SACW | Oct. 10-12, 2007
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Thu Oct 11 21:47:26 CDT 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | October 10-12, 2007 |
Dispatch No. 2459 - Year 10 running
[1] Sri Lanka: The Price of Truth-Telling, The
Price of Lying, and The Need For Monitoring
(Rohini Hensman)
[2] Pakistan - Army , America and Allah:
(i) Musharraf in the Middle (Najam Sethi)
(ii) Pakistan's Democracy: America's stark
choice (Sandy Berger and Bruce Riedel)
(iii) NWFP: 'liberation' after MMA? (Editorial, Daily Times)
(iv) The tragedy of Swat (Editorial, Dawn)
[3] India: 'We suffer from a pathological
incuriosity': A conversation with Arundhati Roy
[4] India: In defence of assertive secularism (Sharad Bailur)
[5] India: Saffron Terror (Subhash Gatade)
[6] India: In The Midst of Goans (Vidyadhar Gadgil)
[7] On the Indo US Nuclear Deal and on the impact
of a possible Indo-Pak Nuclear War:
(i) Report of Public Meeting on Indo-Us Nuclear Deal: Why? What? For whom?
(ii) Indo-Pak nuclear war could cause one billion starvation deaths
[8] Announcements:
(i) Robert Eric Frykenberg will lecture on
"Hindutva as a Political Religion", (Oslo, 15
October 2007)
(ii) "The Talibanization of South Asia: Can it
Be Stopped?" - A talk by Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy
(Chicago, 31 October 2007)
(iii) 11th International Conference on Sri
Lanka Studies (ICSLS) (Portsmouth, 1-3 November
200)
______
[1]
THE PRICE OF TRUTH-TELLING, THE PRICE OF LYING, AND THE NEED FOR MONITORING
by Rohini Hensman
Last week, Rajan Hoole of University Teachers for
Human Rights (Jaffna) accepted the Martin Ennals
Award for human rights defenders on behalf of
UTHR(J), his colleague K.Sritharan, and himself.
Many of us who had been following their writings
from 1987 onwards were overjoyed when the Martin
Ennals Foundation finally gave them the
recognition they so richly deserve. Like a
compass, their reports have provided direction to
seekers of justice and peace in Sri Lanka's
political wilderness. They have been able to play
this role because of their single-minded
dedication to discovering and publicising the
truth. They have not been content to report the
atrocities perpetrated by the Sri Lanka state
security forces, but have also taken up
violations by the IPKF and associated groups, the
LTTE, and other armed Tamil groups. Nor did they
stop at criticising abuses against Tamils, but
protested equally strongly against abuses
directed at Muslims and Sinhalese.
Members of the group have paid a heavy price for
telling the truth. In September 1989,
founder-member Rajani Thiranagama was killed by
the LTTE, which also incarcerated thousands of
Tamil dissidents in underground prisons,
torturing and killing many. Other leaders were
forced to flee Jaffna, leaving their homes and
jobs, and go underground to escape a similar
fate. They continue to live like this, without
permanent homes, their children facing an
uncertain future, unable to do the one thing they
would most like to do: return home to Jaffna. And
yet they continue with their work, providing both
information and analysis which is critically
important to anyone seeking a just peace in Sri
Lanka.
In the period following the signing of the 2002
CFA, UTHR(J) reports tended to concentrate on
human rights violations by the LTTE, who, as
usual, used the ceasefire to hunt and kill their
critics and opponents, and to continue
conscripting children. They also criticised those
who supported this so-called peace process
uncritically, including the Norwegian mediators.
In a bulletin entitled 'In the Name of "Peace":
Terror Stalks the North-East,' released on 1
February 2002, they berated 'the liberal camp,
the peace lobby, church and civil society groups
in Colombo. Along with their Tamil colleagues,
they have largely ceased to question crimes by
the LTTE, particularly against its own people. In
the belief that they should do nothing to rock
the peace boat, they are propelling it towards
another disaster. They carry on as though it is
the LTTE's right to indulge at pleasure in
political killings, conscription and recruitment
of children. This is reflected in the huge
silences and distortions in their statements made
as peace and election monitoring groups. By
purposefully ignoring the fascist controls that
are shot through the whole fabric of Tamil
society, they find no difficulty in detecting
near hundred percent Tamil support for the LTTE
as their sole representatives and sole arbiter in
any peace process. Any active opposition to the
LTTE within Tamil society that continues at heavy
cost is regarded by them as a nuisance, rather
than an essential pre-requisite for a return to
sanity.'
It is largely thanks to UTHR(J) and other
dissident Tamils that many international human
rights organisations and governments stopped
viewing the LTTE as the sole representative of
the Tamils of Sri Lanka, and started documenting
their human rights abuses. Chandrika
Kumaratunga's public admission of injustices
against Tamils, signifying a commitment to ending
those injustices, along with Lakshman
Kadirgamar's trenchant criticisms of the LTTE,
helped to secure bans on it in many countries.
The fortunes of the LTTE were clearly on the wane.
Before the war broke out again, UTHR(J) remained
critical of the LTTE's 'orgy of killing'
(bulletin dated 1 November 2005), and after the
outbreak of war they still documented LTTE
atrocities, clearly blaming the LTTE for the
resumption of hostilities. Yet the overall
balance gradually shifted towards atrocities by
state security forces: for example, the
cold-blooded murder of five students in
Trincomalee on 2 January 2006 and terrorisation
of their families and witnesses to prevent them
from testifying; the Allaipiddy massacre of eight
civilians, including two infants, on 12 May; the
gruesome sexual assault and murder of a couple
and their two small children in Vankalai on 9
June; the execution-style killing of 17 Action
Contre Faim humanitarian workers on 5 August; and
the massacre of eight Muslim labourers and two
others in Pottuvil on 17 September.
This is a small sample of the thousands of
civilians killed, but it highlights two
characteristics: (a) the deliberate nature of the
atrocities: there is no way these killings could
be accidental; and (b) the fact that the victims
are unarmed civilians, whose only crime is that
they - like the Jews and gypsies exterminated by
the Nazis - happen to belong to minority
communities. Since terrorism is defined as 'acts
or threats of violence against unarmed civilians
in pursuit of a political objective,' these are
acts of terrorism committed by state-linked
forces. UTHR(J) also documented cases where
child conscription by the Karuna forces was aided
and abetted by government security forces. It
supported the Presidential Commission of Enquiry
into extrajuducial killings and disappearances
(CoI), yet noted that the Chairman had a conflict
of interest because he was involved in two of the
cases under investigation, and concurred with the
reservations of the International Independent
Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP) observing the
CoI, reiterating the need for UN monitoring of
continuing human rights violations.
After the military supposedly 'liberated' the
East from the LTTE, UTHR(J) reported that 'The
East is now under a total militarisation of the
civil administration, by a military enjoying a
23-year-history of absolute impunity, killing
thousands of Tamil civilians without anyone being
punished. There are no democratic structures
where the civilians have a credible voice, such
as a political settlement with meaningful
devolution would have provided. State-affiliated
killer groups run loose picking out targets among
Tamils with leadership qualities.' It concluded,
'Given the history of violence in the East over
the last two and a half decades, the East more
than any other region calls for a UN Human Rights
Field Operation, to ensure independent and
impartial monitoring, investigation and reporting
on human rights abuses as well as to contribute
towards the protection of civilians. If the
government is serious about winning the
confidence of the local populations, particularly
the minority communities, a deterrent against
abuses, as what international human rights
monitoring offers, will also demonstrate the
government's commitment to protect civilians.'
The Boy Who Cried 'Wolf!'
Is the government listening? As a child, I was
told Aesop's fable about the shepherd-boy who
amused himself by crying 'Wolf!' when there was
no wolf. At first the villagers came running to
help him, but after he had laughed at them three
or four times, decided not to respond in future.
So when a wolf actually did come, no one came to
help the boy when he cried 'Wolf!' and his flock
was decimated. I also learned a poem about a girl
called Matilda, who told such dreadful lies, it
made one gasp and stretch one's eyes. One day she
called the fire brigade to come when there was no
fire, and her aunt, with whom she was staying,
had to pay them to go away after they had doused
the house in water. The next time she was alone
in the house, a fire did break out, but every
time she shouted 'Fire!' the neighbours answered,
'Little liar!', and consequently, when her aunt
returned, Matilda and the house were burned.
