Hey guys, How are u all? It's been long time. Hope all of you are doing great. After getting job at Brisbane our buddy Prafulla is lost. Hey guys I've got some new snaps taken at my University. Check my new hair style dudes. Do you guys think I look bald in those photos. Please do comment and take care.
Best Regards
Sanjeeb







Thursday, February 28, 2008
New-Hair Style
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Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Will there be polls this April?
By Akhilesh Tripathi
Posted on: 2008-02-11 09:35:06 at kantipuronline.com
WILL THE CA elections, which have already been postponed twice in the past, take place this time around, on April 10? This is a question which, apparently, everybody is asking everybody in Nepal these days, without anybody being able to give the answer with any degree of certainty. Nobody is sure. For everybody clearly knows that the major reasons which caused the past deferrals of the much-touted polls are very much still there. To make matters worse, some new and seemingly even more dangerous anti-election factors have surfaced in the meantime.
Yes, of course, the only kind of people who appear to be optimistic and are publicly claiming with full determination that the crucial polls will be held this April are the ruling seven-party lot including the prime minister, home minister, other ministers and leaders (Well, they were making the same tall claim, expressing the same degree of determination on the previous two occasions as well!). However, the simple reality is, the people are not convinced. They don’t believe the politician’s promise. Interestingly, even some seven-party politicians doubt the possibility of the polls during private conversations.
The seven-party 23-point agreement reached in December last year that resulted in the proclamation of Nepal as a “federal democratic republic” by the interim parliament may have ended the misunderstandings and differences among the ruling parties, providing the Maoists a good pretext to rejoin the government, and rekindling hope for holding the CA election in some political sections. But this agreement, too, like other previous SPA-Maoists accords and understandings, was based on the wrong and prejudiced notion that the seven parties were all that mattered in this country and that anything could be done if the seven parties including the Maoists were on one side. This agreement especially left the agitating parties and groups in the country’s southern plains feeling ignored and neglected once again as it had utterly failed to address their demands.
Perhaps such surface gestures led to the formation of what we now have in the form of the United Madhesi Democratic Front- an alliance of Mahantha Thakur’s Terai-Madhes Democratic Party, Upendra Yadav’s Madhesi People’s Rights Forum and Rajendra Mahato’s Sadbhavana Party—that is openly threatening to foil the polls if their six-point demand is not met.
Not to mention the nearly two dozen armed outfits which have mushroomed in the past few months, leaving the situation in the Terai region really appalling with their gun and bomb tactics. One group calls a bandh in one district, while another in some other district. And this is happening almost everyday. Sometimes, the whole of Terai is brought to a total standstill.
Amid all this, the home ministry can do nothing except act like a mute spectator. A legitimate government agency looking helpless. So much so that even the recent seven-party electoral campaigns in many of the Terai towns—though they were claimed to be held amid tight security—were not free from bombings. What kind of real message does this infiltration give? Do these bombings give the people any hope? How can you hold an election as crucial as the one to a Constituent Assembly in such a situation? Even if you can somehow, who will believe that they were held in a free and fair manner?
Leave the elections aside for a while, what’s happening to the state’s supplies system? Used to the long serpentine queues for fuel that have become an almost veritable landmark, do the people have the time to think about the polls?
Nobody had perhaps imagined that the country would be in a situation it is in today within less than two years after the historic popular uprising of April 2006. Worse, the country’s slide towards anarchy and instability could further continue, giving the twice-postponed CA polls a fat chance of success this April too.
There is, however, an even uglier and undemocratic side to the “historic” 23-point agreement and the resulting republic declaration by the interim parliament. A nominated body, which the current interim parliament essentially is, cannot impose a mandatory directive on the assembly of the people’s elected representatives, that is, the constituent assembly. An elected constituent assembly cannot be reduced to the status of a mere implementing body. But unfortunately, the ruling alliance and the nominated MPs have done just that.
There is nothing more democratic in a democracy than to seek the people’s mandate to decide issues of national importance.
The interim constitution issued last year had already clipped all powers and privileges of the monarch, depriving him of any formal/informal role in state affairs. What was wrong with the earlier constitutional provision which said the fate of the monarchy would be decided by the first meeting of a democratically-elected constituent assembly? What made the seven-party leaders take the Nepalese people’s sovereign right into their own hands?
