Death Stalks Forgotten Hills

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By: David Buhril

Infant deaths, far from being crucial in determining the recently concluded electoral fortunes, remain invisible in the remote mountain villages in Manipur’s Churachandpur district. While politicians and State authorities remain untouched by the mounting death toll caused by the “strange disease”, the devastated population recoils in abject helplessness.
Lalropui coiled on the bed of a relative’s floor with her daughter Persie Remsangpui . The mother had come with her little girl to Parbung village from Damdiei village to find medical aid for her baby who is suffering from the feared “strange disease” that has gripped Thanlon and Tipaimukh constituencies in Manipur’s Churachandpur district. However, there were no doctors in Parbung either. Lalropui’s hope was shattered as her baby’s situation grows from bad to worse. Like everyone who were infected by the “strange disease”, Persie’s head , her mother said, would turn hot like a heated pot. Besides, Persie also had high fever and would often vomit. She would cry endlessly till she lost her breathe. The helpless mother and relatives who were silently seated around the sick baby would ceaselessly wet a cloth to cool her head. This is the only effective treatment they could manage to nurse the baby with the “strange disease.” Few days after this Correspondent left the village; Persie succumbed to the “strange disease” that has altogether tolled the lives of over forty (40) infants since the beginning of this year till the time of this writing.
The “strange disease”
The affected population called the disease “strange” due to the sudden and unexplained nature of the deadly outbreak. It is also “strange” because the villagers did not know the ways and means to tackle the menace that is still counting its victims. The strange disease causes high temperature on the head, vomiting, breathing problem, fever and sometimes seizures. After the victims died their nails turned dark and black. Black, round spots would, then, cover their body. “They are the colour of the “strange disease’”, Duoilo Hrangate, Lungthulien villager who also lost his son and five other infants of his relatives to the stalking disease said. “Too many of them have died and there’s nothing that we could do. I don’t even want to talk about it anymore. It made us too helpless,” Malsawmkim who lost a son said. “The strange disease acted so fast. My little boy started vomiting and developed breathing problem at night. He immediately died the next morning,” Ramparmawi of Senvon village said.
In some of the villages, the strange disease is also called “Tulai Natna” (Today’s disease). Last year the same disease was called “Mautam Hri”(Bamboo flower disease). “However, they are the same as it still remains strange to us,” Lalchunghnung Hmar, a human rights activist said. The villagers are totally ignorant of tackling the outbreak that haunts them day and night.
In the absence of any efforts to identify the outbreak, the “strange disease” has already caught up with many names. Kawlhmingthang Khawlum, who lost her daughter, was told by the doctor whom he telephoned to enquire for medical prescription that his little girl was suffering from Pneumonia. Hmingthienghlim was told that her little boy died because he had rotten liver. Lalvulmawi said that her little boy died because he had severe stomach fever. On the other hand, Vanlalsung was told that his little girl might have severe fever in her head. “Everyone we consulted spelt out different diseases. And when our children died they all turned dark or black. The disease remains strange to us,” John, father of Lalnunnem said.
Frontiers sans doctors
Despite the situations that have imploded, the State actors continue to remain distant. Lalhmingthra, who lost her son to the “strange disease” said, “There are no doctors here at all. I have not even seen the face of our community doctor. They are never stationed anywhere within our reach.” “I don’t know if they are scared of catching the deadly disease too, there are no doctors here. We never get to see them,” Lalthutlung who lost his son said. Lalrothang of Tipaimukh village said that no doctors ever come to their village. “We are just like our cattles. Our lives hangs on a thin thread,” Lalthutlung added. Parbung village authority (VA) chairman said that doctors are like unseen visitors here. “Once he came and we told him about the disease and he told us to give the sick infants lots of Septran tablets”, the VA chairman added.
Kawlhmingthang Khawlum said that the situations would be entirely different if doctors were around. “They only surfaced after many have died,” Kawlhmingthang added. The distressed villagers complained of the district TB officer who came to merely posed questions and visited the graves of the infants who have died. “He did not even get to see the sick. He hurriedly left after visiting two villages,” Lalremruot said. Lallawmkim also said, “Once a group of nurses came in the name of medical team. And all they did was weigh all the babies and left again.”
An officer of the 12th Madras Regiment who is posted in the remote Parbung village strongly opined that doctors should come and stay in their posting areas. The Major said, “Doctors who are supposed to be posted here visit the areas only when there is a visit by a dignitary. Even if a doctor comes, he would not even stay for 24 hours. He would curse the innocent villagers and go back” The army officer also said that the health problem is an immense concern to him and he reported about the alarming infant deaths to the Churachandpur district authorities. “If someone gets hurt or sick here, there is no facilities for treatment. They would be just left to die. All they do is they just sit and pray,” the Major said.
Doom flowers, deaths and God
