SACW | June 23-24, 2007
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Sat Jun 23 21:45:15 CDT 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | June 23-24, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2423 - Year 9
[1] Afghanistan: Return of the Taliban (Hamida Ghafour)
[2] Pakistan:
(i) An Open Letter To The CEC
(ii) An identity under scrutiny (Jessica Stern)
(iii) Of fairer sex and 'straight' ideology (Jassna Javed)
(iv) First things first (Aneela Z. Babar)
[3] Salman Rushdie is not the problem. Muslims are (Irshad Manji)
[4] India: Condoms and Conservatives
(i) Rubber stamped
(ii) Moral Vibes (Editorial, Times of India)
(iii) Sex Toys Figure In Ancient Texts Too (Avijit Ghosh)
(iv) A Controversial Condom in the Land of the Kama Sutra (Emil Steiner)
[5] India: Practice of Veiling among the Hindu's
- contrary to claims by Pratibha Patil
[7] USA: Activists push Hollywood, Florida to
dissociating from event involving Hindutva leader
[8] Announcements:
Call for papers!!! Post-Exotic India: A New Narrative in Making
______
[1]
The Guardian
June 4, 2007
RETURN OF THE TALIBAN
No one in Afghanistan wants to be on the losing
side when Mullah Omar's men ride back into town
on their motorcycles.
by Hamida Ghafour
When I lived in Kabul a couple of years ago, it
seemed unimaginable that the Taliban could
return. The regime was considered a spent force
and generally disliked by Afghans. Mullah Omar
gathered his associates, told them they were on
their own and fled on his motorcycle.
Today there are reports of Taliban attacks as
close as two hours from the capital. Nato's
forces are getting hammered in the south by an
astonishingly strong insurgency. Suicide bombs,
utterly alien to the Afghan fighting culture, are
now common.
At the same time, Nato air strikes are hitting
innocent civilians and increasing the
population's resentment against the western
armies. In this mess, there is talk of making a
deal with the Taliban leadership, whoever they
may be, in a bid to bring peace to the south.
This is a dangerous idea.
It is worth considering that the Taliban are also
responsible for the torture and killing of Afghan
civilians. This is no government-in-waiting. This
is no popular resistance movement such as the
Soviet forces faced in the 1980s. This is a
brutal and nasty insurgency in which Afghans
accused of spying are beheaded, doctors are
assassinated and aid workers kidnapped.
I was in Ottawa recently speaking to a civil
servant involved in the Afghan mission. She told
me with some frustration that the Canadians
opened a clinic hospital just outside Kandahar
city, with the local tribal chief's blessing. His
son was sick and was treated by Canadian doctors.
Almost as soon as it opened the clinic was burned
down and the tribal chief killed. The message was
clear: do not co-operate with any western force -
on pain of death.
The statistics bear this out. In the first seven
months of 2006, there were 202 recorded attacks
on schools across the country. In the same time
period, 600 civilians were killed or wounded. In
about 70% of the cases, the attacks were linked
to the Taliban. This figure comes from the
respected Afghan Independent Human Rights
Commission.
The strategy seems clear: to isolate Afghans from
their government in Kabul. If it looks like their
own government cannot provide for them, Afghans
will turn to the Taliban. The targets of the
insurgency are deliberate. There is even a guide,
called the Leyeha given out to Taliban fighters
which sanctions the killing of anyone seen to
cooperate with outsiders and destruction of
roads, bridges and dams.
This is an old strategy. In the days of the
Russian occupation, the countryside's guerrilla
leaders were given arms and funds to isolate the
communist government in Kabul. Then, in the early
1990s, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia helped the
Taliban rise to power by again, putting pressure
on Kabul.
In the post-Taliban era it was never going to be
easy for a government to put together such a
fractured state. For centuries Afghans have
survived invasions by knowing just when to switch
to the winning side. It is simple pragmatism.
There is a growing feeling that maybe Nato and
America are not going to stay for long. If the
west abandons its Afghanistan project, no one
wants to face the repercussion of being on the
losing side when the Taliban ride back into town
on their motorcycles.
How on earth has the south deteriorated so much?
Sadly, it is because the west has allowed it to
happen. President Hamid Karzai, Afghans and aid
workers have repeatedly called for more
peacekeepers for the last five years.
There have been warning signs the Taliban were
re-grouping. In 2004 I met a couple of tribal
elders from a district in Zabul province who had
come to Kabul to plea for help because the
Taliban had taken over five districts. They shut
down the schools and no one could go out at
night, they told me.
But it was not until 2006 - five years after the
regime fell - that Canadians and British deployed
a large number of troops to the south.
In those five years the south and east were left
lawless for Taliban leaders to re-group and drug
traffickers to move in. As a result, there has
been little development of the economy. Many of
the Taliban's fighters are opportunists. Honest
civilians can expect a monthly salary of $50. A
Talib fighter can earn up to $700. According to
Amnesty International, the funds for the
insurgency are coming from the region but also
perhaps wealthy Arabs in the Gulf states.
In this so-called "war on terror" it is Afghan
civilians who are paying the price. They are
caught - not only between Nato's clumsy air
strikes which kill innocent families, but Taliban
terrorists who are determined to turn the country
into a pitiless theocracy once again.
______
[2] PAKISTAN:
(i)
The Free and Fair Election Network
June 22, 2007
ECP Decisive Actions Needed To Increase Voter Numbers
FAFEN SENDS AN OPEN LETTER TO THE CEC
ISLAMABAD: The Free and Fair Election Network
(FAFEN) has called upon Chief Election
Commissioner Justice (Retd) Qazi Muhammad Farooq
to take immediate measures to bridge the gap
between the 18-year-old or above population and
the number of voters registered on the draft
electoral rolls currently on public display
throughout the country.
"Millions of voters who are not on the draft
electoral rolls need to be registered in order to
conduct a credible election. The Chief Election
Commissioner (CEC) must take a decisive action to
rectify the situation either through an executive
order or by seeking support from legislature or
the President," reads an open letter sent to the
CEC by FAFEN.
FAFEN, in its letter, suggests that every citizen
who has been issued a Computerized National
Identity Card (CNIC) and is on the NADRA rolls
must automatically be included on the electoral
rolls. "The objective should be to enable as many
people as possible to vote in the upcoming
election."