It is by means of stories like these that
children learn the price to be paid for
persistent lying: people may believe you once or
twice, but then you lose their trust and they
never believe you again, even on those rare
occasions when you happen to be telling the
truth. Apparently spokespersons of the government
were never told these stories, since they lie
compulsively about human rights violations in Sri
Lanka, and still expect people, especially
foreigners, to believe them. Yet most people are
neither so ignorant nor so stupid. They may
listen politely while government spokespeople say
that everything is fine in the East, and the only
human rights violations are by the LTTE, yet they
are likely to be thinking that not a word of what
is being said is true. All this is a bonanza for
the LTTE. First, the security forces' atrocities
provide them with endless opportunities for
propaganda; then the government cover-up allows
them to dismiss everything said by the government
- including legitimate charges against the LTTE -
as untrue!
The government's stock response to accusations of
human rights violations is to vilify the accusers
as 'LTTE supporters', or even 'terrorists'. Yet
nothing could be further from the truth so far as
UTHR(J) activists are concerned. No one has
sacrificed as much as they have in order to
oppose the LTTE; so long as the LTTE remains,
they can never go home or live in security. The
record can be checked on their website, at
www.uthr.org - their consistent and strong
opposition to the LTTE is undeniable. And
'terrorists'? That epithet is more applicable to
those in the government who sponsor death squads
than to activists of UTHR(J), whose commitment to
non-violence and humanitarianism shines through
all their reports. It is not they who support the
LTTE, but elements in the government who
constantly present the LTTE with propaganda
material by committing human rights violations -
and then discredit the government by lying about
them.
So if the government wishes to avoid the fate of
Matilda and the boy who cried 'Wolf!', it needs
to clean up its act so far as human rights
violations are concerned and invite UN human
rights monitors to bear witness to its
performance. The same monitors will also be able
to testify to the gross abuses committed by the
LTTE, thus strengthening the government's
credibility and discrediting the LTTE. As UTHR(J)
puts it, 'if the Government accepts an equitable
political settlement and upholding human rights
and the rule of law as the way forward, it and
the country stand to benefit enormously from UN
involvement, in the form of a Human Rights Field
Operation that includes human rights monitoring,
reporting and technical support to strengthen our
institutions. UN monitoring could also be used to
make it costly for the LTTE to continue with
political killings and conscription by taking
cover behind the State's conduct.' Will the
government have the wisdom to accept this advice?
Or will it continue to undermine itself and
strengthen the Tigers politically?
______
[2]
(i)
Wall Street Journal
October 11, 2007; Page A20
MUSHARRAF IN THE MIDDLE
by Najam Sethi
Lahore, Pakistan
When Gen. Pervez Musharraf won 99% of the votes
cast in Pakistan's presidential election on
Saturday -- an election that was boycotted by the
opposition, no less -- one national newspaper
headline aptly screamed: "Musharraf steals the
show." Not quite yet, that is: The Supreme Court
will decide later this month whether or not to
validate the election results. If it does, Mr.
Musharraf has promised to doff his uniform and
hold elections. If it doesn't, he may impose
martial law.
This acute uncertainty has created a flurry of
debate here and, more importantly, in Washington,
where the Bush administration is belatedly
working out how to proceed. Is Mr. Musharraf a
failing military dictator or a burgeoning
democrat? And more importantly, should the U.S.
back him or ditch him? The answer isn't as clear
cut as the White House might like.
The radical view, outlined by Sandy Berger and
Bruce Riedel in yesterday's International Herald
Tribune, proposes to ditch Mr. Musharraf
altogether and push for "free and fair
elections." In this perfect world, a secular
civilian government with legitimacy to tackle
religious extremism would emerge, saving
America's face.
But this kind of proposal grossly misrepresents
the on-the-ground reality. Free and fair
elections would likely produce a deeply divided
polity, one in which the religious forces would
likely hold the balance of power between Benazir
Bhutto's secular People's Power Party (PPP) and
Mr. Musharraf's conservative ruling Pakistan
Muslim League (PML). In the absence of Mr.
Musharraf, the PML would most certainly ally with
the Muttahida Majlis Amal (MMA), an alliance of
five bitterly anti-American religious parties.
If that happened, the first casualty of a
rightwing coalition government would be
Washington's war on terror. In the political
paralysis that would inevitably follow, the
Pakistani army would welcome the opportunity to
retreat to the barracks rather than fight "its
own people" in the border provinces. Then America
wouldn't have Mr. Musharraf to lean on to "do
more" to fight terror; it would have to go it
alone.
Other analysts contend that the U.S. should not
back an emerging alliance between Ms. Bhutto and
Mr. Musharraf because the former is corrupt and
the latter is unpopular. That leaves ex-prime
minister Nawaz Sharif in contention. Ousted by
Mr. Musharraf in 1999 and exiled to Saudi Arabia,
Mr. Sharif gained in popularity recently when he
tried, unsuccessfully, to defy the president and
return to Pakistan last month.
A Sharif government probably wouldn't be much to
America's liking, either. Mr. Sharif is a deeply
conservative politician who has always ruled in
alliance with the mullahs, going so far as to
pass various Islamic laws to appease them.
Recently, he set up the All Parties Democratic
Movement (APDM) to oppose Mr. Musharraf. This
grouping comprises all the religious and
anti-American parties in the country. Like Ms.
Bhutto, Mr. Sharif has dodged corruption charges.
When he was in power, he suppressed the free
press with a vengeance. Under the circumstances,
he is hardly likely to prove Pakistan's long lost
democratic savior and champion of the war on
religious extremism.
That leaves Mr. Musharraf, who is quickly
consolidating his power base. On Monday, he named
Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, the former head of the
Interservices Intelligence, vice chief of the
army. That puts Mr. Kayani, a Musharraf loyalist,
in line to become the next army chief. Another
trusted aide, Gen. Tariq Majeed, became chairman
of the joint chiefs of staff committee. Mr.
Musharraf is also strengthening his position by
rupturing the MMA's grip on the volatile North
West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan and
his influence is growing in the Taliban-al-Qaeda
infested tribal badlands of Waziristan.
Mr. Musharraf's alliance with Ms. Bhutto isn't
perfect, by any means. The twice-sacked former
prime minister Ms. Bhutto, a pro-West liberal in
self-exile since 1997, struck a deal to have her
corruption charges dropped in exchange for
supporting Mr. Musharraf's bid for the
presidency. Mr. Musharraf, who's survived three
assassination attempts, remains deeply unpopular
with middle-class Pakistanis because he is
perceived as a U.S. puppet and an anti-Islamic
secularist. Ms. Bhutto, by contrast, is still
quite popular. But that may not matter: Baitullah
Mehsud, the Taliban-al Qaeda commander in
Waziristan, says he is planning to welcome her
back home with suicide bombers "because she is an
American agent."
The Bush administration can't ask Mr. Musharraf
to "do more" in the war against radical Islam at
a time when he is so unpopular at home, nor can
they ask him to hold free and fair elections
immediately and quit the scene. The best bet for
Pakistan and its friends abroad would be a
liberal-secular civil-military alliance that
leads to a stable and moderate government.
Sometimes, that takes more patience than
Washington is willing to extend.
Mr. Sethi is editor of the Friday Times and Daily Times in Lahore, Pakistan.
o o o
(ii)
International Herald Tribune
October 9, 2007
PAKISTAN'S DEMOCRACY: AMERICA'S STARK CHOICE
by Sandy Berger and Bruce Riedel
With the staged re-election on Saturday of
President Pervez Musharraf, America faces a stark
choice: Do we support democracy and the rule of
law in Pakistan, or do we back up a failing
military dictator?
President George W. Bush seems to have chosen to
back the dictator. This is a mistake that will
damage our interests in South Asia and in the
Muslim world.
Musharraf took power in a military coup in 1999.
When we traveled with President Bill Clinton to
South Asia in 2000, we made a four-hour stop in
Islamabad, where Clinton insisted on speaking to
the Pakistani people. He made a strong appeal for
a return to democracy, less than half a year
after Musharraf had deposed Pakistan's elected -
if not entirely effective - Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif. Seven years later, the people of
Pakistan, which is increasingly on the edge of
chaos, deserve no less.
The stakes are critical. Pakistan is the
epicenter of the most dangerous corner of the
world, where terrorism, nuclear weapons, war,
narcotics and dictators come together. Since
9/11, we have looked to Musharraf to be the edge
of our spear against Al Qaeda and have handsomely
rewarded him with over $10 billion in aid. But Al
Qaeda is stronger than ever.
In the last six months Musharraf has alienated
the majority of Pakistanis by trying to pack the
Supreme Court and by his temporizing in handling
Islamic extremism in the capital. Recent polls
show his approval rate has dropped precipitously.
