SACW | May 1, 2007 | Pakistan: Taliban; Freedom of Expression / Sri Lanka: Cricket and War / India: Shiv Sena to burn Laine's book; Fake encounter Killings by Police

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Mon Apr 30 21:29:16 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | May 1, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2398 - Year 9

[1]  Pakistan:
(i)  The Taliban takeover (Ziauddin Sardar)
(ii)  Culture minister is clueless about culture (Editorial, Daily Times)
(iii) Letter to Pakistan authorities re ban on 
the play Burqavaganza (Iftikhar Malik)
[2]  Sri Lanka: mismatch between multi-ethnic 
cricket team and the brutal reality of civil war 
(Jehan Perera)
[3]  India - Rajasthan: Hindutva @ Work - Christian preacher attacked
[4]  India:  Shiv Sainiks instructed to burn James Laine's book
   - Fascist impulses (Edit, Asian Age)
  - James Laine interviewed (Harsh Kabra)
  - Desirable judicial activism: a blow to 
state-sponsored censorship (Edit., Economic Times)
[5]  India - Fake encounter killings by the police
  Murderers in uniform - Criminal acts of the 
custodians of law and order (Kashmir Times, Edit.)
[6]  India: Rock stars in uniform (Pamela Philipose)
[7]  India: Fake Killing(s) : People As Trophies (Subhash Gatade)

____



[1]

(i)

New Statesman
30 April 2007

PAKISTAN: THE TALIBAN TAKEOVER

by Ziauddin Sardar

Pakistan is reverberating with the call of jihad. 
Taliban-style militias are spreading rapidly out 
from provinces in the far north-west. The danger 
to the country and to the rest of the world is 
escalating

"You must understand," says Maulana Sami ul-Haq, 
"that Pakistan and Islam are synonymous." The 
principal of Darul Uloom Haqqania, a seminary in 
Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), 
is a tall and jovial man. He grabs my hand as he 
takes me round the seminary. Maulana ul-Haq 
laughs when I ask his views on jihad. "It is the 
duty of all Muslims to support those groups 
fighting against oppression," he says.

The Haqqania is one of the largest madrasas in 
Pakistan. It produces about 3,000 graduates, most 
from exceptionally poor backgrounds, every year. 
The walls of the student dormitory are decorated 
with tanks and Kalashnikovs. A group of students, 
all with black beards, white turbans and grey 
dresses, surrounds me. They are curious and 
extremely polite. We chat under the watchful eye 
of two officers from Pakistan's intelligence 
services. What would they do after they graduate, 
I ask. "Serve Islam," they reply in unison. "We 
will dedicate our lives to jihad."

Pakistan is reverberating with the call of jihad. 
For more than two months, the capital, Islamabad, 
has been held hostage by a group of burqa-clad 
women, armed with sticks and shouting: "Al-jihad, 
al-jihad." These female students belong to two 
madrasas attached to the Lal Masjid, a large 
mosque near one of the city's main supermarkets. 
I found the atmosphere around the masjid tense, 
with heavily armed police surrounding the 
building. Though the students were allowed to go 
in and out freely, no one else could enter the 
mosque. The women are demanding the imposition of 
sharia law and the instant abolition of all "dens 
of vice". Away from the masjid, Islamabad looked 
like a city under siege.

A new generation of militants is emerging in 
Pakistan. Although they are generally referred to 
as "Taliban", they are a recent phenomenon. The 
original Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan briefly 
during the 1990s, were Afghan fighters, a product 
of the Soviet invasion of their country. They 
were created and moulded by the Pakistani army, 
with the active support of the United States and 
Saudi money, and the deliberate use of madrasas 
to prop up religious leaders. Many Taliban 
leaders were educated at Haqqania by Maulana Sami 
ul-Haq. The new generation of militants are all 
Pakistani; they emerged after the US invasion of 
Afghanistan and represent a revolt against the 
government's support for the US. Mostly 
unemployed, not all of them are madrasa-educated. 
They are led by young mullahs who, unlike the 
original Taliban, are technology- and 
media-savvy, and are also influenced by various 
indigenous tribal nationalisms, honouring the 
tribal codes that govern social life in 
Pakistan's rural areas. "They are Taliban in the 
sense that they share the same ideology as the 
Taliban in Afghanistan," says Rahimullah 
Yusufzai, Peshawar-based columnist on the News. 
"But they are totally Pakistani, with a better 
understanding of how the world works." Their 
jihad is aimed not just at "infidels occupying 
Afghanistan", but also the "infidels" who are 
ruling and running Pakistan and maintaining the 
secular values of Pakistani society. "They aim at 
nothing less than to cleanse Pakistan and turn it 
into a pure Islamic state," says Rashed Rahman, 
executive editor of the Lahore-based Post 
newspaper.

The Pakistani Taliban now dominate the northern 
province of Waziristan, adjacent to Afghan istan. 
"They are de facto rulers of the province," says 
Yusufzai. Waziristan is a tribal area that has 
historically been ruled by the tribes themselves. 
Pakistan has followed the policy of British Raj 
in the region. The British allowed tribal 
leaders, known as maliks, semi-autonomous powers 
in exchange for loyalty to the crown. Pakistan 
gives them the same power but demands loyalty to 
the federal government. They have been sidelined 
by the Taliban, however. Pro-government maliks 
who resisted the onslaught of the Taliban have 
been brutally killed and had their bodies hung 
from poles as a lesson to others. The Taliban 
have declared Waziristan an "Islamic emirate" and 
are trying to establish a parallel 
administration, complete with sharia courts and 
tax system.

Taliban-type militias have also taken control of 
parts of the adjacent NWFP. In Peshawar, one of 
the most open and accessible areas of the 
province, one can feel the tension on the 
streets. There are hardly any women out in 
public. The city, which has suffered numerous 
suicide attacks, is crowded with intelligence 
officers. Within an hour of my arrival in 
Peshawar, I was approached by a secret service 
official who warned that I was being watched. It 
is practically impossible for outsiders to enter 
other NWFP towns such as Tank, Darra Adam Khel 
and Dera Ismail Khan. In Dera Ismail Khan, 
outsiders - that is, Pakistanis from other parts 
of the country - need police escorts to travel 
around. You are allowed in only if you can prove 
you have business or relatives there. Girls' 
schools have been closed, video and music shops 
bombed, and barbers forbidden from shaving 
beards. The religious parties have passed a 
public morality law that gives them powers to 
prosecute anyone who does not follow their strict 
moral code. Legislation to ban dance and music is 
being planned. Even administration of polio 
vaccination campaigns has been halted amid claims 
that it is a US plot to sterilise future 
generations.

Why is the ostensibly secular government of 
President Pervez Musharraf not taking any action 
against the Taliban militants and the parties 
that support them? Part of the answer lies in the 
militants and religious parties having served the 
military regime well. After coming to power in 
1999, Musharraf used them to neutralise the 
mainstream political parties - Benazir Bhutto's 
People's Party and the Muslim League, led by 
Nawaz Sharif. "The military and mullahs have been 
traditional allies," says the Islamabad-based 
security analyst Dr Ayesha Siddiqa. "The alliance 
of religious parties that rules NWFP came into 
power through his support." Musharraf also used 
the religious militants to destabilise 
Indian-held Kashmir by proxy. He encouraged 
extremists preaching jihad to infiltrate India 
for acts of sabotage.

