Monthly Archives: July 2014

Jyoti Basu remembered for bringing the struggle of peasants, workers to the fore

CPI(M) Politburo members Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and Biman Bose arrive to pay tribute to former Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu during his centenary birth anniversary at the state party headquarters in Kolkata on Tuesday./ PTI
CPI(M) Politburo members Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and Biman Bose arrive to pay tribute to former Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu during his centenary birth anniversary at the state party headquarters in Kolkata on Tuesday./ PTI

Elucidating the contribution of veteran Communist leader Jyoti Basu to parliamentary democracy, former Chief Minister and Polit Buro member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said here on Tuesday that Mr. Basu had brought the struggle of peasants and working classes to the centre of politics in West Bengal.

Speaking at an event organised to mark the 100th birth centenary of Mr. Basu. he touched on the Communist leader’s conviction to democracy and the faith in secularism.

“He brought the issues of peasants and the workers to the fore in parliamentary democracy. Its origins lay in the workers movement which was followed by strikes and protest in factories. These protests turned into a phenomenon which engulfed the entire industrial sector and workers were successful is ascertaining their rights,” Mr. Bhattachrarjee said. When he came to power, unlike any other Chief Minister, he made it clear that the government will have to stand for the rights of farmers and agricultural workers.

“The fight for land went ahead with giving pattas (land rights) to the farmers and then identifying the rights of share croppers,” Mr. Bhattacharjee said.

The former Chief Minister reflected on how Mr. Basu ensured that the State remained insulated from the communal strife in 1984 after the murder of Indira Gandhi and 1992 after demolition of Babri Masjid.

“He was secular to the core of his heart. He knew that Communist movement and secularism has to go hand in hand,” Mr. Bhattacharjee said.

Recounting that Mr. Basu had even called the then Prime Minister P V Narashima Rao warning him that the developments could take a nasty turn, he said that Mr Basu had even told his colleagues jokingly that the Prime Minister was convinced that people would disperse from the Babri Masjid site only after performing bhajans.

“Jyoti Babu has an unwavering faith in democracy.. Despite himself being arrested a number of times for false charges when the Left Front government came to power in 1977 all political prisoners across political lines were freed. It was like a general amnesty,” he said.

Referring to present times Mr. Bhattacharjee said that it is clear that the politics in the country has taken a “right turn” with the alliance of corporates and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangha (RSS) ruling the nation but added that it is imperative for the Left forces to take lessons from Jyoti Basu’s life and put up a fight.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kolkata / by Special Correspondent / Kolkata – July 09th, 2014

Veteran Communist leader Vidya Munshi dead

Arguably the first woman journalist of the country, Vidya Munshi was born in Mumbai in 1919 and worked in various newspapers and magazines

Veteran Communist leader, scholar and writer, Vidya Munshi, passed away on Monday in Kolkata. She was 94.

Arguably the first woman journalist of the country, Ms. Munshi was born in Mumbai in 1919 and worked in various newspapers and magazines, including The Blitz.

She stood first among women in the school-leaving examination and left for England to study medicine.

In 1942, Ms. Munshi joined the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) and took part in several programmes of the Communist party in Europe, mainly against the violence and cruelty committed by fascist forces.

In 1945, on behalf of All India Student’s Federation, the student’s wing of the Communist Party of India (CPI), Ms. Munshi participated in an eventful women’s conference (World Federation of Democratic Youth) in Paris.

Ms. Munshi headed the board that publishes the CPI’s mouthpiece, ‘Kalantar’ for several years and was an active member of the party. She headed State Women’s Commission till 2000. She documented her life, the political upheavals and the shaping of women’s movements of her time in great detail in a brilliant memoir, ‘In Retrospect. War-time Memories and Thoughts on Women’s Movement.’

Many important leaders, including members of various political parties, paid their last respects to their favourite ‘Vidya-di’ on Monday afternoon. Her last rites were performed in a city crematorium.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kolkata / by Staff Reporter / Kolkata – July 08th, 2014

Ode to women who dared

They charmed audiences with their histrionics on stage and screen. Men sought their company and women envied their acting and singing skills. They didn’t care for the purdah and dared to defy social norms that prohibited women from stepping out in public.

