South Asia Citizens Wire - 7 Feb 2017 - No. 2926 
[via South Asia Citizens Web - sacw.net since 1996]

Contents:
1. Bangladesh’s Creeping Islamism | K. Anis Ahmed
2. Pakistan: Karamat Ali with Kamran Khan on Buldia Factory Issue on Dunya TV - 
excerpt from TV newsreport
3. Pakistan: Boltay Kyun Nahi Meray Haq Mein [Why dont you speak in my defence 
?] | EACPE Video Contest 2016 (1st Prize Winner)
4. India - UP assembly Elections 2017: An Appeal to Voters of UP to Protect 
Democracy and Defeat the BJP
5. India: Restore the Rule of Law in Bastar - An appeal from lawyers, artists, 
writers, journalists and concerned citizens
6. Praful Bidwai Memorial Award, 2017 - Call for Nominations
7. USA: Letter to the Organizers of the Women’s March - Why Use The Headscarf 
(Veil) As A Symbol For Islam? | Manea Elham 
8. Recent On Communalism Watch:
 - 
::: URLs & FULL TEXT :::
9. The declining left - Bangladesh expects more | Mir Aftabuddin Ahmed
10. Pakistan: Boys vs girls - the problem with separate canteens and entryways 
| Imran Gabol & Shiza Malik
11. Bangladesh is committing suicide by shifting from secularism to 
Islamisation | Shantanu Mukharji
12. Pakistan: Outsourcing justice - Editorial, Dawn
13: India - Pakistan: Ground rules for true referendum | Jawed Naqvi
14. India: Bengal government must address concerns on power plant, not send in 
police | Bolan Gangopadhyay 
15. Ceaușescu’s orphans: what a regressive abortion law does to a country | by 
Sharon Maxwell Magnus
16. Ten Bullets to One, Twenty to Another | Thomas Meaney
17. Tajikistan plans world’s biggest dam - Moscow’s lever in Central Asia | 
Regis Gente
18. Blaker on Harris, 'Vietnam's High Ground: Armed Struggle for the Central 
Highlands, 1954-1965'

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1. BANGLADESH’S CREEPING ISLAMISM | K. Anis Ahmed
========================================
The battle for a secular Bangladesh is both political and cultural. 
Bangladeshis continually evaluate what they will or will not accept in the name 
of Islam. In universities, as many women seem to wear jeans as hijabs. Young 
people openly celebrate Valentine’s Day. But there has been a significant shift 
over the past few decades.
http://sacw.net/article13099.html

========================================
2. PAKISTAN: KARAMAT ALI WITH KAMRAN KHAN ON BULDIA FACTORY ISSUE ON DUNYA TV - 
excerpt from TV newsreport
========================================
Television News report in Urdu regarding Baldia Fire in Karachi and the 
compensation by a German company. Karamat Ali speaking to TV journalist from 
Dunya TV in Pakistan
http://sacw.net/article13096.html

========================================
3. PAKISTAN: BOLTAY KYUN NAHI MERAY HAQ MEIN [WHY DONT YOU SPEAK IN MY DEFENCE 
?] | EACPE Video Contest 2016 (1st Prize Winner)
========================================
A short film in Urdu by Media 6. 1st Prize Winner in the EACPE Video Contest
http://sacw.net/article13102.html

========================================
4. INDIA - UP ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS 2017: AN APPEAL TO VOTERS OF UP TO PROTECT 
DEMOCRACY AND DEFEAT THE BJP
========================================
Voters of Uttar Pradesh will be electing their next state government in 
February 2017. UP is the largest state in the country. The political choices of 
its citizens determine not only the shape of state politics, but national 
politics as well. This time much more is at stake than usual. The voters of UP 
will not only elect their state government but will play a role in determining 
the fate of democracy in India. This puts a special responsibility on them to 
cast their votes with extreme care and wisdom.
http://sacw.net/article13097.html

========================================
5. India: Restore the Rule of Law in Bastar - An appeal from lawyers, artists, 
writers, journalists and concerned citizens
========================================
A galaxy of eminent lawyers, scholars, writers, artists, editors, journalists 
and other concerned citizens have signed a strong appeal today, calling for the 
restoration of the rule of law in Bastar.
http://sacw.net/article13094.html

========================================
6. PRAFUL BIDWAI MEMORIAL AWARD, 2017 - CALL FOR NOMINATIONS
========================================
Praful Bidwai Memorial Award, 2017 carries a cash prize of Rs 1 lakh - Do send 
in names and contact details of the nominee/nominees you propose. The last date 
for receiving this information will be March 31, 2017
http://sacw.net/article13093.html

========================================
7. USA: LETTER TO THE ORGANIZERS OF THE WOMEN’S MARCH - WHY USE THE HEADSCARF 
(VEIL) AS A SYMBOL FOR ISLAM? | Manea Elham
========================================
http://sacw.net/article13098.html

========================================
8. RECENT ON COMMUNALISM WATCH:
======================================== 
 - 
 -> available via: http://communalism.blogspot.com/
 
::: URLs & FULL TEXT :::

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9. THE DECLINING LEFT - BANGLADESH EXPECTS MORE | Mir Aftabuddin Ahmed
========================================
(The Daily Star - February 06, 2017)

Suranjit Sengupta had been a stalwart of the Awami League for the last four 
decades or so. An articulate parliamentarian and a vociferous 
constitutionalist, Mr. Sengupta had been a robust voice in favour of socialist 
principles. Marred by a corruption scandal in 2012 which tainted an otherwise 
glittering political career, the former Railways Minister represented the 
progressive left-wing faction of the Awami League. With his demise, we are yet 
again reminded of the potentiality of this unique brand of politics. At the 
same time, we silently and sadly observe the severe ideological and partisan 
incoherence of those in the left end of the political spectrum. 

