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7월 24일

Somnath Chatterjee: End to a Long Lonely March

Source: http://www.ibnlive.com/news/somnath-chatterjee-end-to-a-long-lonely-march/69461-3.html


One doesn’t know what happens to Somnath Chatterjee from here. Even after his expulsion, he is constitutionally under no obligation to give up his office. After having battled so admirably with a Stalinist party structure, one would hope he stays on. Having expressed his desire not to continue in politics, he must adorn that chair which now befits the stature he has acquired over the years.

Chatterjee has scored heavily in the past month simply by holding on, by being able to brave the onslaught of the party. He has demonstrated beyond doubt that he can take on apparatchiks and will, under no circumstance, mix his politics with his constitutional responsibilities. He has carefully stayed away from the glare of the media, avoided making unnecessary statements. He has not been drawn into any political discussion on his probable change in stance. It is quite possible that given the option, he would have actively pursued the Jyoti Basu line. He wouldn’t have been pushed easily into voting with the BJP.

The CPI-M decision to expel Chatterjee was too predictable. The party knew – as much as the nation knew – that the special session of the fourteenth Lok Sabha belonged not just to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. It belonged to an equally firm, resolute Bengali bhadralok, who contested his first election as an Independent-backed by the CPI-M. Chatterjee told a group of journalists after the tumultuous trust vote how it was the late Pramod Dasgupta who had sent over two comrades to make him sign on a blank piece of paper. That was his initiation into the party. That signature made him a card-holder.

Yes, his relationship with the party has been quite loose. Chatterjee was the able lawyer who could command authority in the Lok Sabha. The party needed him and used him accordingly. They couldn’t afford to lose him. So when Chatterjee suffered a humiliating defeat to Mamata Banerjee in 1984, he had to be nominated without delay from Bolpur. After the death of Jyotirmoy Bose, he became almost indispensable. For the next 15 years, till he became Speaker, Chatterjee was the only CPI-M MP who could dictate terms when he rose to make a point. He was the party’s face in Parliament.

So, it would be extremely unfair for the CPI-M to claim that they had created Somnath Chatterjee. Chatterjee’s rise had a lot to do with his oratorical talent, his legal acumen, his booming voice and his towering presence. By refusing to be an ordinary foot-soldier of the party, Chatterjee has now raised a question which the CPI-M hates addressing. Can a twenty-first century party be run by enforcing a form of discipline that smacks of Cold War sensibilities? The CPI-M has not been receiving the support of the new middle class because it demands complete surrender, subjugation of a nature that takes away the right to use one’s intellect.

Not just that Chatterjee’s defiance has also raised eyebrows of the CPI-M’s differences with the Indian Constitution. From September 2007, the CPI-M has amply demonstrated that it is not common sense but ideology which decides national interest. By including the name of Chatterjee in the list of MPs who would vote against the nuclear deal, the party has undermined the Indian Constitution and questioned the Speaker’s impartial role. This expulsion and the preceding embarrassment could have been avoided if the leadership in Delhi was prudent and was not itching for a fight.

Chatterjee knew he had lost the party. He probably didn’t assess that by losing the party he had gained national admiration. Overnight, he had become the darling of the middle classes. His many interventions were no longer being dismissed as those of a man who views himself at a headmaster. True, he is a stickler for rules and occasionally he runs the House with a brutal fairness which can be occasionally unfair to a hesitant debutante making his first speech. But then at the end of the day, he is a fair man, whose integrity and impartiality in running the House was never in doubt.

Rahul Gandhi told Somnath Chatterjee during his trust vote speech that he had learnt a lot from him. And Chatterjee himself was more concerned about the health of former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee when the voting display boards were throwing up strange numbers. Those were significant frozen frames from a day that belonged to history.

Nearly three decades ago, this reporter had borrowed a book on Mao’s Long March from Chatterjee’s library at his Raja Basanta Roy Road residence in Kolkata. Needless to say, the book was never returned. Now that Chatterjee’s own long march with his party comes to an end, it’s time to wish him a new beginning.


6월 18일

Talking about Think before your Act || Pensez avant votre Loi || あなたの行為の前に考えなさい

Think before your Act || Pensez avant votre Loi || あなたの行為の前に考えなさい

Nowadays all the forms of media have got a recurring item on Gorkhaland.We staying away from the ground reality know nothing about it. Nor do the people staying in the newsroom creating the report know much more than the person who is creating the actual report for them. Because what ever they create doesn’t come to us in full its deciphered and then produced.

