South Asia Citizens Wire - 5 June 2016 - No. 2898 
[via South Asia Citizens Web - sacw.net since 1996]

Contents:
1. Pakistan: A balance sheet for May 28 | Pervez Hoodbhoy
2. Sri Lanka: Return Of Saffron Violence? | Hilmy Ahamed
3. India: Poisoning Young Minds and Paving the Paths to Right Wing Expansion | 
Vijay Prashad
4. India: A Tale of Two Vehicles - Sadhvi's Motorcycle and Rubina's Car | Ram 
Puniyani
5. Video recording: Book release of Rana Ayyub's explosive book "Gujarat Files: 
Anatomy of a Cover Up"
6. India: In Bastar, it looks as if the failed Salwa Judum idea is being given 
a fresh lease of life | Nandini Sundar
7. India: ‘No! This is not Acceptable' say Delhi University Teachers | Mukul 
Mangalik
8. Video: Diane Elson and Amit Bhaduri on Development and Equity | 2016 
Leontief Prize Lectures 
9. Recent On Communalism Watch:

::: URLs & FULL TEXT :::
10. Afghanistan: Escalation in conflict causing 'displacement crisis' - Amnesty 
International Press Release
11. Nepal’s Futile Attempt to Limit Free Speech | Biswas Baral
12. Bangladesh: No let-up in machete killing - Editorial, New Age
13. Pakistan: Women commission rejects CII bill
14. Pakistan’s Jihadist Heartland: Southern Punjab - International Crisis Group 
- Asia Report N°279 30 May 2016
15. Alex Zukas review of Ben Fowkes. The German Left and the Weimar Republic
16. New Political Earthquake in Brazil: Is It Now Time for Media Outlets to 
Call This a “Coup”? | Glenn Greenwald, Andrew Fishman, David Miranda
17. Lessons for Peace from Back in the USSR | David Swanson
18. Tributes to Muhammad Ali (1942-2016)

========================================
1. PAKISTAN: A BALANCE SHEET FOR MAY 28 | Pervez Hoodbhoy
========================================
On this very day, exactly 18 years ago, riotous celebration erupted after 
Pakistan tested its nuclear weapons. Just 17 days earlier, India had 
experienced a similar moment. Then, one year later, Pakistan once again saw 
mass jubilation during the officially sponsored Youm-i-Takbir. But, in sharp 
contrast, today's nuclear celebrations are barely audible. One hopes that this 
signals increased national maturity and sobriety.
http://sacw.net/article12792.html

========================================
2. SRI LANKA: RETURN OF SAFFRON VIOLENCE? | Hilmy Ahamed
========================================
Some Buddhist monks, who are going around intimidating Muslims, have formed 
themselves in to vigilante groups. There is a need for the government to take 
the bull by the horns. No vigilante group should be allowed to intimidate 
anyone, law and order needs to be maintained.
http://sacw.net/article12804.html

========================================
3. INDIA: POISONING YOUNG MINDS AND PAVING THE PATHS TO RIGHT WING EXPANSION | 
Vijay Prashad
========================================
These schools are the infrastructure of the Right. They set up shop, teach 
their narrow and dangerous ideology, use modest amounts of money to build 
support through social services and then convert this into political power. In 
both Gujarat and in central India, the long-term work of the Right has now 
delivered these regions to them. Older nationalist and leftist parties have 
fallen by the wayside. When one asks, how did the land of Gandhi (Gujarat) 
become the laboratory for the Hindutva Right, the answer lies —partly—in this 
educational infrastructure.
http://sacw.net/article12797.html

========================================
4. INDIA: A TALE OF TWO VEHICLES - SADHVI'S MOTORCYCLE AND RUBINA'S CAR | Ram 
Puniyani
========================================
Can there be two type of Justice delivery system in the same country? This 
question came to one's mind with the U turn taken by NIA in the cases related 
to terror acts in which many Hindu names were involved. Now the NIA in a fresh 
charge sheet (May 13, 2016) has dropped the charges against Pragya Singh 
Thakur, has lightened the ones against Col Purohit and others.
http://sacw.net/article12795.html

========================================
5. Video recording: Book release of Rana Ayyub's explosive book "Gujarat Files: 
Anatomy of a Cover Up"
========================================
On Friday [27 May 2016], The Caravan Conversations launched the journalist Rana 
Ayyub's self-published book, "Gujarat Files: Anatomy of a Cover Up." In 2010, 
Ayyub, then working for Tehelka magazine, had spent eight months undercover in 
Gujarat. Posing as a filmmaker, she met bureaucrats and senior police officials 
in Gujarat who held pivotal positions in the state between 2001 and 2010. The 
transcripts of the sting operation, unpublished so far, form the core of her 
book. At the launch, Ayyub was in conversation with the Supreme Court lawyer 
and the former additional solicitor general Indira Jaising, and the journalist 
Rajdeep Sardesai. Hartosh Singh Bal, the political editor at The Caravan, 
moderated the discussion, the first half of which is here.
http://sacw.net/article12794.html

========================================
6. India: In Bastar, it looks as if the failed Salwa Judum idea is being given 
a fresh lease of life | Nandini Sundar
========================================
The security establishment never tires of claiming that human rights activists 
are partisan, and only blame the state. But when they do expose Maoist crimes, 
the police is not interested. One wonders if the establishment's problem is 
really the Maoists – in whose name the state is spending several thousand 
crores on militarisation – or rights activists and the idea of democracy they 
uphold.
http://sacw.net/article12800.html

========================================
7. India: ‘No! This is not Acceptable' say Delhi University Teachers | Mukul 
Mangalik
========================================
A bombshell dropped by the University Grants Commission (UGC) on May 10th–the 
Gazette Notification 2016–has triggered a massive teachers' rebellion at Delhi 
University (DU). When the Delhi University Teachers' Association (DUTA) 
leadership gave a call for a boycott of the evaluation process, May 24th 
onwards, teachers responded with uncommon readiness and near unanimity. 
Evaluation centres remain deserted. Thousands of teachers thronged the Sriram 
College of Commerce (SRCC) auditorium and jammed the Ring Road and the streets 
of DU in the mid-day heat of May 28th. Close to 5,000 teachers marched from 
Mandi House to Parliament Street this afternoon, May 30th.
http://sacw.net/article12799.html

========================================
8. Video: Diane Elson and Amit Bhaduri on Development and Equity | 2016 
Leontief Prize Lectures
========================================
On March 10, the Global Development and Environment Institute (GDAE) awarded 
the 2016 Leontief Prize to Diane Elson and Amit Bhaduri for their work to 
improve our economic understandings of development, power, gender, and human 
rights.
http://sacw.net/article12796.html