Throughout the history of Bangladesh's political journey, left-wing principles 
have been a subsidiary attachment to the mainstream national story. During the 
1960s, the Red Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani led East-Pakistan's struggle 
against Ayyub Khan's military authoritarianism. Although, some may rightly 
argue that Bhashani lit the fire which spurred notions of Bengali nationalism, 
it was the charismatic Sheikh Mujibur Rahman who wielded the baton of hope for 
East Pakistanis. During the 1971 Liberation War, the Awami League led the 
political struggle for freedom, while left-leaning student leaders of the Dhaka 
University Students' Union (DSSU), such as ASM Abdur Rab, Shahjahan Siraj and 
Nur-e-Alam Siddique, organised armed resistance against the Pakistani forces. 
It may be notable to state that the leaders of the DSSU played a critical role 
in enhancing the notion of Bangladeshi independence. Bhashani was still a 
prominent actor, and gave his blessings to Bangabandhu to lead Bangladesh to 
freedom. Sheikh Mujib, whose philosophy and policies could be best described as 
that of a left-leaning centrist, enshrined the values of secularism and 
socialism in Bangladesh's post-liberation Constitution. This was in no 
uncertain terms, the greatest achievement for the political left in Bangladesh. 

Yet it is safe to say that the left never truly governed or led Bangladesh from 
the frontlines. Additionally, leftist principles fail to catch the imagination 
of the public in a way that it has in other parts of the world. Nevertheless, 
the left continues to have an enduring effect in our everyday politics. 
Firebrand leaders such as Rashed Khan Menon and Hasanul Haq Inu serve in PM 
Sheikh Hasina's Cabinet. Matia Chowdhury, the fiery protégé of Maulana 
Bhashani, is one of Sheikh Hasina's closest advisers. 

The shift of leftist politicians towards mainstream political forces is not a 
new phenomenon. Former Prime Minister Kazi Zafar Ahmed, a proponent of 
Bhashani's Islamic socialism, had justified his participation in both the Ziaur 
Rahman and HM Ershad governments as being part of his intention to bring 
progressive change from within the established system. A similar reasoning has 
been used by the likes of Menon and Inu when asked about their philosophical 
u-turn. Perhaps they are right. Or perhaps their actions represent the duopoly 
of our two largest parties. Without relying on the Awami League or the BNP, it 
is simply impossible to stand at the topmost stratum of political governance. 
And this fact entails that left-leaning progressives of the likes of Mirza 
Fakhrul Islam Alamgir and Nuh-ul-Alam Lenin, have joined political 
organisations whose philosophies might very well be different from those they 
share. 

However, there is another side to the leftist story. The troubles of 
Bangladesh's two-party system have been brought forth by those left-leaning 
politicians who believe in bringing progress through activism. They have been 
dubbed unambitious, irrelevant and ineffective. The media gives them minimal 
attention. They rarely get electoral support. But the small group of prominent 
outsiders deserve respect from the public. The Communist Party of Bangladesh 
(CPB) is a decaying organisation. Yet it is headed by the widely respected 
Mujahidul Islam Selim who continues to be a voice of reason and 
anti-establishment politics. The CPB and other small leftist parties played a 
supporting role in ousting General Ershad and restoring parliamentary democracy 
in Bangladesh in 1991. They have been vocal in their intention to protect 
labour rights and ensure environmental protection in the last two decades. Due 
to their small support base, their voice has never truly been heard by the mass 
public. In more recent times, the young Zonayed Saki put his name forward in an 
unsuccessful attempt at the Dhaka mayoral race. Yet Saki gives us hope. He 
provides us with an unconventional alternative. The left provides us with much 
needed competition in the political process. Suffice it to say however, as an 
amalgamated entity, the political left is in a precariously difficult position 
in modern Bangladesh.

Power lures even the best away from their ideologies. It seems many 
left-leaning leaders have succumbed to this phenomenon. They may be right, 
however. One may question the practicality of sitting outside and doing nothing 
about a system which is not right. However, it is this very difference in 
structural opinions which is proving detrimental to the left. Factionalism, 
intra-party feuds and a lack of ideological consistency have created a scenario 
where it is impossible for them to be a united entity. Left-wing politics is 
different from centrist or right-wing politics. 

In countries where socialist norms have succeeded, in almost all cases the left 
has stood up as a united face. Countries like Sweden, Norway and Denmark are 
classic examples. In Bangladesh, we have the exact opposite. Not only is the 
left divided on all sides, there is no interest amongst politicians sharing the 
ideology to unite. The two main political parties have capitalised on this, 
resulting in a growing third force from maturing. This is indeed sad for 
Bangladesh.

In an ideal scenario, Suranjit Sengupta would probably have been happy to 
depart this world seeing a strong leftist political grounding in Bangladesh. 
Unfortunately, that is not the case. The evolution of the self-proclaimed 
Democratic Socialist and former presidential candidate Bernie Sanders in the 
USA is a refreshing sign for even those who do not necessarily share the views 
of the political left. The public of Bangladesh continue to put their weight 
behind the two main parties, yet they would welcome the growth of a strong, 
powerful and united alternative brand of politics. 

Bangladesh is inherently secular, but the country also prides its Muslim 
heritage. It is an exclusive blend which requires an exclusive approach from 
political actors. As such, the basic principles of left-wing politics such as 
social justice, national welfare and equality are ideas, which should in 
theory, captivate the public mindset. Only if the left can strive forward as a 
single force and not capitulate to the constraints of our two-party system, 
only then would leftist norms truly be relatable to the common man. 

Bangladesh is stuck in a frenzy of the two main political parties. Although, 
these two parties deserve credit for playing a great political game, the 
failures of the left have only assisted in creating such a system. Now more 
than ever, the political left needs to adapt to 21st century Bangladesh, and 
take their rightful place in the highest echelon of the country's political 
system. 

The writer is an undergraduate student of Economics and International 
Relations, University of Toronto. 

========================================
10. PAKISTAN: BOYS VS GIRLS: THE PROBLEM WITH SEPARATE CANTEENS AND ENTRYWAYS
by Imran Gabol & Shiza Malik
========================================
(DAWN - Jan 28, 2017)

LAHORE/ISLAMABAD: With girls huddled at the back and boys at the front, a 
chemistry lab class is in full swing at Lahore’s historic Punjab University 
(PU) — ranked second in Pakistan. For Urooj, this kind of segregation is quite 
common. “As long as we can hear the lab attendant’s voice, we have to stand at 
the back of the class,” she says while talking to Dawn.com.

