South Asia Citizens Wire   |  18 October,  2004
via:  www.sacw.net

[1] [Pakistani Journalists] Visiting Jammu & Kashmir (Imtiaz Alam)
[2] Bangladesh: Women's football dribbling with fanatic fantasia (Tureen Afroz)
[3] Pakistan: No compromise on murder (Beena Sarwar)
[4] Indian Muslims' Hope Is One Good Policewoman (Manish Swarup)
[5] India: The Lesser Evil: Lack of Secular Options Led to Democratic Front Win (Jyoti Punwani)
[6] Book Review: "Eqbal Ahmad-Between Past & Future: Selected Essays on South Asia
Edited by Dohra Ahmad, Iftikhar Ahmad and Zia Mian"
[7] Events: Talk on 'Perpetuating Culture and the Production of Self: A Sociological Understanding of Alig Identity' (New Delhi,



--------------

[1]


The News International October 18, 2004

VISITING JAMMU & KASHMIR

Imtiaz Alam

Higher expectations, deeper suspicions, conflicting demands and overwhelming welcome underlined the first-ever visit of independent Pakistani journalists to Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. For reporters in search of the other side of the story, to behave like diplomats while keeping in mind disparate positions of the antagonists was a journey through a minefield. Yet, the members of the delegation kept their cool and behaved the way they should have on a good will-cum-reporting mission to ensure that the window to access no-go areas, in this case across the LoC, is wide opened and not shut on their colleagues from both countries. Though South Asian Free Media Association (SAFMA) broke the barrier, has it helped the ongoing processes or became a victim of paranoia?

This was made clearer by the organisers (SAFMA chapters of Pakistan and India) that the journalists' exchange across the LoC was a part of their effort to allowing media persons freely move across frontiers and accessing information in South Asia. Carrying no briefs from anybody or any party nor becoming instrument of this or that partisan divide, SAFMA had set certain limits while knowing well that the journalists' delegation will come under tremendous pressure from all and too demanding sides, since it was to a territory under a bloody dispute between India and Pakistan and zealously possessed and, variously, claimed by the inhabitants of J&K. It became 'historic' since what should have been a very normal visit became 'abnormal' due to the fact that this was the first-ever journey undertaken by the Pakistani scribes in the last 57 years and against the backdrop of ongoing composite dialogue process.

No doubt, the visit would not have taken place without, thankfully, the clearance from India and Pakistan at the highest level and, indeed, this is what made the visit suspicious in the eyes of some conspiracy theorists or certain sick minds, who in fact suspect every move towards confidence building between India and Pakistan. The kind of reception and affection the delegation received from across all divides and regions was in fact a reflection of the longing the people feel for each other in the subcontinent, especially in J&K for Pakistan. Except for a very small section among the displaced Pandits, living in most miserable conditions in refugee camps in Jammu, accusing Pakistan of displacing them and those elements in Kashmir who consider negotiations between India and Pakistan as a death knell to their 'cause', the fraternity shown for the Pakistani delegation from Jammu to Kashmir was beyond our and their imagination. Even those who expressed reservations, for reasons SAFMA or the delegation could not be held responsible, in fact wanted the delegation to visit whole of Kashmir valley to assess the situation. Those who had decided not to receive the delegation also lined up behind the long queue.

Although there were no restraints on the media team to meet anybody anywhere, the visit was constrained by time and too tight a schedule prepared by SAFMA India and the coordinator, Editor Kashmir Times Mr Bhasin. The latter came under tremendous pressure for allowing the delegation to meet everybody from the local media and all sections of society. Stay in Jammu, although without doubts and acrimony except seen at the Pandits' camps, was too ceremonious. What was quite disturbing to find was that after being displaced from the valley many among them had abandoned their secular paradigm of Kashmiriat and some among them have become communalised to the extent that they now demand carving a Pandit state out of the valley not many among the community agree with. The criticism about the neglect of their plight by the media in Pakistan was right to a point since it is focused on the valley and looked at Pandits with tinted glasses. Yet, there are nationalists, also among the Pandits, who differ with the tendency to treat the Kashmir question as a communal issue and insist on finding a way out of the quagmire of a cyclical violence.

The overwhelming view among the middle classes in Jammu takes 'accession to India' as a fait accompli, while the Punjabis and Dogras underline the need for greater room to allow reunion of the divided communities and are much more flexible on resolving the dispute. In fact their political, intellectual and business representatives show certain degrees of flexibility to bring peace to their troubled region and for greater gains the former J&K state can reap from a rapprochement between India and Pakistan. Their major demand was to open Jammu-Sialkot route and allow free movement of people. The secular view dominant among the urban people of Jammu, many among them don't like to be called Kashmiris, preclude any division on the basis of religion and feel at greater ease with Indian secular ethos. The nationalists, however, demand a untied and secular J&K that will be relatively independent of both India and Pakistan without being fully sovereign. And there are those 'nationalists' who would want a reunited J&K integrated with India, given the level of assimilation that has already taken place.

