South Asia Citizens Wire | 19 October, 2004 via: www.sacw.net
[1] Sri Lanka: Broadening The Discourse On Peace and Security (Asoka Bandarage)
[2] India: Doctor Love, Doctored Hate (Aman Khanna)
[3] India: Congress Win in Maharashtra Seen as Triumph for Secularism (Ranjit Devraj)
[4] Indian History Congress to counter 'saffronised history' (Pranava K Chaudhary)
[5] India: Appeal for Gujarat Student
[6] Upcoming events :
i) Communalism and violence - Sikh massacres, 20 years on (New Delhi, October 19)
ii) Lift ban on Gujarat film: Press Conference cum Protest Meet (Bombay, October 20)
iii) Seminar on 'Women's Movement for the 21 st Century' (New Delhi, October 21)
iv) A lecture and discussion entitled "In the Wake of the Gujarat Pogrom: Reflections on Contemporary India" with Harsh Mander (Los Angeles, November 13, 2004)
--------------
[1]
SRI LANKA: BROADENING THE DISCOURSE ON PEACE AND SECURITY by Prof. Asoka Bandarage
(Text of a Talk presented at a session sponsored by The Society for International Development, Washington Chapter on September 23, 2004. The talk was attended by many policymakers and practitioners from the diplomatic, academic, NGO and state sectors in Washington D.C.)
[Full text of the above paper (39k) is now available via SACW to all interested. Should you require a copy send an e-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
______
[2]
Tehelka, October 23, 2004
DOCTOR LOVE, DOCTORED HATE
A Hindu girl eloped and married her Muslim neighbour in a poor Delhi colony. Muslim families have fled after the Shiv Sena and RSS threatened retaliation. The police offer no protection, reports Aman Khanna
[Photo and Caption:] condemned in love: Neetu Verma
All the houses look the same in Sonia Vihar in east Delhi: bare, uneven brick structures held together more by fate than by cement. Well, almost all. Huge padlocks hang limply on some of the hollowed wooden doors. The dwellers have abandoned their homes of many years. Their prized, cheap belongings - a charpoy, a trunk hither or thither, a few utensils - can still be seen through the cracks in the walls. The overgrowth outside is steadily thickening.
The abandoned houses belong to Muslims in Sonia Vihar. Most of them have been forced out of the colony. Thrown out because a young boy from their community dared to elope with a Hindu girl. "They were all involved. It is for the best they have fled," says the local Shiv Sena leader, Anand Trivedi.
Last month, Neetu Verma ran away and married 28-year-old Mohammed Abid. The two families were living cheek by jowl on the second floor of a rented house. On the morning of September 20, 2004, Neetu's parents found her missing; so was the boy next door.
Her parents claim Neetu is still a minor, of the age of 14. "Our eldest daughter is barely 19. Neetu is our third child. How can we allow her to marry?" says Sushil Kaur, Neetu's mother.
That was enough for the Shiv Sena and the rss to get into action. Trivedi held meetings everyday in the local landlord's phone booth, calling all the Muslims - threatening them. His party workers marched around the neighbourhood, sloganeering. Trivedi himself boasts, "I declared in front of the sho (station house officer of the local police station), if our girl does not come back in seven days, I will set all your (Muslim) houses on fire, with you in them."
"In all of two days I had the investigating officer changed. Earlier, a Kapil Ahmed was in charge. You tell me, how can one let a Muslim handle such a case?" he continues.
Within a day of the two going missing, Abid's mother was hauled to the local police station for questioning. Followed by other members of the family. At the same time, a first investigation report (fir) was filed against Abid.
"Muslims are running a huge conversion campaign. If you turn a girl Muslim, you turn the future generations Muslim. They give a grant of Rs 40,000 to each boy who whisks away a Hindu girl. They even offer legal help and a safe haven"
- Anand Trivedi
Slowly, with each passing day, Muslims started fleeing the neighbourhood. First went the boy's family; then those who were loosely related to Abid. Then came the turn of those who hail from the same district. And now everyone is seeking safer ground.
