SACW | Jan. 3-4, 2007

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Wed Jan 3 19:06:20 CST 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | January 3-4, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2343 - Year 8

[1]  Pakistan:  Dangerous phase of sectarianism (Edit, Daily Times)
[2]  India:  Communal Riots 2006 (Asghar Ali Engineer)
[3]  India : Inside Gujarat's Relief Colonies - 
Surviving State Hostility and Denial (Harsh 
Mander)
[4]  India: organizations of survivors of the 
1984 Union Carbide disaster condemn Tata's offer 
to clear the path for Dow-Union Carbide's 
investments (Harsh Mander ()
[5]  India: Press Release Narmada Bachao Andolan
[6]  India: How the Congress fudged the language question (Mukul Kesavan)
[7]  India:  Constitutional Provisions Religion, Quota and Law (Pran Chopra)

____


[1]


The Daily Times
January 04, 2007

EDITORIAL: DANGEROUS PHASE OF SECTARIANISM

According to our security agencies, three 
incidents of terrorism in Karachi in 2006 - the 
blast at the US Consulate, the Nishtar Park 
massacre and the murder of Allama Hasan Turabi - 
were all carried out by the sectarian militia 
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and were planned in South 
Waziristan under the tutelage of Al Qaeda. The 
new combination is Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Wana and Al 
Qaeda. One can also say that Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is 
the blanket term now used for all manner of jihad 
in which all the Deobandi-Ahle Hadith militants 
have made common cause.

We also know that all three incidents were staged 
through the device of suicide-bombings. This is 
clearly the Arab signature in the violence 
spreading in Pakistan. The same signature was 
appended to the attempts made on the lives of 
President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister 
Shaukat Aziz earlier. Therefore one of the 
lessons that those who object to the hanging of 
Saddam Hussein on the day of Hajj should remember 
is that sectarianism is blind to such 
considerations: the Nishtar Park massacre in 
which scores of Barelvi leaders died took place 
on Eid Miladun Nabi!

All three incidents have been traced to Wana by 
the investigators: one ostensibly committed for 
Al Qaeda and two for the local sectarians. The 
bombing jacket of the boy who killed Allama 
Turabi was made in Darra Adam Khel at the behest 
of Al Qaeda, now spearheaded by Abdullah Mehsud 
who was released by the Americans from Guantanamo 
Bay in 2003. He returned to Pakistan and took his 
first revenge for the death of his mentor Mufti 
Jamil at the Banuri Mosque by abducting two 
Chinese engineers in the Tribal Areas, one of 
whom was killed during the rescue operation.

The Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has finally moved to centre 
stage. Past news of its demise after the capture 
of Akram Lahori were, it seems, highly 
exaggerated. In fact now the entire conglomerate 
of jihadi militias has accepted a common 
sectarian banner, and this has come in the wake 
of Al Qaeda's own transformation from an 
intellectually fashioned anti-American 
organisation into an intra-Islamic exterminator 
of the Shia. This has been done through the 
mental somersault of equating the Shia - the 
government in Iraq plus, strangely, Iran - as 
allies of the United States!

To understand what is going on we have to go back 
to the late 1980s when Al Qaeda was formed in 
Peshawar in the midst of a gathering sectarian 
storm in Pakistan. Because this wave was 
orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, Al Qaeda tried to 
keep away from it. But later, starting with the 
return of Osama Bin Laden and other Al Qaeda 
elements to Jalalabad from Sudan after 1996, Al 
Qaeda had to accept a kind of coexistence with 
the sectarian militias which were taking training 
in its camps. That is why whenever Pakistan 
demanded the return of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi 
killers from the 'friendly' Taliban government, a 
deaf ear was turned to it, and the Lashkar 
terrorists continued to live in Al Qaeda camps 
outside Kabul.

There were times when Al Qaeda was actually 
helped by Iran, especially during the tenure of 
Abu Musab Zarqawi as head of a training camp in 
Herat from where he infiltrated into Kurdistan 
through Iranian territory. After 2003, however, 
there was a cleavage of opinion inside Al Qaeda. 
Mr Zarqawi spearheaded the new trend of viewing 
the Shia of Iraq - and Iran itself - as the 
beneficiaries of the American invasion. At first 
Mr Al Zawahiri resisted this trend and Al Qaeda 
officially advised him in Iraq to stay away from 
Shia-killing, but later the prospect of a grand 
Sunni Arab consensus against Iran became 
irresistible and Mr Zarqawi was hailed as a 
martyr when he finally died in Iraq.

Now Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is supposed to have planned 
a fresh targeting of the Shia community in the 
cities where they are found in large numbers: 
Lahore, Rawalpindi, Gujranwala, Multan, Khanewal, 
Layya, Bhakkar, Jhang, Sargodha, Rahimyar Khan, 
Karachi, Dera Ismail Khan, Bannu, Kohat, 
Parachinar, Hangu, Hyderabad, Nawabshah, Mirpur 
Khas and Quetta. This is certainly a new 
challenge for the government in charge of facing 
up to sectarian violence in the country. Both the 
mainstream parties - the PPPP and the PMLN - 
faced it when they were in government but failed 
because of the exclusive handling of jihad by the 
intelligence agencies. Today all parties must 
stand united to reject what is coming.

Above all, it is the MMA which has to look deep 
into its conscience and separate the biggest 
curse of religion, sectarianism, from the 
Taliban-style governance it supports. The 
alliance has lost many of its leaders to this 
curse without taking any effective action against 
some of its own members. It must not exploit the 
new situation by pinning the blame on the current 
government alone. If the opposition takes some 
sneaking pleasure in the rise of sectarianism in 
Pakistan as an instrumentality of removal of 
government, it will live to regret it. Pakistan 
is a large Muslim state with Shias that outnumber 
the Shias of Iraq. Its population has never been 
sectarian but is now gradually succumbing to the 
fear of violence.