A tribute was paid to 10 actresses of Bengal who have left a lasting impression on the minds of audiences. Titled ‘Songstress’, the programme paid homage to Nati Binodini, Narisundari, Angoorbala, Kanan Debi and Keya Chakraborty among others. The programme weaved in storytelling by popular elocutionist Sujoy Prosad Chatterjee. Songs and dialogues from the plays and films in which they acted were performed.

Commenting on the actresses, an official of 40A Creative Studio that organized the homage said only those who also sang were chosen. Chatterjee also felicitated some prominent actresses of Bengali stage including legendary actress Chitra Sen and veterans like Dolly Basu, Anashua Majumder and Sohag Sen. Actresses Mumtaz Sorcar and Arunima, along with filmmakers Anindya Ghosh and Sekhar Das, were present at the programme.

Students’ tryst with Germany

Students of Birla High Schools Boys and Girls have completed a year-long exchange programme on a project with German partner school Amandus Abendroth Gymnasium in Cuxhaven, Germany. Ten students each from the boys and girls school and 20 from Amandus Adendroth Gymnasium started working on endangered species – mussels in Germany and tigers in India. Each student was hosted by the family of a German student and teachers were hosted by their German counterparts. All the students worked on the project during school hours apart from attending some classes with their German partners in school.

Various educational excursions were organized by the partner school during the stay – Klima Haus, University of Applied Sciences in Bremerhaven, Polar Haus (Alfred Wagner Institute) and Wadden Sea were visited. The entire group visited the mayor’s office where the students had a privilege to meet the mayor of Cuxhaven, Erika Fischer, and interact with her.

Nature in the city captured on lens

Young photographers aged between 16 and 18 years captured glimpses of nature and animals in Kolkata on their lens for a photography exhibition at Harrington Art Gallery. Rashbehari Centre for Ecological Movement (CEMO), an organization that has been spreading awareness on environmental issues for the past few years, held the exhibition on Friday and Saturday. Students from leading city schools put on display around 40 photographs revolving around the theme ‘Nature-watch in Your Backyard’.

The photograph taken by Tiyasa Mal, a student of Shri Shikshayatan School, featuring the flight of three birds in the sky, won the first prize. The second prize went to Kunal De of DPS Newtown for a tiger dragonfly’s photograph. Sweta Karmakar of National High School for Girls bagged the third prize for her excellent snap that featured a squirrel on the hunt for food. Dr Debal Sen, a cardiologist and amateur photographer, inspired the budding shutterbugs to play with light and shadow, striking a balance with their studies. Five members of the host organization exhibited some photographs on wildlife worth between Rs 2,000 and 5,000. “The money raised from the sale of these images will be donated to our organization,” said Purnima Dutt, a member of CEMO.

Show of Bengal tourism

The state tourism department organized a show at Eco Park in Rajarhat New Town to showcase Bengal’s tourism prospects. The venue was the glass house in the Eco island. More than 100 delegates from different parts of the country and also from abroad participated in the show. A presentation was given to the participants on how the tourism department was working towards developing tourism in the state. Hidco authorities handed over a special leaflet and a small souvenir to each of the delegates.

(Contributed by Prithvijit Mitra, Sarthak Ganguly, Jhimli Mukherjee Pandey & Suman Chakraborti. Compiled by Urmi Mukherjee. Photograph by Debobrata Shome)

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / TNN / July 07th, 2014

Students’ date with robots

Students at the robotics workshop at La Martiniere for Girls. Picture by Sanjoy Chattopadhyaya
Students at the robotics workshop at La Martiniere for Girls. Picture by Sanjoy Chattopadhyaya

The first day of a robotics workshop at La Martiniere for Girls in May saw the girls struggling with motors, beams and light censors. But at the end of three days, they were adept at not just assembling a robot but also programming and navigating it through obstacles.

