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November 30, 2011

Venue for a Speech on Tamas

Venue for a Speech on Tamas - A Chronicle of an Event That Should Never Have Happened
by Dilip Simeon
[. . .]
The Tamas meeting was (till then and without exaggeration) the single most significant public gathering in Delhi university, if not the city of Delhi in recent memory. It was definitely the most vibrant and inspired gathering within a walled space that I have had the privilege to witness. The police did their jobs well enough - after doing their best to scuttle the event (in which aim they very nearly succeeded), they turned up in strength to prevent what is known in bureaucratic parlance and among official newsreaders as "an untoward incident". For their part, the Hinduttva brigade did what they know best. They tried to achieve their ends by intimidation and having failed, quenched their anger by painting vicious slogans all over the college walls overnight. For all of us leftists and unabashed (pseudo)-secularists who by the late 1980’s were beginning to wonder where our fighting spirit had gone to, the meeting signifed the rejuvenation of faltering hopes and aspirations. It was our way of standing up, defying communal politics and saying, "We’re not dead yet!". And despite all that has happened since then, not least of it the passage of my respected friend Dewan Birendranath (may he rest in peace) and the destruction of Babri Masjid, that day still energises me as I know it must invigorate most of those who attended it. We weren’t finished then. And we aren’t finished now.

FULL TEXT HERE =>http://www.sacw.net/article2419.html

November 28, 2011

Communal violence in four states, same story of discrimination

Indian Express
28 November 2011 - Op Ed

Four states, same story of discrimination

by Subhashini Ali

The last six months have witnessed attacks on members of the minority community in four different states: Forbesganj, Arhariya in Bihar, Moradabad in Uttar Pradesh, Rudrapur in Uttarakhand and Gopalgarh, Bharatpur in Rajasthan. All those who have been killed and suffered material losses have been members of the minority community. Despite the fact that the states concerned are ruled by very different political dispensations — the BSP in Uttar Pradesh, JD(U)-BJP in Bihar, the BJP in Uttarakhand and the Congress in Rajasthan — the unforgivable and dangerous communal bias displayed by the police and administration and the ways in which political rulers have sought to cover up, justify or downplay this bias, have been similar. Those who believe that all Indian citizens have the right to equal treatment from the administration and the judiciary must voice their concern.

Affected families from Forbesganj, Moradabad and Gopalgarh attended a convention against communal conflict organised by the All India Democratic Women’s Association in the capital recently. Rudrapur went unrepresented because the families of victims have fled the town. They spoke at the convention about bereavement. It was not pity they sought, but recognition of injustice, and punishment of those responsible.
[. . .]
The events of recent months have emphasised the necessity of making the police, administration and judiciary free of bias and committed to secular principles. Exemplary punishment must be meted out to those who violate these principles. Governments must display much more sensitivity and commitment to rehabilitation. The state has to prove its commitment to the secular Constitution through action that cannot be half-hearted and tardy.

The writer is vice-president of the All India Democratic Women’s Association and member of the central committee of the CPM

FULL TEXT AT: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/four-states-same-story-of-discrimination/881210/0

November 27, 2011

India's top film festival caves in to Hindu Right protest and postpones screening of MF Hussain film

Source: Indian Express

IFFI defers screening of M F Hussain documentary

Sun Nov 27 2011, 16:48 hrs Panaji:

The organizers of International Film Festival of India (IFFI) today deferred the screening of a documentary by legendary painter M F Husain amid protests by a Hindu rights group.

The documentary 'Through the Eyes of a Painter', produced-written and directed by Husain in 1967, was to be screened today under the homage section of the festival.

But the IFFI director Shankar Mohan said they decided to defer the tribute screening, pending legal opinion.

“The petitioners (Hindu Janjagruti Samiti) had said that the matter is subjudice," Mohan said, adding, “We don't want to do anything illegal. We are taking legal opinion.”

HJS had threatened to demonstrate at the IFFI venues if the 15-minute documentary was screened at the festival.

Husain, who earned both fame and controversy with his paintings, died in London in June this year at the age of 95.

Produced by the Film Division of India, the documentary was set in Rajasthan and records Husain's impression of the state and its people.

It won the Golden Bear award at the Berlin International Film Festival.

November 25, 2011

A different sort of Valley ‘protest’ (Javed Anand)

What’s Islamic law and a sharia court doing in a secular democratic polity? Your guess is as good as mine. The J&K government, it seems, knows better. Acting suo motu, the police arrested the priest within 24-hours of Bashiruddin’s warning.

For what crime has Khanna been booked? Unlike states like Gujarat, Orissa and Madhya Pradesh, J&K does not have a law against conversions. But where there is a will there’s a way. The pastor has been charged under sections 153A and 295A of the Ranbir Penal Code, the J&K equivalent of the Indian Penal Code.

Section 153A pertains to “promoting enmity between different groups... and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony.” Section 295A has to do with “deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs.”

Why should conversion of a few Muslims to Christianity be deemed a malicious act intended to outrage religious feelings? Why should it be tantamount to promoting enmity between different groups? These might be questions for you and me. But Omar Abdullah and his police may well be wondering whether the FIR and the arrest are enough to douse the flames.
[. . .]
Full text at: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/a-different-sort-of-valley-protest/879674/0

November 24, 2011

Public Meeting & Film: Confronting Hindutva: 15 DEC. 2011, New Delhi

Dear friends,
Champa-The Amiya And B.G.Rao Foundation have organised Public Meeting and screening of a documentary on the subject:CONFRONTING HINDUTVA & ITS STRATEGIES on 15th December, 2011 at 4.30 PM at Indian Law Institute, Bhagwan Dass Road,(in front of Supreme Court), New Delhi. Shri Kumar Ketkar, veteran journalist and commentator and Manisha Sethi, human rights activist and President Jamia Teachers Solidarity Association will speak. A short film prepared by Samrendra Das on violence against christian tribal communities in Orrisa will be shown. A poster detailing the programme is attached.
We request you to participate in the said meeting.

N.D.Pancholi

November 23, 2011

Ramanujan Affair: Why secular universities buckle before the hooliganism of right-wing ?

Ramkatha, Rambhakts and the University

by Ashwin Anshu (in EPW, 12 November 2011)

The controversy over Ramanujan's essay highlights some key issues. One of them is the Hindu right's claim to act as the custodian of Hindu identity and to assert its hegemony over all "Hindu" traditions is often successful due to the weaknesses of our institutions. The other is that the defence of academic freedom and autonomy is central to the life of a university. The supremacy of rational enquiry is the fundamental basis of all academic endeavours and undermining that destroys the basis of a university. If the logic of the criticism of Ramanujan's essay is extended, then historical studies will be transformed into theological works that discuss religion only from the theological rather than secular standpoint. If the aim of history education is to broaden minds and to infuse a critical understanding of the past then shelving of essays like that of Ramanujan on non-academic grounds does not help. The climate of intolerance will only be furthered. Therefore, it is the duty of all members of the university community, the larger academic community as well as citizens concerned about our secular public institutions to impress upon Delhi University authorities that they should not bow down to violence but defend their own faculty and academia and reinstate Ramanujan's essay in the undergraduate syllabi.

Read More : http://epw.in/epw/uploads/articles/16731.pdf

India: Why Madrasas, vedic schools ouside the perview of Right to Education Act ?

From: Hindustan Times

Madrasas, vedic schools to be kept out of RTE

Chetan Chauhan, Hindustan Times

New Delhi, November 21, 2011

First Published: 21:37 IST(21/11/2011)
Last Updated: 01:24 IST(22/11/2011)

Both Hindu and Muslim religious schools will get exemption from the provisions of watershed Right to Information Act, the government has decided. Number of religious organisations had sought exemption of their schools from the law as both mode of teaching and learning was different from conventional schools.

Zafaryab Zilani, convenor of the Shiksha Sangharsha Sanyukt Morcha said if necessary changes were not made in the RTE, madrasas and vedic schools will have to be closed as they will loose their affiliations.

The RTE law provides for 25% reservation for economically weaker sections, a specific student teacher ratio, mandatory school management committee and no annual examination till elementary level, in addition to free education to children in 6-14 age group.

There are about 3,000 vedic pathashalas (schools) in India and thousands of madarsas spread across country. The Kanchi Matha, the Ahobila Matha, and the Andavan Ashram are among the major south-based vedic institutions that have signed petitions seeking exemption from the Act.

Although the HRD ministry had earlier said these religious schools were not covered citing Constitutional safeguards for religious institutions, a decision has now been taken to insert an explicit provision in the RTE law to have clarity.

There was apprehension in some political quarters that the RTE law can be misused to close down madarsas which fail to comply with its norms. "The right to education says that its provisions will be applicable to all schools," a government official said, and there is a need to specify the exemptions clearly.

HRD minister Kapil Sibal has told the ministry officials to end the ambiguity in the law regarding minority institutions and the changes have been circulated for law ministry's approval.

Another amendment in the RTE law is already pending with the Parliament regarding special needs of differentially enabled students in schools. The ministry has decided to incorporate provisions to ensure that RTE does not hamper education of such students.

Hindu Right Opposes Tribute to M F Husain at 2011 International Film Festival being held in Goa

Right-wing organisation opposes tribute to Husain at IFFI
Press Trust of India
Wednesday, November 23, 2011 (Panaji)

A Hindu right-wing organization in Goa has taken objection to a film section at the International Film Festival of India (IFFI), which pays tributes to painter M F Husain.

Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, which had sued the painter for his controversial paintings on Hindu Gods and Goddesses, has urged the organisers of the festival not to pay tribute to the painter.

Husain, who earned both fame and wrath for his paintings, died in London in June this year at the age of 95.

IFFI 2011, which will begin from today, plans to show a documentary-- 'Through The Eyes of the Painter,' directed by Husain on his journey through Rajasthan.

HJS delegation, led by women-wing chief Rajashree Gadekar, on Tuesday met Manoj Srivastava, the Chief Executive Officer of the Entertainment Society of Goa (ESG), asking him to drop the tribute section. Gadekar told PTI that ESG, which is a state government body, however, told the members that the section is curated by the IFFI directorate.

Since IFFI Director Shankar Mohan was not available, the delegation left a memorandum of demands at his office.

HJS has warned to stage an agitation, if IFFI goes ahead with the plan.



Read more at: http://movies.ndtv.com/movie_story.aspx?Section=Movies&ID=ENTEN20110188676&subcatg=MOVIESINDIA&keyword=bollywood&nid=152425&cp

Invitation to Public Meeting "Right Wing Challenges to Democracy" & Book Release of Subhash Gatade's "Godse's Children & The Saffron Condition (29Nov)

New Socialist Initiative

invites you to a public meeting on

Right Wing Challenges to Democracy in Our Times

Speakers:
Nivedita Menon
(Professor, Centre for Comparative Politics & Political Theory, JNU)

Jawed Naqvi
(Senior journalist, The Dawn)

Amit Sengupta
(Senior journalist, Hard News)

To be preceded by Book releases of Subhash Gatade’s

Godse’s Children: Hindutva terror in India
&
Saffron Condition: Politics of Repression and Exclusion in Neoliberal India


Gandhi Peace Foundation, Deendayal Upadhyaya Marg ITO, Delhi, 5.15 pm onwards, 29th November, 2011

Background Note: Last twenty years have witnessed an unmistakable right wing upsurge in politics, economy and the society at large. Ever since the term emerged from Estates General of 1789 France, right wing politics has stood fundamentally opposed to struggles for an inclusive democracy based on principles of equality and freedom. In India, political parties based on sectarian religious, nationalist, ethnic and regional agendas have flourished. They have successively used hatred, violence, chauvinism and fear to terrorise their opponents and minorities. The state has abandoned welfare of the poor both in words and deeds, while it shamelessly hands out tax breaks and natural resources to the super rich. Right wing politics and economic policies are a manifestation of the interests of upper classes and castes. Their easy success is based on wide acceptance of right wing ideas among people. The explosion of an intolerant public, religiosity, violence against women and lower castes, silent nod to state violence against marginalized poor, adivasis and nationalities, and aggressive display of nationalism from cricket fields to popular mobilisations, are parts of every day life of a ‘mainstream’ Indian. A number of critical issues emerge from the success of right wing offensive. How have the institutions of a formally liberal democracy, viz. political parties, legislature, judiciary, police, and media failed against and, in fact have abetted this offensive? How far can these be relied upon to defend and promote democracy? Why has an expanding market capitalism not dissolved ‘feudal’ walls of casteism, patriarchy and non-rational belief systems? The popular acceptance of right wing ideas has deep roots in everyday life. Why has the project of building a modern, secular, and rational public sphere, enshrined even in the constitution, floundered? Is it doomed because of the ‘specificity’ of India, and false claims of modernity? Or, it is failing because it does not fit into the interests of upper class and caste rule in India.

It is not that people suffering right wing depredations are silent. They have organized and agitated, and continue to struggle. They are fighting for their basic human rights in Manipur, Kashmir, and Gujarat. They have fought and are fighting for their land and forests in Narmada, Singur, Jagatsinghpur, Kalinanagar, Chhatisgarh, and even in Noida on the outskirts of national capital, and struck and occupied a factory of the largest automobile maker in the country. However, why has the Left, defined broadly and including all pro-people organizations and mobilisations, failed to bring about an effective counter-offensive against the right?

Right to read Ramanujan's essay : Interview with K.N. Panikkar

A student's right to read Ramanujan's essay on the Ramayana should be inviolable, says historian K.N. Panikkar. Educational institutions are being besieged by bigots bent on imposing their views on the curriculum.

[ read more at: http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/interview/article2650780.ece ]

On Hindu Right and Environmentalism: New Book by Mukul Sharma

From: Permanent Black


Environmentalism and the Hindu Right

Posted: 21 Nov 2011 08:27 AM PST

Mukul Sharma
Green and Saffron
Hindu Nationalism and Indian Environmental Politics


This book examines contemporary environmental issues and movements in independent India on the one hand, and the development of Hindu conservative ideology and politics on the other. It includes the first thorough investigation of Anna Hazare’s movement in Maharashtra.

Mukul Sharma argues that these two social currents—environmental conservation and Hindu politics—have forged bonds which reveal the hijacking of environmentalism by conservative and retrograde worldviews. This, he says, constitutes a major aspect of hinterland political life which neither academics nor journalists have seriously analysed. Environmentalism and politics cannot be seen as separate from each other, for environmental issues are being defined in new ways by an anti-secular form of Hinduism. In turn, Hindu ideologues are gaining mileage for their ideology by espousing major environmental projects.

Anna Hazare’s impact is studied in detail through a careful field investigation of his environmental initiative in Ralegan Siddhi. Sunderlal Bahuguna’s opposition to the Tehri Dam in the Garhwal Himalaya is outlined with great anthropological subtlety. And the regeneration of Vrindavan’s urban and riverine hygiene by internationally funded NGOs is subjected to a historical scrutiny that includes an examination of how Lord Krishna has been redefined as the great god of conservation.

Sharma discusses Nazi Germany and fascist appropriations of environmentalism in Europe to contextualize Hindu conservative nationalists within a larger universe. By pinpointing the communal and authoritarian discourses within some of the new social movements, his book alters the way in which we look at everyday life in the subcontinent. For, says Sharma, at stake in this intermeshing of environmental Green and Hindu Saffron is nothing less than the way Indians understand their humanity.

Hardback / 324pp / Rs 795 / ISBN 81-7824-340-7 / World rights / December 2011


And below
MUKUL SHARMA in conversation with
K. SIVARAMAKRISHNAN

Mukul Sharma’s new book, GREEN AND SAFFRON: HINDU NATIONALISM AND INDIAN ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS is the first serious scholarly study of both Anna Hazare in Ralegan Siddhi, as well as the interpenetration of environmental movements with Hindutva. To coincide with the book’s appearance, K. Sivaramakrishnan (Professor of Anthropology at Yale and a major historian of Indian environmentalism) converses with Mukul Sharma. Their conversation, below, contextualizes the book and provides insights into the author’s core interests.

How did you come to focus on the connections between religious and environmental values and the associated patterns of political mobilization in environmental movements?
Between 1990 and 2001, I happened to do at least three kinds of fieldwork, in different regions, with diverse agendas, and these led me for the first time to begin asking questions about the emerging interrelationships between religious and environmental values and a certain kind of conservative, nationalistic politics in India.
First, as a member of an environment journalists team, organized by the Centre for Science and Environment, Delhi, I visited Ralegaon Siddhi village and met Anna Hazare, to write on an ideal green village and an environmental crusader. I published three positive reports on this in the Hindi newspaper Navbharat Times, I was a special correspondent with them at that time. However, uneasy memories, notes, and documents on the use of Bharat Mata, Shivaji, Vande Mataram, army rules, religious symbols, codes and conduct in the village, along with publications by the then prominent leaders of the Rastriya Swamsevak Sangh portraying the village and its leader as a model for the country, continued to haunt me.
Second, I had been covering the anti-Tehri dam movement in Garhwal for long, and in one of my visits to the dam site in the late 1990s, where Sunderlal Bahuguna was sitting on a long fast, I met a group of sadhus distributing pamphlets that anchored the religious and environmental values of Ganga not only as a pivot against the dam, but also against alleged ‘enemy’ symbols and people of the country: i.e. mosques and Muslims.
And third, when in 2000 I began working with the political foundation of the Green Party of Germany and had an opportunity to visit the country a couple of times, I found a troubled past and present regarding the relationship between the environment and certain kinds of political and religious beliefs. I also felt that environmentalists in the Green Party Foundation were reluctant to formally discuss these linkages. These experiences led me to think in a more concrete and focused fashion on the connections between religious and environmental values, and the associated patterns of political mobilization in environmental movements.