By contrast, the journey to and through Srinagar brought too much pressure on the delegation due to an awesome deployment of security forces, inflated demands of the Kashmiris and high passions of a people under siege for too long. The two meetings that we had on our way to Srinagar showed an area overburdened with the crossfire of security agencies and the militants. The people were living under visible harassment and intimidation. Srinagar wore the look of a capital scrawling on its knees under the burden of both insurgency and counter-insurgency, especially the heavy boots of security agencies, while giving the false image of the summer capital of a state that is supposed to 'enjoy' a special status - in fact in reverse. The passions, expectations and demands were too high, as we met a large number of leaders, students, lawyers, journalists, shopkeepers, men on the street, political activists, wailing women searching for their sons and rank and file of most of the parties.

Regardless of what the parties from the opposite or the same camps say, and there are too many, the people of Srinagar from almost all walks of life know to spell one word with close to total unanimity and that is: Azadi (freedom/independence). The alienation from New Delhi is complete and, perhaps, irreversible. More than 90 per cent of the public opinion is tilted towards independence. Even those who raise the slogan of accession to Pakistan and also Nizam-e-Mustafa, although declining in numbers, subscribe to the idea of independence. Alienation from India does not mean that the Kashmiris want to join Pakistan. Yet the expectations from Pakistan are so high that even a non-official and private visit by the Pakistani journalists on Indian visa came under critical scrutiny, including those who practice Indian law or demand Indian passport to travel abroad. Suspicions about and complaints against Islamabad are on the rise after the division of All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC). On the issue of opening Srinagar-Muzaffarabad route, even those who oppose it cannot afford the reaction from the people who are craving to meet their own on the other side.

The target of resentment are the Indian security forces against whose excesses and human rights violations the system of justice has failed to provide any relief. Even the most moderate daughter of Chief Minister Mufti Sayeed, Mehbooba Mufti, who has come to the rescue of many aggrieved families, feel helpless and seeks refuge behind the excuses a heartless administration provides to hide its crimes. It does not mean that the people are not getting irritated with the excesses committed by the militants. So overwhelming is the support for Azadi that even the senior rank and file of National Conference of Abdullah, People's Democratic Party of Mufti and the Kashmir unit of Congress feel sympathetic to the aspirations of their Kashmiri brethren. The leadership of these parties exhibits a lot of flexibility, despite their capitulation, on possible peaceful solutions while supporting softening of the LoC and opposing militancy. Although Hurriyat is divided, and the Ansari faction accuses Islamabad for the division and Geelani faction blames them of hobnobbing with New Delhi, it can still play a crucial role if reunited and the militant groups took the back seat.

There are two broad views on the course to resolve the conflict: The one who believes that Indo-Pak dialogue will damage the Kashmir cause and any kind of confidence building between the two will be at the cost of Kashmiris. The other view considers Indo-Pak reconciliation process suitable to Kashmiris, if their representatives are engaged to decide their destiny. Almost every section of opinion in Srinagar emphasised the urgency to include Kashmiri representatives in the talks and want the composite dialogue to succeed. About representation the Kashmiri leadership has no problem in showing magnanimity or presenting a foolproof electoral course. The real issue is that both Islamabad and New Delhi stop treating the Kashmir issue as a territorial dispute and, instead, address together the aspirations of the people of the valley in some appropriate form that is to the satisfaction of the two big brothers. The solution lies in the process, not in any pre-determined formula. Can New Delhi and Islamabad dare to get out of their straitjackets and free the Indian and Pakistani minds from remaining a hostage to annexationist or irredentist view over Kashmir and take this hurdle out of the way of greater cooperation? The problem is not with the Kashmiris, it is with us. Who are we, the Indians and Pakistanis, to decide their destiny?

______



[2]

