SACW | 12-13 April 2005

sacw aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Apr 12 16:23:59 PDT 2005


South Asia Citizens Wire  | 12-13 April,  2005

[1] Nepal: Arrests, confiscations, threats - the 
crackdown continues (RSF Press release)
[2] Bangladesh: Fanatics at it again (Editorial, The Daily Star)
[3] 'India, Pak must end hostility' (Report in The Tribune)
[4] India: A camera, a dargah, a temple, and 
police terror (Chinmayee Manjunath)
[5] India: Fear returns to AP - open war between 
the state and the Naxalites (Edit, Deccan Herald)
[6] India: In the name of Cow Protection - 
Attacks on Minorities - Hindu Right in Karnataka
[7] India: Moral policing on the rise - reports from Hyderabad and Bombay
[8]  Books and Book Reviews:
(i) 'Towards a Democratic Nepal by Mahendra Lawoti' (reviewed by Harsh Sethi)
(ii) 'Dr Ambedkar and Untouchability: Analysing 
and Fighting Caste by Christophe Jaffrelot'
[9] Announcements:
(i) Conference: From the Colonial to the 
Postcolonial: South Asia in Transition, 1937-1960 
(Chicago April 15 - 16)
(ii) Words of Women - Zubaan and the India 
Habitat Centre (New Delhi, April 8 and 18)
(iii) Rainbow Festival  - people with alternative 
sexual orientation (Calcutta, June 24-26)

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

[1]

Reporters without borders / Reporters Sans Frontières
5 rue Geoffroy Marie
75009 Paris
www.rsf.org

Press release

12 April 2005

NEPAL: ARRESTS, CONFISCATIONS, THREATS - THE CRACKDOWN CONTINUES

The crackdown on the Nepalese press that began 
when a state of emergency was declared on 1 
February is continuing, Reporters Without Borders 
said today, citing new cases of arrests of 
journalists and censorship of news media.

"The reasons given by the Nepalese authorities to 
justify this crackdown on the news media are 
completely unacceptable," the organization said. 
"Press freedom poses absolutely no obstacle to 
internal peace and security. On the contrary, it 
is an essential element for a return to 
democracy."

Reporters Without Borders said it nonetheless saw 
a glimmer of hope in a new accord reached between 
the Nepalese government and the Office of the UN 
High Commissioner for Human rights allowing for 
monitoring offices to be set up in Nepal with the 
job of preventing the continuation of human 
rights violations.

In a single day (8 April) in the eastern town of 
Dharan, at least six journalists working for two 
local daily newspapers, the Blast Times and the 
Morning Post, were arrested while covering 
protests by various political parties. Those 
detained included Kesab Ghimire, Kishor Karki and 
Bimal Sakaya.

Although released at the end of the day, they 
were given strict orders not to write articles of 
a political nature or report on that day's 
pro-democracy demonstrations, and they were 
warned of reprisals if they did not comply. The 
authorities went on to seize that day's issues of 
the two newspapers and forced staff to hand over 
the keys to their offices.

There have been other, equally alarming cases 
testifying to the desperate plight of press 
freedom in Nepal. On 7 April, journalists were 
banned from covering a debate on the state of 
emergency and intellectual freedom organized by 
the teachers' association at Padma Kanya College, 
a leading women's university in Kathmandu.

Bheri FM news editor Kamalraj Regmi was meanwhile 
transferred on 10 April to a prison in the 
western district of Surkhet after being held in 
the custody of the security forces for 12 days 
under the state of emergency, also known as the 
Peace and Security Act.


______


[2]

The Daily Star - April 12, 2005
  	 
Editorial
FANATICS AT IT AGAIN
The govt must take a firm stand
The Ahmaddiyas in Shyamnagar upazila of Satkhira 
district have sought government protection in the 
face of eviction threat issued by the 
International Khatame Nabuat Movement (IKNM) -- 
an outfit campaigning for declaration of the 
Ahmaddiya community as non-Muslim. The IKNM has 
distributed leaflets asking them to leave the 
place. This amounts to incitement of violence 
against a community, and should therefore be 
regarded as a culpable offence in the eye of law.

The local administration has assured the 
Ahmaddiyas reeling under threats that necessary 
steps would be taken to protect them. The 
government can not view this as an ordinary law 
and order situation, rather it should treat the 
issue as one having a direct bearing on the 
constitutional and legal rights of citizens to 
pursue their faith. Clearly, the situation has 
become complex enough with the followers of IKNM 
and other like-minded parties being undeterred in 
their mission against the Ahmaddiyas. This 
degeneration has a lot to do with the placatory 
attitude of the ruling coalition marked by their 
imposition of the ban on Ahmaddiya publications. 
That surely emboldened the bigots with a 
persecution mentality. Then there was another 
outrage over whether the members of the community 
had the right to use the term mosque to describe 
their place of prayer. The failure to be tough on 
the elements seeking to strip the Ahmaddiyas of 
their rights has created a situation where the 
fanatic elements are renewing the same threats 
against the community. The Shyamnagar situation 
indicates that the vilification campaign has been 
revived yet again.

The nearly 4,000 Ahmaddiyas in Shyamnagar are 
reported to be passing their days amid great 
uncertainty and a sense of insecurity. The 
government will be well-advised to immediately 
activate its law enforcing agencies and 
neutralise the elements posing a threat peace. It 
is a question of safeguarding the rights of a 
section of people being relentlessly targeted by 
a fanatic group.

