SACW | Feb 8, 2007
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Wed Feb 7 19:07:15 CST 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | February 8, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2359 - Year 8
[Interruption Notice: Please note there will be no SACW dispatches
between 9 - 13 February 2007]
[1] Assessing Sri Lanka's presidential commission of inquiry
(Kishali Pinto Jayawardena)
[2] Pakistan: Why Musharraf Succeeds (S Akbar Zaidi)
[3] North American Network for Democratic Republic of Nepal - A Press Release
[4] India - Higher education in a multicultural society (K.N. Panikkar)
[5] India: My right not to be censored (Neera Chandhoke)
[6] India - Gujarat: The non screening of "Parzania" - A Press
Release by Prashant
[7] Clemency for Mohd. Afzal Guru - A petition submitted to the
President of India - on 7 February 2007
[8] Call for Entries : The International Festival & Forum on Gender
and Sexuality 2007 (New Delhi, March 2007)
____
[1] [Reproduced below is full text of a three part article by
Kishali Pinto Jayawardena]
o o o
The Sunday Times Online
14 January 2007
ASSESSING SRI LANKA'S PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY [Part 1]
by Kishali Pinto Jayawardena
In a three part series commencing this week, this column will examine
in detail the mandate and nature of the eight member Presidential
Commission of Inquiry, (the Commission), established by the
Government of Sri Lanka in 2006 in order to probe into fifteen
selected incidents of assassinations, extra judicial killings and
disappearances.
These cases include the assassinations of Minister Lakshman
Kadirgamar, MP Joseph Pararajasingham, Kethesh Loganathan, the
execution style shooting of 17 aid workers in Mutur and killings in
Mutur, Trincomalee, Sancholai, Pesalai Beach, Kayts Police area,
Pottuvil, Kebithagollawa, Welikanda, Digapathana and the
disappearance of Rev Jim Brown, all of which occurred at varying
points of time during 2005 and 2006.
The Commission (due to commence its formal sittings early next month)
will be 'observed' by eleven 'eminent persons' whose functioning is
also governed by a mandate issued by the Presidential Secretariat.
While some nominations have invoked controversy, there is no doubt
that Sri Lanka is fortunate to have had the inclusion of the highly
respected former United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture and
current member of the United Nations Human Rights Committee, Nigel
Rodley. Former Chief Justice of India, P.N. Bhagwati functions as the
Chairman of this panel of observers.
The Government has been strident in its assertions that this
Commission will constitute an effective mechanism in re-establishing
accountability for rights violations in Sri Lanka. Consequently, the
mandates of both the Commission and the international observers will
be analysed in detail to see whether this is indeed, the case. In so
doing, I will underline the fact that we have had enough of
Commission Reports and Sessional Papers that have merely languished
in the desks of bureaucrats.
On the contrary and insofar as killings allegedly by government
forces are concerned, given the pervasive climate of impunity that
has prevailed for decades, (aided by extraordinary emergency laws
allowing abuses), an effective pattern of prosecutions will be the
only actual deterrent. Yet, is the Commission satisfactorily
structured to realise this objective? Where petitions involve issues
of service responsibility as factually and immensely complicated as
those relating to prosecutions for extra judicial killings, can they
be satisfactorily resolved by fact finding Commissions of Inquiry as
well as the law and procedures applicable to command responsibility
and burden of proof as are currently in force? These are the
questions that will be investigated.
Act No 17 of 1948 (the law under which the Commission is
established), was enacted primarily to provide for small local
inquiries concerning the administration of any department of
Government or the conduct of any member of the public service among
other things. It is very clear that while this law may have been
suitable for that purpose, it was not meant to be used for complex
inquiries such as investigations into extra judicial killings.
Page 2 of the mandate of the Commission affirms its fact finding
nature in that its investigations are stated to facilitate and enable
the President "to present the relevant material to the appropriate
competent authorities of the Government of Sri Lanka including the
Attorney General" towards efficacious prosecutions. Thus, it does not
automatically follow that immediate prosecutions will ensue from the
recommendations of the Commission.
Rather, in a context where the Commission has itself, no separate
investigative powers or investigative staff, it will function purely
as a body before which aggrieved persons may present their versions
(often differing) of the violations in issue. This will obviously
accomplish little. Past practice of the work of similar Commissions
has indicated this very well. One immediate comparative instance
concerns the four 1994 Presidential Commissions of Inquiry to
investigate the Involuntary Removal or Disappearances of Persons
which was appointed under the very same law in terms of which the
current Commission has been constituted.
Out of these four Commissions, the Commission investigating the
Disappearances of Persons in the Western, Southern and Sabaragamuwa
Provinces (hereafter the Western Province Disappearances Commission)
remain the best example of the futility of processes of this nature,
even if the Commission itself functions satisfactorily.
Some 10,000 witnesses gave evidence before the Western Province
Disappearances Commission, which found the security forces
responsible for a large part of the disappearances. However, the
prosecutions that followed from these findings were negligible.
