SACW | Feb 5-7, 2007
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Feb 6 20:13:20 CST 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | February 5-7, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2358 - Year 8
[1] Bangladesh: Army-backed Arrests Worry Rights Groups (Farid Ahmed)
[2] New Nepal Versus Old Order (J. Sri Raman)
[3] India: Kashmir a blind spot for Indian human
rights activists and the media? (Bharat Bhushan)
[4] India - Gujarat : Lengthening Shadows of Swastika (Ram Puniyani)
[5] Book Review : Ferreting Out the Bible of
Hindu Fascism [Hindutwa] (I.K.Shukla)
[6] Call for Entries : Film South Asia 2007
____
[1]
Inter Press Service
5 February 2007
BANGLADESH: ARMY-BACKED ARRESTS WORRY RIGHTS GROUPS
by Farid Ahmed
DHAKA, Feb 5 (IPS) - The detention of over a
dozen high-profile politicians by the
military-backed interim government in Bangladesh,
on Sunday, has raised a storm of protests by
rights groups and the country's two main
political parties.
Those taken into custody include former ministers
and legislators from the Awami League party of
former prime minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed and
from the rival Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)
of Begum Khaleda Zia, who stepped down as prime
minister in October on completion of a five-year
term in office.
Among influential ex-legislators picked up in the
pre-dawn swoop was media tycoon Musaddek Ali
Falu, political secretary to Khaleda Zia. Falu
runs the TV channels NTV and RTV and is the owner
of the 'Amar Desh' (Our Country), a Bengali
language daily.
After more than two months of political turmoil
and street violence by the supporters of the two
parties, President Iajuddin Ahmed declared a
state of emergency on Jan. 11 and, on the
following day, an interim government headed by
Fakhruddin Ahmed took over the administration.
The new dispensation, which replaced a caretaker
government that was to have overseen general
elections slated for Jan. 22, immediately
launched a massive drive across the country
netting corrupt politicians and businessmen and
reclaiming government lands occupied by
influential people.
"We haven't seen the police or army detain any
top politician or a minister after the fall of
the military dictator H.M. Ershad in 1990,"
Shahnaj Hossain, a teacher, told IPS in Dhaka.
Over the last three weeks, the security forces
comprising the army, the paramilitary Bangladesh
Rifles and the elite Rapid Action Battalion have
joined police in detaining over 5,000 people.
''Sunday's raids were the biggest raids in three
weeks when we've detained over a dozen of former
ministers and lawmakers," a senior government
official told IPS.
But the detentions have been controversial since
the politicians were picked up from their homes
without any warrant of arrest. An eminent lawyer
Kamal Hossain said politicians should not be made
the target for ''indiscriminate arrests''.
''There is no doubt that cleansing in politics is
necessary and politicians, perceived to be
corrupt, need to be taken care of," Nurul Kabir,
editor of the 'New Age', a leading English
language daily published from Dhaka, told IPS.
''What is missing in the detentions is a
transparent process and specific charges
formulated within the framework of law -- if
corrupt politicians eventually go unpunished due
to lack of adequate legal proof, the whole
purpose of streamlining politics and economy
would be defeated,'' Kabir said.
Others reported detained were Nazmul Huda, a
former communications minister, Salauddin Qader
Chowdhury, parliamentary affairs advisor to
Khaleda Zia, Amanullah Aman, a former state
minister for labour and manpower, Mir Nasir Uddin
Ahmed, a former state minister for civil aviation
and tourism, Iqbal Hasan Mahmood, a former state
minister for power, Ruhul Kuddus Talukder Dulu, a
former deputy minister for land, and former
lawmakers Naser Rahman, Manjurul Ahsan Munshi and
Abdul Wadud Bhuiyan of the BNP.
Naser is also the eldest son of former finance
minister and senior BNP leader Saifur Rahman.
Among leaders of the Awami League detained were
Mohammad Nasim, a former home minister, Mohiuddin
Khan Alamgir, a former state minister for
planning, Salman F Rahman, a leading businessman
and also advisor to Sheikh Hasina, and Pankaj
Devnath.
