SACW | 30 Sept. 2003

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Sep 30 05:34:16 CDT 2003


South Asia Citizens Wire  |  30 September,  2003

[1] Now That All Is Said and Done (Achin Vanaik)
[2] Islamist Cowboys rule Pakistan's wild west (Martin Regg Cohn)
[3] India, Pakistan Back to Sabre Rattling (Praful Bidwai)
[4] Arundhati Roy talks about 'The War That Never Ends' (Anthony Arnow)
[5] Ammu Abraham a Bombay feminist speaks out 
against death penalty ... in light of Dara 
Singh's sentence
[6] Blocking of Yahoo groups content still 
continues in India . . . [Update : morning of 30 
Sept. 2003]
Resist Scandalous Internet Censorship In India 
Now: A Plea to Users and Citizens  (Harsh Kapoor)
+ Addresses  and News Resources

--------------

[1.]

The Telegraph, September 30, 2003

NOW THAT ALL IS SAID AND DONE

Achin Vanaik argues that no one was more 
effective in arguing for the Palestinian cause 
nor more accurate in his criticism of US and 
Israeli iniquities than Edward Said

[The author is a political scientist and has 
recently published the book, Communalism 
Contested: Religion, Modernity and Secularization]

In the Indian media, Edward Said's demise has 
brought forth deserved encomiums for a remarkable 
Renaissance-like personality of multiple talents 
who was also one of the world's outstanding 
public intellectuals, never afraid of speaking 
the truth and exposing the lies, deceits and 
hypocrisies of the powerful and their hangers-on. 
Of course, given the times we live in, we can 
fully expect some pro-Hindutva and pro-Zionist 
voices to express their veiled or not-so-veiled 
contempt for Said.

This article will not aim to add to the encomiums 
that have already covered all facets of Said's 
life. I will only seek to elucidate Edward Said's 
vision of the Palestinian struggle, its goal, its 
strategy, its prospects. He was, without doubt, 
the single most important spokesperson (outside 
of the formal political leadership) for the 
Palestinian cause. No one was more effective in 
expounding the justice of this struggle nor 
anyone more accurate and penetrating in their 
criticism of the iniquitous behaviour of the 
United States of America and Israeli governments 
towards Palestinians and their attempts (abetted 
by house intellectuals and a largely supine 
Western media) to cover this up.

The loss from Said's death is simply inestimable. 
From the Seventies, his tireless efforts in 
print, speech or through television appearances 
and documentary-making made him such a 
pre-eminent public pedagogue and spokesperson. 
After 1994, he had the courage (virtually alone 
at the beginning) to stand up and oppose the Oslo 
and then the Wye Accords and to expose them for 
what they always were - a sham and a disgrace to 
any genuine process of seeking a truly just and 
fair peace settlement. The Indian government, the 
overwhelming majority of Indian media 
commentators, and almost the whole of the 
strategic establishment still wish for the 
Palestinian issue to somehow go away.

Any peace settlement, as long as it lasts, is 
good enough. Hence the earlier refrain about the 
unfortunate collapse of the Oslo accords and 
today's constant clamour about salvaging the 
utterly fraudulent US-backed "roadmap to peace".

Said did more than simply demolish the case for 
the accords through his systematic and detailed 
analysis of their deceitful terms and 
extraordinarily limited concessions, and his 
descriptions of what the everyday brutal reality 
of occupation during the "peace process" meant to 
ordinary Palestinians. He also highlighted the 
disastrous strategic-political mistake made by 
Yasser Arafat in deciding that after the collapse 
of the Soviet Union and the Kuwait War, the only 
chance of getting a reasonably fair two-state 
settlement was by relying on the US to play the 
role of an honest broker willing to persuade the 
Israeli government to accept this "final 
solution".

Instead, as Said was the first to point out, this 
farcical "peace process", controlled by a US 
government that was never interested in playing 
fair, was meant to impose a final Bantustan-type 
solution. That is to say, effectively allowing 
substantial and formally sanctified usurpation by 
Israel of a great part of even the occupied 
territories, as well as ensuring through such a 
final settlement the permanently 
institutionalized military, strategic, economic 
and political subordination of Palestine 
("limited sovereignty" dressed up as independent 
statehood) to Israel. Arafat cannot bring himself 
to acknowledge his fatal strategic mistake. Hence 
his continued attempts to restore the peace 
process with US help. Arafat could also never 
bring himself to fully betray the Palestinian 
cause when he realized that the only settlement 
on offer would have meant precisely this. That is 
why today, both the US and Israel have turned 
against him and sought an even more pliant 
Palestinian leadership. While Tel Aviv discusses 
whether it should assassinate Arafat, Washington 
asks it to avoid such talk publicly and merely 
vilifies Arafat.

Said not only criticized Arafat (while always 
respecting his earlier historic role as leader or 
symbol of Palestinians), he provided his own 
distinctive strategic vision. His own long-term 
goal had shifted from advocating the two-state 
solution to that of a bi-national unified 
territorial state with full and equal rights for 
both Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs - the end 
of Zionism rather than co-existence with it. What 
was more important was Said's prescription for 
how either of these two goals could be achieved. 
To those who argued in the name of a so-called 
realism that the only alternative available was 
abandoning the search for either a two-state or 
bi-national type, and accepting a Bantustan in 
all but name, he presented a firm no. The final 
goal of a just peace must never be compromised 
upon, though the means to achieving it could 
certainly involve compromises.

Behind this insistence lay a deep understanding 
of the real meaning of political struggle far 
removed from the understandings of most strategic 
experts for whom politics is, above all, 
statecraft that must obey the golden rule of 
respecting the existing "relationship of forces" 
between various contenders. For Said, political 
struggle was ultimately a clash of wills not of 
arms or of economic strength in which one side 
seeks to impose its will on the other. If 
Palestinians retained the will to insist on a 
just peace then, in the long run, Israel (and the 
US) could be politically defeated as the 
experiences of Vietnam and the end of apartheid 
in South Africa showed.

