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Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar launch a mega health scheme Under the 'Nayee Peedhi Swasthya Guarantee Karyakram' (New Generation Health Guarantee Programme) targeted at the 3.4 crore children up to 14 years of age and adolescent girls will be provided a health card for their medical check-up and treatment free of cost at government hospitals.



After roads and law and order, Bihar is
turning its attention to the health of its children. As part of its
Bihar Divas celebrations, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar will Tuesday
launch a mega health scheme targeted at the 3.4 crore children in the
state, officials said.



Under the 'Nayee Peedhi Swasthya Guarantee Karyakram' (New Generation
Health Guarantee Programme), children up to 14 years of age and
adolescent girls will be provided a health card for their medical
check-up and treatment free of cost at government hospitals.







'Soon after inaugurating Bihar Divas at Gandhi Maidan, Nitish Kumar will
begin distributing health cards to children,' an official of the Chief
Minister's Office told IANS.







'This mega health scheme will check malnutrition, anaemia and childhood
reproductive problems,' Principal Health Secretary Amarjit Sinha said.







The government planned to distribute health cards by Oct 2 this year, he added.







However, he admitted that reaching out to all the children was a challenging task.







'Special camps would be organised in government schools and sub-primary health centres to distribute these cards,' he said.








According to the World Health Organisation, 55 percent of Indian
children suffer from malnutrition-related diseases before attaining the
age of three. The percentage could be higher in Bihar.








The historic Gandhi Maidan here is being readied for grand celebrations
to mark Bihar Divas Tuesday to commemorate carving of the separate Bihar
province by the British rulers from the Bengal Presidency March 22,
1912. In Patna, thousands of people are expected to gather at the
grounds from Tuesday to Thursday.







Nitish Kumar will kickstart the celebrations by lighting 99 lamps to
mark the 99th anniversary of the state. He has declared that the state
will mark its centenary in 2012 with programmes throughout the year.

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has turned to blogging to showcase the achievements of his government.


Aware of the power and reach of the internet, Nitish seems keen to use the medium to his advantage as the state goes to the polls in a few months.





He has created his own blog (www.nitishspeaks.blogspot.com) to get connected to the people of the state, including those living outside Bihar.











Here is a preview of  Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar Blog : "Nitish Speaks"










Nitish posted his maiden article on Thursday on the success of his pet project, Mukhyamantri Balika Cycle Yojna, launched three years ago.





He wrote that the scheme had brought about a real transformation in the field of girls' education and had been fairly successful in arresting the dropout rate in schools.





"Our government spent Rs 174.36 crore in the past three years to make 8.71 lakh schoolgirls proud owners of bicycles which they are using to educate themselves," he wrote.





He insisted that this was not mere statistics: "In Bihar, bicycles have now become a veritable instrument for social change." In an apparent bid to reach out to all sections, Nitish said the scheme did not exclude anybody on the basis of caste, creed or economic background.





"A remarkable aspect of this project is that this has benefited students from all sections of society," he wrote.





Nitish also revealed how he overruled bureaucrats to give money directly to schoolgirls for buying bicycles, instead of floating tenders for bulk purchase.





"I thought that purchase of bicycles through tenders might give rise to corruption in future. Instead, I was in favour of handing over money through cheques directly to the beneficiaries... (to) not only simplify the entire process but also make the scheme transparent." Nitish has found the blog an effective medium in the election year to send out the message about how his government has pursued a policy of all-inclusive growth in the past four-and-a-half years.





"This will be an ideal platform for the chief minister to directly interact with people on the web," BJP MLC and Nitish's close associate Sanjay Jha, who is looking after his blog, said.





Nitish's blog has already evinced interest from netizens.





Though it was launched without any fanfare, it had more than 250 visitors within hours.





"Given the initial response, I am sure it will be a big hit," Jha said. "We have plans to make it bilingual, in both English and Hindi." Nitish seems to have borrowed the idea of blogging from his bête noire Lalu Prasad. The former railway minister had also started his blog which ended up becoming a grievance cell of sorts for train passengers.

Bihar Ki Nayee Ganga



A Good News Is Coming From Central Government.
Bihar Ki Ganga Ko Lekar Kendra Sarkaar Ka Attitude Positive Lag Raha Hai. Nepal Se Aane Wali Nadiyon Ko Ganga Nadi Ke Samanantar Jorne Ki Yojna Hai Jo Bihar Ke Liye Ek Nayi Ganga Jaisi Hogi. Kendra Sarkar Ne Bihar Sarkar Ke Is Prastav Ki Prarambhik Janch Suru Kar Di Hai. Yojna Aayog (Planning Commission) Ne Is Prastav Ko National Water Development Agency (NWDA) Ko Bhej Diya Hai. Agency Is Project Ka Study Kar Apni Report Planning Commission Ko Degi. Nitish Kumar Ki Government Ne Ye Proposal Center Ke Paas December 2009 Me Bheja Tha.


Aakhir Kya Hai Ye ‘ Bihar Ki Ganga’


Ab Aap Kahenge Ki Ye Nayee Ganga Kya Hai. Details Neeche Hai ……………










Ab Bihar Ki Apni Ganga Hogi. Is Ganga Ke Astitva Me Aane Par State Me Na To Pani Ki Killat Hogi Aur Na Barh Kahar Barpa Sakegi. South Bihar Ko Sukhe Se Bhi Nijat Milegi. Is Ganga Ki Badaulat Bihar Pani Ki Apni Takat Banayega. Jis Pani Ke Karan Bihar Har Varsh Barh Ki Bhishan Trashdi Jhelta Hai, Wahi Is Rajya Ki Samriddhi Ka Pratik Banega.