========================================
9. RECENT ON COMMUNALISM WATCH:
======================================== 
    Bangladesh’s accommodation of extremism spells danger for the region (Sumit 
Ganguly)
    India: State itself the culprit in Gulberg massacre - Teesta Setalvad 
(interviewed in Catchnews)
    India: ‘It Stretches Credulity that Court Rejected Conspiracy in Gulberg 
Society Case’ - Manoj Mitta reponds to questions by The Wire
    Ramdev, that hindutva laced yoga guru has big business ambitions
    India: What were these violent clashes in Mathura between Azad Bharat 
Vidhik Vaicharik Kranti Satyagrahi and the police ?
    India: 84% Of 12 Million Married Children Under 10 Are Hindus (Indiaspend
    India - Gujarat 2002: What happened at Gulberg, 14 years ago (Leena Misra)
    Two Years of Modi Sarkar: Broken Promises-Sectarian Agenda
    India: Modi govts' attack disguised as FCRA violations on leading legal 
luminary Indira Jaising's NGO days after she spoke at the book release of 
Gujarat Files by Rana Ayyub
    India: Awaited, Judgement in 2002 Gulberg Society Trial, 69 People 
Massacred in Gujarat
    India: Court Verdict in 2002 Gulbarg massacre of Gujarat coming today
    India: Racism is not just skin deep (Anuradha M Chenoy)
    India: Madhya Pradesh govt slaps National Security Act (NSA) on duo for 
Facebook post
    India: Tough laws must deter street justice (Edit, The Tribune)
    India: Haryana government must take strict action against apathetic 
officials for Jat riots (Edit, The Times of India, June 1, 2016)
    India: Fear or forgiveness? Bandukwala dithers. But for many 2002 
survivors, the issue is: No justice, no peace (Javed Anand)
    Salil Tripathi's review of Gujarat Files by Rana Ayyub
    India: This false dawn - Modi regime’s obsession with the ‘new’ .. to purge 
the ‘old’, and to create the ‘non-people’ (Apoorvanand)
    India: Every Pandit in Kashmir faces identity crisis (Aarti Tikoo Singh)
    [Courageous Rana Ayyub's Book] Challenging the Gujarat narrative | Jawed 
Naqvi (Dawn 31 May 2016)
    How major IT firms such as SAP and Oracle helped the India's right wing BJP 
during the 2014 national elections
   
 -> available via: http://communalism.blogspot.com/
 
::: URLs & FULL TEXT :::
========================================
10. AFGHANISTAN: ESCALATION IN CONFLICT CAUSING 'DISPLACEMENT CRISIS' - AMNESTY 
INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
========================================
(Amnesty International - 31 May 2016)

Press Release

    1.2 million internally displaced
    Afghan security forces struggling in areas such as Helmand where they have 
taken over from British troops
    Taliban at strongest since 2001, as well as emergence of groups claiming 
allegiance to ISIS

Afghanistan is facing a “displacement crisis” with the number of Afghans who 
have fled violence and yet remained trapped in their own country dramatically 
doubling over the past three years, Amnesty International warned today (31 May) 
as it issued a new report.

Afghans already form one of the world’s largest refugee populations, behind 
only Syrians, with an estimated 2.6 million Afghan citizens living beyond the 
country’s border. The report finds that there are also a staggering 1.2 million 
people “internally displaced” in Afghanistan today, a dramatic increase from 
some 500,000 in 2013.

Recent years have seen an escalation in violence in the country, as 
international troops – including UK forces -  have left, and the Afghan 
security forces have fought for control against anti-government groups like the 
Taliban, who are reportedly at their strongest since their ousting from power 
in 2001. This has led to large-scaled displacement across the country with 
people fleeing the intensifying conflict.

Helmand province, said to be the most dangerous in the country, was where the 
majority of British troops were stationed throughout the 13-year US-led 
invasion and occupation of the country. Four hundred and 49 British military 
personnel died in the province during the war. Since Afghan forces took over 
the battle against the Taliban, they have been steadily losing ground in 
Helmand, and as the conflict has escalated, more civilians have fled in search 
of safety.

There have also been growing reports of fighters claiming allegiance to the 
Islamic State armed group over the past two years. In the eastern province of 
Nangarhar groups apparently affiliated to ISIS have engaged in clashes with 
both pro- and anti-government forces in 2015, leading to the displacement of 
tens of thousands of civilians.

Champa Patel, South Asia Director at Amnesty International, said:

    “While the world’s attention seems to have moved on from Afghanistan, we 
risk forgetting the plight of those left behind by the conflict.

    “Even after fleeing their homes to seek safety, increasing numbers of 
Afghans are languishing in appalling conditions in their own country, and 
fighting for their survival with no end in sight.

    “All parties that have been involved in Afghanistan over the past 15 years 
have a responsibility to come together and make sure that the very people the 
international community set out to help are not abandoned.

    “Afghanistan and the world must act now to end the country’s displacement 
crisis, before it is too late.”

Amnesty’s research found that despite the promises made by successive Afghan 
governments, displaced people in Afghanistan lack adequate health care, 
shelter, food, water and opportunities to pursue education and employment, with 
most living in dismal conditions.

Mastan, a 50-yearold woman living in a camp in Herat, told Amnesty:

    “Even an animal would not live in this hut, but we have to. I would prefer 
to be in prison rather than in this place, at least in prison I would not have 
to worry about food and shelter.”

Amnesty pointed out that a National “Internally-displaced People” Policy 
launched by the Afghan government in 2014 has hardly been implemented – stymied 
by corruption, lack of capacity in the Afghan government and fading 
international interest.

========================================
11. NEPAL’S FUTILE ATTEMPT TO LIMIT FREE SPEECH
by Biswas Baral
========================================
(The Wire - 30 May 2016)

Many people in Nepal seem to believe that it is important to outlaw ‘hate 
speech’. But this is a slippery slope. Who is to judge what constitutes hate 
speech? And how do you suppress it without inviting a terrible backlash?

Nepal is no Bangladesh; you don’t get shot there for expressing your views. The 
public space is vibrant and every shade of opinion, however extreme, gets ample 
space in Nepali media outlets. But this does not mean there is no restriction 
on free expression in the country.

In Nepal there are authorities you can criticise at your peril. The recently 
promulgated constitution also has some vague clauses on press freedom, giving 
the state a lot of discretion over their interpretation and making them rife 
for abuse. For foreigners, it is tougher still, with a new government directive 
preventing them from speaking their minds.

According to the new directive, foreign travellers are forbidden from engaging 
in anything even remotely political while in the country. The ruling comes 
after Robert Penner, a Canadian living and working in Nepal, was recently 
deported for tweets that were deemed to be against ‘national interest’. The 
government, it appears, also did not take too kindly to his suggestion that the 
deaths in the recent protests in the Tarai belt be properly investigated.

Similarly, Martin Travers, a British national was arrested for participating in 
a recent anti-government protest in Kathmandu. Before him, veteran Nepali 
journalist Kanak Mani Dixit was jailed on what many believe were trumped up 
charges. His crime? Vocal opposition to a high-level political appointment.

Cases of concern

Penner had a valid permit to work with a Kathmandu-based technology company 
called Cloud Factory, unlike many other foreigners who routinely overstay their 
visa and work in the country illegally (mostly out of love for Nepal rather 
than with an ulterior motive). Penner liked to tweet and engage in vigorous 
debates on the new constitution online, and was known as being combatively 
“pro-Madhes,” not afraid to openly challenge anyone whom he deemed 
“anti-Madhes”.

Penner had his critics. He was too abrasive for some. (This writer has himself 
often clashed with him on social media on some issues.) But even his worst 
critics in Nepal — some of whom claim to have been harassed and trolled online 
by the Canadian — don’t believe he should have been deported for his tweets and 
his inquiry about the deaths in Madhes if he had not violated any visa rules. 
It says a lot about the level of tolerance in Nepal when people can’t even 
tweet freely.

Penner’s case is sub judice in Nepal’s Supreme Court right now as he has 
challenged the grounds of his deportation.

Before Penner, it was Dixit who was jailed by the country’s main 
anti-corruption body, the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of 
Authority (CIAA). Dixit had strongly opposed the appointment of Lokman Singh 
Karki — a person implicated in the suppression of the 2006 movement for 
democracy — as the head of CIAA. Karki is well-known for changing his political 
colours: once a diehard royalist, he swiftly jumped ship to the side of the 
democratic parties when it became clear that the Nepali monarchy was a spent 
force.

The grounds for Dixit’s prosecution were flimsy, as proven by the Supreme Court 
order to release him. According to the apex court, there was no evidence that 
he had abused his powers as the chairman of Sajha Yatayat, a widely-praised 
public bus service. It was a clear case of personal enmity.