The same is true of the Taliban. The Afghan 
Taliban have been a useful ally against 
unfriendly governments in Kabul. Even though 
Musharraf has been forced to go against them 
under pressure from the Americans, his strategy 
has been to try to contain them, rather than 
defeat them. He tried to regulate the madrasas in 
NWFP and elsewhere in Pakistan that provide 
recruits for the Taliban, seized their funds and 
banned them from admitting foreign students. But 
that's about as far as he wanted to go. Constant 
US pressure has forced him to send in the army, 
with grave consequences. Every time the Pakistani 
army enters Waziristan, it takes heavy 
casualties. Since 2003, when Pakistani troops 
first entered the tribal regions, more than 700 
soldiers have been killed. Not surprisingly, 
Musharraf signed a hasty peace agreement on 5 
September 2006 allowing the Afghan Taliban to get 
on with their business. "The military regards the 
Taliban as an asset," says Siddiqa. "So why 
destroy an asset? Particularly when the asset 
could be useful in the future."

That future may not be too far off. Pakistan's 
foreign policy towards Afghanistan is based on 
the assumption that the Nato forces there will 
withdraw sooner rather than later, leaving Hamid 
Karzai's regime to fend for itself. The Karzai 
government is strongly anti-Pakistani. But the 
Pakistani army needs friendly rulers in Kabul who 
would be willing to run the oil and gas pipelines 
that will serve the newly established port at 
Gwadar through Afghanistan's provinces (see page 
32). So Pakistan needs the Afghan Taliban to 
exist as a force strong enough to establish the 
next government in Afghanistan.

Moreover, a pro-Islamabad Taliban-type government 
in Afghanistan would help establish peace in the 
northern tribal regions of Pakistan. Although 
Karzai himself is a Pashtun, most of the people 
in power in Kabul are Tajiks, a minority tribe. A 
sizeable majority of Afghans belong to the 
Pashtun ethnic group, which ruled Afghanistan for 
centuries. The position of Pakistan's military is 
that this imbalance "against the political 
history and tribal culture of Afghan istan", as 
one army officer told me, is not going to last. 
Most of the Pakistani Taliban - that is, the vast 
majority of people in Waziristan - are also 
Pashtun. And they will not rest until their 
brothers across the border hold the reins of 
power. As such, peace in this part of Pakistan 
depends on who rules Afghanistan.

Musharraf's strategy is to contain the Taliban of 
Afghan and Pakistani varieties alike, while 
weeding out al-Qaeda jihadis, or "foreign 
elements", as they are known in Pakistani 
military circles. The foreigners are a legacy of 
the Soviet-Afghan war. When the war ended, many 
of the central Asians who came to fight the 
Soviets were not welcomed back in their 
countries. For want of an alternative, they 
settled in Pakistan. Most of these foreign 
jihadis are Uzbek. Musharraf has simply bribed 
the local tribes to attack and eradicate the 
Uzbek jihadis. The battle between Pashtun 
tribesmen and al-Qaeda in Wana, southern 
Waziristan, in which more than 200 al-Qaeda 
fighters and some 50 tribal fighters were killed 
a fortnight ago was a product of this policy.

Musharraf's problem is that the Taliban cannot be 
contained. The Pakistani Taliban have now 
acquired enough confidence to break out of Wazi 
ristan and NWFP into other parts of the country. 
"What's happening at the Lal Masjid in Islamabad 
is a trial run for the rest of the country," says 
Rahman. "If the Taliban succeed in Islamabad, 
they will turn Pakistan into Talibistan."

Lawyers in uproar

While Musharraf continues to placate the Taliban, 
the rest of Pakistan is standing up against 
Talibanisation. Huge demonstrations have been 
held in Lahore, Karachi and other cities 
throughout Pakistan. To begin with, the protests 
were held to support Chief Justice Iftikhar Moham 
med Chaudhry, who was sacked by Musharraf in 
March. Chaudhry, who has become a national hero, 
tried to prevent the army from selling the 
national steel mill for a song. The affair was 
the latest in a long list of scandals involving 
the military. The openly unconstitutional act 
caused uproar, leading to countrywide protests by 
lawyers. But the lawyers have now acquired a 
broader agenda. They have become a national 
resistance movement, supported by all sections of 
society, against military rule and the Taliban.

Musharraf's response to the demonstrations and 
the Taliban challenge is to try to entrench 
himself even more deeply. While the country 
buckles under the pressure of suicide bombings, 
kidnappings and acts of sabotage, his main 
concern is his own survival. Constitutionally, he 
must hold elections some time this year - 
something he has promised to do, but the whole 
exercise will be designed to ensure that he 
continues as president for another five years.

His plan to get "re-elected" has two strands. The 
simple option is to get the current hand-picked 
parliament to endorse him for a second term and 
try to manipulate this vote, which the present 
sham constitution dictates, to ensure a healthy 
two-thirds majority. The heads of intelligence, 
the security services and the police have already 
been primed to ensure "positive results".

Bhutto to the rescue?

The other option is a bit messy. It involves 
making a deal with the former prime minister 
Benazir Bhutto, head of the Pakistan People's 
Party. Bhutto, who has been ousted from power by 
the military twice, is desperate to get back into 
power. She has a great deal in common with the 
general. She runs the People's Party as her 
personal property, and her social and economic 
policies - rooted as they are in feudalism and 
opportunism - are not far removed from those of 
the army. Her foreign policy would be the same as 
that of Musharraf; indeed, she is even more 
pro-American than the general.

So Bhutto and Musharraf, who have been 
negotiating with each other for almost three 
years, are an ideal couple. "The problem," says 
Rahman, "is that Musharraf does not want to give 
up his military uniform. It is the source of his 
strength. And the idea of Musharraf remaining 
military chief is anathema to Bhutto."

But the state of the nation, on the verge of 
political and religious collapse, may force 
Musharraf's hand. A deal between the general and 
the self-proclaimed "Daughter of the East" in 
which Musharraf retains most of his power as 
civilian president and Bhutto serves as prime 
minister may be acceptable to both. Rumours 
abound in Islamabad that a deal is imminent.

Bhutto's return from the cold would do little to 
stop Pakistan's slide into anarchy, however. The 
Taliban sense victory and will not be easily 
satisfied with anything less than a Pakistan 
under sharia law, or wide-ranging bloodshed. As 
Asma Jahangir, chairwoman of Pakistan's Human 
Rights Commission, makes clear, the country 
cannot survive its "deep-seated rot" unless the 
"unrepresentative organs of the state - the 
military, the mullahs and the all-consuming 
intelligence agencies - are brought under 
control". It is hard to disagree with her 
assessment. But it is even harder to see how 
these "unrepresen tative organs" can be stopped 
from dragging Pakistan further towards the abyss 
- with dire consequences for the rest of the 
world.

Pakistan: a short history

1947 Muslim state of Pakistan created by 
partition of India at the end of British rule

1948 First war with India over disputed territory of Kashmir

1965 Second war with India over Kashmir

1971 East Pakistan attempts to secede, triggering 
civil war. Third war between Pakistan and India. 
East Pakistan breaks away to become Bangladesh

1980 US pledges military assistance following 
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan

1988 Benazir Bhutto elected prime minister

1996 Bhutto dismissed, for the second time, on charges of corruption

1998 Country conducts nuclear tests

1999 General Pervez Musharraf seizes power in military coup

2001 Musharraf backs US in war on terror and supports invasion of Afghanistan

2002 Musharraf given another five years in office in criticised referendum

2003 Pakistan declares latest Kashmir ceasefire. India does likewise

2004 Musharraf stays head of army, having promised in 2003 to relinquish role

2005 Earthquake in Pakistan-administered Kashmir 
kills tens of thousands of people

2007 Musharraf suspends Chief Justice Iftikhar 
Mohammed Chaudhry, triggering nationwide protests


(ii)

Daily Times
May 1, 2007

Editorial

SECOND EDITORIAL: CULTURE MINISTER IS CLUELESS ABOUT CULTURE

The federal minister for culture, GG Jamal, got 
up in the National Assembly a couple of days ago 
and announced a ban on a play performed in Lahore 
by the Ajoka Theatre company because it offended 
some MNAs of the religious alliance MMA. The play 
called Burqvaganza was not a send-up on the 
hijab, nor was it a play against the wearing of 
hijab. It used the veil (burqa) as a symbol of 
all the politicians and hypocritical citizens of 
Pakistan who live a life of double standards. All 
actors male and female wore the burqa as a device 
to conceal their true identity.

