A malicious statement... I think this group should ask an apology for such a
venomous attack on an academic...

Afthab Ellath


On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 5:55 PM, rsajan <[email protected]> wrote:

> IT IS GOOD THAT SOME PEOPLE ARE STILL GRATEFUL AND LOYAL TO THE  ISI
> FOR ITS MONEY. AND DO WRITE FOR IT.
>
> On Jul 20, 6:39 pm, reny ayline <[email protected]> wrote:
> >    The Great Incendiary Hunt Takes Off in Kerala By J Devika
> >
> > I have been watching the whole drama that has been unfolding after the
> > unspeakable and utterly condemnable act of violence at Muvattupuzha in
> > central Kerala early this month, which has been widely interpreted as the
> > first instance of ‘Talibanist’ violence here, with a sinking feeling in
> the
> > pit of my stomach. A whole manhunt has followed it and this continues to
> be
> > front-page news in many Malayalam newspapers, especially the
> > *Mathrubhumi*.This newspaper has been working very hard to homogenize
> > the Malayalee
> > Muslims and make them collectively responsible for ‘Talibanism’. Everyday
> > the news is full of reports of raids on offices of the Muslim
> organization,
> > Popular Front, and the homes of activists, which apparently unearth all
> > sorts of incendiary material, especially CDs and printed matter.
> Meanwhile
> > the *Mathrubhumi* has worked overtime  to plant tit-bits that would
> collapse
> > many Muslim organizations into a single, threatening, monstrous presence.
> It
> > looks as if the assault which began with the false propaganda around
> ‘Love
> > jihad’ is careening into a horrendous climax which will undo whatever
> peace
> > and trust that exists among the major religious communities in Kerala.The
> > manner in which the Popular Front leaders have been trying to ‘explain’
> the
> > act as ‘natural’ reveals the dangerous dimensions of what it to come (of
> > course, it is another matter that neither the CPM leaders nor the BJP
> bosses
> > in north Kerala have ever been really apologetic of the horrific
> political
> > murders there).
> >
> > The media is producing tons of ‘evidence’ on a daily basis on how the
> > Popular Front activists have been planning and plotting this dastardly
> > attack.The power of rhetoric is clearly being utilised to the fullest:
> just
> > the other day, the mainstream media went wild about the alleged attackers
> > possessing several SIM cards, as if possessing many SIM cards is in
> itself
> > evidence for someone’s links to terrorism. I know many fellows in Kerala
> who
> > possess several SIM cards and use them for such purposes as the efficient
> > management of multiple amorous interests; would they be ‘suspected
> > Talibanists’? Similarly, the hysteria about the hoards of CDs and printed
> > matter seems to be with the clear intention of misleading readers into
> > thinking that possessing such material is a crime or evidence for assent
> to
> > Talibanist ideology. Well, just looking around my office, I find my desk
> and
> > bookshelves full of material that celebrates ‘virtuous Malayalee
> womanhood’
> > which demands an impossible repression of anything sexual; I also have
> > plenty of material that argues for a sadomasochist aesthetic. Now does
> that
> > make me either a good asexual Malayalee woman (god forbid!) or a
> > sadomasochist aesthete? According to the rules set by the mainstream
> media,
> > I will certainly be a propagandist of sadomasochist aesthetics, because I
> > have multiple copies of an article that defends the same which I intend
> to
> > hand out to a group of readers who would like to discuss the sexuality
> > debates within feminism! I may also be a good repressed specimen of
> > Malayalee womanhood (alas!) since I have stored for several purposes,
> plenty
> > of copies of K Chinnamma’s early 20th century proposal to turn all
> ‘native
> > women’ into mothers with sexualities stiffer and straighter than my *
> > Valyammavan*‘s (Grand-Uncle’s) stiffest starched mul-mul *mundu* (a
> > Malayalee dhoti)! All depends on what they choose to find in my room. It
> is
> > time that our journalists were taught some logic, and helped beyond the
> > statistical fallacy (which, simply put, is the error of reasoning that
> > results from examining a number of episodes, for example, (1) whisky+soda
> =
> > intoxication,(2) vodka+soda = intoxication, and (3) gin + soda=
> > intoxication, and coming to the conclusion that the most apparent common
> > factor,soda, is responsible for intoxication).
> >
> > I am of course not saying that I know who were behind this horrible act
> of
> > violence and that I am sure that the Popular Front were not involved.
> Given
> > the trajectory of anti-Muslim rhetoric that has been floating around, it
> may
> > well be the case that this is a foolish, irresponsible, completely
> > unjustifiable, impulsive response by the accused. All I am saying is that
> > the present ‘evidence’ offered by the media by which the accused are
> already
> > guilty works to not so much actually prove them guilty, as to offer bits
> and
> > pieces that promptly  generate certain false associations that pronounce
> > them already guilty. This is by now a familiar strategy and  I am sure
> there
> > are better ways to report a case investigation in a democratic society,
> and
> > that there are ways to gain a degree of distance from the police
> accounts.
> >
> > But there is a parallel I can’t help noticing — between the present
> incident
> > and and earlier one I had written about on kafila (1 oct 2009). The
> latter
> > had to do with another shocking murder, of an innocent man on a morning
> walk
> > at Varkala, near Thiruvananthapuram, and a dalit organization which had
> been
> > working in the dalit colonies at Varkala, the Dalit Human Rights Network,
> > was blamed instantly. In a sequence of events almost uncannily similar to
> > the present one, activists of the DHRM were rounded up and accused of the
