[sacw] SACW #1 | 12 April. 02
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex@mnet.fr
Fri, 12 Apr 2002 01:31:09 +0100
South Asia Citizens Wire #1 | 12 April 2002
http://www.mnet.fr
GUJARAT CARNAGE 2002: A Report To the Nation
By An Independent Fact Finding Mission
[ Full Text at: http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex/GujCarnage.html ]
__________________________
#1. Bangladesh: Urgent Appeal on Arbitrary Arrest and Torture of Dr.
Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir
#2. Pakistan: Tick Yes for Musharraf (Sherry Rehman)
#3. Gujarat isn't India (Praful Bidwai)
#4. India: Invitation to Public Meeting - Citizen's Strategy &
Action Plan for Fighting Fascism in India (Hyderabad, 13 April)
#5. India: Hyderabad - "Coalition for Peace and Communal Harmony" +
letter to the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh
__________________________
#1.
South Asia Forum for Human Rights
G.P.O. Box 12855, Kathmandu, Nepal
Tel +977-1-541026;Fax: +977-1-527852
e-mail: south@s...
April 10, 2002
To
Honourable Prime Minister, Khaleda Zia,
Prime Minister of Bangladesh,
Prime Minister's Office,
Old Parliament House, Tejgaon,
Dhaka,
Bangladesh.
Fax: 0088 / 02 8113244, 811015, 8113243,
e-mail : ps1@p...
Urgent Appeal on Arbitrary Arrest and Torture of Dr. Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir
South Asia Forum for Human Rights (SAFHR) appeals to the Prime
Minister of Bangladesh, Hon Khaleda Zia to urgently intervene in the
matter of the arbitrary detention and torture in custody of Dr.
Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir who was arrested in Dhaka on March 15, 2002.
According to the information received, Dr. Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir,
the former State Minister for Planning, was arrested at the Zia
International Airport on March 15th, 2002, and taken to the
Special Branch of the police office. Dr. Alamgir, who was returning
from abroad, was detained under Section 54 of the Criminal Procedure
Code (CrPC), for 'instigating' government officials and employees in
Dhaka in 1996 to join the Janatar Mancha (people's platform)
demonstration which eventually led to the removal of the Bangladesh
Nationalist Party's (BNP) government from power. We have been told
that on its return to power in 2001, BNP government initiated
disciplinary proceedings against 180 civil servants involved in the
demonstration. On March 15, Dr Alamgir an outspoken critic of the
BNP's politics was arrested.
On March 16th, 2002, Dr Alamgir was produced before the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate's (CMM) Court in Dhaka who ordered his
detention for two days and extended it for another two days. On its
expiry, Dr. Alamgir was reportedly not taken to court, but was
instead taken to the central jail in Dhaka. On March 21st, 2002, Dr.
Alamgir's defence lawyers submitted a petition for a bail hearing to
the CMM, and at the hearing on March 24th, 2002, Dr. Alamgir
reportedly complained about the torture and ill treatment to which he
had reportedly been subjected while in detention.
According to the information received, Dr. Alamgir reported that he
had been taken to an unknown detention facility, where he was
brutally tortured. He was allegedly beaten with bamboo sticks by
three masked men, and a bottle was pushed into his rectum.
Furthermore, during the two-day extension period of detention he was
reportedly subjected to electric shocks on his genitals. Although Dr.
Alamgir suffers from diabetes, he was not allowed to take his
medicine, which was reportedly kept in a briefcase in police custody.
While in detention, he was deprived of food, water and sleep, and was
not given a mosquito net.
Following Dr. Alamgir's complaints on March 24th, 2002, the
magistrate reportedly recorded that Dr. Alamgir had been tortured,
but did not order an investigation.
According to several human rights activists of Bangladesh Dr.
Alamgir's detention is arbitrary and politically motivated. The
police reportedly failed to bring any charges against Dr. Alamgir
until March 19th, 2002. However, they have now submitted a petition
for his continued detention in connection with a murder case the
report of which was filed with Kochua Thana in Chandpur (case no.
26(9) 2001, Sec. 143, 326, 307). Apparently the name of the murdered
person has not been disclosed till date.
