The Himalayan Beacon

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Archive for September 7th, 2008

“The sacrifice I am offering shall not go in vain” – Remembering Shahid Durga Malla

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM GARHWAL POST

NEWS SHARED BY AARDEE

By LP Thapa

DEHRADUN: “The sacrifice I am offering shall not go in vain. India will be free. I am confident. This is only a matter of time, Sharda! Don’t worry, crores of Hindustanis are with you.” These were the last words of Major Durga Malla to his young wife before he was sent to the gallows for defying the British in favour of his motherland, India. He was hanged on 25 August 1944. He was the first Gorkha soldier of the Indian National Army (INA) to sacrifice his life for the cause of the nation. His martyrdom day is now celebrated as ‘Balidan Diwas’ by the Gorkha community every year.

The equestrian figure of this legendary hero now stands proudly in the precincts of the Indian Parliament.
The eldest among four sons and three daughters, Durga was born on 1 July, 1913 at Khate Gaon, Doiwala, to Parvati Devi and Ganga Ram Malla, an army man.

Durga Malla was an extremely self-respecting, laborious, dedicated and honest person. “He was a good elder brother for all of us younger siblings,” says 84 year old Prem Singh Malla, the youngest brother of Durga, who resides, presently, in Ranjhawala. Though he is hard of hearing and losing his memory, he recalled that his elder brother was a good footballer. “I remember, he used to study in the Gorkha Military Middle School (presently Gorkha Military Inter College) and play football passionately and wrote poetry in Nepali and Hindi.” Read the rest of this entry »

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CM & Public pay tribute to martyr – Rifleman Pankaj Gurung

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM GARHWAL POST

NEWS SHARED BY AARDEE

[Please Note: The news is of 26 August was shared by Aardee on the same day but since it was lost in the mail. It is reproduced here today. Regs]

DEHRADUN, 26 Aug: Chief Minister B C Khanduri today paid floral tribute to martyred Rifleman Pankaj Gurung at his residence in Johri village and took part in his funeral ceremony. Gurung lost his life in an encounter with terrorists in Manipur, recently.

On the occasion, the Chief Minister expressed his condolences to the soldier’s father, Prabhu Gurung, brother Prashant Gurung and other family members, and said that his sacrifice had made his family and state immensely proud. He also praised the Gurung family for their contribution towards the defence of the nation.

Rajpur MLA Ganesh Joshi, ADM UC Kabadwal and others were among the hundreds of people present on the occasion. Read the rest of this entry »

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Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay on the Southeast Ridge about to leave the South Col to establish Camp IX below the South Summit of Mount Everest.

Photo: Alfred Gregory, May 28, 1953 [Copyright National Geographic Society]
Tenzing Norgay on the summit of Mount Everest at 11.30 a.m. Tenzing waves his ice-axe bearing the flags of Great Britain, Nepal, the United Nations, and India.
Photo: Edmund Hillary, May 29, 1953

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Death toll rises in flood displaced camps

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM NEPAL NEWS

Kathmandu, 7 September: Five more persons who were displaced by the Koshi floods died while undergoing treatment from a serious bout of diarrhea in hospitals in flood hit Sunsari and Saptari district Saturday. With this, the death toll in the aftermath of the floods has reached 16.

Reports quoted police as saying that Babita Ray, 45, and Mohhamed Khatun, 25, both locals of Haripur, Sunsari succumbed to diarrhea while undergoing treatment.

Similarly, hundreds of flood victims housed in 20 government-run camps of Sunsari are suffering from diseases like diarrhea, pneumonia, typhoid and cold.

The government is running medical centers in the camps to keep a check on the deteriorating health and sanitation condition of the flood displaced.

On Friday, Health Minister Girirajmani Pokharel promised that medical teams, including eight gynecologists will be mobilised at camps for the displaced people from Saturday.

“Our main concern is to contain diseases inside the camps, which are likely to reach epidemic proportions if not acted upon immediately,” he said. “The camps should be insulated against the cold and provided with safe drinking water and proper toilets.” Read the rest of this entry »

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‘Maoists will be wiped out in 8 yrs’

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM KATHMANDU POST

Kathmandu, 7 September: Senior Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) leader KP Sharma Oli claimed Saturday (September 6) that the Maoist party, which has emerged as the largest party in the Constituent Assembly, would vanish in the next eight years.   Comparing the Maoist party to weeds that grow fast and fade away overnight, Oli said the Maoist party would be wiped out in the next elections.

Its (Maoist party’s) longevity will be as short as the period it took to rise,” he said at a program organized by the Tehrathum-Kathmandu Liaison Forum of the UML in Kathmandu. He said the Maoists’ early downfall is inevitable given the nature of their rise.

Terming the Maoists as just a flash, he further declared that they would not last more than eight years at the most.   He said newly appointed deputy prime minister and home minister Bam Dev Gautam was not sent into the government just for displaying him in the media as a celebrity but to taken on the hooligans.

” The hooligans who take the law into their own hands will be punished sternly in the days to come,” according to Oli.   He also claimed that law and order and the security situation have improved immediately after Gautam took over the home ministry. The Home Minister will tame everyone– be it those who seize lands, houses and other property or those who padlock civil servants inside toilets,” Oli claimed.   Read the rest of this entry »

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Incorrect reportings corrected!

