SACW | 24 May 2005
sacw
aiindex at mnet.fr
Mon May 23 20:25:22 CDT 2005
South Asia Citizens Wire | 24 May, 2005
[1] Bangladesh: Threat to seize Ahmadiyya complex
- Rights groups vow to resist Satkhira bigots
[2] Pakistan: Prison houses or money minting dens? (Nafisa Shah)
[3] India and Pakistan - Thawing the frozen divide (Karl F. Inderfurth)
[4] India and Pakistan: Siachen: symbol of hope, not hostility (Suman Sahai)
[5] Pakistan - India - Hindu Right and the
Congress Party: Off with the blinkers (Jawed
Naqvi)
[6] Think Out Of The Box - to resolve India's Naga Dispute (Sanjib Baruah)
[7] Announcements:
(i) The No! No! Campaign!! Against Arms Sales to Pakistan and India
(ii) AMAN Peace and Conflict Studies Course
(Delhi, September 26 - October 26, 2005)
--------------
[1]
The Daily Star
May 24, 2005
THREAT TO SEIZE AHMADIYYA COMPLEX
RIGHTS GROUPS VOW TO RESIST SATKHIRA BIGOTS
Staff Correspondent
Leaders and activists of 12 human rights and
women's organisations will gather on June 1 at
Shamnagar in Satkhira, resisting an attempt by
religious bigots, led by the International Khatme
Nabuwat Movement Bangladesh (IKNMB), to capture
the Ahmadiyya Shamnagar complex on the same day.
In a prelude to the showdown, IKNMB, meanwhile,
reasserted its plan to capture the complex during
a rally held on Sunday night in defiance of
police.
Human rights organisations, speaking at a press
conference at the National Press Club in the
capital yesterday, announced a series of
resistance programmes, including grand rallies at
Satkhira on May 26 and 30, a press conference in
Jessore on May 25, and a view exchanging meeting
in Khulna on May 26. The programmes, they say,
are intended to resist the religious bigots since
the government has shown indifference toward the
Ahmadiyya communities.
Their remarks came after IKNMB and their
supporters, ignoring the resistance of police
forces, held a scheduled rally at about 9:00pm on
Sunday at the Mantala intersection in Kaligonj
upazila. Police earlier prevented them from
holding the rally, which IKNMB had announced in
preparation for capturing the Ahmadiyya mosque at
Shampur Bazar in Satkhira on June 1.
IKNMB said it will seize the mosque if a case
filed against IKNMB leaders is not withdrawn by
May 30. Ahmadiyyas filed the case with the
Shamnagar Police Station after supporters of the
anti-Ahmadiyya outfit attacked them, injuring
over 50 people, including women and children, and
looted at least 10 houses at Sundarban Bazar of
Shamnagar upazila on April 17.
IKNMB has also demanded that a signboard, which
they posted on the Ahmadiyya mosque on April 17,
be hung again by May 30. The sign read, 'A place
of worship for the Ahmadiyya Community, Sundarban
Bazar' and advised Muslims not to mistake the
place as a mosque.
Police did not stop Sunday night's rally, which
began as soon as IKNMB's Nayebe Anir Mufti, Noor
Hossain Nuruni, reached Mantala at about 8:30pm.
Mufti Nuruni, an accused in the case filed by
Ahmadiyyas, said supporters of IKNMB will compel
the government to declare the Ahmadiyyas as
non-Muslim by December 31 by launching a mass
movement.
"Police have violated the constitution as well as
Islam by trying to prevent them from holding the
rally, which is part of their religious rights,"
he said.
In light of such activities, human rights
organisations yesterday urged all, including the
government, to create public awareness for
protecting the rights of the Ahmadiyyas at the
local level. "Religious bigots are acting against
freedom of speech and freedom of religion - which
is contrary to the spirit of the Liberation War
and the Independence of Bangladesh - by launching
attacks on the Ahmadiyyas," said Sultana Kamal,
executive director of Ain o Salish Kendra (ASK).
Other speakers accused the government of turning
a blind eye to the harassment of the Ahmadiyya
community. "It is clear to us that the BNP-Jamaat
government is giving indirect support to the
religious bigots," said Advocate Ruhul Quddus of
Jatiya Ainjibee Parishad.
Maksuda Akhter of Bangladesh Mohila Parishad, Dr
Kaustina Pereira of Jatiya Ainjibee Parishad, SM
Monjur Rashid of Action Aid Bangladesh, Farida
Yasmin of Nari Pakkha, Maksuda Akhtar of
Bangladesh Mohila Parishad and Lina Jamin of Nari
and Manabadhikar Foundation were present.
The other organisations taking part in the
conference included Nijera Kori, Bangladesh
Mohila Ainjibee Samitee, Manabadhikar Bastabayan
Sangstha, Durbar Network and Odhikar.
______
[2]
Dawn
22 May 2005
PRISON HOUSES OR MONEY MINTING DENS?
