Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Sea washes away five houses in Podampetta

Podampetta village is engulfed by sea water

Berhampur: Podampetta village under Palibandha Panchayat of Ganjam district again faced the nature’s fury as the tidal waves washed away 5 houses and sea water entered to ten houses of the village on Tuesday night.
Due to low pressure and depression over Bay of Bengal, the sea became furious along with the continuous rain in the coastal area from Monday onwards. It causes havoc in the coastal villages like Podampetta which is the most vulnerable spot of sea erosion and prey of tidal waves. The sea water is entering into the thatched houses of the village and creating damage to all belongings of the villagers include fish net, boats and household things.
House of L Shyam was completely washed away by the sea waves while the houses of CH Kartik, Setudu, S Bairagi, S Gureiya, L Appeya, B Naidu and B Budhiya were partly affected by this nature’s fury. Before, we had reported about the alarming situation of sea erosion and the threat over this village. It may be noted that, in the month of July, five houses were completely washed away by tidal waves.
District Administration has taken different steps to rehabilitate the villagers to a safe place near the village, but that is not completed yet. Still the building of houses on the land demarcated by the administration is not started yet.
“We have visited the spot before. We have conducted a meeting on this matter and created an action plan to develop infrastructure include road connectivity, sanitation facility, lectricity, drinking water, plantation and so on in the planned rehabilitation village for the peoples of Podampetta. Concerned Department Officials are directed for this work. We hope the rehabilitation village will be ready on the very next year”, said Ganjam Collector Dr Krishan Kumar.
        

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The great banian tree fell down by the windstorm on Monday night within Berhampur University campus beside the P G Central office of the University Photo: Ramakrushna Dakua
Photo: Ramakrushna Dakua
Photo: Ramakrushna Dakua
Bhanjabihar: The great banian tree inside the campus of Berhampur University fell down on Monday night in a tropical wind storm. He was the witness of time in the varsity. so many students has come and returned back to thier work place, but it was there...who left the campus forever surpassing the beautiful memories of the past days.


Sunday, August 28, 2011

Situation is very acute than drought says Minister


Agriculture Minister of Odisha Pradeep Maharathi
Berhampur: Agriculture Minister of Odisha Pradeep Maharathi visited the drought affected areas of Ganjam district on Sunday. He has taken the stock of the drought situation of different blocks of the district.


“I visited the drought affected blocks of Ganjam with local MLAs. What the MLAs had expressed grave concern over the acute shortage of water which has created drought situation in the district, that’s true”, said minister Maharathi to the Newsmen.

Minister reached at 9am at Khallikote block. He visited the Khallikote and Chatrapur block on his way to Berhampur. He visited different blocks with Khallikote MLA V Sugnani Deo, Polsara MLA Niranjan Pradhan, Chatrapur MLA Adikanda Sethi, Berhampur MLA Ramesh Chandra Chyau Patnaik and Gopalpur MLA Pradeep Panigrahy. Minister attended the meetings at Konisi and Rangeilunda block and met the farmers of the area to review the situation respectively.

“We saw that the domestic animals were grazing in the paddy fields. The water level of the ponds is very less, which severely failed to supply water to the paddy fields. The estimation of the crop loss will be finalized with direct monitoring by me with the help of my department officials. My ministry will also provide seeds, fertilizers for Rabi crop as the assistance for the farmers”, he said while visiting the most affected Rangeilunda block.

“Drought declaration is the co-ordination work of three departments; theses are Agriculture, Irrigation, Revenue. According to the relief court, drought declaration is made after September 15, the time crop cutting. But after visited the place I felt that the situation is very acute than drought”, minister expressed grave concern over the drought situation of the district.

In a meeting, minister informed that he will come again to the Aska area of the district on September 14 to review the drought situation. After that he will make the master plan to estimate the loss.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Chief Justice inaugurates Motor Accident Claims Tribunal Court in Berhampur


Chief Justice of Odisha High Court V Gopal Gowda is inaugurating the Southern Division Motor Accident Claims Tribunal building

Berhampur: Chief Justice of Odisha High Court V Gopal Gowda inaugurated the southern division Motor Accident Claims Tribunal building on Saturday here.
Finally the demand is fulfilled. The motor accident claims tribunal court was inaugurated. In 2010, the advocates had given a memorandum consisting of 12 demands to the chief justice, out of which it was one of the major demand.
Odisha High Court Judge Justice B P Dash, Justice Indrajeet Mahanty, Justice Laxmikant Mahapatra were present as honourable guests of the inaugural function.
Chief Justice of Odisha High Court V Gopal Gowda with other three Judges of Odisha High Court
Among others, Transport Department Principal Secretary Gagan Kumar Dhal, District Magistrate of Ganjam Dr Krishan Kumar, Berhampur SP Safeen Ahmed and other administrative officers of Ganjam were present in the function.  

