SACW | 30 May 2004
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Sat May 29 21:46:02 CDT 2004
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South Asia Citizens Wire | 30 May, 2004
via: www.sacw.net
[1] Pakistan: State's religious and legal
contradictions (editorial, The Daily Times)
[2] Religious Sword Over Pakistan (Mahnaz Ispahani)
[3] Bangladesh: Solidarity meeting for Anu Muhammed (May 30, 2004)
+ S Asian body Protests change of signboard
[4] Bangladesh:
[5] Sri Lanka: The Batticaloa Fiasco & the
Tragedy of Missed Opportunities (UTHR)
[6] India: Secular activists to meet in Ahmedabad and Baroda ( May 30, June 2 )
[7] I Call For Entries 4th Karafilm Festival (The
Karachi International Film Festival 2004)
[8] India:
--------------
[1]
The Daily Times [Pakistan]
May 30, 2004
Editorial
State's religious and legal contradictions
The Christian Samuel Masih, accused in a case of
blasphemy, who was attacked by a police constable
deputed to guard him, has died of his head
injury. Earlier, the police arrested the
constable who had attacked him and he is in
police custody. The killer's reason was simple:
Masih had allegedly blasphemed against the Holy
Prophet (PBUH) and it was his (constable's) duty
to kill him for doing so. This is a case that
brings out, like nothing else, the myriad
contradictions these laws have infused in this
state and society.
Until 1979 when General Zia-ul Haq pushed the
blasphemy business to the forefront of his
Islamic legislation, only six people had been
charged under blasphemy and all the cases were
laughed out of the courts. Since '79 - in 1981
the state stipulated that blasphemy was
punishable with mandatory death sentence - there
have been hundreds of cases. The lower courts
have invariable sentenced the accused, though
higher courts have always found the cases mala
fide and freed the accused. However, for the
accused this has meant spending seven to eight
years in jail before the dispensation of justice.
The accused are also at great risk during and
after the trial. Some have been bumped off in
jail and others have had to move out of Pakistan
to avoid being killed.
When the government floated the idea of amending
the procedure under which someone is accused of
blasphemy, the rightwing lobby argued that it was
best for people to be in police custody because
after being thus charged a person was at risk of
being killed by the people if he/she were allowed
to remain at large. It was a diabolical argument.
But even if it were accepted for the sake of the
reasoning, what would the rightwing say now that
a constable has chosen to kill an accused?
The fact is that it is a bad law both in its
conception and its implementation. Hence it is
flawed at both ends. Cases, in which under-trial
accused have been killed by the direct or
indirect involvement of law enforcement
personnel, clearly show that the legislation has
created a psyche that encourages vigilante
behaviour. This is of course a problem that will
always present itself when a state decides to
blunder into the area of belief and legislate on
the basis of the predominant religion.
The contradiction it sows is clearly visible in
the conduct of the constable who, as an officer
of the state, was deputed to ensure the safety of
the accused. Instead, he chose to kill him. Why?
Simply, because his perceived religious
obligation overrode his duty as an officer of the
law. He thought the law conflicted with his duty
as a Muslim. Since he believed this to be a
religious state, he felt that it could not have
laws that conflicted with the higher aims of the
state. His reasoning, flawed as it is, is
logical, given the Pakistani state's own
contradictions.
Punjab's Inspector-General Police says the
training schedule so far does not have a
consistent component on human and citizens'
rights. The IGP wants to rectify this situation.
Wonderful. However, this problem needs to be
tackled at both ends of the spectrum. While the
IGP is planning to do it at the low end of the
spectrum, the state needs to do its own thing at
the high end of the spectrum. This would require
the state to reverse the retrogressive laws
responsible for generating the contradictions
that result in such tragedies and present
Pakistan as a savage society refusing to heed the
logic of pluralism. *
o o o
[Related material]
Blasphemy law case: Samuel faces trial under Section
295 of PPC
* CLAAS files petition against Kot Lakhpat jail
superintendent
By Waqar Gillani and Zainab Khar
Daily Times: May 27, 2004
LAHORE: Samuel Masih, 27, a suspect in a blasphemy
case, who is in critical condition at the Lahore
General Hospital after a police constable hit him on
the head with a brick cutter, has been charged under
Section 295 of the Pakistan Penal Code, which carries
a maximum sentence of up to two years.
According to the first information report lodged
against Samuel, he littered the wall of Darul Islam
Masjid in Lawrence Gardens on August 23 last year.