Nitish Sarkar Ne Nadiyon Ko Jorne Ki Yojna Me Thora Pher Badal Kar Use Bahu Uddeshiya Banaya Hai. Isme Nadiyon Ko Jorne Ke Saath Saath Unse Nahar Nikalne Aur Phir Nahron Ko Jorne Ki Bhi Yojna Hai. Nadiyan Apas Me Jurkar Uttar Bihar Ko Har Varsh Aane Wali Bhishan Parh Se Bachayegi Jab Ki Nahren Kisanon Ko Sichai Ke Liye Paryapta Pani Uplabdh Karayegi. Is Project Par 60 Hazar Crore Rupye Kharach Honge. Sirf Dpr Par 600 Crore Rupye Kharach Ka Anuman Hai.


Nepal Se Aakar Ganga Me Milne Wali Nadiyon Ko Ganga Nadi Ke Hi Parallel Me Is Tarah Se Jora Jayega Ki Bilkul Nayee Ganga Jaisi Hogi. Yah Nayee Ganga Reservoir Ke Roop Me Bhi Kaam Karegi. Yahi Nahin Isme Dus Hazar Mega Watt Tak Pan Bijli Paida Karne Ki Bhi Takat Hogi. Nayee Ganga Parivahan Ke Liye Uttar Bihar Ka Majbot Madhyam Ban Jayegi. Champaran Se Lekar Katihar Aur Kishanganj-Arariya Tak Ganga Me Milne Wali Sari Nadiyan Apas Me Jurengi Aur Nayee Nadi Jaisi Aakriti Le Legi. Isme Gandak, Masan, Ghaghra, Baghmati, Adhwara Samooh, Burhi Gandak, Kamla, Bhuthi Balan, Koshi, Mahananda, Mechi Jaisi Nadiyan Shamil Hain. Ye Sabhi Nadiyan Ganga Me Girti Hain Aur Unka Pani Bihar Ke Liye Bekar Ho Jata Hai. In Nadiyon Ka Pani Ganga Ko Jiwit Rakhe Hue Hai. Ganga Bihar Me Buxar Ke Paas Prevesh Karti Hai Aur Tab Usme Matra 400 Cumek Pani Hota Hai Aur Jab Ki Bihar Chhorte Hue Pirpanti Me Usme 1500 Cumek Pani Hota Hai.








Main Benefits Of This Project
  • Will Be Highly Beneficial For The State.

  • Will Fight Shortage Of Water And Annual Flood.

  • Will Provide Waterways Right From Champaran To Bihar Border-Nepal.

  • Will Be 300 Meters Wide.

  • Will Stop Waters From Nepal .

  • Will Provide Permanent Solution For Flood.

  • Will Provide Water To South Bihar In Times Of Scarcity.

  • Will Be Used As Reservoir.

  • Will Generate 10 Thousand Mw Electricity.

  • Will Provide Water To Thermal Power Plant.

Bihar and Bihari's Contribution to the Development of India... 11% growth rate will change the face of Bihar... I'm proud to be a Bihari... Jai Bihar

Who carries you on a rickshaw or an autorickshaw in Delhi?

Who drives the cars of Delhiites? Who built the Delhi Metro?

Who is building the new houses and the expanding suburbs of Delhi?

Who made Punjab the most prosperous state in the country?



The answer is Biharis. (Here you may not agree.)



The credit for building the Delhi Metro or making Punjab prosperous will never go to Biharis. Does anyone ever say that blacks built America?



In colonial days, Bihar supplied the "girmitiya", or indentured, labour force that built countries like Mauritius, Suriname and Fiji. A bulk of the labour employed in the Raj capital of Calcutta came from Bihar. After Independence, as opportunities grew, Bihari workers flocked to places like Delhi, Punjab and Mumbai.



At the same time, Biharis excelled in other fields. Many of them became great political leaders, ICS and IAS officers, scientists, doctors, engineers, writers and artists. Delhi and other Indian cities attracted huge white-collar Bihari populations and Biharis formed a large part of the Indian diaspora of professionals.



But in the eyes of the rest of India, "Bihari" had come to mean a labourer, a person doing menial jobs. It had become a term of scorn and contempt. In their anglicized lingo, places like Delhi University turned the word into "Harry", but the pejorative tone remained unmistakable.



Heaping scorn on the working classes is a universal phenomenon. That is how words like Negro, Paki (used for Pakistanis and Indians in Britain) and some of the words denoting dalit castes in India earned contemptuous connotations.



In fact, while Biharis were getting their hands dirty on Punjab's farms, Punjabis were migrating in hordes to the US, Canada, the UK and Australia. Never mind that they would take up blue-collar jobs as taxi drivers, petrol pump attendants and waiters in those faraway lands.









As the years passed, many of the Biharis who had come to Punjab or Mumbai as manual labourers started moving up the economic ladder as did the blue-collar Indian emigrants abroad. A usually unnoticed aspect of the so-called racial attacks against Indians abroad is the threat the rise of working classes poses to the entrenched social order. This accentuates the contempt they face. Viewed thus, the attacks on Biharis in Punjab, and Mumbai, and the attacks on Indians abroad are manifestations of the same phenomenon.



