[sacw] SACW | 15 August 02
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex@mnet.fr
Fri, 16 Aug 2002 00:27:11 +0100
South Asia Citizens Wire | 15 August 2002
__________________________
#1. Have India & Pakistan Both Failed In Kashmir?
A Voice From Kashmir - Abdul Ghani Lone interview (Lawrence Lifschultz)
#2. Pakistan -India: Let the Children play (Shahid Nadeem)
#3. Pakistan - India: It's far easier to make a bomb than to educate
400 million people (Arundhati Roy)
#4. Pakistan - India: Candles lit for peace at Wagah border Post
#5. Pakistan - India: Just Like Me (Dilip D'Souza)
#6. Pakistan : A sad August (Masooda Bano)
#7. U.K.'s Sangh Parivar swears by Godse (Hasan Suroor)
#8. India: Hanging by the coat-tails (Shamsul Islam)
__________________________
#1.
Publication * 1 August 2002
Final Approved Shortened Frontline Text 4478 Words
HAVE INDIA & PAKISTAN BOTH FAILED IN KASHMIR?
A VOICE FROM KASHMIR (*)
* * *
-Abdul Ghani Lone-
1932-2002
* * *
Abdul Ghani Lone was assassinated in Srinagar on May 20, 2002 during
a gathering commemorating the twelfth death anniversary of his
friend, Kashmiri leader Mirwaiz Maulvi Farooq. What follows is an
outspoken and detailed interview given by Lone to the writer,
Lawrence Lifschultz, who is currently at work on a book entitled
Kashmir: Is There A Way Out Of The Impasse? The interview, published
here for the first time, took place at Lone's residence in Srinagar
in June 2001. Lone speaks frankly on the ``colonial attitudes'' of
India and Pakistan toward Kashmir and how the Kashmir policies of
both countries have consistently failed the people of Kashmir.
* *
Lifschultz: Mr. Lone, can you describe the history and circumstances
that drew you into Kashmiri politics? What was the process that
changed you from a member of the Congress Party into an opponent of
Congress rule?
Lone: After I completed my law degree I came into contact with an
interesting judge in whose court I was often arguing cases. This
judge said to me: "You also are responsible for what is happening. If
MLAs are trying to intervene in cases, it is due partly to the fact
that there is no one to oppose their activity. You are the first
person from your area to have educated himself. You are an advocate
now. You must come to the rescue of your people."
In those days, G.M Sadiq had formed the Democratic National Council.
Sadiq was the only man in Kashmiri public life at the time that I can
say was absolutely honest. Sadiq convinced me that if we fight this
mighty Government of India we will end up nowhere. Instead, he argued
that we should become part of the system and persuade India to
recognise that people in Kashmir cannot be ruled by force.
I was convinced. I became an MLA and joined the National Congress.
Ultimately, after having served in the Legislative Assembly and
having been a Minister [until 1973], I finally came to the conclusion
that the system was trying to make me cow down. I came to believe
that I couldn't contribute anything to my cause.
I believed then, as I do now, that India cannot retain this territory
by force. If India had any chance to retain Kashmir, then India would
have to convince the people. It is India itself that introduced the
basic principle that the people of Kashmir had available to them the
``right of self-determination.'' The erstwhile ruler of Kashmir
acceded to India absolutely without conditions. Yet it was the
Government of India that in turn declared that this accession would
be subject to ratification by the people.
After Partition when tribesman from Pakistan intervened and began
advancing into the disputed territory, the Government of India
approached the United Nations. The application that India made under
Article VI unequivocally stated that once the territory of Jammu and
Kashmir has been cleared of those that had intervened and peace had
been restored, the people would be free to decide their future, by
means of known democratic norms -- either a plebiscite or a
referendum -- under international supervision. Not only did India
make this commitment, but it asserted it again and again, both
nationally and internationally. It consistently maintained that the
right of the Kashmiri people to determine their future was available
to them.
Lifschultz: Throughout the 1960s, despite the fact that neither a
plebiscite nor a referendum had been held, you still believed that
you could make the "system" work on behalf of Kashmir?
Lone: Yes, we still believed that we could convince the Indians that
unless and until you settle the issue of Kashmir with the people of
Kashmir, it would be very difficult, if not impossible, to run a
"normal" administration in this territory. Either India had to
convince the Kashmiri people that they are a part of India or they
had to give them the chance to decide their own future. Unless India
did one or the other, the crisis was bound to continue.
