Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Haryana. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Haryana. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, August 12, 2016

Health Crisis: India's Wealthier States Are Showing An Alarming Decline In Immunisation Process

By NEWSCOP | INNLIVE

The warning signs from the latest National Family Health Survey data have gone unnoticed so far.

A fair amount of media attention has been given to the resurgence of diphtheria in Kerala, which has been attributed to some Muslims rejecting immunisation efforts due to misinformation. However, a much more dangerous and widespread trend of declining immunisation rates as evidenced by the recent National Family Health Survey 4 data, seems to have gone entirely unnoticed.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Abortion Law's Grey Zone: Retarded Mothers

The Supreme Court recently ruled that a 19-year-old Chandigarh-based mentally retarded girl must be allowed to carry on her pregnancy that was caused by sexual assault. The verdict throws open more questions than it answers.

In India, a disabled girl-child is usually at the receiving end of a lot of contempt and neglect. Women with disabilities have been consistently denied their rights. In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court (SC) of India recently allowed a 19-year-old mentally challenged orphan girl to carry on with a pregnancy resulting from a sexual assault. The Punjab and Haryana High Court ruling had earlier ordered medical termination of pregnancy (MTP). 

Giving the facts of the case, Advocate Colin Gonsalves who had argued for abortion in this case, said that the girl, who was kept at Nari Niketan, Chandigarh, a government institution for destitute women, was raped some time in March 2009 on the premises by the security guards. In May 2009, the pregnancy was detected. 

The media widely reported the rape but no institution or individual came forward in the woman's support. 

A few days later, a four-doctor Multi Disciplinary Medical Board was constituted, which included a psychiatrist. It recommended an MTP. The Punjab and Haryana High Court ultimately went on the basis of these reports. The second one concluded that: "the continuation of pregnancy in this case can be associated with certain complications considering her age, mental status and previous surgery. There are increased chances of abortion... pre-maturity... foetal distress and more chances of operative delivery including anaesthetic complications." 

The committees concluded that the woman "has adequate physical capacity to bear and raise the child but that her mental health can be further affected by the stress of bearing and raising her child." 

This case thus raised fundamental issues relating to consent and to the support required while assessing consent. Eventually most mentally challenged women will, if properly supported, be able to indicate whether they wish to abort the pregnancy or proceed with it, concludes Gonsalves. 

Shampa Sengupta, Director of the Sruti Disability Centre in Kolkata, says that if the woman wants to keep the baby she should be allowed to do so. "We as civil society must take the responsibility of supporting her. How can we forget the UN Rights of Persons with Disabilities Convention?" she asks. 

Sengupta, who has worked on disability for the last 10 years, adds, "How can we say her choice is not valid? 

Because the doctors say so? If you or I do not consider the doctor's word as final, why should this young girl? Also, why is it that no one is talking about the rapists and how Nirmala Niketan came to have male employees?" 

"The SC judgment has focused more on pro-life arguments and the rights of the child," states Bhargavi Davar, who heads the Bapu Trust in Pune, an organisation devoted to challenging the mindset and practices of the Indian mental health establishment. She points out that several women's organisations have responded to this judgment by focusing on women's rights and the right to abortion. 

But nowhere in this dialogue between the state and civil society has the issue of reproductive rights and sexuality in the context of psychosocial and mental disability been discussed. 

Many state institutions for women living with a mental disabilities, with the co-operation of families, routinely sterilise, abort or give the child away for adoption without the consent of the mother. Many women's organisations and NGOs that provide care have an equally problematic custodial outlook towards such persons. Argues Davar, "In this case, we have not heard the woman's voice anywhere, while we have several third party arbitrations and advocacy. We do not know what the woman wants. Whether the mentally challenged woman has the 'capacity' to take care of the child is another question riddled with prejudices and stereotypes." 

In the 1990s at Sirur, Maharashtra, 17 mentally challenged girls below 18 years were peremptorily hysterectomised. The state chose to control the girls' reproductive rights by deploying extreme measures. 

The professionals involved in that decision neither denied that hysterectomies were done, nor did they perceive them as a violation. They justified them as having been done in the best interests of the girls. 

Dr Anant Phadke from Pune who filed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) on the issue, says that case is still on. In January 2009, the state filed an affidavit stating "Mentally retarded adolescent girls or adult women have no sense of hygiene during menstruation." Shockingly, this is the prime reason given by the government for backing the controversial decision. Justifying its move, the government stated that, unlike stools or urine, menstrual flow is continuous and lasts up to at least 100 hours a month. 

It added that caregivers find it difficult to deal with inmates who are uncooperative; and that poor hygiene can lead to infection and laceration on thighs and genitals and that increased flow can cause anaemia. 

Behavioural problems and psychotic symptoms also cause difficulties for care-givers. 

All that is needed to perform the operation is the consent of the parent/guardian and certification from a psychiatrist and gynaecologist that hysterectomy is needed. 

"We are challenging these guidelines," says advocate Anand Grover adding that the hysterectomies were performed for the convenience of the institute, to prevent pregnancy in case of sexual abuse and not for the woman's welfare. The government had no authority to conduct a hysterectomy on mentally disabled women and such a move violates the fundamental rights of such women and the provisions of the Mental Health Act. 

