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October 2017

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Hollywood New Releases

Blade Runner 2049- 6th October 2017

Lead roles- Ryan Gosling, Ana de Armas, Jared Leto & Mackenzie Dav Directed by Denis Villeneuve.

The Mountain Between us- 6th October 2017

Lead roles-Idris Elba, Kate Winslet & Dermot Mulroney Directed by Hany-Abu-Assad

The Snowman 17 October 2017

Lead roles- Michael Fassbender, Rebecca Furguson & Charlotte Gainsbourg Directed by Tomas Alfredson

Jigsaw 28 October 2017

Lead roles- Laura Vandervoort, Tobin Bell & Mandela Van Peebles Directed by Taika Waititi

Geostorm- 20 October 2017

Lead roles- Gerard Butler, Jim Sturgess, Abbie Cornish & Alexandra Maria Lara Directed by Dean Devlin

BOX OFFICE REVIEW:

Movie “It” based on Stephen King's novel is all about a nightmarish clown which is becoming the latest horror movie to bolster, shattering numerous records and setting a new bar for horror films with the opening of $123.1 million in North America and $185 million globally by far the biggest launch ever for the genre. So, It's record-breaking debut came at an opportune time for any movie in the horror genre and the largest September opening of all-time.

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BOLLYWOOD New Releases

Chef- 6th October 2017

Lead roles-Saif Ali Khan and Padmapriya Janakiraman Directed by Raja Krishna Menon

Julie 2- 6th October 2017

Lead role- Rai Laxmi & Ravi Kishan Directed by Deepak Shivdasani

Secret Superstar- 19th October 2017

Lead roles- Aamir Khan & Zaira Wasim Directed by Advait Chandan

Vishawaroopam 2- 18th October 2017

Lead role-Kamal Haasan, Rahul Bose & Pooja Kumar Directed by Kamal Haasan

Golmaal Again- 20th October 2017

Lead roles- Ajay Devgan and Parineeti Chopra Directed by Rohit Shetty 

 

Box office Review:

Mission China released on 8th September 2017 is a big budget Assamese Film spending ` 2 Crore and it took almost two and a half years to complete. The film has been a huge box office hit. It is said that the daily collection of Mission China is more than that of blockbusters movie like Bajrangi Bhaijaan and Bahubali, giving the Assamese film Industry a new direction and new dream. The film was showcased for more than 200 times in a day in Assam and also hit the box office at Mumbai, Pune, Delhi and Bangalore.

 

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India’s First Boat Clinic

The Brahmaputra River runs over 891 km through Assam with vast network of islands and home to the most vulnerable communities in the state. With more than 2.5 million people living on some over 2,500 islands in Assam they represent 8 percent of the total population in the state. For centuries the river has been a source of life for the people of northeast especially Assam. Yet every year due to floods, millions of people are displaced, crops, livestock and properties are destroyed. Health problem are of major concern due the inaccessibility to medical aid.

Most of these islands lack basic infrastructure and services especially in health care. Post the flood event, the major problem faced by people especially those living away from the mainland of Assam is the access to medicines and sustained health care. People had to travel long distances at great cost and risk to get medical attention. The people dwelling among these islands frequently lost pregnant women and children due to lack of access to basic health care.

It was only in June 2004-2005 when Mr. Sanjoy Hazarika the Managing Trustee for the Centre for North East Studies and Policy Research (C-NES) launched a unique initiative to tackle the challenges faced by the Island dwellers. The service provided by C-NES comes virtually to their doorstep with the help of dedicated and extremely hard working team of medical personnel.

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Fighting Corruption or Vindictive Politics?

During its election campaign in Manipur in the early part of 2017, BJP swore to fix accountability for the gross misrule perpetuated in the border state by the Congress, tagging then Chief Minister, Okram Ibobi Singh as the 20 percent CM alleging, he takes that much commission for each and every developmental projects executed in the state during his 15 year rule of Manipur as the Congress’ Chief Minister since 2002. 

Seven months after assuming power, on September 2nd, the BJP led N Biren Singh government registered an FIR for offences of cheating, criminal conspiracy and breach of trust against the former Chief Minister, Okram Ibobi Singh and three former chief secretaries, DS Poonia, PC Lawmkunga and O Nabakishore Singh in a case pertaining to financial irregularities in managing Manipur’s premier construction and employment generating agency, Manipur Development Society, MDS. The misappropriation amounts to Rs.185.79 crore and it is hashtagged as MDS scam now. The FIR came after the state’s Vigilance Department submitted its inquiry report on financial irregularities of MDS acting on a complaint filed by the Planning Department in November 2016.

Others named in the scam are MDS’s former Project Director, Yambem Ningthem Singh and the agency’s Administrative Officer, S Ranjit Singh.

According to the State Vigilance Commission inquiry report, the officials and staff of MDS flaunted established procedures, norms and rules particularly while awarding contract works to agencies and caused a financial liability to the tune of Rs 185.79 crores.

Police source said the FIR lodged would help in establishing how and who were responsible for the procedural lapses, mismanagement, misappropriation and misuse of public fund. Police suspects Yambem Ningthem as responsible for concealing missing documents that the Vigilance inquiry reported in the case of MBs, DPRs, sanction papers of MDS. It is under Ningthem’s tenure as Project Director that the police are investigating for financial irregularities.

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Indian of North Eastern Origin

What does it feel like to share a national life along with those who do not share the same history? If history forms the foundation of our aspirations, looking to a future together is even tougher. Being a North-Easterner in India is more than just belonging to a different sphere within the contemporary national geography. Historical aloofness is the toughest of realities. Our history has shrunk down to an almost academic nonentity. Northeast history makes no sound in the noisy narratives of “mainstream history”. The rigorous interpretation and reinterpretation of history by the contemporary political ideologues is a new national passion. Every vestige of a particular era is brandished as the final proof of what actual India was like. The redefining of India goes on. One wonders that, if the definition of true India and by the same token, a true Indian, is carried out based on the colour and tone of a particular ancient culture, how many ethnic groups in India would actually qualify to be Indians. Even as we wish to get ahead in time, our cultural genes are being taken back in time for validation of their originality in terms of Indianness.

Recently I came to realize that there is now a categorization of Northeast Indians versus Desi Indians. I was more appalled than intrigued by the categorization. The term “desi” in British India times used to be applied to people from the Indian-subcontinent to distinguish them from Westerners. It alluded to being an original inhabitant of the land as opposed to those who came as colonialists. That was sort of the political implication of the term in those days. And it had a tremendous implication in the context of Indian Nationalism that was born against the backdrop of British colonialism. Now semantically, desi means “of the country”. There is also a subtle connotation of “the culture of the land of India”. There may be, perhaps, no ploy to render the Northeast people “non-desi” meaning “not of the land of India”. However, the fact that such a categorization happens so naturally, even without actually thinking it through, bares an underlying mindset that persists among Indians in general.

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