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Saturday, August 4, 2012


Ceremonial Functions At Rashtrapati Bhawan

Ceremonial Functions
CEREMONIAL CHANGING OF THE GUARD - An Unforgettable Spectacle
'Changing of the Guard' is a military tradition whose origins are lost in antiquity. From time immemorial, guards and sentries at Forts, Palaces and Defence Establishments change periodically to enable a fresh body of soldiers take charge.
Come Saturday and the Forecourt of the grand Rashtrapati Bhavan- the official residence of the President since Independence, resounds to the hoof beats of horses and the tune of soul-lifting music. Every Saturday, it's time for the Ceremonial Changing of the Guard - a traditional ceremony in which Infantry Army Guards and the President's Bodyguard, in spectacular red, riding well - bred horses, change guard with clock-work precision, demonstrating time honoured military ethos and discipline of both animal and man. This tradition of Ceremonial Changing of Guard dates back to the raising of the President's Bodyguards with 50 handpicked Horsemen in 1773, then called 'The Guards of Moguls'.
The 40-minute Ceremony includes inspection of the New Guard, nomination of sentries, a formal march to take post and an exchange of compliments by the Guards. A formal military ritual, the Ceremony is a coming together of smartly-attired soldiers of the impressive Army Guard and statuesque President's Bodyguard Troopers, astride their caparisoned, sleekly muscled, powerful and exquisitely groomed steeds. The regal bearing and hard training of the noble mounts of the President's Bodyguard, greatly enhanced by their superb ceremonial equipage, heavily embroidered saddle cloths, ceremonial bridles and bits, lend a regal dignity and spectacle of incomparable colour and pageantry at this Ceremonial Parade. A zestful Band and the impressive arrival and dispersal of the guard, makes the Ceremony an unforgettable spectacle.
The New Guard marches from Rashtrapati Bhavan to the Dominion Columns lining the two wings of the Central Secretariat in perfect military tandem. After inspection, Officers of the guards take salute, and march past smartly. Upon entering the driveway, just inside the Iron Gate of the Rashtrapati Bhavan, the New Guard takes position alongside the Old Guard for formal salutation. After exchanging salutes, the sentries of the Old Guard hand-over the keys to the New Guard. Sentries of the New Guard on duty take post and the remainder troops march off to the tune of "Saare Jahan Se Achcha".
Source: website of The President of India

Corruption’s Reach in India Spawns New Political Party

Supporters of anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare march near the India Gate monument in New Delhi, Aug. 2, 2012.

Supporters of anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare march near the India Gate monument in New Delhi, Aug. 2, 2012.(source: New York Ttimes.):

Now, casinos to come to Punjab after Goa, Sikkim


Now, casinos to come to Punjab after Goa, Sikkim

BY Rohan Dua, TNN | Aug 3, 2012, 01.50PM IST

CHANDIGARH: Forget about canting off to Macau or Las Vegas strip to roll a dice and revel in a tantalising gambling carousal.

Get ready to spin a ball on a little wheel popularly called roulette, see it running around and cheerfully call a bet to the croupier, as you quaff colas and gorge peanuts -- all on the banks of the Satluj river in the rural hinterland of Punjab.

Punjab deputy CM Sukhbir Badal, known for his flamboyance and CEO style of functioning, has ordered the state's infrastructure development agency Punjab Infrastructure Development Board (PIDB) to set up a Las Vegas strip-like casino at Mattewara village near Ludhiana.

A three-member team comprising a PIDB official and two members from an empanelled private agency Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Limited (IL&FS) was sent on a four-day visit to Goa last week to study and explore the possibility of installing slot machines and casinos in Punjab, set to become third state in the country after Sikkim and Goa to have casinos.

According to the state visit report, a copy of which is with TOI, the team -- which returned on Thursday -- held meetings with Goa chief secretary P K Shrivastav and special secretary Mohan Lal and had a first hand experience of slot machines in casinos in Panjim.

The casinos planned in Mattewara will have around 30-50 slot machines, video pokers and card games like baccarat, blackjack, pontoon and sicbo and will be open 24 hours.

""These casinos which we are planning are a part of our recreational amusement zone project near Ludhiana. The purpose is to increase the tourist footfall in the state. Our team has just returned from Goa after studying casinos. We're going to seek more advice and help on legal, technical and operational details from Sikkim and Goa governments,"" PIDB managing director Anurag Aggarwal told TOI.

The Punjab government is likely to discuss the Public Gambling Act, 1867 in its next Assembly session.

The casinos will be built both inside hotels or stand alone on a PPP model near the river.

The initial report has suggested borrowing legal framework from Goa where an annual licence fee of Rs 5 crore is paid by the hotel housing the casinos and an entry fee between Rs 500-Rs 1,000 is charged to every visitor.
Like the existing Punjab lotteries system, the casinos are also likely to generate revenue of around Rs 100 crore annually.

However, Punjab finance minister Parminder Dhindsa debunked the analogy between lotteries and casinos, saying the latter is only for recreational purpose.

""The process is in the initial stages. Casinos will certainly be a big revenue generator. The purpose is not create forced taxation here. We only want to encourage local tourism because when you see the locals from here going to Nepal or Hong Kong, they spend huge money to enjoy these games. Times have changed.But we agree, there might be some criticism as well,"" said Dhindsa.

Out of 1,400 acres of proposed landscaped area surrounded by thick forests and water bodies, Mattewara village is already set to have a horse racing turf on a 140-acre land, golf course on a 200-acre land and an amusement park.
Three multi-national companies including -- Populace , S Powers and JAA Consultants -- have already made bids for offering consultancy services for the horse racing tracks.
US-based game park company Six Flags is likely to construct the amusement part.

