naga Council in his office chamber, “You know that our Maharajah Gambheer Singh had conquered Thibomei (Manipuri for Kohima) but Manipur is now not claiming Kohima, then why should you want parts of Manipur to be included in Nagaland?” And he walked out of the meeting.

Now coming to the present crisis caused by the more than two month-old economic blockade imposed by the UNC. It is a group about whom Chief Minister Ibobi Singh had written to the Union Home Minister stating that they are a “frontal organisation” of the NSCN(I-M) and that he should rein them in via Camp Hebron in Dimapur where NSCN(I-M) leaders stay. North Block has not done anything to that effect, hoping the people of the state turn their angst against Ibobi and his Congress government, or in case the matter goes out of hand, use it as a proxy to impose President’s Rule. All with the objective of installing a BJP-led government after the assembly elections on 4 and 8 March.

But all the calculations at Delhi seem to be going haywire. A journalist colleague from Kohima told me that he thought Ibobi was in the ICU but the physicians at Camp Hebron have managed to revive him and is now back on his feet. The UNC, or for that matter the NSCN(I-M), should have realised that Ibobi was scheduled to announce the creation of a Kuki-dominated Sadar Hills District on 1 November — the day on which the blockade began — but he did not. It was only in mid-November when Ibobi’s helicopter came under fire at Ukhrul and prevented him from inaugurating a hospital there, that he made up his mind to create a Sadar Hills District, now named Kangpokpi, and Jiribam. The UNC had initially opposed its creation and that is the raison d’être for the economic blockade but he also added five other new districts, obviously keeping in mind the forthcoming polls.

What the Centre failed to gauge was the fact that it was Ibobi’s act of blocking Muivah from entering Manipur in 2010 that had returned him to power in the 2012 assembly polls. And ever since 2001 when the NDA government extended the Nagaland ceasefire to Manipur’s four hill districts — after the “Bangkok Agreement” with the NSCN(I-M) following which the assembly and several other buildings were torched and in which 18 protesters were killed — Muivah has been a persona non grata in Manipur — at least to the Meiteis. And, the moment Ibobi appears to be opposing Muivah, his popularity takes an upward swing. 

And the Centre seems to have overlooked the presence of the Kukis, the other major tribe of Manipur, whom Muivah had attempted to wipe off the face of the state through his ethnic cleansing pogrom, killing over 1,000, injuring many and uprooting hundreds of villages between 1992 an 1994. And the Nagas in the three new districts of Kamjong, Tengnoupal and Noney are definitely going to vote for the Congress and so are the other new districts. Ibobi seems poised for a historic comeback for the fourth term. And with the UNC refusing to lift the ongoing blockade until their leaders Gaidon Kamei and information secretary SK Stephen, are released from custody, Ibobi Singh’s dream of the blockade continuing till the elections may come true. For if he now signs for their unconditional release, he will be committing political hara-kiri.

(The writer is the Imphal-based special representative of The Statesman)

China’s anti-corruption body begins purging government graft

IANS | Beijing |

China's anti-corruption body has stepped up its aggressive plan to purge internal government graft after more than three years of campaigning, during which time it has punished government officers, military and business leaders.

According to official Chinese press, more than 500,000 corruption investigators are being placed under tougher supervision measures, after the regulation to standardise graft probes was adopted on Sunday, Efe news reported.

The disciplinary body, the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, established the regulation following a three-day meeting in which two members, Wang Zhongtian and Li Jianbo, were also removed for alleged "disciplinary violations".

Wang, the assistant of high-ranking Communist senior publicly disgraced for corruption, was removed from his position in the Communist Party.

Li was forced to resign from his role at the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

The new regulation of the Chinese anti-corruption body, the details of which were not released, sets standards on how to investigate cases and manage ill-gotten money.

Other proposals included the establishment of a new national supervisory commission to integrate the anti-corruption investigations of different government agencies and the creation of a specific law on the subject.

"Trust (in disciplinary officials) cannot replace supervision," read a statement released at the end of the meeting.

Chinese President and Secretary-General of the Communist Party Xi Jinping participated on Friday in the opening of the meeting and took stock of the anti-corruption campaign ongoing since he came to power almost four years ago.

"The objective of ensuring officials do not dare to be corrupt has been basically achieved," said Xi, adding "the spread of corruption has been effectively contained."

China’s anti-corruption body begins purging government graft

IANS | Beijing |

China's anti-corruption body has stepped up its aggressive plan to purge internal government graft after more than three years of campaigning, during which time it has punished government officers, military and business leaders.

According to official Chinese press, more than 500,000 corruption investigators are being placed under tougher supervision measures, after the regulation to standardise graft probes was adopted on Sunday, Efe news reported.

The disciplinary body, the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, established the regulation following a three-day meeting in which two members, Wang Zhongtian and Li Jianbo, were also removed for alleged "disciplinary violations".

Wang, the assistant of high-ranking Communist senior publicly disgraced for corruption, was removed from his position in the Communist Party.

Li was forced to resign from his role at the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

The new regulation of the Chinese anti-corruption body, the details of which were not released, sets standards on how to investigate cases and manage ill-gotten money.

Other proposals included the establishment of a new national supervisory commission to integrate the anti-corruption investigations of different government agencies and the creation of a specific law on the subject.

"Trust (in disciplinary officials) cannot replace supervision," read a statement released at the end of the meeting.

Chinese President and Secretary-General of the Communist Party Xi Jinping participated on Friday in the opening of the meeting and took stock of the anti-corruption campaign ongoing since he came to power almost four years ago.

"The objective of ensuring officials do not dare to be corrupt has been basically achieved," said Xi, adding "the spread of corruption has been effectively contained."

Big B may lend voice for ‘Ghazi’

IANS | Chennai |

Megastar Amitabh Bachchan may lend his voice for the Hindi version of Rana Daggubati and Taapsee Pannu starrer upcoming war drama "Ghazi", a source said.

"The makers have initiated talks with Amitji. His voice will be used to narrate some crucial part of the story. He's yet to give his nod," a source from the film's unit told IANS.

Directed by Sankalp Reddy, the film is about the mysterious sinking of Pakistani submarine PNS Ghazi off India's eastern seaboard during the 1971 war.

The film is partially based on the book "Blue Fish", penned by Sankalp himself.

While Rana will be seen as a naval officer, Taapsee will be playing a refugee.

The film has also been made in Telugu, and the makers plan to approach Jr. NTR to make him lend his voice.

Big B may lend voice for ‘Ghazi’

IANS | Chennai |

Megastar Amitabh Bachchan may lend his voice for the Hindi version of Rana Daggubati and Taapsee Pannu starrer upcoming war drama "Ghazi", a source said.

"The makers have initiated talks with Amitji. His voice will be used to narrate some crucial part of the story. He's yet to give his nod," a source from the film's unit told IANS.

Directed by Sankalp Reddy, the film is about the mysterious sinking of Pakistani submarine PNS Ghazi off India's eastern seaboard during the 1971 war.

The film is partially based on the book "Blue Fish", penned by Sankalp himself.

While Rana will be seen as a naval officer, Taapsee will be playing a refugee.

The film has also been made in Telugu, and the makers plan to approach Jr. NTR to make him lend his voice.