SACW | Oct. 13-15, 2007
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Sun Oct 14 18:54:11 CDT 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | October 13-15, 2007 |
Dispatch No. 2460 - Year 10 running
[1] Pakistan:
(i) Reconciling with the Ordinance (I A Rehman)
(ii) Threat of radicalisation (Editorial, Dawn)
(iii) God, cricket and pulled hamstrings (Nadeem F. Paracha)
(iv) [A Documentary Film] Dinner With The
President: A Nation's Journey (Robert Koehler)
[2] 'Secular' Nepal forgets Muslims on Eid (IANS report)
[3] India's Burma Policy:
(i) Failing the foreign policy test (Praful Bidwai)
(ii) East With Bits Left Out - A more
imaginative Myanmar policy would do India good
(Sanjib Baruah)
(iii) A conflict of interests (Mira Kamdar)
[4] India: Bureaucrazy -Why . . . the Official
Secrets Act must be abolished (M Veerappa Moily)
[5] Announcements
(i) Sanjoy Ghose Media Fellowship -2007-08 for Women Journalists
(ii) Upcoming Telecast: In Search of Gandhi by
Lalit Vachani (BBC World, 01:10 (GMT)
(iii) Lecture: Sexual Politics: the limits of
secularism, the time of coalition (London, 30
October 2007)
(iv) Identities in a South Asian Context Workshop (Sheffield 16 November 2007)
______
[1] Pakistan:
(i)
The News on Sunday
October 14, 2007
review
RECONCILING WITH THE ORDINANCE
The NRO is likely to offer reprieve to quite a
few who do not merit this favour, and offers too
little too late in several areas where the need
for reform is clamant
by I A Rehman
All sections of society will readily agree that
the accountability process in Pakistan has
generally been exploited to persecute political
opponents and that there is need not only to undo
the wrongs caused to many political figures but
also to devise a genuine, fair and effective
accountability mechanism. There is also unanimity
on the need for a national reconciliation that
will enable all shades of opinion to join the
crucial struggle for the nation's redemption.
Most people have a fair idea of what
accountability and reconciliation mean. A glaring
exception is the country's establishment that has
once again betrayed its capacity for mischief by
issuing the National Reconciliation Ordinance.
Chaudhry Shujaat Husain is absolutely right in
asserting that the ordinance is not what is
claimed in its title and that it was conceived
only as a device to divide the opposition. Once
that objective had been secured the matter could
be forgotten as diversion for a single night.
Deception or cunning of a low variety is manifest
on record.
Public attention has largely been concentrated on
the last section of the ordinance (section 7),
that adds a new provision to section 33 of the
National Accountability Bureau Ordinance of 1999
and which can be assailed on several grounds. It
extends relief to a small number of holders of
public office against whom proceedings had begun
before 12 October 1999, and whose cases have not
yet concluded. Victims of political vendetta
outside the category of holders of public office
or those whose case have finally concluded and
those who failed to challenge the decisions
against them can expect no relief. One also
notices a cynically perverse insinuation that
political victimisation took place only prior to
12 October, 1999, and that no such charge can be
levelled against the regime that foisted itself
on Pakistan on that date. This ordinance alone is
sufficient to prove that selective victimisation
of political opponents continues -- that is, if
nobody can remember what happened at Islamabad
airport barely a month ago. The regime that had
made tall claims in 1999 about its resolve to
give no quarter to plunderers of national wealth
certainly has no face to show, but the biggest
losers are the people of Pakistan.
An even more sinister provision of the ordinance
is the amendment to sec 494 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. Under this amendment an
undisclosed number of people (about 25,000 of
them by some accounts) against whom criminal
proceedings had begun during January 1,1986 to
October 12, 1999 -- a period only a little less
than 14 years, and who include some celebrated
absconders and fugitives from justice, have been
given tidings of discharge provided they can be
owned up by their foster fathers in political
organisations.
That withdrawal of cases against them will depend
on recommendations by federal and provincial
review boards is an eyewash. A retired judge who
will head a review board could easily be outvoted
by the other two members, both representatives of
the executive. On the one hand, the beneficiaries
will be surrogates of political groups, and the
dubious credentials of quite a few of them have
been more than once exposed, and on the other
hand, they will be beholden to unscrupulous
administrations for favours they may not have
deserved. The effect of this replacement of
judicial trial by non-judicial adjudication
regardless of the serious offences attributed to
the accused will not be miscarriage of justice
alone, a number of dangerous and freshly
emboldened men will be let loose on a population
that has not enjoyed security of life and liberty
for many a long year.
The outrageous implications of the amendments to
the CrPC and the NAB law more than offset a
couple of benign-looking provisions of the
ordinance. The members of federal and provincial
legislatures are promised protection against
sudden arrest under NAB orders. They will still
be liable to loss of liberty but only after the
recommendations of committees of their peers have
been taken into consideration.
The amendment to the Representation of the People
Act, to the effect that the election result from
a constituency will be announced by the Returning
Officer as soon as the statements of poll count
from the Presiding Officers are added up
together, is welcome as far as it goes, which is
not far enough. It amounts to a casual tinkering
with the huge obstacles to free and fair
elections in Pakistan. This step alone will not
'make the election process more transparent,' as
claimed in the preamble to the ordinance.
The ordinance will, therefore, fail to find
favour with the conscious segments of the society
on the ground that it offers reprieve to quite a
few who do not merit this favour, and offers too
little too late in several areas where the need
for reform is clamant. Above all, the ordinance
will be denounced for betraying its authors' lack
of comprehension of the remands of national
reconciliation. Anybody serious and sincere in
moving towards reconciliation must address the
alienation of the large populations in
Balochistan and Sindh, the war on the tribal
people, and the denial of the right to self-rule
to the whole nation. Placation of a few who are
in conflict with law only proves how dangerously
narrow and brittle the regime's base is. To call
this national reconciliation is a cruel joke. It
is also unaffordable.
o o o
(ii)
Dawn
October 12, 2007
Editorial
THREAT OF RADICALISATION
THE setting up of a 'law and order' force is the
latest from Maulana Fazlullah, the
self-proclaimed, virtual ruler of Swat. The
country-mullah has been emboldened to take this
step because the government has been looking the
other way all this time when he was busy
broadcasting threats to the local people to abide
by Shariah laws or face his wrath. It's been a
step-by- step advance on the radical cleric's
part, which amounts to more than just testing the
waters. Next came the setting up of a summary
trial court under Islamic law which Fazlullah
himself heads at his village, Imam Dheri.
Besides, vigilante volunteers are going around at
his behest in Swat to enforce religious law.
Attempts by extremists at blowing up a
second-century BC Buddha rock carving, too, have
gone unnoticed. Is it any wonder, then, that the
mullah's henchmen, whom he calls his commandos,
are now patrolling the area using a squad of some
15 vehicles mounted with machineguns, to maintain
'law and order' and to ensure smooth running of
traffic? What's next on his agenda? Here's a
full-throttle attempt at Talibanising society
which is being allowed to go unchecked for
unknown reasons.
The withering away of the state is no more a
Marxian axiom in parts of Pakistan today; but the
state has been withering for all the wrong
reasons. There is no hope for a utopia emerging
in the dangerous bargain. This march backward to
the dark age brought about by the Taliban in
Afghanistan just before 9/11 is now engulfing
large parts of the Frontier province. While North
and South Waziristan may be the extremists'
outposts, huge tracts of settled areas such as
the Peshawar-Kohat-Bannu-Tank belt and now Swat
falling to home-grown Taliban rule is a serious
cause for concern.