JANTRA MANTRA TANTRA KENDRA AT MAKHA,SIKKIM


 


Gangtok, 3rd August 2012 (IPR): The Chief Minister of Sikkim Pawan Chamling declared to beautify Makha Bazar and construct a Jantra, Mantra, Tantra Kendra at Makha, East Sikkim today. He was speaking at the orientation programme on quality education organized by the HRD Department, Government of Sikkim under which the Chief Minister is addressing the teachers and students of the state on quality education. Stressing on the Jantra Mantra Tantra Kendra the Chief Minister said that the project will be a unique collection of the traditional beliefs, faith healing techniques of various clans and tribes of the state, medicinal herbs, gods-goddess of various religions and many more such things which have not even been thought by people around. Besides being an attraction from tourism point of view the centre will be a research centre for the people who want to study on these subjects, the Chief Minister said. Addressing about ten thousand students assembled from five constituencies the Chief Minister asked the students to be very serious in their studies and take optimum benefit from the programmes adopted by the government for them. The schemes conceived today are meant for your future and you should be able to grab up the opportunity, he said and added that only and only if you look out for the demand of the market and take up the profession, you will be able to benefit yourself from it. Stressing further on the career oriented programmes and opportunities made available by the government the Chief Minister highlighted on the various career options to the students and urged them to skill themselves to face the challenges of life. Tourism, hospitality and organic farming are such booming industries which are on huge demand in today’s world and the government has made available various opportunities for the youths, he said and urged the students to be very particular in selecting the profession. Quoting Nelson Mandela on the potentiality of a person the Chief Minister said that a human being has a potentiality of even becoming a God but for that he added to the students that it is essential to realize your potentiality and use it.
Earlier the Chief Minister was shown the town development plan of Makha Bazar  by the officials of Urban Development and Housing Department.

Madhya Pradesh: As power grids collapse, solar village shines

source:Reuters
Madhya Pradesh: As power grids collapse, solar village shines

Meerwada: Life in the remote village of Meerwada used to grind to a standstill as darkness descended. Workers downed tools, kids strained to see their schoolbooks under the faint glow of aged kerosene lamps and adults struggled to carry out the most basic of household chores.
The arrival of solar power last year has changed all that. On a humid evening, fans whirr, children sit cross-legged to study their Hindi and mother-of-seven Sunderbai is delighted people can actually see what they are eating and drinking.
"When it was dark, we used to drink water with insects in, but now we can see insects, so we filter it and then drink," said the 30-year-old, whose flame-orange sari and gold nose ring are small defiances in a life close to the poverty line.

Meerwada, on a dirt track rutted by rains and outside the reach of the national grid, struck lucky when US solar firm SunEdison picked it to test out business models and covered the hefty initial expense of installing hi-tech solar panels in the heart of the village.
But rapidly falling costs and improved access to financing for would-be customers could encourage the spread of such systems down the line, while simpler solar schemes are already making profits in areas where the grid either does not extend or provides only patchy power.
And Asia's third-largest economy, where just this week hundreds of millions were left without electricity in one of the world's worst blackouts, needs all the help it can get in easing the strain on its overburdened power infrastructure.
The country's Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) hopes solar systems that bypass the national grid will account for just under one percent of total installed capacity by 2022. Still a mere flicker, but that 4,000-megawatt (MW) goal would be way up from 80 MW now when so-called off-grid solar systems are still out of reach for most of the country's rural poor.
Sunny again
Large-scale solar facilities that directly feed the grid, such as those at an over 600 MW solar park recently launched with great fanfare in Gujarat, have been gaining traction for some time.
But potential growth in off-grid solar power offers a ray of hope to the around 40 per cent of India's 1.2 billion population that the renewable power ministry estimates lack access to energy. People like those in the village just 200 metres away from Meerwada, who rely on a hand pump for water and cook by torchlight as hungry goats creep up on them out of the gloom.
Covering initial investment on solar is key as, in a country with around 300 days of sunshine a year, subsequent costs are largely limited to maintenance and repairs.
"The high up-front capital cost is one of the adoption barriers (for solar projects)," said Krister Aanesen, associate principal at McKinsey & Company's renewable energy division.
"Although diesel is more expensive on a full-cost basis, you defer cash outlay for the fuel ... the cash outlays are different and that's one of the key challenges."
Small-scale direct current (DC) systems from Karnataka in the south to Assam in the north-east have already cleared that hurdle, supplying simple lights and mobile phone chargers at 100-200 rupees per month per light -- prices that typically allow installers to cover their initial costs in time.
Private company Mera Gao Power fits roof-top solar panels and then transmission to other houses who pay about 40 rupees to connect, with costs thereafter about 25 rupees per week, said Nikhil Jaisinghani, one of the firm's founders. That means it should currently take about 12 months to repay panel installation expenses of about $2,500 for 100 houses, though the cost is set to fall.
Going large
Initial expenses are far more onerous on more comprehensive mini-grids like the one in Meerwada, which includes a room full of batteries that can store enough electricity to provide round-the-clock supply to the village and which has recently started powering water pumps.
California-based SunEdison reckons it cost $100,000-$125,000 to build the 14 kilowatt (KW) plant in Meerwada, an expense that would have demanded fees way too high for the 400 or so villagers, whose per capita income is about $250 a year.
The firm expects initial capital costs to come down enough to make alternating current (AC) systems affordable in villages like Meerwada in a few years, with improving technology and fierce competition reducing hardware costs, while enhanced battery storage driven by the auto industry's push on electric cars is also helping.
SunEdison, which sells solar power plants and services worldwide to commercial, government and utility customers, has over 50 MW of interconnected solar electricity in India, with projects ranging from small rooftop installations to part of the Gujarat solar park.
"Three years ago, the panel price was $2.60 per watt. Today it is 75 cents a watt. I don't think it will halve in the next few years but I clearly see 50 cents a watt by 2014/15," said Ahmad Chatila, president and chief executive of MEMC Electronic (WFR.N), SunEdison's parent company.
In the meantime, the government is offering 30 per cent of the project cost and in some cases low-interest loans for solar power systems under its Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission policy launched in 2010.
But that still means systems are beyond the reach of many poor, rural customers, so some solar companies are putting up the 20 percent deposits on loans required by banks or acting as guarantors for customers who are outside the conventional banking system.
Keep on the sunny side
Back in Meerwada, which lies in Madhya Pradesh, the villagers have added an unexpected ingredient to the cost equation -- frugality. Lights even now are turned on only when darkness falls and fans target the youngest children and the elderly, saving on power use.
Only the village leader, Sampat Bai, has been able to afford a television but it's open to all and her bare-walled main room is crowded when the latest epic dramas come on screen and the children have finished their homework.
Manorbai, a 30-something mother who is now making more money by working at night to mend and sew on her vintage black-and-gold foot-pedal sewing machine, has a simple message on the future.
"Our village has power and other villages should too," she said.
Re-Designed Website of the President of India Launched; Citizens Can Now Connect Directly to the President
The re-designed website of the President of India was launched at Rashtrapati Bhavan today. While the historical perspectives from the earlier websites have been retained, the re-designed website has some new features, which include direct connectivity from the website to social networking media of the President i.e. Facebook and You-Tube. These two features have been initiated after assumption of charge by the President Pranab Mukherjee. The new website also has a Video Gallery. Citizens can connect to the President directly by clicking the button ‘Write to the President’, which will take them directly to the helpline portal. Moreover, visuals have been conceptualized and made user friendly.