Lifschultz: What finally changed your mind?
Lone: What happened is that once again India came to terms with
Sheikh Abdullah. This was 1975. I thought that if Sheikh Abdullah
came to power he was still in a position to convince his own people.
Yet, I also was convinced that Mrs. [Indira] Gandhi was not willing
to give Sheikh Abdullah a free hand to rule. In 1976 I issued a
statement saying that Mrs. Gandhi should detach herself from the
local Congress Party in Kashmir, and permit it to join with Sheikh
Abdullah's National Conference. This would have given Sheikh Abdullah
a free hand to rule in Kashmir. Under these conditions he could still
have convinced the people to accept India. For this statement I was
expelled without notice from the Congress Party. I was then a
Congress Party MLA. Nine other [Congress] MLAs supported me.
I also came to the honest conclusion that `the Old Man doesn't have
the guts and courage to do anything.' He had lost his fire. He was
now very much afraid of New Delhi. After having been so long in jail,
he was also under pressure from his family at that time.
In 1977, I fought in the election on the Janata Party ticket and won.
However, within a year I resigned from the Janata Party and formed
the People's Conference. It was the same problem. At that point we
were fighting for the restoration of "internal autonomy" in Kashmir.
Lifschultz: What did you precisely mean by "internal autonomy"? Had
not the provisions of Article 370 already been eroded?
Lone: When the former ruler of Kashmir acceded to India after
Partition, he surrendered to India authority in only three areas --
defence, communication and foreign affairs. At the time of the
accession, Kashmir was a semi-independent state. In my opinion,
Article 370 of the Indian Constitution that was later drawn up had,
in fact, nothing to do with autonomy. Article 370 was a bridge used
by India to erode the autonomy that we originally possessed following
Partition. The Government of India could only legislate on those
subjects identified by the erstwhile ruler in the `Instrument of
Accession'. Under that `Instrument', the Government of India could
only provide administration in the three subjects.
Later Article 370 was introduced. Under '370', the President of India
could do away with these limits at any stage provided the state
government makes an application to the President and provided this
request is supported by the Constituent Assembly of the state. It
also stated that any Act passed by the Indian Parliament could be
applied to the state of Jammu and Kashmir provided the state
government makes an application to the President. What happened was
that this state's governments went on making applications and the
President started issuing presidential orders. By those presidential
orders, our autonomy was subverted.
Various orders were issued. The jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of
India was extended into J&K in various ways. The authority of the
Auditor General of India was introduced. The permit system was
abolished. At the time of the accession no one was allowed to come to
Kashmir without a permit issued from Srinagar. We had our own Income
Tax Department. We had to surrender that also. All these were taken
away. The right of citizenship was also taken away from the Kashmiri
state. By this I mean Kashmiri citizenship. During the Maharaja's
time, only residents of Kashmir could acquire land in Kashmir. Others
could not directly purchase land. They could only lease land.
In 1964, the biggest blow to our autonomy occurred during the
government of Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq. The measure that destroyed our
autonomy was known as the "Presidential Application Order of 1964."
This took away what we call the "Nomenclature." Until then Kashmir
had its own head of state, the Sadr-e-Riyasat, or President, who was
elected by the state legislature, and the President of India would,
in turn, formally recognise him as Sadr-e-Riyasat of J&K. The
qualification was that he must be a state subject-a citizen of J&K.
No one else could become President. The Prime Minister was the head
of administration. There was no Governor then. The first
Sadr-e-Riyasat was Maharaja Karan Singh. He was the first and the
last. The People's Conference, a party we formed after I resigned
from the Janata Party, was committed to a restoration of Kashmir's
"internal autonomy."
Lifschultz: In 1987 there was an election in Kashmir that, in
retrospect, represents a watershed. Many people date the emergence of
the present militancy which has spanned the last decade from the
intense alienation that followed the election. The election is
generally considered to have been rigged at various levels. Bring me
to where we are today, and tell me where we are going tomorrow?
Lone: We are nowhere. We don't know about tomorrow. But at the moment
we are nowhere. You see the colonial attitudes of Indians and
Pakistanis. We have been in "this moment" for the last twelve or
thirteen years. Our belief is that this dispute has taken the lives
of more than 70,000 people. We know that more than 15,000 houses have
been blasted or torched by the Indian Army. More than 3,000 people
have been killed while in custody. Approximately the same number have
"disappeared". Thousands of our daughters and sisters have been raped
or molested. These have been the weapons of war used against us. We
have suffered all these sacrifices.