Chaudhry Muhammad Yaqoob, librarian of the Darul
Islam, who lodged the FIR stated: ìI work as the chief
librarian at Idrae Darul Islam in Jinnah Garden. I was
sitting in the mosque and was reciting the Quran. I
saw a stranger, whose name was later found out to be
Samuel, the son of a man named Emanuel, spitting on
the mosqueís wall where the mosqueís plaque is placed.
I stopped him from doing so. Qari Riffat and Darul
Islamís library assistant Muhammad Aslam also saw
this.î
There are four sections of the PPC, which provide
punishment for a person accused of blasphemy: Sections
295, 295 A, B and C. Section 295 says that the
punishment of a person could be extended to a maximum
of two years or a fine or both if he defiled a place
of worship with the intent of insulting the religion
of any class.
The Centre for Legal Aid Assistance and Settlement
(CLAAS), a non-government organisation working for
minority rights, has been pursuing the case since
August 23 last year. The NGO said it was the second
case of its kind in which Section 295 of the PPC was
imposed. Samuel was sent to Kot Lakhpat jail for
trial.
Samuel was suffering from tuberculosis and had to be
admitted to Gulab Devi Hospital on Friday, May 21
after a TB attack in jail. The next morning, Constable
Faryad Ali reportedly attacked him with a brick cutter
in the presence of another guard. ìI wanted to earn a
place in heaven by killing him,î is what constable Ali
is reported to have said. Samuel was subsequently
transferred to Lahore General Hospital.
CLAAS has filed a writ petition in the Lahore High
Court against the Kot Lakhpat jail superintendent and
Dr Sikandar, who were in charge of the emergency ward
when Samuel was admitted after being reportedly hit
over the head by a constable. The NGO has questioned
how the accused was attacked even in police custody.
The court will hear the petition on June 2. Samuel was
still in serious condition under police custody when
this report was filed. The police have barred visitors
and his relatives were reportedly refused permission
to see him on Wednesday. Constable Ali, who attacked
Samuel on May 22, was sent to jail after a case was
registered against him.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistanís fact-finding
team, CLAAS and other NGOs have declared the incident
an example of the misuse of blasphemy law.
ìA third person, who did not know about the case,
assumed Samuel was a blasphemy culprit and attempted
to murder him,î said Joseph Francis, the CLAAS
coordinator. He said the government should revise the
blasphemy law.
Waseem Anthony of the Commission for Peace and Human
Development said the life of citizens was at stake due
to the abuse of blasphemy laws in Pakistan.
Samuelís younger brother Sarwar told Daily Times they
were told about the incident two days later. He said
the whole family was dependant on Samuel. Samuel was
whitewasher, said Sarwar. He said that Samuelís became
mentally unstable after the death of their mother and
he was not in his senses when he left home on August
23. ìThe day when this incident happened, Samuel left
home in anger because he had a fight,î he said.
_____
[2]
Los Angeles Times [USA]
21 May 2004
COMMENTARY
Religious Sword Over Pakistan
By Mahnaz Ispahani
May 21, 2004
This month in Karachi, Pakistan, at least 14
Shiites were killed and more than 100 were
severely wounded while at prayer. Scores more
were massacred by Sunni militants in Quetta
earlier this year. In the last decade, more than
1,200 people have died in Shiite-Sunni violence.
Today, sectarian dispute is Pakistan's Achilles'
heel, challenging the officially sanctioned
"Islamic" state - and endangering the country's
future.
If Pakistan is to survive, Sunni extremists - who
advocate violent anti-Shiism and an exclusionary
form of Islam - must be brought down. It is not
enough for President Pervez Musharraf to seek the
capture of foreign jihadists from Al Qaeda and
the Taliban. He must aggressively fight homegrown
militancy. That's what it will take to make
Pakistan the "liberal, tolerant, progressive,
dynamic and strong Islamic state" that Musharraf
proposes, and millions of ordinary Pakistanis
insist that it can be, rather than a militant's
paradise.
Pakistan's founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, was a
Shiite, as were several others who helped him
create the new homeland for Muslims. Many Shiites
continue to serve and lead Pakistan. They are
Islam's and Pakistan's largest religious
minority, making up about 30 million of the
nation's 148 million people. Yet today they live
in escalating terror.
Their crisis is Pakistan's, emerging from three
reinforcing developments. The first is the
"Islamization" of laws, army and society begun by
President Gen. Zia ul-Haq in the 1980s. The
second is the largely unchecked and growing
prowess of Sunni extremist groups in their war
against Shiites. For them Shiites are "kafirs,"
or infidels. The third is the persistent pressure
since Pakistan's creation for ever-purer Islamist
politics by the religious political parties,
which today are key players in parliament and
control the strategic Northwest Frontier Province.