Despite the fact that tens of thousands of such cases are thought to
have occurred in the past, we have had only nine cases of convictions
since 1998.
A major reason as to why findings of Commissions of Inquiry are not
used in the actual prosecutions relevant to those cases is primarily
because the standards of proof used in both contexts differ in
substantial respects. The commission inquiry will hear evidence of
those affected, which may at times be ex parte. In addition, the
provisions of Act No 17 of 1948 stipulate that hearsay evidence
(statements by third parties) may also be heard, which evidence would
however be inadmissible in an actual prosecution.
However, the High Court before which prosecutions may be brought will
consider the specific question as to whether particular service
officers specified in the indictment were responsible beyond all
reasonable doubt for their complicity in that particular crime.
Hearsay evidence will obviously not be admissible for that purpose.
Next week's column will examine past examples where despite
Commission findings in respect of the culpability of senior army
officers, these officers were acquitted in prosecutions precisely as
a result of what has been highlighted above. It will stress the
necessity for rigorous changes in the law incorporating
internationally accepted norms of command responsibility among other
factors, in order that an effective prosecutorial strategy may be
enabled. Undeniably, rather than the continued enthusiastic endorsing
of fact finding procedures, this is what is currently imperative.
The Sunday Times Online
28 January 2007
ASSESSING SRI LANKA'S PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY [Part 2]
by Kishali Pinto Jayawardena
In the last column, the constitution of the eight member Presidential
Commission of Inquiry, (the Commission), established by the
Government of Sri Lanka last year in order to probe into fifteen
selected incidents of extra judicial killings and other grave human
rights violations, was examined. The Commission will begin sittings
in early February.
The point made was very simple; precious little can be achieved by
fact finding Commissions of this nature. Instead, what is required
are substantive legal changes that relate to the determination of
questions of service responsibility as factually and immensely
complicated as those relating to prosecutions for extra judicial
killings. This week's column takes this discussion somewhat further.
However, rather than limiting the debate to the fifteen cases
mandated for inquiry by this Commission, let me put these matters in
their historical context. During the past three decades, we have
undergone civil and ethnic conflict as a result of which, more than
sixty thousand people have died. These killings have occurred both
in the North due to the conflict between the separatist Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) as well as during the late eighties when
there were attempts by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) to capture
the government through armed force.
The abuses that occurred during these periods of conflict were
manifold. While the LTTE and the JVP were responsible for countless
acts of terror, the counter response on the part of the various
Governments was equally ruthless. Many people were simply
'disappeared' by state agents using emergency laws that gave them
extraordinary powers or by paramilitaries acting with the knowledge
and concurrence of sections of government.
There is no question that these deprivations of life were due to a
system that allowed and even encouraged such abuses. A familiar
argument of successive governments has limited responsibility to
rogue elements within its ranks. One primary factor however gives the
lie to this spurious defense.
This is that despite the many thousands of disappearances and extra
judicial killings, the Sri Lankan State has been demonstrably
unwilling to put into place, specific mechanisms of legal
accountability that counter impunity for these perpetrators. Most
particularly, we have seen only two successful prosecutions in recent
times. Ironically, one case concerned brutal acts of rape and murder
of a Tamil schoolgirl and members of her family by soldiers in the
North (the Krishanthi Kumaraswamy Case) while the other concerned the
no less brutal enforced disappearance of fifty three Sinhalese
schoolboys in a remote village in the South (the Embilipitiya Case).
The reason why prosecutions in respect of disappearances and extra
judicial killings fall by the wayside is very clear. Present Sri
Lankan legal structures, based on old notions of British criminal
justice, are wholly unable to deal with questions of service
responsibility as factually and immensely complicated as they are in
these cases. Let me now illustrate this point in one simple but
nevertheless extremely powerful example.
Prior to the Embilipitiya prosecutions, the Western, Southern and
Sabaragamuwa Disappearances Commission of Inquiry (the Western
Province Disappearances Commission) submitted a Special Report on the
Embilipitiya incidents to President Chandrika Kumaratunga on
29.11.'95 which found not only a group of junior officers but the
district coordinating military secretary (who was in effective charge
of the military for that area) responsible for the enforced
disappearances.
However, when the case went to the Ratnapura High Court for
prosecution, even though that senior army officer, Brigadier 'Parry'
Liyanage was indicted along with the other junior officers, he was
acquitted due to the Court holding that no evidence could be found
directly linking him to the charges of abduction with intent to kill.
(See Application No; 121/94, Judgement of the Ratnapura High Court on
23/02/1999. Some of the junior officers were convicted). What is
striking is that the findings of the Western Province Disappearances
Commission were not relevant for this prosecution and, in fact, did
not appear to have even been cited before the High Court.
As remarked previously in this column, the precise reason for this
non-relevance is not difficult to discover; commissions of this
nature are purely fact finding and function very differently from
courts of law. Standards of proof used in findings of the Commission
and in judicial prosecutions differ. Hearsay evidence (unlike in the
case of Commission proceedings) will not be admissible for that
purpose in judicial proceedings.