Then came the arrest of Travers from a demonstration in Kathmandu. All 
available evidence suggests that he had joined the protest out of curiosity and 
that he had no political agenda. This was also why he was promptly released on 
probation. The British government subsequently issued a warning to its citizens 
travelling to Nepal to not get involved in any kind of political activities.

Indeed, the government has every right to formulate laws on what a foreigner in 
Nepal can and cannot do. But what are the standards it is aiming for? Is it 
looking to be North Korea or Syria or does it want to be a progressive country 
that is at ease with constructive criticism?

As Dixit’s case shows, such restrictions are not applicable only to foreigners. 
On May 23, another Nepali journalist, Shesh Narayan Jha, was arrested for 
taking photos of the government secretariat in Kathmandu. Jha happened to be 
outside the secretariat when a Nepali youth decided to smear the front of 
secretariat building with red colour resembling blood, an act Jha managed to 
capture. The youth, Ishan Adhikari, who was also taken into custody, was 
protesting what he termed the government’s reluctance to address the concerns 
of the protesting Madhesi and Janajati communities. Both were later freed but 
there have since been similar copycat acts of daubing red on the walls of the 
secretariat in support of Adhikari’s bold act of defiance.

Prime Minister K.P. Oli, it appears, is simply not bothered by the backlash 
against his recent efforts to control free speech. He is immune to such 
criticism. After all, he is someone who openly advocated enlisting goons into 
his party — the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninists), or 
CPN-UML — saying they deserved an opportunity to “correct themselves”. Nothing 
seems to bother him. This is why he has no hesitation in trying to limit the 
freedom of speech to serve his political agenda. The publicity stunts that he 
uses to whip up jingoistic nationalism among Nepalis seem to be working. 
Recently #ISUPPORTKPOLI became the most popular hashtag on Twitter in Nepal.

Restrictive Constitution

But it is not just Oli and the CPN-UML that wants to limit freed expression in 
Nepal. The Nepali Congress and the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), 
the first and the third biggest parties in Nepali parliament respectively, also 
agreed on a constitution that in a roundabout way circumscribes press freedom.

For instance, the new constitution guarantees “full freedom of the press” in 
the preamble. But Article 19 (1) presents an extended list of restrictions on 
free speech. It bans material that is deemed to infringe upon “territorial 
integrity, nationality and harmonious relations between the federal units,” and 
those the state sees as abetting “hatred to labour and incitement to caste- and 
gender-based discrimination”. These restrictions were notably absent in the 
1990 Constitution as well as the 2007 Interim Constitution. Likewise, Article 
19 (2) introduces a restriction, also missing in the previous Constitutions, 
allowing the government to “make laws to regulate radio, television and online 
content”.

It is important to unreservedly condemn any such attempts to restrict free 
speech, the cornerstone of any functioning democracy. Many people in Nepal seem 
to believe that it is important to outlaw ‘hate speech’. But this is a slippery 
slope. Who is to judge what constitutes hate speech? And how do you suppress it 
without inviting a terrible backlash?

C.K. Raut — a Madhesi academic who advocates the secession of the entire Madhes 
region – started getting some traction among common Madhesis only after he was 
jailed. Before that he was just a firebrand radical whom very few people took 
seriously. The same is true of Penner, who was relatively unknown except among 
a small online community before his arrest and deportation. Penner now seems 
determined to use his new-found celebrity online — with no less than The New 
York Times writing an editorial on his behalf — to hound the Oli government and 
to continue his fight against what he believes are discriminatory provisions in 
the new constitution.

In these times of great political churning in Nepal, we need vigorous debates 
on all contentious issues, not the policing of free speech.

Biswas Baral is a Kathmandu-based journalist who writes on Nepal’s foreign 
policy. 

========================================
12. BANGLADESH: NO LET-UP IN MACHETE KILLING
Editorial, New age
========================================
New Age (Bangladesh) - May 22 2016

Editorial

THE alarming trend of machete attacks on secular bloggers, writers, publishers, 
teachers, Muslim spiritual leaders and their followers, and members of 
religious minority groups, most of which have proved fatal, goes on unabated. 
The latest attack in the series took place on Friday morning in Kushtia. As New 
Age reported on Saturday, when a homoeopath and a teacher of the Islamic 
University in the district were riding a motorcycle on their way to a free 
Friday clinic the former conducted, three assailants aged about 25–26 years, 
who were also riding another motorcycle, hacked to death the homoeopath and 
critically wounded the teacher. This is the heinous manner in which more than 
30 people, who were critical about religion or had liberal views of religion 
and life or belonged to different religious minority groups, have been killed, 
particularly since February 2013 when blogger Rajib Haider was hacked to death 
at Mirpur in Dhaka. Reportedly, both the victims at hand were fond of baul 
ideology — a popular expression of religious syncretism that developed here 
throughout centuries.

Although the police are yet to find the clues to the murders, the Islamic 
State, as the US-based SITE Intelligence reported, has already claimed the 
responsibility for the attack. The same intelligence group reported similar 
claims of either IS or another extremist group allegedly linked with al-Qaeda 
after earlier attacks, which were forthright rejected by the government though. 
What is, meanwhile, more frustrating is that while the government sought to 
link almost all the killings to its political rivals, the Bangladesh 
Nationalist Party and its allies, in particular, it has so far failed to even 
resolve the mysteries behind most of the murders, let alone bring the 
perpetrators to justice. Not only that, it has so far shown an ominous tendency 
to accuse the victims, especially when it came to blogger murders, of courting 
deaths through their activities after all the attacks. One can also recall here 
the home minister’s comment after the recent murder of a Buddhist monk in 
Bandarban when he blamed the victim’s relatives for the killing even before 
investigation. There are reasons to believe that all this may have emboldened 
the machete-wielding groups to not only continue with their killing mission but 
also extend killing fields even to remote areas such as Bandarban.

As mentioned in these columns earlier, it is hard to believe that despite 
seriousness, the police fail to find out the machete attackers or the 
mastermind. It is all the more so because the government has said on more than 
one occasions that the perpetrators of the attacks do not come from across the 
border. Besides, the precision the attackers have evidently maintained so far 
in hitting the targets indicates that attackers were trained in this regard as 
well. In any case, the government must seriously act on the issue without any 
delay to allay the pervasive sense of insecurity among people, not to mention 
ending the long-prevailing culture of impunity. Conscious citizens also need to 
raise their voice over the issue in a sustained manner.

========================================
13. PAKISTAN: WOMEN COMMISSION REJECTS CII BILL
========================================
(Dawn - May 31, 2016

The Newspaper's Staff Reporter 

LAHORE: The Punjab Commission on the Status of Women (PCSW) has rejected the 
Council of Islamic Ideology’s (CII) proposed ‘model’ bill for the “protection 
of women” and condemned it as unconstitutional, illegal and in complete 
violation of fundamental human rights.

The CII’s proposal contravened fundamental rights of women enshrined in the 
Constitution and violated international laws and treaties Pakistan signed and 
was bound by, said the PCSW in a statement on Monday.

“In the light of Article 25 of the Constitution that upholds equality of all 
citizens before the law, the proposed bill adds no value to the rights of 
women,” the statement said.

The CII bill contains some 163 recommendations addressing issues of property, 
marriage and motherhood, besides crimes (including violence) committed against 
women. It also proposes steps like allowing men to “lightly beat their wives” 
and banning co-education past the primary level, that sparked a controversy.

All the rights that the CII claims to grant women under its “model” bill are 
already enshrined in the laws, the PCSW argues.