Now he has refused to let Sharif return to the
country, despite a Supreme Court ruling that said
Nawaz should be allowed home, and he has
orchestrated his re-election by a Parliament
chosen in a rigged election five years ago.
The Bush administration has been notably quiet
about all this. It has demurred from demanding
that the rule of law be respected and has instead
put its arm around the dictator. It has preferred
back-room deals to free and fair elections, even
colluding with the Saudis to again exile Sharif.
This despite the fact that Pakistan has become a
haven for the Taliban, which is killing NATO
soldiers in Afghanistan.
A recent study shows that 80 percent of the
suicide bombers who attack NATO come from
training camps in Pakistan. Five years ago there
were two suicide attacks in the country, this
year there have been over 100, a 70 percent
increase from last year. And in those Taliban
camps lurk Osama bin Laden and his gang.
Thanks to the internal crisis in Pakistan, bin
Laden's space to operate in South Asia is
growing. His freedom to operate was underscored
in his message last month urging a jihad to
overthrow Musharraf. He is not cowering
"impotently" in a cave; rather he clearly has
access to a sophisticated media apparatus that
has tripled its output of messages in the last
year.
All too often, America has forsaken its long-term
interests and, worse, its values in Pakistan and
chosen the short-term convenience of backing
military dictators. These dictators have failed
to develop the country and have undermined its
democratic institutions. Consequently, today only
15 percent of Pakistanis have a favorable opinion
of America and over 70 percent fear an American
attack.
Some say Musharraf is all that keeps Pakistan
from an Islamic takeover. Musharraf used that
line with Clinton in 2000, but Clinton didn't buy
it then and we should not buy it now. Pakistan's
democratic institutions and politicians are far
from perfect. Whose are? But they should be given
the opportunity to address their country's
problems. Sharif and Benazir Bhutto should be
allowed to compete at home, and face trial if
accused of crimes, not deported. Free and fair
elections will produce a secular government that
would have the legitimacy to tackle extremism.
Every election in Pakistan's history shows the
Islamists are a small minority and the
more-secular parties are the majority.
Democracies are always more troublesome partners
because they listen to their own people. A
secular government in Pakistan will battle
extremism and bin Laden for its own
self-interests, not ours. It is time for the
Pakistani Army to return to its barracks and for
us to have confidence in the people of Pakistan.
Sandy Berger was national security adviser to the
President Bill Clinton from 1997 to 2001. Bruce
Riedel was special assistant to President Clinton
for Near East and South Asia Affairs then and is
now Senior Fellow at the Saban Center in the
Brookings Institution.
o o o
(iii)
Daily Times
October 11, 2007
EDITORIAL: NWFP: 'LIBERATION' AFTER MMA?
A terrorist strike on Tuesday in Peshawar's CD
Market in Nishtarabad damaged 20 shops and
wounded 25 innocent people, five of them
seriously. The 4-kg bomb was meant to register
the "pious" man's protest against the
"un-Islamic" entertainment of music. In a
parallel development, the city's official
entertainment centre, the Nishtar Hall, was being
refurbished to resume the cultural activities
banned by the now-defunct MMA government. False
piety could neither stop entertainment nor
persuade the terrorists to spare the province.
Will the NWFP now regain its old character, after
the exit of clerical rule?
After five years' ban on culture, the JUIF and
Jama'at-e Islami are hardly better placed to win
at the level of their win in 2002. By the
alliance's own assessment, it is not going to win
the 70 seats in a house of 124 that it won last
time. Now it is estimated that it will win only
35 seats, the bulk of the rest going to the PPP
and ANP, both pro-culture in their outlook. The
clergy has come a cropper. After coming to power
in the province in 2002, the alliance banned all
musical and vocal entertainment and successfully
tore down all hoardings displaying women in ads.
The Jama'at, which tried unsuccessfully to deface
ad hoardings in Lahore, was heady with success
achieved in Peshawar and the rest of the NWFP.
The MMA banned Peshawar's famous theatre at
Nishtar Hall and ran all the musicians and
singers out of the city. Pride of Performance
singer Gulzar Alam and his family faced
government-backed persecution in 2003 when 27
police officials forced themselves into their
home without arrest warrants and took away Alam's
three sons and a brother. Earlier, the singer was
arrested from a marriage function because of the
"ban on music" put in place by the MMA
government. The police also broke his harmonium
as a gesture of the inauguration of a clerical
utopia.
There was an exodus of entertainers from Peshawar
after that. All musicians and makers of musical
instruments - for centuries part of Pashtun
culture - either accepted their pauperised new
state or ran down to Punjab. The new order was
clearly a copy of the Taliban rule in Afghanistan
brought to an end in 2001. The intent of the
Taliban was clear to the singers of Kabul. Famous
vocalist Nashnaass - the pride of Kabul's Nauruz
festivals - whose cassettes in Pashto and Persian
were sold in all parts of the Pashtun-dominated
regions of Pakistan, decided to leave his
homeland and flee to the West.
Strangely, the "revolution" against entertainment
and foreign franchises was spearheaded by the
Jama'at and its aggressive Shabab-e Milli youth
organisation, while the more pragmatic JUIF sat
back and saw itself being upstaged by the more
radical Jama'at. This was the forerunner of what
was going to follow in the shape of the Hasba
Bill. The bill envisaged the formation of a moral
police to ensure that all public officials
offered their prayers regularly, to force traders
to shut their businesses during prayers, and
suspend TV channels at prayer times, with no
appeal against its summary lashings lying in any
court. In its early form, the bill also contained
a reference to the duty of looking after the
"guests" (Al Qaeda) residing in Pakistan.
The real casualty of the new Islamisation in the
province under the MMA was the economy. It took a
steep dive when foreign investors ran out of the
NWFP to save their lives. The Hasba Bill
obsession of the clergy was mostly responsible
for the international organisations' misgivings
about the province's economic health. The JUIF
leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman did not help much
when in 2003 he announced at a public meeting
that Aimal Kasi, a self-proclaimed assassin,
should be the role model of young Pakistanis. The
Peshawar Bar Association upped the ante by taking
out a procession with banners warning the United
States that Pakistan had "nukes it could use
against America".
What followed was something that the MMA lived to
regret: an Al Qaeda-Taliban onslaught that did
not recognise the MMA government as a friend. The
government steadily lost territory to the
vigilante forces it had unleashed. The chief
minister, Akram Durrani, used the mantra of
blaming all Al Qaeda terrorism of Baitullah
Mehsud on the "intelligence agencies" of the
federal government. All that is gone now. It is
quite possible that the JUIF is itself relieved
that it is no longer presiding over a shipwreck
of governance. It is definitely time for the
people of the province to go back to normal life.
*
o o o
(iv)
Dawn
October 9, 2007
Editorial
THE TRAGEDY OF SWAT
ONCE the hotspot of Pakistan's tourism, Swat is
fast emerging as a stronghold of the
Talibanisation that has swept most of the
southern districts of the NWFP and some northern
districts as well. The war in Waziristan has been
the focus of national attention, and rightly so
given the implications of the rise of militancy
in the tribal areas for the territorial integrity
of the country. But the happenings in Swat also
have profound relevance for Pakistan's society.
Here the issue is not one of a military
confrontation with the army. It is the Islamists'
self-acquired right to impose - even by using
force - their own brand of morality on the
civilian population. Since the beginning of July,
there have been 53 incidents of bomb explosions,
including three suicide bombings, claiming a
total of 48 lives. That is not all. There has
been an assassination attempt on an ANP leader
and officials in the administration and their
families have come under attack and many of them
have now reportedly shifted to Islamabad.
A lot of the violence is directed against women,
girls' schools, NGOs and CD shops. With their
misguided beliefs of restricting women and
banning all entertainment, the militants are now
on the war path. How this is affecting the lives
of common people is shocking. Media reports
suggest that worried parents have pulled out
their children from schools in large numbers.
Health care is being affected with Maulana
Fazlullah conducting an anti-polio campaign on
his illegally operated FM radio. The state's writ
appears to be weakening in this area. Police have
withdrawn from checkpoints in some of the
worst-affected tehsils of Swat, which are now
being policed by militants. Fazlullah sent
hundreds of his armed comrades to rescue two
abducted women from the upscale Kanju Town in
Swat and 'bring to justice' their alleged
abductors who were paraded before a multitude of
people as they await their fate to be decided by
a self-appointed 'Islamic court'.
Unfortunately, all this is happening, not in any
remote corner of the tribal badlands of Pakistan
but in a settled district of the NWFP. There
seems to be total paralysis and inaction with the
state security apparatus going through one of its
worst patches and the administrative system in a
state of collapse. The problem has been further
compounded by a lack of an actionable strategy.