Dr. Alamgir has been placed in detention for one month under the
Special Power Act (SPA), which allows the government to imprison an
individual for up to 90 days without a formal charge. On Dr Alamgir's
brother challenging the legality of the detention, the High Court on
March 30th requested the government to submit within two weeks the
reason for detaining Dr. Alamgir under the SPA. Dr. Alamgir was due
to attend a court hearing at the Chief Metropolitan Magistrates Court
in Dakha on March 31st, 2002, but reportedly was not allowed to
attend due to 'security reasons'. A custody warrant was allegedly
sent by the prison's authorities to fix a new date. The Magistrate
Kazi Meraj Hossain has set the next court hearing to take place on
April 15th, 2002.
SAFHR is gravely concerned for Dr. Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir's physical
and psychological integrity, given that, he has reportedly been
subjected to torture while in detention and continues to be at risk
of further abuses. Also, the willful denial of his diabetic medicine
has placed Dr Alamgir in a life threatening situation. SAFHR
appeals that Dr. Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir be provided with immediate
and appropriate medical care.
Madam Prime Minister we request you to immediately intervene in this
matter and save the life of Dr. Alamgir. We are sure that you will do
everything to fulfill the obligations of the government of Bangladesh
to respect international standards of human rights. Further, we
request you to look into the allegation of use of arbitrary arrests,
torture and violations of procedural rights as a means of repressing
democratic political opposition.
Rita Manchanda
Programme Executive
SAFHR
_____
#2.
Tick Yes for Musharraf
By Sherry Rehman
The newspapers are right. Back in the UK, most Pakistanis totally
approve of President Musharraf's shiny new referendum. Out of the
75,000-strong community here many of them have done well as
naturalized Asians in Britain, and some have even reached positions
of influence, if not power, in the local and national democratic
structures. In fact, Pakistan can boast of originating two MPs, one
life-peer, and scores of Labour and Tory councillors. They know how
to work Westminster, and hold sacred the rights and claims of their
constituents all over Britain.
Yet when confronted with the paradox of supporting non-democratic
solutions for Pakistan, they become completely schizophrenic. It is
the same man-on-horseback, instant gratification syndrome all round.
The widespread expectation is that one man will come heroically
charging in, and sweep all of Pakistan's deep-rooted problems away in
a storm of non-radioactive dust. Then of course, you have the
standard upper and middle-class Pakistani reaction to dictatorship
mirrored in Britain's desis as well. The reasoning is that Pakistan
is different, somehow. Not enough people are educated and sleaze
seeps out of the politicians' pores. Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto
have had their chance. Democracy votes in too many corrupt and
out-of-control forces, so lets not have any more of it, for God's
sake. Let' s just bring in good, clean technocrats and brigadiers
from all over, and we'll all be better off. At least they will send
home the tidal wave of turbans and beards, forgetting conveniently,
that it is the same people who fostered the religious extremism in
the first place.
And as General Musharraf's filmi-looking posters go up all over the
country for his mass contact campaign, he so perfectly fits the
soldier-as-saviour bill, that many of us can be forgiven for
indulging in Lee Kuan Yew-ish fantasies about him as well. After all,
it would be churlish not to acknowledge that the man has steered
Pakistan through a dangerous time with the utmost skill. In the early
months after September 11th, public opinion was almost unanimous in
supporting his policies. His regime's economic policies were at least
theoretically model, although the effects of that on the Pakistani
street have yet to register. Quite above all that, for the first two
years General Musharraf was in power, his demeanour carried with it a
basic rough-and-ready veracity about it, which convinced even many of
his detractors, that he meant what he said when he claimed he would
abide by the Supreme Court's rules. Many thought he would find a way
of staying in the political game at the end of the three years
assigned him. Few believed that it would be this way.
