22 tribals dead after consuming spirit in Maharashtra

Alibag (Maharashtra): Twenty two tribals, including eight women, died after consuming spurious liquor at a village near the pilgrimage town of Pali, about 60 kilometres from Alibag. Twelve other tribals were in serious condition in hospitals in the Raigad district and in Mumbai, Revenue officials in Alibag said on Thursday, adding the death toll is likely to go up. The tribals are suspected to have purchased the spirit from the shop of one Subhash Oswal in Pali over the last week and the first of the casualty was reported on Wednesday morning, police said.

"Twenty-two people have died in the incident and 12 more are serious," Residential Deputy Collector Ramesh Survade told reporters in Alibag. Oswal was arrested on Thursday along with two of his employees Dattatray Musale and Vilas Musale and the trio has been charged for culpable homicide, police said.

"Oswal has a license for selling spirit but cannot sell the goods for the consumption of humans," said a senior police official. Consuming spirit for more kicks is popular among the tribal 'katkaris' of the district and the police suspect that something was amiss with the spirit sold by Oswal due to which the tribals fell ill.

The deceased hail from hamlets in the vicinity of Pali which houses the revered Ballaleshwar Temple. State Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh has announced ex-gratia of Rs 1 lakh each for the next of kin of the deceased. (PTI)

READ MORE - 22 tribals dead after consuming spirit in Maharashtra

RTI Act to be translated in 8 tribal languages

In order to give the tribals their right to know about the basic things through Right to Information Act (RTI), the State Information Commission (SIC) has decided to translate the basic aspect of the existing act in eight major tribal languages of the State. These languages include Ho, Munda, Sanathali, Kui, Kubhi and Desia. SIC has planned to go to the door steps of the community leaders and tribal people's representatives starting sarpanch to MLA and MP and make an all out effort to educate them on the Act.

It has also planned to organise a "Soochna Mahasabha" in this connection. Steps would be taken to educate the officials of the Integrated Tribal Development Agency (ITDA), 17 micro projects, Adivasi schools and Kanyashram on the importance of imparting information to the common people. They will also be educated about the law and their responsibilities in this connection.
READ MORE - RTI Act to be translated in 8 tribal languages

TRIBALS GROUPS MEET KYINDAH

Tribal Guests invited to participate in the Republic Day Celebrations met Minister of Tribal Affairs, Shri P.R. Kyindah here today and presented colourful dances. These tribal guests included 60 tribals, one male and one female from each State, representing 37 Scheduled Tribes and 16 Primitive Tribal Groups were invited by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs. Besides witnessing Republic Day Parade tribal guests also had meeting with President, the Vice-President and the Prime Minister of India and Defence Minister.

The Ministry of Tribal Affairs also took them to the various places within Delhi for sightseeing. They also enjoyed travelling in Metro Train and visit to Vrindavan, Mathura and Agra. Objective for arranging such visits is to provide opportunities to the tribals to know each other and to have glimpses of cultural heritage of other parts of the country.

Felicitating the tribal guests on the occasion, Shri Kyindah said tribals represent a vibrant group of our society. Their welfare has a very high priority of the agenda of the Government. Various programmes and schemes have been initiated by the Government and focus is to provide them all possible opportunities for better education, health care and other development. He said that recently notified Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest Dwellers Act would go a long way to provide land rights to the tribals. He urged for creating mass awareness about the various schemes and programmes so that target groups could take the benefit of the schemes.

*****

NCJ/SR
READ MORE - TRIBALS GROUPS MEET KYINDAH

‘I am still hooked’

What is the real status of thegharial and can we save it?
There are just about 200 adult gharials left alive in the wild and the pressures on their survival are mounting by the day. Gharial survival is inextricably linked with the survival of our northern rivers (as are the fates of river dolphins, turtles, migratory waterfowl, otters and famous fish like the mahseer and hilsa). While some of us may be interested in the conservation of different species, a concept we call “wildlife management”, the real problem is “human management”. Unless the realisation that we are losing all of our rivers hits home, we will not only lose the wonderful gharial and the other river creatures, the stage is also being set for huge die-offs of our fellow human beings who are dependent on these rivers for survival.

If you had the resources, what kind of herp research would you most wish to undertake?
As we all know, good, effective conservation can only happen with good research as the basis. For the gharial, we need to know what their territories are, how far they migrate and what the critical factors are in their riverine habitats that determine whether they survive or not. For the king cobra and python, we need to know how far they roam, whether they have a home range and how large they grow. All this research requires dedicated field people and some fairly expensive radio telemetry equipment. The same argument holds true for the long list of other endangered herps like the leatherback sea turtle (the Andaman and Nicobar nesting beaches are some of the best in the world) and the myriad species yet to be described in the Western Ghats, Eastern Ghats and the North-east.

How could farming possibly help save the last 200 gharials?
The gharials were heavily hunted for their skins. The remaining populations were then limited to the few riverine habitats that weren’t destroyed by dams, barrages and siltation. Now they are being finished off by competing fishermen who always resented the closure of fishing in Protected Areas. Gharials (and muggers) are easy to rear in captivity from eggs collected in the wild and much more profitable than fish. Why catch fish for a small income when a reptile can earn you much more? Croc (including gharial) farming, (where animals are bred for the sale of skins) could ironically save the species if done right.

You have long championed people-oriented conservation such as the Irula Cooperative’s snake venom industry, the Irula Women’s Society’s tree planting programmes and, of course, the croc farming that you and I disagree about. Where do you stand with regard to the proposed Tribal Bill?
A uniform Tribal Bill for all tribals all over India may be a laudable idea but shows how badly the lawmakers have done their homework. What happens when each nuclear family develops into one or more families? Is there another 2.5 ha. available for them too? This is a complicated issue to which too little thought has been given in the face of real and perceived people’s problems and political pressures. Having roamed Indian forests for half a century, I know what human presence in a forest does and it’s rarely positive. If we can’t keep at least that four per cent Protected Area that India has left inviolate, we are dooming one of the richest wildlife legacies on the planet.

Thanks to field studies in different parts of the world, it is now apparent that “rescue” of wild animals and translocation to new, unfamiliar places is likely to end in disaster, snakes included. Do you have any message for the many snake rescuers around the country on this?
This is a tough question because very often when you get a snake call, unless you take a snake away from a household or garden, it is likely to be killed. It would be best to release the snake as close as possible to the place of capture, but in urban areas this is generally not an option. Since snake rescues must, under law, be done with the permission of the Forest Department, an area for release should be chosen with their help and approval that has the basic food, water and shelter requirements for snake survival. This means calling on the help of experts in field herpetology, essential if the rescue and release programme is to have any meaning.

Are there any young herp persons on the Indian horizon that give you reason to hope?
There are a good bunch of young herp persons in India now, more than I could have ever imagined back in the ‘60s when I was starting to get serious about studying and protecting them. They need training, encouragement and in the long run they need jobs in this field, which will only happen when the government, corporates and universities start taking conservation and research more seriously.

Do you have a message for kids?
My main message is something most kids already know: reptiles and amphibians are just about the most fascinating creatures in the world. But it is difficult to make grownups aware of just how wonderful and useful these animals are. It is up to kids to educate their parents and all adults (whose minds generally get closed to the wonders of nature) and open their minds to our dependence on the survival of wild places and wild creatures.
— Sanctuary Features


The statesman
READ MORE - ‘I am still hooked’

Orissa tribals up in arms against government

Anger is growing among the tribal people in Orissa against the state government's indifference towards their problems and sufferings.

As such, the tribals are at war with the government over displacement issues in different parts of the state and what has enraged them now is the fact that hundreds of non-tribals have cornered advantages and privileges that should have come to them.

The issue is no longer limited to Kandhmal district which saw a massive ethnic conflict last month, and is now spreading to other districts as well.