What was required then was a different 
political-strategic perspective that no longer 
relied on either Israeli or US good intentions or 
behaviour but prioritized the building of a new, 
much more democratic and non-corrupt Palestinian 
leadership, not the mafia led by Arafat and 
others. To be truly democratic, such a leadership 
would have to establish political structures 
giving voice to representatives of the four 
million strong Palestinian diaspora outside the 
occupied territories. Second, it would have to 
give up the morally untenable and strategically 
counter-productive path of attacking Israeli 
civilians and even military confrontation, though 
the Israeli government would certainly continue 
with its institutionalized brutality, murder and 
violence against ordinary Palestinians since that 
was the only way to sustain its occupation. 
Three, while engagement with the US, Israeli, 
European and other governments was tactically 
necessarily, strategically the focus had to be on 
engaging, in a much more determined and 
sophisticated manner, the broader public in civil 
societies everywhere, but especially in the US, 
by playing the Palestinians' greatest trump card. 
This has always been the moral strength and 
integrity of their case against the dishonest and 
increasingly threadbare pretence of Zionism that 
Israelis, not Palestinians, are the real victims.

Finally, this leadership's main focus has to be 
on sustaining the morale and determination of 
Palestinians to continue resisting non-violently 
(and all the more effective for being peaceful) 
by building precisely those links that promote 
grassroots democracy, welfare and development for 
ordinary Palestinians everywhere.

The greatest tribute to Edward Said would be to 
recognize his wisdom by endorsing his 
concentration on the development of the internal 
moral-political resources of the Palestinians and 
simultaneously expanding international solidarity 
with Palestinians as the best way to change 
decisively the overall "relationship of forces" 
in their favour. For theirs is the last and 
longest running anti-colonial struggle of modern 
history. History is not on the side of the US and 
Israel. By internalizing this profound insight, 
the Palestinian leadership can be strongly 
optimistic of making history happen.


______


[2.]

Toronto Star September 28, 2003

ISLAMIC LAW RULES PAKISTAN'S WILD WEST
Elected clerics defy Musharraf in Frontier state
'Step by step, we are becoming Talibanized'

by MARTIN REGG COHN

PESHAWAR, Pakistan-First they tore down the Pepsi 
billboard, because it showed a woman drinking 
cola with a man.

Next, a rooftop ad was blacked out because it 
featured a glamorous beauty selling ceiling fans. 
Now, female ultrasound scans by male doctors are 
banned, to stop titillation of the opposite sex.

Islamic law has come to the wild west of Northwest Frontier Province.

Here in the heart of the tribal belt, along the 
Afghanistan border, voters sent shock waves 
across Pakistan by installing a fundamentalist 
coalition in power a year ago. After three years 
of military dictatorship, the Frontier opted for 
religious rule. Emboldened by their electoral 
success, the province's 
preachers-turned-politicians have decided to 
impose sharia - or Islamic religious law - over 
the objections of the central government led by 
President Pervez Musharraf.

The differences in their political agendas are 
symbolized by their competing travel itineraries 
last week: While Musharraf was feted in Canada as 
a bulwark against extremism, a delegation of 
fundamentalists from Frontier province was being 
warmly received in Iran to study implementation 
of sharia.

In the colonial-era provincial assembly where 
they hold a majority of seats, the elected 
clerics are plotting their next move: How to 
segregate female patients from male physicians 
who perform electrocardiograms and ultrasounds.

"We think that men could derive sexual pleasure 
from women's bodies while conducting ECG or 
ultrasound," proclaimed Maulana Gul Naseeb Khan, 
provincial secretary of the governing Islamist 
coalition known as the MMA.

"Some women could lure men under the ECG or 
ultrasound cover. In both cases, perversion could 
prevail in society. Therefore, to save the 
supreme values of Islam and the message of the 
Holy Prophet, peace be upon him, the MMA has 
decided to impose the ban."

Protecting women from the prying eyes of suspect 
physicians is only the latest measure imposed by 
the ruling Muttahihda Majlis-i-Amal (MMA), an 
alliance of six pro-Taliban parties that swept to 
power after Musharraf's military government 
emasculated the old-line secular parties last 
year. The centrepiece is sharia, which would 
reform the legal code and modify social measures 
to conform with the mullahs' interpretation of 
Islam.

The veil for women is now de rigueur under the 
new regime, male students must wear the 
traditional shalwar kameez uniform, and the sexes 
are segregated. Prayers are mandatory for public 
servants, and the provincial government has just 
announced a ban on musical performances in 
designated public venues to protect people from 
disco and other deviant forms of entertainment.

Next on the agenda is a religious police force, 
pioneered by the Taliban when they ruled 
Afghanistan, dubbed the Department for the 
Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice.

The morality measures have sparked an outcry 
among women who must now travel 150 kilometres 
east to the national capital, Islamabad, for 
ultrasound scans.

"The ruling party is only concerned with the 
female anatomy," fumes Dr. Umar Ayub Khan, an 
orthopedic surgeon at the local Police and 
Services Hospital who is also president of the 
Pakistan Medical Association. "I think this 
obsession is not what Islam is about. I would 
call them obscurantists who are trying to make 
Northwest Frontier Province a theocracy."

Local hoteliers, already hurting because of the 
menace of terrorism here, warn that the music ban 
will push them into bankruptcy if guests can no 
longer enjoy entertainment when they visit. 
"Slowly, slowly, step by step, we are becoming 
Talibanized," complains Bashir Ahmed, manager of 
the Khan Klub hotel in Peshawar's old city.

Ahmed says that next week he will close the doors 
of his luxury hotel - a restored mansion 
recalling Peshawar's glory days as a trading 
centre in the British Empire - because foreigners 
are frightened of the fundamentalist tide.

The provincial government makes no apologies for 
carrying out its campaign promises. In fact, it 
claims a clear mandate from voters to give the 
Frontier an Islamic look.

And that's not fanaticism. That's fundamentalist 
democracy, according to one of the movement's 
most influential thinkers.

"We have promised the people, and that (sharia) 
was our manifesto," insists Mohammed Ibrahim 
Khan, a religious scholar turned politician who 
sits on the province's new sharia council.