How would you respond to the assertion that books on religion and ecology, often by scholars of religion, have focused on the realms of culture and spirituality as they reflect ideas of nature or information on ecological relations in the natural world. Such scholarship takes little interest in the political realm or the politics present in cultural constructions of nature or sacred objects in nature. On the other hand, the social science of environmental politics often lacks insight into the affective and devotional dimensions through which individuals and groups may relate to nature and thereby find affinity to the natural world in the form of a religious experience. If you agree with this formulation, is it your interest to bridge this divide?
Most works on religion and ecology, in the specific context of India and Hinduism, are often banal and unidimensional. They usually explore Vedic and Brahmanic understandings of religion, and apply them to the natural world. Leave aside the political realm, they do not even have space for contesting visions of religion and environment. Let me give an example from my village Vishwaspur, in Bhagalpur district of Bihar, where there is a thakur vadi (place of God), owned and nurtured by us, a few Brahmin families, in the name of the whole village. The religious values and practices associated with this place have a robust conservationist and protectionist streak concerning the ponds, trees, and water bodies in its vicinity. However, this religious place, its fruits and ceremonies, are closed to the Dalits of the village. The ‘sacred’ trees of the complex can only be worshipped and used by the Brahmins and Thakurs. So what kind of religious and spiritual values of the environment are we talking about, and by and for whom? I have also been finding many such instances in the state of Rajasthan—where there has been much hype around religiously and culturally celebrated ponds and water bodies—in the course of my new research on Dalit environmentalism. We need to dissect the various forms and content of religion in the environmental arena so that their regressive and liberatory aspects are understood simultaneously. Howsoever, worthy the religious beliefs and practices of an individual or a group may be for the environmental world, my interest lies in seeing it through the spectrum and cross-section of caste, class, gender, justice, and equity, and not as a stand-alone point of reference. Green and Saffron reflects precisely such a politics of the environment. It explores the cultural, ethnic and sectarian dimensions of green issues in India. This also underscores the intermeshing of identity, power, and nature.
[. . .]
Read more at: http://permanent-black.blogspot.com/2011/11/environmentalism-and-hindu-right.html

November 22, 2011

Mallika Sarabai on Gujarat riots of 2002 and after

Can Zakia Jafri take on India's powerful Narendra Modi and win? (Dionne Bunsha)

From: The Guardian, 22 November 2011

Can Zakia Jafri take on India's powerful Narendra Modi and win?

Following Ahsan Jafri's death at the hands of a mob, his widow's fight for justice is now a fight for all India's hate crime victims

by Dionne Bunsha

When the mob swarmed around his housing colony in Ahmedabad on 28 February 2002, the former Indian MP Ahsan Jafri made more than 100 phone calls, desperately pleading for help, over his neighbours' fearful cries and the mob's chants for blood. Eyewitnesses allege that Jafri called the local police station, imploring them to protect his neighbourhood from the threat that was closing in on them. The accusation is that the police stood on the sidelines and watched.

Neighbours crammed into Jafri's home seeking refuge. Little did they know he was the main target. In the late afternoon, when Jafri ventured out, begging the attackers to stop, they burned him alive. About 69 people were killed in the attack on the housing colony. Women were gang raped. Not even young children were spared. The Gulbarg Society massacre was part of a wave of violence against Muslims in Gujarat in 2002.

For almost 10 years, Jafri's wife, Zakia, has been fighting for justice. The frail, ailing 72-year-old has taken on one of India's most powerful politicians, Narendra Modi, the chief minister of India's most prosperous state, Gujarat. Modi aspires to be the Hindu rightwing BJP's candidate for prime minister in next year's elections. He is the darling of Indian industry, commended by Ratan Tata and Mukesh Ambani, the country's richest billionaires, and Amitabh Bachchan, Bollywood's biggest star. But critics allege that Modi stood by during a spate of violence that left more than 1,000 people dead. In Gujarat, the perception is that bringing a case against the influential is almost impossible.

Yet, India is shining. It is considered the world's largest democracy, a rising economic force. Its ugly record on communal violence is swept under the rug. Hate crimes are not normally associated with India. But thousands like Zakia have suffered, and their voices remain unheard, and the powerful leaders who allegedly abetted the crimes remain unscathed. Modi has consistently denied the accusations of his role in Gujarat's pogrom and has condemned the violence.

Years of struggle through a labyrinth of police stations and courts to file a case of alleged criminal conspiracy in the Gujarat violence against Modi and 61 other state officials has left Zakia back where she started.

On 12 September this year, the supreme court verdict sent Zakia's case back to Gujarat's district court. Before passing the verdict, the supreme court had appointed a special investigation team to look into the charges against Modi and the 61 others. After the team submitted its report, the court asked an amicus curiae (a legal expert appointed to assist the court) to make an independent assessment of it. Last month, the amicus curiae's report was leaked to the Indian media. The report allegedly states that there is enough evidence to file charges against the chief minister and several state officials. This gives Zakia and Citizens for Justice and Peace, a human rights group that is co-petitioner in Zakia's case, a glimmer of hope. But will the district court act on it?

Recently, the Gujarat police arrested Sanjiv Bhatt, a senior police officer who testified against Modi, giving evidence of Modi's role in the riots of 2002. Recently, he said he had attended a meeting of senior police officers a day before the Gulbarg attacks began. He attested that the chief minister told them to let the mobs vent their anger. The Gujarat police arrested Bhatt on charges that he forced a junior officer to make a false testimony against Modi. Though out on bail, he still fears he may be killed.

Communal violence is often used as a political tool in India. The BJP, the largest opposition party in India, whose Hindutva ideologues drew inspiration from fascist beliefs , according to scholars such as Christophe Jaffrelot and Marzia Casolari. The BJP and its many fraternal organisations together form the Sangh Parivar (pdf) (Family of Associations), a brotherhood that keeps Hindutva alive and kicking in India today. Gandhi's assassin, Nathuram Godse, was allegedly an activist for the Sangh Parivar. Besides the Gujarat pogrom, the Sangh has allegedly had a hand in several communal massacres, including the demolition of the historic Babri Masjid and the violence that followed across India in 1992-93.

Some of the ruling Congress party leaders were allegedly complicit in the anti-Sikh pogrom that followed the assassination of the former prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1984. Though hundreds of cases are pending in court, none of the politicians who were in power when the deaths occurred have been held to account. Should the frail yet crusading Zakia hope for anything different? Will India ever own up to its violent record on hate crimes? For Jafri and other victims, there's no one left to call, no more doors left to knock on.

Invitation to Seminar on Indian Constitution and Minority Rights (Ahmedabad, 27 Nov 2011)

ANHAD
and
DEMOCRATIC MUSLIM FORUM
invite you to a

Seminar on Indian Constitution and Minority Rights

Date: 27 November 2011

Time: 5.00 to 8.30 pm.

Venue:
Crescent School Auditorium, Opp: Bank of India,
Nr. Ambar Towers, Sarkhej Road, Juhapura, Ahmedabad.

SPEAKERS:
Sophiakhan, Dr. Jimmy Dabhi, Dr. Hanif Lakdawala

Why do medical doctors seem to always head the RSS in Gujarat?

From: DNA

Gujarat RSS gets another doctor as head

Published: Tuesday, Nov 22, 2011, 17:57 IST
By DNA Correspondent | Place: Ahmedabad | Agency: DNA

Gujarat unit of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) has elected Dr Jayanti Bhadesia as its third chief. All the three RSS chiefs till date in the state since the start of Sangh's activities are doctors.

The chief is known as the Prant Sanghchalak.

Dr Jayanti Bhadesia, 51, the newly elected Prant Sanghchalak of Gujarat RSS took over the baton from the outgoing Prant Sanghchalak Dr Amrut Kadiwala on Sunday evening. New state body of RSS was also created after the election.Prachar Pramukh (spokesperson of Gujarat RSS) and Pradip Jain said, "RSS is one of the largest organisations in the world and it functions in a democratic way. After the foundation of RSS in 1925, the organisation was functioning smoothly without any constitution. However in 1950 on the demand of government of India, a 16 page constitution of RSS was made. As per the constitution, elections in RSS shall be conducted after every three years. The election exercise that was held on November 20 was a part of the procedure."

He added, "Dr Amrut Kadiawala, who has been in the RSS since 1950 and has been part of Gujarat Prant Karyakarini for the last 33 years proposed Dr Bhadesia's name during the election for the position of the Prant Sanghchalak. Two members in the meeting of state representatives seconded Dr Kadiawala. No other name was proposed and so Dr Bhadesia was unanimously elected."

The first RSS chief of Gujarat was Dr PV Doshi who served from 1967 to 1997. He was a dentist by profession. Dr Kadiawala is not a clinical doctor but at the age of 60 along with RSS's responsibilities he completed his PhD in Civil Engineering. Dr Bhadesia is practicing general surgeon from Morbi.

"After the election of the new Prant Sanghchalak, the new body of Gujarat Prant RSS was appointed. Apart from this other four members who will represent Gujarat RSS at the national level meeting of all India RSS representatives were also elected," said Jain.

Dr Bhadesia had joined RSS at the age of 13. He has served as Rajkot district Sanghchalak, Saha Prant Karyavahak, Saha Prant Sanghchalak in the organisation. He has been unanimously elected by 155 representatives of RSS from across the state.

Ishrat Jahan Case: Take action now on all who faked evidence

From: Hard News

Mission Assassination Modi: Fake

If the RSS and BJP have any respect for constitutional and ethical values, they should sack Narendra Modi immediately. Because this man will never resign. Even as the wheels of injustice he has unleashed will come to haunt him every day of his life
[by] Amit Sengupta Delhi

Read More at: http://www.hardnewsmedia.com/2011/11/4222

After Ishrat Jahan Fake encounter case, India in a soup over anti-terror talks with Pakistan

India appeared headed for more embarrassment in its anti-terror talks with Pakistan after the Gujarat High Court on Monday admitted a high-level probe report stating that an alleged encounter death of a Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) suspect in 2004 was faked by police.