A Muslim labourer, who lives close to Neetu's house, pleads, "They told us 'either bring the girl back or you will have to pay for it'." "I am a heart-patient, I have diabetes," the old man says, showing the rashes on his arms and legs, "How can I stand up to their threats? My sons come back late in the night; Allah knows when they will be stabbed. The police said, 'you can die today for all we care.' I am thinking of selling my house and leaving."
Sonia Vihar is an unauthorised colony, spread over about 4 sq km, on Delhi's border with Uttar Pradesh. The roads here have given way to sludge and knee-deep potholes. Most of the residents are poor labourers, who travel more than 20 km everyday to Chandni Chowk in Old Delhi to find work. And only 15-20 percent are Muslims.
In such circumstances, it is easy for the Shiv Sena and Trivedi to throw their weight around. The right-wing Hindu group's signboards can be seen at various points from the approach road. The chief, Trivedi, is a small-built man who visibly takes delight in being the troublemaker. "I have handled 15 such cases in the past. Just yesterday, another case of a Muslim boy eloping with a Hindu girl came to me. Though, there the girl is no more a minor, we cannot let Muslims' conversion plan go through."
In Sonia Vihar, he has been spreading rumours about the Muslim community: "they want to open a madrasa in the area; and then convert everyone� After they left, we have come to know one of them was a criminal."
He says Neetu's eloping with Abid is a part of a deeper conspiracy. "Muslims are running a huge conversion campaign. If you turn a girl Muslim, you turn the future generations Muslim. They give a grant of Rs 40,000 to each boy who whisks away a Hindu girl. They even offer legal help and a safe haven," says Trivedi.
All Hindus in Sonia Vihar have started believing this absurd theory. Sunder Singh Kanwar, a general store owner, says, "They put Neetu in a trance� It was all planned. How else can all the families disappear so soon?"
The fir filed by Neetu's parents came up for hearing in the nearby Karkardooma court. On the day of the first hearing, Trivedi dropped by with about 80 goons. "We tore off Neetu's burqa right there in the court," brags Trivedi, "And had it not been for police intervention, we would have brought her back forcibly."
In the two hearings held yet, Neetu has declined to return to her parents' house. The judge has ordered a bone ossification test to determine her age. She, for now, has been sent to Nari Niketan by the judge. Yet, her parents and other members of the community are not convinced. "She is young; she doesn't know what is wrong and right," says her father, Kishan Kumar, and then, sounding like Trivedi, goes on to abuse the entire Muslim community.
Hafizur Rehman, a learned Muslim living in the area, says, "I was scared for days. I am still scared. I tell my sons everyday to walk with their heads down, not because of the fear, but because it is practical. We are less in number and we are vulnerable."
"In fact, there is an old saying in Urdu," Rehman concludes:
Kisne loota hai, Kisne mara hai, Halaat bataate hain, Rehbar ka ishaara hai.
(Who ruined you, Who stabbed you, The order tells all, The leader directs it.)
______
[3]
Inter Press Service, October 18, 2004 INDIA: Congress Win in Maharashtra Seen as Triumph for Secularism
Analysis - By Ranjit Devraj
NEW DELHI, Oct 18 (IPS) - The resounding electoral victory of Congress and its secular allies in the provincial elections in western Maharashtra state is being seen as an endorsement of the party's brand of politics that champions the poor - one that saw it return to national power in May after an eight-year hiatus.
It also provides confirmation that India's electorate is fed up of the communal politics of the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which was unseated from power in a shock electoral defeat - first in the May general elections and now in Maharashtra, the country's industrially most advanced state.
The Congress and its main ally the National Congress Party (NCP) and other groups that together put up a secular front secured 141 seats in the 288-member Maharashtra assembly while the BJP and its close ally, Shiv Sena (Shiva's Army), mustered just a total of 117.
''Over the last two years there has been a groundswell of opinion against the kind of politics being played out in Gujarat (state adjoining Maharashtra),'' said Shabnam Hashmi, a well-known human rights activist and leader of the ANHAD (Open Platform), in an interview with IPS on Monday.
Joining hands with some 50 other groups ANHAD campaigned aggressively across Maharashtra distributing leaflets and urging people to vote for secular parties. They also wanted them to reject the BJP and Shiv Sena.