"Members of the joint forces stormed into our
house at about 1:00am and asked my husband to go
with them," Laila Akhter Bithi, wife of Nasim,
told the local press. ''They failed to produce
any warrant for arrest when we asked them why he
was being taken away."
The teams also raided the homes of a number of
middle-rung leaders of both the Awami League and
the BNP but failed to arrest them. Most of them
have been staying away from their homes since the
joint forces began the drive, their families
claimed.
The two political parties, bitter rivals for many
years, demanded that the government produce the
detained political leaders in court. ''Produce
the political leaders, who were arrested by the
joint forces across the country, in the court,"
the BNP secretary general Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan
said in a statement on Sunday. "All concerned
should make sure that nobody is deprived of the
right to get justice."
''We have no objection if real criminals and
corrupt persons, who have plundered public money,
are arrested. But we call on the joint forces not
to harass innocent leaders of the party only
because of their political identity," acting
general secretary of the Awami League Obaidul
Kader said.
Noted writer and scientist Muhammad Zafar Iqbal
said corrupt leaders of all political parties
should be brought to book and not just of the
Awami League or the BNP.
"Jamaat leaders are also corrupt, but none of
them has been arrested,'' Iqbal said. The
fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh shared
power with the BNP in the last elected government.
A functionary of the Communist Party of
Bangladesh, Ruhin Hossain, told IPS: "The actions
of the security forces must be transparentà we've
heard of the arrest of many people, but
government is yet to come up with the details or
whereabouts of those people."
"Many of the arrested people have not been
produced in a court of law and their families
even did not get any chance to meet them," he
said.
The leading rights group Odhikar (Rights)
expressed its concern over the widespread arrests
and in its monthly report claimed that 32 people
died in custody in January. The report also
claimed that six people were killed in custody
until the promulgation of emergency and at least
24 people were killed from Jan. 12 to 31.
Citing Odhikar and other local groups, the New
York-based Human Rights Watch has accused
Bangladeshi security forces of carrying out
unlawful executions, besides the arbitrary
arrests.
Trouble began with the Awami League and its
allies accusing the BNP and the Jamaat-e-Islami
Bangladesh of appointing partisan or
controversial people to top positions in the
Election Commission and of stuffing the voter
lists with 14 million fake names. To press their
demands for changes in voter rolls and the
reconstitution of the commission they launched a
series of shutdowns and street demonstrations
which quickly turned bloody.
On Sunday night the President appointed former
bureaucrat A.T.M. Shamsul Huda as chief election
commissioner, while the interim government
pledged to reform the election commission before
the rescheduling of general elections. (END/2007)
______
[2]
truthout.org
6 January 2007
NEW NEPAL VERSUS OLD ORDER
by J. Sri Raman
No ruling class or elite parts with power
peacefully. Nepal is offering the latest
illustration of a lesson that students of history
learn from the story of every revolution.
Just over a fortnight ago, the sun of
democracy seemed to have dawned at last on the
snow-bound Himalayan state of Nepal. The days of
bloody civil strife appeared to be over, with an
interim parliament approving an interim
constitution on January 15 and the "arms
management" agreement assuring the people of a
ceasefire between the Nepal Army and the Maoists.
The nation had only to wait for the next date in
the calendar of the peace process - sometime in
June, when a constituent assembly is to be
elected in order to frame a fresh constitution.
The easy optimism has evaporated faster than
snow in the mild Himalayan summer. The streets of
Kathamandu, Nepal's capital, may have witnessed
only peaceful demonstrations for quite some time,
but significant violence has erupted far away, in
the fertile southern lowlands bordering India .
The unrest in the Terai, as this region is
called, has already taken a toll of at least 13
human lives.
The interim government, which the Maoists are
to join this month, faces here a revolt of
Madhesis (or Mahadesis), mostly an ethnic
minority of Indian origin. The Madhesi Janadhikar
(People's Rights) Forum, spearheading the revolt,
claims that the community has been denied its due
place in the post-monarchy dispensation and
demands a new demarcation of constituencies.