Acting on the game-changing report by the Special Investigation Team (SIT) about the Ishrat Jehan encounter by police under Chief Minister Narendra Modi’s administration, the Gujarat High Court ordered that murder charges be framed against the offending police officers.

India’s federal Intelligence Bureau too had supported the claim that a Lashkar plot was under way in 2004 to kill Mr Modi and it was concluded at some level to have pointed to Ishrat Jehan and her alleged LeT team.

Read More: http://www.dawn.com/2011/11/22/gujarat-let-encounter-was-faked-court-told.html

Pakistan: Sectarianism gradually seeping into all corners

From: Daily Times, 21 November 2011

Sectarianism gradually seeping into all corners of country

By Afnan Khan

LAHORE: Pakistan is rapidly falling a prey to the demon of extremism with hardliner clerics campaigning for jihad against rival sects while accusing them of committing blasphemy and violating the sanctity of the followers of Hazrat Mohammad (PBUH) openly.

At one hand the government seems active to maintain inter-faith harmony ahead of the first and the most sensitive month of Muslim calendar, but on the other side sectarian clerics have tossed a campaign against smaller sects under the nose of the government.

The clerics are not only organising small gatherings in different seminars across the board, but they have also continued a banners and posters campaign on the outskirts of the city, especially on GT Road to stoke sectarian tension and seeking condemnation of their opponents by framing them of being critics of sahabah.

Members of the Shia community also told Daily Times that they were not sure that everything will remain calm during the upcoming month of Muharram because the community had already faced a number of well-coordinated terror attacks during 2011 and previous years.

They were of the view that the hardliners were becoming more organised day by day and they have now adopted strategies of not directly naming their opponent sects but they convince the innocent minds, mainly youths in seminaries, a number of false accusations against minorities as true and then finally label any of the sects of committing these crimes to unleash terror against them.

Pakistan correspondent of Christian Science Monitor (CSM) Issam Ahmed who has a long experience of writing on these issues told Daily Times that there were some alarming signs regarding increase in the level of extremism and sectarianism in the country.

He stated that the federal government has managed to reduce the number of suicide bombings and coordinated terrorist attacks against different people as compare to 2009 and 2010 but the level of sectarian violence was rising unchecked with members of Shia community being executed by the terrorists in Balochistan and members of other minority groups being persecuted and targeted repeatedly across the country.

He further noted that Lashkar Jhangvi was specifically stronger in Punjab province and their leaders such as Malik Ishaq were not only given government protection through different ways but they were also allowed to hold press conferences.

He also added that activities of these sectarian elements in Punjab province also indicated that there was some kind of understanding between Lashkar e Jhangvi and current administration of the province.

Issam Ahmed asserted that there must be different strategies to counter the phenomenon of extremism from Pakistan on long term and short-term basis. He asserted that the government would have to come tough on this issue and stop spread of such hatred immediately.

Capital City Police Officer) Ahmad Raza Tahir, according to a recent press statement, directed that no police official would leave his duty till the dispersal of last person from Moharam-ul-Haram’s processions and sittings.

He also promised strict implementation of Moharam Security Plan by remaining high alert, especially till the end of all religious congregations. Ahmad Raza Tahir affirmed that the Lahore Police, in coordination with the Ulemas, Public Representatives, all other related departments and agencies, would ensure comprehensive security for religious routes and places as well as harmony between different sects. He also directed strict enforcement of Loud Speaker Ordinance across the city.

November 19, 2011

Hindus only sports tournament in Mangalore by RSS youth wing

From: The Hindu

MANGALORE, November 19, 2011

Kabaddi tournament 'for Hindus only'
Anisha Sheth

A kabaddi tournament being organised by a Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)-affiliated association has raised concerns here.

The Hindu Jagran Vedike, the youth wing of the RSS, is organising a kabaddi tournament for men and women on Sunday. However, the invitation card and press notes for the event carry a rider: only Hindus can participate.

Writer K. Phaniraj said: “RSS-affiliated organisations make no bones about furthering their agenda of making Muslims and Christians second-class citizens of the country.” He added that a public event only for Hindus was “clearly a show of enmity against other communities, which is against the Constitution”.

He said that law enforcement agencies and the district administration must take note of such instances and take suitable action.

State vice-president of the People's Union for Civil Liberties, Suresh Bhat, agreed that the district administration should take action and prevent the event from happening.

Bangalore-based lawyer and adviser to Commissioner on Food Security appointed by the Supreme Court, Clifton D'Rozario, said that it was “the duty of the police” to register a suo motu case when there was an intention to create hatred between communities, incite violence and create a law and order problem.

Commissioner of Police Seemanth Kumar Singh said that he was not aware of the event but would check with Assistant Commissioner of Police (South) to see if there was likely to be any law and order problem. The tournament is being organised to commemorate the “brave Hindu martyrs of Dakshina Kannada” as part of the organisation's 25th anniversary celebrations.

According to an office-bearer of the vedike, who requested anonymity, the martyrs in whose honour the trophy is being held, include Polali Ananth, Sukhanand Shetty, Prem, Dinesh, Manjunath, Candle Santhu, Udaya Poojary, Jagadish Poojary, Narasimha Shettigar and Chetan Shetty.

Gujarat: Riot cop who battled state vendetta

From: The Telegraph

Riot cop who battled state vendetta
Witness lost constable job
- Guilty of murder

by BASANT RAWAT

Ahmedabad, Nov. 10: The Gujarat government had sacked an employee in connection with the riot case that led to 31 life terms yesterday — not the three among the accused but one who became a key prosecution witness.

It was police constable Munsaf Khan, who had not only identified several key accused in the Sardarpura massacre of 33 Muslims but exposed the rioter-police collusion.

Khan’s victimisation partly mirrors that of another whistleblower policeman, IPS officer Sanjiv Bhatt, who was suspended and arrested after spilling chief minister Narendra Modi’s alleged role in the Supreme Court.

Khan was dismissed in 2007 after he had filed an affidavit in the apex court describing how the local police had left the village, giving the killers a free hand. He was sacked for going on “unauthorised leave”, the same charge on which Bhatt was later suspended.

FULL TEXT AT: http://telegraphindia.com/1111111/jsp/nation/story_14735821.jsp

Table Communal Violence Bill early

From The Hindu

Mumbai, November 19, 2011

‘Table Communal Violence Bill early'

Staff Reporter

For four months the government has been silent on the Bill: Naqvi

The United Progressive Alliance government has not delivered on its promise of bringing in legislation against communal violence. After initial talks, the Centre has fallen silent on the Prevention of Communal and Targeted Violence (Access to Justice and Reparations) Bill which needs speedy tabling, a panel comprising drafters of the legislation said at a meeting here on Friday.

“Not just the leadership, but the executive too have failed to give equal justice under the existing law and this failure has gone unchecked,” National Advisory Council (NAC) member Harsh Mander said.

On the argument about biased approaches toward the accused along communal lines, Mr. Mander cited the instance of the recently released accused of the Malegaon 2006 blast case.

In this case and several others before it, “as long as the accused were Muslims, flimsy allegations, rumours were enough to keep them in jail. But when the accused is from the Hindu faith you need the highest standard of investigation and proof,” he said.

Another NAC member Farah Naqvi said: “Today the ball is firmly in the government's court. For four months the government has been silent. We waited for a democratic dialogue to take place to address the concerns. If the UPA is sincere, they should do it now.”

Former Judge Hosed Suresh questioned the delay to bring in the law. “Are we to go on a fast? People know what happened in this country. We have enough laws, but what happened with them? We need a new law to care for those who have been targeted. The government should not hesitate to table the Bill in the Parliament.”

“We are still debating this [bill] when it should have been a law by now.”

Mr. Suresh said fears that the law would not be able to stand Constitutional scrutiny were needless. “We have defined women and scheduled castes and tribes in the Constitution. I find no justification that it will not stand Constitutional scrutiny,” he said.

Official complicity

Mr. Mander said when the Constitution was framed, the “expectation” was that “the State and the police would stand by the victims, be fair and defend the Constitution and the citizens without any partisanship, prejudice, discussion or hatred.” This vision was far removed from the reality.

Official complicity in a crime was a crime “of a different nature,” Mr. Mander said. The Bill made officials “criminally accountable” for dereliction of duty.

“While our criminal justice system was structured around the rights of the accused, while the State's responsibility was to protect the victims. But what happens when the State is on the side of the accused? Then there is systematic subversion of justice,” Mr. Mander said, pointing to a large number of cases in the Mumbai riots and Gujarat being summarily closed.

Sexual assault

Ms. Naqvi said the Bill encompassed forms of brutal sexual assault on the bodies of women, which had no definition in the existing Indian Penal Code laws related to women.

“This law creates new sexual offences. The kind not recognised in the existing laws. If a woman's body has been mutilated [in the private parts] she cannot prove it's rape. This law defines sexual assault for the first time. We want the government to put these definitions in the current laws,” Ms. Naqvi said.

She sought to dispel the notions that communal violence was a thing of the past. “Paramakudi, Moradabad, Gopalpur, Rudrapur; how many more victims, SITs [Special Investigation Teams], CBI [Central Bureau of Investigation] enquiries, Supreme Court interventions are needed?” she asked.

