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DoE to propose up to 3-year FiT extension for biomass, river hydro

THE Department of Energy (DoE) has drafted a circular that will call for the extension of the feed-in-tariff (FiT) for biomass and run-of-river projects, giving developers a chance to finish their stalled plant construction and avail of the guaranteed rate for their energy output for 20 years.

“We’re looking at three years or until the capacity limit is reached for run-of-river hydro or biomass,” Energy Undersecretary Felix Wiliam B. Fuentebella told reporters, without giving details on when the proposal will come into force.

“There is a draft circular for the extension for three years [for both technologies], whichever comes first — capacity or date,” he added.

Mr. Fuentebella was referring to the installation target of 250 megawatts (MW) for both biomass or small hydro, which was set by the previous administration but was not fully subscribed by the end-2017 deadline.

This time, he said the extension’s deadline would be the full subscription of the installation target or three years, whichever comes first.

Based on the latest DoE data, only five run-of-river hydro projects with a total capacity of 34.60 MW were awarded by the department certificates of endorsement to the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) for FiT eligibility as of November, leaving a balance of 215.4 MW out of the 250-MW target.

The DoE has no update on the five potential projects with a capacity of 82.7 MW that it expected to make it by the Dec. 2017 deadline.

The ERC set a FiT rate of P5.90 per kWh for run-of-river hydro. All five projects qualified for that rate. The rate has been degressed in 2017 to P5.8705 per kWh as called for by the FiT rules.

For biomass projects, 19 projects with a total capacity of 138.61 MW were awarded certificates of eligibility as of November, or a balance of 111.39 MW from the 250-MW target. Only one more project with a capacity of 2.6 MW was expected to receive the certificate by end-2017.

Of the 19 projects endorsed to the ERC, 15 qualified for the P6.63 per kWh rate for the first round, while four qualified for the P6.5969-degressed rate for 2017.

The FiT system offers a fixed rate for the electricity produced by developers of solar, wind, biomass, ocean energy and run-of-river hydro power plants to encourage investments in emerging renewable energy technologies. The first projects to be completed under a prescribed power installation target are awarded the guaranteed FiT for 20 years.

Consumers who are supplied with power through the distribution or transmission network share in the cost of the FiT scheme in part through a uniform charge per kilowatt-hour that appears in their monthly electricity bill as “FiT-allowance.”

National Renewable Energy Board (NREB), which advises the DoE about the direction for renewables, earlier recommended a FiT extension for biomass and run-of-river hydro. Both solar and wind have been fully subscribed. Ocean energy remains a nascent technology. — Victor V. Saulon

Nishikori out of Australian Open, Djokovic unsure

MELBOURNE — Injured Japanese star Kei Nishikori pulled out of the Australian Open Thursday, while Novak Djokovic says he will test his problem elbow at an exhibition before deciding whether to play.

Asian number one Nishikori has not played competitively since last August after suffering a torn tendon in his right wrist during a practice session at Cincinnati.

Nishikori is not the only leading player struggling with injury, with a who’s who of the top names in the game battling to be fit for Melbourne Park.

Former world number one Djokovic hasn’t played since a right elbow issue forced him to quit Wimbledon in the quarterfinals in July.

He has already canceled scheduled appearances at an exhibition in Abu Dhabi and the Qatar Open, and said he will test the injury next week at the Kooyong Classic in Melbourne. — AFP

Truth telling in Duterte land

Almost every government official has the same message whenever the birth or death anniversaries of the country’s heroes are marked: it is to remember what they did for the country, and to emulate their patriotism and devotion to the welfare and betterment of the nation.

On the 121st death anniversary of Dr. Jose Rizal, for example, President Rodrigo Duterte told Filipinos to remember the national hero’s “ultimate sacrifice for the sake of our country,” and to “reflect on his patriotism as we strive to continue his work of building a more united, peaceful and prosperous Philippines.”

Many will take exception to that statement’s presumption that the country is at peace, united, and prosperous today, and that the Duterte regime is adding to those already existing qualities, more than a century after the Spanish colonial government executed Rizal by musketry in Bagumbayan on Dec. 30, 1896. The truth is that the realization of those aspirations has continued to elude the people of these isles after nearly 50 years of US occupation, two world wars, and a succession of supposedly independent administrations.