FAFEN says that such out of box options are
required to be considered in view of serious
flaws in the implementation of the ongoing
process of the display of draft electoral rolls,
as indicated by its findings from the first week
of data collection at 1,037 Display Centres by
its 750 observers throughout the country. Some of
these problems could be addressed in the
remaining days of the display period that will
end on July 3, 2007.
According to FAFEN findings, 88.0% of ECP Display
Centre Information Officers (DCIOs) mistakenly
believe that "it is necessary" for citizens to
bring their CNIC/NIC cards to the Display Center
in order to register to vote. Many eligible
voters who cannot provide a photocopy of their
NIC/CNIC card are being turned away from Display
Centres by the DCIOs.
However, the ECP Manual of Instructions for
Display Centre Information Officers (page 6,
English version) states clearly that a citizen
must provide their CNIC/NIC number, but "it is
not required that a citizen bring his or her
CNIC/NIC to the Display Centre". A citizen must
have their CNIC/NIC number with them in order to
get registered.
Moreover, 86.5% of DCIOs believe wrongly that a
judicial Revising Authority (RA) will "hold a
hearing for every person who files a form to add
their name to the electoral roll". Citizens are
being informed by DCIOs that they must attend a
hearing in another location at a later date, an
additional step that is deterring many people
from completing the voter registration process.
However, the ECP Manual of Instruction (page 7,
English version) states that DCI Os should
instead inform citizens that their "claim for
inclusion [on the electoral roll] will be
reviewed in a summary inquiry by a Revising
Authority who is a judge" and "The Revising
Authority may call the citizen to a hearing if
he/she is not satisfied with the claim for
inclusion".
Similarly, only 0.4% of DCIOs are female and
there are no separate areas at any of the Display
Centres for female eligible voters to receive
assistance in order to fill out the necessary ECP
form to add their names to the electoral roll.
The lack of female DCIOs and separate Display
Centres for women is inexcusable given that the
percentage of registered women voters on the new
electoral roll is significantly decreased from
the percentage who were registered on the
previous voters' list, and given the fact that
cultural factors will prevent many women from
receiving assistance from a male DCIO to fill out
their forms for inclusion as voters.
Additionally, 29.8% of DCIOs reported that they
received no training at all, and an additional
7.2% (for a total of 36%) said they were "not
satisfied" with the training they received. The
ECP has a responsibility to train fully the
personnel who are serving the public in Display
Centres during a process of such national
importance and priority.
As many as 31.9% of DCIOs are "not satisfied with
the security arrangements" at their Display
Centers, and 14.2% DCIOs have no "cell phone or
other way to call for help" if there is a
problem. Election security is of vital importance
and should have been given much more attention,
given historical experience of electoral
intimidation in some locations including reent
by-elections in Karachi, Jamshoro, Bannu, and
Jhang observed by FAFEN and given the current
tense (and sometimes violent) political
environment.
FAFEN urges the CEC to issue an immediate
instruction/ clarification to all DCIOs through
the Assistant Election Commissioners (AEC s),
Registration Officers (ROs), and Assistant
Registration Officers (AROs) to allow eligible
voters to fill out ECP Form IV for inclusion on
the electoral roll even if they do not have their
CNIC/NIC with them, as long as they have their
CNIC/NIC number.
Moreover, DCIOs must also be instructed to tell
eligible voters that a Revising Authority might
call them for a hearing about their request for
inclusion on the electoral roll, but that
Revising Authorities will review the requests
with a summary inquiry that in most cases will
not require a hearing.
Extension in the outreach of Display Centres is
also required, particularly to female eligible
voters. This can be done by recruiting and
training urgently as many female DCIOs as
possible, establishing separate Women's Display
Centres, and making some male and female DCIOs
mobile.
At the same time the ECP needs to put in place
effective monitoring mechanisms now and during
the elections to alert it to problems in
electoral administration in a timely and
effective way, potentially engaging civil society
in this effort.
o o o
About FAFEN:
The Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) is a
coalition of thirty leading Pakistani civil
society organizations. It was established in 2006
to observe the election process, educate voters,
and advocate for electoral and democratic reform.
Afreina Noor.
Network Coordinator
FAFEN Secretariat
#5, Street 58, F-10/3
Islamabad.
Phone:
051-2299 494, 051-2211 875
Cell: 0307 554 1742
Fax: 051-2291 547
URL: <http://www.fafen.org/>www.fafen.org
o o o
(ii)
Dawn
June 21, 2007
AN IDENTITY UNDER SCRUTINY
by Jessica Stern
Having lived more than half his life as a man,
choosing his behaviour and changing his body to
show the world the man he feels himself to be,
Shumail Raj is trying to be what most men want to
be - an honest man
Shumail Raj and Shehzina Tariq have become the
centre of a tragedy known throughout Pakistan and
the world. Who are they? Eight months ago,
Shumail and Shehzina were married in a ceremony
that Shehzina describes as "a love marriage." But
since their story became public, they have been
called every sort of name by reporters, lawyers,
comedians, by people in the street.
Press reports refer to them as a "she-couple", a
"same-sex couple", and as two "girls" or
"lesbians." Their union has been dismissed as the
country's first same-sex marriage. Yet Shehzina
Tariq has stated clearly "We are not homosexual".
Everyone, it seems, gets to say who they are -
except the two themselves.
Instead, as a result of saying what they feel
themselves to be, they have found themselves in
conflict with the law. On May 28, they were
sentenced to three years' imprisonment for
perjuring themselves - for having told the Lahore
High Court that Shumail Raj was a man.
A court-appointed panel of medical examiners had
to be called in to settle the issue of legal
identity. It was more important to identify the
history behind Shumail Raj's full beard and
masculine build than to recognise his right to
privacy, his dignity and self-respect.
The prosecution of the couple and their
humiliating depiction in the media has overlooked
vital facts. Everyone has a biological sex, the
body they are born with. However, everybody also
has a sense of the self which transcends the
body. Without that sense we are more than just
what we are given, we would have no clothes, no
jewellery, no hairstyles. We would practice no
artifice upon ourselves. We would take no joy in
making ourselves look beautiful or strong by our
own standards, patterning our looks on others or
choosing a different guise or style.
Beyond biological sex, there is gender.
Biological sex means how we classify bodies as
male or female, based on factors such as
hormones, chromosomes, and internal and external
organs. Gender describes not what is "male" or
"female," but what is "masculine" or "feminine"
--- what different societies consider to be such;
what individuals feel to be such. Everyone has an
individual experience of how "masculine" or
"feminine" they are. Some feel their inner selves
to be different from how their bodies are
categorised.