The government has left it to the local police to
handle the law and order situation while the
troops that were sent in have not checked the
militants who are also operating in other areas
using Swat as their base. The intelligence
agencies apparently have sufficient information
on the militants' operations but have failed to
take action because the government is still not
clear about its strategy. Already a section of
the population shocked by the assassination
attempt on Afzal Khan Lala has begun to react by
rejecting the police ban on the carrying of
weapons since its faith in the government's
ability to provide security has already been
eroded. Is Swat heading for a civil war?
______
[3]
Tehelka
Oct 13, 2007
'WE SUFFER FROM A PATHOLOGICAL INCURIOSITY'
Writer Arundhati Roy closely followed the
Parliament attack trial. A shoddy probe is just
another tool of repression, she told MIHIR
SRIVASTAVA
Has India become the pet target of terrorism?
I don't know about "pet", but yes, it certainly
has become a target, and we must ask ourselves
why? Not every country in the world suffers from
terrorist attacks . There is a war being fought
in Kashmir - the publicity is that India has won
this war, that "normalcy" has returned. But in
Kashmir, normalcy flows from the barrel of a gun.
There are 7,00,000 security personnel there,
enforcing "normalcy" in Kashmir. In Iraq, in a
fullfledged war, there are 1,25,000 to 1,50,000
US troops. What does normalcy in Kashmir look
like? A little bit of democracy, a little bit of
tourism, a cinema hall run by the cops, a TV
channel run by the home ministry - who are they
trying to fool? Normalcy forced on an angry,
resentful people at gunpoint. If it was "normal",
there would be talk of withdrawing troops. The
only talk is of increasing them. Why? Why do we
talk of the "will of the people" everywhere
except in Kashmir? So, coming to your question,
"terrorism" in India is, for the most part, a
spillover from the valley of Kashmir. Time was
when Kashmir wanted azaadi from India. Might we
be heading for a time when India, or at least
ordinary Indians, folks who want to go about
their humble everyday lives, want azaadi from
Kashmir? I don't know And of course now there's
Babri Masjid, the Bombay carnage, the Gujarat
carnage - all of this complicates things and adds
fuel to the fire. All of this exposes ordinary
people to the possibility of an attack, anytime,
anywhere.
And let me say this - things have become so
complicated, so twisted, so full of subterfuge,
so full of lies and planted stories, fabricated
evidence, that whenever there is an "attack", one
never knows who has carried it out. Never. It
could be the "terrorists", it could equally be
the spooks. There's absolutely no knowing. This
is not some crazed claim. Intelligence agencies
have done this through the ages. In country after
country. It's a hoary tradition. When it comes to
these things, I can no longer believe what I'm
asked to believe, I have no faith in what I read
in the papers, in what I see on TV. It's mostly
crap. No one ever gets to the bottom of anything.
It's all left hanging, the air is thick with the
ghosts of the victims of unsolved crimes. We seem
to suffer from a pathological lack of curiosity.
The investigations into terror attacks are
shoddy. Doesn't this actually exacerbate
terrorism?
A "climate of terrorism" has been created. Many
players - political parties, intelligence
agencies, militant outfits - benefit from the
attacks. Nothing is ever investigated; if an
enquiry is ever set up, it's usually a
smokescreen, a way to defuse a crisis. Whether it
was the Parliament attack case, the burning of
the coach of the Sabarmati Express in Godhra,
whether it is the killing of the main witness of
the Nithari murders or the fake encounter case of
Sohrabuddin Sheikh, or the killing of the main
witness in that case too. The establishment
ensures that no one gets to the bottom of
anything. It all sinks into the marsh, and then
everybody puts their own political spin on it.
One gets the feeling that beyond a point
investigations into such high-profile terror
cases reveal little, they are more of a cover-up.
It's an unholy nexus. Whatever you touch falls
like a house of cards. But even when there is an
exposé - like what happened in the case of the
Parliament attack, or what we're seeing now in
the Red Fort attack - when it is shown that
evidence was fabricated, that we have been lied
to, when we know what those lies were and who
told them, still nothing happens. The police get
medals, the judges get promoted, the journalists
get salary hikes. In the case of the attack on
Parliament, we're talking about a case which
could have resulted in a nuclear war. A case in
which, on the basis of what has turned out to be
false and fabricated evidence, the government of
the day moved half-a-million troops to the border
where they remained for eight months. Eight
hundred soldiers died in the mobilisation
process. Huge tracts of farmland were mined -
those mines are still there. Thousands of crores
of public money was spent. Who gave those orders?
Why? Don't we want to know? Aren't we curious?
Not a single political party has supported the
demand for an enquiry, not a single MP has raised
a question in Parliament, not a single newspaper
has carried out a serious campaign. Why?
But speaking of cover-ups, look at how it all
works in Gujarat, it's more than a coverup, it's
criminal collusion. It's happening now, right
now, while Tata and Reliance call Gujarat a dream
destination for corporate capital, while the CII
sucks up to Modi, while Sunita Williams accepts
accolades and shares a stage with him. After the
carnage in which thousands of ordinary Muslims
were butchered and about 1,50,000 driven from
their homes, the man who presided over it all,
Narendra Modi, is still the chief minister. No
one from the UPA government has so much as
squeaked about it. Of the 287 cases filed under
POTA, 286 are against Muslim and one is against a
Sikh. Offences under POTA, as we know, are
non-bailable, so they're all still in jail. The
property of those accused in the Godhra massacre
was attached. The property of those who were
released on bail in the post- Godhra carnage was
not. Different laws for Hindus and Muslims. In
the case of several massacres, the lawyers that
the Gujarat government appointed as public
prosecutors had actually already appeared for the
accused. Several of them belonged to the RSS or
the VHP, organisations that proudly owned up to
the killings. Survivors found that when they went
to the police to file FIRs, the police would
record their statements inaccurately, and refuse
to record the names of the perpetrators. In
several cases, when survivors had seen members of
their families being burned alive, so their
bodies could not be found, the police would
refuse to register cases of murder. In massacres,
in order to reduce the magnitude of the charges
and elide the detailing of individual crimes,
thepolice clubbed FIRs together to make it all
very vague and subvert the process of the
criminal justice system.
The massacre at Gulberg Society in Ahmedabad, in
which Ehsan Jaffri - who made the mistake of
campaigning against Modi in the Rajkot elections
- and 70 other people were killed and 10 women
wereperiod of ten-and-a-half hours. A mob of
thousands of armed people began to assemble
inside the Gulberg Society colony. That day,
Jaffri made 200 phone calls, including many to
senior police officers, to Modi and LK Advani. At
about 10.30am, the then Commissioner of Police,
PC Pandey, visited Gulberg, which is not far from
the police headquarters. At about 2.30pm, Ehsan
Jaffri surrendered himself to the mob, hoping the
others would be spared. The mob stripped him,
hacked off his body parts, paraded him half-alive
around the colony to terrify people and then
burned him alive. Subsequently, 70 people were
killed and 10 to 12 women were gangraped before
being burned alive. KG Erda, the inspector of the
Meghaninagar police station, stood by and
watched. PC Pandey was promoted to Director
General of Police, Gujarat. As public prosecutor,
the Gujarat government appointed a man called
Chetan Shah who had already appeared for the
accused in the same case!
Today, more than five years later, the killers
remain free. And PC Pandey has continued to be an
efficient servant of the State. As DGP, he has
been instrumental in covering the tracks of the
policemen involved in the macabre murder of
Sohrabuddin Sheikh and his wife Kausar Bi.
Newspapers have reported how he transferred
police officers who were investigating the case
when he realised they would not play by his
rules. How he detailed two policemen to be part
of the investigation when they were themselves
accused in the same case. All this involves the
overt and covert support of the full range of
government machinery, the police, the courts, the
administration - this is how it all works. Sheer
terrorism disguised as democracy. And I haven't
even begun to talk about what's happening in
Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa.
The point is that when people feel they have
nowhere to turn for justice, and that they can be
jailed, raped and butchered even when they have
done nothing at all, then why should they not
fight back? When the whole elaborate machinery of
this democracy fails you at every stage, why not
fight back? Is it surprising that in a quarter of
India's districts, the State has no control?
To talk specifics, in the investigations into the
Parliament attack case, there were a lot of
discrepancies, as the courts have pointed out,
but no action or inquiry was initiated against
the investigators.