Shruti Pandey, a human rights lawyer from Delhi, admits that this is a case that is "so grey". Says Pandey, "To my mind, this case was not about abortion per se, it was about whether the law of this country recognises and protects the agency of a woman to take decisions for her life and body, especially all its nuances when the woman is a person with mental retardation (MR) or any other disability." 

Legally, this case showed - which the HC also noted in detail in its first order - that the Medical Termination Of Pregnancy (MTP) Act does not deal with access to abortion of women with MR, and that it wrongly distinguishes between women with mental retardation and mental illness, leaving the former out totally. Also that the Act does not understand that both these kinds of women are more likely than not to be destitute, in which case guardianship is not that simple. 

Clarifies Pandey, "If the SC has said this woman wants to go ahead with the pregnancy, in principle I would support the decision. Every woman has a right to bear children, including women with mental disabilities. But if the court says it is the right of child to be born/not to be killed, and so the pregnancy must go on, that is hugely problematic. In any case, if the SC says no MTP, I would like to see what support mechanism it relies upon, institutionally, and not merely on the assurances and hyperbole of individuals and NGOs. I would also like this decision then to lead to the state's accountability for creating and sustaining comprehensive and reliable support systems for all persons with disabilities, within a rights framework. This is definitely an obligation under Article 12 of the UN Rights of Persons with Disabilities Convention, which India is totally ill-equipped to deliver on, as this case shows." 

This case indicates eloquently that the Indian legal framework has to be strengthened a great deal to bring it in line with international legislation. 

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Does your MP value your vote?

By M H Ahssan

Does your MP attend Parliament? Does he/she ask questions in the House? Does he/she participate in debates? Between them, the answers to these questions should provide you the bare bones of how effectively your MP carries out core functions. Here’s what we found on examining the data.

Statistics show that nearly one-tenth of MPs in the 14th Lok Sabha have never participated in any debate, while the names of another one-third figure in less than 10 debates in data of the first 13 sessions.

Here, we are treating all discussions other than those under Rule 377 — which we consider separately in the accompanying piece — as debates. On average, a member of this LS has participated 24 times in debates held in the last four and half years. Ministers are excluded in these calculations.

Samajwadi Party’s Shailendra Kumar leads with 312 entries against his name, followed by Basudeb Barman, Ram Kripal Yadav, Bhartruhari Mahtab and Varkala Radhakrishnan.

With 60 participations per MP, Kerala leads the major states plus Delhi list. Delhi is second with 52 debates per member, while with 47 per head, Orissa MPs are the third most active lot. With less than 15 per MP, Assam, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Haryana are at the bottom of the list.

Among major parties, CPI emerges best with an average of 58 entries per MP. BJD at 55 and CPM at 41 are the next best. The NCP performed worst with an average of only 2 per MP. As for questions, 78 members did not ask a single question in the first 13 sessions. Another 167 asked fewer than 10 each.

Averaging at 453 questions per MP, Shiv Sena is at the top of the party list, BJD’s next with 291 just ahead of CPI with 290. Averaging 118, 104 and 34 respectively the BSP, CPM and Akalis make up the bottom three of the list.

Abu Ayes Mondal’s 97% attendance makes him top the attendance list for full-term MPs, while ailing former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee is at the bottom. The overall average attendance of the House for the first 14 sessions was 68.8%. Attendance need not mean actual presence in the House through the day. It only means the MP has come to the House and signed his presence. Thus, BJP averaged 90% in the first session, which the party had boycotted.

Has your MP kept the promise of demanding stoppage of a s uperfast train at your station? Has he raised the issue of improving the condition of sick sugar mills and reconstitution of local cooperatives? Has he drawn the House’s attention to the declining handloom industry in your area? You can hold your MP to account by accessing the data available on the Lok Sabha (LS) website, which unfortunately shows that nearly one-third of MPs never raise these issues.

The Parliament provides provision to raise matters of general public interest that can’t be raised during question hour, ‘calling attention’ motions and resolutions. Under Rule 377, LS members can raise matters that weren’t raised during the same session under any other rule, which can be local but primarily concerned with the central government.

For the first 13 sessions of the ongoing LS, there are 3,326 entries under Rule 377. Excluding ministers, the entries reduce to 3,200 against 348 members. That means 166 MPs never raised any issue under this rule. Apart from them, another 224 members have less than 10 entries under 377. Simply put, most have only occasionally used the provision. With 52 entries against his name, S K Kharventhan tops the list while Virjibhai Thummar, NSV Chitthan, Rajnarayan Budholiya and Karan Singh Yadav are the others who figured in ‘best five’ for raising issues under Rule 377.

Averaging at 15 entries per member, Himachal Pradesh and Uttaranchal top the list of major states, while MPs from Punjab and Haryana averaged just 3 entries per MP. Averaging 8 entries per member, the RJD, CPI and Congress are the three best parties here. The Akali Dal is the worst, as its average member has raised local issues only twice in the 13 sessions so far.

Every Lok Sabha member is entitled to receive Rs 2 crore annually, under the Member of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme (MPLADS). MPs can allocate the money for developmental needs of their constituencies. Data shows that only 6% of MPs have spent less than 80% of their fund.

All five figuring at the bottom of this list are from Bihar. Meira Kumar at 52% shows up worst, while Uday Singh, Rajesh Kumar Manjhi and Ranjeeta Ranjan failed to spend even 60% of the fund.

Does your MP value your vote?