The Marcos terror regime still leads in brutality and destruction the pack of predators that it has been this country’s misfortune to have for so-called leaders. But that distinction is rapidly being contested by its successors including the present one, whose antipathy to a sustainable peace and the authentic reforms the country desperately needs has divided Filipinos more than at any other time since 1946.

In the furtherance of its regressive and unpatriotic policies, the Duterte regime has used state violence and violated human rights on a scale that has become a global scandal. But it is also threatening to place the country under open authoritarian rule: to do even worse than the extrajudicial killing of some 14,000 supposed addicts and petty drug pushers at the hands of an already abusive police force it has empowered to kill with unprecedented impunity.

The imposition of martial rule nationwide — or of a false and deceptive “revolutionary” government — will mean, among others, the silencing of those dissenters, human rights defenders, social and political activists, regime critics, and independent media practitioners committed to the imperative of truth telling in these times of national peril.

The campaign against them is already ongoing in the form of their constant demonization and harassment, and the dissemination of false and misleading “information” through the government media system, its online trolls, and its bought-and-paid-for hacks in print and broadcasting. It is at work as well through the harassment, arrest, and assassination of those community, worker, farmer, Muslim and Lumad leaders who have risked everything to disseminate the truth to a woefully uninformed public.

Mr. Duterte already had harsh words against the press and media even before he came to power. He and some of his officials have accused journalists of corruption, bias, and inaccuracy, and insulted and abused them publicly. He has also threatened media organizations for doing their job of reporting and commenting on what his administration is doing.

The latest regime salvo against truth-tellers is Mr. Duterte’s claim that some journalists are “with the Left,” or are even “cadres,” presumably of the New People’s Army (NPA) or the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP). While he did not provide any details on their alleged left-wing links, that statement, made two weeks ago during a radio interview, was made in the context of the continuing killing of journalists in the Philippines, the impunity of the perpetrators, and his declaration that both the CPP and the NPA are “terrorist” organizations. The police and military could interpret the Duterte statement as a declaration of open season on the harassment and even elimination of those journalists they want to silence.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) has accurately described Mr. Duterte’s allegation as “a potential death warrant against colleagues.” The union warned that “in a country that remains one of the deadliest in the world for journalists, there is cause to worry about this irresponsible claim from the highest elected official of the land.”

While it specially endangers journalists in the Cordillera region, whom Mr. Duterte singled out for abuse, NUJP said his “irresponsible claim” also casts “a chilling effect on journalists who intend to cover the communist rebels in continuing efforts to better explain the roots and directions of the close to half a century-old civil strife” between the Philippine government and the CPP-directed NPA.

“At worse,” continued NUJP, “it would embolden those, including state agents, who seek to silence us by giving them the convenient cover of counter-insurgency.”

“We fear,” the NUJP statement declared, “that it will not be long before Duterte directly targets the critical media in his government’s efforts to stamp out dissent.” The organization has therefore called on “the independent Philippine media and all Filipinos who cherish our rights and freedoms to stand together in common cause and oppose all attempts to silence us.”

Silencing dissenters and critics will almost certainly be part of open authoritarian rule to prevent everyone including independent journalists from explaining to the people the social, economic, and political roots of the ongoing civil war the regime has chosen to prolong rather than end through a peace agreement based on social, economic, and political reforms. By doing so it would bar responsible and independent practitioners from discharging the fundamental communication responsibility of truth telling.

The Marcos dictatorship silenced the Philippine press and media and prevented them from providing the information on vital issues the public needed. There is no reason to believe that any other authoritarian regime will not do the same because accurate and relevant information would challenge such a regime’s legitimacy and authority and expose the sordid realities of its rule.

These were precisely the reasons for which Jose Rizal was executed by the Spanish colonial order. He was not directly involved in the Revolution of 1896. But in the eyes of that regime, Rizal’s offense was his exposing, through his novels Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo, and his essays and other writings, the horrors and brutality of colonial rule.

Some historians have disparaged Rizal for his preference for education rather than revolutionary violence as the means of addressing the Filipino predicament with Spanish colonialism. But his writings were nevertheless crucial in shedding much needed light on the true state of the Philippines and its people under colonial rule as the vital condition to the Revolution’s capacity to overthrow it.

