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In the light of the population explosion debate
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                        |    Top Stories  | 
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                  NIRENDRA DEV | 17 Oct, 2021 
                  Mizoram has made news -- not necessarily for the wrong reasons but 
certainly for quite unexpected reasons. North-Eastern India generally 
makes news due to insurgency-related incidents or other instances of 
violence and killings. This time a mother of 15 children and a widow has
 been honoured and rewarded with a cash prize of Rs 1 lakh by Mizoram's 
Sports Minister Robert Romawia Royte.
  The reason is that the 
native Mizo population is dwindling and hence women like her are being 
awarded and honoured. The unprecedented show had the backing of the 
influential Young Mizo Association (YMA) and a Presbyterian Church 
leader Rev P.M. Manikama. The state Sports Minister, Robert Romawia 
Royte, also loves to be called 'Triple R', in fact has distributed Rs 
2.5 lakh to 17 women who delivered 'more children' at a function held 
within his Aizawl East-II constituency.
  The dwindling population 
and 'fertility' issues are of general concern in the North-East. There 
are also other issues. The local Christian tribals do not believe in the
 government's policy of small family or family planning. The Nagas 
generally use the refrain -- a mother's womb is not a graveyard. The 
population issue remains a vexed problem in the North-Eastern region, 
which has more than 200 linguistic and ethnic groups across the seven 
states of Nagaland, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Manipur, Assam, Tripura and 
Arunachal Pradesh.
  Of these, three Christian-majority states are Mizoram, Nagaland and Meghalaya.
  Meghalaya,
 the hub of Khasis, Garos and Jaintia tribals practises matriarchy. 
Nagaland has so far not elected any woman legislator and Mizoram has 
elected only two in the past and more so as an exception. Royte belongs 
to the regional outfit Mizo National Front, the party led by state Chief
 Minister Zoramthanga. MNF was once led by a crafty rebel leader, the 
Late Laldenga. Royte said that the incentives to mothers were given in 
accordance with 'more children drive' launched by different church 
bodies and denominations and the Young Mizo Association (YMA). Such a 
gesture is not new to Mizoram. In 2018, a Baptist church in remote 
Lunglei district town had announced incentives to encourage couples to 
have more babies in an effort to check their dwindling numbers.
  Of
 course, this disregards the national policy for control population. The
 church in remote Lunglei town had said it would pay families a one-time
 cash assistance of Rs 4,000 for a fourth child and an additional Rs 
1,000 rupees for each new child. These are very sensitive matters. The 
issue of dwindling numbers in the region should be understood in a 
sociopolitical context. Ethnic minority groups fear being swamped by 
'outsiders' from mainland India and other tribal groups. Nagas witnessed
 violent days in the mid-1990s in their confrontation and clashes with 
Kukis. The menace hit both Nagaland and parts of Manipur. In Mizoram, 
the native Lushais are not happy to entertain Brus especially when it 
comes to casting votes.
  The Mizo youth leaders would readily tell
 one that the locals are "not against professionals coming and working 
in our state". The fear and objections are of a regular influx. Here too
 certain complexities work. Mizoram has for months now accommodated and 
helped 'refugees' from Chin province of Myanmar who have taking shelter 
after facing persecution following the harsh military actions there 
since the February coup.
  Yes, 'sharing' ethnic bond is a crucial 
factor in the entire debate. Moving out of the North-East, we know the 
population debate is of general concern. India currently is the world's 
second most populous nation after China. There is a 'national policy' to
 check population growth even as it is not illegal to have more 
children.
  According to the UN figures, in 2019, India had an 
estimated population of 1.37 billion and China 1.43 billion. Now experts
 say by 2027, it is possible that India will surpass China's population.
 It is estimated that India could add nearly 273 million people to its 
population between 2021 and 2050.
  We have one more major 
dichotomy in handling issues like population growth between "mainland 
India" and among the tribal majority states of the North-East. In July, 
the BJP government in Uttar Pradesh law commission released the draft of
 a proposed Bill which made news, and certainly not without good reason.
 The first draft of the Uttar Pradesh population (Control, stabilization
 and Welfare) Bill, 2021 had proposed that the benefits of state 
government-sponsored welfare schemes will be limited to only those with 
two children or less. The State Law Commission in UP had also sought 
comments from the common people. In certain quarters, such moves are 
being linked to electoral politics and Hindu-Muslim divide.
  UP 
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath had himself said: "There is also a lack 
of awareness about population in certain communities and we therefore 
need community-centric awareness efforts".
  The answers to some 
queries triggered by these debates are not known to us as of now. Nor do
 I want to hazard a guess. If an answer has to be decided by a 
democratic process, it is difficult to conceive of a more satisfactory 
method or system than that is embodied in the existing structures. 
Family is a private business and the state should have no business. But 
is it so?
  Society and policy makers hence come back to the same 
question posed on a number of occasions pertaining to different pressing
 problems. The question is - What is the right way for us to get 
forward?
  (Nirendra Dev is a New Delhi-based journalist. He is 
author of books 'The Talking Guns: North East India' and 'Modi to 
Moditva: An Uncensored Truth' )
              
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                |   Customs Exchange Rates | 
                     
              
                | Currency     | 
                      Import      | 
                      Export | 
                     
              
                US Dollar 
  | 
                      ₹88.70
  | 
                      ₹87 | 
                     
              
                UK Pound
  | 
                      ₹119.90
  | 
                      ₹116 | 
                     
              
                Euro
  | 
                      ₹104.25
  | 
                      ₹100.65 | 
                     
              
                | Japanese 
                  Yen | 
                      ₹59.20 | 
                      ₹57.30 | 
                     
              
                | As on 30 Oct, 2025 | 
                     
               
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