[Assam] A write-up by Udayan Mishra
uttam borthakur
uttamborthakur at yahoo.co.in
Tue Mar 3 18:43:54 PST 2009
Chandan Da,
Let us not discuss Udayan Mishra's leanings abd Assam Tribune's allegiance. The question is: whether Sri T. Kishan Singh was killed, the manner of killing notwithstanding? If yes, why? The usual apology shall be in the form of he was a 'spy', or he carried out anti-"................" (that militant faction's) activities. Or is it because, he acted honestly as a government official for the good of the people of his state and prevented leakages. My only point is: only after these militant outfits denounce those killed by them as spies, lackeys, espionage-agents, rapist etc.and unilaterally decide their fate ( may be few 'boys' in their late teens) that people come to hear of the alleged mis-deeds of the likes of T. Kishan Singh. The militant outfits do not give any option to the people to decide for themselves what is good or bad. Rather they impose on the people their 'diktat'/ verdict. Is it any different from when the Indian army rides roughshod over
hapless citizens and concoctes stories of 'encounters'? Do the people have any alternative to choose from? The militants are not the final outcome of a long-drawn struggle based on internal democracy or the guardian angels of such a fight. They do not do what they profess, essentially because they are divorced from people.
So, Chandan Da, please tell me why do you expect a 'ideologically' corrupt 'intelligentsia' to support the militants, when the militants do not find/ try to find support from the people they are 'supposed' to work for? But, I should expect the militants to work better and in a humane/democratic way than the obsolete machinery, because, they show us dreams of a better tomorrow. Is not this lack of absence of democracy the reason behind the fall of even some mighty 'empires' in the recent times despite their better performance in some ways? I specifically anwer your question: despite subjective efforts and favourable conditions, the Russian or Chinese social experiments have not yielded the desired result of expediting the course of history in a given way. It may be like in quantum physics, as soon as you shed light on the sub-atomic particle to observe it, it changes its position:-)
Uttam Kumar Borthakur
________________________________
From: Chan Mahanta <cmahanta at charter.net>
To: A Mailing list for people interested in Assam from around the world <assam at assamnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, 3 March, 2009 7:43:14 PM
Subject: Re: [Assam] A write-up by Udayan Mishra
Hi Uttam:
Last things first:
> Now please do not assign any bad influence my thinking process:-)
*** Far be it for me than to assign bad influences, whatever you may have in mind, to you. But the first paragraph below displays a naivette that is unbecoming of someone of your caliber. While I am tempted to explain, I think it is better for me to avoid it, unless you insist. I will let you make the call, so that I won't have to suffer the consequences of hurting the sentiments of a fellow Oxomiya :-).
> In so far as 'Bhukute Kol Nopoke' aside, I like to say that the social dynamics is so >innumerably multi-factor that whether the effort would end in desired result is always a
> big question unless the whole universe conspires for you.... kol pokibo ne nai tare thik nai....
> but true to human spirit everyone by volition should/ would labour towards a better tomorrow.
*** I am philosophically challenged and thus is unable to grasp whatever it was that you were trying to convey above. I was merely responding to your plea for patience from the grown-ups as to why Mishra
was content with lauding the Manipuri women's repeated protests and demonstrations while ignoring what it brought about as results.
> The killers of Dr. T. Kishan Singh were also perhaps thinking that they were doing great for the people >of Manipur.
*** You are so generous :-).
> Prof Mishra's article points at possible connivance of the state bureaucracy / politicians too. >NSCN-Manipur bureaucrat/politician nexus, does this sound radical Chandan Da?
**** Radical? Heck no! It is actually the most tired of tactics of the fair-and-balanced ( heh-heh) segment of our intelligentsia. They never fail to pay perfunctory cognizance of their govt's failures. It is the quintessential 'xaaliki snan' ( ritual bath) in the pond of their citizenship duties, but devoid of any credibility. It would be credible if they had held their 'democratic' govt's feet to the fire, demanded accountability for THEIR responsibilities.
But I would have to give Mishra a pass on this, knowing that the loyal AT , fiercely independent in its citizenship responsibilities as a premier member of the watchdogs of democracy as it is, would never publish the venting of any such radical notions against their lawfully constituted and democratically elected govt.
