SACW | June 8-12, 2007

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Jun 12 05:56:39 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire | June 8-12, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2417 - Year 9

[1] Sri Lanka: Expulsion of Tamils from Colombo 
stopped - Actions by citizens groups led to 
Supreme court intervention
(i) Open Letter to President Mahinda Rajapakse to 
stop the expulsion of Tamils from Colombo
(ii) Eviction of Tamil Citizens Highlights Divide 
in Sri Lanka (National Peace Council)
(iii) Supreme court restrains abuse of power (Jehan Perera)
[2] Bangladesh: Lawrence Lifshultz Interview on 
Coup of 1975 and Mujib's Assassin Mohiuddin (cbc)
[3] Pakistan: A Political Movement in the Making  (S Akbar Zaidi)
[4] India: Prevent A Nuclear Disaster - Freeze 
the Koodankulam project! (Praful Bidwai)
[5] UK - India: Text of House of Commons Motion on Arrest of Dr Binayak Sen
[6] Why is India's Picasso staying away? (Shashi Tharoor)
[7] USA/India: Sangh Spreads Its Cloak In American Campus (Girish Agrawal)

______

[1]  SRI LANKA: EXPULSION OF TAMILS FROM COLOMBO 
STOPPED - LETTERS FROM CITIZENS GROUPS AND THE 
SUPREME COURT ORDER 

(i)

Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 5:42 PM
Subject: [PR] Open Letter to President Mahinda 
Rajapakse to stop the expulsion of Tamils from 
Colombo

OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT MAHINDA RAJAPAKSE TO 
STOP THE EXPULSION OF TAMILS FROM COLOMBO


Honorable Mahinda Rajapakse,
President of Sri Lanka

On receiving reports of the expulsion of Tamils 
from various locations in Colombo this morning, 
June 7 2007, members of our organizations visited 
the Wellawatte, Pettah and Peliyagoda areas and 
spoke to various persons who had been affected by 
the process and the police in the area. This move 
is directly attributed to the statement made by 
the IGP on the 1st of June, claiming that Tamil 
people cannot remain in Colombo without a valid 
reason. On May 31 Tamils from the North and East 
residing in lodges in Pettah were forced to 
leave, as lodge owners were reportedly instructed 
by the police to not to shelter people from the 
North and East who had no "valid reasons" for 
being in Colombo.

According to the information we have received, in 
an operation that commenced in the early hours of 
the morning, police and army officers visited 
various lodges occupied predominantly by Tamils 
in Colombo and forcibly removed Tamils from these 
guesthouses. In several instances, eyewitnesses 
reported that these were not from the local 
police stations.

Hundreds of Tamils from the Northern and Eastern 
Provinces, who had been staying in Colombo for a 
range of reasons were forcibly loaded onto buses 
and taken to Peliyagoda. A Police Officer at the 
Peliyagoda Police reported that at least 8 buses 
with approximately 50 people in a bus left 
Peliyagoda. Later today, we heard that the IGP 
had clarified to the party leaders meeting in the 
parliament that 6 buses had left for Vavuniya, 1 
bus to Batticaloa and 1 bus to Trincomalee. At 
8.30am in the morning, an officer at the 
Wellawatte Police reported that 3 buses with 
approximately 60 people left for Trincomalee and 
that they would be sent to Jaffna by ship. Later 
on in the day, the Wellawatte Police reported a 
figure of 83. However, as of now, there is no 
confirmation of the numbers of people who were 
put on the buses, nor of their names.

Many of the lodge managers, and remaining 
inmates, complained to us that people were given 
less than half an hour to pack all their 
belongings and board the CTB buses that were 
parked outside these lodges. They were also not 
told their exact destination, only that the 
return to their homes was being 'arranged'.

The criteria for their expulsion seemed to be 
determined arbitrarily by the police and army. 
Even in some cases where lodgers were able to 
explain their presence in Colombo to establish 
their bona fides, they were told that Tamils who 
were not permanent residents of Colombo had no 
right to be in Colombo and had to leave. 
According to a senior official at the Wellawatte 
Police, the criteria for determining return was: 
those who wished to return but did not have the 
funds to do so; those who had no rationale for 
remaining in Colombo; and those who said they 
were remaining in Colombo out of fear.

The Police claimed that they were simply 
assisting Tamils return to their home towns, and 
that they had come to know about these desires 
during checking carried out. The reports from 
residents, owners and staff of lodges, eye 
witnesses to the expulsion however are in 
complete contrast to these accounts. People were 
forced to leave, even those who were in Colombo 
for health reasons and were not fit to travel.

While we are full cognizant of the current 
security situation and the need to maintain close 
surveillance of the city and its environs, in 
terms of the human rights principles that guide 
us in our work as human rights defenders, we are 
convinced that the above process is NOT capable 
of guaranteeing security and rather creates 
further polarization between the different ethnic 
communities that share this island, and heightens 
the sense of marginalization and alienation of 
Tamil people of this country.

We reaffirm the principle enshrined in the 
Constitution of Sri Lanka guarantees all Sri 
Lankans the right to choose their own residence 
(temporary or permanent), and freedom of movement 
and maintain that what has taken place in Colombo 
today is a flagrant violation of this principle, 
and a disgrace to humanity.

We call on you, as our head of State, to take all 
steps available to call an immediate halt to this 
practice, and to offer facilities of return to 
Colombo to anyone who has been forcibly removed 
from Colombo in this process.

Sincerely yours,

Center for Human Rights and Development (CHRD)
Center for Policy Alternatives (CPA)
Free Media Movement (FMM)
INFORM Human Rights Documentation Center (INFORM)
Institute of Human Rights (IHR)
International Movement against All forms of Racial Discrimination (IMADR)
Law & Society Trust (LST)
Rights Now (RN)

7th June 2007

o o o

(ii)

National Peace Council
of Sri Lanka
12/14 Purana Vihara Road
Colombo 6
Tel:  2818344, 2854127, 2819064
Tel/Fax:2819064
E Mail:  npc at sltnet.lk
Internet:  www.peace-srilanka.org

08.06.07

Media Release

EVICTION OF TAMIL CITIZENS HIGHLIGHTS DIVIDE IN SRI LANKA

The ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka has taken a 
sharp turn for the worse with the police forcibly 
transporting over 350 Tamil people out of the 
city overnight for security reasons. This 
includes many women and children who had been 
temporarily residing in Colombo in lodges and 
rented places. The images of buses packed with 
people being forcibly deported from the capital 
city makes a mockery of a united Sri Lanka in 
which all citizens enjoy equal rights. While 
their ultimate destination remains unclear, 
recent statements by police authorities suggest 
that these people will be sent to various places 
in the north and east.

This event appears to have come in response to 
the recent LTTE bomb blasts in Colombo port and 
the Colombo suburb of Ratmalana with consequent 
civilian casualties. The National Peace Council 
has condemned and called upon the LTTE to 
immediately halt such acts of violence. We 
believe that attacks of this nature continue to 
detract attention, both within Sri Lanka and 
internationally, away from the real issue of 
Tamil rights and aspirations. On the other hand 
we believe that the manner in which this eviction 
of Tamil civilians took place, with a round up in 
the early hours of the morning, without any sort 
of due process, was totally unacceptable.

