China says it is drawing up human rights plan

BEIJING: China is drawing up a four-year plan to improve the country's human rights record, which largely translates as higher living standards, a government official was quoted as saying.

Human rights are a sensitive subject in China, which complains that Western countries are unfairly critical and points to its success in lifting hundreds of millions of people out of povert

y in the last three decades. The new plan also comes after a widespread crackdown on dissidents, lawyers and other activists earlier this year.

The 2012-2015 blueprint is second of its kind and has the “aim of expanding democracy, enhancing rule of law, improving people's livelihood and safeguarding human rights”, said Wang Chen, director of State Council Information Office.

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China pledges support for Pakistan

BEIJING: China pledged its support for close ally Pakistan on Tuesday, after the United States announced it would suspend $800 million worth of security aid to Islamabad.

“Pakistan is an important country in South Asia. The stability and development of Pakistan is closely connected with the peace and stability of South Asia,” foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said.

“China has always provided assistance to Pakistan, helping it improve people's livelihood and realise the sustainable development of its economy and society. China will continue to do so in the future.”

US President Barack Obama's chief of staff, William Daley, announced in a television int

erview on Sunday that the United States had decided to withhold almost a third of its annual $2.7 billion security assistance to Islamabad.

The move has plunged relations between Islamabad and Washington — already rocky after US commandos killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in May on Pakistani soil — to a new low.

But it was welcomed by India, which has long accused Pakistan of providing shelter to militant groups and has pushed the global community — the United States in particular — to censure Islamabad.

China, however, is one of Pakistan's closest allies and is also its main arms supplier — a situation that India has also expressed concern about.

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30 killed as bus overturns, catches fire

Ten children and 15 women were among 30 people killed when a Karnataka roadways bus overturned and burst into flames near Challakere area in the Chitradurga district early on Sunday. The North Eastern Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation bus was carrying 63 passengers, mostly from the rural parts of Surpur and Lingasur in the northern Gulbarga and Raichur districts.

State Transport Minister R Ashok told reporters that according to preliminary reports, the driver’s “negligence”

could have caused the accident. Transport and police officials said they suspect the driver of the bus may have dozed off and hit a barricade. The driver Siddaiah Swamy has been arrested, police said.

“The bus overturned and its diesel tank caught fire, engulfing the entire vehicle. Nearly 30 passengers were rescued and admitted to hospitals in Challakere,” Chitradurga Superintendent of Police Labhu Ram said.

The NEKSRTC announced a compensation of Rs 2.5 lakh for next of kin of the deceased while Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa also announced compensation of Rs one lakh for the families of the dead and Rs 25,000 for those injured.

Police said nine bodies had been identified so far and that they planned to conduct DNA tests on several others as their bodies had been charred beyond recognition. Messages have been sent to the relatives of victims in Surapur in Gulbarga district from where the bus had begun its journey.

Police said the overcrowded bus was mostly carrying poor labourers in search of livelihood in Bangalore following disruption in the NREGA programme in the area where they were residing. The reason for the disruption was not clear. Narasimha Naik, BJP MLA from Surapur, held authorities responsible for the suspension of the NREGA works, which, he said, had forced the locals to migrate to other places in search of jobs ahead of the monsoon. “We will look into the matter and see what went wrong,” Yeddyurappa said. Revenue Minister G Karunakara Reddy, who is also in-charge of Chitradurga district, rushed to the accident site and visited the hospitals.