Before Zia put his puritanical religious lens on
Pakistani public life, small-scale Shiite-Sunni
disturbances flared occasionally but were largely
considered law-and-order problems.
In Zia's time, however, the state itself became a
sectarian player, espousing particular Sunni
schools of Islamic law. Shiites then organized to
resist these laws, which are unacceptable to
their traditions. A segment became radicalized,
leading to an increase in tit-for-tat violence
between Sunnis (supported by Saudi Arabia) and
Shiites (supported by Iran).
Today, while extremist Shiites try to retaliate
against their enemies, it is mostly ordinary
Shiites who die at the hands of groups espousing
an anti-Shiite ideology of "kill the infidels."
These same groups are jihadist and pair their
deadly pursuit of Shiites with regional and
global terror activities. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, the
group suspected in many Shiite massacres, is
pro-Taliban, has links to Al Qaeda and is
reported to have played a role in the 2002
killing of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel
Pearl. Strategic assaults have been launched
across Pakistan against Shiite doctors who
ministered in their communities and on Shiite
men, women and children inside houses of worship
and on busy streets. Prominent Shiites move
around with armed bodyguards.
The roots of this crisis of Muslim identity go
back even further than Zia's days, to the 1950s,
when the leadership of Pakistan's most organized,
urban religious group, the Jamaat-e-Islami, and
other like-minded parties began to use Islam to
foster exclusionary politics and public riots by
politicizing the question, "Who is a Muslim?"
The Jamaat led a successful movement to have the
small Ahmediyya sect - which is doctrinal
anathema to the Jamaat - declared non-Muslims by
the state. In 1974, the then-secular and
politically weak Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali
Bhutto obliged it with a constitutional
amendment. Then, in 1984, Zia made it a criminal
offense for Ahmedis to even call themselves
Muslims.
With the ouster of the Ahmedis from the fold, the
tone was set for progressively more intolerant
politics.
Today, a member of parliament can comfortably
call a Shiite an infidel. The Sunni extremist
Azam Tariq was infamous for his anti-Shiite
violence. Yet he could flourish, winning a
national assembly seat several times - most
recently in 2000 - from his jail cell while
facing dozens of criminal charges. He became an
ally of the pro-Musharraf parliamentary party.
Two days before he was assassinated, he told the
New York Times - in his most moderate mien - that
Shiites need not be killed; rather they "should
merely be declared non-Muslims and jailed for 10
or 15 years."
Even as Musharraf bans certain groups and speaks
out against sectarian violence, the militants
flourish and the number of dead rises. One wants
deeds as unflinching as his words. Only if he is
able to put a full stop to the kind of
Islamization that makes a mockery of an inclusive
Muslim homeland; only if he eliminates the
sectarian-jihadi complex that feeds off Shiites
and other minorities' lives, only then will
Pakistan have a secure future.
If Musharraf fails, then the question, "Who is a
Pakistani Muslim?" could destroy all hope for a
more progressive and peaceful Pakistan.
Mahnaz Ispahani is a senior fellow for South and
West Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations.
_____
[3]
Public meeting on Sunday 30th May
A platform for Writer, Teacher, Artist and Cultural Worker called a public
meeting on Sunday (30th May) at 5:30 p.m. in front of National Museum,
Shahbag, Dhaka protesting Continuous Bomb Attack, Uprising of Religious
Fundamentalists and Attack on Anu Muhammad. The platform had been
organizing public meeting, procession and discussion for mass movement
especially during siege of Shahid Minar from Public in 2002 (Against Attack
on Shamsunnahar Hall), in March 2004 (Protesting attack on Humayun Azad and
freedom of expression), and in April 2004 (Discussing on Recent Cultural
Situation of Bangladesh). The forum called all conscious people to join the
meeting for strengthening the movement against all
anti-public activities.
Please also visit our web site www.meghbarta.org for more details and
updates
Nasrin Siraj Annie
Sub-editor
www.meghbarta.org
Dhaka
_____
[4]
The Daily Star [Bangladesh]
May 30, 2004
Editorial
Ahmadiyyas under siege in Chittagong
Going from bad to worse
The International Khatme Nabuyat Movement took
its anti-Ahmadiyya agitation to Chittagong on
Friday, with hundreds of stick-wielding
demonstrators besieging the city's Ahmadiyya
mosque, and reiterating their demand for
Ahmadiyyas to be declared non-Muslims by the
government. Once again, the local authorities
caved in to the mob pressure and agreed to hang a
sign "warning" Muslims that the mosque was an
Ahmadiyya place of worship and should not be
mistaken for a Muslim mosque.