Five of the nine teams that participated in the workshop, including La Martiniere for Girls, qualified for the global round of International RoboCup Junior Competition presented by Indian RoboCup Junior Foundation. Tiro Nomura from Saitama University, Tokyo, judged the teams.

Lorraine Mirza, the principal of La Martiniere for Girls, met David Prakash, the chairman of the Indian RoboCup, in Bangalore. “Why not the east? I would like to host it in our school,” Mirza thought and soon enough she made arrangements to host the workshop and competition in Calcutta, in association with St. Augustine’s Day School, Barrackpore.

The students had to build autonomous robots and not remote-controlled ones, programme the robots and manoeuvre them through obstacles. “The robots have got sensors to sense the obstacles and avoid them,” Prakash said.

And then, as Mirza said, “it was time to test how much you (the students) have learnt and to pick out the teams that are going for the national competition”.

“On the first day, it was torturous for us and it took us three hours just to assemble. But over the next three days we learnt the programming as well,” said Nilakshi Padhi, a Class IX student of La Martiniere for Girls who was part of one of the teams that qualified for the national competition.

Four-member teams from South City International School, Mahadevi Birla World Academy, St. Augustine’s Day School, St. John’s Diocesan Higher Secondary School, La Martiniere for Girls and Boys and others took part in the workshop.

G.S. Rautela, the director general of National Council of Science Museums and the chief guest, urged the students to follow their passion. “Don’t be guided by peers or what your parents are pushing you to. If you like to build robots, build robots. If you want to write a poem, write poems. But follow your passion.”

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph, Calcuta / Front Page> Calcutta> Story / by Jhinuk Mazumdar / Monday – July 07th, 2014

Partha: Not dropping Kabir name from book, adding more stalwarts

SUMMARY
After withdrawing the book last week, Partha Chatterjee had ordered the chairman to revise the book.
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Less than a week after it ordered to withdraw a Bengali textbook for Class 12, which contained a long paragraph on contribution of former Trinamool Congress MP and singer Kabir Suman to contemporary Bengali music, the state government Thursday said the book will be relaunched after revision and addition of some more names.

Among others, the revised boom will now detail the contributions of artistes such as legendary singers such as Hemanta Mukherjee, Manna Dey, Shyamal Mitra, Sandhya Mukherjee and Gautam Chatterjee in the book ‘Bangalir Bhasha o Sanskriti’ (The language and culture of Bengali people).

Education Minister, who had ordered the book to be withdrawn, Thursday told the Assembly that it was “unfortunate that the book did not refer to such stalwarts like Hemnata or Manna Dey or Sandhya Mukherhee.”

“But, of course, we are not in favour of dropping anyone from the list. If ‘Pachakanta’ (a derogatory term for Kabir Suman) can be there, other artistes can also be there,” Partha Chatterjee told the House after a meeting with Aveek Majumdar, chairman of the syllabus committee (for classes upto 12).

After withdrawing the book last week, Partha Chatterjee had ordered the chairman to revise the book. “The draft of the revised version will be shown to me on Monday,” the minister said, adding that the government would recruit poet Ganesh Basu and nuclear scientist Bikash Sinha as advisers to the syllabus committee.

Though the government mentioned factual errors in the book as the reason for its withdrawal, sources said, the riling party was not very happy at reference to rebel TMC leader Kabir Suman.

Suman, a Kolkata-based modern Bengali singer-songwriter and musician contested the Lok Sabha election on a Trinamool Congress ticket from Jadavpur constituency in 2009. He was subsequently suspended from the party after he fell out with the party leadership.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Cities> Kolkata / by Express News Service / Kolkata – July 04th, 2014

Home is where the care is

Knock knock: medical services are being delivered on the doorstep for senior citizens living by themselves, reports Sudeshna Banerjee

ChatterjeesKOLKATA06JUL2014

The Chatterjees of Jodhpur Park live on their own. The husband, a diabetic in his 70s, is recovering from a hip surgery. He has a nurse coming in every day to monitor his parameters and medicine intake, while a physiotherapist makes him do the mandatory exercises. A doctor drops by when the nurse flags for attention. His son, living away in the UK, does not have to depend on his weekly calls back home to find out how his father is doing. An emailed report reaches him every Saturday, with details of his medical status. It is not his mother who sends the mail but a homecare agency which he has engaged for his parents’ care. He can rest easy that they will take steps in case of a medical emergency as well.