Review: Of Gods and Men

Cannes, May 26 — Xavier Beauvois’ Of Gods and Men, which won the Grand Prize at the 63rd Cannes Film Festival, was one of the controversial entries. Tracing the events leading up to the kidnap and murder of seven Christian monks in a remote Algerian monastery, the work threatened to open old wounds. Once a French colony, Algeria, had a trying time under occupation that ended in 1962, but not before bloody brutality. Relations between the two countries still remain somewhat strained, though hundreds of Algerians have now made France their home and source of livelihood. Termed enfant terrible, Beauvois, who made a mark in French cinema with dramatic movies like Don’t Forget You’re Going To Die (1995) and Le Petit Lieutenant (2005), uses this time a real incident to spin his story of monks, their meandering ways, their religion and the ritualistic harmony they share with the local Muslim population. The narrative leads leisurely to the climax, handled with dignified care. Brother Luc, himself asthmatic and ailing, is the resident doctor, who cares for the sick, prudently dispensing the fast dwindling supplies of medicine, while Brother Christian, who heads the monastery, is a wonderful liberal well versed in the Quran as he is in the Bible. They have deep respect for the Islamic nation they have chosen to work for.

Of Gods and Men could not have been more timely in France where a debate between secularism and Islam is now raging. In what appears like a little footnote, the work reveals that both faiths do share a common concern for humanity.

Former Delhi High Court Judge questions eviction of beggars for CWG

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Former Delhi High Court Chief Justice A. P Shah has criticized the State Government for evicting beggars and other ”have-nots” from Delhi.

He was speaking after the Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN), a non-government body, released its progress report on the government”s intended plans in the run-up to the October 2010 Common Wealth Games.

“Authorities are cleaning street vendors, rickshaw pullers and other informal sector workers of the road in the process depriving thousands of the urban poor of their livelihood,” said Shah.

Miloon Kothari, one of the panelists, said the holding of the Games contravened India”s Constitutional.

Kothari said the excessive costs involved in staging the games event ignore the reality of high levels of poverty, hunger, inequality, homelessness and malnutrition.

The HLRN report has posed several questions such as the rationale for spending billions of rupees on the event vis-à-vis the key pre and post event general recommendations and allied suggestions.

Human rights activists have raised several questions covering various dimensions of the Commonwealth Games, especially the level of expenditure on a one-time sporting event and actual delivery of benefits to the masses

Apart from Justice Shah and Kothari, others who took part in the panel discussion were Amitabh Kundu, Director of Hazards Centre and Dunu Roy of HLRN. (ANI)

Obama for more liability on oil company for spills

Washington, May 13 (DPA) US President Barack Obama Wednesday formally threw his weight behind moves in Congress to increase the liability of oil companies for expenses and damages after oil spills.

The proposal would retroactively affect energy company BP for the crude oil well rupture it is now fighting in the Gulf of Mexico, White House officials told reporters.

The ruptured deepwater well is spewing 5,000 barrels of crude a day into the water and threatens a ‘massive and potentially unprecedented environmental disaster,’ said Carol Browner, Obama’s assistant for energy and climate change.

Officials declined to say whether the White House would support lifting liability for damages to $10 billion, as has been proposed in Congress. Current law requires BP to pay the cleanup costs, but limits its liability for other costs like environmental damage to $75 million.

‘We think it’s important to work with Congress in determining what the right number is,’ Browner said.

The bill would also raise the limit on claims against a special oil spill liability fund from $1 billion to $1.5 billion per incident. The $500 million limit on natural resource damage claims would be raised to $750 million.

Testifying before Congress Tuesday, BP America’s chairman Lamar McKay pledged to pay out on all legitimate claims, and said his company had already started reimbursing some people along the Gulf of Mexico for temporary loss of livelihood.

Browner drove home the point, reminding reporters of McKay’s pledge Tuesday of ‘liability, blame, fault, put it over here.’

‘Mariani,’ Assam’s potential business hub

Guwahati, Apr 26 (ANI): Mariani, a town situated on Nagaland-Assam border, is gradually transforming into a business hub.

With peace prevailing in the region, the youth here are increasingly taking up business related ventures.

Mariani is in Titabor District, and about 17 kilometres from Jorhat.

Markets here bustle with activity. New trade complexes are coming up and this encouraging youth to take up business as a career.

“People from outside regions come and do business here and we are earning handsomely like 15-16k per month,” said Dilip Kumar Saha, a shopkeeper.