It is as if we have suffered only for their pleasure. It is as if
there isn't a freedom struggle going on. It is made to appear as if
there is only a dispute between India and Pakistan. Our freedom
movement has been hijacked by the confrontation of these two
countries. So we stand nowhere.
Lifschultz: If you were permitted to stand "somewhere" and Kashmiris
were able to have a real voice, what would a "just solution" to the
Kashmir question look like? Over many decades India and Pakistan have
been stuck in intransigent positions. They tacitly accept that there
are only "two options" for Kashmir and each rejects the option the
other supports. The choice is either accession to Pakistan or
accession to India. Do the "two options" represent a plausible way
forward or does a "third option" exist?
Lone: Yes, I believe if it is left to Kashmiris they will go for the
"Third Option." If a plebiscite had been held within three or four
years after Partition, the results might have been different.
(*)
[FULL TEXT OF THE INTERVIEW IS AVAILABLE AT
Frontline (Chennai, India)
Volume 19 - Issue 16, August 3 - 16, 2002
COVER STORY
A VOICE FROM KASHMIR
Lawrence Lifschultz interviews Abdul Ghani Lone (1932-2002).
http://www.flonnet.com/fl1916/19160200.htm ]
_____
#2.
Daily Times (Lahore)
August 15, 2002
Culture Vulture: Let the Children play
Shahid Nadeem
Will the actors with big moustaches and tight turbans stop playing
their sordid border games and let the children play their
"Border-Border" all over the region, a play that has cross-border
appeal
Independence Day this year (today) is marked by the arrival in
Pakistan of two prominent peace activists from India, Nirmala
Deshpande and Arundhati Roy, to participate in the official launch of
Daily Times. That they have been permitted to visit Pakistan is a
welcome sign and raises hopes that people-to-people contacts will
once again be permitted in a region where governments have dismally
failed to learn to live like good neighbours. The cross-border forays
by peace activists are one way of jump-starting the stalled peace
process: it's time for cross-border pacifism.
Wagah is one place where independence days of both India and Pakistan
are celebrated with great enthusiasm. Flags are hoisted high and the
gates are decorated with ribbons of national colours. The Rangers and
BSF personnel look even taller and stiffer on this occasion, more
aggressive towards each other, more devoid of human feelings. With
their immaculately pressed uniforms and starched, tightly bound
turbans, they are embodiments of empty, rhetorical patriotism,
something which has become outdated and redundant in many parts of
the world. The Theatre of the Absurd which takes place at Wagah every
sunset is perhaps the oldest-running show in the world: 55 years of
non-stop performances and still going strong.
The evening show at Wagah attracts big crowds. At the flag-lowering
ceremony, the grotesque ritual of hate and aggression is taken to an
absurd extreme. The slamming of the gates with violent movements, the
well-trained movement of face muscles to express contempt for each
other, the aggressive gesturing, the exchange of mean looks, and the
orchestrated applause seem like comedia del arte mixed with
Kathakali. This comedy would be very funny if the consequences of
this 'patriotism' weren't so horrendous. The shallowness of these
gestures can be seen from the picnicking mood of the spectators, who
have seen similar performances in their films and TV plays.
A few days ago, a funny situation developed at Wagha. Peaceniks from
both sides had decided to meet up at the border and light candles.
They included human rights activists and showbiz people. In order to
ensure a decent turnout, a Pakistani journalist published news that
Shah Rukh Khan and Madhuri were also expected to be at Wagha. The
next evening, the scene at the border was unbelievable. Patriotic
Pakistanis had converged at Wagha in thousands and the Rangers, like
the march-organisers, were caught unawares. The crowd could not be
controlled. The security of the all-important borders was being
threatened by these Indian-Star lovers. Mounted police were called in
to disperse the crowd and the gates were shut even more firmly. But
the zinda-dilans of the September-City would not leave; they wanted
to see their Shah Rukh Khan and Madhuri. Eventually they did get a
glimpse of Raj Babbar, Gulzar and Hans Raj Hans.Even the Indian
marchers were taken aback by the enthusiastic Pakistani response. I
am not a great fan of Bollywood movies but that day I realised that
artists and entertainers can give a big boost to the peace campaign.
It also became evident that for the common man or woman in both India
and Pakistan, there is no conflict in their patriotism and their
admiration for Shah Rukh Khan and Madhuri.