The kind of gender segregation she is referring to extends well beyond the 
classrooms. “Even outside the classrooms there are different spaces for girls 
and boys. There are a number of canteens where girls aren’t allowed. And in the 
ones they are allowed, curtains are drawn to separate them from the boys,” says 
Urooj.

According to the 2015 fact book of the university, there are only two per cent 
more boys than girls studying at the institution. With the population almost 
evenly divided, segregation on logistical grounds is a flimsy argument. Rather, 
it appears to be a moralistic pursuit based on one of Pakistan’s widely 
accepted and deeply problematic social constructs: the belief that interaction 
between girls and boys leads to immorality, and the disintegration of society.

Moral policing and gender segregation seem to have become the norm on 
university campuses, manifesting a kind of intolerance that is deeply 
uncharacteristic of a progressive academic culture.

Bizarre codes of conduct enforced at many universities

Late in October, a group of agitated, club-wielding students marched through a 
part of the PU campus. They were looking for a boy who they had found sitting 
with a girl in the vicinity of the sociology department.

“Some of them stormed the [department’s] building, broke the gate and tortured 
the guard. They slammed doors and shattered the windows. All this hooliganism 
lasted more than an hour or two,” recalls Hanain Afridi, a student who 
witnessed the events that took place at the university’s Institute of 
Communication Studies (ICS).

Calling the shots

The student activists were believed to be part of the Islami Jamiat-i-Talaba 
(IJT), a rightwing organisation that acts as the unofficial student wing of the 
Jamaat-i-Islami. Elements of the IJT are notorious, students say, for using 
aggression to assert power.

Today it seems that the IJT is behind much of the moral policing that happens 
at one of the country’s largest public universities. How do they command such a 
position of authority? Some say the IJT owes its success to the consistency and 
organisational ability it has embodied over the years. Others feel that 
factions in the university administration are complicit in nurturing and 
facilitating the organisation.

Urooj feels that at times students do resist the student organisations but the 
administration remains silent. “It seems that the administration is also 
following an unwritten agenda of moral policing.”

When asked how the organisation justifies its stance on gender segregation, a 
representative of the IJT, Furqan Khalil, says they have always protested 
against co-education. “We demand that the government should establish separate 
educational institutions for boys and girls,” he says. “Local culture demands 
that young girls and boys should not sit as couples. We never discourage girls 
and boys in groups.”

Codes of separation

While the PU has its segregation ‘code’ enforced by the activists of the IJT, 
in other universities the administrations ensure ‘morality’ on campus.

Gender segregation is enforced through codes of conduct, policies, notices and 
fines. The ‘code of conduct’, usually found on an institution’s website, vary 
greatly from explicit to ambiguous rules leaning towards the bizarre.

At one of Comsats university’s colleges, the university seeks to implement a 
rule barring “entering entryway of opposite sex on campus or allowing the 
same”, leaving much room for imaginative interpretation.

Muhammad, a student at Comsats’ Abbottabad campus, feels that the regulations 
are merely meant to pay lip service. “We don’t have many restrictions but 
couples are fined if they’re found sitting together. The fine is Rs5,000 for 
each individual,” he says.

Not quite concerned over the restrictions, he adds: “People in Punjab have a 
relatively freer mind; but here in Abbottabad, boys and girls don’t interact 
that much anyway.”

The National University of Science and Technology (Nust) has a regulation in 
its policy and procedures document that encapsulates a profoundly ambiguous 
moral compass.

Nust, it states, opposes “indecent behaviour exhibited on the campus including 
classes, cafeteria [and] laboratories, defying the norms of decency, morality 
and religious/cultural/social values by a single or group of students”.

The moral settlement embedded in the Nust’s ‘code’ falls squarely in the realm 
of fluid and arbitrary notions of morality. To that degree, it casts a wider 
net on unsuspecting students who could at any point find themselves in trouble 
over having violated the university’s norms of decency, morality or religion.

The Nust’s website states: “Undue intimacy and unacceptable proximity, openly 
or in isolated areas, will not be tolerated. The tendency of taking advantage 
of common places like cafeteria and shops is objectionable and undesirable. 
Also, students are advised to avoid movement in mix groups on the campus after 
sunset.”

Sara Ansari, a student at Nust, argues that such rules are rarely implemented, 
but when they are it is done arbitrarily. “For example, girls and boys are not 
allowed to play football together but they can play squash and table tennis. 
Similarly, while the rules for both genders are the same, girls bear the brunt 
of these restrictions. If a boy is caught smoking on campus he is given a 
warning but if a girl is smoking, she is reported to the department and 
official action is taken,” she explains.

Under the umbrella of an academic culture, moral policing is bound to be 
problematic. Until more tolerant guidelines built from socially progressive 
values are introduced, a student who wishes to have friends outside his or her 
own gender may need to keep a spare Rs5,000 note in the pocket to pay the 
impending fine.

========================================
11. BANGLADESH IS COMMITTING SUICIDE BY SHIFTING FROM SECULARISM TO 
ISLAMISATION | Shantanu Mukharji
========================================
(Daily O - 5 February 2017)

It's high time secular forces from the country as well as India jointly 
embarked on a loud protest.

On one hand, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina deserves kudos for her 
determination and grit in fighting Islamic terror afflicting her secular 
nation. Yet, on the other, she seems to be losing her battle against the 
Islamic zealots trying to steadily put Shariat and Islamic agenda in place.

Political skeptics, however, assess that she is not only losing the battle but 
cleverly giving in to the fundamentalist forces, ostensibly for the general 
elections, due in early 2019. Hence there is no contest. In reality, the 
secular fabric of the 46-year-old nascent nation is succumbing to the pressure 
of the Islamic right wing reactionaries, leading to a marked regression.