Launching the website, Secretary to the President, Ms. Omita Paul expressed the hope that it would be a step forward to bring the President of India closer to the people. She also said that efforts would be made to ensure that the website is in line with the best global practices.

***


SC/SKS
(Release ID :85703)

Friday, August 3, 2012



Gallup Poll: India Worst Country in Asia for Entrepreneurs

A cashier counts money paid by a customer at an electronics shop in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, July 28, 2011.
Mahesh Kumar/Associated PressA cashier counts money paid by a customer at an electronics shop in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, July 28, 2011.

Indians’ unwillingness to risk failure has hobbled the creation of small businesses and led the nation to be ranked last in Asia in promoting entrepreneurship, according to a Gallup poll.

Government corruption, a lack of capital and credit, and poor technology and training have also impeded the creation of small businesses, Gallup found. Its survey, of 5,000 adults in India from January to March of this year, found that 16 percent of Indian adults own a business and half of those owners are solo operators.

The survey was not all bad news. It found that business thinking, optimism and persistence – all important for entrepreneurs — are common traits among Indians.  Small and medium-sized businesses contribute 8 percent of India’s gross domestic product and employ 60 million people in 26 million enterprises, according to a January 2010 government report.

Nearly half of those surveyed by Gallup said that the government is a significant stumbling block to starting a business. Seven out of 10 Indians said that corruption is widespread in government and 60 percent said that corruption is common in business. The poll’s margin of error was plus or minus 1.7 percentage points, Gallup said. A recent report by the World Bank ranked India 166th among 183 countries in terms of the ease of starting a business.

Training and mentorship are also crucial for startups, but only 37 percent of current business owners and 28 percent of those seeking to start a business said that they know someone who can offer advice about business management, the Gallup poll found.

The survey results were released just as India experienced the two worst blackouts in human history and as foreign investment in India has slowed in part because of concerns about changes in India’s tax policies.

  • The trainees of Beauty and SPA of SICB and Livelihood School of Syari are placed at Sohum Core and Wellness at Mumbai. The trainees left for Mumbai on 31st July 2012. The Sohum Core and Wellness is one of the first operators in the wellness segment, their emphasis is based on the Indian ethos of holistic healing of the mind-body and spirit. The therapy programs are designed after the go ahead given by our panel of doctors and allied experts. We do proactively introduce new therapies that have medical evidence backing their effectiveness. All that we use is carefully evaluated for its impact on the environment and hence the therapies lean towards holistic healing modalities that use natural products and ancient healing arts rather than the extensive use of machines. The trainees are accordingly trained at SICB and Syari Livelihood School to make capable to take the job in such a reputed institution. The Institution will provide minimum salary of Rs. 10000/- per month alongwith the suitable accommodation near the workplace. The SICB had earlier also placed Sikkimese trainees in the same institution.

    Similarly, seven trainees of Motor Mechanic under Gnathang Machong Constituency are also placed at Entel Motors Gangtok and Baiguney in West. The SICB is exploring the possibilities of placing more trainees in other institution including the private garages. Some of the trainees are also been encouraged to start their own venture by establishing the small garages in various locations of the State.
    source:Voice of Sikkim


GANGTOK, 30 July 2012: In a major boost to commercial banks and State Co-operative bank operating in Sikkim, the Reserve Bank of India has decided to extend subsidy to them for providing Satellite Connectivity and Off-site Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) in the State.
A press release issued by RBI informs that this facility is being extended through the “Satellite Connectivity Scheme” of RBI under which the RBI will provide financial incentives in the form of subsidy to branches of commercial banks, State Co-operative banks and off-site ATMs for providing satellite connectivity in the State.
The scheme is to be implemented subject to certain terms and conditions. The branches of commercial banks and State Co-operative bank in the State of Sikkim providing satellite connectivity to their branches and those opening off-site ATMs with separate connectivity on or after 01 April, 2012 and not later than 31 March, 2013 would be eligible for 100% subsidy subject to a maximum of Rs. 12,000 (Rupees Twelve thousand only) per month per branch/ ATM or the actual expenditure incurred by the bank whichever is less, subject to the condition that the branches would offer services of electronic funds transfer free of charge to its customers. The subsidy will stand closed for fresh claims with effect from 01 April, 2013.
Each connection will be eligible for subsidy for a period of 36 months. Therefore, if a branch/off-site ATM obtains connectivity on 31 March, 2013 it would be eligible to receive subsidy up to 31 March, 2016.
Bank branches adopting technology solutions irrespective of the technology deployed for connectivity shall be eligible for the incentive under the Scheme.
The subsidy covers the cost of VSAT, bandwidth charges, AMC, alternate sources of power and routers required for implementing the security layer.
The subsidy also covers both the operational expenditure (OPEX) and capital expenditure (CAPEX) models for deployment of satellite connectivity. For the OPEX model, the subsidy would be linked to the actual monthly lease rentals paid by the bank but for the CAPEX model the actual cost of the equipments deployed by the bank (including installation and commissioning) and recurring charges incurred such as equipment, AMC, bandwidth charges etc. would be eligible. The CAPEX model would take the total cost of ownership over a period of 36 months and arrive at the monthly cost for the purpose of claiming reimbursement from Reserve Bank. The subsidy would, however, be subject to a maximum of Rs.12,000 (Rupees Twelve thousand only) per branch.
Gangtok Office of the RBI will be the Nodal Office for monitoring the Scheme here.
The banks have to lodge consolidated annual claims in respect of their branches after the end of the financial year and will be settled by Gangtok Office after scrutiny on an annual basis. The banks will be penalised if false claim(s) are submitted by them.
It is expected that all the 26 commercial banks operating in the State will take full advantage of this Scheme and extend banking connectivity to the remotest areas and villages in the State.
Source:SikkimNow