The shadow of the Lal Masjid operation in the
heart of Islamabad, too, still lingers. It is far
from over as far as the cousin-cleric of the
slain firebrand Abdur Rashid Ghazi is concerned,
who has been made the custodian of the mosque
under Supreme Court directives. The rhetoric
coming out of the place is as lethal and laced
with threats as to remind one of Ghazi's
intolerant ways of imposing Shariah. With
parliamentary elections round the corner, the
constitutional crisis over Gen Musharraf's
eligibility for another term in office and the
challenging in court of the national
reconciliation ordinance hanging in the balance,
there's a need to do more than just fire-fighting
the threats posed to society by extremists.
Ignoring the emerging radical threat will bring
no bliss, much less order to the chaos spreading
all around.
o o o
(iii)
Dawn
October 07, 2007
GOD, CRICKET AND PULLED HAMSTRINGS
by Nadeem F. Paracha
SO far Shaoib Malik's captaincy of the Pakistan
cricket team has whiffed in like a breath of
fresh air. Especially when compared with the
ironically cramped and conservative style of his
predecessor, Inzimamul Haq. I say ironic because
as a batsman Inzi was fluent and liberally
bordering on the flamboyant. So, was it the fear
of losing that turned Inzi into a stuffy and
lethargically conservative skipper?
Conventional wisdom would suggest, yes, fear was
the overriding reason. But during and after the
procedures that initiated Inzi's complete ouster
from the team, insiders within the Pakistan
Cricket Board (PCB) were also whispering about
the effects of 'tableegh-isation' on the former
skipper's personality. In the course of two years
before the 2007 World Cup debacle, the PCB had
already asked Inzimam to cool it a bit with his
Islam thing, while some cricketers discreetly
complained that they were being forced by Inzi to
follow dictates according to the Tableeghi Jamaat.
A PCB official suggests that the PCB in this
respect had been caught between the devil and the
deep blue sea. Because (according to this
official), like Inzimam, the PCB too saw the
Islamisation of the cricket team as an effective
way to mould the culture of the dressing room.
The culture that was to be moulded was one built
during the captaincies of Imran Khan, Javed
Miandad and Wasim Akram. It was a culture of
flamboyance and combativeness, but which, by the
late '90s, had spiraled out of control, getting
tainted by greed (match-fixing), political
intrigue (captaincy battles involving Javed
Miandad, Wasim Akran, Waqar Yunus and Aamir
Sohail), and groupings.
A former PCB media adviser agrees with the theory
that Inzimam actually used religion to control
the volatile tendencies of the culture prevailing
in the team. Apparently, the late coach Bob
Woolmer had little problem with the team's
re-born-Muslim status and his reasons were
attached to what Inzimam was gaining from his
Tableeghi regime, i.e. discipline and submission
from the cricketers.
However, this discipline was not exactly based on
a willful belief in the importance of
professional order, but rather a grudgingly
submitted fear gained from the players by playing
the ever-useful Islamic card and a strict code of
conduct and ethics based squarely on the
Tableeghi Jammat ideals of Islam. Early this
year, during a talk show hosted by former
Pakistani cricket captain Rameez Raja, Inzimamul
Haq, when asked what his message would be for the
youth, he suggested that along with worldly
knowledge, they should also get religious
education.
This says two things. First of all, it suggests
that ever since Inzimam's stint as captain, more
and more Pakistani cricketers had started using
the formulaic language used by Tableeghi Jamaat
members. Secondly, and as some PCB officials and
cricketers have already claimed, most Pakistani
cricketers, if they had to be in the good books
of the captain, had to tamely submit to his
Tableegh regime in the dressing room.
Like Mushtaq Ahmed and Saeed Anwar before him,
(and celebrities like Junaid Jamshed), Inzimam
had willingly let himself be turned into a
poster-boy for the large evangelist group who in
the last many years has been accused by some
quarters of preying on the insecurities of known
personalities in the showbiz and cricketing
circles. Last year, during the ICC Champions
Trophy in India, Inzimam was taken to task by the
Pakistan Cricket Board chairman for insisting on
holding joint prayers with his team on the ground
where they were taking a training session.
Can anyone imagine the Indian team praying to
Ganesh or Hanuman on a Pakistani ground or an
English team holding a mass at the Gaddafi
Stadium? But then those teams know better because
they come steeped in secular, professional
backgrounds.
It is no secret that players like Shoaib Akhtar
were an awkward anomaly in Inzimam's team. The
reason behind Shoaib's falling out with both
Inzimam and Bob Woolmer had certainly to do with
things more than just pulled hamstrings and
tantrums. Shoaib was said to be disgusted with
the nature of Inzimam's manipulative,
religion-driven ways of gaining loyalty from his
players, and it is only natural that a
personality like Shoaib was bound to feel
isolated and persecuted in the morally
self-righteous and judgmental make-up and psyche
of the Inzimam-led Pakistani cricket team.
So when did it all begin? A veteran sports
journalist suggests that the onus lies with the
former Pakistani cricketer, Saeed Ahmed, whom
Ahmed's former county cricket mate, Tony Graig,
described as a "party animal" in the '70s.
However, Ahmed suddenly saw the light in the
early '90s, grew a beard and joined the Tableeghi
Jammat.
He then started visiting the Pakistan team's
dressing rooms during the matches in Sharjah in
the late '90s, delivering impromptu lectures to
various team members. The team management
surprisingly tolerated him and he managed to hand
over a few cassettes to a couple of cricketers.
These tapes were of lectures given by the
Tableeghi Jammat's most famous speakers.
The cricketers most impressed by these lectures
were the bubbly leg-spinner, Mushtaq Ahmed, the
innovative off-spinner, Saqlain Mushtaq, and
stylish opening batsman, Saeed Anwar. By the
start of 2003 World Cup, all three had become
active members of the Jamaat. Waqar Yunas, who
replaced Wasim Akram as captain, became a sort of
a de-fecto member of the preaching squad (minus
the beard) and is said to have actually
encouraged the practice of cricketers being
lectured by evangelists.
However, these lectures, sudden appearance of
beards and cassettes did not help much as Waqar's
team crashed out of the 2003 World Cup. The
Tableeghi Jammat's recruiting agents made greater
inroads into the team when after the 2003 World
Cup debacle, the team saw a string of firings and
Rashid Latif was named the new captain. Though a
man of liberal outlook, he could not stop men
like Saeed Anwar, Mushtaq Ahmed and Junaid
Jamshed from looking to exercise greater
influence on the team. Eventually, once Rashid
was removed from captaincy, and replaced by
Inzimam, the recruiters got their biggest fish in
this respect: the burly skipper himself!
There is a very interesting photograph that
appeared in the newspapers at the time. It showed
Saeed Anwar, Mushtaq Ahmed and Junaid Jamshed
leading Imran Khan, Inzimam and a couple of other
cricketers at the famous annual gathering of the
Tableeghi Jammat members in Raiwind. Even though
they failed to get Imran Khan in their circle,
Inzimamul Haq became an enthusiastic participant
and a member.
