Sunday 17 May 2015

Mizoram: CNCI State Unit demands white paper on "Chakma Census"




KAMALANAGAR: The decision of the CYMA to go ahead with their resolve to conduct census on the Chakmas as learnt from a report of the Vanglaini issue dated 11.5.2015 has upset the Chakmas.
“To single out the Chakmas as a community for subject to census without genuine ground and that also by a non-state entity is but a humiliation and assault to their dignity as human being. Chakmas are equal citizen of Mizoram and they deserve equal treatment in all respects from the State Government,” the Chakma National Council of India said in a statement released.
It is quite normal for a duty bound citizen to get alarmed by any events/incidents of abnormal nature. However, it does not legitimize someone or for that matter any non-state entity to take the law into their hand. What the rule book warrants is to approach the concerned legitimate authority and urge them to address the issue.
“The Government of Mizoram should come up with a clear stand on the resolve made by CYMA to go ahead with their illegitimate exercise to conduct census on the Chakmas who are also equal citizen of Mizoram and whether Mizoram Government is not duty bound to enforce the rule of Law?” they said.
Time and again the Chakma issue has reared up its ugly head and yet there has been a conspicuous lack of action and policy to resolve the issue for once and all on the parts of the Government. Ultimately, the sufferers are the minority Chakmas. As a result this has contributed to build up a trust deficit between the two communities and which is not healthy for the overall development of the State, observed CNCI.
“CNCI is clueless as to what has caused the urgency to suddenly jump on to such an exercise to conduct census on the Chakmas. What is the justification, the CYMA has decided to take up the census of the Chakmas? Whether, the CYMA have been alarmed by any evidence confirming about the abnormal growth of the Chakmas in Mizoram?” they said.
The perceived abnormal growth rate of the Chakmas may be put to rest by the given table showing the growth rate of the Chakmas sourced from Mizoram at a Glance 2001 published by Directorate of Economics & Statistics, Mizoram. There is nothing abnormal about their growth rate if juxtaposed with that of the rest population of Mizoram.
Comparison of the Chakmas population of Mizoram vis a vis rest of the population of Mizoram after India’s Independence
YEARTOTAL POPULATION OF MIZORAMCHAKMA POPULATIONREST POPULATION(2-3=4)DECADAL GROWTH (CHAKMA)DECADAL GROWTH (REST POPULATION)
(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)
19511,96,20215,2971,80,905--
1951-19612,66,06319,3372,46,72626.4136.38
1961-19713,32,39022,3933,09,99715.8025.64
1971-19814,93,75739,9054,53,85278.2046.41
1981-19916,89,75654,1946,35,56235.8040.04
1991-20018,88,57371,2838,17,29031.5328.59
Average37.5535.41
Source: Mizoram at a Glance 2001, Directorate of Economics & Statistics, Mizoram; http://dipr.mizoram.gov.in/uploads/documents/document3.pdf;http://censusindia.gov.in/Tables_Published/SCST/dh_st_mizoram.pdf

This also bears significance to the memorandum submitted recently to Amit Shah, President, BJP by the MZPs wherein facts have been misrepresented deliberately regarding the growth of Chakma population in Mizoram with inflated figures about the Chakma population as has been learnt from a press report of the thenortheasttoday dated 17/4/2015. For instance it was claimed that Chakma population have jumped to 80,000 in 1991 against the fact that Chakmas were only 54,194 as shown in the above table. It was also conjured that the population of the Chakmas could be around 1,50,000. Whereas, the population of the Chakmas is only 71,283 by 2001 Census figure (http://censusindia.gov.in/Tables_Published/SCST/dh_st_mizoram.pdf) and as per a report of the Vanglaini issue dated 2/3/2015 the population of the Chakmas as of 2011 is only 96,972 (http://www.vanglaini.org/tualchhung/32034).
Despite such strong evidence against the perceived notion of Chakmas growing abnormally, if the CYMA set on to continue with its resolve to conduct census on the Chakmas it will be but very unfortunate on the parts of such a highly regarded NGO of the country which has been known for their service towards the society.