By Nafisa Shah
ALTHOUGH we continue to be shocked by the
atrocities faced by the prisoners at Guantanamo
Bay and Iraq's Abu Ghraib jail, a certain amount
of national obliviousness exists to the dark and
Dickensonian conditions prevailing in our own
prisons. The recent clashes in Sukkur jail were
but one example of their kind and remain an
important indicator of the general state of our
prisons.
In theory, prisons are meant to reform people so
that they can re-enter society leaving their life
of crime behind them. But Pakistani jails do not
live up to this definition. Here in our prisons,
people are criminalized further, and state power
is collusive in such criminalization.
Regular reports by human rights bodies and the
Pakistan Law Commission bring out the logistical
and physical problems of jails. The most
frequently cited problem is that of overcrowding
(the interior ministry report released in June
2004 states that there are 80,000 prisoners in
Pakistan's 73 prisons, against a capacity of
35,365 inmates), lack of sanitation facilities,
the slow disposal of cases, etc.
However commissions, reform reports etc, have
failed to point out the worst aspect of Pakistani
prisons: that a large number of them have become
extraction centres, and crime dens, much like
urban underworlds. The harrowing stories that are
narrated by prisoners in Sindh's jails depicts
them in the light of human objects to be
humiliated. They are treated as criminals, not to
be reformed but to be punished. There is only one
way to escape this - money.
Most jail superintendents, at least in Sindh, are
running prisons on almost a commercial basis with
money passing hands between the jail staff and
the prisoners. In this article, my examples come
from two jails, in Khairpur and Karachi. However,
anecdotal evidence from other jails, including
Sukkur jail, shows that the experience is
probably not very different there.
Each jail has its own 'market' value. According
to my calculation, based on various confidential
letters sent to me from time to time by former
prisoners and jail staff, Khairpur jail fetches
easily about Rs. 20 lakh to Rs. 25 lakh a month
while the figure at Karachi jail is about Rs. 80
lakh to a crore. Jail commissions might want to
investigate how this 'protection money' is
distributed.
A few months ago, a relation was sent to Karachi
jail. The story he brought back was an
eye-opener. There are about 8,000 inmates in the
prison, most of them under-trial prisoners. There
is just about enough space in the barracks to lie
straight at night. Space is competitive and
poverty is a major disincentive. Poor inmates are
packed like sardines and there is not enough
space even to turn around.
Nearly 200 people are thrown into a single
barrack. The point here is that the condition of
the prisoner is contingent upon the money he
brings in. Inmates pay for everything, even to
escape fatigue.
'Sifarish' helps too. I was told that initially,
the jail guard demanded Rs. 200,000 from a group
of five prisoners if they wanted to escape the
general regimen of prisoners. It was only after
the intervention of the governor that the demand
was abandoned.
It is also reported that the jail authorities
charged protection money to the tune of Rs.
100,000 from each member of the revenue staff
recently arrested when the minister for revenue
was sacked. The whole amount was paid.
So insult, humiliation, and protection money add
to the travails of the inmates, most of whom are
not convicts. Interestingly, the persons for the
job, are long-serving convicts, who are now
assigned duties of 'watch and ward' inside the
jail premises.
As district nazim, I have received several
letters from those at Khairpur jail over the
years. There are complaints of humiliation, of
beatings, of massive protection money being
demanded. From time to time, I have intimated the
higher authorities of these complaints, but in
vain. Portions of a recent letter are reproduced
below:
The jail officials, it notes, are "running
everything on contract. Money for washing
clothes, money for keeping mobile phones, money
for charas, for gambling, and even young boys for
money. Television is allowed and they all have
cables. For every cable about Rs. 2,000 a month
is charged.
"...There is a category of prisoners who are
called dalal qaidis who have been sentenced to
death ... who are assigned tasks for collection.
If you make a visit inside the jail premises, you
are charged Rs. 140 rupees... A sipahi has taken
a contract for Rs. 5,000 a week. Every Eid, or on
August 14, charges for one visit are Rs. 350.
"If an inmate is new, then he must furnish the
jail superintendent with a sum of between Rs.
2,000 to Rs. 5,000, in order to avoid a beating.
One prisoner - a dacoit - was charged Rs. 20,000
for not being sent to Sukkur. He is threatening
others of having them transferred to Sukkur,
Hyderabad or Larkana jails if he is not paid Rs.
1,000 per month...Some special prisoners have
been given phones, and some have pistols as
well." This underlines the link the dacoits have
with their companions outside jail.
According to another letter by a prisoner
released on bail, a new prisoner is asked if he
knows anyone inside the prison compound who could
give an undertaking that an advance would be paid
to jail authorities. If the reply is in the
negative, the newcomer is beaten up. (It should
be mentioned that severe beatings are inflicted
on a new prisoner who is then kept in solitary
confinement. A middleman, often a convicted
prisoner, is sent to negotiate the price to be
paid to avoid these cells. This mediator often
also allows loans and guarantees to the new
inmate to be compensated at a future date.)