With peace gradually returning to Assam and Nagaland, traders have reason to be optimistic.

“Many people in Nagaland depend on Mariani for jobs. So in this town the government should lay emphasis on trade and commerce. If peace prevails, the region definitely has a lot of potential,” said Mintu Kolita, a businessman in Mariani.

Just five to six kilometers away from the Mariani is Dehingia village, a small hamlet with 85 households and a population of 1600.

The village has a school and work is in progress to construct a road that will connect it to Mariani.

Funded by the Centre and state, the road that is being built by the Border Road Development Organization (BRDO) is a boon for people, when completed.

This is not all… Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme provides a source of livelihood to many people.

Villagers demand for the promotion of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA).

“The NREGA is going on, and it is going on at a good speed. We should get 100 days of work so that expenses can be taken care of. It will be of great help to us,” said Pobitra Saikia, a villager

Pottery is the main source of income for the people in this region.

They make clay pots and sell them in nearby markets.

“We make pots. We make our living from it and feed our children from it. Business is good, profits are good,” said Mahesh, a potter

Though there is some border conflict between Assam and Nagaland, but people on both sides live in harmony.

They are not bothered about such issues and are engaged in day-to-day business activities.

“There is no conflict, people are peaceful and relate to each other and the dispute is on National Highway and it will be nice if state government of Assam and Nagaland give more efforts for development of the region. And it would be nice if state government solves this issue peacefully,” said Temsuyanger Aier, Mokokchung, Nagaland. (ANI)

Rajasthan”s cattle facing water shortage

Jaipur (Rajasthan), Apr 24 (ANI): The cattle owners in Rajasthan are facing acute shortage of water, as the water bodies have dried up here.

The problem has been aggravated because of a drought like situation in 26 out of 32 districts of Rajasthan.

They have to carry water from far off places because of the water scarcity.

“We have to travel two kilometres away to get water for them. We are facing lots of problem because of water scarcity. Water is not even there in the tube wells all of them are totally dry,” said Jagannath, a cattle owner.

“We have to pass this 3-months time and we are finding it very tough to quench the thirst of our animals,” he added.

It is reported that the scanty and extremely poor rainfall has created a tough situation for all the cattle owners of Rajasthan during this summer.

“Earlier, we used to get water from nearby tube wells, rivers and animals used to drink water on their own but now we are facing lot of problems. We have to travel long distance of about two kilometres to get water for them now and because of the poor rainfall during the last few years, we are facing lot of problems,” said Abdul Jabbar, a cattle owner.

The situation is worst in the districts of Bikaner, Jaisalmer and Barmer, where most of the farmers are totally dependant on animal husbandry to earn their livelihood. (ANI)

Jharkhand farmers protest over land acquisition

Ghatsila (Jharkhand), Apr 19 (ANI): Eminent writer and civil rights activist Mahasweta Devi on Sunday joined hands with farmers in their struggle against the acquisition of farmland for a proposed steel plant in Jharkhand”s Ghatsila region.

The farmers of Potka, Kalikapur and Asambani villages of East Singhbhum District are unwilling to give away their land to Jindal Steel and Bhushan Steel companies, but the villagers allege the government is still forcibly evicting farmers from their lands.

“The fight is about saving our lands. We are not going to give up our lands in any case. Today we will welcome Mahasweta Devi amongst us and we will try to forward our demands to the government,” said Tapas Kumar Bhagat, a villager.

“They will throw them just like that. What will happen to them, where will they go, what will they eat, where will they live, they don”t care about it at all,” said Mahashweta Devi.

State Governments across India have witnessed several such protests in the recent past, as farmers are up in arms against the acquisition of their fertile lands, which are their sole means of livelihood.

