SACW | May 19-20, 2007
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Sun May 20 02:25:47 CDT 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | May 19-20, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2408 - Year 9
[1] Pakistan: Islamabad succumbs (Pervez Hoodbhoy)
[2] Appeal To The Indian Left From A Progressive Pakistani (M.B. Naqvi)
[3] Moves by Sri Lanka Military Worry Human Rights Group (Nora Boustany)
[4] India: March of the righteous brigade (Tavleen Singh)
[5] India: Stop This Vigilantism (editorial, People's Democracy)
[6] India not privilege or monopoly of Hindus
(News report on Mangalore communalism seminar)
[7] India: A Press statement on the Hyderabad
Mosque Bomb blasts (Communalism Combat)
[8] India: People's Tribunal on Nandigram- Notification ()
[9] Book Reviews:
(i) Books on 1857 - A Riot Of Commemorating (Shahid Amin)
(ii) Sri Lanka novel lives up to its bzzzzz (Shyam Selvadurai)
[10] Upcoming events:
India: Activists Sit -in re Fine arts Fac,
MS University Baroda MS (Ahmedabad, 23 May 2007)
____
[1]
The Guardian
May 17, 2007
ISLAMABAD SUCCUMBS
Pakistan's president is doing nothing to prevent
the country's capital from becoming an Taliban
stronghold.
by Pervez Hoodbhoy
After his ill-advised dismissal of the chief
justice of Pakistan's supreme court ignited
violent protest, President Pervez Musharraf may
be banking on Islamic fanatics to create chaos in
the nation's capital, Islamabad. Many suspect
that an engineered bloodbath that leads to army
intervention, and the declaration of a national
emergency, could serve as a pretext to postpone
the October 2007 elections. This could make way
for Musharraf's dictatorial rule to continue into
its eighth year - and perhaps well beyond.
This perverse strategy sounds almost
unbelievable. Musharraf, who George Bush
describes as his "buddy", supports an
"enlightened moderate" version of Islam, and
wears two close attempts on his life by religious
extremists as a badge of honour. But his secret
reliance upon the Taliban card - one that he has
been accused of playing for years - is increasing
as his authority weakens.
Signs of government-engineered chaos abound. In
the heart of Islamabad, vigilante groups from a
government-funded mosque, the Lal Masjid, roam
the streets and bazaars, imposing Islamic
morality and terrorising citizens in full view of
the police. Openly sympathetic to the Taliban and
tribal militants fighting the Pakistan army, the
two cleric brothers who head Lal Masjid, Maulana
Abdul Aziz and Maulana Abdur Rashid Ghazi, have
attracted a core of banned militant organisations
around them. These include Jaish-e-Muhammad,
considered a pioneer of suicide bombings in the
region.
The clerics openly defy the state. Since January
21, baton-wielding, burka-clad students of the
Jamia Hafsa, the woman's Islamic university
located next to the headquarters of Lal Masjid,
have forcibly occupied a government building, the
Children's Library. In one of their many forays
outside the seminary, this burka brigade swooped
upon a house that they claimed was a brothel, and
kidnapped three women and a baby.
Male students from Islamabad's many madrasas are
even more active in terrorising video-shop
owners, whom they accuse of spreading
pornography. Newspapers have carried pictures of
grand bonfires made with seized cassettes and
CDs. Most video stores in Islamabad have now
closed. Their owners duly repented after a fresh
campaign on May 4 by militants blew up a dozen
music and video stores, barbershops and a girl's
school in the North-West Frontier Province.
Astonishing patience has been shown by the
Pakistani state, which on other occasions freely
used air and artillery power to combat such
challenges. Lal Masjid seems to operate with
impunity - no attempt has been made to cut off
its electricity, gas, phone or website - or even
to shut down its illegal FM radio station. The
chief negotiator appointed by Musharraf, Chaudhry
Shujaat Hussain, described the burka brigade
kidnappers as "our daughters", with whom
negotiations would continue and against whom "no
operation could be contemplated".
Clerics realise that the government wants to play
ball. Their initial demand - the rebuilding of
eight illegally constructed mosques that had been
knocked down by Islamabad's civic administration
- became a call for enforcement of Sharia law
across Pakistan. In a radio broadcast on April
12, the clerics issued a threat: "There will be
suicide blasts in the nook and cranny of the
country. We have weapons, grenades, and we are
expert in manufacturing bombs. We are not afraid
of death."
Lal Masjid's head cleric, a former student of my
university in Islamabad, added the following
chilling message for our women students:
"The government should abolish coeducation.
Quaid-e-Azam University has become a brothel. Its
female professors and students roam in
objectionable dresses. I think I will have to
send my daughters of Jamia Hafsa to these immoral
women. They will have to hide themselves in
hijab, otherwise they will be punished according
to Islam. Our female students have not issued the
threat of throwing acid on the uncovered faces of
women. However, such a threat could be used for
creating the fear of Islam among sinful women.
There is no harm in it. There are far more
horrible punishments in the hereafter for such
women."
Indeed, on May 7, a female teacher in the QAU
history department was physically assaulted in
her office by a bearded, Taliban-looking man who
screamed that he had instructions from Allah.
What's next? As Islamabad heads the way of
Pakistan's tribal towns, the next targets will be
girls' schools, internet cafes, bookshops, and
shops selling western clothing, followed by
purveyors of toilet paper, tampons, underwear,
mannequins and other un-Islamic goods.
In a sense, the inevitable is coming to pass.
Until a few years ago, Islamabad was a quiet,
orderly, modern city no different from any other
in Pakistan. Still earlier, it was largely the
abode of Pakistan's elite and foreign diplomats.
But the rapid transformation of its demography
brought with it hundreds of mosques with
multi-barrelled audio cannons mounted on
minarets, as well as scores of madrasas,
illegally constructed in what used to be public
parks and green areas. Now, tens of thousands of
their students with prayer caps dutifully chant
the Qu'ran all day. In the evenings, they roam in
packs through the city's streets and bazaars,
gaping at store windows and lustfully ogling
bare-faced women.