Friday, August 26, 2011

7 Odia labourers return from Sudan

Berhampur: Seven Odia labourers from Patrapur block of Ganjam district were returned from Sudan to their village on Wednesday. They were languished in a power plant in Sudan.
The labourers include A Basudev (26) of Gundra village, Janardan Reddy (25) of Khambari village; Krishna Reddy (35) and Gopal Reddy (30) of Khandadeuli, S Raveendra (35), B Dharmaraju (35) and M Biswanath (40) of Jayantipur were returned from Sudan. Among them, Krishna Reddy who was severely injured while working in the power plant in Sudan admitted in the Patrapur hospital while another person A Basudev is admitted in Berhampur MKCG medical after reaching in their home. They spoke to the Newsmen about their plight in Sudan by the power plant officials.
They revealed that they were living in an unhygienic condition. The sanitation problem was so acute there; even sometimes the toilet water was entering into their houses made up of mud. One person was severely injured while working in the power plant, but he was not properly medicated. They also told that the company didn’t give their payment. After abducting in an unknown place, the officials sent them to India without paying their salary.
They told that 75 persons from Odisha were working there, out of which 15 persons were from Patrapur block only. While 375 persons from other states were working in Sudan, said the homecoming labourers.           

Dead body of a foetus found

Berhampur: A dead body of a foetus was found near Gate bazaar square in the city by Bada Bazaar police on Thursday here. The dead body was thrown away at the roadside. Bada Bazaar police reached at the spot immediately after getting news from Gate bazaar people and recovered the dead body of the foetus.
This is not for the first time police recovered the dead body of a foetus. The mushrooming of Nursing homes in the city and the secretly use of ultrasound method for foeticide is not a new thing also. Foeticide is a social malady, which we need to eradicate from the society, says the intellectuals and social activists of the city.
“The nursing homes are throwing the dead bodies into the roadside which is not fair”, said a businessman Krishna of Gate bazaar area.
“We have formed a squad in the direction of the District Magistrate of Ganjam to keep eye on the nursing homes. They are working routinely. We are also trying to aware the people about this heinous crime of foeticide”, said Chief District Medical Officer Suryakiran Patnaik on Thursday.
Before, Ganjam district Collector Dr Kishan Kumar had expressed serious concern over female foeticide and the use of ultrasound for determining sex in the district. He formed a taskforce team to check female foeticide in thedistrict.
In a meeting recently organised at the Collectorate on female foeticide, the Collector rued, “Some ultrasound clinics in the district are clandestinely practicing sex determination and female foeticide. To keep an eye on such clinics, there is already a task force formed by the district administration which is assigned to submit a report to the administration once in every three months. But I am concerned over the way the task force is working.” The Collector revealed that as per information there were 32 ultrasound clinics in the district. A few have applied for renewal of their licenses. But the administration has no information as to their activities.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Living without money

Former teacher Heidemarie Schwermer has lived without money in Germany for 13 years. Our writer finds out how she does it

Stefanie Marsh
Nov 24, 2009
Twenty-two years ago Heidemarie Schwermer, a middle-aged secondary school teacher just emerging from a difficult marriage, moved with her two children from the village of Lueneburg to the city of Dortmund, in the Ruhr area of Germany, whose homeless population, she immediately noticed, was above average and striking in its intransigent hopelessness.
Heidemarie Schwermer: who lives without money
Her immediate reaction was shock. “This isn’t right, this can’t go on,” she said to herself. After careful reflection she set up what in Germany is called a Tauschring — a sort of swap shop — a place where people can exchange their skills or possessions for other skills and possessions, a money-free zone where a haircut could be rendered in return for car maintenance; a still-functioning but never-used toaster be exchanged for a couple of second-hand cardigans. She called it Gib und Nimm, Give and Take.
It was always Schwermer’s belief that the homeless didn’t need money to re-enter society: instead they should be able to empower themselves by making themselves useful, despite debts, destitution or joblessness. “I’ve always believed that even if you have nothing, you are worth a lot. Everyone has a place in this world.”
But the homeless of Dortmund seemed not to take to Schwermer’s plan, few ever turned up to the Tauschring. Some, they told her angrily to her face, felt that a middle-class woman with some education would never be able to relate to the circumstances of the dispossessed. Instead it was mainly the unemployed and the retired who began, in snowballing numbers, to flock to the Tauschring, their arms full of things that had been lying around their homes unused for years, or skills that they possessed but no longer exercised: retired hairdressers volunteered to cut the hair of out-of-work electricians, who would wire their kitchens in return; retired English teachers gave language lessons in return for the services of a dog-walker. The point was, not a single pfennig changed hands.