Similar mood was revealed at a children's theatre workshop we
recently held at the Arts Council. During an improvisation on the
theme of peace, the children were asked about the consequences of a
nuclear conflict between India and Pakistan. One of them voiced
serious concern about a bomb destroying Bombay: " Not Bombay, all our
favourite stars will be killed". When the Kargil conflict was its
peak, as also during the recent standoff, the demand for Bollywood
videos never dropped even in the cantonment area.
Last June, Ajoka Children's Theatre crossed the border to work with
Indian children and jointly produce a play on peace. The play,
"Border-Border," exposed the hatred-breeding policies that encourage
stereotyping of the other side. The play showed two groups of
children who have been brought by their parents to see the Flag
Ceremony at the border and accidentally cross over to the other side.
The police and parents find it very difficult to locate the children
while the kids have a great time playing with their peers on the
other side. The combined children's workshop in Chandigarh was a
memorable experience for the children, who realised that they have
much more in common than their governments would let them believe.
The way they befriended each other was very moving and educative. If
the young and the innocent could see how love and friendship can
conquer all, why can't the grown ups, those in power, see it.
The plan at the Indo-Pak children's workshop was that Pakistani
children will perform Pakistani roles in the play and the Indian kids
will play Indian roles. It seemed the obvious thing to do. At the end
of the workshop, the kids decided that there was no need for such a
distinction. Right person for the right role should be the criterion,
they insisted. That's what happened. That seemed to be the logical
thing to do. When the play was performed before a packed and
enthusiastic Tagore Hall audience in Chandigarh, no one could tell
who was Indian and who was Pakistani among the cast. For the audience
they were all children.
The play was to be performed in Lahore last December. But then the
big players decided to play their own grotesque comedy with the same
title. Ajoka children want to know when they will have the return
visit from their Chandigarh co-actors. I am sure the children in
India are asking the same question. This is the second Independence
Day since the performance in Chandigarh. Will the states let the
children play their "Border-Border" all over the region, a play that
has cross-border appeal? Let the future generation start building a
peaceful and friendly South Asia.
Shahid Nadeem is a playwright and TV producer of repute
_____
#3.
BBC News
Thursday, 15 August, 2002, 15:02 GMT 16:02 UK
Author slates governments over Kashmir
Roy was recently released from a jail sentence for her anti-dam protests
Booker prize-winning author Arundhati Roy has lashed out at the
governments of India and Pakistan for their stance over disputed
Kashmir.
Speaking in Islamabad on her first trip to Pakistan, the 41-year-old
Indian author said the peoples of the two countries had to solve the
problem, rather than their governments.
It's far easier to make a bomb than to educate 400 million people
Arundhati Roy
"My position on Kashmir is that I don't have one," she told an
audience of by 200 journalists, academics, students and businessmen.
"I don't have inflexible policies, I'm not part of the state.
"It's the people that really want - and need - to solve the problem."
The author, who won the Booker prize for her 1997 novel The God Of
Small Things, has become known for her radical political stances.
She was briefly jailed in India earlier this year after a campaign of
opposition to India's Narmada Dam project.
Arundhati Roy: "Deeply suspicious of nationalism"
Speaking at a peace seminar organised by the Daily Times in Islamabad
on Wednesday, she said she was not "anti-national", but against
nationalism.
"To be an anti-national suggests that you are against that nation and
therefore pro some other nation," she said.
"I am deeply suspicious of nationalism. I am terribly worried about flags.
"I see them as bits of cloth that shrinkwrap people's brains and then
are used as a shroud to bury the willing dead."
And she added that both Indian and Pakistani governments used the
Kashmir issue to deflect attention from domestic concerns.
"When we talk about the Indo-Pakistan or Kashmir problem, we are
assuming they are problems and that people are searching for
solutions," she said.
"I don't think this is the case. I think that for the governments of
both Pakistan and India, Kashmir is the solution - it is the rabbit
they pull out of the hat every time they face domestic problems."
'Betrayal'
The author said she has not written any fiction since God Of Small
Things, which sold six million copies in 40 languages, but has
concentrated her energies on political activism.
At the Islamabad seminar she called India's development of nuclear
weapons "the final act of betrayal of a ruling class that has failed
its people".
"The truth is, it's far easier to make a bomb than to educate 400
million people," she said.
The criticisms came after renewed tension along the territory's line
of control, where India and Pakistani forces are massed.
