And you believe this........ 



________________________________
From: Archana Sharma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, 3 December, 2008 6:57:14 PM
Subject: sorry,had to send you this. This is what i have been talking 
about.Bring it on


This Joint Statement was released to the press simultaneously in Pakistan and 
India on November 30 2008.
We are deeply shocked and horrified at the bloody mayhem in Mumbai, which has 
claimed more than a hundred and ninty lives and caused grievous injuries to 
several hundred people, besides sending a wave of panic and terror across South 
Asia and beyond. We convey our profound feelings of sorrow and sympathies to 
the grieving families of the unfortunate victims of this heinous crime and 
express our solidarity with them.
As usual, all sorts of speculations are circulating about the identity of the 
perpetrators of this act of barbarism. The truth about who are directly 
involved in this brutal incident and who could be the culprits behind the scene 
is yet to come out and we do not wish to indulge in any guesswork or blame game 
at this point. However, one is intrigued at its timing. Can it be termed a 
coincidence that it has happened on the day the Home Secretaries of the two 
countries concluded their talks in Islamabad and announced several concrete 
steps to move forward in the peace process, such as the opening of several land 
routes for trade – Kargil, Wagah-Attari, Khokhropar etc –, relaxation in the 
visa regime, a soft and liberal policy on the issue of release of prisoners and 
joint efforts to fight terrorism? Again, is it just a coincidence that on this 
fateful day the Foreign Minister of Pakistan was in the Indian capital holding 
very useful and productive talks
 with his Indian counterpart? One thing looks crystal clear. The enemies of 
peace and friendship between the two countries, whatever be the label under 
which they operate, are un-nerved by these healthy developments and are hell 
bent on torpedoing them.
We are of the considered opinion that the continued absence of peace in South 
Asia - peace between and within states - particularly in relation to India and 
Pakistan , is one of the root causes of most of the miseries the people of the 
region are made to endure. It is the major reason why our abundantly 
resource-rich subcontinent is wallowing in poverty, unemployment, disease, and 
ignorance and why militarism, religious and sectarian violence and political, 
economic and social injustice are eating into the very vitals of our societies, 
even after more than six decades of independence from colonial rule.
At this moment of unmitigated tragedy, the first thing we call upon the 
Governments of India and Pakistan to do is to acknowledge the fact that the 
overwhelming majority of the people of India and Pakistan ardently desire peace 
and, therefore, the peace process must be pursued with redoubled speed and 
determination on both sides. The sooner the ruling establishments of India and 
Pakistan acknowledge this fact and push ahead with concrete steps towards 
lasting peace and harmony in the subcontinent, the better it will be not only 
for the people of our two countries but also for the whole of South Asia and 
the world. While the immediate responsibility for unmasking the culprits of 
Mumbai and taking them to task surely rests with the Government of India, all 
of us in South Asia have an obligation to join hands and go into the root 
causes of why and how such forces of evil are motivated and emboldened to 
resort to such acts of anti-people terror.
It is extremely important to remind the leaderships of Pakistan and India that 
issuing statements and signing agreements and declarations will have meaning 
only when they are translated into action and implemented honestly, in letter 
and spirit and without any further loss of time. It assumes added urgency in 
the prevailing conditions in South Asia , with the possibility that so many 
different forces prone to religious, sectarian and other forms of intolerance 
and violence may be looking for ways to arm themselves with more and more 
sophisticated weapons of mass murder and destruction. The bloodbath in Mumbai 
must open the eyes of our governments, if it has not already happened.
We urge upon the governments of India and Pakistan to immediately take the 
following steps:
        1. Cessation of all hostile propaganda against each other; 
        2. Joint action to curb religious extremism of all shades in both 
countries; 
        3. Continue and intensify normalization of relations and peaceful 
resolution of all conflicts between the two countries; 
        4. Facilitation of trade and cooperation between the two countries and 