______


[3]

The Tribune - April 10, 2005

'INDIA, PAK MUST END HOSTILITY'
Tribune News Service

Ludhiana, April 9
Human rights activist and journalist Praful Bidwai said here today
that India and Pakistan needed to sit together and seriously discuss
the issue of demilitarisation for ending hostility.

Speaking at a seminar on 'Prospects of peace and security in South
Asia' in the context of arrival of India and Pakistan peace march
that reached here yesterday on its way from Delhi to Multan, at the
Ramgarhia College for Women here today, Mr Bidwai said, "India and
Pakistan stand at a historic crossroad, but they can end 58 years of
hostility and war and live peacefully by allowing free movement of
people".

He said, for this, it was not enough that there was improvement in
state-to-state relation and people-to-people contact or even discuss
Kashmir. "They must put the issue of demilitarisation and reduction
of forces and work towards nuclear disarmament", he asserted.

He said India had doubled its military spending since 1998 and
Pakistan has followed the same. Today India's defence budget stands
at Rs 1 lakh crore ($ 23 billion), including establishment cost and
pensions. Pakistan's declared military budget last year was Rs 200
billion ($ 4.5 billion). In reality, it probably was $6.8 billion
and is expected to rise by 25 per cent plus. Both countries spent
more on military than on health or education. Both have their foot
pressed on a nuclear accelerator. Unless this change is brought
about there can be no durable and sustainable peace between them,"
he said.

Dr Sandeep Pandey, who is leading the padyatra, said during the
march till date, we have met scores of people and exchanged ideas of
peace and brotherhood with them in person. People of both the
countries are longing for peace. This desire of the people has to be
developed into a strong movement so as to force the governments take
further effective measures, particularly for the nuclear disarmament
of the region."

Dr L.S. Chawla, president of the Indian Doctors for Peace and
Development (IDPD), said no country could benefit from nuclear
weapons.

Other dignitaries present on the occasion included Mr Dewan Jagdish
Chander, Mr Ranjodh Singh, Dr Balbir Shah, Dr R.P.S. Aulukh, Mr
Tejinder Mohi, Dr Daler Singh, Dr Gurpreet Ratan, Mr D.P. Maur, Ms
Gurcharan Kochar, Mr Vijay Kumar, Mr Amrit Pal, Mr Sohan Singh, Mr
Kuldeep Binder, Mr Ramadhar Singh.

Earlier, in the day, the march went to Punjab Agricultural
University after passing through main bazaars of the city. A welcome
function was organised by the PAU employees union and the PAU
Students Association (PAUSA) in which over 300 persons participated.
This was addressed by Mr Praful Bidwal, Dr Sandeep Pandey, Dr L.S.
Chawla, Dr R.P.S. Aulakh, Mr D.P. Maur, Mr Sarwan Singh, president,
PAUSA Ms Gurcharan Kochar, Mr Tejinder Singh Mohi, Ms Kusum Lata, Dr
Gulzar Pandher. Large number of schoolchildren also participated in
the function.

A play on Indo-Pak relations, directed by Prof Sompal of Doraha, was
also staged


______


[4]

Tehelka, April 16, 2005

A CAMERA, A DARGAH, A TEMPLE, AND POLICE TERROR

Right to record: Why was a filmmaker hounded by the police at Bababudangiri?

Chinmayee Manjunath
Bangalore

This was what the police asked S. Vijayakumara, a 
filmmaker, and Charitha, a researcher, at the Urs 
last month in Bababudangiri, 30 km outside of 
Chikamagalur. The two were detained overnight and 
threatened for having ?dared to attend a Muslim 
festival?. A dargah and temple stand at this site 
and have been a communal flash point in recent 
years, triggered by the rss/vhp.

Vijayakumara has been filming at Bababudangiri 
for four years and is associated with Pedestrian 
Pictures, a Bangalore-based media activist group. 
Charitha is studying at Mysore University. They 
arrived at Bababudangiri on March 26 this year, 
when the Urs started. ?From day one, there were 
unhealthy vibes,? says Vijayakumara. While press 
photographers were left alone, he was followed 
and questioned because he filmed the police 
removing the chadars from the shrine. Both of 
them were being constantly watched by the police. 
On March 27, at around 10 pm, Vijayakumara was 
approached by two plainclothes policemen who said 
that Charitha was waiting for him at the police 
station. ?I got worried about her and went,? he 
said. Charitha had been questioned earlier while 
she was taking a walk.

Both of them were then jailed separately and 
interrogated. ?It was terror tactics. Where are 
you from, why are you here, again and again?? 
said Vijayakumara. Charitha was told, ?Women who 
walk alone like you cannot be respected. Why are 
you here without your family?? They were not 
allowed to speak with one another or call their 
friends or family.

Eventually, Superintendent of Police (Rural) hd 
Kulkarni came in from Chikamagalur and took on a 
harsher tone. ?They used foul language against me 
and the Muslim community,? says Vijayakumara. 
Charitha was asked what her relationship was with 
him. By about 1am, they were moved to 
Chikamagalur. When Vijayakumara wanted to use the 
phone, he was told to ?shut up before we kick 
you?. Circle Inspector Kashi asked, ?Why don?t 
you just make a film on Hindu gods??