The Tauschring grew exponentially, was written up glowingly in a couple of local papers and turned into something of a Dortmund phenomenon. Its success also prompted Schwermer to ask serious questions of herself and her way of life. “I began to realise that I lived with so many things I didn’t need. So I decided that I wouldn’t buy anything without giving something away. That’s how it started. Then I began to really think about what I needed, clothes for example, and noticed that I could easily get by with what I could hang on ten coathangers. Everything else I gave away. I had so much stuff in the house that was superfluous. Getting rid of it was a relief.”
After a while even her vast collection of books began to assume an excessive presence in her home and one day Schwermer marched to a second-hand shop with her entire library. “The woman in the shop was upset. But I felt that giving them away was a good thing. I love books but I knew I had to get rid of them. I didn’t miss them, which surprised me. I just wanted to pare things down to their essentials.”
What had, in part, led Schwermer to her conclusions about “stuff” was a year of psychotherapy after the breakdown of her marriage in the mid-1980s. It was a difficult year, she remembers: “I was in floods of tears nearly every session, but at the end of it I felt so happy and decided that I wanted to live more simply. I also wanted to pass on what I learnt in therapy to other people, and that’s when I began to train as a psychotherapist.”
Other things changed. She took up meditation and began to realise how dissatisfied she was in her job. “I was always ill with flu or had backache and never realised the connection between my physical symptoms and my unhappiness at work.”
In the wake of setting up her Tauschring, she began to experiment with other sorts of jobs on the side. “I was working in a kitchen for ten deutschmarks an hour and people were saying to me, ‘You went to university, you studied to do this?’ But I thought, well, every person has an intrinsic value, why should I be valued more for being a teacher or a therapist than for working in a kitchen?”
The more ascetically she lived, the happier she became. By 1995 she was deeply involved in the Tauschring, house-sitting for short periods in exchange for cleaning or light maintenance work. She was buying virtually nothing: “When I needed something, I found that it would just come into my life. My glasses, for example. There was an optician who was a member of the Tauschring and he gave them to me in return for some therapy sessions.”
It was in 1996 she realised that “I had to go farther” and took what would be the most radical decision of her life: to live without money. She gave up her apartment and teaching job and resolved to live nomadically, an “extreme lifestyle”, she admits, moving from house to house, in return for menial work. Her new way of life was intended as a short-lived thing: she had given herself 12 months. But she found herself enjoying it so much that it never really ended.
Thirteen years on, she continues to live according to the principles of Gib und Nimm. “Life became much more exciting. More beautiful. I had everything I needed and I knew I couldn’t go back to my old life. I didn’t have to do what I didn’t like, I had a more profound sense of joy, and physically I feel better than ever. Living without money was just the first step. I realised that I wanted to change the world and I wasn’t going to do that by looking after someone’s cat while they were on holiday.”
She still lives — a week at a time — in the spare rooms of members of the Tauschring, cleaning or working in return for accommodation. Only very occasionally has she had personality clashes with her hosts and she tries to resolve any tension within herself “by going for a walk”. She has emergency savings of €200 (£180) and any other money that comes to her she gives away. “I decided it was OK to collect my pension but I give most of it away, except for what I need to pay for train tickets.”
She has no health insurance because she didn’t want to be accused of scrounging off the state. Instead she relies on what she calls the “power of self-healing. When something hurts, I put my hand on it and say to myself I have the power to heal myself and the pain goes away.” What if she becomes really ill? “Cancer? Then I suppose I’ll die. I’ve already prepared myself for death several times — times when I thought, ‘This is it, it’s over’. But then I got up the next day and everything was fine.”
Her entire material world is now contained in a single black suitcase and a rucksack. No photographs because, she says, “I don’t need them”.
In the flesh Schwermer is charming and engaging as well as lively and youthful-looking with strong jutting teeth and eyesight that she says she has halfway managed to correct herself with exercises she has picked from the people she meets. She is well dressed, neat and tidy and, it may come as a surprise given her lifestyle, 67 years old. Her two children — now a music teacher and a therapist — support what their mother does although the family don’t spend Christmas together. Though single, she has relationships every now and again, but is adamant that any love affair will always come second to what she calls her ideological work with Gib und Nimm. “I can imagine having a serious relationship with someone who is spiritual and who believes in what I’m doing, but not one where I live in a nice big house. I can fall in love but I can’t imagine living with someone. ”
Given her constant roaming about the country, it is almost impossible pinning her down. We met in the Greenpeace offices in Münster, near Cologne, where she was to address a group of young people who had been inspired by her work to live without money for week (Schwermer spends much of her time giving lectures about her lifestyle). Accompanying her was an Italian/ Norwegian film crew and we watched as successive teenagers stumbled in and out of the office, having been given the task of bartering for food with the offer of work. “We already live in a barter economy. We go to work to get money. I want to go farther.”
What is farther and how far is far enough? Ideally, Schwermer would like to lead by example and give other people courage to change their attitudes towards money and how they live in and contribute to society. The pressure to buy and to own, she feels, has intensified in recent years. Consumerism is essentially about “an attempt to fill an empty space inside. And that emptiness, and the fear of loss, is manipulated by the media or big companies.” There is a fear, she says, that in not buying or owning an individual will fall out of society. The irony, she claims, is that material goods can never plug a spiritual hole and shopping and hoarding are more likely to isolate people than bring contentment. Does she intend to start a revolution?
“No, I think of myself as planting the seed,” she says. “Perhaps people come away from my lectures or seeing me being interviewed and decide to spend a little less. Others might start meditating. The point is that my living without money is to allow for the possibility of another kind of society. I want people to ask themselves, ‘What do I need? How do I really want to live?’ Every person needs to ask themselves who they really are and where they belong. That means getting to grips with oneself.”
Does she really think that she can convert other people to her life philosophy? “Yes, that’s our future. One day we will all live without money, because we don’t need it and because it is only a burden. We’re the way we are because it’s how the system allows us to be. We can buy everything we want but we need so much less than we realise. If you think that the capitalist system we live in now is the only system, well that’s just ridiculous.”
Though she no longer owns any of her own, she has written two books on her adventures (and has given away her royalties). The first, My Life without Money, turned her first into a minor hero in Germany in some quarters, the kind who, last week for example, was invited on to a late-night TV forum to discuss whether Money Can Make You Happy. Surrounded by dot-com millionaires and lottery winners, she spoke while the other guests peered at her, visibly disconcerted to meet a woman who had given up everything and who claimed to be happy. “I live completely normally, only without money,” she said. “There are people who do so in Siberia. And in Africa there are many people who survive only because they all help each other.”
Schwermer knows from experience that not everyone will take her seriously. When she began with her project, “I was attacked frequently by people telling me that I wasn’t living without money at all, that I was just being provocative or scrounging, which made me cry! But then I realised it isn’t just about giving and expecting something back, or about giving and allowing oneself to be taken advantage of, or becoming a victim. It is about the possibility of having another life, of letting go of the stuff around us and examining our deepest fears.”
She tells me about an episode three years ago when she became convinced that she was going to starve to death: “But I really asked myself what that was about and realised it was about my childhood, and it had no bearing on reality.” (Schwermer is the child of refugees who lost everything after the war). Her only real terror now is appearing in the media. “I hate being on TV because it makes me so nervous but I know I reach a lot of people that way.” The people she does get through to, judging by the demographics of the lecture halls she visits, tend to be women. Why? “Because women are more open to new ideas.”
Is Schwermer a lunatic? Certainly she has been called “naive” and “idealistic” by the author of an article in the right-wing Die Welt newspaper, who asked her whether she was pursuing a communist-lite agenda when communism has been proved to be a failure. “It’s true that communism didn’t work,” she says, “but human beings need to learn to be a little bit different before we can learn to share what we have. We are going to run out of oil in ten years. We don’t have infinite resources. That just isn’t sustainable.”
Is her own itinerant lifestyle sustainable? She thinks so. She feels young but, in the event of death, she has organised her own funeral. She’s “paid” for it by striking a deal with an enlightened clergyman, who agreed that she would cover the costs of the burial by offering counseling sessions for the bereaved. Such deals are a regular feature of her new existence: only the managers of the German rail network seem to be immune to her formidable powers of persuasion, hence the few euros she still needs at her disposable to travel long distances.
Schwermer often talks enthusiastically about “the new world” she is in the process of discovering. She is esoteric but not mad or prone to ranting. Most people find her to be engaging and likeable: there are now many members of her Tauschring. What about those who live without money but not through choice? What about the poor and the homeless? Has she ever converted a homeless person to her way of thinking?
“I haven’t managed to reach the homeless,” she says. “I did hold lectures for the homeless but only six or seven showed up. They didn’t want to hear it. One of the men there accused me of having ‘connections’, that I’d only been able to do what I have been able to do because I knew people. I do have contacts, that’s what this new world is all about, forging links and contacts. Otherwise it wouldn’t work.”
She never managed to convince her interlocutor and not long after their conversation he had resumed his place outside on the pavement begging for spare change.