With children flying the nest in search of career opportunities, the elderly in Calcutta are living alone at home in greater numbers. And to look after them, private agencies are coming up with far better management and accountability than the local nurse-ayah centres.

According to market analyst Frost & Sullivan, the Indian healthcare industry was valued at $79 billion in 2012 and is expected to reach $160 billion by 2017. The largest slice of the pie comprises healthcare delivery services.

“India has a 144 million geriatric population, second only to China. Fifty-one per cent of this number die of chronic diseases like cancer, diabetes and cardiac ailments. Because of advanced diagnostics, diseases are getting detected early and people are living longer. So there is a long period over which disease management is required,” said Ganesh Krishnan, co-founder and chairman of Portea Home Medical Care Services. In his estimate, the home healthcare market is worth about $2-4 billion and in the next 10 years the size of the industry would grow to over $15 billion in India.

The IIM Calcutta graduate, based in Bangalore, who calls himself a “serial entrepreneur”, detected this demand after selling off his last online venture, Tutorvista, in 2013 for $213million in what he says is the largest ever exit in the education sector in India.

Portea is already present in 18 cities, including Calcutta. “Seventy per cent hospital visits can be treated at home,” he said.

An NRI trio of Elina Dutta, Prateep Sen and Tamojit Dutta, along with a couple of friends, started Tribeca Care, a healthcare-at-home platform. They launched the facility in Calcutta last year with Prateep relocating to the city from the US. “We want to make it viable here before expanding to other cities,” said Elina, a former advertising professional who shuttles between Dubai and Calcutta.

Mission Arogya, an NGO which has set up the Kolkata Medical Emergency System website (www.kmes.in) with a Rockefeller Foundation centennial grant it won last year providing people with real-time data on ICCU bed availability in hospitals, is also venturing into this sector with Arogya Homecare Services, which will see a formal launch on August 1.

“We have started providing continuity of care for patients returning from hospitals. This way, patients need not overstay at hospitals, thereby raising their bills. Hospitals too can admit new patients if beds get vacated sooner,” said Mission Arogya co-founder Rajib Sengupta. Their second service in the pipeline is emergency retrieval. “We are tying up with institutions with advanced life support ambulances, which have ICU monitor and resuscitation kits, other than the usual oxygen and stretcher. We are training paramedical staff so that they can rush with an ambulance if a situation arises.”

Nurse with GPS-enabled device

And Calcuttans are ready to pay for such a service. “When we wanted to come here, everyone warned us that Calcutta is price-sensitive and price realisation would be lower. If you look at e-commerce figures for instance, the city lags behind even Chandigarh and Pune. But we have got the biggest response from here,” said Krishnan of Portea.

“It proves Calcuttans are ready to spend for what they perceive is important. Since it is usually the children who engage such services on behalf of parents, it shows family values and attachment are higher here than in other metros,” he added.

Perhaps the number of children having left home in search of jobs too.

What is novel about these companies is the professional approach they bring to a traditionally unorganised sector. “For every patient getting discharged from hospitals to our care, we appoint a care transition manager. He is responsible for setting up the infrastructure at the patient’s home — the bed, devices, oxygen cylinder… whatever his needs be,” said Tamojit Dutta.

Tribeca has divided the city into sectors and created a panel of 15 general physicians. “These days it is tough to make doctors come on call. Our empanelled doctors will do home visits for emergencies in their area,” Elina said.

