[sacw] SACW (26 July 01)
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex@mnet.fr
Wed, 25 Jul 2001 23:35:33 +0100
South Asia Citizens Wire
26 July 2001
http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex
----------------------------------------
[1.] Pakistan - India: Hopes and fears after Agra
[2.] [Pakistan India summit in Agra] A worthy initiative...
[3.] Sri Lanka: Peace Support Group calls for peace and reconciliation
[4.] Sri Lanka: CRM calls for responsible action
[5.] India: Phoolan Devi Shot Dead
[6.]
[7.] India: Supreme Courts asks six states to end starvation amidst plenty
-----------------------------------------
#1.
The News International
25 July 2001
Hopes and fears after Agra
M.B. Naqvi
The author is a well-known journalist and freelance columnist
Agra Summit, after all is said and done, did collapse. There is no
tangible gain. The Indo-Pakistan deadlock is complete. Personal
chemistries between Pakistan President and Indian PM are said to have
ineffably harmonised there. That may provide a basis of some progress
in future. May be. But there is no certainty. Hope however lingers.
But too much cannot be made of the ability of President Musharraf's
media skills and his transparent sincerity. His appeals to the Indian
people over the heads of India's ruling establishment are perhaps
helpful. But how far do they take the train that has become tagged on
to Gen. Pervez Musharraf's person, Kashmiris and all the 140 million
Pakistanis. In actual international dealings these factors get
discounted where realpolitik rules. Pakistan cannot talk to India
from any position of strength.
That is basic. It failed to win all its four wars; the Kargil's
spectacular beginning had had to end in an unceremonious evacuation
and that too with American aid. President of Pakistan reiterated,
correctly, that there is no military solution to the Kashmir
imbroglio. What are the implications of Kashmir having no military
solution?
The fact of the matter is that, apart from not having won a single
war, possession of rival nuclear deterrent puts paid to any hope of
military force being any use in any situation in solving the Kashmir
problem insofar as Pakistan's determination to help liberate the
people of Kashmir is concerned. If this objective is to be achieved,
the means will have to be mainly political and diplomatic for
achieving that end.
Nuclear bombs have frozen dead the Indo Pakistan dispute on Kashmir.
Any real progress towards a Kashmir solution will have to be worked
out with the willing cooperation of Indian government after the
Indian public opinion enables it to do so. That will have to be a
long and sustained effort. In the process of converting the Indian
public opinion to the extent of accommodating Pakistanis and
Kashmiris true wishes, Pakistan's rulers may have to do a lot of
things that Indian people may want.
President Musharraf's unscripted initiatives at Agra and since need
to be seen as an initial exercise in the effort to influencing the
Indian public opinion with a view to creating a pro-Pakistan lobby in
India --- a legitimate and necessary objective. Does Islamabad
understand all its implications? One oblique word about the supposed
guarantee of Pakistan's security, viz. the nuclear deterrent, in
addition to its deadening impact on Kashmir dispute, needs to have
its other aspects focused on: so long a single Pakistani bomb exists
--- and there actually must be many --- Indians will always fear and
mistrust Islamabad's rulers.
Similarly a single Indian bomb, so long as it is there, Pakistanis
will have ample reason to mistrust and fear Indian security
establishment. After all, these evil weapons have no defence
whatsoever. These offensive weapons kill and burn all there exists
in, on or at the target zone and far more areas around --- to
wherever the radioactive fallout will be taken by winds and water. It
will kill even the earth in the target zone and all the flora and
fauna over a wider area. Even future generations will be attacked by
their use. Who can trust an adversary government that possesses such
weapons?
These are inherently mistrust creating and destabilising factors. We
should take good care lest they become permanent. If that happens,
there might then be no solution to any problem. Insofar as India's
intransigence on Kashmir is concerned, who can forget that they are
in possession of a large chunk of Kashmir. They mean to retain it.
They have successfully defended it for over half a century.
Having fought many wars, mere words, uttered no matter with what
sincerity and effectiveness, can scarcely induce the Indian security
establishment to relinquish its stranglehold on Kashmir. It has to be
compelled -- by the Indian people themselves. Until that happens,
South Block will continue to stall and stymie, taking shelter behind
India's constitution embodying Kashmir as a part of India.
