Tuesday, March 26, 2013


Why congress should be defeated in 2014 Loksabha Election?

1.Cong Govt. Has Failed to protect the interest of SC/ST.

a) Congress Govt has failed in bringing amendment to the reservation in promotion for SC/ST

b)Cong.Has Failed to prevent atrocities against SC/ST

c) Policy of the Cong. Govt against the interest of SC/ST       Privatization of PSUs and Banking sectors.

d)Cong.Govt. has Not implemented reservation in private sectors.

e) It has Failed to empower the SC/ST commission to safeguard the interest of SC/ST.

f) Congress ruled states have not created SC/ST commission in their state.

g) Double standard in implementing the welfare measure to SC/ST scheme  Vs General public scheme.
      Allocation of funds for SC/ST scheme is lesser when the same scheme is extended to General public, for example: Construction cost of house under Indra niwas yojana is lesser compared to what allocated to General scheme, similarly the  Extent of Land for construction of house is 3 cents for SC/ST whereas there is proposal to allocate 10 cents   under right to homestead .  This example is only tip of the ice berg there are so many such discrimination.

h) Cong. has Failed to consult SC/ST commission,Ambedkar foundation ,SC/ST organization and MP/MLA before budget meeting.

I)The Cong Govt has failed to allocate for for SC/ST sub plan in proportionate to SC/ST population.

J) No separate advisor appointed to Prime minister to consult issue related SC/ST welfare and other issues.

k)Cong Govt. has Failed to abolition of untouchability

2). Victimisition of  Dalit minister for the decision made with consultation of Finance minister and Prime minister and Attroney General in 2G allocation.
  • ·  Allowing CAG to make wild allegation about the allotment of 2G on the presumptive loss
  • ·   Failed to combat effectively the wrong reports  of CAG on presumptive loss of 2G .
  • ·   Denied permission to appear before the JPC probing the 2 G allocation( just like dalits  treated in kangaroo court by cast hindus in Villages)

3.Corruption in allocation of Coalmines.

4.Cong Govt. has Failed to protect the interest of Srilankan Tamils.

5. Cong Govt. Failed to combat Pakistan Terrorism.

6.Corruption in waiver of Agricultural loan.

7.Cong Govt. has Failed to bring justice for the wrongdoings of Modi in Gujrat Muslim murders .

8. Cong Govt has Failed to control inflation and spiraling prices .

9.Cong Govt has failed to bring reservation for women in the parliament.

10.Cong Govt has Failed to bring legislation to combat corruption.


Friday, March 22, 2013


RESERVATION IN SERVICE MANUAL

           The reservation rosters are not maintained properly by Govt Department .  DOPT has not communicated any guide lines on the maintenance of reservation rosters.  A manual prepared by Institute of Secretariat Training and management New Delhi has given the details of maintenance of reservation roster.  If the reservation rosters is not maintained properly, the ultimate looser is SC/ST  category employees .  It is the responsibility of each employee who appointed on reservation to see that the rosters are correctly maintained by their dept .  Like wise the SC/ST/OBC Association should keep a watch over the maintenance of the rosters and it should be periodically examined for each category  of post.



           In many Dept the recruiting units are not bothered to close the rosters every year  to tally the requirement of SC/ST vacancies .  if the rosters are not maintained properly  vacancies vacated by SC/ST points are not filled up or carried forward .  The author had seen in many offices in the gradation list against the names of muslim officials, community of the officials were noted as SC! since the rosters are prepared based on the gradation list and if it contains wrong information the roster also become wrong.
           If the reservation roster is not maintained properly there is a possibility of counting the meritorious SC/ST employees who were appointed / promoted in merit as SC/ST category and treated as excess at the end of the year while closing the roster, resulting denial of rightful share of SC/ST in subsequent recruitment and promotion.



          Similarly in every department SC/ST Association is functioning but unfortunately the office bearer of the association  are failed to examine their own office rosters.  Though the rosters are not secrete but no body wants to examine it .  Now after the introduction of RTI act the Govt departments are expected to publish the rosters in their website as per section 4  of RTI act ( Pro active disclosure) but non of the Govt department is come forward to disclose the rosters in their website.  Now the individual and association can have copies of roster through RTI act and see that it is maintained properly.