It ridicules the CII advice of getting codified in law that “women will not be 
permitted to receive foreign officials and state guests” and urged all 
concerned citizens and government bodies to reject the bill as unconstitutional 
and redundant for it not only impinges on the women’s rights but also reverses 
the rights gained over a century through a process of evolution of fundamental 
rights and freedoms.

The CII’s draft bill reduces to nothing the rigorous efforts made by the 
government to protect the rights of women and it treats them as legal minors 
and property of men by prescribing that they need to be instructed in all 
matters of life, the commission says.

Criticising CII recommendations for women on co-education, breastfeeding, ban 
on formula milk, use of contraception, criminalising abortion after 120 days, 
barring women from labour-intensive work and military combat, the PCSW says 
women all over the world have excelled in every walk of life.

>From accomplishing the most physically challenging of tasks to running 
>governments and big corporations, there is nothing that women have not been 
>able to accomplish, it says, adding Pakistan is among one of the few nations 
>in the world which has had a female head of the state.

“The CII appears to have forgotten the roles played by eminent women such as Ms 
Fatima Jinnah, Begum Ra’ana Liaquat Ali Khan, Ms Maleeha Lodhi and current 
ministers Ms Saira Tarar, Ms Anushay Rahman and Ms Hameeda Waheed-ud Din. CII’s 
position would be in all respects a huge step back from the progress that has 
been made to date.”

========================================
14. PAKISTAN’S JIHADIST HEARTLAND: SOUTHERN PUNJAB
International Crisis Group - Asia Report N°279 30 May 2016
========================================

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Southern Punjab must be central to any sustainable effort to counter jihadist 
violence within and beyond Pakistan’s borders, given the presence of militant 
groups with local, regional and transnational links and an endless source of 
recruits, including through large madrasa and mosque networks. The region hosts 
two of Pakistan’s most radical Deobandi groups, Jaish-e-Mohammed, held 
responsible by India for the 2 January 2016 attack on its Pathankot airbase; 
and the sectarian Laskhar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), which was at least complicit in, if 
not solely responsible for, the 27 March Easter Sunday attack that killed more 
than 70 in Lahore. To reverse the jihadist tide, the Pakistan Muslim 
League-Nawaz (PML-N)’s federal and Punjab province governments will have to 
both end the climate of impunity that allows these groups to operate freely and 
address political alienation resulting from other governance failures these 
groups tap into.

Southern Punjab was once known for a tolerant society, but over the past few 
decades, state support for jihadist proxies, financial support from foreign, 
particularly Saudi and other Gulf countries, combined with an explosive mix of 
political, socio-economic, and geostrategic factors, has enabled jihadist 
expansion there. Bordering on insurgency-hit and lawless regions of the country 
and also sharing a border with India, it has long provided a convenient base 
where these outfits can recruit, train and plan and conduct terror attacks. 
Although jihadist groups still harbour a fringe minority in a region where the 
vast majority follows a more tolerant, syncretic form of Islam, their ability 
to operate freely is largely the result of the state’s policy choices, 
particularly long reliance on jihadist proxies to promote perceived national 
security interests. The absence of rule-of-law, combined with political 
dysfunction and inept governance, also allows these organisations to exercise 
influence disproportionate to their size and social roots.

With state sponsorship and a pervasive climate of impunity enhancing jihadist 
groups’ recruitment potential, the risks of joining are far lower than 
potential gains that include employment and other financial rewards, social 
status and sense of purpose. These are all the more compelling in Punjab’s 
largely rural and relatively poorly developed southern regions, where 
perceptions of exploitation by the industrialised central and north Punjab, 
referred to by southern Punjabis as Takht Lahore (throne of Lahore), are high, 
the result of political marginalisation, weak governance, economic neglect and 
glaring income inequity.

After the December 2014 attack on the Peshawar Army Public School by a 
Pakistani Taliban faction that killed over 150, mostly children, the civilian 
and military leadership vowed to eliminate all extremist groups. Yet, the core 
goal of the counter-terrorism National Action Plan (NAP) it developed – to end 
distinctions between “good” jihadists, those perceived to promote strategic 
objectives in India and Afghanistan, and “ bad” jihadists, those that target 
the security forces and other Pakistanis – appears to have fallen by the 
wayside.

A highly selective approach still characterises the ongoing crackdown on 
militant outfits in southern Punjab and undermines broader counter-terrorism 
objectives. While the anti-India Jaish continues to operate freely, 
paramilitary units use indiscriminate force against local criminal groups, and 
the Punjab government resorts to extrajudicial killings to eliminate the LeJ 
leadership and foot soldiers. Overreliance on a militarised counter-terrorism 
approach based on blunt force might yield short-term benefits but, by 
undermining rule-of-law and fuelling alienation, will prove counterproductive 
in the long term.

The lack of progress on other major NAP goals, particularly reform and 
regulation of the madrasa sector, has especially adverse implications for 
southern Punjab, with its many Deobandi madrasas. The children of the poor are 
exposed to sectarian and other radical ideological discourse. The state’s 
unwillingness to clamp down on it in sectarian madrasas and mosques so as to 
counter hate speech and prevent dissemination of hate literature increases the 
potential for radicalisation in the region.

In the poorest region of the country’s richest and most populous province, 
where economic hardships are compounded by periodic natural disasters, 
including droughts and floods that destroy homes and livelihoods, jihadist 
groups, often with state support, their access being facilitated by the 
bureaucracy, are given opportunities to win hearts and minds through their 
charity wings. At the same time, civil society organisations capable of filling 
the gaps in the state’s delivery of services are often subjected to 
restrictions and intimidation.

Despite jihadist inroads, the vast majority in southern Punjab still adhere to 
more moderate syncretic forms of Islam: Sufism, and Barelvism, with practices 
and rituals that Deobandis and Wahhabi/Salafis portray as heretic. Yet, a 
general climate of impunity is encouraging extreme religious, sectarian and 
gender discrimination and exclusion. If left unchecked, these groups’ influence 
will likely spread within and beyond the region.
Lahore and Islamabad should enforce the law against all jihadist organisations, 
without exception. If they do not, many in southern Punjab may continue to see 
the rewards of joining such organisations as far outweighing the costs.

RECOMMENDATIONS

To end the climate of impunity

To the federal and Punjab governments:
1.  Replace selective counter-terrorism with an approach that targets all 
jihadist groups that use violence within or from Pakistani territory, including 
by thoroughly investigating the alleged role of Pakistan-based jihadists in the 
Pathankot attack, extending beyond individual operatives to the organisations 
that sustain them.

2.  Focus counter-terrorism efforts on reforming and strengthening the criminal 
justice system, with a properly resourced, authorised and accountable 
provincial police force at its heart, so as to moderate reliance on lethal 
force.
3.  Investigate and monitor under the Anti-Terrorism Act or UN Security Council 
Resolution 1267 and its blacklist all madrasas, mosques and charities with 
known or suspected links to banned groups, as well as those that maintain armed 
militias, or whose administrators and/or members incite violence and other 
criminal acts within or from the country; and act first against those madrasas 
in southern Punjab already identified as actively training militants and having 
direct or indirect links with jihadist outfits.

4.  Prevent circulation of hate literature and enforce laws against hate speech 
in madrasas, mosques and other forums, including by following through on all 
current cases against hard-line preachers and others accused of violating them.

To redress policy that favours a jihadist fringe over a moderate and diverse 
civil society
5.  Remove arbitrary official and unofficial restrictions on NGOs and other 
civil society organisations in southern Punjab and assume responsibility for 
protecting against jihadist threats.