Less rainfall creates drought like situation in Ganjam

Berhampur: Rain has been remaining the lifeline for the farmers in agricultural field. Less and erratic rainfall has left the farmers sulking. Still, they are waiting for a good rain. Rangeilunda and Belaguntha block are severely hit by less rain, revealed the district level review meeting on Monday.
In the district level review meeting, the officials were discussed about the alarming situation in the field of agriculture in Ganjam. On the direction of State Government, district collector Dr Krishan Kumar called the sub-collectors, Tehsildars, BDOs, agriculture officers, statistics and Irrigation Department officials to attend the review meeting on the present situation of agriculture in Ganjam.
In the meeting, the agriculture and statistics officials informed that the district has received 489 mm rainfall against 650 mm rainfall during this season till August 3rd week which is 25 percent less rainfall against the expectation. In the month of April it has received 33 percent less rain while 22 percent less in May, 34 percent less in June, 19 percent less in July and 22 percent less in August till 3rd week.
Two blocks were severely affected by less and erratic rainfall this season. Except Buguda, the rest 21 blocks have received less rainfall, the officers informed in the meeting.
Among others, DRDA Project Director M Muthukumar, ADM Sashibhusan Padhi, Sub-collectors of the district were attended the meeting. Collector directed all the Tehsildars, Statistics and agriculture officers to give report before 29 of this month on this matter.

