Sunday, August 29, 2010

Indian Christian Martyr's Day

Bhopal : Ecumenical Commission of the Catholic Conference of Bishops of India,(CCBI),has appealed to all Christian community members to remember the Indian Christian Martyrs on 29th August,(Last Sunday of the month).

In 2008, communal violence broke out in Orissa, that claimed the lives of many Christians. The Catholic Church in India wants to observe a "Martyrs' day". The violence against the affected Christians still takes place, and there may be some unscrouplous people within the Christian community who are joining hands with criminals.

This is a story that was put forward by Compass Direct News on August 25 , shortened  by me.

Christians displaced by Kandhamal violence in 2008 sold for coerced labour or sex.

 Nearly two years after large-scale anti-Christian violence broke out in India’s Kandhamal district, Orissa state, a team working against human trafficking on Aug. 9 rescued a 16-year-old Christian girl – one of at least 60 people sold into slavery after being displaced by the 2008 attacks.

 A network has trafficked Christian girls and women from Orissa to the national capital, sources said.

“Human trafficking agents operating in the tribal belt of Orissa have targeted the Christian girls who are displaced by the Kandhamal communal violence – we have been receiving complaints of missing girls from Kandhamal after the violence broke out in 2008,” said attorney Lansinglu Rongmei, one of the rescue team members.

The girl, whose name is withheld, is a tribal Christian who was sold into slavery along with her 19-year-old sister and two other girls, all victims of the 2008 violence; they were trafficked from the Daringbadi block of Kandhamal district to the capital in December 2009, according to the Human Rights Law Network (HRLN). Her sister and the other two girls remain missing.
The mother of the girl accompanied the rescue team the evening of Aug. 9 in the Rohini area of Delhi, said a source from the HRLN Anti-Human Trafficking department.
“It was only the joint efforts of the All India Christian Council [AICC], HRLN Anti-Human Trafficking and the area police that made this rescue possible,” the source said.

The rescue team took action after the minor’s mother approached the HRLN of Kandhamal for help, which in turn called the Delhi office. Team members said they were disappointed by the reaction of police, who were initially cooperative but later “just unwilling to help,” in the words of one member.
Rongmei told Compass that police refused to file a First Information Report, telling rescue team members, “No rape of the victim took place as per the medical examination, and there was no need for a case registration against anyone.”

The rescue team was not given a copy of the report of a medical examination at Bhagwan Mahavir Hospital, Pitampura, in Delhi, but they were told it indicated no sign of rape.

“It is confirmed that she was not raped,” said Madhu Chandra, spokesperson of the AICC and part of the rescue team. “She was physically abused, with teeth bite marks and bruises on her body – her neck, leg and right hand.”

Tricked

The girl stated that a well-known woman from their village in Kandhamal district gave her and her sister a false promise of safe and secure work in Delhi as gardeners.
Instead, operatives brought the sisters and the two other girls to a placement agency in Ratala village in Delhi, Sakhi Maid Bureau, which was run by a man identified only as Montu.

The HRLN source told Compass that the girl was with the placement agency for six days as the owner, Montu, attempted to rape her on several occasions. She was threatened, beaten, drugged with alcohol and sexually molested, the source said. The girl said her sister and the other two girls were treated the same way.

She was placed in a home in Rohini, Sector 11, as domestic help beginning in January. Until July, she said, she was treated relatively well there, except for a few instances of being slapped by the lady of the house. Then the family’s 10-year-old son began to hit her and their 14-year-old son tried to assault her sexually, and she tried to flee earlier this month.

The girl told the rescue team that she informed the lady of the house about the elder son’s misbehavior, but that the woman stated that she could do nothing about it.
“She bears marks from being beaten on her right hand by the younger boy,” said Chandra.

He told Compass that the owner of the placement agency collected the girl’s wages from the family who employed her, promising to send the money to her mother in Kandhamal district, but that he failed to do so.

Compass was unable to meet with the girl as she was still traumatized and undergoing counselling sessions. The girl’s mother sobbed for her other daughter, grieved that no one knew what condition she was in.
Montu, the placement agency operator, has absconded, according to police.

Passive Police

Prasant Vihar Police Station House Officer Sudhir Kumar confirmed the rescue team’s accusation that he refused to register a complaint in the girl’s case.
“The victim is from Kandhamal, let her go back to Kandhamal and register her complaint there,” Kumar told Compass. “No rape of the victim took place as per the medical examination, and thus there is no need for registering a case against anyone.”
Assistant Commissioner of Police Sukhvir Singh told Compass he had no explanation why the girl’s complaint was not registered, but he insisted on having her and the rescue team return.
“We will file their complaint if they come back to us now,” he said.

Karuna Dayal, coordinator of Anti-Human Trafficking Initiatives at HRLN, led the rescue team, which also included AICC Legal Secretary Advocate Rongmei, Chandra and Ashis Kumar Subodh of the AICC, and three others from the HRLN – Afsar Ahmed, attorney Diviya Jyoti Jaipuria and one identified only as Sangram.