Land acquisition for various projects such as Special Economic Zones (SEZs), highways and industrial projects has sparked off violent protests and agitations across India in the recent past. (ANI)

Jharkhand farmers protest over land acquisition

Ghatsila (Jharkhand), Apr 19 (ANI): Eminent writer and civil rights activist Mahasweta Devi on Sunday joined hands with farmers in their struggle against the acquisition of farmland for a proposed steel plant in Jharkhand”s Ghatsila region.

The farmers of Potka, Kalikapur and Asambani villages of East Singhbhum District are unwilling to give away their land to Jindal Steel and Bhushan Steel companies, but the villagers allege the government is still forcibly evicting farmers from their lands.

“The fight is about saving our lands. We are not going to give up our lands in any case. Today we will welcome Mahasweta Devi amongst us and we will try to forward our demands to the government,” said Tapas Kumar Bhagat, a villager.

“They will throw them just like that. What will happen to them, where will they go, what will they eat, where will they live, they don”t care about it at all,” said Mahashweta Devi.

State Governments across India have witnessed several such protests in the recent past, as farmers are up in arms against the acquisition of their fertile lands, which are their sole means of livelihood.

Land acquisition for various projects such as Special Economic Zones (SEZs), highways and industrial projects has sparked off violent protests and agitations across India in the recent past. (ANI)

Educated youth take up vegetable farming in Assam’s Majuli island

Majuli (Assam), Mar 25 (ANI): Breaking away from conventional ways of earning a livelihood, educated youth in Assam’s Majauli in Jorhat District have taken up vegetable farming as a profession and they are doing fairly well.

Fertile but flood affected Majuli Island, situated on Brahmaputra riverbank is now seeing many educated youth take up vegetable farming as a profession.

One such example is Subhash Hazarika, who began this journey five years ago. Today his annual income is between three to four lakhs, which is enough to take care of his family.

“Whatever I have developed in last five years, I will tell you about that. I have one brother who is running an electric shop. I have bought two-maruti van, two bikes and one power driller and earning enough money for my family,” Subhash Hazarika, a vegetable cultivator.

Hazarika is a source of inspiration for many unemployed youth.

His success has motivated them to take up the cultivation of tomatoes, potatoes, onion and sugarcane and many other vegetables.

Majuli’s another successful farmer Anil said: “By farming, I am trying to make our lives. I have started farming of sugarcane and have earned more than a lakh out of it in a year. In some area, I am producing mustard by which, I’ll be earning thirty-forty thousand at one times farming.”

As peace and normalcy gradually return to the region, people are finding new ways of becoming self-reliant and actualizing their potential.(ANI)

Anand Sharma stresses on need for higher investments in industrial sector

New Delhi, Mar 25 (ANI): Union Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma has said that higher investments are required in the industrial sector in order to generate more employment and livelihood so that the poor can be part of India’s growth process.

Sharma expressed his views during a meeting with the Belgium Deputy Prime Minister Steven Vanackere.

He emphasized that it is important that the investment relationship between India and Belgium enters diversified sectors.

“We need to do more in different sectors like transport equipment, machine fabrication and high technology sectors in which Belgium has strength. India is slated to invest around 1.5 trillion US dollars in the coming 5 to 6 years in the infrastructure sector and we expect Belgium businesses to participate in this effort”, Sharma said.

During the interaction, Vanackere informed that this was perhaps the most successful business interaction between Indian and Belgium businesses.

In the infrastructure area, he highlighted ports as an area in which Belgian companies are interested. (ANI)

When an anti-poppy raid went in vain in Manipur

Ukhrul (Manipur), March 25 (ANI): An anti-poppy operation launched by volunteers of All Manipur Anti Drug Association (AMADA), Assam Rifles, Litan police station, and Narcotics Control Bureau (Imphal Unit) met with disappointment, as poppy cultivators had already extracted the seeds from the plants before the arrival of the team in Ukhrul district of Manipur state.

The joint team uncovered a poppy cultivation site of about 2,000 acres in Ukhrul district alone. But on its arrival at the spot, it turned out that nearly all the poppy seeds had been harvested leaving the plants standing.