New action plan to tackle elephant problem in Ganjam

'Operation Gajaraj'
Berhampur: To curb the problem created by wild jumbos in Ganjam block, the forest department formed an action plan and it is sent to Chief Conservator of Forest for recommendation, sources said.
According to the action plan, the wild pachyderms are entering to the human habitations. To put a stop to them, a trench of 2.5m depth and 2m width will be dug as first plan. Secondly, fences consisting electric wire will be constructed to check the infiltration of the jumbos to the human habitations. Though there is less possibility to cross the trench by the wild jumbos, still the electric wire fence bearing low voltage electricity is another alternative, sources said.
The problem created by these animals is now a challenge for the forest department to drive away the jumbos from that area. Now 30 forest officials are engaged in this work. They are divided into two groups.
To control the group, one Deputy Range Officer is appointed in each squad. Apart from that, four foresters, two Deputy Officer are assigned for the duty and Khallikote Range Officer is deputed to supervise all the work.
The appointed squads will give report to the Range Officer after recognizing the elephant shelters within the dense forest at the day time. On the other hand, Sobha and Mahendra namely two Kunki elephants are used in the operation guided by the Mahouts one from Assam and two from Odisha respectively to drive away the jumbos.
The Forest Department suspecting that the jumbos are coming from Chandaka forest and residing now in the dense forest areas of Narayani and Barunei hills near Khallikote. The forest officials relocated a herd consisting of eight elephants while the other herd has taken shelter in a secret place, the officials informed. The number of elephant is on the rise. Now 135 elephants are under the Berhampur Forest Division against the 121 elephants before.
Recently, two elephants were electrocuted near Rambha under Ganjam block, while on August 14; six people were injured by elephant attack at Bada Kainchpur village under Ganjam Block. Demanding compensation for the families of the injured, the villagers staged dharna in front of the block office on Friday. The tussle between men and elephant claimed the lives 7 human and 5 jumbos in Ganjam block.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Mass rally in Berhampur supporting Anna Hazaare



“Whether I am there or not, don’t allow this flame to be extinguished. Till India is free from corruption, this flame should burn,” said Anna.
 

Berhampur: A mass rally supporting anti-corruption crusader Anna Hazaare and Jan Lokpal Bill was organized by the youth organizations of the city on Saturday here.
Hundreds of youth led by coordinator B. Santosh Kumar along with other members of the organizations in the city were participated in the procession started from Khallikote College stadium at 7.30 am of the morning. The procession reached again at the Khallikote square after end of the procession in the town. Then they organized a signature campaign to support Jan Lokpal Bill.
Similar rally was organized on Friday by Berhampur Nagarika Manch led by former Deputy Speaker Ramachandra Panda. Protesting the arrest and detention of Anna Hazaare by Delhi police, they demanded at the Government to accept the Jan Lokpal Bill. They also demanded that Government should pass an accountability law to make civil service accountable to the public. Among others, Prof Prahallad Panda, Laxmi baba, Rajendra Panda, Rama Patra, Gadadhar Patro and others were taken the lead of the movement.
While on Saturday also Supporting Anna Hazaare the Nagarika Manch and other organization members were sat in the morning to evening dharna in front of Gandhi statue near Gandhi nagar square.
The Nagarika Manch is holding a series of public meeting to generate public opinion to support Anna Hazaare and Jan Lokpal Bill. On Monday, the Manch organizes a meeting to disscuss on this matter.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Kin of Languished Odia workers in Sudan decry for help

Berhampur: After one and half month, again the Odia labourers working in a Sudan power plant in Africa have complained against the power plant of giving torture to them in the foreign land. 25 workers are reportedly arrested by the Sudan police after the agitation by the Odia labourers against the plant due to cheating in wage and minimum facility committed by the Indian farm and Sudan power plant.

The workers complained that the management of the power plant located at Costi in Sudan has reneged on the promises given to them by Bhawani Construction of Kerala which acts as the company’s employment agent in India. The conditions to provide them free treatment, insurance, 8-hour working day, one holiday per week, monthly salary of Rs 15,000 with boarding and lodging facility were simply dreams for them since they joined the plant six months back in February this year.
They are exploited by the company in working hours, wage and otherwise. Even the company administration has recovered the transportation fees from India to Sudan from their accounts. All this has agitated the workers who are currently on strike but not without threat to their life from the company goons.
“We have taken further steps to bring back the labourers languishing in Sudan. We have already informed the labour commissioner of India. He is looking into the matter”, said District Magistrate of Ganjam Dr Krishan Kumar to The Pioneer on Friday.
“The company didn’t listen to our demand, what they had committed to provide. So our people went on strike. After Media’s interference, the Sudan plant agreed to provide health insurance and medical facility but after one month again they are giving torture. After protest by the workers, they were arrested by Sudan police and the police took them to an unknown place. Those were remained in the plant, they are in distress without food and minimum facility”, said Simanchala Gauda, a worker fled from Sudan.
“We have contacted the Bhabani Erectorates Ltd after the complaint from the kin of workers in distress in Sudan. The Agent informed that they had taken 67 workers from Ganjam district. Those are working in Sudan through Bhabani Erectorates Ltd; we have all that data with us. From August 11 they have started agitation against the company. We informed the Labour Commissioner to take further steps to bring back the workers”, said Labour Officer of Ganjam Dipti Ranjan Mohanty.
 It may note that, more than 150 Odia labourers are reportedly languishing in Sudan where they were dispatched by a Kerala firm to work in a power plant. The labourers migrated mainly from villages under Patrapur block, Rangeilunda block in Ganjam district. Things came to light when the workers on Thursday morning requested their relatives back home over phone for help to rescue them.
A worker who is working in the power plant in Sudan, informed his family members about the incidents over phone. The family members of the workers from Kesharipada, Khandadeuli, Antarasingi, Gundra, Poleru, Khambarigaon, Buribada, Baranga, Sashan, Turubudi and Jayantipur met the district administration and requested for immediate steps for the safe return of their kin from Sudan.
The families of the distressed workers on Thursday met the Ganjam officials to bring back their relatives from the foreign land. They met Ganjam collector and District Labour Officer and appealed for the rescue of arrested workers by Sudan police.