Commenting on the poor prison diet, the letter
says that flour is mixed with lentils to increase
the quantity and that drugs are freely available.
The government had apparently given the jail
authorities Rs. 1500,000 but very little of this
money was used on what it was meant for. Instead,
money was extracted from the prisoners. Moreover,
gas facilities are available only to the staff.
There is a category of prisoners known as yateem
qaidis, who have no relatives and no money. Their
services are sold to richer prisoners who hire
them for Rs. 1,000 paid to the jail authorities
for tasks like washing and cleaning shoes. The
yateem qaidis are frequently beaten.
A recently released prisoner said that he had to
pay Rs. 2,500 as protection money every month in
Khairpur jail. This was confirmed by an officer
who has served in the jail. Prostitution, too, is
common in Khairpur jail. Young men are made
available for other inmates. Prices may range to
as high as Rs. 10,000 a night.
This information is neither classified nor
confidential. It is well known. Anyone who serves
time in jail comes back with similar grisly
accounts of the treatment meted out to prisoners.
However, inmates are not ready to testify in
official inquiries and land themselves into
greater trouble.
The collusion starts at the top, and it is
possible that the notorious chain, linking
officials and prisoners, also includes
influential personalities, as quite a few people
use "sifarish" to avoid multiple charges. Poor
women come weeping to me, asking me to write
letters to the jail superintendent to exempt them
from paying money.
The repercussions of this scenario are serious.
If prisoners pay through their teeth, then they
also weaken the authority of the jail staff, and
as the Sukkur incident shows, are not governed by
any form of discipline.
Pakistan's jails are regulated by the Prisoner's
Act of 1875, with added rules framed in 1972. The
prison rules, a colonial mishmash, allow for
severe punitive measures, solitary confinement,
whipping, handcuffs, chain links and bar fetters
to be used on the prisoners. The jail
superintendent is the sole authority and the
prisoners have no other recourse to lodge an
appeal against their condition. These draconian
measures legitimize the cruel and inhuman
treatment of prisoners at the hands of their
jailers. This is a deterrent not to curb
lawlessness but for those who do not pay.
A jail reform commission recommended more
reform-oriented work and the provision of space,
of building new prisons, including open jails,
and of initiating technical and vocational
skills. It also recommended separate jails for
women and total separation of juvenile prisoners
from adult (often more hardened) prisoners.
However, these recommendations have not been
seriously considered.
Our lawmakers must urgently evaluate the state of
prisons. Large public interest groups comprising
human rights activists, judges and lawyers must
be included in committees charged with overseeing
prison reforms and should perform the functions
of legal entities on whom clear powers have been
bestowed.
The writer is district nazim, Khairpur.
_______
[3]
The Christian Science Monitor - May 23, 2005 edition
INDIA AND PAKISTAN - THAWING THE FROZEN DIVIDE
By Karl F. Inderfurth
WASHINGTON - Imagine waging a miniwar at 21,000
feet, where temperatures touch minus 40 degrees,
and where altitude sickness and frostbite have
caused as many casualties as bullets and
artillery rounds. That's what India and Pakistan
have been doing for the past two decades in a
remote area of disputed Kashmir known as the
Siachen Glacier, the world's largest outside the
polar regions.
Few contend Siachen has any strategic value, but
it has been important as a symbol of the
unremitting hostility that has existed between
India and Pakistan, neighbors who have fought
three wars and added nuclear weapons to their
military options.
But the dispute across the glacier's 47-mile-long
frozen divide on the western end of the Himalayan
chain may be thawing, as part of a wider, more
comprehensive peace process that has been
unfolding between India and Pakistan for the past
two years.
The defense ministers of the two countries are
scheduled to meet Thursday and Friday in
Islamabad. Their instructions, contained in the
joint statement issued at the end of Pakistan
President Pervez Musharraf's recent visit to
India, are to find a "mutually acceptable
solution" to Siachen and to do so "expeditiously."
Three factors augur well for accomplishing that
objective. First, India and Pakistan agreed to a
cease-fire across the Line of Control, the
military line that divides Kashmir, in November
2003. That cease-fire included Siachen, and the
guns have remained silent since. Second, the two
sides nearly reached an agreement to resolve the
dispute over a decade ago, to include a phased
troop withdrawal and demilitarization. As a
former Indian foreign secretary puts it, all
that's needed now is "to dust off the old ideas
and take them forward."
But the most important factor pointing toward a
possible breakthrough on Siachen is the fact that
the two countries are now in the midst of their
longest-running - and most hopeful - effort to
normalize relations in their history.
At their mid-April meeting in New Delhi, India's
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President
Musharraf watched their national teams play a
long-anticipated cricket match. Pakistan won but
"cricket diplomacy" is proving to be a winner for
both countries.