The team also discovered that an adjoining field of about the same size had been cleared, apparently for planting more poppy plants. All the plants were destroyed.

R K Ibosana Singh, intelligence officer of the Narcotics Control Bureau, Imphal unit, said that on the basis of anonymous tips, they have launched a massive campaign, ”Operation Armstrong II”, to destroy poppy plantations in all the hill districts of Ukhrul, Chandel and Churachandpur in Manipur state.

“Without expressing the name of the informer, they come to office and say–as a young citizen I have all the right to inform these things for the betterment of our society. There are some poppy plants, planted by some unknown persons, and this makes all the youth intoxicated by taking it in mouth and by boiling it….and taking it in liquid form,” said Singh.

The team also found makeshift huts constructed at the poppy cultivation sites to ostensibly store the poppy harvest.

Empty boxes of khaini (tobacco), which were used for scrapping opium from poppy fruits, were also found.

Local villagers say that they are compelled to cultivate poppy since they do not have alternatives to sustain their livelihood.

“Every community comes and buys the extracted opium, including Meitei, and Kukis. Our village is very poor. So we have planted them to sustain our livelihood. As we don”t have any agricultural land, we buy our daily basic needs with the income generated from these plants,” said Lhungpu Haokip, village chief of Thawaii village, Ukhrul.

The Anti-Narcotics Department of Manipur has noted that a high income generated from the poppy cultivation coupled with demand from Myanmar has led villagers in the border area of the state to growing poppies illegally.

As per reports, the crude produce of poppy grown in the state is smuggled out to cater to the Golden Triangle through the porous Indo-Myanmar border.

The Golden Triangle is located in the hilly terrains of the South East Asian countries, namely Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam, and is considered to be one of the largest heroin producing zones of the world.

India allows poppy cultivation under licence in very small pockets and under strict supervision, with the produce solely used for medicinal use. (ANI)

Himachal farmers to receive permits to kill wild animals damaging their crops

Baragaon (HP), Mar 20 (ANI): Farmers of Himachal Pradesh will soon receive permits to kill wild animals that damage their crops and affect the yield.

In a few areas of the state, the farmers have also left their fields barren, as monkeys and other animals are destroying their cultivation.

Primarily the permission to kill monkeys and blue bulls will be given to cultivators in Una, Kangra and Sirmour Districts of the state.

However, the affected farmers in other districts of the state are also demanding to be allowed to kill monkeys responsible for crop destruction.

“All the villages near Shimla should get this permission because these animals are harming the fields. They destroy any crop, which we grow. This is the only mode of livelihood of people here. We should get the permission to kill them if necessary,” said Joginder Sharma, a farmer from Baragaon.

According to the state”s forest department, the permission to kill wild animals has been granted.

The state Minister of Forests, J P Nadda, said the decision has been made under the Wildlife Act of India.

“This conflict is going to carry on. Animal lovers will always love animals but at the same time humans also have to exist and the development part has also to be taken care of. But what government has done is whoever needs a permit, we give them and that is not regional based. That is on the demands of the farmers,” said Nadda.

Himachal Pradesh Government is also concentrating on opening more sterilization centres for animals to check the numbers of monkeys and blue bulls.

As per an estimate, there are over 400,000 monkeys and thousands of wild blue bulls in Himachal Pradesh. (ANI)

Police cane protesting trade union workers in Mumbai

Mumbai, Mar 6 (ANI): Police resorted to baton charge to quell scores of trade unions activists in Mumbai who were protesting against price hike in the Union Budget.

Thousands of workers, including women, of Trade Union Joints Action Committee (TUJAC) an umbrella organization of various trade unions, took to street for Jail Bharo Andolan on Friday.

As a part of their protest, activists voiced their ire against the rise in prices of essential commodities and asserted that soaring prices have strained their livelihood.

Some of women workers were carrying their infant babies to express their discontent.

