December 4, 2012

‘CHINESE ACTIVITIES IN SOUTH NEPAL’ RAISE INDIA’S HACKLES

[“Yes, we are concerned. We have already shared this information as a leading agency in this regard,” said Sahay, answering a query of an Indian journalist whether India was concerned with the alleged increasing number of Chinese study centres in southern Nepal.]


By Mahesh Acharya
NEW DELHI, DEC 03 - Claiming that Chinese activities in the southern part of Nepal have surged, India has, in a rare public statement, expressed its concern on the issue. 

Addressing a press meet after a crucial border meeting with the Nepali delegation in New Delhi on Monday, the head of the Indian team, Pranay Sahay, who is the director general of the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB), voiced such concerns. 

This is the first time a top Indian official made such a public statement on the alleged Chinese influence in Nepal.

“Yes, we are concerned. We have already shared this information as a leading agency in this regard,” said Sahay, answering a query of an Indian journalist whether India was concerned with the alleged increasing number of Chinese study centres in southern Nepal.

“This [information on Chinese activities] has reached all appropriate mechanisms. Also, a mechanism has been worked out at a higher level to implement this,” he added.

Sahay, however, did not elaborate why the alleged Chinese activities were worrisome for India. He claimed that this particular issue was not raised during Monday’s talks with the Nepali team. Nepali officials confirmed that the issue did not emerge.

The talks, however, saw the discussion on a string of border related issues, including greater cooperation in combating terrorism, arms smuggling, insurgency, smuggling of fake currency and human trafficking.

“The talks were fruitful. We agreed to further enhance our cooperation and coordination in border related thorny issues,” said Koshraj Onta, leader of the Nepali team and chief of the Armed Police Force.

Meanwhile, in his solo press meet after the talks, SSB head Sahay commended Nepali security personnel on a “fairly high seizure and recovery of fake Indian currency in comparison to the previous years”. 

Asked about the harassment Nepalis are facing at the hands of the SSB personnel, Sahay said that he had considered the issue “very seriously” and had even taken stern action against the perpetrators.

Border pillar data differ in the meeting, both sides put forward their own claims about the number of border pillars. According to a source privy to the meeting, the Indian side put the figure at 6,800 plus while the Nepali side rebutted with a 5,000 plus figure. Both sides, however, have agreed to sort out the problem after conducting a joint study on the ground.

‘Indian insurgents in Nepal’

Sahay claimed the possibility of insurgents active in north-eastern Indian states residing in Nepal. “In the past, we even brought some NorthEast militants to India from Nepal,” he said.

Rise in SSB strength

India has already moved ahead with its plan to increase the number of SSB personnel stationed along the border with Nepal. “Within a few years, this number will go up to 35,000 from the current 30,000,” he said. This means the battalion number will rise to more than 35 from the current 29.

The plan to construct 89 new border outposts is also under way.

“Till now, 25 have been constructed. The whole process will complete by 2015,” said Sahay.

Next meeting in 2013

Both the sides have agreed to hold the next meeting in Nepal next year. However, the specific date and venue will be decided later. Monday’s meeting is the first of its kind at the level of the chief of border guarding forces of the two immediate neighbours. Though core talks wrapped up on Monday, other crucial meetings will continue on Tuesday and Wednesday.

@ The Kathmandu Post 

[The ban was immediately decried by women's rights activists, who said it would isolate women.  Jagmati Sangwan, vice president of the All India Democratic Women's Association, said that the men who head such village councils "want women to get cut off from the processes of modernization, education and employment."  She said they knew full well that such laws, targeting only one segment of society, are not legal.]
 
PATNA, Bihar -- A village council in the state of Bihar this week prohibited unmarried women and girls from using mobile phones, saying that they promote extramarital affairs and unsanctioned marriages and erode the moral fabric of society.  Married women will be allowed to use them only indoors and in the presence of a relative.

The decree was issued Sunday by a panchayat -- an informal, unelected council -- in Sunderbari, a village of 8,000 in the Purnia district of eastern Bihar. "Girls," as the council calls them, which are defined as all unmarried females, face a fine of 10,000 rupees, or $180, if they violate the order, the council said, or the equivalent of months of income for most families in the area; the fine for married women is 2,000 rupees.

"With the use of mobile phones by the girls and women, incidents of love affairs, elopement and extramarital affairs have increased in our village,"  Mohammed Manwar Alam, a panchayat member, said by telephone Tuesday. "It is intolerable and eroding the moral fabric in our society," he said.

Many villagers, male and female, attended a village meeting Sunday about the ban, and most favored it, particularly older people, Mr. Alam said. He presided over the meeting. The panchayat, which is made up entirely of men, also barred women from bathing outdoors, at water pumps or in ponds or canals.

Sunderbari is an impoverished, predominantly Muslim village about 300 kilometers, or 190 miles, from the state capital, Patna. About 60 percent of district residents live below the poverty line.

Another member of the panchayat, Mohammed Javed Iqbal, said that at least six women from the village had eloped in the past five months, which he said has hurt the village's reputation.   "Even the married women have eloped with their lovers, dumping their husbands," Mr. Iqbal said. "The easy use of mobile phones has been the real game changer in all the incidents," he said.

The panchayat formed a social advisory committee to implement the ruling; a 10-member executive body within the committee will be in charge of enforcing it.

The ban was immediately decried by women's rights activists, who said it would isolate women.  Jagmati Sangwan, vice president of the All India Democratic Women's Association, said that the men who head such village councils "want women to get cut off from the processes of modernization, education and employment."  She said they knew full well that such laws, targeting only one segment of society, are not legal.

Similar rules made by self-appointed village councils have become commonplace in some parts of rural India, notably, of late, in the states of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.  In July, a village council in Bagpat district of Uttar Pradesh issued a decree banning "love marriage," or a marriage that was not arranged, saying that those who did so would not be allowed to live in the village. They also said that women below the age of 40 could not go to the market, and unmarried women and girls would not be allowed to use mobile phones on the streets.

In October, a village council member in Haryana, reacting to a series of rapes in the state, blamed the influence of movies and television and suggested that the marriage age be lowered to 16 to keep women sexually satisfied. Ms. Sangwan said she believed such statements in Haryana had emboldened panchayats in places like Bihar.

These all-male panchayats, while not legally part of the governing structure of India, have deep historical roots, and their decrees are often followed faithfully by village communities. Politicians often rely on them to mobilize voters, which means their power increases around elections, experts say.

Sandeep Kumar R Pudakalkatti, the Purnia district magistrate, has opened an investigation into the Sunderbari panchayat's move; he told the BBC that if the edict is unlawful, "necessary action will be taken against those guilty."

Another district official, Sanjay Kumar, a block development officer, said in an interview that he planned to visit the village himself to ensure that the reports are true. "Such a diktat cannot be allowed in a democratic society," he said. "It is unlawful."

The village's top elected official, Shamina Khatoon, a woman, was not invited to the panchayat's meeting on Sunday.

Neha Thirani contributed reporting to this article from Mumbai.