The stage is being set for transforming Islamabad
into a Taliban stronghold. When Musharraf exits -
which may be sooner rather than later - he will
leave a bitter legacy that will last for
generations, all for a little more taste of power.
______
[2]
Mainstream
19 May 2007
Appeal To The Indian Left From A Progressive Pakistani:
EVOLVE ALTERNATIVE PARADIGM OF ECONOMIC GROWTH
by M.B. Naqvi
The following is what the author wanted to
present at a meeting in Karachi when the leaders
of the two Indian CPs-the CPI and CPM-visited
Pakistan in the recent past. -Editor
I intend to ask a few questions to you. But first
the perspective in which I am talking.
The international order as it has developed since
the 1990s has been profoundly disturbing. I am
sure you will share my overall assessment of a
unipolar world in which one nation possesses far
too much military strength and has consciously
decided to make the fullest use of that military
strength for its political as well as economic
interests. In the name of leadership it has
dominated the world. It seeks unquestioning
privilege of intervening wherever it wants to and
reserves the right to pre-emptive military
action. Its conduct is not always truthful. I
believe you share my belief that this
international order is not acceptable. There is
far too much of imperialism in it.
Insofar as imperialism is concerned, it has gone
beyond the export of capital as Lenin in 1919 had
defined. It focuses today on a certain economy
containing a given quantum of resources and the
potential for development. The name of the game
now is to develop an economy for the greater
profit of the developer.
But the name of the game in politics for the US
is to get control over the sources of strategic
raw materials, especially oil. The American
thrust in Asia stands on a tripod. The first leg
is the Middle East that the US regards as its
backyard insofar as Asia is concerned. The second
leg is its strategic alliances with Japan and
Taiwan. The third leg is the US-India alliance
with Pakistan somewhere precariously attached.
One does not mention in it the smaller Far
Eastern countries and Australia that I regard as
more or less a part of the American power system
in Asia (the first leg).
An additional theatre is the policy toward the
former Soviet Union and China. Insofar as the
Soviet Union is concerned, it began by
befriending it and in the name of promoting human
rights and democracy it is ensuring the dilution
of the old Russian influence in the Central Asian
Republics as well as encouraging minority states
within the Russian Federation to assert against
Russian authority. How that is to be assessed is
the question. Does it or does it not sum up a
policy of encouragement of fissiparous tendencies
in the Russian power system so that it comes down?
More questions concern China. The rise of Chinese
power and its economic growth has caused worries
to the US. But until the end of the Clinton era
in American politics the policy was to encourage
China's growth and try and assimilate it in the
American-led comity of nations. There were, of
course, voices from what is described as the
security community. They regarded China as a
potential rival. But those voices remained in a
minority. The government was committed to a
policy of assimilating China in the American-led
international system. But the start of the Bush
era changed that. The Americans have not entirely
given up the policy of engagement. The growth of
Sino-American trade is a staggering phenomenon
that rivals the American-Japanese trade. China
appears to be earning $ 163 billion per year
surplus in trade with the US. But the Americans
dare not blackball Chinese exports. Supplies of
consumer goods and simpler technological goods is
so vital a component of American consumption that
its discontinuation or even diminution would hurt
America more because it is sustaining a standard
of living that cannot be paid for by American
exports alone. America has of necessity to run
huge deficits with China, Japan, Germany and, of
course, oil producers around the globe. It is
easy for it. All it has to do is to print dollar
bills. The US is today world's greatest debtor.
But instead of being vulnerable to foreign
pressure, it holds its creditors in thrall. The
creditors dare not withdraw the bulk of their
deposits from the American financial system for
fear of the dollar's crash. All their credits
will become worthless. It is the Americans who
hold the whip hand despite being the Big Debtor.
The American modus operandi in the economic field
is, of course, to earn as much as it can. It has
revived the cruder form of capitalism everywhere.
The policy originated in what is remembered as
the Washington Consensus that gradually became
the credo of the governments of Margaret Thatcher
in Britain and Ronald Reagan in America. It came
to be known as the deregulation, privatisation
and liberalisation paradigm. Free trade has
become the chief slogan. The intention is to
create a global market in which there are few or
no tariffs. The whole globe should comprise one
economy. This economic theory is supposed to
benefit all manner of countries at all stages of
development. Let's look at what has so far
occurred?
-
THE former colonies comprising the so-called
Third World are increasingly at the receiving
end. A growing number of economies have gone
belly up, especially in Africa. In the normal
course of events in all capitalist economies,
there are some winners and some losers. Only the
losers are many more than the gainers. That is
the normal feature of capitalism as you know
better than what I do. At the international
level, it is the same. Scores of countries have
become basket cases with heavy indebtedness. The
IMF and World Bank have a hard time rescheduling
and writing off some of their debts without
hurting the financial system of the West. The
process is going to accelerate as globalisation
increases.
Globalisation's working inside each developed
economy is the same. It produces losers-who lose
jobs and whose standards of living tend to become
lower-while the gainers, of course, become richer
still. The process can be watched not far from
the place we are sitting today. I mean the
spectacular economic growth of India in recent
years has intensified poverty, whatever its
quantum or extent. I find it is a controversial
matter among economists. The Indian Government
insists that it is no more than 24 per cent and
it is decreasing. The independent economists,
especially those on the Left, find it actually
growing or at the very least stagnant. But those
above the poverty line as defined are also not
necessarily rich. The cream is appropriated by
some 250 to 350 million Indians. The rest try to
make the two ends meet by my non-scientific
estimate. It is the same in Pakistan. Its
governments did mimic its Indian counterpart
about the prospects of growing at eight per cent
and above. And poverty was to get reduced through
the trickle-down process. Although the recent
earthquake in the northern parts seems to have
created doubts whether really high growth rates
can be maintained in the sectors of economy that
are prone to grow faster.