The reality, my lovelies, is that the few were right. Those who
distrusted dictatorship and all it stands for, were a small minority
railing against the inevitable reification of absolute power. No
elaborate lectures are needed on why this referendum is being
undertaken in the first place. The regime's justification for it is
that it is needed to provide cover for the continuity of certain
policies. Point taken. Many of its policies need the benefit of
sustainability, but the thing to remember here of course, is that no
political government in the last twelve years has had that luxury,
mainly because they are never allowed to complete their terms. Maybe
it is they who should be given that chance, as is the case next door
in India, or any other imperfect democracy. The other hole in this
argument's heart is that the suspension of constitutional norms was
not the only route to General Musharraf becoming president. An act of
parliament pushed through by the new legislature after October 2003
would have given the desired results, although without the certainty
that military men seem to need so much. The possibility of such an
option would only have arisen if Musharraf had created political
space for the two parties he seems to fear most, namely the PPP and
the PML[N].Both its leaders could have been rationally persuaded, in
the interests of Pakistan's future, to make some common ground with
the new president. This route would also have demonstrated
Musharraf's intention of sharing power, which he says this whole
exercise is about. Instead, his continued intransigence about keeping
both Nawaz Sharif and Bhutto out of the forthcoming election is
itself a conceit of someone who believes at the same time, in the
"unity of command."
Referendums are not designed for choosing presidents, nor are they
considered substitutes for regular electoral politics. But that is
not the only objection. Firstly, for Pakistanis, the memory of
President Ayub, and actually much worse, of General Zia, looms
ominously large over the very word. The baggage of two generals who
played havoc with the country will soon indelibly attach itself like
the kiss of death, to General Musharraf, who until this point, at
least had the virtue of standing out as different from them. My
second objection to this referendum lies in the question framed for
it. Does Musharraf really believe that we can't see through the fait
accompli nature of the question to be used on April 30th ?It gives no
voter any choice of another candidate. The blatant addition of a
Zia-like catch to the question, in which the voter is asked to
endorse his policies of anti-fundamentalism, economic continuity,
restoration of democracy, and , no less, the Quaid's ideals, will
amount to the voter equating all these with Musharraf's presidency,
with no choice but to vote yes. But this is only the beginning.
Serious charges of rigging have already started forming a shadow over
this poll. We all agree that the credibility of every polling
exercise lies in stringent rules that protect transparency and
fairness. Well, guess what, the rules for this referendum are
different. The problem is not that the voting age has been promptly
lowered to 18, but the fact that there are no restrictions on which
polling station one can vote from. No voter's list is needed, just
the possession of an identity card. The mind boggles at the sheer
number of opportunities this will provide for duplication of votes.
It gets better. Happily for the president, the possibilities for
multiplying the votes have now gone up exponentially because when a
voter goes into the polling booth, there will be no polling agent
from the opposition or any neutral party, to oversee the bona fides
of the vote cast, nor will there be anyone to stop the polling
officer from stuffing the ballot box This was how General Zia's
abysmally low turn-out had translated into a bumper head-count.
Nobody has forgotten this fact, nor have they accepted the validity
of the numbers. The new Referendum Order that has been issued is, in
fact, very like General Zia's Referendum Order, which debarred any
tribunal, court, or authority from challenging the validity of any
section of the order. Which brings us to another caveat against this
referendum. The drum-rolls for 30th April have hardly begun to sound
when the red carpets, the stage entertainers, the bus-loads and the
gravy train to elicit voters has already begun, all quite openly on
state expense. The manner in which the perquisites of incumbency are
shamelessly being used to garner support for the new president reeks
of another dismal juncture in our history when like the 200,000 local
representatives, a group known as basic democrats were used to usher
in another ersatz, sham democracy.
If I was General Musharraf, I would think twice about turning
the country into a political gulag where only oleaginous loyalists
ruled. The provincial governors are already looking to becoming the
key props to a system which will over-rule elected chief ministers.
Not to be left behind, the Nazimate is working overtime at
reinforcing a system which will bypass parliament. Lahore's Nazim,
Mian Amir, for instance, is only the first mayor to harness his
district's support for General Musharraf's referendum. Many more will
follow, bringing their crowds by the truck-load. In either case, the
good General will be in power for at least five years, backed this
time, with the dubious power of this referendum. The new prime
minister will enjoy his or her ceremonial post, but little else.
Needless to say, the clash of powers that will arise between the
local bodies and the new provincial governments will result in
complete institutional gridlock. Musharraf says this will be a new
era when one institution will be able to check and balance the other.