The ethnic violence in Kandhmal last month has now spread to neighbouring Balangir, also a tribal-dominated district. Thousands of tribals, who participated in the rally are angry over reports that many non-tribals have been cornering facilities available to Scheduled Tribes by producing fake documents.

''Fake tribals occupying government jobs must be thrown out and genuine tribals be offered the posts. The land these people have bought or own must be returned and fake tribal students must be driven out of schools and colleges,'' said Satyanarayan Bhoi, president, Adivasi Kalayan Sangh.

''We tribals have lost everything, our land, our homes, our identity because of these fake certificates. The government will listen to us only if we confront them unitedly,'' said a local resident.

The state government cannot afford to antagonize the tribals. They are a huge vote bank and are already unhappy over a number of issues including displacement due to industrial projects across the state.

No wonder after sleeping over the matter for over a year, the government is now promising quick action.

''All the complaints should be sorted out by the concerned officials by the end of this year,'' said Naveen Patnaik, Chief Minister of Orissa.

Kui Samaj, a tribal group in Kandhmal, has come out with a long list of people they allege have held government positions on the basis of fake certificates. That includes IAS and IPS officers.

But any crackdown will invite a backlash from Dalits, especially Dalit Christians.

NDTV

READ MORE - Orissa tribals up in arms against government

What is behind Hindu-Christian violence

By Dan Isaacs
BBC News, Orissa

Man displaced by violence
Some of the displaced are in a refugee camp in the town of Bamunigan

Hundreds of families in a remote region of the eastern Indian state of Orissa remain homeless and without support after a wave of violence swept the region last month.

The minority Christian community in Kandhamal district, many of whom are forest tribal people and low-caste Dalit converts from Hinduism to to Christianity, say they've been targeted by radical Hindu nationalist organisations seeking to put an end to the church and its activities in the region.

This is rejected by the Hindu groups who say the violence is the consequence of local issues unconnected with their presence in the area.

The district has remained under night-time curfew since the tensions erupted and has been largely inaccessible to foreign journalists until now.

Repeated pattern

Father Ravi Samasundar stands amid the burned out ruins of his church in the town of Bamunigan.

Lakhanananda Saraswati
Lakhanananda Saraswati says he was attacked by a mob

"They brought oil, and kerosene, piled everything they could find in the middle of the church and set fire to it. They destroyed or looted everything."

Across this remote region, deep in the highland forests, the pattern was repeated over and over.

Churches were ransacked, entire villages razed and their inhabitants forced to flee into the forests.

The violence, which began on Christmas Eve, has now largely abated, but the plight of the people has not.

Many are now living in the shells of their burned out homes, all their possessions lost.

The conflict has pitted Hindu against Christian, tribal against non-tribal.

All share some responsibility for what has happened, all have suffered. Years of relatively peaceful co-existence of these communities, living a fragile rural existence, has been shattered.

Seething

The Christian community blames the virulently anti-Christian rhetoric of Hindu nationalist organisations; and one person in particularly, a revered local holy man, Lakhanananda Saraswati.

MAP

Father Ravi Samasundar seethes with anger at what has been happening. "Saraswati speaks against Christianity, against the priests, against the nuns," he says.

Hindu activists accuse the local Christian community of stirring up trouble by making "unreasonable" demands - a reference to their attempts to be granted the same preferential access to jobs and education given to low-caste Hindus and tribal communities.

"Political parties or organisations have nothing to do with this. It is a clear social problem", says Jagabandhu Mishra, editor of Rashtra Deepa - a newspaper in the local Oriya language, which reflects the more extreme views of the Hindu nationalists.

When I met Mr Misra in his office, the front page of a recent addition of the paper lay on the desk between us.

It accused the 'Sons of Jesus' of attacking Hindus, and reported on a Christian mob brutally injuring the local Hindu leader Saraswati, an event which triggered much of the worst violence, and which subsequently turned out to be entirely false.

Was there, I asked, a campaign of conversion, or re-conversion of Christians to Hinduism in the area? "If those Hindus who converted to Christianity want to come back," he told me, "the door is now open to them."

Christian mob

No side is left blameless in this conflict. After the initial attacks on church institutions and the shops and homes of Christian families, Christian mobs responded in kind.

A Hindu woman walks through her destroyed village
A Hindu woman walks through her destroyed village

In the village of Gadapur, Hindu families, standing amid the charred rubble of their homes, told me how a mob of tribal Christians had descended on them, forcing them to flee into the forest, before destroying every shop and dwelling in the village.

For those now living in makeshift tents, or in the ruins of their old homes, aid from the state government has been limited: a few tents, some plastic sheeting, food and cooking utensils.

But far more is needed on a sustained basis.

Ministers from the Hindu nationalist BJP-controlled state government have toured the area, made promises, but pledged little constructive support for those in most need.

Perhaps more alarmingly, NGOs and church organisations have been banned from offering direct assistance. The official reason given is that by helping one community and not another, they may provoke further violence.

Interest rates

Church and other aid organisations, desperate to help their local communities see sinister motives at work.

Elderly Hindu woman
This elderly Hindu woman lives with her adopted Christian son

"This conflict is fought in the name of religion," says NGO worker Kailash Chandra Dandpath, "but the real motives are economic and political.

"The business community here, with its links to the Hindu nationalist organisations, were once in complete control here. They'd lend money to the tribals and the Dalits at incredibly high rates of interest, up to 120% per year, and then the debtor would have to sell his farm produce to the lender at a price controlled by the businessmen."

Mr Dandpath is describing the system still widely practiced in India, of bonded exploitation, where a family might well be indebted to the lender for generations.

"What's happening now", says Mr Dandpath, "is that the farmers, the most marginalised of whom are from tribal and Christian communities, are being linked by the NGOs to local banks, lending at perhaps 10% interest a year - ten times less.

"This is clearly a threat to the businessmen. And they are trying to break this link, using religion as an excuse... in India, the easiest method of politics is to take religion to divide and rule."

The dynamics of conflict are rarely easy to dissect.

There are always economic and social divisions within society to be exploited by those more rich and powerful, particularly when the existing order is threatened.

And there's no doubt that the diverse communities in Kandhamal district have suffered a terrible tragedy in recent weeks, which threatens to break down the existing delicate social order there forever.

BBN

By Dan Isaacs
BBC News, Orissa

Man displaced by violence
Some of the displaced are in a refugee camp in the town of Bamunigan

Hundreds of families in a remote region of the eastern Indian state of Orissa remain homeless and without support after a wave of violence swept the region last month.

The minority Christian community in Kandhamal district, many of whom are forest tribal people and low-caste Dalit converts from Hinduism to to Christianity, say they've been targeted by radical Hindu nationalist organisations seeking to put an end to the church and its activities in the region.

This is rejected by the Hindu groups who say the violence is the consequence of local issues unconnected with their presence in the area.

The district has remained under night-time curfew since the tensions erupted and has been largely inaccessible to foreign journalists until now.

Repeated pattern

Father Ravi Samasundar stands amid the burned out ruins of his church in the town of Bamunigan.

Lakhanananda Saraswati
Lakhanananda Saraswati says he was attacked by a mob

"They brought oil, and kerosene, piled everything they could find in the middle of the church and set fire to it. They destroyed or looted everything."

Across this remote region, deep in the highland forests, the pattern was repeated over and over.

Churches were ransacked, entire villages razed and their inhabitants forced to flee into the forests.

The violence, which began on Christmas Eve, has now largely abated, but the plight of the people has not.

Many are now living in the shells of their burned out homes, all their possessions lost.

The conflict has pitted Hindu against Christian, tribal against non-tribal.

All share some responsibility for what has happened, all have suffered. Years of relatively peaceful co-existence of these communities, living a fragile rural existence, has been shattered.

Seething

The Christian community blames the virulently anti-Christian rhetoric of Hindu nationalist organisations; and one person in particularly, a revered local holy man, Lakhanananda Saraswati.