''The response we got was tremendous with people saying that they did not want communal politics to spread from Gujarat into Maharashtra,'' said Hashmi.
Among the star campaigners for the BJP in Maharashtra was Gujarat's Chief Minister Narendra Modi who has been indicted by well-known rights groups for overseeing the anti-Muslim pogrom that raged for several months through his state in 2002 leaving more than 2,000 people dead.
The shock defeat of the BJP and its right-wing allies in the May general elections was widely attributed to the failure of its top leadership, led by then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, to effectively intervene in the violence and discipline Modi.
The BJP's demise from power politics was also attributed to the pro-rich policies of the Vajpayee government that tried to sell the idea of a ''Shining India'' campaign, which not only failed to capture the imagination of the country's poverty-stricken masses but also enraged them.
Far from learning lessons from the debacle, the BJP set about trying to win the elections in Maharashtra by trying to rake up pro-Hindu sentiments over imagined insults to the memory of Veer Savarkar.
Savarkar took part in India's anti-colonial struggle against British rule but wanted the country to become a Hindu state.
But the Congress and its allies retaliated, and it seems successfully, by airing serious allegations that Savarkar was part of the conspiracy to murder Mahatma Gandhi. They also blamed him for the historical events that led to the creation of Pakistan from a larger India in 1947.
''We are disappointed with the results of the Maharashtra elections - we had hoped for a victory in that state,'' said BJP's national president Venkiah Naidu conceding defeat at a press conference on Monday.
Naidu also announced his resignation and the handing over of the reins of the party to Lal Krishna Advani best known for riding motorised chariots across the country and whipping up a pro-Hindu fervor that resulted in the 1992 demolition of the 17th century Babri Masjid mosque in Ayodhya in northern Uttar Pradesh state.
The demolition of the Babri Masjid led to communal riots across the country between India's Hindu majority and Muslims who form 14 percent of the country's billion plus population.
Most affected by the new polarisation was the state of Maharashtra and its bustling capital of Mumbai on the Arabian sea, known for its cosmopolitan outlook and its prosperous Muslim merchants and businessmen.
Mumbai is also known for its textile mills - dating back to the British colonial era - which closed down as a result of economic restructuring. These mills are now being rapidly converted into shopping malls and business centers catering to the newly rich elites, while unemployed textile workers are left to build shacks outside their high walls in the hope of receiving compensation.
Earlier this year, in January, Mumbai played host to the World Social Forum (WSF) -- the first time it was held outside its original home of Porto Allegre in Brazil - where the problems of globalisation and the widening disparity of income between the rich and poor were aired and discussed.
On taking office in May, India's new Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, a former World Bank economist promised that while he would stick with India's commitment to globalisation, he would ensure that it has a human face to it - a key demand made by activists at the Mumbai WSF.
The Congress Party's return to power in New Delhi was the result of a new partnership it built with India's communist parties with the express purpose of defeating the BJP and its pro-Hindu politics. The partnership has worked well once again in Maharashtra.
''There is no doubt that the Congress alliance's triumph in the 14th general election and the consequent adoption of the National Common Minimum Programme sent out a positive message to voters in Maharashtra,'' commented the respected 'Hindu' newspaper in an editorial on Monday.
The 'Hindu' attributed the win in Maharashtra to the fact that Congress Party leader Sonia Gandhi personally campaigned in the elections and concentrated on livelihood issues.
''The huge crowds at Mrs. Gandhi's rallies (in Maharashtra) suggested that she had become something of a cult figure following her rejection of the prime minister's post,'' the 'Hindu' editorial said referring to her unexpected renunciation of the top job after leading her party to its historic victory in May.
Said Hashmi: ''Everywhere we went in Maharashtra we found people longing for a return to the secular and egalitarian ideals on which this country was founded and the best expression of that is visible in the way they voted.'' (END/2004)
______
[4]
The Times of India
IHC to counter 'saffronised history' PRANAVA K CHAUDHARY
TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2004 02:38:01 PM ]
PATNA: Indian History Congress (IHC), a professional body of "progressive" historians, will now motivate its members, numbering more than 7,000 (mostly college teachers) to use "scientific tools" in history classrooms with an aim to counter the growing impact of "saffronised history".