It will simply not negotiate on Kashmir. Pakistanis should devise a
suitable PR strategy and the policy to force South Block into
democratic reasonableness. The present kind of Jehad in Kashmir is
misconceived. It is playing on an adversary's pitch and according to
his rules and assumptions. Whoever has more fire power and trained
manpower will actually win. Who is actually suffering: ordinary
Kashmiris. Who is mainly dying? Mostly young Kashmiri boys --- Muslim
ones. India admits to 30, 000 deaths. Kashmiris outside India put the
figure at 70,000 to 80,000.
As of now the struggle is utterly unequal --- largely because the gun
has become the arbiter. In a certain sense, the Pakistanis and
Indians mean to fight on to the last Kashmiri Muslim young man. This
is unfair to the Kashmiris. Let us recognise that the Indian
political class has one billion people to recruit from. It has more
resources than Pakistan. It can buy or make whatever equipment may be
required. It can go on indefinitely to suffer the kind of casualties
Indian security forces are taking. But the supply of Muslim Kashmiri
youth is more restricted; it can run out. Kashmiris, when they began
in 1989 with a non-violent protest, it conferred on them on a high
moral ground.
The guns in their and other hands have made them vulnerable to being
dubbed as terrorists. They are losing world's sympathy. Look at the
record. How many violent liberation movements have produced peaceful
and progressive states in recent decades? Algeria, Vietnam, Palestine
and many African states yield ambiguous answers. Vietnam's victory
was more a definitive defeat of American wills to kill more --- not
because of Vietnamese of undoubtedly heroic fight. American will to
go on murdering was sapped by nonviolent protests in the US campuses
and on Europe's roads.
Algerians made truly heroic sacrifices. But could anyone visualise.
Algeria's independence without a de Gaulle? Palestinian PLO, so long
as it pursued violent struggle, achieved nothing. Once it resorted to
Intifada, it got at least pittance.
Violence has endangered that pittance today is a different case;
Israel's true nature --- a fascist state with a racial philosophy
quite akin to herrenfolk, its democracy (and earlier socialism) for
Israelis notwithstanding --- will take some more time to be widely
realised. Only Intifada will force the Israelis' hand into some
concession-making while international opinion and pressure might make
Israel a true democracy for all, with crucial Palestinian concerns
being met in substantial measure. In most other areas of civil wars
in Africa only anarchy has incrementally won.
All this has relevance for Kashmir. Taking up the gun in Kashmir ---
under the euphoria created by nuclear capability --- was a mistake.
Nonviolent protest is far more effective. Violent means are an
invitation to a ruthless government to employ far greater violence
and kill so many that the whole society is brutalised and chances of
progress vanish.
Let the Kashmiris, the actual Kashmiris, revert to nonviolent
protests and demand freedom --- from the Indians who are denying it
in various forms. Pakistan has little role. It can only do what it
claims: giving political, moral and diplomatic support and no gun
running. In the end, the matter has to be resolved by the Kashmiris
and Indians primarily between themselves.
There is no reason for Pakistan to remain fixed on 'Kashmir or
nothing' while India goes on saying 'anything but Kashmir'. Let's get
out of that sterility. Let's be truly flexible. Normalise ties fully
with India. Be civilised neighbours, trading and cooperating, while
differing on Kashmir NMD and possibly many other issues. Create a
pro-Pakistan lobby in India openly.
Let India try to do the same here. Let us both be democracies and
truly civilised by treating our own and India's citizens with
courtesy and sympathy. Let us both progress economically, politically
and socially through regional cooperation. Pakistan's unremitting
efforts to recruit UN, American or any other mediation are
misconceived too; the propaganda points thus gained do not amount to
much in real life. Indians are unlikely to agree to any mediation.
Nor western good offices will necessarily be to the advantage of
Pakistan.
For, most of them will ultimately advise Islamabad to accept the LOC
as the definitive border with India. If that is what might come of
it, Pakistan might as well do it without the pother of international
mediation. At any rate, the failure at Agra might have increased the
American role in South Asia. Both India and Pakistan have to count
the cost of developments that may ensue. Finally Pakistan economy's
current state and its prospects demand a basic change in the national
budgeting. This is definitive. It cannot go on bearing the burden of
both the expected levels of debt servicing and security outlays in
the coming years. Economic expertise of western bankers cannot make
fewer resources much ampler by pursuing the policies they are being
told to pursue. A basic change is overdue. That cannot come without a
revolutionary change in Pakistan's India policy. Will there by any?
______
2.