Big support for Hazare continue in Berhampur


"Anna tum age badho, hum tumhare saath hai"

BERHAMPUR: Supporting Anna Hazaare, various institutions, social organizations and political parties held different programmes in different parts of the city on Thursday. The student organizations condemned the fundamental right violation by Union Government in the case of Anna Hazaare’s arrest by Delhi police.
Support for Anna Hazaare is increasing day by day all around the country, while the Silk City Berhampur is not the exception. BJP workers condemning Union Government burnt an effigy of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh near Kommapalli in the city.
In the other hand, Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) called a nationwide college bandh on Thursday. Its effect has been felt in Ganjam. The colleges were closed by ABVP’s call. The youth organization staged dharna in front of Khallikote Autonomous College here. The youths of Gandhinagar protesting Lokpal bill framed by the Union Government and organized a signature campaign programme in the city.
While the Ganjam district youth wing of BJD were organized a huge protest meeting near Mahatma Gandhi statue at Gandhinagar here.
Hundreds of BJD workers and the local people of Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik's home town Hinjilikatu, 18 km from here took out a procession and a motorcycle rally led by Ajay Kumar Maharana in the town protesting the fundamental right violation of Anna Hazaare.
This is the second day of Strong and spontaneous support came forth for Anna Hazaare in the district in the wake of his arrest by the Delhi Police at the behest of the UPA Government.

Support for Anna from Ganjam

Berhampur: A strong support has come from Ganjam district for Anna Hazaare on Wednesday.

Protesting Anna Hazaare’s arrest, supporters were showed their inclination towards Anna and his fight against corruption campaign by agitating, giving slogan and sitting in dharna in different places of Ganjam.


Supporters of Anna Hazaare protesting the Lokpal Bill framed by Union Government, called a 12 hour bandh in chief minister’s home town Hinjilikatu 18 km away from Berhampur on Wednesday. Hundreds of supporters were come out with a procession and a motorcycle rally in the town. They sat in a dharna in Hinjili bus stand led by Ajay Kumar Maharana.
Protesting Anna’s arrest by Delhi police, School and college were closed in Hinjili. Market, shops were also closed here. A strong support has come from Hinjili area for Anna Hazaare.
While in Berhampur, student organization SUCI organized a dharna near Khallikote College in Berhampur city. Supporting Anna Hazaare Berhampur University students were come out in a procession by holding placards in Bhanjabihar.
Similar protest was organized in Khallikote town. College students set out in a rally here by chanting slogans against corruption and a procession supporting Anna’s anti-corruption campaign.
   
 

Railrok in Berhampur demanding passenger halt


Berhampur: The residents of Ankuli and Lanjipalli area organized a railrok demanding a passenger halt near Lanjipalli here on Wednesday.
Lang standing demands from the people of Ankuli and Lanjipalli area for a passenger halt near of Lanjipalli could not be solved by the railway authority or the district administration till today, though the people of the area have been demanding it from 1997.
The area people many a times attracted the attention of district authorities, elective representatives of Berhampur and DRM’s of Railway for fulfillment of their demand, but they could not succeed.
As a result the people of Ankuli, Lanjipalli, Berhampur Industrial area, Engineering College area came out with a huge gathering for railrok near Lanjipalli.
The administration and railway authorities’ inaction compelled the area people for railrok. Hundreds of women along with men were sat on the railway line demanding for their cause. Due to this strike, the communication was hit for few hours. The trains like Berhampur-Bhadrak fast passenger and Duronto Express were took a halt for few hours.
After the given commitment by the railway officials, the agitators were moved from the strike.