Let us repeat this point. The sign was hung up by
the police. The police claim to have done so in
order to maintain the peace. Thus, in the name of
"maintaining the peace" the government has been a
party to the continuing stigmatisation and
marginalisation of the Ahmadiyyas.
It is interesting that the government is forever
bemoaning the image problem that Bangladesh
suffers from, and castigates the media, the
opposition, and even watchdog international
organisations for contributing to this negative
image which is so harmful for the country.
It does not seem to occur to the government that
nothing anyone else can say or do could possibly
harm our image as a country more than this kind
of religious intolerance that it not only eschews
but also condones. There is simply no place for
this kind of obscurantist and reactionary
religious repression in the Bangladesh we are
professing to want to create. The world, even we
have come too far to permit ourselves to revert
to this kind of backwardness.
The government owes an explanation to all of us
as to where it stands with respect to
safeguarding the constitutional right to freedom
of religion.
If in a nation of 130 million people we cannot
afford to give space to one lakh Ahmadiyyas
because of the sectarian orthodoxy of a handful,
who do not care for civic peace and law and
order, what kind of a signal are we putting
across in terms of both governance and our
credentials as a moderate Muslim country?
Certainly nothing to be proud of.
o o o
See Related Material
The Daily Star
May 30, 2004
Ahmadiyya Mosque
S Asian body Protests change of signboard
DU Correspondent
The South Asian People's Union against
Fundamentalism and Communalism yesterday
protested the change of signboard of Ahmadiyya
community's 90-year-old Baitul Baset Mosque by
police following demands of 'extreme
fundamentalist force'.
A statement signed by the organisation's
President Prof Kabir Chowdhury and Member Prof
Muntasir Mamun said the BNP-Jamaat alliance
government is patronising the Islamist outfit,
International Khatme Nabuyat Movement (IKNM),
like the Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh led by
its operations commander Bangla Bhai, trampling
human rights and democracy.
Police are helping the Islamist force as they are
helping Bangla Bhai's men in the northern
districts, the statement said and added
Bangladesh is going under a Taliban-like rule.
The statement urged the conscious citizens and
progressive political parties to get united to
resist the religious extremists.
______
[5]
UTHR
http://www.uthr.org/bulletins/Bul36.htm
University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna)
Sri Lanka
UTHR(J)*
Information Bulletin No. 36
Date of Release: 29th May 2004
The Batticaloa Fiasco
& the Tragedy of Missed Opportunities
Introduction
PART I:
The Continuing Tragedy of Child Soldiers
Karuna releases the children under his command
New Conscription in the North and Trinco
Trauma
Re-examining the statistics of a widespread tragedy
PART II: Karunas Gamble
The Killings Begin
The LTTEs business partners
The Undermining of Karuna
The word games commence
What happened in Verugal
The White Flag Incident
Giving charge of patrimony
Part III: The Elections and their aftermath
A triumph of fascist diplomacy?
The TNAs lethal democracy
The Return of the Ellalan Force
The Recolonisation of Sri Lanka
A National Consensus vs. Mounting Anarchy
Appendix
Children Abducted by LTTE(P)
Summary
This latest bulletin by the University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna)
assesses the role of institutions responsible for protecting the rights
civilians in the wake of Karunas rebellion and the April election. The
LTTE(P)s routing of Karunas forces (accomplished with the active or
tacit support of Sri Lanka authorities and the international community)
left no clear authority in place in Batticaloa, and mistrust all around.
In the vacuum, both sides began weeding out their opponents, including
military and intelligence cadres and also influential academics and
businessmen. The region began slipping into anarchy.
Child soldiers released from Karunas army have chilling stories to tell
of their experiences under the LTTE. Their testimony makes clear that
recruitment is ongoing, and the traumas experienced by children and
families are profound. As more parents gather the courage to go public
with their complaints, the true scope of the problem is emerging, exposing
the half-truths of organisations that have shown more interest in
protecting their own international reputations than preventing abuse.
The bulletin criticises the insufficient and ineffectual official response
to the LTTEs systemic and unchecked use of violence and intimidation
against opponents engaged in electoral politics, culminating in
wide-spread vote rigging in the North and East.
The bulletin stresses that international agencies and donors cannot take
the place of a self-respecting civil society and state institutions backed
by a national consensus and sense of purpose. It urges the Sri Lankan
people to become responsible agents of their own destiny. It calls on the
government to show the LTTE that it is ready to discuss political
solutions, to tell the international community the terms on which it will
deal with them, to seek new friends, and new economic models.
The attempt to make peace here giving second place to democracy and human
rights is having its logical consequences.