In responding to these attacks by forcibly 
evicting Tamil citizens back to the north and 
east, the government has provoked feelings of 
anguish, alienation and bitter anger within the 
entire Tamil community, and condemnation from Sri 
Lankans of goodwill and the international 
community. It is indeed tragic that the 
government has become the principal reflector of 
the divided nature of the polity, and that it 
should fail to realise that measures of this 
nature can drive people to the brink. This action 
could play into the hands of separatist forces 
who would interpretit as tantamount to ethnic 
cleansing and seek to further justify their 
claims for separation. Prior to taking this 
precipitous action, the government could have 
specified the criteria under which people from 
outside could stay in Colombo or have to leave in 
view of the current security conditions, and 
given a time frame within which these specific 
restrictions would apply.

Colombo has long provided a safe haven for people 
from the North and East who might otherwise be 
forced to live in deeply insecure and desperately 
poor conditions and in areas where government and 
LTTE forces are engaged in battles which include 
air bombardment and artillery fire that have 
severely victimized the civilian population. The 
latest government position seems to be that Tamil 
citizens from the North and East can only reside 
in Colombo if they can satisfy the security 
forces who raid their places of residence. This 
is a gross violation of the human rights of 
citizens under the Sri Lankan constitution and in 
terms of international law to live or reside 
wherever they choose to.

The National Peace Council demands that the 
government immediately stop evicting Tamil 
citizens from Colombo and elsewhere. We are 
extremely concerned about the fate of an 
estimated 15-20,000 Tamil civilians who are 
residing in lodges in Colombo who may be 
subjected to the same fate. We also demand that 
the government and LTTE cease using violence that 
causes death and injury to innocent civilians. We 
call on both parties to return to the negotiating 
table and work out a political solution to the 
conflict in order put an end to terrorism, 
violence and human rights abuses in Sri Lanka.

Executive Director
On behalf of Governing Council

o o o

(iii)

[Consequent to a fundamental rights application 
filed by Dr. Packiyasothy Saravanmuthu , Director 
for the Centre For Policy Alternatives, the 
Supreme Court of Sri Lanka has restrained the 
police from evacuating Tamils from Colombo 
lodges.]

o o

Daily Mirror
June 12, 2007

SUPREME COURT RESTRAINS ABUSE OF POWER

by Jehan Perera

The power of the judiciary, as the third branch 
of government, was demonstrated to great effect 
last week when the Supreme Court put a halt to 
the forcible eviction of Tamil people from 
Colombo. Until the Supreme Court gave its 
verdict, the eviction of 370 Tamil residents 
overnight from their lodges and rented 
accommodations seemed a foregone conclusion. The 
ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka took a sharp turn 
for the worse with the police forcibly 
transporting these Tamil people out of the city 
on the grounds of security reasons. Those evicted 
included many women and children who had been 
temporarily residing in Colombo contradicting 
government propaganda that Tamils lived 
harmoniously with their Sinhalese brethren in the 
south and, hence, that there was no ethnic 
conflict at all.

That the eviction order was a gross violation of 
the human rights of citizens under the Sri Lankan 
constitution and in terms of international law to 
live or reside wherever they choose to was 
patently clear and was mentioned by the 
opposition in the debate in Parliament. But the 
Rajapaksa government has shown itself to be a 
stubborn one, unwilling to change course in the 
middle. This is evident in the punishing military 
battles that are taking place in both the north 
and east and the government showing no signs of 
being deterred despite heavy casualties being 
reported and the government coffers being emptied.

True to form, and the somewhat anarchic 
conditions that prevail in the country, 
government spokespersons gave a mix of reasons to 
explain what was happening. The most frank 
admission was that the evictions were wrong, but 
necessary in war. The argument was made that the 
LTTE had infiltrated the city to carry out 
terrorist attacks, and most of the LTTE suspects 
lived in the type of lodges that were raided. 
Therefore, temporary residents who were Tamil and 
could not give an adequate reason for being in 
Colombo needed to be sent away. But there were 
also other government spokespersons who claimed 
that the Tamil people who were seen loaded onto 
buses and driven out of the city were doing so 
voluntarily, and the government had given them 
the benefit of free transport. The more 
disingenuous of government spokespersons claimed 
to have no knowledge of what was happening.

The media images of helpless Tamil people being 
shipped out of Colombo was an outrage to moral 
sentiments, except perhaps to hardened government 
leaders and their die hard nationalist 
supporters. What was unconscionable was that the 
people selected for eviction had barely any time, 
often less than an hour, in which to get ready to 
leave in the early morning hours before the crack 
of dawn. Most of the police personnel who took 
part in the raids, and the soldiers who 
accompanied them, did not know enough Tamil to 
elicit an understandable response from the 
agitated people they were questioning. As a 
result, it is likely that the police used 
intuition, and their own prejudice, to judge 
whether people could stay on or be evicted.

Civic Opposition

Not surprisingly, with this level of discretion 
being given to individual police officers, there 
was a considerable degree of variability in their 
choice of victims, which included the old, the 
sick and women with young children, in addition 
to young men who would be the prime suspects. 
Although the number of people directly affected 
by the first wave of evictions was relatively 
small, the fact that it could occur at all 
highlighted the ominous possibility that it could 
be followed up with subsequent waves of 
evictions. The fate of an estimated 15-20,000 
Tamil people who are residing in lodges in 
Colombo hung in the balance as an immediate 
consequence of the eviction order. As a result 
the feelings of anguish, alienation and anger 
within the Tamil community both in Sri Lanka and 
internationally reached fever pitch.

It soon appeared that the government had no clear 
idea as to where to send the evicted people to, 
except that they would be sent to the north and 
east. In doing so, the government was 
inadvertently legitimising the notion of a Tamil 
homeland in the north and east. Ironically, when 
anti Tamil riots broke out in Colombo and other 
parts of the country in 1983, the government of 
that time too decided to send the victims to the 
north and east, regardless of the ties those 
people had with the north and east. It is doubly 
ironic that the Rajapaksa government which has no 
ideological affinity at all to the Tamil homeland 
concept should have become the principal 
reflector of the divided nature of the polity and 
confirmed the belief of Tamil people that the 
north and east of Sri Lanka is the only place 
they can call their home.

The first evidence of active public opposition to 
the eviction of Tamil residents of Colombo came 
from the public demonstrations organised by small 
civil society groups. These groups have been seen 
periodically demonstrating in Colombo, and 
issuing media releases, on peace and human rights 
related issues, in addition to conducting 
awareness campaigns and offering legal aid to 
victims. The question has been whether they were 
having an impact on the decision making processes 
of the chief protagonists who appear to have the 
sole power to govern either well or badly. This 
time too it seemed that these civic groups would 
have no greater impact than making a statement 
and being a moral voice.

New Possibility

But this time there was indeed a major 
difference. Not only were the demonstrations 
bigger than usual, with even those from private 
sector establishments and international 
organisations joining in. A petition filed in the 
Supreme Court by one of the civil society groups, 
the Centre for Policy Alternatives, in the name 
of its director Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu, was 
accepted by the Supreme Court. In recent years, 
the Supreme Court's role in protecting minority 
rights and human rights alike has seemed to 
diminish. But in a decision that gives a new 
lease of life to those who believe in 
constitutional government and the role of the 
judiciary in checking governmental abuse of 
power, the Supreme Court granted interim relief, 
and ordered a halt to the evictions.