The Universal Declaration of Human rights states
"all people are born free and equal in dignity
and rights" and "recognition as a person before
the law" is a basic human right. The law should
not condemn you because you seek to have your
identity recognised. Its purpose should be to
uphold an individual's fundamental human rights,
and respect and protect personal identity,
dignity and freedom.
Courts from Europe to Brazil to Egypt have upheld
the right of people to have the genders they live
in recognised by the law. In Egypt this legal
finding was upheld by a fatwa from the sheikh of
Al Azhar.
Human rights also include the right to health.
The World Health Organisation (WHO), the United
Nations' coordinating authority for health,
observes that transgender people - people whose
gendered selves are different from their bodies -
experience "a desire to live and be accepted as a
member of the opposite sex, usually accompanied
by a sense of discomfort with, or
inappropriateness of, one's anatomic sex." Their
health and well-being depend on their being cared
for and recognised as who they feel themselves to
be.
The imprisonment of Shumail Raj and Shehzina
Tariq sends the message that people born female
have no right to call themselves male, even when
that is how they see themselves. Shumail Raj may
have been born female, but he underwent two
surgeries to alter his gender, the first at the
age of 16. He intends to go abroad for the third
surgery that he feels would complete his growth
into a man.
Now 31, Shumail has lived more than half his life
as a man, choosing his behaviour and changing his
body to show the world the man he feels himself
to be. Shumail Raj is not a perjurer - nor is
Shehzina Tariq. He is trying to be what most men
want to be, an honest man.
The writer is a researcher with the New York-based Human Rights Watch.
o o o
(iii)
The News
June 19, 2007
OF FAIRER SEX AND 'STRAIGHT' IDEOLOGY
by Jassna Javed
The sexuality debate and the issue of same-sex
marriages is a developing area of family law in
various jurisdictions abroad. In December 2005,
the South African constitutional court declared
the absence of a facility to allow same-sex
marriages as offensive to the country's
constitution because it amounted to a denial of
equal protection under the law. The result was
the adoption of legislation in November 2006
allowing same-sex couples to be able to marry. In
Canada, the Canadian Supreme Court held that the
existing common law definition of marriage which
is confined to 'union for life between a man and
a woman' could no longer stand because it
offended against the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms that guarantees equality
irrespective of sexual orientation. The result
was that the same-sex marriages were legalized
federally in Canada in July 2005. Even before
that, Spain, a country with a high percentage of
Catholics, became the third country in the world
to pass legislation legalizing same-sex
marriages, the first two being Holland in 2001
and Belgium in January 2003.
The issue has arisen in our part of the globe
with the episode of Shumail Raj and Shahzina
Tariq. There are no reliable figures of
homosexuals in Pakistan but the issue is
certainly not the first of its kind although it
is probably the first one to hit the attention of
the media after Justice Khawaja Muhammad Sharif
of the Lahore High Court sent the same sex couple
to separate jails for three years on perjury
charges. The couple has avowed that they are not
homosexuals but rather share a passionate bonding
with each other provoked by, what the same-sex
couple regards, a non-discursive and profoundly
negating ritual of arranged marriage. The
implications of this inferno are rooted in the
censorial, negative power of patriarchal violence
that is so adamantly embedded yet conveniently
denied.
Individual autonomy, independence,
self-sufficiency, self-rule, freedom and
self-determination are laudable aspirations for
any society that regards the welfare of
individuals seriously. These fundamental values
have been discussed by many influential legal and
moral philosophers from John Locke to Kant to
Rawls. The "self" that often desires to be
autonomous, is socially constructed. It is a
hybrid of culture, tradition, religion, morals,
and power. When this "self" takes the form of a
female gender, particularly in our country and
those others that share similar cultural values
and traditions, this social construct becomes an
amalgam of all the above but most importantly
patriarchy, and to some extent, misogynist
experience. Women like men are autonomous
individuals but women's independence is
marginalized due to the negativity of a genre of
patriarchal power unleashed in our legal space.
Although many philosophers assume that to be
human is to be in some sense autonomous, women
are far from being autonomous. In fact they are
profoundly relational. The degree of autonomy is
usually measured by the amount of choice and
power that one has. Power and choice are
necessary for the exercise of real autonomy.
However, due to the biological, reproductive role
of women, they are largely rendered
non-autonomous.
When a woman is pregnant, her physical being
embraces the embryonic life of another, and thus
she experiences a shared physical identity with
herself and her fetus. Robin West, a prominent
feminist of this era, takes on this stance to
explain the counter-autonomous experience of
women. When a woman shares her physical identity
with another life developing inside her, her
autonomy is largely undermined. When she becomes
a mother and shares the emotional and
psychological bond with her infant, her autonomy
becomes tied to the infant once again. Because
women are burdened materially with the dependency
of the fetus upon them (although no doubt they
are emotionally and psychologically enriched with
this bond) they tend to rely more on
relationships with others from whom they can
derive the material strength and power to nurture
the infant who ultimately depends on them. Thus a
woman's biological role is inherently
counter-autonomous.
However, it is not only the biological aspect of
a woman's physical being that makes her
non-autonomous, it is also the social, political
and legal victimization caused by the pervasive
patriarchal institution, the compulsory
heterosexuality, the institution of arranged
marriage, forced romance, and the censorship in
many cultures that gives birth to and nurture
woman to woman bonding and redirect the young
girl's emotional and sentimental identification
toward men. This construction of the woman bond
is thus largely the result of pervasive and
universal institution of patriarchy that
trivializes women, suppresses them, and
ultimately some emotionally weaker ones seek
refuge by unionizing with the same-sex.
Patriarchy is like a Trojan horse which brings
with it the evils of dehumanization of women,
subordination, objectification, sexism and it
marginalizes, trivializes, silences and threatens
their existence in this patriarchal world.
There is considerable potential in this theory if
one is inquisitive to delve into the whole
sexuality debate and dig out the reasons for some
people's so-called "deviant" behaviour. From the
diagnosis of homosexuality as a psychological
disorder in 1970's, to it being considered a
disease, then a mere perversion, then
'paraphilia' or the sexual disorder, a 'third
sex', and finally the present classification as a
separate sexual orientation, we have been
confronted with various theories and explanations
by sexologists and psychologists regarding
homosexuality.