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

Sikkim IPR Press Release

Gangtok, 6th September:In response to the in-correct reportings made in some local dailies published recently, the following information is furnished for the benefit of the general public and beneficiaries concerned.

1) That, the B.P.L. foodgrains are admissible to the identified B.P.L. families/individuals only holding valid ration card.

2) The identification of the B.P.L. families made in Gram Sabha are further certified by the concerned District Collector regarding their genuineness.

3) The monthly quota of each schemes of foodgrains is supplied to the nearest Fair Price Shops and other Government approved agencies for distribution to the B.P.L. families on production of the ration cards issued to them who lift allocated foodgrains within the relevant month.

4) The Government has been continuously lifting the foodgrains and dispatching to the concerned Food Godowns every month without any shortfalls so far and distribution statement of foodgrains is regularly obtained for record to ensure that leakage or shortage is prevented.

It is therefore, clarified for all concerned that the B.P.L. foodgrains are admissible only to the identified families who have valid Ration Cards. They are required to lift their allotted quota every month from the Fair Price Shops allotted to them which are located in the nearest place to them. There cannot be increase and decrease in the quota as the government gets a fixed quota of foodgrains under different schemes based on the estimation of B.P.L. families in Sikkim by Planning Commission of India. Any beneficiary not getting his monthly quota should approach the concerned Godown Incharge and the District Civil Supplies Officer for mitigation of his/her complaint instead carrying out false propaganda through media.

With regard to alleged non-supply of information under Information Act, it can only be said that there is a proper redressal forum under the said Act for any aggrieved persons to approach. As far as the Department of Food, Civil Supplies & Consumer Affairs is concerned there is no pendency of any information related application till date.

IPR News Service

IPR No 141/IPR/08-09

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Sikkim Police Act enacted

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

Sikkim IPR Press Release

Notification No. 89/Home/2008 Dated 05/09/2008

Gangtok, 6th September: Consequent upon the enforcement of the Sikkim Police Act, 2008 w.e.f. 05/09/2008 vide Notification No. 88/Home/2008 dated 05/09/2008 and in exercise of the powers conferred under section 39 of the said Act, the State Government hereby constitutes a State Police Board in place of State Security Commission constituted vide Notification No. l03/Home/ 2006 dated 28/12/2006.

II. The State Government is accordingly pleased to order that the Independent Members of the State Security Commission appointed vide Notification No. 59/ Home/2007 dated 18/06/ 2007 shall be the Members of the State Police Board under the said Act for the remaining duration of their term.

III. Notification Nos. l03/Home/2006 dated 28/12/2006 and no.59/ Home/2007 dated 18/06/2007 hereby stands superceded.

BY ORDER AND IN THE NAME OF THE GOVERNOR.

Sd/-

(N. D. CHINGAPA) IAS

CHIEF SECRETARY

IPR News Service

IPR No 142/IPR/08-09

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Sikkim IPR Press Release

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

6th September,2008

Notification No. 88/Home/2008 Dated 05/09/2008

In exercise of the powers conferred by sub section (3) of section 1 of the Sikkim Police Act, 2008, the State Government hereby appoints the 5th day of September, 2008 as the date on which the Sikkim Police Act, 2008 (Act No. 15 of 2008), shall come into force in the State of Sikkim.

BY ORDER

Sd/-

(N. D CHINGAPA) IAS

CHIEF SECRETARY

IPR News Service

IPR No 143/IPR/08-09

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PRASAR BHARATI BROADCASTING CORPORATION OF INDIA

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

BY TANDIN WANGMO

When we walk through Rockville Road, we will find Prasar Bharati Broadcasting Corporation of India Television Station. The Television Station was established in 1987 before which the people of the hills had no mass media. The radio broadcast relayed from Kurseong being their only gateway to information and entertainment. The setting up of the Television Station at Rockville in 1987 thus opened up a doorway to the world. [Inset: Prasar Bharati Lower Power Television Relay Centre. Photo by Tandin Wangmo]

Television is an important element of our culture that shows things of common and universal interest. National Culture is not found in Museums or created by educational institutions and universities. The Prasar Bharati Low Power Television Relay Centre located near Rockville Road transmits five channels in Darjeeling. It usually transmits for 18 hours and the transmission through VHF Band III 100 watt. The Channel of operation and Television Station carries Picture Carrier Frequency (video) 175.25 MHz. Sound Carrier frequency is 180.75 MHz.