"Frontline", August 3, 2001
Comment
A worthy initiative
By Praful Bidwai
A major diplomatic initiative does not "fail" merely because it does
not result in a joint Declaration. The Agra Summit must not be judged
harshly or hastily and declared a failure just because the draft
Declaration foundered on commas and full-stops. However one analyses
the fine print of all the disparate statements by India and Pakistan
about Agra, there can be little doubt that the two nations attempted
something new there. The very fact that they advanced the hand of
friendship to each other is noteworthy. This could well herald a new
era in South Asia's tangled history and put on the agenda what has so
far been almost unthinkable: peace, tranquillity and cooperation
between India and Pakistan as they proceed to resolve outstanding
disputes.
The Agra Summit was not Lahore-II, nor a repetition of any of the
earlier attempts at an India-Pakistan rapprochement. It took place in
qualitatively different circumstances and has a unique significance.
The Lahore meeting between Atal Behari Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif
happened amidst tight police rule and the arrest of thousands of
Sharif's opponents, especially from the religious parties. Division
within the Pakistani political class was palpable as Vajpayee and
Sharif embraced each other. This didn't hold true of Agra. This
Summit evoked little active or street-level domestic opposition,
despite the reservations of the Pakistan People's Party and Muslim
League.
More important, the Agra Summit attempted something far more
ambitious than Lahore: rather than mere confidence-building measures
(CBMs), it sought to address some of the root-causes of the mutual
hostility, suspicion and mistrust that mark India-Pakistan relations
and even their domestic politics.
Indian and Pakistani leaders came to Agra with their own conflicting
priorities. Indian leaders wanted to get a series of agreements in
place on nuclear restraint, conventional CBMs, trade liberalisation,
economic cooperation, people-to-people contacts, etc. Very
importantly, they also wanted to get Pakistan to withdraw its support
to "cross-border terrorism" in Kashmir--should Kashmir at all be
given central place in the talks. For Pakistan, the top priority was
to get India to accept the centrality or primacy of the Kashmir
"dispute", or as Musharraf diluted it in the morning of July 16, "the
Kashmir issue".
In the event, the two sides agreed to accord Kashmir exceptional
status as the central or main issue at stake between them. They could
not agree on language and on a consensual formulation on ending
"cross-border terrorism" as a means of and one step towards resolving
the Kashmir problem. They nevertheless agreed to resume their
dialogue, with summits every year between the two heads of
government, and foreign minister-level meetings every six months.
At the end of the day, the effort to produce a joint statement failed
because diplomats from the two sides could not unshackle themselves
from old stereotypes and stated positions. But they could try
again--and succeed. At any rate, it would be puerile to blame
Musharraf's breakfast meeting with editors for the impasse that
ensued in the afternoon of July 16. Unconventional as it was, the
General's initiative did not represent a hardened stance, but just
the opposite. He strained to indicate flexibility and a willingness
to enter into a "partnership" with India and turn this historic
"event" into "historic gains". Terms like "partnership" and "fruitful
cooperation", and tributes to "people-to-people contacts" and "the
high road to peace and prosperity," do not come easily to Indian and
Pakistan leaders. "Partnership", until now, was reserved for others,
especially the US. The fact that they are being used now is
reflective of a change of climate.
This climate offers India and Pakistan a historic opportunity to
unshackle themselves from one of the main fetters upon their
potential development as healthy, pluralistic, open and democratic
societies. The fetter is the mutual hostility that has attended
their relations right since their birth. Hostility has been a major
input not just into their military preparations, but into the way
they define their nationhood, the way their leaders envisage their
future, the way their political systems decide on what is the
"acceptable" level of force to be used against their own people, as
well as their adversary, and the privations they are willing to
inflict on their own people by undermining their social, economic and
civil and political rights.
The constant stoking of hostility has caused a major drain on
resources away from the minimum needs of the people. It has also been
an important aggravating factor in the growth of communal and
sectarian politics. Above all, it has provided grist to the mills of
intolerance. It has helped "externalise" the true causes of their
internal problems.
For Hindutva in India, rivalry with Pakistan provides repeated
validation of the Two-Nation Theory and of the communal proposition
that Muslims and Hindus have altogether different "psyches";
intransigent, "fanatical", "violence-prone" Muslims can never live in
harmony with "peaceful and tolerant" Hindus. Contrariwise, for
Pakistan's Islamicist jehadis, India-Pakistan hostility provides both
cause and proof of irreconcilable differences: the "incompatibility"
of pluralism and Nizam-e-Mustafa, or the peaceful coexistence of the
pious and the kafir.