The play was first performed in March. The 
discussion on it was started by five angry MMA 
MNAs at the National Assembly on April 26. The 
politicians used extreme language of outrage as 
if the play offended against Islam. Suddenly the 
burqa itself became sacrosanct. Instead of 
standing up to the onslaught and allowing debate 
on it, the speaker avoided a full discussion of 
it. Two lady MNAs, one from the PML and the other 
from the PPP, stood up and protested against the 
clerics but the federal minister for culture, 
instead of showing backbone, immediately gave in 
and announced the ban.

The angry clerics wanted a blasphemy case 
registered against the Ajoka Theatre and its 
leading lights. The government did not take time 
even to consider what the issue was all about. 
Was anyone asking the women of Pakistan not to 
take the burqa? The theme of the play had nothing 
to do with that matter, although it would have 
been perfectly justifiable to do a play against 
the forcible imposition of hijab in the regions 
of the country where Talibanisation is stealing 
territory from the PMLQ government at the federal 
centre.

By capitulating to the clerical wrath at the 
National Assembly the government has once again 
signalled its reaction to the rising wave of 
extremism in Pakistan. President Pervez Musharraf 
doesn't tire of asserting that Pakistan must face 
up to extremists, but whenever it is time for the 
government to show backbone against extremists it 
simply runs away from the battlefield. The people 
who elected the present government because of the 
moderate appeal of President Musharraf now know 
that it has steadily lost vertebrae on issues 
where the country needed them desperately. It 
chickened out of the law against honour-killing, 
it also chickened out of the Hudood Laws 
amendment which took the PPP vote to pass.

The culture minister deliberately misinterpreted 
the play by saying that "burqa is part of 
Pakistani culture" and that "no one will be 
allowed to ridicule our culture". He is still to 
open his mouth on the sort of culture being 
imposed on the helpless people of the Tribal 
Areas by gangsters posing as the champions of 
Islam. The burqa is our culture if it is a symbol 
of freedom and not if it is forced on people. 
Then it becomes a symbol of slavery and is no 
longer culture. Culture is what grows out of the 
organic life of people spontaneously. The culture 
minister has no clue about the meaning of 
culture. He is an ignoramus. He simply ignored 
the theme of the play which was about hypocrisy 
and concealment.

The ban emphasises the prostration of the federal 
government in the face of the extremist assault 
on Islamabad by the seminaries of Lal Masjid. The 
entire world was shocked at the developments. It 
is no longer shocked now that it knows the PMLQ 
government has simply surrendered to the 
vigilante aggression of the clergy. The law 
simply doesn't exist. Had the MMA any objection 
to the Ajoka play it should have gone to court, 
but it knew that the government was in the mood 
to go down on its knees and thought better of it. 
This is the season of kowtowing in Islamabad. 
Pakistan is creeping beyond the point of 
redemption in the hands of politicians singularly 
lacking in the gift of intellect. *

o o o

(iii)

LETTER TO PAKISTAN AUTHORITIES RE BAN ON THE PLAY BURQAVAGANZA


28 April 2007.

-Hon'ble Mr. Shaukat Aziz,
Prime Minister of Pakistan,
Islamabad.

-Hon'ble Lt. General (Retd.) Mr. Khalid Maqbool
The Governor of Punjab,
Lahore, Pakistan.

-The Minister for Culture
Government of Pakistan,
Islamabad, Pakistan.

Dear Sirs,

Subject: Unwarranted Ban on Ajoka Play.

                As a concerned Pakistani, who 
believes in the Jinnahist vision of the country, 
I take a strong exception to unwarranted ban on 
Ajoka Theatre and its current play, 
"burqgavnaza", which is, in fact, meant to 
highlight our double standards at various levels. 
Certainly, humour and entertainment keep 
societies healthy and positive. Why would someone 
try to insidiously convert our country into an 
other regressive, self-immolating Talibanised 
state? Millions of Pakistanis and likeminded 
people all over the world are shocked and 
saddened by this abrasive official ban and would 
rather flag the freedom of expression and 
dissent. It is our democratic right and by 
imposing such unilateral ban you are neither 
being fair to the country nor to 160 million 
responsible Pakistanis. We want arts, literature, 
politics and debate to flourish among our 
responsible, mature and well meaning citizens and 
would request you to rescind the ban and let the 
fresh breeze come into an otherwise dreary 
existence of these industrious people, who find 
themselves at this critical crossroads of their 
history.

                     Best regards,

Sincerely,
Iftikhar Malik
(Oxford)

Professor Iftikhar H. Malik
FRHisS
School of Historical and Cultural Studies
Bath Spa University,
BATH  BA2 9BN. UK

_____


[2]

New Age
May 1, 2007

SRI LANKA: MISMATCH BETWEEN MULTI-ETHNIC CRICKET 
TEAM AND THE BRUTAL REALITY OF CIVIL WAR

In the run-up to the World Cup finals, the 
international media ran stories representing the 
hope and lack of understanding of the 
international community about the mutually 
destructive war in Sri Lanka. They speculated 
that the goodwill and euphoria generated by the 
cricket team would translate into political 
initiatives that would take this beautiful and 
talented country to peace.  But the international 
media wrongly assumed that the positive social 
and cultural relationships that bind the ethnic 
communities in Sri Lanka together could translate 
into a political vision and commitment to secure 
a power-sharing formula to resolve the ethnic 
conflict, writes Jehan Perera


At the same time as the Sri Lankan cricket team 
was battling against the odds against their 
Australian counterparts at the World Cup finals 
in Jamaica, the night sky in Colombo was set 
alight. This was not a display of fireworks to 
celebrate the underdog team's gallant 
performance, but bursts of anti-aircraft gunfire 
from numerous places in Colombo. In a tragic and 
unconscionable manner, the unity that the 
country's multi-ethnic cricket team had 
demonstrated in both victory and in defeat, was 
once again not matched by the protagonists in Sri 
Lanka's long-drawn-out ethnic conflict.
    In the run-up to the World Cup finals, the 
international media ran stories representing the 
hope and lack of understanding of the 
international community about the mutually 
destructive war in Sri Lanka. They speculated 
that the goodwill and euphoria generated by the 
cricket team would translate into political 
initiatives that would take this beautiful and 
talented country to peace.  But the international 
media wrongly assumed that the positive social 
and cultural relationships that bind the ethnic 
communities in Sri Lanka together could translate 
into a political vision and commitment to secure 
a power-sharing formula to resolve the ethnic 
conflict.
    The decision of the LTTE to use its limited 
air power to bomb Colombo on the night of the 
World Cup finals was undoubtedly a carefully 
calculated one. There was a possibility of the 
Sri Lankan armed forces being more focused on the 
performance of the country's cricket team that 
night than on the strategies of the LTTE. The 
commander-in-chief of the Sri Lankan armed 
forces, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, was himself 
in Jamaica along with his entourage to cheer on 
the Sri Lankan team and to encourage them to 
victory. The eyes of virtually all Sri Lankans 
not fortunate enough to be able to travel to 
Jamaica were glued to the television screen.
    Fortunately the bombs that the LTTE's light 
aircraft dropped on the oil storage facilities on 
the outskirts of Colombo failed to cause serious 
damage unlike the LTTE attack in 2001. In that 
year LTTE ground attack squads caused a near 
catastrophe when they successfully penetrated the 
oil storage facilities and set them on fire. The 
wheels of the economy came to a virtual 
standstill at that time. Although past experience 
has shown that LTTE ground attacks have been much 
more severe in their destructive potential, the 
new LTTE tactic of air attacks brings with it an 
unprecedented dimension of uncertainty.
   