This is a field about which I need not go
further. But I would ask a question: those who do
not like the present paradigm of economic growth
known as 'reforms' or the globalisation scheme
carry a moral responsibility. They have to offer
an alternative paradigm. It is not enough to
condemn globalisation as iniquitous and as
something that will not help the poor. It helps
mainly the rich. There is no doubt that it will
go on doing these things. The point is: how do we
counter it? I am aware that the American masses
surprised the world by the strength of their
protest in Seattle some years ago. Then the
Europeans picked up the theme and their protests
against G-8 and even OECD have only grown. Today
the leading capitalist countries meet in
international conferences amidst the tightest
possible security. They dare not operate freely
even in the developed West that stands to gain
more than the people in Asia. The popular
protests against Americans and the other leaders
of the West, who are propagators of the
globalisation programme, are now a familiar
feature, as Hong Kong the other day has shown.
There is something missing that is terribly
important. What is missing is an alternative
vision-a vision of what can replace it.
Needless to say that even the Left today cannot
go back to Stalinist planning and
theover-centralised and bureaucratic economic
management. A certain amount of market mechanism
for allocation of resources and various other
purposes, including pricing of goods and
services, will be needed. Private capital as such
has to be given a defined scope for doing its
business. The allocation of resources by
bureaucrats is not now an option. But will it now
be free market forces that will determine
everything from choosing what to produce and
selling it at whatever prices they wish? That is
what the Americans advocate. The point is: what
does the Left advocate?
-
FRIENDS, I wish to address mainly our guests from
India. Naturally the question arises: what can
Pakistanis learn from the Indian political life?
I suggest that the Left in India has to evolve a
coherent economic policy or paradigm that should
guide Indian economic development in days to
come. That would provide the means for mass
mobilisation to preserve India's independence in
decision-making and to give its affairs direction
that will enable the people of India to make
economic progress primarily for the benefit of
the common man. But immediately following it is
the consideration that all freedoms guaranteed by
the Indian Constitution, that distinguish it from
semi-dictatorships in the Third World, should be
preserved. In other words, the economic paradigm
must preserve all political liberties while
raising the standard of living of the common
Indians-who are today being left out of the
economic miracle that is supposed to be underway.
It does look to me that the Indian mainstream
parties have not adequately learnt the lesson
from the election of May 2004. The downfall of
the NDA Government represented the disenchantment
of the common people, particularly in the
villages, with the economic policies which Dr
Manmohan Singh originally initiated. Dr Manmohan
Singh is not expected to move far out of the four
walls of that policy which happens to be what the
World Bank, IMF and American Treasury believes to
be the panacea for all the world's ills. The aim
of most of our Indian guests today can only be to
overcome poverty of the bottom 50 per cent of the
population and to raise their cultural level-the
real purpose of economic development. It requires
thoroughgoing research in economics in the quest
for a set of economic policies that would
directly attack the poverty of the broad masses
and which raises their political and cultural
awareness amidst all necessary freedoms. I would
underline the need for this research. India
particularly is endowed with a wonderful human
resource base; there are excellent economists on
the Left as well as the Right. I would suggest
that the parties of the Indian Left should pool
their human and financial resources to create a
Planning Commission with a view to arriving at a
proper economic development plan for India.
Immediately following that I would suggest that
India should actually become a leader of South
Asia. There are historical similarities in all
the South Asian countries, particularly with
India in each member of the SAARC today. These
are all neighbours of India primarily and most of
the ethnicities in India have overshot the
political boundary to share with particular
neighbours. For instance, the language, culture
and sensitivities of West Bengal are, to a large
extent, shared with Bangladesh. Similarly there
are many commonalities of ethnicity between the
Indians and the Nepalese. Much the same can be
said about Pakistan and India. And so on with Sri
Lanka. Only Afghanistan, a new member, is not
contiguous to India. But via Pakistan there are
historical and some ethnic commonalities among
India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. All these
countries need economic development as well as
democracy. The need for freedom is as strong in
Pakistan as in India or in Bangladesh or in Nepal
or Sri Lanka or other places. The Planning
Commission that the Indian Left parties may
establish should aim at creating a viable
regional economic entity in the shape of a
reinvented SAARC by putting a social and economic
content in the idea behind SAARC: regional
integration of a given kind.
The purpose of planning in all the six countries
has necessarily to be the same as in India. That
Planning Commission can have a political wing
too. It should consider political strategy
primarily for the Indian Left and extend it to
relations with various members of the SAARC.
Politics in all the countries have to be not
merely informed with the spirit of the economic
policies but also be based on those economic
policies. In other words, the main thrust of the
politics of the pro-people parties should be
basically similar economic programmes.
One would suggest that a set of common slogans or
policies has to be found that will fire the
imagination of the masses. My humble suggestion
would be that it is now time for the Indian Left
to go well beyond the limited Employment
Guarantee Scheme that is hopefully being
implemented by the UPA Government today. It
should call for a bold departure here: the aim
should clearly be Social Security for all; jobs
for all have to be created and in the case of not
being able to provide jobs to all unemployed, or
largely unemployed, the state should be provided
with some compensatory allowances. The size of
the allowance can be as low as indicated in the
Indian scheme today or better. But any country
that is embarking on a plan to make Social
Security the sheet-anchor of its economic
policies will have to reorient its politics in
the same way. The present rush of the Indian
establishment to make India a tremendously strong
military power is actually unnecessary and a
wastage of scarce resources. India needs to make
Social Security the sheet-anchor of its policies.
That will ensure its social and political
integrity much better than a much stronger Indian
Army. Human security ought to be taken seriously,
at least by the Left. If economic programmes are
made that way, the Left can perhaps move out of
its provinces of West Bengal, Tripura and Kerala.
It is time for the Left to properly lead India
directly on its own behalf.
Incidentally while suggesting a broad shift from
the present course of making India a great
military power, this can only succeed if the Left
presents and makes it acceptable to most Indians
a new policy vis-à-vis Pakistan, the arch rival
that has nuclear weapons. Pakistan needs to do
exactly the same. Should there be a strong
Leftist push against militarisation of the
economy and society in India, it will rub off on
Pakistan. The much smaller Left here, that does
not like militarisation, can take a harder line
if they are strongly supported by a more pacific
Pakistan policy by India. Similarly India should
have pacific policies toward other neighbours
based on equality and fair-play. But it is not a
very simple matter. India has come of age as a
capitalist economy. Imperialism is just a step
ahead of capitalism's success anywhere. The more
a capitalist economy succeeds, the more it moves
into other parts of the globe, tries to corner
markets exercising control over the resources of
other countries. Indians are entering that stage.