In our country, by accepting the monopolizing
wisdom of our ancestors and showing our
indifference to delve into the intricate details
pertaining to custom, tradition, and the laws of
heaven, we have buried the spirit of questioning.
The awareness and an attempt to find a rational
eye in every decision, doctrine, and dogma at the
bare minimum flourish debate, and promote speech
and expression. If we are not scared of losing
our religious and social significance by debating
publicly issues of sexual orientation, gender and
sexuality, questioning our beliefs will lead to
more clarity and less confusion rather than what
some of us perceive to be sacrilegious.
The aim of free speech, as enshrined in Article
19 of our constitution, is to protect a
marketplace of ideas. Avoiding the suppression of
the exchange of ideas and chilling speech forms
an integral part of the individual's right to
freedom of expression. If one assumes arguably
that law is a form of a social control and crime
is 'a revolt against the social order', as
Nietzsche put it, the judiciary and officials who
apply sanctions whenever this social order is
breached would obviously act in ways that
reinforces the 'norm' or the status-quo, which is
largely homophobic. The logical conclusion of
concentrating more power in the state apparatus
to chill speech regarding sexual orientation is
to reinforce this homophobia.
Perhaps the most powerful weapon in the state's
arsenal is to declare these 'deviants' as
criminals since they act in a way that goes
against the conformity with the herd. However,
legislative or judicial suppression might not be
the right or the only answer to the popular
philosophy which stigmatizes homosexuals as
"deviant" when they dare to come out of the
closet. We really need to find avenues and forums
to discuss, without anxiety, fear or contempt for
homosexuals, the present heterosexual hegemony
and the 'straight' ideology with a focus on "more
speech" through education and media.
The writer is an advocate and has degrees from
Yale Law School and the University of London.
o o o
(iv)
The Post
4 June 2007
FIRST THINGS FIRST
Dr. Aneela Z. Babar
A friend who is coordinating Samar Minallah's
visit to Washington (DC) to receive the Perdita
Huston Award (Minallah has won the 2007 Perdita
Huston Activist for Human Rights - the Award
itself was established in 2002 to celebrate the
work of Perdita Huston, and to recognize the life
and work of outstanding advocates for women's
rights in the developing world) wrote a worried
note yesterday when she read in a column of mine
of the furor an inadvertent hug on the part of
Nilofar Bakhtiar had caused in Pakistan. The
friend wrote a worried note back on her website:
After hearing that Nilofar had to resign I called
DC and made sure that everyone there was aware
that they were in no way to touch Samar. I asked
that everyone attending be sent a memo, in case
someone unknowilngly patted Samar on the back or
God forbid gave her a hug. To which I had to
write back that considering we are living in the
interesting times of Shumail R and Shahzina, she
should make sure no one hugs Samar. Surely no one
wants to give more grist to our judicial mills
and have some overzealous person in Lahore filing
a case that a woman in Washington DC 'aspiring
towards' and/or 'masquerading' as a man wanted to
hug Samar. In short, please don't hug us, we are
Pakistani.
Marriages are a tricky business to comment on,
and far be it for me to venture on what
constitutes a good one or a bad one. But it
becomes particualrly problematic when we have to
define what constitutes them - is it a marriage
of minds, are they decided on planes divine, does
it concern matters of a union of the flesh, the
soul? I don't have the text for Justice Khwaja
Muhammad Sharif's judgement on the issue, but I
understand that it pertained more to matters of
perjury, of falsifying accounts, of impersonating
as a man in matters legal than the issue of what
constitutes a marriage. And probably the learned
judge was wise not to step in that minefield, of
not deliberating on the definition of marriage in
Pakistan, for that would have opened a Pandora's
Box which would not have suited those who
comprise the 'moral brigade' and pride themselves
as the custodians of matters cultural and
traditional in Pakistan. By defining who can
enter into and what conditions rule a marriage, I
am sure our learned courts would have to give a
ruling on the legality of marriages between women
and the Quran (I am sure certain very respectable
families in Sindh who form a power
religio-political nexus in Sindh would like to
share their views on this issue), minor girls
traded to settle blood disputes, instances when
both parties know that the "bride" in question
will not be enjoying that status but is rather an
individual against whom the aggrieved party can
direct their ire and vengance. In many cases she
is kept as a reminder of the loss their family
has suffered, a living punching bag, and if she
is very lucky, cheap domestic labour. Then we
also have the instances of forcible divorces in
case a set of wata satta marriages (exchange
marriages) breaks down, which any day can be
gauged by the plethora of questions on any given
day in advice columns in our daily newspapers.
What say of the sanctity of the institution of
marriage in that case? Negotiating a relationship
is difficult as it is, but imagine the scenario
of when any typical day there are four people
walking the tight-rope of your relationship, you,
your spouse, your brother and sister-in-law - one
false step and everyone comes falling off. And I
need not get into the details of the countless
cases where women are treated as chattel, forced
to marry their rapists, pay off gambling debts
(Shahzina's case one instance), keep a promise an
elder had made, marrying a brother-in-law who is
still a minor to keep property/children together.
In all these cases what can still hold as a good
marriage (Pakistani or otherwise) and should be
allowed under any concept of justice and leading
a good meaningful life (which should be a basic
human right for any person, even if perchance
they happen to be Pakistani; our nationality
shouldn't by definition preclude us from aspiring
to happiness, no matter what our President has
told us).
Huma Yusuf writing elsewhere on this particualr
issue has brought up the 'first things first'
mentality in Pakistan which she understands is
behind our belief, albeit flawed, that we should
deal with fundamental issues - democracy,
terrorism, poverty, illiteracy, Kashmir, nukes,
and land reforms before getting matters of social
justice and debatable issues like this particular
relationship resolved. Yusuf does plead to civil
society in Pakistan to not shy away from their
responsibilities, particularly since we are
members of a global village and to understand
that the issue can be (and I join her in this)
the harbinger of a meaningful social revolution
in Pakistan, but I would like to turn her use of
the phrase "first things first", which for many
is problematic 'around'. Let us continue to have
a policy of "first things first" in Pakistan, but
apply it for all the contentious definitions of
marriage that parade in Pakistan. Let our
honorable judiciary and civil society in Pakistan
do away with the contentious definitions of civil
unions in Pakistan that I have listed, where
women are victimized and where in more cases
parties have turned to the legislature and
judiciary to rescue women out of a situation
which they do not recognize as a marriage but
have been gagged in the name of maintaining
tradition and cultural pride. Resolve that and
then deem yourself fit to decide in a situation
where two partners who were happy in their union
and had approached you to protect their
relationship are concerned.
