Skip to main content

Featured

Long power cut around Jajmau

 Recently, Jajmau residents faced a long power cut. It was quite intolerable. Some residents were reportedly sheltered at their relatives' residences in nearby localities. It was definitely a harrowing experience, undoubtedly. People, anyhow, tolerated the worst situation. Such a long-duration power failure in the main localities of the Jajmau area left hapless residents, old ladies, young mothers, and others leaving their homes for relatives' homes, where power supply continued without any disruption.  A totally different scene erupted over a little longer power disruption in Jajmau. There was no clear-cut information about the restoration of the power supply. The residents honestly endured the unsatisfactory situation with the support of an inverter up to 07 a.m.  Certain families moved to their relatives' places to beat the heat.  Even the political leaders kept on asking for the exact timing of the restoration of the normal electricity supply. It was only possibl...

Haka dance swirls ire over treaty bill


Recently the protest by the youngest MP in New Zealand's two-hundred-year history drew everyone's attention to her intense anger against the quite old indigenous treaty bill against the Maori tribe in that famous country. 

She even did not hesitate to rip the bill copy in the House which kept the Speaker quite nervous and unsettled as well. 

She got immense coverage all the world over by putting her strong objection against the contentious treaty bill. Bearing the distinction of the youngest MP, she gained significant popularity against an old styling war-time powerful dance that involves shaking the head and neck in the front while leaving the fingers back lax and loose.

Having run with the distinction of the youngest MP in New Zealand's two-hundred-year history she is merely 22 years old at present. Hana-Rawiti Kariariki Mapei-Clark represents the Te Pati Māori area in the Parliament, as reported. 

Her facial expressions were portrayed as a confident lady owning no regard, so as to conceal all the oddities and create whatever one does or says in instant anger. Her measures appear to be instilled with demanded actions and virtually against every unfavourable reflection about the past treaty. 

She might be said the most acceptable adherent of the Haka dance. Her manner seems to have been based on that same idea of the oldest symbolic moves before the war in the country. 

It will be apt to mention here that the much-discussed Treaty, signed in 1840 between the British Crown and over 500 Maori chiefs, set the terms for governance and the relationship between the two parties. 

Its inherent principles continue to reportedly shape legislation and policy in New Zealand today. Over the years, court rulings and a separate Maori tribunal have progressively developed Maori rights. 

However, some analysts maintain that these sorts of persistent developments have resulted in most of the more or less small-mindedness against the non-Indigenous citizens there. As a result, there was all this furore was caught during the parliamentary session. 

Comments

Popular Posts