The above argument is buttressed by the fact that there is a distinct 
manipulation of the educational curriculum in Bangladesh. The well calculated 
tampering is part of an Islamic agenda which desires more Islamic presence and 
references in textbooks.

What's more worrisome is the removal of Hindu names from the curriculum who 
once formed an integral part of the education system, contributing 
substantially to the academic canvas of the country.

Notable those removed from the list are famous Bengali litterateur Sarat 
Chandra Chattopadhay and Michael Madhusudan Dutta - literary giants of all 
times who have enriched Bangla in Bangladesh with a vision for posterity. Also 
axed from the list are Sunil Gangopadhyay and Sufi singer Lalon Fokir. Excerpts 
from the Ramayana, running for many, many years have evaporated under the 
Islamic heat.

Significantly, Rabindranath Tagore lived in Selidaha, Kushtia, Bangladesh, in 
pre-Partition Bengal, and churned out the best of literary works inclusive of 
short stories, novels, plays and music, and is also the author of the national 
anthem of Bangladesh.

If this disturbing trend is not curbed, Tagore may also vanish into thin air 
due to the ongoing diktat of the Islamic forces. It would appear that these 
historical figures are targeted for their being Indian and possibly because 
their origin is Hindu.

Rabindranath Tagore lived in Selidaha, Kushtia, Bangladesh, in pre-Partition 
Bengal. (Photo: India Today) 

Lamentably, this trend is noticed in Pakistan too where history has been 
repeatedly flirted with distorted versions causing hatred for India by the 
younger generation. It's ironical that Bangladesh is emulating Pakistan - a 
nation which tried killing the spirit of Bangla and the rich culture. There is 
an obvious attempt to put the clock back.

Bangladesh owes India a great sense of unforgettable gratitude for India for 
the latter's supreme sacrifices during the former's liberation war and it's a 
historical reality that Bangladesh came into being due to India alone, which 
trained the freedom fighters and helped defeat the occupation forces.

This fact cannot be ignored and all out resistance must be put to stop any 
attempt made to distort it in the textbooks of history.

Against this backdrop, it is also imperative to identify the villains 
responsible for subverting the education system. The principal enemy of this 
initiative is the Islamic outfit Hefazat-e-Islam. Headquartered in Chittagong, 
this entity has only six years of existence but has been flexing its muscles to 
put an Islamic agenda since 2013. 

In brief, within three years, it was on the streets airing its demands. It has 
a 13-point charter which, inter alia, calls for introduction of Shariat law, 
madarsa education, death to those defaming Islam and other related demands 
reminiscent of the medieval period.

According to the trend, therefore, Bangladesh is being transformed towards 
Islamisation. Sadly again, Hefazat-e-Islam is largely composed of teachers and 
academics who are meant to shape the youth, instilling education on liberalism 
and tolerance but their blueprint is just the opposite. Their level of 
intolerance has Sufis and Ahmediyas on target. 

Regrettably, a segment of the Bangladeshi youth has lately come to notice, 
being romanticised by IS-sponsored radicalism. This is evident by the 
complicity of the "educated" youth participating in the terror attacks in Dhaka 
and neighbouring districts. The same youth will get more radical ideas by the 
corrupted version of the curriculum. This remains an area meriting close vigil.

Defending her decision to allow such Islamic forces to get the better of her 
and her policies, the Prime Minister is reported to have confided that she 
cannot allow such Islamic forces to be wooed by the opposition Bangladesh 
Nationalist Party (BNP) and any tie-up with them may impair her own electoral 
prospects.

Politically, her move could be astute but for a forward thinking nation with a 
bloodied past, it will be suicidal to give in to the radical lobbies. As it is, 
there are numerous cases of forced conversions, grabbing of Hindu property, 
desecration of Hindu places of worship, etc.

Amid this, if O (in Bangla) is written as Orhna (scarf to cover the body part) 
instead of earlier Ol (yam) in the textbooks, then certainly Islamic orthodoxy 
will replace the secular credentials, undoing all achievements consolidated so 
far by Bangladesh.

It's high time secular forces from India and Bangladesh jointly embarked on a 
loud protest and prevented our immediate neighbour from going completely 
Islamic, bringing disastrous consequences to the region.

There are still about two years to go before the next elections and both 
countries need to collaborate to defeat such forces. Better sense must prevail 
sooner than later.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and 
do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of DailyO.in or the 
India Today Group. The writers are solely responsible for any claims arising 
out of the contents of this article.

Writer
Shantanu Mukharji 

The author is a retired IPS officer who has held key positions in the 
Government of India handling sensitive security issues within and outside India.

========================================
12. PAKISTAN: OUTSOURCING JUSTICE
Editorial, Dawn
========================================
(Dawn - Feb 06, 2017

BY passing a bill that gives legal and constitutional cover to the jirga and 
panchayat system of dispute resolution, the National Assembly has only 
highlighted its own weaknesses. The non-serious approach to the matter must 
also be criticised: only 23 members of the house were present, and none of them 
pointed out the lack of quorum, allowing the crucial responsibility of 
administering justice to be outsourced to some of the most regressive elements 
in society. It may be true that the jirga and panchayat system has existed in 
the country for centuries, but that does not mean it should be handed the 
responsibility to administer justice, even in supposedly minor cases. Over the 
years, this system has given us heinous ‘judgements’, supposedly endorsed by 
‘tradition’, such as vani where young girls are forcibly married off in order 
to settle disputes or enmities. If the law minister, who introduced the bill, 
thinks that the provision of attaching ‘neutral arbitrators’ to each case is 
sufficient to ensure that the verdicts pronounced will be in accordance with 
the law and fundamental rights, and will protect the rights of women, then it 
can reasonably be assumed that he is washing his hands of the responsibility of 
providing justice to the common citizens of this land.

