SACW | Feb 20, 2007 | 5 years after Godhra, fire bombing of Samjhauta express raises many questions
Harsh Kapoor
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South Asia Citizens Wire | February 20, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2362 - Year 9
[1] Fire Bombing of Samjhauta Express: Reactions from Citizen Groups & Media
- Statement by India Chapter of Pakistan India Peoples Forum
- Terror Attack on Samjhauta Express Press Release by Concerned Citizens
- Keep the peace process on track (Siddharth Varadarajan)
- Editorial , The Telegraph
- Peace and the burning train (Edit., The Hindu)
- Samjhota explosion (Edit., The News International)
- Blast on Samjhauta - Put the joint mechanism
to work (Editorial, Economic Times)
- Helpline numbers for Samjhauta Express
[2] Refuse to sit by and let the mass crimes go unpunished (Teesta Setalvad)
[3] Public Hearing: Mothers, wives, sisters of
the Disappeared from Kashmir Depose before the
People (New Delhi, 22 February 2007)
[4] India: Using hate as a weapon to gain power (Vidya Bhushan Rawat)
[5] Book Review: Benchmarking Identities (Pratap Bhanu Mehta)
____
[1] FIRE BOMBING OF THE SAMJHAUTA EXPRESS: FEBRUARY 2007
REACTIONS FROM CITIZENS GROUPS AND THE MEDIA
[Some five years after the train fire at Godhra
that a sparked anti - muslim pogrom by Hindutva
extremists, the fire bombing of the samjhauta
express (the only train to ply between India and
Pakistan) raises many questions as who was
involved. Could it be Hindutva fundamentalists or
their counterparts who want to stall the
official peace process between India and
Pakistan. ]
A. REACTIONS BY CITIZENS GROUPS
(i)
20 Feb 2007
PAKISTAN-INDIAN PEOPLES' FORUM FOR PEACE AND
DEMOCRACY CONDEMNS THE FIRE BOMBING OF SAMJHAUTA
EXPRESS
Pakistan-India Peoples' Forum for Peace and
Democracy (PIPFPD)strongly condemns the vicious
terrorist bombing of the Delhi-Lahore Samjhauta
Express in which 67 people were killed and more
than 50 injured. Indians and Pakistanis are
united in their deep grief at this heinous crime
that cannot be justified by any cause and we
express our deep condolences to the families of
the innocent victims of this act of terror.
The train symbolizes the deep desire of the
peoples of India and Pakistan to have good
neighbourly relations and it has served as a
crucial lifeline to maintain people to people
contacts across the border. The terror attack on
the train and its timings indicates that its
purpose was to derail the peace process and to
undermine people to people contacts, which has
been a significant component of the process of
building peace between the two countries. PIPFPD
urges that this tragic incident should not be
allowed to disrupt the process of normalizing
relations as had happened last July. In this
context, PIPFPD is deeply appreciative of the
efforts of the governments of India and Pakistan
to continue with the peace process, and welcomes
the move to continue without interruption the
train service and other cross border links. Let
this become an opportunity to affirm the urgency
of normalising relations in recognition of the
people of India and Pakistan's commitment to
peace and friendship.
Tapan Kumar Bose
General Secretary
o o o
Press Release
February 19, 2007
TERROR ATTACK ON SAMJHAUTA EXPRESS
As citizens of India committed strongly committed
to peaceful and fruitful relations between India
and Pakistan as also unequivocally to lasting
justice and peace between all communities within
India, our heart goes out to all the victims of
the recent terror attack on board the Samjhauta
Express. The attack reveals above all, that
terror and terrorism has no religion and victims
of all communities, Muslim and Hindu, rich and
poor can easily become the victims of such an
attack. We offer our deepest condolences to all
the affected families in this moment of grief.
We unequivocally condemn this attack that is an
attempt not only to de-rail peace talks but also
to create schisms and rifts between communities.
We thank the political leadership of both
countries for using sombre and sensitive language
at such a time and urge them -- specifically the
intelligence and investigative authorities of
India -- to go further and rigorously investigate
and get to the bottom of such an attack.
Outfits of terror have no religion and should
never be equated as such. The language and acts
of terror can be perpetrated by fanatic outfits
within any and all social, political and
religious sections. Similarly victims of terror
as today's brutal incident shows, can hail and do
hail from all sections. Terror and terrorism can
be home grown as well as imported; both equally
are not just anti-national, they strike at the
fabric of our nation because they create schisms
between communities.
Vijay Tendulkar, President CJP
Dr Prabhat Patnaik, noted economist
Teesta Setalvad, Secretary, CJP and co-editor Communalism Combat
Arvind Krishnaswamy, Treasurer, CJP,
Javed Akhtar, CJP and Muslims for Secular Democracy (MSD),
CP Chandraskehar, economist, JNU,
Javed Anand, CJP and MSD,
Nandan Maluste, CJP,
Anil Dharker, CJP,
Rajendra Prasad, SAHMAT
Ram Rehman, SAHMAT,
MK Raina, SAHMAT,
Hasan Kamal, MSD,
Rahul Bose, CJP
___
B. SELECTED COMMENTARY AND EDITORIALS IN THE INDIAN AND PAKISTANI PRESS:
(i)
The Hindu
Feb 20, 2007
KEEP THE PEACE PROCESS ON TRACK
by Siddharth Varadarajan
For the third time in less than a year,
terrorists have attempted to derail the peace
process between India and Pakistan. Handing them
a victory is the last thing we should do.
IN TERMS of the choice of both target and timing,
it is not difficult to surmise that Sunday
night's bomb blast on board the link train of the
Samjhauta Express was aimed primarily at stopping
the peace process between India and Pakistan.
As the indigent, divided families who travel on
it every week know so well, the time the train
takes to run from Delhi to Lahore can hardly be
justified by the laws of locomotion or the
dictates of cartography. And yet, that journey is
a symbol of the civilised neighbourliness
ordinary Indians and Pakistanis so desperately
yearn for, a hint of what the future might bring
if only the understanding and compromise its name
connotes were allowed to run to its final
destination.