In his second-floor office overlooking the 
sprawling headquarters of the powerful 
Jamaat-e-Islami party, flanked by leather-bound 
religious books in a glass bookcase and Qur'anic 
inscriptions on his walls, Khan stresses that he 
is the face of moderation. The Frontier province 
will avoid the excesses of the Taliban regime 
that ruled Afghanistan until it was toppled by 
the Americans after 9/11.

"There were many things in the Taliban regime 
that we agree with," muses Khan, 48. "They 
established peace within Afghanistan, and they 
said whatever was in their hearts."

But Khan insists the Frontier Islamists offer a 
kinder, gentler fundamentalism. "We can succeed 
where they failed," he boasts. "Statecraft is a 
difficult task, but we are learning."

Unlike the Taliban, which barred girls from 
schools in Afghanistan, everyone gets an 
education in the Frontier. And while the bearded 
scholar backs the Taliban view Muslim men should 
not trim their facial hair, he insists no one 
will be beaten or imprisoned for shaving.

The veil will be voluntary, and prayer caps will not be imposed.

"This can be done through propaganda," Khan says. 
"Those women who are without veils can be 
persuaded by the propagation of virtue."

Where the Taliban's religious police used whips 
to enforce order, the Frontier will use words, 
according to the government's soft-spoken 
minister of law, Zafar Azam. As the man charged 
with enforcing sharia and setting up the 
sinister-sounding virtue and vice squad, Azam is 
the new sharia sheriff in town.
----------------------------------------------------
`We are not the Taliban, we are democrats.'
Frontier Law Minister Zafar Azam
----------------------------------------------------
But he is an unlikely enforcer. Azam is 
clean-shaven, boasts that he holds an American 
green card, and loves Michael Jackson tunes. So 
why can he watch Thriller with his kids in 
America, but teenagers here cannot? Azam frets 
that rock videos with suggestive lyrics could 
overwhelm impressionable young people in the 
Frontier.

"Here it is an illiterate society, they need 
education about that," Azam explains over chilled 
soft drinks at the government officers' club. 
"Look, personally I like Michael Jackson very 
much, and I have lots of his songs, but for the 
young generation it is not good for developing 
their morals and values.

"Because of this music, teenagers are thinking too much about sex."

For the law minister, sharia is not merely a 
matter of morality, but offers greater efficiency 
for clogged courts. "Sharia works because it is a 
quick procedure," Azam explains. "In Islam, the 
first thing is virtue and vice. This is the main 
guideline for sharia, to prevent bad things."

As for segregation of the sexes in hospitals and 
clinics, Azam makes no apologies.

"We have some customs for the ladies, the purdah 
(seclusion) system. For conditions like 
pregnancy, it's very bad in our tradition for the 
lady to have the delivery by a male doctor."

But Azam expresses contrition about the 
heavy-handed tactics of Islamist vigilantes who 
tore down the billboard showing a man and woman 
flirting over a Pepsi. There was no need for 
these fundamentalists to destroy property, 
because the government had already pressured the 
bottler to remove the ads.

"This picture was not good," Azam explains. "I 
talked to the Pepsi multinational and they agreed 
to replace it."

But before Pepsi could make good on its promise, 
the hardliners struck. Azam says he disciplined 
the local police for negligence in giving the 
fundamentalists a free hand.

More than 100 activists used stones and iron rods 
to destroy the billboards while police looked on, 
there have been bonfires for videos showing music 
and dancing, and vigilantes have threatened 
cinemas and cable TV operators for showing 
similarly unsuitable fare.

"That damaged our image," Azam frets. "We are not 
the Taliban, we are democrats."

Azam has a point. In fact, many in the cabinet 
are veteran politicians who only embraced Islamic 
fundamentalism on the eve of the last elections 
as a way to win votes.

Like, for example, the province's chief minister, 
Akram Khan Durrani, who grew a beard only under 
pressure from his religious coalition partners. 
Before playing the Islamist card, he was known as 
a secular politician.

Most analysts fault President Musharraf for 
creating the conditions that allowed the 
Islamists to make a breakthrough in the 
parliamentary elections.

Previously, religious parties were considered a 
fringe movement, capable of massing extremists 
for street protests, but never capturing more 
than 10 or 15 per cent of the vote. That changed 
when Musharraf sidelined the major secular 
parties, banning the candidacies of his two main 
rivals in exile, Pakistan People's Party leader 
Benazir Bhutto, and Pakistan Muslim League chief 
Nawaz Sharif (whom he ousted in a military coup 
four years ago).

Encouraged by the military, the various religious 
parties agreed not to run candidates against one 
another in the same constituencies. By avoiding a 
split in the vote, and exploiting local 
resentment against America's war on the Taliban, 
the new coalition won a two-thirds majority of 
seats.

Foreign diplomats and local analysts say 
Musharraf has opened a Pandora's box in Pakistani 
politics. The religious parties that the army had 
expected to be compliant are confronting him with 
their sharia strategy.

"The president was so hellbent on destroying the 
two (mainline) parties that he didn't realize the 
consequences of fragmenting the secular vote," 
says Aamer Ahmed Khan, editor of The Herald 
newsmagazine.

Now, Musharraf is vowing to block the province's 
plans for sharia if they impinge on federal 
jurisdiction. But the mullahs are not intimidated.

Khan, of the Jamaat-e-Islami party that dominates 
the Frontier coalition, points out that Musharraf 
has backed down from his earlier pledge to 
regulate Pakistan's controversial religious 
seminaries, known as madrassas. Singled out as a 
breeding ground for extremism, most of the 10,000 
madrassas have ignored the government's authority 
with impunity.

"The government has retreated and the madrassas 
have won," Khan asserts. "There is rage in the 
madrassas against Pervez Musharraf, and he felt 
the power of the madrassas."

But if the fundamentalists won power through 
political expediency and military manipulation, 
they may ultimately alienate their electoral base 
by misgoverning, local analysts predict. The 
appeal of their religious garb is wearing thin 
amidst the mundane realities of politics.

"After one year in power people are noticing that 
the mullahs who used to ride on bicycles are now 
driving around in fancy cars," says Shamim 
Shahid, Peshawar bureau chief of The Nation 
daily. "Unemployment is high, and povery is 
increasing."