I am from West Bengal [WB], spent almost two decades on the land of Bengal. I have my loyalty to it so as others who have loyalty to their native state. But when you see some bad news about WB like a strike or some ugly agitation like that of Gorkhaland I really feel bad. Not because of me being from the state but because the TRUTH not being shown.

Let’s try to ponder of some points before we come to a decision of whether the Gorkhaland be given?

I asked a simple question to a couple of friends and I was not surprised by their response, as it was a common response any Indian would give.

Question: what is meant by a GORKHA?

Answers: a caste… no idea … Nepali … !

I think the same would have come if some one asked me instantaneously, but I was surprised when I did some research on this issue.

The fact -- there are two groups of Gorkhas in India,

  1. The Indian Gorkhas

Indian Gorkhas have been residents of India for centuries. Under the Treaty of Sugauli in 1815, Nepal ceded an area of 18,000 sq km to the British.This territory constitutes what are today parts of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Darjeeling district. A treaty with Bhutan in 1860 brought the current Dooars areas in Bengal and Assam into British possession.

The Gorkha population resident in these territories became part of British India then. The Gorkhas participated in the Freedom Movement with Gandhiji and also joined the Azad Hind Fauj in big numbers. The tune of India’s national anthem Jana Gana Mana was taken from an original composition by Captain Ram Singh Thakur, a Gorkha in the INA. Two Gorkhas, Damber Singh Gurung and Ari Bahadur Gurung were members of the Constituent Assembly. Ari Bahadur Gurung was a member of the drafting committee. He is a signatory to the first Constitution of India.

  1. And those who have come to India under the provisions of the 1950 India-Nepal Treaty of Friendship that allows Nepalese citizens to come and work, buy property and settle in India without permits. Their presence in India has led to confusion about the nationality of Indian Gorkhas and they are often misidentified as Nepalese citizens.

Huh……. That’s a huge blow…..!!! lot more to come…..

We are hearing about the GORKHALAND now, I think , they feel, will help seal their identity as Indians.

But before going to the main question lets see the background of these leaders and the issue they are raising.

The Political Scene:

The GJM, formed late in 2007, has revived the demand for Gorkhaland and has been holding protests and rallies in support of a state that is to be carved out of West Bengal.GJM was formed by Bimal Gurung, earlier a councillor of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council. He was a close associate of Subhas Ghising, president of the Gorkha National Liberation Force (GNLF).

The two fell out in 2007 over the attempt to extend 6th Schedule status to Darjeeling. Under the 6th Schedule of the Indian Constitution, certain tribal-majority areas are given autonomy in administration. While the GNLF wanted the 6th Schedule status with enhanced powers for the Hill Council, the GJM desired full statehood. The Centre introduced the 6th Schedule to the Constitution Amendment Bills in Parliament in December 2007 but it was shelved.

While the GNLF exists as a political organisation, almost its entire support base has moved to the GJM. After a visit to Kolkata in March this year, Ghising was barred from entering Darjeeling by the GJM until he resigned as caretaker administrator of the Hill Council. The term of the last Hill Council expired in 2004, and no elections were held thereafter. The West Bengal Government appointed Ghising as caretaker administrator, extending his term every six months until his resignation in March. Thereafter, Ghising has remained confined to his home in Darjeeling.

The Topic: What is behind the demand for Gorkhaland

o The demand for a separate administrative set-up for Gorkhas of India was first voiced in 1907,

o when the premier civil-society body of the Gorkhas, the Hillmen’s Association, asked the British for an administrative set-up separate from Bengal.

o In 1946, the then undivided Communist Party of India demanded that the Darjeeling areas be constituted in an entity called Gorkhastan.

o The GNLF took up the issue in a big way from 1986.

The current demand the current demand

o The map for the current Gorkhaland envisages not only the three hills subdivisions of Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong, but also Siliguri and parts of the Dooars that fall in Cooch Behar and Jalpaiguri districts in North Bengal, extending up to the River Sunkosh on the border with Bhutan.

o While the GNLF had included Dooars in its programme, it did not push for their inclusion in their map of Gorkhaland, a result of which was that when the DGHC formed only the hill subdivisions were included in it, leaving out chunks of the plains where large populations of Gorkhas reside.

o The GJM has managed not only to garner the support of Gorkhas in the plains, but also of the Adivasis, who form a substantial percentage of the population of the Dooars. This has created tensions between the Bengalis of Siliguri and the Gorkhas.

o A separate state of Gorkhas would be securing of their identity as Indians. Indian Gorkhas have long been misidentified as being citizens of Nepal and they feel that a state of their own will root them to India. The Gorkhaland of their imagination, therefore, does not only secure the economic development of the Darjeeling area but also the political identity of the over one crore Indian Gorkhas across the country.