There have been periods in the recent 
violence-ridden history of the country when the 
Supreme Court has given people the hope that the 
cause of justice would be upheld even in the face 
of powerful and ruthless governments. The period 
1988-93 was one such. The period of terror in the 
bleak years of 1988-89 when the JVP launched its 
insurrection against the state was one in which 
the majority Sinhalese population lived with the 
same degree of uncertainty and fear that members 
of the Tamil minority live with today, in the 
context of abductions, killings and bland denials 
of responsibility by all concerned. But during 
those very dark days there was a sense amongst 
the people and human rights defenders alike that 
the Supreme Court was on their side, even if 
there was not much that it could do to reverse 
the tide of human rights abuses.

In the light of the positive direction taken by 
the Supreme Court in its most recent decision on 
the eviction of Tamils, there seems to be a new 
possibility for restraining the abuse of power by 
the government. Within hours of the Supreme 
Court's decision, the government announced that 
the evicted Tamils would be brought back from 
wherever they had been abandoned in the north and 
east. The Prime Minister went before the media 
and admitted that a big mistake had been made and 
expressed the government's regret to the Tamil 
people. In a parallel development President 
Mahinda Rajapaksa disclaimed all knowledge of the 
forced eviction of Tamil people from Colombo and 
called on the Police Chief, who appears to be 
made the scapegoat, to submit a report on the 
incident.

These unbelievable reversals on the part of high 
government authorities are an indication of the 
power of the judiciary to direct the government 
on a new path of justice and respect for human 
rights. They may also indicate a shift in the 
balance of political power. But keeping Colombo 
safe from terrorist attacks will call for more 
than treating the Tamil population in Colombo 
with justice and dignity. The government will 
need to adopt that same principle of putting the 
human rights of people first in other parts of 
the country as well, most notably in the north 
and east where major battles are being fought. 
Likewise, if the LTTE wishes to be treated as the 
representative of the Tamil people and be treated 
on par with the government for purposes of 
negotiation, it too should adopt that same 
principle and refrain from acts that harm the 
civilian population.



______


[2]  [BANGLADESH: RADIO INTERVIEW - LAWRENCE 
LIFSHULTZ ON MUJIB'S ASSASSIN MOHIUDDIN & COUP OF 
1975]

www.cbc.ca

CBC Radio Show
Date:	2007/06/08
Time:	17:30:01

BANGLA LIFSCHULTZ
Duration: 00:13:31

When "As It Happens" first told the story of 
Mohuiddin Ahmed back on the 29th of May, it 
seemed like a relatively simple cry for help. A 
former Bangladeshi army officer was begging 
Canada for asylum. He was about to be deported 
from the United States to face execution for his 
role in a thirty year-old coup.

But we've been doing a little spadework since 
then. And with every interview, the story reveals 
itself to be more and more like a Graham Greene 
novel -- in which individual lives are caught up 
in international intrigues beyond their ken.

Lawrence Lifschultz has been following the story 
of the 1975 coup from the beginning. He's the 
former South Asia correspondent for the Far 
Eastern Economic Review. We reached Mr. 
Lifschultz in Branford, Connecticut.

http://www.cbc.ca/mrl3/8752/asithappens/20070608-aih-2.wmv

______

[3]


Economic and Political Weekly
June 2, 2007

PAKISTAN: A POLITICAL MOVEMENT IN THE MAKING
The largely unexpected public response to the 
dismissal of the chief justice by Musharraf has 
significantly changed the political situation in 
the country. With the politicisation of the 
issue, the growing "movement" is creating a 
serious problem for the president.

by S Akbar Zaidi

Many of Pakistan's best known newspaper 
columnists and analysts, especially those who 
were politically active in the late 1960s, are 
calling the present times and mood in Pakistan, 
"revolutionary", and are making numerous 
references to the 1968-70 period. Of a later 
generation of writers, there are those who are 
comparing Pakistan today to the 1986-88 period, 
and here too, one hears the word revolution 
repeated many times in columns, as well as on the 
electronic media. Whatever one wants to call it, 
there is no doubt that the political process 
underway in Pakistan today is probably the most 
significant development that has taken place in 
many, many years. Numerous events and 
developments have taken place in the last 10 
weeks, which may have changed Pakistan's future 
for some time to come, if not permanently. If one 
looks at just the last few weeks, there are four 
main events - or series of events, or processes - 
that have taken place which have changed 
Pakistan's political map.

A number of smaller happenings have also added 
additional dimensions to these developments. The 
four main actors/events which have come to the 
fore relate to the chief justice "issue", the 
muhajir Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), Benazir 
Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP), and the 
extraordinary new role and power of the 
electronic media.

Chief Justice Resigns

On March 9, the fully-uniformed chief of the army 
staff, president general Pervez Musharraf, 
summoned the chief justice of Pakistan Iftikhar 
Muhammad Chaudhry, to his office, and is supposed 
to have kept him waiting for five-and-a-half 
hours. In this period, it has been stated, that 
the chief justice was pressurised by the 
president along with a number of uniformed 
generals, to resign his post. The president's 
team had created a charge-sheet against the chief 
justice on a number of accounts related to the 
misuse of his office. He was accused of many 
things, including using a government helicopter 
to attend a funeral and ensuring for his son, a 
public servant, privileged postings. When he did 
not voluntarily resign, the chief justice was 
made "dysfunctional" and sent home to await 
further charges, and an acting chief justice of 
the Supreme Court of Pakistan, appointed in his 
place.

There is no denying the fact that this has been 
president general Musharraf's worst mistake and 
greatest miscalculation, and that he was 
ill-advised in taking this decision. He himself, 
very soon after it became clear what the reaction 
to this move was, said that a "conspiracy" had 
been hatched against him personally. For the 
government, there may have been reasons to take 
some action against the chief justice since he 
had taken a stand in a major privatisation case 
last year which embarrassed the government and 
revealed its wrong-doings, and the chief justice 
was increasingly making some (albeit muted) 
sounds, about Pakistan's disappeared people, many 
of whom are Baloch, who have been picked up by 
one of Pakistan's many "agencies" and have 
disappeared. It is important to state that the 
chief justice is no trail-blazing revolutionary 
for, as a judge of the Supreme Court, he had 
signed all the nefarious laws and constitutional 
changes which president Musharraf designed 
without a whisper of protest.

Chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry was as 
much part of the establishment as was the chief 
of the army staff himself. With the chief of the 
army staff seeking a second term as president of 
Pakistan - which many judges and politicians feel 
is unconstitutional - he was advised by someone 
close to him that the chief justice would create 
a problem when it came to his re-election and 
hence should be removed. No one, least of all 
president general Pervez Musharraf, could have 
expected a response of this order, by all means 
novel in Pakistan's military-led history, that 
has made these last 10 weeks the weakest and most 
difficult of his seven-and-a-half years in 
office. Initially, seeing that their chief 
justice was not bowing down to military pressure, 
some lawyers were emboldened and started a public 
campaign to have a fair trial of the deposed 
chief justice and to have him reinstated. Slowly, 
this small campaign grew in nature and size, and 
some judges resigned their posts in pro- tests, 
and many judges started supporting the ousted 
chief justice. In the first few weeks of the 
campaign, the slogans were largely those related 
to the restoration of the chief justice and 
regarding upholding the stature and sanctity of 
the judiciary. The judiciary fought back to 
protect its own institutional interests and so in 
the process, emerged united. There was little 
"politicisation" and political parties, as always 
the opportunists most have been in the past, 
watched from the sidelines.