As expected we are now seeing a rising incidence of killings -
Prabhakarans people by Karunas people and vice versa, and government
security personnel by Prabhakarans people on the suspicion that they are
aiding Karuna. Prabhakaran is today almost exclusively dependent on his
intelligence chief Pottu Amman and a handful of other northern cronies,
backed by 500 or so northern cadres, to restore his control in Batticaloa.
Given Prabhakarans proclivity to provoke a war whenever he feels
cornered, the prospect of one is nearer now.
______
[6]
Dear Friends,
First and foremost, a big warm hug and
congratulations to all those who dared to dream
the possibility of the ouster of the fascist
regime that ruled our country!! Many of us have
wished for this day and many others have
contributed, in big and small ways, to make this
day a reality.
With the electoral defeat of the NDA government,
all of us who are committed for a just and
secular society can surely breathe a sigh of
relief but we know that this is not the end of
the journey. Perhaps, now is the time to put our
hearts and experience together and come up with
some concrete action points that we would like
the present UPA government to look into and
rectify.
We therefore, propose a one day meeting on the
1st of JUNE, 2004. 10.30 am onwards
at
PRASHANT [Drive-in Road, Ahmedabad]
to come up with a CHARTER OF DEMANDS
TO BE PRESENTED TO and LOBBYED WITH THE UPA GOVERNMENT.
Some of the issues and concerns that the CHARTER OF DEMANDS could raise are:
suggestions/issues related to LEGAL and SOCIAL
JUSTICE to VICTIMS of the GENOCIDAL CARNAGE
[including GODHRA TRAIN VICTIMS]
suggestions/issues related to TRAIL and
PUNISHMENT of all public servants [CIVIL
SERVANTS, POLICE OFFICIALS, POLITICIANS and the
CHIEF MINISTER] responsible for the CARNAGE
suggestions related to a SPEEDY and
TRANSPARENT COMPLETION of Justice NANAVATI
COMMISSION
suggestions related to effective implemenation of
NHRC's RECOMMENDATIONS, like establishment of
SPECIAL COURTS etc
suggestions related to DE-COMMUNALISATION the educational CURRICULUMS
suggestions related to DE-COMMUNALSATION of all
research, educational and other INSTITUTIONS
and ANY OTHER SUGGESTIONS/ISSUES/CONCERNS that we need to raise.
We request that you please give some thought to
these issues and come prepared for the meeting so
that we have a concrete list of action points
that can be lobbied with. For example, it is NOT
enough that for our CHARTER OF DEMANDS to broadly
mentions that 'communal elements should be weeded
out from all institutions'. We must able to
provide a list of such institutions that have
been infected with the communal virus and, if
need be, even name those persons we think need to
be removed!
We would be grateful, if those who cannot make it
to this meeting can SEND us their CONCRETE
SUGGESTIONS via EMAIL a day prior to the meeting
[by the 31st May]
Anhad [Act Now for Harmony & Democracy] takes the
responsibility of presenting the CHARTER OF
DEMANDS and lobby with all concerned ministries
and party officials of the UPA and its supporters.
We must continue to keep alive the secular agenda
and hope that this exercise will be a step
forward in that direction...for we can breathe
easy but cannot afford to doze off!
Hope to see you all on the 1st JUNE.
Sincerely,
Shabnam Hashmi, Harsh Mander, Stalin K
(Note: Baroda meeting wd be on June 2 morning.
for details contact Raj Hans
<mailto:rajkhans at yahoo.com>rajkhans at yahoo.com)
_______
[7]
CALL FOR ENTRIES
4TH KARAFILM FESTIVAL
THE KARACHI INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2004
Submissions of Features, Short Features,
Documentaries and Short Films are invited for the
4th KaraFilm Festival to be held in Karachi,
Pakistan in December 2004.
The KaraFilm Festival is a non-governmental,
not-for-profit venture dedicated to showcasing
quality work in the visual medium from around the
world and to nurturing creativity. Pakistan's
only competitive international film festival, it
is also a space for interaction between
filmmakers, actors, writers and audiences and is
committed to exchange between artists from
different cultures and countries. In the past we
have screened films from Pakistan, India,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Iran, China, United
Kingdom, USA, Canada, Germany, France, Italy,
Japan, Russian Federation and New Zealand.
Work may originate on film or video format. There is no entry fee.
Please check our website:
<http://www.karafilmfest.com>http://www.karafilmfest.com
for more information and the Entry Info section
for submission requirements.
E-mail: <mailto:info at karafilmfest.com>info at karafilmfest.com
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz on the perils of fundamentalist politics, on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South
Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
The complete SACW archive is available at:
bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/
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See also associated site: www.s-asians-against-nukes.org
DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.
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