All these demands considered

  1. The ethnic, cultural and linguistic distinctions between the populations of Darjeeling and the rest of West Bengal.
  2. Under the West Bengal administration, feel the Gorkhas, Darjeeling has not developed despite being a world-renowned centre for tea, tourism and education.
  3. Identity as Indians.

I think the protesters have forgotten that India was dreamt as a country, which would be above the ethnic, cultural and linguistic distinctions between the populations. Independence was fought a ONE.

I have visited the North-East many a times, and I believe that the region has been neglected by the Center a lot but again the constitution has made provisions [Hill Councils, Legislative Assemblies and MPs] where in the states can raise their voice.

Creation of a new state ? haa haa… in paper it looks good but there should be some basic foundation to have this demand. Eg: Jharkhand, it was the resource well for the erstwhile Bihar state.It was the bread earner for Bihar. So It could think of better future if it could control the revenue generation models present in the state.They demanded and they got it. There was a political angle to it also.

But Gorkhaland , whats their revenue… its majorly TOURISM… TOURISM… TOURISM…followed by Tea plantations and nothing else. Just imagine the revenue of a state dependent on two things and both being seasonal.Will the state survive alone to take up the expenses incurred . If you can answer this question its a BINGO !

When it comes to development I think since it’s a renowned Tourist destination the required development has happened.But the development activities are at the discretion of the GHC [ Gorkha Hill Council ] , if they don’t do it or take initiatives of doing it the Center or the State can’t be blamed for.People in the council need to be optimistic , futuristic and moreover less corrupt [ you can survive in Hills if you are Clean--- I think so !!].

Indian identity..hmmm…well in INDIA all are INDIANs if you can speak the native language or HINDI !! Jokes apart I think this issue can be dealt better by a campaign by the central government like the one Bengal government has done… it telecasts Nepali language program every evening..thus showing that Darjeeling and other neighbouring regions are a part of WB. It can create more job opportunities and create more facilities in these regions like better technical institutes, seats of learning so that the feeling of being INDIAN stays in the native.

Gorkhaland shouldn’t be allowed to be created because if done so, India would open the gates for our enemies to enter.As the control will move to less experienced people who would be more bent to be corrupt than save the nation.

So my request to the people in Darjeeling and other regions to think logically and then go ahead and not blindly follow people who want to ruin their fortune and make theirs. People like Gurung and others have ever thought of them nor will they ever do so.Their children will go abroad and outside the state to study while their supporters and the people staying there in the region will have to send their children within the state.

So think before you act…!Light bulb

Reference: http://www.indianexpress.com



Think before your Act || Pensez avant votre Loi || あなたの行為の前に考えなさい

Nowadays all the forms of media have got a recurring item on Gorkhaland.We staying away from the ground reality know nothing about it. Nor do the people staying in the newsroom creating the report know much more than the person who is creating the actual report for them. Because what ever they create doesn’t come to us in full its deciphered and then produced.

I am from West Bengal [WB], spent almost two decades on the land of Bengal. I have my loyalty to it so as others who have loyalty to their native state. But when you see some bad news about WB like a strike or some ugly agitation like that of Gorkhaland I really feel bad. Not because of me being from the state but because the TRUTH not being shown.

Let’s try to ponder of some points before we come to a decision of whether the Gorkhaland be given?

I asked a simple question to a couple of friends and I was not surprised by their response, as it was a common response any Indian would give.

Question: what is meant by a GORKHA?

Answers: a caste… no idea … Nepali … !

I think the same would have come if some one asked me instantaneously, but I was surprised when I did some research on this issue.

    The fact -- there are two groups of Gorkhas in India,

  1. The Indian Gorkhas

       Indian Gorkhas have been residents of India for centuries. Under the Treaty of Sugauli in 1815, Nepal ceded an area of 18,000 sq km to the British.This territory constitutes what are today parts of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Darjeeling district. A treaty with Bhutan in 1860 brought the current Dooars areas in Bengal and Assam into British possession.