There is a very strong possibility that this same pattern will repeat
itself in the fifteen cases that would be inquired into by the
current Commission of Inquiry. In other words, (and confounding
current cynicism) even if the inquiry/investigative process of the
Commission proceeds successfully, its findings may well prove to be
useless when the matter goes to actual prosecutions in terms of the
existing criminal law.
Within this rigid framework of the law, it is no surprise that the
most that can happen is the successful prosecution of junior
officers. However, senior officers escape unscathed and the system
itself (which condones and encourages such actions) remains in place.
So we have the paradoxical result that while state appointed
Commissions of Inquiry find culpability on the part of state
officers, the laxity of the law allows them escape. Practically, in
both the Embilipitiya Case and the Krishanthi Kumaraswamy Case, only
the junior level officers were successfully prosecuted with their
convictions being upheld on appeal.
Even more disturbingly, the law has developed in such a manner that
even though the doctrine of command responsibility has not been held
applicable to state agents in times of war in the relevant
prosecutions, such principles have nonetheless been affirmed in a
different judicial context of fundamental rights violations in
situations of ordinary law and order. The inconsistency in this
differential application of judicial principles has been marked.
The concluding part of this column next week will examine these cases
and will urge a different approach to securing accountability in
regard to human rights violations as contrasted to a fact finding
Commission of Inquiry from which improbable miracles continue to be
promised by this Government.
The Sunday Times Online
4 February 2007
ASSESSING SRI LANKA'S PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY [Part 3]
by Kishali Pinto Jayawardena
This is the concluding segment of a three part series of articles
critically examining the recently established eight member
Presidential Commission of Inquiry, (the Commission), to probe into
fifteen selected incidents of grave human rights violations that had
occurred in the country during 2005 and 2006. A team of international
"eminent persons" will observe the Commission's work and the
functioning of both bodies will be in accordance with their
particular Mandates.
Some eminently commonsensical points may be disposed of first. The
fifteen incidents selected for the scrutiny of this fact-finding body
are only a minute fraction of similar abuses that continue to take
place even as this column is being written. Is it not discriminatory,
if not wholly irrational that some incidents have been selected for
inquiry by this special process while others have been exempted? On
what basis has this selection been done and the spatio-temporal
limits of the Commission's mandate defined?
In addition, problematic conditionalities govern the release of the
findings of the Commission in regard to which, the President can
withhold the publication of any material which is in his opinion,
"prejudicial to or absolutely necessary for the protection of
national security, public safety or wellbeing." Curiously, different
grounds seem to govern the release of the reports of the Commission
and the International Observers. It seems that though at an early
stage, both mandates used the same vague term of 'public safety and
well being', the Mandate of the Observers (see the supposedly final
version of the Mandate of the International Observers dated November
24, 2006 and signed by the Secretary to the President) was changed
later to the more rigorous wording of 'national security' and 'public
order' while the Mandate of the Commission remained the same.
Meanwhile, ambiguities in the relevant last paragraph of the Mandate
of the Commission leaves the publication of its Report dependant upon
yet another contingent factor; namely that the publication should be
immediately after the Attorney General decides to prosecute and files
indictment for that purpose. The question then arises; what would be
the situation if the Attorney General decides that there is not
enough prima facie evidence to prosecute? Or, for that matter, in a
country where the indictments take up to two years even in the case
of ordinary crimes, what if there is interminable delay in the
issuance of the indictments? Would the Report then not be made public
till all these conditions are complied with?
From the question of publication we should proceed to the issue of
prosecution. The Mandate of the International Observers contains a
clause that permits objections to be made public when the Attorney
General unlawfully or unreasonably refrains from instituting
prosecutions on the findings of the Commission. It is however
relevant that the Commissioners are directed to come to a finding on
the 'identities, descriptions and backgrounds of persons and groups
of persons who are responsible under the applicable laws and legal
principles of Sri Lanka' for the commission of deaths, injury or
physical harm in respect of the fifteen selected incidents.
By itself, this stipulation seems innocuous. After all, the relevant
standard should indeed, be "the applicable laws and legal principles
of Sri Lanka." But then, what would be the case if such laws and
standards are manifestly inadequate to deal with the complexity of
war crimes that the Commission will undoubtedly be called upon to
deal with? For example, if the question of culpability involves
indirect rather than direct responsibility, could the Commission
recommend prosecution and would the Attorney General be justified in
issuing indictment? If not, would the Observers be justified in
regarding this as an unreasonable or unlawful decision of the
Attorney General to refrain from prosecution?
Last week's column looked at a singular instance of the Embilipitiya
Case concerning the abduction of twenty four Sinhalese schoolchildren
with intent to kill by officers of the army during the height of the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna insurrection in the late eighties. In this
instance, the Attorney General did, in fact, prosecute Brigadier
'Parry' Liyanage, the district coordinating military secretary and
hence in effective charge of the military for that area.