New Age  - October 17, 2004

WOMEN'S FOOTBALL DRIBBLING
WITH FANATIC FANTASIA

by Tureen Afroz

The Bangladeshi girls can now 'bend it like Beckham'. Or I must say that they have dared to do so. The first ever women's football tournament of Bangladesh began on October 4 this year. Thanks to Bangladesh Football Federation and more thanks to the women players and their supportive families to take the country a step ahead. Women in Bangladesh were already into sports like volleyball, handball, swimming, shooting, judo and karate. The recent addition of football to the women's sports in Bangladesh is undoubtedly a brave step towards globalization. I feel proud to be a Bangladeshi woman. Sincere cheers for you soccer-girls out there for making a mark by creating a history for me and for all of us!
However, it is unfortunate to notice that certain fanatic Islamic groups in Bangladesh have become critical over the country's first-ever women's football tournament. They have decided to carry on a three-day agitation program in Dhaka to stop the tournament. These groups have further vowed to announce tougher programs against the government if the competition is not stopped immediately. According to media reports of last few days, the Amir of Islamic Constitution Movement (ICM) and Charmonai Pir Fazlul Karim threatened to besiege the National Sports Council on October 9 if the government had not stopped the ongoing women's football tournament. The Islamic group, Jamiatul Ulama Islami Bangladesh has further declared that there members were even ready to sacrifice their lives to stop the event from going ahead.
It may be mentioned here that only a few months back, Bangladesh's first women's wrestling competition received the similar kind of threats from Muslim fanatics who termed the event "vulgar and indecent". However, this time the demand of fanatic Islamic groups is not only limited to stopping the football tournament as such. They further demanded "a ban on all kinds of women sports" in Bangladesh. The reasons forwarded by these fanatic Islamic groups so far are two-folds :
women sports destroy moral character; and
women sports are anti-Islamic.
I really do not understand how women sports can be said to destroy moral character. Even if it is, whose moral character are they talking about - of the women or the men? As far as the women are concerned, physical exercise and sport are beneficial to their physical healthiness. Men and women alike are in need of sport and exercise to maintain their physical fitness. Benefits derived from sport are keys to universal notions of good health, confidence, success and overall happiness. It is, therefore, a well acknowledged fact all over the world that sports not only have social and physical benefits but also essential psychological consequences. Physical exercise and fitness help to maintain a more balanced emotional state, as it 'aids in the release of harmful free radicals and excess hormones'.
Women have multi-dimensional roles to play in family and the society. Therefore, women should be physically and emotionally fit to provide significant inputs to the society, as well as to her relationship with husband, family and friends. Therefore, the claim of fanatic Islamic groups that women sports destroy moral character of women is completely illogical. If, however, these Islamic groups meant that women sports would destroy the moral character of some men in the society then it is those men who need psychiatric treatment to restore the required standard of morality. Ban on women's sport would not help them much as they can still fantasize women's sports in their mind and can suffer from 'continuous degradation of morality' syndrome.
The other reason for demanding a ban on women sports by the fanatic Islamic groups in Bangladesh is that women sports are anti-Islamic. It is stated that Islam in general has always encouraged sports as a way of refreshing one's mind, be it of a man or women. The Prophet Muhammad always advised his disciples (both men and women) to engage in different forms of sport. According to history, the Prophet himself would engage in sports like wrestling, racing, archery and horse races. Islam did not, therefore, discriminate women on grounds of sports as such. Moreover, the following hadith would illustrate how women are treated equally with men in Islamic precinct regarding physical capabilities :
While Aisha (r.a.a) was on a journey along with the Apostle of Allah (s.a.w), she had a race with him and outpaced him. As time passed, the Prophet (s.a.w) wished to avenge for his loss, so he raced her again, in which case he outpaced her, and remarked: "This is for that outpacing."
Therefore, the claim made by fanatic Islamic groups in Bangladesh as to women sports being un-Islamic is completely baseless. Their demand for banning the ongoing football tournament and as such, the women's sports, does not merit any consideration, what so ever. On the contrary, it is strongly stated that their very demand for banning women's sports in Bangladesh is itself un-Islamic.
As a matter of fact women's sports are encouraged in other parts of the Muslim world too. Very specifically, football is played by Muslim women in many other countries of the world. Muslim women in Indonesia, Malaysia, Qatar and Oman have been playing football against all odds. On September 18, 2004 women's football also made its debut in Pakistan when a match was played by its women's football team in Islamabad to promote the spirit of fair play in competitions. Football has been played by women in Iran for several decades and according to Khadijeh Sepanchi, the head of the Iranian Women's Football Association, about 4,700 Muslim women currently play football in Iran. Women football tournaments are also a regular feature of Kuwait University. Moreover, many non-Muslim countries of the world currently have their own all-Muslim women football teams participating in national and international events. Ansar United of the United States of America has its own all-Muslim women football team. The United Kingdom also sent its own all-Muslim girls' football team to the 3rd Muslim Women's Games of 2001.
The question of banning women sports in Bangladesh on Islamic grounds does also give rise to various issues of discrimination and Constitutional rights of women. Let's assume, to meet the demand of fanatic Islamic groups, such a ban is imposed by the government on Muslim women in Bangladesh. It will create a discrimination against Muslim women vis-�-vis non-Muslim women of Bangladesh as the later would be outside the scope of such ban. The government will thus be in violation of Article 28 (1) of the Constitution by which the citizens of Bangladesh have a right not to be discriminated on grounds of religion. If however, the ban is extended to non-Muslim women, they would be forced to refrain from doing something which otherwise their religion might permit. Therefore, the state would be in violation of Article 41 of the Constitution which guarantees freedom of religion to every citizen of Bangladesh.
Moreover, if a ban is imposed on women sports (say, playing football) in Bangladesh while men remain free to participate in such activities, it would create a discrimination against women vis-�-vis men. According to Article 28(2) women in Bangladesh are guaranteed equal rights with men in all spheres of the State and of public life. Also, it is one of the fundamental principles of our state policy that the government should ensure women participation in all spheres of national life (Article 10 of the Constitution). Besides, the government has its international commitment under the Women Convention (CEDAW) to eliminate all forms of discrimination against women from the society. Therefore, the government should encourage and provide women of Bangladesh with equal opportunity and patronization in sports.
In conclusion, I see no valid ground for fanatic Islamic group's agitation against the ongoing women's football tournament in Bangladesh. Rather, the very demand raised by fanatic Islamic groups for banning women's sports in Bangladesh is illogical, un-Islamic and above all, un-constitutional.