What stopped Biharis from bringing about a green revolution or building a Metro in Bihar? The answer is geography and history. Geography, because ravaged by floods, the land of Bihar was unable to feed its growing population. And history, because what was the centre of the biggest Indian empire in ancient times was reduced to an obscure provincial existence. The skewed landownership system introduced by the British rulers worsened the situation.



It is a story of a couple of hundred years. Things could have improved after Independence had the political leadership of Bihar been able to exert influence on the rulers in New Delhi to get enough funds for development projects and set off a process of industrialization in the state.













On the contrary, Bihar continued to live the same, conveniently ignored, provincial existence. A system built on casteism, nepotism, corruption and crime came to dominate the state. It spawned a neo-rich class of netas, babus, contractors and government engineers who would build palatial houses for themselves with the money meant for dams, power projects, ration for the poor or even fodder for cattle.



The money meant for roads, other infrastructure and public amenities would go into their bank accounts. No wonder, the roads - supposed to be built with public money - in front of those houses would be full of ditches and become the playground of pigs every monsoon.



With limited options of higher education and hardly any employment opportunities in the state, the youth of Bihar started looking out. They flooded places like Delhi University and Jawaharlal Nehru University. They started dominating the country's toughest competitive tests like the IIT Joint Entrance Examination and the UPSC's civil services examination. With this success, Biharis started believing that they were the brainiest. As for others, they at least began to acknowledge that Biharis were inferior to none when it came to brainpower.



The academic success, however, did not do much to rid the word "Bihari" of the scorn it had gathered. People in Delhi continued to laugh at those who spoke with a Bihari accent. Those who spoke without an accent would get this compliment: "Oh, you are from Bihar? But you don't sound like a Bihari."



Biharis, meanwhile, were retreating into a shell, with little but the glory of ancient and medieval heroes like Buddha, Mahavira, Chandragupta, Chanakya, Ashoka, Aryabhatta, Guru Gobind Singh and Sher Shah to bask in. Now comes 11% growth. The state can recover from the damage it has suffered over hundreds of years only if such a high rate of growth can be sustained for many, many years. Then Biharis would not have to till others' land or build cities and countries elsewhere.



Jaago India Jaago



src: TOI









What is the reason of linguistic war going in India. Should Hindi be taken as a national language and be made compulsory or we should follow 'language of convenience’ and follow English as "Ingliss" and lose our identity. Jaago India Jaago

There are various elements necessary in the making of a nation such as a common language, a common religion, a common Government and a common culture and social economy, but perhaps the most fundamental and indispensible factor is the possession of a common country, a fixed, definite abode. Even nationality has a material physical basis without which it can hardly manifest and assert itself as a real existence and factor in the political world”. – Radha Kumud Mookerji, Ex-Historian





Those nations are at a loss, where there is no common language, one that is officially declared, mooted and followed religiously. A common language can convey the sensitivity of their inhabitants. On 15th August 1947, British India gave birth to a sovereign nation: India in English and Bharat in Hindi.





What’s there in a name? Are ‘Bharat’ and ‘India’ same or different?













By January 26, 1950 it was made official that rich cultural heritage and ethnic diversity of “ancient Bharat” will be re-assimilated and will be re-amalgamated in order to carve out a new modern nation, BHARAT. But nothing really happened… at the age of 59, Bharat is persistently struggling for ‘her’ own identity against India. From British-India to India, privately owned India Inc. is endlessly ruling the roost. Bharat has continually been facing tough challenge to stand on its feet - since its inception. Millions of people of ‘Indian’ origin do not know what ‘Bharat’ is, and why ‘Bharat’ is engraved in their Passports and other documents? What happened in ‘Maharashtra Assembly’ speaks the volume of identity crisis of Bharat. Linguistic war inside Assembly could have been avoided, if we would have given our country one name: either India or Bharat.





Will any country without “a language of national repute in real terms” ever become a forceful country to reckon with?





A few months ago, there was a panel discussion on CNN-IBN online why “the foreign policy of China is ruthlessly aggressive”. In other words, why our nation’s foreign policy is mercifully meek? Panel failed to address the core problem, it was the language. Mandarin, the language of China is a ‘font’ of aggression and the ‘typescript’ of national pride. Our nation does not have a language that can embrace her entire populace and stimulate the feeling for the place we live in and work for, neither the officially declared Hindi and nor the languages of 8th schedule in our constitution. It is practically impossible to snub aggression in ‘scrounged’ idioms, what ‘India’ is doing for the past several years.





Officially declared language, Hindi went on dialysis on the night of August 14, 1947 when first Prime Minister of Independent India Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru delivered his first ‘independence speech’ in and outside the Parliament in the language of his convenience. ‘Nehruvian’ school of language continues to dominate both inside and outside of Parliament amongst different political and social affiliates. India became the officiating country to the world; her representatives never spoke in the officially declared nation’s language at any world forum. It is ironical to note that many cities and states across our country adopted names in their respective languages in order to assert their regional smugness. Calcutta, Bombay, Madras and Bangalore embraced regional self-importance in the form of Kolkata, Mumbai, Chennai and Bengaluru, respectively. No one asserted emphatically ever on behalf of Bharat. 





Bombay, the financial capital of India became Mumbai, but Mumbai remained financial capital of India. Imperative to regional leadership and own weaknesses of Bharat, not only Mumbai is slowly slithering, but the entire small rural-urban centers across the nation. That is why there is no national pride associated in the battle of name change. ‘India’ gained many technologists and scientists, but there was none in favor of ‘Bharat’. Hence, our national (educational) identity is lost in translation.