MAP

Father Ravi Samasundar seethes with anger at what has been happening. "Saraswati speaks against Christianity, against the priests, against the nuns," he says.

Hindu activists accuse the local Christian community of stirring up trouble by making "unreasonable" demands - a reference to their attempts to be granted the same preferential access to jobs and education given to low-caste Hindus and tribal communities.

"Political parties or organisations have nothing to do with this. It is a clear social problem", says Jagabandhu Mishra, editor of Rashtra Deepa - a newspaper in the local Oriya language, which reflects the more extreme views of the Hindu nationalists.

When I met Mr Misra in his office, the front page of a recent addition of the paper lay on the desk between us.

It accused the 'Sons of Jesus' of attacking Hindus, and reported on a Christian mob brutally injuring the local Hindu leader Saraswati, an event which triggered much of the worst violence, and which subsequently turned out to be entirely false.

Was there, I asked, a campaign of conversion, or re-conversion of Christians to Hinduism in the area? "If those Hindus who converted to Christianity want to come back," he told me, "the door is now open to them."

Christian mob

No side is left blameless in this conflict. After the initial attacks on church institutions and the shops and homes of Christian families, Christian mobs responded in kind.

A Hindu woman walks through her destroyed village
A Hindu woman walks through her destroyed village

In the village of Gadapur, Hindu families, standing amid the charred rubble of their homes, told me how a mob of tribal Christians had descended on them, forcing them to flee into the forest, before destroying every shop and dwelling in the village.

For those now living in makeshift tents, or in the ruins of their old homes, aid from the state government has been limited: a few tents, some plastic sheeting, food and cooking utensils.

But far more is needed on a sustained basis.

Ministers from the Hindu nationalist BJP-controlled state government have toured the area, made promises, but pledged little constructive support for those in most need.

Perhaps more alarmingly, NGOs and church organisations have been banned from offering direct assistance. The official reason given is that by helping one community and not another, they may provoke further violence.

Interest rates

Church and other aid organisations, desperate to help their local communities see sinister motives at work.

Elderly Hindu woman
This elderly Hindu woman lives with her adopted Christian son

"This conflict is fought in the name of religion," says NGO worker Kailash Chandra Dandpath, "but the real motives are economic and political.

"The business community here, with its links to the Hindu nationalist organisations, were once in complete control here. They'd lend money to the tribals and the Dalits at incredibly high rates of interest, up to 120% per year, and then the debtor would have to sell his farm produce to the lender at a price controlled by the businessmen."

Mr Dandpath is describing the system still widely practiced in India, of bonded exploitation, where a family might well be indebted to the lender for generations.

"What's happening now", says Mr Dandpath, "is that the farmers, the most marginalised of whom are from tribal and Christian communities, are being linked by the NGOs to local banks, lending at perhaps 10% interest a year - ten times less.

"This is clearly a threat to the businessmen. And they are trying to break this link, using religion as an excuse... in India, the easiest method of politics is to take religion to divide and rule."

The dynamics of conflict are rarely easy to dissect.

There are always economic and social divisions within society to be exploited by those more rich and powerful, particularly when the existing order is threatened.

And there's no doubt that the diverse communities in Kandhamal district have suffered a terrible tragedy in recent weeks, which threatens to break down the existing delicate social order there forever.

BBC NEWS

READ MORE - What is behind Hindu-Christian violence

Land grab not in tribals' interests: Kerala minister

Kerala Tuesday said that the ongoing land grab agitation led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) in Wayanad district was against tribal interests as the land in question has been earmarked for distribution among tribals.

A group of landless farmers and tribals, led by CPI(ML) activists, had Friday occupied government land at Meppadi in Wayanad, demanding that it be distributed among the landless.

'It should be suspected that this stir may have been organised by those who are against distributing land among tribals. The land now occupied by the agitators was actually earmarked to be distributed among the tribal people,' A.K. Balan, minister for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes welfare, told reporters at Kalpetta.

Kalpetta, the Wayanad district headquarters, is around 70 km east of Kozhikode.

'Out of around 350 families who have illegally occupied the government land, only around 120 families belong to the tribal community,' the minister pointed out.

Tribals make up 36 percent of the population of the hilly district of Wayanad.

'We haven't taken a decision yet on vacating the agitators from the land. The government is awaiting a report from the district collector,' he added.

The land occupied by the agitators was taken over by the government in 1970 from Harrison Malayalam plantations in the wake of land reforms. It is currently held by the state forest department.

A similar agitation for land by tribal outfit Adivasi Gothra Maha Sabha (AGMS) in 2003 at Muthanga in the district led to violence, resulting in the death of a tribal and a policeman.

READ MORE - Land grab not in tribals' interests: Kerala minister

Tribals forced to eat human excreta in Betul - Act a blot on humanity

This story was reported in today Hindustan Times, Bhopal Edition & Rajya Ki Nai Dunia. It is total violation of human rights, an act which not only needs to be condemned by all but needs immediate reaction by the State. This is blot on HUMANITY and should not be accepted at any cost.



Betul,Madhya Pradesh: Six persons, including the husband of a village "sarpanch" were arrested for allegedly forcing two tribals to consume human excreta in full public view, police said.While the police claim the act was preformed by the accused over the dispute related to theft of wood, the tribals, who were admitted to the hospital, alleged the treatment was meted out to them as a punishment for demanding job cards under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Schemes (NREGS).

The victims, Nathuram alias Dhannu and Mainu Adivasi, claimed they had approach Mannu Gond, husband of the village sarpanch who handle all her official affairs, and sought their job cards under their scheme. Infuriated by their demand, Gond and five others forced them to consume human excreta in front of the villagers, they alleged.

Cases were registered under various section of IPC against six person for forcing Dhannu and Mainu to consume human excreta.

READ MORE - Tribals forced to eat human excreta in Betul - Act a blot on humanity

Gujarat's new district for tribals fails to bring cheer

AHMEDABAD, India (UCAN): Tribal activists and Church people in Gujarat state, western India, say a district created for tribal advancement has only weakened them politically and economically.

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi announced the creation of Tapi as the state's 26th district on Oct. 2, 2007. The day marked the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, a native of Gujarat, who successfully led India's independence struggle from British colonial rule.

The new district derives its name from the river Tapi, which flows through the state's tribal-dominated southeastern region. Its headquarters is Vyara, 330 kilometers south of Ahmedabad, the state's commercial hub. Ahmedabad is 915 kilometers southwest of New Delhi.

Jesuit Father Stanny Jebamalai, who heads the Vyara-based Legal Aid and Human Rights Center, says the new district "has not served the purpose." He pointed out that local people had for the past two decades demanded the tribal areas of Surat district be made a new district. However, they are now dissatisfied as the redistricting left that tribal pocket truncated and politically weakened, the priest told UCA News.

Only half the district's 10 predominantly tribal taluka (subdivisions) went to the new district, while Surat retained the rest. Prior to the division, Surat, with nearly 5 million people, was the second-biggest district in Gujarat after Ahmedabad, which has 5.8 million people.

Tapi now has about 719,000 people, nearly 98 percent of them tribal. The tribal subdivisions that remain in Surat have 520,000 people, more than 90 percent of them tribal. Nearly 15 percent of the tribal people are Christians.

"We wanted to unify and strengthen the tribal people sharing common language and culture. However, it has not happened, as more than 500,000 tribals are still left with Surat district," Father Jebamalai explained.

Such division makes the tribal communities "politically ineffective" and obstructs "their long-term aspirations," he said, noting that they share historical and socioeconomic realities too. Keeping them together would have "strengthened tribal identity and created a distinct consciousness" among them, he asserted. If the government is "really interested" in tribal people's development, it should unite them, the priest added.