The forum, whose members include former
Maoist insurgents loath to lay down arms, has
made its presence and protests felt. The
violence, fueled by blockades and police firings,
shows no sign of ending. And it may encourage
other ethnic rebellions.
Some saw the protests coming, but not quite
on this scale. Reporting on them, Rita Manchand
recalls: "While the Jan Andolan (People's
Movement) I (1990), the first democratic uprising
that resulted in a constitutional framework, was
essentially Kathmandu-centric, this time round
there was a countrywide mobilization and
convergence on Kathmandu, and the 'janajatis'
(communities from the countryside) came in huge
numbers."
Result: "The dominant wall graffiti in
Kathmandu is all about ethnic assertion, and
particularly the Madhesia community's right to
self-determination.... The Chepang community
(52,000) wants 'self-determination with autonomy'
in 29 village administrative units spread over
four districts. The Tamangs are claiming some of
these districts." On January 31, the experiment
in Kathmandu received an additional blow in
eastern Nepal, as yet another group, the Limbu
community, called for a three-day strike in its
areas to press for an autonomous Limbu state.
In the immediate afterglow of the interim
constitution's issuance, the advance toward peace
and democracy appeared to have won acquiescence,
if not acceptance, by all the major adversaries.
Dethroned King Gyanandra and his loyal courtiers
and generals refrained from striking a discordant
note. No sign of sympathy and solidarity emanated
from his clan and political constituency in
India. And US Ambassador to Nepal James Francis
Moriarty was on his best diplomatic behavior,
with his embassy actually welcoming the interim
constitution.
The appearances began to appear deceptive
with the growth of ethnic disturbances. Moriarty,
of course, has not publicly endorsed the ethnic
protests. However, he has kept up his anti-Maoist
offensive. Despite the interim constitution, he
has announced, the "terrorist tag" put on the
Maoists won't be removed. He has also made clear
that, after the Maoists' inclusion in an interim
government, the US aid to Nepal won't be extended
to ministries under Maoist control.
The different policies toward the same
government will be a tribute to his distinctively
innovative diplomacy. But we have to wait for
more evidence of Moriarty's assistance to his
anti-Maoist allies in their current campaign.
It is not only the Maoists, however, who see
evidence of the part played by the pro-monarchy
political camp in the continuing Madhesi
protests. The Maoists have always claimed to
sympathize with the aspirations of the Madhesis
and other ethnic minorities. The interim
government of Prime Minister Girija Prasad
Koirala and the Maoists have together "conceded"
the Madhesi demands and promised a more federal
Nepal under the new constitution. Koirala has
announced a team of three ministers, two of whom
are of Indian origin, to talk to the protestors.
The government, the Maoists, as well as
several observers see the continuance of the
agitation, despite the concessions, as proof of
Gyanendra's hand in the background. As the
government launched a crackdown in the Terai
plains, the first to be detained were two former
ministers of the deposed king - Kamal Thapa, who
made himself hateful as the Home Minister
ordering a repression of the anti-monarchy
movement and Badri Prasad Mandal now facing
investigation in a corruption scandal.
The political parties to have voiced the
loudest support for the agitation are also those
to oppose a total abolition of the monarchy. One
of these is the Rashtriya Prajatantra Party
(Nepal), which has vowed to "actively work to
build a prosperous and modernized state by
maintaining the image of a monarchical Hindu
Kingdom."
No one who knows the religious-communal far
right in India (which has just engineered a
seriers of Hindu-Muslim riots at home) can rule
out its link with the agitation, considering its
expressed concern over the fall of the "Hindu
kingdom" under Gyanandra. Maoist chief Prachanda
was quick to see the hand of "Hindu extremists"
behind the Terai unrest.
As violent erupted in January, he said: "A
few days ago, some Hindu followers had a
gathering at Gorakhpur in India (bordering
Nepal). Some elements who were involved in
terrorizing Madhes also participated in the
gathering, which has already been publicized in
the media. These incidents happened after that."