India is more accommodative.





Music is magic, and Indian (mainly Hindi) Cinema has shown us a new national hope. In 2009, nearly two-third lyrics of Hindi songs have English inputs for the betterment of our rural folk-tongue. According to a survey on upper middle and rich Indians conducted by The Nielsen (published in CNN-IBN online edition) found that "Top 10 affluent cities of India prefer English language for newspapers but watched television more in regional languages. “Nine in 10 affluent individuals watch television and nearly three-fourth read English dailies”, the survey further added.





Can English as a language be our exclusive identity of one-nation theory - India?





Reflective confusion has always prevailed over Indian Institute of Technology vs ‘Bhartiya Prodyogiki Sansthan’. And, between Prodyogiki and Technology, there were/are many dumb abnegators. It was my late realization in early 1990s that why parents are working overtime on feeding ‘Technology’ to their children over ‘Prodyogiki’ as a mode of communication? Trends set in motion for the sake of acquiring prestige, power and jobs, or whatever the forms it may have today. A sudden realization by the Government was for a ‘unique identification number’ for all in order to serenade one’s national identity. Therefore, Agency was ‘just’ given a new name in Hindi language, “Bhartiya Vishishth Pahchaan Pradhikaran” and in English “Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI)”. It was noticed that UIDAI made its presence felt everywhere on the recent visit of its Director, Mr. Nandan Nilekani in Patna. There was no banner depicting “Bhartiya Vishishth Pahchaan Pradhikaran”. Poor ‘Bharat’ is enduring stress of continual ‘Indianization’ of her own heartland.











Policy making places are no exception. A couple of months ago, during a parliamentary Question hour in English between Maneka Gandhi and Jairam Ramesh, Mulyam Singh Yadav wondered whether he was in an Indian or an English parliament. 





What language one should use in the Parliament, the so-called national language Hindi or the language of convenience. Maneka Gandhi chose language of convenience, ENGLISH. Later BJP spokesperson Mr. Rajiv Pratap Rudi cleared the BJP view and gave verdict in favor of the language of convenience. At the same time, he showed ‘enormous kindnesses” towards Hindi. Constitutionally declared the so-called national language has all the privileges and civil liberties till the ‘language of convenience’ blows its horn boldly in coming years. Mr. Jairam Ramesh too asked for forgiveness.





The “INGLISS”





A language is like a flower, and needs enough water for its nourishment, and hence, the Hindi. I personally believe that Hindi as a national language has failed at all fronts to such an extent that it will certainly never become a language of convenience in 21st century. Hindi has further failed to get acquainted with millions of individuals as ‘Indian identity’, so why it has been crowned with national title with so much disgrace in their own country and parliament? Insult can be tolerable, injury can be beyond repair. Hindi should be given due respect in the 8th schedule of constitution before it loses everything in the name of national language in coming years. Language signifies our identity. Why should we carry such a fake identity, which divides people and creates a class system based on linguistic diatribe?





Hindi is losing its foot hold in the Hindi heartland, where the life of economically upward mobile people wakes up with “good morning” and slumbers with “good night”. Those who are fighting for Hindi inside Parliament/Assembly ironically take pride in their second generation who are fluent enough in the characters of “good morning” to “good night”. Not only amongst rich and affluent, over the years English has emerged stronger, has grown bigger, and in fact they are finding acceptability amongst rural tongue - INGLISS. 





These days, speaking ‘Ingliss’ is providing citizens of Bharat a full satisfaction of earning prestige as well as upper hand in sharing the cake of globalization with rest of Indians including nearness to bureaucracy and military.





Hindi has no right to occupy the national language seat in an ethnically divided multi-lingual country. Time has come to declare INGLISS as a language of national identity and neo-nationalism. Time has come to shed the ‘double standard’ in our lives. Bihar has always been the torch bearer of the revolution of its kind. Bringing English (Ingliss, an Indian English) as a compulsory subject in Class X board is a major shift in the policy of Government of Bihar. Many “Bhartiya” from Bihar putrefied in their linguistic struggles on the streets of ‘India’ in finding their dreams. Let the Government of Bihar initiate the process of endowing the official status to INGLISS as the primary language for all Biharis.





A country whose President, Prime Minister and Council of Ministers refrain from speaking “officially declared national language” while pledging for their respective offices, remain restrained in taking tough stand against the marginalization of national language by extremist forces; a country whose parliamentarians are mortified by the language Hindi, calling it a disease, is an embarrassment to the words, national and nationalism. It is an absolute double standard with respect to ‘Bharat’.Let us declare “Ingliss or English” the language of National Identity of India.



src: When India Defeated Bharat: By Dr. Sudhir Ranjan

Power Project Investments in Bihar

One of the key focus of the Government of Bihar has been infrastructure development. We have seen the government invest in roads, Primary healthcare and education. The government also realizes that power will also play a major role in the development of Bihar and hence has increased focus on power generation projects in Bihar. Thus between 2006 and 2009 power generation projects worth more than 73,000 crores have been approved or are in the various stages of approval. If all these project materialize, then the total power generation capacity of Bihar will have increased by more than 18,000 mega watts. This will definitely go a long way in the development of Bihar.







While SIPB (State Investment Promotion Board) of Bihar has approved or conditionally approved all these projects, the Bihar cabinet is still taking its sweet time to approve the projects.





The Bihar cabinet has only approved 3 projects that will result in a total of 5,440 mega watts of power generation capacity with an investment of 22,779 crores India rupees.