    Unconventional warfare
    The LTTE bombing raid on Colombo was 
unsuccessful in destroying their targets. 
However, they have once again been successful in 
demonstrating their ability to engage in 
unconventional warfare. The chaos in Colombo on 
the night of the attack, the firing on a 
commercial airliner by over-excited anti-aircraft 
gunners, and the massive international media 
coverage of the event will do much to harm the 
country's prospects. Two major international 
airlines have already suspended their flights to 
Sri Lanka with immediate effect. Neither tourists 
nor foreign investors are likely to be prepared 
to visit the country in the current circumstances.
    No government or society can tolerate a 
situation where its capital city is subjected to 
periodic bombing raids by an enemy force. There 
is no question that such threats have to be 
neutralised. The manner in which the government 
has been approaching this task over the past year 
and a half of President Rajapaksa's rule is 
primarily, if not solely, through its military. 
Unfortunately, the ruling party's proposals for 
political reform that are to be unveiled are 
reported to be regressive ones seemingly designed 
to appease Sinhalese nationalists and that take 
the country back more than two decades.
    The government's immediate response of sending 
its own air force to heavily pound 
LTTE-controlled areas may satisfy governmental 
leaders and nationalist sections of the 
population. They would wish the LTTE to be 
severely punished for the unexpected exercise of 
bombing Colombo on the night of the World Cup 
finals which had united the multi-ethnic 
population behind the multi-ethnic cricket team. 
On the other hand, most of the people living in 
the LTTE-controlled areas would not have been 
able to watch the cricket match in any event.
    The war-related destruction of infrastructure 
in the LTTE-controlled areas is such that the 
people there live fifty to several hundred years 
in the past in relation to economic facilities 
and political democracy. The regular air force 
bombing to which those areas have been subjected 
is of a different order of magnitude in 
comparison to the few small bombs dropped by the 
LTTE air force. At least three hundred thousand 
people have been displaced from their homes and 
live in the most wretched conditions since the 
commencement of hostilities between the 
government and LTTE in April last year.
    On each of the occasions that the LTTE has 
acknowledged its air raids, it has sought to 
justify them by claiming they are in retaliation 
for the air bombing of their areas by the 
government. It is this type of logic that Mahatma 
Gandhi totally rejected by saying that if the 
attitude of an eye for an eye was followed the 
whole world would go blind. Unfortunately the 
militarists on either side of the divide tend to 
get stronger when equivalent, if not greater, 
retaliation is seen as the appropriate mode of 
response.
   
    Human costs
    If large-scale civilian suffering and 
displacement can be ignored, the military 
strategy of the government up to now has been 
relatively successful in the east of the country. 
The government has militarily captured those 
parts of the east that were administered by the 
LTTE. The next theatre of confrontation is likely 
to be the north where the LTTE's military and 
administrative assets are presently concentrated. 
The aircraft and airfields that have caused chaos 
and apprehension in Colombo are located in the 
LTTE-controlled areas of the north.
    The government may soon send in its ground 
troops into the north to seek out and destroy the 
LTTE's military and administrative assets there, 
as they have in the east. There are indications 
that the government's military campaign against 
LTTE strongholds in the north has already 
commenced. One of the first targets appears to 
the Madhu area of the north which is currently 
under LTTE control and where there is a large 
refugee welfare centre in the vicinity of the 
sacred Catholic shrine of Madhu. As a result, the 
situation there has become very tense and fearful.
    The Catholic Church is fearful that in the 
event of hostilities there will be shelling and 
bombing of the area and which can lead to the 
destruction of the shrine. The military had 
indicated that they wish to rescue the civilians 
from being under LTTE control. This sounds 
similar to the theme of liberating the people 
living in LTTE-controlled areas in the east who, 
now as a result are in refugee camps. Although 
the Catholic Church has tried to get the two 
sides to declare Madhu to be a peace zone, this 
has proven to be unsuccessful.
    Adding to the woes of the people is the fact 
that the presence of LTTE cadres has increased 
substantially with recruitments and abductions of 
young people into their ranks taking place even 
from public places. Forced abductions without a 
sense of conscience are taking place on a regular 
basis and it is reported that up to 3,500 youth 
are being targeted for recruitment.  The LTTE is 
also reported to be interfering with the work of 
NGOs and stating that they need to function under 
their diktat. Many NGOs are afraid of sending 
their staff to the field due to harassment by the 
LTTE.
   
    Way forward
    What this goes to show is that the human costs 
of continued confrontation between the government 
and LTTE are very high. The escalation of the war 
into the north would add significantly to those 
human costs. There is a desperate need for an 
alternative path to conflict resolution, but at 
the present time neither the government nor the 
LTTE appear to have either the political vision 
or commitment to carve out that path. Instead 
they appear to be mutually engaged in a cycle of 
violence from which the people have no escape.
    It is indeed regrettable that the ruling 
party's political proposals to resolve the ethnic 
conflict offer even less in term of power-sharing 
than the existing system of provincial councils 
set up under the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord of 1987. 
The ruling party proposals seek to limit 
power-sharing to the district level and to the 
village level. Even today the Indo-Lanka Peace 
Accord, with its provisions for the establishment 
of provincial councils, and for the temporary 
merger of the Northern and Eastern provinces, 
stands as a reasonable model of ethnic 
accommodation.
    The main burden of keeping hope alive 
therefore falls on the UNP which as the main 
opposition party has stood consistently for a 
negotiated political solution based on the 
federal formula of the Oslo declaration that was 
agreed on by the government and LTTE negotiating 
teams in December 2002. The left coalition 
partners of the government and civil society 
groups that stand for a negotiated political 
solution also need to continue voicing their 
commitment to a viable power-sharing framework 
that meets the just demand of the Tamil people 
for their rights.
    Jehan Perera is media director of the National 
Peace Council in Colombo, Sri Lanka. He can be 
reached at: jehanpc at sltnet.lk


_____



[3]

Hindutva at work:

CHRISTIAN PREACHER ATTACKED IN JAIPUR
http://haw.blogspot.com/2007_04_01_archive.html#4296586606008708504
[Reproduced from a report in The Hindu, 30 April 2007]

______


[4]  [AFTER COURTS LIFT BAN - SHIV SAINIKS 
INSTRUCTED TO BURN JAMES LAINE'S BOOK]