New Delhi too, has issued an official
statement welcoming the proclamation of the
interim constitution. Many common citizens in
Nepal are apt to wonder whether the far right
across the border would have been to free to
function in this manner, without India's
government winking at its activities,
Well-wishers of the pro-democracy movement,
like India's Left, hope that the proven
determination of the Nepalese people will help
them overcome all hurdles. It will be folly,
however, to underestimate the forces arrayed
against them.
A freelance journalist and a peace activist
of India, J. Sri Raman is the author of
Flashpoint (Common Courage Press, USA). He is a
regular contributor to t r u t h o u t.
______
[3]
The Telegraph
February 07, 2007
HUGE BLIND SPOT, ONLY FOR J&K
by Bharat Bhushan
Srinagar, Feb. 6: Has Kashmir become a blind spot
for Indian human rights activists and the media?
Kashmiri civil society activists certainly
believe so. The serial killings in Noida, near
Delhi, they point out, occupied the nation's
attention for days on end. But Indian civil
society and media did not get agitated in the
same way with the exhumation of bodies of
innocents killed by the security forces in
Kashmir.
"The Indian civil society seems to have written
off Kashmir and Kashmiris. In the 1990s, human
rights activists used to come here. But now
hardly anyone comes," laments Pervez Imroz, a
lawyer and head of J&K Coalition of Civil Society.
Khurram Pervez, a human rights activist, who lost
a leg while on election observation duty in the
last Assembly election, also feels the same way.
"Indian civil society activists are very clear
about opposing communalism. They showed their
power of lobbying with the media during and after
the Gujarat riots. But when it comes to Kashmir,
they don't mobilise public opinion in the same
way. They talk of minority issues (Kashmiri
Pundits) but ignore custodial deaths and
disappearances," he points out.
Imroz believes that several factors have
contributed to this. "It could well be that
India's many problems engage their attention. But
I think everyone in India is under the influence
of ultra-nationalism. The Indian media indulges
in self-censorship and does not do anything to
harm the army's image. What is surprising,
however, is that they find time to make strong
statements about Iraq but completely ignore
developments in their own backyard in Kashmir,"
he points out.
He says about 10,000 Kashmiris have disappeared,
about 70,000 killed in the conflict and there are
about 2.5 lakh torture victims. "A large number
of youngsters have been rendered impotent because
of torture. Even after the introduction of
several confidence-building measures between
India and Pakistan, the ground situation has not
changed. The security forces operate with the
same impunity as earlier," Imroz claims.
"Indian commentators wax eloquent about
everything on TV but when it comes to Kashmir
they all talk of 'valiant Indian soldiers'. Why
is that on Kashmir everyone follows the state's
line of curbing militancy with its full might?
Why do we have to be Indian first before human
rights violations in Kashmir are addressed?" asks
Khurram.
Imroz argues that while the government is
expected to support the army, it is the civil
society which can hold it accountable. "In the
present situation, there is no Indian civil
society engagement here, Kashmiri civil society
has not come up and the international community
has disengaged itself," he points out.
Imroz says that respecting human rights also
concerns Kashmir's future. "We see it as an
investment in the future of Kashmir. We want to
build institutions to protect democracy and
dissent to ensure that our future is not worse
than our present," he says.
He claims that attempts to build alliances with
human rights organisation in the rest of India
have been relatively less successful than with
the European civil society organisations.
Khurram points out that in the 1990s no one had
invited Indian human rights activists to come to
Kashmir but yet they came on their own. "But we
still appeal to the Indian civil society
organisations to come here and see for themselves
what is happening here. At least they should take
note of the crimes against humanity taking place
here," he argues.
However, Imroz seems sceptical when he says: "I
feel about Indian civil society what Leo Tolstoy
said about the man who sat on another's back,
choking him and forcing him to carry him - yet he
assures himself and others that he feels sorry
for him and wants to lessen his burden by all
means except getting off his back. I don't want
to name such people in Indian civil society but
they are there."