The questioning continued into the night and by 
the time they were released, it was 11am on March 
28. Their confiscated cameras and mobile phones 
were returned; but the police had checked all the 
dialled telephone numbers and questioned them 
about it. Kulkarni told Vijayakumara, ?We will 
leave that girl but you will not be spared.? 
Though complaints have been lodged with the 
deputy commissioner of police, Chikamagalur, no 
action has been taken. Neither has a reason been 
given for their detention. It is ironic that at 
Bababudangiri, known as a historic symbol of 
peace and secularism, the knowledge of another 
religion is banned and the right to freedom is 
muzzled so brazenly.


______


[5]

Deccan Herald - April 12, 2005

Second Edit
FEAR RETURNS TO AP
IT IS OPEN WAR BETWEEN THE STATE GOVERNMENT AND THE NAXALITES IN ANDHRA PRADESH

Once again, it is war between the state and the 
Naxalites in Andhra Pradesh. The brief interlude 
of peace, initiated as a fulfilment of its 
election promise by the new Congress government 
from May to December 2004 that led to peace talks 
in October last, has been shattered. The 
possibility of resuming the peace dialogue is 
getting remoter by the day as each side regresses 
into its earlier ways of violence and 
counter-violence. The state once again is 
resorting to encounters and has eliminated 
important leaders and cadres of the CPI (Maoist) 
in the last four months. The Maoists on their 
part have been going after "soft targets" killing 
the so-called informers, local politicians, 
setting Road Transport Corporation buses on fire 
and targeting lower rung policemen. In this kind 
of war between the state and armed rebels, those 
who suffer the most are the people caught in the 
crossfire.

The two sides should make all efforts to resume 
the peace dialogue that ended after the first 
round in October, 2004. The government's 
insistence that Maoists should renounce arms 
before coming to the negotiating table seems to 
be an excuse for not resuming the dialogue. The 
allegations against Maoists that they "misused" 
the peace period to strengthen themselves smacks 
of naivete, to say the least. The cynics might as 
well see a quid pro quo arrangement in Maoists 
indirectly supporting the Congress during 
elections and the new Congress government looking 
the other way as Maoists went on a "fund raising" 
spree, for about six months from May 2004. As 
Maoists became more brazen and careless and their 
couriers fell in the police net with several 
lakhs of rupees in cash, the state, egged on by 
the police department, turned hostile towards the 
Maoists.

The Andhra Pradesh government should bear in mind 
that the alienation of the people, their 
suffering and overall setting back of the 
development clock are too high a price to pay. 
The peace process may be slow, frustratingly so, 
but it is a better option than the rough and 
ready methods that are counter-productive and 
damage the social fabric.


______


[6]


Deccan Herald, March 17, 2005

STRIPPING INCIDENT: DK CONG PANEL FLAYS SANGH PARIVAR
The Karnataka Komu Souharda Vedike in Udupi will hold a protest on March 19.
Mangalore, DHNS:

The Dakshina Kannada District Congress Committee 
has strongly flayed Sangh Parivar members for 
stripping naked two persons belonging to a 
minority community and assaulting them 
mercilessly for allegedly transporting cattle at 
Malpe police station limits on Sunday night.

The assault on an aged person and his son was a 
shame on the democratic system, the Committee 
said and flayed the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh 
(RSS), Vishwa Hindu Parishat (VHP) and Bajrang 
Dal for attack on the minorities. Alleging that 
the police too were indirectly involved in the 
incident, the Committee has called upon all the 
people to ban all the Sangh Parivar associations. 
The Committee also submitted a memorandum to the 
deputy commissioner in this regard.

The delegation comprised Mayor Purandaradas 
Kuloor, Deputy Mayor Sujatha Ahalya, former mayor 
Krishnappa Mendon, District Congress Vice 
President Ivan D'Souza, Ibrahim Kodijal, 
Kalavathi, Padmanabha Amin, Sarala Karkera, Appi, 
Ashraf and Farooq among others.

Assns flay incident

Meanwhile, DYFI, Samastha Karnataka Sunni 
Students' Federation (SKSSF) and Karavali 
Janajagrutha Okkuta (KJO) in separate press 
releases have flayed the incident. They have 
compared the heinous incident to that of 
American/British soldiers' torture on Iraq 
soldiers. All the three organisations have 
threatened to launch agitations if the police did 
not take immediate action and stop such inhumane 
incidents.

Protest on March 19

The Karnataka Komu Souharda Vedike in Udupi has 
demanded Superintendent of Police S Murugan and 
DySP U R Pangam's suspension over the Sunday's 
incident.
In a press meet, Vedike President Rama Diwana 
said a protest has been organised on March 19 in 
Udupi and many State-level progressive thinkers, 
writers, poets will take part in the protest. Few 
of the people who are likely to participate in 
the protest include Murugarajendra Math 
(Chitradurga) seer, Sri Revannasiddeshwara Math 
(Dharwad) seer Basavaraja Devaru, Sanath Kumar 
Belagali, K L Ashok, Kalkuli Vittal Hegde, K M 
Sharief and Annar Sadath among others.

A certain Hajabba was transporting a calf in a 
Omni van when the accused Kantha Poojary stopped 
him, took Hajabba to a nearby field and assaulted 
him. When Hajabba did not return home till late 
in the night, his son Hasanabba went on searching 
his father when he found his father being beaten 
up by a group of people at Moodabettu. When he 
went to rescue his father, he too was beaten up.

The incident created furore not only in the 
coastal districts but also in the assembly. Both 
the persons are recovering in the hospital.