Asian Age
May 1, 2007
Editorial

Editorial
FASCIST IMPULSES

The "order" issued to Shiv Sainiks to burn copies 
of James Laine's book Shivaji: The Hindu King in 
Islamic India by Mr Bal Thackeray is typical of 
the Shiv Sena chief's arbitrary and intolerant 
approach to settling issues of public concern. 
Contending that the book's contents are both 
baseless and unflattering of Shivaji, who is 
rightly held in great respect in Maharashtra and 
the rest of the country, the Maharashtra 
government had banned the sale of the book. The 
Bombay high court has lifted the ban. If the 
court verdict is unacceptable to the government 
and the people, as is being claimed, the proper 
course is to approach the Supreme Court for 
redress. The state government, we are told, 
proposes to do just this, but Mr Thackeray has 
intervened, obviously with a view to mobilising 
public opinion against the book's sale and 
pressuring the apex court. Mr Thackeray clearly 
anticipates that the Supreme Court is unlikely to 
reverse the Bombay high court's ruling. If the 
ruling is upheld, he argues, nothing can be done, 
and hence to pre-empt such a situation, the book 
ought to be burnt on the streets. It would be 
obviously up to the Shiv Sainiks to locate copies 
of the book and seize them by force. The Shiv 
Sena argues that while protest action against the 
book will create no law and order problem, 
allowing the sales to continue definitely will. 
Not so strangely, all political parties including 
the ruling Congress-Nationalist Congress Party 
are supporting Mr Thackeray's call. There is no 
denying that anything derogatory said or written 
about Indian leaders held in high respect is apt 
to hurt popular sentiments and provoke 
retaliation. The political class on that ground 
will justify Mr Thackeray's "order." Mr 
Thackeray's call will only help the sale of the 
book, whereas his real intention is to prevent 
it. It would encourage people to take the law 
into their hands and this cannot be an acceptable 
option in a functioning democracy like ours.


o o o


The Times of India
30 April, 2007

Q&A: 'NO SIMPLE ANSWERS TO PROBLEMS OF CULTURAL SENSITIVITY'


The Supreme Court recently quashed the criminal 
proceedings against American historian James W 
Laine, a professor of religious studies at 
Macalester College. Laine had faced possible 
police action for defaming Maratha king Shivaji 
through his controversial book, Shivaji: Hindu 
king in Islamic India. The book had triggered a 
public outcry across Maharashtra, including mob 
violence in Pune's Bhandarkar Oriental Research 
Institute in January 2004. Laine speaks to Harsh 
Kabra on what it means for a foreign scholar to 
work through the social and cultural 
sensitivities of India:

You've said that your whole interest was not the 
historical Shivaji, but the shape of the 
narrative that gets told, histori-cal or not. For 
a foreign scholar like you, what do the cultural 
sensitivities involved with working on oral 
narratives of iconic figures like Shivaji mean?

If we frame the question as how should an 
American scholar be sensitive about the culture 
of Indians he studies?, we are not comprehending 
the complexity of Indian culture. Indian culture 
is itself so complex, with many internal 
divisions. Shall I replicate the views of 
conservative Brahmin scholars? Shall i privilege 
Hindu views over Muslim ones, male perspectives 
over female pers pectives? I think we are in a 
period of global exchange of ideas in which there 
are no simple answers to problems of cultural 
sensitivity.

But there is always the possibility of a nativist 
reaction to foreigners who are likely to overlook 
the specific social and cultural contexts of 
these narratives.

There is perhaps such a possibility but i think, 
in my own case, my work was interpreted falsely, 
not in terms of a foreign, post-colonial attack 
on Indian culture, but as part of a Brahmin 
conspi-racy to question the royalty (Kshatriya) 
status of Shivaji and other Marathas. I had no 
intention of taking a position in that debate 
which goes back to the age of Shivaji himself, 
but that's what i was caught up in. Yet, for 
example, the translation of ancient treatises and 
holy texts into western languages in the past 
didn't stir up controversies.

What has been the latter-day experience elsewhere?

It is interesting to note that widespread 
translation of Sanskrit scriptures, which were 
for centuries restricted to the use of Brahmin 
men, has not, to my knowledge, caused much of an 
outcry in the period from 1800 to the present. 
However, the controversy concern-ing my two books 
was not really related to issues of translation.

How do you feel, in the wake of the SC judgment? 
Do you stand by your decision to refrain from 
research projects related to Maharashtra?

I am happy not to have any charges against me, 
but I am not at all sure that travel in 
Maharashtra would be the wise thing to do. I 
however, continue to have an abiding interest in 
India and will work on broader issues in the 
future.

o o o

Economic Times
APRIL 12, 2007

Editorial

DESIRABLE JUDICIAL ACTIVISM: A BLOW TO STATE-SPONSORED CENSORSHIP


The Supreme Court order restraining the 
Maharashtra government from proceeding against 
James W Laine, the author of Shivaji: Hindu King 
in Islamic India, must be hailed. The ruling, 
which would now compel the state government to 
withdraw the FIR it had registered in 2004 
against the author, publisher and printer of the 
book for allegedly attempting to destroy public 
order, is a brilliant example of judicial 
intervention that cannot be faulted.

More so, since the FIR followed the intolerant 
vandalism that Maharashtra saw in 2003 after 
Laine's book was published. We fully agree with 
the court that a work of scholarship cannot be 
judged as being contrary to the interests of 
communities on the basis of certain scattered 
remarks torn out of context. Laine's book does 
contains citations from folklore about Shivaji 
which had offended local opinion.

But their express intention is clearly not to 
disparage the Maratha icon. Instead, they are 
part of serious scholarship that seeks to arrive 
at a more informed understanding of the subject. 
The FIR, filed by the state government, was 
clearly an attempt to curb the fundamental right 
to freedom of expression. Regrettably the 
publishers had to 'withdraw' the book from the 
state after the government went ballistic.

The principle of separation of powers is meant to 
embody a desirable tension between individual 
rights and social consensus. While lawmaking and 
governance are meant to articulate the latter, 
the judiciary is supposed to protect the former 
from any kind of excess that might occur, 
unwittingly or otherwise, in the conduct of 
legislative and governmental functions.

For, it's simply not enough for lawmaking and 
executive functioning to be in accord with the 
will of the majority. Real democracy is about 
mediating the popular will through a network of 
institutional structures and the law of the land. 
The dangers of conflating irrational 
majoritarianism with enlightened consensus are, 
indeed, great in a developing democracy.

All political parties in Maharashtra had 
unanimously lent their voice to the anti-Laine 
outrage. In that context, the court order is a 
reminder that illiberalism, merely because it's 
upheld by the majority, cannot be passed off as 
democracy.

______


[5]