However, very soon it became clear that this was 
not just a protest against one decision, but 
there were clear beginnings of a "movement", for 
justice with political overtones. The lawyers 
were joined by a few activists from some 
political parties and by members of the public. 
While there has been considerable public support 
- as seen by popular meetings and response to the 
chief justice's various visits and trips to 
different parts of Pakistan - this has not been a 
"public" movement, but very much a lawyers' 
protest movement, with some though growing help 
from political parties.   However, the colour of 
the protest has changed, and from a collective 
action issue concerning the lawyers and their 
self- interest, the slogans and the politics of 
the movement have become far more politicised. 
From initially favouring the chief justice and 
his reinstatement, the protests soon became 
anti-government, anti-Musharraf, and have now 
become audibly anti-military. There is growing 
support for the lawyers' movement amongst 
different cross sections of society, as can be 
envisaged by the number and nature of people who 
are participating in the movement, many as 
observers rather than as activists and 
participants. Even the more radical slogans are 
being repeated in many quarters and the "Go 
Musharraf, Go" chant heard at most of the jalsas 
of the lawyers, is no longer uncommon. Yet, it 
must be remembered that while the lawyers' move- 
ment may have a lot of public support and 
sympathy and it has increasingly become 
"politicised", this is not, as yet, a "political 
movement" in the sense that is usually recognised.

The Issue Turns 'Political'

An extraordinary May 5 road-trip from Islamabad 
to Lahore, which usually takes four hours took 24 
and completely changed the mood and scale of both 
the lawyers and the government. The lawyers and 
their supporters realised that they were on to 
something bigger than they had envisaged, while 
the government/military felt that this was 
certainly not a normal issue. After all, this was 
the Punjab which was following the journey of the 
chief justice.

The MQM

In his address to different bar councils across 
Pakistan, the chief justice was scheduled to 
address the Sindh bar in Karachi on May 12. 
Karachi has been ruled by the Muttahida 
(previously muhajir) Quami Movement, since the 
early 1980s, when the MQM emerged as an urban 
militant political party, speaking for the rights 
of the settled migrants (muhajirs) from India 
after Partition. Its politics was known to have 
been one which was overtly violent, yet they were 
also popular. They have won all the elections 
that they have participated in since the 1980s 
from the larger towns of urban Sindh, especially 
Karachi. Because of their urban Sindh vote bank, 
they have also been part of the Sindh provincial 
government, as they have been since the elections 
of 2002. The city of Karachi has faced much 
violence, destruction and mayhem since the rise 
of the MQM, especially during the second Benazir 
Bhutto government in the 1990s. However, since 
1999, when general Musharraf and the military 
took over power, Karachi has been at peace and 
has prospered perhaps more than any other 
region/part of Pakistan.

The MQM- Military-Alliance is the other MMA which 
is part of the Pakistan political map. The period 
since 1999 has been the longest period of peace 
and prosperity that Karachi has seen probably 
since the 1960s. The first MQM cadre, brought up 
in an era of terror and violence in the 1980s and 
1990s, is perhaps in its late 30s and 40s, or 
even older. The MQM youth have, since 1999, lived 
in an era of peace, prosperity and stability as 
it has been part of government and has not needed 
violenceor terror to achieve its political or 
economic interests and goals. Clearly, demography 
and economic well-being have remade the MQM and 
its supporters, and until May12, overt violence 
was not part of the MQM's strategy. On May 12, 
the chief justice of Pakistan, Iftikhar Muhammad 
Chaudhry was scheduled to make a trip to Karachi. 
As a counter measure, the MQM decided to hold its 
own rally in support of general Pervez Musharraf. 
However, the MQM (which forms the government of 
Sindh and a major partner in the federal 
government) tried everything possible to stop the 
chief justice from coming to the city. After 
putting hundreds of road blocks across the main 
streets from the airport, they attacked small 
groups of those lawyers and political activists 
who wanted to come to the airport to receive the 
chief justice. Over 40 people were gunned down in 
cold blood. This was not the first time so many 
people were killed in Karachi in a matter of a 
few hours, but it was the first time for almost a 
decade, and the peace of the city was destroyed 
by those who were responsible for that peace.

The consequence of the killing of the 40 people 
in Karachi this time around, unlike the killings 
in the past, was unprecedented. Never before has 
there been such condemnation of the federal 
government, the provincial government and the MQM 
and its leaders, as now. The MQM has never had to 
make a tactical retreat in the past and has 
weathered every political storm that has come its 
way. This time however, it has been shaken by the 
reaction of politicians and from the media. What 
seems of interest is to try and understand why 
the MQM has been more loyal than the king 
himself. Why did the MQM do what no other 
political party in government has done, even when 
it could have disrupted the chief justice's 
visits and addresses? One reason for this is, 
that there is a strong MQM military alliance, 
when both need the other. It could be that the 
MQM panicked over the growing support for the 
chief justice and against general Pervez 
Musharraf. It could be that they wanted to show 
him that they were on his side and would not 
allow "their" city to be taken over by his 
opponents. (In fact, president general Pervez 
Musharraf has come out in extensive support of 
the MQM's way of handling things on May 12, and 
has said that they are completely innocent of the 
killings.)

The MQM needs the military as much as the 
military needs the MQM, and hence the 
enthusiastic support to each other. Other reasons 
suggest that the MQM military alliance is based 
not simply on any ideological/ politicalbasis, 
but that both have benefited from the billions of 
dollars worth of land deals made in Karachi. 
While the military may run Pakistan, MQM runs 
Karachi. The MQM-military nexus is based on each 
benefiting politically and economically through 
each others' support. However, the reaction 
against the way the MQM took over Karachi on May 
12, has backfired and added to a renewed 
resentment against it and many of its supporters 
have also been shocked and find it difficult to 
defend their party's actions. Importantly, the 
MQM, for the moment at least, stands isolated 
from the political mainstream, and only the 
president and his prime minister are left with 
embarrassing statements in their defence. Even 
many of Musharraf's ministers are unable to 
support MQM's actions of May 12. The PPP The 
biggest and most embarrassed loser in the process 
which started on March 9, has been Benazir Bhutto 
and her PPP, with more egg on her face than she 
would like. In April, when the chief justice 
issue had neither become as politicised as it is 
or had grown in scale to the size it is, Benazir 
Bhutto said that she was willing to make a deal 
with president general Musharraf allowing her to 
come back to Pakistan to participate in the 2007 
elections. She had even said that she had no 
objection to  being prime minister with him as 
president. President Musharraf too, had said that 
this was a possibility he could work with. 
However, after the lawyers' movement became 
bigger than anyone anticipated, and especially 
after the May 12 killings in Karachi, the main 
route open to Benazir Bhutto, is a littered 
minefield. With so much antagonism against the 
MQM for breaking with the settled political 
parliamentary process since 2002, Benazir Bhutto 
would face excessive protest if she were to go 
ahead with accepting a minor or  junior 
partnership with general Musharraf.

The big winner as a consequence of the events of 
May 12, and with the deal for the moment in 
hibernation, has been the king's party, the party 
in power at the moment, the PML-Q. What would 
happen to the 70 or so ministers in government, 
or the Chaudhry brothers of Gujarat who rule the 
Punjab under the banner of the PML-Q, if Benazir 
and Musharraf made a deal, has never been 
discussed. Clearly, while Musharraf may have 
required an alliance with the PPP, his current 
crop of ministers from the PML-Q, do not. Also, 
with the MQM and the PPP sharing a bitter past, 
it was never quite worked out how both will work 
together in Sindh, a province from where they 
draw their greatest support. For the moment at 
least, the Benazir-Musharraf deal has been put on 
hold. Many in government hoping to be elected, 
hope this stays so for some time to come.