The failure of the Agra Summit to produce a joint Declaration is a
temporary setback to the cause of combating the "hostility-forever"
mindset so favoured by communalists. Representatives of the communal
Right can barely hide their glee. (Some privately congratulate Sushma
Swaraj for distorting the content of the talks). And yet, they are
profoundly mistaken to underrate the three factors that made the Agra
Summit possible and influenced its far-from-trivial gains.
These are, first, the substantial growth of a popular constituency
for peace in India and Pakistan; second, the support that Vajpayee
received from the secular forces on inviting Musharraf; and finally,
changes in the balance between the Pragmatists and the Cynics in
India's foreign policy establishment. The peace constituency has
grown by leaps and bounds over the past decade in both India and
Pakistan. This is reflected in the multiplication of people-to-people
initiatives-in magnitude, scope, numbers and reach. There are at
least 20 such NGOs, including the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament
and Peace (India) and Pakistan Peace Coalition, the Pakistan-India
People's Forum for Peace and Democracy, South Asians for Human
Rights, Association of the Peoples of South Asia, Hind-Pakistani
Dosti, Women's Initiative for Peace in South Asia, even Soldiers for
Peace. Along with growing people-to-people interaction, there have
been seminars, workshops, and mutual visits among students,
journalists, trade unionists, social scientists and human rights
activists. These have increasingly broken down the barriers of
prejudice. All these groups hold that peace is possible and
desirable, indeed imperative.
Among the most significant of these was the July 12-13 Pakistan-India
People's Solidarity Conference held in New Delhi, sponsored or
endorsed by more than 200 organisations. The Conference was the
culmination of a long process of dialogue and deliberation on a range
of issues. It demanded a negotiated settlement to the Kashmir
problem, involving the people of all regions of Jammu and Kashmir. It
declared that the only sensible way of reducing the nuclear danger in
South Asia is to ensure that nuclear weapons are never deployed. It
adopted a simple, yet far-reaching, Declaration which drew out and
developed the logic of India-Pakistan rapprochement and peace.
There is simply no doubt that the Vajpayee and Musharraf governments
have had to take this peace constituency into account and pay some
heed to it. It is significant that Jaswant Singh, while criticising
Pakistan's initial response to India's unilateral relaxation of visa
restrictions, underscored the centrality of "the people": how can the
"people's" concerns be "peripheral", as Pakistan termed the step?
Vajpayee received flak from the hawks in the foreign policy and
defence establishments, and from within the sangh parivar and the
Shiv Sena for inviting Musharraf. The NDA's boycott of the July 14
tea party is related to this. Prominent among his critics have been
diehard Pakistan-baiters such as Sanghi intellectuals and former
ambassadors to Islamabad (who carry a baggage of prejudice from their
bitter personal experience). It is no accident that certain
individuals close to the Advani camp like K..R. Malkani, for
instance, were openly dismissive of the Musharraf visit and doomed
the Summit to failure.
The Vajpayee initiative received strong support from leaders of the
secular parties of the Left and the Centre, who refused to boycott
the July 14 tea party and who saw the Agra Summit in broad-minded
terms as a worthy cause precisely because of its potential to defuse
India-Pakistan hostility and strengthen the sentiment for
reconciliation and peace. Vajpayee specifically urged them to support
him and help isolate the "grumblers from the Right" in his own
parivar. He also interacted with a section of liberal intelligentsia,
which reinforced his Summit initiative
Vajpayee himself seems to have been influenced by a desire to leave a
positive "legacy". Deeply impressed at the enduring popularity of the
Lahore bus, he probably wants to be remembered for contributing to a
resolution of India-Pakistan tensions and the Kashmir issue rather
than for his Hindutva. The overwhelming support he received from
secular politicians, the intelligentsia, and much of the media has
certainly helped him.
This is related to the third factor. This is the ascendancy of the
Pragmatists over the Cynics--the two broad tendencies that divide the
policy-making and -shaping elite in New Delhi. The Cynics, who regard
Pakistan as irredeemably recalcitrant and hostile, and prefer a
hardline approach, have had to yield ground to the Pragmatists. In
recent weeks, their "pro-active policy" in Kashmir has run out of
steam. The Cynics wanted the government to take a tough stand on
Kashmir, which they believe could be "sold" to the Bush
administration, which is more favourably disposed towards India than
Pakistan. The Cynics believed nothing could and would come out of
Agra.