Closed gates; zipped lips. Quran exhibit shut down in Delhi

From: Outlook | Web | Nov 18, 2011

Essay

The Deadening Silence Of Good Intentions
Closed gates; zipped lips. What happens when an exhibition on the Quran opens in New Delhi.

by C.M. Naim

In September 2011, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat in India organized an exhibition on the Quran at the Constitution Club of India, New Delhi. It highlighted the teachings of the Quran under a wide range of headings: Justice; Suffering; Death; Science; Peace; Women’s Role and Rank, and so forth. It also put on display the translations of the sacred text in 53 languages—including Tamil, Telugu. Marathi, Russian, Korean and Vietnamese—that the Ahmadis have successfully produced over many decades. [1]

The exhibition was to last three days; it closed after one day and a half. There were raucous demonstrations outside the club by various local Muslim organizations, and the police ordered the exhibition closed. The authorities feared further, and more violent, protests. To their credit, however, the Delhi police did a good job of keeping the demonstrators from physically damaging the exhibits and the organizers. Credit is also due to the Congress MP, Mr Pratap Singh Bajwa, who represents Gurdaspur (Punjab), where Qadiyan is. He helped his constituents by making available the space for the exhibition—one hopes his party did not reprimand him. Also commendable is Mr Wajahat Habibullah, the Chairman of the National Minorities Commission, who visited the exhibition and also publicly spoke in support of it. In both cases, it was an act of personal courage besides being what was officially expected of them. [. . .].
FULL TEXT AT: http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?279021

Douse fires of anti-Muslim prejudice

From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 8, Issue 47, Dated 26 Nov 2011

Douse Communal Fires

Our commitment to secularism will remain hollow as long as anti-Muslim prejudice exists

By Abdul Khaliq

LAST WEEK, that inveterate hate-monger Praveen Togadia made an impassioned plea for a new Indian Constitution that allows for “anyone who converts Hindus to be beheaded”. He went on to assert that “we Hindus should include Buddhists, Sikhs and Jains because their line of thinking is no different from Hindus, except for a few small habits”. Is this isolated fundamentalist ranting or the indication of a trend towards increase in the forces of hatred and division in our society?

The preamble to the Constitution is the most noble advertisement of our commitment to secular humanism. It spells out our resolve to be a humane society that will secure justice, liberty, equality for its citizens and promote fraternity. Of these cherished values, the greatest and the most neglected is fraternity, perhaps because it is least amenable to political action. As a wise man once said, the State can prevent me from coveting my neighbour’s property but it cannot oblige me, by law, to love my neighbour. And yet, the success of our pursuit to be a strong, united and civilised country ultimately depends on whether we love one another as brothers. Our prescient Constitution- makers, knowing the importance, underlined fraternity as a key ingredient for building a vibrant democracy.

We have failed dismally in this endeavour. The country today is the hotbed of a million mutinies. Our prime minister has spoken of terrorism as the biggest threat to the nation. Others believe that the long shadow of Maoists over the heartland is our Achilles’ heel. However, there is another insidious, omnipresent and all-consuming poison that is eating into the vitals of the nation — religious prejudice and intolerance.

When a bomb explodes and kills innocents, cold fear grips the Muslim community. It knows, from bitter experience, that although terrorism claims affinity to a host of faiths and ideologies, the invariable reaction to a terrorist act is to blame it on some Islamic terrorist group. The grim reality is that only Muslims are made to feel that they have to answer for the perverted deeds of their co-religionists, whereas an equally heinous crime by Norwegian Anders Breivik is rationalised as a case of individual madness that has nothing to do with Christian fundamentalism. Similarly, the terrorist acts of the right-wing Hindu extremists are seen as an aberration. The fact that so-called Islamic terrorism claims many more Muslim victims than others is studiously ignored because it vitiates a neat argument.

The bogus perception of Islam has unfortunately seeped into the law-enforcement apparatus. Time and again, the nation is confronted with the unacceptable injustices perpetrated on members of the minority community in the guise of fighting terrorism. After the 2006 Malegaon blasts, 115 Muslims were picked up and all, barring nine, were released after years of incarceration and torture. These nine innocents remained behind bars until last week, despite Swami Asimananda’s confession that it was the handiwork of Hindu extremists. Earlier this year, 63 Muslims who had languished in jail for nine years for alleged involvement in the Godhra train massacre of 2002 were released for want of evidence. The Godhra verdict itself threw up a major paradox. The court on the one hand adjudged that this horrific incident was the result of a criminal conspiracy and on the other came out with the astonishing contradictory ruling letting off the main conspirators who were allegedly instrumental in mobilising the mob on that fateful day. The judge apparently does not subscribe to the dictum that a case is only as strong as its weakest link. Full of loose ends and imponderables, the judgment has done little to inspire confidence and finally clear the air.

So acute is the discrimination that Muslims wonder whether they have equal citizenship rights under the law

In July, 12 Muslim youth, who were implicated for the Haren Pandya murder, were set free after five years as there was no evidence against them. More recently, 21 Muslims who had been implicated for the Mecca Masjid blasts of 2008 were released because they were innocent. Not surprisingly the advocate commissioner who had been appointed by the State Minorities Commission to investigate allegations of police abuse not only confirmed torture but the report also added that the detainees believed that they had been picked up and tortured “because they belong to a particular community”.

What the years of torture, unfair defamation and separation from their families have done to these broken spirits is impossible to express in words. So acute is the discrimination that Muslims wonder whether they have equal citizenship rights under the law. The most tragic irony is that scores of innocents are behind bars because of their religious affiliations, whereas there are thousands of murderers — the perpetrators of the Sikh killings of 1984, the Mumbai blasts of 1992, the subsequent Mumbai pogrom of 1993, the Godhra train massacre of 2002 and the subsequent Gujarat riots — who are roaming free. This is the chilling reality of life in our country today, which can be ignored only at our own peril. These hate-mongers would need little provocation to kill again.

Former Supreme Court judge Justice Markandey Katju recently berated the media for accentuating the false perception about Muslims. He is convinced that the media often twists facts and creates the impression that Muslims are terrorists. Observers have noted that the media is muted and guarded in exposing the atrocities committed by other right-wing extremists. It is significant that the mainstream media ignored the recent revelations by a special director of the Intelligence Bureau at the conference of the State Police Chiefs that Hindu extremists have either been suspected or are under investigation in 16 incidents of bomb blasts, which makes Hindutva terror a much bigger phenomenon than previously envisaged. The media, however, continues to portray the Muslim as the archetypal terrorist. Fuelled by prejudice and intolerance, our public discourse has degenerated to the lowest possible level. The most inflammatory and divisive rhetoric has become commonplace. We are all aware of the scurrilous remarks about Muslims made by Subramanian Swamy, who has called for disenfranchisement of Muslims if they did not proudly acknowledge that their ancestors were Hindus. Even the once respected Justice VR Krishna Iyer made this scandalous observation: “I do suspect their loyalty. If every Muslim in India feels India to be his motherland and wants to defend it, the police will easily get information about the secret manoeuvres of hostile Muslim elements.” Can hate and prejudice get more absurd and hurtful than this? With such deviant thought processes in the public domain, our founding fathers’ cherished dream of universal brotherhood lies in tatters.

In this mind-numbing environment of hostility and prejudice, one would have thought that the political leadership would help to redress this grave situation with courage and humanity. But far from trying to rectify matters, they have only added fuel to fire. Who can forget Rajiv Gandhi’s statement about the inevitable effect of the falling of a big tree? Or Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s heartless comment following the Gujarat riots that Muslims did not condemn the Godhra carnage loudly enough. Then we had Narendra Modi’s infamous Newtonian observation justifying the Gujarat riots as reaction to an action.

Today, the woes of the ordinary Muslim seem never ending. Living as he is on the margins of society, discriminated against in education and the job market, even when looking for accommodation, he is also burdened with the awful stigma of being in tacit collusion with terrorists. In communal conflicts, he is not only pitted against the other group but has to contend with the clearly partisan actions of the State as demonstrated in the Gopalgarh incident in Rajasthan where only the Muslims were gunned down by the police. And despite his intolerable travails, he is considered the main beneficiary of “minority appeasement”. Is it any wonder then if many believe that our secular democracy exists only in the statute books?

Abdul Khaliq is General secretary, Lok Janshakti Party.
akhaliq2007@gmail.com

November 18, 2011

BJP youth activists detained for protest at 'Wikipedia Conference' in Bombay

From: The Times of India


BJP youth activists detained for protest against Wikipedia
PTI | Nov 18, 2011, 06.10PM IST

MUMBAI: About 20 activists of BJP's youth wing were on Friday detained while they were demonstrating against the "wrong representation" of maps of Jammu & Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh on Wikipedia, outside the Mumbai University here.

The protest comes on the day when the founder of Wikipedia Jimmy Whales was at the varsity to deliver the opening address on the 'Wikipedia Conference'.

BJP's city youth president Ameet Satam said the demonstration was against "wrong and illegal depiction of the map of India, not showing Jammu and Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh as part of the country, which is a criminal offence".

Ban on Ramanujan’s essay shameful : UR Ananthamurthy

The Times of India

Ban on Ramanujan’s essay shameful: URA

TNN | Nov 2, 2011, 04.58AM IST

BANGALORE : Kannada litterateur UR Ananthamurthy has soundly criticized Delhi University's decision to remove AK Ramanujan's essay, 'Three Hundred Ramayanas: Five Examples and Three Thoughts on Translation' , from its undergraduate History syllabus.