The two countries have gone to war three times over Kashmir since
their independence from the UK in 1947.
o o o
Related Report in the Times of India
The Times of India
FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 2002
Arundhati Roy in Pak for peace
REUTERS [ FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 2002 1:43:44 AM ]
ISLAMABAD: Award-winning writer and activist Arundhati Roy sees
herself as an 'insect' burrowing into established institutions to
force social change.
This week, in a radical step, she has made her first trip to
Pakistan. If she has a message for the people of both the countries,
it is simple: "Don't listen to your governments."
Speaking to Reuters on Wednesday after addressing a peace seminar in
Islamabad, Roy said ordinary Indians and Pakistanis must stand up for
themselves.
"We are all members of an ancient civilisation, not a recent nation.
We have so many things in common and there is absolutely no reason to
point nuclear weapons at each other.
"Eventually we have to ally ourselves with each other and we have to
blow a hole in this huge dam between us," she said.
"Bigots, fundamentalists on both sides can twist things to suit their
own needs. I am terrified of that happening both in India and
Pakistan... It is not about Muslims, Hindus. It's about fascism,
majoritarianism, bigotry, these things."
"The governments raise the rhetoric whenever it suits them, and now
they are sulking because people are taking their rhetoric seriously
and saying: 'how can they think that we will probably have a war?"'
Her comments came as leaders of both countries traded insults over
Kashmir, using some of their strongest language on the emotive issue
since stepping back from the brink of war in May.
Reading from one of her essays at the seminar, Roy called India's
development of nuclear weapons "the final act of betrayal of a ruling
class that has failed its people" and added: "the truth is, it's far
easier to make a bomb than to educate 400 million people."
"This issue of social justice in both our countries is the
fundamental issue, and as long as these issues are not addressed, we
are going to be very, very weak tinpot countries."
At the Islamabad seminar Roy struck a chord, being warmly applauded
throughout by 200 people including journalists, academics, students
and businessmen.
_____
#4.
The Hindu
Aug 16, 2002
Candles lit for peace at Wagah
WAGAH AUG. 15. The India-Pakistan military stand-off notwithstanding,
Indians extended a hand of friendship and peace to people on the
other side through a midnight candle light vigil outside this joint
border check post.
At the stroke of midnight, journalist and Rajya Sabha Member, Kuldip
Nayar, led his friends from the Indian chapter of the Hind-Pak Dosti
Manch and other organisations to light candles. They chanted
``Hind-Pakistan Dosti Zindabad'' slogans about 200 metres from the
Radcliffe Line.
There was, however, no reaction from across the border to this
symbolic gesture attempting to rekindle peace and friendship.
The Border Security Force (BSF) officials disallowed the Manch
activists from entering the check post zone due to security reasons.
Later, talking to presspersons, Mr. Nayar claimed that Pakistan's
human rights activist, Asma Jehangir, led a handful of women to their
side of the border during the retreat ceremony in the evening and
chanted slogans of unity.
Ms. Jehangir was, however, not allowed to carry out the candle light
vigil by Pakistani security officials, he claimed.
Mr. Nayar, along with the former chairperson of the National
Commission for Women, Mohini Giri, said Punjabi and Sufi singer,
Hansraj Hans, and about 10,000 peace-lovers, started the ``peace and
friendship'' journey by lighting a torch at the historic Jallianwala
Bagh in Amritsar.
Mr. Hansraj Hans set the tone for the night by singing ``yeh mere
Punjab ki dharti hai, wo mere Punjab ki dharti hai'', indicating that
despite the Partition, the land of five rivers (Punjab) was still one.
UNI
_____
#5.
Rediff.com
August 14, 2002
Dilip D'Souza
Just Like Me
Deep-seated religious hatreds ... a cycle of violence, death, and
retribution; irreconcilable differences over land and sovereignty.'
Would it surprise you if I said that those words refer to India and
Pakistan? How accurate a description is it of the dreary,
blood-drenched war story our two countries have scripted together for
55 years?
'Speaking only for us Indians: after all, our differences with
Pakistan over land and sovereignty have indeed eluded any solution.
If they are not irreconcilable, they are pretty close. The cycle of
violence, death, and retribution wheels on and on, and not just in
Kashmir. I still shudder at the memory of the man I met last April in
Dehlol, a village in Gujarat. The massacre of Muslims in his village
and elsewhere in Gujarat, he told me through clenched paan-stained
teeth, was nothing but a justified retaliation. Because "they" cause
so much trouble for us, coming over as "they" do from Pakistan into
Kashmir. And certainly the hatreds between religions are deep-seated.