If the government wants to bring in alternate dispute resolution mechanisms to 
help reduce the caseloads in the courts, which is the language in which it is 
justifying the passage of this controversial bill, then an option already 
exists in the form of the office of the federal and provincial ombudsman. That 
office can be strengthened and expanded to perform dispute resolution functions 
in the 23 different offences applicable in the jirga and panchayat bill. This 
way dispute resolution will remain the responsibility of the government while 
minor issues can be settled quickly in accordance with the rules and principles 
the state is obligated to uphold. If it can find ‘neutral arbitrators’ for 
jirgas and panchayats then surely it can find the personnel to staff the office 
of the ombudsman at the union council level too.

No assurance given by the law minister regarding the protection of the rights 
of women under a jirga and panchayat system should be entertained. The 
lawmakers who were present in the Assembly on the day the bill was voted upon, 
disgraced their oath of office by approving the bill with such little 
discussion. The Senate should move to block its passage, and if that fails, the 
provincial governments should steer clear of invoking its provisions. Perhaps 
the Supreme Court can examine its legality as well. The state should be working 
on strengthening modern forms of dispute resolution, not reinforcing antiquated 
bodies that do more harm than good and giving them legal cover.

========================================
13: INDIA - PAKISTAN: GROUND RULES FOR TRUE REFERENDUM | Jawed Naqvi
========================================
(Dawn - 7 February 2017)

A FORMER Indian diplomat, the rare service where you can still find a few 
liberal souls, once served in Indonesia. What the diplomat told me left me 
aghast. It seems that a clutch of soldiers from Subhash Chandra Bose’s defeated 
Indian National Army had retreated to safer territories in Indonesia after the 
British won the decisive Southeast Asian war against Japan.

When India and Pakistan gained independence in August 1947, the soldiers who 
had waged a valiant anti-colonial battle went to the new Indian embassy to 
process their passage back home. They were asked their religion. Muslims were 
asked to apply to the Pakistan embassy. Things haven’t changed much, have they?

Babu Khan ‘mistri’ ran a garage for old crocs in Lucknow where my father’s Ford 
Prefect was cared for like a pet. Babu wore a fur cap in all seasons somewhat 
like Firaq Gorakhpuri and loved to pepper his conversation with Urdu couplets. 
He had returned from Karachi in the 1950s where he failed to find a promised 
job. He was in this way an economic migrant as migrants often are. Babu soon 
returned home as people do. He was missing Lucknow and he believed he could 
still find a life in his old hometown.

The Indian law had no room for his mushy expressions of homes-sickness and the 
police arrived to repatriate Babu to Pakistan. My lawyer father was a staunch 
supporter of Nehru. He carried a bullet wound in his arm from his student days. 
As a young freedom fighter he climbed the roof of Lucknow’s Christian College 
where a senior British official was due to visit. His job was to tear down the 
Union Jack and put up the Indian flag in its place. The deed done, the young 
man was rusticated but not before being shot through the arm during the melee. 
Father got Babu a stay order from the courts and he lived a happy life in 
Lucknow till his death.
Being connected helps. Being a non-Muslim is all the advantage one needs as an 
Indian visa-seeker from Pakistan.

One of my father’s routine pro bono works was to get stay orders, which may be 
no more possible, for Pakistanis returning to Lucknow. I think Shyam Benegal’s 
film Mammo captured a similar quandary about a simple Muslim woman who kept 
dodging the police because she had to stay on in her old Bombay home with her 
sister and nephew.

An uncle, the late professor S.M. Naseer, was beaten and jailed in Kanpur 
during the freedom struggle. He was a communist. For reasons that took many 
liberal Muslims to Pakistan, Naseer migrated and became a much-loved economics 
professor in Karachi. He was baffled that he could never get a visa to India. 
Then national security adviser J.N. Dixit dug out the files and found 
intriguing facts in Naseer’s dossier. Dixit solved the mystery. The Indian CID 
knowingly blacklisted Naseer because the British predecessors had marked him as 
a communist threat. Naseer got his visa finally and broke down at the ancestral 
graveyard in Mustafabad near Rae Bareli where many of his cousins and elders 
lie interred. That’s all that he came to do.

There are so many Pakistanis who would get Indian visas because they were one 
way or the other linked with progressive activism. Faiz was a leading example. 
But Sajjad Zaheer returned home from Pakistan and he didn’t have to take a stay 
order to get his Indian citizenship back. It’s all a bit of a lottery. Being 
connected helps. Being a non-Muslim is all the advantage one needs as an Indian 
visa-seeker from Pakistan. The prejudice didn’t spare soldiers of the INA. It 
is with this perspective that I saw Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s 
mocking address to Pakistanis the other day. The speech reminded me of an 
unambiguous couplet.

“Lagey moonh bhi chidhaney dete dete galiyan saahab/Zubaan bigdi to bigdi thi, 
khabar leeje dahan bigda.” (Hissing curses was not enough that you’ve started 
making faces at me. Your tongue was truly dreadful but now, pay heed, your 
visage looks poised to lose its shape.)

Everyone knows that Pakistanis are harassed and terrified by religious 
extremism they directly or indirectly helped create. Twisting the knife instead 
of offering helpful advice, Mr Singh asked Pakistanis to hold a referendum if 
they would like to migrate to India.

Or perhaps he said the referendum should be about joining India. A similar 
public survey or plebiscite would continue to be denied to the Kashmiris, he 
clarified, because Kashmir was in any case an integral part of India.

So what was Singh’s point? The question flows from a less mocking quest — in 
fact, a heartfelt petition — pursued previously by Indian leaders of stature. 
People like Ram Manohar Lohia, a leftist, who had many pitched battles in 
parliament on behalf of secularism, died dreaming of a confederation between 
India and Pakistan. Nehru, one or two years before his death, said he too 
favoured a confederation but did not raise the idea because it frightened 
Pakistan. You could find this treasure hidden away in the footnotes of Gunnar 
Myrdal’s Asian Drama.

So let’s not make a mockery of an idea that was embraced and may have never 
been discarded by very well-meaning men and women on both sides of the border. 
As referendums go, here is a real poser without rancour or malice. Mr Singh 
should free the borders. Be lavish with visas. And then only both sides could 
jointly ask: do both people want to live in peace with each other? Do they want 
to jointly fight terrorism of all forms? Should they be allowed to visit each 
other freely? Should their countries divert their humungous defence budgets to 
building schools and hospitals?