After "converting" most of the regular players of
the team, the only ones deciding not to toe the
line in this respect were Shoaib Akhtar, Shahid
Afridi and, of course, Danish Kaneria (who is
Hindu). Even Yusuf Yuhanna, Christian, converted
to Islam (and became Mohammad Yusuf). Even though
he insisted that there was no pressure from
Inzimam for him to change his faith, insiders and
press reports suggested that much of Yusuf's own
family members thought otherwise. By early 2006,
Shahid Afridi too had become a member of
Inzimam's religious clique, leaving only Shoaib
Akhtar to face the music.
Inzimam's Raiwind regime may have turned the
Pakistan cricket team into a (seemingly)
well-knit unit, but its many critics accused the
captain of operating at the expense of
ostracising talent that refused to bend to the
religious dictates of his regime. Many also
believe that Inzi's religious zeal actually
softened the team's innovative and competitive
nature, a nature that was rigorously nourished
and encouraged by the likes of former captains
like Imran Khan, Javed Miandad and Wasim Akram.
The new attitude had left them looking and
behaving more like cricketing ambassadors of the
Tableeghi Jammat, with an on-field outlook that
smacked of a lacklustre approach to competitive
cricket. But what now? The PCB official I was
talking to said that silently but surely, the
culture of the team is being moulded again,
making it more competitive and secular. He said
the board had absolutely no problem in how any
player wanted to conduct his religious business,
but the sort of religious fanfare exhibited
during Inzimam's reign as captain is being
discouraged.
One can understand that it will take some time
for the board to rectify the Tableeghi culture
that was so systematically invested in the psyche
of the team. This became apparent when after
losing the Twenty20 World Cup final to India last
month, Shoaib Malik apologised to "all Muslims of
the world". Some observers considered it to be a
somewhat racist comment, since there are
Christians and Hindu Pakistanis as well who were
supporting the team, and, of course, most Indian
Muslims were rather happy that Pakistan lost!
"It will take time," says the PCB official. "The
cricketers were encouraged to wear their
religious beliefs on there sleeves, and they got
used to it. But this will change, once the
cricketers realise that one doesn't have to
exhibit one's religious commitment to prove one's
patriotism," he said.
o o o
(iv)
www.variety.com/
September 20, 2007
Toronto
DINNER WITH THE PRESIDENT: A NATION'S JOURNEY
(Documentary -- Pakistan)
by Robert Koehler
A Vidhi Films presentation in association with
ITVS Intl./ZDF/Arte. (International sales: Steps
Intl., Copenhagen.) Produced by Sachithanandam
Sathananthan. Executive producer, Sally Jo Fifer.
Directed by Sabiha Sumar, Sachithanandam
Sathananthan.
With: Sabiha Sumar, Pervez Musharraf.
Narrator: Sabiha Sumar.
As timely as the slap of the morning paper on the
porch, Sabiha Sumar and Sachithanandam
Sathananthan's "Dinner with the President: A
Nation's Journey" only partly explores the
pressing questions regarding Pakistan's future
and the prospect of current unelected President
Pervez Musharraf. Flawed but most telling for
Western viewers as a specifically Pakistani view
of Musharraf's political dilemmas and the nature
of his support and opposition, hourlong doc
should be rapidly snatched by North American and
Euro news cablers, while Musharraf is in a
potential power-sharing deal with former prez
Benazir Bhutto.
Pic was made prior to Bhutto's touted
re-emergence, but is told from narrator Sumar's
personal and feminist p.o.v., which gives equal
or more weight to women's rights than to matters
of quelling Islamist terrorists in the nation's
western frontier. Including a pleasant though
unrevealing dinner session with Musharraf, Sumar
mixes with young hipsters and old fundamentalists
to draw picture of a country riven by huge
ideological, cultural and gender divisions. Many
agree, though, that Musharraf's brand of
"democracy" is better than that of previous
regimes, including Nawaz Sharif's, toppled in
Musharraf's 1999 coup.
Camera (color, widescreen, DV), Claire Pijman,
Peter Brugman; editors, Albert Elings, Eugenie
Jansen, Calle Overweg. Reviewed at Toronto Film
Festival (Real to Reel), Sept. 13, 2007. English,
Urdu dialogue. Running time: 58 MIN.
[Contact Information]
http://www.itvs.org/international/filmmakers/dinnerwithpresident.html
http://vidhifilms.net/
______
[2]
Hindustan Times
14 October 2007
'SECULAR' NEPAL FORGETS MUSLIMS ON EID
Indo-Asian News Service
Kathmandu, October 14, 2007
More than a year after it abolished Hinduism as
the state religion and declared itself secular,
Nepal, once the world's only Hindu kingdom, still
remains Hindu in its psyche, with the government
on Sunday failing to extend greetings to Muslims
on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr, one of the Muslim
festivals.
As Muslims in the parts of sub-continent
celebrated Eid on Sunday after a month's fasting,
the Nepal Muslim Ittehad Sangh's petition to
Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala to declare
Eid a national holiday fell on deaf ears.
The secular government however had observed a
public holiday on Friday to celebrate
Ghatasthapana, worshipping a holy pitcher and
kicking off the biggest Hindu festival in Nepal
that lasts for nearly a fortnight.
Strangely, the prime minister's office had not
issued any public message, extending greetings to
the Muslim community.
It was the communists and royalists who rose to the occasion.
The second largest party in the ruling coalition,
the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist
Leninist (UML), greeted Muslims, wishing for
peace and progress.
Madhav Kumar Nepal, chief of the party, hoped the
country would soon be able to hold the stalled
election and progress to a peaceful and
prosperous federal republic.
Earlier this month, Maoist chief Prachanda had
issued a statement, extending best wishes for Eid.
A former prime minister, Surya Bahadur Thapa, who
was appointed by King Gyanendra in 2003, also
extended his best wishes as chief of the Rastriya
Janashakti Party, hoping for peace, happiness and
prosperity.
However, there was no message from the office of
the prime minister, who is now also the head of
state.
Since this year, Koirala has been observing all
the Hindu festivals, including recently offering
worship to Nepal's living goddess, the Kumari, an
incident that created a standoff between him and
the embattled king with the crowds hailing the
monarch and shouting slogans against the premier.
Last month, Nepal experienced one of the worst
sectarian violence in its history when the murder
of a powerful Muslim landlord in apilavastu
triggered killings, arson and looting.
Hundreds of Muslims are said to have fled their
homes following the incident, with many of them
fleeing to India.
[. . .]
______
[3] India - Burma:
(i)
FAILING THE FOREIGN POLICY TEST
by Praful Bidwai
6 October 2007
India's approach to the Myanmar problem speaks of
the deep cynicism that passes for foreign policy
'realism' in New Delhi.
IF the real test of the short-term success of a
nation's foreign policy lies in its
neighbourhood, rather than in distant lands or
remote or rarefied international fora, then
India's policy has been something of a failure in
recent years - just when the country's global
profile has undergone a sea change.
Nothing illustrates this better than New Delhi's
policy somersaults over Nepal until it recognised
the inevitability of the absolute monarchy's end.
Only slightly less serious has been its failure
to anticipate or influence major developments in
Bangladesh and Sri Lanka and, more recently, to
stand in solidarity with the movement for full
democratisation in Pakistan.
However, these lapses pale into the shade when
compared with India's reprehensively passive and
callous posture towards the pro-democracy
movement in Myanmar - the greatest such
mobilisation since 1990 - which holds the
potential to overthrow one of the most repressive
and barbaric military regimes anywhere in the
world.