[7]   [MORAL POLICING IN HYDERABAD AND BOMBAY]

The Telegraph
April 11, 2005

Moral police prowl Hyderabad parks

G.S. Radhakrishna

Look over your shoulder
Hyderabad, April 10: Lovebirds beware! A band of 
about 100 men will be on the prowl in Hyderabad's 
parks, scanning the greens for students looking 
for a moment of precious intimacy.

The Federation of Culture Upgradation and Social 
Services (Focuss) was launched yesterday to wage 
a campaign against kissing and petting in public 
places, especially parks.

Mohsin, a 55-year-old ex-serviceman who is the 
honorary secretary, said they would pick out 
"errant" teenagers in school uniform and counsel 
them.

B. Ramesh Kumar, a member who retired from the 
state police force five years ago, said a survey 
has found that it is mostly schoolchildren 
between 13 and 16 who go to parks looking for 
private space.

Such youngsters are often blackmailed and abused 
by local thugs who catch them getting physical, 
he added. "More than six out of 10 cases of young 
girls running away from homes is due to such 
acts."

Focuss chose Ugadi, the Telugu New Year's Day 
today, to launch its campaign, distributing 
pamphlets in parks, cinema halls, temples and 
community centres.

It also plans to offer guidance to victims of 
blackmail. "We will observe confidentiality and 
work under the umbrella of the police, if needed, 
to nab the culprits," said Purushottam Rao, 
another member and a former postmaster.

Mohsin proposes to open branches in other cities 
in the state to counsel young victims of 
harassment. But, he added: "For enlisting our 
support, they should vow not to do such acts in 
public."

Focuss has drawn up a charter which prescribes 
that every member should oppose display of 
affection between the sexes in public.

"Members should accost men and women who dress 
indecently or misbehave in public," added 
Purushottam Rao.

The charter says:

- Kissing and petting in public should be discouraged
- A campaign should be waged against indecent 
dressing in schools and colleges, by teachers too
- Protest should be made against screening of 
adult movies in public places, outside cinema 
halls
- Drive should be launched against wild parties in hotels
- Campaign should be run against "wild rituals" 
and women-only pujas in some ashrams and temples

The outfit's members - most of them retired men 
who meet on morning and evening walks - have 
planned to break up into teams that will patrol 
about 10-12 parks to start with. They will be 
armed with identity cards and are also planning 
to get a stamp of approval from the police.

Law-keepers generally welcomed the moral police, 
only wondering whether they would be effective.

A senior officer was sceptical. "Everybody 
preaches morals. One has to see whether Focuss is 
really for social good or just a club of some 
dirty old men who want to spoil the pleasures of 
the young," he said.

The city police have launched a major offensive 
against dance bars that have opened in the city 
over the past two years. "This used to be a 
nawabi passion.Š But dancing girls are now 
available for Rs 100 in bars and, outside the 
city, in dhabas," said police commissioner Dinesh 
Reddy .

Women's organisations, which have been running a 
campaign against dance bars, have also not warmed 
to Focuss.

The problem should be solved at the root, they 
say, and suggest allowing boys and girls to meet 
freely in schools. P. Sandhya, a prominent member 
of AP Mahila Samakhya, said if teenagers are 
allowed to interact with the opposite sex in 
schools, they will not head to parks and there 
will be no need for moral police.


o o o o


Mid Day - March 31, 2005

Police State
By: A Mid Day Correspondent

Mumbai's eight commandments

Don't dance!

If you go to a dance bar, you will damage the 
cultural texture of the state, says the home 
minister. Pray, what is the cultural texture of 
the state? If the home minister can answer that, 
the bar owners will be only too happy not to 
damage it.

Don't read!

What you can read is no longer up to you - there 
are plenty of organisations for just that kind of 
thing, you see. And it seems they're not big fans 
of The Da Vinci Code, Midnight's Children or 
James Laine's book on Shivaji.

They broadly believe you are not fit to decide 
what to read and that the 'wrong' books could 
warp your mind. Whew, thank God for them!

Don't play!

The Shiv Sena has decided that you must never be 
able to experience the excitement of an 
India-Pakistan match at the Wankhede.
If you dare challenge their wisdom, expect to wake up to
more stories of dug-up pitches.

It's the price of exercising your Constitutional right, you see.

Don't cuddle!

Hey, what's that hand of yours up to? Make sure 
it's nothing more than a quick hug or the cop on 
the corner (who must have a thousand more 
important things to do) will pounce on you 
gleefully, drag you to the nearest police station 
and book you for indecent behaviour.

Don't watch!

Change the channel, avert your eyes, it's a 
disgusting show of skin! A wet saree scene is 
unnatural, EVERYONE knows that.

Why even educated, learned people like college 
professors (not to mention community 
organisations) believe this sort of thing should 
not be televised. If you're the kind of weirdo 
who wants to watch it anyway, stay put on the 
sofa till midnight, when curfew is lifted.

Don't celebrate!

If you want to do something silly like show your 
girlfriend you love her, make sure it's not with 
teddy bears and red roses on Valentine's Day. 
Don't you know Western culture is depraved? God 
forbid it corrupts your pure Indian heart.

Don't look!

We obviously don't have enough moral policing, it 
seems, because the railways, of all 
organisations, has decided to do their bit. 
Underwear, they said, is too dirty a word for 
your fragile mind, and went on a rampage when 
such ads sprung up on billboards.

Their latest stunt is blackening Udita Goswami's 
bare back in Zeher posters.  We still don't know 
how censorship fits into their job description.

Don't wear!
Many Mumbai colleges have long had bans on 
sleeveless shirts, short skirts and anything else 
that's on their list of things
that are 'against Indian culture'.


