Punjab authorities launch drive to uproot “Congress Grass”

Nag Khurd (Amritsar), Sep.5 (ANI): Farmers in Punjab are confronted with an unusual problem these days. A weed described as “Congress Grass” has covered all soil-bunds in the fields here and the administration is taking up measures to educate farmers about how to obviate it.

The “Congress Grass” is said to be a major biological pollutant of the environment. It is described as one of the seven most destructive weeds of the world.

Locally known as ‘Gajar Buti’, the Congress Grass has become an ecological nuisance especially on sides of link roads and other waste lands. It causes Asthma, Allergy and skin diseases to humans and also the animals.

It becomes a host for dangerous insects. Nowadays the vast growth of this weed can also be seen on roadsides and other wastelands.

Observing its harmful effects on the fields, the agriculture department has decided to pull out the “Congress grass” from its roots.

It is a mechanical technique in which fodder cutter machines attached to tractors are to be used to clear the area covered up by Congress Grass.

The novel technique of mechanical removal of this weed from the sides of link roads and wastelands in Amritsar district was started on Thursday.

Authorities are spreading public awareness among farmers through demonstrations about the new technique with the help of fodder cutting machine by eradicating Congress Grass.

With the help of the machines, the farmers are able to get rid of this menace of “Congress Grass” more effectively and rapidly.

The idea to use fodder cutting machine for this purpose has been conceived by Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar, Kahn Singh Pannu.

On Thursday, Pannu demonstrated to farmers by driving a tractor in Nag Khurd village in Majitha area about how to pull out the “Congress Grass”.

Talking to ANI Pannu said, this is first time in Punjab that they are cutting the hazardous weed “Congress Grass” with fodder cutter machines and it is giving god results.

According to Pannu, Congress Grass is not only harmful to the crop but also causes severe skin problems like rashes and itching and some time cause respiratory diseases.

“Through demonstration, we are creating awareness and educating the farmers to get rid of this unwanted weed by applying new methods,” Pannu said.

With the help of department of Agriculture, Animal Husbandry and Rural Development, about 20 Fodder Cutter Machines in the district will be employed for the removal of the Congress Grass from the berms and the waste lands in the district.

The farmers, who own these machines, will operate them to remove the weed and they will be paid for their services by the Panchayats (village councils).

“Since these day we have ample time so we would pull out the Congress Grass by applying the new method,” said Satnam Singh, a farmer, while adding that it is more convenient as there has been always a shortage of labour in Punjab.

“Apart from the damage to crop through reduced yields, Congress Grass is weakening the strength of the land,” said Inder Preet Singh, another farmer.

Appreciating the efforts being made by administrative authorities, Singh said he feels that agriculture department should organize more camps so that the more farmers could benefit by eradicating the Congress Grass from their field. By Ravinder Singh Robin(ANI)

Naxal attack kills 11 in Dantewada district

Dantewada, May 6 (ANI): A landmine blast triggered by naxalites has killed 11 persons including two CRPF personnel and five special police officers (SPOs) in Chhattisgarh’s Dantewada district.

“The incident took place at Sirguda village in Bastar region under Injram police station area, when naxals blew up a tractor carrying the SPOs and jawans,” Inspector General of Police A N Upadhyaya said.

Those killed include four civilians.

“The blast occurred when a joint patrol team of CRPF, district police force and special police officers, sent to Bhejji village, were returning from their duty in a tractor carrying some civilians,” Upadhyaya said.

Three other SPOs were also injured in the naxal attack.

The injured have been admitted to a nearby hospital in Injram.

The police officer further informed that an additional police force has been sent to the spot to take stock of the situation.

A helicopter has also been sent for rescue operations. (ANI)

Naxal landmine claims 10 lives in Chhattisgarh

Raipur (Chhattisgarh), May 6 (ANI): A landmine blast in Sirguda village, in Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region, claimed the lives of at least ten people on Wednesday.

Among the dead were two CRPF personnel and four special police officers, police said.

They said naxals blew up a tractor carrying the special police officers (SPOs) and jawans.

Chhattisgarh home minister Nankiram Kanwar had earlier told the State Assembly that 241 people had fallen victim to the Naxal violence in the state during the last year.

In his written reply to a question by Congress MLA Haridhar Bharadwaj, the home minister said, Naxalites have killed 241 persons in the state between January 1, 2008 and January 12, 2009.

During this period, 82 of extremists were killed in police encounters, and 431 Naxalites and Sangam members were also arrested, he said.