Fine. Who, in the new National Security Council he creates, let alone
in parliament, will have the power to check his office ? Not anyone
in Pakistan, for sure.
_____
#3.
The News International, Pakistan, April 11, 2002
Gujarat isn't India
Praful Bidwai
Six weeks into the pogrom of Muslims following the killing of 58
Hindus at Godhra, Gujarat seethes with violence, hatred, insecurity
and fear. Nation-wide revulsion in India at the butchery of hundreds
of innocent citizens, and at Narendra Milosevic Modi's lynch-law
rule, remains unrelieved by Atal Behari Vajpayee's belated, largely
tokenist, one-day visit to the state on April 4.
Vajpayee, accompanied throughout his stay by Modi, condemned
violence, especially of the bestial variety. But he failed to condemn
its cause: the state's connivance at, indeed sponsorship of,
organised murder and mayhem. Or reining in the wayward state
apparatus compromised by Hindutva, he lapsed into pitiable
platitudes. On the key question of sacking Modi, he was shamefully
silent.
The demand to send Modi packing has acquired a sharp political edge,
besides urgency. After last Sunday's gratuitous attack on journalists
by the Gujarat police -- during a peace meeting at Gandhi's own
Ashram -- even the BJP's "secular" partners in the National
Democratic Alliance have found their tongue.
If the sack-Modi demand snowballs, the countdown to the BJP's fall
from power at the national level may have begun.
It is ironical, but not insignificant, that this process should be
precipitated in Gujarat, which has been called Hindutva's crucible or
"laboratory". The victims recently placed in the crucible have been
Christians, Adivasis (forest-dwelling nature or ancestor-worshippers,
not Hindus), Dalits, and of course, Muslims.
Gujarat has long been India's most communally volatile state, with
the Hindus sharply polarised against the others. In no other state
has the ideology of communalism, and specifically, the doctrine of
the impossibility of peaceful co-existence between Hindus and
Muslims, struck such deep roots as in Gujarat.
Yet, it would be dangerously wrong to think that the vast majority of
Gujarat's Hindus approve of India's worst pogrom since Partition, or
support the state's role in it. An opinion poll, just published by
"Outlook" magazine, says 65 percent of the people believe the Vishwa
Hindu Parishad, the BJP's lumpen street-fighting arm, and the Modi
government, connived to target the Muslims.
72 percent say they don't feel safe and secure in Gujarat. 44 percent
believe the post-Godhra violence is unjustified. Only 32 percent
think the government did enough to stop the violence; 58 percent
don't. (Muslims comprise 10 percent of the sample. Caste Hindus
account for 60 percent; Dalits and Adivasis for 25 percent.)
However, despite these qualifications, Gujarat does remain
exceptional both for the ferocity of the current pogrom, and the
persistence and frequency of communal violence. Communal conflict has
been, regrettably, endemic to certain parts of India. Yet, over 90
percent of the country has never been "riot-prone".
Only 18 percent of India's cities have experienced communal violence
in the past half-century. Eight cities alone account for about half
the death-toll in such violence. Two of them, Ahmedabad and Baroda,
are in Gujarat. Godhra, also in Gujarat, has the horrific distinction
of being under curfew for 200 days or longer in a year -- in the
1970s and 1980s.
95 percent of rural India, in which 70 percent of the people live,
has not witnessed Hindu-Muslim violence. Villages account for four
percent of communalism's death-toll.
Admittedly, other parts of India do contain some of the ingredients
found responsible for inter-religious strife in Gujarat. But they are
nowhere nearly as developed, nor present in the same combination.
So what explains Gujarat's frightful communalisation? How could it so
completely erase the Gandhian tradition of non-violence? How come the
bhadralok, "respectable", "noble" upper-caste people, including
doctors and lawyers, participated in the killing, burning and looting?
Gujarat is India's only state in which the BJP rules with a clear
majority of votes, and has done so longest. Communalism's origins
there go back a long time. Modern India's first recorded communal
riot took place in Gujarat, in 1713. Throughout the past century,
Gujarat has seen periodic surges of violence. It witnessed as many as
443 significant communal flare-ups between 1971 and 2001.