All politicians must come together to save the 
next generation of Pakistanis from the new 
orientation spreading in the Muslim world. 
Already, in some of the cities - like Gilgit, 
Parachinar, Bannu, etc - a kind of sectarian war 
among the people seems to have started. It must 
not spread further. So far the venting of anger 
has been targeted and not general. But the very 
foundation of a state founded by a Shia leader - 
the Quaid - is now at risk. Once they throw down 
roots these budding ethnic and sectarian 
conflicts never go away. And the states that 
allow them to become embedded are then faced by 
their own annihilation. We must learn this lesson 
before such a fate befalls us. *

_____


[2]


COMMUNAL RIOTS 2006

by Asghar Ali Engineer

(Secular Perspective Jan. 1-31, 2007)


This is as usual our annual survey of communal 
riots and events during 2006. This was 
comparatively an year with few riots. In fact 
post-Gujarat India has witnessed fewer riots. 
Gujarat was indeed another watershed like the one 
after post-Babri riots. It has been witnessed 
that after some major riot, subsequent years 
witness smaller and fewer riots. Mumbai riots 
after demolition of Babri Masjid by Sangh Parivar 
fanatics were also very intense and widespread in 
1992-93 in which more than one thousand persons 
perished. After Mumbai riots there was no major 
riot with the exception of Coimbatore riots (in 
which 40 persons were killed) until Gujarat 
happened.

Gujarat was really earthshaking both in its 
intensity and in its brutality and direct 
involvement of state machinery. In fact nothing 
like Gujarat had happened in post-independence 
period. Gujarat happened in 2002 and since 
Gujarat no major riot like it has happened. Such 
major riots perhaps make even communal forces 
make so nervous by exposure of media that it 
takes quite sometime for them to gather courage 
for next major communal riot. Also, after riots 
like the ones in Gujarat, 2002, it becomes 
difficult for communal forces to get people’s 
support for another one for quite some time. It 
is also important to note that the next major 
riot does not usually occur at the same place. 
For example, after Mumbai riot of 1992-93 next 
major riot took place in Gujarat, not in Mumbai. 
Similarly earlier during eighties many major 
riots took place but subsequent riot never 
occurred at the same place.

So after Gujarat there has been no major riot so 
far. During 2006 several small riots took place 
in different places. The first riot occurred at 
Baroda on 17th January. Two groups of Hindus and 
Muslims clashed on some petty matter in which two 
persons were injured. The police and Rapid Action 
Force came into action and prevented further 
trouble. Three persons were arrested.

On 3rd February there were clashes between those 
going for Friday prayers in Kamalmaula Masjid and 
Bhojshala temple for worship in Dhar, Madhya 
Pradesh. The Hindu Jagran Manch, a Sangh Parivar 
unit has been claiming that Kamalmaula Masjid is 
a Hindu temple and Dhar has become communally 
highly sensitive place and clashes occur here 
frequently. More than 300 Muslims were prevented 
from entering the sque to pray and police had to 
resort to lathicharge and fire teargas shells and 
impose curfew. Muslims had to pray in a temporary 
structure outside.  Later on curfew was relaxed 
and Hindus were allowed to perform puja.

Very surprisingly clashes between Muslims and 
Buddhists occurred in Leh in J&K on 10th 
February. The mob set ablaze a house at Horay 
Gonpa in protest against the alleged desecration 
of Qur’an. 31 persons were arrested in clashes 
between Muslims and Buddhists. The Qur’an was 
allegedly kept inside the mosque in Bodh Kharboo 
in Kargil. Curfew had to be imposed which 
continued for few days and Army had to stage flag 
march. Leh, in a sense, is communally sensitive 
as earlier too clashes had occurred between 
Muslims and Buddhists.

There were clashes in Muzaffarnagar, U.P. between 
communities on 17th February during 
demonstrations against cartoons of the Prophet of 
Islam. Six persons were injured. The sentiments 
were inflamed as U.P.’s minister of Haj Haji 
Muhammad Yaqoob announced reward of 51 crores of 
rupees for anyone who brings the head of the 
cartoonist. PAC was posted to control the 
situation. In Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh also 
clashes occurred between Muslims and Hindus in 
which one shop was set on fire and 5 persons were 
injured on same day i.e. on 11th February in Char 
Minar and other areas. Hyderabad witnessed 
similar disturbances again on 24th February when 
a religious place was desecrated in Karwan 
locality. The faces of lions installed outside 
the religious place were found broken. 
Immediately large number of people collected and 
began stoning the houses of other community. 
Police had to resort to lathicharge to disperse 
the mob.

On 3rd March Lucknow which is not so communally 
sensitive witnessed communal clashes between 
Hindus and Muslims in which 4 persons were killed 
while Muslims were staging demonstrations against 
Prophet’s cartoons after Friday prayers in 
Aminabad, Qaiserganj, Latoosh Road when Muslims 
forced shopkeepers to down their shutters. 
However, according to Muslim source disturbances 
started when Khatiks (Hindu slaughterers) stoned 
Muslims protesting against Prophet’s cartoons. 
Then firing started from both sides in which 4 
persons were killed. Majority of those injured 
were Muslims. In retaliation Muslims stoned many 
vehicles and damaged them and set fore to 
effigies of Bush.

Goa also witnessed communal violence on 4th March 
when Muslims took out protest march against 
demolition of a structure used for prayer by the 
minority community. To save the minority 
community, police claimed, they were evacuated. 
The Congress blamed the Hindu fundamentalists for 
disturbances.  The Hindus stoned the Protest 
march. Then the mob ransacked several 
establishments and torched vehicles. Police fired 
in the air when someone attacked inspector Gaad 
and snatched his revolver. Two persons were 
injured in the firing. About 100 persons were 
arrested.

Bangalore saw communal violence on 10th March 
when dispute started between members of two 
communities in a Muslim majority area of city on 
the question of barking of dog. The argument 
between youths of two communities and 9 persons 
were injured when stoning started and one person 
was seriously injured in stabbing. The police 
brought the situation under control.

On March 26 Baroda witnessed communal violence 
once again in Fatehpura area. More than 100 
persons gathered and stoned in which 6 persons 
were injured. The dispute between the two 
communities arose on small matter and soon 
engulfed the area in violence. Of the injured 
four were seriously injured and had to be 
hospitalised.

Aligarh flared up on the eve of Navratri on April 
6 and four persons were killed. The two 
communities indulged in stoning and firing. It 
was alleged that Muslims removed the decorative 
lighting of a temple and violence flared up. Then 
the clash occurred with Muslims in Sabzi Mandi 
and Daiwali Gali. In fact, some alleged that when 
a piyao (structure for drinking water) was sought 
to be used as temple and was decorated with 
lights on the occasion of Navratri, the dispute 
started and took violent form. Besides 4 persons 
who died, 13 were injured of which 6 were in 
critical condition. Curfew had to be imposed in 
the area of five police stations.