Kashmir Times
May 1, 2007

Editorial

MURDERERS IN UNIFORM
CRIMINAL ACTS OF THE CUSTODIANS OF LAW AND ORDER

The Indian police never had the reputation of 
being a very civilised, fair-minded, law-abiding 
institution, although they are the state's 
law-enforcing arm. The corruption and misuse of 
power indulged in by the lower ranks of the 
police is proverbial. The man in khaki is still 
the most dreaded man in the area, and most 
villagers pray that their sons become one. Not 
for nothing did Justice A.N. Mullah of Allahabad 
high court refer to the Indian police, sometime 
around 1960, as the "largest single body of 
gangsters". But, if that was the sad fact nearly 
fifty years ago, the situation today is many 
times worse. The process started with the rise of 
insurgencies, first, in the north-east, and then 
in the forms of Naxalism in West Bengal and 
violent separatism in Punjab and Jammu and 
Kashmir. The pillars of democracy, like the rule 
of law and the rights of an individual, came to 
be ignored in favour of extra-judicial actions 
taken in the name of national integrity. Even a 
democrat like Nehru once said about certain 
incidents in Kashmir that "democracy can wait". 
All forms of extralegal actions, like fake 
encounters, custodial killings, and just 
disappearance after arrest, came to be 
increasingly accepted as necessary in the 
socalled national interest. The supposed interest 
of the people came to throttle the voices of law 
and rights. It is only since the end of the 90's 
that voices came to be raised against the 
conspiracy of hush-hush about the misdeeds of the 
security forces, and around 2400 such mysterious 
deaths in Punjab still remain unaccounted for.
In Jammu and Kashmir the first breakthrough came 
after the deliberate killings of the innocent 
villagers at Pathrebal were exposed. In recent 
months graves after graves have been exhumed as 
proofs of fake encounters, and skeletons are 
regularly tumbling our of the cup-boards of the 
security forces. As if not to be left behind in 
their race for recognition the army too came to 
be known not only for faking their living jawans 
as killed militants but also for actually killing 
some of their local porters for passing their 
bodies on as those of armed infiltrators. In any 
case one thought till recently that such unlawful 
killings take place only in the 
insurgency-afflicted states of Jammu and Kashmir 
and in the north-east. But, now one is shocked to 
learn that even in Gujarat three IPS officers 
have been arrested on charges of having conspired 
to eliminate a Muslim couple in November 2005. 
That they have been sent to police custody proves 
that the charges against them are based on fairly 
solid grounds, and their alleged involvement in 
such illegal killings only suggests how low our 
law-enforcers can go to break the laws in their 
morbid quest for awards and rewards. From Manipur 
to Gujarat and Jammu and Kashmir the story every 
where is essentially the same. The draconian 
AFSPA is there to provide them immunity for their 
acts and this has made them trigger happy, and 
enable them to earn undeserved recognitions 
through unbecoming means. The security forces 
cannot be restrained from misusing their special 
powers and their is no reason why these should 
not be snatched away from them, as the people of 
Manipur and Kashmir want.
Gujarat, never the home any insurgency in any 
form, of course has a dubious history of misuse 
of special powers of the police. In the terrible 
days of the TADA, in the 90's, more people, 
mostly Muslims, were arrested under it in Gujarat 
than in Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, or in the 
states in the north-east. Similarly, during the 
post-Godra riots 240 people were arrested under 
the POTA, and 239 of them were Muslims, and the 
remaining one was a Sikh. Were the former 
arrested for ensuring their safety from the 
marauding bands of armed Hindus? Many bereaved 
parents and widows in the Naxalite-affected 
states have similar tales of woe to tell. These 
force one to ask the question -- especially after 
going through the revealing research work of 
ex-IGP of Uttar Pradesh, Bibhuti Narain Rai's 
Curfew in the City -- whether we have the police 
force for protecting the edifice of law or for 
breaking it, for preventing murders or for 
committing some, and for protecting the weak from 
the powerful or for helping the latter in 
carrying out their selfish designs?

______


[6] 

Indian Express
May 01, 2007

ROCK STARS IN UNIFORM
'Encounter specialists' get away with murder 
because the system cannot care less

by Pamela Philipose

  Sohrabuddin Sheikh was a criminal guilty of 
extortion and other rackets, and we must listen 
to BJP leader V.K. Malhotra and not glamourise 
him. But it has now been established, under the 
CID imprimatur no less, that he was not a 
terrorist, was not a Lashkar-e-Toiba operative, 
and was not planning to assassinate Gujarat Chief 
Minister Narendra Modi. Of course we would not 
have known all this and it could have been the 
perfect "encounter" murder, if Sohrabuddin Sheikh 
did not happen to have a brother who was 
persistent enough to knock at the Supreme Court's 
doors. Sohrabuddin Sheikh also had a wife who 
insisted on accompanying him into the unknown and 
who also, according to the Gujarat government's 
statement in the Supreme Court, has ended up 
dead. She too proved inconvenient to the 
choreographers of her husband's "encounter" death 
because it is not often that a LeT operative/ 
terrorist/ intent on killing Modi traipses around 
the countryside accompanied by a loving wife. 
But, of course, we must not glamourise Kauserbi.

Sohrabuddin Sheikh's killing was allegedly 
masterminded by the head of Gujarat's 
anti-terrorism squad, D.G. Vanzara. He belongs to 
a breed of policemen who has been allowed to 
create its own independent universe of impunity 
and rewrite every rule in the book; a breed which 
is allowed to create a "subterranean stream of 
homicidal violence", as Suketu Mehta put it in 
Maximum City - Bombay Lost and Found. Mumbai's 
"encounter specialists", believed to have broken 
the back of the mafia gangs that ruled the 
metropolis, emerged as popular as rock stars in 
the late nineties and early years of this decade, 
posing for journalists with their AK-47s and 
reeling off the number of scalps they had claimed 
as their personal tally, much like the maharajahs 
of an earlier era did their tiger killings. They 
became the subjects of movies and had police 
gallantry awards pinned to their lapels. Until, 
that is, it was discovered that many in this 
league of extraordinary men were making money 
from various interests,

including the mafia, by actually staging shootouts.

If in Mumbai the "encounter" specialists were 
deployed to battle the mafia with complete 
support from the state government, in post-riots 
Gujarat, they were on a mission to eliminate 
terrorists with the active assistance of the 
state government. Sohrabuddin Sheikh was 
eliminated in November 2005, but almost a year 
and a half before that there was the curious 
"encounter" that occurred near the Kotarpur Water 
Works, Ahmedabad, early one June morning, when 
the bullet-riddled bodies of the four occupants 
of a car, including a young woman later 
identified as Ishrat Jehan, from Mumbra, were 
discovered. The FIR claimed that at least two of 
this party were "Pakistani fidayeen" of the LeT 
equipped with arms and ammunition who were 
proceeding with the intention to kill Narendra 
Modi. An inquiry into the incident by human 
rights groups in July 2004 pointed out that the 
Gujarat police were not even able to confirm that 
the two men were indeed Pakistani. It was also 
noted that while the car in which the 
"terrorists" were travelling was riddled with 
bullets, there was little evidence of return fire 
by the "fidayeen" despite their reported 
possession of an AK-47 and AK-56. The report also 
noted that the Crime Branch in Ahmedabad had 
grown into a "powerful parallel police force" 
that was a law unto itself. But the questions 
around this "encounter" soon died down, and the 
Gujarat's special squad was free to move on to 
its next big "operation".

Such extra-judicial violence draws its rationale 
from the belief that tough measures are needed to 
make life safer for the rest of the citizens. But 
staged encounters do not help in securing public 
safety. In fact, they can work to the contrary, 
by blurring the lines between legitimate security 
measures and illegitimate ones. Such peremptory 
snuffing out of lives deprives the police of 
significant information that is vital if they are 
indeed serious about fighting terrorists or the 
mafia in the long term. They deepen public 
scepticism about the police force, and further a 
culture in which a small group of officers, 
enjoying great political patronage and the 
confidence of the highest functionaries in 
government, are allowed to believe that they have 
the licence to kill and who draw great personal 
and pecuniary benefits from that licence.

So normalised have "encounter deaths" become 
today, and not just in Gujarat, that the fact 
that they violate the most basic article in the 
Constitution, the right to life, is hardly a 
concern. They also ignore the express strictures 
passed by the National Human Rights Commission. 
In 1997, the chairman of the NHRC, Justice M.N. 
Venkatachaliah, wrote to all the chief ministers, 
reminding them that the policeman, under the law, 
is not conferred with the right to take away 
another person's life and that if he kills a 
person, he commits the offence of "culpable 
homicide whether amounting to the offence of 
murder or not, unless it is proved that such 
killing was not an offence under the law". It 
would not be considered an offence if the death 
is caused in the exercise of the right of private 
defence or while trying to apprehend a person who 
is fleeing from the scene and "accused of an 
offence punishable with death or imprisonment for 
life." He then went on to state that whether the 
death caused in the "encounter" was justified 
would, however, have to be established through a 
proper procedure, which should include the 
registering of such deaths and investigation into 
the facts - under an independent investigating 
agency. The frighteningly facile way in which 
Sohrabuddin Sheikh's life was snuffed out, as 
indeed those who were possible witnesses to it, 
his wife and associate, Tulsiram Prajapati, 
demonstrates just how seriously Gujarat's 
anti-terrorist squad took the Constitution and 
well-laid out procedures of apprehending 
suspected criminals.