Four factors explain Gujarat's extraordinary proneness to
communalism. First, the near-absence of a social reform movement
comparable to that witnessed in, say, Maharashtra, Bengal or Tamil
Nadu in the 19th and early 20th century among the Hindus, and to a
weaker extent, among north Indian Muslims under Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.
This made for a rigid caste structure and for heightened influence of
Right-wing thinking in the culture of this business-oriented society
which places a premium on commercialising all human relationships.
The Right grew rapidly under the tutelage of Sardar Patel after
Gandhi's early withdrawal from Gujarat in favour of national politics.
Secondly, Gujarat saw the consolidation of a powerful alliance
between patidar land-owning farmers, and Brahmins and Banias. This
divided "Bhadra Gujarat" from "Aam Gujarat". The division became
irreconcilable in the 1980s when a challenge emerged "from below" --
a coalition called KHAM (Kshatriya-Harijan-Adivasi-Muslim), which won
power in 1980.
The upper-caste elite attacked KHAM violently through a street-level
agitation in 1981-82 against Dalits. This was repeated even more
militantly against low-caste OBCs in 1985-86.
The leader of this Right-wing campaign was none other than Narendra
Modi. Its predominant ideology was Hindutva, the binding cement of
upper-caste unity baptised in blood. Originally targeted at low-caste
Hindus, the campaign soon turned against Muslims, and in the late
1990s, against (the largely Adivasi) Christians.
Hindutva has now given the Gujarat elite a uniquely aggressive,
violent identity.
A third factor is the growing influence of conservative non-resident
Indians. Gujarat has India's highest population of professional NRIs
living in North America. Their "long-distance" nationalism is
especially reactionary, and feeds Hindutva. This NRI community is
typically more orthodox, traditional and backward-looking than its
resident counterparts. It provides role-models for young Gujaratis.
However, an important long-acting fourth factor is Gujarat's weak
liberal culture in the modern, pluralist sense. One reason for this,
apart from the Right's strength, is the weakness of Gujarat's labour
movement. Once militant, this was compromised by the imposition of
the pro-employer Mazoor Mahajan union based on the romantic notion of
"trusteeship": industrialists as labour's "trustees", not exploiters.
The disarming of the labour movement in early stage meant that
Gujarat's elite was under little pressure to make human rights,
labour rights, and other concessions, or to respect liberal values.
As the great historian E P Thompson often said, a liberal culture
doesn't come out of thin air; it arises from the people's struggles,
when workers and peasants fight at the barricades. This didn't happen
in Gujarat.
Over the past decade, the bhadralok's aggressiveness has become
increasingly xenophobic and crude. In Gujarat, textbooks were
severely rewritten to distort history by glorifying everything Hindu
and maligning everything non-Hindu.
It is not accidental that Advani's infamous 1990 rathyatra was
launched from Somnath in Gujarat -- and planned by none other than
Milosevic-Modi. Advani has been repeatedly elected to the Lok Sabha
from Gujarat.
The seeds of hatred sown by Hindutva have produced a crop of fascist
horror and delivered a blow to the cause of Indian secularism and
pluralism.
Unless the Hindutva juggernaut is stopped, some other states could
also go Gujarat's way, devouring Constitutional legality and
undermining the Indian nation's integrity. That's why sacking Modi
isn't an ephemeral, short-term, limited, party-political demand. It
is a moral-political-Constitutional imperative.
_____
#4.
INVITATION
PUBLIC MEETING
Citizen's Strategy & Action Plan for Fighting Fascism in India
Date: 13th April, 2002 ( Saturday)
Time: 06:00 pm
Venue: Press Club, Bashir Bagh, Hyderabad, AP
Speakers :
Ms. Medha Patkar, Narmada Bachao Andolan
Mr. Anil Chaudhary, Vice-President, INSAF ( Educationist, New Delhi)
Mr. Zaheer Ali Khan, Managing Editor, SIASAT DAILY
Dr. Kalpanna Kannabiran, Professor, NALSAR, Hyderabad
(To present Report of INSAF STUDY TEAM to Gujarat, along with
Team Members: Dayamani Barla, Chittaranjan Singh, Wilfred D'Costa)
Chairperson:
Sri B Narsingh Rao, Academician
o o o
Dear Friends,
The communal carnage in Gujarat and the build-up for 15th March in
the name of performing Yagna to start the construction work of Ram
Mandir at Ayodhya are reasons enough to bow our heads in shame. "We
the people of India...." have proclaimed ourselves to be a secular
and democratic republic and thus, profess the right to a life with no
communal violence.