6.  Repeal all legislation that discriminates on the basis of religion, sect 
and gender and refrain from backtracking on provincial pro-women legislation or 
yielding to Islamist party pressure to dilute its provisions.
7.  Protect southern Punjab’s religious minorities, in particular Christians 
and Hindus, and take action against perpetrators of violence against women by 
acting through the legal system on reports of intimidation and abuse.

To redress the political, social and economic alienation in southern Punjab 
that contributes to recruitment opportunities for jihadist groups

To the federal and Punjab governments:
8.  Reform and expand the public school network, including by removing 
intolerant religious discourse and distorted narratives glorifying jihadist 
violence from the classroom; and accompany education reform with assistance 
along the lines of the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) to help poor 
families afford to send their children to school.

9.  Increase southern Punjab’s development budget, accompanied by meaningful 
consultations with communities on development programs; and establish and 
implement requirements to hire a significant proportion of local labour for 
such programs and provide it related training.

To the ruling and opposition parties:
10.  Respond to the political alienation in southern Punjab by including local 
leaders within party decision-making processes and structures, and giving them 
a voice at the local, provincial and national levels.

11.  Redress local grievances by addressing them in the provincial and federal 
parliaments, including through appropriate legislation.

Islamabad/Brussels, 30 May 2016 

========================================
15. ALEX ZUKAS REVIEW OF BEN FOWKES. THE GERMAN LEFT AND THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC
========================================
(H-Net Reviews. May, 2016)

 Ben Fowkes. The German Left and the Weimar Republic: A Selection of Documents. 
Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2015. 399 pp. $28.00 (paper), ISBN 978-1-60846-486-9.

Reviewed by Alex Zukas (Department of Social Sciences, National University)
Published on H-Socialisms (May, 2016)
Commissioned by Gary Roth

The German Revolutions

Ben Fowkes has produced a book that is much more than a standard documentary 
reader. Thanks to his skillful translations and expert commentaries, it gives 
English-language readers a sense of the broad range of issues which animated 
the German Left during the Weimar Republic (1918-33). Weimar Germany had the 
largest socialist party and the largest communist party (outside the Soviet 
Union) in the world so the relations between those two left-wing parties had 
world-historical significance. Since this book is a study of the political Left 
rather than the entire German working-class movement, Fowkes devotes little 
space to the politics of the German trade union movement (which was also the 
largest in the world).

Fowkes organized 176 documents around twelve key issues that correspond to the 
twelve chapters in the book. Although some complete documents are provided, 
most entries are short excerpts from longer documents. His choice of documents 
demonstrates Fowkes’s expert knowledge of the key primary sources on the Weimar 
Left and includes party congress proceedings, periodicals, unpublished archival 
sources, and published documentary collections. The brevity of the excerpts 
keeps the reader focused on the key issues being discussed in the chapter and 
prevents the introduction of extraneous issues present in the longer documents.

The chapters are organized around the following themes: 1) social democracy’s 
role in the establishment of the Weimar state, 2) council democracy versus 
parliamentary democracy, 3) communism’s insurrectionary politics, 4) the Weimar 
Left’s attitudes toward Weimar democracy, 5) social democracy 
(Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands or SPD) between government opposition 
and coalition, 6) the German Communist Party (Kommunistische Partei 
Deutschlands or KPD) and the Comintern, 7) social democratic foreign policy, 8) 
democratization of the armed forces, 9) the gender and sexual politics of 
social democracy and communism, 10) social democratic and communist long-term 
political objectives, 11) party structure, base, and milieu, and 12) parties 
and groups of the dissident Left.

The bulk of the book concentrates on the policies of the two main Left parties 
of the Weimar Republic. Fowkes reserves his last chapter for a discussion of 
Left dissidents from the beginning to the end of the Weimar Republic and 
includes a selection of documents outlining their party programs and critiques 
of the two major Left parties. It is a little surprising that Fowkes does not 
have a chapter on SPD and KPD views of, and policies toward, the Weimar Right, 
especially the Nazis, but these views and policies emerge in part in the above 
chapters.

Each chapter has an introduction in which Fowkes, with reference to exemplary 
historical research, explains the significance and context of the key issues 
raised by the documents. There is also a general introduction to the period and 
its central issues and extensive footnotes in every chapter that explain key 
terms, events, individuals, and organizations for the general reader. At 
roughly seventy pages, taken together the introductions constitute a small and 
well-informed monograph on the Weimar German Left.

The general introduction lays out the main political issues that the two major 
left-wing parties confronted in the Weimar Republic and the stances they took 
toward those issues. At the most fundamental level, most SPD leaders believed 
that capitalism was a permanent feature of German life and from that assumption 
they pursued policies that promoted parliamentary democracy as the best means 
to secure workers’ interests and piecemeal improvements. KPD leaders, on the 
other hand, “thought capitalism and bourgeois rule were doomed” (p. 1) and 
believed a revolutionary state based on workers’ councils would best secure the 
interests of the broad working class. The SPD strove to be a party of 
governmental stability while the KPD strove to be a party of governmental 
overthrow. That neither party succeeded in their quest is one of the main 
outcomes delineated by this book.

While it engaged in state- and local-level alliances (see chapters 3 and 6), 
the KPD shunned coalitions with other parties at the national level. The SPD 
welcomed such coalitions and the documents in chapter 1 clarify the role of the 
SPD’s leaders in supporting a national parliamentary government during the 
revolution of 1918 and the early years of the republic against more radical 
left-wing groups that sought to create a council-based democratic socialist 
government controlled by workers and against SPD stalwarts who proposed to 
socialize the major industries of Germany. The documents in chapter 1 
illustrate the range of opinion within the SPD and the reform measures that the 
SPD attempted to enact with its coalition partners. Fowkes points out the major 
contradiction in which SPD leaders found themselves: only a vigorous mass 
workers’ movement (which made SPD leaders uneasy) could put enough pressure on 
the SPD’s bourgeois coalition partners to generate reforms but as soon as the 
pressure let up, the reforms were undone.

Chapter 2 revisits this early history but it focuses on the issue of the 
movement by radical workers for council, rather than parliamentary, democracy 
and SPD opposition to that goal. The documents show the lively debate among 
members of the SPD and the breakaway Independent SPD (USPD) about the 
desirability and feasibility of the councils as a new form of state. As the 
documents and commentary by Fowkes makes clear, many council members were not 
sure that they wanted to assume power and the SPD was able to use these 
divisions and its alliance with the military to suppress the more militant 
elements and have the more moderate elements vote to dissolve the workers’ and 
soldiers’ councils and institute factory councils that were not organs of state 
but would assist in securing social peace and efficient running of factories. A 
council form of government was a major plank in the KPD’s program throughout 
the Weimar period.

The first few years of the Weimar Republic were years of worker rebellion and 
civil war. Chapter 3 contains documents relating to discussions among 
communists of 1) the possibility of a united front with socialists and 2) the 
efficacy of insurrection. Fowke’s introduction to this chapter contextualizes 
KPD politics and explains important internal dynamics and disputes within the 
party about vanguardism and armed uprisings. His discussion is nuanced as he 
explains that German communism was not synonymous with armed insurrection or 
vanguardism during this period and that KPD leaders had varying views on both. 
Such disputes often ended with leadership changes, particularly in the 
aftermath of failed uprisings. The upshot was that, after several failed 
uprisings from 1919 to 1923 the KPD, while committed in theory to the violent 
overthrow of capitalism and the realization of a socialist revolution along 
Bolshevik lines, no longer fostered plans to seize state power but focused 
instead on opposition to the Weimar system and support for the Soviet Union.