On April 11, on the occasion of Prophet’s birth 
day Khandwa was engulfed in communal violence and 
in Pali in Rajasthan was also affected on this 
occasion. Twelve persons were injured in stoning 
in Khandwa. In both the places indefinite curfew 
was imposed. The police sources in Khandwa said 
that dispute started when some Muslims removed a 
Raavi Pandal in Jalebi chowk. In Pali, 10 persons 
were injured when a procession of Mahavir Jayanti 
was stoned. Some Muslims objected to procession 
being taken from Pinjara Mohalla and trouble 
started.    

Thana experienced communal disturbances on 24th 
April. It is reported that one Muslim was 
unloading wood from a truck when two Hindu youth 
objected. However, matter was apparently settled 
but at night around 10 p.m. some Hindu youth came 
with swords and attacked Muslim houses. But 
Bajrang Dal group leader Prakash Ramkumar Yadav 
claimed that clashes started when he and his 
father were attacked and injured. But Mahmood 
Dalvi said he received a phone call from the area 
and when he reached there Ramprakash Yadav, along 
with 150 others were attacking Muslim houses. 
They were saying that we will make this area 
Gujarat. It was also alleged that when Muslim 
houses were being attacked the local MLA Eknath 
Sinde and policemen were silent spectators. 
Muslims alleged that police was arresting us 
instead of mischief mongers and attackers. 
Muslims felt terrorised by Bajrang Dal activists 
and lack of police support.

On April 25 one person was killed in Bhivandi, a 
Shiv Sainik, on the question of playing cricket. 
Four others were injured. It all started with a 
cricket ball hitting a Hindu woman and Muslim 
boys refusing to stop playing cricket. They 
forcibly stopped and slapped the boys. The boys 
threatened to return and settle score. They, some 
30 in all returned with sticks, chains and stumps 
and attacked Mohan. Mohan later succumbed to his 
injuries. Police arrested six boys and was 
looking for 20 others.

Baroda, communally highly inflammable place since 
early eighties, once again was in flames on May 
1st when a three hundred year old dargah of 
Chishti Rashiduddin was demolished by Vadodara 
Municipal Corporation which sparked riots in 
which 4 persons were killed and more than 12 were 
injured in police firing.  Two of the dead had 
bullet injuries while other two were stabbed. It 
was demolished as an ‘illegal structure’. How can 
a three hundred year old dargah be declared as 
illegal?

Initially there was argument between residents of 
the locality but matter worsened when police 
intervened leading to riots which soon spread in 
different parts of the city. The police failed to 
disperse the mob by lathicharge and resorted to 
firing. Later on one Muslim was burnt alive along 
with his car and when people phoned control room 
police allegedly said ‘Go to Pakistan’. According 
to one estimate in all 6 persons died.

On intervention by Kamaluddin Bawa, it was agreed 
by Muslims that a portion of Mazar could be 
sliced of for road widening but when Muslims 
discovered that VMC plans to demolish entire 
Mazar they protested. The corporators most of 
whom were from BJP also maintained that when they 
could demolish temples why can’t VMC demolish 
dargah. But they forgot that temples were 
unauthorised and of recent origin whereas dargah 
was three hundred years old and could not be 
called ‘illegal’. Anyway it resulted in serious 
communal violence resulting in death of six 
persons. On 18th May dead bodies of two children 
were found in decomposed state in the dicky of a 
car belonging to a VHP leader. How heinous crimes 
these communal fanatics can commit!

Aligarh witnessed another bout of communal 
violence on 29th May when a BJP leader was 
murdered and in retaliation two persons were 
killed. The police further extended the curfew 
which was already force since last eruption of 
violence and clamped it in two more areas. Thus 
curfew was clamped in all five police station 
areas. Ahmedabad also experienced communal 
violence after a scooter rider knocked down 
person of another community near a place of 
worship. The police resorted to lathi charge and 
in all 30 persons were injured both in 
lathicharge and stoning between persons of two 
communities.

Next communal violence erupted in Karoli, 
Rajastan on 16th June when at a tea stall a 
mentally unstable person put cow dung on Qur’an 
and wrote objectionable things on it and showed 
it to people. This caused provocation to Muslims 
who set fire to two Hindu shops besides damaging 
some stalls. They then marched to collector’s 
office and submitted a memorandum demanding 
action against the offender. Some Hindus set fire 
to an autorickshaw. There were some incidents of 
stabbing also.

On 18th June there was incidence of communal 
violence in Goda village in Pratapgarh district 
of U.P. Two girls were burnt alive after the 
murder of a Hindu youth by some unknown persons. 
As the news of Hindu youth’s murder spread 
hundreds of people poured in Gonda village with 
weapons and attacked establishment of a Muslim 
community in Gonda, Baldu and Subedar villages. 
Over 100 houses were set ablaze in which two 
girls were charred to death. These three villages 
border on Pratapgarh and Raebareli districts. 
Immediate police reinforcements were rushed and 
situation was controlled. Some 100 persons were 
arrested.

On fourth September Raesen town in M.P. saw 
eruption of communal violence. Some persons 
allegedly threw pieces of beef at Jain temple. 
Hearing this news Hindus began to gather in large 
numbers and began stoning shops belonging to 
Muslims and damaging them. The police tried to 
disperse mob by firing teargas shells and when 
crowd did not disperse it fired three rounds in 
the air. Police reinforcements and rapid Action 
Force was brought to keep situation under control.

Ganpati festival is another occasion for eruption 
of communal violence. This year on 7th September 
Rabori area of Thane, near Mumbai and Usmanabad 
in Marathwada saw eruption of communal violence. 
In Rabori Muslims and those in the Ganpati 
procession clashed and began stoning but the 
police was quite alert and immediately brought 
the situation under control within 15 minutes.

However, it was more serious in Usmanabad where 
those in the Ganpati procession began throwing 
gulal (red powder) at Muslims in an inebriated 
state. They threw stones at the mosque and 
several Muslim shops. They also began to set fire 
to shops and vehicles and broke open some shops. 
It went on till late at night. It began from 
Khwajanagar of Shams chowk and continued right up 
to Samtanagar, near the place where Ganpati is 
submerged in water. Police arrested 64 persons 
from both the communities.

Nanded is another communally sensitive town in 
Marathwada region of Maharashtra. It witnessed 
communal violence on 29th September when student 
organisation Chava took out procession against 
reservation on religious grounds and passed 
through a Muslim locality and began stoning a 
mosque and damaged stalls selling iftar (breaking 
fast) eatables as it was month of Ramadan. These 
students having support of Shalinitai, a Maratha 
leader, were carrying lathis and other sharp 
weapons. They were shouting slogans against 
Muslims and attacked Abidin mosque near Bank of 
Hyderabad and damaged stalls selling fruits for 
Iftar. The vehicle belonging to Chava was full of 
stones. They were also carrying and waving 
swords. The police remained silent spectator and 
did not take any action against students. This 
procession was taken out when article 144 was in 
force. But police Dy.S.P. Abdurrazzaq claimed it 
lathicharged the processionists and arrested 30 
of the Chava Organisation. 