The IHC will mainly focus on history teachers belonging to colleges in Hindi heartland located in states like Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Delhi.
IHC, in its 65th annual session to be held at Bareilly (UP) later this year, has for the first time decided to organise panel discussions on broad four aspects of the Indian history. Each panel discussion will be anchored by a panel of renowned historians like Irfan Habib and Bipan Chandra.
Topics of panel discussions will be on education in Indian history, state in Indian history, Persian text and medieval Indian history and Buddhism and early Indian history. Each panel discussion will be sponsored by agencies like Union HRD ministry, Aligarh Historians' Society (Aligarh) and Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Public Library and Nav Nalanda Mahavihara (both in Bihar).
Besides, IHC members, mainly belonging to rural areas, will also be encouraged to send their research papers in Hindi medium so that it can be taken up at the annual session. Till recently, history scholars were only allowed to read their paper in English language only.
"This time we expect as many as 150 research papers from Bihar in the forthcoming IHC session at Bareilly," said IHC secretary Vijay K Thakur. According to a rough estimate, Bihar and UP still send one of the largest contingents of history teachers to the IHC session every year.
"Our main focus will be to propagate the "scientific technique and method" of teaching Indian history in various colleges in the country. IHC is the best platform in the country," Thakur told ToI on Thursday.
IHC session at Bareilly is likely to adopt some of the important resolutions related to the propagation of the scientific method in the teaching of Indian history in schools and colleges. Noted historian Sabyasachi Bhattacharya will be the general president of the IHC session at Bareilly.
______
[5]
APPEAL FOR GUJARAT STUDENT
I am sending this appeal on behalf of Patel Juned Mohammad Hanif Abdulmajit of Usmania Nagar, Lunawada, Panchmahals, Gujarat. Juned has just received admission into the Government Engineering College, Gandhinagar, and needs help with tuition and living expenses.
During the Gujarat genocide of 2002, his father, who ran a small grocery shop, was severely injured. Later, while being taken to the hospital, he was lynched by a mob in the presence of the police. The shop was also completely burnt by the rioters. Juned�s family consists of fourteen people, without any earning member. He is the eldest. Despite the tragic death of his father, the family�s pitiable financial condition and the hostile state environment, Juned managed to get 71% in his secondary school examination, and admission into engineering college. The monthly living expenses are estimated at Rs. 2400 p.m. for four years, or Rs. 28,800 per year, and a total of Rs. 115,200 for the whole course.
Please contribute in whatever way you can. The cheques should be made out to: 'Anhad', 4 Windor Place, New Delhi 110001. The cheques should be made out in the name of �Anhad�, but marked on the back: 'for Juned scholarship'.
Thank you. Nandini Sundar, Associate Professor Centre for Law and Governance, JNU
______
[6] Upcoming Events:
(i)
Meeting on Tuesday, October 19, 2004 at Indian Social Institute, Lodhi Institutional Area, New Delhi at 5.00PM to discuss and decide on a common course of action to mark the occasion. ******************************************************* Dear friends,
As you are all keenly aware, November 1, 2004 marks 20 years of the terrible holocaust against the people of the Sikh faith.
In these last twenty years, the Indian people have been the victims of repeated acts of communal massacres � be it Maliana and Bhiwandi, the communal massacres that followed the demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992, or the Gujarat genocide of 2002.
We must not forget that India was partitioned in August 1947 preceded and followed by the biggest communal holocaust in the history of humankind. The states that were created after Britain left India in 1947 are all inheritors of the British colonial Indian state and the political parties that rule these countries are products of the colonial Indian state.
In all acts of communal genocide, in November 1984 as well as Gujarat, the demolition of the Babri Masjid and the massacres that followed it, the central role of the Indian state in the organising of these massacres has been established beyond a shadow of doubt.