Role of the Media

The star of the show since early this year has 
been what one can collectively call "the media". 
The revolution or political movement with its 
consequences are all the making of the media. 
They certainly are real and have mass support, 
but without constant live coverage, with history 
in the making as one watches, the sort of 
reaction one sees would not have taken place. The 
24 hour long car ride from Islamabad to Lahore of 
the chief justice was shown live on television, 
as were the murderous at- tacks on citizens and 
on TV stations in Karachi on May 12. While the 
visuals have been revolutionary in what they have 
depicted, what has been even more extraordinary, 
has been the media content, which has been truly 
revolutionary. Never before has one heard the 
slogans of Go Musharraf Go, or "No more military 
rule", on live television. Never before has the 
MQM been called a fascist party on live 
television by dozens of analysts, nor Altaf 
Hussain, the leader of the MQM equated with 
Hitler. Both in the electronic media and in the 
press, these parallels are made with great ease 
and with a great deal of space repeatedly, even 
daily. Just a few years ago, at least in Karachi, 
it would have been impossible to survive after 
calling the MQM fascist in private, leave alone 
in public, or calling Altaf Hussain, Hitler. Or 
for that matter, chanting slogans in the national 
assembly which were reproduced in all newspapers 
after May 12 'qatil, qatil, MQM' or 'qatil, 
qatil, Musharraf' ("killer, killer MQM" or 
"killer, killer Musharraf").

The press has been fairly free for some years 
now, but never so free or so powerful. The power 
of the press has been recognised and used by both 
the government and those who oppose it. Every 
speech of the leaders of the lawyers' movement is 
televised live, and they get away with saying 
whatever they want, including statements 
televised live such as, "down with the generals, 
down with the military". There have also been 
many attempts to gag the press and to silence it, 
but all such attempts have failed and rebounded 
back into the face of the government. The press 
is emerging as perhaps the most powerful hitherto 
unknown force in Pakistan's politics.

Along with all this, there have also been 
dramatic developments in Islamabad around the Lal 
Masjid and the Jamia Hafsa, a madrasa for girls. 
As all writers have been emphasising, just a few 
kilometres from the presidency, a group of ulema 
and their students, have raised the flag of the 
sharia and of the call to a "talibanisation", all 
in Musharraf's enlightened, moderate, Pakistan. 
It seems that this group of students and their 
leaders have been given a free hand to instil the 
fear of god in the hearts of Islamabad's Muslims. 
The comfort level of these instigators is so 
high, that many believe that the freedom they 
enjoy is deliberate and meant for publicity 
reasons. The fear, the argument goes, is not to 
be instilled in the hearts of the populace of 
Islamabad, but in the hearts of the Americans in 
Washington. The hope is that these cries of the 
"talibanisation of Pakistan" will be heard in 
Washington and will lead to continued and further 
support to president general Musharraf's 
enlightened moderation (or is it moderate 
enlightenment? One forgets), and the Americans - 
so critical and influential to the political 
economy and geopolitics of the region - will 
continue to support the man in uniform and in 
power in Islamabad today, rather than bring about 
any change over which they may have little 
control or influence.

Trouble for Musharraf

While Pakistan is in the throes of major 
developments, by no stretch of the imagination is 
this a revolution. It is barely a political 
movement, although it is in the process of 
becoming one. In 1968-70, 1977 or 1983, 1986-88, 
all political movements were organised around 
political parties and political leaders. Today, 
the only "leader" is a chief justice, while some 
of the political parties are waiting to see when 
they can join president general Pervez 
Musharraf's camp and cut a deal with him, and 
most have only shown symbolic support to the 
lawyers' movement. The opposition to military 
rule is still as disorganised as it is 
opportunistic. Nevertheless, president general 
Pervez Musharraf is in a spot of bother, and 
needs to extricate himself from this hole he has 
dug himself into. It is probable that there will 
be some sort of change or transition in this year 
of two elections, but at the moment it is 
difficult to predict the out- come of this 
transition. President general Musharraf may be 
further weakened for the moment and may need to 
rebuild his rule, more inclusive this time along 
with more partners. It does not seem likely that 
he will leave voluntarily or give up power. He 
can always make a number of tactical retreats, 
and salvage some room for himself. One does not 
know what his most important constituency, the 
army, is thinking, but they may prefer to enjoy 
the benefits of military rule by supporting 
someone who has ensured that they all benefit. On 
the other hand, with the military being abused 
publicly, on television, it may be the army which 
calls for a collective retreat, to re-emerge 
after playing its ubiquitous "behind the scenes" 
role, which it did throughout the decade of 
democracy in the 1990s. The TINA factor - there 
is no alternative - however, might just result in 
the general-president's political longevity. It 
is 60 years and still the serving chief of the 
army staff general, is the president of Pakistan, 
ignominy of the worst kind.



______


[4]


Kashmir Times
11 June 2007

PREVENTING A NUCLEAR DISASTER - FREEZE THE KOODANKULAM PROJECT!