         The SC/ST Liaison officer  of the Govt department is expected to inspect the rosters but these officer seldom inspect the recruiting unit in their department .  Now the individual and association will resort the RTI act to get the copy of the inspection report and information through RTI and ensure that these officer is regularly inspecting the office.

         The reservation roster manual will give an idea how it should be operated and maintained which can be downloaded by selecting  and right  clicking  the following link.

http://persmin.gov.in/otraining/UNDPProject/undp_modules/Reservation%20in%20Service.pdf

Wednesday, March 6, 2013


Magizhini Manimaran's Kumki  Hit song soi soi

Two Million and fifty thousand visits to this youtube version of the song, and the visitors and viewers, admirers growing by the min  

Soi Soi - Full Song - Kumki
Pl click the following link to view the full song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=XXFWy74Gxgk

to hear Mahilini's great voice,  the thirst for a novel music and new and powerful voice, this spectacular voice, as the song begins with a long melodies hymn
The Singer of this song "Soi Soi", Magizhini Manimaran is a Gem of voices, the hidden greatness of India, somehow such talents that is spread across the nation of India has never been discovered and shown to this world, but listening to Soi Soi first creates a Craving, it create a thirst and when you listening to her voice, it stirs and kind of kindles the very thoughts, for the first time listener or the repeat visitor,at 7 seconds after you play this video or audio and upto 22 second, within 15 seconds you will be totally mesmerized, that long protracted pre-hymn voice captures the sense of hearing and then she continues soi soi......a spectacular voice. She has been a inspirational folk singer for long, unfortunately the slave dalit musicians and movie artists never recognized and brought her to the forefront of music industry, it took a new comer musician D.Imman, the musician for the movie Kumbi in which Soi Soi is one of the several songs, you can hear all the songshere 
thank you Imman, 
D. Imman is an Indian film composer and singer. He has composed songs and provided background music for Tamil films. He did his schooling in Don Bosco, Egmore, Chennai and college in Pachaiyappa's College. Wikipedia
Film music credits: Naan Avanillai 2, Thamizhan, you stand taller than Illayaraja like musicians 
 (hindu societies procrastinators who betrayed the dalit society, how many of these gems are all over Tamil Nadu hidden from discovery, we need more Immans to ddiscover real singers, native, talented, original singers) in discovering and letting the world  to see this talent Magizhilini 
Soi Soi is a special and great song in this movie, I also like "Nee Yeppo Pulla" song also is good
Some latest news on Magizhilini:  

Magizhini Manimaaran Profile – Soi Soi Kaiyalavu – Kumki


She is Magizhini Manimaaran who sang the “Soi Soi” – scorching fast paced song in the recently released movie Kumki with music by Iman and lyrics by Yugabharathi. She has the magical voice which makes us to listen to the song many times. Magizhini Manimaran’s voice and Imman’s composition blend well. The ‘Soi Soi’ words are catchy.
Born in Vedanthangal and moved to Chennai for work after completing her 10th standard. She met her husband Manimaran in chennai who taught her music. She joined in his troop and started singing. She has not learned classical music but she sings all kinds of “Gramiya songs”. According to her “Thaalattu”  is the best melody. She is having two sons whom she wants to bring up as Doctor and Engineer but at the same time she wants them to concentrate in “Parayisai”. Now she is getting lot of  opportunities in Tamil movies after this musical hit “Soi Soi” 
Hindu News:-Drummer-woman makes it big
 “She was first a ‘parai’ drummers and later a singer. The ‘kalai kuzhu,’ right from its inception, worked on an ideology that they will never play for funerals — “Idhu saavukkana parai illai viduthalaikkana parai” (This ‘parai’ drumming is not for funeral but for liberation). Our performance always had a strong message that aimed at re-signifying ‘parai’ as a symbol of self-respect and assertion. Aadhikkam aliyattum, kizhiyattum paraigal alla, Indhiya saatheeya samoogam (Let the beating up of ‘parai’ destroy the dominance; let it break down not the parai but the Indian caste hierarchy),” he says. 

“The troupe performs for political and social conferences and for temple festivals of lineage gods and other traditional gods. Perhaps one of the oldest of the indigenous folk arts, ‘parai aattam’ embraces life in all its forms — birth, puberty, engagement, marriage and death. But, today, despite a rich legacy, ‘parai aattam’ has been pushed to the margins as a polluted form of art,” he says.
source: upliftthem.blogspot.in.