As the government of Bihar has itself said that Bihar will need more than 8000 mega watts of power in the in next 5 years, it should speed up the process of making more approvals. The projects that are approved by the cabinet are 




Company : Type : Power capacity (MW): Location : Inv (Cr) 




JAS Infrastructure Capital Pvt. Ltd. Thermal : 2640 : Banka 11120



Adhunik Power & Natural Resources Ltd. : Thermal : 1000 : Kahalgaon, Bhagalpur : 4369.45 




M/S Nalanda Power Company Limited : Thermal : 1800 : Pirpainti, Bhagalpur : 7290




On another note, the Bihar government should also focus on giving approvals to green energy projects which will benefit Bihar more in the long run. Thus solar energy projects and Biomass projects should be encouraged. Currently most power projects in Bihar are Thermal/Coal based.

I have extracted a list of power projects in Bihar and am listing the ones with more than 100 MW production capacity.The list of all projects approved from 2006 to July 2009 can also be accessed here : Power Projects Bihar

Road Show On Food Processing Policy of Bihar on 17 September 2009, Hotel Windsor Manor, Bangalore







Agriculture and food processing sectors are crucial to the economy of the state of Bihar. Government of Bihar is driving several initiatives for growth of the food processing sector. It has recently launched two schemes viz. Integrated Development of Food Processing and establishment of Food Park scheme. The state government's Vision 2015 envisages investment of Rs 1,670 crore in the sector, and this would generate further investment in food processing sector in the state making the total investment to about Rs 4,175 crore.


Bihar government is taking proactive steps to invite investors and entrepreneurs by devising attractive incentive schemes and policies. In order to explore business opportunities, a Road Show is being organised in Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore and Hyderabad.


The Road Show at Bangalore is scheduled on 17 September 2009 at Hotel Windsor Manor from 1100 Hrs – 1330 Hrs followed by Lunch.
The objective of the business-focused Road Show is to sensitize decision makers from Business and specific agribusiness  about the opportunities  in Bihar in Food Processing Sector. Government support will be available for such project, which will be one of the focus areas of the agenda for this interactive session.
The Session would be addressed by Mr. Ashok Kumar Sinha (IAS), Principal Secretary – Industries, Government of Bihar and Mr. S Mukherjee, Chairman of Bihar State Electricity Board along with other Government officials and CEOs of food processing companies.
The deliberations would be followed by a One-to-One Meeting where interested industries/entrepreneurs may interact with Government officials and discuss the existing facilities and support available.
Please participate and nominate your colleagues in the Road Show and explore business prospects in the State of Bihar.


List of all the Investment Proposals in Bihar

The Bihar State Investment Promotion Board (SIPB) has cleared (or cleared with conditions) 194 investment projects worth more than 115,000 crore rupees (over 23 billion dollars). These projects include



26 Thermal, biogass and solar power plants

25 sugar mills

34 agricultural/ food processing units

18 steel and cement plants



For all who are interested, the entire list of proposal is posted on the Bihar government website and also on http://sites. google.com/ site/progressive bihar/project- approved 

MUZAFFARPUR’S SHIVI SUDARSHAN BAGS INDIA NEWS BROADCASTER AWARD



news videographer of the year 2009My Friend Shivi Sudarshan has made everyone including ‘News 24’ proud. He’s been adjudged the best News Videographer of the Year 2009 at the India News Broadcaster Awards Night. Nerves ran high as the nominees for the best News Videographer of the Year were announced at New Delhi’s Intercontinental Hotel amidst young and seasoned professionals from the journalistic fraternity. And finally, the videographers who captured the devastating Bihar floods of August 2008 for News 24- Shivi Sudarshan, Rishi Nath and Shailesh kumar were announced winners.
Shivi Sudarshan
Shivi Sudarshan
The trio travelled traverse terrains to capture the agonizing tragedy of the victims of the flood. Simultaneously, in keeping with the mission of the channel to bring relief to the victims, they distributed food, water and clothes to the devastated people. They waded through neck deep waters, tiptoeing many a times to keep their heads above drowning waters. But they stood firm enough to hold their cameras and seize the disaster for the rest of the countrymen to witness. The pictures they shot of the devastating deluge impacted News 24’s audience deeply. Relief poured into News 24’s head office at Noida, Uttar Pradesh, all of which were transported to the victims subsequently. At the risk of their well- being and health, the trio worked to tell a story. An effort that has been lauded and appreciated at the glittering event of India News Broadcaster Awards over the weekend.
“I’d like to thank News 24, Managing Editor Ajit Anjum and all my colleagues who supported me to do such a challenging job. I have no words to express my feelings. Thanks to all,” Shivi told Greater Voice.
Anjum said: “We are all proud of the feat of our videographers. It was a tough moment for all of us as an entire team was stationed at the flood stricken area for a month. We provided relief and aid to the victims and the entire experience stands as an unforgettable time in our careers and lives. We hope to continue to provide our viewers authentic news that matters like we have in the past.”
Hailing from Muzaffarpur in Bihar, Shivi lives in Delhi and works for News 24. He’s earlier worked for Sahara Samay and ETv among others. He can be reached on 09873022407.

Bihar has opened its trade doors for state’s Industrialists and Entrepreneurs



Bihar’s invitation came at a programme “Road show on food processing policy of Bihar”.