The joint statement issued at the end of their
discussions said the two leaders have "determined
that the peace process was now irreversible."
They agreed to pursue further measures - like the
bus service that began April 7 connecting the two
capitals of divided Kashmir - "to enhance
interaction and cooperation." This will include
more meeting points for separated families,
trade, pilgrimages, and cultural exchanges.
India's Singh says "soft borders" will create the
right climate for a final Kashmir settlement,
which both leaders said they are committed to
achieve.
Most important, Singh and Musharraf pledged they
"would not allow terrorism to impede the peace
process." As The Economist pointed out, this is
"a striking promise, implying both that Pakistan
is distancing itself further from 'freedom
fighters' in Kashmir, and that India is not going
to react to every terrorist attack as if it were
an act of Pakistan aggression." This pledge, in
short, gives the current peace process a real
chance to succeed.
Unfortunately, that pledge is being tested. In
recent days, a car bomb in a business district in
Srinigar, the capital of Indian-held Kashmir, and
a grenade explosion at a school there killed
several people and injured nearly 100. While the
Indian press reported that a "pro-Pakistan
militant outfit" claimed responsibility for the
first terrorist act, Pakistani press accounts
attributed the attacks to "freedom fighters."
But if the unfolding peace process between India
and Pakistan is able to withstand such
challenges, what is to become of the Siachen
Glacier?
A creative solution has been offered by South
Asian conservationists. Concerned by
environmental degradation and loss of life, they
have proposed that the glacier - source of the
Indus River, a key resource for both India and
Pakistan - be converted into an ecological peace
park, jointly maintained by both nations without
reference to territorial boundaries. Both
countries already have high-altitude natural
reserves. Moreover, the concept of peace parks is
not new.
Today there are some 140 trans-frontier parks on
the borders of about 100 countries.
Perhaps the time has arrived for the world's
highest battlefield - the Siachen, which means
"place of roses" - to be added to that list.
* Karl F. Inderfurth served as US assistant
secretary of State for South Asian affairs
(1997-2001) and is a professor at the Elliott
School of International Affairs at George
Washington University.
_______
[4]
The News International
May 24, 2005
SIACHEN: SYMBOL OF HOPE, NOT HOSTILITY
Suman Sahai
The Siachen glacier is the highest, and possibly
the harshest battlefield, in the world. This icy
wasteland is a drain on the exchequers of both
India and Pakistan. It costs India about two
billion rupees every month to maintain a troop
presence in Siachen. Possibly it costs Pakistan
the same.
For a fraction of this cost and with a great deal
of imagination, this bone of contention could
become an asset for both countries. Siachen, with
its military presence, could become the perfect
gene bank for the region's precious and highly
specialised genetic resources! This symbol of
fractious fighting and hostility could be turned
into a symbol of hope and collaboration for the
future, now that the leaders of our warring
nations are walking the road to peace.
India, which has one of the largest gene banks in
the world, understands the importance of
conserving genetic material. Pakistan does too.
For both nations, genetic resources form the
backbone of the economy and the basis of the
livelihoods of tribal and rural communities.
Genetic resources are also the raw material for
biotechnology, which will dominate up to 60
percent of the global economy in the coming
years. India and Pakistan can develop as
important producers of biotechnological products,
given the richness of their genetic wealth. To do
this, they must begin by conserving and storing
their genetic wealth in gene banks. One option is
to base such gene banks in the permanently frozen
glaciers of Siachen.
India and Pakistan, like the rest of the
subcontinent, are home to several thousand
species of plant, insect and animal life. This
biological wealth is one of the most sought-after
resources in the world today. The Indian
Subcontinent contains some of the most important
biodiversity "hot spots" of the world. This
region has given the world several varieties of
food and cash crops and has contributed
significantly to the stability in global
agriculture. The famed Basmati rice being poached
by America belongs to the Indo-Pakistani region.
The Subcontinent has contributed to at least
20,000 varieties of rice to the International
Gene Bank in the Philippines. Similarly, it has
contributed many kinds of pulses, peas and beans,
other kinds of cereal like millets, vegetables
and spices to various gene banks that are
conserving genetic resources for the future.
A gene bank is one of the facilities necessary to
conserve the fast eroding genetic diversity in
our fields. If we fail to conserve our genetic
(biological) diversity, we risk the future food
security of this country, as also of the world.
In addition to plant varieties in agriculture.
There is an urgent need to save our forest
resources, the animal and fish species in our
rivers and the insects and the micro-organisms of
our region.
Most of the gene banks in existence are located
in Western nations. Although they are governed by
an international mandate, practically, the
control over the genetic material in the bank is
not in the hands of those who are the
contributors. India for example, has little
control over the many thousand rice varieties
lying banked at IRRI in the Philippines. All our
micro-organisms are lying banked in an American
facility because we do not have our own gene bank
for storing these. At this time, with an
aggressive biotechnology industry demanding
access to our genetic resources and forcing an
international patent regime to monopolise these
resources, it has become imperative for us to
think of our own gene banks, under our control.