Fire beak out in Ganjam village

Berhampur: 14 houses were turned to ash in the Madhurchua village under Rambha police station of Ganjam district on Monday morning.
Around 3.10 am at the wee hour of early morning, the fire broke out in the thatched houses. Villagers tried a lot to control, but it became futile and 14 houses completely turned into ash. The villagers rang up to fire station for help. Fire station team reached at the village at morning 6 o’clock. All most 14 houses were burnt at that time.
The houses of Kalicharan Nahak, Khalia Nahak, Santosh Nahak, Sanku Nahak, Bighnaraj Nahak, Pramod Nahak, Judhistir Nahak, Ravindra Nahak, Rajendra Nahak, Gokula Nahak, Advaita Nahak, Rahash Nahak, Akhil Nahak, Tarabati Nahak were burnt in the fire.
The villagers suspecting electric short circuit might be the reason of the fire break out. Most of the families are below poverty line. They have lost all their belongings in the incident.
MLA of Chatrapur Adikanda Sethi, Ganjam block chairman Surath Pahan, Ganjam Tehsildar Bijayananda Nayak, CPI leader Narayana Reddy were visited the site and assessed the lose by the fire accident.
Instantly, Surath Pahan and his team have given assistance by giving polythene, dry food to manage the family for some days. The team has given assurance to provide Indira Awas to the bereaved families.
“We visited the place with our team. We are planning to provide Indira Awas to each family; those houses are burnt in the fire. We also discussed with the district administration to give all support to the families of fire victim”, said block chairman Pahan.
Last year also 4 houses were burnt due to fire breakout in that same village. The villages of that area have been demanding a fire station near Rambha, which will help them at the time of need due to close proximity. It may be noted that, this area is 25 km away from Chatrapur fire station. The political leaders along with block chairman are supporting them for a fire station near Rambha.

Development work can curb Naxal problem: Jairam Ramesh


Berhampur: “There are 60 districts are Naxal affected in the country, out of which 15 districts from Odisha. The Naxal problem in Odisha is not worsened like Chhattisgarh. We are planning out to tackle the situation. From that, development work in the Naxal affected area is the need of hour, which can curb the Naxal menace in Odisha”, said Rural Development central minister Jairam Ramesh in a review meeting on Saturday at Berhampur RDC office, as the part of his Odisha visit.

He reviewed the central government funded development works by visiting different parts of Odisha. During the visit, he reached at Berhampur RDC office to review the development work of the districts under southern RDC on Saturday morning here.

He also reviewed the MGNREGA works and the development works in Naxal affected areas. He lauded a collector’s proposal of building playgrounds under the scheme of NREGS in the tribal area. He discussed about road connectivity, Indira Awas Yojana and other welfare projects of the tribal area. He told that there is the need of more Post Offices and Banks in rural areas for the smoothly transactions of NREGA wages.
“This year central government has sanctioned one hundred thousand crore rupees as the budget for Rural Development, from which Rs 6,000 crore has been sanctioned for Odisha. Every year centre allocates 25
crore extra for the upliftment of the tribal districts, but this year extended to 30 crore”, said Jairam Ramesh in the review meeting.

He advocated for the farmers to stop acquisition of the cultivable land, which yields 3 tier crop a year, and also suggested to computerize all the data to bring more transparency in MGNREGA work. He gave the instances of Andhra Pradesh, who get succeed in this field. He told about the road connectivity, broadband connection and to modernize the old system in the rural area.

Among others, RDC Laxmi Narayana Nayak, Panchayatiraj Secretary Aurobinda Padhy, Rural Development Secretary Ashok Tripathy, Jairam Ramesh’s Personal Secretary R Vineel Krishna, collector of Nayagada with the district collectors under southern division RDC were present over the review  meeting.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

14 injured in group-clash near Golanthara, raged villagers block road


Berhampur: Again a group-clash has taken place near Golanthara after Kodala violence. 14 persons were injured in the group-clash between Singabadi and Medinipur village of Simhala Panchayat under Golanthara police station of Ganjam district on Thursday night. Protesting this, Medinipur villagers blockade the road on Friday demanding action against the villagers of Singabadi.

Before, the villagers of Medinipur had complained against the villagers from Singabadi for the matter of damaging the crops by the domestic animals like buffaloes and cows in their land, though there was no grazing land without the paddy fields. But the villagers of Singabadi did not listen to them. The villagers had complained to the administration against the defiant behavior of the Singabadi villagers. But they could not get solution from the administration.

On Saturday night, villagers of the Medinipur and Singabadi came to a face to face clash taking into this matter. 10 villagers from Medinipur and 4 from Singabadi were injured in the group-clash. Then the next day the villagers of Medinipur blocked the Chikiti-Berhampur main road for demanding strong action against the villagers of Singabadi.

Injured persons are in MKCG medical college and hospital for their treatment. ADM Sangram Panda and Tehsildar Manoj Panda rushed to the spot to take the stock of the situation and after the interfere of the officials the raged villagers were agreed to stop road blockade.

5.38 crore housing project for slum dwellers in Berhampur

Berhampur: Berhampur Municipal Corporation (BMC) laid foundation stone to the 5.38 crore Integrated Housing Project for slum dwellers of the city on Wednesday here.

Two years before, Central Government had sanctioned the Integrated Housing for Slum Development Project, but due to some problems in land demarcation construction work was delayed.