By M H Ahssan

Does your MP attend Parliament? Does he/she ask questions in the House? Does he/she participate in debates? Between them, the answers to these questions should provide you the bare bones of how effectively your MP carries out core functions. Here’s what we found on examining the data.

Statistics show that nearly one-tenth of MPs in the 14th Lok Sabha have never participated in any debate, while the names of another one-third figure in less than 10 debates in data of the first 13 sessions.

Here, we are treating all discussions other than those under Rule 377 — which we consider separately in the accompanying piece — as debates. On average, a member of this LS has participated 24 times in debates held in the last four and half years. Ministers are excluded in these calculations.

Samajwadi Party’s Shailendra Kumar leads with 312 entries against his name, followed by Basudeb Barman, Ram Kripal Yadav, Bhartruhari Mahtab and Varkala Radhakrishnan.

With 60 participations per MP, Kerala leads the major states plus Delhi list. Delhi is second with 52 debates per member, while with 47 per head, Orissa MPs are the third most active lot. With less than 15 per MP, Assam, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Haryana are at the bottom of the list.

Among major parties, CPI emerges best with an average of 58 entries per MP. BJD at 55 and CPM at 41 are the next best. The NCP performed worst with an average of only 2 per MP. As for questions, 78 members did not ask a single question in the first 13 sessions. Another 167 asked fewer than 10 each.

Averaging at 453 questions per MP, Shiv Sena is at the top of the party list, BJD’s next with 291 just ahead of CPI with 290. Averaging 118, 104 and 34 respectively the BSP, CPM and Akalis make up the bottom three of the list.

Abu Ayes Mondal’s 97% attendance makes him top the attendance list for full-term MPs, while ailing former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee is at the bottom. The overall average attendance of the House for the first 14 sessions was 68.8%. Attendance need not mean actual presence in the House through the day. It only means the MP has come to the House and signed his presence. Thus, BJP averaged 90% in the first session, which the party had boycotted.

Has your MP kept the promise of demanding stoppage of a s uperfast train at your station? Has he raised the issue of improving the condition of sick sugar mills and reconstitution of local cooperatives? Has he drawn the House’s attention to the declining handloom industry in your area? You can hold your MP to account by accessing the data available on the Lok Sabha (LS) website, which unfortunately shows that nearly one-third of MPs never raise these issues.

The Parliament provides provision to raise matters of general public interest that can’t be raised during question hour, ‘calling attention’ motions and resolutions. Under Rule 377, LS members can raise matters that weren’t raised during the same session under any other rule, which can be local but primarily concerned with the central government.

For the first 13 sessions of the ongoing LS, there are 3,326 entries under Rule 377. Excluding ministers, the entries reduce to 3,200 against 348 members. That means 166 MPs never raised any issue under this rule. Apart from them, another 224 members have less than 10 entries under 377. Simply put, most have only occasionally used the provision. With 52 entries against his name, S K Kharventhan tops the list while Virjibhai Thummar, NSV Chitthan, Rajnarayan Budholiya and Karan Singh Yadav are the others who figured in ‘best five’ for raising issues under Rule 377.

Averaging at 15 entries per member, Himachal Pradesh and Uttaranchal top the list of major states, while MPs from Punjab and Haryana averaged just 3 entries per MP. Averaging 8 entries per member, the RJD, CPI and Congress are the three best parties here. The Akali Dal is the worst, as its average member has raised local issues only twice in the 13 sessions so far.

Every Lok Sabha member is entitled to receive Rs 2 crore annually, under the Member of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme (MPLADS). MPs can allocate the money for developmental needs of their constituencies. Data shows that only 6% of MPs have spent less than 80% of their fund.

All five figuring at the bottom of this list are from Bihar. Meira Kumar at 52% shows up worst, while Uday Singh, Rajesh Kumar Manjhi and Ranjeeta Ranjan failed to spend even 60% of the fund.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Honour Killing In Haryana: Girl Lynched, Boy Beheaded

By Manpreet Singh / Rohtak

In another suspected ‘honour killing’, a couple was allegedly killed by the girl’s family in Rohtak district in Haryana on Wednesday. The Indian Express reports that Nidhi Barak, 20, was murdered and cremated in full public view whereas the boy, Dharmendar Barak, 23, was reportedly assaulted, limbs broken and then his head severed.

The couple belonged to the Jat community and were residents of Gharnavati village in Kalanaur, Rohtak district. Dharmendar’s family has not lodged a formal complaint with the police, the report said. The police have managed to recover the remains of the girl from the pyre and have also taken the boy’s body for a post-mortem examination. 

Monday, March 02, 2015

'Modi's Suit' Drama: A Conman Tries To Dupe The 'Owner'

A conman from Haryana allegedly made a bid to dupe Dharmanandan Diamonds, the company owned by Laljibhai Patel who won the auction for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's pinstriped suit, of over 4 crore by trying to get a duplicate cheque encashed.

On February 20, Laljibhai's winning bid of 4.31 core had won him the possession of the suit in a high profile auction in Surat. And the amount was to be used for the Clean Ganga campaign.

Wednesday, January 08, 2014

'LeT Imams At UP To Avenge Sufferings Of Riot Victims'

By Suleman Ansari | Lucknow

The Delhi Police said that suspected members of a Lashkar-e-Toiba module in its custody had visited the riot-hit western Uttar Pradesh district of Muzaffarnagar and contacted some residents there. The suspected Lashkar operatives had during their questioning claimed that they visited the region to avenge the suffering of Muslim victims of the Jat-Muslim riots in September but this claim had to be verified, the police alleged.