The Frontier's flirtation with fundamentalism 
could be short-lived if the mullahs fail to 
revive a moribund economy, tempering the popular 
appetite for religious radicalism.

"People are fed up because they are not 
delivering," says Afrasiab Khattak, a long-time 
human rights activist who predicts his secular 
Awami National Party will make a comeback when 
people tire of religious obsessions.

"The mullahs are discrediting themselves with 
fundamentalism, because people want education, 
jobs and economic development .... This is an 
infantile disorder that I hope we can get over."

-
RIAZ KHAN/AP PHOTO
A police officer directs a man to smear away the 
faces of actresses on a movie poster in Peshawar, 
Pakistan earlier this month. The provincial 
government, dominated by religious hardliners, 
has brought its brand of Islamic law to the 
country's Northwest Frontier.

______


[3]

Inter Press  Service
September 27, 2003

SOUTH ASIA:
India, Pakistan Back to Sabre Rattling

Commentary - By Praful Bidwai

NEW DELHI, Sep 26 (IPS) - South Asian nuclear 
rivals India and Pakistan have again crossed 
swords and revived their barely-suppressed mutual 
hostility through verbal duels between Prime 
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and President Gen 
Pervez Musharraf.

The only difference is that, this time around, 
the duelling venue is the United Nations in New 
York and events on the sidelines of the General 
Assembly session, which both leaders have 
addressed in recent days. The two states have 
also moved closer toward deploying their nuclear 
weapons and missiles. This highlights the 
heightened danger from any new confrontation that 
may begin between India and Pakistan. Barely five 
months ago, Vajpayee held out ''the hand of 
friendship'' to Pakistan from Srinagar in the 
Kashmir Valley. He invited Pakistan to walk the 
path of peace and reconciliation. Musharraf and 
other Pakistani leaders responded warmly to the 
offer, the first after their 10 months-long 
confrontation - consisting of the deployment of 
one million soldiers between them -- ended 11 
months ago. However, this Wednesday, Musharraf at 
the United Nations tore into India's position on 
Kashmir and attacked New Delhi for its ''brutal 
suppression of the Kashmiris' demand for 
self-determination and freedom from Indian 
occupation'' while urging the United Nations and 
the major powers to intervene to resolve the 
''dangerous'' dispute. In a tat-for-tat reply the 
next day, Vajpayee assailed Pakistan for 
supporting and using ''cross-border terrorism'' 
as ''a tool of blackmail''.

He also accused Musharraf of having made ''a 
public admission for the first time that Pakistan 
is sponsoring terrorism in à Kashmir. After 
claiming that there is an indigenous struggle in 
Kashmir, he has offered to encourage a general 
cessation of violence à in return for 'reciprocal 
obligations and restraints'.'' Musharraf 
demanded, without naming India, that ''states 
which occupy and suppress other peoples, and defy 
the resolutions of the (Security) Council, have 
no credentials to aspire for (its) permanent 
membership''.

Indian leaders dismissed these remarks as 
''rubbish'' and the result of Pakistan's ''annual 
itch'' on Kashmir.

Vajpayee countered: ''Most U.N. members today 
recognise the need for an enlarged and 
restructured Security Council, with more 
developing countries as à members''. This 
vocalised India's aspiration for a permanent 
Security Council seat. How has this degeneration 
into mutually hostile rhetoric come about? 
Broadly, it has involved three processes playing 
themselves out over the past five months. First, 
India and Pakistan have consciously tried to 
throttle growing and exuberant people-to-people 
or civil society contacts between their two 
countries. Ever since the Lahore-Delhi bus route, 
suspended in January last year, was recently 
resumed, there have been a large number of visits 
of friendly citizens' delegations, businessmen, 
schoolchildren's groups, and journalists' 
organisations as well as parliamentarians' 
conferences.

These were many steps ahead of the extremely 
slow-paced, reluctant and very guarded 
official-level exchanges. Now both countries, 
especially Pakistan, have clamped down on such 
visits through the simple expedient of denying 
visas to each other's citizens. The worst cases 
of such denial are the cancellation of a jurists' 
and lawyers' delegation, and a high-powered visit 
by Indian businessmen. Secondly, the two 
governments have quibbled over the sequence and 
content of the steps to be taken for normalising 
bilateral relations. They restored 
ambassador-level contacts and restarted the bus 
service. But they failed to reach an agreement on 
the resumption of severed air and rail links or 
trade. India made the restoration of rail links 
conditional upon the resumption of flights 
between the two countries' cities as well as free 
passage through their airspace.

Pakistan, in turn, insisted that air links could 
not be resumed unless India assured it that it 
would not unilaterally suspend overflights, as it 
did last year, and earlier, in the 1971 
Bangladesh war. The talks held late month 
collapsed. But the third, and most important, 
process involved a bloody-minded refusal by both 
establishments to make sincere attempts to remove 
mutual misunderstanding, build confidence and 
take such unconditional steps as they could 
without compromising their positions.

It is as if both had vowed to ensure that the 
tentative peace initiative begun in mid-April 
would collapse. They increasingly made 
self-fulfilling prophesies of doom and laid down 
conditions that were destined not to be realised. 
Thus, India has over the past few weeks hardened 
its insistence that there could be no meaningful 
dialogue with Pakistan until ''cross-border 
terrorism'' is completely ended.

Pakistan in turn has questioned India's 
willingness to discuss the Kashmir issue and 
hinted that terrorist activity across the border 
would not stop until India's repression in 
Kashmir ends. Islamabad claims that the 
separatist militancy in Kashmir is fully 
indigenous and that it only lends it ''moral and 
political support''. But its general credibility 
on this issue is low. Islamabad made an identical 
claim in respect of the Taliban too, although it 
virtually created it, trained it and infiltrated 
it into Afghanistan in the early 1990s.

There is pretty strong evidence that Islamabad's 
secret service cut off support to Kashmiri 
militants some months ago. But India claims that 
this was revived in recent weeks. There is no 
independent verification of this. Underlying the 
failure to negotiate reconciliation and 
normalisation is deep-seated resentment and 
suspicion on both sides, compounded by domestic 
political considerations.