To take such decisions in the name of the people without actually and exactly knowing the people’s mandate is doubtlessly undemocratic. No one should forget that an imposed change is not sustainable.
On the other hand, all this has only opened the door and encouraged other several groups and parties—on the margins or otherwise—to put forward new demands to even derail the CA polls or otherwise. The simple logic that is being attached to these ever-increasing demands is-- “If you don’t have to wait for the CA polls to declare the country a federal republic, why on earth do you need the very same polls to meet our demands?”
The ruling alliance doesn’t have a convincing answer.
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Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Congratulations….
Great News,
There is nothing in the world that you can’t do and there is nothing in the world that you don’t know. That is the spirit you have to take around and I am sure profession will excell. 
I know doing work is not a big deal. If anybody else can do it, surely you can as well. Focus on doing better than others and that’s where you should be aiming. All the best and we are really happy about your job. Congratulations….
Best regards,
Sushil
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Hello
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Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Economics of YCL upkeep :Rs 1 b a year needed
KATHMANDU, Feb 5 - Much has been said and written about extortion, intimidation and abductions by the Young Communist League (YCL) and its occasional dabbling in social work. But hardly anything has been written on the financing of this most sophisticated and perhaps most ruthless political machine with 40,000 full-time paid cadres across the country.
The Post approached a number of YCL leaders in Kathmandu Valley and asked where they got the money to keep their organization going? The answer was almost unanimous: "It's the generous contribution of the people." But there is more to it than that.
Consider room and board first: YCL provides Rs 500 monthly allowance and food and accommodation to its full-time cadres. At a merge Rs 60 per day for two meals, YCL needs to spend Rs 18,00 for each cadre.
For 40,000 cadres, the monthly budget (including allowance and meals) is Rs 92 million, which means one billion rupees in annual terms. On top of this, YCL needs to find accommodation for the cadres, who are ready to 'act' any time the party orders.
Surprisingly, each of the YCL units is 'self-sufficient'. The party doesn't provide any financial support and has asked each of them to generate its own revenue. There are over 10,000 full-time YCL members, in 41 units, in Kathmandu Valley alone.
When asked how YCL manages its finances, Chandra Bahadur Thapa aka Sagar, YCL-in-charge for the Valley, said, "People provide it voluntarily."
He offered a further explanation: People know that a parallel Maoist administration exists in the country and they cooperate, providing us financial assistance.
He proudly elaborated how his 300-member YCL unit, based in Balaju, has constructed new buildings for the unit with the help of 'generous' support from local people. "Generous people provided us bricks, cement and other items. So we were encouraged to build new houses for our comrades," he said pointing to a construction in progress.
Pratap Gurung aka Mausam, YCL-in-charge of Kapan, also says he has been running his 100-member YCL unit smoothly with 'generous aid' from people in different walks of life.
"Shoe factories provide us shoes and various other industrialists provide food and other items. Even some hoteliers here willingly give us a monthly levy ranging from Rs 3,000 to Rs 5,000. So we have not faced any financial problems so far" says Gurung, former company commander of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Third Division in Chitwan.
He also claimed that since the YCL punishes any criminals operating in the area, many business entrepreneurs and hoteliers are happy to provide them a monthly donation as 'levy'.
Mausam's team has occupied a garment factory, which is essentially the property of Nepal Bank Limited. The bank seized the factory after owners Laxmi Acharya and Sher Bahadur Thapa failed to repay debts.
But that's bank property, how can you take it under your control? "Our party (Maoist) will soon talk to Nepal Bank and request it to sell it to us us at a reasonable price," he said.
The locals in Kapan refuse to talk to the press about what they think of YCL activities in their vicinity. "I don't want to speak about it," a local hotelier told the Post, refusing to reveal his identity. Forget the locals, even Kathmandu police refuse to comment about the YCL on record. A senior police official, preferring to remain unnamed, said, "The people are forced to provide money to the YCL."
He also said the YCL has taken the law into their own hands in the name of maintaining security in various places.
"It's an open secret that the YCL has been operating as a parallel administration in the country. Although we document their crimes, the government dissuades us from taking action against any YCL person. So we just ignore any crime in which the YCL is involved," he said.