Raymond Chaudhari, a Catholic representing Vyara-based Adivasi Sangharsh Samiti (society for the tribal struggle), agrees. He says keeping the 10 subdivisions together would help improve self-respect and dignity among the tribal people and enhance their prosperity.

Pareshbhai Vasava, a tribal activist, acknowledges the new district has solved many hassles for local people. Vasava lives in Songadh taluka, 175 kilometers from Surat. Vyara is only 60 kilometers away. However, he also questions the government's wisdom in keeping the other five subdivisions with Surat.

Ashok Gamit, a Vyara-based journalist, also says Tapi should include all 10 taluka for better administration of tribal areas.

Jesuit Father Xavier Manjooran, who heads a social service organization in the region, predicts tribal people in Surat will not get many benefits meant for tribal advancement, since they are now a smaller minority in the district.

Tribal people in Gujarat are spread over 11 districts in the state's southeastern region. They account for 15 percent of the state's 50.7 million people. The Church manages several schools, health-care centers, technical institutes and other facilities in the tribal area.

Church workers also strive to empower tribal people to fight for their rights. This at times has led to tension between the Church and radical Hindu groups who also operate there.

Several attacks on Christians have occurred in the area, especially after the Bharatiya Janata Party (Indian people's party) came to power in the state in 1995. The party is considered the political arm of groups that want to make India a Hindu theocracy. The latest reported attack took place in the third week of December.


Details here
READ MORE - Gujarat's new district for tribals fails to bring cheer

Indian Culture "Castes" its Shadow on Christianity

By Chhavi Sachdev In largely Hindu India, the number of Christians is on the rise. Despite being a child of the West, Christianity in India is growing up with its own identity. Indian Christians, because they live in close proximity with other religions, tend to take other religions seriously and bring them to their theological discourse, which the Western Christians do not need to do, said Kuruvilla Pandikattu, a Jesuit priest and physicist. By and large the perspective is similar, Pandikattu said. Certain areas in India have always been strongholds of Christianity, such as Goa, a former Portuguese settlement on the West Coast, and Kerala on the East, where the Apostle Thomas is believed to have settled in the first century. While the landing of Thomas is hard to prove or disprove, there is definite evidence of a thriving Christian community in Kerala by the third century largely because of Syrian spice merchants who stayed in Kerala and intermarried, said Corrine G. Dempsey, an associate professor of religious studies at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. A conservative estimate is that 60 percent of all Christian Indians come from Dalit and lower classes, said Albion Universitys Selva Raj. Missionaries, though banned by the government, gain a foothold thanks, largely, to the entrenched caste system in society. Although casteism has been officially outlawed since 1950, rural society runs along strict caste lines. The lowest caste, Dalits or Harijans, previously called untouchables, faces widespread discrimination along with economic and educational disadvantages. India has a quota system, similar to the American affirmative action, but the realities of rural life are removed from it. Sociologists and anthropologists agree that a casteless religion is, therefore, attractive to indigenous tribals. Yet, it is hard to determine whether faith precedes the desire for socioeconomic mobility, or vice versa, said Raj. Evangelists also influence Christians from the mainstream churches or from other sects, said Rowena Robinson, an associate professor of sociology at the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. It is difficult to judge from attendance at evangelical ceremonies, the measure of actual conversions. The two should not be confused. Many may attend healing rituals etc without aligning themselves on a more permanent basis, continued Robinson, who authored Christians of India and Religious Conversions in India: Modes, Motivations, and Meanings. Those who do convert soon discover that Christianity is also rife with discrimination, Raj said. Even after adopting Christian names that have no obvious caste markers like Hindu names do, it remains obvious they are converts and, therefore, a step below. Until 30 years ago, Christian cemeteries had separate burial grounds for Dalit converts, said Raj, whose forthcoming book is called Dealing with the Deities. Converts tend to retain their pre-conversion rituals, traditions and non-converted relations. In all conversions almost everywhere, it is unlikely that the past will be completely eradicated. Cultural retentions are always there, including in terms of kinship structures, marriage patterns and ritual elements, said Robinson. Even in educated circles, the influence of preconversion and their neighbors Hinduism abounds. Christian brides in India wear white but eschew dresses for saris. At Keralas Syrian Christian weddings, the climax of the event is the tying of the tali around the brides neck, like at Hindu weddings, said Dempsey. The tali is a gold leaf-shaped ornament worn on a gold chain. Christian talis often have crosses on them to distinguish them from Hindu talis. Syrian Christian churches often have prominently displayed gold lamps similar to lamps you see in Hindu temples, she said. Additionally, Saint festivals look very much like festivals at Hindu temples, particularly when it comes to processions in which the saints statue like the Hindu murti, or statue brings up the rear. Syrian priests even used to provide astrological advice, though Dempsey said this has fallen out of favor in the past half century.


For more read this blog
READ MORE - Indian Culture "Castes" its Shadow on Christianity

Youth bulge and India

ou have heard about the great “age advantage” that awaits India. We are told how we are about to reap the benefits of a young population, while the aging west pays the price for not reproducing. India, today has a remarkable 51 percent of its population under 25 and 67% under 35. By 2020, the average Indian will be 29, the average Chinese 27, and the average Japanese 48. Wow !

The natural counter question is : Well, does the youth bulge guarantee economic success ? The answer is a resounding NO. In fact, it would be a miracle if violence can be avoided and conditions created for economic transformation. This is the essence of the popular youth bulge theory. The Law and Other Things blog makes a great attempt to put it in an Indian context. The theory is very compelling partly due to its plain speaking German author - Prof Heinsohn. After all, it simply says that violence needs young unattached male fighers. Duh! I think there is much more in this simple theory than meets the eye.

First this theory in a nutshell.

Gunnar Heinsohn, a social scientist and genocide researcher at the University of Bremen, has an explanation for why this might be so. Since its publication in 2003, his eccentric and eye-opening Sons and World Power* (not available in English) has become something of a cult book. In Mr Heinsohn’s view, when 15 to 29-year-olds make up more than 30 per cent of the population, violence tends to happen; when large percentages are under 15, violence is often imminent.

FT

I will not bore you more with explaining this theory further. There are plenty of resources on the web. I want to focus on what this theory has for India.

A common misconception :

The population growth could “transform into a demographic dividend if every child was born healthy and was educated,” said Health Minister Ambumani Ramadoss.

Really, is it that simple ? According to the youth-bulge theory, education and health has little bearing on the proclivity to violence. In fact, well fed and educated youth are even more dangerous. The north-east, Kashmir, Punjab have lower poverty and higher education. Sri Lankans, both Tamils and Sinhalese have high literacy levels. So, obviously the excellent & free education system in Sri Lanka did not help them. The less said about our public primary education the better.

What bulge

I pulled stats for India from the US Census bureau. Our population in 2020 looks is shown in the graphic below. This is when the youth bulge (15 - 35 ) appears to be most pronounced.

idbpyr20.png

Fast forward into the future, in 2050 the population for India would be

idbpyr50.png

You can see that in 2050, the youth bulge has passed.

If the youth bulge indeed correlates with violence, then

  • the worst years would be between 2020 to 2030.
  • the chance to formulate pre-emptive strategies is before 2015

    For more visit this Blog
READ MORE - Youth bulge and India

Maoists release abducted tribal cops in Chhattisgarh

Raipur, Jan 29 : After keeping them in captivity for four days, Maoist militants in Chhattisgarh released two tribal Special Police Officers (SPOs)from their custody Monday in the southern district of Bijapur.

"Both the SPOs, males in their late 20s, were set free by the leftist extremists today, they are unharmed but highly terrorised," Ankit Garg, Bijapur district superintendent of police, told IANS.

He added that the two men were released in a forested area of Gangloor in Bijapur district in Bastar region, some 440 km south of capital Raipur, from where they were abducted Jan 24.