Indian multinationals are beginning to find their
feet-elsewhere too. This is now the time to make
a great dash for pacific and true
development-oriented policies. That would help
Left-learning liberal elements in other countries
of the region to do the same. South Asia should
be aimed at becoming an island of prosperity and
social progress in the globalised village.
-
THERE is a short-term policy conundrum for the
Left in India. I do not think it is a major or
fundamental question but it remains a question
for today: how far can the Left go in supporting
the UPA Government in Delhi, when the Delhi
Government is hell-bent on becoming the core ally
of the US and pursuing a military policy that
virtually pre-empts social progress of the kind
implied here? It is obvious that either the UPA
Government has to restrain its love for America
and globalisation or the Left will have to draw a
line somewhere. One sometimes fondly thinks that
there would be a split in the Congress now. It
has become necessary. Those who go with Dr
Manmohan Singh's preferred course would be those
who are ideologically or otherwise closer to the
BJP than to the Nehruvian Congress. The other
Congress, possibly run by Sonia Gandhi, would
remain loyal to an independent foreign policy and
an economic policy which is at least
quasi-socialist. If this were to happen, the Left
can then have a stronger working arrangement with
that Congress. But I do not see today an Indira
Gandhi who would intentionally split the Congress
and isolate the true succesors of the Syndicate
of the 1960s.
There is another minor question of there being
half a dozen Communist Parties and a few
nominally Socialist ones. The origins of most
divisions date back to the 1920s and 1930s. That
age has gone. The issues that divided the various
Leftist-inclined parties are no more. In India
one is told the activists of various Leftist
factions or parties are freely cooperating over
local matters. It is only the leaderships that
differ. Even they do not differ much over
significant matters of economic or foreign
policies. They only differ among themselves for
personal or at most for partisan reasons. The
controversial issues today are globalisation,
foreign policy in this new age and the security
questions about Asia. On these questions there
are deepening differences now emerging in India
whereas in the last almost six decades there has
been a consensus over foreign policy. Economic
policy should now divide the Indians. The issues
of today should be purposefully focused on and
new programmes have to be evolved. For that
purpose the old differences between the Leftist
groups and parties are meaningless. They refer to
the controversies of the past, especially over
who would interpret Marxism better for the
comrades. The challenge today is a new programme
to be evolved by all the Leftist groups and
parties together. That would produce political
unity as well.
The author is a renowned veteran Pakistani journalist based in Karachi.
_____
[3]
Washington Post
May 18, 2007; Page A19
MOVES BY SRI LANKA MILITARY WORRY HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP
by Nora Boustany
A leading human rights activist expressed fears
that a northbound mobilization of troops in Sri
Lanka indicated the Colombo government was
planning to open another front in its push into
Tamil Tiger territory, in retaliation for
increasingly brazen rebel attacks involving
airstrikes against military air bases.
"The government is now thinking of opening a
front in the north. We have seen a lot of
mobilization to indicate that, and lots of aerial
bombing," Ahilan Kadirgamar, a spokesman for the
London-based Sri Lanka Democracy Forum, said in
an interview Wednesday in Washington.
"This is in reaction to the Tigers having brought
in about half a dozen aircraft parts and
assembled them in the country to attack air bases
and oil refineries in the south," he said,
referring to a recent turning point in the
24-year-old conflict.
Kadirgamar's organization has a network inside
Sri Lanka and roving monitors working between
London and New Delhi to keep the international
human rights community abreast of developments
through news releases and visits to Washington,
New York and Geneva.
Since the beginning of this year, the escalation
of hostilities in Sri Lanka has contributed to
increasing violence, which, in addition to the
fighting, now includes the planting of mines
along civilian bus routes and the abduction of
scores of residents on both sides of the front
lines.
Kadirgamar said his group has appealed to the
international community, particularly the U.N.
Human Rights Council, to send human rights
monitors, not peacekeepers, to the island to
track serious violations.
Two incidents last month targeting passenger
buses have heightened anxiety over attacks on
civilians. In one attack, seven civilians were
killed and 25 wounded in a blast that destroyed a
bus traveling between Mannar and Vavunia on April
7. A similar attack aimed at a bus heading from
Mannar to Colombo, the capital, on April 23
killed six Tamil civilians and a government
soldier in civilian clothing. Six other soldiers
were injured, the group said.
Sri Lanka's Human Rights Commission has recorded
more than 100 abductions and disappearances this
year. Last year, 1,000 people were reported
missing. A March press release from the Democracy
Forum said that dozens of civilians had pleaded
with officials to keep them in jail for fear of
kidnappings or killings. "The LTTE, the Karuna
faction and the security forces are all being
held responsible for these violations," the
release said. The Karuna is a Tamil faction that
split from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
and is collaborating with government forces.
The Karuna has been abducting businessmen in
Colombo "with the objective of extorting large
sums of money," the release said.
The rebel group wants a separate state with full
control over its law enforcement and government
entities. But a large majority of the island's
Tamil minority would like to have a solution
based on federalism and a decentralization of
power, Kadirgamar said. Tamils comprise 13
percent of Sri Lanka's population, and Sinhalese
make up 73 percent.
Last Sunday, unidentified gunmen shot dead a
senior Buddhist monk close to a demarcation zone
separating government troops from Tamil Tiger
territory in the northeast, a day after soldiers
killed five rebels in separate incidents, wire
agencies reported. Troops have evicted the rebels
from areas they controlled under the terms of a
shattered 2002 cease-fire, which collapsed
gradually in recent months.
Richard A. Boucher, assistant secretary of state
for South and Central Asian affairs, who visited
Sri Lanka last week, announced that Washington
had suspended aid that was about to be disbursed
through the Bush administration's Millennium
Challenge Corp. because of worries about the rate
of abductions and killings on both sides. Sri
Lanka's human rights record and ballooning
defense spending had also prompted Britain to
suspend about $3 million in debt relief
assistance.