The writer is a barrister and currently doing her Ph.D. in Law at Monash University, Australia


______



[3]

The News on Sunday
October 17, 2004

NO COMPROMISE ON MURDER
Beena Sarwar

Murder by any other name still smells foul. It is still murder.
Unfortunately, the Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill 2004 against 'honour
killings' introduced by the treasury bench in the National Assembly deems
this crime compoundable, allowing for a 'compromise' (razinama) between the
parties. Thus the accused in 'honour killing' or karo kari cases will
continue to be able to escape punishment.

Most karo kari cases are committed by a close relative - father, brother,
son, or husband of the woman. Often, the victims are the most vulnerable
members of the family or community. In either case, if and when the case
reaches a court of law, the victim's family may 'pardon' the murderer (who
may well be one of them), or be pressurised to accept diyat ('blood-money')
as compensation. The murderer then goes free.

The motive is often other than the stated ghairat or honour, often related
to land disputes or old enmities. Such cases continue to take place because,
very simply, the murderer knows he will get away with it. The statistics
speak for themselves: according to one estimate, around 1,261 cases of
honour killings were reported in 2003 alone - 938 women and 323 men. That
is, over a hundred such cases a month.

The present bill does nothing to change this state of affairs, which appears
to have worsened since the promulgation of the Qisas and Diyat Ordinance of
1990. Like other laws enacted in the name of religion, this one too has its
flaws and critics, as well as supporters who appear more interested in
preserving the status quo than in the ground reality of its negative effects.

On the positive side, this law did away with the concept of 'grave and
sudden provocation' introduced by the British and incorporated in Section
300 of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC). The 'provocation' clause allowed
someone who had been 'provoked' into spontaneous murder, to receive a
lighter sentence if he could justify his act. Then, as now, a woman's
perceived infidelity was justification enough.

The Qisas & Diyat Act's omission of this clause leaves no room in the law
for any concessions. "But the law and the judiciary are apparently two
different things," writes the Lahore-based criminal lawyer Hassam Qadir
Shah, in 'Don't let them get away with murder', a booklet on criminal
procedures (Shirkat Gah Women's Resource Centre, 2002). "While the law is
clear and unforgiving on this account, some judges of the superior courts of
Pakistan have tried to read between the lines to apply the earlier concept
of justified anger. Quite a few reported judgments in the form of case-law
have once again mitigated the offence of murder in the context of so-called
'honour' crimes."

However, as Shah notes, several judgments also criticise this trend.
"Neither the law of the land nor religion permits so-called 'honour'
killings and it amounts to intentional murder ('qatl-i-amd')," states one
Supreme Court judgment, noting that "such iniquitous and vile" acts violate
the fundamental rights as enshrined in Article 9 of the Pakistan
Constitution which provides that no person shall be deprived of life or
liberty except in accordance with law. "Any custom in that respect is void
under Article 8 (1) of the Constitution" (PLD 2001 SC 96).

The major flaw in the Qisas and Diyat law, which covers all offences against
the human body, is that it makes such offenses compoundable (open to
compromise as a private matter between two parties) by providing for qisas
(retribution) or diyat (blood-money). The heirs of the victim can forgive
the murderer in the name of God without receiving any compensation or diyat
(Section 309), or compromise after receiving diyat (Section 310).

Most cases result in one or the other compromise, thus allowing murderers to
go free, even though Pakistani law does not contain any provision which
allows the offence of murder to be mitigated. Contrary to common belief,
Islam also explicitly forbids such killing in the name of ghairat or honour.

Prior to this change, the state was a party to murder cases, which were
non-compoundable, in keeping with the principle that the state must ensure
the right to life of all citizens, regardless of class, gender or creed. Now
the poor "may be cornered into compromising even for the most heinous crimes
in lieu of a hefty payoff, for instance. This promotes the practice of
settling murder cases, and especially cases of karo kari through a
compromise or razinama," notes Shah.

Many lawyers and human rights activists believe that there is no need to
define 'honour crimes' or 'karo kari' murders separately, as the existing
provisions of the PPC and the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) are sufficient,
provided that such murders are registered as murder. In cases where guilt is
established, through confession or trial, the perpetrator must be convicted
at least on paper, even if there is a razinama, so that the criminal record
is established.

No matter how well-intentioned, the government's bill on 'honour killings'
is a farce as long as these factors are ignored. And finally, no law can
bring about changes unless it is implemented, and unless society changes to
accept the status of women as equal human beings.


______


[4]

New York Times, October 17, 2004

INDIAN MUSLIMS' HOPE IS ONE GOOD POLICEWOMAN

Manish Swarup/Associated Press
Angry mobs rioted in Ahmadabad in 2002 to protest the deaths of 59 Hindus in a train attack.


By Amy Waldman

KALOL, India - So indecent was his younger brother's death that Idris Yusuf Ghodawala never imagined the indignity that was to follow.