These are some of the ideals Bose and his soldiers fought for. The answers are 
all too well known. Mr Singh would be scared of them.

The writer is Dawn’s correspondent in Delhi.

========================================
14. INDIA: BENGAL GOVERNMENT MUST ADDRESS CONCERNS ON POWER PLANT, NOT SEND IN 
POLICE.
by Bolan Gangopadhyay 
========================================
(The Indian Express - February 7, 2017

The 13.5 acres of land on which the Power Grid Corporation of India Ltd (PGCIL) 
has chosen to set up a power grid substation belonged to farmers. This lowland 
area is full of fisheries and farmlands which yield four crops a year.

The assembly constituency of Bhangar in the South 24 Parganas district of 
Bengal has been in the headlines for the growing popular movement against the 
construction of a power grid substation in the area. Since the protesting 
villagers organised a massive road blockade on January 11, the media’s 
attention to the movement only increased with stories of police raids and 
ransacking, arrests and the persistent refusal of the protesters to let the 
police enter their villages.

The death of two villagers, Alamgir Hossain and Mafijul Haq, from bullet 
injuries on January 17, was a particularly poignant moment in the movement. The 
recent arrests of several activists and villagers associated with the Committee 
to Save Land, Livelihood, Ecology and Environment, a body formed by the 
villagers with the help of others to coordinate the movement, have further 
aggravated the situation. The villagers complain of daily intimidation by the 
state police, aided by local Trinamool Congress strongmen. They are even more 
agitated by the discrepancy between the verbal assurances made by leaders of 
the state government that the substation will not be built, and their 
experience that the construction work for the same is proceeding within the 
boundary walls of the acquired land.

The 13.5 acres of land on which the Power Grid Corporation of India Ltd (PGCIL) 
has chosen to set up a power grid substation belonged to farmers. This lowland 
area is full of fisheries and farmlands which yield four crops a year. In this 
rather densely populated locality, farming and fishing are the main sources of 
livelihood. The general economic condition is not poor. Adjacent to the 
sprawling New Town-Rajarhat neighbourhood of Greater Kolkata, which has seen a 
real estate boom in the last decade, these villages are located near Kolkata.

The decision to set up the 400/220 kv, SF6 gas-insulated Rajarhat Power Grid 
substation was taken in 2012. It was only after they had been induced to sell 
their lands below the market price that the people of the concerned villages 
came to know in 2014 that the proposed construction on their land would be a 
power grid substation, and not a distributing substation, meaning that it would 
not have any effect on improving local electricity supply. On several occasions 
since 2014, the villagers have submitted their questions and objections in 
writing to the local administration, and sought clarification on the difference 
between distributing and power grid substations. But the authorities did not 
care to answer those queries.

Last October, the PGCIL authorities agreed to a meeting in the BDO’s office 
with the villagers where the latter put forward their three main demands, 
asking for: One, a written document from PGCIL, clarifying that it was indeed 
about to start a power grid substation in the specified land; two, a formal 
clearance certificate from the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate 
Change; and three, a written assurance from PGCIL that SF6 gas would not cause 
harm to local practices of fishing and harvesting or to animals and humans in 
the future. Till date, they have not received any answer.

In the absence of any clear and definitive answers in writing from the 
authorities, local concerns have been heightened. The perceived dangers of 
using SF6, a most potent greenhouse gas, and of being exposed to an allegedly 
high-level electro-magnetic field have been at the centre of local 
conversations. Scientific theories and counter-theories have been hurled at 
each position, and the strange silence of the government and the PGCIL has 
certainly added to the villagers’ fears of health and environmental hazards.

The crucial point to note here is the sheer sidestepping of the consultative 
process that should be a political minimum in any democratic structure. The 
very fact that PGCIL can choose to set up a power grid substation without 
organising a meeting with the gram sabha and explaining the details of the plan 
in the local language exposes the deep authoritarianism in the state’s notion 
of “development”. The systematic neglect by the authorities of the legitimate 
questions of the villagers is, perhaps, powered by the faith that sending a 
police force will make up for the lack in scientific explanation and community 
consultation.

The writer is a Kolkata-based human rights activist

========================================
15. CEAUȘESCU’S ORPHANS: WHAT A REGRESSIVE ABORTION LAW DOES TO A COUNTRY | by 
Sharon Maxwell Magnus
========================================
(The Conversation - February 1, 2017)

Donald Trump’s announcement of the reinstatement and reinforcement of the 
“global gag” – which means the US will no longer fund any non-governmental 
health organisations working outside the US that give information about 
abortion – will have a devastating impact in some countries. I know because I 
have witnessed it happen before.

In 1990, as a young reporter specialising in women’s issues, I travelled to 
Romania a few weeks after the revolution that deposed the dictator, Nicolae 
Ceaușescu. While I was there, I spent time with Francu – a mother of two. In my 
mind’s eye, we are in a bare Bucharest hospital corridor which doubles up as 
recovery room. Francu is relaxed and smiling although she’s about to have an 
abortion. But that’s because this one is going to be performed by doctors.

She’d performed the last one herself using dirty rubber piping and had been in 
near-death agony afterwards. But the ban on abortion at the time – and the ban 
on even receiving information about abortion – meant she’d had to deal with the 
blood, pain and risk of death in secret.

The reason she’d got to this point was hidden in another ward. There, I 
encountered hundreds of Romania’s “orphans”. They lay under once white 
blankets, in little glass boxes like museum exhibits behind glass. The room was 
as quiet as a provincial museum. At the time, having little experience of 
babies, I did not realise that the lack of crying was a sign of emotional 
deprivation. The nurses were kind but they were few and the babies many. The 
nurses could not attend to them when they cried so the babies had given up 
crying. It saved energy. These “orphans” probably had parents – but they’d been 
given away because their parents could not feed the children they already had.