The Prasar Bharati Broadcasting Corporation of India Television Station, Darjeeling offers a coverage of 25 km radius which is effective in line of sight. It can be over 25 km from the Television Station in direct line of sight and not the normal road distance. Read the rest of this entry »

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GORKHA STADIUM, ABANDONED AND FORGOTTEN

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

By Manisha Dewan

DARJEELING, AUGUST 17: The construction of the only stadium in Darjeeling Hills situated 9 km from the Darjeeling Town is incomplete even after 45 years of its initiation. “The place where the stadium is presently situated was a tea garden before it was converted into a play ground and then into a stadium in 1963,” said Kesav Pradhan, in-charge, Sports Authority of India Hostel situated within the precinct of the stadium. “Earlier the stadium was simply known as the Public Play Ground. Later when the control of the stadium was transferred to Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council, the stadium was named Gorkha Stadium,” Kesav Pradhan said. [Inset 1: The dilapidated seatings at Gorkha Stadium, Lebong. [Inset: A public meeting at Lebong Stadium. Seen are the stands of the Stadium over the slopes of Lebong. Photo by Barun Roy]

[Inset 2: Incomplete part of the Stadium. Photo by Manisha Dewan]

A prominent sportsperson speaking anonymously said, “The authorities never did take much interest in the completion nor the maintenance of the stadium. Funds came and disappeared but nothing happened. The stadium is effectively abandoned by the authorities. The stands are incomplete and the ones that are complete have been left unattended. No competitions or sports events of any standing are ever organized. The stadium which should have held a place of great respect and love in the heart of every individual in the hill has effectively been left to rot.”

The stadium is presently under the supervision of Sports Authority of India. According to sources at Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council, the administration of the stadium was transferred to the Sports Authority of India (SAI) in 1993. “It is no use blaming Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council,” the source said. “The pathetic condition of Gorkha Stadium is due to the apathy shown by the Government of India and more appropriately the Sports Authority of India. They do not bother about anything accept maintaining their presence at the stadium”. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Essays, HB EXCLUSIVE | 7 Comments »

HIMALAYAN MOUNTAINEERING INSTITUTE

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

BY DIPTI KAR

After the successful ascent of Mount Everest on 29th of May 1953 by Late Tenzing Norgay and Sir Edmund Hillary, mountaineering in India got impetus. Consequently the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute was established by personal initiative of Late Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru the first Prime Minister of India. The Institute was established on 4th November 1954 in Darjeeling which was, then, the hub of all mountaineering activity in India. Late Major N. D. Jayal was the first Principal of the Institute whereas Late Tenzing Norgay was Director of Field Training. The Institute is located at an altitude of 6800 feet above sea level.

In 1954 the institute was stated at Roy Villa at Lebong Cart Road, it was shifted to the present location on the western spur of Birch Hill (jawahar parbat) in 1957. The institute is a landmark in Darjeeling and an important centre of tourist attraction. It commands a magnificent view of Kanchenjunga massif.

The institute is an autonomous body. It is governed by an Executive Council which is head by the Defence Minster of India as the President. The Chief Minister of the state of West Bengal is the Vice President of the Institute. The Council has eminent mountaineers as its members. The representatives of Government of Nepal and Government of Bhutan are also members of the council. Read the rest of this entry »

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RIMC Soccer Cup

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM GARHWAL POST

NEWS SHARED BY AARDEE

Bishop Cotton. Tibetan Home, Assam Valley, Scholar’s Home enter semis

DEHRADUN, 6 Sept: Araab’s hat-trick took Bishop Cotton School past The Doon School into the semi-finals of the RIMC Soccer Cup today. Kachan Goi, Akash Thapa and Silachi’s braces took Scholars’ Home also into the semis. Tibetan Home and Assam Valley were the other teams to reserve seats in the semis.

In the first quarterfinal match, Bishop Cotton managed a 4-2 win against The Doon School. Araab scored a hat-trick in 13th, 28th and 50th minutes of play, while Pun added one in the 55th minute. Valtz and Vaibhav scored for The Doon School.

In the second quarter-final match, Tibetan Home proved too good for Welham Boys. After it took 16 minutes to open the account through Liney, the Tibetan boys did not look back. Dorji struck in the 32nd minute, followed by Gijne in the 40th minute to take his team 3-0 up. Read the rest of this entry »

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AN APPEAL by Kalimpong Press Club

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

Kalimpong Press Club is a registered body formed by the journalists of Kalimpong Sub-Division. On behalf of the Club I would like to apprise you about the followings for your kind information, comment, advices, cooperation and necessary help.

1. That, Kalimpong Press Club is an organisation of journalists and free lancers as well as  lovers of Journalism. It has intended to exercise the right to information and share the same to the public through different media.

2.   That, the members of the Society being media personnel are not only earning their bread or enjoying the adventure of journalism but serving the society since its inception in one way or other.

3. That, in the past the Club organised several interactive programme for the social, moral well being and awakening of the people of Kalimpong. So far it has organised interactions in the name of Sajha Munch in the following subjects like Police public relationship, Role of NHPC and how far it is beneficial to the people of Kalimpong, Role of media in the local perspective, Decline in the use of Nepali literature and language, Identity of Gorkhas in the eyes of Gorkhas and Non-Gorkhas, Is Bundh the only solution of a problem? Present Examination Conduction System and National Relevance of the Demand of Gorkhaland in the Political Context.

4. That, some of these programmes were telecasted live with phone in facility for instant public participation in the programme and allied eminent personalities were invited in the panel for discussion and interaction. These programmes were positively welcomed by the public and were practically very much fruitful resulting public awareness and fruitful follow up.