Thursday 14 May 2015

The Chakma Diary: A Chakma Bloggers Directory has been launched


Chakma Diary Logo

'Chakma Diary: The Chakma Bloggers Directory' website has been launched yesterday. The website will provide all the informations about the different bloggers of the Chakma community worldwide. The website is http://chakma-diary.blogspot.in.

Thursday 30 April 2015

Breaking News: The Official website of Chakma ADC has been suspended



The Chakma Autonomous District Council (CADC) was established on 29th April in 1972 Under the Sixth Schedule of The Constitution of India. The CADC failed to maintained the account and has been suspended. The website was launched on last November 24, 2014, by the Information & the Public Relation Department of CADC. The Official website of CADC is www.cadc.gov.in.

Friday 10 April 2015

Chakmas in Mizoram protest against discriminatory rules



Kamalanagar: More than one thousand people from all walks of life from Kamalanagar and nearby villages joined the Peace Procession called by Chakma National Council of India (CNCI), Mizoram State Committee in collaboration with all Political Parties and NGOs at Kamalanagar on 10th April, 2015 to demonstrate protest against the making of amendment of the Mizoram (Selection of candidates for Higher & Technical Courses) Rules, 1999 resultant of which the prospect to avail the facilities of pursuing technical education under Reserved Quota System shall stand curtailed totally for the Chakmas and other ethnic and religious minorities of the State.

Addressing the demonstrators Shri Rasik Mohan Chakma, President, CNCI, Mizoram State thanks them for huge and spontaneous support to the cause. He expressed that it is unfortunate in a civilized country like India, by a democratically elected government a rule to directly discriminate a Section of Citizen of the country is made. If any reservation is to be made it should be according to benign essence of our Constitution which provides for positive discrimination for the disadvantage group to give them a fair treatment because of their disadvantage status, he stressed. Elaborating his statement he pointed out that the Article 15(4) of the Constitution of India provides that “Nothing in this article (Article 15(1)) or in clause (2) or article (29) shall prevent the state from making any special provision for the advancement of any socially and educationally backward classes of citizens or for the Scheduled Caste and the Scheduled Tribes”. He further stressed that the amendment is a upright breach of article (9) of the 1986 Mizoram Peace Accord which provides that “The rights and Privileges of the minorities in Mizoram as envisaged in the Constitution, shall continue to be preserved and protected and their social and economic advancement shall be ensured.” He urged upon the govt. of Mizoram, headed by Pu Lal Thanhawla to roll back its decision and make another amendment of the Mizoram (Selection of Candidates for Higher & Technical Courses) Rules, 1999 by inserting the provision of reservation of 20% Seats for the Chakmas and Brus out of the reserved quota in technical courses.

Shri Rupayan Chakma, President, MCSU and Shri Molin Kumar Chakma, Vice-President, CYCA also addressed the gathering and condemned the Mizoram Govt. in strong words for making racial discrimination in the matter of amendment of the rule targeting the Chakmas and Brus who are most backward and only ethnic & religious minority of the state. They pledged to continue the movement until positive solution is made. Both the speakers termed the amendment as illegal, unconstitutional and provocative to disrupt communal harmony in the state. They thanked the demonstrators and appealed for full support and cooperation in the movement.

The procession in token of expressing anguish and protest burnt thousands copies of amendment rules in front of SDO ( C ) Office, Chawngte and ended on submission of a Memorandum to the Chief Minister, Mizoram through the SDO (C ) Chawngte demanding immediate roll back of Govt’s decision and also making another amendment of the rules by inserting the provision of 20% reservation for the Chakmas and Brus out of the Reserved Quota of Seats in the Technical Courses. 