What is the current "Burmese crisis" all about?
Simply put, underlying it is popular disgust with
an extraordinarily predatory regime, which has
brutalised 47 million people with a huge
490,000-strong army for decades, which has
bankrupted a country endowed with magnificent
natural resources, which routinely practises
arbitrary detention, slave labour and torture,
and which has had no compunctions about gunning
down and "disappearing" dissidents.
The people of Myanmar have risen in revolt
against the junta. It is the duty of the
international community to support them and
protect them against a lawless government which
is accountable to nobody and shows no regard for
the cares and concerns of the larger world. If
human rights are inherent to flesh-and-blood
people, then concern for them must be universal.
Only the most consummate practitioner of
Machiavellian realpolitik or the diehard cynic
with deadened sensibilities could remain unmoved
by the sight of barefoot monks refusing alms
offered by soldiers in protest against the ruling
junta, or of the Army opening fire against a
column of peaceful demonstrators. The scenario
evocatively reminded the global public of the
Gandhian legacy of India's great struggle against
colonial rule - close to the Mahatma's birth
anniversary.
Yet, just as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and
Congress president Sonia Gandhi were extolling
the virtues of Gandhian non-violence, the new
Chief of the Army Staff, Deepak Kapoor, spelt out
his ground-level interpretation of India's
approach towards Burma in his maiden press
conference.
He said that the happenings are Myanmar's
"internal affair" but "we have good relations"
with its government and "we should maintain
these". General Kapoor stressed that the support
of the Myanmarse military is vital to the success
of India's counter-insurgency operations in the
northeastern region.
Ergo, as far as Myanmar is concerned, out go
"romantic" notions such as democracy, human
rights, and peaceful resolution of disputes, from
which other things follow - including the
injunction against violating the impunity of
non-combatant civilians, and respect for
international law and covenants on civil and
political rights. In realpolitik, everything is
par for the course, and nothing is forbidden, so
long as it promotes "the national interest" (for
example, counter-insurgency). It was especially
deplorable that the Army Chief made this
pronouncement bearing strong policy implications.
This represented an intrusion into the
prerogative of the executive and was wholly out
of order for a military commander. Yet, General
Kapoor was following in the footsteps of his
predecessor Gen. Joginder Jaswant Singh, who,
too, was given to making expansive policy
declarations, including one that vetoed a
solution to the Siachen glacier issue with
Pakistan.
Kapoor's statement may appear to be a crude
version of the supposedly sophisticated, nuanced
position of the Ministry of External Affairs. But
it is not. It accurately reproduces the core of
the Ministry's stand, minus a few platitudes such
as "India hopes to see a peaceful, stable and
prosperous Burma" and "a broad-based process of
national reconciliation and political reform".
The bottom line is the same. As an establishment
journalist put it, in New Delhi's view, "a
hundred thousand monks are hardly going to be
able to overthrow the military regime".
Had the Ministry's approach been really different
from the Army's, it would have summoned the
Burmese Ambassador to India to the Foreign Office
or issued a statement deploring the killing of
innocent people in Myanmar without mincing words.
It did nothing of the sort.
In fact, India did not even pull the considerable
leverage it has over the Yangon regime to help
fix the visit to Myanmar of United Nations
Special Envoy Ibrahim Gambari, including getting
him permission to fly to the new capital
Naypyidaw, where he first met the acting Prime
Minister, and after days of waiting, the top
junta commander, Gen. Than Shwe. In fact, China
pushed for this.
It is only when External Affairs Minister Pranab
Mukherjee sensed the international mood on
Myanmar during his October visit to New York that
he suggested that Myanmar consider conducting an
inquiry into the unconscionable use of force in
Yangon and other cities.
In New York, Pranab Mukherjee stressed that
India's "interests" lie in "a stable and peaceful
periphery"- which is necessary "if India is to
grow rapidly and transform itself". He was at
pains to oppose economic sanctions against
Myanmar. He said: "I do not subscribe to penal
sanctions at all times. We should instead try to
engage the country concerned in negotiations.
Sanctions .. should be the last resort because
[they are] counter-productive. Instead of
correcting the errant rulers, they end in the
suffering of innocent people."
This was a weak, pusillanimous, and conditional
statement devoid of reference to principle or
doctrine. It came after more than 40 (and
according to one estimate, 200) protesters had
been killed by the junta, and thousands detained.
It repeated shop-worn cliches about the
limitations of sanctions - in favour of
"constructive engagement", a strategy first
advocated by the West vis-À-vis Apartheid South
Africa, where it manifestly failed.
What "constructive engagement" with Myanmar might
mean was revealed by Union Petroleum Minister
Murli Deora's visit to that country to discuss a
gas deal, right at the height of the
state-sponsored violence.
Pranab Mukherjee's "national interest" statement
derives from the view that democracy or
protection of the life or limb of Myanmarese
civilians is not a worthy cause in and of itself.
The double standards which contrast this with
India's fervent rhetorical advocacy of democracy
in the United States -led bodies like the Concert
of Democracies are both rigorous and astounding.
India's stand on the Myanmarese question is
neither spontaneous, nor ethically grounded, nor
even driven by an internal process of policy
deliberation. It is impelled largely by
international pressure, spearheaded by the U.S.
This does not speak of a proactive approach
worthy of an emerging power with an independent
foreign policy orientation.
This passivity marks our media too: In contrast
to the international press, hardly any Indian
journalist has filed reports from within Myanmar
or from its borders.
India's position on Myanmar is determined by four
parochial considerations: Securing Myanmar's help
in fighting insurgencies in the northeastern
region; exploiting Myanmar's natural gas
reserves; containing China's influence in
Myanmar; and promoting "stability" in India's
"periphery", itself a derogatory term for our
neighbourhood.
All four considerations are dubious. Myanmar has
only extended limited, selective cooperation in
preventing some northeastern groups from
establishing camps on its soil. Prominent among
them is the National Socialist Council of
Nagaland (Khaplang), with whom Myanmar has a
ceasefire agreement anyway.
But the Myanmarese military has at best taken
token and desultory action against the United
Liberation Front of Asom, the People's Liberation
Army and the United National Liberation Front
(UNLF) of Manipur. At any rate, the border region
has never been fully "sanitised" of insurgents.
The larger point is that Myanmar has shrewdly
played Chinese interests off against Indian
interests, while milking both countries for
military and economic assistance and holding out
the lure of gas, teak and other natural
resources. India has walked into this trap.
India's famed "interests" in Myanmar's gas
warrant critical scrutiny and introspection, not
celebration. It should embarrass us all that four
Indian companies figure among the "Dirty 20"
corporations implicated in the exploitation of
Myanmar's gas reserves - at the expense of human
rights violations and environmental destruction.
Among them are the public sector ONGC Videsh Ltd
and the Gas Authority of India Ltd.
The human rights and environmental consequences
of these petroleum and gas companies' activities
have been detailed at length by EarthRights
International, the Shwe Gas Movement and the
Arakan State Human Rights Commission. Put simply,
they are horrifying.
The argument that India should invest in Myanmar
and develop close relations with its military
regime to counter Chinese influence is a non
sequitur and hence unconvincing. A large country
like India can and has to live with military
relationships between some of its neighbours and
other powers. India has done so successfully
during periods of Pakistan's close military
relations with the U. S. and China. This did not,
and should not, generate a panic response. Such
relationships are not a zero-sum game.