The two Haryana imams arrested last month for their suspected links to Lashkar-e-Toiba, and another LeT operative on the run, had allegedly visited relief camps of victims of the Muzaffarnagar communal riots and sought to recruit men to their module.

Tuesday, October 08, 2013

Should President's Rule Be Imposed To Create Telangana?

By M H Ahssan / INN Live

Contrary to the prevailing opinion, in this country, new state formation has never been smooth. Nor were the procedures exactly similar. Each state formation was unique and had followed a different sequence of steps.

The only thing common to all the state formations so far in Independent India has been the rigid applicability of Article 3 in its truest sense, where Parliament is given the supreme authority to carve out states irrespective of the opinion of the involved State Assemblies.

While the NDA followed a convenient procedure in the creation of Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand in 2000, where the state assemblies initiated the demand for separation, such a procedure is neither legally mandated nor is constitutionally prescribed and deviates from most other prior state formations. 

Friday, August 09, 2013

Why Was This Buffalo Sold For Whopping Rs.25 Lakhs?

By Kajol Singh / INN Bureau

A whopping Rs 25 lakh is what a certain Kapoor Singh of Singhwa village in Rohtak received for his trophy buffalo, which yields up to 32 litres of milk every day. Murrah Buffalos, often called  Black Gold in Haryana because of their  breed and good milk production, contribute 70% of the total milk production (63 lakh tonne) in Haryana.

Singh, 55, sold his ‘Gold Mine’  to an Andhra Pradesh farmer Rajiv Sarpanch for Rs 25 lakh after having bought her for Rs 2.5 lakh two years ago, thus marking the  highest bid for a buffalo in the country.

Monday, July 17, 2017

Animal Rights Activists Face Cattle Smugglers’ Ire

While incidents of violence purported by cow vigilantes hit the headlines, what has gone relatively unnoticed is an ever increasing spate of attacks on animal rights activists who dared to take on the smugglers of cattle and other animals.

Some of these activists, whom INNLIVE interviewed, said there is little organised resistance to the illegal trade of meat, as vigilance at the sale points and at the highways remains lax.

Tuesday, February 05, 2013

IAS, IPS Cadre Crunch Hits Governance

The severe shortage of IAS and IPS officers in states across India has begun to adversely impact governance everywhere. There’s a deficit of over 3000 IAS and IPS officers – about 30% -- in the country and that may continue for some more years. As of now, though, key seats are empty, officers are holding multiple assignments and police officers missing in troubled districts. It’s a wonder how official work is getting done, if at all, in large swathes of India. 
    
With fewer bureaucrats in place, many senior officers in a number of states are burdened with multiple responsibilities. For instance, “a junior IAS officer who is posted as director in one department in Jharkhand is also the secretary in another. Similarly, an IAS officer is posted in the secretariat and also has to take care of outdoor work which creates problems in the execution of work in offices,” said a source in Ranchi. The state, with an IAS cadre strength of 208, has only 114 currently. Of these 16 are on central deputation. 
    
Former Jharkhand DGP V D Ram, who had asked the Centre to return IPS officers on central deputation, added that the police face insurmountable problems due to shortage of officers. “At times we know that a particular officer is not capable enough to be posted as SP of a district, but due to shortage of IPS officers we have no option. Most of the time this deprives us of the cutting-edge that we need to maintain law and order,” said Ram. In a Naxal-affected state, that’s not good news. 
    
In MP, the shortage of police officers is probably affecting morale, too, over problems of getting leave. There are only 238 IPS officers against a strength of 291. “The shortage may look small but it’s a huge gap,” said Arvind Kumar, IG, administration, police headquarters. “The scarcity is generally at the level of SP and SSP and we don’t have a choice of officers to be posted in districts. A minimum of 10% of leave reserve is also required and this creates problems,” added a senior IPS officer. 
    
Such shortfall can lead to inefficiency and delays at work. Punjab chief secretary Rakesh Singh said it puts undue pressure on the rest of the serving officers and officials. “If you have too many portfolios with you, it gets difficult to devote as much time as you would like to in order to do full justice to each subject,” he said. The sanctioned cadre strength for Punjab is 221 IAS and 172 IPS officers. 
    
As of now, the state has 180 IAS and 142 IPS officers. Most of the IAS officers are holding multiple charges and shuttling between different offices to keep appointments. Anirudh Tewari is secretary in three departments - power, personnel and non-conventional energy. 
    
In the Chandigarh UT administration, too, certain posts like that of finance secretary are saddled with 10-12 departments. Since the UT gets officers on deputation from Punjab and Haryana and the entire process of getting a new officer’s name cleared takes months, the functioning of the administration suffers. 
    
Likewise, in Haryana, governance is now largely dependent on state cadres of civil and police officers as it has just 163 IAS officers – with 20 on deputation to the Centre – and 102 IPS officers against the sanctioned strength of 205 IAS and 137 IPS officers. The state’s additional chief secretary, home, Samir Mathur, admitted the shortage of IPS officer, adding, “We have very efficient senior officers of state cadres who have been posted as additional SP in districts as well as in the field.” 
    