Culture police feast on your freedom

Self-appointed moral guardians could kill city's liberal tradition

The next time you hear a story about faraway 
Afghanistan and shake your head in disbelief at 
its citizens' oppression and lack of freedom, 
take a step back and peer out into your own 
backyard.

These days just about everybody - colleges, the 
police, community organizations and even the 
railways - wants to decide what you can see, 
hear, wear, do and say. It may not be long before 
Mumbai loses its spirit, vitality and above all 
openness to these self-ordained culture cops, all 
of whom are armed with the usual sanctimonious 
justifications.

Take Pratibha Nathani, for instance. This St 
Xavier's College professor makes regular rounds 
of police stations to check the broadcast of 
anything with a hint of sex and violence. She 
says, "I am appalled at the sex and violence on 
TV. These can have a disastrous effect on 
impressionable minds.

There were suicides after Dhananjoy Chatterjee's 
hanging in Kolkata, and rapes and murders 
elsewhere. I think this is all the effect of 
television. I am not deciding what society can or 
can't watch. I am merely concerned that our laws 
to curb sex and violence on television are not 
being implemented."

The police, self-appointed sworn enemies of 
smitten couples everywhere, have their own take 
on the matter. Sanjay Surve, assistant police 
inspector at Bandra police station, says, "It's 
not a question of where lovers should sit. It is 
about their safety.

They can sit wherever they want - Bandstand, 
Carter Road or Bandra-Worli sea link. Our main 
aim in restricting them from sitting at these 
places after 8 pm is to protect them from the 
risk of being mugged, robbed or even killed."

Even what you can watch and read is no longer in 
your hands - these decisions are taken by 
community organisations. Angry protests, street 
marches and appeals to the government greet the 
release of every book that is deemed even mildly 
controversial.

Johnson Therattil, president of the Kerala 
Catholic Association, opposed the movie Sins and 
Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code. "The story of the 
Da Vinci Code ridicules the bible and does not 
have any historical background. It affects 
people's beliefs the illiterate people can get 
carried away.

In a country like India, where so many religions 
co-exist, restraint is necessary. If such things 
are allowed to continue, it will destroy our rich 
culture. Today, we love our family. But such 
influences will slowly lead to the breakdown of 
our joint family system."

Even the Shiv Sena has a similar explanation 
for... you guessed it, Valentine's Day. Their 
justification? "Valentine's Day is not our day, 
as there is no mention of it in our calendars. It 
is just a marketing gimmick.

People are not so enthusiastic about rakhi, then 
why are they about V-Day? Moreover, why should 
students spend so much when they don't earn? We 
don't want to encourage it as it is a 
Westernisation of our culture," says the Sena's 
Pramod Navalkar.

How can they take such a blatantly dictatorial decision?

Bar owners, girls upset over decision

Danish Khan


______


[8]

[BOOK REVIEWS]

(i)

Economic and Political Weekly, April 9, 2005
Book Review

Nepal in Crisis

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Towards a Democratic Nepal: Inclusive Political 
Institutions for a Multicultural Society
by Mahendra Lawoti;
Sage Publications,
Delhi, 2005;
pp 345, Rs 395.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Harsh Sethi

It is not often that books get released at 
opportune times. True, Nepal's experience with a 
decade and a half of multiparty parliamentary 
democracy has rarely been smooth. Nevertheless, 
with the country once again under emergency rule, 
reminiscent of the earlier dismissal of the 
Koirala government by the present king's father, 
Mahendra Lawoti's book should enjoy an avid 
readership. Further, more than the fact of an 
assertive and ambitious ruler exercising 
extra-constitutional power, hardly an uncommon 
occurrence in fledgling third world democracies, 
Nepal has for some years been trapped in a near 
civil war situation, with Maoist insurgents in 
control of large swathes of the countryside. How 
the country will negotiate these troubled times 
is thus a matter of great concern, not only for 
its people but also the region.

For those interested in Nepal, Mahendra Lawoti is 
no unfamiliar name. Alongside many of his 
colleagues - Lok Raj Baral, Krishna Khanal, 
Krishna Bhattachan, and the younger Krishna 
Hachhethu - he has consistently drawn attention 
to the structural and ideational anamolies in the 
Nepalese situation, in particular the remarkable 
degree of exclusion of the vast majority of 
Nepal's population - itself a mosaic of many 
castes, ethnicities, languages and regions - from 
any effective participation in the country's 
political and economic governance. That the 
erstwhile autocratic regime of the Ranas was 
oligarchic, concentrating all power in a few 
clans and families, is not surprising. Nor is the 
reluctance of various monarchs - from Tribuvan to 
Gyanendra - to open out spaces for participation. 
More intriguing, and troubling, for the 
democratic future of Nepal has been the singular 
inability of the various political parties - of 
all ideological shades - to make both themselves 
and the polity more inclusive. When a few upper 
caste hill groups exercise hegemony over all 
institutions - legislative, executive, judicial - 
as also control most civil society organisations, 
a drift towards violent, extra-parliamentarism is 
to be expected. Mahendra Lawoti's book lays out 
the problem of exclusion and its consequences in 
all its complexity - political and cultural - in 
different domains.