Mr. Duterte is quite right. Filipinos must remember and appreciate Rizal’s patriotism. But he himself should realize that Rizal’s devotion to his country and people consisted of his risking liberty and life itself for the sake of the truth as a fundamental weapon in the human enterprise of interpreting the world in order to change it.

That is precisely the purpose, the reason for being, of every independent journalist, human rights defender, social reformer, and authentic revolutionary. But that reality has apparently escaped the understanding and even the awareness of the Duterte regime, the policies, statements and acts of which have been focused on the very opposite of the truth that all of human history attests will set us free.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility.

www.luisteodoro.com

UN chief welcomes reopened Korean hot line

UNITED NATIONS — UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday welcomed the reopening of a hot line between North and South Korea, and voiced hope for more diplomatic initiatives to end the peninsula’s nuclear standoff.

North and South Korea earlier Wednesday reopened the communication channel that had been shut since 2016, following an offer from North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un to send a team to next month’s Winter Olympics in South Korea.

“It is always a positive development to have a dialogue between the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and the Republic of Korea,” said UN spokesman Farhan Haq.

Mr. Guterres “welcomes the reopening of the inter-Korean communication channel,” he added.

UN Security Council resolutions call for the de-nuclearization of the Korean peninsula and “we hope that enhanced diplomatic initiatives will help to achieve that goal,” said Mr. Haq.

South Korea has offered to hold talks with the North on Jan. 9 to discuss “matters of mutual interest” including the North’s Olympic participation.

Mr. Guterres’ support for inter-Korean dialogue stood in contrast to remarks from US Ambassador Nikki Haley, who on Tuesday dismissed the overtures between Pyongyang and Seoul as a “Band-Aid.”

The US, backed by Japan, is pushing for sanctions and total isolation of Mr. Kim’s regime in response to a series of missile launches and nuclear tests.

Russia, and North Korea’s sole major ally China, have repeatedly called for talks to de-escalate tensions, but the US has been adamant that Pyongyang must first freeze its military programs.

Ms. Haley warned on Tuesday that if Pyongyang carries out another missile test, it would face the likelihood of even more sanctions.

The Security Council adopted a new raft of sanctions on Dec. 22 to restrict oil supplies to North Korea — the third set of measures imposed on Pyongyang in a year. — AFP

Larawan’s triumph continues with wider release, US screenings

CANDIDA and Paula’s struggle to hold on to their father’s painting (and, in turn, hold on to their ideals) as many people try to convince them to sell it to save them from destitution, closely mirrored what the creators of Ang Larawan went through just to get the film a nationwide release.

And the stuggle was ultimately fruitful for the film, which has gone on to garner prizes, a wider run, and a life after the Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF).

“From the beginning, we wanted to do Ang Larawan because of all it stood for — it was art versus commerce. If we can get the young people of today to discuss the story, even if they disagree, we just want them to open their minds to the possibility that things aren’t always about money. And the funny thing, that’s what happened to us,” Girlie Rodis, one of the film’s executive producers, told the media on Dec. 30 at the Via Mare restaurant in Quezon City.

“At the start of the Metro Manila Film Festival, we had 53 theaters, then it went down to 26 after few days. After the awards night, we went up to 56, which is more than when we started,” she added.

The film’s official Facebook page announced on Jan. 2 that the film is currently being screened in 77 cinemas nationwide.

Ang Larawan, which was based on National Artist Nick Joaquin’s play, Portrait of an Artist as Filipino, with a libretto by fellow National Artist Rolando Tinio, was one of the big winners at this year’s MMFF, taking home the Best Picture, Best Actress (Joanna Ampil), Best Musical Score (Ryan Cayabyab), and Best Production Design (Gino Gonzales) trophies, and also garnering a posthumous Special Jury Prize for Nick Joaquin and the Gatpuno Antonio J. Villegas Cultural Award.

It was a continuous uphill climb for the team to get the film to where it currently is, from being rejected during the first round of MMFF entry selections to being pulled out of theaters the first few days of the festival, but, like the Marasigan sisters whose battle cry was “Contra Mundum (defy the world),” the film likewise did defy the odds.

Looking back, Ms. Rodis said their rejection during the MMFF script selection was a blessing in disguise as it served to publicize the film among millennials.