Offering a host of incentives, principal secretary of Bihar industries department A.K. Sinha took centre stage at the event to answer questions posed by Jharkhand industrialists. Entrepreneur Prakash Tekriwal posed questions regarding the time it would take a firm to set up a rice processing unit in Bihar and if it would be entitled to capital subsidy. It should not take more than a month. One can directly purchase land to set up a unit or can approach Bihar Industrial Area Development Authority. For reliable source of electricity, one can set up a captive husk-based power generation unit” .









The department secretary who had served as a sub-divisional officer in Jamshedpur and deputy commissioner of Hazaribagh in unified Bihar, claimed that the neighbouring state’s industrial inceptive policy was one of the best in the country.


He added that so far Bihar had received over 200 proposals with an expected investment to the tune of Rs 1,20,000 crore in several sectors, including food processing — a core area for industrialists.


Ravi Ranjan Mishra, vice-president of IL&FS CDI Limited that has been appointed by the Bihar government as a project management agency for handlooms, textiles and food processing, added that a wind of change was blowing through Bihar. Vice-president of Jharkhand Small Industry Association S.K. Poddar concured. Industry sources revealed that Bihar had received quite a few proposals from Jharkhand, including those from Usha Martin Group and rice mill owners. Rice, litchi, maize, makhana, jute, tea and sugarcane were identified to have the potential to value-add to the economy of the states.


Mahesh Prasad, the technical director of the Bihar industries department, said similar shows were organised in Delhi, Calcutta and Varanasi.


The department is contemplating to visit Bangalore and Mumbai, too.


Tourism picking up in Bihar:Over 3.4 lakh foreigners visited state in 2008





In all, 3,45,572 foreigners visited Bihar during the year 2008 which is next to foreigners visiting Goa. Deputy chief minister Sushil Kumar Modi attributed the rise in foreigners’ visit to better law and order situation, improvement in tourists’ facilities and positive changes in the state.http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/



Places of Tourist Attraction in Bihar









After reviewing the schemes of state tourism department, Modi said that tourists visiting the state has increased and this could be gauged from the figures. While 63,321 tourists visited Bihar in the year 2005, the number escalated to 3.45 lakh in 2008. The review meeting was attended by tourism department principal secretary Rashmi Verma.http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/



Mundeshwari Devi Temple













She informed the deputy CM that work for ropeway at Mandar hills and for visiting Mundeshwari Devi temple have already been allotted to RITES company. The two ropeways would soon be handed over to the state government, she said.http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

The Hotel Management Institute is coming up in the state at a cost of Rs 14.11 crore. The fund has been sanctioned, Verma said and added that classes of the Hotel Management Institute would start in a rented house from next month. A Food and Craft Institute is also coming up in Muzaffarpur for which a sum of Rs 4.75 crore has been okayed.http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/



Modi also asked the principal secretary to make the floating restaurant on the Ganga available for people on full moon night as well, besides making arrangement for water sports and water scooter in the Ganga. He expressed satisfaction over the working of the tourism department.http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

Sudha "The Taste Of Bihar" bringing White Revolution... is all set to go national crossing the borders to Kolkata and Delhi

Sudha, the taste of Bihar, is all set to go national. Having spurred a white revolution in the hitherto backward state of Bihar, Sudha milk will now sell in Delhi and Kolkata.

http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

“It’s a proud moment for Bihar as for the first time any of the state’s milk federations has been able to transgress the state boundaries by its sheer genuineness and purity. In fact, every Bihari should be proud of Sudha in the same was as every Gujarati is proud of Amul,” said Bihar State Co-operative Milk Producers’ Federation (COMPFED)’s managing director Arunish Chawla.



COMPFED created history on July 14 when its daily procurement of milk crossed the seven-lakh-litres- a-day mark. The procurement will soon go up to over 9 lakh litres per day, a proud Chawla said.











But the history was not made in a day. Over the years since 1983 several milk unions have joined hands to script the success story of COMPFED, which sells all its milk products under the brand name of Sudha. In the process, theirs have become one of the best examples of cooperative achievement in a developing economy. http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

There are currently eight milk unions and three marketing dairies which add to the federation’s total procurement per day. They are:



  • Barauni Milk Union known as Deshratna Rajendra Prasad Milk Union,

  • Visha-Pataliputra Milk Union with its headquarters at Patna,

  • Samastipur-based Mithila Milk Union,

  • Muzaffarpur- based Tirhut Milk Union,

  • Bhagalpur’s Vikramshila Milk Union,

  • Ara’s Shahabad Milk Union,

  • Gaya’s Magadh Dairy Project and

  • Kosi Dairy Project headquartered at Purnia.

http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

COMPFED has three marketing dairies at Jamshedpur, Ranchi and Bokaro. These three procure milk from various milk unions and even their local resources.









With surplus milk at its disposal, COMPFED has signed an agreement with the Delhi Milk Scheme run by Mother Dairy and Amul in Kolkata to supply 30,000 litres of milk each to the two metros every day later from this month. This supply, however, will be marketed there under the brand names of Mother Dairy and Amul.

http://hallosushant.blogspot.com/

“Two tankers will be sent from Samastipur to Delhi while two tankers from Barauni will carry milk to Kolkata every day,” said Chawla.



Though Sudha in Bihar provide not only pure and delicious milk everyday but also delicious milk products like curd, gulab-jamun, peda and milk-cake... yummi

Two Indian schemes in finals for global green energy awards

Two pioneering schemes in India are among the finalists for this year's Ashden Awards for Sustainable Energy, the organisers of the awards have announced.