Police records, obtained by the Post, show that the YCL has set up offices in 23 locations in Kathmandu Valley alone.
When asked about the future of the YCL, Sagar, former brigadier commander of the PLA Dinesh-Ramji Battalion, said, "Once we form our government, it will be dismissed." Till then, the 'generous aid'- euphemism for soft extortion - will continue.
Ghanashyam Ojha
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Monday, February 4, 2008
India's Black Market Organ ScandalBy SIMON ROBINSON/NEW DELHI
Shocked but not surprised.
That might be the best way to sum upIndia's reaction to the revelation this week that a black market organtransplant ring had been harvesting kidneys from poor Indian laborers,sometimes against their wishes, and using them in foreigners desperatefor transplants. Police who busted the ring last week say doctors paidas little as $1000 for the kidneys and then sold them for as much as$37,500. The racket, based in Gurgaon, a business center close to thecapital, New Delhi, drew victims from as many as eight Indian statesand lasted for almost a decade. Police say the black market doctorsmay have illegally transplanted as many as 500 kidneys. The ring,according to the police, was run by two Indian brothers, neither ofwhom had any medical training but who oversaw the surgery. One of thebrothers has been arrested in Mumbai, but the other, Amit Kumar, whopolice say was the racket's kingpin, is now the focus of aninternational manhunt and may have fled to Canada.But while the details of this particular case are appalling, and thescam is the first — or at least first to be exposed — involvingforeigners from as far away as the U.S. and U.K flying in fortransplants, Indians are sadly all too familiar with organ rackets. In2007, police in southern India uncovered an illegal kidney tradeinvolving fishermen whose jobs had been destroyed by the Indian Oceantsunami. A massive transplant ring in Punjab was also uncovered in2003. Police there believe at least 30 of the donors, who as in thislatest case were poor, illiterate workers promised riches for theirorgans and bused in to be operated on, died, despite promises thatthey would receive excellent post-operation medical care and that theyhad nothing to worry about.India's illegal organ trade is driven in part by the incredibleimbalance between supply and demand for legal organs. The Indiangovernment banned the sale of kidneys for commercial gain in 1994;lawbreakers can be jailed for up to five years. But legal organdonations remain rare in India. The Multi Organ Harvesting Aid Network(MOHAN), a Chennai-based non-government group that promotes legalorgan donation, puts donation rates in India at well under 1 permillion, compared to rates of more than 20 per million in places suchas Spain, the U.S. and France. The group's head Dr Sunil Shroffrejects the idea that Indian culture or religion is behind the lowdonation rates. "The reason is we haven't got our act togetherbasically," he says. "The infrastructure is not there. The generalperception is lacking."The Indian government has encouraged more people to donate, and a fewyears ago began a campaign to increase the rate of cornea donations totry to fix the country's huge problems with blindness. But despitesome success — the high-profile cricketer Anil Kumble and Bollywoodactress Aishwarya Rai both promised to donate their eyes when they die— a 2003 study in the Indian Journal of Opthamology found thatilliteracy and rural residence (read poverty) meant that only half ofthose persons interviewed "had knowledge of eye donation, 20% knewabout corneal transplantation and only 4.34% of them knew when todonate their eyes."Dodgy doctors exploit those same factors — illiteracy and poverty — tobuy cheap organs on the black markets. There are millions of pooryoung men in India, desperate for a job and only too ready to travelto India's big cities at the promise of a quick buck. And even ifthey're not willing, they're still potential fodder. The AssociatedPress reported that while some donors sold their kidneys willingly,some were forcibly brought to clinics, held at gunpoint and thenforced to undergo operations that they didn't want. "India is not sucha literate population," says a spokeswoman from the National HumanRights Commission. "That's the main thing. There are a lot of peoplewho are easy to take advantage of."Shroff and his colleagues at MOHAN argue that if India can push itslegal donation rates up "then we can take care of the shortage andstop these kind of horror stories." But encouraging families to donatethe organs of their recently deceased after this week's terriblerevelations is no easy task. "For the next month or two it's going tobe extremely hard to get a family to donate because they think it'ssome big scam," says Shroff. "That's the wider damage this type ofstory does."
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