Throughout its history in the Weimar Republic, the SPD had a love-hate 
relationship with the bourgeois parties with which it formed national 
government coalitions. Unlike the KPD, it saw the defense of the parliamentary 
republic as a defense of working-class interests, but coalitions often meant 
compromising on those interests. Chapters 4 and 5 provide documentary evidence 
of the internal struggles of the SPD regarding its strategy of coalitions with 
bourgeois parties in an unstable and sometimes hostile parliamentary democracy, 
along with documentary evidence of the problems faced by the SPD and KPD in 
their attempts to form a united working-class front against the bourgeois 
parties of Weimar. In both situations, ideological divides were deep and trust 
was in short supply. As Fowkes indicates, such coalitions were episodic. 
Efforts at a united front with communists officially ended when the communists 
began to refer to SPD leaders as “social fascists” after 1928 (although 
informal alliances did persist at the local level) and efforts at coalition 
with bourgeois parties ended in early 1930 with fundamental differences over 
social policy. Once fear of the Nazis took hold in late 1930, the SPD assumed a 
policy of toleration of the Brüning government, which led to its capitulation 
to right-wing parties bent on eliminating the republic.

Chapter 6 focuses on the relationship of the KPD to the Communist International 
(Comintern) headquartered in Moscow. Fowkes explains that the emotional and 
ideological connection of the KPD to the Comintern was always strong even as 
the relationship grew from one of relative independence and equality in the 
early Weimar Republic to greater financial and bureaucratic dependence to the 
point that, after 1928, the party’s “general policy in most important strategic 
and tactical questions was determined outside Germany” (p. 174). While the 
documents presented make this growth of centralized control evident, they 
expose the ambiguities and dissentions of the earlier period. Fowkes explains 
the “class against class” policy of the KPD after 1928 and its “social fascist” 
line was partially a result of a new Comintern line in the “Third Period” but 
also partially the result of a genuine and deeply held opinion of KPD leaders 
and rank-and-file members that the SPD was counterrevolutionary in the early 
Weimar period and remained counterrevolutionary in its continued repression of 
radical worker demonstrations in Prussia and its support of the capitalist 
Weimar state.

The next chapter presents the reader with documents regarding the SPD’s foreign 
policy ideas and practices, which Fowkes frames as pro-Western and anti-Soviet. 
The SPD worked to revise the Versailles Treaty through cooperation with the 
Allies while the KPD favored an alliance with the Soviet Union. Fowkes offers 
only a few documents on KPD foreign policy, which he argues was anti-Western 
(that is, anti-capitalist) and pro-Soviet. While purportedly about foreign 
policy, the documents themselves reveal a proto-nationalist bent within the SPD 
and even the KPD. In this chapter Fowkes’s commentary greatly surpasses the 
reach of the documents.

Socialists had long wanted to democratize the German military. Such a desire 
stretched back before World War I. The documents in chapter 8 lay out the 
various socialist and communist positions about the proper relation of the 
military to civilian power in the new republic. As Fowkes elaborates, because 
of their fear of a radical takeover of political power, the SPD aligned itself 
with the old imperial officer corps in the aftermath of the German Revolution 
and used the military to suppress worker uprisings, patrol eastern borders, and 
guarantee food supplies. The Soldiers’ Councils argued for subordination of the 
military to civilian power, election of officers, abolition of rank, and other 
democratizing moves but the new SPD-led government sided with the High Command 
and kept the old structures intact. By 1920 the time for reform had passed and 
the military retained a great deal of autonomy and began to influence foreign 
policy and budget decisions regarding military expenditures and illegal 
rearmament. Communists took a dim view of all of these developments and worried 
about a resurgence of German militarism, while the SPD passed a resolution in 
1929 for civilian control of the military that carried no weight. Fowkes’s 
commentary again greatly surpasses the reach of the documents in this chapter. 
One wishes he had included documents that extended as far as his observations.

The documents in chapter 9 engage issues of women’s equality and sexual 
politics. According to Fowkes, both parties promoted women’s equality in 
society and the workplace, but the SPD had a traditional view of women’s roles 
and neither party had many women in leadership positions and both promoted 
gender divisions of labor within their party and affiliate organizations. The 
documents show that SPD women were not happy with this situation. According to 
Fowkes, the SPD was very tentative around issues of sexuality while the KPD 
used “demands for sexual reform as an agitational tool” (p. 243). Such demands 
included decriminalizing abortion and making birth control and sex education 
freely available. Fowkes elaborates the parties’ position on the other main 
issue of Weimar sexual politics, homosexuality, explaining that communists 
advocated complete decriminalization while socialists backed conditional 
decriminalization, but he includes no documents on their positions.

In chapter 10 the documents Fowkes submits are the two parties’ official 
programs at the start of the Weimar Republic and the modifications the parties 
made to them later. His introduction explains the problems faced by the parties 
that led to the articulation and revisions of these programs, with the 
communists moving in a national populist direction and the socialists 
abandoning their time-honored moniker as a working-class party in favor of a 
“people’s party,” even as prominent Marxists in the party resisted this move. 
Fowkes sees the SPD’s continued coupling of Marxist rhetoric with reformist 
practice as a major contradiction that it was unable to overcome. He also 
comments on each party’s agrarian program, which he includes in the chapter.

Chapter 11 presents documents regarding each party’s internal structure and the 
socioeconomic and geographic bases of its support. While both parties were 
urban and proletarian, the KPD was more urban and proletarian than the SPD and 
had more frequent leadership turnover. In his commentary, Fowkes engages the 
hot issue of working-class “milieu”: what it was, how strong it was, and to 
what extent the parties shared it. The documents offered in this chapter are 
party membership figures, organizational statutes of the parties, their 
auxiliaries, cultural (milieu) organizations, national election returns, and 
articles on worker education.

The final chapter in the book documents the factional divisions within the 
whole Weimar Left. The first texts are from the first and largest splinter 
party, the USPD (founded in 1916), which saw itself as the upholder of the 
proletarian values of the prewar SPD and as the defender of the council system. 
Both it and the Socialist Workers’ Party (SAP, founded in 1931) left the SPD 
(which a small section of the USPD rejoined in 1922). While Fowkes discusses 
other socialist dissident groups, the remaining documents concern communist 
splinter groups like the leftist Communist Workers’ Party (KAPD), founded in 
1920; the rightist Communist Working Group (KAG), founded in 1921; ultraleftist 
groups around Karl Korsch and Ruth Fischer (1926); and the rightist KPD 
Opposition (KPO), founded in 1930. Fowkes argues that while this dissident Left 
was numerically small, it had influence beyond its numbers, especially at the 
end of the Weimar Republic.

This book has great value to historians and students of Weimar Germany, early 
twentieth-century socialism, and the Weimar Left not only for its wide 
selection of documents but also for the key debates among historians that 
Fowkes explains in his commentaries and footnotes. In addition, the book has a 
wide range and offers a rich picture of the Weimar Left. It includes documents 
that represent different viewpoints in the SPD and KPD on a whole range of 
issues and it engages high politics, social issues, long-term political 
objectives, the sociology and milieux of the parties, and dissident splinter 
groups.

Fowkes provides an outstanding bibliography of the primary sources he consulted 
as well as recent and classic works by historians on the Weimar Left. While 
space is always a consideration, one wishes he had included documents that 
extended as far as his commentary in some of the chapters. Also, some secondary 
works cited in the footnotes with only the name of the author and the date of 
publication (e.g., Sperber 1998 and Stibbe 2010) are not in the bibliography. 
This oversight is easily corrected with a full bibliographic entry. 
Nevertheless, this book will serve as a standard work on the German Left in 
English that historians of socialism or working-class movements who do not read 
German and students in upper-division history courses on the Weimar Republic or 
early twentieth-century socialism can consult with confidence.