Codruta, a Romanian orphan, at 13 years of age in 1990. Angela Catlin

The reason for “Romania’s orphans” was Ceaușescu’s fixation on achieving a 
larger workforce. Measures to grow the birth rate included a near-complete ban 
on abortion – and information about it – combined with extremely limited access 
to contraception (though some was smuggled in). There was workplace 
pregnancy-testing to ensure women didn’t arrange abortions themselves.

It was a policy which gifted Romania the highest maternal mortality rates in 
Europe, the highest number of deaths from abortion, and a generation of 
emotionally afflicted, malnourished “orphans” raised in miserable conditions 
until, after the revolution, charities (and philanthropists such as JK Rowling) 
supplied help and funds.

In Romania before the revolution it was illegal to have an abortion, it was 
illegal to talk about abortion, it was illegal to give anyone information about 
abortion. Yet as my experience shows – and works such as Gail Kligman’s The 
Politics of Duplicity, Controlling Reproduction in Ceaucescu’s Romania confirm 
– women still had abortions. Some of the women I interviewed had friends who 
died from illegal abortions, but that didn’t stop them having one that was 
equally dangerous.

Backwards step

This is why Trump’s reinstatement of the “Mexico City” policy on abortion and 
aid is so retrograde. All that will happen, as activists have pointed out, is 
that in developing countries such as Nepal and in Sub-Saharan Africa life 
chances will be diminished and the abortion rate may even go up.

This result was observed in a World Health Organisation study of a previous 
iteration of this policy which was brought in by George W Bush in 2001 and was 
rescinded in 2009 by Barack Obama.

The death rate of women in these countries will also climb. In the first year 
after abortion was legalised in Romania, the maternal death rate fell by 50%.

This “gag” could have been offset if it had been matched by a vast increase in 
federal funds for contraception in those countries which are going to be 
affected. But – no surprises here – that hasn’t happened.

This year is the 50th anniversary of the Abortion Act in the UK. The figures 
for death from illegal abortion prior to that year are hard to confirm but the 
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists states they were the leading 
cause of maternal death in the 12 years before the Act.

If women in a rich country died then through a lack of information and access 
to legal abortion, how much worse the plight of women in developing countries 
today. What this means globally is hungrier babies, reduced life chances and 
the needless death of young women in countries which are already struggling.

(Sharon Maxwell Magnus - Principal Lecturer in Journalism, University of 
Hertfordshire)

Disclosure statement:
Sharon Maxwell Magnus won the Rosemary Goodchild Award for her coverage of 
women’s health in the aftermath of the Romanian revolution.

========================================
16. TEN BULLETS TO ONE, TWENTY TO ANOTHER | Thomas Meaney
========================================
(London Review of Books, Vol. 39 No. 3 · 2 February 2017)

Rescued from the Nation: Anagarika Dharmapala and the Buddhist World by Steven 
Kemper
    Chicago, 480 pp, £31.50, January 2015, ISBN 978 0 226 19907 8

Tamil: A Biography by David Shulman
    Harvard, 416 pp, £25.00, September 2016, ISBN 978 0 674 05992 4

The Seasons of Trouble: Life amid the Ruins of Sri Lanka’s Civil War by Rohini 
Mohan
    Verso, 368 pp, £16.99, October 2015, ISBN 978 1 78168 883 0

Independence was handed to Ceylon’s elite on a platter. ‘Think of Ceylon as a 
little bit of England,’ Oliver Ernest Goonetilleke, the first native 
governor-general, said. This was a point of pride. Don Stephen Senanayake, the 
country’s first prime minister, remarked: ‘There has been no rebellion in 
Ceylon, no non-cooperation movement and no fifth column. We were among the 
peoples who gave full collaboration while Britain was hard-pressed.’ After 
independence in 1948, Ceylon alone among the former colonies not only retained 
but promoted the monarchy: the Union Jack flew alongside the Ceylon flag; a new 
constitution was drafted by an LSE professor, Ivor Jennings; Colombo debutantes 
were presented at Buckingham Palace; and, thanks to some genealogical 
ingenuity, George VI was recognised as the latest monarch in the ancient line 
of Kandyan kings. While the rest of the empire in Asia smouldered – in India 
there was Partition, in Malaya the Emergency, in Burma the civil war – Ceylon 
became Whitehall’s model for the transfer of colonial power. ‘There was no 
fight for that freedom which involved a fight for principles, policies and 
programmes,’ Solomon Ridgeway Bandaranaike, the anti-colonial head of state who 
took power in 1956, said when he reviewed the transition a decade later. ‘It 
just came overnight. We just woke up one day and were told: “You are a dominion 
now.”’

The full text of this book review is only available to subscribers of the 
London Review of Books.

========================================
17. TAJIKISTAN PLANS WORLD’S BIGGEST DAM - MOSCOW’S LEVER IN CENTRAL ASIA
by Régis Genté
========================================
(Le Monde Diplomatique - February 2017)
 
To Uzbekistan’s great displeasure, Russia has long supported the high version 
of the Rogun Dam (335m). By so doing, Russia gave itself a powerful means of 
keeping the most populous of the Central Asian republics within its ambit. 
(Uzbekistan has around 30 million people while Tajikistan has a little over 
eight million.)

In 2004, when relations between the Russians and Uzbeks were poor, President 
Putin promised Tajikistan $2bn. To fund this, the Kremlin looked to the 
aluminium giant RUSAL, run by Oleg Deripaska, who became a billionaire under 
Boris Yeltsin. It is very much in Russian industrialists’ interests to be 
associated with the government’s social or foreign policy, including 
financially, if they want to continue to do business untroubled by the tax 
authorities and anti-corruption agencies. So RUSAL was encouraged to invest in 
completing the dam, rebuilding the foundry at the Tursunzoda aluminium plant 
and constructing a new plant. In exchange, Deripaska was granted a majority 
share in the dam and a share in the profits from the Tursunzoda plant. At the 
time, Tajikistan had concerns about this poisoned gift, which forced it to give 
the Russians 20% of its national power production and 60% of its exports.