Gene banks are expensive options and the cost has
been one of the major impediments to setting up
our own facilities on a large scale. The National
Gene Bank in Delhi has been an Indo-US effort.
But given the current climate of controversy over
genetic resources, in the matter of storing our
genetic material, it is best to be independent.
Although a conventional gene bank is an expensive
proposition, an unconventional gene bank need not
be so.
A gene bank is essentially a combination of
fridge and freezer. Here there are two ways of
storing genetic material, usually in the form of
seeds. Seeds can be stored for five to 15 years
(medium-term storage) in the "fridge" section, at
five degrees Celsius. This is not so difficult.
While seeds that have to be stored for a long
term which theoretically means "forever," have to
be stored in the "freezer" section, which means
at -20 degrees Celsius. This is somewhat more
difficult because it means very heavy energy
costs. Maintaining a gene bank at -20 degrees not
only means heavy electricity bills but, given the
problem of power shortages, it means providing
back-up support by captive power generation,
making the whole exercise still more expensive.
The permanently frozen Siachen is a natural
freezer where the imperative -20 degrees C is
provided by nature and entails no electricity
bills. Here is a free gene bank of almost
unlimited capacity, provided we have the
imagination and the will to seize the
opportunity. India and Pakistan maintain highly
trained troops in that territory. This skilled
manpower is bored out of its head and has nothing
better to do than take pot shots at each other.
It is not unreasonable to assume they would be
more than happy to catalogue, store and maintain
the foundation of their children's future,
provided their leaders let them.
Making a gene bank in the Siachen would really be
quite a simple affair. All the technical know-how
is available at the National Gene Bank in Delhi.
What is essentially required is for seed samples
to be treated appropriately for long-term
storage, put into special aluminium pouches,
labelled properly and put into the bank. What is
important is that the samples can be retrieved
periodically and sent back to the field to test
that nothing has gone wrong in storage and that
they are still viable.
The seeds derived from these grown-out samples
can go back to the bank. Suitable sites in the
Siachen can be selected as, so to speak, ice
cupboards where boxes containing the aluminium
pouches can be stored. A similar, perhaps less
glamorous but, under the circumstances, more
easily implementable option is available for us
in the experimental station we maintain in
Antarctica. In this perma-frost region nature has
also provided conditions which are suitable for
natural gene banks. Here also we maintain highly
trained teams of scientists so manpower will not
be an additional cost. For a modest sum of money,
the banking facilities for the genetic resources
of our region can be extended almost indefinitely.
Gene banks in the Antarctic and Siachen are new
ideas, but they have tremendous potential. Their
likely impact on securing the livelihoods of our
people and strengthening the economy of our
region should be incentive enough to try. Given
the crucial importance of genetic resources to
our joint future, it is time for the leaders of
India and Pakistan to demonstrate a quantum leap
in creative thinking.
The writer is director of Gene Campaign, a leading Indian NGO
_______
[5]
Dawn - May 23, 2005
OFF WITH THE BLINKERS
By Jawed Naqvi
NEW DELHI: President Pervez Musharraf's newly
advertised belief that his chemistry with Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh offers the best chance
for a solution to the Kashmir issue actually
marks a tectonic shift from Pakistan's erstwhile
blinkered view that it could do serious business
only with rightwing Hindu hardliners. That Dr
Singh is neither a Hindu revivalist nor a dyed in
the wool Pakistan-baiter, which the BJP and its
various leaders had quite evidently proved to be,
should be an eye-opener for those, including most
notably Pakistani liberals, who had cultivated a
perverse preference for the Hindutva leadership
out of a kind of spite, as it were, for the
Congress. It is a fact though that the Congress
has not been entirely clean on many of the
concerns voiced by liberals in both countries,
nor does it smell of roses on the communal
question. Over a period of time, and certainly
since the mid-eighties, it has promoted a narrow
nationalism as well as Hindu communalism whose
DNA is not very different from the BJP's.
Moreover, the Congress has traditionally had an
extra weapon in its quiver - that of fanning
Muslim communalism and obscurantism to fit
apolitical, electoral need. The roots go back to
the years before Independence when Mahatma Gandhi
sought to get Indian Muslims tethered to the
Khilafat Movement as an anti-British tool. For
all practical purposes the Khilafat Movement
ended up as an attempt to stave off the rout of a
system of religious leadership of Muslims that
was no longer going to be tenable in
thecontemporary world.
Today, juxtaposed to President Musharraf's stated
objective to lead his country towards an
Ataturk-inspired modern, liberal nation state,
the Khilafat Movement of Gandhiji appears even
more medieval than was originally visualized.