_____
[4]
Indian Express
May 20, 2007
MARCH OF THE RIGHTEOUS BRIGADE
by Tavleen Singh
Since this column is often wrongly accused of
nurturing ill-feelings towards Islam, I use the
chance this week to show that I bear equal
ill-will towards any religion that tries to
occupy the public space. How someone chooses to
worship in private does not interest me, but as
the citizen of a secular country, I refuse to
accept the right of priests and religious people
to impose their faith, sartorial tastes, and
morals upon the rest of us.
Last week it was the turn of Sikhs to launch
forth into the public arena. They took to the
streets in huge numbers wearing medieval costumes
and brandishing swords because of some imagined
insult to Guru Govind Singh. They looked like
lunatics on the loose and as a Sikh, I was
extremely irritated to see the religion I was
brought up in turned into a mockery.
Who are these people? How dare they think they
have a right to speak on behalf of all Sikhs?
Personally, I was discomfited by the fanatical
gleam in the eyes of young men who should have
better things to do than to run around
brandishing swords and unkempt beards. And over
what? Some little Baba in some little Punjab town
wears an outfit that supposedly resembles the
clothes Guru Govind Singh liked to wear! And we
are expected to believe that this was good enough
reason for this public display of religious
hysteria?
Where were the keepers of law and order? Is it
not an offence to wander the streets waving
swords? Why were these protests permitted in
cities across Punjab? Is it because the Akali
government is taking revenge on Baba Gurmeet Ram
Rahim Singh for urging his followers to vote
Congress in the recent Assembly elections? If it
is, then the Akalis have learned nothing from the
mistakes of the past. Mistakes for which
thousands of innocent people died terrible deaths
at the hands of terrorists because some fools in
positions of power thought religion and politics
made a good mix.
Whenever religion moves beyond private worship to
the public space this happens. Thousands of
Indians have died in riots caused by religion,
India was divided because religion was allowed to
intervene in matters that should have been
restricted to politics and still we appear to
have learned no lessons. We make no objections to
our political leaders consorting with religious
men who range from the dangerous to the bizarre.
Remember that Baba from Mathura whose blessings
came in the form of a kick on the head of
visiting dignitaries? Remember the dignitaries
who lined up to be kicked? One of them was
India's home minister. Unusually for a religious
person the kicking Baba seems to have had a
secret sense of humour.
My aversion to religion being allowed to occupy
the public arena is also because it brings forth
a particularly loathsome type of righteous
person. The sort of person who believes he has
the divine right to become arbiter of public
morals by using violence and intimidation if
necessary. The Indian state is easily brought to
its knees by this kind of 'righteousness' and
films and books have been banned on account of
it, but the real laboratory of loathsome
righteousness is Narenda Modi's Gujarat.
We saw it in action at the M.S . University's
Faculty of Fine Arts, Vadodara, in the
Chandramohan incident. Instead of locking up the
busybody who went poking his nose into other
people's paintings, the Modi government arrested
the student whose painting the busybody found
offensive.
Modi is famous for being loathsomely righteous in
the name of Hindutva, but this time he exceeded
his own high standards by showing the world - as
the sword-waving Sikhs did - that secular India
is no different from the worst kind of Islamic
state. The annoying thing about the loathsomely
righteous is also that they are usually stupid,
so they demanded a ban on Fanaa because Aamir
Khan commiserated with Medha Patkar when she
fasted against the Narmada Dam.
If they had been more intelligent they would have
noticed that if there was reason to demand a ban
it should have been because the film's hero is a
terrorist who steals a nuclear device from the
Indian army. With Parzania they failed to notice
that the film lied about Godhra.
The only way to stop being held to ransom by
people who should not have any right in a secular
country to occupy the public space is for the
state to ensure that religion remains a private
affair. When sword-waving Sikhs take to the
streets, they should be arrested, as should
fatwa-issuing maulvis and hate-spewing Hindu
fanatics. They violate the secular principles on
which India is built and if that is not an
offence I do not know what is.
______
[5]
People's Democracy
May 20, 2007
Editorial
STOP THIS VIGILANTISM
The RSS has concluded that the recent rout of the
BJP in the UP assembly elections was due to the
fact that it was not aggressive enough with its
Hindutva agenda. The message is clear. In the
days to come, all the tentacles of the communal
octopus are bound to flex their muscles in
sharpening communal polarisation and spreading
deeper the venom of communal hatred.
This, naturally, would be accompanied by
fascistic intolerance unleashed by the `cultural'
vigilantes of the RSS. This is precisely what
happened recently at the Maharaja Sayajirao
University in Vadodara in Gujarat. The local VHP
`moral police' barged into the fine arts
department of the university where students had
put up some paintings as a part of their internal
assessment. The VHP vandalised the paintings
claiming that they offend their sentiments and
sensibilities. The award winning student
Chandramohan was assaulted and roughed up. In
typical BJP-led Gujarat style, the police acted
promptly by arresting the victim of this
horrendous incident and not the attackers! Not
satisfied, the pro-vice chancellor of the
university acting in a manner of being more loyal
than the king suspended the dean of the faculty
because he defended his student! Chandramohan had
to spend nearly a week in jail before getting
bail. The dean continues to remain suspended. In
the meanwhile, the VHP vigilantes have laid siege
to the university, perhaps the premier fine arts
institution in the country which had been the
home for eminent artists of the likes of Bhupen
Khakkar, K G Subramaniam etc.
Naturally, this outrageous fascistic assault has
been condemned by all democrats, across the
country, as a brazen affront to the Indian
Constitution which guarantees the freedom of
expression. But, such incidents appear to be the
order of the day in Gujarat under Narendra Modi.
Popular films like Parzania which documents the
post-Godhra communal pogrom of 2002 has been
banned from being screened in Gujarat theatres. M
F Husain's gallery in Ahmedabad is vandalised,
part of an unprecedented chain of obnoxious
events forcing one of India's greatest living
artists to virtually live abroad in exile.
Continuous threats are issued that Husain would
be arrested the moment he sets foot in his own
country.