“It helped a lot as millennials became aware of the film,” she said, adding that many audience members from that generation watched the film multiple times in order to help the film not be pulled out of cinemas.

“A good portion of our sales are [from] repeat viewers,” said actress Rachel Alejandro, who played Paula and is also one of the film’s producers, remarked during the same press conference.

While the MMFF which will end its run on Jan. 7, the team behind Ang Larawan is determined to bring the film to as many people as possible. Ms. Alejandro said they will be touring schools including University of the Philippines Los Baños and the University of Cebu.

ABS-CBN’s The Filipino Channel (TFC) is also bringing the film to US theaters starting Jan. 12, according to a company press release.

The film’s producers are also looking at restaging the original sung-through play version, a plan originally set for 2017 but pushed back because of the film.

Ms. Rodis also revealed that they plan on adapting other Filipino musicals to film, like Jose Javier Reyes’s Katy! The Musical, about the life of the “Queen of Philippine vaudeville and jazz” Katy dela Cruz, as well as Ryan Cayabyab’s Alikabok, about a Katipunera who left her comfortable life in order to fight for her country.

“Even if it’s few and far between, we would like to make movies that are authentic and true to form,” she said. — Zsarlene B. Chua

Manila Water plans more emergency reservoirs

MANILA WATER Corp. has started the construction of a 100-cubic-meter underground reservoir that will serve as a potable water source in evacuation centers such as a school in Cainta town, Rizal province.

“Manila Water aims to construct these emergency reservoirs in 22 cities and municipalities within Metro Manila’s East Zone and the Province of Rizal in its commitment to assure water service reliability even during times of calamities such as earthquakes and flooding,” Manila Water said in a statement on Thursday.

The listed company said the reservoir project, which had its groundbreaking recently, will be built at the Cainta Elementary School in Barangay San Roque. It will become a potable water source in the aftermath of disasters and calamities.

Aside from the one in Cainta Elementary School, the company also plans to construct a 50-cubic-meter reservoir in Francisco P. Felix Memorial National High School in Barangay Sto. Domingo.

Manila Water said the emergency reservoirs are designed to provide 10,000 evacuees with potable water up to three days.

In October last year, Manila Water also broke ground on an emergency reservoir project at the Sto. Rosario Elementary School in Barangay Sto. Rosario-Kanluran, Pateros.

In Pateros, reservoirs will also be installed in Pateros Elementary School in Barangay San Pedro and Masikap Covered Court in Barangay Sta. Ana.

Manila Water provides water and wastewater services to Metro Manila’s east zone concession area covering the cities of Makati, Mandaluyong, Pasig, Pateros, San Juan, Taguig and Marikina. It is also in charge for the southeastern parts of Quezon City and Sta. Ana and San Andres in Manila. — V.V. Saulon

Dominic Thiem only seed left standing at Qatar Open

DOHA — World number five Dominic Thiem eased through to the quarter finals of the Qatar Open on Wednesday to become the only seeded player left in the tournament after the first two rounds saw the seven other highest-ranked players eliminated.

Four seeds crashed out in the first round and a further three lost in the second, ensuring that the Doha tournament will have its first non-seeded finalist since Gael Monfils in 2014.

French veteran Richard Gasquet and Spain’s Fernando Verdasco and Feliciano Lopez — seeded five, seven and eight — lost on Wednesday as the surprises continued in Doha.

They joined second seed Pablo Carreno Busta, as well as Tomas Berdych, Albert Ramos-Vinolas and Filip Krajinovic — numbers three, four and six respectively — who all fell at the first hurdle.

The carnage among the seeds comes after the tournament was shorn of three major stars before it even began, with Novak Djokovic, Stan Wawrinka and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga pulling out as they try to recover from injuries. — AFP

Brain freeze

The ability to remember, memorize, and to retain ideas, numbers, and facts is a fascinating function of the brain. The individual can grasp multiple concepts and interconnect them.

Memory is defined as stored experiences — happy, mundane, sad ones, sometimes remembered. These often need provocation for its remembering.

What happens when one forgets? It is normal to have memory lapses as one grows up and becomes preoccupied with many things to the point of filling up the memory bank.