by Praful Bidwai

India has come to treat World Environment Day, 
June 5, as a mere ritual, involving lip service 
to the cause of environmental protection while 
promoting policies and activities that are 
ecologically thoroughly unsound. On the eve of 
the G-8 summit, our government could not even 
formulate a response to the question the world is 
asking: what does India intend to do, as one of 
the globe's fastest growing economies and its 
fifth biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, to cut 
its emissions? What is its strategy to mitigate 
climate change, besides making money through 
carbon trading? How long is the Indian elite 
going to hide behind its poor people to resist 
demands for limiting its growing contribution to 
global warming?
In recent years the Indian government has 
sanctioned countless environmentally hazardous 
industrial and mining projects, promoted the 
profligate use of energy and wasteful luxury 
consumption by the rich, allowed extensive 
deforestation and pollution of rivers, 
gratuitously diluted environmental clearance 
norms, and failed to remedy the human and 
ecological effects of large dams, chemical 
factories, and harmful activities along our 
vulnerable coast. In 1994, it instituted a system 
of Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for 
major projects, including public hearings-as a 
token of "transparency".
However, this has been so comprehensively 
subverted in practice as to have become a farce. 
A whole army of "consultants" has mushroomed, who 
will produce appallingly bad reports extolling 
hazardous projects-as "command performance" for 
their sponsors. Public hearings are conducted 
with cynical collusion between state pollution 
control boards (PCBs), EIA consultants, project 
sponsors and the district authorities.
Typically, the hearings' organisers ensure that 
the projects' opponents are not properly 
informed, nor heard. The District Collector's 
concluding report usually mocks the process and 
arbitrarily grants the project approval even when 
a majority of participants register their strong 
opposition. In any case, the report can be 
whimsically overruled by the Central Pollution 
Control Board or Ministry of Environment and 
Forests (MoEF).
I had experience of this last week in respect of 
a public hearing for the Russian-designed Units 3 
to 6 of the Koodankulam Nuclear Power Station 
(KNPS), proposed to be built by the Nuclear Power 
Corporation of India (NPC) at the Southern tip of 
India, less than 20 km from Kanyakumari. 
Ironically, Units 1 & 2, both of 1,000 MW, and 
costing a huge Rs 13,171 crores, are already 
three-fourths of the way through 
construction-without even an EIA, leave alone a 
public hearing. NPC claims, incredibly, that the 
new Units won't add to the environmental impact 
of the original project.
If approved, the 6,000 MW KNPS will be India's 
largest and most concentrated nuclear power 
centre, 10 times bigger than all other nuclear 
power stations (barring one). It must also be one 
of India's most hated and unpopular 
electricity-generating facilities. The public 
hearing of June 2 at Tirunelveli bore ample 
testimony to this. More than 2,000 people from 
three coastal districts (Tirunelveli, Tuticorin 
and Kanyakumari) attended it-a number that speaks 
to the strength of the anti-project sentiment.
The hearing took place in intimidating 
conditions-a police posse of 1,500, tight 
security barriers, nasty riot gear, "Striking 
Force" trucks and water-cannon vehicles, and 
armoured crowd control carriers called "Vajra". 
Yet, hundreds of people insisted that they be 
allowed to speak. Under MoEF guidelines, the EIA 
report summary must be widely publicised in the 
local language, and made available to people in 
advance. This didn't happen.
The Collector claimed that a Tamil translation of 
the EIA summary was available at designated 
offices. But he couldn't produce a copy. None 
among those present at the hearing had seen it. 
Many said they nothing was available in these 
offices during their visits.
The Collector, say MoEF rules, must conduct the 
hearing in "a systematic, time-bound and 
transparent manner, ensuring widest possible 
public participation district-wise. Every person 
present at the venue shall be granted the 
opportunity to seek information or 
clarifications. The summary of the. proceedings 
accurately reflecting all the views and concerns 
expressed shall be recorded. and read over to the 
audience. explaining the contents in the 
vernacular language."
None of this happened. Two hours into the 
process, after about 10 persons had spoken, the 
Collector abruptly closed the hearing and 
declared he would convey the assembly's 
sentiments to the PCB and MoEF. It's not as if 
there was violence or any other provocation to 
terminate the hearing. The people were simply not 
given a chance to register their views.
This gross violation of due process has further 
enraged the local people, who overwhelmingly 
oppose the project. They want the hearing to be 
resumed after MoEF requirements are fulfilled, 
including wide circulation of the EIA in Tamil.
It's not difficult to understand why the people 
hate the KNPS. They don't do so out of ignorance, 
but because they are literate, worldly-wise and 
aware of the hazards of nuclear power. The 
project is being foisted upon them without even 
an honest acknowledgement that nuclear power is 
fraught with problems, including generation of 
radioactive waste, routine releases of 
radioactivity and other toxic substances, and the 
possibility of catastrophic accidents like 
Chernobyl 21 years ago. It's one thing to claim 
that steps can be taken to overcome the hazards 
and risks; it's another to deny their existence 
altogether.
The Koodankulam project concentrates all the 
classical problems associated with nuclear power 
(discussed in this Column last February and in 
December)-in a magnified form. Thus, it will 
generate large amounts of spent fuel, which 
contains concentrated high-level radioactivity. 
But the EIA takes no account of this. The EIA 
greatly underestimates routine releases of 
radioisotopes like iodine-131 and noble gases. 
The plant will expose hundreds of occupational 
workers to high doses of radiation-a silent, 
invisible poison that damages cell DNA and causes 
cancers and genetic deformities. Like all reactor 
types-and Koodankulam is a Russian design, as was 
Chernobyl-KNPS can undergo a core meltdown, with 
devastating consequences for Tamil Nadu and 
Kerala, even Sri Lanka.
KNPS poses four additional problems that warrant 
its scrapping. First, it's being built at the 
edge of the Gulf of Mannar, one of the world's 
richest marine biodiversity areas, with 3,600 
species of flora and fauna, of which 377 are 
endemic. The thermal discharges from the plant 
are liable to adversely affect this sensitive, 
vulnerable, yet precious, biological reserve. 
Available data suggest that the seawater in the 
secondary cooling circuit will be discharged at a 
much higher temperature than the 7§C (above the 
incoming water) norm of MoEF. The amount of 
seawater circulated is 13 times higher than for 
the average Indian nuclear station.
Second, within a 5 km radius of the plant lie 
three large settlements: Koodankulam (pop. 
20,000), Idinthakarai (pop. 12,000), and a new 
Tsunami (rehabilitation) Colony (pop. 
2,000-plus). KNPS's location violates the 
Department of Atomic Energy's siting norms and a 
Tamil Nadu Government Order of May 31, 1988, 
which declares a 1.6 km-radius zone around the 
plant "prohibited". The next zone, in a 5-km 
radius, is a "sterilised area", where "the 
density of population should be small so that 
rehabilitation will be easier." Finally, "in the 
outlying area of 16 km, the population should not 
exceed 10,000."
Now, Koodankulam and Idinthakarai are just 2 to 4 
km from the plant as the crow flies. And the 
Tsunami Colony' last row is less than one km from 
the reactors. The population in the 16-km radius 
is at least 70,000. So either NPC will flagrantly 
violate its own norms, or thousands of families 
will be brutally uprooted-and separated from 
their livelihood as fisherfolk. This is 
unconscionable and altogether too disgusting even 
to contemplate.
Third, the plant is being built in a seriously 
water-stressed area. It originally planned to 
bring fresh water from the nearest source, 
Pechipparai dam, 65 km away. But in the face of 
popular resistance, the idea was dropped. It will 
now daily desalinate 48 million litres of 
seawater-an exorbitantly expensive technology, 
unproved on an industrial scale. This will send 
the costs of electricity it generates through the 
roof.
Finally, even without this additional expense, 
the original (optimistically) estimated cost of 
Koodankulam's power is Rs 3.08 per unit. By 
contrast, the cost of electricity from the nearby 
Neyveli thermal power station will be Rs 1.66 to 
1.74 (on capacity factors of 85 and 70 percent 
respectively). The Koodankulam estimate excludes 
the costs of decommissioning nuclear reactors 
(which are one-third to one-half their capital 
costs).
KNPS represents a rotten deal, especially because 
Southern Tamil Nadu has become the wind energy 
capital of India-with hundreds of megawatts of 
renewable, cheap and safe energy.
Koodankulam was always a political bargain, 
signed during the last days of the USSR, to 
symbolically reaffirm "Indo-Soviet (Russian) 
friendship". It remains that despite today's 
changed conditions. But there are better, less 
toxic and expensive ways of expressing 
friendship. Koodankulam must be scrapped.


______


[5]

House of Commons
Thursday 7 June 2007
Notices of Motions for which no days have been fixed
('Early Day Motions')

* The figure following this symbol is the total 
number of Members' names submitted in support of 
the Motion, including names printed for the first 
time in this paper.


1615	ARREST OF DR BINAYAK SEN	5:6:07
	Ms Diane Abbott
	Peter Bottomley
	Lynne Jones
	Mr Martin Caton
	Mr Ronnie Campbell
	Jeremy Corbyn
	* 11
	Mr George Galloway	John Hemming	Mr Mike Weir
	Mr Dai Davies

	That this House is concerned at the 
arbitrary arrest of the human rights activist and 
General Secretary of the Chhattisgarh unit of the 
People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), Dr 
Binayak Sen, in the Indian state of Chhattisgarh; 
notes with concern that this arrest has taken 
place in the aftermath of the alleged involvement 
by the police in the unlawful killing of 12 
adivasis or tribal people; further notes that, 
despite these allegations being substantiated by 
a police inquiry, the state government still 
refuses to approve the prosecution of those 
suspected to be involved; further notes that this 
has occurred in the context of an escalation in 
violence between Maoist rebels and the Salwa 
Judum militia, which is widely believed to be 
sponsored by the state government; further notes 
with concern that other members of the PUCL have 
been subject to harassment and threats of arrest; 
and therefore supports the calls of Amnesty 
International for the state government to release 
Dr Sen immediately unless he is charged with a 
recognisably criminal offence and take urgent 
steps to end the harassment of the other human 
rights defenders in the state.

