Friday, 30 August 2013

Assam Youth brings literacy to 11 villages


St. Peter’s EM. School, Oxiguri, needs water


PROJECT FOR PROVIDING WATER FACILITY TO ST. PETER’S E.M. SCHOOL, OXIGURI
Chirang District, BTAD, ASSAM.
REQUEST FOR THE PROJECT:

Request for making a well for the students of St. Peter’s EM. School, Oxiguri.

Request for Well for water facility for St. Peter’s EM. School
Oxiguri, Amteka, Chirang-Dist, BTAD

Geographical and Historical Background of the school: St. Peter’s EM school is in Amteka Oxiguri about 6 kilo metres away from the Market. It is located at the foothill of Bhutan. The school is surrounded by five villages, mainly Hatimara in the east, Dwikwrguri on the West, to the North Balagari and on the South Amlaiguri. The school was founded in the year 1994 by Rev. Fr. T. O. Jose, SDB. The purpose of building this school was to provide quality education for the village children who are far away from the E.M. schools. Up to this year, about 40 persons have succeeded to complete class X, 21 of them completed B.A . and Seven MA.

In year 2001, the school was closed down due to many challenges mainly, lack of water facility, no residential teacher, no watchman to guard the compound and no proper in charge of the school. 

We are proud to say that the people woke up and began to see the need of reopening the school to continue to render good education to these children. Keeping this in mind, the school was reopened in the year 2008 with the leadership of Rev. Fr. Jose. 

Today, we are facing the same challenge again. It is not only an inconvenience but also illegal to have no water facility for the school. It is against the right of the school children. Therefore, it is an immediate need of the school that we need to have a well close by.

At present the school has been drawing water from a close by well which is about 150 mitres away from the school. It is a private well, belonging to Mr. Bijon Muchahary. We are grateful for his generosity up to now to share the water from his well. However, it has created a lot of difficulties for the respective family and the school children as well. The 2nd well is about 250 metres away from the school which is difficult to get water.

The challenges are as follows:
  1. Time consuming to get water.
  2. It is inconvenient for the family of the well in his house when so many children go there every day.
  3. Difficult to give water supply for the toilet.
  4. Teachers are not willing to stay there since there is no proper water facility.
  5. It creates indiscipline in the school.
The details of the project:
  1. Making the well in the school property.
  2. The school is from Grade LKG to IV.
  3. At present there are 54 students and 7 teaching staff in the school.
  4. Needs to dig about 55 feet deep to get water.
  5. Rings required about 37.
  6. Due to the depth of the well, there is a need to fix rod and plaster with cement at least up to three rings. This prevents the quick damage of the well.
  7. Total Labour expenses will come up to Rs. 40,000/- (estimated)
    Material Cost will be an additional Rs. 60,000/- (estimated)
The Second Immediate Need of the school:
The second immediate need of the school is to have two new rooms. The school needs protection and maintenance. It is possible only when we keep some teachers or a watch man to guard the property.

The children of the school and the staff will always remain grateful to you and to the NGO for giving life to the school.

Fr. Mathew Das, S.J.

St. Peter’s E.M. Koila Moila.

Thursday, 29 August 2013

Pictures from Chirang in Assam and Tamenglong in Manipur.