Returning to Samar Minallah's news, it is a
matter of pride to learn that some of us refuse
to be intimidated by the sheer enormity of the
task ahead as we turn to confront all the hurdles
that impede Pakistani women to operate as full
citizens in their country. Minallah through her
endeavour Ethnomedia has been involved in a
public advocacy programme against many of the
horrific crimes committed in the name of honour.
Swara, best translated as "compensatory
marriages", is just one of them. I am quoting
here from the letter of recommendation for the
Perdita Huston award to explain what issues her
win raises. "From such cases as two minor girls
being given away as compensation against 11
stolen buffaloes, or the case of a religious
scholar solemnizing a marriage of a one month-old
girl to a one year-old boy to end an age old
dispute after a tribal Jirga's verdict, are hard
to imagine, but are a daily reality of the world
that Samar lives in. Though un-Islamic and
illegal, this century's old customs take
precedence over local jurisprudence and are
backed by some politicians who do not wish to
upset their constituents...fifty other similar
cases of girls from different parts of the
country given as compensation have been averted
with Samar's dedicated work taking each
individual case as far as the Supreme Court of
Pakistan. One of the journalists that helped
highlight the incident through different forms of
media has been missing since thenIn the case
that Samar was fighting (pro bono) for the girls
aged 2, 3, 5 and 6, she challenged the decision
taken by a feudal lord. Despite the risk to her
life she bravely continues to advocate and defend
girls who may never even know her."
First things first, Justice Khwaja, and then
comment on what constitutes a marriage.
The writer is a freelance columnist with a background in academe
______
[3]
The Times (UK)
June 21, 2007
SALMAN RUSHDIE IS NOT THE PROBLEM. MUSLIMS ARE
In a battle between flaming fundamentalists and
mute moderates, who do you think is going to win?
by Irshad Manji
Growing up in Vancouver, I attended an Islamic
school every Saturday. There, I learned that Jews
cannot be trusted because they worship "moolah,
not Allah," meaning money, not God. According to
my teacher, every last Jew is consumed with
business.
But looking around my neighbourhood, I noticed
that most of the new business signs featured
Asian languages: Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese,
Korean, Hindi, Punjabi and plenty of Urdu. Not
Hebrew. Urdu, which is spoken throughout Pakistan.
That reality check made me ask: What if my
religious school is not educating me? What if it
is indoctrinating me?
I am reminded of this question thanks to the news
that Salman Rushdie, author of The Satanic Verses
and ten other works of fiction, will be knighted
by the Queen of England. On Monday, Pakistan's
religious affairs minister said that in light of
how Rushdie has blasphemed Islam with provocative
literature, it is understandable why angry
Muslims would commit suicide bombings over his
knighthood.
Members of Parliament, as well as the Pakistani
government, amplified the condemnation of
Britain, feeding cries of offense to Muslim
sensibilities from Europe to Asia.
As a Muslim, you better believe I am offended - by these absurd reactions.
I am offended that it is not the first time
honours from the West have met with vitriol and
violence. In 1979, Pakistani physicist Abdus
Salam became the first Muslim to win the Nobel
Prize in science. He began his acceptance speech
with a verse from the Quran.
Salam's country ought to have celebrated him.
Instead, rioters tried to prevent him from
re-entering the country. Parliament even declared
him a "non-Muslim" because he belonged to a
religious minority. His name continues to be
controversial, invoked by state authorities in
hushed tones.
I am offended that every year, there are more
women killed in Pakistan for allegedly violating
their family's honour than there are detainees at
Guantanamo Bay. Muslims have rightly denounced
the mistreatment of Guantanamo prisoners. But
where is our outrage over the murder of many more
Muslims at the hands of our own?
I am offended that in April, mullahs at an
extreme mosque in Pakistan issued a fatwa against
hugging. The country's female tourism minister
had embraced - or, depending on the account you
follow, accepted a congratulatory pat from - her
skydiving instructor after she successfully
jumped in a French fundraiser for the victims of
the 2005 Pakistan earthquake. Clerics announced
her act of touching another man to be "a great
sin." They demanded she be fired.
I am offended by their fatwa proclaiming that
women should stay at home and remain covered at
all times. I am offended that they have bullied
music store owners and video vendors into closing
shop. I am offended that the government tiptoes
around their craziness because these clerics
threaten suicide attacks if confronted.
I am offended that on Sunday, at least 35 Muslims
in Kabul were blown to bits by other Muslims and
on Tuesday, 87 more in Baghdad by Islamic
"insurgents", with no official statement from
Pakistan to deplore these assaults on fellow
believers. I am offended that amid the
internecine carnage, a professed atheist named
Salman Rushdie tops the to-do list.
Above all, I am offended that so many other
Muslims are not offended enough to demonstrate
widely against God's self-appointed ambassadors.
We complain to the world that Islam is being
exploited by fundamentalists, yet when reckoning
with the opportunity to resist their clamour en
masse, we fall curiously silent. In a battle
between flaming fundamentalists and mute
moderates, who do you think is going to win?
I am not saying that standing up to intimidation
is easy. This past spring, the Muslim world made
it that much more difficult. A 56-member council
of Islamic countries pushed the UN Human Rights
Council to adopt a resolution against the
"defamation of religion". Pakistan led the
charge. Focused on Islam rather than on faith in
general, the resolution allows repressive regimes
to squelch freedom of conscience further - and to
do so in the guise of international law.
On occasion, though, the people of Pakistan show
that they do not have to be muzzled by clerics
and politicians. Last year, civil society groups
vocally challenged a set of anti-female laws,
three decades old and supposedly based on the
Quran. Their religiously respectful approach
prompted even mullahs to hint that these laws are
man-made, not God-given.
This month, too, Pakistanis forced their
government to lift restrictions on the press. No
wonder my own book, translated into Urdu and
posted on my website, is being downloaded in
droves. Religious authorities will not let it be
sold in the markets. But they cannot stop
Pakistanis - or other Muslims - from satiating a
genuine hunger for ideas.
In that spirit, it is high time to "ban"
hypocrisy under the banner of Islam. Salman
Rushdie is not the problem. Muslims are.
After all, the very first bounty on Rushdie's
head was worth £1 million. It increased to £1.25
million; then higher. The chief benefactor,
Iran's government, claimed to have profitably
invested the principal. Hence the rising value of
the reward. Looks like Jews are not the only
people handy at business.