Question is what holds back those from the ranks of our intelligentsia that does not have to grovel for AT's permission to call a spade a spade?
c-da
At 8:43 AM +0530 3/3/09, uttam borthakur wrote:
> Chanda Da:
>
> You got me wrong there.
> The insurgents promise a better way of life, alternative to the extant tyranny. But always end up being brutal murderers without any agenda other than money (or playing into the hands of the system they say they are trying to uproot) and kill persons liked by the people at large to sub-serve the vested interests of the system itself.They become terrorists bereft of any mass support. In fact they act in cross purposes with that of people and make hasty insincere retreats when they face people's ire: NSCN denouncing this killing, ULFA denouncing Lakhimpur blasts, ULFA denying killing of Kamala Saikia............In all they do not give people an alternative to choose from apart from flowery speeches like any other politician.
>
> In so far as 'Bhukute Kol Nopoke' aside, I like to say that the social dynamics is so innumerably multi-factor that whether the effort would end in desired result is always a big question unless the whole universe conspires for you.... kol pokibo ne nai tare thik nai.... but true to human spirit everyone by volition should/ would labour towards a better tomorrow. The killers of Dr. T. Kishan Singh were also perhaps thinking that they were doing great for the people of Manipur. Prof Mishra's article points at possible connivance of the state bureaucracy / politicians too. NSCN-Manipur bureaucrat/politician nexus, does this sound radical Chandan Da?
>
> Now please do not assign any bad influence my thinking process:-)
>
> Uttam Kumar Borthakur
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Chan Mahanta <cmahanta at charter.net>
> To: A Mailing list for people interested in Assam from around the world <assam at assamnet.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, 3 March, 2009 3:19:55 AM
> Subject: Re: [Assam] A write-up by Udayan Mishra
>
> Hi Uttam:
>
>
>> Why of the 'heedlessness' was not in the pale and ambit of Mr. Udayan Mishra's write-up, or was it? Also, it should be understood that The Assam Tribune restricts the length of an article to a given number of lines, words and columns. Just as we are discussing Mr. Mishra's article, views may crystalise and this may impel someone to act in a given direction.
>
>
> *** It is , more than anything else, the culture of symbolic gestures , of homage paying, serving as a substitute for real thing that our intelligentsia is unable to dig out from under.
>
> Nothing wrong with paying homage to the brave going down fighting.
>
> But to hope for change from the sacrifice,in this case the supreme sacrifice, of the lonely crusader, is absurd. It is, at best, an immature and uninformed reaction. The obvious place to seek it is the power establishment, the 'legitimate' government. It is a no-brainer.
>
> Then why is that it was ignored?
>
> Simple: It is easy to go brow-beating the insurgents. It asserts one righteousness, avoids annoying the power structure and helps bury the highly uncomfortable (but obvious to anyone willing and able to see) nature of the dysfunctional desi governance. For if one goes after it, it ends up giving legitimacy to those whom the article is primarily designed to attack and discredit, isn't it?
>
>
> And not because the AT's limit on word count.
>
> Finally, I think it will be more than a tad bit frivolous to try to plea : Bhukute' koltw nopoke' . Time for invoking that has been past decades ago.
>
> c-da
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> At 7:48 AM +0530 3/2/09, uttam borthakur wrote:
>> As Ms Patricia Mukhim had pointed out, 'insouciance' may be the problem. Such desensitisation pervades every sphere. But it never stopped anyone from discussing "slumdog' and the squalor. Also, there are certain things that are really puzzling in human behaviour ( remember Yudhisthir approaching the water hole in Mahabharata), such as, the 'impatience' that all expected changes would come about in one's own life-time. There may be a lull before the storm, who knows?
>>
>> Why of the 'heedlessness' was not in the pale and ambit of Mr. Udayan Mishra's write-up, or was it? Also, it should be understood that The Assam Tribune restricts the length of an article to a given number of lines, words and columns. Just as we are discussing Mr. Mishra's article, views may crystalise and this may impel someone to act in a given direction.
>>
>> So, i should think that patience and perseverence would augur well for everyone of us, especially the adults.