in all of South Asia . We welcome the fact that the Srinagar-Muzaffarab ad and 
Poonch-Rawlakot borders have been opened for trade and that the opening of the 
road between Kargil and Skardu is in the pipeline. 
        5. Immediate abolition of the current practice of issuing city-specific 
and police reporting visa and issue country-valid visa without restrictions at 
arrival point, simultaneously initiating necessary steps to introduce as early 
as possible a visa-free travel regime, to encourage friendship between the 
peoples of both countries; 
        6. Declaration by India and Pakistan of No First Use of atomic weapons; 
        7. Concrete measures towards making South Asia nuclear-free; 
        8. Radical reduction in military spending and end to militarisation.
Signatories:
India:
        1. Kuldip Nayar, journalist, former Indian High Commissioner, UK., 
Delhi 
        2. S P Shukla, retired Finance Secretary, former Member, Planning 
Commission, Delhi 
        3. PEACE MUMBAI network of 15 organisations, Mumbai 
        4. Seema Mustafa, Journalist, Delhi 
        5. Manisha Gupte, MASUM, Pune 
        6. Dr. Ramesh Awasthi, PUCL, Maharashtra 
        7. Jatin Desai, journalist, Mumbai 
        8. Prof. Ritu Dewan, University of Mumbai 
        9. Prabir Purkayashta, DSF, Delhi 
        10. Prof. Pushpa Bhave , Mumbai 
        11. Paromita Vohra, filmmaker, Mumbai 
        12. Achin Vanaik, CNDP, Delhi 
        13. Meena Menon, Focus on the Global South, Mumbai 
        14. Romar Correa Professor of Economics, University of Mumbai 
        15. Anjum Rajabally, film writer, Mumbai 
        16. Anand Patwardhan, filmmaker, Mumbai 
        17. Kamla Bhasin, SANGAT, Delhi 
        18. Dr. Padmini Swaminathan, MIDS, Chennai 
        19. Sumit Bali, CEO, Kotak Mahindra Prime Limited 
        20. Dr Walter Fernandes, Director, North Eastern Social Research 
Centre, Assam , 
        21. Rabia, Lahore Chitrkar 
        22. Rakesh Sharma, filmmaker, Mumbai 
        23. Prof. Kamal Mitra Chenoy, JNU, Delhi 
        24. Prof. Anuradha Chenoy, JNU, Delhi 
        25. P K Das, architect, Mumbai 
        26. Neera Adarkar, architect, Mumbai 
        27. Datta Iswalkar, Secretary, Textile Workers Action Committee, Mumbai 
        28. Madhusree Dutta, filmmaker, Majlis, Mumbai 
        29. Amrita Chhachhi, Founding member, PIPFPD 
        30. Mazher Hussain, COVA, Hyderabad 
        31. Prof. Manoranjan Mohanty, Delhi 
        32. Prof. M C Arunan, Mumbai
Pakistan:
        1. Mr. Iqbal Haider, Co-Chairman, Human Rights Commission Pakistan and 
former federal Minister of Pakistan 
        2. Dr. Tipu Sultan, President, Pakistan Doctors for Peace & 
Development, Karachi 
        3. Dr. Tariq Sohail, Dean, Jinnah Medical & Dental University , Karachi 
        4. Dr. A. H.. Nayyar, President, Pakistan Peace Coalition, Islamabad 
        5. Justice (Retd) Rasheed A. Razvi, President, Sindh High Court Bar 
Association 
        6. Mr. B.M.Kutty, Secretary General , Pakistan Peace Coalition, Karachi 
        7. Mr. Karamat Ali, Director, PILER, Karachi , Founding member, PIPFPD 
        8. Mr. Fareed Awan, General Secretary , Pakistan Workers Confederation, 
Sindh 
        9. Mr. Muhammad Ali Shah, Chairman , Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum, Karachi 
        10. Mr. Zulfiqar Halepoto, Secretary, Sindh Democratic Front, Hyderabad 
        11. Professor Dr. Sarfraz Khan, Area Studies Centre ( Central Asia), 
Peshawar University 
        12. Syed Khadim Ali Shah, Former Member National Assembly, Mirpur Khas 
        13. Mr. Muhammad Tahseen, Director, South Asia Partnership (PAK), 
Lahore 
        14. Mrs. Saleha Athar, Network for Women's Rights, Karachi 
        15. Ms. Sheema Kermani, Tehreek-e-Niswan, Karachi 
        16. Ms. Saeeda Diep, President, Institute of Secular Studies, Lahore 
        17. Dr. Aly Ercelan, Pakistan Labour Trust, Karachi 
        18. Mr. Suleiman G. Abro, Director, Sindh Agricultural & Forestry 
Workers Organisation, Hyderabad 
        19. Mr. Sharafat Ali, PILER, Karachi 
        20. Mr. Zulfiqar Ali Shah, PILER, Karachi 
        21. Mr. Ayub Qureshi, Information Secretary , Pakistan Trade Union 
Federation 
        22. Ms. Sheen Farrukh, Director, Interpress Communication Pakistan , 
Karachi 
        23. Mr. Zafar Malik, PIPFPD, Lahore 
        24. Mr. Adam Malik, Action-Aid Pakistan , Karachi 
        25. Mr. Qamarul Hasan, International Union of Food Workers (IUF), 
Karachi 
        26. Prof. Muhammad Nauman, NED University , Karachi 
        27. Mr. Mirza Maqsood, General Secretary, Mazdoor Mahaz-e-Amal 
        28. Ms. Shaista Bukhari, Women Rights Association, Multan


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