There are 250 houses will be built in the first phase, for which 5 crore 38 lakh 71 thousand rupees is estimated. For this project center will bear 80 percent of the expenditure, whereas 10 percent from the state and the rest by the beneficiaries.

In the first phase, 2 crore 24 lakh 83 thousand rupees is sanctioned for 98 houses in Bauri Sukunda, 1 crore 43 lakh 85 thousand rupees for 65 houses in Gola Raghunathpur, 88.91 lakh for 46 houses in Mochi street and 81.04 lakh for 41 houses in Bijipur Badabauri street as well.

All the facilities will be available in the slum colonies, which are going to be constructed soon. The tender process has finished.Necessary steps have been taken to speed up the construction work within the stipulated time.

On the occasion of lay foundation stone, Berhampur MLA Ramesh Chandra Chyaupatnaik, Mayor Sib Shankar Das, Deputy mayor Sanjukta Samal, BMC Commissioner Bheem Manseth along with other officials, engineers and elected representatives of BMC were present.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Dharakot chickungunya: officials take the stocks of the situation

Berhampur: Following breakout of dengue in Anugul along with other district, the chickungunya at Dharakot block in Ganjam district left the people in the state of panic. The number of patients rose to hundred in the block on Tuesday. It seems that some of the patients are unable to walk and the rest have pain in their external body parts, the people apprehend that the dreaded disease has broken out in the district.

From Sunday onwards, the number of patients are on the rise. On Monday, near about fifty people were affected and rushed to the hospital, but on Tuesday, more than hundred people were affected in the disease at Gadadamodarpalli and nearby villages of Dharakot block.

Most of the patients were taking treatment by sleeping on the floor due to lack of bed. Ganjam District Mediacal Officer (Maleria) Dr Uma Shankar Mishra has visited the affected village on Monday afternoon. Among others Dharakot Tehsildar Sangeeta Behera and Zilla Parishad member have visited the spot to take stock of the situation.

The medical team has started spraying DDT by going to door to door in the village. Treatment is going on. Awareness programmes has been started to keep clean the surrounding of the village as well as the houses.

Out of the affected, Tamal Gauda, Kalu Gauda, Kanak Gauda, Devraj Gauda, Sibani Khatei, Jitendra Das and Bharati Dakua are reported to be in serious condition and have been admitted at the Dharakot Community Health Centre for treatment while the rest hundreds are getting treated in the hospital and in village on Tuesday.

A press meet was organized on Wednesday in the IEC hall of CDMO, Ganjam to discuss about Dengue and Chickungunya problem in the district. CDMO Suryamani Patnaik along with other health officials discussed about the symptoms, pre-caution, treatment and preventive measures for Chickungunya and Dengue.

“We have discussed about the prevention of Chickungunya and Dengue disease. It’s curable, no need of panic over this. We have taken preventive measures in Gadadamodarpalli village of Dharakot block. We are waiting for the medical report of the disease, which will come very soon”, said CDMO to the newsmen here.

Two jumbos electrocuted in Ganjam

… After 48 hours, administration got into the spot
… Intelligence failure says DFO
… If administration will not take any action to give compensation for farmers and to drive away the jumbos, then the people will solve the problem in their own way, told the raged villagers.
… Lack of Coordination between wildlife and forest official delayed the operation, as a result the jumbos became the victims of people’s anger


Berhampur: Two wild jumbos died in electrocution at Haripur near Rambha under Khallikote Forest Range area of Ganjam district on Monday.
Two female wild elephants were died. Among them one is adult of 30 years and the second one is a young of 10 years. These two elephants were breathed their last near the tail end of the jungle and in a paddy field at Haripur village. When the villagers went out for works in their paddy fields in the morning, they found these two jumbos dead.

After the death of these two, other jumbos were raged and roared violently. The violent behavior of these pachyderms created terror among the local people.

Forest officials have reached at the spot after 48 hours of the death of the elephants. The forest officials have started enquiry into the matter. The young elephant had come in to contact of electric wire first, to save the life of the young one the mother came into contact of the electric wire and breathed her last. The wire was near a pump house of the paddy field. The first one was away from 755 ft and later one was 203 ft away from the pump house.


“Enquiry is going on. After the post mortem report the real reason will come out, whether they had consumed poison or electrocuted. The veterinary doctors have reached in the spot. Due to intelligence failure we could not get the information early”, said DFO of Berhampur AK Jena to The Pioneer.

“Elephants are electrocuted. We have started enquiry into the matter. If any found guilty under wild life protection act, then they will prosecute them”, said Ranger of Khallikote Forest Range Kishore Kumar Nayak.

Before The Pioneer had reported about the nuisance work of the 32 wild elephants in the Ganjam block and lack of co-ordination between wildlife and forest official, who delayed the operation, as a result the jumbos became the victims of people’s anger.

Fight between man and elephant claimed seven life of human beings and five lives of the jumbos in 2008 as well. 19 houses along with damaging of crops during the years affected on economy of the farmers, sources said.