Notwithstanding the fact that a fact-finding Commission of Inquiry
into Disappearances had found a measure of responsibility on the part
of this senior army officer, he was acquitted in the High Court due
to the finding that no evidence could be found directly linking him
to the abductions.
This was a good illustration of the absence of the doctrine of
command responsibility in our criminal law. Principles of the Rome
Statute on the International Criminal Court imposing responsibility
where a commander either knew or should have known that such crimes
were being committed by forces effectively under his or her command,
and failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures to prevent
the commission of the crimes or to have them investigated, (Article
28), are important in that regard.
But apart from the criminal law, it is disturbing is that even in a
different judicial context of exercising its jurisdiction pertaining
to fundamental rights violations, Sri Lankan judges have been wary of
emphasizing the doctrine of command responsibility in situations of
conflict. For example, following Brigadier Liyanage's acquittal
referred to above, he subsequently won a fundamental rights case
against his non-promotion to the rank of Major General. The Supreme
Court took the contested position that in the absence of direct
involvement in the disappearances, Brigadier Liyanage merely occupied
'a place of authority in the chain of command.' (see SC Application
No;506/99, SCM dated 25.11.99). To give the proverbial devil her just
due, it must be said however that despite the direction of the Court,
then President Chandrika Kumaratunge refused to make the promotion.
In puzzling contradistinction, the Supreme Court has been far more
receptive to applying the doctrine of command responsbility in
situations of ordinary law and order. For example, in Silva vs
Iddamalgoda, ( 2003 [2] SriLR, 63) and in the Wewelage Rani Fernando
Case SC(FR) No 700/2002, SCM 26/07/2004,) the officer-in-charge of a
police station and senior prison officials were respectively held
liable, not on direct involvements in the acts of torture but rather,
on their non-action.
These paradoxes are understandably bewildering to human rights
activists who tend to shy away from rarefied battles over obscure
points of legal theory in the courtrooms. Yet there is no doubt that
the reform of the legal/justice system and the law itself is key to
ensuring rule of law norms in times of conflict. Ideally, the
Commission process and the involvement of an independent objective
element through the international observers could be used to urge
such a process, including the establishing of an effective witness
protection programme.
In the alternative, we will be reluctant observers of yet another
dilatory, obfuscatory 'fact-finding' process with no perceptible
impact on a prevalent culture of impunity and a manifest lack of
prosecutorial/judicial will.
______
[2]
Economic and Political Weekly
January 27, 2007
Letter from South Asia
WHY MUSHARRAF SUCCEEDS
Military rule in Pakistan has had long spells because the army has
learnt how to be repressive and yet accommodative, target only the
marginalised and minority groups, buy off support from political
groups and, in Musharraf's case, make use of the US fear of "Islamic"
power.
by S Akbar Zaidi
Why does military rule persist in Pakistan for as long as it does, at
times up to a decade, often without much resistance? Why is military
rule acceptable to a large number of people, perhaps even the
majority at certain times, and even preferred to Pakistan's own form
of electoral politics or democracy? Two possible, partial,
explanations have been suggested by commentators in these columns.
One relates to the nature of Pakistan's civil society and questions
whether it has a democratic gene in it, or whether its agenda is more
of "enlightened moderation" rather than of participatory politics,
and is hence willing to support anyone who fulfils that agenda
through any means. Similarly, as a corollary, the second strand of
this argument assertsthat the political class, which should be
involved in the democratic process of politicking, is more interested
in coming to power at any cost, even if that means coming to some
'samjhota' with military rule than having to take the military
head-on.
Clearly, what both these strands suggest is that Pakistanis are
opportun- ists andare concerned, like most rational beings, in
specific outcomes and results, and not in the process through which
they are achieved. It also suggests that these groups in society are
more willing to compromise than oppose or contradict the state
institutions. While this is perhaps a partial and tenuous argument,
it ignores the role - at times brutal, at others accommodative - that
the military plays in this equation. In order to under- stand the
longevity of military rule in Pakistan, let us first examine how
general Zia stayed in power for 11 years and how general Musharraf
can easily do likewise.
Zia and Bhutto
General Zia came in to power in July 1977 through a coup, which was
backed by a large number of politicians who were against Z A Bhutto.
Clearly the supporters of the Pakistan People's Party, Bhutto's
party, were against the coup and against Zia, especially when he
hanged Bhutto in 1979. Zia's regime was oppressive and brutal by any
definition of the term. He had hundreds of Bhutto supporters ar-
rested, jailed and flogged. Some were even hanged. The greatest
opposition Zia faced was from the People's Party, and not from the
collective constituency of political actors - women's groups were a
notice- able and commendable exception. Many of those who had
suffered Bhutto's wrath, if they did not openly support Zia, sat on
the sidelines hoping that they too would get their turn in power.