There may be many pitfalls in the Ataturk model
of governance, not the least being a tendency for
authoritarianism, but few can question its thrust
for a badly required enlightenment visa vis
religious zealotry rampant in both countries.
Last week, the Indian state - which is
essentially a hotchpotch amalgam of the Congress
and the BJP's worldview - took yet another step
to stoke the fires of Hindu-Muslim communal
passions. It did so with a clearly delineated
electoral purpose. In its new ill-considered move
the government gave Aligarh MuslimUniversity,
which is a federally funded institution mind you,
a kind of a minority status by granting 50 per
cent reservations for Muslim students. The Indian
constitution does not allow for such reservation
on religious grounds. That is the hallmark of a
secular state. In any case the university has
more than 50 per cent Muslim students at any
point of time. So what's the big deal? No prizes
for guessing then that the BJP lunged at the
issue and why not? If and when elections are held
in Uttar Pradesh or anywhere else in the north,
even Assam for that matter, the BJP would raise
the bogey of appeasement of Muslims by the
Congress, a time-tested political plank. The BJP
would get more Hindu votes and the Congress would
probably get a few more Muslim votes.
Bal Thackeray, Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and All
India MuslimPersonal Law Board, which has been
effectively given the contract to brainwash young
Muslim minds in the madrasas, were patronized by
the Indian state under Congress rule. In fact
they were set up to foil the secular liberal
politics because liberal politics would logically
lead to egalitarian demands, which the Indian
state is not ready to entertain. This approach
persists even more vehemently today. The problem
with this kind of polarization is that it not
only fuels Hindu and Muslim extremists, but it
also takes away the focus from the issues that
need to be targeted. For the Congress the latest
Aligarh move is a clever attempt to create the
illusion of helping Muslims without actually
doing anything for them, except bringing more
harm. What do Indians need most, and let us
assume that Muslims are also among them? They
need jobs. They need security. They need to be
treated with respect. The state doesn't have to
try very hard to deliver all these if it can be
only a little more transparent, merit-oriented,
caring, and ruthlessly protective about
everyone's individual and collective rights to
equality and justice enshrined in the
constitution.
As Aligarh's most eminent academician and
acclaimed historian Irfan Habib said the move to
reserve college seats, when Muslims don't need
that quota, could only harm them. So while the
BJP has attacked the reservation issue to whip up
communalism, the Left has taken up cudgels
against it to bridge the growing gap between
India's Muslims and the Indian state.
Addressing the hardcore issues of secular
governance is thus necessary for it impacts on
the evolving India-Pakistan relations. Moving
away from the Khilafat Movement and Ataturk
models, what is it that ideally the two countries
would want to see in Kashmir as they head to
resolve this seemingly intractable issue? What
kind of political and religious milieu would be
agreeable? What would happen to both countries if
Kashmir elects a religiously fundamentalist
government, bereft of its all-embracing
Kashmiriyat, if it were to ever hold free and
fair elections? What are the ways to prevent such
a slide from happening? Going by the
diametrically opposite approaches to the kind of
Muslim society they want to build, President
Musharraf would win the liberal corner hands
down. The question really becomes more urgent
when it gets to Prime Minister Singh and his
Congress Party. In its attempt to placate Hindus
and Muslims as electorally useful religious
categories - tinkering with the Ayodhya mosque
here and a Muslim divorcee's case there - the
Congress was forced into political oblivion for
four general elections. And if it hasn't learnt
any lessons from history, then it would be
leaving Pakistan with no choice but to continue
to engage with the BJPas the only feasible
interlocutor. For who knows when the Congress is
going to hand the Hindutva hordes the ideal come
back vehicle of communalism. Dr. Singh's liberal
credentials notwithstanding."
______
[6]
The Telegraph, 14 May 2005.
THINK OUT OF THE BOX
Sanjib Baruah
T. Muivah's suggestion - a special federal
relationship with India - may well be the
solution to the Naga dispute, writes Sanjib Baruah
When in an interview on BBC's Hard Talk last
month Thuingaleng Muivah spoke of a special
federal relationship with India it could have
become a sign that the eight-year-old peace
process is finally heading towards a settlement.
However, it was not interpreted that way.
Apparently our opinion-makers do not consider a
special federal relationship a viable
proposition. Nor can the kind of constitutional
change necessary to create such a relationship be
won in a bargain at a closed-door negotiation.
Public debates have to first prepare the ground.
In certain ways, the climate for such a debate
could not have been more conducive. Today,
innovative new ideas are part of the discussion
on the status of Kashmir. Consider K. Natwar
Singh's sky-is-the-limit comment on what is
possible. There is no reason why the same could
not apply to Nagaland. However, whether the kind
of national attention that focuses on Kashmir can
be mobilized for the Naga question is another
matter. When it comes to the North-east, we seem
to be quite content to leave decisions to small
groups of people: we don't even want to know very
much until some crisis boils over.