Piglets being sold during market days

Higher Secondary School in Bengtol

Classroom




Health Centre

Bodo Business Women

Well and the market shade







Friday, 23 August 2013

Northeast pupils left in the lurch

Northeast pupils left in the lurch

Yogita Rao

Mumbai: A communication gap between central and state governments has left several Northeast students in the lurch.
    The students have been arriving in Mumbai in the hope of getting a seat in a technical college here. But they have to contend with disappointment as institutes here closed admissions on August 15 in keeping with aSupreme Court order.
    On July 1, the Ministry of Human Resources Development (MHRD) sent a letter to state governments stating that seats be reserved in technical institutes for Northeast students. The students could take admissions till August 30, stated the MHRD letter.
    State governments in the Northeast were to issue a letter to accompany the MHRD order so that students could seek admissions. But some state governments issued the letters as late as on August 12.
    Seats are reserved for Northeast students under various central government schemes as there are not many engineering/polytechnic colleges in that region.
    Anil Hebbar of the Northeast Friendship Mission said that these students live in far-off places and it takes them at least 10-15 days to get train reservations.
    “If one goes by the MHRD letter, the students still stand a chance. But if the SC order asked colleges to close admissions by Au
gust 15, how is it the students’ fault,” said Hebbar.
    While some students who were turned away by colleges have left, others are pursuing the matter with the Directorate of Technical Education (DTE) in Maharashtra. “Most of these students are from poor families and were finding it difficult to stay in Mumbai for a long period of time,” said Hebbar.
    A couple of girls from Meghalaya and Sikkim had reached the colleges allotted to them before August 15 but were denied admissions as the colleges were asked to fill up seats strictly within the sanctioned intake capacity in the BArch course.
    “It is strange that the MHRD is not aware of the SC order,” said a student.
    DTE officials claimed the SC order states that no student should be admitted under any quota in any institute after the last date (August 15), said an official. DTE director SK Mahajan was unavailable for comment.
Times View: Students shouldn’t suffer T he central and state government agencies should sort out the problem between themselves; students, who do not have any role to play in this, should not get caught in the crossfire. It’s unfortunate that students have to go through this tension and trauma for the lack of coordination between two government agencies.

Thursday, 22 August 2013

Eureka Forbes Purifies Water for Rural India


 Copyright 2011, Forbseindia.com
Inconsistencies in impurities pose a challenge but Eureka Forbes is using data and local communities to get a foothold in the rural water market
Minty-fresh it may well taste, but there’s a reason you don’t swallow your fluoride toothpaste. If consumed at more than 1.5 milligram per litre, the mineral poses serious health hazards. But in the Mahbubnagar district, just south of Hyderabad, fluoride contamination has been a persistent problem and its cause cannot be linked to an affinity for toothpaste.

You need to dig just a little deep to learn that the soil and groundwater in the region have some of the highest levels of fluoride in India. Consequently, in some villages, 92 percent of residents suffer from ailments such as stiff joints and bone deformity, symptoms of fluorosis—a condition caused by ingesting excessive fluoride from untreated groundwater.

The good news: There has been a marked improvement in the health of the villagers in recent times, courtesy a joint initiative by Eureka Forbes and World Vision. They have evolved a rural water business model that serves a dual purpose: It alleviates the problem by involving the community, and also creates brand awareness for Eureka Forbes.

Since 2007, they have set up around 70 ‘community water plants’ in Andhra Pradesh alone and the benefits to local health have been marked. In Chatanpally, for instance, a village which saw the highest adoption rate of the Reverse Osmosis (RO) purified water at 44 percent, the local health worker reported a 60-percent reduction in diarrhoeal cases and a 100-percent reduction in enteric fever—classic fluorosis symptoms.

For the enterprising local who runs the plant, it is a win-win too: Goodwill, and up to Rs 6,000 per month from the 66 containers (each with 20 litres costing Rs 3) he sells every day. Eureka Forbes has installed hundreds of large purifiers called Water Shops in villages, and trained locals—like our businessman in Chatanpally—to run the plants and sell the water.

The Technology
Using advanced monitoring systems and central diagnostic centres, Eureka can track the level of impurity in each plant in real-time at their main lab, the Aquadiagnostics Water Research Technology Centre in Bangalore—the first Water Quality Association-certified laboratory outside the US.

By purifying the water at the borewell extraction stage and attaching sensors to the filter, it can monitor the quality of water being accessed by the community.

Sixteen regional labs, which analyse the water, have the ability to calibrate the plant to change its purification methods. This gives technicians a real-time understanding of the state of each plant and the option to send engineers to remote villages to address malfunctions. Further, the labs conduct water mapping of aquifers (the nature, structure and availability of underground water tables) on an ongoing basis. This information helps Eureka Forbes deliver better products.