Friday, March 1, 2013


Outrage in Bhandara
Afortnight after the bodies of three daughters of an impoverished Dalit widow were found in a well in a village in Maharashtra’s Bhandara district, the investigation languishes. The victims, aged 11, 8 and 6, went to school and never came back. After villagers gave up a nightly search, the police took their time to even accept a complaint. Two days later, the bodies were spotted. According to the police, the girls were raped before being murdered. The only arrest so far has been of a teacher of the school, who was found not to have realised that the children had missed their noon-meal, although she had earlier in the day forbidden two of them from leaving during school hours. It would appear from accounts of the sequence of events that had the police acted on time, the girls could have been found. Fifteen police teams were assigned to the case after the inspector who failed to act quickly on the matter was suspended. The insensitivity and class bias among sections of the law enforcement agencies are once again in evidence here. The sense of insecurity that poor policing and entrenched lawlessness could together engender varies only in scale between rural areas and urban regions. With the trauma of the gang-rape and murder of a young woman in New Delhi last December still raw, the Bhandara case once again highlights the distance this country has to travel.
Incredibly, Maharashtra’s Home Minister, who claimed a little too prematurely last week that the case was “80 per cent solved,” has since blamed the residents of the village for not cooperating with the police. Many VIPs have been visiting the victims’ family. But such visits seem to have only added to the agony of the family and the problems of the police force which, while facing the heat for slow investigation, needs to deploy personnel for the visits and to manage simmering popular protests in the area. Amid all this, the tragic loser is none other than the mother of the victims. Civil society has been showing a growing sense of outrage over such horrific incidents, but the structures of governance ought to respond to it on a matching scale. The enforcement of a benchmark of zero tolerance for violence against women, especially children, cannot wait any more. As the Parliamentary Standing Committee examining the Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill, 2012 that seeks to enhance punishment for crimes against women places its report before the House, with the recommendations of the Justice Verma Committee forming the backdrop, the case for the enactment of the most stringent provisions for such atrocities stands further buttressed. The certainty and the severity of punishment should act as true deterrents.
Source: The Hindu dt 28.2.13

Right to Homestead Bill: Task force to finalise draft
Draft Bill to be discussed on Tuesday

After legislating the Right to Information and Education — and making a stab at the Right to Work and 

Food through the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act and the Food Security 

Act respectively — the government’s next step seems to be aimed at legally upholding the right to a home 

of your own.

On Tuesday, a task force set up by the Rural Development Ministry — including government officials and civil society members — is expected to finalise a draft of the National Right to Homestead Bill 2013.
The Bill aims to ensure that “every shelterless poor family has a right to hold homestead of not less than 10 cents … Within a period of 10 years commencing from the date of notification,” according to the draft to be discussed by the task force on Tuesday, a copy of which is available with The Hindu .
According to the National Land Reforms Policy draft — which may also be finalised at the meeting — more than 31 per cent of households in the country are landless. Almost 30 per cent own less than 0.4 hectares, meaning 60 per cent of the population owns only five per cent of the country’s land.
Jan Satyagraha impact
The Jan Satyagraha movement, spearheaded by the Ekta Parishad last year, brought thousand of landless people together to protest this state of affairs. Their march to Delhi ended in Agra when Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh agreed to a charter of demands, with the Right to Homestead and a National Land Reforms Policy heading the list.
The task force, headed by Mr. Ramesh, has held three meetings so far to try and fulfil that agreement. The draft Bill calls for State governments to notify an implementation plan within one year to identify beneficiaries, make an inventory of available lands and acquire more, and develop and allot plots. It mandates that the Central government will bear 75 per cent of the cost — through a National Homestead Guarantee Fund.
Eligibility criteria uncertain
The draft seems uncertain about the specific eligibility criteria for beneficiaries. The Bill is aimed at poor families in rural areas only. Government employees, landowners, income tax payers are all exempt. Other criteria, including a maximum income level, have not yet been finalised. The title to the homestead will be given in the name of the adult woman member of the household.

Readers are requested to read  our New year resolution 2011 in page section also.
 Source: The Hindu dt 26.2.13