With increase in fresh intake of IAS/IPS officers a distant prospect, one way forward for the states could be former Jharkhand chief secretary AK Singh’s suggestion that regular appointments of junior officers be made through the state public service commissions, so that they get timely promotions.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Congress must bet on the winning horse

By M H Ahssan

That the Congress is its own worst enemy is something we have all known after watching the party lose the polls in states where it was on top. Many senior party leaders whose actions or lack of understanding resulted in these defeats got away scot-free. They were not held accountable for their lapses. In fact, many of them were rewarded with additional responsibilities.

But, now it appears that all this may change. Party president Sonia Gandhi’s observation at the Parliamentary Party meeting last week underlining the threat to the Congress from within sounded both a note of caution and a warning for trouble-makers. Having brought the party to power at the Centre after winning 16 states (and subsequently losing most of them), Ms Gandhi is in a combative mood. She has made it clear that dissidence will not be tolerated.

Ms Gandhi’s determination and resolve has carried the party through many of its battles. However, lesser minions have created problems in the party by misusing her name in order to ensure that their importance is not diminished. Most of these people are officer-bearers or in charge of states they know little about. They need to be firmly controlled if the party has to fare well. These people with their limited influence but colossal egos have sacrificed the interests of the party at the altar of their vested interests.

Therefore, Ms Gandhi has to ensure that the only criteria, which must be used for selecting candidates, should be that of winnability. Performing well in the Lok Sabha polls must be the objective. There should be no bar, for instance, on MLAs or Rajya Sabha MPs contesting. If the candidate with a winning chance is just a corporator or a loyal party activist, he or she must be selected overriding the whims and fancies of a few leaders who will want quotas to be allotted to them for the final selection. If the Congress High Command can ensure that winnability alone matters, half the battle will have been won at the outset. For this, the state leadership must be strengthened.

In Punjab, a state where the party is likely to do very well, barring MLAs from contesting some seats like Amritsar could have an adverse impact on its chances. If Ms Gandhi’s observations are followed in letter and spirit, the decision on whom to field should be left to Captain Amarinder Singh who has been the face of the party in the state. Of course, the final selection should have the approval of Ms Gandhi.

In Haryana, attempts from within are already on to destabilise Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda whose record has been exemplary so far. Very few people know that Haryana has attracted more investment than even Gujarat. It has overtaken Punjab in GDP and is second only to Goa. At a meeting last week, two senior leaders — Shamsher Singh Surjewala and Birendra Singh (perhaps at the behest of some senior leader) -- suggested that the assembly polls due in March next year should be held simultaneously with the Parliamentary polls. The objective was not as much to strengthen the party as to weaken Hooda. These machinations must end now.

In Mumbai, a criterion is sought to be imposed which bars the Mumbai Pradesh Chief Kirpa Shankar Singh from contesting the polls on the plea that he must ensure the victory of all others. Everyone knows that Gurudas Kamat and Murli Deora as MPCC presidents have contested Lok Sabha polls in the past. This is possible in a city like Mumbai that has six seats. The North West Mumbai seat, which has many people from Eastern UP and Bihar, is most suitable for some one like Kirpa. This would send out an appropriate message to the likes of Raj Thackeray. It will also give the Congress a leg up in the city.

The party has a record of framing different criteria for different people. It does not have a single principle which would apply to everyone. There are ministers like Saifuddin Soz and Pranab Mukherjee who also head state units. There are others like AK Antony, Prithviraj Chavan and V. Narayanswamy who are also in charge of states. There are many other examples.

What is interesting about these polls is that while the Congress looks strong, its allies in the UPA appear weak. In the NDA, the BJP is appears weak while its allies seem strong. That is why the formation of the next government is dependent on post-poll tie-ups.

To leverage the Congress into a stronger position, its leaders must stand behind Ms Gandhi in no uncertain terms. Otherwise, they might well find themselves sitting on the opposition benches. Between us.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Focus: Why We Adopted The System Of 'Cheating' Today?

By Ragini Khanna in Delhi
A frustrated aspirational society is linked to upsurge in foul exam means. Based on compelling evidence of widespread cheating in the 2015-16 All India Medical Examinations held last month, the Supreme Court recently ordered the Central Board of Secondary Education to conduct a retest. Earlier in March, Indian and foreign media featured prominently parents and relatives scaling school walls and buildings, to pass answer chits to students taking secondary school examinations in Bihar.

Friday, October 04, 2013

Prison Cry: An Innocent Childhood Lost Behind The Bars

By Ruchika Nigam (Guest Writer)

The 2012 crime records from NCRB show nearly 1800 children jailed by circumstance, most often with their mothers, across Indian prisons. INN takes a look at the lives of these innocent prisoners and argues for vigilant implementation of relevant suggestions to ensure their basic rights.

Until last year, four-year-old Mantasha used to think a car was the rubbish redi, the cart that was rolled into the prison barracks each day, where she lived along with her mother, 24-year-old Mehram.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Pre-Marital Sex: What Kids Must Know

By Swapna Majumdar

It took Sweden 50 years to do it. In India, it might take even longer to include sexuality education in the school curricula, if the ongoing debate is any indication. Indian parliamentarians have just recommended that sex education for the young be banned, and indeed several states in the country have already done so. But, as a new Indo-Swedish collaborative study points out, the longer there is resistance to equipping adolescents with information associated with puberty and sexual and reproductive health (SRH), the greater are the chances of an increase in premarital sexual curiosity and its associated health risks.