More important, those who demand that India must
see itself as a countervailing force to China
essentially advocate the launching of a new Asian
Cold War. This can only have disastrous
consequences for India's long-term security. An
arms race with China - that too with a strong
nuclear component - will sharply raise India's
already bloated military expenditure. The
economic burden will be massive. Once you are
sucked into an arms race, you no longer make your
own strategic decisions autonomously. They are
made for you by your adversary.
Finally, promoting "stability", defined
independently of regime legitimacy, is a recipe
for freezing a situation of iniquity and
oppression. Surely, India's long-term interests
do not lie in a neighbourhood which has a series
of "stable" but tyrannical regimes. We long
deluded ourselves that Nepal's monarchy would
guarantee "stability"- only to find the
pro-democracy movement shattering that dangerous
myth.
In the ultimate analysis, a foreign policy
divorced from morality, or counterposed to it,
cannot serve national, leave alone universal,
purpose. In the past, although not consistently,
India tried to marry the two. Jawaharlal Nehru's
advocacy of non-alignment, decolonisation, peace,
nuclear disarmament, and redressal of North-South
inequalities was one such attempt. It gave India
a much higher global stature than was warranted
by its military or economic power. It also
contributed to a better world.
Global Stature of The Past
In the mid- and late 1960s, too, India stood its
ground in opposing the U.S.-led Vietnam War
despite its dependence on Washington for
financial aid, and worse, its "ship-to-mouth"
existence in regard to wheat supplies. Similarly,
India continued to support the anti-apartheid
movement and the African National Congress (ANC)
in the face of all kinds of economic and
political arguments about losing its influence
with the West. Ultimately, the ANC triumphed.
India was proved right.
Again, India earned the respect of the world by
awarding the 1993 Nehru Memorial Prize for
International Understanding to Aung San Suu Kyi,
three years after she had won 90 per cent of
Parliament seats in an election and was arrested
- to be detained ever since.
The pertinent point is, any broad-horizon foreign
policy calculus must recognise that India has a
plethora of options in any given situation.
Indeed, these have multiplied with India's
growing economic power. To imagine that they have
shrunk - for example, to a zero-sum game in
Myanmar vis-À-vis China - is to impose upon
ourselves an artificial narrowing of our horizons.
This can only demean India and detract from her
potential to contribute to making the world a
better place. At the end of the day, just as
India's domestic achievements will be measured by
the world on the strength of her success in
overcoming mass deprivation and building an
inclusive society, her foreign policy success
will be judged by her contribution to the larger
world.
o o o
(ii)
The Telegraph
October 15, 2007
EAST WITH BITS LEFT OUT
- A more imaginative Myanmar policy would do India good
by Sanjib Baruah
Most countries do public diplomacy abroad. In its
standard use, the term refers to cultural and
educational programmes, radio and television
broadcasts, and citizen exchanges to promote
foreign policy goals. In recent years, it has
come to include 'soft power' - the goodwill that
a country has because of the influence of popular
culture and its positive image among foreigners.
The target of public diplomacy is usually foreign
audiences.
India however, chooses to do public diplomacy at
home. For the second time in less than four
months, the external affairs minister, Pranab
Mukherjee, visited the Northeast to explain the
Look East policy. Both events were sponsored by
the public diplomacy division of the ministry of
external affairs. One can only welcome the
belated discovery by the South Block of the value
of the public discussions of foreign policy. But
one wishes that these exercises were more about
taking input from the ground, rather than about
explaining policy from the top. From the
perspective of India's multiple global audiences,
there may be some risks in calling these
exercises public diplomacy. Does our external
affairs ministry treat the Northeast as India's
'near abroad' or the 'far-east' within?
Mukherjee explained the promises that the Look
East policy holds for northeastern India and how
the priority given to its economic development
fits into our foreign policy goals. The Planning
Commission deputy chairman, Montek Singh
Ahluwalia, was around as well. He said that the
Northeast would see a massive upsurge in economic
development over the next five years. Audiences
in the Northeast, however, have grown a bit tired
of the repetitious nature of what they have been
hearing about the Look East policy. The reporter
for The Telegraph pointed out that Mukherjee's
speech in Guwahati was almost an exact
reproduction of the speech he gave in Shillong
four months earlier.
But the missing 800-pound gorilla from the
Guwahati deliberations was the situation in
neighbouring Myanmar. What are its implications
for the future of the Look East policy? As fear
grips Myanmar following the crackdown by the
military junta, questions are being asked
everywhere about the implications of the recent
developments. What, for instance, does the
crackdown on the Buddhist monasteries mean with
reference to whatever residual legitimacy the
military regime still has?
Since our Burma policy took a U-turn in the early
Nineties, India has been betting on the military
regime's durability. Thus, even though the
decision of the army chief, Deepak Kapoor, to
publicly articulate foreign policy goals raised
some eyebrows, his statement calling the
crackdown in Myanmar an "internal matter" was not
out of line with official policy. Mukherjee has
said, "It is up to the Burmese people to struggle
for democracy, it is their issue." And the most
scandalous of all was the presence of the
petroleum minister, Murli Deora, in Myanmar to
sign a deal for natural gas exploration when the
crackdown was in full swing.
Our foreign policymakers like to describe our
Myanmar policy as being premised on realism. The
concept is subject to much criticism in the
academic literature on international relations.
Realism can easily be an excuse for lazy
thinking: letting some supposedly objective
national interests get the upper hand in shaping
foreign policy.
The sudden end of the Cold War in 1989 spelt the
failure of realism to explain some of the new
forces that were transforming the world. Among
these emerging forms of more globalized political
activism are those that have been further
energized in recent years by the internet, the
mobile phone and the proliferation of 24-hour
news channels.
The impact of some of these forces is apparent in
the pressures on Myanmar and on many other
governments - including India - vis-à-vis their
Myanmar policy. In the past few days, India has
had to modify its initial stance in response to
these pressures. It voted for the European
Union-sponsored resolution at the United Nations
Human Rights Council condemning the Myanmarese
government for its violent repression of peaceful
demonstrations. The council has also approved a
resolution calling for an independent
investigation of the human rights situation in
Myanmar.
Myanmar itself has responded to these pressures
by clamping down on the internet, the mobile
phone network and by taking steps to stop the
flow of news and pictures from the country.
Recently, China's sensitivity to world public
opinion has been all too apparent. Even on
Myanmar, unlike India, China did not take a
strict "internal matter" line, but opted for
behind-the-scenes diplomacy. With the Beijing
Olympics on the horizon, China does not want to
be seen as being closely associated with
unpopular, repressive regimes.
After initial resistance, it began putting
pressure on Sudan to accept a UN peacekeeping
force in Darfur. Activists have warned that
Beijing risks hosting the "Genocide Olympics".
While no one expects Beijing to become an
advocate for democracy in Myanmar, there is
little doubt that its Myanmar policy reflects
sensitivity to global public opinion and the
importance of soft power.
China is not alone in this matter. Unlike the
early years of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations, when there was a reluctance to intervene
in the internal affairs of member states,
political liberalization in countries like
Indonesia and Philippines, and political activism
in Thailand and Malaysia are leading it towards
siding with the forces for change in Myanmar.
Japan's Myanmar policy has also changed
significantly. Even Singapore has said that it is
"deeply troubled" by the crisis in Myanmar.