>>
>> Uttam Kumar Borthakur
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ________________________________
>> From: Chan Mahanta <cmahanta at charter.net>
>> To: A Mailing list for people interested in Assam from around the world <assam at assamnet.org>
>> Sent: Sunday, 1 March, 2009 9:59:52 PM
>> Subject: Re: [Assam] A write-up by Udayan Mishra
>>
>>> >It is about the death of a young civil servant in Manipur. I thought assam netters would be interested. How efforts at good deeds are silenced by guns: state as well as militants. So, you may try the link below......
>>
>>
>> **** I was hoping to see some solutions to the problem, at least a discussion of.
>>
>> A lot of ink has been used to displaying one's own righteousness. But who challenged it?
>>
>> Cheap thrills is how I see the essay.
>>
>> Was anyone debating, doubting, gloating over, or otherwise condoning a most senseless crime? Even NSCN( IM) has condemned the act, as the article says.
>>
>>
>> The author leaves no doubt about his own balanced sense of justice by painstakingly pointing out the perpetrators -- the insurgents and the state. How more balanced can one get? He pays flowing tributes to the Manipuri women , their outrage and their fearless, ceaseless protests.
>>
>> Somewhere here must be lurking what their efforts have brought them.
> >
>> But why can't I find it? Could it just be, therefore, that these are just as meaningless rites too? And why should it be meaningless, fruitless? Who should they be looking at for results? The good folks or the folks? Misra, incisively points out who the bad guys are. But where are the good guys? How does he see their role in these tragedies? Do they have any responsibility too? Could it be that he would not get into that, lest it dilutes his message?
>>
>> Standing out, by its absence, is any effort by the author to look at, if not suggest solutions, into what leads to these acts of violence and death and how to put an end to it. In that it is, at best, yet another lot of idle blather.
>>
>> cm
>>
>>
>> PS: If I am not mistaken, this writer authored an article a few years ago, in which he exhorted the people of Assam to forsake the fantasy of the Seven Sisters, that the Assamese had nothing in common with the Nagas, the Mizos, the Khasis and so forth and argued the point that the notion of the Seven Sisters is a myth. Has he found religion, or am I the one who is confused?
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>> The tragedy of Manipur
>> - Udayon Misra
>> Dr Thingnam Kishan Singh, the young SDO of Kashom Khullen subdivision of Ukhrul district of Manipur, demonstrated a rare sense of integrity and courage as a civil service official. He decided to swim against the tide. Unlike most other government officials who have been unquestioningly obeying the diktats of the different militant groups, Kishan Singh stubbornly opposed the siphoning off of government funds into the coffers of the militants. Kishan believed passionately that development funds must go to the people. And, he paid with his life for his uprightness and idealism. On February 13, Dr Kishan Singh along with his driver, Aribam Rajen and a mandal, Yumnam Token Singh were abducted from front of the Deputy Commissioner's office at Ukhrul as they came out of a meeting. Four days later their bodies were discovered at Taphou Kuki village in Senapati district. They had been bludgeoned to death in a most brutal manner. The NSCN (I-M) was suspected
of
> > carrying out the abduction and murders and after initial denials the NSCN (I-M) admitted that three of its cadres were involved in the incident. Obviously, the militant outfit was unhappy at Kishan Singh's resolve not to allow development funds from being squandered by the militants and hence it decided to teach the young idealist officer a lesson. One was immediately reminded of the manner in which Sanjoy Ghose was abducted and killed by the ULFA because he demanded transparency in the release of funds meant for rural development programmes at Majuli.
>>
>> Had it not been the immediate public outcry following the discovery of the dead bodies of Kishan Singh and his colleagues, the incident would have perhaps been written off as yet another instance of militant killing in the state of Manipur. Manipur has been in the throes of violence for several decades now. But unlike many other states of the country where violence, both by the State and by insurgent outfits have come to be accepted with a stoic sense of resignation, in Manipur the people, especially its womenfolk, know how to protest every such killing. Women's organisations like the Meira Paibi have been in the forefront of such protests and women dressed in white and silently protesting violence and the deaths of innocents is a common sight in Imphal and other towns of Manipur. Not that these protests have resulted in immediate results. Entire Manipur was galvanized over the rape and murder of Thanjam Manorama by security personnel some years ago.