The study found growing evidence from across the country that a significant proportion of young boys and girls had become sexually active before marriage. According to research conducted by MAMTA, a Delhi-based NGO working on SRH, and the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education (RFSU), there has been an increase in the percentage of unmarried young Indians becoming sexually active in the past five years. The study, which focused on urban and rural areas of Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka over a five year period beginning 2003, found that in 2004, 5.8 per cent unmarried young people had sexual intercourse. This figure increased to 7.4 per cent in 2006 and 7.5 per cent in 2008. More unmarried males (9.3 per cent in 2004 and 10.2 per cent in 2008) reported having a sexual experience compared to unmarried females (0.5 per cent in 2004 and 3.2 per cent in 2008).

What is worrying was that very often they did not use protection, either because of lack of information or lack of access to the means to gain it. "Considering the sensitivity of the subject and the taboos associated with it, it was important to adopt an approach that would be culturally acceptable. On the other hand, we also needed to measure their knowledge, attitude and practice on sexual health to be able to design strategies to address their needs. This is why we sought the support of RFSU, as it has expertise on SRH and sexuality education," said Dr Sunil Mehra, Executive Director, MAMTA.

According to Maria Andersson, International Director, RFSU, even though people as young as 16 years were sexually active in Sweden and premarital sex was not considered taboo there, it is a proven fact that increased sexual knowledge had prevented unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) there. She believed that even though the two countries had different cultural beliefs, with Sweden being a more open society than India, there was no reason to think that the same approach would not work in India. "Good sexuality education enabled people to find joy in their sexuality and gave each individual an opportunity to make decisions about his or her own body. Our strategy is to support and encourage young people to make their own decisions and not let anyone else, including friends, group pressure or expectations, influence them. Providing relevant facts was important, but it was not enough. We also support responsible behavior that includes using contraceptives and allowing them to discuss and reflect on the importance of this knowledge that contraceptive use should not be the responsibility of women alone, a strategy easily adaptable to Indian conditions," she contended.

Building on RFSU's experience that investing adequate and quality time in understanding the gaps was critical before implementing any strategy, 32 villages in Bawal Block of Rewari district in Haryana, 31 villages in Pindra Block of Varanasi district in Uttar Pradesh and four urban slums in Kormangala in Bangalore, Karnataka, were chosen to identify the key areas of health needs associated with puberty. They included menstruation, personal hygiene and contraception, a less talked about issue.

At the same time, it was decided to study the impact of imparting adolescent education to 5,000 school children in four schools - two of girls and two of boys, in urban Rewari and rural Bawal - to assess whether this changed their perceptions on premarital sex, unwanted pregnancies, STIs, HIV-AIDS, sexual abuse and equity in decision making powers of girls and boys.

"Unlike in India, in Sweden sexuality education is compulsory in schools and has been since 1955. The right to sexual and reproductive health services and sexuality education is the key to ensuring gender equality. RFSU sees openness on sexuality as the point of entry of health promotion and the prevention of sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS. This is why the strategy for India was also to break the culture of silence and let young people open up on these sensitive subjects," pointed out Andersson.

After spending time with young people, their parents, teachers and community leaders, MAMTA found that in addition to interventions like training peer educators, it would be more useful to adapt RFSU's concept of youth clinics where information on SRH could be accessed without fear or embarrassment. Thus was born youth information centres (YIC).

Since young people, particularly girls, were more vulnerable to STIs, YICs facilitated information sharing; and also worked closely with community and religious leaders and sensitized Panchayati Raj Institution (PRI) members on issues of education and school retention. The most important outcome of this strategy were attitudinal changes.

In all the intervention areas, age at marriage was delayed among young people. The percentage of girls that married below the legal age of marriage fell from 61.2 per cent in 2004 to 45.2 per cent in 2008. For boys, the corresponding figures were 79.5 per cent and 76.2 per cent, respectively.

By 2008, the perception that education was important for girls led to 38.5 per cent young men whose sisters had dropped out of school, to argue that they could share some household chores with their sisters and help them get more time for studies. Nearly 26.9 per cent young men felt that they could convince their parents to allow their sisters to continue studies as external candidates.

Using RFSU's technical expertise in gender sensitization, the sexuality education curriculum under the adolescent education programme (AEP) was developed for students of Classes VIII, IX and X based on an assessment of their knowledge and needs. At the end of three years, a comparison was made between students of Class 10 who had been through the sexuality education curriculum and Class 11 students of the same school who had not experienced it. Irrespective of the location of the school, boys and girls who had been through the programme were able to identify and reject common misconceptions about nocturnal emissions, masturbation and myths related to HIV transmission. Girls in Class X were able to understand that the oral pill did not protect them from STIs and HIV, while a significant number of urban and rural girls said they would decline to have sex without a condom and oppose sexual abuse.

The evidence clearly is that increased sexuality knowledge decreases risky behavior and boosts gender equality. MAMTA is now hoping that its research findings will influence policy makers in India to formulate a more rational and relevant national policy on sexuality education.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Young ‘Brides’ Have Good Resale Value

With drought in Maharashtra, ‘selling’ and ‘reselling’ of brides is likely to become an increasingly lucrative business for nefarious elements—the bride agents. 

