In India, where traditionally boys have been preferred over girls, a village in backward Bihar state has been setting an example by planting trees to celebrate the birth of a girl child. In Dharhara village, Bhagalpur district, families plant a minimum of 10 trees whenever a girl child is born. And this practice is paying off. Nikah Kumari, 19, is all set to get married in early June. The would-be...
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Consolidation is vital by Surinder Sud
There are numerous debilitating factors that disallow Indian agriculture from growing to its potential. The most critical of them, which, ironically, are not receiving due attention, are related to land. Not only is the availability of land for farming shrinking, but its quality and fertility are also waning. Agricultural holdings are getting smaller and turning uneconomical to operate. The much-hyped land reforms have, right from the beginning, been misdirected. These have...
More »Policing the police by Moyna
Surprise was in store for Sushil Kaushik when in 1989 he first joined duty as a constable in Serkot in Uttar Pradesh’s Bijnor district. He had no idea how corrupt police officials can be. He saw policemen taking bribes, and superiors deducting constables’ salaries without giving any explanation. Kaushik questioned his bosses on the irregularities he came across. In Serkot his colleagues would take bribes from villagers who brought fire-wood...
More »Woman poisoned to death over dowry, husband arrested
A woman was allegedly poisoned to death by her husband and in-laws for bringing inadequate dowry, police said today. In a police complaint, victim's father Prithvi Singh has alleged that Sangeet's husband Naresh, brother-in-law Mukesh and mother-in-law Sumitra Devi gave poison to his daughter yesterday. Singh also accused the trio of harassing his daughter for bringing inadequate dowry, they said. Meanwhile, police has registered a case under various sections of...
More »A potato remade for industry has some Swedes frowning by John Tagliabue
Amflora is a kind of miracle potato: it is precious to the starch industry. Johan Bergstrom, a blond and boyish man of 31, who farms here with his father, reached into the dark, soft soil and extricated a tennis-ball-size potato, holding it gently so as not to snap off any of a half-dozen white shoots that were growing out of the potato's eyes. He advised against tasting the potato, whose...
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