On March 1, 2002, as Hindu-Muslim riots convulsed the state of Gujarat, a Hindu mob armed with shiny new swords set upon Imran Ghodawala, an 18-year-old Muslim, dragged him into the Rabbani mosque and burned him to death. Idris, hiding on a balcony next door, saw the attack and then the smoke billowing from the mosque.

When Idris Ghodawala went to the police to claim Imran's remains, he said the top local police officer, a Hindu named R. J. Patil, told him there were no remains to claim. Mr. Patil had burned them, knowing full well that Muslims, unlike Hindus, bury their dead.

The sacrilege still makes Mr. Ghodawala, 31, weep.

"We are Muslims, and they burned our body," he said.

Mr. Patil's action appears to have been part of a broader effort to conceal evidence and thwart prosecutions after the riots in Gujarat state, which left at least 1,100 Muslims dead and up to 600 missing. Mr. Ghodawala could name four members of the mob that killed his brother, two of whom he had played cricket with as a child. But he said Mr. Patil refused to let him name names, or even file a complaint. So Mr. Ghodawala's case essentially disappeared, as did thousands of others stemming from the riots.

In a state controlled by Hindu nationalists, the police either refused to register the names of the accused or simply summarily closed cases; prosecutors did not oppose bail for suspects, and judges delivered acquittals in cases where dozens of people died.

Only a small number of Hindus have been convicted for any action in the riots, although the Supreme Court has now intervened to force more than 2,000 cases that had been closed to be re-examined and at least two retried.

What happened in this area was typical except in one respect. Late last year, Neeraja Gotru Rao, a policewoman of uncommon courage, arrived here after being sent by the state police to reinvestigate the cases. Her work led to the arrests of about 30 suspects, including the personal assistant to a state government minister. It also led to the arrest of Mr. Patil on suspicion of destroying evidence by burning the remains of Imran Ghodawala and at least 12 other Muslims.

The fate of these two police officers, whose interpretation of duty so diverged, will test more than whether justice will be done in the riots, which were set off by the immolation on Feb. 27, 2002, of 59 Hindus in a train carriage. It may also determine whether Muslims here can once again believe in the impartiality of the Indian state.

On a recent afternoon, the corpulent Mr. Patil was found not in jail, but sipping tea in his pajamas in the local government hospital. The minister's personal assistant and another well-connected accused person - all three ostensibly under arrest - were with him. Pleading illness, they were seeking bail from the comfort of the hospital.

Ms. Rao, meanwhile, was back in Ahmedabad, having been ordered by the Gujarat state police to wrap up her unfinished work. She is not granting interviews, but victims and their advocates say the order is another effort to thwart prosecutions.

"She was removed because she was doing good work," Mr. Ghodawala said. "And because she said she would try to find out who were the superior officers who gave the orders. Now I don't think anybody will take up this case." The director general of the Gujarat police says Ms. Rao, who is Hindu, was taking too long with her work, and that her investigation was finished.

The rioting lasted for weeks, but was most ferocious in the first few days. Sixty-eight Muslims died in this area, many of them from Delol, a village nearby.

Muslims died in the village and the surrounding fields, where Yaqub Adam, a tailor, saw his father, mother, uncle, cousin, nephew and two other relatives killed.

"Their only work in those days was to find the Muslims, kill them and burn them," Mr. Adam, 40, said.

Eleven more Muslims died next to the Ambika Society housing colony, when the truck in which they were trying to flee ran straight into a Hindu mob.

"Nobody came to save us," said Medina Yaqub Sheikh, who said she saw her husband hacked by a sword, then set on fire. One young woman said she was raped by five men.

More Muslims died at Derol station, and 17 more fleeing rioters at the Goma River. Two small boys were reportedly thrown on a fire, then when they crawled off, thrown on again. In Kalol, where about one-fourth of the 20,000 residents are Muslim, 165 Muslim properties and vehicles were looted and burned. One Muslim man, injured in the police firing, was burned to death in the hospital compound. Imran Ghodawala was burned to death in the mosque.

If each killing had its horrific particularity, the aftermath was strikingly similar. Victims and witnesses went to the local police station, controlled by Mr. Patil, to register complaints and claim their dead.

Survivors said Mr. Patil refused to let them file complaints, saying he would write what needed to be written. In the end, he wrote a single complaint bunching all the killings together and not listing the suspects whom witnesses had named. Survivors of the Ambika Society massacre said he told them that he had burned the remains of their loved ones.

When Mr. Ghodawala sought a certificate proving his brother's death so his family could get compensation from the state, he said the police told him that if he named names his family would get no money.

He would see his brother's killers in town, but was powerless, he said, tears flowing again. "If we chase them we cannot live here, we cannot work here," he said. "We do not have anybody to help."

That changed when Ms. Rao arrived at the end of last year. The state police had dispatched her to investigate the killings and rape at the Ambika Society after pressure from human rights and women's groups and the Supreme Court.

She set up shop in a separate room at the Kalol police station, and victims began coming to see her. They found a woman, about 35, in a police uniform, with short hair, small glasses, a strong build and a soft voice.

She listened with compassion, and spoke with affection. Medina Yaqub Sheikh is illiterate, but as she recounted how her husband died, she knew it mattered that Ms. Rao took notes.