They are getting more deep-seated every day: my experience in Dehlol
is just one example.'
Fit us pretty well, those words. Right? Only, they are from a recent
editorial in England's The Observer, titled 'Peace Lessons from
Ireland'. They comprise a short list of "parallels" between Northern
Ireland and the Middle East. Nothing to do with India, Pakistan, and
Kashmir, yet how familiar they seem. They could have been written
about us.
In a climate like that, whether in Northern Ireland, the Middle East,
or our subcontinent, how do you find peace? What would such a peace
look like? (I'm not even asking the more fundamental question: do
enough of us even want peace in the first place? I can only assume
and hope so.)
Over three weeks in June and July, 36 13- and 14-year-olds from India
and Pakistan (and many more from all over the Middle East) found
themselves thinking about those questions. I write this to give you a
flavour, as our two countries wallow in now middle-aged hostility and
mistrust, of what they went through.
The kids met at a programme called Seeds of Peace. Since 1993, SoP
has brought together Israeli and Palestinian kids every summer at a
camp on a calm lake in rural Maine, USA. In this gorgeous spot,
chosen for its seclusion and serenity, the kids play, talk, live, and
eat together. In doing so over the three weeks of camp, they learn
that those others from across the battle-lines have human faces:
which is the first prerequisite for making peace, which is therefore
the lesson that they are never able to learn at home.
But that recognition of humanity comes not just from playing and
eating and then, having had a boatload of fun, declaring a joint
belief in some universal, but chimerical, brotherhood. After all,
humans come fully equipped with fears, hatreds, and prejudices --
just as much as their capacity to have boatloads of fun. So SoP
deliberately pushes the kids to face up to and explore their
differences, their prejudices. Because it's only when you have
addressed these things in each other, and found ways to understand
them, that you form real bonds. It's such bonds that give you a
foundation to start exploring what real peace might look like.
The SoP idea is that by going through this experience, these kids
will then become ambassadors in their home countries for the idea of
peace. And in those violence-wracked spots, amid the hatreds and
cynicism their elders feel that fuel the bloodshed, these kids might
just be the only hope for peace.
India and Pakistan joined the SoP programme in 2001. This year, I was
one of two adults who took an 18-member Indian delegation to the camp.
I'll admit: I was sceptical when we got there. Just observing all
that goes on around me in my country, I have long grown cynical about
such terms as "tolerance" and "religion" and even "peace". Few of us
know what tolerance means. Religion is so perverted by the very
people who claim it guides them that every religion nauseates me. And
peace? When war, killing and hatred are honoured guests in too many
drawing rooms, I'm not sure any more what peace is.
What was going to come of one set of kids meeting another in far-off Maine?
I arrived at camp bathed in this cynicism, but holding on
nevertheless to a faint hope that the kids would erase some of it.
Very selfishly, I was looking to these enthusiastic, articulate
children to give me new meaning for those terms. That's what I wanted
from this trip.
The amazing thing: I was not disappointed. But it took a while.
When the Indians and Pakistanis first met, they delighted in all they
had in common, and quickly became friends. It was good they started
that way, because there were some traumatic moments ahead. Soon
enough, the kids got into the meat of their time at camp -- their
"coexistence sessions" with the Pakistanis. At these, trained
facilitators draw out the kids' differences, nudge them into airing
their disagreements and stereotypes about each other.
And this produced outrage. There is no other word to describe the
feelings of the Indians when we met them after their first two or
three coexistence sessions. The first complaints we heard were that,
in contrast to themselves, the Pakistanis were "over-patriotic" and
"religious patriots", and how could they be that way at a camp like
this? After that, every single belief they had about Kashmir and
Pakistan -- about India, for that matter -- was suddenly challenged
as never before. The way they regarded figures like Jinnah and
Gandhi. Their ideas about events from our history. Their sense of
being Indian. Their assumptions about everything to do with Kashmir.
And of course, their up-close and personal encounter with that
much-worn truth, that my terrorist is often your freedom-fighter. And
vice-versa.
All this and more changed what had been unquestioned truths into a
morass of hard, wrenching questions. Not that the Pakistanis were not
similarly shell-shocked. They were, and a couple of them were even
reduced to tears. And the facilitators told us that the kids on both
sides had been equally eloquent and passionate about their own
countries: neither had been particularly more or less "patriotic".