Using Islamic laws and symbols as props for legitimacy, Zia managed
to put the fear of god in all Pakistanis and became an active social
engineer "Islamising" Pakistani institutions and society. He claimed
to derive his legitimacy from fulfilling Pakistan's destiny to become
an Islamic country and thereby drew support from a large section of
Pakistan's urban middle classes, many of whom endorsed his
Islamisation programme. Essentially, he was able to get social
support from key sections in Pakistan's society as well as political
support from Islamic parties by bringing them into the political
arena as members of his parliament, the Majlis-e Shoora. However, a
section of Pakistan's enlightened and moderate women played a key
role in opposing his government. And of course, and most
importantly, there was Afghanistan, and the country became the US'
front line state receiving large amounts of military and economic
aid. The Musharraf story has many par- allels with Zia.
Just as Zia had alienated Bhutto's supporters but was able to draw
support from other political groups and build his own mainstream
political constituency, Musharraf too has been able to work with most
political groups and parties who feel that by keeping their options
open, they will be allowed to share the power the military chooses to
dispense. The military's game when in power is to quickly identify
individuals and groups - there are many, too many of them - who are
willing to work with it and allow them some sem- blance of authority
and autonomy in a political structure which it dominates. This form
of praetorian democracy has worked well for both Zia and Musharraf.
Identical to Zia's Islamisation pro- gramme and his desire to fulfil
Pakistan's Islamic destiny (even if it is inverse in content) is
Musharraf's messianic mission of "enlightened moderation", intended
to realise the general's vision of Pakistan's destiny. In both cases,
not surprisingly, there are numerous actors, groups and factions who
are willing - even genuinely eager - to fulfil Pakistan's destiny in
either of these two opposing directions. Hence, allies have never
been a problem for any military regime in Pakistan.
Ends and Means
In Musharraf's case, just as the general has himself genuinely
expressed the view that he (at least personally) wants to see a
liberal and moderate Pakistan, there are numerous Pakistanis, too who
want the country to be a modern, liberal, enlightened and peaceful
society. Just as there were those who supported Zia's Islamic agenda
out of their strong belief in such a political project for Pakistan,
there are those who feel the same way about Musharraf's vision. When
the ends justify the means, why should either vision be spoiled by
agitational politics or democracy?
It is this accommodative and inclusive, rather than exclusionary,
political strategy which ensures that military rule in Pakistan
continues unabated. Moreover, it is the refinement of this strategy
from military regime to military regime, which allows the Musharraf
dispensation to be less repressive than either Ayub Khan or Zia.
Military rule in Pakistan is increasingly relying on the carrot
rather than the stick. Also, in all the three episodes, the US
government and Washington's financial institutions have played a key
role in supporting the generals' rule in Pakistan. Without this
financial, military and dip- lomatic support, none of the military
governments would have survived as long as they did. This also
explains why the decades of military rule show higher growth rates in
the economy than the democratic interregnums. In each of the three
cases the generals used the financial support from the US and other
western governments to not only provide patronage and buy-off
political opposition, but to also invest in economic resources. They
could not have done this on their own. Military rule does also make
enemies and excludes some groups. However, interestingly, in
Pakistan, in each of three military regimes the exclusion and
repression - often brutal and military - has been of ethnic/regional
groups and not of mainstream political parties. But what is critical
is that the military regimes are able to get away with this brutality
precisely because they do not face enough opposi- tion. Ayub Khan and
Yahya Khan were able to rape East Pakistan because there was no
protest in west Pakistan against the military's actions; the
democratic movement against Zia came mainly from Sindh and Zia was
able to suppress the province because most of the political parties
there were accommodated in his settlement. And now Balochistan under
Musharraf: the little resistance that his oppressive policies receive
is isolated and takes place far away in this region, on the sidelines
of "main- stream" political Pakistan. Musharraf has also succeeded
by reading the times astutely. Zia ul Haq, despite all his
accommodative skills, would have found it difficult to survive in a
post 9-11 anti-Islam world. In a world of US domination and "western"
values, Musharraf has pandered to the fear- syndrome lobbies of the
west, a factor that has resulted in his longevity. He has also
benefited from the "there is no alternative" factor: he has projected
himself as a liberal, moderate, enlightened, Muslim general who rules
a country with nuclear weapons. If the US withdraws its support
without finding a strong and reliable alternative to Musharraf, the
nuclear weapons could end up in the hands of Islamic fundamentals, so
goes the improbable theory. Better to work with the devil you know
than the one you do not.
With Musharraf making plans to be re- elected as general-president
for another five years, there does not seem to be any way to dislodge
him from power. He will not go voluntarily and the opposition, hoping
to "share" power with him in the next assembly, is unlikely to make
much noise. Having made a number of enemies in Waziristan and
Balochistan, probably the only way he would end up going is the Zia
way. Until then, general Musharraf is assured a political career
perhaps far longer than any of his predecessors.