For instance, in industrial areas, heavy metals like iron and chromium get dissolved in water. To tackle this, Eureka Forbes’s resin technology has a manganese oxide iron exchange that removes the heavy metal.

“Water changes its constituents season to season, month to month, year to year,” says Dr AV Suresh, CEO of Forbes Professional, the company’s cleaning services and water purification arm. “The challenge is what does the customer do if the water quality changes?” Citing the example of his home in Mumbai, he explains that the UV filter is effective only when municipal water flows from the taps. But, during water shortages, tanker water is added to the mix and, as a result, the ‘total dissolved solid’ goes up and the taste gets adversely affected.

The Market
There is obviously a clear need for water purification across the country. The contaminants are different— fluoride in the south, arsenic (from iron mining) in the east, salt and nitrates in the west and pesticides/fertilisers (from agricultural activity) in the north. Even in the slums of Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi and Mumbai, 56 percent of borewell and 37 percent of tanker water exceed permissible limits of contamination, according to a Monitor report.

The requirement, thus, is esta-blished. But what about the market?

Enough players are evincing interest in the rural water business. While brands like Tata’s Swach and Hindustan Unilever’s Pureit are predominantly selling home water purification solutions, Doshion Veolia is making larger-scale solutions available. Eureka Forbes has focussed on a target that lies in-between individuals and large-scale consumers—the community.
It is too early to ascertain how the rural population will consume purified water in the long run—individually or en masse. But Eureka Forbes has committed to venture on a different path. They want communities of 5,000 to own and run their own water plants, while the company monitors them through their water labs.
What emerges is that water purification isn’t a ‘one size fits all’ game; groundwater from various parts of the country requires specific filtration equipment, settings and recalibration. Eureka Forbes is powered by a sophisticated water map created on the basis of data collected from the government, NGOs and their own sales teams’ experience in the field. The map is constantly updated with information from the labs. 
 



The Business
Though Eureka Forbes has taken baby steps with an investment of around Rs 50 lakh till date, they insist their rural plan is not about corporate social responsibility (CSR) alone. It is also a business decision.

Here’s how it works: Eureka Forbes provides the hardware, the panchayat provides the land, the state provides the water, and locals are trained by NGOs to run the plant and sell the potable water. The model may change from state to state but the basics remain the same.

Dr Rajesh Roy, head of strategic partnerships at Eureka Forbes, says, “The plants are either subsidised by the government, CSR initiatives, microfinance agencies or NGOs. We have got different business models with different partners.” In Madhya Pradesh, the government has subsidised the plant cost and Eureka Forbes recovers the operational expenditure by running the plants and selling water. In case of CSR partnerships, the company pays for the plants as well as the running cost.

As far as microfinance agencies go, Eureka Forbes has a 50:50 partnership model. In one case, a microfinance agency has subsidised the plant and is recovering the cost by selling water to the community.

The model, however, is fraught with challenges. For one, not all villagers are willing to pay for pure water when they can get regular water free from the government. In some villages, less than 20 percent of the people pay for the RO-filtered water even after the plant has been operational for two years. Additionally, disease rates have not gone down across the board because many continue to cook with the untreated water even though they drink purified water. Eureka Forbes’s own research shows that there was no significant fall in cases of diarrhoea.

Only when a large percentage of villagers use the water plants and pay the correct fee can the Water Shops become sustainable. Otherwise, external subsidies will be needed to keep the plants running.

Suresh and Roy remain optimistic. According to Eureka Forbes’s field research, rural families have an average monthly income of Rs 4,000 of which they spend Rs 200 on medicines to treat diseases caused by drinking impure water. They also spend Rs 200 on a mobile phone. They feel these families are ready to spend Rs 3 for a 20-litre container when water transported from safe areas costs as much as Rs 10. Also, Suresh believes that establishing a brand name at the community level through their Water Shops will give them a boost.