India is ruled by its most right-wing government 
in 56 years, led by a strongly Islamophobic 
party, which often equates terrorism with 
Pakistan and Islam. In Pakistan, Musharraf faces 
a tough Islamist opposition that accuses him of 
having sold out on Kashmir. Amid the mounting 
India-Pakistan rivalry come intensified 
preparations in both countries to further build 
their missile programmes and fissile-material 
stockpiles and to proceed toward the deployment 
of nuclear-tipped missiles. On Sep. 1, India's 
newly formed Nuclear Control Authority held its 
first-ever meeting and reviewed the arrangements 
in place for the ''strategic forces programme''. 
It took ''a number of decisions on further 
development of the programme'', which will 
''consolidate India's nuclear deterrence''. 
Exactly two days later, in a tit-for-tat 
response, Pakistan too held a meeting of its 
National Control Authority. This decided to make 
''qualitative upgrades'' in the nuclear 
programme. Since then, the Indian defence 
ministry has confined that it is to 
''operationalise'' the nuclear-capable 
intermediate-range Agni missile and that it has 
sanctioned the raising of two missile groups.

Independent international experts believe that 
Pakistan is currently more advanced than India so 
far as the deployment-readiness of missiles goes. 
Both countries now have short and medium-range 
missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads and 
reaching each other's cities in less than 10 
minutes. There are no worthwhile 
crisis-prevention and -crisis-diffusion or 
confidence-building measures in place between 
India and Pakistan. They are suspicious of each 
other's nuclear doctrines and have not hesitated 
to resort to nuclear blackmail. During the Kargil 
war of 1999, they exchanged nuclear threats no 
fewer than 13 times. More recently, in their 10 
month-long eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation, they 
came perilously close at least twice to actual 
combat. India threatened conventional surgical 
strikes and a ''limited war''. Pakistan warned 
that any war would escalate to the nuclear plane. 
With Kashmir as the flashpoint, the threat of 
Nuclear Armageddon now looms larger over South 
Asia. (END/2003)


______


[4]

http://war-times.org/issues/12art2.html

Arundhati Roy talks about
'The War That Never Ends'

By Anthony Arnow

Arundhati Roy is the author of the award-winning novel The God of Small
Things and two books of essays, War Talk and Power Politics. Roy, who lives
in New Delhi, received the 2002 Lannan Prize for Cultural Freedom.

Q. THE WAR ON IRAQ HAS BECOME AN OCCUPATION. IS IRAQ A NEW COLONY?

Yes, but it's proving to be a pretty recalcitrant one. Maybe we should
rethink the notion that Iraq has been "conquered." American soldiers are
dying every day, more now than during the war.

Q. THE U.S. GOVERNMENT HAS BEEN THREATENING IRAN, SYRIA AND NORTH KOREA. DO
YOU THINK IRAQ WAS JUST A PRELUDE?

In this particular chapter of War and Empire, the war on Afghanistan was the
real prelude. Basically "The War on Terror" is Bush's perfect war, the war
that never ends. The weapons deals that never stop. The oil fields that
never dry up.

But maybe those who supported the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were too
quick to declare victory. In both countries now, U.S. troops are bogged down
in a kind of quick sand. That's why the U.S. government is trying to coerce
other countries like India and Pakistan to clean up the mess it has left
behind.

If the United States now attacks Iran, Syria, or North Korea, its troops
will be further strung out across the globe. But then the physics of Empire
seems to be encrypted in some way--overreach and implode. Maybe that's what
will happen. But the downside is that the U.S. arsenal of nuclear weapons
might ensure that the American Empire is the last empire the human race will
ever know.

Q. HALLIBURTON JUST ANNOUNCED INCREASED PROFITS LARGELY BECAUSE OF ITS IRAQ
OPERATIONS. WHO'S PROFITING FROM THIS WAR AND WHO ISN'T?

Halliburton is an old player in Iraq. It's not every corporation that can
boast of having the army and the entire military might of the most powerful
country on earth at its disposal, risking life and limb in order to increase
its margins of profit.

If I were a U.S. soldier, risking my life and sanity in the 100-plus-degree
deserts of Iraq, I'd be asking some pretty serious questions of the CEOs of
companies like Halliburton. How much do you earn? How much do I earn? What
do you risk? What do I risk?

Equally, if I were a student, or a school teacher, or a health worker or a
single mother in the United States, reading about the huge cuts in public
spending, I'd be asking a very simple question about this war: Who pays, who
profits?

I think what I find most insulting of all is the complete confidence with
which George Bush the Lesser and his henchmen do what they do, assuming that
American people are just plain stupid, and that public memory is fickle.

America's poor are being exploited and put on the frontlines to ensure
further profits for America's rich. It's for this reason that it's
ridiculous and self-defeating to be "anti-American." America is not one
homogenous mass of brutality.

One-fifth of the armed forces are African American. I don't imagine anywhere
close to one fifth of the profits of this war go to African American people.
Asians and Latinos are in the army, hoping to get citizenship. What a great
system. Get the Blacks, Asians, Latinos, and poor whites to fight your
boardroom battles for you


Q. IRAQ IS BEING OPENED UP FOR PRIVATIZATION IN THE NAME OF DEMOCRACY. WHAT
IS PRIVATIZATION ABOUT?

It's quite unbelievable. The kinds of things that are being done these days
in the name of "democracy" would be laughable if it weren't so savage.
Privatization is the anti-thesis of democracy. It is the process of
transferring public assets, held in trust for the public good, to private
companies to amass private profit. It is simply unacceptable.

Q. SOLDIERS AND THEIR FAMILIES ARE SPEAKING OUT AGAINST THE OCCUPATION. WILL
THIS HELP RALLY INTERNATIONAL OPPOSITION?

I think speaking out against the occupation is the bravest thing that a
soldier can do. I have always admired the U.S. soldiers who spoke out
against the Vietnam War. In fact, in places like India, when people get
randomly racist and anti-American, I always ask them: When do you last
remember Indian soldiers speaking out against a war, any war, in India?

When soldiers speak out, people really sit up and listen. I cannot think of
a better way of rallying international opposition to the occupation. To
those American soldiers who have had the courage to speak out, I send my
heartfelt salaams.