Trapped in an endless spiral of the breakdown of civil administration, the fringe constituencies were driven remorselessly to live life’s dire straits that gnawed them with the outbreak of the “strange disease” and food crisis as well that was caused by the gregarious flowering of bamboo. When science and medicines are adding years to people’s lives in other parts of the country, the precarious population who are negotiating with unenviable lives in the forsaken mountain villages find themselves to be waiting for their turn of death as they were left to their own devices of fighting the disease that cause deaths. Last year, the same disease took more than fifty lives, mostly infants.
The outbreak of the “strange disease” placed a serious burden on the public health system as well as the primitive livelihood system of the susceptible populations. “The disease is not only robbing our lives but is also draining the little money we have. Just as predicted, the bamboo flowering has brought us endless misery,” Laldawmsang who lost a son said. This factor not only reduces the capacity of the communities to move out of their cornered constituencies to avail medical services, but even complicates the task of measuring the impact of the outbreak in their respective villages. Many, still, could not help but blame the bamboo flowering, also called as “doom flower” for turning the cycle of death and food crisis over them. Epidemic outbreaks and food crisis are believed to accompany the “doom flower” that bloom after every forty eight years in this bamboo-rich constituencies that are the epicentres of the phenomenon. While the self-reliant agrarian populations were being pushed to their distress by the “doom flower”, the collapse of health services has severely worsened their distressing regularity. The tragedy, say locals, is that all these lives could have been saved if the government had intervened.
to be continued
Mothers like Lalinmawi who lost her daughter to the “strange disease” said, “In the absence of everything that could favour us and the lives of our children, we compelled ourselves to believe that everything that is happening to us is, rather, God’s will.” “All that we could do is pray to God,” Kimthang, who lost her only son said. As death’s multiply, the helpless villagers, bereft of all hope, turns to God as a last resort.
Infant deaths: Man-made?
The mysterious infant deaths in the shelved hills that have been invisible to the outside world need to be asked if it is man-made or not? While the authorities merely reduced the severity of the disease by tagging “endemic type” to it, the excuse remains far from saving lives from the claws of the “strange disease”. The slackness on the part of the health authorities have played a role over forty (40) infant deaths. The insensitivity on the part of the State authorities is seen as an attempt to make the disease invisible. Rather than find ways and means to fight the disease, the authorities resorted to lip-synch from a distance to wash their hands clean. “If doctors were available, our children would not go to the grave this early,” Lalrothang of Tipaimukh village who lost her daughter said.
Voices from the land of infant graves felt that lives could have been saved if the responsible authorities only have the will and the responsibility to respond to their situation. Mothers describe how they desperately consult one another or the educated villagers to save their children when the “strange disease” grasps them. One interviewee wishes that the “strange disease” could have a name so that they would know how to make their children immune from it.
The stacked symptoms
The breakdown of civil administration in the fringe constituencies that further resulted in the collapse of health services have stacked high to bear the symptoms of the “strange disease.” While the absence of everything “basic” have already become become normal for the marginalised villagers, the Indian army officer of the 12th Madras regiment expressed his concern: “The Government of Manipur is not present anywhere here. Governance is absent, there is food-crisis in many villages and there is no road. The villagers are still employing crude and primitive methods to sustain their livelihood system. They have a will to do better, but they are not getting any help from the State authorities.” Villagers opine that if not for the Church based organisations that are operating in the cornered constituencies, they would be pushed out from their ancestral home. The Church based organisations, however, did not avail medical services to the villagers. The primary health centre that figures on paper is far from being operational. Doctors and nurses are on their regular missing spree. Meanwhile, the long starking absence has created medical emergency that is spiraling out of control.
What needs to be done
First and foremost, the Government of Manipur should identify the “strange disease” that caused high fatality rates. It should immediately involve in facilitating efforts to activate strategies for the prevention and control of the outbreak of the “strange disease”. Steps should be taken for mass vaccinations to immunise the vulnerable children and infants. The Government should immediately end its reactive responses, but should also focus on long-term mass vaccination campaigns and initiate community awareness programmes. It should install surveillance capabilities, which would mean stationing the absent doctors and nurses in their posting areas. Making the primary health centre operational should stand out in its priority list. The Government should also stress to strengthen decision-making and public health policy development through institutional capacity building efforts. These should be further assisted by infrastructural facilities. A committed dose of political will should doggedly pursue the necessary missing steps. Otherwise, forgotten frontiers like Tipaimukh and Thanlon could easily be wipe out by the “strange disease” if the outbreak turns into a full blast epidemics.
Many more deaths are likely before the disease is brought under control. The villagers fear that the death toll would increase with the onset of monsoon. The Indian Army officer also ruefully said that the villagers will suffer more when the rain comes. Until then, the “strange disease” will continue to generate the dreadful but invisible stench of death to the shattered population behind distant hills and mountain.