For a start, there are weaknesses in 
the constitutional design. Despite formal 
recognition of Nepal as a multicultural, 
multi-religions and multilingual society with 
people seen as the ultimate source of power and 
legitimacy, not only does the constitution permit 
unnecessary leeway to the monarch, often elevated 
to the status of an incarnation of Lord Vishnu, 
there is insistence on one religion (Hindu) and 
one language (Nepali). Lawoti is, like many 
others exercised with the problems of inclusion 
and exclusion, very critical of 
the first-past-the-post Westminster style 
parliamentary electoral system which invariably 
marginalises smaller groups. His discussion of 
different systems of proportional representation, 
decentralisation, and vigorous affirmative action 
programmes, including reservation, need careful 
and sympathetic engagement if Nepal is to emerge 
out of its current crisis and institute just, 
equitable and legitimate representative rule.

This is crucial since many external analysts, 
even those not advancing cultural arguments for 
the weakness of Nepali democracy, tend to 
foreground an assertive monarchy as the source of 
Nepal's troubles. There is undoubtedly a problem 
with the space accorded to monarchy, as an 
activist monarch like Gyanendra has shown. But as 
Lawoti demonstrates, ethnic/religious/cultural 
violence has occurred more frequently after 1990 
(post the institution of multiparty democracy) 
than before. This may today have been 
overshadowed by the threat of Maoist insurgency, 
and hence has received less attention, but the 
threat exists nonetheless.

In the absence of accommodative institutions and 
practices, dissent (made easier under democracy) 
is seen as a 'law and order' problem and thus 
sought to be quelled by force - thereby further 
sharpening the conflict. Lawoti does not even 
rule out the possibility of secession.

Maoists' Initial Appeal

Lawoti's analysis of the Maoist movement needs to 
be read in the context of a unitary state, 
exclusionary institutions, and fragile 
parliamentary norms and practices. Significantly, 
he does not dismiss the Maoists as 'terrorists', 
despite expressing little sympathy with their 
means, tracing their initial appeal and 
subsequent growth and consolidation, particularly 
amongst 'excluded' social segments to the failure 
of the political system and formal actors. What, 
however, he fails to address are the 
specificities of the current context. The Maoists 
in Nepal, like any significant social force, do 
not reflect textbook teleology. They are armed, 
control large parts of the country, and have 
forged international links, including with left 
wing militants in India. They are also, like any 
large movement, divided in factions and 
tendencies, each advancing somewhat different 
political projects. Since this book is singularly 
reminiscent in its treatment of regional and 
international actors - the Indian state, 
left wing groups in India, the ISI of 
Pakistan and the US - it would be hazardous to 
assume that if only Nepal somehow crafted a more 
inclusive institutional design, there is the 
likelihood of a peaceful future.

Nevertheless, Mahendra Lawoti's discussion of 
various institutional arrangements - to be put 
into place through a constituent assembly - 
federalism, formation of new regions, 
non-territorial federalism, sub-autonomy within 
autonomy, minority rights, a powerful upper house 
of nationalities, and a shift to a proportional 
electoral system drawing upon the work of Will 
Kymilca and Arend Lijphart and the latter's 
theory of consociationalism - deserve serious 
scrutiny. Clearly, if and once the dust settles, 
political actors in Nepal have to imagine a 
differently constituted state. Lawoti's book 
provides useful inputs.

A final caveat. Social science sets great store 
by design. What analysts and theorists 
insufficiently appreciate is the time and space 
needed for institutions to gather roots, evolve 
norms and conventions for healthy practice. In 
south Asia, India was lucky in its early years - 
partly because of the character and legacy of its 
'national movement' and partly because many of 
the leaders got the time and space to make their 
distinctive contributions. Most of us fail to 
appreciate the importance of restraint in public 
affairs. Hopefully, the future Nepal, in its 
tryst with democracy will not forget the lessons 
from its past.



(ii)


Christophe Jaffrelot

DR AMBEDKAR AND UNTOUCHABILITY
Analysing and Fighting Caste

Hardback / 206ppp / ISBN 81-7824-125-0 / Rs 
495.00 / South Asia rights  / Copublished with 
Columbia University Press and C.Hurst & Co, London

'Š a work of the first importance [which] will 
find a wide and appreciative readership, both 
within the academy and outside it. It is a 
subtle, thoughtful and above all well-rounded 
study which nicely balances the personal and the 
historical, the intellectual and the political, 
to give us what we haven't had so far (and yet so 
badly need)-a multidimensional portrait of this 
extraordinary and under-appreciated 
figure.'-Ramachandra Guha


'Ša very valuable addition to the literature. 
Jaffrelot's viewpoint is both fresh and very 
knowledgeable. He brings a political scientist's 
expertise to Ambedkar's actions which is not 
duplicated in other work. In addition he 
considers Ambedkar's thought in an evolutionary 
perspective, keeping in mind the constant of his 
pragmatism.'-Eleanor Zelliot

B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956) was the first Dalit or 
low-caste Hindu to be formally educated to the 
highest level, gaining his PhD in the West. 
Despite this huge achievement he remained true to 
his background and origins, fighting for Dalit 
rights throughout his life. No one today doubts 
Ambedkar's status as India's first and foremost 
Dalit.

For years, Ambedkar waged a singular and lonely 
battle against India's brahminical and 
higher-caste political establishment, which 
included Mahatma Gandhi, who resisted Ambedkar's 
effort to formalize and codify a separate 
identity for lower-caste Hindus.

Nonetheless, Ambedkar became Law Minister in the 
first government of independent India, and 
chairman of the committee which drafted the 
Indian constitution, and was able to modify 
 Gandhian attempts to influence India's polity.