The Gorkha population resident in these territories became part of British India then. The Gorkhas participated in the Freedom Movement with Gandhiji and also joined the Azad Hind Fauj in big numbers. The tune of India’s national anthem Jana Gana Mana was taken from an original composition by Captain Ram Singh Thakur, a Gorkha in the INA. Two Gorkhas, Damber Singh Gurung and Ari Bahadur Gurung were members of the Constituent Assembly. Ari Bahadur Gurung was a member of the drafting committee. He is a signatory to the first Constitution of India.

  1. And those who have come to India under the provisions of the 1950 India-Nepal Treaty of Friendship that allows Nepalese citizens to come and work, buy property and settle in India without permits. Their presence in India has led to confusion about the nationality of Indian Gorkhas and they are often misidentified as Nepalese citizens.

Huh……. That’s a huge blow…..!!! lot more to come…..

We are hearing about the GORKHALAND now, I think , they feel, will help seal their identity as Indians.

            But before going to the main question lets see the background of these leaders and the issue they are raising.

The Political Scene:

The GJM, formed late in 2007, has revived the demand for Gorkhaland and has been holding protests and rallies in support of a state that is to be carved out of West Bengal.GJM was formed by Bimal Gurung, earlier a councillor of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council. He was a close associate of Subhas Ghising, president of the Gorkha National Liberation Force (GNLF).

             The two fell out in 2007 over the attempt to extend 6th Schedule status to Darjeeling. Under the 6th Schedule of the Indian Constitution, certain tribal-majority areas are given autonomy in administration. While the GNLF wanted the 6th Schedule status with enhanced powers for the Hill Council, the GJM desired full statehood. The Centre introduced the 6th Schedule to the Constitution Amendment Bills in Parliament in December 2007 but it was shelved.

While the GNLF exists as a political organisation, almost its entire support base has moved to the GJM. After a visit to Kolkata in March this year, Ghising was barred from entering Darjeeling by the GJM until he resigned as caretaker administrator of the Hill Council. The term of the last Hill Council expired in 2004, and no elections were held thereafter. The West Bengal Government appointed Ghising as caretaker administrator, extending his term every six months until his resignation in March. Thereafter, Ghising has remained confined to his home in Darjeeling.

The Topic: What is behind the demand for Gorkhaland

o       The demand for a separate administrative set-up for Gorkhas of India was first voiced in 1907,

o       when the premier civil-society body of the Gorkhas, the Hillmen’s Association, asked the British for an administrative set-up separate from Bengal.

o       In 1946, the then undivided Communist Party of India demanded that the Darjeeling areas be constituted in an entity called Gorkhastan.

o        The GNLF took up the issue in a big way from 1986.

The current demand the current demand

o       The map for the current Gorkhaland envisages not only the three hills subdivisions of Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong, but also Siliguri and parts of the Dooars that fall in Cooch Behar and Jalpaiguri districts in North Bengal, extending up to the River Sunkosh on the border with Bhutan.

o       While the GNLF had included Dooars in its programme, it did not push for their inclusion in their map of Gorkhaland, a result of which was that when the DGHC formed only the hill subdivisions were included in it, leaving out chunks of the plains where large populations of Gorkhas reside.

o       The GJM has managed not only to garner the support of Gorkhas in the plains, but also of the Adivasis, who form a substantial percentage of the population of the Dooars. This has created tensions between the Bengalis of Siliguri and the Gorkhas.

o       A separate state of Gorkhas would be securing of their identity as Indians. Indian Gorkhas have long been misidentified as being citizens of Nepal and they feel that a state of their own will root them to India. The Gorkhaland of their imagination, therefore, does not only secure the economic development of the Darjeeling area but also the political identity of the over one crore Indian Gorkhas across the country.

All these demands considered

  1. The ethnic, cultural and linguistic distinctions between the populations of Darjeeling and the rest of West Bengal.
  2. Under the West Bengal administration, feel the Gorkhas, Darjeeling has not developed despite being a world-renowned centre for tea, tourism and education.
  3. Identity as Indians.

I think the protesters have forgotten that India was dreamt as a country, which would be above the ethnic, cultural and linguistic distinctions between the populations. Independence was fought a ONE.

I have visited the North-East many a times, and I believe that the region has been neglected by the Center a lot but again the constitution has made provisions [Hill Councils, Legislative Assemblies and MPs] where in the states can raise their voice.