It has also been noted that the communalisation of the polity and the organising of communal genocide has served those in power in disrupting the unity of the toilers and tillers and paralysing them in the face of the offensive of the ruling class. The communal holocaust of 1947 and the partition of the country was the biggest attack on the struggle of the Indian peoples for independence accompanied by social transformations. The 1984 holocaust against Sikhs served to launch the anti-working class modernisation program of the Indian ruling class. The demolition of the Babri Masjid accompanied the First Generation Reforms of the Narasimha Rao Government. The Gujarat genocide was accompanied by the Second Generation Reforms of the Vajpayee government. With the powers that be committed to continuing on the anti-worker, anti-peasant and anti-national course of globalisation, liberalisation and privatisation, it can only be expected that the Indian state will organise even more dastardly massacres of the toiling and oppressed people in future.
Therefore, when we mark the 20th anniversary of the terrible holocaust against people of the Sikh faith, we at the same time will need to address the following issues.
� When the history of India since colonial times till today is one of the state deliberately dividing the polity along communal lines and organising communal massacres to crush the toiling peoples, is it not treachery on the part of those forces who portray the Indian state and the Indian ruling class as �secular�, blame the toilers and tillers for being communal, and spread the notion that only the BJP is communal and keeping the BJP out of power will ensure protection for people from communal violence?
� What needs to be done to make the toilers and tillers of India conscious that the bourgeoisie wields the weapon of communalism and communal violence to attack their struggle against the anti-social offensive?
� How can the toilers and tillers of India ensure that communalism and state organised communal violence will be put to an end once and for all in India?
We invite you to a meeting on Tuesday, October 19, 2004 at Indian Social Institute, Lodhi Institutional Area, New Delhi at 5.00PM to discuss and decide on a common course of action to mark the occasion.
Kindly confirm your participation at the following numbers/e-mail: PK Shahi, AIFTU - 27490084 Narinder, IPF - 25269471 Bijju Nayak, Hind Naujawan Ekta Sabha - [EMAIL PROTECTED] Suchrita, LRS - 26389610, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(ii)
PEOPLE'S MEDIA INITIATIVE
B-104, ACCORD APTS., LOKHANDWALA II CROSS LANE, ANDHERI (W), MUMBAI - 400 053. TEL: 022 26369677. Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Press Conference cum Protest Meet
Sub: Press Conference cum Film Makers and various Cultural/ Social organisations of Mumbai has organised Protest Meet on Wednesday 20th October, 2004 at 6: 30p.m. at Press Club, Near Azad Maidan, V.T., Mumbai to demand lifting ban on "Chords on the Ritcher Scale", a 45 minutes documentary on Kutch Earthquake 2001. The Film was banned during NDA Government rule and when Anupam Kher was Chairperson of Censor Board.
Dear Sir/Madam,
Big stalwarts are rallying around ousted Censor Board chief Anupam Kher but no film personality including Anupam Kher spoke a single word about Gujarat communal massacre or regretted the decision of the Censor Board to ban films like "Aakrosh" and "Final Solution" on Gujarat riots, "Aakrosh" was cleared after a long battle with NDA Government only to be cleared by Mumbai High Court and Anupam Kher cleared "Final Solution" only after change in Central Government to save his chair. During his period, "Chords on the Ritcher Scale" directed by Shyam Ranjankar produced by Vision Graphers and People's Media Intiative, a 45 minute gripping documentary made with 2 years of hard work on post earthquake situation in Kutch Gujarat, 2001. The Film speaks about discrimination against Dalits, minorities and underprivileged section of the society during relief and rehabilitation and the role played by communal organisation during the period. Examining Committee of Censor Board banned the Film in June 2003 and the ban was uphold by Revising Committee because it makes passing reference to RSS and VHP and Anupam Kher who is a non RSS person, secular and democrat, did nothing about it. He was just not available to meet us also.
We are made to believe that all bigwigs from Film Industry , those who joined BJP and became MP's are really secular and Democrat and ignorant about Gujarat riots and activities of VHP-RSS, which are close to BJP.
We are meeting to condemn Censor Board and previous NDA Government for banning the Films like "Chords on the Ritcher Scale", "Final Solution", "Aakrosh" and to urge present Government clear this Film and stop political censorship and also to release a Film made by Prakash Jha for Doordarshan on Jai Prakash Narayan. Press Conference will be held on Wednesday 20th October 2004, at 6:30p.m. at Press Club, Near Azad Maidan, V.T. Station, Mumbai.