"Earlier when we used to talk to the police they never used to write," Ms. Sheikh said.

As word spread about Ms. Rao, more victims began visiting her. Idris Ghodawala told her of his brother's killing. She visited the scene, photographing the spot, still preserved in the mosque, where his brother had burned.

"She used to encourage us: 'Don't be afraid of anybody,' " Mr. Ghodawala said.

Yaqub Adam told her of his family's deaths. "No one knew about this case because it was never reported," he said. "Because of R. J. Patil, nothing came on the surface."

Ms. Rao worked as late as midnight and avoided talking to witnesses in front of the local police, bringing her own staff to write affidavits.

"She wanted that whatever injustice happened to us, at the end of the day we should get justice," said the young woman who had been gang-raped.

Local Hindus looked on her less favorably. "Neeraja Rao used to call people and they would be sitting all day in her office," huffed Tushat Patel, a town official. "She was very tough."

By the time she was taken off the investigation, 22 Delol men had been arrested. So had at least three of the four men Idris Ghodawala had named in his brother's killing, although they are free on bail.

One of them, Ajay Soni, a lecturer and member of the Association of National Volunteers, India's most powerful Hindu nationalist organization, called the charge fabricated. "This is all political," he said. "The minority cannot rule this country. This will not go any further."

Mr. Patil denied any wrongdoing as well. "All the senior officers knew what was the situation at the time," he said from his hospital bed.

For now, whether he was a renegade or following orders from superiors will remain unanswered since Ms. Rao is no longer here to pursue it.

Not a single Muslim has returned to live in Delol. Instead, they live in a ready-made ghetto, a colony built for them on the edge of Kalol by an Islamic relief organization. The houses are filled with widows and absence.

The young woman who said she was raped said she also lost her father, brother and husband - every male member of her household. She said she is still too fearful to go to town on her own, where her rapists wander free on bail.

She and the other victims want Ms. Rao back. "We had complete confidence in her, and we were getting justice through her," said Ms. Sheikh. "Now we are not sure."

In trusting Ms. Rao, the victims went out on a limb. Now, they say, it has been snapped beneath them.

Idris Ghodawala said he again sees no hope for justice, and he feels more threatened than ever. When he crosses paths with those who were arrested in the killing of his brother, he said, "It is I who try to hide, not them."

______



[5]


The Times of India, October 18, 2004

THE LESSER EVIL: LACK OF SECULAR OPTIONS LED TO DEMOCRATIC FRONT WIN
Jyoti Punwani

Even before noon on Saturday, the relief was palpable. Those who had threatened to launch an agitation against the Congress, or had decided not to endorse the ruling combine in the Maharashtra elections, were filled with an overriding thought: The BJP ogre had been kept out; no chance here of another Gujarat.

After a long time, the old Congress ruse worked, this time, without them even having used it. For 20 years, the Congress used the BJP to frighten the Muslims - and others repelled by Hindutva - into voting for it. This strategy failed after the Babri masjid demolition. After December 6, 1992, it seemed that the Congress had moved to the fringes of Muslim, if not secular, consciousness. But Gujarat 2002 changed all that. And the BJP's defence of Narendra Modi was the final straw.

Yet, last week, Muslims in Maharashtra didn't come out in droves as they had in 1999 to vote out the Sena-BJP. Some Muslim areas of Mumbai saw poor turnout. Yet, even here, Muslim candidates backed by the ruling combine won. The poor turnout was the latest indication of the despondency with which Muslims in Maharashtra regard the five years of rule by a 'secular' government. When the Vilasrao government was formed in 1999, Mumbai's Muslims were dancing on rooftops. Never before had there been as many as five ministers from their community. After the Sena-BJP drought, this was a bounty. Every Muslim home now had a direct connection to Mantralaya, it was said gleefully. The sight of the Samajwadi Party Maharashtra president and 1993 bomb blast TADA accused (discharged by the Supreme Court) Abu Asim Azmi, till then reviled by the Sena mouthpiece Saamna, striding along the corridors of Mantralaya as a partner in the government, sent a thrill through even those Muslims for whom he'd done nothing.

Azmi's loss this time from Bhiwandi, more than 50 km away from his domain in south Mumbai, is both a tragedy and a relief. A relief because had he won, his claim of being the messiah of Mumbai's Muslims would have gained strength, despite his doing little other than resorting to Thackeray-style rhetoric. A tragedy because his defeat, despite his closeness to the ulema and a public endorsement by two mainstream Muslim organisations, represents the failure of the elusive 'Third Force', so desperately sought by Muslims sick of the Congress-NCP.