Each of Portea’s health workers carries a GPS-enabled smartphone. “Thus we know how far he is from the patient’s home. We have developed an app by which the readings get recorded in our centralised database. If a patient’s blood sugar level, for example, is found to be high, the system issues an alert and the doctor in our headquarters has a discussion with the on-site health worker about remedial measures. The patient’s son sitting in the US gets to know that his mother’s sugar has been checked and the findings are sent via email and SMS,” said the Portea chairman.

Mission Arogya, which has a no-profit no-loss revenue model, wants to ensure that the service stays within the reach of the middle class as well. “Ours is a pay-for service model, not a subscription-based one. If a client wants us to scale up in any way, like use webcam and video conference to provide regular health updates to near and dear ones, we will do so,” says Sengupta, a Jadavpur University software engineer who is also pursuing research in bio-medical informatics at the University of Nebraska, Omaha.

Hospitals are largely welcoming of the development. “All these years we had no such service in Calcutta. People are at last thinking about it. With the number of patients with chronic illnesses on the rise, this is the answer,” said Arindam Kar, director, critical care, Medica Superspeciality Hospital, who has voluntarily trained a team of advanced nurse practitioners of the hospital to look after released patients at home for over two years now.

“This is a pay-for service and the patients are taken to the hospital if needed,” Kar added.

Each nurse is in charge of about five-six patients and is the one-point contact for all their medical needs. They instruct the ayahs engaged by the patients on duties like changing of oxygen cylinders, taking a call on whether a doctor needs to be called and facilitating appointments and blood sample collections.

Explaining why domiciliary disease management is beneficial to hospitals, he says the average realisation per occupied bed is far less for patients with chronic illness like Parkinson’s disease or bed sore than for those with acute illness requiring operation or investigations.

“After two days of stay in a hospital, if a patient with urinary tract infection is prescribed an antibiotic which has to be infused over an hour, he would find it taxing to stay back just for that. In such a case, it would suit both him and the hospital to have him treated at home,” Kar said.

Quality of caregivers

One problem area seems to be the lack of quality and accountability of the primary caregivers. At Tribeca, the senior-most nurses are direct employees of the company but the rest are sourced from nurse-ayah centres. “In the first batch of ayahs that we trained, a lot either left soon after or did not deliver,” Tamojit recalled. Tribeca Care tried out about 40-45 agencies from which the number of supply points has now been filtered down to 15. “We can’t handle a 300-strong ayah workforce. We’d rather have 30 nurses in our employ and work with agencies that we trust.”

But Portea does not believe in outsourcing. “We give the health workers a three-month training at a centralised location spending a lot of money. We can’t control quality unless they are our own people,” Krishnan said. The company has a 700-strong workforce across the country.

This lack of accountability has kept Mission Arogya from including ayahs in its portfolio of services. “Our nurse will teach the ayah engaged by patients how to take care of them, like changing the catheter,” said Sengupta.

Service bouquet

Elderly patients are asking for more. Mission Arogya will soon start delivering laboratory services and medicines to the doorstep. They will also take orders for medical equipment like medical mattress, Nimbus bed, bipap ventilation and insulin.

“We are trying to do dialysis at home but that will depend on logistics and location of the client,” said Sengupta. Portea also offers equipment on hire and pharmacy deliveries.

Tribeca Care is even devising a package that will include services of lawyers and accountants. “For the elderly, tax returns to groceries, everything is a problem. They are requesting for these services. We help with technology, too, like setting up Skype for clients to talk to relatives abroad,” Elina said.

“We even dabbled in property management as some clients needed help in disposing of property. We are also thinking of starting packaged tours for the elderly who are fit to travel,” said Prateep.
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HELP AT HAND

Portea Medical
3355 4554
E-mail: care@portea.com
Website: www.porteamedical.com

Tribeca Care
4027 7777
E-mail: enquiry@tribecacare.com
Website: www.tribecacare.com

Arogya Homecare
2436 1080, 8334880900
E-mail: contactus@missionarogya.org
Website: www.missionarogya.org

What other services do senior citizens require at home? Tell ttmetro@abpmail.com
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source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph, Calcutta / Home> Front Page> Calcultta> Story / by Sudeshna Banerjee / Sunday – July 06th, 2014