Mangalore in South Karnataka is highly sensitive 
area and BJP has its stronghold here. Since the 
BJP became part of ruling coalition in Karnataka, 
the communal situation has deteriorated there. 
The police is playing partisan role and Sangh 
Parivar members have become quite bold. Mangalore 
area has history of communal violence. In 1998 
Surathkal riots 8 persons were killed and Muslim 
properties were widely damaged. This time around 
2 persons were killed in Mangalore area between 
October 4 and 7 but also in between hundreds of 
minor skirmishes took place between Hindus and 
Muslims.

The communal polarisation has been created by BJP 
since 1992 when Babri Masjid was demolished and 
JP has reaped benefits in elections by winning 11 
seats in Assembly elections of 2004 from the 
region. According to T.A. Jhonson of Indian 
Express “several flashpoints for communal 
violence have emerged from the issue of 
transportation of cows in violation of a state 
law to eve teasing to inter-religious 
relationships.” Also, the minorities complain of 
administration’s bias since the BJP became 
partner in coalition. Ironically the Mangalore 
district is under the charge of a BJP minister. 
The rightwing Hindu youth feel that they can get 
away with anything. Those in 15-25 year age group 
are cause of frequent violence against Muslims 
and over-react on issues like cow transportation 
as they feel no action will be taken against them.

However, Hamid Khan, member of the Muslim Central 
Committee said that police acted swiftly after 
outbreak of violence on October 4 and imposed 
curfew effectively, otherwise situation would 
have got out of control.  The BJP minister 
Nagaraj Shetty also gave assurance that action 
will be taken against the guilty “without 
politics”. The Janata Dal (Secular) which allied 
with BJP blamed Bajrang Dal and SIMI for 
violence.  

On the occasion of Diwali on 22nd October 
communal violence erupted in three districts of 
U.P. Muzaffarnagar, Blandshahar and 
Ambedkarnagar. In Khalapar region of 
Muzaffarnagar a firecracker was ignited and 
dispute started with this between some Hindus and 
Muslims and violence erupted in which one person 
was killed and more than three were injured. 
There was firing from rooftops, which continued 
for half an hour resulting death of one person. 
Mulayamsingh declared compensation of Rs.5 lakhs 
for family of Pankaj killed in the clashes. 
Another person, a student of 11th class was 
murdered in Ambedkarnagar and communal 
disturbances started in which several people were 
injured including some police officers. Here many 
shops and houses were also damaged.

From what has been narrated above it can be seen 
that several small riots take place on small 
matters like playing cricket or lighting a 
cracker or someone being knocked down by a 
scooterist and so on. Why does it assume communal 
colour? The obvious reason is that communal 
forces indulge in communal propaganda and poison 
the minds of people and this continues throughout 
the year without any respite. This helps create 
communal mindset and even personal disputes 
between Hindus and Muslims then acquire communal 
colour and becomes cause of communal violence.

Communal propaganda going on unceasingly becomes 
greatest obstacle in smooth relationship between 
two major communities of India. Unfortunately the 
governments even in the Congress ruled states 
does not contemplate any action against such 
propaganda though there are laws prohibiting such 
propaganda creating ill will between communities. 
Not only this there is pronounced bias in text 
books taught in government as well as private 
schools from primary to secondary levels. These 
text-books also help create polarisation in our 
country. Education has thus become part of the 
problem instead of part of the solution.

One more thing which we observe from description 
of riots above that these incidents sparking 
communal violence do not assume major proportions 
only because political parties do not perceive 
any political benefit in spreading communal 
violence and police curbs violence by taking 
effective action. However, if politicians 
perceive any direct benefit they immediately 
exploit the incidents to create major communal 
flare up. Thus it is mainly politicians who are 
responsible for major communal flare up. The 
violence will be contained if politicians do not 
want and it will assume major proportions, if 
they desire communal violence for electoral 
politics like in Mumbai in 1992 and Gujarat in 
2002.

It is only proper awareness among people and 
active role of civil society actors which can 
help contain major mishaps. We need aware and 
vibrant civil society to contain outbreak of 
major communal violence. When civil society gets 
polarised on communal lines as in Gujarat, it 
becomes very difficult for civil society to 
intervene.  

_____


[3]


Economic and Political Weekly
December 16, 2006

INSIDE GUJARAT'S RELIEF COLONIES
SURVIVING STATE HOSTILITY AND DENIAL

by Harsh Mander

Many of those who survived but were displaced by 
the widespread communal violence in Gujarat in 
2002 have been forced to remake their lives in 
"relief colonies" that are without most basic 
public services. Surveys of these colonies and 
their inhabitants, five years after the violence, 
reveal not merely the miserable conditions in 
most of them, but also the denial of all support 
by the state that thus perpetuates the insidious 
ghettoisation of a community.

FULL TEXT AT:
http://www.epw.org.in/showArticles.php?root=2006&leaf=12&filename=10892&filetype=pdf

_____


[4]

Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Stationery Karmachari Sangh
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangharsh Morcha
Bhopal Group for Information and Action
Bhopal ki Aawaaz

January 3, 2007

PRESS STATEMENT

Addressing a press conference today leaders of 
four organizations of survivors of the December 
1984 Union Carbide disaster in Bhopal strongly 
condemned Chairman Tata Group Ratan Tata's offer 
to clear the path for Dow-Union Carbide's 
investments in India by leading an effort to pay 
for and clean up Union Carbide's toxic waste in 
Bhopal.

Displaying a poster of Ratan Tata with a garland 
of shoes around his neck they called the 
industrialist an anti-national element who was 
causing damage to the people and environment by 
facilitating the expansion of American 
multinational Dow Chemical in this country. The 
leaders appealed to Bhopal survivors to boycott 
Tata's salt as a mark of protest, and have 
launched a national boycott campaign.

The leaders emphasized that Dow Chemical took 
over the environmental liabilities of Bhopal when 
it became the 100 % owner of Union Carbide in 
2001. They said that according to the "polluter 
pays principle" which is valid both in USA and 
India Dow/Union Carbide must pay for the clean up 
in Bhopal.