Q. PRESIDENT BUSH HAS ASKED INDIA TO SEND TROOPS TO HELP "CONTROL" IRAQ.
WHAT IS YOUR REACTION?

Bush probably knows that rightwing religious fundamentalists, regardless of
what religion they subscribe to, are brothers in arms. George Bush, Osama
bin Laden, Ariel Sharon, the mullahs of Pakistan and the L.K. Advani's and
Narendra Modi's of India have no trouble understanding each other.

In India, the present government is not just right wing, it is skating very
close to fascism. For the first time in the history of independent India,
the Indian government (the coalition led by the Bharatya Janata Party) is
trying hard to align itself with the U.S.-Israel axis. It is not a
coincidence that the massacre of Muslims in Gujarat, conducted with the
brazen collusion of the government and the police, took place so soon after
Sept. 11. Neither is it a coincidence that the case is closed
internationally, because killing Muslims now, after Sept. 11 is somehow seen
as acceptable.

If Indian troops aren't sent to Iraq, the reason won't be a lack of will on
the part of the Indian government. It will be because the proposal has
caused serious outrage among Indian people, a majority of whom were also
incensed by the war in Iraq.


______


[5.]

[ Edited version of E-mail Post forwarded to some list serves]

[...]
Re:  Statement of the Evangelical Fellowship of India on Dara Singh's sentence
Date: Sat, 27 Sep 2003 15:49:16 +0530
From: Ammu Abraham (Women's Centre, Bombay)

Friends,

Many of us associated with the movement to uphold 
the human rights of all and to promote greater 
humanism are opposed to the death penalty, 
whatever the guilt. A few years back, India's 
Deputy PM, L.K.Advani had promoted the idea that 
the death penalty should be introduced in the 
rape law of the country. (This proposal did not 
first come from L.K.Advani but from a woman Rajya 
Sabha member from the Congress-I). The feminists 
of this country took the initiative to oppose 
this move and also to register the fact that many 
of us are opposed to the death penalty per se.

My heart shared the hurt of Mrs Gladys Steines, 
when her family was so brutally done away with. I 
felt so moved, and was pleased for once, to have 
been born a Christian, when she knelt and said 
with tears in her eyes that she forgives those 
who did it. Genuine forgiveness does not come 
easy; it takes a lot of pain and transcendence. 
Unlike many activists in Mumbai, I admired Mrs. 
Steines for it, because her pain and her 
genuiness were both obvious. I understand that 
her forgiveness is not a legal matter and I would 
not agree that it should be.

  The problem is that the legal system is a human 
system. Its human justiceŠand it is capable of 
error. Its the best that we could produce, but it 
is still capable of error. Should a life be taken 
by the state, on the basis of it? What if 5 years 
after the death penalty is executed, totally 
convincing new evidence should prove the executed 
person innocent beyond all reasonable doubt? Can 
anyone then bring that life back? Of course not. 
It is for this reason that I oppose the death 
penalty, never mind how 'rare' the offence.

What is the meaning of "rarest of rare" in a 
country in some parts of which people are lynched 
on suspicion that they took the life of cattle, 
for food or for a livelihood, and the guilty then 
go unpunished? Or for that matter, what is the 
meaning of it in Western, Christian majority 
countries, where doctors are murdered for 
aborting an embryo and the govt thinks nothing of 
bombing or starving to death millions of children 
through sanctions?

Let us not, in our anti-communalist fervour, 
which certainly cheers me, allow anger to carry 
us away. Let us all come together to write for a 
Presidential cancellation of the death penalty 
for Dara Singh and the other accused, and use 
this opportunity to ask Parliament that the death 
penalty be removed

altogether. Dear [...], you who have been so 
relentlessly an anti-communalist and anti-fascist 
could perhaps take the lead in this? I ask this 
because I noticed your piece [...] about the 
judgement.

With my warm regards to all,
Ammu Abraham, Women's Centre, Bombay

o o o

Press Statement by the Evangelical Fellowship of India

  Judgment of the Hon’ble Court, Orissa awarding a 
death sentence  to Dara Singh and life sentence 
to the accomplices

  Even as the law of the land finally condemns to 
death Dara Singh  for the brutal killing of 
Graham Stuart Staines and his two  innocent 
children, Philip and Timothy in Manoharpur, 
Baripada,  Orissa on the 23rd of January 1999, we 
at the Evangelical  Fellowship of India take this 
moment to condemn the growing  hatred and 
intolerance towards the minority communities.

  Seeing the law catch up with those who cut short 
three innocent  lives, it is hoped that this 
measure will serve as a deterrent  to those who 
continue to persecute minorities.

  In spite of this being the ‘rarest of rare’ case 
deserving the  death penalty, the sentencing of 
Dara Singh would not bring  the necessary 
healing, which was initiated by the forgiveness 
of Mrs. Gladys Staines.

  Dara Singh is a product of a systematic hate 
campaign  unleashed against the minority 
communities by the  perpetrators of the 
ideologies of hatred.

  Appropriate steps need to be taken by both 
government and civil  society that reconciliation 
and healing instead of hatred flourishes  which 
was the mission of Graham Stuart Staines

  Sd/-

  Rev. Richard Howell

  General Secretary-EFI

______

[6]

Blocking of Yahoo groups content still continues in India . . .
[Update : morning of 30 Sept. 2003]

RESIST SCANDALOUS INTERNET CENSORSHIP IN INDIA NOW
A Plea to Users and Citizens  +  resources and news

Harsh Kapoor

A growing number of internet users in India have 
vigorously and actively protested against,  the 
blocking  yahoo groups;  pushing ISPs and the 
govt of India to take note.  VSNL one of the 
biggest Internet service providers lifted the ban 
on 27th September 2003, but the blocking by other 
important ISPs still remains in place (i.e. till 
the afternoon of 29 September 2003) for users at 
Dishnet etc.

It is important to keep up the pressure to rally 
all our forces to force the remaining ISP's and 
the govt to retreat.  This is indeed a great 
opportunity for us to push the govt and also the 
ISP's like Dishnet  who seem to have internalised 
the great security mantras of the Indian State.