The terrorists who bombed the train are clearly
not interested in that final destination. By
murdering at least 67 passengers on the eve of a
visit to India by Khurshid Ahmed Kasuri, the
Foreign Minister of Pakistan, their intention is
to provoke another bout of tension and
finger-pointing between Islamabad and New Delhi.
At the very least, their aim is to make the
process of travel between the two countries so
fraught with danger that few will want to take on
the risk and inconvenience of the journey by
train, bus or even plane.
In the wake of the coordinated bombing of several
commuter trains in Mumbai on July 7, 2006, the
terrorists were temporarily able to seize the
initiative but that mistake must not be repeated
again. Then, India postponed a scheduled meeting
of Foreign Secretaries and within days the
atmospherics began to degenerate. Policemen in
Mumbai and Delhi spoke loosely about the "pretty
good evidence" they had of the Pakistani
establishment's involvement and it seemed as if
the peace process was going into free-fall. In
the end, however, the evidence turned out to be
less than clinching. The realisation also dawned
that dialogue and people-to-people contact help
rather than hurt the country's interests.
After some deft pre-negotiation involving the
creation of a joint anti-terror mechanism, India
finally felt comfortable talking to Pakistan
again.
Though India was right to criticise Pakistan for
the latter's failure to act against terrorist
organisations and training facilities on its
territory, it erred in linking the future of the
peace process to an incident for which
Islamabad's complicity could only be inferred but
not established. Indeed, nearly seven months
after the blasts, evidence of Pakistan's official
complicity continues to elude Indian
investigators. Unfortunately, this failure to
follow through with the specific allegation will
no doubt be used by Pakistan to question the
validity of India's general case that terrorist
groups continue to operate from its territory.
Fundamental question
At the heart of the Indian policy dilemma lies a
fundamental question: is the government of Pervez
Musharraf involved in the instigation, planning
or execution of terrorist acts such as the blasts
in Mumbai and Malegaon and on the Samjhauta
Express? There is no doubt the Pakistani
establishment has the capability to mount these
kinds of covert operations but it is not clear
what its motive would be, or what it would stand
to gain from a termination of the peace process
because there can no longer be any doubt over
what the underlying logic of these blasts is.
But if the answer to the question of General
Musharraf's involvement is `No', then does this
mean there are terrorist groups on the soil of
Pakistan that are able to operate independently
of, and in opposition to, the Pakistani state? It
is obvious that this is so. The numerous bombings
that have taken place inside Pakistan such as in
Karachi last year on the birthday of Prophet
Muhammad, the suicide attacks on Pakistani
soldiers, and the attempts that have been made on
General Musharraf's own life all suggest such
"independent" terrorist groups not only exist but
are flourishing.
What is not clear, however, is the extent of
connectivity between Pakistan's "independent" and
"dependent" terrorist outfits such as the
Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad.
Islamabad and Washington may like to pretend a
Chinese Wall separates the two; in reality, there
is mixing and osmosis of men and materiel. That
is why the Pakistani establishment is at once
both a sponsor and a victim of terrorism.
Three years after promising to act, the Pakistani
government remains indifferent to the existence
of terrorist groups on its territory. Prominent
individuals such as Masood Azhar go in and out of
house arrest but the activities of their
organisations continue more or less unchecked.
At the same time, the overall scale of
cross-border violence and infiltration in Jammu
and Kashmir has fallen, though the scale and
audacity of terrorist strikes elsewhere in India
has gone up.
In assessing its general policy to Pakistan,
India knows there is no viable military option or
compellance strategy to deal with this problem.
The massive military mobilisation during
Operation Parakram proved conclusively that India
has no option other than diplomacy in dealing
with Pakistan.
This does not mean ending terrorism should not be
the top-most priority for India. The Government
should continue to insist that Pakistan fulfil
its January 2004 commitment of not allowing its
territory to be used for terrorism directed
against India. Shutting down existing and new
groups as and when they come up and arresting
their leaderships is a verifiable demand that
India should make. And for evidence of
compliance, it need rely merely on the ample
reports that the Pakistani press itself publishes
from time to time, rather than on
"narco-analysis" and "brain mapping" of terrorist
suspects on this side.
Before using the continuation of the peace
process as a lever to try and stop terror again,
however, India needs to ask whether the peace
process has in any way compromised its national
security.
Today, many more visas are being issued to
Pakistanis than in 2004. Trade is up, both direct
and indirect. New transportation routes have
opened up in Kashmir, Punjab and Rajasthan.
Business delegations visit each other far more
frequently. If any of this has led to national
security being compromised on the margins - for
example, some 30-odd Pakistanis who applied for
visas to watch cricket two years ago have yet to
return home - surely our agencies can devise a
better system of address verification,
information-sharing, and so on so as to minimise
the risks involved in encouraging closer
people-to-people contact and travel. In the long
run, greater travel, tourism, and trade will
enlarge the constituency of people inside
Pakistan who support the normalisation of
relations with India. This, in turn, could
eventually alter the political dynamics within
Pakistan.
It is also largely thanks to the ongoing peace
process that India and Pakistan have established
a common vocabulary on Kashmir, something that
would have been unthinkable a few years ago.
Today, both sides agree that the solution lies in
transcending the Line of Control dividing Jammu
and Kashmir. This shift in thinking can hardly
have endeared General Musharraf to the extremists
who regard Kashmir's territory as their own
sacred battleground.
It is precisely the prospect of a peaceful
solution that has got the authors of the
Samjhauta Express and Mumbai train blasts so
worked up. Rather than allowing terrorists to
dictate the pace and content of the peace
process, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and
President Musharraf must insist on keeping the
initiative in their own hands. There can be no
turning back now. The Samjhauta Express martyrs
must not have died in vain.
o o o
(ii)
The Telegraph
February 20, 2007
EDITORIAL
For a relationship that so routinely uses buses
and trains as vehicles of expression, the message
sent out by bombed train compartments is expected
to be poignant. The gutted Samjhauta Express is
supposed to derail the India-Pakistan peace
process. The threat the attack conveys is no
different from that which was borne out by the
carnage that immediately preceded the first
journey of the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus two
years ago. Any step to normalize relations
between the two countries is seen by hardliners
as an attempt by the establishment to soft-pedal
the Kashmir issue. Bus or train diplomacy thus
takes the first beating each time the nations are
close to ending the hiatus in bilateral ties.