According to the leaders, the Tata family had 
helped the East India Company in smuggling opium 
to China, had functioned as the commissariat for 
the invasion of Ethiopia by the British army and 
had named its textile factory in Nagpur "Empress 
Mills" in honour of Queen Victoria. The Bhopal 
leaders see Ratan Tata following the footsteps of 
his ancestors in the Tata family and serving 
imperialist interests in his role as the 
Co-Chairman of the US India CEO Forum.

The survivors' leaders stated that the head of 
the Tata family, JRD Tata had condemned the 
arrest of Warren Anderson, Chairman of Union 
Carbide in 1984 and demanded that Ratan Tata 
apologize to the people of Bhopal for this 
treachery by the Tata family.

Pointing out the links between Tata and Union 
Carbide, the leaders stated that Keshub Mahindra 
who is accused as Chairman of the Indian 
subsidiary of Union Carbide was also the Director 
of several Tata companies in 1984. David Good, 
former Director of the South Asian Bureau in the 
State Department of the US government and the 
official who denied Anderson's extradition to 
India is now Head of the Tata Corporate office in 
USA.

The leaders described the environmental 
destruction wrought by Tatas in different parts 
of the country. They pointed out that the 
Comptroller and Auditor General of India had 
singled out Tata's Chromite mines in Sukhinda, 
Orissa for causing widespread pollution and 
health damage. Similarly the Supreme Court 
appointed Monitoring Committee on Hazardous 
Wastes has passed strong comments against waste 
disposal by Rallis - a Tata company in Patancheru 
near Hyderabad.

In Mithapur Gujarat, Tata's factories have 
contaminated ground water and destroyed 
agriculture in villages such as Arambada, 
Bheemrana, Lalapur, Surajkaradi and Padli. In 
Jamshedpur, where Tata's run a steel plant, 
thousands of tonnes of boiler ash containing 
lethal heavy metals are dumped in the middle of 
the city at Jugsalai. Tata's collieries at West 
Bokaro in Jharkhand are responsible for the 
irreparable damage caused to the Bokaro river.

In the Gulf of Kutch, Tata Chemicals is currently 
facing two cases in the Supreme Court of India 
for open drainage and pipe line through a reserve 
forest and a sanctuary. The leaders asked Ratan 
Tata to first clean his own backyard before 
attempting to clean up Bhopal.


Rashida Bi, Champa Devi Shukla
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Stationery Karmachari Sangh
93031 32959

Syed M Irfan,
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangharsh Morcha
93290 26319

Shahid Noor
Bhopal ki Aawaaz
98261 82226

Rachna Dhingra, Satinath Sarangi,
Bhopal Group for Information and Action
98261 67369
Contact : House No. 60, Near Cold Storage, Union Carbide Road, Chhola, Bhopal

Please visit 
<http://www.bhopal.net/>www.bhopal.net for more 
information on the campaign for justice in Bhopal

______


[5]

Please note that the is pasted further below.


NARMADA BACHAO ANDOLAN
62-Gandhi Marg, Badwani, Madhya Pradesh-451551
Phone: 07290-222464, E-mail: nba.medha at gmail.com/abarada at rediffmail.com

3rd January 2007
Jantar Mantar dharna site
New Delhi

Press Release

ï	NBA dharna in Delhi continues
ï	NBA delegation meets Smt. Veena Chhotray, 
Chairperson, Resettlement and Rehabilitation 
(R&R) Sub-group, Narmada Control Authority
ï	Fraudulent affidavits submitted to 
Supreme Court by M.P. and Maharashtra stands 
exposed
ï	ìVisthapan Parishadî held at the Dharna site today

The Narmada Bachao Andolan dharna in New Delhi 
today entered the 2nd day with hundreds of 
representatives of the affected adivasis and 
farmers in the Narmada Valley, who arrived here, 
resolving that they will not return till their 
demands, are met. The dharna, which began 
yesterday at the gate of Shastri Bhavan, 
continues at Jantar Mantar, after the agitating 
affected people were forcibly lifted and put into 
vans and brought to Jantar Mantar late last 
night. This police action is reprehensible not 
just because of the use of force on peaceful 
agitators, but also since it took place while the 
NBA delegation was in Shastri Bhavan, holding 
discussions with Smt. Veena Chhoutray, 
Chairperson R&R Sub-group.

NBA has, in its talks yesterday with the Dr. 
Meira Kumar, Union Minister for Social Justice 
and Empowerment and Smt. Veena Chhoutray, 
expressed deep anguish at the fact that 
construction up to 122m had been completed even 
after the Shunglu Committee Report had clearly 
found that R&R was not yet completed. Also, 
despite the directions of Prime Minister that R&R 
work must be accelerated, during the period when 
there would be stoppage of work at 119m, and 
completed before work on construction of the dam 
was resumed. NBA then pressed for the undertaking 
of R&R work on war footing without any further 
increase in dam height. Towards realizing R&R of 
affected people, NBA placed a list of demands 
that is enclosed with the press release. The 
sacrificing of the rights of the affected 
populations at the altar of Sardar Sarovar is the 
violation of the rehabilitation framework laid 
down by the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal Award 
and the several judgments of the Supreme Court.

IT MAY BE RECALLED THAT IN THE ONGOING CASE IN 
THE SUPREME COURT, THE GOVERNMENTS OF MADHYA 
PRADESH AND MAHARASHTRA HAD FILED AFFIDAVITS 
STATING THAT THE R&R OF ALL PAFS UP TO 122M HAD 
BEEN COMPLETED. OWING TO THE NBAíS AGITATION IN 
MARCH/APRIL 2006 IN NEW DELHI, THE PRIME MINISTER 
DIRECTED THE FORMATION OF THE SHUNGLU COMMITTEE 
TO VERIFY THE R&R CLAIMS IN MADHYA PRADESH. THE 
FINDINGS OF THE SHUNGLU COMMITTEE, NOT ONLY 
VALIDATE THE CLAIMS MADE BY NBA, BUT EXPOSE THE 
LIES IN THE AFFIDAVITS OF THE GOVERNMENTS. THE 
REPORT ALSO BRINGS OUT THAT 25,000 FAMILIES 
(19000 DECLARED PAFS, OTHERS ëCLAIMANTSí) 
CONTINUE TO RESIDE IN THE SUBMERGENCE AREA OF M.P 
ALONE WHO WOULD HAVE TO BE RESETTLED AND 
REHABILITATED, LISTS OF MAJOR SONS WERE YET TO BE 
COMPLETED, LAND YET TO BE PURCHASED BY THOSE WHO 
HAVE ACCEPTED SPECIAL REHABILITATION PACKAGE 
(SRP), TENS OF R&R SITES WERE YET TO BE EITHER 
ESTABLISHED OR DEVELOPED WITH AMENITIES AND THE 
GOVERNMENT OF MADHYA PRADESH DOES NOT HAVE 
CULTIVABLE LAND FOR REHABILITATION. THE REPORT OF 
YASHADA, PUNE, THE OFFICIAL MONITORING AND 
EVALUATION AGENCY APPOINTED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF 
MAHARASHTRA, HAS FOUND THAT 874 PROJECT AFFECTED 
FAMILIES ARE YET TO BE REHABILITATED. WHAT THIS 
GOES TO PROVE IS THAT THE AFFIDAVITS THAT HAVE 
BEEN PLACED BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT BY THE 
GOVERNMENTS OF MAHARASHTRA AND MADHYA PRADESH ARE 
FRAUDULENT.