Intelligence agencies are powerful. They have a
network of informers. They use journalists to
plant stories in the press and create a certain
climate. A climate in which the courts can come
out and say things like "the collective
conscience of society will only be satisfied if
capital punishment is awarded to the offender"
(as observed by the Supreme Court in its
judgement against Parliament attack accused
Mohammad Afzal Guru). This complete impunity is
getting alarming.
So there is no accountability. The intelligence
agencies know that whatever they do, they will
get away with it?
Intelligence agencies operate like this all over
the world, it's in their nature, whether it's the
Mossad, the CIA, the KGB, the ISI or RAW. They
are the hit-men of the establishment. They
operate in the dark. The point is, how much play
are they going to be given? Are they going to be
allowed to go nuts? In Kashmir, false encounters
and even massacres have stopped shocking people -
they enrage, but they don't shock. Now it's
spilling into the plains. Andhra, Chhattisgarh,
Gujarat, Bombay Of course, it's happened in West
Bengal during the first Naxal uprising in the
late 60s, in Punjab in the 80s, in Manipur since
1947. In these covert killings, nobody knows who
is killing whom, no one knows who is on which
side.
With the judiciary overlooking shoddy
investigations, doesn't it give intelligence and
investigative agencies the wrong signal? That
they can get away with a bad investigation?
We live in times in which no kind of judicial
rigour is necessary. Not for cases like the
attack on Parliament or at Red Fort. It was all
done with flag-waving, tub-thumping
nationalistic fervour. But unless the pressure
comes from us, from the people, unless we insist
on asking the hard questions, we can't blame them
for doing what they do. But when these
institutions fail, when the government tries to
control people by force, with guns and policemen
and soldiers, things will fall apart. Of course
there's never going to be an ideal situation in
which there's peace on earth and we celebrate the
brotherhood of man and the sisterhood of women.
But we have the right to dream. Do we want things
to get worse or better? This kind of cleverly
hidden brutality may work for a while, but some
day it will explode in our faces. It has begun.
Blowback is a theme that doesn't only apply to
the US.
______
[4]
Indian Express
October 09, 2007
IN DEFENCE OF ASSERTIVE SECULARISM
by Sharad Bailur
The Sethusamudram controversy proves that it's
time to come out in support of liberal values
The recent controversy over Sethusamudram
brought to the fore a number of issues. First,
all religions are intolerant - some more so; some
less. The book religions (Christianity, Islam and
Judaism that encourage proselytisation) more than
others. We had better accept this and deal with
it in the true spirit of secularism. We have now
reached a stage where it is possible to
annihilate mankind itself in defence of our
beliefs. What is more important? Belief - right
or wrong - or the survival of mankind? Apparently
belief. To quote Sam Harris from his book, The
End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the Future of
Reason: "Certainty about the next life is simply
incompatible with tolerance in this one."
As for "equal respect to all religions",
everybody knows that if you respect one religion,
you cannot respect any other. What in reality is
being asked is this: irrespective of your beliefs
you should, at least in public, pretend to 'show
respect' for the other person's religion. Or at
least don't do anything to provoke him.
Apparently religious people have a divine right
to get provoked more easily than those who follow
no faith. Equal respect to all religions
encourages bad blood between faiths and is
therefore responsible for causing riots. Besides,
it can be deliberately misunderstood to mean that
all religions are encouraged: 'respect' being the
operative word. This, in effect, is competitive
obscurantism.
Secularists in India skirt around the problem to
avoid 'giving offence' to religionists. Everybody
respects the religionist's right to give offence
in 'defence' of his faith. Therefore you have a
right to get angry in defence of unreason. But I
do not have a corresponding right to defend
reason. By implication unreason is respectable,
and should be respected, and reason is not and
should not be respected.
The word 'secular' in our Constitution is not
clearly defined. This has led to politically
correct expressions like 'equal respect to all
religions'. When a president or PM attends a
public religious ceremony it is not just the
person who does so but the office he/she
occupies. We should enact a law that says that
once a person occupies a high office he should
not attend a public religious ceremony so long as
he is in office. He should, of course, be free,
as a citizen of this country to pray to his
various gods in the privacy of his home.
The secular person can only be heard above the
din of unreason if he maintains a sustained
campaign in favour of reason and secularism. We
need a more assertive secularism in India in
favour of liberal values and against religious
obscurantism of any colour. It is time secular
people stood up and told the rest that what they
are doing goes against their freedom to live in
peace. And it is time the Constitution openly
stood by the secularist, and the agnostic in view
of what its own Preamble states.
______
[5]
Himal
October - November 2007
SAFFRON TERROR
by Subhash Gatade
Nanded, in Maharashtra, is a town with a
significant population of different faiths -
Hindu, Muslim, Sikh and Buddhist. Nanded could
well have become a new metaphor for secularism as
practised in the Subcontinent, but this was not
to be. Instead, Nanded has come to represent the
emergent danger of a violent new brand of Hindu
militancy, with due support from a section of the
state machinery. A place that was once witness to
the final days of Guru Gobind Singh, Sikhism's
Tenth Guru, has today metamorphosed into an
epicentre of violent Hindutva. Indeed, Nanded
represents the build-up of the violent
fundamentalist Hinduism of the past half-century.
The town has been witness to a new spate of acts
that can be inarguably dubbed 'terrorism'.
The inner workings of this new form of Hindutva
were on show recently in two, evidently
accidental, explosions in Nanded within a span of
nine months, in April 2006 and February 2007.
These blasts, which killed four people, took
place at the houses of activists from the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), Bajrang Dal
and Shiv Sena. The arrival of Nanded on India's
'terror' map was followed by media investigations
into similar previous incidents, which also
showed the involvement of Hindu youth in
terrorist actions.
The new element here is the increasing similarity
between Hindu militancy and 'terrorism' of other
hues. While various enquiry commissions have
looked into riots in post-Independence India and
corroborated the proactive role played by the RSS
in instigating riots, the irony of the situation
is that the organisation is still able to
maintain its 'missionary' image. Part of this is
because the group has long maintained a strict
division of labour within its ranks, delegating
much of the 'dirty work' to fringe workers. The
Nanded blasts proved to be an exception to this
pattern, as the RSS links were obvious. This is
why, in the immediate aftermath of the
explosions, the Sangh Parivar leadership went to
great lengths to suppress the news. Indeed,
activist friends of this writer in Maharashtra
were themselves unaware that any such incident
had taken place.
One set of blasts took place in a house belonging
to Laxman Rajkondwar, an old RSS activist, and
killed two youths belonging to the Bajrang Dal
and RSS, while injuring three others. The
explosives that were being made were to be used
during the entry into Maharashtra of Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) leader L K Advani's Bharat
Suraksha Yatra, the idea being to warn of the
grave security situation existing in the country.
Later investigations found that the plan had been
to instigate communal riots in Nanded that could
have spread to adjoining areas. Such a situation,
it was hoped, would boost the sagging morale of
both the BJP and its ageing stalwart, Advani (see
accompanying story, "Befuddled, jingoistic
party").
The aim was clearly to instigate a communal
conflict. A police raid on one of the deceased's
houses found maps of nearby mosques, as well as
clothes and caps usually worn by Muslims in the
area, which the activists were going to wear to
sneak into and attack the mosques and gurudwaras.
The only thing still needed was explosives. The
making of bombs in a house owned by an old RSS
activist - one who supposedly also dealt in
firecrackers, at that - seemed like the perfect
plan.
Of course, the story neither begins nor ends in
Nanded. Since 2003, at least five, and perhaps
six, Hindutva-related explosions have taken place
in central Maharashtra alone, in Parbhani, Purna,
Jalna and Nanded. Malegaon also witnessed a bomb
blast last year, killing 40 people, with strong
indications of a Hindutva hand behind it. (The
final picture will emerge after an ongoing
investigation by the Central Bureau of
Investigation finishes.) Beyond the geographical
similarities, the details of the attacks were
uncanny: each took place between 1:45 and 2:00 in
the afternoon, just after Friday prayers, at the
most prominent mosque in town. (The bomb that
went off in Nanded in 2006 exploded on 6 April, a
Thursday, but was apparently meant to be set off
at an Aurangabad masjid the following day.)
At the same time, this cannot be dubbed a
Maharashtra-centric phenomenon. Madhya Pradesh's
former chief minister, Digvijay Singh, has
publicly admitted to the involvement of various
groups and individuals affiliated with the RSS in
similar acts in his state. As for the rest of the
country, no systematic study of saffron 'terror'
has yet been undertaken. One reason for this
could be the thin line that separates the
different anushangik (affiliated) organisations
of the RSS, thereby making it possible to move
from the 'legal' to the 'illegal' without great
effort. Indeed, there is every possibility that
funds collected from the Hindu diaspora for
philanthropic work might also have been
channelled to further 'terrorist' activities.