There have been two major stumbling blocks to a
settlement of the Naga conflict - the question of
Naga sovereignty and the idea of integration of
Naga-inhabited areas. Under the leadership of
Muivah and Isak Chishi Swu, the Nagas have begun
thinking of the sovereignty question in quite
creative ways, outside the traditional paradigm
of independence.
This has been an act of admirable statesmanship
on the part of Muivah and Swu, and the single
most important factor that has carried the peace
process this far. There is no similar movement on
the question of the integration of Naga-inhabited
areas, but Muivah has indicated that he only
seeks an agreement in principle. He is willing to
give more time for translating such a commitment
into practice.
It is in this context that the idea of special
federal arrangements could provide a
breakthrough. Muivah's reply to a question on
whether such a settlement could be within the
framework of the Constitution was suggestive. It
can come "as close as possible" to that, he said,
but ruled out a settlement "within the Indian
Union or within the framework of the Indian
Constitution". Yet it is hard to argue that a
federal relationship can be anything other than
one that is spelt out in the Constitution.
Further, Muivah's reasoning on the issue was not
based on principle, but on a concern that an
agreement made today might not last, that laws
incorporating such an arrangement can be thrown
out later.
One can hardly blame Muivah for reading the
Indian track record accurately. After all, that
is exactly what happened to the autonomy that
Jammu and Kashmir had once enjoyed. Article 370
had made India a leading example of what
political scientists call asymmetrical federalism
- a federation where some units have different
powers, or greater autonomy than others. In the
case of Kashmir, it was done to make its
constitutional status consistent with the
accession instrument. Thus parliament's powers
were limited to defence, foreign affairs and
communication and the residual powers were left
to the state assembly. Furthermore, the state's
two top offices had special designations -
Sadr-i-Riyasat, instead of governor, and prime
minister, rather than chief minister. But
gradually all elements of Kashmir's special
autonomy disappeared, titles like Sadr-i-Riyasat
were eliminated and Kashmir became like any other
state.
Today a leading example of asymmetrical
federalism is Canada, where Quebec has more
powers in certain areas compared to the
predominantly Anglophone provinces, and Spain,
where "historical communities" such as Catalonia,
Basque Country and Galicia have more powers than
other autonomous communities.
But unlike Canada and Spain, Indian public
opinion has been ambivalent about asymmetrical
federalism. To a large extent, this attitude was
responsible for sealing the fate of Article 370.
Article 371, which follows the constitutional
provision on Kashmir, grants some asymmetrical
autonomy to Nagaland and a few other northeastern
states. That this autonomy has survived owes more
to the lack of interest in the region in the rest
of the country than to any active public support
for such a dispensation.
A special federal relationship can be built on
the foundation of the asymmetrical federalism
that already exists in Nagaland. Indeed it might
even permit the settlement of the integration
issue. For instance, a second legislative chamber
can be constituted to represent the interests of
Nagas living outside Nagaland. Such a chamber
elected by non-territorial constituencies -
something like a Naga Ho-ho transformed into a
statutory body - can recognize the trans-state
nature of Naga identity and respect the
territorial integrity of states like Manipur,
Arunachal Pradesh and Assam. But such an idea
cannot be explored unless the neighbouring
northeastern states are brought into the
discussion as stakeholders in the Naga conflict.
One should not expect a final settlement to take
the form of an agreement announced to the press
at the end of secret negotiations. What the next
stage of the Naga peace process needs most is not
fresh ideas but active efforts to link what
happens behind closed doors with dialogues
outside. Such dialogues should involve not only
Naga civil society, but also the civil societies
of the neighbouring northeastern states and the
rest of the country. The Naga leadership and the
Indian government must now muster enough
political will not only to imagine a viable
blueprint for the future but a road map on how to
reach there. And such a road map must include a
healthy dose of public participation.
Sanjib Baruah is visiting professor, Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi.
______
[7] [Announcements]
(i)
Dear All
The No! No! Campaign!! was launched successfully
on 11th May 2005 in India and Pakistan. As per
reports received, the Campaign was launched at
the South Asian Peace Conference in Multan in
which over 800 delegates from across Pakistan
participated. Admiral Ramdas launched the
Campaign at a Public Meeting in Hyderabad, India.
The No! No! Campaign received unprecedented
endorsement and response from networks and
organisations in both the countries. List of
collaborating organisations is attached and also
available on the Campaign website:
www.nonocampaign.net
Facility for online endorsements is also active.
Please visit Petitions Online to sign at the
following address:
www.ipetitions.com/campaigns/nonocampaign
Please pass on this mail to all your contacts
with a request to sign and endorse the Campaign.
Signature drives have been initiated and are
continuing in many cities and towns across India
and Pakistan.
According to Dr. Nayyar of Pakistan Peace
Coalition, groups in Islamabad and Rawalpindi
have decided to hold a daily demonstration from
May 12 to May 27, choosing different sites in the
twin cities, and involving different component
organisations as focal organisers. So, while one
day, it will be a CPC demo in the main bazar of
Islamabad, the next day a trade union will
arrange it on a busy intersection in Rawalpindi,
and a third will be organised by students of a
university, and so on.