Press Release By, Ramesh Pimple, Jatin Desai & Shyam Ranjanka For People's Media Initiative.
(iii)
Seminar on 'Women's Movement for the 21 st Century'
Greetings !
Each year, Stree Adhikar Sangathan ( WRO- Women's Rights Organisation) organizes an intensive three-day workshop for its members to encourage collective thinking, learn from experiences, improve theoretical understanding, review activities and plan for the future. Apart from those who are involved with WRO throughout the year, we benefit tremendously from knowledge and experiences of our friends who help us in this workshop as resource persons. Earlier WRO workshops have been held in Allahabad (2000), Delhi (2001), Lucknow (2002) and Varanasi (2003).
As part of this workshop, we also organize a one day public event on an issue of current relevance. Topics of earlier public events were on Women on the Threshold of Transition ( 2000), Women in the Context of Indian Culture and Civilization ( 2001), Our Culture and Communalism (2002) and Women and Communalism (2003).
This year we plan to hold the public event on the first day of the workshop itself i.e. on October 21st, 2004 to discuss and debate on Women's Movement for the 21 st Century. Few leading scholar-activists of the women's movement have agreed to join us for the deliberations and share with us their concerns. Prof.Uma Chakravory, Dr Saroop Dhruv, Prof Zoya Hasan, Dr. Nivedita Menon and Dr Mary John have already confirmed their participation.
We will be happy if you can join us for the seminar which would be held at 1 p.m. on 21 st October 2004 at Mobile Creches office ( Behind Shivaji Stadium- Sector 4, DIZ area, Raja bazaar, New Delhi 110001, Ph. 23347635)
Waiting to hear from you Stree Adhikar Sangathan ( Contact : 011-27872835 / 9891170909/ 0532 -2552324)
(iv)
"In the Wake of the Gujarat Pogrom: Reflections on Contemporary India" Saturday, November 13, 2004 1:30 - 4:30PM University Hall, Room 1000 Loyola Marymount University 1 LMU Drive, Los Angeles, California 90045
An afternoon with Harsh Mander of ANHAD
Harsh Mander was serving in Gujarat as a senior Indian Civil Service Official during the Gujarat Riots of 2002. He had a close view of the way in which senior civil service officers, police and even medical officers were co-opted by or contrived with the political regime. He resigned in protest and went public with his criticism. He has written extensively on Gujarat including a collection of essays entitled "Cry, My Beloved Country: Reflections on the Gujarat Carnage" and the book "Unheard Voices: Stories of Forgotten Lives."
Harsh has worked with victims of the 1984 Sikh massacres, with the Dalits of Delhi, the displaced of the Narmada Dam and rickshaw pullers, tribals and sex workers of India. He is currently associated with ANHAD (Act Now for Harmony and Democracy for justice) an NGO working with the marginalized and dispossessed. He was given the M.A. Thomas National Human Rights Award in 2002.
During the program, excerpts from Rakesh Sharma's acclaimed film on Gujarat, 'Final Solution' (2004) will be shown and Harsh will discuss the events of Gujarat 2002, state of Indian minorities, National & State elections and the recently published Census, etc. A question and answer session to follow.
Sponsors: South Asia Forum, South Asian Network & Coalition for an Egalitarian & Pluralistic India. A donation of $5 is requested but no one will be turned away for lack of funds.
Directions:
From Valley/Downtown: Take San Diego (405) FWY south. Exit on Jefferson Blvd (W) and turn right; Left on Lincoln and left on LMU Dr.
From Orange County: Take San Diego (405) FWY North to 105 FWY West. Exit on Sepulveda Blvd (Airport Exit) and go about 2 miles merge left on Lincoln Blvd and turn right on LMU Dr. towards the beach.
University Hall will be the first Bldg on the right, enter the underground parking structure from the second entrance and take the elevator to Room 1000. Plenty of free covered parking available.
For more information please contact: Robin Khundkar (714) 895-5048; Asha Shahed 310-377-8472; John Ishvardas-Abdallah (310) 748-9369; Asad Zaidi (714) 313-2703.
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
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
