I/II.
http://scroll.in/article/804314/smriti-irani-misrepresented-my-work-in-her-speech-oxford-researcher-sarmila-bose

FOR THE RECORD
'Smriti Irani misrepresented my work in her speech': Oxford researcher
Sarmila Bose

The HRD minister is accused of misinterpreting the contents of the
academic's book on Bangladesh during the debate on free speech.

Sarmila Bose  · Yesterday · 06:30 pm

On February 24, 2016, in the Lower House of the Indian parliament,
Smriti Irani, India’s Minister of Human Resource Development, named me
and my book Dead Reckoning: Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War,
during her fiery response on the issue of freedom of speech. The
minister’s introduction of me was most kind, and her remarks raise
important issues about how to study the past and what happens when
freedom of thought and expression, whether by scholars, journalists or
students on university campuses, collide with notions of
"nationalism".

Unfortunately, what Minister Irani attributed to my book is incorrect.
She claimed I wrote that “the Bangladesh liberation war was a
fallacy”. Whether India’s intervention by means of invasion in
Pakistan’s self-destructive crisis was a fallacy or not is an
important question, but not one addressed in my book. The book is not
about India. It is an investigation, based on extensive field
research, of what happened in particular incidents of violence during
a little over a year of conflict in what was then East Pakistan. Irani
is also mistaken in claiming that I wrote that “the Pakistan army
never did anything to the Bangladeshis that Indira Gandhi went to
support”. The book is something of a catalogue of horrors: describing
the atrocities committed by the Pakistan army to crush a movement for
"azaadi" in one of their provinces, as well as those committed by
Bangladeshi nationalists against non-Bengalis in the name of Bengali
nationalism.

Irani was referring to my book in the context of students of
Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi being arrested and accused of
being “anti-national”. She quoted, with disapproval, slogans allegedly
raised by the students in support of "azaadi" for Kashmir, and against
the Indian state and the Indian army. She did so while rousingly
raising the slogan “Bharat mata ki jai” in parliament. The whole point
of democracy is to accommodate different perspectives in a
deliberative setting. It is essential for students to have a
questioning mind, to challenge authority and to grapple with
conflicting values and points of view. India is best served by knowing
what really happened in any historical or contemporary event,
including unpalatable facts and conflicting versions of what happened.
Muzzling scholarship, journalism or student activism in the name of
nationalism, religion, political ideology or any other excuse,
violates the values of freedom and democracy, and hurts India.

***I realise the minister is busy and perhaps did not have the time to
read my book, but whoever briefed her on me is probably unreliable on
other matters as well. Quite apart from misrepresenting my work, was
it right or fair to try to use me to attack my brother, an opposition
MP, who made a speech the day before? Irani thought he should present
my book to Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi. That is a very good idea, as
long as they take the trouble to read the book of course, before
opining on it. However, it is far more important for the people of
India to have access to a wide range of evidence-based publications
and the freedom to engage in debate on difficult issues, including the
dark side of "nationalism".*** [Emphasis added.]

Sarmila Bose is a Senior Research Associate at the Centre for
International Studies, Department of Politics and International
Relations, at the University of Oxford.

II.
http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/NewsDetail/index/1/6993/Irani-Has-a-History-For-Drama-In-2004-She--Announced-a-Fast-Unto-Death-Against-PM-Modi

Monday, February 29, 2016

Irani Has a History For Drama: In 2004 She Announced a Fast-Unto-Death
Against PM Modi
THE CITIZEN BUREAU

Sunday, February 28,2016

NEW DELHI: December 25,2004: BJP’s Smriti Irani begins a
fast-unto-death in Surat for the immediate resignation of then Gujarat
Chief Minister Narendra Modi. “Whenever people mention Gujarat they
only talk about the riots and try to corner the Gujaratis on the
issue. So, in order to maintain the respect that I have for Atalji and
the BJP, I won’t hesitate to take this step,” Irani said. She
announced the decision to go on fast a few days before, maintaining
that she had chosen December 25 as it was then Prime Minister Atal
Behari Vajpayee’s birthday.

Later when she turned d into an ardent supporter of PM Modi she
justified this fast----that by the way did not even last a day as
Vajpayee intervened and asked her to call it off----Irani said, “I was
the victim of propaganda. I visited Gujarat and saw the reality. I was
trapped in the plethora of lies. When I met Narendra Modi, he told me
to examine him from the prism of truth. The truth was shocking. It was
contrary to the propaganda spread in the mainstream media.”

Before the debate on the JNU, Rohith Vemula issue in Parliament
Bahujana Samaj party leader Mayawati wanted to know from Minister
Irani whether a Dalit had been included as a member in the central
government’s probe commission into the suicide of Dalit scholar
Vemula. She failed to get an answer but got an assurance from Irani
that if her response to the debate failed to satisfy Mayawati she
would have her head cut off and placed at the BSP leaders feet. After
the debate, Mayawati said she was far from satisfied and reminded
Irani about her promise. To which the Minister responded with a
grimace, “well you can get your BSP leaders to cut off my head.”

***Irani, who relies more on theatre than facts, seems to have now run
into trouble with the Opposition determined to move a privilege motion
against her on Monday, the day the budget is to be presented. Far from
dying down, the debate on the crackdown and arrests of students in JNU
and Vemula’s suicide has turned into a straight confrontation with the
Congress party even holding a press conference accusing the HRD
Minister of “waging a war against Dalits”.*** [Emphasis added.]

***The Minister has been challenged not just by the law makers, but
also by the Joint Action Committee in the Vemula case, who held a
press conference and issued a detailed statement challenging her
claims in Parliament. Vemula’s mother has been part of the
demonstration by the students in Delhi, the candlight vigil where she
was protected from a police crackdown by students at the spot, and
again at the press conference where she issued the statement
challenging Irani to prove her claims. (this has been reported
extensively in The CItizen over the past few days).*** [Emphasis
added.]

Irani shot into fame from a fairly obscure background with the Tv
serial Kyonki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi. After having set her
information about Gujarat right as she says, she remained a Modi
supporter and while she was set to be a Cabinet Minister when he won
the elections with a sound majority, eyebrows were raised when she was
given the HRD portfolio both within and outside the party. A major
controversy about her educational qualifications were raised,
something that still rankles as in her response in Parliament in the
recent debate Irani referred to her alleged lack of education. She was
accused of filing false affidavits about her educational
qualifications.

Irani has been a member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh from
childhood. Her family is from the RSS.She joined the BJP in 2003 and
contested the elections against Congress party’s Kapil Sibal from the
Chandni chowk parliamentary seat in Delhi. She lost and was said at
the time to have blamed Modi and the 2002 Gujarat violence for her
defeat. She subsequently mended her relations with him, and in 2011
came into the Rajya Sabha as a member from Gujarat.

Since then the Minister has been at the forefront of a campaign in
Universities, that has pitted the government now against the students
per se. The banning of the Periyar Study Circle in IIT-Madras, the
circumstances that led to the death of Rohith Vemula in HCU, and the
crackdown on JNU that has made it to the world headlines are being
spearheaded by her and her Ministry.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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