______


[6]


Times of India
10 June 2007

WHY IS INDIA'S PICASSO STAYING AWAY?

by Shashi Tharoor

It's a lovely small apartment in Dubai, with a 
view from the balcony of the old port where dhows 
used to drift in before the town had a single 
skyscraper. But what interests me is the view 
inside: a room with a single easel, a bare floor, 
and canvases stacked against the wall. And off a 
narrow corridor, a treasure trove: mounted close 
to each other on the walls of a bedless bedroom, 
88 previously unknown paintings by the Master 
himself, India's Picasso, MF Husain.

This tiny flat in the Gulf Emirate is Husain's 
studio, his escape, his museum, his refuge. The 
last word sticks in my throat as i utter it. Why 
should our greatest living artist need a refuge 
from his homeland? For the last year Husain has 
been shuttling between Dubai and London, and has 
not set foot in India, where his paintings have 
been vandalised, his exhibitions assaulted. So 
many abusive cases have been filed against him 
that a court even went so far as to attach his 
home and his property - a fatuous decision since 
reversed by the Supreme Court. But Husain fears 
the harassment will not end there; the moment he 
sets foot in Delhi or Mumbai, he says, he is sure 
to be dragged off to the lock-up, tormented by 
legal proceedings. He is 92 and does not want to 
spend his years battling the persecution of the 
petty hypocrites who have turned on him. So he 
stays away.

His tormentors profess to be defending their 
faith and the nation's cultural integrity. They 
object to the use of nudity in his art, 
particularly in his evocations of Hindu 
mythological figures and deities, which they 
claim offends them. Instead of applauding the 
decision of a Muslim artist to derive inspiration 
from the ancient legends of his homeland, they 
accuse him of desecrating a faith that is not 
his. Instead of honouring an artist who has 
revived worldwide appreciation of the richness 
and diversity of the sources of Indian culture, 
they have attacked him for insulting Indian 
culture, reducing Indianness to the narrow 
bigotry of their own blinkers. It is ironic that 
a profoundly patriotic painting of the 
geographical shape of India in the persona of a 
semi-naked woman elicited the loudest howls of 
outrage from these philistines.

It is a disgrace that our democracy has allowed 
the most intolerant elements of our society to 
derail the life and work of such a great Indian 
artist. These so-called Hindus have clearly never 
seen the inside of any of our ancient temples, 
have never marvelled at Khajuraho or seen a 
sunset at Konarak. Worse, Husain is far more 
steeped in the Hindu sensibility than they are. 
Theirs is a notion of 'Bharatiya Sanskriti' that 
is profoundly inauthentic, because it can be 
traced back no further than the Puritanism that 
accompanied the Muslim conquests.

Will they next attack the explicitly detailed 
couplings of Khajuraho, far more scandalous than 
anything Husain has ever painted? What about the 
Kama Sutra, the tradition of the devadasis , the 
eros of the Krishna Leela - are they all 
un-Indian now, or even un-Hindu?

When the late, great Mexican poet Octavio Paz 
wrote his final ode to our civilisation, In Light 
of India, he devoted an entire section to 
Sanskrit erotic poetry, basing himself, among 
other things, on the Buddhist monk Vidyakara's 
immortal 11th-century compilation of 1728 kavya , 
many of which are exquisitely profane. Are poets 
like Ladahachandra or Bhavakadevi, who a thousand 
years ago wrote verse after verse describing and 
praising the female breast, to be expelled from 
the VHP canon of 'Bharatiya sanskriti' ? Should 
we tell future Octavio Pazes seeking to 
appreciate the attainments of our culture that 
the Ramayana on Doordarshan is 'Bharatiya 
sanskriti ,' but a classical portrayal of the 
erotic longings of the gopis for Krishna is not?

It is time all Indians, but especially Hindus, 
woke up to what is being done to our heritage in 
our name. To reduce the soaring majesty of an 
inclusive, free-ranging, eclectic and humane 
faith to the petit-bourgeois morality of 
narrow-minded bigots is a far greater betrayal of 
our culture than anything an artist can paint. It 
is deeply disappointing, too, that our government 
has been silent in the face of the harassment of 
a living Indian icon. Only a handful of 
politicians - take a bow, Maneka Gandhi - have 
had the nerve to speak out against the barbarians 
who are destroying the image of India. And it's 
striking that the only state government that has 
had the courage to stand up for Husain is that of 
Kerala, which has awarded him the Raja Ravi Varma 
Prize. Reports say that Husain will travel to 
Thiruvananthapuram in September to receive the 
award. If so, it would be the first time he has 
set foot on Indian soil in over a year.

But that is not enough. He must be able to return 
to live and work, free of frivolous lawsuits and 
the threat of assault, spending his last years in 
the land whose culture suffuses his work - and 
whose culture he has immeasurably enriched. In 
that Dubai apartment, Husain showed me the 88 
paintings and drawings that he had once gifted to 
a Czech friend 50 years ago, and which she 
insisted be returned to him upon her death. "She 
could have kept them - they were hers," he told 
me. "But she said these pictures belonged to 
India and deserved to return there."

How ironic, then, that they are languishing, 
crammed into every available inch of wall-space 
in a Dubai apartment. They belong in India - 
ideally in a Husain museum, showcasing the life 
and astonishing career of a national treasure. 
When will someone build such a museum, and where? 
"Perhaps in Kolkata," Husain says wistfully. 
"They would not attack my paintings in Kolkata."


______


[9]