We must not glamourise Sohrabuddin, but neither 
must we glamourise such brutal and unconscionable 
acts. Some 21 encounters that are believed to 
have taken place in Gujarat between 2003 and 2006 
have just been brought to the scrutiny of the 
Supreme Court. Now let justice speak.

______


[7] 

FAKE KILLING(S) : PEOPLE AS TROPHIES
by Subhash Gatade

Truth is finally out.

People who had a faint glimmer of hope about 
Kausar Bi's whereabouts finally know that she is 
no more. As the counsel for the Gujarat 
government himself admitted before the Supreme 
Court, she was killed, burnt and her ashes were 
thrown in some field. But it does not throw light 
on the fact that who killed her ?

It appears that Gujarat government wants to buy 
time to divulge the information. But the CID 
report filed by Ms Geeta Johri is very clear on 
this aspect.The interim report of the IG (CID) 
Geeta Johri - who investigated the case as per 
instruction from the Supreme Courst - know that 
Kausarbi was personally strangulated to death by 
D.H.Vanjara in the very presence of his wife and 
son (Bhaskar, 28 th April 2007).
Imagine the head of the Anti Terrorism Squad, who 
till the other day functioned as DIG killing an 
innocent woman and using his position to cover up 
the crime.

As things stand today the story of the encounter 
killing of Soharabuddin Sheikh in cold blood, 
followed by similar killing of his friend 
Tulsiram Prajapati and later his own wife Kausar 
Bi is getting murkier everyday. Thanks to 
Ruhabuddin Sheikh who persisted in his attempts 
to get justice and ultimately approached the 
Supreme Courts to intervene in this matter in 
which his brother was killed in a fake encounter 
and sister in law had gone missing. Today three 
senior police officers - two from Gujarat and one 
from Rajasthan are behind bars charged with 
kidnapping and murder of an innocent citizen. If 
the Gujarat government is compelled to follow the 
leads then it will have to apprehend more than 
two dozen other police officials from both the 
states who participated in the whole operations 
at some level.

The manner in which the fake killing(s) have 
snowballed into a major embarassment for the 
'invincible looking' Modi regime is for everyone 
to see. Independent analysts have rightly pointed 
out that Amit Shah, a close buddy of Narendra 
Modi and in charge of the Home Ministry, who 
supposedly went all out to save the guilty 
officers, may also be sacrificed to save his 
mentor from further discomfirt. And looking at 
the evidence which is ranged against his buddies, 
the day is not far off when 'Hindu Hriday Samrat' 
Modi may also have to personally face the music.

II
Ofcourse few things are crystal clear about this 
killing of an innocent citizen and packaging it 
as the killing of dreaded terrorist belonging to 
Lashkar-e-Toiba.

Firstly, the killing of Soharabuddin Sheikh was a 
joint operation by two states Gujarat and 
Rajasthan- both ruled by Sangh-BJP people- 
executed by officers who happened to be very 
close to the top echleons of the people in power. 
It was not for nothing that Gujarat government 
asked Ms. Geeta Johri to hand over her charge to 
another person, when she was to present the final 
report and Gulab Chand Kataria, the home minister 
of Rajasthan personally flew in a special plane 
with his other officers, to plead the case for 
Dinesh Kumar, a senior police officer with his 
government who is behind bars for this encounter.

Secondly, if one were to believe the journalist 
who played a pivotal role in exposing the 
killing, then the task of eliminating 
Soharabuddin was undertaken at the behest of ( by 
taking 'Supari' from) the rivals of the deceased 
and crores of Rs were exchanged for this purpose.

Thirdly, it was not for the first time that 
Gujarat police have organised an encounter 
killing and presented it as killing of terrorists 
who had come to kill Modi, Togadia or any other 
similar rabble rouser from the Hindutva Brigade'. 
Does anybody remember the killing of Isharat 
Jahan, a college girl from Bombay along with 
three other persons a few years ago or the 
killing of Sami Ali Pathan and packaging it as 
another 'victory' of the Gujarat police over 
'terrorists'.

While the opposition has claimed that during 
Vanjara's tenure at the Anti Terrorism Squad 15 
people were killed in 9 fake encounters. Asian 
Age (30 th April 2007) tells us that the 'Rogue 
Gujarat Cop Killed 13'. But it would be opportune 
to have a look at the manner in which he went 
about it.

Ahmedabad, April 29: Controversial Gujarat IPS 
officer and “encounter specialist” D.G. Vanzara, 
now under arrest for the death of one Sohrabuddin 
in November 2005, has killed at least 13 people 
in the past few years on the alleged grounds that 
they were plotting to kill Gujarat chief minister 
Narendra Modi and other senior BJP leaders. He 
has also arrested scores of “terrorists” on 
similar charges.

To his colleagues and others he has depicted 
these fake encounters as “patriotic acts” which 
were evidence of his “deshbhakti.” The alleged 
“terrorists” who he had caught and killed, 
claiming that there were members of international 
terrorist outfits and engaged on deadly missions 
to kill Mr Modi and others, were all, barring one 
exception, armed only with “tamanchas”. These 
indigenously-made weapons are usually not the 
assassination weapon of choice employed by 
terrorist outfits. Mr Vanzara did this to justify 
the absence of injury to policemen while they 
were on such encounter missions.

Fourthly, it is clear that the top bosses of the 
state were complicit in what was being done at 
the ATS level. Any layperson can gather that the 
killing spree engaged in by these rogue cops 
helped enhance the threat perception of 'Hindu 
Hriday Samrats' inside as well as outside Gujarat 
and add glory to their image. It was not for 
nothing that they saw to it that not a single 
complaint reached the State Human Rights 
Commission against him. The clout which Vanjara 
enjoyed with the political masters can be gauged 
from the fact that he even managed to get his 
younger brother Vanraj Vanzara, who was with the 
state forest department, sent on deputation to 
the Gujarat State Human Rights Commission. It is 
not surprising to note that till date, the state 
human rights commission has not received any 
complaints against Mr Vanzara.

III

It is worth noting that BJP,  which finds itself 
on a sticky wicket in this fake killings has 
devised multiple lines of defence to avoid 
further embarassment to its 'poster boy' Narendra 
Modi. Chances are that if the interim reports of 
the IG(CID) becomes public or CBI or any other 
investigation into the case is taken up at the 
federal level, then it would become further 
impossible for it to defend Modi.
They understand it very well that if 
investigations proceed in this fake killings 
case, it would be incumbent upon the agency to 
have a look at similar encounters in the state 
which happened in recent past, to look for any 
'method in this madness'.It will have to unravel 
the mystery where similar sounding post-facto 
justifications for the killings were peddled and 
pliant media was further used to add to the aura 
of Narendra Modi or his other buddies.

Another important aspect of this investigation 
would be revisiting all those cases where people 
were apprehended on the suspicion that they were 
plotting to finish any of those Hindutva bigwigs 
and put behind bars under any of those draconian 
laws which are there in the kitty of the 
government. The recent acquittal of four innocent 
persons who had to languish in jail for around 
four years on similar trumped up charges is a 
case in point.

The BJP has suddenly discovered that the concern 
expressed by justice loving people over the 
encounter killing of an innocent citizen is 
'glorifying criminals'.They have dished out n 
number of charges filed against the people who 
were killed which were filed supposedly in 
different police stations in the two states. But 
in their overenthusiasm to save their skin, they 
forgot the basic constitutional premise which has 
devised mechanisms to deal with criminals in a 
legitimate manner. And it was not surprising that 
when cornered by the media, whether it believes 
in the rule of law, it was found fumbling for 
words.