In the final stage of his life Ambedkar distanced 
himself from politics and sought solace in 
Buddhism, to which he converted a short while 
before his death.

Jaffrelot's major new book focuses on the three 
key areas that are central to a full 
understanding of India's pioneering Dalit: 
Ambedkar as social theorist; Ambedkar as 
statesman and politician; and Ambedkar as an 
opponent of caste Hinduism and advocate of 
Buddhism as a method of release from Hindu social 
oppression.

In each case, Jaffrelot argues, Ambedkar was the 
first to forge new political, symbolic, and 
emotively powerful strategies for Dalits. These 
not only proved effective in Ambedkar's own 
lifetime, they resonate powerfully even today.

CHRISTOPHE JAFFRELOT is director of CERI (Centre 
d'Etudes et Recherches Internationales) at 
Sciences Po in Paris. His books include The Hindu 
Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics (1996) 
and India's Silent Revolution: The Rise of the 
Low Castes in North Indian Politics (2003).



______


[9]     [Announcements: ]


(i)  [Conference]

The University of Chicago Department of History, 
the Modern South Asia Project, the
Committee on Southern Asian Studies, the South 
Asia Center, and the Nicholson Center
for British Studies present:

"From the Colonial to the Postcolonial: South Asia in Transition, 1937-1960"

April 15 and April 16, 2005
9 am - 6 pm


The Franke Institute for the Humanities
The University of Chicago
1100 East 57th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60637

The aim of this conference will be to examine the confluence, in the wake of
decolonization, of global and national influences in the reconfiguration of
South Asian societies and polities. The participants will include a range of
distinguished and up-and-coming scholars from North America, the United
Kingdom, South Asia and Australia. They approach the issue of decolonization
in different but mutually reinforcing ways, through constitutionalism,
sports, regionalisms, housing, gender, minority issues, and class formation.
The published volume of papers from the conference will be dedicated to the
memory of Professor Bernard Cohn, who had a sustained interest in the
history of decolonization in the subcontinent.


o o o o

(ii)

Zubaan and the India Habitat Centre will be 
continuing its programme of conversations with 
women writers, Words of Women

This month we have two writers, Manjushree Thapa 
on Friday 8th of April and Arupa Patangia Kalita 
on Thursday, 28th of April. Urvashi Butalia and 
Mitra Phukan will be in conversation with the two 
writers respectively. Manjushree Thapa is the 
author of the recently, well received Forget 
Kathmandu: An Elegy for Democracy and her widely 
acclaimed novel The Tutor of History. Her other 
published works include a travelogue, Mustang 
Bhot in Fragments, and translations of Nepali 
literature. Her essays and short stories have 
appeared in several anthologies, journals and 
magazines in Nepal, India and USA. Arupa Patangia 
Kalita is one of Assam's leading award-winning 
novelists. She has more than ten novels and short 
story collections to her credit including 
Mriganabhi (1987) and Millenniumar Sapon (2002). 
Started last year, this programme, entitled Words 
of Women, has so far featured Mahashweta Devi, 
Indira Goswami, Githa Hariharan, Mridula Garg, 
Manjula Padmanabhan, Mrinal Pande, Mitra Phukan, 
Kamila Shamsie, Kunzang Choden, Bulbul Sharma, 
Manju Dalmia, C.S. Lakshmi (Ambai), Namita 
Gokhale, Paro Anand, Shauna Singh Baldwin, 
Shobhaa De and we hope to include many more other 
women writers  in the months to come

We'd be delighted to welcome you to this discussion. The venue is Casurina
at the Habitat Centre, Lodi Road at 7 pm.20

The programme usually lasts just over an hour.
We look forward to seeing you there.

Jaya Bhattacharji
For ZUBAAN
Zubaan,
K-92, FF,
Hauz Khas Enclave,20
New Delhi - 110016
Email: zubaanwbooks at vsnl.net

o o o o o

(iii)

THE RAINBOW FESTIVAL

24th to 26trh JUNE 2005
KOLKATA,
INDIA

Commemorating Stonewall Riots Day, June 1969

The Beginning of the Gay Liberation Movement


A venture by INTEGRATION Society, Kolkata, India

Dear Friends,

Hereís wishing all of you success and joy, encompassed
in the vibrant colors of the Rainbow!

Colors connote the Rainbow, which affords all of us
happiness and joy; where we are different and yet
together.

About INTEGRATION Society . . .

INTEGRATION Society, Kolkata has been working as a
Communication Initiative on Health and Human Rights
for the Youth and Sexual Minorities since 1999, it has
taken up quite a few events that have given the issues
of alternative sexuality quite a public visibility.
Especially, The Rainbow Festival, the only Gay Pride
of India happening in Kolkata since 1999, has made a
remarkable space in the media and among the public.

'Visibility' being the prime objective INTEGRATION
Society picks up events that are not only media
sensational but also with strong voices and
recommendations. From audio play to short film, from
poster presentation to art and craft exhibition all
had been executed by INTEGRATION Society, Kolkata
since the beginning of its journey.

About THE RAINBOW FESTIVAL

Among all the activities what Integration Society has
earned a space for in India, is organizing THE RAINBOW
FESTIVAL, the most impact-making event concerning
people with alternative sexual orientation and gender
Identity.Ý This is to commemorate the Stonewall Riots
Day, June 26, 1969, the red lettered day in the
history of the social movement of gay liberation.
Today, in India, with a different set of developmental
and rights issues to grapple with, more than 100
groups, over last few decades have been showing
admirable and encouraging efforts in running the
socio-political movement of people with alternative
sexuality and gender identity towards achieving a
healthy and safe lifestyle and space. But it is still
not enough to do away with all kinds of
discrimination, stigma, taboo and harassment that LGBT
people face in this country. Not enough to ensure
equal space and dignity for every individual
irrespective of their class, cast, language, religion,
sexual preferences and so on.