Like the much-hyped bus service, the Samjhauta
Express in 2004 signalled a rapprochement between
the feuding neighbours. That the train managed to
escape the wrath of militants so far, and even to
expand its network, was perhaps owing to its
utility to thousands of passengers who found it a
convenient way to mend broken ties and carry out
business. Unfortunately, such mundane affairs
have never been the concern of troublemakers. An
ominous message had to be sent out before the
visit of the Pakistan foreign minister, Mr
Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri, could take the dialogue
to its next logical step. A success like the
Samjhauta Express was an obvious target.
There is no reason to suspect that the bomb
attack will permanently impair Indo-Pakistan
relations, nor suspend train operations between
the countries forever. Despite the initial
hitches, the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus has taken
off. The bomb attack on the train, too, is
unlikely to keep determined travellers away for
long. However, it is the commitment of the two
governments to carrying on the peace process that
will decide the severity of the immediate
repercussions of the bombing. This is the first
incident in which the majority of victims are of
Pakistani origin. The fact that the bombs could
have been planted in an unguarded railway station
in India itself has also caused much
consternation in the Pakistani establishment. It
has accused the Indian administration of a
security lapse with the same vehemence with which
India often blames its neighbour in similar
situations. Yet both the countries should be
ashamed at this evident failure of their joint
mechanism to combat terrorism.
o o o
(iii)
The Hindu
Feb 20, 2007
Editorial
PEACE AND THE BURNING TRAIN
The heart-rending scenes of charred bodies and
twisted metal in two coaches of the
Pakistan-bound Samjhauta Express are gory
testimony to yet another major terrorist strike
in India. The horrifying twin bomb explosions
when the train was near Panipat in Haryana,
killing at least 67 people, unite Pakistan and
India in deep grief. They are a chilling reminder
that terrorism in this day and age has
international linkages in more ways than one. The
identity of those responsible for the carnage is
not yet known but the object and timing of the
attack provide strong clues to the motives.
Started in 1976 following the Shimla accord, the
Samjhauta (`Understanding') Express has
symbolised good neighbourliness between India and
Pakistan. The train, which has run almost
uninterruptedly for more than three decades -
suspended only for short periods in the wake of
Operation Bluestar, the Babri Masjid demolition,
and the terrorist attack on Parliament - has been
a lifeline for people-to-people contact between
the two countries. Millions of people on either
side of the border, most of them poor folk, have
used the train to visit relatives and places of
pilgrimage.
The attack on the train (technically a special
train from which the passengers are transferred
at Attari to the India-Pakistan service) has
taken place a day before Pakistan's Foreign
Minister Khursheed Kasuri arrives in New Delhi
for talks on the ongoing peace process. In a bid
to signal their strength, terrorists sometimes
choose to time their attacks to coincide with the
visit of dignitaries. In 2002, Hurriyat leader
Abdul Ghani Lone was shot dead in Srinagar a day
ahead of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's
visit to Kashmir. Two years earlier, 35 Sikhs
were massacred in Chattisinghpora in Kashmir on
the eve of President Bill Clinton's visit to
India. It is more than likely that those who
perceive the India-Pakistan peace process as a
threat to their survival have perpetrated the
Samjhauta Express carnage. The attack may revive
memories of the Mumbai train blasts last year,
but there is an important difference. The
Samjhauta Express is a highly protected train and
the attack on it raises serious questions about
gaps in railway security. How did the incendiary
material used to set the coaches ablaze get past
the security checks at Old Delhi railway station?
The decision to allow the unaffected coaches to
resume their journey to Attari on the Indian side
of the border must be commended. Terrorists aim
at disrupting normal life. The best way to honour
the victims of terrorism is to ensure that life
goes on in the midst of heart-rending grief. And
the best way to defeat terrorist designs is to
ensure that the peace process remains on track.
o o o
(iv)
The News International
February 20, 2007
Editorial
SAMJHOTA EXPLOSION
The loss of as many as 65 precious lives on the
Samjhota Express linking Pakistan and India is
tragic and must be the work of the elements
opposed to the ongoing peace process between the
two countries. It is worth noting that the deadly
explosion took place a day before Pakistani
Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri's three-day
trip to India, where according to various
reports, there may well be a breakthrough
agreement signed on liberalising the stringent
visa regime currently existing between the two
countries. The Samjhota Express was on its way to
Attari and eventually Lahore from Delhi when,
according to eyewitnesses, it was rocked by two
explosions as it was traveling through Panipat
district in the Indian state of Haryana. At least
65 people are reported to have been killed and
the Indian authorities believe that some of these
may well be Pakistani nationals returning to
Pakistan after visiting relatives in India. In
fact, a spokesperson of the Pakistan Foreign
Office said on Monday morning that "preliminary
investigations" showed that most of the victims
were Pakistani.
According to India's railways minister, Laloo
Prasad Yadav, the blasts were caused by crude
explosives and struck two coaches of the train.
Pakistan has rightly condemned the blasts and has
asked India to conduct a thorough investigation
into the act of terrorism. One would have to
unequivocally agree with Mr Yadav's remarks to
the press that the blasts were "aimed at
derailing peace talks" between the two countries.
One hopes that both sides will swiftly and
publicly express their determination to carry on
with the peace process. Also, both countries- and
India particularly- should understand that
dilly-dallying or perceived lack of progress only
serves to strengthen the hawks and opponents of
peace on both sides. As far as motive is
concerned, the attackers could be from an array
of opponents to the peace process; from the
militants in Indian-administered Jammu and
Kashmir who have opposed the ongoing dialogue and
taken a hard line on the four-point plan put
forward by President Pervez Musharraf to the Shiv
Sena/VHP/Bajrang Dal combine which has time and
again expressed opposition to the peace talks.