>> Manipur's protest against that heinous deed was flashed throughout the country and abroad. But the culprits are yet to be punished. But the people of Manipur have not allowed the callousness and collaboration of the authorities in these inhuman acts of violence to dampen their spirits. They know in their heart of hearts that they must keep on protesting against all such acts, whether committed by the State or by the militant groups. So, the Joint Action Committee set up to protest the deaths of Kishan Singh and his colleagues has worked out an elaborate plan of action which is bound to keep people's opinion focused on the need to secure justice and get the perpetrators of this terrible crime duly punished. Who was Kishan Singh over whose murder entire Manipur has been galvanized into protest? So much so, that all organisations irrespective of clan and tribe loyalties have come out in one voice in demanding that the criminals masquerading as militants
> be
>> punished. The NSCN(I-M) which initially tried to disclaim responsibility, has now said that it has identified the killers who happen to be its cadres and that they are in its custody. With thousands of people demonstrating against the murder in the Tangkhul Naga dominated Ulkhrul district, the NSCN(I-M) leadership has now been forced to distance itself from this heinous deed by at least publicly disapproving the crime.
>>
>> Dr Thingnam Kishan Singh was no ordinary government official. In many senses, he was a symbol of the young and resurgent Manipur that is trying to come out of the clutches of almost endless violence. He had founded the "Centre for Alternative Discourse" and was the editor Alternative Perspectives, a scholarly journal which has created for itself a place among the intellectual world of the country. Each issue of this highly perceptive journal would carry an incisive essay by Kishen Singh and the topics ranged from critiquing India's Look East policy to the economics of underdevelopment. Sad to say, in Assam today we have few social science journals which would be able to compete with the one edited by Kishen Singh, either in the range of its topics or in the depth of its analysis. A topper in English Literature both at the undergraduate and the post-graduate level from the Jamia Milli Islamia University, Kishan started his teaching career at Delhi's
>> Shyamlal College. But his urge to serve his own state of Manipur made him give up that job and come and join the prestigious DM College at Imphal. From there he moved to the Manipur University as a Lecturer. Then he took the Manipur Civil Service examination and joined the administration. As the SDO of a backward district, Kishen was bent on making development funds reach the people instead of the militants. His devotion to duty and unswerving loyalty to his ideals created problems for those who worked with him. The Joint Action Committee has accused the Deputy Commissioner and the Superintendent of Police of Ukhrul of having complicity in the crime. The Chief Minister Ibobi Singh has already suspended both of them for their failure to ensure protection to Kishen and his colleagues. Only a thorough and impartial enquiry will reveal the truth of the matter.
> >
>> It is rather strange that initially the murder of this leading intellectual and Manipur Civil Service official went virtually unreported in the regional press and media of our state. That much for our sentiments on the seven sisters being bonded with a common thread! It was only after life in Imphal and other towns came to a virtual halt because of massive people's protests against the murders and curfew had to be imposed, that the regional media gave some space to the incident. Quite often the regional media in Assam rightly accuses the national media of blacking out this region during moments of crisis. But, unfortunately, when it came to reporting this particular incident involving the abduction and murder of a leading intellectual of neighbouring Manipur, the regional press in Assam failed to give the incident due weightage. Those who knew Dr Kishen Singh would vouchsafe for not only his unflinching loyalty to the common people but also his urge
to
>> build a new Northeast where there would be more meaningful interaction and exchange between the different states and their people. The research foundation which he had started, the journal he edited and the discussions he initiated bear testimony to all this. He was one of those few who could successfully get out of the groove of localised thinking and relate his vision to happenings not only in this region or country but also in the wider world. This is exactly what he stated in his editorial in one of the volumes of his journal. His death in the hands of some criminals who try to pass off as "freedom fighters" but who are the real enemies of the people, has created a void which will be difficult to fill. I take this opportunity to pay my tribute to a young man who, unlike most of us, dared to do what he considered to be right.
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>> At 9:11 AM +0530 3/1/09, uttam borthakur wrote:
>> > It is about the death of a young civil servant in Manipur. I thought assam netters would be interested. How efforts at good deeds are silenced by guns: state as well as militants. So, you may try the link below......
>>>
>>> http://www.assamtribune.com/scripts/details.asp?id=mar0109/edit2
>>>
>>> Uttam Kumar Borthakur
>>>
>>>
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