 Part of the Shapoorji Pallonji group, Eureka Forbes generates revenues of Rs 1,800 crore with water purification accounting for 75 percent of that. The rural market is still a small fraction of its 30-year-old water purification business. But it is too early to jump to conclusions. This is a relatively new problem, Suresh says, pointing out: “Until now, the main challenge has been educating people because the issue was always the availability of water rather than its treatment. You can only treat water provided it’s there.”

Chinese troops intrude 20km into Arunachal Pradesh

Now, Chinese troops intrude 20km into Arunachal Pradesh

JAK Rifles Halts PLA Patrol

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi: China has done it again. People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops intruded over 20km into the Chaglagam sector of eastern Arunachal Pradesh, pitched tents there and finally withdrew after spending three to four days in the area last week. 

    This latest incursion seemed somewhat similar to the 21-day standoff between the rival armies in the Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) sector of eastern Ladakh after PLA troops had intruded 19-km into Depsang valley in April. 

    Importantly, defence ministry and Army on Wednesday downplayed the entire incident. “There was no standoff between the troops. Both armies patrol up to their perception of where the Line of Actual Control (LAC) lies. Long-range patrols, which can be of 10-12 days duration, from both sides carry tents to spend the nights at high altitude. There is nothing unusual in all this,’’ said an officer. 

    But sources said there was “a faceoff-like situation’’ in Chaglagam’s “fish tail’’ area, which is largely unmanned due to the inhospitable terrain and takes its name from the shape the
LAC takes in the region, after the intrusion was reportedly detected by ITBP personnel on August 13. The Army rushed soldiers from the 9 JAK Rifles battalion to the area and stopped the PLA patrol from “ingressing any further’’, which included the use of “banner drills’’ to tell the Chinese soldiers that they had entered Indian territory. 

    The Army’s 2 Division deployed in the region even mounted a couple of helicopter reconnaissance sorties, with the deputy GoC (general-officercommanding) on board, but to no avail. Later, the PLA patrol left the area on its own. Both Indian and Chinese armies have been conducting “aggressive patrolling’’ along all the three sectors of the 4,057-km long LAC — western (Ladakh), middle (Uttarakhand, Himachal) and eastern (Sikkim, Arunachal)
— to strengthen their claims to disputed territories. India has recorded well over 600 “transgressions’’ by PLA troops across the LAC in the last three years. Reports of the latest incursion in Arunachal emerged a day after the IAF landed a C-130J ‘Super Hercules’ aircraft at the DBO airstrip, which is just about 7 km from the LAC in eastern Ladakh, to convey a strategic message that it can swiftly rush troops and supplies to forward areas if required. 

    India and China are now close to inking the new Border Defence Cooperation Agreement (BDCA) that outlines several confidence-building measures to defuse faceoffs and tensions between rival troops along the LAC, as was earlier reported by TOI. 

    This includes additional BPM (border personnel meeting) set-ups to add to the existing ones at Chushul, Nathu La and Bum La as well as a DGMO-level hotline between the two armies like the one India has with Pakistan. Kibuthu, which is near the Chaglagam sector in Arunachal, is one such proposed BPM point that can kick in whenever there is a face-off between rival troops. 

    China is irked with belated Indian efforts to counter its massive build-up of military infrastructure all along the LAC. Under India’s overall plan, advanced landing grounds in both Ladakh and Arunachal have been re-activated after being neglected for over 30-40 years.

In the last three years, India has recorded 600 transgressions by PLA troops

Monday, 19 August 2013

Nagaland coal, oil tap close to opening

Nagaland coal, oil tap close to opening

Nagaland coal, oil tap close to opening
Promit Mukherjee. @promit07

Mumbai: The vast reserves of oil and coal in Nagaland, which remain out of bounds for user industries, may be set to open soon.

If sources are to be believed, former petroleum secretary R S Pandey, who was appointed as the interlocutor in February 2010 to resolve a long-running dispute with the National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Isak-Muivah (NSCN-IM), has managed to iron out several differences with the ethnic party.