The essay has been in the eye of a storm in the otherwise sleepy ac ademia and has forced academics and students to take to the streets in protest against what they see as a blow to the diversity of Indian thought and scholarship.

"The old orthodox India would never have done this. It made room for so many variations. It is only the modern India of communalism and extreme nationalism that finds itself unable to deal with plurality and diversity,'' Ananthamurthy told TOI. "It is an utter shame. It is intolerable.''

In 2008, ABVP activists charged into the office of the then head of DU's department of history, Prof SZH Jafri, and demanded that the essay be withdrawn. The academic council later referred the essay to an expert committee which was to decide whether it should remain on the syllabus or not. Although three of the four experts on the committee recommended that the university keep the essay on its syllabus, the council voted to drop it.

According to Ananthamurthy , ancient texts are often to be found in one or many of the following forms: 'shruti' , 'smriti' and 'purana' . While 'shruti' refers to the oral version of texts, 'smriti' refers to remembered accounts and 'purana ' to the written ones. "There is no end as to how many versions there can be. Only very limited people can claim that there must be only one version," he said.

Illustrating how intertextual ancient epics can take shape in their telling and retelling over centuries, Ananthamurthy laughingly recounted a certain version of the Ramayana performed in a rural area, in which Sita is denied permission to accompany her husband on his forest exile: She says, "How come all the other Sitas are allowed to go with Rama while I am not?''

Academics and students from two of Delhi's universities support Ramanujan's essay

Courtesy: Mail Today

Delhi univs voice support for banned Ramayan

Dr Upinder Singh (right)
The DU meet was chaired by Dr Upinder Singh (right).

Students and teachers from two universities in Delhi assembled on Wednesday to express their support in favour of retaining A. K. Ramanujan's essay, 300 Ramayanas. They also had a discussion on the various translations of the Ramayana.

While those gathered at Delhi University held a candlelight march, the scholars gathered at Ambedkar University were audience to a short documentary called Anek Ramayana.

The gathering at the DU campus saw about 50 people marching from the department of history to the faculty of arts, shouting slogans against the administration and the growing influence of communalism on academia.

"Basically, we're trying to mobilise opinion both within the university and outside. We are trying to use democratic ways to express our demand," said Pankaj Jha, a professor of history at Lady Shri Ram college. "The only thing that will really satisfy us in the end is for the essay to be reinstated in the syllabus."

The march was preceded by a panel of professors discussing the impact of the decision to drop the essay, written by renowned scholar A. K. Ramanujan. History professor and daughter of the Prime Minister, Dr Upinder Singh chaired the meet.

"In the face of all this intimidation... it seems like the space for academics to express themselves is under threat, and we need to do something about that," Singh told the crowd, "This is a question of safeguarding the university as a place It is a struggle to ensure that this kind of thing is not taken casually."

Ambedkar University was host to a short documentary film directed by Sikha Sen, which explored the various translations and historical depictions of the Ramayan. The documentary was followed by a panel discussion aimed at debating how autonomous may an educational body be in teaching its syllabus, and how immune may it be to political pressure. "The issue before us is to decide whether to succumb to political pressure. In my opinion we have to fight this political pressure that pressurises syllabus decisions not on merit but political basis," faculty member Salil Mishra said.

Communalising Investigations

From: Outlook - 16 November 2011
The politicisation and communalisation of the investigation process since 2006 in terrorism-related cases has led to a paralysis of the investigation machinery in the states and the government of India.

by B. Raman

The politicisation and communalisation of the investigation process since 2006 in terrorism-related cases has led to a paralysis of the investigation machinery in the states and the government of India.

The result: Barring the 26/11 terrorist strikes in Mumbai which were successfully investigated and prosecuted, our investigating agencies have not been able to detect any of the post-26/11 terrorist strikes in Pune, Mumbai, Benares and New Delhi and they have not been able to successfully prosecute any of the major terrorist incidents that had taken place before 26/11.

FULL TEXT AT: http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?278991

November 17, 2011

BJP back to Ram temple agenda in Ayodhya

From: Tehelka.com

Saffron party back to Ram temple agenda in Ayodhya

BJP President Gadkari promises ‘Gandhian Ram rajya’ and a grand Ram temple if party is voted to power in UP

by Virendra Nath Bhatt
Ayodhya

BJP President Nitin Gadkari on Thursday promised to bring “Gandhian Ram rajya” and a grand Ram temple in Ayodhya if the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was voted to power in the 2012 Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh.
FULL TEXT AT: http://www.tehelka.com/story_main51.asp?filename=Ws171111BJP_CAMPAIGN.asp

Condemnation of Targeted Communal Attacks in Hyderabad and Secunderabad - Demand for Action

Press Release

Condemnation of Targeted Attacks on Members of One Community

Demand for Action- Constitution of Magisterial Enquiry to Expose Conspiracy

We the undersigned representatives of Civil Society are deeply concerned and disturbed by the spate of targeted attacks on members of a particular community during the past fortnight in different parts of Hyderabad and Secunderabad. What is alarming is that most of these attacks have taken place in localities without any history of communal tensions and conflicts. No one could have imagined that any such incidences could take place in places like Balanagar, Bowenpally, Chickadpally, Kachiguda, Malkajgiri and others. The fact of such attacks in these localities point to a very well thought out strategy to not only foment communal disturbances in the city but also to expand the poison of communal tensions to a much larger area.

People living in communally sensitive areas are already becoming apprehensive about the possibility of communal trouble and rumours are rife that 400 to 500 people have arrived in Hyderabad to start riots. History has shown that creation of such an atmosphere of insecurity, distrust and apprehension of trouble more often than not leads to riots and the conspirators behind this recent spate of attacks must also be aiming to foment trouble by creating the required atmosphere. It is also seen that even after the arrest of 6 persons of Hindu Vahini alleged to be behind some of the attacks, the instances of attacks continue pointing to the existence of more gangs and a deeper and well thought out conspiracy. If the authorities do not unravel the conspiracy and expose the conspiring forces, the city may soon witness another bout of riots causing irreparable damages to the poor and suffering to all citizens.

We had seen riots in Hyderabad in March- April 2010 and it is clear now that those were engineered to divert the attention from the Telangana movement and the conspirators at that time were successful in achieving their objective. Unfortunately, the authorities had totally failed in catching the culprits or exposing and punishing the conspirators. It is also possible that the present occurrence of attacks could be to once again to divert attention from crucial issues like the Telangana Movement, corruption or as a preparation for creating vote bank for the next elections in the State that could be in 2014 or even earlier.

If the conspiracy is not unraveled immediately and all those responsible, however high and mighty, are not exposed and prosecuted with utmost speed, such incidences could well become a trend in future to divert attention from contentious issues or divide society for petty electoral gains. This would cause irreversible loss to the secular fabric and peaceful atmosphere in society and inflict incalculable loss on the economy and greatly stunt the growth of the country.

We appeal to all citizens not to fall a prey to these provocations by some intriguing, communally minded persons, maintain calm and peace locally and make all efforts and assist the authorities to detect the conspirators and share information with them, and pressurize the authorities to bring the culprits to book.

Hence we demand:

1. Those behind the attacks should be apprehended without any delay and booked under sections 307, 153 –A and 120-B and under the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2002.

2. Special investigation teams should be constituted to unravel the conspiracy and fast track courts should be formed to unsure speedy trail and prosecution.

3. Sketches of suspects should be prepared with the help of the victims and should be publicized though media and posters to apprehend the culprits.

4. It has come to our notice that innocent youth are being picked up again without proper evidence to suspect them. Police should use proper scientific methods to apprehend the guilty and not harass the innocent that seems to be happening more as a rule than an exception. Departmental enquiries against the concerned officials should be instituted for not following proper procedures in arrests and investigations.

5. Cash awards for any information leading to the arrest of culprits and the conspirators must be announced.

6. Cost of all the treatment of the victims should be borne by the government and they should be given a compensation of at least 2 lakhs each.

7. Special police pickets should be posted in all the sensitive areas and police patrolling, especially at night, should be intensified to instill confidence amongst the people.

8. We appeal to all citizens to form vigil groups in their areas to deter targeted attacks and dispel feelings of distrust and insecurity amongst the people.

9. While recognizing and honouring the unalienable principal of the freedom of the media, we appeal to the media to also use extreme care and caution while carrying any news items or reports to ensure that sentiments of the people are not inflamed and an atmosphere of peace and harmony is created and maintained.


Mazher Hussain,
COVA

Dr. Manatosh Mandal,
Hum Sub Hindustani Trust

K.M. Arifuddin
Madina Education Centre

Nanak Singh Nishter,
International Sikh Center for Interfaith Relations

GVVSDS Prasad,
General Secretary, Sarvodaya Mandal, Andhra Pradesh

Jasveen Jairath,
SOUL

P. Umesh,
Joint Action for Water

Veda Kumar,
Chelimi Foundation

Aliuddin Quadri,
Bharat Ekta Manch

Ambika,
Aman Vedika

M.A.Shakeel,
HRLN

Prof. Rama Melkote
Mohammed Turab,
Inter Faith Forum

Why the Communal and Targeted Violence Bill must be codified into law (Teesta Setalvad)

In 1998, five years after we launched Communalism Combat, we had pointed out, in possibly one of the first researched compilations on judicial pronouncements on communal violence, that from the first ever bout of communal violence in free India (Jabalpur, 1961) to the full-blown pogroms that followed some decades later, two characteristics typified the violent frenzies that frequently cost us lives and property (‘Who is to blame?’, Communalism Combat, March 1998).