5. That, from 15th March 2007 it is transmitting an informative news programme of 30 minute duration called DAINANDINI in a channel slot provided by the local cable operator Sky Scan Cable TV Network . On public request this programme is being produced and transmitted daily from the month of March 2008 and telecasted at 7pm and re telecasted at 7am, the next morning. This Cable network covers Kalimpong and adjacent 22 villages like Lava, Lolay gaon (Kafer), Algarah, Pedong, Tista, Peshok, Mungpoo etc.

6. That. this programme is produced and presented by engaging a few enthusiastic youths working as journalists. Video Cameras and other equipments are provided by well wishers just for the use and they have to be returned whenever requisitioned..

7. That, a Board constituted by the members of Kalimpong Press Club controls, maintains and supervises it.

8. That, to run this programme 5 Persons are engaged as full timer while 6 are part timers. Of the full timers there is a Chief Editor, Editor, Reporter, Videographer, News Video Editor. And the part timers include 2 videographers, one Office superintendent one assistant and two news readers. Besides these, two videographers voluntarily help the unit while other members of the club too give their helping hand in need. A few interested persons also send footages and information as news material at their own expenditures.

9. That, full timer staff and two news readers are paid a meager amount as honorarium. They get just one fourth of what they should be paid at the least. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in HB EXCLUSIVE, Have your Say? | 24 Comments »

Kalimpong Press Club setting standards for Journalists across the Hills

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

Kalimpong Press Club was established on 16th Nov 1998 for the welfare and solidarity of the Journalists of Kalimpong sub division and persons interested in Journalism. Its objective is to unite all member journalists for the betterment of media, acquire admissible rights of the media and media persons and assist the administration and other bodies working for the smooth function and development of the society and public institutions. It aims to bring all the people related to journalism in a single platform for the benefit and development of the society. Started with eight journalists now it has 42 members of which 16 are working journalists while the 26 are persons interested or having a taste in journalism  categorized under associate members.

Initially Kalimpong Press Club served just as a platform for release of new books magazines, newspapers and periodicals. Different books, periodicals published at that time were released in the meeting of KPC. It also observed birth days of eminent writers, journalists which were ignored by the society. Eminent journalists like Dr. Harka Bahadur Chhetri and Mr. Subhas Deepak were also felicitated by the Club for their achievement in the literary and journalistic fields.

Only from the year 2000 it started to function as a press body giving representations to the governmental bodies for the rights of the Journalists and succeeded to exercise the rights and provisions readily available in the local level.  As a part of introducing NGOs of Kalimpong to the Press as well as public it started to organize Press meet called Meet the Press with different NGO’s.

It gave stress to observe different important days starting from International Book & Copyrights day. On 22nd April 2002 it observed the day by educating people about copyright through a seminar in which Mr. Anmol Prasad an advocate and Rev D. K. Khaling the first Diploma holder of Hills in Journalism from Calcuttta University spoke on the topic. It also tried to inculcate the love for drama by staging dramas like Itiahas bhitrako arko itihas of Prativa Kala Niketan and Sun ko Aunthi by Himalayan theatre academy.

Kalimpong Press Club Interaction Nepali language

Kalimpong Press Club Interaction on NHPC

On 20th Nov 2004 Kalimpong Press Club initiated a new era in the history of Kalimpong by organizing Interactive programmes with live transmission of the same in the Local Cable TV network. The first programme was organized on the occasion of its 6th Foundation Day and named as Sajha Manch and the topic was Police Public relationship.  Mr.SK Gazmer, the then ASP of the WBP had to face Mr.Samsher Ali (Public representative), Mr.Gyan Bdr Chhetri (Drivers rep), Dr.Din Dayal Agarwal (rep of Business Community) in the panel with Prof. Wangchuk Basi as Mediator. The programme coordinated by Mr.AK Rai was facilitated by Phone-in facility for the viewers to ask their queries and give suggestions to the panelists during live transmission. It concluded with remarks of Mr.C.K.Shrestha as an observer of the programme. It had a remarkable impact and had a commendable after effect mending the police public relationship.

Afterwards Interactive programmes were observed from time to time, especially during the annual foundation day of Club. On 16th Nov 2005 National Press Day was observed along with the Foundation day of the Club and the topic of the interactive programme was Role of Media and Regional Journalism. Dr.H.B.Chhetri, Mr.C.K.Shrestha, Advocate Prabhakar Dewan were in the panel and Mr.Vinay Raj Tiwari Sr.Journalist and Sr.Correspondent AIR Gangtok was invited as Observer.

On 6th April 2005 another Meet the Press with Mr.Krishna Psd Humagain, Secretary, Nepal Journalist Association was organized to exchange the views and the situation faced by the Journalists of Nepal from the then Monarch. Similar  programme was organised with Mr. Raj Mithaulia, President of the Kolkata Press Club from whom we came to know about the different categories of Press membership. We implemented the same in our Club by inviting dignitaries and interested persons as Associate members.