One of NBAís demands is that there should be an 
investigation into the massive corruption in the 
disbursement of cash compensation in the name of 
Special Rehabilitation Package (SRP) in M.P. The 
figures presented by M.P., of the PAFs 
rehabilitated in Madhya Pradesh or of those who 
are shown to have supposedly purchased land, are 
fabricated. There is massive corruption of crores 
or rupees by the officials (almost all land 
acquisition officers and resettlement officers) 
and the middlemen (especially few local 
advocates), which has led to false registries and 
land purchases that have not actually occurred. 
In the past month or so, several government 
officials have been found guilty of corruption 
practices in relation to SRP. An investigation by 
a Central Agency would reveal the obscene levels 
of corruption pervading this entire process.   

Today, ìVisthapan Parishadî (a public meeting of 
the displaced) was called to discuss the various 
issues related to displacement. Speakers, 
relating to experiences across India, strongly 
stated that displacement, without ërehabilitation 
with replacement of livelihoodí, just mere 
uprooting of communities, has become the most 
serious national issue. On the one hand, the 
traditional displacement caused by dams, 
highways, mines, industries, etc. still displace 
lakhs, on a yearly basis. Now the new ìland 
reformî movement of the government, namely SEZ, 
will further displacement like never before. Only 
humane considerations and a humanist value 
framework, which is enshrined in our 
constitution, can enable anyone and the State to 
take cognizance of the pain and anguish, the 
intensifying peopleís struggles, the issues of 
justice raised, rights to life and livelihood, 
asserted. The speakers included Ravindra Sahu 
speaking on Orissa, Shantaji (Sanjha Manch), 
Sandeep speaking on Singur, Rakesh Rafique, 
Lalbabu, Vimalbhai (Uttarkhand), Bijulal, Denzil, 
Kamala Yadav and Himanshu Upadhyay.

The dharna at Jantar Mantar will continue and 
that is the resolve of the people from the 
Narmada Valley. The NWDTA and Supreme Court 
judgments have to be implemented and the R&R of 
people must precede any further dam construction. 
Like Bhaijikaka, an adivasi from Gujarat affected 
by the dam, always says, ìhamara hak aage hain, 
Sardar Sarovar peeche hainî (The rights of the 
affected comes first, projects can wait).       

Ashish Mandloi,Kamala Yadav,Yogini Khanolkar,Noorji Padvi,Medha Patkar    



NARMADA BACHAO ANDOLAN
62-Gandhi Marg, Badwani, Madhya Pradesh-451551
Phone: 07290-222464, E-mail: nba.medha at gmail.com/abarada at rediffmail.com
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Press Release
2nd January 2007

ï	NBA dharna outside Shastri Bhavan (Delhi)
ï	NBA delegation meets Dr. Meira Kumar, 
Union Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment
ï	Increasing the height of the Sardar 
Sarovar Dam from 119m up to 121.92m is complete
ï	Directions of the Prime Minister that 
further construction be undertaken after 
completion of balance R&R, thrown to the dustbin

Today (2/1/07), the NBA began dharna outside the 
Shastri Bhavan, which houses the Ministry of 
Social Justice and Empowerment and met with the 
Dr. Meira Kumar, Union Minister for Social 
Justice and Empowerment. The NBA delegation was 
accompanied by Swamy Agnivesh and Shri Praful 
Bidwai. In a long meeting with the Minister, the 
NBA delegation updated the Minister on the 
developments with regard to the dam and 
rehabilitation of project affected persons. The 
Minister promised to look into issues raised by 
NBA and get in touch later. The Minister, 
however, stated that since she has visited the 
Valley as part of the Three Member Ministerial 
Committee constituted by the Prime Minister last 
year, she was aware of the problems in the 
resettlement process. NBA resolved that the 
dharna would continue until the demands were met. 

NBA informed the Minister that the Sardar Sarovar 
dam was raised from 119 mts to 122 mts, the 
height that was approved in March 2006, but was, 
after a long struggle, investigations and 
continuing legal action, stayed. While the 
submergence caused by the 119 mts dam itself 
drowned and devastated adivasi families in the 
mountainous communities of Jhabua and Badwani 
(Madhya Pradesh), and Nandurbar (Maharashtra), 
there are altogether about 35,000 families, i.e. 
1.5 lakh and more people living, even today, in 
the affected area of 122 mts.

It is the 21 year long struggle and its 
continuation that has resulted in about 11,000 
families getting land based rehabilitation, 
notwithstanding the numerous problems still being 
faced by them. Despite this, more than two lakh 
people continue to reside in the submergence area 
of full dam height which is 138.68 mts, with the 
gates planned to be erected above the wall of 122 
mts. Rehabilitation of all these as per law and 
court judgments is not in sight since the state 
governments have raised a cry of ìNo cultivable 
land availableî. In lieu of land, Madhya Pradesh 
government is trying to pay cash through corrupt 
officials-middlemen-politicians nexus illegally. 
This nexus has grabbed crores of rupees from the 
public money in the exchequer, permitted by NO 
MONITORING by the Centre.

Prime Minsterís promise to the apex court never 
kept intact, instead, the process of promises and 
violation, fraudulent and false affidavits has 
been on. The weak report by the Shunglu Committee 
(Oversight Group) brought out the fact that 
thousands of families are far from rehabilitated. 
The Committee, however, expects all this to 
change by the end of this financial year i.e. 
March 2007! The Prime Minister had assured the 
Court in July that the dam construction would not 
be taken beyond 119m without a review in October, 
and importantly, until R&R was completed.