"The SPOs were released only after they committed to the rebels that they would not assist police force in the future anti-Maoist operations," a local police officer said.

The Chhattisgarh government has recruited about 4,500 local youths, mainly tribals, as SPOs in the worst insurgency affected districts of Bijapur and its adjoining Dantewada. The main responsibility of the SPOs is to assist the police force to dismantle rebels' terror network at grass root level.

IANS

READ MORE - Maoists release abducted tribal cops in Chhattisgarh

Gorkha Tribal Instruments

An Exclusive from Roshan Pradhan, South Sikkim
Domphu

The instrument in the front is the leather made musical instrument that is usually used in celebrations by Tamang tribals called domphu one that is hanging with coloured clothes rapped is also made of leather tighten on metal frame is also a musical instrument but is used as to sent an intimation . different types /rhythms of beats signifies whether it is a wedding or a death rituals. It is used mostly by Limbu tribals , Tamangs and Buddhist people. It is called nagara . It is in pair and has 2 short sticks to beat the both .It the old day when the population was less and scattered the nagara used to be the mode to communication especially to inform the relative and surround about the death of their dear one. The smoke that come from the local plant called tetypati is an sign of welcome and believed to cast off evil sprite from the visitor body.

Courtesy : http://beacononline.wordpress.com/2008/01/28/gorkha-tribal-instruments/

READ MORE - Gorkha Tribal Instruments

Christians Raising Hell in NE India

I read this hate article by a Hindu. They just think that imposing something on their fellow Indians and making it as true when we all know who is lying. The Hindu fundamentalist do not love India, they want to divide it and divide it they will. Pushing false propaganda, reconverting, terrorizing will not help the economy neither will it bring food on the table.

1. I don't praise Christians in India but they are better than a lot of the Hindu zealots. Take for eg. Many a Hindus think they are helping the poor by giving them food on the road side, they spend a lot of money which is in good spirit but would it not better if they taught them how to fish. Say you spend Rs. 10000 on these food distributions, why not buy a Rickshaw for one of these people, they can make them independent. But this is not what they really want to do. They want these people to be under them, beg to them for anything their life etc...

2. From the environmental point of view, Hindu religion has the worst environmental record, there is nothing green in the worship:

a. Take Diwali which is a festival of Light and pollution under a cloud of crackers, candles.
b. Durga Puja: Burning of Incense, slaughtering of the buffalo in Nepal are just some examples. Can't something be done for sake of environment when the Goddess is the mountain and the rivers, trees, Ganga (Holy river) most polluted.

The term Hindu religion to most Hindus I presume is MONEY nothing else, there is no morality, GOD IS MONEY And that is the end. I have hardly seen a Hindu officer that has not taken bribe and used the money to pray to God for the easy pick.

For India to GROW, Hinduism and its philosophies should make some changes and talk about morality and not just push it under tables.

I will write more..........YOU JUST WAIT The fight has just begun...................





"1. At this point in time, quite a few Hindus have their eyes vectored toward Kashmir, where slaughter of Hindus by Sullas, has been underway for some time, but they have totally shut their eyes on NE India, where the Christians are giving plenty of Hell to Hindus. The power-balance has definitely shifted in favor of Barbaric-Christians, largely due to the Hindu neglect of NE India, to what is going on over there. It is worth pointing out that we Hindus have a fundamental problem, that is more than 1200 years old. We have forgotten how to defend ourselves. We Hindus are more interested in making money, and military service ( Kashatriya Duty of a Hindu ) is being disdained. Whether we realize it or not, this attitude is a path of total disaster for the Hindu, and is response."

For more read http://hinduismdefense.blogspot.com
READ MORE - Christians Raising Hell in NE India

Strategy for Tribal upliftment in India

AN OVERVIEW

India has the largest concentration of tribal people anywhere in the world except perhaps in Africa. The tribals are children of nature and their lifestyle is conditioned by the Eco-system. India, with a variety of ecosystems, presents a varied tribal population throughout its length and breadth.


DISTRIBUTION

The areas inhabited by the tribal constitute a significant part of the under developed areas of the country. The tribal live mostly in isolated villages or hamlets. A smaller portion of their population has now settled in permanent villages as well as in towns and cities. On the whole, as per rough estimates, the prominent tribal areas constitute about 15 percent of the total geographical area of the country.

AID STRUCTURE TO VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS FOR WELFARE OF STs



  • Scheme in operation since 1953-54




  • Grants provided for improving educational and economic conditions of STs through voluntary efforts.




  • Spectrum of voluntary efforts includes residential schools, hostels, medical units, computer training units. Shorthand and typing units, bal wadis. Libraries and audio-visual units.




  • 90% grants to NGOs and 10% there own contribution.




  • Scheme as modified in 1999-2000 provides for 100% grants to NGOs working in scheduled areas assistance also made available to autonomous institutions. Local bodies. Co-operative societies etc.




  • Allocation Rs.92.09 Crores for IX Plan.

    The main concentration of tribal people is the central tribal belt in the middle part of the India and in the north-eastern States. However, they have their presence in all States and Union Territories except the State of Haryana, Punjab, Delhi and Chandigarh. The predominant tribal populated States of the country (tribal population more than 50% of the total population) are: Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland and Union Territories of Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Lakshadweep.

    THE MAJOR TRIBES

    There are 533 tribes (with many overlapping types in more than one State) as per notified Schedule under Article 342 of the Constitution of India in different States and Union Territories of the country with the largest number of 62 being in the State of Orissa. Some of the major tribes of different States are:

    Andhra Pradesh:

    Bhil,Chenchu, Gond, Kondas, Lambadis, Sugalis etc.

    Assam:

    Boro, Kachari, Mikir (Karbi), Lalung, Rabha, Dimasa, Hmar, Hajong etc

    Bihar & (Jharkhand):

    Asur, Banjara, Birhor, Korwa, Munda, Oraon, Santhal etc.

    Gujarat:

    Bhil, Dhodia, Gond, Siddi, Bordia, etc

    Himachal Pradesh:

    Gaddi, Gujjar, Lahuala, Swangla, etc.

    Karnataka:

    Bhil, Chenchu, Goud, Kuruba, Kammara, Kolis, Koya,Mayaka, Toda, etc.

    Kerala:

    Adiyam, Kammrar, Kondkappus, Malais, Palliyar,etc

    Madhya Pradesh & Chhatisgarh:

    Bhil, Birhor, Damar, Gond, Kharia, Majhi, Munda, Oraon, Parahi, etc.

    Maharashtra:

    Bhil, Bhunjia, Chodhara, Dhodia, Gond, Kharia, Nayaka, Oraon, Pardhi, Rathwa etc.

    Meghalaya:

    Garo, Khasi, Jayantia, etc.

    Orissa:

    Birhor, Gond, Juang, khond, korua, Mundari, Oraon, Santhal, Tharua, etc.

    Rajasthan:

    Bhil, Damor, Garasta, Meena, Salariya etc.

    Tamilnadu:

    Irular, Kammara, Kondakapus, Kota, Mahamalasar, Palleyan,Toda etc.

    Tripura:

    Chakma, Garo, Khasi, Kuki, Lusai, Liang, Santhal etc

    West Bengal:

    Asur, Birhor, Korwa, Lepcha, Munda, Santhal, etc.

    Mizoram:

    Lusai, Kuki, Garo, Khasi, Jayantia, Mikir etc.

    Arunachal Pradesh:

    Dafla, Khampti, Singpho etc.

    Goa:

    Dhodi, Siddi (Nayaka) .

    Daman & Diu:

    Dhodi, Mikkada, Varti, etc

    Andaman & Nicobar Islands:

    Jarawa, Nicobarese, Onges, Sentinelese, Shompens, Great Andamanese

    Dadra & Nagar Haveli:

    As in Daman & Diu

    Uttar Pradesh & Uttaranchal:

    Bhoti, Buxa, Jaunsari, Tharu, Raji

    Nagaland:

    Naga, Kuki, Mikir, Garo, etc.