A Senior Fellow with the European Foundation for
Democracy, Irshad Manji is creator of the new
documentary Faith Without Fear and author of The
Trouble with Islam Today: A Wake-Up Call for
Honesty and Change
______
[4]
INDIA: CONDOMS AND CONSERVATIVES
(i)
Indian Express
June 23, 2007
Editorial
RUBBER STAMPED
Will our netas let us mind our own business and
pleasure? Even if condoms vibrate
At a time when the upcoming race for president
has stretched the party-political lines
especially tight and clear in the capital, a rare
consensus is unfolding in Madhya Pradesh. "Sex
toys can have serious repercussions on the Indian
way of life," says BJP leader and state PWD and
IT minister Kailash Vijayavargia in a three-page
letter to the prime minister. It is
"... bound to have a harmful effect, especially
on youngsters", chimed state CPM secretary
Bahadur Singh Dhakad. Undoubtedly, the local
Congress notable has also made a statement to the
same effect. All parties are united in their
demand for an immediate prime ministerial ban on
a ribbed condom with a vibrating ring marketed by
the government-owned Hindustan Latex Ltd.
Parties across the political spectrum have shown
this meeting of minds earlier. Invariably, it has
been on issues of "morality", of protecting
"India's culture and tradition" supposedly under
siege. There was the unanimity on the banning of
dance bars in Mumbai. There was the complicit
acceptance of a move by a secular government to
ban a book for allegedly offending the sentiments
of those who revere Shivaji. Earlier, a
resounding silence followed lumpen rage against
film actress Khushboo after her statement on
pre-marital sex. There has been silence, again,
by all parties whenever the I&B minister presumed
to decide what can or cannot be construed as
healthy viewing for adult Indian audiences and
chopped and banned television programmes and even
whole channels. We've had ample warnings of this
cross-party restrictiveness.
Yet the Madhya Pradesh controversy is worryingly
instructive. It shows us that the fight against
the 'moral police' is not out there, against a
clearly identifiable enemy. The moral police is
often an agreeable animal of every political
persuasion, waiting to strike, catch us unawares.
The condom marketed by Hindustan Latex is not the
issue, though the government-owned enterprise
deserves commendation for its show of marketing
verve and imagination. The point is, we need to
tell our political parties that we can mind our
own business, and pleasure.
editor at expressindia.com
o o o
Times of India
23 June, 2007
Editorial
MORAL VIBES
A minister in Madhya Pradesh is not quite kicked
about a particular condom being marketed by
government-owned Hindustan Latex Limited. So much
so that he has written to the PMO to intervene
and ban the controversial brand. The condom in
question goes by the name Crezendo. The
minister's objection is that it is ribbed and
comes fitted with a vibrator ring. This,
according to him, makes it a sex toy and
therefore against Indian tradition. The rationale
is that condoms are fine as long as they are used
for protection, but not if they promote sex for
pleasure. This is a truly baffling instance of
political opportunism in the name of Indian
culture.
Predictably, the fuss created by the minister has
instigated politicians from the Congress and CPM
as well to hop on to the bandwagon. When it comes
to championing the collective morality of the
country, it's a competitive field: There's little
that separates politicians of different hues.
However, their arguments stand on a shaky wicket
and the concern is misplaced. Even a cursory
glance at ancient texts and statuary in India
gives lie to the claim that sex for recreation is
not in keeping with Indian tradition and culture.
What seems to have peeved the protestors is that
the company marketing the condoms is
government-owned. It does not stand to reason
that Hindustan Latex can market other speciality
condoms - coloured and textured - but not go a
step further. Why? Texture is also meant to aid
pleasure. A company must be free to innovate its
product line if it feels there is a need to do
so. Whether it is government-owned or private is
immaterial. Hindustan Latex has been registering
a slowdown in profits owing to competition from
other brands. If value-adding to its existing
products can help arrest the slide, so be it.
Condoms are an essential weapon in our battle
against AIDS and other sexually-transmitted
diseases. They are equally important in promoting
effective birth control as well as family
welfare. The experience of health workers has
been that men, especially in rural areas and
small towns, are resistant to using condoms. This
reluctance to use protection increases the risk
factor and makes women particularly vulnerable.
It is imperative that all attempts are made to
popularise the use of condoms and promote safe
sex. To that end, it is welcome that companies
come up with innovative ideas to market condoms.
It is ironic that while government is running a
high-decibel multimedia campaign to promote the
use of condoms, self-appointed custodians of
Indian culture are hell-bent on playing
spoilsport. If only the repercussions were not
grave, one could call the fracas outright stupid.
o o o
(iii)
Times of India
23 June, 2007
SEX TOYS FIGURE IN ANCIENT TEXTS TOO
by Avijit Ghosh
NEW DELHI: These days condoms are a source of
unending worry for Madhya Pradesh PWD minister
Vijayvargiya and his political friends in the
state. Especially, if they come with a vibrating
ring. Then, he feels, the condom metamorphoses
into a sex toy. "And sex toys," says the
minister, "can have serious repercussions on the
Indian way of life."
Celebrated historical texts suggest otherwise.
Vatsyayana's 4th century AD compilation Kama
Sutra, the world's oldest tome on sex and its
pleasures, is peppered with so many details of
sex toys that one begins to wonder if it was a
small-scale industry in ancient India.
The section titled Aupanishadika (occult
practices) talks about various kinds of apadravya
(apparatus) used for sexual intercourse. These
dildos or sex aids were made of wooden, rubber,
gold, silver, copper, ivory, even horn. At one
place, the Kama sutra also says that when men
have no sex partner, they satisfy themselves
"with dolls."
The book provides graphic details of the shapes
and sizes of the sex toys ranging from a rounded
stick to a curved stick in the shape of a mortar,
from an object shaped like a flower bud to
elephant's trunk. The text even talks about
artificial sex organs made of "hollowed out
pumpkins" and "bamboos moistened with oil and
ointment."
The MP minister seems to be arguing against sex
as pleasure. "The government should promote
family planning and not something that is meant
to give your partner pleasure," he says. By this
logic even dotted or flavoured condoms should not
be promoted by government.
The minister's worries on the social effect of
such toys seem to be misplaced. Several Indian
texts show that sexual love was both art and
sport in the ancient period.
Set in Benaras, Damodargupta's 8th century AD
long poem Kuttanimata (The advice of a courtesan)
devotes a number of pages on how to win hearts
and bodies of young men.