First finalist, French charity Groupe Energies Renouvelable Environnement et Solidarites (GERES), which works with local groups in Ladakh to help farmers grow fresh vegetables year-round in simple passive solar greenhouses. The result is the availability of spinach, coriander, onions, garlic and strawberries in the markets of Leh even when the temperature is well below freezing point.

The other finalist from India, Saran Renewable Energy Pvt. Ltd in Bihar, one of the finalists, has installed a new gasification system that generates electric power for 11 hours a day using locally-sourced biomass, providing a popular, sustainable, and cheap alternative to an unreliable grid supply. The 220 MW of electricity produced in a year is currently sold to 10 businesses which previously used diesel generators, as well as farmers, a school and a clinic. The result is a better-quality and more reliable electricity supply that also prevents the emission of about 200 tonnes of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide every year from the 77,000 tonnes of diesel that would otherwise be used, and helps to secure income for the 100 local farmers who supply the biomass, the organisers of the London-based awards committee announced.

Ashden Awards for Sustainable Energy recognises the efforts of individuals or organisations in the deployment of locally-available renewable energy in the developing world with the aim of combatting climate change and reducing poverty. The Award carries a total prize tag of £350,000 ($567,000), which will be used to expand and promote these projects.

Other finalists are from the US, China, Nicaragua, Uganda and Ethiopia. The winner will be declared June 11.

Valmiki Tiger Reserve and National Park in West Champaran, Bihar: A Wildlife Tourist Attraction

Valmiki Nagar : Earlier known as Bhainsalotan.



The Valmiki National Park is spread across a core area of 335.64 sq.km of more than 800 sq.km. of the Valmiki Sanctuary located in the West Champaran district of Bihar.



Valmiki was established as the 18th tiger reserve in 1990. It ranks 4th in terms of density of tiger population.









The Government of Bihar, in 1978 declared an area of 464.60 sq. km., which now forms the Reserve, as Wildlife Sanctuary, and a national park in 1989. Later on, in 1990, 419.18 sq. km. was added to the Sanctuary, totalling to 880.78 sq. km.



The park is surrounded by the Royal Chitwan National Park of Nepal in the north and the river Gandak on the western side with the Himalayan mountains as a backdrop. Adjacent to the sanctuary, in the forests of Chitwan National Park, Nepal, is the historic Valmiki Ashram.



The park consists of moist sal bearing forests, dry sal bearing forests, moist mixed deciduous forests without sal, cane and tropical seasonal swamp forests containing reed beds and wet grasslands. The one-horned rhinoceros and Indian bison often migrate from Chitwan to Valmikinagar.

hallosushant.blogspot.com

The forest here is a mix of extensive Savannah lands and swamps. The forest in the sanctuary is rich in Bhabar-Dun sal, dry Siwalik sal, khair and cane. The extensive forest area of Valmikinagar was owned by the Bettiah Raj and Ramanagar Raj until early 1950s.



Here, you can find wild animals amidst their natural habitat roaming about in their environment. The diverse range of wild lives and animals that are found in the Valmiki National Park, Bihar includes the following:



Tiger,

black buck,

sloth bear,

wolf,

deer,

leopard,

python,

peafowl,

chitals,

sambars,

nilgais,

leopards,

hyenas,

Indian civets,

jungle cats,

hog deer and wild dogs.



One-horned rhinoceros and Indian bison often migrate from Chitwan to Valmikinagar.



Best time: Any time (avoid summer between May-June and rainy season between July - Aug). Best between Oct- Mid April.



Where to stay: There are a number of rest houses of the Irrigation Department available.



How to Reach











Air: The nearest airport is at Patna at a distance of 295km.

Rail: The nearest rail head Valmiki Nagar is 5km from the park.

Road : There are bus services from Valmiki Nagar to Bettiah ( 80km) the nearest town.

hallosushant.blogspot.com

Nearest railhead Valmiki Nagar is connected to Delhi, Lucknow and other major city like varanasi, Kolkatta etc. Best train is Saptkranti Express leaving New Delhi afternoon and reach Valmiki Nagar early morning. Valmiki Nagar is close to Nepal border and nearest town is Birganj. So one can extend the trip upto Nepal as well. Return journey can be made by same superfast train Saptkranti express leaving Valmiki Nagar just afternoon and reach New Delhi at 5am. Please check http://www.irctc.co.in for booking and more details for access from other city. People visiting Varanasi can also reach park (3-4 hours drive or train time).

hallosushant.blogspot.com

Nearest airport is Patna (approx 200km). Birganj (nearest nepal town) also has an airport well connected to Kathmandu.



People visiting can also extend their trip to:



Bapudham Motihari: where Mahatma Gandhi started his first Non-cooperation movement. Gandhi Musium is good if someone has interest.



Temples : Jatashankar Temple, Nardevi Temple and Kaleshwar Temple. Triveni Temple (a holy place for Hindus) is located across the Gandak barrage in Nepal (2-3 kms) from Gandak barrage.



Archaeologically rich places : Lauriya Nandan Garh and Someshwar Fort. Lion pillar of Ashoka at Lauriya Nandan Garh is a single block of polished sand stone.



Contacts:

Dy. Conservator of Forests,

Champaran Forest Division,

P.O.Betia, Distt. Champaran

Bihar



Some Facts :





Mahrishi Valmiki, the author of Ramayan, set Valmiki Ashram on the banks of Gandak here. Sita gave birth to Luv and Kush at Valmiki Ashram.