“India should invest more in green sector”

Vice president of MCC Chamber of Commerce and Industry Arun Kumar Saraf welcomes Baroness Sandip Verma, U.K. Minister, at an interactive session in Kolkata on Saturday. Rajya Sabha MP Amar Singh looks on. / The Hindu
Vice president of MCC Chamber of Commerce and Industry Arun Kumar Saraf welcomes Baroness Sandip Verma, U.K. Minister, at an interactive session in Kolkata on Saturday. Rajya Sabha MP Amar Singh looks on. / The Hindu

It has a great potential for using its renewable energy resources: U.K. Minister

Stating that India has a huge potential in tapping its renewable energy, U.K. Minister of Department of Energy and Climate Change Baroness Sandip Verma said that India should invest more in green sector.

“Unlike in the U.K., India has a great potential for using its renewable energy resources. While in the U.K., we are still relying on nuclear and coal for our power resources, we are trying to do away with coal. India and the U.K. share a lot of similarities and I think India should consider options of investing in green sector,” Ms. Verma said.

She was participating in an interactive session on ‘India-UK initiatives on climate change’. Vice president of MCC Chamber of Commerce and Industry Arun Kumar Saraf was present.

Observing that India should learn from Bhutan in using clean energy, Amar Singh, Rajya Sabha MP, said there are a lot of untapped clean energy sources in Arunachal Pradesh.

Stressing on the need to uniform rule in banning constructions near river banks, Mr. Singh said after the flash floods in Uttarakhand [June 2013], there was a sweeping ban on constructions along river banks in the State so that future disasters could be avoided. “Why wasn’t there a similar ban in States like Himanchal Pradesh?” Mr. Singh asked.

“There is a huge scope in India and the U.K. to use low-carbon approaches not only to fight climate change but to deliver energy security, economic growth, and inclusive development. Although on a per capita basis, India’s carbon emissions remain a small fraction of those of developed countries, the country’s rapid economic growth has brought with it higher emissions,” Mr. Saraf said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kolkata / by Staff Reporter / Kolkata – July 06th, 2014

Real estate consortium acquires Keppel Magus

Sureka Group, Merlin Group and JB Group announced that they were taking over the company as well as its project at the satellite township for Rs.150 crore, in an all-cash deal

A consortium of three Kolkata-based real estate groups has acquired 100 per cent stake in Keppel Magus Development Private Limited (KMD), which was implementing a major project in the upcoming township at Rajarhat.

Sureka Group, Merlin Group and JB Group announced on Thursday that in an all-cash deal, they were taking over the company as well as its project at the satellite township for Rs.150 crore. This includes contractor obligations, bank liabilities and unsold apartments at a 25-acre plot at New Town, a satellite township in Rajarhat on the city’s eastern fringes.

The consortium partners have delivered over 20 million sq. ft. of quality development across real estate categories such as residential, commercial and retail, according to a statement.

The consortium has acquired KMD as an “ongoing entity”, and plans to execute remainder of the project besides speeding up the remaining few deliveries from the first phase.

KMD was earlier held by Keppel Land of Singapore, Magus Estates & Hotels Ltd., subsidiary of Asian Hotels (North) Ltd. of the Jatia Group, owner of Hyatt Regency in New Delhi, and Four Season Resorts in Goa and Puravankara Group from Bangalore. After completing Phase-I of the project, Elita Garden Vista, the group decided to divest 100 per cent stake to Sureka, Merlin, JB consortium.

Individually, the consortium partners have projects in Hyderabad, Chennai, Raipur and Ahmedabad.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Business> Industry / by Special Correspondent / Kolkata – July 03rd, 2014

Bitten by travel bug, rickshawpuller on solo expedition from Kolkata to Ladakh

SUMMARY
Das way back in 2008 had gone all the way to Rohtang Pass in a rickshaw with his wife and daughter.
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A rickshawpuller has set out on a daring 3,000-km expedition from Kolkata to the famous Khardung La pass in Ladakh, which has one of the world’s highest motorable road.