This whole episode, smacks of utter disregard for 
people's rights as citizens and for their rights 
as consumers. While the government of India 
continually lectures the world about our being 
some larger than life information economy 
superpower, it is deeply undermining the very 
basis on which the conditions for a domestic 
'information driven economy'  to flourish, by 
regimenting, and controlling information for 
consumption and leisure . . .

The past record of the Indian state of invoking 
'national security' regarding internet access and 
control speaks for itself, in 1999 during the 
heat off the Kargil war, the leading Pakistani 
daily was blocked by VSNL the then leading govt 
run internet service provider.

Indian Parliament passed the draconian 
Information Technology Act in May 2000 to target 
'cybercrime', which it defines as unauthorised 
access to electronic data. Cybercafés and homes 
of Internet users can be searched at any time 
without a warrant on suspicion of cybercrime and 
those who set up "anti-Indian" websites can be 
jailed for five years.

Bombay Police announced in May 2001 that anyone 
wanting to use a cybercafé there would need to 
show an ID, driving licence or student card or 
for foreigners a passport or plane ticket.

POTO, the anti-terrorist law of 2001(the 
Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance) was brought in 
the wake of the 11 September attacks, allows the 
government to monitor all kinds of electronic 
communications, including personal e-mail, and 
voice data without legal restriction.

You will recall how one of India's leading 
independent voices in the media Tehelka.com was 
shamelessly victimised following its revelations 
about the corruption in defence sales. For two 
years, the Tehelka was harassed and hounded, and 
the web site's debts grew to a point of collapse.

Police in New Delhi arrested the journalist 
Iftikhar Gilani, New Delhi bureau chief of the 
Kashmir Times  on charges of spying for Pakistan 
on 7 September 2002 his grave crime was 
downloading an article from the Internet, which 
was already freely available in print in 
libraries in India. Senior officials of the 
Indian army testified in the courts that he had 
no sensitive information.

All this has happened and concerned citizens and 
rights groups have taken up these issues in part. 
But somehow human rights community in India 
havent gotten organised to work on issues of 
Cyber rights and shrinking freedom and 
restrictions with regards to electronic data 
surveillance and Internet censorship.

This current crisis, is an opportunity for us to 
organise a platform of Indian Internet users to 
take up not only the current ban but start a 
regular national fora to lobby for civil 
liberties and rights campaign for internet users. 
The Internet is a full fledged extension of the 
public sphere and public space.

This is an invitation to rights activists in 
India to take up these issues and not leave them 
to techies. Its not just techies who use 
computers, and computers are slowly spreading to 
all levels.   So do take note.

o o o

Posted below are addresses of the officials and 
bodies to whom people must write to protest or to 
seek their intervention re the current Internet 
censorship in India.

Arun Shourie
(Minister  of Communications & Information Technology & Disinvestment)
Email : ashourie at nic.in

Shri Ravi Shankar Prasad
(Minister of Information and Broadcasting)
E-Mail: ravis at sansad.nic.in
Phone: (91) 23384340, 23384782 Fax : (91) 23782118

Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In)
www.mit.gov.in/cert/

India's Department of Telecom
www.dotindia.com/
ddgir at sancharnet.in

The Internet Service Providers Association of India (ISPAI)
www.ispai.com/

====

NEWS REPORTS AND RESOURCES

BBC News
29 September, 2003, 11:49 GMT 12:49 UK
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/3148288.stm 

Outrage over India Yahoo ban

Thousands of internet users in India have flooded 
a government website calling for a ban to be 
lifted on a Yahoo discussion group.

Yahoo is in a legal grey area, say experts

The ban has resulted in the blocking of all 
discussion groups hosted by the internet giant in 
India, inconveniencing internet users across the 
country.
The Indian Government ordered the move because of 
fears the discussion group, the Kynhun forum, had 
links with banned separatists.
It used new information technology laws to force 
Indian internet service providers (ISPs) to block 
the forum after Yahoo refused to comply.
The government says the Kynhun forum is linked to 
the outlawed Hynniewtrep National Liberation 
Council, a minor separatist group in the 
north-eastern state of Meghalaya.
It said the discussion group "contained material 
against the Government of India and the State 
Government of Meghalaya".

Censorship

The order was issued by the Indian Government's 
Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-IN) which 
holds the power to block internet sites deemed to 
be obscene or a national security threat.
Under the IT Act, Indian ISPs are liable for all third party data and content.
  I publish a monthly newsletter which is 
distributed free of cost to more than 1,000 
subscribers worldwide. Suddenly I learn that I 
can no longer have access to my data
Yahoo user Vivek Soley

Since Indian ISPs lack the technical expertise to 
block a sub-group, they have responded by 
blocking Kynhun's IP address, which makes no 
distinction between it and other Yahoo discussion 
groups.
Thousands of Indians have now flooded the 
CERT-IN's discussion board asking for the ban to 
be lifted.
Global media watchdog Reporters Without Borders 
says the case highlights the danger of internet 
censorship.
"Blocking a few web pages can result in the 
blocking of hundreds of other web pages that have 
nothing to do with the banned content - this is a 
recurring problem on which we must remain very 
vigilant," secretary-general Robert Ménard said.
Indian cyberlaw expert, Pawan Duggal, says the 
government is on very thin legal ground.
"The inherent sovereign power of the government 
to block can never be denied," he told BBC News 
Online.
"But the route they have taken is completely 
illegal and will be struck down if challenged in 
court."

Cyber chaos

Despite the legal grey area, the ban has in 
effect blocked out many Indians from the Yahoo 
discussion groups.
  The government should lift this ban before it 
ruins India's image as a free country
Vivek Soley lives in the central Indian town of 
Indore and maintains a subscribers list on 
yahoo.groups.com.
"I publish a monthly newsletter which is 
distributed free of cost to more than 1,000 
subscribers worldwide.
"Suddenly I learn that I can no longer have access to my data.
"Several other educational and information groups 
have also been blocked all because of one group," 
he says.
Naveen Rolands' eight-year-old daughter has a 
Yahoo group through which she shares photos and 
accounts of her travels with family and friends 
who are abroad.