The Narmada Control Authority (NCA) and its R&R 
Sub-group, both held meetings and directed the 
State government to complete works at R&R sites 
to ensure that the affected get land as per 
eligibility, that all grievances are redressed 
and thousands of families shifted to the R&R 
sites, upgradation of the 49 average/poor R&R 
sites, etc. These are yet to be done. Yet again, 
even the Shunglu Committee has failed to ensure 
that R&R sites are established for the adivasi 
villages in Jhabua, where as of today, there are 
no R&R sites. Thousands of families thus do not 
have any place to shift.

In Maharashtra, the situation remains unchanged 
for those hundreds of affected families facing 
submergence year after year but awaiting to be 
ìdeclaredî as affected persons and those who are 
declared but not yet rehabilitated. The problems 
of those affected families who still remain in 
their original villages in Gujarat, falls on deaf 
ears. The thousands of complaints received by the 
Grievances Redressal Authorities of these two 
states, points to the problems faced by even 
those who have shifted to the R&R sites.

Despite all this, the dam was taken up to 122m! 
This is murderous. This is an utter violation of 
legal and human rights guaranteed by the law of 
the land and against the ethos of our 
constitution. Are the Courts watching?

And on the top of it all, these sacrifices of 
huge displacement and burial of thousands of 
years old culture and cultural habitation went in 
vain. The speculated benefits from the very dam 
in terms of generating electricity, distribution 
of drinking water and irrigating of drought prone 
area still remain a distinct utopian dream.

ï	Drinking water could have been supplied 
to all the 8200+ villages even at dam height 110m 
itself, but has not materialised. Only about 
1/4th of these received some water and of these, 
10% have received water with some regularity.
ï	Irrigation potential at 110m was claimed 
to be an area of 5.5 lakh hectares but only 
58,000 hectares was covered. Instead of taking 
action to cover up the rest of the target area 
first, what is happening right now is raising of 
the height of the dam from 110m to 122m by 
putting up the same target potential. Needless to 
add that the work on the canal network is lagging 
behind.
ï	Power to be generated at 122m is only 
about 50% of what the official statements claim. 
The main power-house will stop producing power 
once irrigation potential in Gujarat and from 
Indira Sagar in Madhya Pradesh are realized 
within few years.

The people will have to challenge this state of 
affairs and this State! The dharna at Delhi will 
continue till all demands are met.

Ashish Mandloi	  Kamala Yadav	     Noorji Padvi    Medha Patkar

______


[6]

The Telegraph
January 04, 2007

A NECESSARY ALIENATION
- How the Congress fudged the language question

by Mukul Kesavan

One way of understanding the enduring importance 
of English in India is by viewing it in the wider 
context of post-colonial nations. The world is 
full of relatively new countries (like ours) 
governed by English- and French- and 
Spanish-speaking elites. In these countries, as 
in India, the colonial state's language became 
the language of law, power, science, modernity 
and aspiration. The native inheritors of colonial 
states who possessed these languages enjoyed 
being a powerful elect and feeling cosmopolitan. 
That their cosmopolitanism was derivative, not 
home-grown, bothered a few amongst them but, as a 
ruling class, being anglophone or francophone was 
a matter of self-congratulation not concern.

But to explain the role of English in independent 
India solely in these terms is to misunderstand 
the republic and underestimate the significance 
of English. The history of English in republican 
India has to be read alongside the history of 
Indian nationalism. Unlike every other 
post-colonial nation, Indian nationalists spent a 
lot of time side-stepping the temptations of a 
single identity. Religion and language and a 
homeland defined by one or the other or both were 
the precedents available from Europe's 
nationalist histories and non-European 
nationalisms derived from these, like Ataturk's 
Turkey. India's diversity led the Congress to 
invent a pluralist patriotism that was made up, 
in equal parts, of anti-colonialism and sleight 
of hand.

The sleight of hand consisted of finding ways to 
continuously defer the question of national 
identity because in a country as various as India 
any definition of India's nature was likely to 
cause trouble. Anti-colonialism, deeply felt and 
wholly justifiable though it was, was itself a 
way of deferring the conflicts internal to Indian 
society (based on caste, class, faith and 
language) because it asked the Raj's subjects to 
sink their differences to present a united front 
against colonial rule.

But the history of nationalism was so bound up 
with the idea of self-determination that the 
pressure to define the Indian self in question 
was constant, and the Congress wasn't immune to 
it. The novelty and originality of the Congress's 
pluralist take on Indian nationalism are more 
apparent now than they were then, because like 
most political movements, the Congress didn't 
take time off to theorize the content of its 
nationalism: it improvised it on the run, in 
response to its enemy, its constituencies, its 
strengths and vulnerabilities. And like the 
Bolsheviks who constantly invoked Marx, that 
prophet of the industrial proletariat, even as 
they brewed revolution in a peasant economy, the 
Congress invented a pluralist practice even as it 
struggled with the rhetoric and vocabulary of 
Europe's hegemonic nationalisms.

You can see this in the iconic status that 
patriots like Garibaldi and Mazzini had for 
Indian nationalists, the influence of Young 
Italy, the way in which enthusiastic nationalists 
were described as Young Turks. But most 
strikingly, you can see the influence of this 
homogenizing nationalism in the insistent idea 
that respectable nations came wrapped in a single 
'national' language.

The idea that a nation not disciplined by one 
language was a disordered Babel was so powerful 
that even the Congress, normally so keen to duck 
questions of culture, was forced to confront it. 
This was partly because the question of language 
had become confounded in India with the idea of 
religious community. Till the summer of 1947, the 
Congress's official position was that the 
national language of independent India would be 
Hindustani written in two scripts, Farsi and 
Devanagari. Gandhi, along with many other 
Congressmen, would have preferred Hindi written 
in Devanagari, but the potential of the 
Hindi-Urdu controversy to create communal trouble 
led them to accept this compromise position.

The odd thing about the Congress sponsorship of 
Hindustani as India's national language was that 
this pluralist compromise was squarely aimed at a 
republic dominated by north Indian quarrels. 
Because Hindi and Urdu together formed the 
largest language group in the country, the 
Congress, otherwise so scrupulous about cultural 
majoritarianism, had decided that Hindustani 
would be India's national language.

The closest the Indian republic came to Hindu 
chauvinism in the matter of culture was when, in 
response to Partition, the Congress did an 
about-face on the language question and decided, 
as early as late 1947, that the national language 
would be Hindi written in the Nagari script. The 
implication was that now that the majority of 
India's Muslims had constituted themselves in a 
separate Muslim state, Hindustani was an 
unnecessary form of political correctness.