Inspired by the compliments of the previous Interactive programme, the controversial issue of establishment of National Hydroelectricity Power Project in the Teesta valley was raised by the Club by organizing another Interactive programme. ” Establishment of NHPC how far it is beneficial to the local people “a 3rd Presentation of Sajha Manch was organized on 7th October 2006.Mr. S.Khatua, Chief Engineer of NHPC Teesta Low Dam Project III with Mr. B.K.Parajuli, Publicity Officer and other Officers had to face the panelists Mr. Tshering Dorjay Bhutia, President of Kalimpong Mainline Taxi Drivers Welfare Association with Mr. Hem P Gautam, Secretary of Bus Owners’ Assn, Mrs. Tekla Dhakal, Teacher, Mr.K.P.Gautam, Journalist to answer their queries. It had Mr. AK Rai assisted by Mr. Bhuan Khanal as the Mediators.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Flood victims go hungry

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM GULF TIMES

KATHMANDU: Over 4,500 persons displaced by Koshi flooding in Sunsari had to go hungry the whole day on Friday after aid organisations providing relief materials denied any food items to them saying they were not ‘verified’.

Not a single aid organisation came up to provide food materials for those taking shelter at Koshi Secondary School located in Laukahi, Akraha Primary School located in Jokraha and Janata Higher Secondary School in Madhuvan of flood-hit Sunsari district.

This goes against Red Cross’s pledge that aid organisations would not discriminate against anybody affected by the floods and would provide food to all of them.

Chief district officer Durga Prasad Bhandari said the natural disaster rescue committee would arrange for food for all the flood victims until they are all verified.

Meanwhile, during Friday’s session of the Legislature Parliament, lawmakers from various political parties raised serious concern over the plight of the flood victims in Sunsari district and accused both the governments of Nepal and India for gross negligence which invited the Koshi catastrophe. Read the rest of this entry »

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Human Trafficking: Daughters of Darkness

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM POLS 51 BLOG

By Shehzad Noorani

A picture is worth a thousand words, right?

“Young girls stand on the street outside Marwari Mandir brothel in Jessore. Jessore is a major city near Indian border that has recognized network for trafficking women and children out of Bangladesh into brothels in India. Indian brothels are known to have extremely high HIV prevalence rate. Once infected and sick by AIDS, girls are replaced with new ones. Infected ones are send beck to their villages or rural communities in countries like Bangladesh and Nepal, where once again prostitution is taken up, if not as a primary occupation, as part time. This pattern spreads infections in such remote communities where getting treatment, even for minor infections or disease, let alone HIV/AIDS, is considered a dream.”

“Malo (5 years-right) holds a sharp grass cutting tool in her hand. She works in fields about 2 km away with her seven year old sister Masino. She belongs to Tamang tribe, a low cast in Nepal. Her sister Masino said: “No, we don’t go to school. We have no money and mother says we must all work” Talaku village, near famous tourist resort of Chisapani in north-east of Kathmandi in Nepal. Malo’s oldest sister works in a brother a town away. She’s neer seen her sister. Her oldest sister is only 12.” Read the rest of this entry »

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RAPE FOR PROFIT – Trafficking of Nepali Girls and Women to India’s Brothels

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

Copyright Human Rights Watch
All Rights Reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 95-78059

ISBN 1-56432-155-X

From Human Rights Watch/Asia

Human Rights Watch/Asia was established in 1985 to monitor and promote the observance of internationally recognized human rights in Asia. Sidney Jones is the executive director; Mike Jendrzejczyk is the Washington director; Robin Munro is the Hong Kong director; Jeannine Guthrie is NGO Liaison; Dinah PoKempner is Counsel; Zunetta Liddell and Patricia Gossman are research associates; Mark Girouard and Shu-Ju Ada Cheng are Luce fellows; Diana Tai-Feng Cheng and Jennifer Hyman are associates; Mickey Spiegel is a research consultant. Andrew Nathan is chair of the advisory committee and Orville Schell is vice chair.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Research for this report was undertaken in Nepal by Jeannine Guthrie, research associate for Human Rights Watch/Asia and in India by a research consultant who must remain anonymous. It was written by these researchers and edited by Sidney Jones, executive director of Human Rights Watch/Asia and by Jeri Laber, senior advisor to Human Rights Watch/Asia, with additional editorial advice from Sarah Lai of the Women’s Rights Project, Andreas Stein of Human Rights Watch, and Juan Mendez, Human Rights Watch General Counsel. Jennifer Hyman, associate with Human Rights Watch/Asia prepared the manuscript for publication.

We wish to express our gratitude to the many organizations and individuals in Nepal and India who helped make this report possible, many of whom must remain anonymous. Special thanks are due the staff and members of the Informal Sector Service Centre (INSEC), Child Workers in Nepal (CWIN), INHURED International, ABC Nepal, the Creative Development Centre, and Women Acting Together for Change (WATCH), and to Meena Sharma, Shisam Mishra, and Shiva Hari Dahal for their invaluable assistance and advice during our visit to Nepal. We would also like to express our sincere thanks and admiration to S.A. Lalitha, of the Joint Women’s Programme of India; Preeti Pai Patkar of Prerana, Anju Pawar, Farida Lambay, and the staff of Indian Health Organization for their aid and guidance to our researcher in India.