Combat Law
8 June, 2007

SANGH SPREADS ITS CLOAK IN AMERICAN CAMPUS

by Girish Agrawal

That the sangh parivar, the 'family' of 
organisations spawned and controlled by the 
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), has an 
extensive overseas presence is no secret. That 
the overseas arms of the sangh, just like the 
parent body RSS, have Hindutva as their guiding 
ideology, take direction from the RSS, and could 
not care less about the social, constitutional or 
political integrity of India, has also never been 
in doubt. But the depths to which the sangh will 
sink to spread its ideology of hate and recruit 
foot-soldiers has only now been exposed by the 
Campaign to Stop Funding Hate (CSFH) in its 
recently released report called Lying 
Religiously: The Hindu Students Council and the 
Politics of Deception. (The report is available 
at: http://hsctruthout.stopfundinghate.org/).
This report reveals that the sangh has spread its 
web of hatred in universities across North 
America to ensnare young Indian-Americans through 
the Hindu Students Council (HSC), an organisation 
based in North America, which "publicly claims to 
provide a space to learn about Hindu heritage and 
culture and draws it membership primarily from 
the Indian-American student community."
The CSFH, of which the writer is a member, is a 
voluntary organisation based in the US. The 
organisation tracks the activities of the sangh 
parivar in the US and in the wake of the 
anti-Muslim pogroms in Gujarat, was instrumental 
in researching and releasing a report documenting 
the fund-raising activities of the sangh in the 
U.S. (see The Foreign Exchange of Hate: IDRF and 
the American Funding of Hindutva, available at 
http://stopfundinghate.org/sacw/index.html). 
Having watched with growing worry as the sangh 
spread its message of hate among young people in 
North America, CSFH decided to publish some of 
its research into the sangh's activities among 
youth in the hope that exposing these activities 
to the light of day will stop, or at least slow 
the spread of the Hindutva poision.
The Hindu Students Council (HSC) was formed in 
1990 by a group of sangh parivar activists. They 
claimed that the organisation was being formed to 
assist Hindu students who struggle with the "loss 
and isolation" due to their "upbringing in a dual 
culture Hindu and Judeo-Christian?" The HSC 
targeted the so-called second and third 
generations, that is, the children and 
grandchildren of Indians who had migrated to the 
US in waves starting in the 1960s.
Even though the HSC wrapped itself in a cloak of 
'culture,' the goal was not simply indoctrination 
of young people in Hindutva ideology, but also to 
plant the seed of a new generation of sangh 
leadership.
As Vijay Prashad notes in a recent article in 
ZMag ("Multicultu-ralism Kills Me"), "the HSC was 
never simply about the identity struggles of 
those whom it called Hindu Americans. It was also 
the youthful fingers of the long-arm of 
Hindutva-supremacy in India."
The report by CSFH, hereafter shortened to Lying 
Religiously, points out that even though HSC was 
started as a project by the VHP of America, and 
had no independent legal existence until just 
after the Gujarat violence of 2002, when it 
registered as a non-profit, tax-exempt 
organisation in the U.S., separate from the VHP 
of America, perhaps in an attempt to put some 
legal distance between itself and other sangh 
parivar entities responsible for the brutal, 
terrorist violence unleashed against Muslims in 
Gujarat.
Ordinary HSC members are largely unaware of the 
ideological and organisational links with the VHP 
and the larger sangh parivar. The authors of 
Lying Religiously further make the point that 
this lack of awareness is not accidental, the 
sangh has followed a deliberate strategy of 
hiding intimate connections between HSC and 
various parts of the sangh parivar. This practice 
of deception, of hiding its true hate-filled 
nature behind a mask of "heritage and culture," 
is of course not unique to the HSC, but is how 
the sangh parivar always operates when it does 
not hold the reins of power.
Ordinary HSC members are largely unaware of the 
ideological and organisational links with the VHP 
and the larger sangh parivar
Lying Religiously challenges the claims by HSC of 
being a non-partisan, non-political, cultural and 
spiritual/religious organisation. It "documents 
the history, organisation, and political links of 
HSC and demonstrates that it is part of the sangh 
parivar. These findings sharply contradict the 
public face HSC presents in the US as a spiritual 
and religious body. The information presented in 
this report locates and documents the origins and 
institutional links of HSC, and throws light on 
the concealed purposes behind the creation of 
such an organisation. This report shows that HSC 
has deep-rooted connections-institutional, 
personal, and political-with the sangh parivar."
HSC was molded through the sangh's vision to woo 
American youth to Hindutva, and as such, the 
vision for the organisation is created not by 
students who join a chapter of this seemingly 
liberal organisation on their campus today, but 
was established almost 15 years ago by the VHP. 
In 1993, months after the destruction of the 
500-year-old historic Babri Masjid by its goons, 
the sangh organised a sort of victory celebration 
worldwide, part of which was the World Vision 
2000 conference held in Washinton, DC. Ashok 
Singhal, the leader of the VHP in India, attended 
the conference, and singled out HSC for attention:
"Now, the first project we have in mind is 
strengthening the Hindu Students Council Š . This 
is the generation which is going to throw up the 
[sangh] leadership of the future. We therefore 
feel that they should be the focus of our 
attention."
Lying Religiously points out that although HSC 
has an extensive web presence, nowhere does it 
clearly identify its roots and connections, or 
its agenda. "No connection or affiliation with 
the RSS, the VHP, the Bajrang Dal, the BJP or any 
other part of the sangh parivar is acknowledged. 
And all HSC chapters are careful not to openly 
articulate a sectarian agenda."
The report details the history of the HSC as a 
project of the sangh parivar, started and 
controlled by the VHP of America, and how, at the 
beginning, it not just acknowledged its links 
with the sangh, but declared them proudly. But as 
it grew and matured, HSC made a "deliberate 
effort to disguise, often disown, this 
connection" with the sangh. The strategy appears 
to be aimed at attracting a wider membership to 
HSC who would not join if they knew that "HSC was 
an offshoot of an extremist organisation with a 
record of directing violence against minority 
groups in India."
In the wake of the release of 'Lying 
Religiously', the Hindu Students Council claimed 
in a press release that it is not hiding 
anything, on the contrary, it is "open about its 
activities," and does such things as "hosting 
speakers, performing community service, holding 
poojas, celebrating festivals, and participating 
in interfaith discussions." The last claim, of 
interfaith amity, articulated by the national HSC 
on its website as "Sarve Api Sukhina Santu Sarve 
Santu Niramayah" (Let everybody be happy, 
healthy, and blessed), is particularly cruel 
given the sangh's anti-Muslim politics. As noted 
in Lying Religiously, "[t]he rhetoric of HSC's 
self-presentation flows easily into the North 
American framework of 'liberal multiculturism' 
where each cultural group (mostly 'ethnic' 
minorities and religious groups) has, in 
principle, its own separate, unique space to 
perform its identity." As Vijay Prashad notes in 
his ZMag article [referenced above], 
"Multiculturalism in the US provided cover for 
the cruel, cultural chauvinism in India."
The report presents a lot of specific information 
in making its argument that the strength of the 
denial by HSC of its connections with the sangh 
gets suppressed "at moments of crisis, planning 
and celebration in the sangh family. Š At Š 
politically significant moments, HSC is present 
along with other members of the sangh family."
In addition to all the evidence about the façade 
of independence and liberalism presented by HSC 
being underlain by deep connections to the sangh 
parivar, a final bit of evidence presented in 
'Lying Religiously', about the electronic 
connection between HSC and the sangh parivar, is 
extremely interesting.
"HSC, as the most technologically savvy segment 
of the sangh, is in charge of the electronic 
infrastructure of almost the entire sangh 
parivar. Not only are core and flagship 
institutions of the sangh - the RSS itself, the 
VHP in India, the VHP of America, Seva Bharati in 
India and the IDRF in the US - all located on [a] 
network based in San Diego and run by HSC, but 
even small and minor Sangh institutions such as 
collegegrading.com (an ABVP front), 
balagokulam.org (an HSS outfit), and 
indiafriends.org (an HSS front) reside on the 
same cluster." (emphasis added.)
The network referred to in the above quote from 
Lying Religiously is the Global Hindu Electronic 
Network, or GHEN, maintained and run by HSC. A 
copyright notice for GHEN says: "Please note that 
entire collection of GHEN websites is copyrighted 
1998-1999, Global Hindu Electronic Networks, 
Hindu Students Council." A map of the Class C IP 
addresses of the various websites shows that they 
all reside on the same server or cluster of 
servers based in San Diego in the U.S., 
controlled and run by one of the founders of HSC. 
No more evidence is required to demonstrate the 
true strength of the 'family' connection between 
the Hindu Students Council and the sangh parivar 
in India and elsewhere.

The writer is a US-based human rights activist


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Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
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