             Creation of a new state ? haa haa… in paper it looks good but there should be some basic foundation to have this demand. Eg: Jharkhand, it was the resource well for the erstwhile Bihar state.It was the bread earner for Bihar. So It could think of better future if it could control the revenue generation models present in the state.They demanded and they got it. There was a political angle to it also.

          But Gorkhaland , whats their revenue… its majorly TOURISM… TOURISM… TOURISM…followed by Tea plantations and nothing else. Just imagine the revenue of a state dependent on two things and both being seasonal.Will the state survive alone to take up the expenses incurred . If you can answer this question its a BINGO !

            When it comes to development I think since it’s a renowned Tourist destination the required development has happened.But the development activities are at the discretion of the GHC [ Gorkha Hill Council ] , if they don’t do it or take initiatives of doing it the Center or the State can’t be blamed for.People in the council need to be optimistic , futuristic and moreover less corrupt [ you can survive in Hills if you are Clean--- I think so !!].

            Indian identity..hmmm…well in INDIA all are INDIANs if you can speak the native language or HINDI !! Jokes apart I think this issue can be dealt better by a campaign by the central government like the one Bengal government has done… it telecasts Nepali language program every evening..thus showing that Darjeeling and other neighbouring regions are a part of WB. It can create more job opportunities and create more facilities in these regions like better technical institutes, seats of learning so that the feeling of being INDIAN stays in the native.

             Gorkhaland shouldn’t be allowed to be created because if done so, India would open the gates for our enemies to enter.As the control will move to less experienced people who would be more bent to be corrupt than save the nation.

So my request to the people in Darjeeling and other regions to think logically and then go ahead and not blindly follow people who want to ruin their fortune and make theirs. People like Gurung and others have ever thought of them nor will they ever do so.Their children will go abroad and outside the state to study while their supporters and the people staying there in the region will have to send their children within the state.

So think before you act…!Light bulb

Reference: http://www.indianexpress.com

10월 10일

Talking about mainu tera shabaab le baita ..!!!

 

Quote

mainu tera shabaab le baita ..!!!
 I was searching for this Ghazal from Jagjit Singh since my College Days..its awesome... its in Punjabi but Love has no language.You can get this song in his ALBUM named ENCORE.
The original poetry was written by Shri Shiv Kumar Batalvi.
 
Sources:
The Lyrics:
     mainu tera shabaab le baita (3)
     rang gora gulab le baita(3)
     mainu tera shabaab le baita

     kinni beeti the kinni baakiye(4)
     mainu yeho hisaab le baita(2)
     rang gora gulab le baita
     kinni beeti the kinni baakiye(4)
     mainu yeho hisaab le baita(2)

     mainu jadvi tusi voh yaad aaye(4)
     dindihade sharab le baita(3)
     mainu jadvi tusi voh yaad aaye(3)
     dindihade sharab le baita

     changa honda sawal na karda
     mainu tera jawab le baita(2)
     rang gora gulab le baita
     mainu tera shabaab le baita
 

 
10월 9일

Talking about KARNATKA's role in MAHABHARATH of Polictics

 

Quote

KARNATKA's role in MAHABHARATH of Polictics
Some comments from Mr. H D DeveGowda...before his son Kumaraswamy lost his seat as CM of the state:
Source CNN IBN [dated 6-Oct-07]
At the same time, Gowda however squarely blamed the BJP for pushing the state to yet another election. "The solution to the present situation was not in my hands, but in the hands of the BJP, which has ruled the country for six years," Gowda said
"The BJP is afraid of JD(S)'s good showing in the recent local bodies elections," He claimed.
 
Before I write my comments my due respect to Mr H D DeveGowda.
Wat has JD(S) given us? They are saying BJP as the cause for the mid term election,but I think its the reputation and step of HD,his sons and his party which has led to this step.
Nobody is thinking of the LOSS to the state: all the development work will stop, huge funds will flow to the accounts of the political parties, waste of energy paper and time which could have been used for some other fruitfull place.
For any party the POLL cost is less as the candidates pay the mere security and all the campaign expense is lobbied thru donations.Which again is the root of corruption.
 Huge amount of TAX money will go into this coming poll[which i see ..is predictable] none of the politicials pay tax...but they do acknowledge corruption...the STATE NEEDS TO GROW and I think JD(S) and Congress throughout their rule over KARNATAKA has made it feel as DRAUPADI in MAHABHARATA.
Its high time for some sensible leadership to come over.
 

Mishra Anup

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