I. INTRODUCTION

At least hundreds of thousands, and probably more than a million women and children are employed in Indian brothels. Many are victims of the increasingly widespread practice of trafficking in persons across international borders. In India, a large percentage of the victims are women and girls from Nepal. This report focuses on the trafficking of girls and women from Nepal to brothels in Bombay, where nongovernmental organizations say they comprise up to half of the city’s estimated 100,000 brothel workers. Twenty percent of Bombay’s brothel population is thought to be girls under the age of eighteen, and half of that population may be infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).1

Trafficking victims in India are subjected to conditions tantamount to slavery and to serious physical abuse. Held in debt bondage for years at a time, they are raped and subjected to other forms of torture, to severe beatings, exposure to AIDS, and arbitrary imprisonment. Many are young women from remote hill villages and poor border communities of Nepal who are lured from their villages by local recruiters, relatives or neighbors promising jobs or marriage, and sold for amounts as small as Nepali Rs.200 [$4.00] to brokers who deliver them to brothel owners in India for anywhere from Rs.15,000 to Rs.40,000 [$500-$1,333]. This purchase price, plus interest (reported to be ten percent of the total), becomes the “debt” that the women must work to pay off — a process that can stretch on indefinitely. Only the brothel owner knows the terms of the debt, and most women have no idea how much they owe or the terms for repayment. Brothels are tightly controlled, and the girls are under constant surveillance. Escape is virtually impossible. Owners use threats and severe beatings to keep inmates in line. In addition, women fear capture by other brothel agents and arrest by the police if

they are found on the streets; some of these police are the brothel owner’s best clients. Many of the girls and women are brought to India as virgins; many return to Nepal with the HIV virus.

Both the Indian and Nepali governments are complicit in the abuses suffered by trafficking victims. These abuses are not only violations of internationally recognized human rights but are specifically prohibited under the domestic laws of both countries. The willingness of Indian and Nepali government officials to tolerate, and, in some cases, participate in the burgeoning flesh trade exacerbates abuse. Although human rights organizations in Nepal have reported extensively on the forced trafficking of Nepali girls to Indian brothels, and sensationalist coverage of trafficking issues is a regular feature of the local press, the great majority of cases is never publicized, and even when traffickers have been identified, there have been few arrests and fewer prosecutions.

In India, police and local officials patronize brothels and protect brothel owners and traffickers. Brothel owners pay protection money and bribes to the police to prevent raids and to bail out under-age girls who are arrested. Police who frequent brothels as clients sometimes seek out under-age girls and return later to arrest them — a way of extorting bigger bribes. Girls and women who complain to the police about rape or abduction, or those who are arrested in raids or for vagrancy, are held in “protective custody” — a form of detention. Corrupt authorities reportedly allow brothel owners to buy back detainees.

In Nepal, border police are also bribed to allow traffickers to transport girls to India. In many districts, traffickers exploit political connections to avoid arrest and prosecution. On return to Nepal, the few women who escape the brothels and appeal to the police for help, or who are returned by the Indian police, are shuttled from one police station to another as they make their way back to their home districts. Some remain in police detention for weeks until their guardians come and collect them. Women who have managed to survive the system of debt bondage frequently become recruiters to fulfill their owners’ requirement that they find another girl to take their place. If women who return home have managed to earn money, they are more easily accepted back into their communities, and may eventually marry.2 Those who escape the brothels before they have paid off their debts, who return without money, or who are sick and cannot work, are shunned by their families and communities. Many will return to India. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Essays, HB EXCLUSIVE | 1 Comment »

The Rape of 100,000 Girls

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM CAPTIVE DAUGHTERS

By Helen Brown

[[Dear friends, it is a matter of great concern that girls are still being trafficked from Nepal, Darjeeling Hills and Sikkim. The Himalayan Beacon is greatly concerned about it and will be highlighting these issues prominently from now on. Regs Barun]]

Seema had left the poverty of her home village to work in Kathmandu. She was barely twelve when a smooth-talking flesh trader lured her to Bombay with talk of a better job. She hoped to become a film star. Instead she was sold into a brothel.

At first she resisted, screaming, crying and fighting off prospective customers, but the madam who ran the brothel would have none of it. She sent in a muscled toughie to hold the girl down while an old man raped her. The pain was so intense that Seema lost consciousness and had to be hospitalised for a week. After that it was back to the brothel where the other child prostitutes told her she could not win this battle.

But Seema’s spirit was not broken. Nine months later she escaped from the brothel and boarded a train, hoping to eventually get back home. A soft-spoken lady promised help. She lured the young girl to Calcutta and sold her. Seema had only escaped from one brothel into another.

Now Seema appears resigned to her fate. She hits the streets of central Calcutta as soon as it gets dark and stands near a lamp-post soliciting customers. Her parents in Nepal have no idea where their daughter is. She does not have the courage to tell them, and anyway, they probably think she is dead. It is better that way… Read the rest of this entry »

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Relatives make human trafficking complex

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

KATHMANDU, Sept. 6: The efforts to check human trafficking in Nepal, from where approximately 7-12 thousand people are reportedly being trafficked every year, have been fraught with several challenges.