GANGTOK, 30 July 2012: Sikkim traders are all set to resume trade with Tibetan Autonomous Region over the Nathula again this week whether it be via Rongli or through the JN Road, which it is informed, is open for light vehicles. However, this time the traders’ association has set up a committee to monitor the prices and seek to sort out the differences and disputes regarding different pricing of goods by traders engaged in border trade.
For the purpose of monitoring prices the traders’ association has come out with a rate chart of different goods and this chart is to be adhered to strictly by traders engaging in border trade. Anyone found selling goods at cheaper prices is to be ‘fined’.
However this remains a very controversial issue as there is no official mechanism or authority to fix selling rates of items to be sold at the border trade marts. So it is an open question as to with what authority this committee can monitor the rates fixed by the traders’ association and also as to how many of the active traders are willing to adhere to this.
This was decided upon by the association after the contingent of Indian traders returned from the trade mart on the Chinese side with the news that the Chinese authority were unwilling to cooperate – whether it be on the matter of fixing prices or on the matter of allowing more quantities of goods through and stop the confiscation of excess Indian goods.
Following the adamant attitude of the Chinese customs officials as well as the Chinese Trade Officer the traders’ association, sources inform, has also advised the Indian traders to refrain from exporting unlisted goods. The traders’ association has also called for all traders to cooperate and engage unitedly in trade with the Chinese for healthy association and business as well.
Cooperation from all traders would see some profits for the Indian traders who have been managing to keep the trade alive in spite of incurring huge transport costs resulting from the closure of JN Road and resorting to the Rongli route to Nathula.
As for the rates fixed by the Association, among the main items of trade, Sugar has been fixed at Rs. 2,400 per bag of 50 kg and Rs. 1,100 for 20 kgs; Vegetable oil has been fixed at Rs. 1,200 per jar; Rice at Rs. 1,350 for 25 kgs; the much in demand Aarti Rice has been fixed at Rs. 1,550 per 25 kgs and Parle G biscuits at Rs. 450 per carton.
Besides, the Traders’ Association has also decided to donate money for the reconstruction of the Shiva Mandir which has been dismantled /damaged due to the road widening works at JN Road. All members of the Association have been asked to contribute a like amount for the reconstruction of the mandir.
Source:SikkimNOW




TRADERS’ MEETING INCONCLUSIVE OVER PRICE WAR
GANGTOK, 22 July: There is a raging price war among Sikkim traders engaged in the Nathula Border Trade which is bringing down the price of goods being sold across to traders from Tibet. Involved in this price war are the Sikkim traders who, it seems, are a divided lot. A tussle has begun between old traders [who have been trading over the past seasons] and the new lot who have received trade passes this season.
This resulted in a meeting being called by the Traders’ Association in Gangtok on 20 July to come to some sort of understanding. Despite such hindrances this is the first season in 6 years which saw imports of Chinese goods into Sikkim and serves as an encouragement to traders of both sides.
With a view to carve a niche for themselves the new traders have reportedly been selling goods across the border at prices lower than the rates established by the traders thus far. This has led to the lowering of prices of main items of trade thus affecting the margin of profit and forcing the older traders also to bring down their ‘higher’ pricing.
Thus the price of a sack of sugar – about 50 kg – has come down from the “normal” [for Nathula thus far] of Rs. 2,600 to Rs. 2,200 and it is informed that new traders are also willing to sell it for Rs. 2,000. The actual price [in Sikkim] of 50 kg of sugar is just Rs. 1,700. Similarly, the other major item of trade, rice, a 50 kg sack of which was initially being sold across the border at Rs. 2,000 has seen a “fall” in rates as well. Sources inform that the new set of traders are even willing to sell it at below Rs. 1,500 with some even willing to sell it at its actual price of Rs. 1,110.
Not to be left out, the Chinese traders have also added their own dimension to this jamboree over prices. Seeing the price war among the traders here, it is informed that they are now declining from buying in bulk and refraining from buying some items altogether with the motive of inducing a further fall in prices.
The traders’ association meeting of 20 July among traders proved inconclusive as new traders could not be convinced to increase their rates. There was talk of refraining from engaging in trade for a week in order to get prices up again but this also was not finally decided upon. In fact the old traders were at a loss to understand how items could be sold at such low rates. Adding another twist some items are being returned by the Chinese traders as these are not accompanied by their dates of manufacture and expiry.
While the dilemma of the old traders continues, what comes as tremendous news for the government is the fact that for the first time in 5 seasons of trade the border trade has recorded imports. The month of June 2012 witnessed the first official imports since 2007 when Chinese traders stopped bringing in listed items as they had no market. This season, with a shallow increase in the items of trade, import figures have been recorded just over Rs. 1.8 lakh for the month of June. On the other hand, exports were a whopping Rs. 1.91 crore.
The main items of import are blankets, quilts, carpets and china clay the largest item of import for June being blankets which saw 200 pieces worth over Rs. 1,00,000 being imported. Source:SikkimNow

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Rains bring greenary in Rajasthan

Bhutan Bets Organic Agriculture Is The Road to Happiness


 

A Bhutanese farmer puts her harvest of chilies on the roof of a shed to dry and protect it from wild boars, deer, and monkeys in 2006.
EnlargeJames L. Stanfield/National Geographic/Getty Images
A Bhutanese farmer puts her harvest of chilies on the roof of a shed to dry and protect it from wild boars, deer, and monkeys in 2006.
The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan drew international attention a few years back for saying gross national happinessshould trump gross domestic product when measuring a nation's progress. If you're going to prioritize happiness, the Bhutanese thinking goes, you'd better include the environment and spiritual and mental well-being in your calculations. (Not everyone in Bhutan is happy, and many leave as refugees, as Human Rights Watch and others have noted.)
But Bhutan, which has only 700,000 people — most of whom are farmers — has another shot at international fame if it can make good on a recent pledge to become the first country in the world to convert to a 100 percent organic agricultural system.
Last month at the Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development, Prime Minister Jigmi Thinley said his government is developing a National Organic Policy because the country's farmers are increasingly convinced that "by working in harmony with nature, they can help sustain the flow of nature's bounties."