As we mature (and add chronological years), we notice little quirks. Our short-term memory plays tricks. Stress and age are factors that affect the memory. Beyond a certain age, people joke about “senior moments” and being forgetful about little things. “The disc is full.”

Memory is about what has transpired. We have a data bank that stores details from the time we are in the womb. Thus babies can remember sounds — classical music or loud noise, words, and feelings. They respond to the same stimuli when they are children and adults. Toddlers can recall celestial phenomena such as the solar eclipse, earthquake, falling stars, full moons, Mars, the red planet. They are sensitive to exuberant fireworks — bursts of color and explosions.

Kids absorb everything they hear and see like a sponge absorbs water. Their memory is fresh and uncluttered. Learning and retention are easy. (It is important that we keep our promises and do what we say because children do not forget.)

“Where are those reading glasses?” (They’re on top of one’s head. “Where are the keys?” (In one’s pocket.) “Who is that person?” (The face is familiar but ummmmmmm….) These are awkward moments that occur occasionally. One takes them in stride, with poise and a sense of humor.

Forgetting is normal. When one is still a teenager, it is panic time during exam week. A bright student suddenly forgets the algebraic formula or the chemical composition or the important historical date. At a thesis defense, he forgets a critical explanation for a theory. It is a lapse that happens due to nerves, cramming, lack of sleep or all of the above.

A person can recall minute details about a childhood adventure but she cannot remember a trauma or people associated with that event.

“I distinctly remember forgetting that,” remarked writer Clara Barton. Someone reminded her about an offense done to her, years earlier.

One would rather remember the happy times. When one undergoes a devastating experience, the brain has a protective mechanism that blocks certain painful memories. There is a coping mechanism that makes one “forgets” the sad, heart wrenching moments of grief and loss. Victims of abuse suppress the memory. It is a defense mechanism the individual use so he can function. Psychological therapy and spiritual counseling are needed to deal with such traumas.

An individual with a photographic memory has the gift and advantage of remembering innumerable images, numbers, and details. However, he may find it exasperating occasionally when he cannot recall dates and names. This could be due to stress, anxiety, worry, or a simple overload of things happening too quickly or simultaneously. One needs to use an internal sieve to sift through the overwhelming, assorted, distracting stimuli, and objects.

The brain’s memory bank can only store so much information. Overload can cause “brain freeze.”

For example, at a business forum or social gathering, one sees a familiar face. But it is a struggle to recall his name. The solution is quite simple. Practice memory enhancing exercises. Introduce yourself and shake hands. Hopefully, the other person is polite enough to identify himself, too.

Memory experts say that one can thaw the freeze with practice.

De-clutter the brain. Relax and visualize pleasant scenes. Do crossword puzzles. To remember names: Pay attention. Visualize the name. Remind yourself. Make it a habit. Start a ritual. Sing it. Tie a string around your forefinger.

Notice how the “older seniors” (the elders) have excellent long-term memory. They can recount clearly what had happened several decades ago — the war, the first meeting, the first trip, the neighborhood, the first day in school and so forth. However, they forget what happened yesterday, a few hours or minutes ago.

A script writer commented, “Memory is a way of holding on to the things you love, the things you are, and the things you never want to lose.” Thus, the seniors hold reunions to prepare for their jubilee celebrations. Getting together is a chance to reminisce and enhance the good old days, and how perfect things seemed to be. The Barbra Streisand poignant song goes,

“Watercolor memories of the way we were…”

 

Maria Victoria Rufino is an artist, writer and businesswoman. She is president and executive producer of Maverick Productions.

mavrufino@gmail.com

PNB is first bank to reopen in post-siege Marawi City

THE task of rebuilding from the ruins is slow and difficult for Marawi City, but simple steps help the effort along. For one, the reopening of the Philippine National Bank Marawi Branch recently, the first bank to open in the city after the siege. The branch is located inside the Mindanao State University (MSU) campus. A day before it reopened, the bank was also the first to resume operations of ATM units — one machine in the MSU campus branch and another in the Capitol area. PNB Marawi Branch operates from Monday to Friday, from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. As of September 2017, PNB has more than 680 branches and over 1,000 ATMs nationwide.