The NSCN-IM had been demanding the establishment of Nagalim, or Greater Nagaland, consisting of all the Naga-inhabited areas of neighbouring Assam, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh and some portions of Myanmar, which it considers to be the rightful homeland of the Nagas. But the Centre, which has come to the negotiation table with the party leaders almost 50 times, has not agreed to their demands, said the sources.

Pandey himself conceded to dna that “several differences (with the NSCN-IM) have been narrowed”, but did not disclose further detail.
Highly placed sources said, however, that the warring party has mellowed substantially and agreed to give up several demands.

“This might eventually pave the way for oil and coal exploration as both central and state governments are showing interest now,” said one of the sources.

That’s good news for state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) and Oil India, which have been struggling to increase production from the flagging basins in the country.

The reserves of oil on the onshore sedimentary basins of Nagaland have largely stayed trapped in the prolific Assam-Arakan basin since 1994 when ONGC walked out of the state due to the disputed nature of the region. While the company and its onshore peer Oil India continued exploration from the Assam side of the basin, the reserves in Nagaland have been lying idle.
According to media reports, estimates of oil reserves indicate that the Tzurangkong (under Tuli sub-division, Mokokchung) belt, falling under Wamakan-Amguri area adjoining the Geleki reserve forest, has an estimated 50-60 million metric tonne of crude oil. This belt is believed to hold the highest and yet to be proven crude oil reserve within Nagaland.

The estimated reserve at Changpang, where ONGC had been drilling oil since the Eighties and from where one million tonne of crude was extracted as against the permit for 18 kilolitres on experimental basis, has around 20-30 million metric tonne.

The assessed coal reserves in Nagaland, on the other hand, were around 315 million tonne at the end of 2011, according to a media report. This, however, could not be independently ascertained.
Published Date:  Aug 19, 2013 DNA

Saturday, 10 August 2013

First Naga UPSC Member

DIMAPUR, AUGUST 9 (MExN):
Morung Express

The President of India has appointed Dr P. Kilemsungla as a Member of the prestigious Union Public Service Commission (UPSC). 

Her appointment letter was issued by the Union Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions.

The UPSC is a constitutional body authorized to conduct examination for appointments to the services of the Union such as Civil Services, Engineering Services, Combined Defense Services etc.

It may be mentioned that after having become the first Naga woman Member of the Nagaland Public Service Commission (NPSC), Dr. P. Kilemsungla had retired as the acting Chairperson of the NPSC in January 2013.

She graduated from Lady Keane College, Shillong and did her MA in Education from Guwahati University. She then did her Ph. D (Education) from NEHU and started her career as a lecturer in Kohima Arts College and went on to teach at the Nagaland College of Teachers Education (NCTE).

She then became the Principal of the first District Institute of Educational Training (DIET) in Kohima and later served as the Principal of the Government Polytechnic and then NCTE, Kohima.

Dr. Kilemsungla is the first Naga to be appointed as a Member of the UPSC.


Triangular highway connecting India, Myanmar and Thailand.

Why should North East India be significant for the Western Region? There is a whole new regional marketing throwing open opportunities for investments, trade and commerce.
  • India and Myanmar have agreed to a 4-lane, 3200 km triangular highway connecting India, Myanmar and Thailand
  • The route, which is expected to be completed by sometime during 2016, will run from India's northeastern states into Myanmar, where over 1,600 km of roads will be built or improved. 
  • The first phase connecting Guwahati to Mandalay is set to complete by 2016. 
  • This will eventually be extended to Cambodia and Vietnam. 
  • This is aimed at creating a new economic zone ranging from Kolkata on the Bay of Bengal to Ho Chi Minh City on the South China Sea. 
  • A framework Agreement on the Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project, a Protocol on the Transit Facilitation of the Project and a Protocol on the Maintenance and Administration of the Project were signed during the visit of Senior General Maung Aye to India on 02 April 2008. 
  • The Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project envisages connectivity between Indian ports on the eastern sea coast and Sittwe Port in Myanmar and then through riverine transport and by road to Mizoram. 
  • Also see http://www.mdoner.gov.in/content/myanmar

Monday, 5 August 2013

Nahum Kahmei of Tamenglong Manipur, playing my guitar.