The Pragmatists thought differently: India can't indefinitely sustain
hostility with Pakistan. This is dangerous, especially in today's
nuclearised situation, which certainly greatly worries the world.
Pakistan's internal problems, compounded by the Afghan imbroglio, may
be worse than India's. But India can't be indifferent to them, leave
alone rejoice in them. A destabilised or "failing" Pakistan is not in
India's interest. Besides, argued the Pragmatists, India-Pakistan
rivalry is a hurdle to South Asian cooperation. So India had much to
gain from Agra. Jaw-jaw is always better than war-war. India made a
big mistake by targeting Musharraf for too long, and insisting on an
end to "cross-border terrorism" as a precondition for talks, say the
Pragmatists. It was OK to do so six months after Kargil. But a
correction has been in order. Agra provides that, and more.
Admittedly, the line of demarcation between the Cynics and the
Pragmatists has not always been clear. Many cross it for reasons of
expediency. But in recent months, the Pragmatists have gained over
the Cynics. That too has helped Vajpayee. Equally, a large number of
people stand outside the Cynic-Pragmatist divide. They are fed up
with the hostility with Pakistan and its accompanying rhetoric; they
want a break so they can return to the real priorities of food
security, shelter, healthcare, education, employment...
The forces that made the Agra Summit possible in the first place and
which strengthened the drive for India-Pakistan reconciliation are
deeply rooted in this society. They are not about to disintegrate.
They must strongly push for a resumption of the Vajpayee-Musharraf
dialogue. There is a whole rich agenda to be addressed. It would be
positively dangerous to postpone some parts of it. What we need now
is a popular campaign and grassroots mobilisation for India-Pakistan
peace.-end-
________
3.
Peace Support Group calls for peace and reconciliation
The President's decision to prorogue Parliament in the face of a 'No
Confidence Motion' against the government and a petition signed by a majority
of the members of parliament calling for an early debate on the Motion, is
clearly a subversion of the basic principles and practices of parliamentary
democracy. The integrity of the parliamentary process is called into question
when Parliament is prorogued for expedient and partisan reasons, a group
styling itself the Peace Support Group has said.
Furthermore the decision to hold a non-binding referendum during this period
is a cynical attempt to divert attention from the blatantly anti-democratic
act of prorogation by executive fiat. In addition, the wording of the
question to be placed at the referendum - "Is a new constitution as a matter
of national importance and necessity needed for the country?" - shows a
measure of contempt for the public's understanding of the issues relating to
constitution making. The objective of the referendum needs to be clarified.
There is confusion as to whether it is purely consultative or the first step
towards the adoption of a new Constitution through extra-Constitutional
means.
The Constitution is a social contract among all the groups and communities
living in a society. It should be an agreed text based on a broad
consultative process as well as a multi-party consensus. In the absence of
this, to even attempt to frame constitutional issues in a year/no format at a
referendum, is to question the very legitimacy of the process of
Constitution-making.
Accordingly, we urge the immediate rescinding of the Presidential orders
proroguing parliament and calling for a referendum. We also recommend the
setting up of a 2 year Interim Government of Peace and Reconciliation in the
spirit of partnership and power sharing, committed to advancing the peace
process and democratic reform. This government should comprise the incumbent
President, a Prime Minister who commands the confidence of Parliament and
representatives of political parties who agree on a minimum programme of
peace and democratic reform.
Our proposal is not to be confused with proposals from sections of civil
society and the polity that favour the setting-up of a 'National Government'
with the objective of excluding minority parties and prosecuting the war. We
totally reject this. What we favour, instead, is the formation of an Interim
Government of Peace and Reconciliation to implement a Minimum Programme which
includes the following elements:
1. Re-activation of the peace process.
2. Constitutional reforms including the abolition of the Executive
presidency, establishment of five Independent Commissions, electoral reforms,
substantial Devolution of powers and a commitment to enhance the protection
of human rights.
3. The strengthening of the existing Bribery Commission and Human Rights
Commission.
We appeal to all political parties to rise above partisan interests and
address the current crisis. We call on members of civil society to defend and
promote democracy and peace at this critical juncture in our history.