It has been known that the agents scour Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu to look for prospective brides for men from gender-skewed regions of Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, western regions of Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Punjab. Maharashtra’s Chandrapur district, which has been officially tagged as one of the most backward districts in the country, has become one of favoured hunting spots for these agents.

A recent case, in which five adolescent girls went missing from the district, saw the political mercury in the district soar and the police swing into action. It was a 700-kilometre trail that the police had to follow. With the five girls from the slum being sold as ‘brides’ to desperate unmarried men in Madhya Pradesh, a special team of the Maharashtra Police had to pursue the case in Ashok Nagar district in the neighbouring state. Led by Assistant Inspector Yogesh Pardhi, the Maharashtra Police team was determined to bring back the girls, aged between 16 and 20.

What Pardhi and his team learnt during the investigation was quite intriguing. The police had managed to arrest one of the agents who had sold one of the minor girls to a man from Shadora village in Ashok Nagar in Madhya Pradesh. Police team found out that the agents who sold off those women got Rs 30,000 to Rs 50,000 for every woman sold. However, one of the five girls from Chandrapur, who had been sold for Rs 30,000, had returned to her agent owing to the ill-treatment at the hands of her owner. The agent was too happy to resell her a second time and pocketed Rs 35,000. Pardhi had no answer as to why the girl did not return to her family when she had the opportunity, and instead approached her agent.

Though Pardhi had no answers, Shafiqur Rehman Khan of Campaign Against Bride Trafficking has them. “The ceremony solemnising such marriages are most appropriately called as Thag Vivah (cheat marriage). Rarely does the bride enjoy the social status of a wife. These women are either known as Paro brides, as in stolen, or Molki brides as in purchased,” said Khan. He explains Molki brides have to physically satisfy more than one person and also double as labourer on the fields.

The trading of brides also means that the few genuine bride seekers are finding it difficult to ‘stay’ married. When a 50-year-old businessman from Jaipur in Rajasthan had married a bride from Maharashtra, he thought it was coincidence that the two brides that he had earlier purchased from agents had run away. In two months the man has spent Rs 2.50 lakh on three brides. 

However, his third bride from Maharashtra too ran away. Subsequent police investigation revealed that agents and the brides were hand-in glove and were sold again. The agents are finding selling brides more lucrative than dealing in brothels. And more than the buyers, the agents are more keen to sell brides owing to demand in northern states. Khan fears that with drought in Maharashtra, agents would have a field day recruiting new brides as poor families are happy to have one less mouth to feed.

Though Khan believes that it is difficult to put a precise number on the quantum of bride trafficking, he estimates that there are about dozen such brides in every village of Haryana. As agents come up with offers of new brides, the time spent by the bride in particular household is also limited. “The old brides are sold to procure new ones. It is very similar to the cattle market. The market for brides as per our study is growing steadily at the rate 20 per cent every year,” said Khan.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

SPECIAL REPORT: INDIA'S SELF-INFLICTED WATER CRISIS

By Upender Dikshit / Delhi

Ultimately, a solution to the country’s water management problems lies in creating fragmented water markets regulated at the level of various states.

It is not unusual for the monsoon to play truant in one part of India or the other every year. The country’s water situation is so precarious that even a normal monsoon, spread unevenly, creates drought-like conditions in some part of the country. Very often the scarcity of water spills over into the following year. Some years ago, it was the Bundelkhand in Uttar Pradesh that was starved for water; this year, the Marathwada region of Maharashtra is confronting an acute water scarcity.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

A TRANSFORMATION FROM FIELDS TO BPO

By M H Ahssan

A first-of-its-kind women-only BPO started by 'Harva' in a Haryana village is all set to harness the rural talent while changing the rigid mindset of the people, transforming rural economy.

Just six months ago, Puja, 18, and Bimla Devi, 35, spent their day cooking meals, tending to cattle and working in the field -- the everyday routine of village women across Haryana. Never in their wildest dreams had they imagined that they could one day be sitting in an office working away furiously in front of a computer.

Today, this is the remarkable reality of hundreds of women in Tikli and Aklimpur villages. Their agrarian way of life has not changed – they still cut fodder for their cattle and clear the cow dung -- but they are now equally adept at using a computer. They work in a business process outsourcing (BPO) centre which has set up shop in the heart of their village. A first-of-its-kind women-only rural BPO in India, this centre was started by 'Harva', which stands for harnessing value of rural India.

"I never thought I would be able to work on a computer. It was a big thing for me. But now working on the keyboard comes so easily to me. We come here for eight hours and do our job. I'm so proud of myself," says Puja.

A bumpy ride
And how did these simple women get a hang of using a high-tech device like pros? It’s all thanks to a three- to four-month rigorous training course. Bimla can now type 35-40 words a minute, can mine relevant pieces of information from a pool of data and can do data entry perfectly.

But accomplishing this was not easy. Getting these women to step out of their homes was no mean feat. It took a lot of persistence to get them to break the rigid cultural and social barriers of their male-dominated society. It was the persuasive powers of Ajay Chaturvedi, a banker, who is a business management graduate from the University of Pennsylvania and an engineer from BITS Pilani, that worked like magic on these women. "When we heard of Ajay's proposal we were elated that we would be trained and get jobs," recalls Puja.

So it all began six months back with 500 women, who were selected to be trained in computer basics. "Irrespective of their formal education, they were selected for their ability to read and write, and some basic understanding of the English language, apart from their willingness to learn," says Chaturvedi.

