Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Call for entries:Co-Production Market at Film Bazaar Goa Film Bazaar

Film Bazaar Goa (India) is inviting entries for the 5th Co-Production Market which will take place from November 24 – 27, 2011. The deadline for submissions is September 30, 2011.

The Film Bazaar Co-Production Market is a four – day event where delegates are provided with the opportunity to meet, formally and informally, international producers, sales agents, distributors as well as broadcasting and funding representatives active in the field of co-production.

Filmmakers with South Asian stories seeking co-production partners are eligible for this program. The project could be in development, pre-production or production stage. There is no entry fee for applications.

Twenty selected projects will be presented in a Project Catalogue and e-mailed to all Film Bazaar delegates two weeks prior to the commencement of the market. Thereafter these projects will be presented in the Co-Production Market from November 24th-27th 2011 at Film Bazaar, Goa.

Projects such as As the River Flows (Bidyut Kotoky), Ocean of an Old Man (Rajesh Shera), Shor (Raj Nidimoru & Krishna DK), That Girl in Yellow Boots (Anurag Kashyap), He (Mangesh Joshi), Ceylon (Santosh Sivan), I Am(Onir & Sanjay Suri), Love, Sex aur Dhoka (Dibakar Banerjee), The Virgin Goddess (K.T.N. Sastry) and The Return Of Tiger (Mike H Pandey) have been presented at the Co-Production Market in the past years.

Courtesy:dearcinema

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Language of delay: Forms now in Konkani & Marathi

PANJIM: The Education Department sought to create further confusion and chaos among parents by announcing that a fresh proforma will be issued to parents through schools for filling up forms to decide on the language of choice for their children, in Konkani and Marathi.

Meanwhile, around fifty thousand-odd forms filled by parents exercising their choice of language has reached the Education Department on Thursday — the deadline for the submission of forms.
Later, speaking to Herald Deputy Director Anil Powar said, “The Department will issue proforma in Marathi and Konkani so that parents can read the forms and fill them in the language of their choice”.

The Department actually admitted that this was due to the pressure mounted by the BBSM which threatened to protest vociferously if the proforma was not sent in Konkani and Marathi.
The Education Department will now have to deal with the existing filled forms and the huge delay the process of sending and receiving filled forms in other languages would take.

“We will begin classifying all the forms from tomorrow. It is a huge task and is expected to take time as we sift through the forms of each school”, sources in Education Department said.
However, sources, said that there are several issues that are expected to crop up during the course of implementation.

“What if a school has just one or two students whose parents choose regional language? Will they be thrown out of school? Will they have a separate division just for them?” sources asked.
The logic baffles. The Department is in no position to explain how this will further help the process and why this move was made after the process of seeking parents views were taken.
Meanwhile, the Education Department will begin dealing with the forms it has already received.
Besides, the Department will also have to separately conduct inspections to see if schools have the necessary infrastructure before granting them permission to open separate divisions for the different choices of parents.

Questions are also being raised about the availability of textbooks in English with sources saying that even if the order was given to print text books, it would take at least another two months to be available.

The directorate of education supplies free textbooks to children under the Sarva Siksha Abhiyan scheme.
Commenting on the situation, sources in the Education Department said that all these issues will be raised before the Government and that the new medium of instruction will not be implemented until all hurdles are cleared.
Courtesy : Herald

Goa Chaka Chak campaign yet to create impact in state

PANAJI: The state is not sparkling clean as yet, though the Chaka Chak, Goa (CCG) campaign was rolled out with much fanfare nearly five months ago on Republic day.

The village panchayats are either totally disinterested or the interest levels are not enough to carry it forward, say garbage managers.

Lack of political will, inactive management committees and problems in identifying sites are major reasons for Chaka Chak Goa moving at a snail's pace. "The panchayats are too slow in taking the schemes forward," says Patricia Pinto, state coordinator, CCG.

Many environment conscious villagers, irked by the sight of garbage strewn around, are keen on installing a waste management system. "But you can't force a village to have a system if the people sit back and wait for things to happen," says Pinto.