The statement has been signed by: Sunila Abeysekere, Radhika Coomaraswamy,
Sunanda Deshapriya, Rohan Edirisinha, Ketheshwaran Loganathan, Paikiasothy
Saravanamuttu, Jeevan Thiagarajah and Joe William.
Sunday Observer
July 22 2001
________
4.
CRM calls for responsible action
Prorogation of Parliament, when a no-confidence motion is pending, though
apparently permitted by the Constitution, is not in the spirit of democracy.
The discretion to prorogue Parliament should only be used for good reason
that is clearly in the national interest, the Civil Rights Movement has said
in a statement.
The referendum is a costly diversion which appears meaningless due to the way
it is phrased, which is as follows:
"Is a new constitution as a matter of national importance and necessity
needed for the country?"
The people are being asked whether they want a new Constitution, without it
being specified what this Constitution would be.
Since all major political parties have stated publicly that there should be a
new Constitution, they should as a matter of urgency communicate this
formally to the President, together with a commitment to actively engage in a
constructive process of formulating a constitution which could command the
necessary majority.
The Referendum should then be cancelled.
This would enable attention to be concentrated on the pressing problems that
face the country, by far the most urgent of which is the armed conflict that
daily causes untold misery to thousands. The people have a right to expect
their representatives to act responsibility in the national interest.
Sunday Observer
July 22 2001
________
5.
[25 July 2001]
PHOOLAN DEVI SHOT DEAD
I.K.Shukla
This woman MP from Mirzapur, U.P., was liquidated in broad daylight
in New Delhi, the capital of BJP's Bharat, July 25 afternoon. Another
feather in the cap of Bharat Mahaan. Old glory restored once more.
As previously in the Vatican Vajpayee had assured the Pope that
Christians were safe and happy in Bharat, there was neither any
violence nor any discrimination against them, so in Durban, Aug.31,
some minister or minion of Bharat Sarkar will assure the World
Conference on Xenophobia and Racism that there is no caste-based
discrimination in India, just as there is no female infanticide, no
bride burning, no violence against women, no forced female traffic.
As for violence against Dalits, Bharat neither allows it nor has ever
heard of it. Such canards belong to history. And only unpatriotic
people resurrect them from time to time for foreign propaganda.
That she was murdered in New Delhi proves quite a few major things:
Even if an MP, if you are a Dalit, you are not safe. So, never try
being an MP. The parliament is for the upper caste elites -
affluent, propertied classes, urban or rural. If you are a Dalit
woman, know your place. Otherwise, you will be cut down. So nothing
could save Phoolan Devi because she was a Dalit, a woman, and had the
gumption to sit as an equal among the lawmakers of the land.
Prior to this Capital mayhem just three days ago a Dalit woman was
gang raped in Haryana by six upper caste youth. None of the rapists
apprehended, jailed, nor ever to be hanged. Dalit women in Tamilnadu
have been burnt alive for the crime of wearing a blouse. In Bihar
and U.P. the crimes against Dalits are a daily occurrence. Not that
other states lag much far behind in perpetrating atrocities on Dalits
and their women. But since BJP-NDA says all this is untrue and
random, and hence no reflection of anarchy or bias, those demurring
with it are anti-national.
Phoolan Devi had to be made an example of. She was a fighting icon
against caste oppression and male savagery in a society which is
abysmaly steeped in hierarchical and inhumane prejudices, in violence
and immorality, in iniquity and degradation, in manifold corruption,
and myriad crimes of monumental proportions. This society refuses to
loosen its grips on the slaves (Dalits) whose labor and honor it
exploits as a matter of right by tradition. Therefore any attempt on
the part of Dalits to emancipate themselves is crushed bloodily and
brutally. Whether it be demands for fair wages, or water from a
village well or pond, or admission to temples or schools, or jobs in
the private or public sector, Dalits must consent to be denied their
rights in perpetuity. Or, face liquidation, their divinely sanctioned
deserts, their anciently ordained destiny. No conversion for them to
escape heaps of humiliations and deprivations. They are born to be
exploited, "enjoyed", or execeuted by the upper caste.
Unless this communal fascist gang, the Hindu Taliban, now in the
saddle, is kicked out right away India cannot breathe free and easy.
It harbors and fosters criminals, many of them ministers. It is
soaked in scams and scandals galore. It has piled a record of crimes
in two years that other governments would take centuries to match. It
would keep India illiterate, intimidated, and terrorized- without
memory, without morals, without civility and dignity, without
culture, justice and freedom. The HTaliban savages must be liquidated
before they liquidate India.