    Sikkim:

    Bhutia, Lepcha

    Jammu & Kashmir:

    Chdddangpa, Garra, Gujjar, Gaddi, etc.


    Among the notified tribes, a group is still at most primitive stage. They continue to live in isolated areas and practice either primitive agriculture or no agricultural practice and most of them are still in food gathering stage with almost stagnating population. Such groups (75 Nos.) are named as Primitive Tribal Groups (PTGs). They are spread over 15 States/UTs.

    DEMOGRAPHICAL CHANGES

    Population in millions

    Census Years

    Total population

    Population of ST

    S.T. %

    1951

    361.1

    19.1

    5.29

    1961

    439.2

    30.1

    6.85

    1971

    548.2

    38.0

    6.93

    1981

    685.2

    51.6

    7.53

    1991

    846.3

    67.8

    8.10

    According to 1991 Census, the population of the Scheduled Tribes in the country is 67.8 million, which is 8.1 percent of the total population of the country. The population of Scheduled Tribes has been found increasing after 1951.
    The decades population growth between Census Year 1981 to 1991 in respect of tribal population has been much more (31.64%) than the same for entire population (23.51%).

    As compared to the sex ratio for overall population (927 females per 1000 male), the sex ratio among the Scheduled Tribes is more towards females (972 Females per thousand Males).

    LITERACY & EDUCATION

    As per 1991 Census, the literacy rate among tribals (29.6%) is found to be far below the overall literacy of the country (52.2%). The female literacy rate among tribals is far lower (18.2%) as compared to overall female literacy for the country (39.2%). However, the significant point is the increase in total as well as female literacy among tribals, though still at lower pace as compared to the overall population for the country.

    The Enrolment Ratio (1997-98) and School Drop-out rates for overall and STs is:

    S.No.

    Parameters

    Overall

    STs

    1.

    Enrolment Ratio (1997-98) (Class I-V) Class VI-VIII)

    89.7& 58.6

    90.7 43.2

    2.

    School Drop-out rate (1993-94)

    52.8

    77.7

    HEALTH

    The development of health facilities for scheduled tribe got impetus through successive plans. The Primary Health Centres (PHC) Health Sub-Centres (HSC) and ICDS project established in tribal areas are indicators of extension of medical services to the tribals. The medical facilities though not adequate are hardly used by tribals living in isolated villages and hamlets.

    Medical Centres Types

    Total No.

    No. in S.T. Areas

    Percentage

    Primary Health Centres (1996)

    21853

    3258

    14.9

    Health Sub Centres (1996)

    132778

    20355

    15.3

    ICDS Projects (1998-99)

    4200

    70

    17.8


    ECONOMIC STATUS

    The majority of tribals constitute the labour work force though their participation in works is declining, but not steadily. More than half of the rural tribal population is found to be below poverty line as per latest survey available with Ministry of Rural Development (1993-94). However, there is a perceptible declining trend in persons from tribal communities below poverty line.

    The per capita income of tribals continues to be one of the lowest in the country and their alienation from their own land continues. As on January 1999, the tribals were alienated from 9,17,590 acres of tribal land and only 5,37,610 acres of such land was restored as per latest statistics published by the Ministry of Rural Development.

    CONSTRAINTS IN TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT

    There are innumerable constraints responsible for lower pace of tribal development process than desired. Some of the major constraints are:

    (i) Destruction of forests: The forests are not only the source of livelihood for tribals but there exists an intricate relationship between tribals and forests in forest Eco-systems. The depleting forest resources are threatening imminent food security for a good portion of the tribal population.

    (ii) Lack of awareness: There exists lack of awareness among tribal population about various developmental programmes launched by Government of India and States, resulting in their exploitation.

    (iii) Protection of Tribal Rights & Concessions: The Tribals have been given numerous rights and concessions under various statutes of central as well as State Governments but they remain deprived of the benefits arising out of such statutory provisions due to their ignorance and apathy of enforcing agencies.

    STRATEGY FOR DEVELOPMENT: THE TSP APPROACH

    The Tribal Sub Plan (TSP) Strategy has been adopted for all round development of tribal areas throughout the country since Fifth Five Year Plan. Under the TSP approach almost entire tribal inhabited area have been covered under any one of the following, depending upon their population percentile:

    i) Integrated Area Development Project (ITDPs)
    ii) Modified Area Development Approach (MADA)
    iii) Clusters
    iv) Primitive Tribal Groups

    The TSP approach ensures allocation of fund for tribal areas from State Plan as well as Central Ministries, at least proportionate to population of tribals in the state (from state plan) and to the overall proportionate tribal population for the country from the budget of Central Ministries.

    PLANS/PROGRAMMES OF THE MINISTRY - AN OVERVIEW

    Ministry of Tribal Affairs continued to implement various Schemes/programmes aimed at welfare and development of Scheduled Tribes. An Overview of the activities of the Ministry is as follows:

    SPECIAL CENTRAL ASSISTANCE TO TRIBAL SUB-PLAN: (SCA TO TSP)

    The Ministry of Tribal Affairs extends special central assistance to the TSP States and Union Territories and also to North Eastern States of Assam, Manipur and Tripura as an additional grant to these states/UTs. These grants are basically meant for family oriented income generating Scheme in various TSP areas to meet the gaps, which have not otherwise been taken care of by the State Plan.

    GRANTS UNDER PROVISION OF ARTICLE 275 (1) OF THE CONSTITUTION

    The Ministry provides Grant-in-Aid to TSP and tribal majority States under Article 275 (1) of the constitution to meet the cost of such projects for tribal development as may be undertaken by the State Government for raising the level of administration of Scheduled Areas therein to the level of the rest of the state. In the Ninth Plan, besides other projects, from the funds allocated under this Scheme it was proposed to establish 100 Residential Schools on the pattern of Navodaya Vidyalayas.

    GIRLS HOSTEL

    The Scheme for construction of Girls Hostels for STs is a useful instrument for spreading education among tribal girls whose literacy is only 18.91% as per 1991 census. Under the Scheme funds are provided to all the TSP States and Union Territories having tribal population for construction of hostels on sharing basis (50:50) to States and 100% to UTs.

    BOYS HOSTEL

    Like he Scheme for Girls Hostel, under this Scheme funds are provided to states on sharing basis (50:50) and 100% to UTs for construction of Boys Hostel for STs.

    ASHRAM SCHOOLS IN TRIBAL SUB-PLAN AREAS

    The Ministry under the Scheme provides funds to all the States and UTs having tribal population for establishment of residential schools for STs in an environment conducive to learning near their habitations on sharing basis (50:50) to States and 100% to UTs.

    VOCATIONAL TRAINING SCHEME

    The main aim of this Scheme is to develop the skill of the tribal youth in order to get employment are to avail opportunities for self employment. Under this Scheme cent percent grant is provided to States/ UTs/ State Government run institutions or organizations as well as registered Non Governmental Organizations for establishment of Vocational Training Centres with the capacity of 100 students at each centre.

    EDUCATIONAL COMPLEX IN LOW LITERACY POCKETS FOR WOMEN IN TRIBAL AREAS

    This Scheme provides cent percent financial assistance to NGOs/ Organization established by government as autonomous bodies/educational & other institutions like Cooperative Societies, to establish educational complexes in 136 identified districts of erstwhile 11 states (now 13) where tribal female literacy is below 10% as per 1991 census. Educational complex is meant for girls studying from class I to V with strength of 30 students in each class. The grants are provided to meet non-recurring as well as recurring expenses on building (hiring or maintenance) teaching, boarding, lodging and to also for medical and health care of students.