Going all-out organic is a lofty goal for any country given that many farmers — and poor farmers in particular — covet chemical fertilizers and pesticides to enrich their soil, boost production and keep diseases and pests at bay.
But Andre Leu, an Australian adviser to the Bhutanese government and the president of the International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements, says it's very doable.
"I don't think it's going to be that difficult given that the majority of the agricultural land is already organic by default," Leu tells The Salt.
Indeed, the synthetic chemicals and fertilizers that are used so widely in countries like the U.S. are only available and affordable to a few of Bhutan's farmers who are widely dispersed across the rugged and mountainous terrain sandwiched between India and China. But very few of the organic-by-default farmers have been certified as such by third-party institutions. (Certified organic food, by the way, makes up less than 1 percent of the world's calories, and is mostly available to wealthy consumers.)
According to the World Food Program, Bhutanese farmers mainly grow rice and corn, as well as some fruits and vegetables, including potatoes and oranges. But as demand for food has grown in recent years, the country has been forced to import rice and other foods from India, and today Bhutan is a net food importer.
One of the few products Bhutan exports to the U.S. is red rice;Lotus Foods sells it to chains like Whole Foods. Bhutanese red rice is more nutritious and tastes nuttier than white rice, its boosters say, and is well-suited to pilaf, as Monica Bhide reportedfor NPR's Kitchen Window earlier this year. The rice does not have organic certification, but Lotus Foods says it been grown without the use of pesticides or other chemical inputs for centuries.
The Ministry of Agriculture says the organic program, launched in 2007, is not just about protecting the environment. It will also train farmers in new methods that will help them grow more food and move the country closer to self-sufficiency. The ministry is now training extension workers in organic methods and giving farmers who go organic priority for government assistance.
Not everyone is so sure that a 100 percent organic Bhutan is a great idea. Leu says he's found some resistance among researchers at the Ministry of Agriculture who've been trained in conventional farming techniques abroad.
And an article last year in the Bhutan Observer notes that many farmers who grow export crops like apple, Mandarin orange, and potato already rely heavily on chemical fertilizers and could be reluctant to give them up.
Still, Leu is optimistic that Bhutan's burgeoning organic agriculture research centers will eventually be able to come up with organic methods to boost yields and manage the problems of these crops.
"All these problems are solvable, they just need a few more years of research to come up with some more effective solutions," Leu says.

China test fires “new” missile on Tibetan plateau

China test fires “new” missile on Tibetan plateau
Phayul[Wednesday, August 01, 2012 19:03]
A Chinese medium-range air defense missile is fired by a mobile launcher.
A Chinese medium-range air defense missile is fired by a mobile launcher.
DHARAMSHALA, August 1: China successfully test fired three new surface-to-air missiles on the Tibetan plateau sometime last month, prompting further questions on its assertions of a “peaceful rise.”

The exercise, as reported by the People’s Liberation Army’s Daily Online on July 20, was targeted at enemy aircrafts from the “south-east” direction - an obvious reference to India.

The exercise was conducted by the Lanzhou Military Area Command at a mountain pass at an altitude of 5000 metres. Observers believe that the new surface-to-air missile tested has been tailor-made for operations in the high altitude terrain and rarefied atmosphere of Tibet.

The Indian defence think-tank, Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, noted that the exercise, apart from testing new equipment in the Tibetan environment, has reportedly helped the unit to gather more than a hundred technical data relating to topics like storage and maintenance of equipment, system coordination and troop mobility in the Tibetan plateau.

IDSA said that a similar test was conducted of two missiles in Horqin grasslands, Tongliao, Inner Mongolia by PLA in September last.

The think tank said China’s latest missile test “reveals the security dilemma existing between these two neighbours” and noted that it could lead to the “further intensification of the perception of an armed conflict and the militarisation of the Himalayan region.”

“Development and deployment of the new missile in Tibet would definitely figure in the acquisition and deployment of matching defence hardware on the Indian said,” IDSA said.

Last week, a senior Indian army officer, posted at North West Frontier joined a growing chorus of Indian military experts, including former Army chief General V.K. Singh and the Naresh Chandra Task Force on national security in calling China an enemy nation.

Indo-Tibetan Border Police DIG, Nagender Singh called China an enemy that could not be trusted and said that in the event of a conflict, China should be given a befitting reply.

"Chinese have shrewd intentions. The country is not reliable. They have always remained our enemy and we can never believe what they say," Singh said.

He added that Indian forces will try to reclaim lost territory that China continues to occupy since the 1962 border war.

The Naresh Chandra task force, appointed to review and suggest new steps to reform the security establishment recommended that India should be prepared militarily to deal with an “assertive” China.

"There is concern about China's policy of "containment" of India, marked by growing Chinese interest in countries of South Asia. China will continue to utilize Pakistan as part of its grand strategy for containing India in a ‘South Asian box,’” the panel says.

Kashmiri researcher discovers two ‘rare insect species’ in Sikkim and Jammu


Kashmiri researcher discovers two ‘rare insect species’

SPOTLIGHT

IMRAN MUZAFFAR


Srinagar, Aug 1: In a significant contribution to the field of entomology (the study of insects), a research scholar from Kashmir has discovered two new rare species of an insect ‘Trichoptera’ (Caddisflies) in the Himalayan regions of Baderwah (Jammu) and Lachung (Sikkim).
 The two new species – ‘Eubasilissa sikkimensis’ and ‘Eubasilissa schmidi’ – have been discovered by Dr Sajad Hussain Parey during his doctorate course, which he finished recently, at  the Department of Zoology and Environmental Sciences, Punjabi University, Patiala.
 Dr Sajad hails from Hajin town of north Kashmir’s Bandipora district.
 According to an international journal on animal taxonomy ‘Zootaxa’, New Zealand, Dr Sajad is one of the few entomologists from India to have surveyed the entire Indian Himalayan belt (J&K, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram, Manipur and Tripura) during his doctoral research. The research paper on the discovery of the two new species has also been published in the same journal ‘Zootaxa 3403: 61–68   (2012)’ this year.
 The research states that with the addition of two new species, the genus Eubasilissa is represented by 9 valid species from India. “Two new species of the genus Eubasilissa Martynov are described and illustrated from the Indian Himalaya, namely Eubasilissa sikkimensis sp. nov. from Lachung (Sikkim) that appears close to Eubasilissa maclachlani (White, 1862) and Eubasilissa schmidi sp. nov. from Baderwah (Jammu & Kashmir) that resembles Eubasilissa avalokhita Schmid, 1962. Before the discovery of the two species the genus Eubasilissa was represented by 7 species,” it says.
 Talking to Greater Kashmir over phone, Dr Sajad said the genus Eubasilissa were the largest caddisflies known from India. “Earlier only 7 species of this genus were reported from India and only 17 species over the world. With the discovery of these two rare species, the genus Eubasilissa is represented by 9 from India and 19 from the World,” he said.
 Commenting on the scope of research in entomology in the State, he said Jammu & Kashmir was still unexplored as far as the existence and importance of the insects was concerned. “Many new and wonderful discoveries could be made if extensive and intensive surveys and researches are undertaken,” he said.
 Sajad said such rare insects were among the most significant biomonitoring agents for determining the quality of water and to access the health status of an aquatic ecosystem. “This is a biological technique voraciously used by European scientists for predicting water pollution. Such techniques if driven in India would solve many problem of water pollution,” the scholar said.
 Sajad said genus Eubasilissa was confined to the states of Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, West Bengal, Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland.
 He said he was working on some more projects in the Himalayan region. “Given the richness of the Himalayan stretch, I am fascinated by its vastness. The only thing is that as scholars we need to do research and travel,” Sajad said, adding “J&K Government has much to find in the Himalayan region provided extensive and intensive researches are carried out.”
 Sajad has recently joined as senior research fellow at Pollinators, Pollinizers and Pollination Management Research Centre of Sher-i-Kashmir University of Agriculture Sciences and Technology (SKUAST), Srinagar.
Source; Greater kashmir