See full story on https://goo.gl/ypfSYx

Jeepney drivers, operators form cooperative in response to modernization program

DRIVERS and operators in Iloilo City and Iloilo Province are enticing more of their fellow operators to join a cooperative they formed late last year in response to the Department of Transportation’s (DoTr) planned implementation of the jeepney modernization program. Established in September 2017, the Western Visayas Transport Cooperative is comprised of the Iloilo City Loop Alliance of Jeepney Operators and Drivers Association (ICLAJODA) and the Confederation of Iloilo Provincial Jeepney Operators and Drivers Association (CIPJODA). As of January this year, the cooperative already has 16 individual operators as members. Boyet Parcon, ICLAJODA president, said the cooperative expects more operators to join following the initial implementation of the phaseout in other regions. The cooperative is scheduled to have a seminar with the Office of Transport Cooperatives on Jan. 12. — Louine Hope U. Conserva

Focusing on the BGC business traveler

By Zsarlene B. Chua

INTERNATIONAL budget hotel chain, ZEN Rooms, has introduced ZEN Homes — its solution to what the company sees as a current lack of affordable accommodations in one of the country’s most prominent central business districts, Bonifacio Global City (BGC) in Taguig.

“Until now, there were simply zero professional affordable options for travelers in BGC — only luxury hotels and amateur Airbnbs,” Nathan Boublil, ZEN Rooms cofounder and global managing director, told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview late-December 2017.

The dearth of options, he said, puts travelers in a tight spot: luxury hotels are expensive and while amateur Airbnbs are “clearly more affordable, it is not the most reliable or the safest options.”

“[Airbnbs are] not even necessarily cheap as there are no economies of scale on the service,” he explained.

So, in order to provide a more affordable and reliable option, ZEN Rooms has introduced serviced apartments which can cost as low as P2,000/night all-in and includes facilities like pools, gyms and fully functional kitchens.

“ZEN Homes [has] the service level of a mid-range hotel and is cheaper than an Airbnb. We are able to achieve such low prices thanks to the economies of scale of managing many units and hotels (unlike amateur Airbnbs who cannot spread their cost across units),” Mr. Boublil said.

Located at the ICON Plaza and Forbeswood Parklane, ZEN Rooms currently operate 70 “homes” and plans to introduce 50 more by the first quarter of 2018.

ZEN Rooms, a budget hotel brand backed by Rocket Internet SE of Germany, was founded in the middle of 2015 by Nathan Boublil and Kiren Tanna, who built FoodPanda.com in 2012 — also backed by Rocket Internet — which has become the largest food delivery service in Asia.

Unlike budget hotel brands which typically construct properties from the ground-up, ZEN Rooms operates by taking over existing rooms in already-built buildings such as condominiums or hotels and re-branding them and furnishing them with all the fixtures of a hotel: a front desk, a restaurant, etc.

The serviced apartments are also bigger spaces — from 40 square meters for studio rooms to 60 square meters for apartments which can house four people. And because of the added amenities, Mr. Boublil said guests stay for around one week on average.

“Professionals having meetings in BGC would have to stay in Makati and then commute. Amateur Airbnbs is often not an option for them given the lack of reliability and planning needed to check in/out,” he said of the rationale behind the apartments.

“Given this lack of budget hotels that we could possibly franchise and work with, we decided to create the offering ourselves from scratch, by taking apartment units under management and operating them,” he added.

ZEN Rooms first introduced the service in Makati in the first quarter of 2017 and decided to replicate it in BGC during the last quarter of the same year, noting that since opening in BGC, its current customer demographics are skewed towards professional/business travelers (60% profession and 40% leisure.)

“Given the excellent customer satisfaction ratings, we are now growing our ZEN Home division fast, benefiting travelers and real estate owners — and essentially turning into the largest budget serviced apartment business in the Philippines, in addition to our budget hotel franchise,” he said.

ZEN Rooms entered the Philippine market in 2016 and is now currently operating more than a thousand rooms in 10 cities nationwide. In Asia, the company is currently operating more than 5,000 rooms in over 35 locations including Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Hong Kong, and Singapore.

Arundhati Roy: the literary canary in India’s coalmine

Indian author Arundhati Roy — AFP

NEW DELHI, INDIA — She may have returned to publishing fiction after a two decade hiatus, but Indian writer Arundhati Roy says she has no plans to sheath her polemical sword anytime soon in a world where the vulnerable are still being “smashed.”