It has also taken a position that fake killings 
are a norm everywhere in today's times where the 
justice delivery mechanisms are already cracking 
under its own weight. They are thus of a 
considered opinion that it is not proper that 
Gujarat or for that matter Rajasthan should be 
singled out for that.

Following the old dictum that offence is the best 
defence, they have rediscovered that other 
parties are soft towards terrorism and BJP is the 
only party which is supposedly playing a no 
nonsense battle against terrorism.There was a 
news in a section of the media that after lying 
low for some time Mr Narendra Modi is planning to 
go on the offensive on this issue. It is learnt 
that he has asked his colleagues to make a plan 
where the killing of Sohrabuddin could be 
projected as the Saffron Party's resolute battle 
against terrorism. It wants to project that 
Congress as well as left as supporters of 
criminals/terrorists. The only lacunae in this 
whole plan is the killing of Kausarbi as well as 
Tulsiram Prajapati, a backward caste Hindu.

IV

One hopes that further details would come out in 
the ensuing investigations and we would get to 
know the real culprits in the whole case. But the 
moot question is that can the fake encounter 
killings could be reduced to the depradations of 
few officers who were out to make some fast buck 
or gain greater proximity to their political 
masters or one should look for the larger 
gameplan hatched by the powers that be which made 
such killings inevitable.

Perhaps one should look at the three year old 
plan made by the Gujarat goverment supposedly to 
'counter terrorists'.

It sounds surprising that the 'revealations about 
the counter terrorism plan of the Gujarat police’ 
(The Rediff Special, Sheela Bhatt in Ahmedabad, 
How Gujarat plans to counter terrorists, July 15, 
2004) which sent shivers down the spine of the 
religious minorities in the state especially the 
Muslims then which were yet to recover from the 
trauma and tribulations of the post Godhra 
carnage could not become a matter of debate at 
the national level then also.

The implicit understanding (as per the Gujarat 
government) behind this plan was that the ‘state 
has become a haven for terrorists’ ( read Islamic 
terrorists)’. In an interview to the same emag 
the additional CP of Ahmedabad Mr Vanzara had 
hammered this point home in no uncertain terms 
plainly stating that ..After the Godhra carnage 
and the subsequent riots terrorists of a variety 
of types and shapes are aiming at Gujarat. 
Gujarat has become the destination for 
terrorists.(The Rediff Interview July 27,2004) .

As a precursor to this plan a detailed survey of 
the number of mosques, madrasas at the state 
level was done and the various Islamic 
organisations active inside the state and their 
alleged linkages with other 
national-international organisations was also 
noted. As per the plan every policeperson from 
the constable level upwards was instructed to 
keep a close watch on the situation at the ground 
level. S/He was also asked to keep tabs on 
meetings at masjids and the goings on in the 
Madrasas. Activities of the Tablighi Jamaat were 
to be keenly watched under this plan.

It is clear to even a layperson that the neatly 
designed ‘counter terrorism plan’ of the Gujarat 
government at the behest of the state government 
stigmatised the whole minority community in 
uncertain terms. The most ironic part was that it 
did not even bother to mention the extremist 
elements within the Hindu community at whose 
behest the postGodhra pogrom of the minorities 
mainly Muslims was undertaken. And the need to 
keep a close watch on the controversial 
activities of the plethora of organisations of 
the Hindutva Brigade and its leaders was thus 
skillfully scuttled. The action plan conveniently 
missed the warning by the intelligence people 
which has clearly asked to rein in Hindutva 
fanatics. To quote : 'intelligence bureau people 
overseeing the national scene had warned the 
central government to rein in elements like 
Praveen Togadia and Ashok Singhal if it was keen 
to nip the fresh sources for terrorist activities 
in the bud.' (Jansatta, Hindi Daily, 5 th Sep, 
2003, Delhi, ‘Intelligence bureau warns the 
government about Togadia and Singhal )

According to the top bosses of the Gujarat police 
the plan had traced its origins to the murder of 
former state home minister and senior Bharatiya 
Janata Party leader Haren Pandya. It is still 
being said that the murder of Mr Haren Pandya 
opened up the eyes of the state government that 
the state has become a breeding ground for 
terrorists belonging to organisations like the 
Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Tayiba and 
Jaish-e-Mohammad.

Ofcourse it is another matter that till date Mr 
Vithalbhai Pandya, father of Mr Haren Pandya has 
consistently maintained that his son’s murder was 
politically motivated and has pointed his fingers 
at the higher ups in the state BJP for their 
complicity in the same. As a mark of protest 
against the state government’s reticence to 
investigate his charges, in the elections to the 
parliament in 2004 he even contested as an 
independent candidate against Mr L.K.Advani. 
Looking at the track record of the state 
government in pursuing matters of governance and 
the way its whole apparatus unfolded itself in a 
partisan manner during the 2002 pogrom ,  the 
‘counter terrorism plan’ did not sound surprising.

It is a fact that the trauma of the minorities 
has not ended with the pogrom only. The way they 
were subjected to all round harassment right from 
relief distribution to apprehending the guilty is 
for everyone to see. Till date a significant 
section of the Muslim population in the state is 
facing economic boycott. Also the way the highly 
draconian POTA was misused and innocent persons 
were victimised in the state in post pogrom times 
is a fact which has also been well documented. A 
report filed by the AFP ( New Delhi, Sep 03) had 
said that our of the 240 booked under POTA which 
carries a death penalty 239 were Muslims and one 
was a Sikh. While muslims had been booked for 
three different attacks on Hindus, including the 
burning of Sabaramati Express at Godhra last 
year, the attack on Ahmedabad’s Akshardham temple 
and the murder of former minister Haren Pandya, 
it was clear that despite the participation of 
thousands of Hindus in the pogrom none of the 
cases were found to be a fit enough for clamping 
POTA against him/her.

It need be added that this ‘counter terrorism 
plan of the state police’ had come as a sequel to 
the amended Gujarat Control of Organised Crime 
Bill (GUJCOC), which was passed by the Gujarat 
assembly in the beginning of June ’04. The Bill 
had almost all the provisions of POTA, including 
the authority to hold the accused in jail without 
trial and provisions giving jurisdiction only to 
special courts to try the cases under the Act.

It would be naivette to think that the said 
action plan which is partisan in nature and 
communal in content  would have seen the light of 
the day without the directions from the top 
bosses of the Parivar. Ofcourse the rationale 
behind the plan was not difficult to decipher.

V.

Even a cursory glance at the action plan - which 
largely went unnoticed in the rest of the country 
- makes it clear that it has provided a free hand 
to the law and order people in the state to 
continuously harass minorities as part of their 
'mission' of countering terrorism. The next step 
then becomes catching hold of innocent people 
belonging to the minority community at regular 
intervals and bumping them offf supposedly to 
provide a post facto justification of the 
'success of the action plan'.

Isharat Jahan, Sami Ali Pathan or Soharabuddin 
Sheikh and many of their ilk - independent 
citizens of a secular nation, then merely become 
'trophies' which are displayed from time to time 
to convince the pliant masses the danger such 
'other' people present to the tranquility of the 
state.

There is no doubt that the likes of Vanjara and 
all his associates in the encounter killing who 
have committed crime against humanity be given 
exemplary punishment but simultaneously we should 
enhance our efforts so that the real culprits in 
this game are not allowed to go scot free. People 
who have been peddling agenda of hate for the 
last eighty plus years, people who have no qualms 
in presenting the Gujarat genocide 2002 as 
'successful experiment', people who promote such 
'Dirty Harrys' to do the 'needful'.


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

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
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