Sikkim: In the upper reaches of Sikkim, there can’t be too many government servants who can actually keep up with and even outrun the sturdy Lepchas, also known as the Rong. Indian Forest Service (IFS) officer Sandeep Tambe is one such rarity. But his recent contribution to the region has been much more vital in nature.

Preserving nature: Sandeep Tambe (centre) addressing villagers in Sikkim.
Preserving nature: Sandeep Tambe (centre) addressing villagers in Sikkim.


Four years ago, Tambe met a delegation of Lepcha elders who were troubled as the usually bountiful Himalayan mountain springs—locally known as Mohaan, Kuaan and Dhara—were fast drying up because of the usual reasons: increasing population, burgeoning livestock, soil erosion, erratic rainfall, deforestation, forest fires, road construction.
The solution that Tambe hit upon was spring-shed development, which is based on the principles of rainwater harvesting.
“The scientific principle of spring-shed development is to conserve every drop of rainwater where it falls, the ‘running’ water needs to be trained to ‘walk’, and the ‘walking’ water needs to be trained to ‘rest’ for a while,” explained Tambe.
The novelty lies in sustainably developing the spring-shed to increase the percolation of rainwater and thus recharging the ground water. The concept of water harvesting was a completely alien one to the people of the region as scarcity was new to them.
Today, the mountain springs once again gurgle with water—testimony to the success of an initiative that has won the Ground Water Augmentation Award from the ministry of water resources. Tambe credits teamwork for the success of the water conservation effort.

Locals work on a groundwater recharge scheme in west Sikkim
Locals work on a groundwater recharge scheme in west Sikkim

Tambe, 41, had an unorthodox route to the IFS. He holds a mechanical engineering degree from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, and worked for software services firm Infosys Ltd in the US. After spending three years in the corporate world, he came back to India, heeding the call of the wild.
“Happiness lies in the forests and the secrets that it shares with me,” he said. “If I can do anything to protect natural history, that would be my ultimate satisfaction in life.”
After a PhD from the Wildlife Institute of India, he joined the IFS. Hailing from Mandla district in Madhya Pradesh— home to the Kanha National Park and Tiger Reserve, which inspired Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book—the young Tambe always thought of himself as Mowgli. Some of that spirit is still in him—as evident by him being able to hold his own on the steep mountain slopes of Sikkim.
To help reverse the scarcity, Tanbe sought the expertise of WWF-India, the People’s Science Institute (PSI) in Dehradun and the State Institute of Rural Development in Jorethang, Sikkim, to start the spring-shed conservation programme, better known as Dhara Vikas, to rejuvenate the dying springs.
The once well-forested spaces that used to act as water catchment areas had been reduced to a few trees, limiting the percolation of rainwater and creating the hydrological imbalance.
It was estimated that less than 15% of the rainwater was percolating down to recharge the underground springs, while the rest was flowing down as run-off, often causing floods. Global warming and erratic weather patterns had also hurt the spring water resources of Sikkim. The situation was worsened by rain falling in short bursts and extreme weather events becoming more frequent.


The main challenges Tambe and his team faced initially were identifying recharge areas accurately, developing local capacity, encouraging rainwater harvesting in farmers’ fields, and sourcing public financing.
“Water supply programmes have traditionally received priority in public financing, but with the drying up of spring water sources, water supply schemes have taken a beating,” said Tambe.
It was found that the farming practice most amenable to spring recharge was paddy cultivation and in locations where farmers had discontinued agriculture, water sources located downstream had started drying up.
Civil structures such as check dams were unstable and not sustainable on such steep terrain, given the weak geology prone to frequent cloud bursts and heavy rainfall. The non-governmental organizations involved put together a number of engineering measures to harvest rainwater such as conserving soil and moisture with contour trenches and pits, gully plugs and bunds on terraces.
The desilting of dried-up ponds and lakes was among the many interventions that were central to the success of Dhara Vikas.
Further greening measures included brushwood check dams, the planting of shallow-rooted grass that doesn’t need much water, shrubs, hedgerows and trees.
Restrictions were imposed on livestock grazing, fuel-wood gathering and fodder cutting. The recharge area was fenced off.
Work is now under way to revive five springs in the south, east and west districts. Information on nearly 200 springs has been collected and a “web atlas” application that shows village springs being developed to make the information accessible to all users. Weather stations are being set up to record atmospheric changes. The next step is to artificially recharge the Nagi Lake in Namthang by harvesting spring water.
“The existing national rural drinking water programmes need to explore spring-shed development as a means to ensure sustainability of the spring water sources, especially in the mountains,” said Tambe. “A positive step in this direction is a nationwide aquifer-mapping exercise that is being planned along with mountain spring conservation for effective groundwater management.”
ananda.b@livemint.com

Wednesday, August 1, 2012


Ensure nationality of displaced before resettling them: Groups

Ensure nationality of displaced before resettling them: Groups


Source:PTI
Kokrajhar, Aug 1 (PTI) As many as 13 Bodo organisations today appealed to the government to undertake proper scrutiny of relief camp inmates and verify their nationality before allowing them to return to their homes. The appeal was made during a meeting here under the chairmanship of Bodo Sahitya Sabha (BSS) President Kameswar Brahma. The organisation comprising BSS, All Bodo Students Union, Tribal Sangha and All Bodo Women Welfare Federation ABWWF among others also urged the government to ensure a proper upgradation of the National Register of Citizens. They also demanded that the Indo-Bangladesh border be sealed before any rehabilitation of the relief camp inmates was undertaken. Blaming illegal immigrants for the violence, they said relations between the Bodos and indegenous minorities were cordial. Meanwhile, BJP national spokesperson and Rajya Sabha MP Tarun Vijay today visited Kokrajhar and termed the violence as a "demographic war on India". He appealed to both the central and state governments not to indulge in vote bank politics. Vijay also said that fake refugees were entering relief camps in Dhubri districts of Assam.