Source: Kangla

Singngat khua ah Agri.Input subsidy hawmkhia

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Lamka, May 22: Central Govt apan Mautaam kial panpihna antang kilei te ban ah louma a haichi/ buh-le-bal ahihsiat te panpihna Agricultural Input Subsidy tung tawn a sumtang (cash component) hongpai te Singngat area ading teng SDO/ Singngat leh staff te’n tuni’n Singngat khua ah va hawmkhia uh a, CDSU makaite’n leng va en zui uhi.

Source: Manipur Express | May 23, 2009

Relief anntang khenkhat zuak gu

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Son Khuptong
Lamka, 21 May: Muanhuaitak apan thukizadan in Mautaam ziak a panpihna hongpai anntang March 19, 2009 a Lamka apan puakkhiak a omte lak a khenkhat kho Hausa khat in khomipite kiang a hawm gai veklou in khenkhat koihtuam in in a khonung in zuak hi.

Thukizadan in Lungthul (T)/Pumlawng kho Hausa Mr. Khuplian in amau khua a ding a kial panpihna anntang (relief rice) bag 176 a muh lak ah bag 48 koihtuam in a dang bag 128 te bel khomipi lak ah hawmzak a, a koihtuam anntang bag 48 te bel bag khat ah Rs. 700/- zel in zuak a, deihsak tuam leh tanaute kiang ah bel bag khat ah Rs. 600/- zel in zuak hi. Hiai kial panpihna anntangte bel zanhal zek inleng kho dang apan mi khenkhat in va lei lai uh hidan inleng thutut kingah hi.

Hiai toh kisai in a kisaipih thuneitute’n kintak a etkai a, hichibang a kial panpihna hongpaite kialthuakte laka zuak ahih nawnlouhna dia pan a lak uh poimoh sakthu tamtak apan kiza hi. Hiai antang bag te bel half bag ngen hi’n leng thutut kingah hi.

Source:The Lamka Post | May 22, 2009

Thanlon khua ah hawmkhe ding

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Lamka, May 19: Central Govt apan Mautaam kial panpihna antang kilei te ban ah Mautaam in louma a haichi/ buh-le-bal ahihsiat te panpihna Agricultural Input Subsidy tungtawn a sumtang (cash component) te Lamka  Police station ah Laltanpuii SDO/ Thanlon makaih in Thanlon  area ading kihawm khia a, ala kha nailoute ading in May 20, 2009 in Thanlon khua ah kihawm khe nawn ding hi. Agricultural input subsidy hawm kheding in Laltanpui SDO/ Thanlon leh staff te’ ban ah Santosh Singh, OC/ Thanlon te’n May 20, 2009 in Thanlon khua zuan ding uhi. Agricultural input subsidy ahihleh Thanlon, Bukpi, Joutung, Dialkhai, Hanship, Palkhuang, Sumtuh, Bungpilon, Kaihlam leh Mualpheng khua te’ kiang ah piak hiding in kigen hi.

Source: Manipur Express | May 20, 2009 

ZEPADA unhappy with rice distribution

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The Imphal Free Press

From M Kaimuanthang

Lamka, May 13: Though the successful distribution of relief rice by the district administration to all interior parts of the district is appreciable, the manner of distribution of cash component and agriculture input subsidy by officials has surprised one and all.