Forty-year-old Satyen Das, who ferries commuters at Naktala in south Kolkata, marshalled his personal savings and generous donations from local people, packed his luggage under the passenger’s seat of his refurbished rickshaw and started on his one-of-a-kind journey last month.

“I make a living on my rickshaw and spend my whole day with this, so I could not leave it behind when I started to dream about my trip to Ladakh,” Das said.

He has already reached Uttar Pradesh from where he will go to Srinagar and reach Ladakh after crossing Kargil next month. “I want to spread the message of world peace with this journey and also I want to promote rickshaw as a cheap and eco-friendly mode of transport,” he said.

Expecting to complete the expedition within five months, he is also eyeing an entry into the Guinness Book of World Records for his feat.

Bitten by travel bug, Das way back in 2008 had gone all the way to Rohtang Pass in Himachal Pradesh in a rickshaw with his wife and daughter. But this time the target is higher and he is travelling alone.

“He has this addiction of travelling in the Himalayas and going to far-off places,” said Partho Dey, secretary of Naktala Agrani Club, who helped him with funds.

Das modified his rickety old rickshaw with additional brakes and new body made of light steel at a total cost of Rs 15,000. In a day, he pedals to cover around 40-50 km and for makes night halts at religious places where he can stay for free.

Having only elementary education, the rickshawpuller said the unique road trip is also a great learning experience as he gets to understand the culture and diversity of India by criss-crossing different states, cities, towns and villages.

“My first task in the morning is to go to the local police station and take permission to move ahead. So far I have been getting it easily,” Das said. He is armed with maps to find his way to his next stop and a digital camera to document his special journey.

The club members are taking care of his wife and daughter, whom he left back home.

“We estimate that the trip would cost around Rs 80,000, which we have raised it amongst ourselves after we saw his passion and determination to travel,” Dey said adding that they have have given him an ATM card to withdraw cash as and when required.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Cities> Kolkata / by Press Trust of India / Kolkata – July 04th, 2014

Snow leopard, red panda get new conservation centre in Darjeeling

SUMMARY
At present, the zoo has 14 snow leopards and 17 red pandas. It is the first Asian Zoo to have started captive breeding of snow leopards.
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To reintroduce captive-bred endangered animals like red panda and snow leopard into the wild, the Darjeeling zoo has now started a new breeding conservation centre for wildlife.

Built in an area of five hectares inside the zoo, the centre hosts three pairs of snow leopards and two pairs of red panda, the Padmaja Naidu Himalayan Zoological Park director, A K Jha, said.

“As per the guidelines of the Central Zoo Authority, our main objective would be to ensure a safe and healthy transition of captive-bred animals from the zoo to the wild. This new centre with all the required facilities will help us achieve that,” he said.

In the years 2003 and 2004, they had released four red pandas, born under captivity, into the wild. Two of them, however, died later on for not being able to take the pressure of jungle.
“Our resources were limited that time, but now we have guidelines from IUCN and CZA. We are also doing our own feasibility study before we restart the process. We are very cautious this time,” the zoo director said.

Although snow leopards have been born under captivity here since 1989, yet none have been released into the wild so far. The official said they should be able to release red pandas into the wild in the next 1-2 years, but the snow leopards would take around 4-5 years.

Two female cubs were recently born to a snow leopard brought from Czech Republic.

“Releasing them into the wild will take time. We will have to train them to be able to hunt food in a forest,” Jha said, adding that they would also have to find a proper habitat which the species can adopt as their new home.

At present, the zoo has 14 snow leopards and 17 red pandas. It is the first Asian Zoo to have started captive breeding of snow leopards.

An endangered species, snow leopards are found in higher altitudes of the Himalayas and are hunted for their valuable fur.
A joint initiative of both the state and central government, the Darjeeling zoo is also conducting conservation programmes for other endangered Himalayan species like Tibetan wolf, Himalayan salamander, etc.

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Cities> Kolkata / by Press Trust of India / Kolkata – June 27th, 2014