In a classic case of the kettle calling the pot
black, the fascistic `cultural police' of the RSS
tentacles accuse the likes of Chandramohan and M
F Husain of promoting enmity and hurting
religious sentiments of the people. (The arrest
warrants are under Section 153 (A) of the Indian
Penal Code which relates to this precise charge.)
The pretensions to moral outrage comes from a
government in Gujarat whose top police officers
shoot innocent couples after branding them as LeT
agents!
The BJP, in the meantime, has come out in a
brazen defence of the cultural vigilantism
displayed by the RSS tentacles, Vishwa Hindu
Parishad and Bajrang Dal. Speaking at the BJP's
parliamentary party meeting, the leader of the
opposition, Advani, has stated that the BJP could
not support a concept of personal artistic
freedom to hurt religious sentiments. And, of
course, what is not stated is that the
RSS/BJP/VHP/Bajrang Dal are the only ones who can
judge on such matters. The fascistic storm
troopers will, thus, as always and anywhere, be
both the prosecutor and the judge.
What makes this incident at the M S University
all the more outrageous is the fact that
routinely students display copies of many temple
sculptures in their academic work. In this
particular instance, as well, this occurred. In
any case, these exhibitions were, as stated
above, part of the internal academic assessment
and not meant for any public display.
Nevertheless, even if they were, will the saffron
brigade now target the temples at Khajuraho and
Konarak for their sexually explicit sculptures?
Clearly, the motivation behind such attacks by
the self-proclaimed defenders of religious
sentiments is to sharpen communal polarisation
for political and electoral gains. The casualty,
in the process, are the very freedoms guaranteed
in our Constitution. It is high time that the
secular democratic public opinion must rise
unitedly to put an end to such a situation in
which self-styled cultural vigilantes of the RSS
tentacles can violate and deny others the
fundamental rights enshrined in our Constitution.
______
[6]
Deccan Herald
May 20, 2007
INDIA NOT PRIVILEGE OR MONOPOLY OF HINDUS
Mangalore, DH News Service:
Delivering the inaugural address at the national
seminar on Communalism and Media, Justice Sachar
opined that there is a very conscious effort by
those who pretend to be the keepers of the
country to spread negative news about Muslims in
the country.
"India is not the privilege or monopoly of
Hindus. Muslims are very much a part of India's
history, culture, pride and heritage," said
former Supreme Court Judge Justice Rajendra
Sachar.
Delivering the inaugural address at the
national seminar on "Communalism and Media"
organised by Karnataka Communal Harmony Forum
here on Saturday, Justice Sachar opined that
there is a very conscious effort by those who
pretend to be the keepers of the country to
spread negative news about Muslims in the country.
No one has a right to ask a person whether he
or she is loyal to the country. Loyalty to a
country is nobody's preserve. It is automatic to
any natural citizen, Justice Sachar said and
added that the communal version that the Muslims
do not belong to the country and that they have
their sympathies to Pakistan is a vicious lie.
"Muslims are minorities because they are less
in number. This doesn't mean they have less
rights," he said and added that anyone who doubts
or makes fun of secularism is a traitor and is
violating the Constitution.
Senior journalist and film maker Nupur Basu
opined that media in India has become a very
powerful animal in the last one and a half decade
and that its increasing polarisation is a very
troubling trend. The various communal riots that
took place in the country recently were not
spontaneous as the politicians are trying to
prorogate, but were well engineered projects, she
said and added that the journalists have not done
enough on this matter yet.
Senior journalist and columnist Praful Bidwai
stated that Karnataka is one of the most rapidly
saffronising states in the country.
"Around 20,000 people were killed in communal
riots in India only in the last 10 years. This is
higher than the number of people killed in
terrorist attacks," Mr Bidwai said and added,
"The fact that Narendra Modi who has executed the
killing of 1,500 Muslims in Gujarat is the Chief
Minister of the state even 5 years after the
Godhra riots is extremely shameful to the whole
country".
Media is not just about Chronicling, it has to
analyse, has to remind people about past events
and act as a watch dog of the society, he said
and flayed the 'Murdochisation' and massive
decliner in diversity in the media.
Writer and activist Arundhati Roy opined that
the Modi government in Gujarat is using democracy
as a tool to prorogate fascism. She also said
that it is not right to blame the politicians
alone for the condition in Gujarat, for it is the
people who voted them to power, and hence they
are also responsible for their condition. She
further elaborated on the growth of RSS as a
prominent force in Indian politics.
Vartha Bharathi Editor Abdusalaam Puttige,
writer G Rajashekhar, Karnataka Communal Harmony
Forum State Secretary K L Ashok, district
president C N Shetty, Roshni Nilaya lecturer Prof
Rita Noronha, Karnataka Forum for Dignity
Secretary Abdul Lateef, PUCL President P B D'Sa,
Mangalore University Chair in Christianity
Chairman Fr John Fernandes and Chitra
Publications Managing Director B V Seetharam
among others were present on the occasion.
______
[7]
Communalism Combat
May 18, 2007
PRESS STATEMENT
We as citizens of India, committed to Peace
between peoples, communities and nations,
standing for equality for all strongly condemn
the dastardly blasts after Friday prayers at the
Hyderabad Mecca Mosque today. Terror attacks have
no religion and victims of all communities fall
prey to these premeditated and violent attacks.
India being a secular democratic republic
committed to its constitutional mandate must
ensure that all its agencies of State and Law
Enforcement look at all acts of terror
dispassionately and acknowledge that these can be
planned and carried out by outfits of all colours
and hue who eschew and promote hatred and
violence. International terror outfits as well as
those that use religion to generate terror from
within the country. All must be equally put under
intelligence scanners. To date the activities of
all such outfits, despite their proven and public
record of generating acts of terror and violence
including perpetrating pogroms against sections
of Indians, have NOT been scrutinized with the
same rigour as those of know terror outfits. We
must not forget the lessons, unraveled, and yet
to be unraveled following the nanded (2006 and
2007) and Malegaon (2006) blasts in Maharashtra.