Kanwar said that the state government had so far compensated 126 civilian families who fell victim to the Naxal violence. (ANI)

Jaswant, wife worth over Rs.12 crore

Siliguri, April 9 (IANS) Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) heavyweight Jaswant Singh, who filed his nomination from northern West Bengal’s Darjeeling Hills Thursday, has movable and immovable assets worth over Rs.7 crore and his possessions include a herd of 42 cattle and two Arabian horses.

Singh’s wife Sheetal Kumari owns assets valued at over Rs.5 crore, according to the affidavit submitted by the former union minister.

Singh, BJP leader in the Rajya Sabha, owns a Fiat car, a tractor and four tracts of agricultural land in Rajasthan valued at more than Rs.69 lakh.

Livestock owned by the leader include the herd of cattle priced at over Rs 1.50 lakh, and the Arabian horses gifted to him by the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, said the affidavit filed as part of the nomination requirements for contesting the Lok Sabha polls.

Singh also owns a bungalow in Jodhpur worth Rs.1.75 crore, a hut priced at Rs.4.5 lakh in his native village of Temawas, a farmhouse in Jodhpur valued at Rs.7.5 lakh and has 50 percent share of value Rs.4 crore in a new Delhi flat. His wife is the other co-owner.

He has cash of Rs.10,000 and his equity share holdings total a little above Rs.68,000.

Singh also holds two accounts with the State Bank of India in London and New York and the total deposits amount to around Rs.15.42 lakh.

His spouse Sheetal Kumari owns two cars – an Innova of market value Rs.9.5 lakh and a Fiat Uno worth Rs.1.2 lakh.

She has fixed deposits of Rs 5.83 lakh, and shares valued at Rs.9.52 lakh, besides gold ornaments of Rs.8.86 lakh and seven kilograms of silver (Rs 1.52 lakh).

Her immovable assets include a hut in Pali district of Rajasthan worth Rs.1.50 lakh, an outhouse in Jodhpur priced at Rs.35 lakh, besides the 50 percent share in the co-owned house with Jaswant which makes her richer by Rs.4 crore. She is also the owner of a farm house in Rajasthan’s Pali district valued at Rs.1.5 lakh.

M and M sees strong April, testing May-June – TV

Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd expects strong sales in April on demand for its utility vehicles ahead of general elections, but the following two months will be testing times, a senior official told a TV news channel. Mahindra, the country’s largest utility vehicle and tractor maker, reported a 6 percent rise in total vehicle sales in March, compared with a year earlier, with domestic sales climbing 11 percent to 25,748 units.

“March is always a high-selling month. So it’s very rarely that you will see the March-kind of numbers to continue,” Pawan Goenka, president for automotive sector, told CNBC TV18 on Wednesday.

However, because utility vehicles are in demand for campaigning during elections, sales should be strong in April, he said.

India goes to month-long general election in mid-April.

“April should be strong because of heavy demand from elections, but May and June will be the real test to see whether the industry has come back from the downturn that we saw in the (fiscal) third quarter,” he said.

He was referring to October-December, which was the worst quarter for the automobile sector in India as car sales slipped more than 11 percent from year ago and truck and bus sales fell by around 48 percent.

Tata Motors, India’s largest vehicles maker, truck and bus maker Ashok Leyland and Mahindra had shut their plants for short periods in the December quarter to align production with demand.

Mahindra’s vehicles sales fell 29 percent in that quarter.

In March, sales of Logan, the sedan Mahindra makes in its joint venture with France’s Renault, fell nearly 70 percent to 962 units from 3,068 a year earlier.

The Logan was stabilising around 800-1,000 vehicles a month, Goenka said.

“Given the current market conditions and given the number of products in that segment, we think that will be about the steady kind of volume for Logan,” he said.

Mahindra’s newest utility vehicle, Xylo, launched in January this year, sold 3,124 units in March.

The company is working on introducing a modified version of its top selling vehicle, Scorpio, in the United States early next year.

Orissa tornado death toll rises to 10

The death toll in Tuesday’s unseasonal tornado in Orissa rose to 10 Wednesday with the recovery of two more bodies, officials said.

‘Two dead bodies were found early this morning. We fear there could be more people trapped under the debris,’ district sub-collector Ranjan Kumar Das told IANS.

He added that at least 20 people are suspected to have perished in the storm.

The tornado followed by a hailstorm wreaked havoc in at least 11 villages of Rajkanika block in the coastal district of Kendrapada. It struck around 4.30 p.m. Tuesday and continued for nearly one-and-a-half hours.

It took several hours for relief and rescue teams to reach the affected villages because a large number of uprooted trees blocked the way.

While officials said the number of injured admitted to hospitals is over 100, they fear the figure will rise to 300.

The twister was so strong that several vehicles were tossed around like toys. At Arasa village, a tractor crashed to the ground after being lifted into the air by the storm. The driver was killed on the spot.