The garbage management committees in panchayats, which can serve as pressure groups at village level, are largely dormant. "Though there are some villagers in these committees, they are not pressurizing the panchayats to avail of the scheme," Pinto said.

"The sarpanchas and panchas do not seem interested. And we have to keep calling them to form the committees," says Valerie Madre Deus, CCG North Goa coordinator. Agrees K D Sadhale, co-ordinator for central Goa. "The campaign has elicited lukewarm response from some sarpanchas. They are more interested in awarding the contract to some private agency to lift the garbage on an annual basis," he said. Moreover, the panchayat bodies are run by paid staff, who already have their work cut out.

But while many panchayats are yet to form committees, a few village groups are compelling their panchayats to take up plans for door-to-door collection. "Villagers in Mandrem, Siolim and some other panchayats are pushing their panchayats to show initiative in taking up the scheme," said Clinton Vaz, CCG South Goa coordinator.

"Some panchayats contacted us, but the main requirement to avail funds is setting up of infrastructure to store the collected waste," Pinto said. In some panchayats, these bodies are yet to find a place while others are yet to commence work to erect a shed or enclosure for dry waste.

Infrastructure should not be a problem if panchayats are determined to pursue the scheme, Vaz said. "Some panchayats have taken rooms or godowns on hire while Varca and another panchayat are storing it in one of the rooms of their own panchayats," he said.

Sadhale said that opposition to locating storage points is also hindering selection of sites. "Some do not want the storage point near their compounds," he said.

Courtesy:Times Of India


Monday, May 9, 2011

Goa’s handicrafts will soon get a helping ‘haat’

PANAJI: A crafts bazaar, 'Goa Haat', will soon be set up across six acres of land on the eastern side of the Rua de Ourem creek in Panaji, opposite the directorate of tourism. Modelled along the lines of the Delhi handicrafts bazaar, 'Delhi Haat', the bazaar is aimed at giving a boost to Goan tourism and handicrafts.

Official sources told TOI that while the blueprints for the Goa Haat -- to be set up at a cost of Rs 5 crore sanctioned by the central government -- are ready, the approval of the Panaji planning and development authority (PDA) is awaited. The project will be tendered within two to three months, sources said.

It is learnt that tourism secretary D C Sahoo visited the 'Delhi Haat' to study its functioning, and the 'Goa Haat' is expected to function in a similar fashion. For example, stalls in the 'Delhi Haat' are allotted to a vendor for only 14 days, after which a new vendor occupies the stall. This prevents a vendor from claiming tenancy rights, sources said.

The 'Goa Haat' will not utilize the entire six acres of land near the creek. Only four acres will be used for the stalls and two acres will remain untouched so that the greenery of the area is preserved.

The 'Goa Haat' will have 25 permanent stalls which will be allotted to the tourism or handicraft corporations of different states in India on a lease basis to conduct their sales throughout the year. Another 40 stalls will be open, temporary stalls without shutters. Here, artisans of different states will be asked to apply for allotment of stalls for two or three weeks and the allotments will be done in advance. A certain percentage of the stalls will be reserved for Goan artisans who will also enjoy some preference in allotment of the stalls, sources said.

The concept of allotting stalls on a rotation basis is favourable to the government because it eliminates the permanent occupation of a stall. The government hopes that the stalls showcasing handicrafts from different states of India will attract tourists to the 'Goa Haat' giving it a national colour, feel and generate revenue, sources said.

Sources also disclosed that the tourism department has plans to utilize the other part of the land adjacent to the land allotted for 'Goa Haat'. The department is considering starting entertainment facilities like laser shows, amphitheatres, etc on the adjacent plot on a public-private-partnership basis without involving government funds, sources said.