The Indian state, while recognizing all India's 
major languages as national languages, made Hindi 
pre-eminent as the pan-Indian language of the 
nation. But this lurch towards the idea that 
nations were ordered by a unifying national 
language was reined in by the creation of 
linguistic provinces, the de facto acquiescence 
in the rejection of Hindi as an official language 
by non-Hindi states and, most crucially, in the 
indefinite retention of English as India's 
official link language alongside Hindi. Just as 
the national movement was willing to use the 
menace of the colonial state to postpone the 
settling of scores within Indian society by 
holding out independence as a panacea to 
everything, the moment it won that independence, 
the young republic began using aspects of that 
state's foreignness to umpire the quarrels 
produced by India's diversity.

The Congress, as was its habit, fudged the 
language question. It succumbed to the Hindi 
lobby by nominating Hindi as the national 
language, and then defanged the resentment that 
the hegemony of Hindi might have caused by 
refusing to follow through on the logic of a 
pan-Indian 'national' language. Paradoxically, 
English, the language of colonial exploitation, 
became the republic's guarantee against 
linguistic strife. As happened so often with the 
pluralist nationalism improvised by the Congress, 
this stratagem didn't 'solve' the question of 
language - it postponed it. The retention of 
English as the language of pan-Indian government 
bought the republic time. It blunted the sharp 
edge of linguistic assertion and it allowed this 
pluralist state in its infancy to shirk the 
responsibility of forcing some definitively 
Indian language down unwilling Indian throats. By 
helping the young republic duck the dangers of 
defining an authentically national self, English 
enabled the development of a benign pluralism.

______


[7]

Deccan Herald
January 3, 2007

CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS
RELIGION, QUOTA AND LAW
by Pran Chopra

Encouraging Muslims to get education and apply 
for jobs in large numbers can increase their 
presence.

An interesting change has been taking place 
lately in the views of Muslims regarding the 
question whether a quota in government jobs 
should be "reserved" for those Muslims, who face 
the same traditional deprivations as are faced by 
Scheduled Castes or Backward Classes, for whom 
there have been reservations for decades.

The changes represent a departure by many Muslims 
from the position taken by them earlier, that 
there are no discriminations among Muslims on the 
basis of class or caste and therefore they do not 
want such reservations, or want them only as 
Muslims, not as persons belonging to a particular 
caste or class.

The changes became more noticeable after some 
loosely worded comments were made in public by a 
few Union ministers, who were perhaps misled by 
some words in the Constitution which had been 
clarified in a 1966 judgment by the Supreme 
Court, in Venkatraman v/s the State of Madras.

The Muslim public mind might have misread the 
position when a Cabinet minister said that the 
Constitution, as it stood, allowed job 
reservations for Muslims, or misread more when 
the Sachar Committee report added that the 
condition of many Muslims was no better than that 
of the Scheduled Castes, or still more when the 
Prime Minister spelt out his priorities for 
improving the lot of the Muslims. Of course the 
Constitution was there for all to see. But it is 
doubtful whether it was seen by everyone in the 
context of the Supreme Court judgment in the 
Venkatraman case.

Clause 16(1) of the Fundamental Rights says: 
"There shall be equality of opportunity for all 
citizens in matters relating to employment or 
appointment to any office under the State". But 
clause 16(4) adds "Nothing in this article shall 
prevent the State from making any provision for 
the reservation of appointments or posts in 
favour of any backward class of citizens which, 
in the opinion of the State, is not adequately 
represented in the services under the State".

Since the Sachar report has said that the 
condition of Muslim employment is worse than that 
of Scheduled Castes who, as can be argued, have 
been given reservations to improve their 
"representation" in "the services of the State", 
a hurried reading of clause 16(4) can lead the 
unwary to conclude that the Constitution, as it 
is, can provide for "reservations" for Muslims 
too.

But such a reading would miss the difference 
between the Muslims as a "community" on the one 
hand and on the other hand the Scheduled Castes 
as a "backward class", which is the crux of the 
judgment in the Venkatraman case. As explained by 
Seervai, widely recognised as the most 
authoritative commentator on court decisions, 
"clause 16(4) only permits reservation for 
Backward Classes and not for any person, who does 
not belong to it".

As though to underline the difference between 
"reservation of posts on communal lines" and 
reservation for Backward Classes, Seervai says 
"distribution of offices among communities 
according to fixed quotas or ratios infringes 
clause 16(1)".

Such wording in the Constitution might suggest 
that the difference between clauses 16(1) and 
16(4) is only in sociological terms and not in 
legal or judicial terms. But that is not so. The 
difference sums up the difference between the 
basic logic, which underlies the decision by the 
Constituent Assembly to provide reservations for 
Scheduled Castes and Backward Classes, and none 
for religious communities.

These facts lent force on two counts to the 
demand for reservations. It supported the 
backward classes' argument that having been 
suppressed for centuries they had lost their 
capacity to compete with others on an equal 
footing, and to recover it they needed a position 
of advantage for some time. Second, the force of 
this argument (plus the force of their votes) 
inclined the higher caste Hindus to agree.

There is no such history of suppression of 
Muslims by Hindus (rather the reverse), which 
would justify job reservation. On the other hand 
current history shows that Muslim presence on the 
campus and in the job market was depressed by 
nothing so much as by the departure of the better 
educated and more resourceful Muslim elite for 
Pakistan in and after 1947. That also explains 
the low ratio of those who fully qualify for the 
job among those who apply.

Present times have also added a note of warning 
in the form of what has been happening to 
inter-caste relations within the Hindu society as 
a result of the clash between the demand for 
reservations by the lower castes and resentment 
against it by the higher. Echoes of this warning 
are to be heard in the advice of one of the most 
thoughtful Muslims in this debate over the 
advantages and dangers of reservations. Writing 
in the latest issue of Muslim India, a leading 
Muslim academic, Prof Imtiaz Ahmad, says "Given 
its highly contentious nature, en bloc 
reservation for Muslims as a community, on which 
the elite Muslims have been insisting for so 
long, is likely to generate conflict not only 
between Muslims and others but also within the 
Muslim community".

What needs to be ensured is that Muslims figure 
much more on the campus and in the job market 
than they do. Unfortunately even the Minorities 
Commission has ignored the means of doing it.

Distribution among communities as per fixed quota infringes the Constitution.



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

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