Both characteristics hold good today.

One is the silent yet strident mobilisation by right-wing supremacist groups through hate speech and hate writing against religious and other minorities for months beforehand. Though these have always amounted to violations of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), they have gone unchecked and unpunished, creating a climate that is fertile ground for the actual outbreak of violence. The other major cause of such violence has been found, by several members of the Indian judiciary, to be the failure of large sections of the administration and the police force to enforce the rule of law, resulting in a complete breakdown indicating deliberate inaction and complicity.

Both these features combined each time – whether in Jabalpur (1961), Ranchi (1967, Justice Raghubir Dayal Commission of Inquiry), Ahmedabad (1969, Justice Jagmohan Reddy Commission of Inquiry), Bhiwandi, Jalgaon and Mahad (1970, Justice DP Madon Commission of Inquiry), Tellicherry (1971, Justice Joseph Vithayathil Commission of Inquiry), Hashimpura (1987) or Bhagalpur (1989) – to ensure that minorities were not just brutally targeted but also denied free access to justice and reparation.

The organised violence in Delhi in 1984, Bombay in 1992-1993 and Gujarat in 2002 took the levels of impunity for state and non-state actors to hitherto unknown heights. A historiography of communal violence since Indian independence thus reveals a poor report card on justice delivery and reparation. Today unfortunately, we have extant examples of victim survivors, Muslim, Sikh and Christian, still waiting at the threshold for the first stages of investigation and trial to begin decades after the crimes have taken place.

The newly drafted Prevention of Communal and Targeted Violence (Access to Justice and Reparations) Bill 2011 (commonly referred to as the Communal and Targeted Violence Bill), which awaits a nod from the cabinet before it is tabled in Parliament, is an attempt to address the imbalance and the despair caused by over six decades of discriminatory justice delivery.

FULL TEXT: http://www.sabrang.com/cc/archive/2011/nov11/cover1.html

Resolution adopted at AIDWA convention communal conflict, 16 Nov 2011

http://sacw.net/article2394.html

Gujarat riots: SIT concealing evidences to protect politicians, say victims

Gujarat riots: SIT concealing evidences to protect politicians, say victims
Published: Monday, Nov 14, 2011, 21:28 IST
Place: Ahmedabad | Agency: PTI

Some of the victims of 2002 Gulberg housing society riots in Ahmedabad have accused the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) of concealing evidences to protect politicians and high-ranking policemen in the post-Godhra communal violence case.

FULL TEXT HERE: http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_gujarat-riots-sit-concealing-evidences-to-protect-politicians-say-victims_1612498

November 16, 2011

Photos [and reports] AIDWA Convention on communal conflict 16 November 2011

Photos by Mukul Dube from AIDWA Convention on communal conflict, Constitution Club, New Delhi, 16 November 2011







Apart from testimonies by families of victims of recent communal violence in Forbesganj, Rudrapur, Gopalgarh and Moradabad, Shweta Bhatt (wife Police office Sanjiv Bhatt) and elected officials of AIDWA addressed the convention and expressed solidarity with the riot victims.

Posted below are some relevant news reports on the convention:

Ummid

Punish erring police officials in communal conflicts: AIDWA

Wednesday November 16, 2011 11:00:43 PM, IANS

New Delhi: The All India Democratic Women's Association (AIDWA) Wednesday demanded exemplary punishment for police officials responsible for "atrocities" during recent communal conflicts in different states and sought a legislation against communal violence.

At a convention here against communal conflict, AIDWA passed a resolution demanding speedy justice to the victims who belong to the minority community.

The AIDWA resolution said that ten members of minority community were shot dead by police in Bharatpur in September this year and four Muslims including a woman and a child were killed due to police firing in Araria district in Bihar when villagers were protesting forcible takeover of their land by a local politician from the ruling alliance.

It said that police had fired on protestors from minority community and communal fanatics had razed shops and property owned by them in Rudrapur in Uttarakhand and one person was killed in police firing in Moradabad in Uttar Pradesh.

Victims from Forbesganj in Bihar, Gopalgarh in Rajasthan, Rudrapur in Uttarakhand and Moradabad in Uttar Pradesh narrated their experience of "one-sided" police and administrative action at the convention.

"The convention condemned the communal bias of the police and administration during these riots," the resolution said.

The convention also demanded justice for victims of Guiarat riots and accused Gujarat government of "threatening and intimidating those who dare to expose the role of the chief minister (Narendra Modi) and his government in the Gujarat genocide."

Shweta Bhatt, wife of IPS officer Sanjeev Bhatt, addressed the convention and expressed solidarity with the riot victims.

AIDWA patron Brinda Karat said Gujarat government was stifling attempts to book Modi for 2002 riots. She alleged that witnesses were being intimidated and killed and said United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government had failed to provide protection of witnesses. She said that many survivors of the Gujarat riots were still living in camps "in deplorable conditions".

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The Hindu
NEW DELHI, November 17, 2011

Our fight will continue: Shweta Bhatt
by Smriti Kak Ramachandran

Shweta Bhatt, wife of suspended Gujarat IPS officer Sanjiv Bhatt, is undaunted by what lies ahead in their fight against the State administration. Taking on the Narendra Modi government, she said the State people wanted “a change” and were not afraid to speak against the system.

“When my husband decided to speak out, we knew there will be consequences; there were and we faced them. And we know it is not going to end soon,” she told The Hindu on Wednesday. Ms. Bhatt, who was in the Capital to attend a convention organised by the All India Democratic Women's Association, said though there was pressure on the family, covertly and otherwise, the thought of giving up did not arise. “I am very proud of my husband, he is a very brave man; my children are brave children of a brave father and I am completely with my husband.”

“We have been troubled in various ways: first he [Sanjiv Bhatt] was hounded, then the family was demoralised and old cases were dug out, but we are prepared to fight. We are getting a lot of support from people, a lot of young people are coming out to join us and that strengthens our resolve to fight against the injustice in Gujarat.”

She dismissed the claims of the Modi government that it has been able to usher in development in the State. “What is happening in Gujarat [in terms of development] is also happening in Kanpur and Bhopal. The money for the flyovers is coming from the Centre. What has the Modi government done? What is happening in Gujarat is not progress. Funds for judicial and police service are being subverted and Mr. Modi is using his office for carrying out his agenda.”

November 15, 2011

Sri Sri Ravishankar and Art of Politics

by Ram Puniyani

AS ELECTIONS in Uttar Pradesh are nearing, so is the number of travels by spiritual gurus. These gurus are giving their discourses against corruption. (November 2011). The major ones amongst them are Baba Ramdev and Sri Sri Ravi Shankar (Sri Sri). Sri Sri has shared space with Anna and played a considerable role when the government had arrested Anna. Sri Sri came to play the role of an interlocutor between Anna and his followers, during his prison stint. As if by a divine design, yoga guru Ramdev and Sri Sri have suddenly realised this menace of corruption and have plunged themselves head long into the anti corruption movement.

So, the teachings of Ramdev have a supplementary dose of anti corruption teachings added on to it. Similarly Sri Sri’s ‘Art of Living’ has now the additional flavour of anti corruption sermons. While this is going on, Congress general secretary Digvijay Singh has alleged that Ramdev, Anna and Sri Sri are team members of RSS. Ramdev is known to be close to BJP and had also toyed with the idea of floating his own political party. However, Sri Sri never talked on similar lines, and has maintained that he has nothing to do with politics. According to him his UP tour is a mere extension of what he has been doing, making people take oath against corruption.
And, now Digvijay Singh has gone hoarse, claiming Sri Sri has a political agenda and he is Team C of RSS. Does Sri Sri have no political agenda? Or is he a part of RSS pantheon? Surely one can guess that Sri Sri may not have attended the Shakha bauddhiks (intellectual sessions conducted in RSS branches, known asShakhas) and might not have worn khaki shorts and saluted the saffron flag in RSS shakhas. But yet, Sri Sri is surely a part of a scheme to influence electoral politics. Having said that, let’s understand that electoral politics is not the only form of politics influencing the society; it is also done by social movements and awareness programmes.
Bills cannot be passed on the streets and not under pressure. The government had accepted and is furiously working in that direction. Despite that the threats from team Anna are on and team Anna actively worked against the ruling Congress in Hisar elections. It seems there is more to the Anna upsurge than just the JLB or anti Corruption issue. They are having a deeper agenda, and Sri Sri is very much a part of it. Earlier the bill for Right to Information, NREGA etc were brought in, anti Corruption bill is in the offing, than why such a pressure from Team Anna and associated gurus. This just reconfirms that there is more to Anna movement than meets the eye.
The political agenda of this movement is much deeper than what is apparent at the surface. One needs to question whether under the garb of spirituality a particular type of politics is being strengthened. Sri Sri had a phenomenonal rise during last three decades. To beat the stress of today’s working youth, Sri Sri has devised Sudarshan Kriya, based on the breathing exercises from the past traditions of India. Today, he is in league with many a God-men, people like late Bhagwan Satya Sai, Asaram Bapu, Baba Ramdev, propagating values of a particular type. While these godmen are selling tranquilising therapies, ‘keep fit regimes’ on one side, on the other they also support the prevalent social dynamics in the society. The ‘deeper changes’ to ensure the rights of weaker sections of society is what we should strive for. On the contrary the type of politics, which comes in the garb of religion, propagates the values which are opposed to the politics of affirmative action for weaker sections of society. The godmen are rubbing shoulders with the Nitin Gadkaris. Narendra Modis, Ram Madhavs and the like. So logically they are the one’s touring the state where election is due and they know on whose side they are canvassing in a subtle fashion. Such type of politics, laced in color of religion, is tied to the apron strings of a Hindu Rashtra, which in turn is being spearheaded by RSS.
WHILE SPEAKING on the eradication of corruption a noble sentiment, there is obvious rise of parallel movement of Anna and initiatives of Godmen on the issue. There simultaneity is striking. RSS chief claims that he talked to Anna Hazare to take up this issue. It is appalling as to how this triad of Anna Hazare, Baba Ramdev and Sri Sri realised the need for anti Corruption movement all at the same point of time? And, of course, the RSS rushed its swayamsevaks in this movement all over the country without a minutes delay. Mere coincidence? No way! While talking against corruption is good, the question is why is there no talk about female foeticide, atrocities against dalits and violence against minorities? The spiritual guru, one hopes, is aware that these issues are prevalent in our society. Why no support for ‘right to food’ issue, or why no support to eradicate communal violence? And last but not the least how come there is such a perfect match in what Sri Sri believes and what RSS-BJP want on the issues related to minorities, reservations for dalits, etc?