Courtesy: Times Of India

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

This is the news page of Goa news Online

Welcome to the news page of Goa news online. Here you will see the daily fresh news about Goa and the breaking news as it happens. Do come here everyday without fail to get the best bite into the news as it happens in Goa

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Call for entries:Co-Production Market at Film Bazaar Goa Film Bazaar

Film Bazaar Goa (India) is inviting entries for the 5th Co-Production Market which will take place from November 24 – 27, 2011. The deadline for submissions is September 30, 2011.

The Film Bazaar Co-Production Market is a four – day event where delegates are provided with the opportunity to meet, formally and informally, international producers, sales agents, distributors as well as broadcasting and funding representatives active in the field of co-production.

Filmmakers with South Asian stories seeking co-production partners are eligible for this program. The project could be in development, pre-production or production stage. There is no entry fee for applications.

Twenty selected projects will be presented in a Project Catalogue and e-mailed to all Film Bazaar delegates two weeks prior to the commencement of the market. Thereafter these projects will be presented in the Co-Production Market from November 24th-27th 2011 at Film Bazaar, Goa.

Projects such as As the River Flows (Bidyut Kotoky), Ocean of an Old Man (Rajesh Shera), Shor (Raj Nidimoru & Krishna DK), That Girl in Yellow Boots (Anurag Kashyap), He (Mangesh Joshi), Ceylon (Santosh Sivan), I Am(Onir & Sanjay Suri), Love, Sex aur Dhoka (Dibakar Banerjee), The Virgin Goddess (K.T.N. Sastry) and The Return Of Tiger (Mike H Pandey) have been presented at the Co-Production Market in the past years.

Courtesy:dearcinema

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Language of delay: Forms now in Konkani & Marathi

PANJIM: The Education Department sought to create further confusion and chaos among parents by announcing that a fresh proforma will be issued to parents through schools for filling up forms to decide on the language of choice for their children, in Konkani and Marathi.

Meanwhile, around fifty thousand-odd forms filled by parents exercising their choice of language has reached the Education Department on Thursday — the deadline for the submission of forms.
Later, speaking to Herald Deputy Director Anil Powar said, “The Department will issue proforma in Marathi and Konkani so that parents can read the forms and fill them in the language of their choice”.

The Department actually admitted that this was due to the pressure mounted by the BBSM which threatened to protest vociferously if the proforma was not sent in Konkani and Marathi.
The Education Department will now have to deal with the existing filled forms and the huge delay the process of sending and receiving filled forms in other languages would take.

“We will begin classifying all the forms from tomorrow. It is a huge task and is expected to take time as we sift through the forms of each school”, sources in Education Department said.
However, sources, said that there are several issues that are expected to crop up during the course of implementation.

“What if a school has just one or two students whose parents choose regional language? Will they be thrown out of school? Will they have a separate division just for them?” sources asked.
The logic baffles. The Department is in no position to explain how this will further help the process and why this move was made after the process of seeking parents views were taken.
Meanwhile, the Education Department will begin dealing with the forms it has already received.
Besides, the Department will also have to separately conduct inspections to see if schools have the necessary infrastructure before granting them permission to open separate divisions for the different choices of parents.

Questions are also being raised about the availability of textbooks in English with sources saying that even if the order was given to print text books, it would take at least another two months to be available.

The directorate of education supplies free textbooks to children under the Sarva Siksha Abhiyan scheme.
Commenting on the situation, sources in the Education Department said that all these issues will be raised before the Government and that the new medium of instruction will not be implemented until all hurdles are cleared.
Courtesy : Herald

Goa Chaka Chak campaign yet to create impact in state

PANAJI: The state is not sparkling clean as yet, though the Chaka Chak, Goa (CCG) campaign was rolled out with much fanfare nearly five months ago on Republic day.

The village panchayats are either totally disinterested or the interest levels are not enough to carry it forward, say garbage managers.

Lack of political will, inactive management committees and problems in identifying sites are major reasons for Chaka Chak Goa moving at a snail's pace. "The panchayats are too slow in taking the schemes forward," says Patricia Pinto, state coordinator, CCG.

Many environment conscious villagers, irked by the sight of garbage strewn around, are keen on installing a waste management system. "But you can't force a village to have a system if the people sit back and wait for things to happen," says Pinto.