Not even the most vehement opponent of BJP-SS could endorse the last five years of 'secular rule' in Maharashtra. The omissions and commissions are startling: 53 communal riots (in contrast to the Sena-BJP's three); the shielding of guilty policemen indicted by the Srikrishna Commission; the targeting of Muslims in fake encounters; POTA's communal use; a refusal to advertise police recruitment drives in the Urdu press (for the state's constables/inspectors, Muslims remain landyas); the benign relationship between both Congress CMs and Bal Thackeray (he helped Sushil Kumar Shinde become CM by not fielding an opponent); continuous tirade against Muslims in Saamna ("All the murderers in the country - those that are found - are all Muslims. Tear apart not just by law but by force" are editorial statements from last month's issue); impunity to the VHP to conduct poisonous campaigns across interior Maharashtra; the bureaucratic functioning of the Maulana Azad Financial Corporation set up specially for Muslims.

For the first time in a decade, Maharashtra's normally expressive Ulema Council refused to endorse any party, asking Muslims to vote for the 'best' candidate. That statement brought the favourite of the secularists to the ulema's doorstep four days before election day. Digvijay Singh's belated rush to the heart of Mumbai's Muslim area was another first; normally, the Congress sends emissaries to the community weeks in advance. Why, in 1999, even former Sena strongman Chhagan Bhujbal had wooed Muslims, only revealing his reluctance to shed his ideological roots after he became home minister.

It was this 'arrogance' of the Congress that Maharashtra's politically conscious Muslims wanted to dent by supporting potential Third Force candidates, hoping to pressurise them into pushing for Muslim demands. Alas, not only were such candidates too few, had they won, they would have sold themselves for a ministerial berth. Muslim activists knew this, yet, from all sides one heard the anguished question: What else can we do?

There were two other factors, which made votes drop into Congress's lap: Sonia Gandhi's 'sacrifice' and Thackeray's last-minute anti-north Indian outburst. Despite Sonia not having lifted a finger to ensure a genuine secular government in Maharashtra, not even the most disgusted Muslim could resist her grand gesture, the final stamp which set her apart from her predecessor, Narasimha Rao, in the eyes of the Muslims.

Now that Maharashtra is set for another five years of non-Hindutva rule, should we expect genuine secular politics, some tough stands perhaps, from the new government? There's no reason why that should happen. All the Muslim ministers described as nikammey by the community are back. The Congress has seen it can win even without wooing its vote bank. What prevents it from lapsing into complacency?

Yet, Muslims across the board are happy. Yes, all the rascals have returned, but they shrug that it's only rascals who win anyway. Communal forces have been kept out, that's what matters.


______


[6] [Book Review]