______
[3]
NORTH AMERICAN NETWORK FOR DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF NEPAL (NANDRON)
PRESS RELEASE
February 5, 2007
North American Network for Democratic Republic of Nepal (NANDRON) is
deeply concerned over the violent situation in Terai and expresses
its solidarity with the common people of Terai, and renounces the
violence and infiltration of the regressive forces in peaceful
agitation launched by Madhesi people demanding their rightful place
in Nepal's political system. It is obvious that regressive
monarchical forces are trying to reestablish themselves through
infiltration in the movement by jeopardizing the upcoming Constituent
Assembly Elections. We demand immediate isolation of the infiltrators
and opening up of dialogue with genuine leaders leading the Madhesi
movement.
NANDRON urges Nepal government to fulfill the genuine demands of
Terai communities and immediately declare Nepal as Democratic
Republic with Federal Governance System, paving way to the
Constituent Assembly's election. We also demand the implementation of
the comprehensive peace agreement and announcement of the CA election
date immediately.
NANDRON supports inclusive and participatory governance through
proportional representation with equal participation of all
ethnicities in the affairs of state. At this historic juncture, when
it appears possible to build Nepal as a promised land for all, unity,
understanding and trust among all ethnicity, and linguistic groups,
are paramount. Let us vouch for the national integrity.
NANDRON demands the Rayamajhi Commission Report be made public and
fully implemented immediately as recommended by the Commission. We
would like to draw the attention of all the lawmakers in the interim
legislature that the Non-resident Nepalese be not deprived of voting
rights in this historic event of the Constituent Assembly's election
for the establishment of a New Nepal.
The North American Network for Democratic Republic of Nepal (NANDRON)
is an advocacy and watchdog organization acting as a common forum for
all Nepali expatriates and friends of Nepal living in North America
with one of its primary objectives being advocacy and awareness
campaigns to help the political parties, civil society, and people of
Nepal pursuing for the establishment of a popular, inclusive and
representative democratic republican system in the country.
Dr. Chitra Tiwari
Coordinator
United State of America
Washington DC
cktiwari at verizon.net,
ddpoudel at cox.net
______
[4]
The Hindu
February 08, 2007
HIGHER EDUCATION IN A MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY
by K.N. Panikkar
Value education should be primarily secular without, however,
discarding the humanist elements in religious traditions.
THE UNESCO International Commission on Education for the Twenty-first
Century headed by Jacques Delors has identified "learning to be" and
"learning to live together" as two among the four pillars of
education. They connote some of the fundamental values education
tries to impart in any society. "Learning to be" addresses the
question of development of the inner capacity of the individual,
which will prepare him or her to meet social and political
responsibilities. "Learning to live together" would involve the
creation of a harmonious life, transcending sectarian loyalties and
differences. There is no education without values, but in all
societies values are a mixed bag. They are so because of differing
ideological needs. Yet there are certain universal values all
societies cherish and disseminate. Education is an effective agency
of value dissemination, particularly in the context of a globalised
world. As such, the values in education are a combination of the
universal and the particular, both subject to changes according to
the differing patterns of human experience. The values of higher
education in India as obtained at the time of its liberation from
colonial rule in 1947 and developed thereafter were shaped by the
influences of these two dimensions.
The search for the creation of new values in education has a fairly
long history, reaching back to the period of early colonial rule. The
Indian intelligentsia during the colonial period had sought to evolve
a system of education qualitatively different from the colonial and
the traditional. The alternative did not entirely reject them. It was
an effort to reconcile tradition with modernity in which tradition
was identified as the dominant literate culture and its religion and
modernity as the culture of the capitalist West filtered through
colonialism. The beginning of the quest for such reconciliation can
be traced to the intellectual engagements in the early part of the
19th century. The genesis of modern ideas of education in India is
generally attributed to the colonial system but in reality they
emerged in opposition to it. The Indian intelligentsia tried to
evolve an alternative that was neither colonial nor traditional,
although it borrowed ideas from both. Given the colonial hegemony,
however, the alternative was stillborn, remaining mainly at the level
of ideas without much of an impact on practice. As a result, the
modern educated intelligentsia was nurtured on the social and
political values the colonial system tried to disseminate, which
continued to be an influential factor even after Independence.
The thinking on education as reflected in the recommendations of
various commissions and policy statements from 1948 to 1992
underlined an increasing tendency to adopt secular values.
Unfortunately, this tendency to orient value education on
secular-democratic lines received a setback thereafter when Hindu
communal forces controlled the governments at the Centre and in some
States. During this period, two tendencies acquired prominence.
First, to promote religion-centred education by defining value
education mainly in religious terms. Secondly, to discard the
critical approach to the tradition-modernity relationship and to
privilege traditional values over all others.
The implication of this historical experience - the incorporation of
secular values and their attempted reversal - is a useful guide in
the formulation of value education. These two tendencies represented
two different conceptions of Indian society. The former implied a
plural society struggling to become multi-cultural whereas the latter
implied an attempt to turn a plural society into a mono-cultural one.
India being a multi-religious society with a variety of cultural
practices, one of the aims of value education should be to promote
the former and discourage the latter. If so, value education has to
be primarily secular without, however, discarding the humanist
elements in religious traditions. Such an approach would lead to two
sets of values. The first, universal moral values such as truth,
honesty, and compassion; and, the second, values such as secularism,
democracy, and equality. These two sets of values are generally
considered mutually exclusive, but are not really so, as secularism
essentially creates a moral universe.