Madhya Pradesh: Gita in school syllabus

From: zeenews.com

MP govt to include Gita in school syllabus

Last Updated: Monday, November 14, 2011, 23:53

Indore: Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan has said that Bhagwad Gita would be included in school curriculum.

"Teaching Gita is no crime and the government would include the teaching of Gita in educational curriculum," Chouhan said while addressing a function organised by the RSS-backed Saraswati Vidya Pratishthan here on Sunday.

Claiming English has been overemphasised compared to other subjects in school curriculum, the chief minister said his government's priority was to "correct" the curriculum and promote Hindi.

He also said most of the government work is done in Hindi and the state would not hesitate to encourage any good work done for promoting Hindi.

PTI

DU essay row mirrors the rot in higher education

From: Mail Today, 15 November 2011


by Jyotirmaya Sharma

THE REMOVAL of A. K. Ramanujan’s essay on the Ramayana by the Delhi University’s Academic Council is disgraceful. So is the way in which the Vice- Chancellor presided over this Goebbelsian purge through propaganda. But the episode hides the callousness with which we treat ideas, especially ideas that do not seem to fit our cherished myths. Ideas question our sense of comfort, challenge our self- deception and assail the banality of our selfimage.

No amount of signing petitions and writing to the HRD minister would redress the damage this shameful episode has done to intellectual freedom in Indian universities.

The academic community will have to find new ways of dissent. For instance, the emails of the VC and all those who voted in favour of removal of the essay ought to be clogged with copies of the essay, and I mean hundreds of them. This must happen every single day, every hour, for weeks and months, for as long as the people responsible do not express contrition.

Scenario

It is likely that some of them will eventually read the essay and realise their folly as well as admit their ignorance. Students and teachers must gather outside the VC’s office and outside the offices of those who favoured the removal and read aloud the essay. The din caused by Ramanujan’s wisdom must paralyse the day to day functioning of people who revel in parading their insolent might.

Waking and sleeping, these men, who are enemies of ideas and excellence, must be made to encounter Ramanujan’s prose.

Teachers must begin to teach and discuss the essay in class, whether it is on the syllabus or not. The assault on the written word must be countered by the greater power of the akshara , that which does not perish.

There is no doubt that these episodes will continue to happen and haunt us till we do not address questions that plague university education in India, and especially higher education. No sensible individual can question the goal of providing access to education for all those who want to avail of the opportunity for higher education. But access and excellence must go hand in hand.

Higher education must be about excellence. But excellence does not mean phoney elitism or social snobbery. Neither does it have anything to do with the technocratic- managerial argument of meritocracy. It has much to do with raising the bar of the kind of questions that are asked, the manner in which these are posed and the solidity of research that emerges out of it.

For that to happen, the school system and the regime of undergraduate education have to be qualitatively lifted and enhanced.

Further, the academic departments have to be granted genuine autonomy and not be hostage to the game of numbers that is often played out in bodies like the academic councils in the name of democratic functioning. For departments to be autonomous, they must be made accountable and funding ought to be tied to their performance across rational parameters. Too much today depends on the grace and favour of bodies like the UGC and university administrations.

But thinking about higher education seems to be going in the opposite direction. There are moves to standardise higher education at the national level, an attempt that hides behind the rhetoric of greater mobility of students but has at its core the idea of watering down standards.

Higher education cannot deliver till such time it is controlled by a bureaucracy at the top, aided by mediocre academics whose business it becomes to help water- down standards for the sake of their own survival.

Teachers

Neither can the market become the sole arbiter of excellence.

A substantial part of the blame lies with teachers: they have pandered to furthering mindless representation of ideologies, fashions, notions of political correctness and populism.

In other words, they have simulated what politicians and demagogues do best.

In times of crisis they have resorted to taking help of politicians and political parties rather than sorting contentious issues within the confines of their institutions.

Moreover, higher education has survived too long on the empty rhetoric of ‘ nation building’, an abstraction open to multiple interpretations and political interventions. This is so especially when what constitutes the nation and its interests are susceptible to ideological and political interpretations.

The way teachers treat students, especially in the realm of higher education, is part of the problem. A misplaced paternalism exists where, instead, there ought to be friendship and partnership.

Teachers and policymakers continue to treat students reaching postgraduate studies as children who need to be led, guided, and protected from what they consider as dangerous trends. Instead of showing the way to intellectual freedom, students are told to be careful of things that might harm their intellects and, in turn, harm the nation.

Our collective insecurity as a nation and our valorisation of smug mediocrity in the name of the nation’s interests turns students from free individuals to slaves. Denying access to a certain kind of literature is, in fact, the modern manifestation of caste elitism, where some texts are denied access because of a higher reason prevailing, which denies that access. If literature of all sorts is available, the students would be able to make their minds up about what to them would be the most tenable and convincing argument.

But academic bureaucracies have little respect for ideas, and even less respect for the endusers of the system in whose name they seem to exist and seem to flourish.

Solution

The lesson from the Delhi University episode is also that banal Hindutva has no ideology or political affiliation. It cuts across party politics. If this move had been initiated by Murli Manohar Joshi, people would automatically impute ideological motives to it. But this shameful act of removing an essay has happened when a Congress- led government is in place and in a place where a Congress ruled government rules Delhi. Banal Hindutva thrives on mediocrity, amorality, conformity, smugness and misplaced certainty.

The solution to this lies within the university. Those who supported this move have to be shamed and their shallowness exposed. But the community of teachers and scholars must rise in order to assert their academic independence and their administrative autonomy. Otherwise, their fates would continue to be sealed by twenty five men and women, within which number are several beholden to the arbitrary power of the Vice- Chancellor, many of them quiet and indifferent, and a handful allowed to commit crimes against intellectual excellence and flourishing.

Delhi University must show the country that they are ready to take their destiny back into their hands, not by running to ministers and politicians, but by fabricating a new vocabulary of dissent.

The writer teaches politics at the University of Hyderabad

Announcment: Convention against communal conflict, 16 Nov 2011 (Delhi)

The All India Democratic Womens Association (AIDWA)
invites you to attend a

CONVENTION against COMMUNAL CONFLICT

Day/Date/Time: Wednesday, 16 Nov. 2011 -- 2.00 p.m.to 5.00 p.m

Place: Dy. Speaker’s Hall, Constitution Club, Rafi Marg, Delhi

Recent months have seen a resurgence of communal conflict and violence in several States. In each incident whether it has occurred in Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar or Uttarakhand, members of the minority community have had to bear the brunt of the violence and destruction. In each case, the police and administration have acted in a partisan manner. Family members of those killed and maimed in these incidents will be present at the Convention to tell us about their experiences.

We are very happy that Smt. Shweta Bhatt, wife of Shri Sanjeev Bhatt, IPS, will be attending this Convention. On behalf of all of us, she will be felicitated for the courageous stand she has taken against the Government of Gujarat and its Chief Minister by our patron, Brinda Karat.

We hope that you will make it convenient to accept our invitation.

Subhashini Ali
Jagmati Sangwan
Vice-Presidents

Sumitra Chopra
Sehba Farooqui
Jt. Secys.

Sudha Sundararaman
General Secretary
All India Democratic Womens Association

November 14, 2011

Ishrat case: SIT to probe volte-face by witnesses

by Prashant Dayal, Nov 15, 2011

AHMEDABAD: The Gujarat high court appointed special investigation team (SIT) probing the Ishrat Jahan encounter case of 2004 has started investigating into the circumstances that led to several witnesses of the case doing a volte-face while investigations were mid-way.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ahmedabad/Ishrat-case-SIT-to-probe-volte-face-by-witnesses/articleshow/10733463.cms