In this connection, the ZOMI Economic Planning and Development Agency, ZEPADA, in a release today said that Thanlon SDO/BDO distributed all the said components and subsidy at Churachandpur police station citing reasons that police personnel were unable to provide enough security.

Mautam affected poor people from farflung areas who are the beneficiaries have been compelled to travel long distances with many expenses and most of them covered about 200 kms just to collect their share of relief money, said the ZEPADA.

If the deployment of army battalion at Thanlon subdivisional heaquarters and three army check posts along the NH-150 are not enough to provide security to the officials, what about the common man`s security in the area, questioned the release.

While rueing the complete failure of the government to put in place all civil administration in the subdivision headquarters it reiterated that all the relief rice could have been distributed to all the areas without any hitch.

Stating that there may be some nefarious attempts to squander the money on the part of the officials, it questioned again why should the little amount of money make the life of the officials vulnerable.

ZEPADA in ‘press statement’ suah

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Lamka, May 13: Zomi Economic Planning and Development (ZEPADA) in tuni a thusuah abawlna uah, district administraton leh Lamka pansan a om civil organization tuamtuam-te panlakna ziak in mautaam relief antang lawhchingtak in hawmzah hita a, huai in kialpi thuakte naktak in panpih ahi chi uhi.
    ZEPADA in ataklatdan un, official khenkhat in mautaam panpihna tawh kisai a sum leh agricultural input subsidy tuamtuam te ahawmkhiakdan  uh lamdang pipi om chi uhi. Huchihlai in, Thanlon SDO/BDO in Thanlon ah security lam taksapna paulam in Lamka Police station ah Thanlon bial mipite ading sum/agriculture subsidy ahawmkhiak mawkpen km 200 val a gamla Thanlon mipite’n hong bangchi lak ding uhiam chih dotna bawl uhi.
    Thanlon ah Army te a om ban uah, Police station leng om a, NH 150 tawn in army outpost 3 bang a om lai a, huchihlai a, security lam taksapna om ahihleh, minautang-te’ ading in bangzahta a security lam thawmhauhuai hiding hiam chi’n ZEPADA in taklang ua, state government in sub-divisional heaquarters teng ah civil administration detdoutak a tunkhiak kin  uh poimawh hilou hiam chi uhi.

Source: Manipur Express | May 14, 2009

Agriculture Input subsidy hawmkhia

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Lamka, May 11: Central Govt apan Mautaam kial panpihna antang kilei te ban-ah louma a haichi/ buh-le-bal ahihsiat te panpihna Agricultural Input Subsidy tung tawn a sumtang (in cash) te tuni’n Lamka Police station ah  Thanlon area a Guite kual a innkuan 928 te ading hawmkhiakna Thanlon SDO leh staff te’n nei uhi. Panpihna sum-te ahihleh innkuan khat in Rs.2100/- zel in ngah ua, April 3, 2009 in leng Thanlon SDO makaih in panpihna sum ana hawmkhe ta uhi. 

Manipur Express | May 12, 2009

Singngat Area a ding antang pawkhia

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Lamka, May 5: Central Govt apan Mautaam kial panpih nang sum hongpai te’ antang kilei te hawmkhiak hizel a, tuni’n Singngat area ading in atawpna leh 4th phase nang antang quintal 1,693.42 khua 24 ading  Lamka a FCS Godown, HQ Veng apan puak khiat in om hi. Antang kipawkhe te ahihleh Singngat khua a ding in quintal 657, Sumchinvum  khua a ding in quintal 42, S.Belpuan khua a ding in quintal 37, New Laijang  khua a ding in quintal 48, Haijang  khua a ding in quintal 57, Muallum khua a ding in quintal 168, M.Goshen khua a ding in quintal  15, L.Phaimol  khua a ding in quintal 65, N.Khonom khua a ding in quintal 11,Panglian khua ading in quintal 47, S.Zezaw khua ading in quintal 71, S.Geltui khua ading in quintal 56, S.Munhoih khua ading in quintal 43, Zahong khua ading in quintal 7.42, Kullian khua ading in quintal 31, S.Phaijai khua ading in quintal 27, Hiangdung khua ading in quintal 23, S.Belbing khua ading in quintal 32, M.Lunmual khua ading in quintal 36, Bongbal khua ading in quintal 58, M.Tanglian khua ading in quintal 63, T.Kotlian khua ading in quintal 25, B.Tollen khua ading in quintal 32 leh Simbuk khua ading in quintal 42 hi’n kigen hi.