______
[4]
http://www.sacw.net/DC/CommunalismCollection/ArticlesArchive/puniyanifeb2007.html
www.sacw.net
4 February 2007
GUJARAT : LENGTHENING SHADOWS OF SWASTIKA
by Ram Puniyani
Perzania, a film based on a true story in the
backdrop of Gujarat violence, sensitively
portraying the plight of a Parsi family, whose
son goes missing during the carnage, was released
all over the country barring Gujarat. Earlier to
this, another film, Fanaa starring Amir Khan, who
personally sympathized openly with the plight of
those displaced due to the Narmada dam project,
could also not be screened in Gujarat. What is
the social and political scenario as we are just
a month away from the fifth anniversary of Godhra
train accident and the Gujarat carnage?
Gujarat carnage was very different from the
communal violence which took place in Independent
India so far. Here one could most clearly see the
well planned violence unleashed on the pretext of
Godhra train accident, duly supported by the
state Government under the patronizing eye of the
central government. While every possible rule of
the law was violated by the authorities, the
hapless victims were left to rot in the refugee
camps with atrocious living conditions, totally
ignored by the state government. The mirror of
Gujarat's dominant social thinking was to come to
light soon with the winning of elections by
Narendra Modi, who had played central role in the
violence. What has been happening in the social
milieu of Gujarat is beyond belief as far as the
democratic norms and the communal amity is
concerned.
One has witnessed that the process of deliverance
of justice, remains unexecuted. Many a people
under different types of pressure could not lodge
their complaints, many a times it was made as a
condition for their return to their homes. Many
an FIRs were not filed, the victims of the riots
are gripped by the losses of lives and property
in mammoth proportions, while the perpetrators of
crime are moving with great pride in having
taught 'them' a lesson. Those arrested for Godhra
train burning are rotting in jails with the POTA
charges on them. Barring the cases like those of
Zahira with different twists and turns, most
other wronged ones are living the constant agony
and pain of what they had to face. The role and
attitude, impartiality, of sections of judiciary
has also come under severe doubts
Added to that is the alienation, social boycott
and the ghettotisaztion of Muslim minorities,
which has been set very deeply in the aftermath
of carnage. One can see the areas marked by
religious denominations getting converted into
geographic dividing lines. Once the hatred
crosses the threshold limits it creates the wedge
which becomes unbridgeable over a period of time.
And that's what one sees in the social milieu of
Gujarat. The pattern of life amongst large
sections has changed, and the constant harping on
identity, first that of religion and later that
of caste has been the logical corollary of the
hate ideology which is ruling the roost.
Over fifty thousand families are living in the
poorly maintained rehabilitation colonies totally
deprived of the basic facilities. The subtle
intimidation of Muslim majority is supplemented
by the attacks on Christian missionaries and also
by the holding of events like Shabri Kumbh to
co-opt the Adivasis into the Hindu fold, at the
same time changing the terms of social reference,
from the ones of development to the ones of
identity issues is there for all to see. The
social common sense in Gujarat in particular, has
been taken to the insane heights where every
issue becomes a ground for further intensifying
the hatred against minorities.
The dominant social opinion may have some
dissenting voices which may feel the present
brusque anti-minoritism will spoil the business
atmosphere in Gujarat but the large sections of
middle class sees Modi as a protector of Hindus.
Two set of laws already seem to be in operation,
the ones for majority and the other for the
minorities. Intolerance directed to 'external
enemy' does not stop there. It does come back to
majority as well and the sharpened religious
identity leads to the caste and other narrow
identities becoming stronger by the day, and
that's what Gujarat is witnessing today. The very
air is becoming heavy with the intolerance, which
is the basic credo of Gujarat society today. It
also does manifest itself in the people like Babu
Bajrangi who are openly flaunting the laws and
acting as moral police, intimidating; beating up
young couples; with full patronage from the
ruling party and associated affiliates, who
emboldened by the power and ideology of
sectarianism are out to abolish the democratic
and liberal space, which is the hall mark of any
open society.