Did ‘Solar Storms’ Cause India’s Massive Blackout?

An image of the mid-level solar flare, visible on the lower left hand side, captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory on July 28, 2012.
Courtesy of NASA.An image of the mid-level solar flare, visible on the lower left hand side, captured by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory on July 28, 2012.


KASHMIR: Dras in Kashmir, which is famous for being the second coldest inhabited place on earth after Siberi, has got its first automated teller machine last week.

The ATM was installed by Jammu & Kashmir Bank as part of its expansion plans in remote areas of the state.Speaking on the occasion Tafazal Hussain, Bank's Executive President said that the bank would open more branches and ATMs in the Ladakh zone in the coming months. Dras had come into the limelight during the Kargil war when the town witnessed heavy shelling. Incidentally, India's highest ATM was installed by Axis Bank at Nathu La in Sikkim at a height of 13,200 feet. The world's most remote ATM is in the Antartic and is maintained by US bank Wells Fargo. J&K Bank has a network of over 530 ATMs and the bank aims to increase the number to 750 by the end of the current financial year. At the same time the bank plas to expand its branch network in Srinagar and far flung areas of the state.

Campus Talk: Cooking Gas From Food Waste
Chinmaya Vidyalaya schools in the city have been installed with bio-gas plants to treat the organic waste generated, including the Chinmaya Vidyalaya at Vazhuthacaud | By Mukesh Venu
On Jul 30, 2012
Waste disposal at schools could be a daunting task; especially when the number of students numbers a thousand. The issue of waste treatment remains caught up in the political jinx, and every home, hospital, hotel and institution is left to itself in sorting out effective and efficient treatment methods to get rid of the organic waste that is generated on a daily basis.

The Chinmaya Mission has been an active participant in spreading education through out the transitionary periods that the state has gone through ever since its formation.
Keeping up this legacy, the school management has come forward with an environment friendly way to treat food waste that's generated in the five schools functioning under the Chinmaya Mission in the city. Every school has been equipped with a bio-gas plant to convert the food waste generated into usable biogas.

“There are close to a thousand students studying in this school,” says Ashalatha, Principal, Chinmaya Vidyalaya, Vazhuthacaud. “The bio-gas plant had to be installed as we did not possess a proper method to do something about the gathering food waste.”

With options for waste disposal running short in the city, the bio-gas plant was more a necessity than an alternative for the school. The financial aid for installing the bio-gas plant at these schools came from the Chinmaya Trust, and was installed with the help of students, teachers and the PTA of the schools.

 

The food waste is dumped into the plant containing the cultivated bacteria population, which converts the waste into fuel gas and left over composite. The bacterial population in the plant is fast growing and the small plant is enough to treat the waste generated from the whole school every day.




“We use the gas generated from the plant for making tea for the teachers in the mornings and afternoons, and to boil the water for the LP section kids. The composite makes for excellent fertilizer which has already started showing its effects in the school garden.”

The environment friendly way of treating left over food at Chinmaya Vidyalaya School, Vazhuthacaud, gives adequate proof to two things – the efficiency of the plant in treating the waste with no harmful residue, and the necessity of having a bio-gas plant in schools to take care of food waste.

With the waste issue showing no sign of being resolved in the near future, it is high time that schools in the city started resorting to environment friendly methods of treating organic waste to not only provide for clean surroundings, but also to bring profit by saving on gas cylinders. 

Tuesday, July 31, 2012


Chevron to Expand Bangladesh Natural Gas Project


Production capacity at Bibiyana to increase by 300 million cubic feet per day

July 30, 2012 05:03 AM Eastern Daylight Time

SAN RAMON, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) today announced that its subsidiary will proceed with the expansion of its Bibiyana natural gas field in north-west Bangladesh.

“As the largest holder of natural gas resources in Asia-Pacific among our peers, this investment in Bangladesh further strengthens our regional portfolio of major gas projects and enhances our position as a leading supplier in the Asia Pacific region.”

The new project will include expansion of the gas plant to process increased natural gas volumes from the Bibiyana Field, additional development wells, and an enhanced gas liquids recovery unit. The project is estimated to cost approximately $500 million and is expected to boost Chevron’s total natural gas production capacity in Bangladesh by more than 300 million cubic feet per day to 1.4 billion cubic feet per day, and 4,000 barrels per day of natural gas liquids. First production is expected in 2014.

George Kirkland, vice chairman, Chevron Corporation, said, “As the largest holder of natural gas resources in Asia-Pacific among our peers, this investment in Bangladesh further strengthens our regional portfolio of major gas projects and enhances our position as a leading supplier in the Asia Pacific region.”

Melody Meyer, president, Chevron Asia Pacific Exploration and Production, said, “Bibiyana is the largest producing gas field in Bangladesh and a leading example of how technology, investment, and expertise can assist countries to utilize domestic resources to secure reliable, cleaner-burning, and affordable sources of energy.”

Chevron is one of the world’s leading integrated energy companies, with subsidiaries that conduct business worldwide. The company is involved in virtually every facet of the energy industry. Chevron explores for, produces and transports crude oil and natural gas; refines, markets and distributes transportation fuels and lubricants; manufactures and sells petrochemical products; generates power and produces geothermal energy; provides energy efficiency solutions; and develops the energy resources of the future, including biofuels. Chevron is based in San Ramon, California.

Special Report: In Himalayan arms race, China one-ups India


July 29, 2012|Frank Jack Daniel | Reuters


TAWANG, India (Reuters) - It has all the appearance of an arms race on the roof of the world.

Asia's two great powers are facing off here in the eastern Himalayan mountains. China has vastly improved roads and is building or extending airports on its side of the border in Tibet. It has placed nuclear-capable intermediate missiles in the area and deployed around 300,000 troops across the Tibetan plateau, according to a 2010 Pentagon report.

India is in the midst of a 10-year plan to scale up its side. In the state of Arunachal Pradesh, new infantry patrols started on the frontier in May, as part of a surge to add some 60,000 men to the 120,000 already in the region. It has stationed two Sukhoi 30 fighter squadrons and will deploy the Brahmos cruise missile.
"If they can increase their military strength there, then we can increase our military strength in our own land," Defence Minister A.K. Anthony told parliament recently.

Reuters journalists on a rare journey through the state discovered, however, that India is lagging well behind China in building infrastructure in the area.