    GRANTS-IN-AID TO STATE TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS AND OTHERS

    This is a Central Sector Scheme, with 100% grant, available to the state Tribal Development Cooperative Corporation (STDCCs) and other similar corporations of State engaged in collection and trading of minor forest produce (MFP) through tribals Grants under the Scheme are provided to strengthen the Share Capital of Corporations, construction of Warehouses, establishment of processing industries of MFPs etc. to ensure high profitability of the corporation so as to enable them to pay remunerative prices for MFPs to the tribals.

    PRICE SUPPORT TO TRIFED

    The Ministry provides Grants-in-aid to its corporation, TRIFED to set off losses on account of fluctuations in prices of MFPs being marketed by it for ensuring remunerative prices to tribals engaged in collection of MFPs either directly or through STDCCs and other such Cooperative Societies.

    INVESTMENT IN SHARE CAPITAL OF TRIFED

    The Ministry is the largest shareholder of TRIFED with over 99% contribution in its Share Capital. Under this Scheme, the Ministry provides funds to TRIFED as its contribution in the Share Capital.

    VILLAGE GRAIN BANK SCHEME

    This Scheme provides Grants for establishment of Village Grain Banks to prevent deaths of STs specially children in remote and backward tribal villages facing or likely to face starvation and also to improve nutritional standards. The Scheme provides funds for building storage facility, procurement of Weights & Measures and for the purchase of initial stock of one quintal of food grain of local variety for each family. A Committee under Chairmanship of village Headman runs the Grain Bank thus established.

    GRANT-IN-AID TO VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATION

    As many as 27 types of projects with focus on tribal education, literacy, medical & health care, vocational training in agriculture, horticulture, craftsmanship etc., are being supported by the Ministry under this Scheme through registered Non-Governmental Organizations.

    SCHEME ON RESEARCH & TRAINING

    Under the Scheme “Research & Training” the Ministry provides financial assistance under three components:

    (i) Grants to Tribal Research Institutes on 50:50 sharing basis; for conducting Research & Evaluation Studies, Seminars, Workshops etc;
    (ii) Award of Research Fellowship to Tribal Students on 100% basis registered in Indian Universities; and
    (iii) Supporting projects of All-India or Inter-State nature on 100% basis to NGOs/Universities etc. for conducting research on tribal matters, Travel Grants and for Publication of Books on tribals.

    SCHEME FOR DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMITIVE TRIBAL GROUPS

    Under this Scheme cent per-cent assistance is provided to NGOs and other institutions for under-taking projects on development of PTGs on activities mainly focussing on their food security literacy, agriculture technology up gradation, etc

    POST METRIC SCHOLARSHIP FOR STS, BOOK BANK SCHEME AND OVERSEAS SCHOLARSHIPS

    The post-metric scholarship Scheme provides financial assistance to all ST students for pursuance of post-metric studies in recognized institutions within India. The Scheme provides for 100% assistance from the Ministry to State Governments and UT Administrations implementing the Scheme, over and above their respective committed liabilities. The Ministry also gives financial assistance for setting up Book-Banks in institutions running professional courses like Medicine, Engineering, Law, Agriculture, Veterinary, Chartered Accountancy, Business Management, and Bio-Sciences. Annually, Ministry provides financial assistance to 9 meritorious ST students for Post-graduate, Doctoral and Post-Doctoral studies in foreign universities/institutions of repute.

    UPGRADATION OF MERIT OF ST STUDENTS AND SCHEME FOR COACHING

    These Schemes provide 100% central assistance to State/UT Administrations. The up gradation of merit Scheme is for arranging coaching classes in reputed colleges for developing competence among ST students for their better performance in competitive examinations conducted by various universities institutes for admission to Medical and Engineering courses while the Scheme for coaching is for conducting Pre-Examination Coaching for tribal students for various examinations conducted by UPSC, SSC, Banking Services Recruitment Boards etc.

    OTHER IMPORTANT ACTIVITIES OF THE MINISTRY

    Besides the implementation of aforesaid plans/programs, the Ministry conducted the following activities during the year for improving the implementation of programs and Schemes:

    SECRETARIES’ CONFERENCE

    A two-day conference of State Secretaries of Tribal Welfare was organized in New Delhi on 16-17th May, 2000, in which the Directors of Tribal research Institutes located in various States also participated. The deliberations in the conference was focused on the need for State Tribal Research Institute devoting more time for tribal research and building up of necessary information and data bank on various aspects of tribal life and culture, so that the Central and State Government could draw upon then in formulating policies and programs for development of tribal. The State Governments/UTs were also urged to ensure concrete measures for timely implementation of various Schemes/Programs for tribal welfare and better targeting of the beneficiaries.

    MINISTER’S MEETING ON ARTICLE 275(1) OF THE CONSTITUTION

    This was for the first time that State Governments were asked to submit specific Schemes for infrastructure development. A Minister level meeting was held with the State Governments and Schemes were approved prepared by the State Governments for improvement of infrastructure in the Scheduled Areas. At the Conference following were emphasized:

    i. timely implementation of the Scheme

    ii. timely submission of utilization certificates, quarterly report, etc.,

    iii. undertaking only infrastructure building Schemes under Article 275(1)
    but not individual beneficiary Schemes;

    iv. exercising strict vigilance on NGOs working in their state through
    District Collectors.




    READ MORE - Strategy for Tribal upliftment in India

    Tribal Welfare by GOI

    STRATEGY - THE TSP APPROACH

    The Tribal Sub Plan (TSP) Strategy has been adopted for all round development of tribal areas throughout the country since Fifth Five-Year Plan. Under the TSP approach almost entire tribal inhabited area have been covered under one of the following, depending upon their population percentile:

    i)


    Integrated Area Development Project (ITDPs)

    ii)


    Modified Area Development Approach (MADA)

    iii)


    Clusters

    iv)


    Primitive Tribal Groups

    The TSP approach ensures allocation of fund for tribal areas from State Plan as well as Central Ministries, at least proportionate to population of tribals in the state (from state plan) and to the overall proportionate tribal population for the country from the budget of Central Ministries and Financial Institutions etc.

    BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE SCHEMES

    The Ministry of Tribal Affairs implements various Schemes and Programmes aimed at welfare and development of Scheduled Tribes. An Overview of the activities of the Ministry is as follows:-

    SPECIAL CENTRAL ASSISTANCE TO TRIBAL SUB-PLAN: (SCA TO TSP)

    The Ministry of Tribal Affairs extends special central assistance to the TSP States and Union Territories and also to North Eastern States of Assam, Manipur and Tripura as an additional grant to these states/UTs. These grants are basically meant for family oriented income generating Scheme in various TSP areas to meet the gaps, which have not otherwise been taken care of by the State Plan.


    GRANTS UNDER FIRST PROVISO TO ARTICLE 275 (1) OF THE CONSTITUTION

    The Ministry provides Grant-in-Aid to TSP and tribal majority States under Article 275 (1) of the constitution to meet the cost of such projects for tribal development as may be undertaken by the State Government for raising the level of administration of Scheduled Areas therein to the level of the rest of the state. In the Ninth Plan, besides other projects, from the funds allocated under this Scheme it was proposed to establish 100 Residential Schools on the pattern of Navodaya Vidyalayas.

    GIRLS' HOSTEL

    The Scheme for construction of Girls Hostels for STs is a useful instrument for spreading education among tribal girls whose literacy is only 18.91% as per 1991 census. Under the Scheme funds are provided to all the TSP States and Union Territories having tribal population for construction of hostels on sharing basis (50:50) to States and 100% to UTs.

    BOYS' HOSTEL

    Like the Scheme for Girls Hostel, under this Scheme funds are provided to states on sharing basis (50:50) and 100% to UTs for construction of Boys Hostel for STs.

    ASHRAM SCHOOLS IN TRIBAL SUB-PLAN AREAS

    The Ministry under the Scheme provides funds to all the States and UTs having tribal population for establishment of residential schools for STs in an environment conducive to learning near their habitations on sharing basis (50:50) to States and 100% to UTs.