Bharatiya Janata Party’s prime ministerial candidate L.K. Advani, who is on a two-day trip to the state for the poll campaign, is expected to visit the affected areas Wednesday, official sources said.

Aniston’s $56,000 hair styling is worth it, claim experts

New York, Mar 6 (ANI): Jennifer Aniston’s 56,000 dollars a week pay out to bring her hairstylist along on her ‘Marley and Me’ Europe tour might have raised many eyebrows, but elite stylists have claimed that such a fee is totally worth it.

Legendary hair stylist Edward Tricomi, co-founder of the elite Warren Tricomi salons, says that such a jaw-dropping sum for hair like Aniston’s is worth every penny.

“You can’t put any price on it – it’s priceless,” the New York Daily News quoted Tricomi as saying.

Tricomi even likened Aniston and her pricey locks to a farmer, who might need a 4,000 dollars part to repair his tractor.

He said: “For celebrities, hair, make-up and stylists are exactly like that tractor part. They are the ones who create that aura for the celebrity and her look. These people are much in demand, so they’re worth every single penny they get – and more.”

Fellow stylist Philip Pelusi seconded Tricomi’s opinion by saying: “The most important accessory that you own is your hair.”

He further said that he “can understand” why some stylists charge so much to travel with a star.

“It’s not that the hairdresser wants to overcharge, but they need to make up what they lose in the salon,” he said.

Tricomi also pointed out that stylists like Chris McMillan, who is Jennifer Aniston’s mane man, are originators and not imitators, and their styles are the ones which are copied around the world.

“We’re the people who are creating the trends. It’s short-lived and other people collect on that,” he said.

Talking of some stylists’ astronomical fees, Pelusi said: “Even I’ve cringed on occasion.”

But, in his opinion, McMillan’s fee is not outrageous, and so believes Tricomi.

“I know mostly everybody would say this is really crazy, but most people don’t have a job like this,” said Tricomi. (ANI)

Punjab village leads in selling farming implements

Ferozepur (Kabul Shah Khubban village), Feb.14 (ANI): Known to be a predominantly agricultural state, Punjab has a huge demand for agricultural implements. Travelling in Kabul Shah Khubban village in south-west side of Punjab is known as a hub for manufacturing farm implements.

Located near the India-Pakistan border in Ferozepur district, almost every household in the Kabul Shah Khubban village manufactures agricultural equipments like disc harrows, disc ploughs, tractor trolleys.

Villagers here, who have traditionally been farmers earlier, used to make farm implements for their own use. But gradually they started selling them to others in nearby villages.

The village is now known for producing farming equipments. Youngsters have take to family traditions like ducks to water.

“This is the first and the only village of Punjab where everybody is employed. You will not find any unemployed perosn in our village. Around 1,000 boys here remain busy in various activities everyday. They don’t have any bad habits and other things like theft and robbery don’t happen here. We have only one problem that we are get an erratic supply of electricity and also there is no banking service in the village,” said Fateh Singh, a mechanic in the village.

Kabul Shah Khubban today draws buyers from neighbouring states of Haryana and Rajasthan. The village attracts buyers not just from across Punjab but also from Jammu and Kashmir and even South India.

he reputation and high demand contributes to the village’s monthly income from agricultural farm equipments to a whopping 400,000 dollars!

There is a feeling among villagers that the income can be multiplied with the availability of the latest technology, 24-hour electricity supply and proper finance.

There are 10 large and 60 small-scale manufacturing units in the village. Other households are engaged in making components of farm implements.

“The mechanics themselves practically test the farming implements in the fields. They are completely aware of the use of these machines in the fields, whereas other traders just sell implements to the customers. The mechanics keep on experimenting with new machines. In this way, it’s a tradition, that we have kept going for generations,” said Ranjit Singh, another villager.

Even as diversification of crops is taking place in the state and farmers are taking to newer crops, the availability of suitable farm equipments is vital. For instance, Punjab’s south-west region growing cotton has taken to horticulture. It requires farm equipment that is not easily available in the market. y Avtar Gill (ANI)

Oz farmer discovers man-shaped spud!

Melbourne, Jan 9 (ANI): An Australian farmer was left stunned when he unearthed a man-shaped spud.

Retired orcharding consultant and farmer Ernie Crouch, 73, was digging spuds when he discovered the potato with two arms, two legs, a body, head and small nose.

Sprouts stick out the top of spud’s head.

Crouch was amazed to see that the potato emerged intact after being lifted from the ground by his tractor.

“He did have whiskers but they broke off,” the Mercury.com au quoted Crouch, as saying.

The spud is a Glenvale and the farmer has yet to decide whether the potato will end up as chips or used as seed. (ANI)