(Incidentally, the bombing comes almost a week
before the fifth anniversary of the infamous
Godhra train incident that ignited the Gujarat
communal riots of 2002.)
The latter in fact has an explicit agenda of
ridding India of its Muslims so that their ideal
of a true (read pure) Hindu nation can be
realised -- and they make no effort really to
even hide it. In that context, attacking a train
carrying Pakistani passengers, and which is a
symbolic link between the two countries, serves
many purposes and drives home a message to the
Indian government that there are some people who
oppose the peace talks. Of course, these aren't
the only opponents to peace between the two
countries. Several statements made in recent
months by the top Indian military brass --
particularly with regard to the settling of the
Siachen dispute -- have shown that institution to
be bitterly opposed to peace -- at least for now.
One hopes that in this case there will at least
be no finger-pointing by the Indian authorities
without a thorough investigation into the causes
of the blasts.
o o o
(v)
Economic Times
February 20, 2007
Editorial
PUT THE JOINT MECHANISM TO WORK
Blast on Samjhauta
The bombing of the Samjhauta Express, which has
claimed 66 lives and grievously injured scores of
others, is, without doubt, a cold-blooded attempt
by purveyors of terror to blow the fragile
Indo-Pakistan peace process apart.
Given the train is a symbol of dialogue, it's
particularly vulnerable. Special measures to
secure the train from the nefarious designs of
groups, whose political and ideological existence
is inversely linked to the increasing proximity
between India and Pakistan, were certainly needed.
It's time the Indian security-intelligence
establishment insisted passengers taking the
train go through rigorous security and
immigration clearances at the Delhi station
itself. Trans-national trains the world over
follow such procedures. Most importantly,
however, it would do well not to give in to its
anti-Pakistan reflex and point accusatory fingers
at Islamabad.
The Indian state should ensure that a rigorous
probe is conducted. All possibilities, even those
that appear implausible, must be explored.
Dubious arrests, and forced confessions, which
usually follow terror attacks, do little to
enhance the credibility of the Indian state.
Seen as part of a continuum of recent terror
strikes in Pakistan, the Samjhauta explosion
indicates that Manmohan Singh was,after all,
right in asserting that Pakistan, too, is a
victim of terror.
The train explosion now provides New Delhi the
opportunity to put its instinctive distrust for
Islamabad aside and try and make the joint
anti-terror mechanism truly functional. New Delhi
should realise that Pervez Musharraf does not
have complete control over Pakistan-based
terrorist groups.
Large sections of Pakistani society, which view
secular modernity with suspicion, are in the
thrall of political Islam. Communal carnages in
India, like the 2002 post-Godhra pogrom, together
with the Indian state's failure to deliver
substantive justice to victims of communal riots,
have only legitimised the specious two-nation
theory that has been its ideological ballast.
New Delhi, even as it continues to engage
Islamabad vigorously, must deliver on its
constitutionally-ordained promise of secularism.
That is important if it is to be seen as a
trustworthy partner in peace by all of Pakistan.
o o o
HELPLINE NUMBERS FOR SAMJHAUTA EXPRESS
Northern Railway has started the following help line numbers:-
New Delhi Railway Station 1072, 011-23342954, 23341074
Head Quarter 011-23389319, 23389853, 23385106
Hazrat Nizamuddin Station 011-24355954
Ambala Station 1072, 0171-2610329, 2611072
Amritsar Station 0183-2564485, 2223171
Ludhiana 0161-2760006
Jalandhar 0181-2223504
At site 0180-3297823, 6450342
______
[2]
www.sacw.net > Communalism Repository | February 20, 2007
http://www.sacw.net/DC/CommunalismCollection/ArticlesArchive/teesFeb152007.html
Acceptance Speech, Nani A Palkhivala Civil Liberties Award, 2006
REFUSE TO SIT BY AND LET THE MASS CRIMES GO UNPUNISHED
by Teesta Setalvad
[On January 15, 2007 Teesta Setalvad was honoured
with the Nani A Palkhivala Civil Liberties Award,
2006. Here is the full text of her acceptance
speech.]
Friends,
As I stand here to accept this award given in
memory of a man who has been described
alternately as a passionate democrat, a patriot
and above a good human being I cannot but recall
how this one man institution associated with us,
Communalism Combat, in its nascent years. In
response to one of the darkest moment this great
metropolis, Mumbai (then Bombay) has lived
through, December 1992 and January 1993, he sat
alongside the inimitable and unique, the late Mr
HM Seervai to speak to the then President of
India to 'call in the army'. When a subsequent
government in the state reaped the benefits of
hate politics and in a stroke of executive
arrogance scrapped the Justice Srikrishna
commission of inquiry investigating the mass
murder and police complicity behind the violence,
Mr Palkhivala stepped down from Bombay House and
along with another captain of industry Mr SP
Godrej joined us in the nationwide protest that
was one of the citizens actions that eventually
led to the reinstatement of the commission. That
was January 30, 1996. A year earlier, two
judicial decisions one of the Bombay High Court
and the other by the Supreme Court had shaken the
common man's faith in the judiciary. Citizens had
challenged the hate writing in the Saamna, and
through a writ petition urged for a judicial
directive to compel the state government to
prosecute the author of these speeches a man who
went unchallenged by the law and order machinery
in this great city, Mr Bal Thackeray. Mr
Palkhiwala said the future of India was at stake
if the court did not compel the state to
intervene and take action against this kind of
journalism.
Today, in 2007 we see a glittering and glamorous
India everyday, through the media and parts of
our large cities ; an India that suggests growth
and wealth and prosperity yes, but only for a
section of our population. A third of Indians
reel under rural hunger where the lack of access
to nutrients in their diet should be a matter of
national shame. Narrow and aggressive definitions
of patriotism coupled with rank unprofessional,
if not biased conduct in the intelligence
services and the law and order machinery, have
'othered' many sections of Indians, reducing them
to irritants, trouble makers or rank
anti-nationals.