Ram Nath Jha, who teaches in Special Centre for
Sanskrit Studies, JNU, says that even ancient
philosophical treatises such as Swaminarayan
Bhashya's comments on Sankhyakarika (12 century
AD) and Mathara Vritti (between 6th-8 century
AD), a major text in Sankhya philosophy talk of
sex as a pleasure provider.
Jha quotes from Bhashya: Upatisthate
vishayopabhogartham tadupastham
anandagrahanalingam bhavati (The sex organ
produces pleasure through experiencing objects;
therefore, it is a sign of the atma). Jha says
people have stopped reading original texts.
"Which is why they talk like this," he says.
However, Kumkum Roy, who teaches ancient India in
JNU, offers a different twist to the debate. She
admits that means of enhancing sexual pleasures
are discussed in ancient Indian texts. "But," she
points out, "the notion of sexual pleasure in
these texts was not universal. They were
primarily meant for men belonging to dominant
elite groups."
o o o
Washington Post
A CONTROVERSIAL CONDOM IN THE LAND OF THE KAMA SUTRA
Does the 'Crezendo' Violate Indian Law?
By Emil Steiner | June 21, 2007
Few medical ethics debates have the potential to
touch so many people as the one now going on in
India over a tiny plastic ring called the
Crezendo.
The Crezendo, a condom with a battery-powered
vibrating ring attached, has sent shockwaves
through the world's second-largest country, where
contraception is encouraged but sex toys and
pornography are forbidden. In the state of Madhya
Pradesh, conservative Hindus are particularly
disturbed by the device, which they say is
nothing more than a vibrator.
Adding to their outrage is the fact that a
government-owned company is involved in marketing
it. Madhya Pradesh's minister for road and
energy, Kailash Vijayvargiya, told the BBC that
the government's job "is to promote family
planning and population control measures rather
than market products for sexual pleasure."
But a spokesman for Crezendo's manufacturer,
Hindustan Latex Ltd., explained that the product
"was launched with the primary objective of
addressing a fall in condom usage... A major
reason cited by users was the lack of pleasure
when using condoms." As a result, for the past
three months, some Indians have been safely
experiencing "ultimate pleasure" for about a
dollar per use, while others have taken to the
streets in protest.
India has its own standards for what is and isn't
appropriate -- just ask Richard Gere -- and while
it may be hard to believe that the country that
came up with The Kama Sutra could be so prudish
when it comes to sex toys, that really isn't what
this debate is about. The question is really how
those standards affect India's ability to improve
public health. Or, to put it another way: Does
decency mandate throwing out the erotic bubble
bath with the baby?
______
[5]
[India's presidential candidate Pratibha Patil
recently triggered a controversy by saying that
the 'ghoongat' (veiling among Hindu Women) was
born to protect Hindu women from Mughal invaders.
Such claims have gained popular currency in India
due to systematic propaganda by the Hindu right
which tends to blame - the Mughals for the
arrival of veiling in India. Historians in India
have for long years challenged such suggestions.
See below extract ]
from :
VEILING OF WOMEN IN THE BRAHMANIC RELIGION
by Thanabalu Kalimuthu
(courtesy Prof. D.N. Jha)
"Bhavabhuti in his Mahaviracharita gives a clear
vivid evidence of purda. When Rama sees
Parasurama coming towards him, he directs his
consort Sita, 'Dear one, he is our elder,
therefore turn aside and veil yourself' [Mvir.Ch.
Act II, p.71] [1200, p.70].
"The Kalibhana grant also tells us that the women
of the royal household observed purda in Orissa
[1200, p.70] [In.H.Qu. XX (1944) p.242].
"Vachaspati tells us that women of good families
did not come without a veil in public [Vach.]
[1200, p.70].
"Some women were so much devoted to their
husbands that they would not even look at the Sun
regarding him as a parapurusa. If the servants
were found seeing the faces of queens, they
feared punishment. [Sis. XII.20.17] [1200 p.70].
"The free mixing of men and women was considered
bad in Sriharsha's works [Nais.Ch. XV.3] [1200,
p.70].
"'Harsha's [1099-1101] [Lohara dynasty] coins
[depict] a half cross-legged goddess [and] a veil
appears on the head ' -- [Coin.39]."
______
[6]
http://communalism.blogspot.com/2007/06/thanks-to-campaigning-city-of-hollywood.html
IMC-USA commends the City of Hollywood, Florida
for officially dissociating from Sadhvi
Ritambhara Event
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 23, 2007
Indian Muslim Council-USA, an advocacy group
working towards protecting and promoting the
pluralist and tolerant values of the Indian
society along with a broad-based alliance
representing Hindu, Christian and Muslim
communities as well as organizations of secular
persuasion commend the City of Hollywood, Florida
for distancing itself from an event honoring
Sadhvi Ritambhara.
This announcement comes in the wake of a
concerted campaign by Indian Americans of various
background protesting the City of Hollywood's
'sponsorship' of the event on Saturday June 23rd.
Ms. Ritambhara is a leading member of Vishwa
Hindu Parishad, a militant organization that has
been implicated in promoting hatred and violence
against Muslims, Christians and other cultural
and religious minorities in India. Ms. Ritambhara
is currently under-trial for her role in the
Babri Mosque demolition case. On December 6,
1992, she incited an armed Hindu mob to tear down
the 16th century Babri Mosque in Ayodhya, India,
in violation of the order of the Indian Supreme
Court. She further incited Hindu mobs to attack
Muslims leading to over 3000 deaths in December
1992 and January 1993.
Shrikumar Poddar, the Hindu spiritual leader of
Vaishnava Center for Enlightenment, Lansing, MI
said, "Sadhvi Ritambhara is the anti-thesis of
Hinduism, always speaking ill of other faiths, I
wonder how the State Department issues visa to
such promoters of hatred".
The officials at the City of Hollywood were
educated by the callers about the deplorable
record of Ms. Ritambhara and were surprised to
learn that the organizers had quoted City of
Hollywood, Florida as one of the sponsors of the
event. The City immediately demanded and received
a written apology from the organizers of the
event.
Shekhar Reddy, writing on behalf of South Florida
Hindu Association, apologized for the
embarrassment caused to the City of Hollywood.