How we Celebrate THE RAINBOW FESTIVAL . . .

INTEGRATION Society as an initiator organizing this
Pride walk since 1999 in Kolkata. A great concept
coming from Mr. Owais Khan in 1999 naming it as
'FRIENDSHIP WALK' has gradually evolved in to a
festival and became popular asÝ 'THE RAINBOW
FESTIVAL', has achieved an increasing popularity over
these years. By 2004, the city had seen the greater
gathering around the Rainbow Festival and felt the
presence of LGBT communities throughout India raising
a chorus for their rights To Love And To Be Loved.
Organisations Like Companions On A Journey from
Shrilanka, Naz Foundation from Delhi, Fellowship From
Orissa, Amtie, Bandhan, DMSC, PLUS, Prataya, SAATHII,
Swikriti from Kolkata and so many individuals from
various parts of the world coming together we were
about 300 friends that matched steps with each other
and sang chorus for equality and dignity. For the
cultural events mainstream performing art groups like
Sapphire Creations, OnStage, X-Pose and quite a few
talented individuals with their solo performances have
expressed support and solidarity to this greater cause
in different years.

The last time was remarkable not only in terms of the
number of participants, also looking at the variety,
including some lesbian friends showing up for the
first time, it gained a real feeling of togetherness.
The mainstream, the women groups, other developmental
initiatives, Kolkata Police and the media increasingly
have come around supporting this mega event.

Needless to mention that it is always YOUR
contribution that brought all the success to THE
RAINBOW FESTIVAL. In a country like India, in a
society like ours, sexuality still being dumped under
the carpet, YOU, from that very society standing up
beside us is undoubtedly deserve a great salute.

This year, the effort is to increase the periphery of
partners in this venture by encouraging more
organisations and individuals, be them community, be
them mainstream to match steps with us and share the
joy and happiness of being together. The idea is to
create a stage to embrace and celebrate diverse,
disjointed and different sexualities - where you can
meet, interact, speak, explore, discover your true
self and breathe life without the constraints of
morality, tradition, rationality or political
correctness. Most importantly, this is to create a
space that is for all and it is all about life and
desire.

Inviting YOU at THE RAINBOW FESTIVAL 2005 . . .

Hence, we INVITE YOU and YOUR FRIENDS to come and
participate at THE RAINBOW FESTIVAL 2005 with all
possible capacity and strengthen the visibility and
the voice of equality and dignity for US.

This year, June 26th being Sunday, we would like to
hold the Pride Walk on the morning of 26th June 2005
along with some cultural event around that.

This year it will be three days long Festive Weekend
from 24th June 2005 to 26th June 2005 having various
cultural events. We will be keeping you informed about
the details of the entire festival as it gets
finalized.

We welcome all the Friends who had been there with us
in the past and friends who could not be with us on
those great moments togetherness and joy are also
welcome this time. So friends KEEP GETTING REDDY! We
sincerely hope to see more new faces with us!!

Unfortunately, INTEGRATION Society not being a funded
organization we regret for our limitations in handling
any kind of reimbursement for the participants. We
would consider your participation in this festival on
your own cost, a great contribution to the cause that
contributes towards the larger GLBT movement of India.

YOU become Part of THE RAINBOW FESTIVAL 2005 . . .

Let us come together and join hands. Not to create
conflicts, not to move away from tradition, not to
create divisions; but to break through all possible
barriers between people. This, to interpret life from
a new, inspiring perspective, to make this great event
even bigger success this year, we really need all of
you to come forward and lend your hands in various
ways.

To you all who are in a position to contribute to this
great event in other ways, INTEGRATION Society looks
up to you for your support. To ensure better
participation and to increase the scope of the
programme the budget of the festival for this year
will increase up to Rupees Two Lakhs (Rs. 2,00,000/-).
Whether you are an organization or an individual,
funding or sponsoring any particular or partial
expense of the budget will be considered as a great
contribution from your side.

YOU can help us by . . .
- Forwarding this Announcement/Invitation
Mail to your friends for better spread of words all
over
- Join us here in Kolkata during THE
RAINBOW FESTIVAL 2005
- Fund or Sponsor any particular or partial
expense of the festival
- Volunteer with you capacity and talents
to make this festival a better success

Any amount is welcome in cheque/draft/money order
payable to :

PALM AVENUE INTEGRATION SOCIETY

And to be posted to :

RAFIQUEL HAQUE DOWJAH
84 Jhawtalla Road, Flat No.2
Kolkata 700 017, India

For any clarification you may call at : 91-9339029922

Or mail at : integrationsociety at yahoo.co.in

Needing Your Best Wishes & Early Response

With Solidarity
RAFIQUEL HAQUE DOWJAH
Secretary, INTEGRATION Society, Kolkata, India

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Love and Let People Love Their Way . . .


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

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.sacw.net/
SACW archive is available at:  bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/

Sister initiatives :
South Asia Counter Information Project :  snipurl.com/sacip
South Asians Against Nukes: www.s-asians-against-nukes.org
Communalism Watch: communalism.blogspot.com/

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




More information about the Sacw mailing list