India may be the laggard in responding to this
new era of global activism. Indian foreign
policy- makers had discovered realism rather
late. It is understandable that countering
Chinese influence, and hoping that Myanmar (and
Bangladesh) would extend to our security
establishment the kind of help that Bhutan
provided in 2003 to eliminate Northeastern rebel
groups would be major considerations in India's
Myanmar policy. But shouldn't we be worried that
India's national interest defined in that way -
and often articulated by active or retired
military generals - requires the presence of
non-democratic regimes in the entire
neighbourhood?
Rather than betting on the generals' survival for
much longer, it is time for India to take a
long-term view, draw lessons from its isolation
on Myanmar, and rethink its Myanmar policy. It is
in a good position to take the leadership in a
global initiative to bring about a political
transition in Myanmar. That would enable India to
side with the forces of Myanmar's future. In
another era, when Burma was a province of India
and the separation of Burma from British colonial
India was debated, the Buddhist monks of Burma
took a strong pro-India position. Writing from
Calcutta in 1931, Ottama Bhikkhu of Burma
supported a federal scheme tying India with Burma
that had Gandhi's blessings. None of Burma's
traditions, he said, "hark back to China, all
hark back to India". He pointed to Burma's
historical connection with India by sea and land
dating back to "the earliest times". Madras and
Bengal, he said, "supplied dynasties of Burmese
kings, priests and peasants". The Buddha gave
Burma its religion and "Indian architects their
style of architecture." Contrasting this with the
relative absence of cultural influence from
China, he said, even though China is near Burma,
its "interest in Burma seems to have been limited
to these trade-routes, for traces of her
influence are hard to find".
No other country has more of a reservoir of soft
power assets in Myanmar than India. Today, the
democracy movement there is led by a woman who
once lived in India, and is the author of a book
called Burma and India: Some Aspects of
Intellectual Life under Colonialism.
We should not squander these soft power resources
by letting our obsession with economic growth and
energy security and our security establishment's
inclination to put counter-insurgency ahead of
conflict resolution stand in the way of a more
imaginative Myanmar policy.
The author is at the Centre for Policy Research,
New Delhi, and Bard College, New York
o o o
(iii)
The Guardian
October 14, 2007
A CONFLICT OF INTERESTS
If the US and the EU want India to act according
to its moral values and not its national
interests in Burma, they had better do the same.
by Mira Kamdar
The world has been horrified by graphic images of
the latest crackdown by Burma's military junta.
But the bullets and clubs unleashed on Buddhist
monks have worked. The monks have retreated, and
an eerie normalcy has returned to Yangon
(Rangoon), Burma's principal city and former
capital.
That crackdown continues under cover of darkness.
When the sun sets in Burma, fear rises. Everyone
listens half awake for the dreaded knock on the
door. Any night, the military's agents can come
for you, take you away, and make sure you are
never heard from again.
In recent nights, the junta's henchmen have burst
into monasteries, lined up sleepy monks, and
smashed their shaved heads against the walls,
spattering them with blood. Scores of others,
perhaps hundreds, have been carted off for
interrogation, torture, or execution. The
nighttime assault on a United Nations employee
and her family made international news, but
hundreds of less well-connected Burmese have been
similarly abused.
For 45 years, Burma's people have been subjected
to the junta's reign of terror. My father was
born in Rangoon long before the 1962 coup that
brought the current regime to power. Afterwards,
many of my relatives, prosperous Indian merchants
who had been settled in Burma for generations,
abandoned homes and businesses in order to save
their skins as chaos enveloped the city, later
renamed Yangon.
A relative who now lives in Bangkok, but who
returned part-time to Yangon in response to
overtures from Burma's cash-starved rulers,
recalled those days: "We lived through hell. We
never knew when we woke up each morning what
would happen. People were being denounced left
and right. They could just come and take you away
and take everything away from you." Those who
couldn't leave Burma, or didn't want to, have
lived with this fear ever since.
The United States and Europe have issued strong
statements condemning the crackdown and calling
upon Burma's neighbours, especially India and
China, to exert their influence on the regime.
The response from both has been muted (as it has
from Thailand, which also has strong economic
ties with Burma).
China balks at interfering in the "internal
affairs" of a neighbour from whom it gets
precious natural gas and potential access to the
sea. India, which "normalised" bilateral
relations a few years ago, is reluctant to
alienate Burma's military, with which it has
worked closely to counter rebels in India's
northeast who had been using the common border to
tactical advantage. To this end, India has
provided aid, including tanks and training, to
Burma's military.
But the main reason for India's good relations
with Burma's ruling thugs is the country's vast
and still largely unexploited energy reserves,
which India desperately needs to fuel its
economic boom. India has invested $150m in a gas
exploration deal off the Arakan coast of Burma,
and India's state-owned Oil and Natural Gas
Corporation and Gas Authority of India Ltd have
taken a 30% stake in two offshore gas fields in
direct competition with PetroChina, which has
also been given a stake.
India and China are simply doing what the US and
European countries have done for so long: trump
rhetoric about democracy and human rights with
policies that serve their strategic and energy
security interests. US relations with Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia are two examples, and America's
Chevron and France's Total, two of the world's
oil giants, continue to do a brisk business in
Burma, thanks to loopholes in the sanctions.
But the rise of India and China means that the
time-tested posture of western democracies toward
emerging states to "do as we say, not as we do"
will become less tenable. If the EU and the US
want democratic India to act according to its
stated moral values and not its vital national
interests when these appear to conflict, they had
better be prepared to do the same.
Feeling the heat, including threats from some US
senators to link America's nuclear deal with
India to its actions in Burma, India has
announced that it is asking for the release of
Burmese democratic opposition leader and Nobel
prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest.
But the credibility of all democratic regimes,
not just India's, is at stake in what unfolds in
Burma.
In cooperation with Project Syndicate/Asia Society, 2007.
______
[4]
Indian Express
October 09, 2007
BUREAUCRAZY
M Veerappa Moily
Why we recommended that the Official Secrets Act must be abolished
The recent raids by the Central Bureau of
Investigation on the house of a retired officer
of the Research & Analyses Wing (RAW) for alleged
violations of the Official Secrets Act (OSA) have
ignited a public debate on the role of this act
in preventing greater openness and transparency
in government. The OSA, enacted by the British,
regulates all matters relating to secrecy and
confidentiality in government. It mainly provides
a statutory framework for dealing with threats to
the unity and integrity of the nation by way of
espionage, sedition and other covert acts against
the nation. Despite its colonial lineage, the act
has been kept operational after Independence on
grounds of national security.
In its first report, the Second Administrative
Reforms Commission (ARC) headed by me had
undertaken a full review of this act in the
context of the Right to Information Act in a bid
to reconcile the felt need for transparency in
government with the imperatives of national
security. It would be illuminating and opportune
at this juncture to retrace the basis of our
eventual recommendation in that report to abolish
the OSA.
How to deal with so-called 'official secrets' is
perhaps the most contentious issue in the
implementation of the RTI Act. In a democracy,
people are sovereign and the elected government
and its functionaries are public servants
accountable to the citizens. Transparency should
therefore pervade all aspects of governance. At
the same time, it has to be recognised that
public interest is best served if certain
sensitive matters affecting national security are
kept out of the public domain. The RTA Act treads
this fine balance - for example, by giving people
the unhindered right to know the decisions of the
cabinet and the reasons for these, but not access
to the actual discussions that may occur in the
cabinet. The act explicitly recognises these
confidentiality requirements in matters of state
and Section 8 of the act exempts all such matters
from disclosure.