Dr. John Dayal, secretary general of the AICC, said large-scale human trafficking in Christian tribal and Dalit women of Kandhamal district is one of the worst problems in the aftermath of the Kandhamal violence.

“Police have made arrests in the nearby Andhra Pradesh and other states,” he said. “Because of the displacement due to the violence, they lost their future, and it is very easy for strangers to come and lure them. Community and family life has been disrupted; the children do not have the normal security that growing children must have. Trauma, unemployment and desperate measures have resulted in the loss of childhood, forcing many to grow up before their age.”

The AICC is calling on the National Commission for Women, the National Commission for Scheduled Castes and the National Commission for Scheduled Tribes to investigate.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

It's pouring and no TataSky

After weeks of heat and dust and fears of drought, the skies have finally opened around Patna, the Bihar capital, and its wet, flooded, and afloat with rubbish.

All TataSky subscribers have come to know the bitter truth, that life isn't at all Jhing-a la la, when it rains. Your DTH receiver doesn't receive signals in the rain. Now I wonder how they forgot to part with that little bit of information in their ads? So, in effect, I'm going to miss the TV news, the evening serials, and whatever else I want to watch, because it's raining steadily, and Tata Sky services will remain on the blink.

What's gonna happen at Masterchef Australia? The Tatasky services were screwed during 'Moment of Truth' as well.

I'd like to get one of these TataSky vendors to Ancient Egypt and feed him to the lions. End of story.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

My new Anthem

I've decided on my new theme song of the year and it's below

Rachel:
Something has changed within me,
Something is not the same.
I'm through with playing by the rules
Of someone else's game.

Kurt:
Too late for second-guessing,
Too late to go back to sleep.
It's time to trust my instincts,
Close my eyes and leap.

Both:

It's time to try
Defying gravity
I think I'll try
Defying gravity
Kiss me goodbye I'm
Defying Gravity
And you won't bring me down...

Rachel:
I'm through accepting limits
'Cause someone says they're so.

Kurt:
Some things I cannot change,
But till I try, I'll never know.

Rachel:
Too long I've been afraid of

Kurt:
Losing love I guess I've lost.

Both:
Well, if that's love,
It comes at much too high a cost!

I'd sooner buy
Defying gravity.
Kiss me goodbye,
I'm defying gravity.
I think I'll try
Defying Gravity
And you won't bring me down.

I'd sooner buy
Defying gravity.
Kiss me goodbye,
I'm defying gravity.
I think I'll try
Defying Gravity
And you won't bring me down.

Bring me down!
Ahhahhoahh

Friday, August 13, 2010


The heat is on

The Monsoon rains haven't been sighted in the state of Bihar, India.
It's arid, hot, humid and depressing.
End of post.

Patriotism in India

Just wave the flag
Don’t wear it

Love your country
Shit on its streets
Pollute its rivers


Poison its earth with pesticides
Suck up its ground water , don’t bother to replace it


Turn sidewalks into public urinals
Throw garbage on the road
Choke its sewers with illegal plastic


Ignore rules and laws at will
Bribe and be bribed : after all, Gandhiji's smiling on the bank-note , Honestly!!


Promote unscientific and superstitious practices: mystical India!
[No matter if thousands of babies and women die from unhygenic rituals]


Smash and break up public property in the name of democratic protests


Lie, cheat, steal, murder- to keep your ‘seats’ in the Assembly and Parliament
Lie, cheat, burn, pillage, murder in the name of religion and its protection
Loot and scam away public funds: that’s the the Common-wealth game
Kill and evacuate all the forest dwellers to get your hands on minerals for export

That’s the way that you love your country


‘Tiranga’ : the name for the Indian flag is also the name of a cancer-causing chewing tobacco
-- the fix of the masses
Aha , Aha That’s the way I like it
Jai Ho


Enjoy Independence Day,
The way you’ve loved your country for the past sixty years
You deserve it!

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

HUNGER

Hunger is infinity more than feeling peckish between breakfast and lunch.
 It is the acute absence of any sort of relief from that emptiness in your breadbasket.
It’s gone beyond the dull ache stage, past the symptomatic headaches and dizziness, way beyond.
It’s the absence of means to gather food.
It’s the absence of the ability to procure a single grain or a drop of gruel to put into the parched mouth of an offspring.
It’s the absence of hope.

And in this country, where there is so much hunger in so many places, where people are starving, there are mountains of grain that is just lying around. It’s not being distributed. It’s not being sold. It’s waiting to be eaten by rats and worms. It’s going to lie there and rot, while hundreds of people die of slow starvation.

Instead of sitting on our fannies and staring at TV stories of hunger in our country, it’s time we did something to urge our government to move those surplus stocks of food to alleviate people’s misery, to bring to them a ray of hope. Instead of letting that food eventually rot, why not sell it to the starving at rates they can afford?
Why not spend a couple of minutes and click this link to do something about hunger, even if it's symbolic!
Click here and sign up

Sunday, August 01, 2010

Sunday Resolution

That's it. Comments, anyone?