Nonetheless, culturally integrated practices are
being utilised to arm certain sections of the
Hindu community. Back in 2001, Rajasthan's
then-Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot revealed that up
to four million trishuls - six to eight inches
long and sharp enough to kill - had been
distributed by the Bajrang Dal to Hindu
households across the country. Meanwhile, in
2002, a group in Orissa, under the district Shiv
Sena unit, formed the first-ever Hindu suicide
squad, aimed at countering Muslim 'extremism' in
Jammu & Kashmir and elsewhere. More than 100
youths, including some women, are said to have
joined the group.
Hindutva collusion
Nanded's population is made up of around 500,000
Hindus, 200,000 Muslims and 100,000 Sikhs. The
town has seen a significant amount of communal
tension in the past, which spiked following the
demolition of the Babri Masjid in December 1992.
In more recent years, this tension seems to have
also spilled over into surrounding towns such as
Parbhani, where, in November 2003,
motorcycle-borne attackers hurled bombs into the
midst of a large congregation of Muslims
assembled for Friday papers. Although the
identities of the Parbhani bomb-throwers were
never traced, forensic tests following the Nanded
blasts revealed that the accused were part of the
same group of Hindu militants that had executed
the attack in Parbhani.
Following the April 2006 blasts in Nanded, an odd
silence ensued - in the local and national media,
as well as in the local and national governments.
There was also a disturbing lack of sincerity on
the part of the investigating agencies in
pursuing the case, despite appearing to have
gathered significant evidence of the involvement
of district and state leaders of the RSS and
Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP). As investigations by
the People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) and
other rights organisations have made clear, the
district administration even saw to it that news
of the blasts did not receive wide coverage.
After the initial excitement, district officials
also allegedly pressured the local media not to
follow the case any further.
The lackadaisical reaction also spread through
those involved in local and national
investigations. Local police made contradictory
statements, and failed to make arrests in the
initial stages. Despite the sensitive nature of
the Nanded case, the Central Bureau of
Investigation (CBI) expressed its "inability" to
conduct the subsequent investigation. In response
to a case filed by some social organisations
against the tardiness of the investigations, the
CBI filed a suo moto affidavit explaining that it
was "overburdened" and had "limited hands to deal
with such cases". The cumulative effect of the
half-hearted - or wholly obstructionist -
initiatives, at both the state and central level,
was to show the kid-glove treatment being meted
out to India's new breed of Hindutva militants.
Secular activists questioned whether the reaction
would have been similar had the explosions taken
place in a minority-dominated area, and the
involvement of some 'fanatic' Islamic group been
detected.
The cavalier manner in which the probes of the
Nanded blasts were undertaken may have prepared
the ground for a stepping-up of similar
activities in the area. On 10 February 2007, at
little after midnight, biscuit boxes being hauled
by 28-year-old Pandurang Ameelkanthwar in another
area in Nanded exploded, killing him instantly.
His cousin, Dnaneshwar Manikwar, sustained
massive burns and died six days later.
Ameelkanthwar had been a former shakha pramukh
(branch head) of the Shiv Sena, and was also
associated with the Bajrang Dal. He hailed from
an area in Nanded called Rangargalli, a known
hotbed of rightwing Hindu outfits.
A mere 'fire-related accident' was how state
officials subsequently reported the incident. But
preliminary findings of a civil-society inquiry
suggest that Ameelkanthwar and Manikwar died due
to handled planted explosives. Neighbours near
the explosion also told the team that there had
been a third person present at the time, who had
also been injured but has been unaccounted for in
subsequent reports.
These eyewitnesses also said that a police
officer, who went on to be part of the official
investigation, supervised the seizing and
spiriting away of critical evidence from the
spot. In their report, the civil-society
investigators state that the Maharashtra police,
particularly the superintendent and
inspector-general, appeared to be in "undue haste
to close all possibilities of a possible
liquid-substance-driven explosion, preferring to
quote oral findings of forensic experts from
Aurangabad who are reported to have told them
that it was a petrol-ignited fire". Among other
evidence, this conclusion is brought under
serious suspicion by the fact the explosion threw
the iron shutter of a nearby godown a distance of
40 feet - an extremely long way for a fire set
off by burning gasoline.
The civil society team also refers to a "nexus
between some police officials and the rightwing
Hindu outfits". According to the probe's
findings, Nanded Police Inspector Ramesh
Bhurewar, who was leading the investigation of
the 2006 Nanded blast, was also in charge of the
investigation into the Parbhani blasts in
November 2003. During the course of the long
investigation, he had not made a single arrest. A
First Information Report was only registered
after a legislator raised a question in the state
assembly. But following the Nanded blasts in
April 2006, the accused admitted to having placed
the bombs at Parbhani. As such, the civil-society
report concludes: "The Nanded and state police
are hence guilty of underplaying crimes wherein
members of the minority community are the
victims, causing a loss of face for the state
police."
In their conclusion, the fact-finding team
demanded that the central government keep a close
watch over the increasing incidence of Hindutva
'terror' activities. They also asked for
independent investigations under a team of
neutral officers; and impartial, public inquiries
into the Nanded, Malegaon, Parbhani and Purna
incidents, in order to ascertain whether state
intelligence and police agencies are indeed
professional and neutral enough to investigate
instances of politically driven Hindutva violence.
History of hate
Post-Independence India is replete with examples
of the participation of Hindu extremists in
aggravating communal situations, targeting
particular communities, and aiding and abetting
riots. Those who have watched the organisation
since its inception say that the 'terrorism'
label may be modern, but the acts themselves,
fundamentalist to the core, are decades old:
making communally sensitive speeches that
culminate in riots; leading religious processions
in sensitive areas inhabited by Muslims and other
minorities; and outright provocations leading
people to engage in violence.
Rajeshwar Dayal, chief secretary of Uttar Pradesh
at the time of Partition, provides in his 1999
memoirs A Life of Our Times details of another
kind: damning evidence of RSS chief Golwalkar's
plans to conduct a pogrom against Muslims.
Pyarelal Nayyar, Mohandas Gandhi's secretary
during those tumultuous times, adds to these
accusations: "It was common knowledge that the
RSS had been behind the bulk of the killings in
[Delhi] as also in various other parts of India."
Contrary to the perception that the Sangh Parivar
has gained momentum only since the 1990s, various
commissions that have looked into communal riots
since 1947 have gathered a significant body of
evidence on the role of the RSS and affiliated
organisations. The Reddy Commission, which in
1969 looked into rioting in Gujarat; the Justice
Madon Commission, which analysed the riots in
Bhiwandi, Maharashtra, in the early 1970s; the
Justice Vithayathil Commission, which probed the
1971 Tellicherry riots - all of these provide
solid details of the involvement of either the
RSS or its mass political platform, the Bharatiya
Jana Sangh, in fomenting the trouble.
Justice Venugopal's report, on the Kanyakumari
riots of 1982, also severely indicted the RSS for
its role in instigating riots against Christians.
According to Justice Venugopal, the RSS
methodology for provoking communal violence was
as follows: rousing communal feelings in the
majority community; deepening fear in the
majority community; infiltrating into the state
administration; training young people of the
majority community in the use of weapons; and
spreading rumours to widen communal splits. About
the shakhas that the RSS organises under the
rubric of physical training, Justice Venugopal
said that the aim appeared to be "to inculcate an
attitude of militancy and training for any kind
of civil strife".
It was only in 2004 that the Terrorism Research
Centre (TRC), a US-based institute, declared the
RSS a 'terrorist organisation', lumping it
together with a host of jihadi and secessionist
outfits, including the Lashkar-e-Toiba, the
United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) and the
Hizb ul-Mujahideen. This new listing came close
on the heels of an internationally embarrassing
incident for the Hindutva-wallahs, wherein
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi was denied a
visa to travel to the US. The two slaps in the
face left the Sangh Parivar bosses seething
(although it took more than eight months for the
RSS to formally react to the TRC's assessment).
But this was not the first time that Hindutva
organisations had earned international
opprobrium. In 2002, secular activists in the US
brought out a thoroughly researched report called
"Funding Hate". For the first time, this document
exposed how funds collected in the US by the
India Development and Relief Fund (the IDRF, an
umbrella organisation floated by the Hindutva
brigade) were directly sponsoring sectarian
violence in India.