“Suddenly police began baton charge. They began hitting us mercilessly like animals and used water cannon also. They hit on me head, I fell down, somebody brought me to hospital,” said Babli Rawat, leader of Gharkamgar Molkarin Sanghatna.

“Police personnel vandalised vehicles. They also smashed the vehicle of organiser of protest, Vivekbhao Pandit, just to proof that the protest was violent. But it is not true, it was a peaceful demonstration. Now, they (police personnel) are not letting the injured to be brought to hospital,” he added.

Rising inflation, particularly in the sphere of food items, has sparked recurring street protests in various parts of the country and put political pressure on the Centre to find a solution without hurting economic recovery.(ANI)

Vocational training programme for unemployed youth in Himachal

Kufri, Sep. 6 (ANI): Unemployed youth in Kufri region of Himachal Pradesh are delighted after a special vocational course has been introduced at a Hotel Management Institute to enable them earn livelihood in tourism sector.

Introduced under the Central Government, the tourism and hospitality requires candidates to have had school education till standard eight as minimum eligibility.

The tourism-based course, which can be completed within six to eight weeks of training, is aimed to enable the local youths to get into jobs.

The enrolled students obtain free training, uniform and stipend of rupees 1,500 to 2000 at the institute.

“They (unemployed youth) after doing this course whose entire expense is being met by government including education, uniform, training equipments can explore job opportunities. We will also provide certificates after the completion of the course. Moreover, industrial training for a brief period so that after they pass out from this they can have employment opportunities,” said Dipankar Mukherjee, Principal, Institute of Hotel Management, Kufri.

The local youth are enthusiastic to pursue this course. The students are being trained in cooking, catering apart from other nuances of the trade.

“This course will be very helpful. Even though in 8 weeks time you can’t learn everything but the course will help to get job opportunities,” said Poonam Sharma, a student.

Even graduates are showing interest in this special course, as they know it will prepare them for many employment opportunities.

“This course assures job for us. There are job opportunities in tourism sector as hundreds of tourists come to visit Himachal…. We are not only learning cooking and catering but also this course is teaching us the real sense of hospitality… this will tell us how to help and guide tourists,” said a graduate trainee.

Tourism is an important employment generating sector in Himachal Pradesh and it is the mainstay in Kufri which attracts large number of tourists to enjoy snow falls. By Hemant Chauhan (ANI)

Army helps people in Kashmir to find jobs

Poonch, Aug 31 (ANI): Indian army, besides fighting a two-decades-old militancy in Kashmir has been helping people to find jobs.

Remote villages, located close to the military ceasefire line in places such as Sawjain sector in Poonch district of Jammu region, are accessible only on foot and residents have to travel miles in search of food and livelihood.

People living in border villages like Gali-Maidan, Bedaar, Khet, Sawjian and Neriyan lack job opportunities because of the tough geographical terrain.

The villages are located at high altitude due to which people have to face adverse climatic conditions. People here live in Dhoks made up of mud and bamboo.

Women travel miles to collect firewood and men have few job opportunities. In such circumstances many youth work as porters for the army, ferrying rations and other goods for the troops guarding the frontiers.

The jobs help residents supplement their family income and the opportunities created by the army have to an extent helped them and prevent the migration of youth to states like Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

“Army is a source of employment and provides jobs to the youth only for 4-5 months. Some get absorbed as permanent porters while others get temporary jobs. Otherwise there are no job opportunities here,” said Ali Mohammad, a villager. (ANI)

After recession, Kanpur’s leather tanning industry faces pollution board’s hammer

Kanpur, Aug. 26 (ANI): The leather tanning industry in Kanpur is going through a tough time as it faces closure after coming under the scanner of the pollution control board.

Many of the total 412 factories were shut down due to recession, and now the pollution board’s hammer threatens to drive the industry on the verge of extinction.

The workers fear loosing their livelihood.

“The work is already less and if the tanneries close down labourers will be out of work. Thousands of workers will loose their livelihood,” said Munna, a labourer.