Wednesday 8 April 2015

Chakma civil bodies and political parties condemn Mizoram govt action

Aizawl ( ), April 8: The Chakma National Council of India (CNCI), Mizoram State Committee convened a meeting of representatives of all Political Parties, NGOs and MDCs in CADC on the 7th April, 2015 at Kamalanagar to discuss on the recent Amendment of the Mizoram (Selection of Candidates for Higher & Technical courses) Rules, 1999 made by the State Government of Mizoram.
Rasik Mohan Chakma, President, CNCI Mizoram State Committee, who presided over the meeting while placing the agenda for discussion stated that the recent amendment of the rules particularly the explanation clause on the term ‘Local Permanent Residents’ and ‘indigenous’ is the outcome of the agreement made between the MZP and the Government of Mizoram on 25th September, 2014 and subsequently called off the protest by MZP following the ‘Agreement’. In the recent amendment of the explanation clause of Rule 5, with the insertion of “Zo-ethnic people who are native inhabitants” in place of “indigenous people of the state of Mizoram” henceforth the selection of candidates for Higher & Technical courses against the reserved quota of seat shall be made on ethnic line not on merit, he stated. He called upon the representatives of NGOs, Political Parties and the MDCs to place their opinion and suggestion on the issue.
In addition to representatives of NGOs and Political Parties, Shri Pulin Bayan Chakma, Shri Adi Kanta Tongchangya, Kali Kumar Tongchangya and Alak Bikash Chakma partook in the discussion and deliberation in the meeting.
The meeting in unison condemned the decision of the Government of Mizoram for making the provision for selection of candidates for Higher & Technical courses on the base of ethnicity. It is a clear violation of the provision of the Constitution of India as Article 13(2) provides that “the State shall not make any law which takes away or abridges the rights conferred by this part and any law made in contravention of this clause shall to the extent of the contravention, be void”, article 15 (1) also provides that “The State shall not discriminate against any citizen on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth or any of them”. Above all the amendment is a bare violation of Article 9 of the 1986 Mizoram Peace Accord which provides that “the rights and privileges of the minorities in Mizoram as envisaged in the Constitution, shall continue to be preserved and protected and their social and economic advancement shall be ensured” which was signed non-other than the present Chief Minister Pu Lal Thanhawla.
The meeting also observed that while positive discrimination for the disadvantage group to give them a fair treatment because of their disadvantage status is practiced in other part of the country, in Mizoram the ethnic and religious minorities are being made prey of negative discrimination. The meeting also resolved to place demand to provide reservation out of reserved quota of seats in technical courses for the Chakmas in Mizoram. It was also resolved to launch peace procession on 10th April, 2015 in Kamalanagar in protest of the recent Amendment of Rules pertaining to selection of candidates for Higher & Technical courses in Mizoram. The meeting also entrusted the CNCI to take any other course of action for positive solution of the problem in this regard.

Monday 16 February 2015

Former Chakma minister, Legislator join BJP

First Chakma Minister Dangu Nirupam Chakma and Former Legislator Dangu Alak Bikash Chakma join BJP


Written by Adam Halliday on The IndianEXPRESS | Aizawl | Posted: February 16, 2015 7:00 pm 