The image of a vibrant Gujarat is being
strengthened through media, a section of which
played a were compliant and supportive role to
the agenda of Hindu Rashtra. The overt violence
is not there but covert violence and deepening of
sectarianism is the order of the day. What is
Fascism? It is not a mere academic debate. When
state, in connivance with dominant sections of
society, is out to bury the norms of liberal and
plural values, when the dominant section of
society approve this intolerance for 'others' and
than for 'our' dissenting people, the fascism is
there. The fate of Fanaa and Perzania are the
mere symptoms of the piercing trishuls of RSS
ideology stalking the streets and bastis of
Gujarat. It is a state where the social activists
can be beaten up right in Gandhi's Sabarmati
Ashram, a place where non violence and dissent
had been propagated as the basic norm for
creating a democratic society. While Modi has
'successfully' deflected the criticism of his
policies as an insult of Gujarat, the matters
become difficult for those who will like to
uphold the gains of our freedom movement, for
those who will regard all people of India as
equals, irrespective of their religion.
The processes going in Gujarat are a definite
pointer towards "Hindu Rashtra in One state", an
Indian variant of Fascism. While looking forward
to the change in the turn of the tide in
anticipation of the fifth anniversary of the
genocide, one hopes the worst is over and the
society at large will not only welcome Perzania
with open eyes and mind but will also revive the
humane spirit of the Indian nationalism.
______
[5] BOOK REVIEW:
Ferreting Out the Bible of Hindu Fascism (Hindutwa)
I.K.Shukla
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Golwalkar's We or Our Nationhood Defined: A
Critique by Shamsul Islam: Pharos Media and
Publishing Pvt Ltd, New Delhi, 2006, pp 162,
Rs.120.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Why has this Bible of Hindutwa, first published
in 1939, succeeded by four reprints until 1947,
been withdrawn from RSS shelves and made
unavailable to the general public? Why has its
authorship been denied, fudged over, and brazenly
lied about in a concerted manner, among others
including the author, by Lalchand K. Advani, Atal
B.Vajpeyi, and David Frawley, who outdid all with
three big lies in just two sentences: 1.
Golwalkar just translated it, 2. in 1938, and 3.
"it was only part of the general literature of
the times that he was examining."
How fanatically vicious Golwalkar was in laying
down his version of Mein Kampf informs this major
handbook of Hindu fascism wherein he strips
himself for condemnation and revulsion as an evil
ogre of Dark ages. The long and well-researched
Introduction by Prof. Islam in itself has become
an invaluable asset for serious researchers,
scholarly academics, and committed activists. He
deserves kudos for retrieving Golwalkar's
poison-spewing book, always revered by RSS and
its affiliates, and widely regarded as the Bible
of Hindutwa fascists, among others, by two CIA
agents close to them Jean A. Curran (author of
Militant Hinduism in Indian Politics: A Study of
the RSS, 1951) and Craig Baxter (author of The
Jana Sangh: A Biography of an Indian Political
Party, 1969).
An aside for relieving the tedium is in order.
How shallow was Golwalkar becomes clear from his
mention of names of historical importance in the
field of literature: Sharatchandra Chakrawarti,
Babu Premchand (p. 42). I had never known of
them. Golwalkar had casually heard these names
and embellished them with his imagination. This
imagination is at full play in his understanding,
skewed and sickly, of history, human
civilization, culture, and modern polity. No
wonder only such a one could call Hindutwa
"anadi" (without a beginning, beyond history, and
pre-historical). His repeated use of the word
"scientific" is comic and contemptible, and his
exhilaration at Fatherland a slavish adoption of
the German word Vaterland with all its
concomitant evils fleshing it out. This unabashed
and implacable devotee of three evil Ms - Manu,
Mill (James, East India Company's employee, hack
historian, who partitioned Indian History into
three divisions: Hindu, Muslim, British, 1817,
-not Christian-) , and Mussolini, besides Hitler,
regarded them all as great regenerators and
benefactors of mankind!
The riddle is why the Hindutwa luminaries and
lumpens who have always venerated this Bible of
Hindu fascism are fighting shy of it at present.