Cover-up
One potential reason for the inability of the
powers-that-be to establish a connection between
Hindu militants and acts of terror in India could
be the near absence of non-Hindus in the central
government's various intelligence wings. Whatever
the reasons, this dearth is shocking. Barring the
Intelligence Bureau, which has around 12,000
personnel and only a few Muslim officers, none of
the other intelligence departments have even a
single Muslim officer between them. From 1969
until today, neither the Research and Analysis
Wing (RAW) nor the National Technical Research
Organisation (NTRO) has hired even one Muslim
officer. (Following the Malegaon blasts, S M
Mushrif, a retired India Police Service officer,
publicly disparaged the Intelligence Bureau for
having long been the source of "unsubstantiated
rumours" due to "deep-seated bias".) The state of
affairs has inevitably led to what can be dubbed
the government's rather monochromatic
presentation of the menace of terrorism in recent
years, with sole responsibility for attacks
almost immediately placed on various Islamist
groups, regardless of evidence.
Despite a 'secular' coalition currently holding
the reins of power at the Centre and in many of
India's state administrations, there have been
depressingly few sincere attempts to move beyond
post-9/11 mythology and the rhetoric of the 'war
on terror', which demonises Islam. So complete is
this perspective that it is difficult to decipher
any qualitative difference between the 'secular'
Congress and the 'communal' BJP in their
responses to any act of 'terror'. Instead, even
while we have been witness to the dilly-dallying
of the Congress following the Nanded and Malegaon
blasts, the same Congress-led government had no
qualms in targeting Muslims as a community after
the July 2006 bomb blasts in Bombay. (In the
immediate aftermath of the Bombay attacks, an
anti-terrorist squad singled out the Muslim
community for suspicion, and immediately began
'combing' operations.) The Maharashtra state
administration has also shown its anti-Muslim
bias in times of tragedy. Even while attesting to
their sadness over the Malegaon blast, state
officials saw to it that victims, the majority of
whom were Muslim, received just a fifth of the
compensation received by the victims of the
Bombay blasts of 1993 - the majority of whom were
Hindu.
The fallout of this situation has been the
administrative failure to address terrorism
unleashed by Hindutva activists and formations.
One possible reason for the government's
ostrich-like position could be that, due to
electoral considerations, nobody has wanted to
displease the majority Hindus. While it is true
that Hindutva groups are not currently in a
majority at the Centre, the impact of Hindutva
nonetheless transcends its strength in
government. Note the inability of 'secular'
groups to bring criminal cases against the likes
of communal leaders like Shiv Sena supremo Bal
Thackeray, and the champions of Hindutva: Praveen
Togadia, Lal Krishna Advani or Narendra Modi.
Indeed, the present-day Congress itself is a
faint shadow of its Nehruvian avatar: after all,
it 'discovered' the idea of 'soft Hindutva' two
decades ago, in a bid to further its hold on the
reins of power.
It is time that the public be made aware of the
rising trajectory of Hindutva criminality. The
dangerous understanding that a particular
community, region or religious ideology is more
prone towards 'terrorist' activities needs to be
refuted at all costs. The people of Southasia in
general, and India in particular, need to be
convinced that there is no qualitative difference
between the violent acts committed by LTTE
suicide bombers, al-Qaeda jihadis, Khalistani
militants or members of militant Hindutva
organisations. This realisation could be the
first step in organising simultaneous social and
political strategies to expose, challenge and
dissolve these groups.
______
[6]
Gomantak Times,
October 11, 2007
IN THE MIDST OF GOANS
by Vidyadhar Gadgil
Twenty years ago, when I first lived and worked
in Goa, I attended a workshop on threats to Goa's
environment and culture. It was there that I
first heard the term 'bhaille' (outsiders). It
was one of the recurring motifs of the workshop
that the 'bhaille' were the biggest threats to
Goa's environment. I was taken aback, as this was
an event attended by liberals and activists,
where one would not have expected such
viewpoints. Another term I heard was 'ghati'.
There was clearly a negative value attached to
the term, which in Maharashtra is used to
describe rustics. Intrigued, I devoted a fair bit
of time to examining the issue. It seemed
contradictory that I - 'bhaillo' and 'ghati' -
never felt any particular hostility directed
towards myself; in fact, I met with an easy
acceptance. Was this because of my class/caste
background? Not entirely, I discovered - Goans
are truly among the most tolerant and easygoing
of people, not easily given to prejudice.
It was not only me, there was no overt hostility
towards the people from outside Goa who lived and
worked in Goa. When talking about 'outsiders',
what people were protesting was a phenomenon -
their perceived lack of control over the
development process - rather than individuals.
There was also a genuine anger against the
tourism industry's despoilation of Goa and
against the anti-people pattern of development
that people felt, with some justice, was being
imposed upon them from outside Goa.
Those were heady times - there was a churning in
Goa as the masses began to assert their identity
and demand their rights. The Konkani agitation,
the movement against tourism spearheaded by the
Jagrut Goenkaranchi Fauz (JGF), the movement for
statehood - they all redefined the political
landscape of Goa. At a public meeting on 30 May
1987, the day Goa attained statehood, the mood
was one of jubiliation: it was the dawn of hope.
Over the next ten years, my involvement with Goa
continued, albeit somewhat intermittently, so I
was aware that these hopes were being largely
crushed. Yet, in 1997, when my family and I
shifted to Goa to settle here permanently, it
came as a bit of shock to see the change in the
public mood; it was as if the churning of the
mid-80s had never happened. The movement for
genuine change had been sidetracked, marginalized
or co-opted by the political class and corporate
interests, and it was business as usual. A
cynicism and tiredness had set in amongst the
no-longer-so-young activists I knew in the
mid-80s.
But around 2005 the churning process began once
again, as globalization and neo-liberalization
began to be revealed for the chimeras that they
were. People looked around them and discovered to
their horror that the development process had
been hijacked and turned against the people. The
beaches had become privatized concrete jungles,
Goa's forests were facing the axe as the
construction boom reached ridiculous proportions,
and Goa's politicans fattened themselves at the
expense of the masses. Once again, the common man
was feeling marginalized and threatened.
One response to this has been a questioning of
the very concept of development. The people's
movement which crystallised around the Goa Bachao
Abhiyan has redefined the way development is
perceived. Development which enriches a few at
the expense of the masses and destroys Goa's
environment is not true development, this strand
of thought avers. It is not the mass of people -
of Goan descent or otherwise - who are the
problem. It is those who heedlessly plunder Goa's
resources - politicians, industrialists and
various kinds of middlemen - and sell them to the
highest bidder that are the problem. To
paraphrase the speech of Dr. Oscar Rebello, the
convenor of the GBA, at the massive public rally
in Panjim on 19 December 2006: "It is not
non-Goans who are the problem; it is the
anti-Goans."
There is however, another response to Goa's
current crisis. This seeks to externalise the
problem and, following a xenophobic and
reactionary line of thought, blames the workers
who come to Goa from other parts of India to earn
their living. Ignoring the fact that these
workers make a vital contribution to Goa's
economy, they are despised and condemned on the
basis of the fact that they are poor and come
from different cultures and traditions. Rather
than look at their relationship with the
community and the environment, their ethnic,
cultural and religious backgrounds are focused
upon.
The stigmatization of the 'ghatis' and bhaille'
has now reached frightening proportions. The
worst example of this was when the
Sanvordem-Curchorem communal violence of March
2006 was sought to be justified on the grounds
that its targets were 'outsiders'. The growing
communalization of the Goan polity and society
provides a fertile ground in which such thought
patterns acquire particular virulence, and find
expression in terms of active discrimination and
even violence against minorities, who can easily
be cast in the role of the 'other'.
But at a subtler level, this trend of thought is
beginning to pervade everyday social discourse in
Goa. Workers from Orissa, Karnataka and other
'backward' states are vilified for defecating in
the open and described as 'unclean' (that they
are in this position because their employers do
not provide them even basic facilities is
conveniently forgotten). Even in the urbane
drawing rooms of Goa's educated and well-off
classes, such a prejudice has begun to take hold,
and all kinds of derogatory comments about
'ghatis' are routine, being allowed to pass
without any criticism of the social attitudes
that underlie them.
Goa is at a crossroads today: it is obvious that
we cannot follow the existing pattern of
development without social and environmental
disaster. But there are two options. Do we
question what 'development' means, and insist
that, rather than merely enriching a few and
destroying natural resources, it is framed and
practiced in a manner that benefits all and
respects the environment? Or do we seek
convenient scapegoats for our problems, and
further marginalize and victimize them, thereby
exacerbating social tensions and furthering
communal agendas? The choice is ours to make.