That site is now blocked.
"I wonder who the real terrorists are," he said. 
"My daughter who uses Yahoo groups to share some 
photos? Or the bunch of clowns who call 
themselves politicians and [bureaucrats] who have 
given free publicity to an insurgent group?"
"The government should lift this ban before it 
ruins India's image as a free country."
Others point out that Kynhun had no more than about 20 subscribers.
"There are over 200 Kashmiri discussion groups 
with far more volatile views," says Pawan Duggal.
"With this action the government has opened a huge Pandora's box."

o o o

[Statement by Kynhun the group on yahoo whose ban 
the Indian  authorities triggered the present 
crisis ]

The Voice - Press Release
by Kyrmenlang Ryntathiang 7:58am Sat Sep 27 '03
address: Ri Hynniewtrep phone: NA <kyrmenlang at yahoo.com>
[ groups.yahoo.com/group/Kynhun ]

The Voice - Press Statement

Press Release

The HNLC after having carefully examined the 
notification signed by the Government of India 
through the Ministry of Communications & 
Information Technology, Department of 
Telecommunications (LR Cell) No. 820-1/2003-LR 
(Vol I) dated 10/09/2003 by Jayant Kumar to ban 
"Kynhun" Yahoo Group which published the Internet 
Newsletter of the HNLC "The Voice", felt that the 
Government of India had not done any justice by 
imposing the ban on the said news media without 
assigning any reason, however to show its 
superiority it had ordered the Officials of Yahoo 
and the Internet Service Providers to ban the 
said news media of the HNLC. Banning the site 
clearly shows a cowardly act on the part of the 
Government to bar off the people to read the 
Newsletter published by the HNLC and from the 
fact the Ban sends a message to the world that 
the tall claim of the Indian Government regarding 
the Freedom of Speech and Expression in the 
country is unjustified.  [...].
http://india.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=7968&group=webcast


o o o

India Blocks Almost All Yahoo! Forums
India Bans Web Discussion Group, but Ends Up 
Blocking Access to Popular Unrelated Yahoo Forums
The Associated Press
BANGALORE, India Sept. 29
http://abcnews.go.com/wire/Business/ap20030929_1278.html

o o o

San Diego Union Tribune (September 30, 2003)
India bans one Yahoo discussion group - and almost all are shut
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/computing/20030929-1314-india-yahooblocked.html

o o o

Reporters Without Borders
5, rue Geoffroy Marie - 75009 Paris - France
Tel. (33) 1 44 83 84 84
E-mail : rsf at rsf.org

Asia Press Release
29 September 2003

Government ban on separatist site blocks access 
to all Yahoo ! discussion groups

Reporters Without Borders today called on the 
Indian authorities to rescind instructions issued 
to Internet service providers to block access to 
the "Kyunhun" discussion forum, which is 
reportedly linked to the Hynniewtrep National 
Liberation Council, a banned separatist group in 
the state of Meghalaya.

The organisation questioned the need to ban this 
discussion group and voiced outrage about the 
measure's side-effects. The Kyunhun site is 
hosted by Yahoo !, and an unintended consequence 
of the ban is that Indian Internet users have 
lost access to all Yahoo ! websites.

"This case highlights the danger of Internet 
censorship giving rise to complex technical 
problems," Reporters Without Borders 
secretary-general Robert Ménard said. "Blocking a 
few web pages can result in the blocking of 
hundreds of other web pages that have nothing to 
do with the banned content - this is a recurring 
problem on which we must remain very vigilant." 
[...]


o o o

The Telegraph, September 29, 2003

FREEDOM OF ABUSE

The internet has given a bizarre twist to the 
story of human freedom. There seems to be no 
secure line between the thrill of limitless 
possibilities and the frightening sense of things 
getting out of hand. What emerges is an 
impossible tangle of ethical, legal and political 
issues. Microsoft Network will soon be shutting 
down its free chatrooms for users in the United 
Kingdom, Europe, South America and parts of Asia, 
including India. This is the first time that a 
transnational service provider will deliberately 
draw in the worldwide web. The reason given for 
this is fundamentally moral, although it has been 
noted that MSN makes very little money from its 
international chatrooms anyway. But the problem 
will have to be addressed squarely. Nothing less 
than the sexual abuse of minors is the issue 
here. Lurking in these chatrooms are dangerous 
people, who are part of a vast, global network of 
criminals, the almost unmanageable spread of 
which is now being gradually revealed. Policing 
this limitless cyberworld of slippery identities 
and virtual anonymity is proving to be expensive 
for service providers and daunting for lawkeepers 
all over the world. Sexual crime and terrorism 
are two very different phenomena, but they 
operate within the same technological 
infrastructure, and pose similar practical and 
ethical problems of security.

Yet organized paedophilia confronts the 
libertarian with a difficult moral absolute. Any 
notion of total freedom will therefore have to be 
carefully reconsidered, but keeping in mind the 
pitfalls of such policing. This will always be 
difficult to achieve, and sustaining it can, and 
should, never be solely the task of the state. In 
India the problem is double-edged. On the one 
hand, child sexual abuse remains a largely 
invisible phenomenon, and there is no reason to 
assume that it is any less widespread than in 
Europe. So awareness and prevention will have to 
be stepped up relentlessly. On the other hand, 
the Indian state's attitude to moral policing is 
far from reassuring. Censorship - moral, cultural 
and political - has often taken, and continues to 
take, highly regressive forms in the hands of the 
Centre. The government censors documentary films, 
shuts down politically dissenting cybergroups, 
intervenes regularly in sexual health programmes 
and continues to regard homosexuals as criminals. 
This is certainly not the best profile for the 
ideal censor. The policing and censorship of 
something as pervasive as the internet should 
face, uncompromisingly, their toughest 
challenges. But they should also remain firmly 
within the public domain of discussion and debate 
in the Indian democracy.


_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

Buzz on the perils of fundamentalist politics, on 
matters of peace and democratisation in South 
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit 
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South 
Asia Citizens Web (www.mnet.fr/aiindex).
The complete SACW archive is available at: http://sacw.insaf.net

DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.

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