Not that they have abjured its ideology of racial
hatred and violence against non-Hindus, of ethnic
extremism and bloody purge, of India as the
fatherland of Hindus only, once more adumbrated
without any remission in Golwalkar's later book
Bunch of Thoughts. The reason for this coyness
and concealment is a mix of cowardice and
criminality that have distinguished the bloody
enterprise of the Hindutwa cult since its
inception. It has vindicated its assassination of
Gandhi on January 1948 by a recurrent series of
mass slaughters since 1992 of Muslims,
Christians, and others it decreed to be non-Hindu.
In Gandhi's murder the involvement of RSS became
too evident, too undeniable for it to escape
unscathed. Hence, a new political creature of
Hindu communalism, Jan Sangh, was fabricated.
Hence too the disavowal of Golwalkar's book We or
Our Nationhood Defined, as an expedient. What,
howeve,r the book had already achieved remarkably
successfully through its wide diffusion was to
remain inviolate, i.e., its racist precepts and
its politically invidious indoctrination of the
masses. The ban on RSS on 4 Feb.1948 was a
temporary glitch, but it was also a safety valve,
curiously, helping RSS more than hindering it.
The legal hibernation thus secured, it went ahead
with its perfidies and pogroms, neither
handicapped, nor humbled. The title of this
seminal booklet was well chosen, not in a
symbolic but in quite a substantive sense. It
defined the Hindutwa cult of crime and sedition,
as it defiled the Indian nationhood at the same
time. It thus upheld treason as virtue, pitched
terrorism as duty, tyranny as statecraft, and
theocracy as polity. The sinister screed had
achieved its squalid ends well.
It would be apposite to quote the redoubtable RSS
stalwart of yesteryears, Prof.Balraj Madhok on
Vajpeyi and Advani, as extremely pertinent to the
criminality that has characterized RSS all along.
How did Advani climb the organizational ladder? :
"The position of Lal Krishan Advani was like a
puppet. He was not capable for the post
(presidentship of BJS) which was given to him
after discarding many senior workers. I knew
through my personal experience that he is a
boneless wonder. He has neither personal
integrity nor opinion. But he is lucky. The
office which he had got due to the offerings
(prasad) of Vajpayee and officials of Sangh,
keeping aside its honour, he acted as a bonded
labourer, for any work assigned to him." (p. 146,
Zindagi Ka Safar- 3: Deendayal Upadhyay Ki Hatya
Se Indira Gandhi Ki Hatya Tak, 2003, Delhi).
And on Vajpayee:
"Sometime back when I was the President of Jana
Sangh, Jagadish Prasad Mathur, in charge of the
Central Office, who was staying with Atal Bihari
at 30, Rajendra Prasad Road, had complained to me
that Atal had turned that house into a den of
immoral activities. There everyday new girls were
coming
" (p.25, Ibid.)
Madhok points out unreservedly to the triad of
Vajpayee, Nana Deshmukh and Balasaheb Deoras,
responsible for the murder of Dendayal Upadhyaya
in 1968 at Mughalsarai Railway junction, having
been patronized by Golwalkar, popular as Guru in
the RSS lore.
These qualifications and attributes, essential to
Hindutwa, have propelled it onward. It earned its
cherished laurels as a den of cutthroats,
kleptomaniacs, womanizers, rapists, arsonists,
terrorists and traitors by remaining constant to
its cultist pledge of grime and gore. For
unraveling its various layers of diabolical and
anti-national crimes in such a painstakingly
thorough manner, and highlighting the threat they
pose to the unity and security of the nation, the
author has put us all in his debt. 5Feb.07
______
[6]
CALL FOR ENTRIES
Film South Asia '07
4-7 October 2007
Kathmandu
Film South Asia, the festival of South Asian documentaries, calls for
entries for the sixth edition of its biennial festival being held in
Kathmandu from 4-7 October 2007. Documentaries made in and after
January 2005 are eligible for the competitive section.
Submission deadline for the entries: 30 June 2007.
Details and entry forms are available at www.filmsouthasia.org
For further information contact:
Upasana Shrestha
Co-Director
Film South Asia
P.O. Box 166
Patan Dhoka
Lalitpur
Nepal
www.filmsouthasia.org
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
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