The main military supply route through sparsely populated Arunachal is largely dirt track. Along the roadside, work gangs of local women chip boulders into gravel with hammers to repair the road, many with babies strapped to their backs. Together with a few creaky bulldozers, this is the extent of the army's effort to carve a modern highway from the liquid hillside, one that would carry troops and weaponry to the disputed ceasefire line in any conflict with China.

India and China fought a brief frontier war here in 1962, and Chinese maps still show all of Arunachal Pradesh within China's borders. The continuing standoff will test whether these two Asian titans - each with more than a billion people, blossoming trade ties and ambitions as global powers - can rise peacefully together. With the United States courting India in its "pivot" to Asia, the stakes are all the higher.

FIGHT AN INSURGENCY

"With the kind of developments that are taking place in the Tibet Autonomous Region, and infrastructure that is going up, it gives a certain capability to China," India's army chief, Gen. V.K. Singh, told Reuters the day before he left office on May 31. "And you say at some point, if the issue does not get settled, there could be some problem."

Indian analysts and policymakers went further in their "Non-Alignment 2.0" report released this year. It argues India cannot "entirely dismiss the possibility of a major military offensive in Arunachal Pradesh," and suggests New Delhi should prepare to fight an insurgency war if attacked.

"We feel very clearly that we need to develop the border infrastructure, engage with our border communities, do that entire development and leave our options open on how to respond to any border incursion, in case tensions ratchet up," Rajiv Kumar, one of the report's authors, said in an interview.
Indian media frequently run warnings of alleged Chinese plots, and both militaries drill near the border. In March, while China's foreign minister was visiting Delhi, the Indian air force and army held an exercise dubbed "Destruction" in Arunachal's mountains. Three weeks later, China said its J-10 fighters dropped laser-guided bombs on the Tibetan plateau in high-altitude ground-attack training.

NUCLEAR WEAPONS

Some policymakers play down the Arunachal face-off. Nuclear weapons on both sides would deter all-out war, and the forbidding terrain makes even conventional warfare difficult. A defense hotline and frequent meetings between top Chinese and Indian officials, including regular gatherings at the border, help ease the pressure. Bilateral trade, which soared to $74 billion in 2011 from a few billion dollars a decade ago, is also knitting ties.

From China's perspective, the border dispute with India doesn't rank with Beijing's other border or military concerns, such as Taiwan. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin struck an optimistic tone.
"China and India are in consensus on the border issue, will work together to protect peace and calm in the border region, and also believe that by jointly working toward the same goal, negotiations on the border will yield results," Liu said.

Hu Shisheng, a Sino-India expert at the government-backed China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, said the border dispute casts an oversized shadow in the Indian media - where the China threat is perceived to be strong. But any voices within the Chinese military that advocate seizing the region are weak, he said.

"China's military could take the territory by force, but maintaining the gains in the long term would be exceptionally difficult," Hu said, noting the tough terrain.
In 2008, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh made his first trip to Arunachal and promised $4 billion to build a 1,700-kilometer (1,055-mile) highway joining the valleys of the state as well as a train line connecting to New Delhi. These would also make troop movements easier.

Around the same time, former army chief Gen. J.J. Singh was appointed governor of the state and is ramping up infrastructure, power and telecom projects.


Never before in the history of this region has such a massive development program been conducted here," he said, sipping tea at his residence.

Singh, who spent much of his army career in Arunachal, said India and China both realize "there is enough place and space for both of us to develop. A very mature and pragmatic approach is being taken by both."
But despite 15 rounds of high-level talks, the border issue looks as knotty as ever. Indian media often whip up anger at Chinese border incursions, played down by both governments as a natural result of differing perceptions of where the border lies. India's defense minister told parliament 500 incursions have been reported in the last two years.

Unable to match China's transport network, India's focus is now on maintaining more troops close to the border.

"India struggles to build up infrastructure," said Ashley Tellis of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who has written extensively on the India-China relationship. "They have been trying to do this for the past six or seven years now, and it is progressing far more slowly than they would like. What they have done in the interim is build up the troop strength."

COURTING THE LAMAS

One of main irritants in India-China relations, and a key part of China's claim to Arunachal, is Tibetan Buddhism. Beijing claims a centuries-old sovereignty over Arunachal and the rest of the Himalayan region.
India hosts the Dalai Lama and his Tibetan government-in-exile. When the Dalai Lama fled Chinese rule in Tibet in 1959, his first stop was the Buddhist monastery in the Arunachal town of Tawang near the border. Three years later, China occupied the fortress-like hilltop monastery in the 1962 war before withdrawing to the current lines.

In the 17th century, Tawang district was the birthplace of the sixth Dalai Lama. Deified as his latest incarnation, the current Dalai Lama visited the monastery in 2009 and has hinted his next reincarnation will be born in India. Some say in Tawang.

Tibetan Buddhists see the Dalai Lama as a living god; China sees him as a separatist threat. Many in the Indian security community worry that instability in Tibet after his death could endanger India.
So, New Delhi is wooing the locals. The intermingling of the Indian army and the Tawang monks is striking. War memorials on the road are built in the style of Tibetan Buddhist stupas, with prayer wheels and flags.

Soldiers frequently visit the temple, and advise the lamas about troop movements and developments on the border.

Lobsang Thapke, a senior lama at the monastery, says India's troop buildup has made the monks feel safe, but that India was far from matching China's road-building prowess.

From our side, we have to go through a lot of difficulty," he said in a carpeted room above the main hall, where child monks chanted morning prayers. "They (India) have not black-topped. Gravelling has not been done."

ANGER AND ANXIETY

The Indian footprint here isn't always welcome. India's new wealth is seen in the multi-storey hotels mushrooming between traditional wood-and-stone houses in town, and new Fords and Hyundais on the hilly streets.

But anger is rising about a lack of jobs and perceptions that government corruption is rampant. Student movements have organized strikes in the state capital.
Hotel worker Dorjee Leto says educated young people like himself feel forgotten by India. There is almost no mobile phone coverage, power cuts that last days, and just that long muddy road to the outside world.
Anxiety over China, however, outweighs the irritation with India, says Leto, who like most in Tawang is a follower of Tibetan Buddhism.

"It's a fear, because already China has annexed Tibet. We feel part of India, we are used to India," he said.
(Additional reporting by Satarupa Bhattacharjya in New Delhi; Biswajyoti Das in Arunchal Pradesh; Michael Martina and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; editing by Bill Tarrant and Michael Williams)

Source:Chicagotribune.com