It is a moment of profound test for all our
institutions. The paradigms of fair play, equal
rights to life and ownership of private property,
make both the shock of farmers being shot dead in
communist West Bengal and the shame of the mass
victim survivors of the Gujarat carnage of 2002 a
living reality. Closer home, in Maharashtra,
protests following the brutalization and murder
of a Dalit family in Khairlanji allowed the
Nagpur police to pull out 55 year old women and
other protestors from their homes and thrash them
into silence. In Amravati a rickshaw driver
protesting was shot point blank in the head by
the police.
Does the Indian state need to answer, any more, to the largest number?
Does the executive initiate and take decisions of
economic and social policy after due
consultation, through the vote, in a democratic
manner?
Have our Courts shown due and democratic concern
to issues of economic and social access, equity
and non-discrimination?
Does our media, television and print reflect news
at all, leave aside news and views of the
majority of Indians?
Do institutions of Indian democracy adhere to the
word and spirit of the Indian Constitution?
Is India a living and breathing democracy?
Be it West Bengal, Gujarat, Maharashtra or Orissa
lands belonging to voiceless Indians are being
seized, without adequate debate, transparency or
Constitutional accountability. 'Globalisation'
has come here in partnership with vengeful and
vindictive state terror and repression. State
force at its most brutal is being used to stifle
democratic protest and dissent. As I look forward
to the memorial lecture by an icon of modern
India, a captain of industry, I urge this
prestigious audience here to ask some of these
difficult questions. Of themselves.
Friends, next month is the fifth anniversary of
the Godhra mass arson and the post Godhra
genocidal killing. Justices VR Krishna Iyer and
PB Sawant both retired judges of the Supreme
Court- who headed a citizens tribunal into the
Gujarat carnage, have observed that "the post
Godhra carnage was an organized crime perpetuated
by the state's chief minister and his government"
and held Gujarat's CM Modi to be "the chief
Author and Architect of all that happened in
Gujarat after the arson of February 27, 2002.".
The National Human Rights Commission and the
Supreme Court of India have drawn similar
conclusions about the head of the state of
Gujarat.
Today for the same captains of industry who see
the vision of a glittering India exemplified in
the 'strong political leadership of Mr Narendra
Modi'. I refer to the recent investments promises
to the state. I would like to place this reminder
on record. All and each of us, especially those
who hail from Gujarat would like to see Gujarat
vibrant, and prosper. The community that Mr
Palkhivala hailed from was first given refuge
within what is today known as Gujarat when the
Parsis migrated to India, from Persia. Strength,
cohesion and prosperity can be built through an
enlightened administration and polity that
respects the rights of all, harbours dissent and
respects the struggle for rights and justice, a
state of affairs that supports the natural order
of things.
However, when 'normalization' and strength' are
equated with a vindictive administration and
political repression, when brute compromise is
thrust, when acknowledgement of the horrors of
mass crime are denied hundreds of thousands of
victims, when villages, cities and mohallas are
divided by borders, when the victim survivors and
human rights defenders who stand up for justice
are threatened arrest and torture, it is
repressive strength and state power that we are
talking about. Civil liberties, the struggle for
the defence of which I am being honoured here
today, are severely trampled upon.
Friends, even what actually happened at Godhra
railway station on February 27, 2002 is hotly
contested today. There is absolutely no proof of
the theory perpetuated shrilly by Mr Modi to
justify state sponsored mass rape, killings and
murder. As we approach the fifth anniversary of a
truly bleak period in Indian post-Independence
history, I request each one of you present here,
to remember. The struggle of man against power is
the struggle of memory against forgetting.
As I acknowledge the huge contribution of my
family to my work, I would like to laud the joint
vision of my comrade in arms, Javed Anand that
launched us into this collective battle since
1993. Colleagues at Sabrang and the board of
trustees of Citizens for Justice and Peace and
its myriad supporters (even from captains of
industry) who have the vision to support the
dissenting voice, Raisbhai and Suhel, my tribute.
Top lawyers of the Supreme Court and the High
Courts, masters in their field, continue to offer
pro bono services for the causes that we plead.
Our work of a decade and a half has made us
experience the relentless attempts of the system
to tire out the protestor, the dissenter, the
victim. Therefore today's award, I dedicate to
one man within the Indian system, who stood (and
still stands) mighty in the face of a murderous
and vindictive Gujarat administration. Mass
murder, mass rape and mass arson were allowed in
Gujarat by a complicit and participatory
administration and police force. Many police
officers stood out. But only one man has remained
a stoic and principled dissenter until today,
refusing to cave in even as weeks lapsed into
months and months into years. This man that I
dedicate today's honour to not a victim, he did
not loose a dear family member. He does not hail
from the victim community. His only quality- that
many but his co-travellers have seen as a fault-
is that he refused to sit by and let the mass
crimes planned at the highest level go
unchallenged. He documented the illegal and
unconstitutional orders spat out by Mr Modi in a
meticulously maintained personal diary. He filed
well-documented affidavits before the ongoing
Nanavaty-Shah Commission. He suffered for these
acts by being denied due promotion to the post of
Director General of Police, Gujarat, the highest
post in his field that as a policeman and thrice
Presidential Award winner for bravery, he would
and should aspire to. He faced attempts to
browbeat him in and out of the courts. He and his
wife live socially and politically ostracized in
a state that captains of industry tell us is
vibrant and shining due to (quote) 'a strong and
political leadership favouring rapid growth' ..Mr
RB Sreekumar, Additional Director General of
Police, the state of Gujarat, I salute you.
______
[3]
Public Hearing
MOTHERS, WIVES, SISTERS OF THE DISAPPEARED FROM
KASHMIR DEPOSE BEFORE THE PEOPLE
Jantar Mantar [New Delhi]
February 22, 2007
10am-4pm
PRESS CONFERENCE: 4PM
In the last few weeks investigations by the J & K
police on the demand of the people of Kashmir
have established that several innocent Kashmiris
were kidnapped and murdered by sections of J & K
police and Indian security forces. The disfigured
dead bodies of the murdered persons were buried
as "Pakistani militants killed in encounter".