Similar daily campaigns are being organised in
Hyderabad Deccan by different organisations,
unions, and student groups at recreation centers,
university campuses, railway reservation
counters, bus stops, shopping malls and all such
places where people congregate. As a result of
tapping such varied public places, it has become
possible to reach out to different sections of
society from the poor to the educated and elite
and spanning all age groups. The enthusiasm of
the people is unbelievable and most are
expressing happiness at this opportunity to
participate in this initiative to promote peace
and goodwill between India and Pakistan.
A Leaflet detailing the India Pakistan defense
spending vis a vis allocations for education and
health in both the countries and revealing that
the cost of one F 16 is enough to construct 2400
primary schools that could educate 12 lakh
children and other such estimations is proving to
be a great hit and winning over scores to the
peace constituency. A copy of the Leaflet is
attached (in both Acrobat Reader and Word
Formats).
The Leaflets along with the Petition Form to take
signatures from people are printed and available
in Hindi, English, Urdu and Telugu. These could
be posted to groups in India already engaged in
or interested in launching campaigns in their
areas. Alternatively, you could download the
attachments and print your own copies. Groups in
Pakistan are translating them into Punjabi and
Sindhi also.
As Schools and Colleges are on vacation, it was
decided to carry on the Campaign till 11th July
2005. So we have some more time and the
possibility of reaching out to millions of
students and youth to sensitise and enlist them
into the peace constituency.
Request all to organise signature Campaigns in
your areas and also inform us about all your
programs, experiences and successes so that we
could put them on the Campaign website and share
with others.
Please visit the Campaign Website: : www.nonocampaign.net
Please sign online at: www.ipetitions.com/campaigns/nonocampaign
Please forward this mail to all on your mail list.
Regards
Mazher
o o o o
(ii)
Dear All,
Greetings from Aman. We hope this mail finds you well. Being friends of
Aman or ex-participants of the Peace Course, we announce the opening of
applications for Peace Course, 2005. Below are some details of the
course, which we would be glad if you forwarded to people who would be
interested in attending the course or posted on your respective sites.
As in the past, we hope to work with people concerned with issues of
conflict and further the process towards peace.
Regards,
Dilip Simeon
Director, Aman
The AMAN Peace and Conflict Studies Course (In collaboration with Jamia
Hamdard)
Delhi, September 26 - October 26, 2005
Overview
The course aims at developing and widening intellectual discourse on the
subject among individuals working in NGOs, teachers, journalists,
students and other concerned citizens. The course will make Indian and
South Asian reality a starting point for an investigation of conflict,
violence and its many ramifications. A conceptual approach that will
connect, rather than compartmentalize themes relevant to violence and
conflict will be developed. We believe that philosophical and ethical
inquiry is a necessary element in such a study. Our lectures and
seminars shall examine the relationship between local and global issues,
competing histories and antagonistic polities; and the functions that
link ethnic identity, gender, and symbols to political and economic
structures.
Duration
The course will be conducted from 26th September to 26th October, 2005.
It will be interactive and residential, with two or three units being
conducted every day, two in the mornings and one in the afternoon/early
evening. Each unit will consist of two hours, and will include a lecture
and a discussion.
A seminar on issues which require further discussion will be organized
at the end of each week.
Application requirements
Prospective participants are required to send the following information
by 10 July 2005.
1) A Curriculum Vitae
2) Interest in attending the course (500-800 words)
3) Name and Contacts of two referees
Participants' ability to comprehend lectures and other forms of
discussion in English is necessary, although the course is open to those
who wish to speak and submit their coursework in Hindi.
Course Structure: The course will consist of the following six rubrics,
whose contents will be supplied in greater detail to participants over
the weeks preceding the course. The web site can be visited for regular
updates. <www.amanpanchayat.org>
Rubric 1: Ethical and Philosophical Perspectives on Violence
Rubric 2: Aspects of twentieth century world history
Rubric 3: Conflict Issues in the Womens Movement
Rubric 4: The world order and concepts of conflict
Rubric 5 : Issues in the Contemporary History of India and South Asia
Rubric 6: Law, Conflict and Peace Processes
Costs and fee waivers for suitable candidates will be announced next
week.
Please ask for more information on the Aman Trust and the Peace Course
from our office, via e-mail, or ordinary mail. Address correspondence
to:
Peace Course, The Aman Trust
C- 651, 1st Floor,
New Friends Colony,
New Delhi- 110065
E-mail: peacecourse at amanpanchayat.org
Visit AMAN web site for further details on the course and organization
<www.amanpanchayat.org>
Early applications will be appreciated as the course is limited to 20
participants.
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz on the perils of fundamentalist politics, on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
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