    VOCATIONAL TRAINING

    The main aim of this Scheme is to develop the skill of the tribal youth in order to get employment or to avail opportunities for self-employment. Under this Scheme cent percent grant is provided to States/ UTs/ State Government run institutions or organizations as well as registered Non Governmental Organizations for establishment of Vocational Training Centres with the capacity of 100 students at each centre.

    EDUCATIONAL COMPLEX IN LOW LITERACY POCKETS FOR WOMEN IN TRIBAL AREAS

    This Scheme provides cent percent financial assistance to NGOs/ Organization established by government as autonomous bodies/educational & other institutions like Cooperative Societies, to establish educational complexes in 136 identified districts of erstwhile 11 states (now 13) where tribal female literacy is below 10% as per 1991 census. Educational complex is meant for girls studying from class I to V with strength of 30 students in each class. The grants are provided to meet non-recurring as well as recurring expenses on building (hiring or maintenance) teaching, boarding, lodging and to also for medical and health care of students.


    GRANTS-IN-AID TO STATE TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS AND OTHERS

    This is a Central Sector Scheme, with 100% grant, available to the state Tribal Development Cooperative Corporation (STDCCs) and other similar corporations of State engaged in collection and trading of minor forest produce (MFP) through tribals Grants under the Scheme are provided to strengthen the Share Capital of Corporations, construction of Warehouses, establishment of processing industries of MFPs etc. to ensure high profitability of the corporation so as to enable them to pay remunerative prices for MFPs to the tribals.

    PRICE SUPPORT TO TRIFED

    The Ministry provides Grants-in-aid to its corporation, TRIFED to set off losses on account of fluctuations in prices of MFPs being marketed by it for ensuring remunerative prices to tribals engaged in collection of MFPs either directly or through STDCCs and other such Cooperative Societies.

    INVESTMENT IN SHARE CAPITAL OF TRIFED

    The Ministry is the largest shareholder of TRIFED with over 99% contribution in its Share Capital. Under this Scheme, the Ministry provides funds to TRIFED as its contribution in the Share Capital.


    VILLAGE GRAIN BANKS

    This Scheme provides Grants for establishment of Village Grain Banks to prevent deaths of STs specially children in remote and backward tribal villages facing or likely to face starvation and also to improve nutritional standards. The Scheme provides funds for building storage facility, procurement of Weights & Measures and for the purchase of initial stock of one quintal of food grain of local variety for each family. A Committee under Chairmanship of village Headman runs the Grain Bank thus established.

    GRANT-IN-AID TO VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS

    As many as 27 types of projects with focus on tribal education, literacy, medical & health care, vocational training in agriculture, horticulture, craftsmanship etc., are being supported by the Ministry under this Scheme through registered Non-Governmental Organizations.

    RESEARCH & TRAINING

    Under the Scheme "Research & Training" the Ministry provides financial assistance under three components:-

    (i)


    Grants to Tribal Research Institutes on 50:50 sharing basis; for conducting Research & Evaluation Studies, Seminars, Workshops etc.

    (ii)


    Award of Research Fellowship to Tribal Students on 100% basis registered in Indian Universities.

    (iii)


    Supporting projects of All-India or Inter-State nature on 100% basis to NGOs/Universities etc. for conducting research on tribal matters, Travel Grants and for Publication of Books on tribals.

    DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMITIVE TRIBAL GROUPS

    Under this Scheme cent per-cent assistance is provided to NGOs and other institutions for under-taking projects on development of PTGs on activities mainly focusing on their food security literacy, agriculture technology up gradation, etc.

    POST MATRIC SCHOLARSHIPS, OVERSEAS SCHOLARSHIPS AND BOOK BANKS

    The post-matric scholarship Scheme provides financial assistance to all ST students for pursuance of post-matric studies in recognized institutions within India. The Scheme provides for 100% assistance from the Ministry to State Governments and UT Administrations implementing the Scheme, over and above their respective committed liabilities. The Ministry also gives financial assistance for setting up Book-Banks in institutions running professional courses like Medicine, Engineering, Law, Agriculture, Veterinary, Chartered Accountancy, Business Management, and Bio-Sciences. Annually, Ministry provides financial assistance to 9 meritorious ST students for Post-graduate, Doctoral and Post-Doctoral studies in foreign universities/institutions of repute.

    UPGRADATION OF MERIT AND COACHING

    These Schemes provide 100% central assistance to State/UT Administrations. The up gradation of merit Scheme is for arranging coaching classes in reputed colleges for developing competence among ST students for their better performance in competitive examinations conducted by various universities institutes for admission to Medical and Engineering courses while the Scheme for coaching is for conducting Pre-Examination Coaching for tribal students for various examinations conducted by UPSC, SSC, Banking Services Recruitment Boards etc.

    MONITORING & EVALUATION OF EFFORTS ON TRIBAL DEVELOPMENT

    The Constitution of India guarantees not only the social-economic upliftment of tribal people but also provides for objective evaluation of the administration and control of the Scheduled Areas and the Scheduled Tribes in any State other than Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Tripura (for which there are separate provisions) through the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution Article 244 (i) ensures submission of Annual Reports by the Governors of the States to President of India regarding administration of the Scheduled Areas and setting up of Tribal Advisory Council to advise on such matters pertaining to the welfare and advancement of the Scheduled Tribes.
    The Ministry of Tribal Affairs being the Nodal Ministry for overall policy, planning and coordination of programmes for the development of tribals, monitors the progress and achievement made by variousMinistries/Departments for 22 TSP States/UTs under Point 11(b) of the 20 Point Programme.The Ministry monitors the achievements made under various developmental programmes by engaging State Tribal Research Institutes/Universities/other institutions and also through field inspection by Officers of the Ministry.

    GOVERNORS' REPORTS

    The Governors' Report is an objective evaluation of the development efforts undertaken by the State Government in Scheduled Areas of the State with regard to administration. The Scheduled Areas have been declared in eight States namely, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar (now Bihar & Jharkhand), Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh (now Madhya Pradesh & Chhatisgarh), Orissa and Rajasthan, Governor's Report provides an unbiased assessment of the situation in Scheduled Areas of the State, inter alia, various measures taken for up gradation of administration of such areas, implementation of protective laws, matters referred to the "Tribal Advisory Council" (TAC) and their recommendations etc.

    The States are required to send the Governor's Report within six months of the closing of the financial year i.e. by 30th September of each year. The latest position of receipt of the report is given in table below:-

    TRIBAL ADVISORY COUNCIL (TAC)

    Eight States having Scheduled Areas, namely, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar (now Bihar & Chhatisgarh), Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh (now Madhya Pradesh and Chhatisgarh), Orissa & Rajasthan and two Non Scheduled Area States, namely, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal have constituted TACs. The TACs consist of not more than twenty-five members of whom as many as three-fourth members are Scheduled Tribe representatives of the State Legislative Assembly (ST-MLAs). The Governor of the State may refer matters concerning to administration of welfare of tribals to the TACs for recommendations.

    The Ministry issues guidelines for TACs. As per latest guidelines the TACs should meet at least twice a year and discuss the issues concerning tribal interests and making appropriate recommendation for protection of tribal interests.

    POINT 11(B) OF 20 POINT PROGRAMME

    The point 11 (b) of 20 Point Programme is to provide economic assistance to the Scheduled Tribe families to enable them to rise above poverty line. The ST families are assisted through various Schemes implemented by Departments of Agriculture, Rural Development, Horticulture, Animal Husbandry, Sericulture, Forestry, Small & Cottage Industries, etc.

    The Ministry fixes the targets for 22 States/UT s and also monitors the progress of achievements on monthly basis. The officers of the Ministry inspected more than 75 projects in the States of Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Orissa, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh.
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