As a national forum of about 500 social action groups, social
movements and progressive intellectuals, INSAF is committed to resist
globalization, combat communalism and defend democracy.
INSAF had sent a Team to study the situation in the rural and tribal
areas of Gujarat, which have remained largely un-touched by earlier
investigations/studies.
On behalf of INSAF, we invite you to this PUBLIC MEETING, where we
would share the highlights of the INSAF Study Team Report, hear the
first hand account of fascist attack on the media and Medha Patkar in
Gandhi Ashram, and build a sound strategy and action plan to combat
communalism & strengthen secular-democratic polity in the country.
Looking forward to your presence and active participation.
In Solidarity,
Ms. Jameela Nishat Adv. K
Rajendran Rajendra K. Sail
National Executive Committee Member State Convenor, INSAF
National Secretary, INSAF
Address : 10-3-300/A/1, Humauyun Nagar
V 500 028 ( Tel: 3535584)
______
#5.
Dear Friends
On 6th April 2002 a broad alliance of organisations, individuals,
trade unions, womens organisations, human and civil rights groups,
NGOs in Hyderabad, came together under the banner of "Coalition for
Peace and Communal Harmony" and held a one day fast, peace rally and
public meeting to condemn the ongoing carnage in Gujarat and press
for dismissal of the Modi government amongst other demands. Please
find as an attachment a report of the meeting, and copies of the
letters sent to the President, Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh and
the Governor of AP .
A delegation of the coalition, went to meet the Governor of Andhra
Pradesh on 8th April, to hand over the letter and resolutions passed
at the meeting.
As a follow up, a meeting was held on Monday 8th April 2002, wherein
various follow up actions were discussed (minutes will be circulated
soon). Amongst these include:
i) A delegation to the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh to present
the resolutions taken at the meeting and to urge him to use his
levarage to force the dismissal of the Modi government.
ii) April 15th to be a day of mobilizing the citizens of Hyderabad
and Secunderabad to contribute in cash/kind towards relief and
rehabilitation in Gujarat. Unlike the Gujarat earthquake where there
was massive mobilization by a wide cross-section of
people/organisations, in this disaster where over 1 lakh people are
living as refugees in their own country- there has been absolutely no
response from the "silent majority". We must break this silence.
Different organisations have taken up the responsibility in their
localities, to go from shop to shop, door-to door to appeal to the
citizens to contribute for the relief and rehabilitation. At the same
time flyers will be distributed appealing to citizens to speak out
against this violence and contribute in their own small way.
We urge you to join in this effort. For those of you who would like
to participate please contact the following telephone numbers:
*3399752 *7155491
COALITION FOR PEACE and COMMUNAL HARMONY
Hyderabad
COALITION FOR PEACE AND HARMONY, HYDERABAD
The Chief Minister,
Andhra Pradesh Government,
Hyderabad
Dear Chief Minister:
We are a group of concerned citizens and organizations whose
objectives are the preservation of our national democratic and
liberal values. We are also advocates of human rights, in particular
those of women and children, and pride ourselves in the multi-ethnic
and multi-religious character of India, which has always projected
India's positive image in the international community.
We are deeply aggrieved at the recent spate of arson and violence
and continuing lawlessness in Gujarat. Women and children are
special targets of the attacks. Women are subjected to rape and
killed thereafter or the earning members of the families are
killed, and shelters destroyed. Currently, there is also an
agitation for the economic boycott of the Muslims. The idea seems to
be to repress a section of the Indian people by terror and economic
deprivation. We urge upon you to use your office to arrest and
rectify this trend and reverse it towards a rule of law. You have
tremendous leveraging position in national politics because the
existing government depends on your support for survival.
