Jim Yardley writes in New York Times today: As Global Games Begin,
India Hopes for Chance to Save National Pride. Wrong title, Mr.
Yardley. India doesn't hope to save national pride: it's the violent,
corrupt and inefficient people on top who're trying to save their
national power, with help from corporate media -- Indian and
international. It's shameful.

This is a quick summary of the so-called Commonwealth Games, 2010. (1)
Rounding up and jailing of poor people with their children off Delhi's
streets; (2) massive corruption of the ruling Congress leaders who
allegedly stole millions of dollars by doling out big corporate
contracts with outrageously inflated prices; (3) major failing to meet
important deadlines causing international derision; (4) paying 15-20
cents or less per hour (and working them 12-14 hours a day) to the
thousands of workers, and falsely promising them housing, health care,
child care, education, etc.; (5) creating an oppressive and unsafe
work climate where at least 40 workers have died from on-the-job
injuries, etc. while working on the Games sites; (6) organizers
rampantly used child labor; (7) the govt. shut down schools, colleges
and govt. offices for the games with no make-up time for lost studies
or work -- unprecedented in modern world history; (8) major
construction debacles including the road bridge collapse in Delhi last
week; (9) historic number of international athletes pulling out of the
games; (10) massive arrogance of the Congress govt, International
Olympic Committee and Commonwealth Games executives who took millions
of dollars, yet didn't deliver.

Other than some no-name, local, grassroots groups, international human
rights bodies or the United Nations did not produce any audible
screams against such rights and justice violations (bizarre, because
the big-name groups in particular wouldn't miss any opportunity to
raise hell on other politically expedient lapses in select places
across the globe.)

The entire cost that has nothing to do with welfare of the ordinary
people (totaling billions of dollars) has been and will be dumped on
the broken backs of the average and poor Indian citizens who couldn't
care less about the Games; their lives will not change a bit after the
fiasco is all over. Mr. Yardley, you might challenge the status quo
the Games' sponsor corporations and their trustee governments are
perpetuating. That's the real problem big media need to address.

And we're not even talking about the painful and pathetic legacy of
the Commonwealth hegemony. As if two hundred years of looting a
once-prosperous country and leaving a torn, bloody, violent and
impoverished three pieces of land with carefully chosen cronies
weren't enough.

If anything, the British Queen and her administration owe a
long-overdue apology with major reparation to the one billion-plus
people they tyrannized in South Asia. That would be a real good start.
Everything else falls short.

Partha Banerjee is a New York-based human rights and media activist.
He teaches at Empire State College. Email: [email protected]

http://www.countercurrents.org/banerjee031010.htm
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means
respecting all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the
others. When a society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it
undermines peace and leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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