Sitting in a café in the bowels of Old Delhi’s labyrinthine streets on a chilly winter’s afternoon, the 56-year-old still simmers with the kind of fiery political rhetoric that has made her one of her homeland’s harshest modern day critics.

“I would find it very hard to live with myself in this country if I didn’t talk about what was going on,” she says.

“Not only in India but all over the world, an economic system is being created that is driving people apart,” she adds.

“I’m writing about how this system is actually smashing up the vulnerable in this country.”

Roy has spent much of the year publicizing her new novel — The Ministry of Utmost Happiness — a sprawling and lavish tale published in June.

But inevitably conversations stray onto the kind of political issues she is now equally well known for: Kashmir, Maoist insurgents, environmental activism, and the rising communal tensions in modern day India.

The novelist and the polemicist is a duality she has worn for 20 years and she’s not going to stop now. The new book’s dedication after all reads: “To, The Unconsoled.”

FAME AND ACCLAIM
After years of struggling to find her voice, penning television and movie screenplays in Mumbai, the daughter of a Syrian Christian from Kerala and a Hindu Bengali burst onto the scene in 1997 with her debut novel The God of Small Things.

The story of twins Rahel and Estha and their traumatic childhood in Kerala was a publishing sensation, selling more than six million copies worldwide, scooping up the Booker Prize and turning Roy somewhat uncomfortably into a darling of the global literary set.

Many favorably compared her at the time to South Asia heavyweight writers like Salman Rushdie and Vikram Seth. But those hoping for a swift series of fiction follow ups were disappointed.

Instead she turned herself into something resembling India’s moral conscience, churning out essays on a broad range of topics that riled the country’s elite and — when it came to her harsh criticism of India’s treatment of Kashmir — even earned her a sedition charge.

“I get into so much trouble so many times and I keep promising myself I won’t write another (essay),” she explains. “But it comes from a place where just keeping quiet just doesn’t seem to be an option.”

Her essays, she says, are written with a “kind of pacy restlessness.”

But the new novel afforded her an opportunity to write more cautiously and slowly.

“When I write fiction I’m the exact opposite. I’m just completely relaxed, completely take my time.”

Started some 10 years ago, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness absorbs many of the leftist political subjects she has written about, forming “part of the foundation” of the book.

Copies of Arundhati Roy’s novel The Ministry of Utmost Happiness are stacked up at a book store in New Delhi. — AFP

Among the vast cast are Maoist guerrillas and Hindu nationalist mobs, a transgender community struggling against poverty and prejudice in Old Delhi and a love story set against the backdrop of the Kashmir’s long-simmering insurgency.

‘CONSTRUCTED CHAOS’
Compared to her widely acclaimed debut, the reviews for her belated follow-up are more mixed, with some saying the work is long and chaotic.

It is a criticism Roy partially accepts, but brushes off.

“I know a lot of people describe it as chaos, but that chaos is constructed,” she explains.

She expects her readers to spend time exploring the new book.

“It’s looking at the story as though it’s a big city like Delhi,” she says. “You can’t really just read The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, you have to get to know it, like you get to know a city: walk through big roads, small roads, courtyards, barren places.”

Politics comes fairly easily to Roy, but fiction less so.

“It took me a lot of time to recover from The God of Small Things,” she admits. “Not just because of the worldly success, but to write something that I dredged up from some place that was quite deep.”

It is unlikely she will shelve her polemical pen anytime soon.

Roy says under the stewardship of Hindu nationalist prime minister Narendra Modi, India is at its most polarized place in years.

She reels off a list of ills, from protesters recently blinded by police shotgun pellets in Kashmir, to the ongoing prejudice against India’s “untouchable” castes and rising fundamentalism.

“There are mobs running around wanting to burn down cinema halls, there are mobs of huge mustachioed men celebrating sati,” she fumes, referencing the historical but extinct tradition where a widow would throw herself onto her husband’s funeral pyre.

Critics of Roy’s essays say they can be hysterical and narcissistic. But Roy is unrepentant, seeing herself as a much needed canary in the coal mine.

“It can’t go on like this,” she warns. “Something will arise either out of complete destruction or some kind of revolution. But it can’t go on like this.” — AFP