Dawn
17 October 2004

REVIEW: Predicting the future
Reviewed by Uzma Aslam Khan

Between Past & Future is a collection of essays and talks delivered by Eqbal Ahmad over a period of almost 30 years. Though he wrote regularly throughout his life, this is the first compilation of his work to appear in print, and the editors, Dohra Ahmad, Iftikhar Ahmad, and Zia Mian, must have excruciated over which articles to include or omit. But the result is not only a precious anthology of one of the most encyclopedic and thought-provoking minds of the 20th century, but an urgently needed reference point: almost all the 44 essays are as relevant today as when first written, some perhaps even more. Eqbal Ahmad not only analyzed the past but also predicted the future; the extent to which the predictions have come true are often so chilling that this book serves as a kind of compass to the 21st century.
Despite his overall opposition to nationalist-separatist movements, in the 1972 "Notes on South Asia in crisis", Ahmad explained why he ultimately supported Bangladeshi nationalism. The piece illustrates his compassion and objectivity on many levels: it was mailed an hour before he was taken to trial in the US for protesting against the Vietnam war, revealing how he could engage with several outrages at the same time, with equal devotion and clarity; it condemns the Pakistani military's heinous treatment of Bengalis, as well as India's military intervention, and the massacring of around 10,000 Biharis by the Bengalis. Yet, despite being a Bihari himself, he refused "to equate the actions of the Bengali vigilantes with those of the government and the criminal acts of an organized, professional army".
In the 1980 interview "Pakistan in crisis", he spoke for two other disenfranchised groups: the Sindhis and the Baloch. He called Sindh "the second place in 20th century history where the indigenous people have become a minority in their own homeland - the first being Palestine". He argued that the southern provinces were "for all practical purposes completely excluded from the structure of the state". His warning about Baloch nationalism is chillingly pertinent to today.
One of the most illuminating articles in the collection is on Afghanistan. From the Anglo-Russian rivalry played out on Afghan soil, to the growing Soviet influence soon after the departure of the British and subsequent growth of rival elitist communist groups, to Daud Khan's 1973 Kremlin-approved military coup, "Bloody games" is a vivid chronicle of a land "torn to pieces by teams sponsored by outsiders". Events leading up to the 1979 Soviet invasion are unnervingly convoluted, yet Ahmad was able to pick apart the knitting and expose individual strands more clearly than many other analysts.
Several strands lead to the Pakistan-backed Islamic fundamentalists' opposition to the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan, which overthrew Daud's government, also unpopular with Pakistan. Support of these Islamic groups began during Z.A. Bhutto's rule, in retaliation for the support Daud extended to the Pakhtoonistan movement. Daud repented and tried to reestablish links with Pakistan, but the Islamic groups continued to be used as "bargaining chips". The stakes were raised by General Zia, but they had already been introduced. A point seldom conceded enough here is that these threads are firmly rooted in Pakistan.
Once the Soviets invaded, the Mujahideen organized into eleven main groups: four were headquartered in Iran, seven in Pakistan. The article appeared in 1988, but today this warning rings even louder: "(Decades) of war have undermined the old Afghan ways; to the ancient ethnic and tribal divisions of Afghanistan have been added the conflict of ideologies and the irreconcilable ambitions of armed political organizations. In the Afghan code of honour, badal - the obligation to take revenge - has an important place. Neither time nor space limits the obligation. Unless a truce is made and compensation is paid, harm done in Peshawar or Kabul may be avenged years later in New York or Moscow."
When will the Soviet Union, Pakistan, the United States and Iran deign to offer a truce? The cost to Pakistan of failing to do so is spelled out in the 1998 article, "What after strategic depth?": "However inadvertently, Islamabad is setting the stage for the emergence in the next decade of a powerful Pakhtoonistan movement."
No one subject Ahmad wrote on was more important to him than any other. I selected these articles simply because I had not read them before, and there is no room to discuss more. So, for instance, the three on de-nuclearization, some of his last to appear in Dawn, are not discussed, though "India's obsession, our choice," in which he pleaded that trying to match India's nuclear capability is not deterrence but suicide, cannot be read enough. Ditto for the eloquent "A Kashmiri solution for Kashmir", the articles toward the end on Islam and politics, and the very moving piece on Akhtar Hameed Khan.
A minor concern: The book is divided into four sections; articles within each are not organized chronologically. Fair enough, but how are they organized? Except for the fourth, the headings are too vague to provide a thematic link, and although occasionally articles do run smoothly in series, some juxtapositions appear perfunctory. An example is "Reason as spectator", about a stampede that erupted at a conference. Why did it follow the articles on the nuclear tests? It would have made more sense in the last section, with the others on the religious right.
A deeper doubt is the inclusion of excerpts from three talks delivered on Mohammad Ali Jinnah, at the launch of the Jinnah Papers in 1995, in the presence of President Farooq Leghari. In the introduction, the editors explain that the purpose of the publication of the Jinnah Papers was to begin a national debate on Pakistan's history. They quote Ahmad as saying: "I do not know of any country's educational system that so explicitly subordinates knowledge to politics." But the excerpts do not begin to fill those gaps in knowledge. Moreover, the change in Ahmad's tone was stark: "Jinnah led (Pakistanis) with unassailable integrity along a path that promised economic justice, liberation from a constricting past, and an enlightened future. They followed with enthusiasm and dedication, without fear or misgiving". Nowhere did he himself tackle pressing questions, such as: what "constricting past" was Jinnah "liberating" Muslims from? And what about those Muslims who chose not to migrate, or came with a great deal of fear and misgiving? If he did write on such topics, the articles were unfortunately excluded from the book, though Ahmad believed (as he stated in another article) that "opposition is to democracy what oxygen is to life".
But the rest of the book is a searing, poignant gift, and the publisher and editors cannot be thanked enough for providing it. Eqbal Ahmad's last words in "South Asia in crisis" should be on bumper stickers: "In order for Pakistan to prosper in freedom and dignity we must withdraw the power presently vested in the army and bureaucracy and restructure both institutions... I hope (we will be compelled) to creativity and innovation rather than to put on more military fat and to harden the authoritarian arteries of the bureaucracy."
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Eqbal Ahmad-Between Past & Future: Selected Essays on South Asia
Edited by Dohra Ahmad, Iftikhar Ahmad and Zia Mian
Oxford University Press, Plot # 38, Sector 15, Korangi Industrial Area, Karachi
Tel: 111-693-673
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: www.oup.com.pk



______



[7]

The Centre for Studies on Indian Muslims, Hamdard University, invites you to attend a talk on

'Perpetuating Culture and the Production of Self:
A Sociological Understanding of 'Alig' Identity'
(Reflections on What it Means to be a Student of the Aligarh Muslim University)

By
S. M. Faizan Ahmed

S. M. Faizan Ahmed received a Bachelor's degree in Sociology from the Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, and did his post-graduation from the Dept. of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, Delhi. Apart from his independent research, he has also been involved with several research institutions in Delhi. He has worked on Partition, Masculinities, Labour issues, the Students' movement and Muslim Politics. He is currently engaged in writing a monograph entitled "Making Democarcy Meaningful: Towards a New Brand of Muslim Politics".

Date: 21st October, 2004 (Thursday)
Time: 2:45 pm
Venue: Board Room (Near VC's office), Main Administrative Building,Hamdard University, New Delhi (Near Batra Hospital)




_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

Buzz on the perils of fundamentalist politics, on matters of peace and democratisation in South Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit citizens wire service run since 1998 by South Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
SACW archive is available at: bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/


Sister initiatives :
South Asia Counter Information Project :  snipurl.com/sacip
South Asians Against Nukes: www.s-asians-against-nukes.org
Communalism Watch: communalism.blogspot.com/

DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.

_______________________________________________
Sacw mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://insaf.net/mailman/listinfo/sacw_insaf.net

Reply via email to