Now, it has been established that the government
policy of giving financial reward and promotions
to police and security personnel who produced a
better kill list of militants/terrorists has
encouraged these kidnappings and murders.
Moreover, the fact that Jammu and Kashmir has
been declared a 'Disturbed Area' and the Armed
Forces Special Powers Act is in force there (thus
empowering the personnel of the armed forces "to
shoot to kill on suspicion") has produced a
culture of impunity that has further encouraged
these murders.
Since 1989, an estimated 150,000 Kashmiris have
been killed in Jammu and Kashmir. An overwhelming
majority of these people were killed by the
Indian forces in Kashmir. Since 1990 and the
imposition of AFSPA, the Indian Armed forces
intensified the practice of killing of people
immediately after their arrest. Under various
operations - "Operation Tiger", "Operation Eagle"
and "Operation Shiva", the members of the army
and paramilitary forces cordoned a village or a
town and extra judiciously shot and killed or
made 'disappear' unarmed civilians - in the
name of crack-down operations against the
"terrorists". As dead "terrorists" could not talk
back - all the dead were declared "terrorists".
According to human rights activists and the
Association of the Parents of the Disappeared
Persons (APDP) about 5000 to 7000 persons remain
missing in Kashmir today. Thousands of habeas
corpus petitions are pending before the J&K Court
but the Security Forces have declined to respond
to the Court's summons, leaving Kashmiri citizens
without the protection of law and justice.
The Indian media has exposed the shocking crimes
of the security forces in Kashmir but a section
of the news media has suggested that these are
"aberrations" committed by a few "bad elements"
in the police and armed forces. Some columnists
have warned against the practice of exaggerated
claims of human rights abuses and disappearances
by so-called human rights activists. However, the
cumulative reports of civil and democratic rights
groups who have been visiting Jammu and Kashmir
during these years, testify to the widespread
practice of such killings and disappearances. The
fact that the state rewards its soldiers
according the number of 'terrorists' they kill,
betrays the level of cynicism with which the
Indian state regards the ordinary people of Jammu
and Kashmir whom it calls its 'citizens'.
In Jammu and Kashmir, the recent Ganderbal
killings have galvanized a peoples democratic
protest and a determination to seek justice and
an end to this shameful and heinous practice of
'kill lists' and large scale disappearances. They
have reached out to civil society groups in the
rest of India for solidarity and support in the
campaign for truth and justice.
Ashok Aggarwal
Kamal Mitra Chenoy
Kamla Bhasin
Nirmala Deshpande
Shabnam Hashmi
Sonia Jabbar
Tapan Bose
Uma Chakravarti
& others
For
Kashmir Solidarity Committee
e-mail: kashmirsolidarity at gmail.com
______
[4]
www.sacw.net > Communalism Repository | February 12, 2007
http://www.sacw.net/DC/CommunalismCollection/ArticlesArchive/vbrFeb07.html
USING HATE AS A WEAPON TO GAIN POWER
by Vidya Bhushan Rawat
BJP's manifesto for Uttarakhand reflects the
bankruptcy of its ideology. That Sanskrit will be
the state language and the government would pass
anti conversion laws shows that BJP has not
learnt the methods of governance at all. It also
shows how the saffron party does not talk of
governance but only hate formula to win an
election.
Nobody knows it better than the saffron outfit
how to claim the legacy of an entire movements,
which has dominated the dreams of a common man in
Uttarkhand. Neither the BJP nor the Congress
party ever contested on the plank of a separate
hill state. Major political leaders of both the
parties in Uttar-Pradesh came from the powerful
Brahmin communities of the hills. In fact, Uttar
Pradesh, due to its geographical and influential
Brahmin population always remains the hunting
ground for the 'national' leaders of Uttarakhand.
The tiny Indian state remained useless for their
grand Indian vision. But one decision of Mulayam
Singh government to implement Mandal Commission
Report in the hills created so much of blood bath
and later the unfortunate incident of the Rampur
ka tiraha, that the entire history of the state
changed.
More than five years of Uttarakhand with two
different governments, things have not changed in
the hills. The only thing that is changed is that
the bureaucracy has increased its head. While the
Congress party does not have credible face. It
imposed upon the state a chief minister who might
have been a heavyweight and so-called father of
'industrialization' of Uttar-Pradesh, it really
betrayed the popular sentiments of the hill
state. Congress never contested the election
under the leadership of N.D.Tiwari. Similarly,
when the BJP created Uttaranchal State, clearly
it betrayed the popular sentiments by changing
the name of the state. Secondly, it also imposed
on the state a leader Nityanand Swami who does
not have any standing in the hills, neither is he
considered to be a sympathizer of the hill state.
Finally, buckling under the pressure of the party
cadres, the high command made Bhagat Singh
Koshiari, an obedient follower of the Sangh,
Chief Minister of the state. The things did not
work. Being a state where popular aspirations
were rising high, BJP could not fulfill those and
lost the poll to Congress.
Congress as usual did nothing to assuage the
feelings of those who sacrificed their lives for
the creation of the new state. Growing
discontents in the party forced ND Tiwari, a
veteran from Uttar-Pradesh to spend huge sum of
money on his discretionary quota. Therefore,
every MLA had a list to support people from
his/her constituency. Governance was nowhere
except that the government was very keen to
invite 'foreign' investment which many of the
resident Uttarakhandi's are proudly claiming
would make Uttarakhand a Switzerland. Without
going into the merits of these nonsensical
debates, it is shocking that the non resident
Uttarakhandis' do not seem to be worried about
the growing discontent in Uttarakhand on the
current module of development. The environmental
hazards of mining near Dehradun once destroyed
the beauty of the city, the big damns that are
being constructed on the lines of Narmada, the
rivers which are being sold to the multinational
and above all the dangers of global warming on
the Himalayan glaciers will devastate the hill
culture and geography. But in the din of money,
we want to claim that the Uttarakhand has become
Switzerland, though many of them may not even
know how democratic is the Swiss system of
governance. Governance in Uttarakhand means a
heavy police system with red beacon vehicles
followed by the chums of political leaders.
