After training for a year at the Assam Textile Institute in 1980, 
Nilima Deka, a resident of sub-urban Guwahati, set up a weaving 
machine at home.  
  
It was bad news for Nilima as soon as she began. Deka's attempts to 
finance her business found her slip into a trap of money lenders. Her 
financial position deteriorated to such an extent that she eventually 
had to shut down her business.  
  
However, all was not lost. Micro credit from Nightingale Charitable 
Society — a non-governmental organisation (NGO) engaged in lending 
activity to the poor and the deprived since 2001 — helped Deka 
restart the business, stalled for more than two years.  
  
Today, Nilima Deka's weaving business is flourishing.  
  
Nightingale Charitable Society (NCS) does business with 106 self-help 
groups (SHGs) and is in the process of forming joint-liability 
groups, the model the society introduced recently.  
  
The joint-liability groups will be fully operational from March 2008, 
giving a new dimension to micro-finance activity in Assam. These 
groups are aimed at reducing the risk factor involved in micro-
finance lending. Under the model, there are groups of loan seekers. 
One of the loan seekers in such a group is granted a loan at a time, 
while the rest are guarantors and ensure the loan taken is repaid.  
  
The joint-liability groups model, prevalent in other parts of the 
country, reduces the risks of non-recovery substantially.  
  
The NCS discovered this model when it undertook a six-day training-
cum-exposure tour to Andhra Pradesh recently, sponsored by North 
Eastern Development Finance Corporation (NEDFi), Ministry of 
Development of North Eastern Region and Indian Institute of Bank 
Management, Guwahati.  
  
Mantu Nath Sarma, Secretary of the NCS, says they are in the process 
of forming the the groups, which will initially have four members, 
and will start lending in a month or two.  
  
Though the amount of transaction NCS has done till date is hardly 
comparable with those in Andhra Pradesh, Sarma said, the newly 
acquired know-how and skills would surely make a whole lot of 
difference. With prospects looking brighter now, NCS is planning to 
expand and will shortly have a branch office in the countryside.  
  
NEDFi, Apex Bank and Indian Bank are some of the banks that provide 
credit to the organisations engaged in micro finance activities in 
Assam. Though private sector banks have not been involved in such 
activities in this part of the country, talks are on with ICICI and 
HDFC banks, said Sarma.  
  
Pratap Chakravarty, president of the NCS, is motivated by the Nobel 
laureate Mohammad Yunus' model of Grameen Bank and feels it can bring 
about a revolution among the deprived masses.  

KOUSHIK HAZARIKA
http://www.asom.co.nr

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