Yet it took only a few more sessions of coexistence for the outrage
to mellow into a quiet thoughtfulness. If the Pakistanis have their
own views and hold them every bit as strongly as we do, can it really
be that we are wholly right and they are wrong? (What do right and
wrong mean here anyway?) Do they have a right to their views as we do
to ours? Is there some sense -- even if we disagree with it -- in
what they believe? Should we be open to re-examining our views in the
light of theirs? Are their fears and impressions about us any less
real than ours about them? Can we understand those fears? Is it
really un-Indian, unpatriotic, to even acknowledge the opinions
Pakistanis have? Is it really Indian to believe that whatever
happens, whatever they think, we are right? In fact, what does
patriotism itself mean?
How do we build relationships, find peace, through all these
questions? Through our differences? Can we dare to trust? Can we
afford not to?
In all they learned, but especially by their introspection, the kids
-- Indian and Pakistani alike -- taught me two lessons. One: peace is
hard work, and these teenagers now realise that. Hatred and war are
the easy options, which is why there are enough people in our
countries demanding them. Two: yes, peace begins with an
acknowledgement of humanity. The friendships the Pakistanis and
Indians built in Maine are embodiments of that -- and most of all
because they had not shied away from their differences, but examined
them thoroughly.
They may not have found answers to all their questions, but at least
the kids were thinking about them.
Akshaya Shankar, a 14-year-old seed from Goregaon in Mumbai, summed
things up like this: "I think this patriotism hinders coexistence."
That one line, if you think about it, might just be the story of our
55 years. But if seeds sprout and grow, perhaps it won't be the story
of the next 55. Perhaps more of us will know what Lahore's Fahad Ali
Kazmi now does: "The enemy," he said, "is just like me."
_____
#6.
The News International (Pakistan)
Friday August 16, 2002-
A sad August
Masooda Bano
The writer is an Islamabad-based columnist with background in
development research
It is true for countries like ours where frustrations and grumbles
are part of the life that at least on Independence Day we should
celebrate what we have got and show hope for the future. But, there
are times when it becomes difficult to keep hope alive even on these
rare occasions. This August is one of those times.
It marks an end of a very turbulent and difficult year for Pakistan
that among all other things is notable for the birth of a completely
new breed of violence in the country. The two recent attacks on
missionaries in Murree and Taxila just before the Independence Day
being the reminders of that. And it heralds in an era of equally
great uncertainty as the country prepares to go to polls to elect a
government, which under the proposed constitutional amendments would
either have to be content with being a puppet government or will most
likely not survive. Squeezed between a traumatic past year and a
volatile future promising nothing but political chaos this
Independence Day marks a very sad August.
The rise in attacks on the foreigners and the Christians in Pakistan
is a sad reflection of the wrong policies of the successive Pakistani
governments especially the military establishment. It shows how
dangerous it is to play with ideologies and how they can back fire.
The exploitation of Islam in Zia ul Haq period to create mujahideen
culture, which was done basically to serve his personal interest of
winning US support, is now coming back to haunt the country.
Also, it shows how lack of consultation, and arbitrary rule creates
grounds for civil unrest and divide. After every fresh attack on
foreign or Christian interest in the country, the present government
makes an announcement that it is a reaction to the regime's liberal
policy to side with the West on the war on terrorism. But, when
General Musharraf was so openly siding with the west and soaking in
the praise that west showered on him, and was going around the world
taking photographs with President Bush and Prime Minister Blair at a
time when there was strong resentment within major sections of the
population against the attacks on Afghanistan, did we not expect this
to happen. Of course it was expected.
It was wisest then to keep the association with the west a bit low
profile at least in the public. But, General Musharraf with his
military mind thought he can order and the whole of Pakistan would
listen while he wins praise for himself in the international arena.
Sadly, societies do not operate like that. People have different
agendas within the same society and the whole concept of a leader is
that while making decisions he keeps in mind the various interests
within the society and how to tackle them. Going to extremes
eventually leads to civil unrest and that is what we are witnessing
in Pakistan right now. It is not how much we supported the west, but
how much we published it, that has been the real problem.
The bigger issue is that the same approach of ruling the country by
giving orders is visible in all the actions of the present government
none more so than the forthcoming elections. "Too many cooks spoil
the broth" is the famous quotation from one of General Musharraf's
speeches in the past months where he was justifying his use of power
to bring major changes to the constitution and reserving power in the
hands of the president. But, then the birth of this new breed of
violence in the country is exactly what happens when there is no
consultation among the various groups in the society. General
Musharraf and his team of advisors need to realise this.
