Thursday, June 15, 2006

Governance by Army men??

The name was Mr. Colin Gonsalves. He was speaking in some 2-day seminar. I can’t remember who organized that seminar but the news report told us that it was attended by the who’s who of Manipur’s human rights activists and representatives of Apunba Lup.

It was 7—may be, 10 days back.

There in the seminar, Mr colin Gonsalves, who was said to be an imminent Supreme Court lawyer, presented his viewpoint like this—

“What’s happening in Manipur is reality an experiment testing the feasibility of the governance of the land by Indian troopers”.

That’s a totally new view of what’s happening in Manipur right now. But somebody can also term it as indulging in the sensationalism of the particular situation.

For me, it was the first time I ever heard of Mr. Colin Gonsalves and the news report did not give the argument in arriving at his observation. Of course, I was intrigued but really did not know how to rate his observation.

But today’s papers carried the report of Brig Kochekkan meeting the media in his tactical headquarters situated in Kangla Park.

What strikes me most is when he said that they are going to develop Henglep (remember mass rape—its locale is around there) into a model village and they will be spending Rs 3 crores for the purpose!

Rs 3 crores for developing a village! That’s a lot of money, Brigadier!!

Everybody knows that there is no civil administration down there. And I like the idea of the villagers benefiting no matter where the money comes from and the Government of Manipur is not the sole agency for initiating development there. That initiative may come from the NGOs, private parties etc. I’ve no objection to that.

But the army men spending Rs3 crores for developing a village sound pretty like they are stepping into the shoes of politicians or civil administrators. C’mon, army men trying their hands at the governance of the land! That’s pretty ominous.

Do you think Mr. Colin Gonsalves have a point when he pointed that there is ongoing experiment in Manipur to test the feasibility of governance of the land by the army men? Again, that sounds pretty ominous to me.

And, today I find out that Mr. Colin Gonsalves is the founder director of Human Rights Law Networks.

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