Pillars of secularism
The three pillars of secularism, to borrow the terminology used in
the UNESCO report, are religious universalism, humanism, and
rationality. In a multi-religious society universalism is one of the
ideological bases of secularism. It would help to create harmony
among religions by emphasising the commonly shared religious truth,
which could lead to mutual respect of religions. Without respecting
the religious rights of different denominations, a multi-religious
society can hardly have a peaceful existence. One of the travails of
Indian society since colonial times has been religious strife which,
among other things, is a result of the absence of mutual respect.
Faith in religious universalism, which is central to secularism,
alone can bring about a harmonious relation between religions.
Therefore, the core belief of universalism that all religions are
essentially the same and differences are only in their external
manifestations is a necessary value to cultivate in a multi-religious
society.
In all considerations of values in education, the multi-cultural and
multi-religious character of Indian society figures prominently. The
solution to the tensions arising out of this is sought through the
dissemination of secularism as a value of education. This naturally
brings into focus the place of religion in education. The
overwhelming consensus has been in favour of education about
religions distinct from religious education. The distinction is
extremely important as the former would reinforce universalism and
the latter would strengthen particularism. India is generally
considered a multi-cultural society. If equality is central to
multiculturalism, such an appellation is of doubtful validity. India
is at best a plural society, which tolerates the existence of
different cultures.
Cultural equality in practice is yet a far cry. It is in this context
that the inculcation of secular values becomes crucial as it would
contribute to the transition from the plural to the multicultural.
The cultural homogenisation the Hindu communal forces try to bring
about would adversely affect this process. The tendency to privilege
an invented monoculture of the past tends to undermine the possible
realisation of multiculturalism. In this context, therefore, imbibing
secularism as a value in education assumes great importance. In
recent times, both cultural homogenisation as well as privileging the
invented monoculture of the past gained ascendancy in the realm of
higher education.
In all discussions on educational values, there is a tendency to
differentiate the secular values from the moral and the ethical. The
assumption is that secular and moral values are distinct and
unrelated. A strict division between the two is unreal, not only
because they are interrelated in practice but also because most of
the moral and ethical values are also embedded in the latter. One of
the foundations of secularism, for instance, is humanism, which
incorporates almost all moral and ethical values derived from
religious teachings. This is not to argue that values derived from
religious teachings need not be part of education, but to suggest
that religion is not the only possible source for the incorporation
of moral values such as compassion, love, mutual respect. It is
possible to inculcate such values from secular sources also. The
purpose of education could be variously interpreted, ranging from the
mundane to the spiritual. That it helps to understand the meaning of
life, to realise the creative potential of human beings, and to
locate oneself in society is beyond dispute. Today when Indian
society is entering a new phase of global participation, a variety of
tensions are likely to emerge. One among them is related to the place
of traditional values in a fast changing social, cultural, and
intellectual climate. That they cannot be discarded is generally
acknowledged. It is equally true that there is no place for revival.
The solution is creative integration of the values of both for which
the inculcation of secular values in higher education, which provides
a sphere for critical interrogation, could pave the way.
(The writer is a historian who is currently Chairman of the Higher
Education Commission of Kerala. This article is based on a
presentation at the Indo-China seminar on Higher Education in New
Delhi on January 20-21, 2007.)
______
[5]
Indian Express
February 08, 2007
MY RIGHT NOT TO BE CENSORED
As 'Parzania' is kept out of theatres in Gujarat, the question is:
Can a ban on a book, play or painting ever serve a larger cause?
by Neera Chandhoke
The Indian state banned Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses in 1988
and 27 years later film exhibitors ruled out the screening of
Parzania in Gujarat. In both cases it was feared that an otherwise
creative work might enrage political passions, cause law and order
problems, lead to the destruction of private and public property.
What on earth, defenders of censorship can ask, is wrong with this?
Individuals, howsoever creative, sometimes need to be curtailed in
the interests of the public good. Reportedly activists of the Bajrang
Dal warned owners of cinema houses in Gujarat that any decision on
whether the film on the human consequences of post-Godhra riots
should be screened, should keep in mind the interests of the state.
That the theatre owners' decision is prompted by commerce more, and
by considerations of ethics less, is not as important as the basic
question: why is censorship of a book, a film, a play, or a painting
wrong, if the ban serves a larger cause?
We can only answer this question when we ask the reverse question:
Why is censorship wrong? What does censorship do to the authors of a
text? At an obvious level, censorship denies the author the basic
right to freedom of expression. Human beings have the right to
articulate their opinions, and give form to their creativity, their
notions of how things are and how they should be. This is what being
human means - to reflect on what it means to belong to society, to
critique social practices, to dream of a desired society and to give
expression to these yearnings. I may not agree with the precise way
in which you frame your opinion or your creativity. But as the
philosopher Voltaire put it, 'I disapprove of what you say, but I
will defend to the death your right to say it'. Censorship denies
basic rights to the creator of the text, and thereby the right to be
human.