~Manipur Express | May 6, 2009

Singngat block a ding mautaam anntang guang
LAMKA, May 5
Hq. Veng a FCS godown ah tuni sun dak 12:00 apan in Singngat block sung a ding mautaam kial panpihna anntang 4th phase a khua 30 a ding qtl. 1650.72 truck ah guang uhi. Hiai anntangte bel Singngat dropping centre khua 6 ah a ding qtl. 798.30, Muallum dropping centre khua 4 a ding qtl. 259, Panglian dropping centre a khua 5 a ding qtl. 224.42, Kullian dropping centre a khua 6 a ding qtl. 207 leh M.Tanglian dropping centre a khua 4 a ding qtl. 162 hi a, IB Road zul DC/CCpur bungalow kong ah kivualsak ua, zingchiang zingkal dak 7:30 in DC/CCpur in khakhe ding hi.

Tuni zingkal in dak 7 inleng DC/CCpur in Thanlon block a ding mautaam kial panpihna anntang tamtak khakhia hi. Hiai hun ah Food & Civil Supply Officer banah bialtu SDO Laltlanpuii tel uhi.

~The Lamka Post | May 06, 2009

MNF cadres still face cases

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Guwahati, May 4: When Lalzarliana, Lalbiakhluna and Vanlalhruaia — all rebels of the Mizo National Front — came overground in 1986 after the signing of the Mizo Accord, they had dreams in their eyes of leading free lives after decades of running in the forest.

But the story of the three former MNF rebels could come as a big turn-off for militants in the Northeast planning to shun the path of violence and join the mainstream.

The three surviving comrades-in-arms of late MNF chief Laldenga, who led the two decade long Mizo insurgency, are still fighting court cases which were slapped against them many years ago in the neighbouring state of Manipur. The continuation of the criminal charges in Manipur since 1984 is contrary to the general amnesty issued to all the 720 MNF rebels after the signing of the Mizo Peace Accord in 1986.

“Almost all of our colleagues received general amnesty under the provisions of the Mizoram Peace Accord and all cases were dropped. However, the cases against the three are yet to be dropped and they have to visit the court almost regularly,” C. Zama, treasurer of the Ex-Mizo National Army (MNA) Association told The Telegraph over phone from Aizawl.

Though the three rebels refused to speak, Zama said: “In 2004, we met the then Manipur home minister T.N. Haokip. Although he had assured us that he would take up the matter, nothing has happened. The association also submitted several petitions to the Prime Minister and the President earlier but to no avail.

“We fought in the jungles for 20 long years to attain statehood for the then Lushai Hills of Assam as Mizoram. Our chief Laldenga became the chief minister of the new state in 1987, Zama said.

The three former MNF rebels — Lalzarliana of Thenzawl district, Lalbiakhluna of Kolasib district and Vanlalhruaia of Churachandpur district in Manipur face robbery charges filed against them at Churachandpur police station (case no 103(6)/1984 under Section 395/397/121 (A)/307/120 of the IPC).

The birth of the MNF is a fascinating tale. The MNF initially started as a voluntary organisation called the Mizo National Famine Front (MNFF) in 1959-60 to tackle the worst natural calamity in recent history — mautam — a famine induced by the widespread flowering of bamboo which returns every 50 years.

This Front provided relief to the famine-stricken. Later, it converted itself into a political party called the MNF. In 1966, the MNF president declared an “independent sovereign” Mizoram as the party’s goal and declared war against India, launching a simultaneous attack on government installations.

The insurgency ended with the signing of the peace accord. Laldenga died in 1990, following which the Congress came back to power in the state. Laldenga’s second-in-command, Zoramthanga, finally led the MNF back into contention in 1998 and then again in 2003. He was chief minister till 2008. “Zoramthanga himself wrote to Manipur chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh in 2002 to drop the cases against the three former MNF soldiers. However, nothing happened,” said Zama.

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Source:The Telegraph

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