In an unequal and elitist society where public
officials wield enormous powers, the OSA has
engendered a climate of secrecy wherein
confidentiality becomes the norm and disclosure
the exception. Section 5 of the OSA was intended
to deal with potential breaches of national
security but the clumsy wording of the section
has converted it into an omnibus provision
reducing practically every official data and
transaction into a confidential matter. This
tendency was accentuated by the Civil Service
Conduct Rules 1964, which prohibit communication
of an official document to anyone without
authorisation.
The RTI Act has a clause: "Sec. 8(2):
Notwithstanding anything in the Official Secrets
Act, 1923 nor any of the exemptions permissible
in accordance with sub-section (1), a public
authority may allow access to information, if
public interest in disclosure outweighs the harm
to the protected interests." This provision
overrides the OSA and allows disclosure of
information even where there is a clash with the
exemption provisions of Sec. 8(1) of the RTI Act.
In other words, the OSA would not come in the way
of disclosure of information if it is otherwise
permissible under the RTI Act. Nonetheless, the
OSA along with other rules and instructions still
creates a climate of secrecy and paranoia in
respect of all official matters even where these
may have nothing to do with national security,
which is the rationale for the OSA.
Section 5 of the OSA lays down that any person
having information about a prohibited place, or
such information which may help an enemy state,
or which has been entrusted to him in confidence,
or which he has obtained owing to his official
position, commits an offence if (s)he
communicates it to an unauthorised person, uses
it in a manner prejudicial to the interests of
the state, retains it when (s)he has no right to
do so, or fails to take reasonable care of such
information. Any kind of information is covered
by this section if it is classified as secret.
The word 'secret' and the phrase 'official
secrets' have not been defined in the act.
Therefore, public servants have the discretion to
classify anything as secret.
The Supreme Court in Sama Alana Abdulla vs State
of Gujarat (1996) held: (a) that the word
'secret' in clause (c) of sub-section (1) of
Section 3 qualified official code or password and
not any sketch, plan, model, article or note or
other document or information and (b) when the
accused was found in conscious possession of the
material (map in that case) and no plausible
explanation has been given for its possession, it
has to be presumed as required by Section 3(2) of
the act that the same was obtained or collected
by the appellant for a purpose prejudicial to the
safety or interests of the state.
This implies that a sketch, plan, model, article,
note or document need not necessarily be secret
in order to be covered by the act, provided it is
classified as an official secret. Consequently,
even information which does not have a bearing on
national security is not to be disclosed if the
public servant obtained or has access to it by
virtue of holding office. Such overly harsh and
sweeping provisions help create a Kafkaesque
atmosphere of secrecy about even trifling matters
as shown by the travails of the former RAW
officer whose criticism of the procurement
practices in his former organisation have been
taken to be a breach of the OSA. His revelations
may be considered as whistle-blowing by some
while his former colleagues may consider them to
be more a case of washing dirty linen in public.
But how such allegations can be considered a
breach of national security is difficult to
fathom.
The writer, a former chief minister of Karnataka,
is chairman of the Second Administrative Reforms
Commission
______
[5] ANNOUNCEMENTS:
(i)
SANJOY GHOSE MEDIA FELLOWSHIP -2007-08 FOR WOMEN JOURNALISTS
Charkha Development Communication Network, an NGO
working to empower rural communities through
communication, has announced the "Sanjoy Ghose
Media Fellowship -2007-08 for Women Journalists"
with the objective of highlighting perspectives
of women in areas of conflict through the media.
This arises from the basic premise that in an
area of conflict where development itself stands
compromised, often the perspectives of women are
not expressed nor do they form part of public
opinion. Being key players and playing
multifarious roles within their homes and in
society, these reflect alternate viewpoints on a
host of issues and add value in dealing with the
crisis that people have faced for nearly two
decades.
Charkha wants to encourage writings by women in
the region to bring out these insights. Through
its Feature Services in Hindi, English and Urdu,
the writings will be disseminated through
national and regional media to reach a vast
readership across the country.
The Fellowship is open to all women writers and
journalists residing in Jammu & Kashmir between
the ages of 25-45 years. Applications are invited
in Hindi, English and Urdu. There will be 3
Fellowships for six months with a total value of
Rs.12, 000/-, each and will be selected by a Jury
of eminent people in the media and academia both
in J&K and from the national mainstream. Those
who have already received the Sanjoy Ghose
Fellowship are not eligible. The Fellowships
will be awarded in New Delhi on 7 December 2007
to mark the birthday of the founder of Charkha,
social activist, Sanjoy Ghose.
Further details are available on the website:
www.charkha.org. The applications should be sent by post to:
The President
Charkha Development Communication Network
G-15/11-12 Malviya Nagar, New Delhi 110 017
Telefax: 011-26680816/26680688
E-mail: charkha at bol.net.in
The last date of receiving applications is 2 Nov 2007.
Sujata Raghavan
Programme Coordinator
Mobile no: +91-9811217054
____
(ii)
"IN SEARCH OF GANDHI" (52 MIN.) IS SCREENING ON BBC WORLD.
US/CANADA SCREENING TIMES
Monday October 15, 2007
01:10 (GMT) In Search of Gandhi BBC World*
INDIA SCREENING TIMES
Monday October 15, 2007
01:10 (GMT) In Search of Gandhi BBC World*
Synopsis:
In the early decades of the twentieth century,
Mahatma Gandhi's legacy of satyagraha inspired a
mass movement of millions of Indians to rise up
against the British colonial state and
successfully agitate for the establishment of a
democratic and free India. But what kind of a
democracy does India have today?
In road-movie style, the film crew travels down
the famous trail of Gandhi's salt march, the
remarkable mass campaign that galvanized ordinary
Indians to join the non-violent struggle for
democracy and freedom in 1930. Stopping at the
same villages and cities where Gandhi and his
followers had raised their call for independence,
the film documents the stories of ordinary
citizens in India today. Although inspired by a
historical event, In Search of Gandhi is not a
journey back in time. Instead it is a search for
the present and future of democracy in India.
Main Credits:
Camera: Mrinal Desai
Sound: Anita Kushwaha
Editing: Menno Boerema
Executive Producer: Iikka Vehkalahti
Produced by Don Edkins
Directed by Lalit Vachani
A Wide Eye Film (2007) for Steps International
For information on the Democracy project, see:
http://www.whydemocracy.net
_____
(iii)
British Journal of Sociology 2007 public lecture
SEXUAL POLITICS: THE LIMITS OF SECULARISM, THE TIME OF COALITION
Date: Tuesday 30 October 2007
Time: 6.30-8pm
Venue: Old Theatre, Old Building [London School of Economics]
Speaker: Professor Judith Butler
Discussant: Professor Chetan Bhatt
Chair: Dr Suki Ali
This lecture considers the conditions for
coalition that might exist between religious and
sexual minorities through focusing on
differential forms of state coercion. Several
arguments have emerged in Europe and elsewhere,
claiming that feminism and progressive sexual
politics are threatened by new religious
communities and the effects of Islam in
particular and base their views on libertarian
principles (feminism and progressive sexual
politics rely on increasingly robust conceptions
of personal liberty) and on criticisms of
multiculturalism (cast as a relativist enterprise
that is unable to ground strong normative
claims). Such arguments tend to rely on
conceptions of sexual or gender freedom which
presume certain conceptions of secular progress
and to forget or dismiss conceptions of sexual
politics that are bound to anti-racist struggle.