The challenges have emerged because of increasing human trafficking, especially women trafficking with the involvement of close relatives of the victims.

The issue has also become complicated when women are being trafficked in the name of foreign employment and other pretexts, and underground nature of the crime.

Meanwhile, the second anti-human trafficking day was celebrated with the slogan of ‘Vision for New Nepal: Creation of a Human Trafficking Free Society’ on September 5.

People and different organisations started to celebrate the anti-human trafficking day when Nepal’s Parliament ratified the SAARC Treaty Against the Trafficking of Women and Children 2002 on Bhadra 20, 2063 BS.

Speaking at a programme in the capital, secretary at the Ministry of Women, Children and Social Welfare Punya Prasad Neupane said that the challenges multiplied in the field of checking human trafficking, as any girl or woman can be trafficked by their own father, brother and husband.

He said that the government has already formulated a law to stop human trafficking. A regulation in this regard has been forwarded to the Council of Ministers for approval, he added. Read the rest of this entry »

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Top of the class

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY

By Louisa Pearson

AS THE sun rises, the children of the Kalimpong Hill region in the Himalayas put on their uniforms, pack their bags and make their way to school. For some of them, this means a two-hour trek along narrow footpaths through mountain terrain, but it’s a journey they don’t mind making. Their schoolrooms may look humble by Western standards, but the 100 pupils at St Mary’s see education as a road from poverty  to opportunity.

In this remote setting, 7,500ft above sea level, the last person you might expect to find is a retired Scots primary school teacher. But for 65-year-old Pauline MacInnes, visits to the village of Nok Dara, in West Bengal, have become a regular occurrence. In 1999, when her daughter was working as a volunteer teacher in Nepal, MacInnes decided to fly out and lend a hand during the summer holidays. She enjoyed it so much that in 2004 she decided to officially volunteer her services through an organisation called MondoChallenge. Unfortunately, her trip coincided with political unrest in Nepal, and it looked as if she would be confined to the capital city, Kathmandu, for her three-month stay. But, keen to venture into the hills, MacInnes took up the option of going to a village called Baranumber, in West Bengal, instead. Although this region is officially part of India (a gift from the British when they left), the area borders Nepal and the people living here are Nepalese.

“I don’t like ordinary holidays,” says MacInnes. “So I work in the classrooms teaching English. They need that, because there are no examination systems or textbooks in Nepali. The children do their work in English, and they also study Hindi and the West Bengali dialect.”

While teaching at Baranumber, MacInnes met Father Felix D’Sousa, director of several schools in the nearby Gitdubling valley. He explained that remote schools receive little help, and extended an invitation for her to visit them should she decide to return. Her resulting visit to St Mary’s in 2006 cemented MacInnes’s desire to help the local children. “It’s a very isolated area, and the teachers at the school are not getting paid,” she says.

“They ask for a fee from the children, and those that can give money do, but it’s not enough. The teachers are working without pay because they are so keen for the children to get an education. It’s the only thing they can see as a way forward for the villages.”

The personal stories of the children she meets shows what a difference the schools have made to their quality of life and future prospects. She describes one girl, Anita, who was brought to school when she was seven. Anita’s father had walked out on the family, leaving the girl’s mother struggling to cope. “Anita was very ill, so her mother left her at the school and asked them to attend to her, whether she lived or died, as she could not afford to keep her,” MacInnes explains. Three years on, Anita has severe learning difficulties, but she has responded well to the care and support of the teachers and pupils, and MacInnes describes her as “happy and contented – she loves to help in the kitchen and the garden”. Read the rest of this entry »

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Leaders pledge to end human trafficking

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM SOUTH ASIAN MEDIA NET

KATHMANDU: Senior leaders of major political parties today pledged to put an end to human trafficking and sexual exploitation.

At an interaction on ‘Human Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation and New Constitution’ organised by Maiti Nepal, the leaders emphasised the need of concerted efforts to tackle human trafficking and sexual exploitation.

Maoist leader and CA member Agni Sapkota said the government would include appropriate measures in its policy and programmes to control human trafficking and sexual exploitation. UML leader and CA member Radha Gyawali said his party was committed to bringing human trafficking and sexual exploitation to an end. NC leader and CA member Suprabha Ghimire said laws should be enforced to control human trafficking.

CA members Umakanta Chaudhary, Dan Kumar Sunuwar, Pradip Gyawali and Bhagawati Chaudhary stressed the need to launch awareness programmes on human trafficking and set up vigilance offices along the border.

Anuradha Koirala, Chairperson, Maiti Nepal, said political commitment was essential to deal with human trafficking.

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Govt abolishes Haliya system

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM NEPAL NEWS

The government has declared the abolition of Haliya system (land tillers working as indentured labourers) prevalent in mid and far-western Nepal for ages.

A cabinet meeting Saturday decided to abolish Haliya system a day after reaching a five-point agreement with Haliyas who have been staging protest in Kathmandu for some time now, demanding abolition of the system along with a proper rehabilitation plan.

“The government has uprooted Haliya system from today,” Peace and Reconstruction minister Janardan Sharma announced before a group of Haliyas at Kathmandu’s Maitighar Mandala, where they have been staging sit-in.