______
[7] ON THE INDO US NUCLEAR DEAL AND ON THE
IMPACT OF A POSSIBLE INDO-PAK NUCLEAR WAR:
(i)
From: Focus on India (FOI), Issue Oct 2007, Vol. IV, No. 10
----------------------
REPORT OF PUBLIC MEETING ON INDO-US NUCLEAR DEAL: WHY? WHAT? FOR WHOM?
Held on 11th September 2007 at Mumbai Marathi Patrakar Sangh,
Mumbai
On 18th December 2006 the US President George
Bush inked the Henry Hyde Act towards actualizing
the much talked of Indo-US Nuke 'Deal'. This had
been earlier outlined in the Bush- Manmohan Singh
Joint Statement of 18th July 2005 at Washington
DC. This was further reiterated on 2nd March 2007
in a Joint Statement issued from Delhi, during
George Bush's visit to the country. In order to
understand the pros and cons of the Deal and its
implications on us and affects on nuclear
disarmament efforts, Peace Mumbai, a network of
organizations and individuals committed to the
goal of a just and peaceful world along with
Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament (CNDP) a
national coalition working for Nuclear
Disarmament and Peace, jointly organized a public
meeting on Indo-Us Nuclear Deal, What? Why? For
Whom? on 11th September 2007 at Marathi Patrakar
Sangh, Mumbai. 150 plus people, representing
diverse sections of society, participated.
Former Assistant Editor of the English daily 'The
Hindu', Ms. Kalpana Sharma who chaired the
meeting blamed media for creating confusion on
the issue. People got divergent views which
deserved more clarity, she stated.
Mr. Sukla Sen, an member of CNDP, blamed nuclear
technology as immoral and profoundly unmitigated
evil. It surpassed time and space barrier and its
impact was widespread. It triggered the
weaponisation programme and it was structurally
incoherent logic to claim that it created
ambience of deterrence. He gave example of what
USA had been getting setbacks both in Afghanistan
and Iraq. He stated that the latest measures on
the part of mandarin of the country were to adopt
Hydrogen bomb which had unfortunately larger
potential for destruction vis-à-vis nuclear
weapons. He suggested we should start a campaign
against this deal because the Deal had not been
clinched as it has to go through various stages
like, separate treaty with the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) laying down the
scopes and terms of inspections of the 'civilian'
plants, then agreements will be presented to the
45-member Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) for
ratification. On consensual endorsement by the
NSG the whole package will again be presented to
the US Congress for final approval so as to
enable the President to bring it into force.
If the deal was clinched it had the potential to
grievously undermine the current global regime of
nuclear non-proliferation and prospects of global
nuclear disarmament, further aggravation of
tensions and accelerate arms race in the region.
So it's a very serious negative development for
global and regional peace and security. It would
undermine the efficacy of NAM and other
accountable bodies. It would create considerable
dampener for efforts to develop ecologically
benign renewable sources of energy nationally
and also globally.
Mr. Jayraman a nuclear scientist stated that the
deal was done with the intention to reach into
the strategic orbit of USA. It meant that UPA
became a willing partner of USA strategic and
assertive foreign policy which was in tune of
Hyde Act which said clearly one had to be
congruent of USA foreign policy. It will became
nothing less than an instrument of USA foreign
and security policies. It was not viable for
peace and energy needs. Hence it would provide
strong fillip to the aggressive ambitions of the
Bush administration, he averred.
Mr. M.V Ramana, a well-versed nuclear energy
analyst from Bangalore emphasized that nuclear
technology was not cheap. It would bring a lot of
problems when it would be difficult in all three
dimension of nuclear adoption like availability,
accessibility and affordability. More so it was
not safe but a rather catastrophic technology.
There was history of failure of the Department of
Atomic Energy (DAE) to produce large quantities
of nuclear electricity. In 1962, Homi Bhabha, the
founder of India's nuclear programme, predicted
that by 1987 nuclear energy would constitute
20,000 to 25,000 MW of installed electricity
generation capacity. His successor as head of
DAE, Vikram Sarabhai, predicted that by year 2000
there would be 43,500 MW of nuclear power.
Neither of these predictions came true. Despite
over 50 years of generous funding, nuclear power
currently amounts to only 3,900 MW, just 3.1 per
cent of installed electricity capacity of
1,27,056 MW (as of September 2006). Even if the
DAE meets its current projections of 20,000 MW by
the year 2020, it will only be 8-10% of projected
total electrical generation capacity. He warned
people about the stance taken by the proponent of
nuclear technology which was propogated as safe
through hyperbole about climate change, carbon
and Greenhouse gas emissions.
In the end there was interactive session which
clarified many queries with regards to the deal
and related issues and created better
understanding on that.
o o o
(ii)
The Times of India
4 Oct 2007
INDO-PAK NUCLEAR WAR COULD CAUSE ONE BILLION STARVATION DEATHS
LONDON: A nuclear war between India and Pakistan
would not only have catastrophic affects in these
two countries or their neighbours, but it could
cause one billion people to starve to death
across the world.
Hundreds of millions of more would die from
disease and conflicts over food in the aftermath
of any such war.
US medical expert Ira Helfand will on Thursday
present this horrifying scenario in London during
a conference at the Royal Society of Medicine.
"A limited nuclear war taking place far away
poses a threat that should concern everyone on
the planet," the New Scientist magazine quoted
Helfand as saying.
"It is appropriate, given the data, to be
frightened," said Helfand, who is an
emergency-room doctor in Northampton,
Massachusetts, US, and a co-founder of the US
anti-nuclear group, Physicians for Social
Responsibility.
Helfand has tried to map out the global
consequences of India and Pakistan exploding 100
Hiroshima-sized nuclear warheads.
Referring to earlier studies that have suggested
that in such a conflict, the annual growing
season in the world's most important
grain-producing areas would shrink by between 10
and 20 days, he said that the world is
ill-prepared to cope with such a disaster.
"Global grain stocks stand at 49 days, lower than
at any point in the past five decades," he said,
adding: "These stocks would not provide any
significant reserve in the event of a sharp
decline in production. We would see hoarding on a
global scale."
Countries, which import more than half of their
grain, such as Malaysia, South Korea and Taiwan,
would be particularly vulnerable, along with 150
million people in north Africa, which imports 45
percent of its food, Helfand said.
Many of the 800 million around the world who are
already officially malnourished would also
suffer, he added.
He went on to say that the global death toll from
a nuclear war in Asia "could exceed one billion
from starvation alone."
Food shortages could also trigger epidemics of
cholera, typhus and other diseases, as well as
armed conflicts, which together could kill
"hundreds of millions".
Helfand further told the magazine that the smoke
would warm the stratosphere by up to 50°C,
accelerating the natural reactions that attack
ozone.
"No-one has ever thought about this before...I
think there is a potential for mass starvation,"
he cautioned.
Endorsing Helfand's views, John Pike, director of
the US think tank, globalsecurity.org, said the
fallout from a nuclear war between India and
Pakistan "would be far more devastating for other
countries than generally appreciated."
"Local events can have global consequences," he added.
______
[8] ANNOUNCEMENTS:
(i) Professor Emeritus Robert Eric Frykenberg
from University of Wisconsin, Madison, will
lecture in Oslo on "Hindutva as a Political
Religion: An Historical Perspective", on Monday
15 October 2007, 14.15-16.00. Venue: Georg
Sverdrups hus, room BL27, Blindern, Oslo.
o o o
(ii)
"THE TALIBANIZATION OF SOUTH ASIA: CAN IT BE STOPPED?"
A talk by Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy
Date: Oct 31, 12:00am - 1:30pm
Where: International House, 1414 E. 59th St, Chicago, IL 60637, United States
o o o
(iii)
The 11th International Conference on Sri Lanka
Studies (ICSLS) will be held on 1-3 November 2007
at the University of Portsmouth, UK. The
Conference theme will be "Social Realities and
Natural Environment, in Sri Lanka: Insiders' and
Outsiders Perspectives". This theme is expected
to focus on diverse perspectives on Sri Lankan
social realities. The conference will also expand
its coverage to discuss interface of social and
natural environments within the framework of
environmental sustainability.
For inquiries, Please contact:
Dr. Premachandra Wattage,
Co-ordinator of the 11th ICSLS
Centre for the Economics and Management of Aquatic Resources (CEMARE)
University of Portsmouth
Burnaby Terrace
1-8, Burnaby Road
Portsmouth, PO1 3AE, UK.
Tel: +44 (0)23 9284 4124
Fax: +44 (0)23 9284 4614
http://www.port.ac.uk/departments/economics/cemare/
E-mail: Premachandra.Wattage at port.ac.uk
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