________
6.
PRESS COMMUNIQUE ON MURDER OF PHOOLAN DEVI
The murder of Phoolan Devi in broad day light as she was returning from
the Indian parliament of which she was a member shows ultimate savagery
of the Indian caste system, which tolerates people of the deprived
castes only when they are submissive and not when they stand up as equal
to caste Hindus.
Phoolan Devi had received death threats and requested for a "Z" level
high security, which was refused by the Home Ministry. She has been
killed in the wake of the forthcoming elections in Uttar Pradesh, the
most populous of Indian states. Phoolan Devi was a member of Samajwadi
Party which is expected to pose real threat to ruling Hindu nationalist
Bhartiya Janata party led by the present Prime Minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee.
Phoolan Devi was the subject of the well-known movie "Bandit Queen". Yet
Phoolan Devi was neither a bandit not a queen. She was a daughter of
the wretched of India who had fought against upper caste tyranny against
"Dalits", an Indian word for the oppressed.
This cowardly murder of Phoolan Devi underscores the correctness of the
demand of all Dalit organizations of India and other democratic sections
of the society to take up the issue of caste system at the forthcoming
UN conference on racism in South Africa. This also exposes the hypocrisy
of the Indian government which is doing its best to prevent inclusion of
caste system in the conference.
Phoolan Devi had accepted the invitation of CERAS to vist Canada on a
lecture tour and we were looking forward to her visit after the
elections in Uttar Pradesh.
CERAS, Centre d'etudes et de ressources sur l'Asie du Sud (South Asia
Research and Resource Center) condemns this cowardly murder of Phoolan
Devi in the strongest possible terms and conveys its sympathy to her
husband and to the leaders and members of the Samajwadi Party.
Daya Varma
President,
CERAS (Quebec, Canada)
Phone: (514) 398-3632
________
7.
http://www.timesofindia.com/articleshow.asp?art_id=1670104917
SC ASKS SIX STATES TO END STARVATION AMIDST PLENTY
OUR LEGAL CORRESPONDENT
THE TIMES OF INDIA NEWS SERVICE
EW DELHI: Shocked at the increasing number of starvation deaths
despite overflowing Food Corporation of India (FCI) godowns across
the country, the Supreme Court on Monday asked six drought-prone
states to reopen closed public distribution shops withina week.
The People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) has alleged starvation
deaths in Orissa, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Gujarat and
Himachal Pradesh.
While the apex court was concerned at the plight of starving people,
attorney general Soli Sorabjee termed it as a ``horrendous state of
affairs'' and said there was something ``radically wrong with the
system''.
The court said the government priority, in compliance with the Famine
Code, should be to provide food to the aged, infirm, disabled,
destitute, and pregnant and lactating women who are in danger of
starvation.
A Bench comprising Justice B N Kirpal and Justice K G Balakrishnan
said that it was ``a situation of plenty wherein the officialdom in
the country created the scarcity of food''. The Bench further
observed: ``There is plenty of food, but distribution of it among the
poor is absent.''
``Devise a scheme where no person goes hungry when the granaries are
full and lots being wasted due to non-availability of storage
space,'' the Bench told the government.
Sorabjee said to devise such a scheme would require a coordinated
effort between the states and the Centre and sought two weeks' time.
The court granted his plea and posted the matter for further hearing
on August 20. The court also sought affidavits from the six states,
the Centre and the FCI detailing their response to meet the
unprecedented situation of ``scarcity among plenty''.
PUCL counsel Colin Gonsalves and Aparna Bhat said it was ``tragic
that over 50 million tonnes of foodgrain, as against the required
buffer stock of 17 million tonnes, were lying in various godowns of
FCI across the country but the non-enforcement of the Famine Code had
resulted in starvation deaths.''
PUCL raised three questions relating to the right to food. ``Does the
right to life mean that people who are starving and who are too poor
to buy food grains ought to be given food grain free of cost by the
state from the surplus stock lying with the state, particularly when
it is reported that a large part of it is lying unused and rotting?''
it asked.
``Does not the right to life under Article 21 of the Constitution
include the right to food?
``Does not the right of food, which has been upheld by the apex
court, imply that the state has a duty to provide food, especially in
situations of drought, to people who are drought-affected and are not
in a position to purchase food?'' PUCL asked.
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