On their part, the owners of tanneries like Bade Haazi, requested the government to look into the matter.

“This is a industry which is giving valuable foreign exchange to the country and besides this its giving employment to the people we request the government to look into the matter and see how many loose their employment and will become dependent if the tannery units close down,” said Haazi.

Earlier, leather and products worth 2750 million rupees were exported from Kanpur, but now the exports have gone down to just 25 percent during the last few months. (ANI)

Punjabi farmers call for fewer restrictions to cultivate in border areas

Dhanoye Kalan, Attari Sector (Indo-Pak Border) Aug. 25 (ANI): The restrictions over movement along the Indo-Pak border have been causing problems to the local farmers.

Farmers living in border areas in Punjab have their land spread across the fence, and movement is prohibited at night for security reasons.

The restrictions cause hardship in tending the farms, particularly irrigating them at night.

The farmers are aware that night-long curfew alongside the 345-mile zig-zag fence along the Indo-Pak border in Punjab is meant to strengthen security, they want the government to find a solution to the problems they are facing.

Most villagers along the Indo-Pak border area depend on farming for their livelihood. Paddy cultivation requires lots of care. The farmers cannot water their fields at night because of daily night curfew along the Indo-Pak border.

The curfew has been imposed to keep terrorists and smugglers at bay. Unfortunately, it has also caused problems for the farmers. They have to obtain identity cards to obtain access to their land.

Farmers complain that the curfew imposed from dusk to dawn also makes it difficult to carry on farming activities.

Shiv Singh, a farmer of Dhanoye Kalan Village points out that while there was no curfew during the day, after 6 in the evening till 6 in the morning their movements are restricted up to 500 metres alongside the barbed wire.

Electricity was available only at night to irrigate the farms but due to curfew, they were unable to irrigate their farms.

He pointed out that villages around Dhanoye have more than 2,000 acres of farming land and more than 1000 acres of the land is beyond the fence. The farmers at the border demand that government should decrease the area of curfew.

“We are allowed to harvest only wheat and paddy that needs more care all the time. He question that when the farmers of the other side (Pakistan) could cultivate their land any time why not us?

And whenever tension increases at the border, the villagers have to shift their belongings to safer places. Those who decide to stay put are deprived of the basic facilities like medical services, education. They are cut off from the rest of India.

Villagers said that many a times they have conveyed their difficulties to the concerned officials but nothing has been done to address their concerns.

Talking to ANI, Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar, Khan Singh Pannu pointed out that the restrictions have been imposed on the orders of the Ministry of Defence . He said that he would convey the concern of the border farmers to the authorities.” By Ravinder Singh Robin ANI)

Provide immediate relief to drought-affected areas: Pawar

New Delhi, Aug 21 (ANI): Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar asked the State Agriculture Ministers on Friday to take immediate steps to provide relief to the drought affected areas.

Addressing a conference of State Agriculture Ministers here, Pawar urged them to take steps to protect the interest of small and marginal farmers.

Pawar described the situation in 246 districts across 10 states as grim, and said the state agriculture departments must gear up their machinery to ensure full support to the farmers at this critical times.

Rabi crops can be planted early and over a large area to make for the kharif losses due to a poor monsoon, Pawar explained.

“This is good opportunity to ensure wheat is sown in time particularly in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal,” Pawar.

Pawar said there is an urgent need to promote alternate crops like pulses, sunflower, bajra, fodder and vegetables as the reports pointing out a shortfall in paddy sowing.

In his speech Pawar also stressed the need for sustaining the animal health, livelihood of small and marginal farmers and landless labourers.

He asked the State Governments to set up control rooms at the state capital and district headquarters to deal with drought situation.

“For the drought-affected population we should ensure availability of food, drinking water, fodder and employment. I am sure with your cooperation we would be able to tide over this crisis and regain the momentum of food grain production in the country.”

Pawar also expressed concern over price rise and asked the ministers to take measures to check it. (ANI)