East West Interconnecting in Pune. With Nahum Kahmei of Tamenglong Manipur, playing my guitar.

Thursday, 1 August 2013

North East Entrepreneurs ! Any takers?

A Billion Dollars in the Kitty, But these PEs Have Nowhere to Invest

Six firms seek extension of fund tenures; some even return cash to investors

SNEHA SHAH MUMBAI

    
Half a dozen private equity funds are yet to invest half the money they raised in 2010 and 2011 due to scarcity of quality investment options in a slowing economy, and have now sought their investors’ nod to extend fund tenure. Barings Private Equity Partners, Avigo Capital, Ascent Capital, Aavishkaar, Peepul Capital and Everstone are yet to deploy $1 billion (or about . 6,000 crore) out of the $2.1 billion raised in 2010 and 2011. 

Typically, a private equity fund in India has a lifespan of seven years — first three years to invest and another four to manage the portfolio companies and exit. 

Rahul Bhasin, managing director and CEO of Barings Private Equity Partners India, says its limited partnership investors have agreed to extend their deadlines by a year. “The LPs (limited partners or passive investors) know the situation on the ground and would rather want GPs (general partners or fund managers) to wait than deploy capital in a hurry,” he says. “They (LPs) are forthcoming in extending the deadline by a year or two so that the money is invested in quality companies.” 

Some funds have even partially returned the money they raised to investors. India Value Fund, which raised $725 million, the highest until now by a local fund, returned $150 million last year, as it could not find good companies to invest. 

Though India fund managers promised a higher rate of returns exceed
ing 25% earlier, they now say the LPs have recalibrated their return expectations to 16-18%. “In a tough macro environment it is better to hold the cash and invest when clarity emerges,” S Harikrishnan, managing director at Avigo Capital, says. “The extension of investment period also validates the LPs’ confidence in the revival of the Indian growth story,” he adds. 

Fund managers have sought tenure extension as they expect an economic turnaround in two years. Until now, private equity funds have invested roughly $60 billion, but vari
ous industry estimates show that only one fourth of it has been returned through exits. Experts attribute this to the high valuation when the money was invested in the vintage years of 2005-2008 and compromises the funds made on due diligence and enforcing corporate governance. 

“A lot of money chased a lot of companies that never deserved capital. The current mess is a result of that.” Sanjay Nayar, India head of global fund KKR, says. The extension in investment period also means the managers get more time to exit the companies they have already invested in. 

Consultants say that in most cases, this is not a good time to exit because the slowing economy and a weaker currency led to mismatch in performance of companies and expectations of PE investors. “The weakness in the economy has resulted in most compa
nies underperforming expectations,” Vikram Hosangady, head, PE advisory at KPMG India, says. “This is not an opportune time to exit given the depressed earnings and…the state of the capital markets,” he adds.
According to Venture Intelligence, which tracks PE and Merger & Acquisition deals, around 15 funds raised close to $3.8 billion in FY10, while around 27 funds collectively raised $4.2 billion in FY11. Some funds, which raised money from large sovereign and pension funds, have tweaked their investment strategy and extended the fund life. “We have raised money with a fund life of around eight years as against a typical real-estate fund that has a lifespan of five years. This is because we feel that in today’s scenario we need more time to deploy capital, manage companies and then seek exits,” says S Sriniwasan, chief executive officer of Kotak Realty Fund, which raised around $200 million towards the first close of its $400-million fund. 

Deal closure in a slowing economy takes a longer time as investment council or committee that includes representatives from investors and fund managers seek more disclosures on corporate governance. “Today the investment council or panel of a fund is rejecting more proposals than ever before. Around four out of five proposals taken to the council are being rejected on account of poor governance standards in the company, high valuations and lack of clarity on growth of the company,” said the India head of a global fund on condition of anonymity.