> > most appalling crimes, with the mainstream media gleefully lapping up the
> > cartloads of ‘evidence’ that the police was discovering on a daily basis
> and
> > coining such conceptual gems as ‘dalit terrorism’. The violent act in
> that
> > incident was as mindless and atrocious as in the present one — an act
> that
> > was politically so damaging that one would be justified to think that
> only
> > the politically-dumbest person would commit such a crime. In fact, such a
> > person could well be judged as incapable of elementary rational
> calculation
> > — and could therefore be called dangerously mad. The present act is
> exactly
> > this. The professor in question had been punished and the matter seemed
> to
> > have ended there. On the other side, the Muslims in Kerala, especially
> those
> > active in youth organizations such as the Solidarity, have been under
> > incessant attack recently, and therefore to engage in such violence would
> be
> > nothing short of political suicide, and this is as clear as daylight to
> the
> > most ordinary observer of public life in Kerala.It happens, and the
> police
> > get into their act, exactly like in the Varkala murder case, producing
> tons
> > of ‘evidence’ to feed the media which utilizes it to homogenize and
> > criminalize a particular group of people. The police have still to
> produce
> > credible evidence against the ‘suspects’ who have been arrested in the
> > Varkala murder case; it is most likely that they will be let go, like the
> > ‘suspected Maoists’ who were arrested a couple of years back in Kerala
> who
> > have now been released, of which I had written about in an earlier post
> (22
> > Jan 2008).
> > What really strikes me, however, is the timing of these incidents. The
> > Varkala murder case came just at the point when negotiations around the
> > Chengara land struggle seemed to be reaching somewhere; the anti-dalit
> > tirade did much to diminish the political gain that the dalits had made
> > through the Chengara land struggle. Now, this comes just after the
> > successful thwarting of government promotion of neoliberal predators at
> > Kinaloor in north Kerala in which Muslim organizations were actively
> > involved.  And lo! Kodiyeri Balakrishnan, Home Minister of Kerala, tells
> the
> > Kerala State Assembly on 14 July (according to *The Hindu*, Trivandrum
> > edition,15 July) that “the Intelligence wing of the Police Department was
> > keeping a close watch on certain human rights organisations who were
> > suspected to be indulging in activities aimed at subverting development
> > initatives in the State.” He further hinted that “foreign sources” may be
> > funding these organisations and that “subversive activities would not be
> > permitted in the State under any circumstances”. Too neat, I must say. I
> am
> > well aware that one should not read too much off such close associations,
> > one simply lacks the hard evidence to do so. But I do feel that the
> uncanny
> > likeness between the two incidents gives us good reason to insist on
> > critical distance from police versions and on independent investigation
> > especially because the mainstrean media is outdoing the police.
> >
> > And of course, Balakrishnan’s profound observations may be completely
> > innocent — but that is not the point. His  words may be a brave attempt
> to
> > make hay while the sun shines in between an unrelenting monsoon. Such is
> the
> > desperation in the LDF: the panchayat elections are approaching and it
> MUST
> > be won! As the drama unfolds after the violent incident at
> Muvattupuzha,our
> > political benefactors, the LDF, have been busy with the Great Beneficiary
> > Hunt, in view of the approaching panchayat elections which the LDF cannot
> > afford to lose. In the recent weeks we have been witnessing a amazing
> > proliferation and elaboration of governmental categories who are being
> > handed pensions, cheap loans for housing, noon-meals, medicines —
> everybody
> > from people suffering from various kinds of chronic and genetic ailments
> to
> > unwed (tribal) mothers to senior citizens neglected by their NRI children
> to
> > financially challenged Gulf-returnee women workers — have been sought out
> > and lined up for welfare,and LDF legislators and panchayat members are
> busy
> > combing their constituencies for anyone who may fit into this amazing
> range.
> > The festival will last up to the upcoming panchayat elections. However,
> what
> > I have been discussing — which may perhaps be called the Great Incendiary
> > Hunt — is also part of the LDF strategy which, as even our littlest brats
> > would tell you, has changed with a vehemence — it has moved towards the
> > Hindus, and is determined now to tell them that they are safe from the
> ‘bad
> > Muslims’.
> >
> > And in the bargain, one can get rid of the *rea…llly baa..dd* Muslims
> too,
> > the ones who thwart neoliberal predators. There is great unity in this —
> > everyone, including the Congress and the Muslim League, would like to be
> fed
> > by the predators, everyone would love to paint themselves ‘secular’ in
> the
> > bargain,everyone would love to subsume the meaning of ‘development’ to
> > ‘neoliberal growth’. In addition, the Great Incendiary Hunt  and the
> Great
> > Beneficiary Hunt are strategies that ensure success in the Game of
> > elections, but only there is only one player who can access both.  Only
> the
> > first is available to all players, and therefore no player sacrifices it.
> > The second is available only to one player, the ruling coalition, and
> > therefore the others try their best to delegitimize it — while continuing
> to
> > access the first the best they can. Since all players are incessantly
> > forwarding-calculating and promises (and lofty political ideals) are
> nothing
> > but ‘cheap words’ in the universe of such Games, the LDF is likely to
> access
> > both strategies.
> >
> > Welcome to the world of political games!
>
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