Certainly, freedom of expression, like other rights, is not absolute;
it can be limited by the principle of serious harm. If an
inflammatory speech leads to communal or caste riots in which other
persons are seriously harmed, the speech giver is culpable under law.
What else counts for serious harm? Consider incidents in which either
'this' group or 'that' has demanded that a book be withdrawn, or a
film not be screened. In India, increasingly groups who tend to
belong to one particular ideology get agitated over representations
of Saraswati by M.F. Husain on the grounds that this representation
'hurts' their sentiments. Deepa Mehta was not allowed by the same
kind of group to film Water on the same pretext. Irate mutterings
accompanied her earlier film Fire; the film, it was said, was against
Indian culture. Historians cannot criticise Shivaji because he is an
icon of Maharashtra. The film Fanaa could not be shown in Gujarat
because the hero commented adversely on the Narmada issue. Now
Parzania cannot be shown in the same state, because it might
perchance harm the interests of the state.
But what is the notion of harm that is being employed here? Husain's
sketch of Saraswati followed a well-known and historical genre of
representation in India. The film Water documents the plight of
widows, not unknown to the newspaper-reading public. The film Fire
deals with a phenomenon which is again not unknown - alternative
sexualities. Fanaa was banned because the hero said something that
had been documented in hundreds of government and non-government
reports: That lakhs of people in the Narmada valley have been
displaced without proper compensation. And hundreds of published and
unpublished reports about what happened in Gujarat are in the public
domain.
In all these cases, the basic freedom of the author of the work has
been violated, even though the exercise of his or her right has not
resulted in serious harm. But our rights as readers, as watchers of
films, as art lovers, and as citizens have also been violated. To
watch a film is to engage in a dialogue with the filmmaker, to
respond to the issues raised and the manner in which they have been
raised, to criticise them and to mull over them. A good filmmaker
shakes society out of its complacency, forces people to think.
Censorship deprives us of this 'waking up'. It violates two rights -
your right to tell me a story, howsoever wracking that story might
be. It also violates my right to learn from that story. Either way,
censorship prevents communication. This defeats the purpose of
democracy; the rights of authors not to be prevented by the actions
of other agents from communicating their ideas to others who might
wish to hear them.
-The writer is a professor of political science, University of Delhi
______
[6]
Prashant
. The Province Office for Integral Social Development of the Gujarat Jesuits
. A Centre for Human Rights, Justice and Peace
Post Box No. 4050, Navrangpura, Ahmedabad 380 009,
Gujarat, India
Tel. : +91 (079) 66522333, 2745 5913 . Fax :
+91 (079) 2748 9018, 2630 1362
Mobile : 9824034536 . e-mail : sjprashant at gmail.com .
www.humanrightsindia.in
PRESS NOTE
The news that "Parzania", a film by Rahul Dholakia will not be
screened by the multiplex owners of Ahmedabad is simply shocking.
The cold fact that an individual or a small group can terrorize
ordinary citizens in this State, speaks volumes of the break-down
of the law and order mechanism. It is also a clear indication that
the ordinary citizens are denied their rights and freedoms. For
them, the so called "Vibrancy" of this State, is a sheer sham...a
total falsehood.
Citizens of Gujarat should now boldly come out to protest the
violation of their fundamental rights and make every possible effort
to ensure that "Parzania" is screened everywhere and that as many
as possible are able to see it.
A new "Satyagraha" has to take place !
Fr. Cedric Prakash sj
for and on behalf of several concerned citizens
and human rights activists
7th February 2007
______
[7]
www.sacw.net | 8 February 2007
CLEMENCY FOR MOHD. AFZAL GURU - A PETITION SUBMITTED TO THE PRESIDENT
OF INDIA - ON 7 FEBRUARY 2007
http://www.sacw.net/hrights/Afzalpet7feb07.pdf
______
[8]
Call for Productions from African, Asian, Pacific, Latin American,
European and Caribbean countries
The Public Service Broadcasting Trust is pleased to invite audiovisual
productions for
THE INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL & FORUM ON GENDER AND SEXUALITY
New Delhi, India, March 2007
The Festival will bring together a rich collection of films from India
and across the world delving into the deep intricacies of our everyday
experiences of gender and sexuality and those that raise some of the
larger issues associated with these identities and constructions.
If you have recently directed a documentary, a short fiction film, a
feature or a television programme that is innovative (in form or
content), creative, challenging and goes beyond conventional forms of
television/ film language, we are interested in screening your work.
For details on entering films visit www.psbt.org
Public Service Broadcasting Trust is a not for profit trust that
represents the confluence of energies in an attempt to foster a shared
public culture of broadcasting that is as exciting and cutting edge, as
it is socially responsive and representative of democratic values. In
seeking to do this, PSBT seeks to situate a new vocabulary and activism
at the very heart of broadcasting in India.
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South
Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
SACW archive is available at: bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/
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