========================================
16. NEW POLITICAL EARTHQUAKE IN BRAZIL: IS IT NOW TIME FOR MEDIA OUTLETS TO 
CALL THIS A “COUP”?
Glenn Greenwald, Andrew Fishman, David Miranda
========================================
(The Intercept - May 23 2016)

Brazil today awoke to stunning news of secret, genuinely shocking conversations 
involving a key minister in Brazil’s newly installed government, which shine a 
bright light on the actual motives and participants driving the impeachment of 
the country’s democratically elected president, Dilma Rousseff. The transcripts 
were published by the country’s largest newspaper, Folha de São Paulo, and 
reveal secret conversations that took place in March, just weeks before the 
impeachment vote in the lower house was held. They show explicit plotting 
between the new planning minister (then-senator), Romero Jucá, and former oil 
executive Sergio Machado — both of whom are formal targets of the “Car Wash” 
corruption investigation — as they agree that removing Dilma is the only means 
for ending the corruption investigation. The conversations also include 
discussions of the important role played in Dilma’s removal by the most 
powerful national institutions, including — most importantly — Brazil’s 
military leaders.

The transcripts are filled with profoundly incriminating statements about the 
real goals of impeachment and who was behind it. The crux of this plot is what 
Jucá calls “a national pact” — involving all of Brazil’s most powerful 
institutions — to leave Michel Temer in place as president (notwithstanding his 
multiple corruption scandals) and to kill the corruption investigation once 
Dilma is removed. In the words of Folha, Jucá made clear that impeachment will 
“end the pressure from the media and other sectors to continue the Car Wash 
investigation.” Jucá is the leader of Temer’s PMDB party and one of the 
“interim president’s” three closest confidants.

It is unclear who is responsible for recording and leaking the 75-minute 
conversation, but Folha reports that the files are currently in the hand of the 
prosecutor general. The next few hours and days will likely see new revelations 
that will shed additional light on the implications and meaning of these 
transcripts.

The transcripts contain two extraordinary revelations that should lead all 
media outlets to seriously consider whether they should call what took place in 
Brazil a “coup”: a term Dilma and her supporters have used for months. When 
discussing the plot to remove Dilma as a means of ending the Car Wash 
investigation, Jucá said the Brazilian military is supporting the plot: “I am 
talking to the generals, the military commanders. They are fine with this, they 
said they will guarantee it.” He also said the military is “monitoring the 
Landless Workers Movement” (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra, or 
MST), the social movement of rural workers that supports PT’s efforts of land 
reform and inequality reduction and has led the protests against impeachment.

The second blockbuster revelation — perhaps even more significant — is Jucá’s 
statement that he spoke with and secured the involvement of numerous justices 
on Brazil’s Supreme Court, the institution that impeachment defenders have 
repeatedly pointed to as vesting the process with legitimacy in order to deny 
that Dilma’s removal is a coup. Jucá claimed that “there are only a small 
number” of Court justices to whom he had not obtained access (the only justice 
he said he ultimately could not get to is Teori Zavascki, who was appointed by 
Dilma and who — notably — Jucá viewed as incorruptible in obtaining his help to 
kill the investigation (a central irony of impeachment is that Dilma has 
protected the Car Wash investigation from interference by those who want to 
impeach her)). The transcripts also show him saying that “the press wants to 
take her [Dilma] out,” so “this shit will never stop” — meaning the corruption 
investigations — until she’s gone.

The transcripts provide proof for virtually every suspicion and accusation 
impeachment opponents have long expressed about those plotting to remove Dilma 
from office. For months, supporters of Brazil’s democracy have made two 
arguments about the attempt to remove the country’s democratically elected 
president: (1) the core purpose of Dilma’s impeachment is not to stop 
corruption or punish lawbreaking, but rather the exact opposite: to protect the 
actual thieves by empowering them with Dilma’s exit, thus enabling them to kill 
the Car Wash investigation; and (2) the impeachment advocates (led by the 
country’s oligarchical media) have zero interest in clean government, but only 
in seizing power that they could never obtain democratically, in order to 
impose a right-wing, oligarch-serving agenda that the Brazilian population 
would never accept.

Brazil's interim President Michel Temer during a meeting with unionists at the 
Planalto Palace, in Brasilia, Brazil, on May 16, 2016. Photo: Andre 
Dusek/Estadao Conteudo. (Agencia Estado via AP Images)

Photo: Andre Dusek/AP
The first two weeks of Temer’s newly installed government provided abundant 
evidence for both of these claims. He appointed multiple ministers directly 
implicated in corruption scandals. A key ally in the lower house who will lead 
his government’s coalition there — André Moura — is one of the most corrupt 
politicians in the country, the target of multiple, active criminal probes not 
only for corruption but also attempted homicide. Temer himself is deeply 
enmeshed in corruption (he faces an eight-year ban on running for any office) 
and is rushing to implement a series of radical right-wing changes that 
Brazilians would never democratically allow, including measures, as The 
Guardian detailed, “to soften the definition of slavery, roll back the 
demarcation of indigenous land, trim housebuilding programs and sell off state 
assets in airports, utilities and the post office.”

But, unlike the events of the last two weeks, these transcripts are not merely 
clues or signs. They are proof: proof that the prime forces behind the removal 
of the president understood that taking her out was the only way to save 
themselves and shield their own extreme corruption from accountability; proof 
that Brazil’s military, its dominant media outlets, and its Supreme Court were 
colluding in secret to ensure the removal of the democratically elected 
president; proof that the perpetrators of impeachment viewed Dilma’s continued 
presence in Brasilia as the guarantor that the Car Wash investigations would 
continue; proof that this had nothing to do with preserving Brazilian democracy 
and everything to do with destroying it.

For his part, Jucá admits that these transcripts are authentic but insists it 
was all just a misunderstanding with his comments taken out of context, calling 
it “banal.” “That conversation is not about a pact for Car Wash. It’s about the 
economy, to extricate Brazil from the crisis,” he claimed in an interview this 
morning with UOL political blogger Fernando Rodrigues. That explanation is 
entirely implausible given what he actually said, as well as the explicitly 
conspiratorial nature of the conversations, in which Jucá insists on a series 
of one-on-one encounters, rather than meeting in a group, all to avoid 
provoking suspicions. Political leaders are already calling for his resignation 
from the government.

Ever since Temer’s installation as president, Brazil has seen intense, and 
growing, protests against him. Brazilian media outlets — which have been 
desperately trying to glorify him — have suspiciously refrained from publishing 
polling data for many weeks, but the last polls show him with only 2 percent 
support and 60 percent wanting him impeached. The only recent published polling 
data showed that 66 percent of Brazilians believe legislators voted for 
impeachment only out of self-interest — a belief these transcripts validate — 
while only 23 percent believe they did so for the good of the country. Last 
night in São Paulo, police were forced to barricade the street where Temer’s 
house is located due to thousands of protesters heading there; they eventually 
used fire hoses and tear gas. An announcement to close the Ministry of Culture 
led to artists and others occupying offices around the country in protest, 
which forced Temer to reverse the decision.

Until now, The Intercept, like most international media outlets, has refrained 
from using the word “coup” even as it (along with most outlets) has been deeply 
critical of Dilma’s removal as anti-democratic. These transcripts compel a 
re-examination of that editorial decision, particularly if no evidence emerges 
calling into question either the most reasonable meaning of Jucá’s statements 
or his level of knowledge. This newly revealed plotting is exactly what a coup 
looks, sounds, and smells like: securing the cooperation of the military and 
most powerful institutions to remove a democratically elected leader for 
self-interested, corrupt, and lawless motives, in order to then impose an 
oligarch-serving agenda that the population despises.