Training was provided free-of-cost and during the course they learnt about office culture and etiquette, basic English and communication skills, apart from Microsoft Office computer applications. Initially this was difficult for them, recalls Archana, 29, who has a 12-year-old daughter and a one-year-old son. "We were shy, a bit hesitant and all of a sudden had to deal with machines and technology. But gradually, with training and motivation, we picked up fast," she says.

Mining jobs
Their determination not only got them through the training but they were rewarded with short-term employment. Out of the 500 women initially selected, 200 completed the course and 50 were deployed on various projects. Twenty women are still working on projects, which involve data mining, while 30 more women are likely to get work as new projects come in.

While the opening of the BPO has created jobs for these rural women, Chaturvedi emphasises that this is in no way an NGO project, which aims at social welfare and plays less attention to accountability. He believes that the only way to better utilise the rural India market is through "socio-capitalistic business models".

"This is a business venture with a conscience and social responsibility. I am a capitalist, who would see whether a business model is viable and profitable or not. After ensuring this, the social cause can be served. If I create value, create business and opportunities, it will benefit everyone, including the villagers," says Chaturvedi.

He also frankly admits that he did not employ the women out of charity. "Women are overall superior beings, far more hardworking and serious. They can do a job in half the time that men can. They are good at multi-tasking and efficient and can work at a stretch without taking breaks, whereas men tend to always take many small breaks during work hours," he says.

Chaturvedi proudly gives the example of a 25-year-old woman - a Class VIII graduate - who learnt all the characters on the computer keyboard in just three hours, "something that is not easy even for people like me," he smiles.

Interestingly, the BPO centre is not Chaturvedi’s only rural venture. This entrepreneur left his lucrative job with Citi Bank to tap rural talent and opportunities. He has already dabbled in community farming for non-rain-dependent cash crops in Uttarakhand. He wants to expand this project to 10,000 acres across the country that will benefit 10,000 farmers in the next four to five years. He has also been providing credit to rural people through micro-financing. Waste management is his upcoming project.

But for now, he wants to take this BPO model to other villages after seeing its success in Tikli, Aklimpur and surrounding villages. He has six other states in mind and has already laid the groundwork to open a centre in Bihar and Uttarakhand.

Enhancing image and status
Working at the BPO centre has helped enhance the image and status of women in a state notorious for its skewed sex ratio and masculine culture. It has proved to be their ticket to economic freedom, albeit in a modest way.

Bimla, mother of a girl who is in Class VII and a boy in Class II, was over the moon when she received her first salary of little over Rs 2,000 (US$1=Rs 44.6). "Whatever little amount I got, it was mine. It was a result of my hard work and I realised its worth,” she says.

Adds Suman Devi, 28, a mother of two, "We feel economically empowered. It gives us a sense of security. We spend the money on ourselves and contribute to household expenditure, apart from saving some for the future." Reena, 18, the most vocal of the lot, gives her take: “I feel city people always think rural women are illiterate and uncultured. But now we have proven them wrong. We are educated and all we need is just an opportunity. Since the villagers know we are getting salaries every month, they too want to send their girls and daughters-in law over here."

The last six months spent at the BPO have made them better with time management and multi-tasking. "Earlier we used to spend the entire day doing household chores. But after joining the BPO, we finish all our work by 10am, come to office, work here and go back for the evening chores," says Bimla.

Apart from being a source of their financial independence, the BPO centre has become a place for these women to make friends. Now they have their own space amidst 20 computers in this two-room centre nestled among sprawling fields. "We have bonded really well. During our breaks we share our happiness and sorrows, married life, problems and issues, at home or outside. It gives us a lot of emotional support," says Manju Yadav, 25, who has a daughter.

All they want now is some sustainable long-term projects, which would guarantee them regular work and income. But for the time being, they are enjoying their new avatar and keying in their success story.

Wednesday, December 03, 2014

New Versions Challenge Rohtak Sisters' Story - Whose Truth Is The Truth?

The video opens with two girls in a heated tussle with a man in a bus in Rohtak, Haryana. One of the girls uses her belt to hit him and he too is seen retaliating. The girls, both sisters, were reportedly acting out against three men because they allegedly harassed them.

‘Bravehearts’, 'Courage Sisters', the names given to the ‘Rohtak sisters’ by the media, warded off their alleged assaulters with all their might as other passengers chose to be passive onlookers. A pregnant woman, who the girls claimed was the only person to have shown them support on the bus, is said to have had captured the entire incident on a phone.

Monday, November 03, 2014

The Art of Cheating! 67 candidates caught wearing shirts with built-in Bluetooth device!

Around 67 aspirants were caught cheating with SMS and Bluetooth during SSC examination held on Sunday at various examination centres in the state for the recruitment of Assistant Grade -3 in Central government institutions.  All those arrested belong to Haryana.

Pradeep Sharma, resident of Sonipat (Haryana) was arrested from Kamla Nehru Girls Higher Secondary after being caught cheating through mobile phone with answers to all questions written in code words. According to TT Nagar police, Pradeep reached the examination center 10 minutes late and carried his mobile against the rules. He was caught after his suspicious activities as he was looking at his mobile in intervals. Immediately his mobile was seized and the police was informed. 

Read More: http://ttamacha.blogspot.in/2014/11/the-art-of-cheating-67-candidates.html