Teesta Setalvad
Javed Anand
Arvind Krishnaswamy
Nandan Maluste
Rajendra Prasad
Sabrang Communications & Publishing Pvt. Ltd.
P.O.Box 28253, Juhu Post Office, Juhu, Mumbai 400
049. Tel.: 26602288 / 26603927, Fax: 26602288
Email: sabrang at bom2.vsnl.net.in. Web: www.sabrang.com
______
[8]
People's Tribunal on Nandigram
NOTIFICATION
WHEREAS on 14th March, 2007, a large section of people/local residents
protesting against the entry of the huge armed contingent of police
and other categories of armed forces in Nandigram area, Purba
Medinipur, West Bengal, were allegedly attacked, and injured and
killed in the police firing;
AND whereas 14 people including women (according to the government
version) were officially confirmed as being killed in the violence
while many women and men were severely injured by firing, lathi-
beating and /or use of toxic materials;
And whereas there were also incidents of arson, carnage, violence,
killing and flight from affected villages starting from the month of
January 2007, including the incidents of violence on 6 / 7th January
2007;
And whereas there has been continuation of such violence even after
14th March incident, including that on 30th April 2007;
And whereas there has been considerable public reaction, outcry and
commotion over the14th March incident; and other incidents of
violence; and whereas it has been prima-facie established that the
police action of 14 March 2007 is violative of Article 21 of
Constitution of India and of various provisions of the laws of the
land and of human rights.
And whereas the All India Citizens' Initiative are of the firm opinion
that it is necessary to constitute an independent People's Tribunal
for the purpose of finding truth about the aforesaid matter(s), which
is definitely a matter of public importance;
And whereas no Judicial Inquiry Commission has been set up by the
Government authorities to inquire into the aforesaid matter(s);
Therefore, in these circumstances, the All India Citizens'
Initiative, comprising of eminent citizens from various sections of
society of India, decides to set up a people's Tribunal consisting of
judges and juries namely.:
Justice Bhargava, Ex-Chief Justice Sikkim High Court
Prabash Joshi, Editor, Jansatta
Minakshi Sen Bandopadhyay, Ex-Member, Womens Commission, Tripura
Lalita Ramdas, Social Activist
John Dayal, Journalist and Human Rights Activist
Jyotirmay Samajder, Doctor
And others
in order to investigate the aforesaid matter(s)
The TERMS OF REFERENCE OF THE TRIBUNAL shall be as follows:
(i) to inquire into the background, causes, course, nature and motive,
if any leading to the incident of 14th March;
(ii) to consider whether any organized group or groups of people or
individual/individuals was/were involved in the incident and /or were
behind the incident;
(iii) to ascertain whether the reported state violence and alleged
mass killings were done or purported to be done for restoration of
public order and for establishment of rule of law in the affected
areas, and to find out responsibility of the state authorities,
administrative as well as law enforcing agencies;
(iv) to inquire into the nature of social, economic and medical
consequences upon the victims in particular as well as the people of
Nandigram and adjoining areas at large;
(v) to examine whether there was any cases of disappearances/missing
arising out of the police action/or state-supported actions and also
to examine truthfulness of allegations of lapse or failure on the part
of police and medical practitioners towards injured victims;
(vi) to consider such other matters relevant or incidental to the
aforesaid terms of reference as the tribunal may deem fit and
proper .
With this TERMS OF REFERENCE, the TRIBUNAL is now issuing this public
notification [ ref.no PTN-01/05/007 dt 16.05.07] inviting the State
Government, District Administration, Purba Medinipur, including police
administration of both State and District level, the Chief Medical
Officer of Health of the District and other doctors and sisters
attached to health departments and hospitals of the district,
political parties, associations /organizations /(mass and /or social )/
NGOs, members of the public having knowledge or acquainted with the
INCIDENT or other incidents or facts relevant to the above TERMS OF
REFERENCE, to furnish to the Tribunal Statements of Facts relating to
the aforesaid incident or the above terms of reference.
_____
[9] BOOK REVIEWS:
(i)
Outlook Magazine | May 28, 2007
A RIOT OF COMMEMORATING
The mutiny as seen through literature, folksong,
missives and a canonical episode ...
by Shahid Amin
BOOKS ON 1857
All nations, old and new, claim their antiquity in their own ways.
Nation-states-Firangi, Francisi, Amriki, or our
own-find it impossible to recollect without
commemorating. As national markers,
commemorations allow for the passage of
identity-bearing citizens through hallowed time.
During such hooplas, both the Republic and the
public make demands for historical 'item numbers'.
But how does one convey the tumult that was 1857:
mutiny and insurgency, plebeian disorder and
state terror, atavistic proclamations and radical
stirrings, within the contours of the India of
today? How does one narrate the 'Ghadar', when
the voice of the native rebel (of sundry accents)
has been strangled into oblivion? Till very
recently, most accounts of 1857, both learned and
popular, have not been too bothered by the
paucity of 'native sources'. The records of the
past-as also in the present-are generated and
kept by victors, or rulers, even if we elect them
ourselves.
Rebellion 1857, published 50 years ago, and now
reissued, represents the best of popular Marxist
scholarship. A handy compendium which highlights
the impress of the Upsurge on Urdu literature and
folk songs, it underscores the contribution of
peasants, artisans and 'Muslim revivalists' to
the making of the Ghadar. It has a detailed piece
on the making of the rebellion, especially in
Delhi, where Bahadur Shah Zafar was a prisoner of
the sepoys, and of history. The irony of
featuring a reclining Zafar as a huge puppet,
perched atop the Red Fort, stirring daintily in
response to the pull of strings, was perhaps
deliberately invoked in the recent mega show in
the capital! An illuminating essay on Ghalib's
view of the loss and recapture of Delhi, and
another on the folk songs of 1857 present the
non-combatants' perceptions of the events.
The Penguin 1857 Reader is a fresh collection,
where the documents of the time, and extracts
from a spate of British 'Mutiny Narratives' that
followed, speak to us directly. We have here some
interesting letters, impressions, recollections
and analyses of actors and contemporary and
near-contemporary writers. The pre-revolt
missives sent by Laxmibai to British officers,
the report on the circulation of chapatis by
Delhi policemen, the plight of English officers
and families, and accounts of British reprisals.