Moreover, to become Switzerland, one needs values
of impartiality, a system where individual
dignity is restored. Where mind is free from
racial and caste prejudices. Uttarakhhand has not
really got rid of them. Who will it blame if the
women continue to face the brunt of male
chauvinism. Who will we blame if the Dalits face
threatened in the entire state and rarely
consider them part of the mainstream.
Now, we see the manifesto of the Hindutva party
which is worried about cow protection while give
a damn to people's aspiration. It talks of a
Sanskriti but keep quiet on the issue of
sanskriti. Will it be the hegimonistic
brahmanical values, which the Brahmin bosses of
the Sangh always preach us? Why is a party so
much bothered about conversion in the hills? Why
the hell it want to go on an agenda, which has
nothing to do in the hills. Even if there are
Christians or Muslims in the hills propagating
their faith, the Hindutva people have equal
rights to propagate their faith. Clear enough,
the brahmanical religion of Hindus has never been
missionary in zeal and practice and therefore
this superfluous threat perception from the
minorities. Can they deny me right to convert if
I wish to do so? And who has given them the
authority to decide about an individual's freedom
and choice of religion to be followed.
The fact of the matter is that state like
Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Gujarat give no
option to people. They make people look similar
though mask may change in one form or the others
but 'identity' business work. Hence, in all these
states, the parties have been dominated by the
Hindutva ideology whether it is BJP or Congress
or even the so-called third front. That has been
the hallmark of the Hindutva agenda to Hinduise
the political parties and bureaucracy. Hence,
when BJP comes out with an agenda of cow
protection and a law against conversion in
Uttarakhand state, it clearly reflect the mindset
of its upper caste leadership which has no
constructive thing to offer to the people of the
hill state. Congress leadership of Himachal
Pradesh has already brought anti conversion laws.
The fact is that the tears of those who lost
their nears and dear ones have not dried and the
party is playing ultra-national politics in the
hills. A calculation of the number of dead
soldiers in the Kargil war gives clear report how
a majority of hill soldiers lost their lives
while BJP went offensive in other part of the
country to get votes. This ultranationalism helps
the Hindutva to warm up the state for its own
dubious purposes and befool the masses into the
national framework. While the needs and issues of
the Uttarakhand are entirely regional the
Hindutva want to turn it into a National
referendum against minorities.
It is more than ironical since there are not much
issues related to minorities in the Uttarakhand.
Unlike UP where Muslims are a major chunk to
influence the votes, Uttarakhand does not have
such a religious diversity. But then, as I have
always mention that if India were a totally upper
caste state, the Sangh Parivar and its Brahmin
bosses would become totally redundant since in a
Hindu upper caste state, the Brahmin would become
a minority and therefore may not get the power.
Even in the Uttarakhand state, where the Brahmins
and Thakurs come together to hate the Dalits and
minorities but do not like each other despite
all public pretence.
BJP's fad reflect from the fact that it has not
stated anything on the migration of the
Uttarakhand people to other state converting it
to mere money order economy. Rather, it has used
an idiotic issue of Sanskrit as a state language.
Whose interest the Hindutva want to serve? Clear
enough, the Sanskrit language, which has no value
except for those who wish their children to
capture the huge temples in the hills and do the
social work of performing wedding and dying
rituals; there is virtually nothing in the
language. Where was the need to rake up this
issue of Sanskrit? Do all the hill people speak
Sanskrit? Why did the BJP not raise the issue in
Uttar-Pradesh or Gujarat, which is its laboratory?
Uttarakhand people have to be careful by such
destructive agendas of the Hindutva outfits. They
must reject the caste notion and identity
politics of the Hindutva based on hatred against
the minorities. Where was the need to rake up
this issue in Uttarakhand. Does it have any
constructive programme for the hills? One must
not ignore the fact that the Hindutva laboratory
function well in the upper caste dominated
states. Even leaders like ND Tiwari who remained
a Brahmin first and secular later, the Hindutva's
mascot Ashok Singhal gave him certificate of the
best chief minister of India. Tiwari deliberately
gave support to Swami Ramdev against whom lot of
complaints were lodged with the health ministry.
It would be unfortunate, if the people of
Uttarakhand allow themselves to be swallowed by
the narrow casteist political leaders
masquerading as the champion of Hindutva or
nationalist leaders, who do not have any agenda
for the hill state and its people. Five years
have gone and people of the state feel betrayed
by both the nationalist parties.
The mountains of Uttarakhand remain unparallel.
So are the people. They are simple and have been
truly nationalists. But the ultra nationalist
forces who have contributed very little for the
development of the state have exploited this
nationalism. Uttarakhand need a government where
every one can own the government and where
sarkari babus are not to suck the blood of the
innocent people, where the MLAs are not your
bosses but your companions and where every
community remains in peace with other. Let the
Hindutva work for social cohesion in Uttarkhand
rather than raking up useless issues. Let
Hindutva's managers work for a combine strength
of upper caste with out any façade of Hindu
Unity. There cannot be any Hindu Unity by abusing
the Muslims and Christians. It would be better
for them to start a movement to eliminate the
castes? The Hindutva talks of Samarasta by
organizing joint meals but it has never worked on
inter caste marriages. At least, if it wants to
make Uttarakhand a laboratory of Hindutva first,
start this from the upper castes? Let the Thakurs
and Brahmins of Uttarkhand organize marriages
together and give lessons to the people of other
parts of the country. The Sangh Parivar knows it
well that it is an impossible task and hence hate
against Muslim and Christian is the biggest
agenda for them to come back to power. Hope the
people will realize this and reject such forcees.
Uttarakhand need a coalition government of all
communities so that the Hindutva's experiment is
defeated in the very beginning. It is important
to have leaders of quality and not just with one
point programme to capture power. Smaller states
are turning dangerous these days. It is easier
for the international financial institutions to
pressurize them under the pretext of investment.