In the end the Tajik authorities avoided having to reject the Kremlin’s offer. 
On 13 May 2005 the Andijan massacre took place in the Uzbek region of the 
Ferghana valley. The Uzbek president Islam Karimov put down a protest movement 
with the loss of 187 lives according to official figures, though some NGOs 
believe the death toll was several hundred. Karimov accused the US of having 
orchestrated the insurrection and threw himself into Russia’s arms again.

As a result, the Kremlin no longer needed to threaten Uzbekistan by offering to 
fund Tajikistan. Russian pressure on the Uzbeks was relaxed — as was the 
projected height of the Rogun Dam. And RUSAL breathed a sigh of relief as it 
had seen no economic advantage in getting involved. The dam project was 
definitively shelved in 2007, officially because of disagreement over the 
shares granted to RUSAL in the management company and the aluminium plants.

Since then, Uzbekistan has again pulled away from Russia and is looking to the 
US once more. It even agreed the opening of a NATO liaison office in Tashkent 
in 2013. The investiture of Shavkat Mirziyoyev, following the death of 
President Karimov last September, may signal the return of better Russo-Uzbek 
relations: the new man is seen as being relatively close to the Kremlin.

========================================
18. BLAKER ON HARRIS, 'VIETNAM'S HIGH GROUND: ARMED STRUGGLE FOR THE CENTRAL 
HIGHLANDS, 1954-1965'
========================================
 J. P. Harris. Vietnam's High Ground: Armed Struggle for the Central Highlands, 
1954-1965. Modern War Studies Series. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 
2016. Illustrations, maps. 552 pp. $45.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-7006-2283-2.

Reviewed by Christopher N. Blaker (Oakland University)
Published on H-War (February, 2017)
Commissioned by Margaret Sankey

The Indochina Wars—a series of regional, national, and international conflicts 
fought in Southeast Asia during the Cold War—were among the bloodiest and most 
controversial wars waged during the second half of the twentieth century. While 
the First and Second Indochina Wars have been dissected by historians for 
decades, an unparalleled degree of complexity that characterizes those wars 
continues to be uncovered to this day. J. P. Harris’s Vietnam’s High Ground: 
Armed Struggle for the Central Highlands, 1954-1965 contributes a great deal to 
the history of the Indochina Wars. It highlights the wars’ effects on a region 
of Vietnam that is rarely mentioned in many historical sources—the Central 
Highlands, which were among the most important areas in all of Vietnam during 
the wars. After briefly touching on the early history of Vietnam, relationships 
between Vietnamese and Highlander ethnic groups, French and Japanese conquests 
of Vietnam, and the First Indochina War (1946-54), Harris focuses the rest of 
his book on the early period of the Second Indochina War between 1954 and 1965.

The author is careful to emphasize the ethnic differences between Vietnamese 
and indigenous Highlander populations and explains how those differences were 
accentuated during the period of 1954-65. Despite both the North and South 
Vietnamese governments maintaining a national desire for independence, neither 
was prepared to offer the Central Highlands any kind regional autonomy. 
Contrarily, both sides ravaged the landscape through countless battles and 
exploited the region’s indigenous people for their own gain. North Vietnam 
brought the war to the Central Highlands by forming the Ho Chi Minh Trail 
alongside the region and luring South Vietnamese military units to the 
Highlands to trigger decisive, destructive battles. South Vietnam’s Diem Regime 
was just as invasive, forcing indigenous Highlanders into the war through 
involvement with South Vietnam’s Civilian Irregular Defense Group, Strategic 
Hamlet Program, and army.

Harris focuses specifically on the year 1965 in the last sections of his book. 
He offers detailed accounts of the Siege of Plei Me and Battle of Ia Drang, 
which were the first major clashes between the armed forces of North Vietnam 
and the United States. Events of 1965 ultimately marked the Vietnam War’s 
transition from an insurgency/counterinsurgency war to a far more conventional 
conflict, which is how it remained until the war’s end nearly a decade later.

Research materials from the period of 1954-65 reveal a great deal of previously 
undiscovered history of the Vietnam War. During that period, the war was 
conducted largely by special forces and guerilla units of all factions, which 
resulted in few after-action accounts or official military reports being 
compiled and archived. For that reason, much of the detailed history of the 
Vietnam War before 1965 remains a mystery.

However, historians today have access to more and better sources than existed 
in years past. Harris makes good use of both primary and secondary sources on 
the war and takes advantage of having access to materials originating in the 
United States, North Vietnam, and South Vietnam, and with insurgent groups, 
such as the Viet Cong. He is thus able to offer a balanced account of the many 
political and military developments occurring during the war and remains 
objective throughout his work.

Full-page maps of Vietnam and especially the Central Highlands help ground 
readers in the country’s geography. Detailed graphics of military operations 
augment the author’s descriptions of battle. High-resolution photographs of 
indigenous peoples at home in the Highlands; Vietnamese citizens and military 
personnel during the early war; and well-known U.S. Army personalities, such as 
General William Westmoreland, Major General Harry Kinnard, and Lieutenant 
Colonel Hal Moore, illustrate scenes painted by the author’s prose. Finally, a 
useful chart in the book’s introduction indicates that despite being in the 
minority throughout the country, ethnic Highlanders were not contained only to 
the Central Highlands but lived in most northern provinces of South Vietnam.

Military history enthusiasts and scholars of the Vietnam War will appreciate 
the historical findings presented in Harris’s work. The author offers a 
well-researched and well-organized testimony to the war’s impact on Vietnam’s 
Central Highlands, a region that received little attention during the war and 
perhaps receives even less in the present. While Harris views the war through a 
wide, anthological lens and presents a great deal of information pertaining to 
the conflict, his major argument—that the Central Highlands both significantly 
influenced and were greatly influenced by the Indochina Wars—remains at the 
forefront of his work. Ultimately, Vietnam’s High Ground succeeds in broadening 
the value of international understanding of the Vietnam War.


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

South Asia Citizens Wire
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. Newsletter of South Asia Citizens Web: 
www.sacw.net/

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