The 20th chapter of Sabhaparva in Mahabharat mentions that the Pandavas accompanied by Krishna had crossed this area, then known as Gandaki Pradesh







A dam is built on the river Gandak (Gandak Project). This dam and its channels are the lifeline of north-western part of Bihar. This channel also irrigates some portions of eastern U.P. This dam is also generating hydro-electricity. This dam has been handed over to the nation by late Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru the then Prime Minister.



Vote for Nalanda University as "Top seven wonders of India".

http://7wondersofindia.ndtv.com/thanks_final.aspx?voteid=166 

It's a poll conducted by NDTV and Nalanda University, despite being in top 20, is still lagging behind some other monuments in India to get into Top 7. 
  
It would be a befitting tribute to the Nalanda University at a time when serious efforts are being made at International level to revive this great University.China,Japan and Singapore is keenly involved in this project.The gloray of the university can be understood from the fact that its heritage is often called as collective "Asian heritage" and revival as " Asian Renaissance" . 

Ruins of the University. 

If this topic interests you then here is more details :
 
Nalanda University (Founded in 414-445 A.D by Gupta  emperors, notably Kumaragupta, Located at Nalanda 55 miles away from Patna)
The ancient university of Nalanda was world's first residential university in recorded history.In its heyday it accommodated over 10,000 students and 2,000 teachers. The university was considered an architectural masterpiece, and was marked by a lofty wall and one gate. Nalanda had eight separate compounds and ten temples, along with many other meditation halls and classrooms. On the grounds were lakes and parks.. The library was located in a nine storied building where meticulous copies of texts were produced.
It attracted pupils and scholars not only from all parts of India but also from foreign countries like Korea, Japan, China, Tibet, Indonesia, Persia and Turkey . The Tang Dynasty Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang left detailed accounts of the university who visited India in the 7th century.He spent many years in this university both as a student and as a teacher.
Even today you can see the majestically built classrooms, compounds, temples and meditation halls proclaiming its bygone architectural charm.The each and every particle of the ruins seems to be spreading the rays of knowledge and peace.
Dating more than one thousand years back, the ruined university complex still boasts of its past glory and pride.

Ruins of the University.
Oldest university
The oldest extant universities in the world -- in continuous operation -- date back to around 1200 years ago, and they are all outside the United States. The University of Al Karaouine in Fez, Morocco (founded 859 AD), is listed as the world's oldest, continually-operating, degree-granting university, followed by Cairo's Al Azhar University (975 AD).
European universities all came in the next millennium with Bologna (1088), Paris (1150), and Oxford (1167) listed as the oldest. Nalanda preceded all of them, having been founded around 450 AD under the patronage of the Gupta emperors, although some records date it back to 500 BC around the time of Buddha. It functioned till 1193 when it was sacked by the armies of Bakhtiyar Khilj
Libraries
Its collection was said to comprise hundreds of thousands of volumes, so extensive that it burned for months when set aflame by foreign invaders. The library had three main buildings as high as nine stories tall, Ratnasagara (Sea of Jewels), Ratnodadhi (Ocean of Jewels), and Ratnarañjaka (Delighter of Jewels).

The seal of Nalanda University set in terracotta on display in the ASI Museum in Nalanda
Curriculum
...virtually the entire range of world knowledge then available.. Courses were drawn from every field of learning, Buddhist and Hindu, sacred and secular, foreign and native. Students studied science, mathematics,astronomy, medicine, and logic as diligently as they applied themselves to metaphysics, philosophy, Samkhya, Yoga-shastra, the Veda, and the scriptures of Buddhism. They studied foreign philosophy likewise.
In brief , it was a treasure of invaluable books, manuscripts and knowledge.
 Influence on Buddhism
The University was instrumental in the spread of Buddhism and Indian culture in Vietnam, China, Korea Japan and Tibet
Decline and end
In 1193, the Nalanda University was sacked by Bakhtiyar Khalji, a Turk who was the general of Mohammed Gauri.The Persian historian Minhaz, in his chronicle the Tabaquat-I-Nasiri, reported that thousands of monks were burned alive and thousands beheaded  and the burning of the library contin ued for several months and "smoke from the burning manuscripts hung for days like a dark pall over the low hills.
The last throne-holder of Nalanda, Shakyashribhadra fled to Tibet in 1204 CE at the invitation of the Tibetan translator Tropu Lotsawa.
When the Tibetan translator Chag Lotsawa visited the site in 1235, he found it damaged and looted, with a 90-year-old teacher, Rahula Shribhadra, instructing a class of about 70 students.
Thus the destruction of the great  centers of learning at Nalanda and Vikramshila ( another University located near Bhagalpur)  marked an end to the  ancient Indian scientific thought and progress in mathematics, astronomy, alchemy, and anatomy.What Indians had created and achieved over centuries through their hard work,dedication and innovation was destroyed in a moment by the invading armies of Islam , marking a shift of knowledge center from India to elsewhere.
Even Bihar suffered hugely with the destructions of two great centers of learning (Nalanda and Vikramshila destroyed in the same year )as its pre-eminent position in the field of education was lost...It had already lost the political glory after the decline of Mauryas,Guptas and Pals.It shot into prominence for a small period under the rule of Sher Shah (1540-1545) whose reign is remembered for his outstanding work in the field of infrastructure like roads , bridges etc.The famous GT road was built by him.But , its lost glory could never be restored.

 

 
Plans for revival:
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