Without denying that clear tensions exist between
religious traditions that condemn and forbid
homosexuality and progressive sexual movements
that tend to promote exclusionary conceptions of
the secular, the lecture focuses on the
importance of conceptions of cultural
translation, antagonism, and the critique of
state coercion to consider what 'critical
coalition' might mean for religious and sexual
minorities
Judith Butler is Maxine Elliot Professor at the
University of California, Berkeley. Chetan Bhatt
is a professor in the Department of Sociology at
Goldsmiths.
This event is free and open to all with no ticket
required. Entry is on a first come, first served
basis. For more information, email
events at lse.ac.uk or call 020 7955 6043.
---
(iv)
IDENTITIES IN A SOUTH ASIAN CONTEXT WORKSHOP
Location:
ICOSS - 219 Portobello, Sheffield, S1 4DP
Date:
Friday 16th November 2007
Workshop theme
The currency of the word `identity´ has never
been more important in South Asia. In an era of
uneven cosmopolitan hypermobility and neo-liberal
globalisation, the tensions between the
particular and the global, the religious and the
secular, and the state and the nation are acutely
felt within disparate South Asian societies. This
one day workshop brings together international
scholars working on South Asia and its diaspora
at all career levels. Its aim is to push at
understandings of how and why `identity´, and its
continuing production across different registers
and through different historical, aesthetic and
political formations, remains such a potent
signifier in South Asia, feeding social,
political and cultural conflict in both domestic
and international spheres. The workshop seeks to
interrogate some of the different axes through
which identities, including gender, caste,
community and religion, continue to coagulate in
a South Asian context and shape public and
private spheres. The workshop also looks beyond
the reification of `identity´ in South Asia by
pushing at how apparently essential and material
senses of self, other, sameness and difference
are in fact historical, relational, heterogeneous
and dynamic productions. In particular the
workshop aims to combine the insights of
different disciplines in the Arts and Humanities
and Social Sciences, in explorations of South
Asian `identities´.
The event is part of the South Asian Studies in
the North (SASIN) network which seeks to create a
high quality research network of scholars working
on South Asia in the north of England. The
universities of Sheffield, Lancaster, UNCLAN,
Manchester, Leeds and York are involved with this
network. Previous events have been held in Leeds
and Manchester.
SASIN Leeds Workshop February 2007
This workshop is being co-organised by Dr
Katharine Adeney from the Department of Politics,
Dr Tariq Jazeel from the Department of Geography,
Dr Alistair McMillan from the Department of
Politics, Dr Glyn Williams from the Department of
Town and Regional Planning and Dr Ben Zachariah
from the Department of History. As well as
forming part of the CIPR´s identity research
strand, this workshop is supported by the
University of Sheffield´s Social Science Research
Division and Humanities Research Division, and
will form part of the WUN Seminar Series on South
Asia.
Keynote speaker
Professor Shail Mayaram
Shail Mayaram is Professor and Senior Fellow at
the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies,
Delhi. Her writing has been on state formation,
subalternity and marginality, philosophy of
history, multiculturalism and Muslim identities,
religious conversion and transnational religious
civil society, spirit possession and shamanism,
oral epic and narrative traditions and gender and
governance. Her most recent writing is on the
categories of caste and tribe, the nature of
caste formation and the question of backwardness.
She has been coordinating a project on
cosmopolitanism and the city. The studies it has
undertaken by several eminent scholars are now
part of a volume titled, The Other Global City:
Living Together in Asia which investigates
inter-ethnic relations in the urban contexts of
Bukhara, Beirut, Cairo, Istanbul, Dacca, Delhi,
Lahore, Lhasa, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Tokyo.
She is currently working on a book project
titled, Nationalism in the time of Imperial
Terror: From Pax Britannica to Pax Americana.
Publications include Against history, against
state: Counterperspectives from the margins
(Columbia University Press, 2003); Resisting
Regimes: Myth, memory and the shaping of a Muslim
identity (Oxford University Press, 1997);
coauthored with Ashis Nandy, Shikha Trivedi,
Achyut Yagnik, Creating a nationality: The
Ramjanmabhumi Movement and the fear of self
(Oxford University Press, 1995); coedited with
Ajay Skaria and MSS Pandian, Subaltern Studies
vol 12 (Permanent Black, 2005).
Workshop Schedule
9.30-9.50 Registration and coffee
9.50-10.00 Welcome
10.00-11.00 Plenary Session
Chair: Dr Katharine Adeney, Department of Politics, University of Sheffield
Professor Shail Mayaram, CSDS, Title to be confirmed.
11.00-11.20 Coffee
11.20-12.50 Gender and Identities.
Chair: Dr Alistair McMillan, Department of Politics, University of Sheffield
Professor Shirin Rai, Department of Politics,
University of Warwick. `Gender and Political
Representation: Narratives of Service among
Indian women MPs.´
Dr Kanchana Ruwanpura, School of Geography,
University of Southampton. `Gender Awareness &
Action: The Ethno-Gender Dynamics of Sri Lankan
NGOs.´
Dr Sumi Madhok, Department of Politics, SOAS.
'Five Notions of Haq: Rights, Gender and
Citizenship in North West India'. `
12.50-13.50 Lunch
13.50-15.20 Colonialism, Postcolonialism and Identity
Chair: Dr Ben Zachariah, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Dr Steve Legg, Department of Geography,
University of Nottingham. `Racial intimacy and
imperial feminism: Meliscent Shephard's
anti-brothel quest in colonial India.´
Mr William Avis, Department of History,
University of Sheffield. 'Sixty Years of
Post-Coloniality: the Particularity of the
Assamese Experience.'
Dr Tariq Jazeel, Department of Geography,
University of Sheffield. 'Environmental
literacies after Eurocentrism: reading the
politics of space in southern Sri Lanka.'
15.20-15.40 Coffee
15.40-16.40 Diasporic identities
Chair: Dr Tariq Jazeel, Department of Geography, University of Sheffield
Dr Rob Aitken, Department of Politics, University
of York. `Identity Politics and the confusion and
conflation of networks, communities and
identities in the South Asian diaspora.´
Dr John Zavos, School of Arts, Histories and
Cultures, University of Manchester. `Situating
Hindu Nationalism in the UK: Vishwa Hindu
Parishad and the development of British Hindu
consciousness´
16.40-17.00 Coffee
17.00-18.00 Caste and Community *
Chair: Dr Glyn Williams, Department of Town and
Regional Planning, University of Sheffield
Dr Andrew Wyatt, Department of Politics,
University of Bristol. `The re-positioning of
Tamil identity in the new political economy.´
Professor Craig Jeffrey, Department of Geography
and Jackson School of International Studies,
University of Washington. `Caste, class and
improvised politics on a north Indian university
campus.´
* This will also be a seminar for the World
Universities Network (WUN) series on South Asia
with video link to the University of Washington
and other partner institutions
18.00-19.00 WUN Reception.
Papers
Kanchana Ruwanpura's paper is now available by
emailing Margaret Holder (contact details below)
Registration information
Registration is free, but because places are
limited (and to allow us to organise catering),
please call or email Margaret Holder to confirm
your attendance. 0114 222 1645
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
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