Democracy cannot be engineered by order. Its very spirit lies in
descent among the people, the right of each and every individual of
the nation to express his or her choice, where eventually the choice
of the majority rules. Pakistan has to get back on the path of real
democracy where the military goes back to its original role of
defence of the border after the elections rather than spending all
its energies intervening in the civilian affairs.
When one thinks what potential this country had and still has it
makes the review of the current scenario even sadder. Pakistan might
not have had a strong industrial base at the time of partition of
India but it got a very fertile land of Punjab, which was known to be
the granary of India. Any work on the history of partition always
refers to how for India losing this part of Punjab was a big loss in
terms of its agriculture productivity.
Pakistan had a good natural resource base and hard working people. It
attracted a lot of foreign aid from quite early time especially in
the General Ayub Khan period. It registered six percent growth rate,
which was among the highest in South Asia, for most of the early
decades. But, today not only the wrong policies have retarded the
economic performance of the country but worst we today stand behind
most other South Asian countries in terms of our human development
indicators. It has been an elitist model of growth all along where
wealth has accumulated in the hands of a few with no distribution to
the larger population.
Estimates of poverty now suggest forty percent of the population
living in poverty. Sixty per cent of the population remains
illiterate. Similar percentage of the population has no access to
basic health services or sanitation facilities. Above all the
population growth rate estimated around 2.8 to 3 percent remains one
of the highest in the world. This is in sharp contrast to both India
and Bangladesh where successive government policies and
non-government sector programmes have helped bring the population
growth rate down to 2.1 percent.
There are lessons to be learnt here from these countries, especially
Bangladesh, which with its Muslim population has still been able to
implement successful family planning programmes. The excuse that the
Mullah in the rural areas in our country is one of the main causes of
failure of our family planning programme is thus not acceptable. Ways
can be found to win over the Mullah to cooperate in these programmes
provided the real will is there. Just like ways can be found to
tackle other problems. Lack of funds the most often quoted excuse on
the part of successive Pakistani governments does not hold any
ground. The real issue is the abuse of funds, which are available.
In the development literature there is a lot of talk about 'social
capital' nowadays in addition to economic and human capital.
Expressed simply, the idea behind social capital is that voluntary
networks of people are critical for development of a society as when
people come together they develop associations and build trust, which
then contributes to a stronger civil society that can then create
pressure on the state to deliver. The strength of US democracy and
society is today being explained by some academics in the light of
the large number of voluntary organisations that US has traditionally
had. In case of Pakistan if there is one thing that is most important
today that is to build this social capital. For Pakistan today the
only hope is for the educated Pakistanis to come together to form
groups, associations, and networks among themselves, to develop
alternative visions of what Pakistan should be, and then to challenge
the state on these issues. Otherwise left to its vices, the state in
this country will never change itself.
_____
#7.
The Hindu
Friday, Aug 16, 2002
U.K.'s Sangh Parivar swears by Godse
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON AUG.15 . Britain's Sangh Parivar celebrated India's
Independence Day today by resolving to ``advocate Godse's outlook and
action'' and challenge ``every anti-national Mulla-Commie'', a
shorthand for Muslims and communists.
In an e-mail to the Parivar members, Bipin Patel, a hard-core
Hindutva activist and believed to be close to the Deputy Prime
Minister, L.K. Advani, warned that ``every drop of blood needs to be
avenged. And we are ready at any cost''.
Declaring that a ``morally decadent and decomposing nation cannot be
saved even by nuclear weapons'', it said: ``We see the merit in
Gandhi's, (sic) but only after all theology-inspired terrorists are
reduced to dead meat. Till that goal is not achieved, we advocate
Godse's outlook and action. And if, in the meantime, a Gandhi comes
to create hurdles in the way, then that Gandhi would need to be put
out of the way''.
This was attributed to a ``discussion board''.
The mail starts innocuously by asking its recipients to observe ``at
least a minute's silence in memory of those who sacrificed their life
for us'', and then goes on to say: ``Also, let us resolve to
challenge every anti-national Mulla-Commi.
The battle is hard-particularly when the Indians are not united for
Bharat Mata - but not difficult at all. Every drop of blood needs to
be avenged. And we are ready at any cost.
Together, and together alone, we will win. Jay Bharat Mata, and Vande
Matram. Bipin''
This is followed by the Godse bit from a ``discussion board''.
_____
#8.
The Hindustan Times
15 August 2002
Hanging by the coat-tails
Shamsul Islam
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_37746,00120002.htm
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