The garbage management committees in panchayats, which can serve as pressure groups at village level, are largely dormant. "Though there are some villagers in these committees, they are not pressurizing the panchayats to avail of the scheme," Pinto said.

"The sarpanchas and panchas do not seem interested. And we have to keep calling them to form the committees," says Valerie Madre Deus, CCG North Goa coordinator. Agrees K D Sadhale, co-ordinator for central Goa. "The campaign has elicited lukewarm response from some sarpanchas. They are more interested in awarding the contract to some private agency to lift the garbage on an annual basis," he said. Moreover, the panchayat bodies are run by paid staff, who already have their work cut out.

But while many panchayats are yet to form committees, a few village groups are compelling their panchayats to take up plans for door-to-door collection. "Villagers in Mandrem, Siolim and some other panchayats are pushing their panchayats to show initiative in taking up the scheme," said Clinton Vaz, CCG South Goa coordinator.

"Some panchayats contacted us, but the main requirement to avail funds is setting up of infrastructure to store the collected waste," Pinto said. In some panchayats, these bodies are yet to find a place while others are yet to commence work to erect a shed or enclosure for dry waste.

Infrastructure should not be a problem if panchayats are determined to pursue the scheme, Vaz said. "Some panchayats have taken rooms or godowns on hire while Varca and another panchayat are storing it in one of the rooms of their own panchayats," he said.

Sadhale said that opposition to locating storage points is also hindering selection of sites. "Some do not want the storage point near their compounds," he said.

Courtesy:Times Of India


Monday, May 9, 2011

Goa’s handicrafts will soon get a helping ‘haat’

PANAJI: A crafts bazaar, 'Goa Haat', will soon be set up across six acres of land on the eastern side of the Rua de Ourem creek in Panaji, opposite the directorate of tourism. Modelled along the lines of the Delhi handicrafts bazaar, 'Delhi Haat', the bazaar is aimed at giving a boost to Goan tourism and handicrafts.

Official sources told TOI that while the blueprints for the Goa Haat -- to be set up at a cost of Rs 5 crore sanctioned by the central government -- are ready, the approval of the Panaji planning and development authority (PDA) is awaited. The project will be tendered within two to three months, sources said.

It is learnt that tourism secretary D C Sahoo visited the 'Delhi Haat' to study its functioning, and the 'Goa Haat' is expected to function in a similar fashion. For example, stalls in the 'Delhi Haat' are allotted to a vendor for only 14 days, after which a new vendor occupies the stall. This prevents a vendor from claiming tenancy rights, sources said.

The 'Goa Haat' will not utilize the entire six acres of land near the creek. Only four acres will be used for the stalls and two acres will remain untouched so that the greenery of the area is preserved.

The 'Goa Haat' will have 25 permanent stalls which will be allotted to the tourism or handicraft corporations of different states in India on a lease basis to conduct their sales throughout the year. Another 40 stalls will be open, temporary stalls without shutters. Here, artisans of different states will be asked to apply for allotment of stalls for two or three weeks and the allotments will be done in advance. A certain percentage of the stalls will be reserved for Goan artisans who will also enjoy some preference in allotment of the stalls, sources said.

The concept of allotting stalls on a rotation basis is favourable to the government because it eliminates the permanent occupation of a stall. The government hopes that the stalls showcasing handicrafts from different states of India will attract tourists to the 'Goa Haat' giving it a national colour, feel and generate revenue, sources said.

Sources also disclosed that the tourism department has plans to utilize the other part of the land adjacent to the land allotted for 'Goa Haat'. The department is considering starting entertainment facilities like laser shows, amphitheatres, etc on the adjacent plot on a public-private-partnership basis without involving government funds, sources said.

Courtesy: Times Of India

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

This is the news page of Goa news Online

Welcome to the news page of Goa news online. Here you will see the daily fresh news about Goa and the breaking news as it happens. Do come here everyday without fail to get the best bite into the news as it happens in Goa