The people of Uttarakhand may not know the
dangers of privatization of water but they have
more worry about Muslims and Christians. They may
not know much about the plight of the Tehri Dam
evacuees as they have got the issue of Sanskrit
language, which will give them employment as
suggested by the Sangh Parivar. Smaller state may
be good for governance but easy to implement the
agenda of the Hindutva. The experiment of
Hindutva continues in Chhatishgarh where they
made Raman Singh, a non Chhatisgarhi, a Thakur,
Chief Minister, in Jharkhand, they wanted to
change and impose a leadership, which backfired,
and in Uttarkhand, they brought a man called
Nitya Nand Swami whose track record is well known
to be mentioned here. The hate formula worked in
all the other states. In Chhatishgarh, we have
everything for the Babas, Thugs and international
corporate houses but nothing for the poor
tribals. The economic interest of the powerful
non Chhatishgarhi elite are being persevered by
the government. In Jharkhand, while tribal die of
hunger, Ramdev become state guest to preach Yoga
to the MLAs, in Uttarkhand, ND Tiwari was the
best person to protect the interest of Hindutva
and therefore there was not much needed. Since
Twiariji is on his way out, the BJP and its
various leaders are ready to capture the space.
Ofcourse, the Thakurs and the Brahmins will
always fight with each other as their interest
clash with each other. But who care for ideology,
caste will rule Supreme in Uttarakhand, except
from the fact, public posturing unity among
people would always be there. For a better
Uttarakhand, let the people raise local issues
and leave these national issues to national
politicians. The more some body focuses on
so-called national issues, the bigger the chances
of betrayal of popular sentiments in the
'national interest'. Uttarkhand's voters have
always paid the price of being nationalist, now
time has come that they shed this stigma of
nationalism and question every politicians and
throw them to garbage who are giving them useless
slogans and destructive ideas. Let Bijli Sadak
paani aur rojgar (Electricity, water and
employment) dominate the political discourse
there. If hate agenda wins in Uttarakhand, it
will the upper castes only who will have to pay
heavy price and not any one else. We all know how
politicians thrive on hate propaganda for their
own dubious purposes. Beware with such hate
politics and defeat their agendas.
______
[5]
Business Standard
February 15, 2007
BENCHMARKING IDENTITIES
Pratap Bhanu Mehta / New Delhi
This interesting and wide-ranging volume fills
two gaps in the Indian literature on secularism.
Most of the debates in India tend to be very
insular. Although they will occasionally make
references to Europe and America, there are few
attempts to situate the process of secularisation
in India in a comparative perspective, in
relation to countries more comparable, like
Indonesia. Second, much of the literature tends
to focus on immediate political exigencies like
Hindu nationalism, rather than take a look at the
longer trajectory of secularism. This volume
attempts to do both. But the results are, as with
many conference volumes, mixed.
The essays explicitly on India are useful but
predictable. Rajeev Bhargava gives a
characteristically lucid defence of the project
of a contextual secularism that is both rooted in
the Indian context, but makes reference to values
that are universal. Romila Thapar engages in the
usual quest for proto-secularism in pre-modern
India, while Lamin Sanneh usefully links the
question of secularism with the question of
diversity. The only provocative essay is by Dilip
Menon, who argues that communalism is the
deflection of the central, unaddressed issue of
violence and non-egalitarianism within Hinduism,
what he calls the "highest stage of casteism".
The essay works well as a piece of provocation.
But its central thesis is largely refuted by the
comparative history of secularism provided in
this volume itself. Almost all national
identities have been premised upon benchmarking
identities which include some groups and exclude
others. In that sense there is nothing peculiar
about the Indian experience that can be related
to caste. Indeed, as Faisal Devji's brilliant
comment in the book points out, the real question
is not the relationship between the secular and
the religious. The real question is how
nationalism puts both secularism and religion at
risk. Hence there are two paradoxes that
characterise the debate on secularism. First,
religion itself becomes a form of ethnicity
rather than a form of piety, its function as
identity becomes more important than its function
as theology. Second, as Ashis Nandy pointed out
long ago, secularism in Indian has two antonyms:
religion and communalism. But communalism is more
a step-child of nationalism than it is of
religion. What needs to be interrogated in this
context is not religion but nationalism. The
minute we attempt to benchmark identities, we run
the risk of creating boundaries and exclusions.
This claim is largely borne out by the
comparative essays: Aijazuddin on Pakistan; Ben
Kiernan and Sayfi Anwar on Indonesia; Nur Yalman
on Islam; or Amila Butrovic on Serbia. Almost all
these essays are concerned with one question that
seems odd when juxtaposed with the Indian
material. This is the question: Is Islam
compatible with modernity and secularism? At one
level such questions are odd: what a religion is
is what its adherents make of it. But it is odd
in the sense that in the Indian context, the
analogous question,"Is Hinduism compatible with
modernity and secularism?", does not now quite
have the same urgency or resonance. But the
question: "Can Hindu nationalists, or Hindus,
target Muslims?" still does. In other words, the
theological debate over secularism and modernity
is not a live intellectual issue, the political
debate over targeting minorities is. In fact you
could argue that we talk about secularism so
much, not because we see religion as a threat,
but because we do not wish to interrogate
nationalism.
The main essays in the volume are also
accompanied by short comments, and some
discursive observations by Bhagwati and
Srinivasan on the threats to secularism. Both lay
great stress on the fact that Hindu identity is
allegedly more pronounced amongst the Diaspora.
This claim is true in one obvious sense that
sections of the Diaspora are visible in Hindu
movements. But statistically is the Diaspora more
likely to peddle in identity politics than
natives? Much of the survey data on this suggest
that this is not the case; rather than the
Diaspora being more prone to these temptations,
it basically mirrors patterns in India.
But the debate over the future of secularism is
likely to continue. We should be grateful to this
volume for reminding us that while India's
history is peculiar, this is a global debate and
will now be played out increasingly in an
international context. And as the process of
secularisation gains ground, the question of
religious identity becomes more complicated. As
is said, "We put ourselves under God's yoke most,
when we feel his presence the least."
The future of secularism
T N Srinivasan
Oxford University Press
Price: Rs 595; Pages: 321
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
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/
DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.
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