The organizations that participated in this campaign include:
Alliance for a Secular and Democratic South Asia
Association of Indian Muslims of America (AIM)
Dharma Megha
Federation of Indian American Christian
Organizations of North America (FIACONA)
Friends of South Asia (FOSA)
Hindu Vaishnava Center for Enlightenment
Indian Muslim Council-USA (IMC-USA)
Indian Muslim Relief and Charities (IMRC)
India Foundation
Indian American Coalition for Pluralism (IACP)
Indian Christian Forum (ICF)
International Service Society
Muslim Youth Awareness Alliance (MYAA)
NRI Coalition for Social Justice
NRI's For Secular and Harmonious India (NRI-SAHI)
Seva International
Supporters of Human Rights in India (SHRI)
Vedanata Society of East Lansing
Washington Watch.
______
[7] ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Call for papers!!! Few Travel Grants for PhD Students!!!
POST-EXOTIC INDIA: A NEW NARRATIVE IN MAKING
Graduate School of International Development, Roskilde University
& SASNET, Lund University
Two days Intensive PhD Workshop and Public Lectures, 26-27 September 2007
Organisers: Ravinder Kaur, Laurids Lauridsen,
Roskilde University and Staffan
Lindberg, Lund University
Venue: Roskilde University
ETCS: 3 points
Background:
The 1990's economic liberalization programme in India is often seen as a sharp
turning point that transformed India from an aid recipient developing nation to
a fast growing global player. In less than two
decades, India has become the new
Asian success story comparable to China. New global buzzwords - outsourcing,
call centers - have found inextricable Indian associations. In short, India
speaks and is spoken of in a new global language, the lexicon of which is
derived from its historic economic growth. The exotic - foreign, distant,
mysterious and veiled - produced through the oriental gaze no longer dominates
the Indian imagery. The post-exotic of 1990's seeks to produce a new narrative
of global India.
As India posts 9.4% growth rate for the first time in its 60 years of
Independence (1947-2007), an unprecedented public euphoria tinged with
scepticism seems to be fast gaining ground. The reasons for euphoria are
evident in the impressive statistics produced by the government that show high
growth, low inflation, large flows of foreign direct investments and ever
growing foreign exchange reserves. India has seemingly found a new comparative
frame vis-à-vis China a global entity on fast track unshackling it from its
historic 'other' Pakistan one half of the Indo-Pak duo mired in regional
rivalry and conflict over Kashmir, low intensity conflicts and wars. In short,
India is on its way to become a global player with impeccable democratic
credentials, and a gigantic, prosperous middle class composed of highly
educated and competitive professionals.
The successive governments, since 1990's economic liberalisation, have tried to
capture the spirit of new India in catchphrases and slogans such as 'Shining
India' and 'Incredible India' to captivate people's imagination in India and
abroad. These media driven campaigns have been received sceptically as they
gloss over uncomfortable facts of mass suicide deaths among farmers in, for
example Punjab, Karnataka and Maharashtra; growing rich/poor gaps; social
inequalities and falling levels in the human development index where India
ranks two notches below at 126 since 2004. Equally uncomfortable is the
occurrence of communal and caste conflicts that threaten to mar the euphoria
from time to time. Recently, violence erupted in Rajasthan over claims staked
by newly mobilised caste groups to the reservation quota; clashes took place in
Punjab where orthodox Sikhs, comprising of landed peasantry, took offence to
appropriation of Sikh revered symbols by a sect of low caste Sikhs and Hindus.
These events are neither isolated nor infrequent, rather fresh episodes in a
long history of inter-community violence, for instance the 2002 Gujarat
massacre that took hundreds of lives and triggered off spatial, social and
economic segregation of Hindus and Muslims.
The new Indian narratives emerge out of this
tension between unfettered national
pride, spurred by economic success and global recognition, and deep discomfort
at premature celebrations by the prosperous and burgeoning middle class. At the
heart of this tension lies the struggle over representation of authentic India,
for instance, an early 20th C Gandhian vision - "India lives in its villages"
that saw rural India as the definitive feature of the country; versus
outsourced call centre businesses in Gurgaon skycrapers and 'India's silicon
valley' in Bangalore that symbolise entrepreneurship, technological innovation
and global competition. Clearly, this historic tension has reached a defining
moment that is evident in the competing narratives.
This two day intensive workshop explores the
post-exotic India through following
themes:
a. processes and affects of 1991 economic liberalisation ,
b. emergence of a vocal, mobile and astute middle class,
c. global ambitions of India, and
d. its regional implications in South Asia.
Invited Speakers:
Nicholas Dirks, Columbia University
Thomas Blom Hansen, Amsterdam University
Pritam Singh, Oxford Brookes,
Staffan Lindberg, Lund University
Ravinder Kaur, Roskilde University
Srirupa Roy, Amherst, USA, SSRC New York,
Nandini Gooptu, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford,
Pamela Price, Oslo University
Anna Lindberg, Lund University
Arild Engelsen Ruud, Oslo University
Sten Waldmann, Uppsala University
Jørgen Dige Pedersen, Aarhus University
Structure of the workshop
The training course is structured around two elements:
Day 1: Presentations by the invited speakers, and
Day 2: Presentation of PhD-papers. The latter
will take place in smaller groups.
There will be made plenty of time in the
programme for discussion, in plenary as
well as in the small working groups. Each participant will write a 5 page paper
focussing on the following issues:
* Abstract or fundamental research question.
* Specific questions (argued in relation to fundamental research question).
* Data and fieldwork strategy.
* Fieldwork techniques.
Participation requirements:
The first day of the workshop is open to all. The
second part of the workshop is
open to all PhD students upon application by July
15th to <rkaur at ruc.dk>. A maximum
of 20 PhD students can participate in the work shop sessions. Each participant
must prepare a short paper (no more than five pages), presenting her/his
research design and setting, main questions regarding fieldwork and data
collection techniques. This text should be submitted to the organizers at
Inge at ruc.dk no later than August 15th. Ultimo August, information about working
group composition as well as the different papers will be circulated to the
participants. Participants in a working group are expected to have carefully
read and commented upon each of the fellow participants' texts. 15-20 minutes
will be given for each presentation in the working groups.
Funding Possibilities:
The Graduate School appreciates that the cost of participation may be
prohibitive to some students. We therefore offer two travel grants for students
who would otherwise be prevented from participating in the course. The
beneficiaries will be selected on merit. Application for the travel grant
should accompany the application for participation in the course and include a
letter of recommendation from the supervisor.
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
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matters of peace and democratisation in South
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