There are extracts from the trial of Bahadur Shah
Zafar, Queen Victoria's proclamation offering
amnesty to all save those charged with the
killing of 'British subjects', translations of
folk songs, newsreports from Europe and US, and
the representation of 1857 in English fiction.
Brief introductions provide the context.
Nayar's companion volume, The Great Uprising, has
a much tighter storyline. Well-researched, it
provides a potted history of British rule in
India, settling down to an innovative retelling
of the events in the "many theatres of the war".
To recount the entire story of 'The Sepoy War',
cluttered as it is with disparately connected
events, without letting the reader's attention
waver is a major achievement. The downside is the
virtual absence in Nayar's account of the
generalised uprising, especially in the Ganga
valley. He links 1857 rather coyly with Gandhian
nationalism, thus muddying a fine copybook
unnecessarily.
Rudrangshu Mukherjee's Spectre of Violence makes
no such leap of imagination. He focuses instead
on a canonical episode of rebel violence: the
massacre of besieged and depleted English
combatants and women and children at Satichaura
Ghat, and subsequently at the enclosed
Bibighar.In a finely tuned analysis, Mukherjee
dares to look this violence-and the evidence-in
the face, not to hail it, but to show how the
various British accounts of these events got
constructed by an interplay between what was
witnessed, remembered and enshrined. We have
already moved away from a head count-colonialist
and nationalist-in the grisly sense of that term.
And entered history's estate, where historians
are often in a position to establish not just
what happened in the past, but also how memory
and memorialisation play on the certitude of
facts.
o o o
(ii)
The Globe and Mail
May 19, 2007
SRI LANKA NOVEL LIVES UP TO ITS BZZZZZ
by Shyam Selvadurai
Mosquito
By Roma Tearne
HarperCollins, 296 pages, $29.95
In 1987, Theo Samarajeeva, the hero of Roma
Tearne's debut novel Mosquito, leaves behind his
life in England and returns to Sri Lanka, the
country of his birth. What drives him back is the
tragic death of his Italian wife, Anna, during a
mugging. Theo, a world-renowned novelist, is
hoping to lick his wounds and resume work on a
book in an idyllic seaside villa along Sri
Lanka's southern coast.
The world around Theo, however, is far from
idyllic. He has returned into what is often
regarded as the most turbulent time in Sri
Lanka's 23-year-old civil war. The government has
extended its term in parliament without an
election. In order to combat the Tamil Tigers in
the north and a growing Maoist revolution in the
south, the government has armed civilian units
known as Home Guards. These militia are not
answerable to anyone and have begun to kill
scores of young people in the south, burying them
in mass graves.
Since his arrival at the villa, Theo has taken an
interest in Nulani Mendis, a 17-year-old girl
from the neighbourhood who visits him regularly.
Her father was murdered some years before for his
political opinions, and the girl has remained
mute since then, taking refuge in her drawings.
Theo sees immediately that Nulani is a gifted
artist, and under his care and affection she
begins to emerge from her shell. Soon Theo finds
he is falling in love with her.
Theo is unaware of the dark undercurrents in this
idyllic village by the sea. His loyal manservant,
Sugi, who is from the village, knows better. "Be
careful sir," Sugi warns him. "You do not yet
fully understand this ruined place. ... We are so
confused by the war."
Sugi is particularly concerned about Theo's
relationship with Nulani. Her uncle, the leader
of the local Home Guard unit, has other plans for
his niece. But it is not in Theo's nature to be
careful. Soon things come to a head and Theo is
abducted by Nulani's uncle, acting on
instructions from the Sri Lankan army. Theo is
imprisoned by the army and tortured.
This abduction puzzled me. Why would a government
risk worldwide censure by imprisoning and
torturing a writer of Theo's stature? His books
expressed sympathy toward the Tamils, it's true,
but he has maintained a low profile and not been
involved in any muck-raking.
It is equally puzzling that the four-year
disappearance of a writer of this stature raises
no stir in the publishing world or in the media.
When Theo does turn up, all his agent has to say
is, "For God's sake, Theo, I thought you were
dead. I sent you letter after letter but you
never replied. I tried phoning but your lines
were constantly down."
Writer Frank O'Connor has said that the novel is
an art form that builds around the nature of time
and the effects that time has on events and
characters. I believe this is the great pleasure
of the novel, and in this aspect, Mosquito amply
rewards. Tearne, a Sri Lankan visual artist
educated and living in England, uses her keen eye
to render details of place and character in a
startling and original way.
And once she has established her world, readers
witness how people and places change over time:
Marriages collapse and come back together,
beloved characters die, others grow old, the
young become disillusioned. The rural village
grows more metropolitan, until it becomes almost
a suburb of Colombo, the capital. Tearne does
wonderfully what any novelist writing about
modern Sri Lanka must do: capture a balance
between its aching beauty and its horror.
Shyam Selvadurai's most recent novel is Cinnamon Garden.
_____
[10] EVENTS:
Calling students, artists, poets, journalists,
film-makers, designers, art historians, critics,
art lovers, doctors, architects, scientists,
writers, lawyers, activists and all other
citizens!
The recent Sangh Parivar offensive against the
Fine Arts Faculty of M.S. University is another
episode of blatant bullying in the name of
religion.
A Dharna is organised to demand:
1. Dismissal of case against Chandra Mohan
2. Immediate revoking of the suspension order against Dr. Shivaji
Panikkar
3. Vice-Chancellor's resignation/removal for
his inability to take any action against the
intruders
We, the citizens against fascism, stand for our
democratic rights to free expression. Please do
come in large numbers to strengthen the voice.
Venue: In front of Town Hall, Ellisbridge, Ashram Road, Ahmedabad
Date: Wednesday, 23rd May 2007
Time: 5:00 pm onwards
Please circulate this email to as many people as possible. Thanks!
For details please contact: 98240 26069 (Pravin Mishra), 079 26463792,
26447691 (Imran Ali)
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
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Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
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