A handful of veteran Chakma politicians in Mizoram, including the state’s first Chakma minister, have left the state’s main political parties to join the BJP as the party’s state unit has plans this week to induct more people in areas dominated by ethnic groups generally perceived to have less than friendly relations with the majority Mizos.
The moves come as the state readies for elections to almost 550 rural bodies known as Village Councils, all of which will have an unprecedented five year term; the newly elected bodies will still be around in the next state assembly elections scheduled for 2018, in which the Congress hopes to script history by winning three consecutive terms.
BJP national secretary Ranjit Majumder, who is coordinating operations in the state where the BJP has never won an election and mustered less votes than NOTA in the last assembly polls, led Saturday’s ceremony in which Chakma politicians such as Nirupam Chakma (a former Congress Minister of State), A K Chakma (a former MNF legislator) and a host of others including former members of the Chakma Autonomous District Council or CADC were inducted into the party.
The CADC’s 81 village councils will go to polls on February 25, the earliest in Mizoram in the upcoming poll season. Dates for elections to village councils elsewhere have not been announced yet but are expected sometime in April.
The BJP’s state vice-presidents Laldinliana and Chalngura meanwhile told The Indian Express on Monday in Aizawl that party leaders will travel this week to Sakawrdai – the largest settlement dominated by the Hmar tribe in northern Mizoram – and then to the Hachhek assembly constituency in western Mizoram, an area dominated by members of the Bru tribe.
At both places, the leaders said, the party will induct new members, claiming several Village Councils have pledged to shift loyalties from their present political parties to the BJP.
The leaders said the party is seeking to work bottom-up by asking every VC or aspirant VC members what they need most and promising to deliver these but would not comment directly on whether the party’s focus on minority-dominated regions is a move aimed at the ethnic identities of the communities that live there.
Relations between Chakma and Mizo groups have been largely unfriendly for generations. It soured further in the past year over issues relating to illegal immigration of Chakmas from Bangladesh, as well as opposition by Chakma groups to the Mizo Students’Association’s (or MZP’s) plans to build a rest-house for Mizos in Borapansury, one of the largest Chakma-dominated settlements in Mizoram.
Politically however, Chakmas conventionally vote for the Congress party, and the Lal Thanhawla government currently has one Chakma minister. Another Chakma politician, former MoS Nihar Kanti Chakma, is a ruling Congress MLA.
The Hmar tribe is more often than not considered part of the Mizo community (Mizo being a generic term to encompass various tribes bound by similar dialects, customs and histories) but a militant group based out of Manipur that splintered from the main Hmar militant group which laid down arms in the 1990s has for years carried on the demand for an autonomous tribal district for the tribe under the Indian Constitution’s sixth schedule.
CM Lal Thanhawla recently accused the BJP of tying up with the militant group, the Hmar People’s Convention – Democrats or HPC-D, to garner votes for the rural body elections in exchange for a fulfilment of the latter’s demand, but BJP leaders have denied this saying they are not in touch with the militants.
The Congress, however, dominates in the Hmar-dominated areas as well, which covers three assembly seats, all of which currently have Congress MLAs.
The Bru tribe faced mass ethnic conflict with the majority Mizos in 1997 when a pro-autonomy militant group killed a Mizo official, leading to an ethnic backlash which led to tens of thousands of Bru tribesmen fleeing Mizoram for Tripura, where many continue to reside in squalid relief camps although thousands have returned home.
Ethnic tension sometimes rears its head, however, when Bru militants occasionally take part in cross-border kidnappings spearheaded by the National Liberation front of Tripura (NLFT), but there have been no reports of ethnic violence since 2010.
All assembly seats with large numbers of Bru voters, mostly in Mamit district, are currently represented by Congress MLAs.

Monday 9 February 2015

MZP begins construction of controversial "Zofate Chawlbuk" at Borapansury

Aizawl (Mizonews.Net): The Mizo Zirlai Pawl, the largest students’ body in Mizoram, has started construction the controversial “Zofate chawlhbuk” (Resting House of the Zo tribes) in Borapansury under the Chakma Autonomous District Council on Friday last.
Ground leveling was done first, after which building materials were taken to the place.
There was no report of any trouble and the construction work is believed to be going on smoothly. Earlier, there was a “misunderstanding” with the Chakma community which objected to the construction of “Zofate chawlhbuk”.
As per plan, ‘Zofate chawlhbuk’ will be a two-storey concrete building. It will be 45 feet long and 30 feet wide.
MZP said that the main objective behind the construction of Zofate chawlhbuk in Borapansury village is to preserve the land that had been heroically preserved by the Mizo forefathers for the settlement of their future generations.

Political Map of Chakma Autonomous District Council (Chakmaland), Mizoram, Northeast India

Chakmaland, officially recognised as Chakma Autonomous District Council (CADC), an autonomous district council for Chakma people in Mizoram, India.


                                                   India Map showing Mizoram State





Mizoram District Map





Mizoram District Map & ADC Map and Road Map showing location and road connectivity

                    



Mizoram Administrative Division Map

Source: http://mizorural.nic.in/


Area showing Chakma concentration in Mizoram




Outline Map of Chakma Autonomous District Council




Map of Chawngte Rural Development (RD) Block

Source: http://mizorural.nic.in/


Political Map of Chakma Autonomous District Council, Mizoram, India

Source: cadc.gov.in


Political Map of Chakma Autonomous District Council (aka Chakmaland), Mizoram, Northeast India.

All the photos given above except original map of Chakma Autonomous District Council (CADC) are compiled and re-edited by chakmaland.blogspot.com from different sources including CADC official website: cadc.gov.in.