Minister Sharma also said the government would soon come up with rehabilitation programme for freed Haliyas.

There are an estimated 100,000 Haliyas, who belong mainly to Dalit and indigenous Tharu communities, in western Nepal. Read the rest of this entry »

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Another Nepal ‘murder mystery’ to be resurrected

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM IANS

By Sudeshna Sarkar

Kathmandu, Nepal, 02:01 PM IST

A 15-year-old death that was as controversial as the massacre of the Nepal royal family in the tightly guarded palace in Kathmandu and is believed by many to have had equal effect on shaping the destiny of the nation will be resurrected as a maverick filmmaker seeks to solve the ‘conspiracy’ behind it.

Twenty-nine-year-old Nepali film director Manoj Pundit, whose earlier documentary on Nepal’s boundary disputes with India created widespread controversy, is poised for greater turmoil as he has begun shooting his account of how Madan Kumar Bhandari, one of Nepal’s most promising and influential political leaders, died in 1993.

Bhandari, one of the top leaders of Nepal’s communist movement, became general secretary of the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (UML) in 1991 and was thought to be headed for a far greater role when his promising political career was cut short just two years later.

In 1993, the 41-year-old was travelling by road from Pokhara city in central Nepal to Chitwan in the south when the car plunged off the road into a river at a village called Dasdhunga.

While both Bhandari and his travelling companion, senior party member Jeev Raj Ashrit, were killed, the driver, Amar Lama survived.

There were no other eyewitnesses.

Ten years later, Lama was abducted from Kathmandu and taken to Kirtipur town on its outskirts where he was shot dead, execution-fashion, by gunmen in full view of bystanders.

The murder revived the memory of Bhandari’s death and fuelled suspicion that he was actually killed as part of a political conspiracy which exterminated Lama too to remove the only man who knew what had actually happened.

Pundit is seeking to unravel the mystery of the Dasdhunga crash in his upcoming film, also called ‘Dasdhunga’.

‘I was 14 when Bhandari died,’ he says. ‘I remember how the crash gripped the entire nation. My father would discuss it feverishly with his friends. People suspected it was not a mere accident but something more sinister.’

Two years ago, Pundit travelled to London where he came across a man who had begun investigating the crash on his own. Read the rest of this entry »

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Mumbai blast (1993) terrorist caught in Nepal and deported

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

FROM GROUND REPORT

By Sweta Poddar

Kathmandu, Sep 6: Nepalese police have secretly deported two key suspects in 1993 serial bomb blasts in Mumbai after arresting them in the capital.

Salim Ghazi and Riyaj Khatri who were suspected to be involved in Mumbai blast that killed over 250 people were arrested in a residential area here on Thursday on the basis of a tip off, according to The Kathmandu Post.

Both of them were in Interpols Red Corner list of wanted and were also wanted in murder and terrorist activities in India. However, they have no records of committing any crime in Nepal, the daily quoted a senior police official as saying.

Salim Ghazi is known for his underworld link to Chhota Shakeel and Indian police suspected him of hiding in Pakistan. The two had been staying in Kathmandu for a long time in the guise of businessmen dealing in handicraft and operating a manpower agency, the daily quoted chief of Kathmandu police Upendra Kant Aryal as saying.

According to the police they were extradited to India yesterday. However the two were not wanted for in any crime in Nepal.

The serial blasts in Mumbai on March 12, 1993 left 257 people dead and injured more than 700 others.   The deportation will help the Mumbai Police in creating a fear psychosis in the mind of terrorist.

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त्रिपक्षीय बैठक आज

Posted by barunroy on September 7, 2008

दार्जिलिंग (निज प्रतिनिधि)। दार्जिलिंग पर्वतीय क्षेत्र की समस्याओं के बारे में कल आठ सितम्‍बर को दिल्ली में त्रिपक्षीय बैठक होगी। इससे पहले आज यहां से गये एक सर्वदलीय प्रतिनिधिमंडल के नेताओं ने एक बैठक की। बैठक में एक सूत्री गोर्खालैंड की मांग के बारे में ही बातचीत की गयी। कल होने वाली बैठक के बारे में विचार-विमर्श किया गया। बैठक में मोर्चा के महासचिव रोशन गिरी, अमर लामा, अनमोल प्रसाद, प्रदीप प्रधान, अध्यापिका उर्मिला रूम्‍बा, रामजोन गोले, मधुसूदन थापा, अशोक लामा, प्रेम निरोला आदि ने भाग लिया। उल्लेखनीय है कि श्री रोशन गिरी के नेतृत्व में एक उच्च स्तरीय प्रतिनिधिमंडल त्रिपक्षीय बैठक में भाग लेने के लिए कल ही दिल्ली गया है। कल बैठक होगी, जिसमें केन्‍द्र सरकार की ओर से गृह सचिव मधुकर गुप्ता एवं पश्चिम बंगाल सरकार की तरफ से मुख्‍य सचिव अमित किरणदेव, गृह सचिव अशोक मोहन चक्रवर्ती और दार्जिलिंग की ओर से एक सर्वदलीय प्रतिनिधिमंडल भाग लेंगे।

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