We request your intervention in the following specific issues
concerning Gujarat :
1/ There is ample evidence to show that the Narendra Modi
(NM)government, by its acts of omission and commission, and several
utterances of Mr. Modi , has shown partisanship against the
minority community. It has neutralized the functioning of
law-enforcing officers. The NHRC,s preliminary comments are
sufficient indictment of the NM government.. Please, therefore,
pressurize the central government to remove the NM government as a
first step to restoration of normalcy and of the confidence of the
minority community and of the law abiding citizens. The officials
guilty of complicity or dereliction of duty should be severely
punished and by the same token, those who performed their duties
courageously and as per law should be commended and not subjected to
any harassment. Further, the conduct of the NM government should be
examined by the NDA as the government at the center is not of the
BJP but of the NDA.
2/. The judicial inquiry into the Gujarat violence should be made
by a sitting judge of the Supreme Court , instead of by a judge of
the Gujarat High Court as ordered now.
3/ While condemning in no uncertain terms the heinous crime at
Godhra, we feel that the subsequent riots in Gujarat, specifically
the phase that started after March 15, are premeditated and
engineered by outfits like the VHP, Bajrang Dal. They have spread
hatred against the muslim community in a planned manner even into the
rural areas, targeting up to villages having a population of 500.
This has caused the widespread and persisting rioting. This is
nothing but an act of terrorism. We, therefore, request you to
prevail upon the central government to stop the inflow of funds from
abroad to these outfits and ban them, as they have done to
organizations like SIMI. Further, the RSS , the umbrella organization
of the BJP, VHP, Bajrang Dal must be condemned by the NDA government
for its ominous resolution that the muslims must please the Hindus
for their safety. The safety of any Indian citizen is guaranteed by
the constitution, as long as he or she is law-abiding.
4/. These fanatic outfits are attacking the integrity of the country
and are trying to create a permanent divide among the Indian people:
diverting attention from the development of the vulnerable, weaker
sections of society, the women and children; hurting the country's
economy, frightening away foreign investors from this country and
retarding development. These forces are also tarnishing the image
of India as a multi-ethnic, multi-religious and secular country. If
these forces are not checked in time, India cannot live up to its
commitment to fighting terrorism. World opinion, already shocked by
the events in India, will veer to the contrary view that India is
fostering a "Hindu" variety of terrorism, which is a stain on the
image of Hinduism itself, and no less frightful than any other
terrorism.
5/ Please also exercise your pressure so that utmost importance is
given on the rehabilitation of the riot victims, and also do
whatever you can from your relief funds, at least as a token gesture.
About 97000 registered riot victims are in relief camps and another
25000 in unregistered community clusters. Despite Prime Minister's
personal exhortation to Narendra Modi for their rehabilitation, the
state government by its latest notification of 28th March has not
said anything about their rehabilitation, Modi's thinking reportedly
being that rehabilitation of Muslims at this stage would "terribly
hurt Hindu sentiments". Can this government ever restore rule of law?
Further the inmates of camps should not be asked to leave the camps
until appropriate relief and rehabilitation measures are in place
(NHRC recommendation).
6/ Finally, the report of the NHRC must be taken seriously and the
recommendations acted upon speedily and in all earnest and
sincerety.
7/ We would like to reaffirm our former statement that you have a
key role to play in these national concerns. What happens in Gujarat
is also your concern, because it is happening under the NDA
government, which is also supported by you.. We reiterate our
request to you to use your leverage to its maximum in any manner you
think fit, to compel the Central Government and the state governments
of parties belonging to the NDA, to govern as per law.
Yours
Sincerely:
_____
#6.
Dear Friends,
A volume in honour of Dr. Asghar Ali Engineer on his completing sixty
years entitled "Competing Nationalisms in South Asia" has now been
published by Orient Longman. It has been edited by noted India
scholar from USA Prof. Paul R. Brass and noted journalist Achin
Vanayak. Various scholars from USA, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka etc.
have contributed essays to this volume.
This volume was planned in honour of Dr. Asghar Ali Engineer for his
commitments and unceasing efforts for containing communalism and
promoting communal harmony and peace for the last 30 years. This book
can be ordered from Orient Longman Pvt. Ltd., 1/24 Asaf Ali Road, New
Delhi:- 110 002. Its cost is In Indian Rs.525/-. Their e-mail address
is olldel@d...
Centre for Study of Society and Secularism
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