If Dilma’s impeachment remains inevitable, as many believe, these transcripts 
will make it much more difficult to leave Temer in place. Recent polling data 
shows that 62 percent of Brazilians want new elections to select their 
president. That option — the democratic one — is the one Brazil’s elites fear 
most, because they are petrified (with good reason) that Lula or another 
candidate they dislike (Marina Silva) will win. But that’s the point: If what 
is being avoided and smashed in Brazil is democracy, then it’s time to start 
using the proper language to describe this. These transcripts make it 
increasingly difficult for media outlets to avoid doing so.

========================================
17. LESSONS FOR PEACE FROM BACK IN THE USSR
by david swanson
========================================
(davidswanson's blog - 3 June 2016)

In the early 1980s almost nobody from the United States traveled to the Soviet 
Union or vice versa. The Soviets wouldn't let anybody out, and good Americans 
were disinclined to visit the Evil Empire. But a woman in California named 
Sharon Tennison took the threat of nuclear war with the seriousness it deserved 
and still deserves. She got a group of friends together and asked the Russian 
consulate for permission to visit Russia, make friends, and learn.

Russia said fine. The U.S. government, in the form of the FBI and USAID, told 
them not to go, warned that they would not be permitted to move freely once 
there, and generally communicated that they, the U.S. government employees, had 
internalized their own propaganda. Tennison and company went anyway, had a 
wonderful experience, and spoke at events with slide shows upon their return, 
thus attracting many more people for the next trip.

Now it was Tennison's turn to brief the flabbergasted and ignorant U.S. 
government staff who had virtually no actual knowledge of Russia beyond what 
she gave them. This was back in the day when President Ronald "Is this a film 
or reality?" Reagan said that 20 million dead Americans would be acceptable in 
a war. Yet the so-called intelligence so-called community didn't know its 
assets from its elbows. War as a "last resort" was being considered without 
having considered literally any other resorts. Someone had to step in, and 
Sharon Tennison decided she'd try.

Those first trips took courage, to defy the U.S. government, and to operate in 
a Soviet Union still monitored by a nasty KGB. But the Americans went with 
friendship, were generally permitted to go wherever they wanted, and 
encountered friendship in return. They also encountered knowledge of cultural 
differences, the influences of history, political and social habits both 
admirable and lamentable. They became, in fact, a bridge between two worlds, 
experts on each for the other.

They expanded their work as Gorbachev came to power and the USSR opened up. 
They hired staff and opened offices in both countries. They sponsored and 
facilitated all variety of exchanges from art schools to Rotary clubs to police 
officers to environmentalists. They began bringing Russians to the United 
States as well as the reverse. They spoke all over the United States, even -- 
in some examples Tennison gives in her book The Power of Impossible Ideas -- 
converting gung-ho members of the U.S. weapons industry into volunteers and 
staff (in one case a man lost his job at General Dynamics as penalty for 
associating with them, but this freed him to more closely associate).

Tennison's organization worked on sister cities, citizen diplomacy, alcoholics 
anonymous, and economic development. The latter would, over the years, become 
increasingly central and certainly focused on privatization and Americanization 
in a manner that might well be criticized. But it was not U.S. citizen 
diplomats who created the oligarchs of the 1990s or any culture of oligarch 
admiration. In fact, Tennison and her philanthropists made grants to Russians 
dependent on their making donations to others, working to build a culture of 
philanthropy. Alcoholics Anonymous can also be criticized, of course, but this 
was an effort to assist Russians with a real problem, not to threaten them with 
nuclear annihilation. All of these projects built relationships that have 
lasted and that have influenced U.S. policy for the better.

Through the 1990s, the projects evolved to include food and financial 
donations, orphanages, aid modeled on the Marshall Plan's Productivity Tours, 
the creation of urban gardens and sustainable agriculture, and numerous 
business-training initiatives. Tennison met Vladimir Putin before he rose to 
power. She also met and advised top officials in the U.S. government. She 
accepted huge grants from USAID, the agency that had advised her never to begin 
her work. Of course, USAID has been involved in coups and hostile propaganda 
around the world, and a closer look at that problematic association might have 
been helpful in The Power of Impossible Ideas. But the work Tennison describes 
was all for the better, including taking U.S. Congressional leaders to dine in 
ordinary Russian homes. (I wonder how many current U.S. Congress members have 
done that.)

I can't possibly recount all the amazing stories in Tennison's book, which 
lives up to its vague and extravagant title; I strongly recommend you read it 
yourself. The critical development in the later chapters is the diversion 
Tennison encountered between reality and U.S. media. She found Putin to be a 
force for reconciliation, and the U.S. media to be intent on demonization -- at 
least from the moment that Russia refused to participate in attacking Iraq in 
2003.

Putin had tried to partner with the United States, challenging the demands of 
Russian hardliners. He allowed the U.S. to use Russian bases in Central Asia. 
He overlooked the United States withdrawing from the ABM treaty. He accepted 
NATO expansion right to Russia's border. He supported, up to a point, the U.S. 
"war on terrorism." Washington didn't care.

"During the 2000s," writes Tennison, "I watched as the reservoir of goodwill 
from the Gorbachev/Reagan years evaporated." In 2004 the State Department cut 
off its funding for Tennison's work. In 2006 the Council on Foreign Relations 
produced a report hostile toward Russia. That same year, Russia gave the United 
States the 10-story-tall monument that stands in Bayonne, New Jersey, but it 
was too late to have the U.S. media inform many people of it. In 2007, the U.S. 
was pushing to get Georgia and Ukraine into NATO. Now, following the Ukrainian 
coup, the U.S. is seeking "partnerships" with NATO for those nations. The U.S. 
also announced its plans to put Ronnie's "Star Wars" into Poland and the Czech 
Republic, later changed to Poland and Romania.

Finally, Putin began pushing back, warning against aggression toward Russia. In 
2007, Tennison brought a group of 100 Russians to Washington, D.C., to speak to 
Congress. But the hostility only increased. (By 2016 Pentagon staff would be 
openly saying the motivation of this hostility is bureaucratic and 
profit-driven.)

In 2008, Tennison and others in her organization launched a blog to correct bad 
U.S. media. But with tensions growing ever worse, Tennison has lately returned 
to where she started and begun taking groups of interested Americans to visit 
Russian cities and get to know members of the demonized foreign land. These 
trips are as badly needed as they were in the 1980s, though they may require 
less courage. In fact, what seems to me to require the most courage, or the 
greatest delusion, is to not participate in this potentially world-saving 
project.

Sharon Tennison provided this at the end of her book, so I assume it's OK to 
copy it here: Reach out to her at sharon [AT] ccisf.org.

========================================
18. TRIBUTES TO MUHAMMAD ALI (1942-2016)
========================================

FIGHTER, JOKER, MAGICIAN, RELIGIOUS DISCIPLE, PREACHER: MUHAMMAD ALI
by Kevin Mitchell
Muhammad Ali, the brash and beautiful young man from Louisville who ‘shook up 
the world’, was a man for his times who shaped those times and made them 
unforgettable
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/jun/04/muhammad-ali-sp-fighter-joker-magician

MUHAMMAD ALI (1942-2016): ANTI-WAR LEGEND AND BOXING GREAT DIES AT 74
"My conscience won’t let me go shoot my brother, or some darker people, or some 
poor hungry people in the mud for big powerful America... How can I shoot them 
poor people? Just take me to jail."
by Jon Queally
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/06/04/muhammad-ali-1942-2016-anti-war-legend-and-boxing-great-dies-74


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South Asia Citizens Wire
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. Newsletter of South Asia Citizens Web: 
www.sacw.net/

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DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not 
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