SACW | 11 June, 2004
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Fri Sep 3 10:10:04 CDT 2004
South Asia Citizens Wire | 11 June, 2004
via: www.sacw.net
[1] Pakistan: Allegations most unbecoming (Javed Jabbar)
[2] India: Need of the Hour: Beyond 'Detoxification' (Sumanta Banerjee)
[3] India: Vajpayee is an honourable man So why did he do nothing when
Gujarat burned? (Madan Bhatia)
[4] Pathology of aid dependency in Bangladesh and budget (Golap Monir)
[5] India: Closure on an unfortunate episode in Mushirul Hasans life
(Edit, Indian Exprtess)
[6] Upcoming Events:
- 'Under-privileged and Communal Carnage: A case of Gujarat'
by Prof. Ghanshyam Shah (Amsterdam, 15th June)
- Lecture: Fragments of Grace: My Search for Meaning in the Strife of
South Asia - Pamela Constable (15th June, New York)
- Roundtable: The 14th Indian National Legislative Elections: Analysis
and Prospects (Paris, 16th June)
- IRC Annual Lecture : Readings and discussion for Refugee Week with
Hari Kunzru, Monica Ali and Dave Eggers (London,17th June)
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[1]
Dawn
03 June 2004
Allegations most unbecoming
By Javed Jabbar
At a largely attended public meeting in Karachi on May 25, the acting head of the MMA and the Amir of Jamaat-e-Islami, Qazi Hussain Ahmed is reported to have spoken as follows according to a leading English newspaper (not Dawn). As the version below has not been contradicted it has to be presumed that it is an accurate report of what he said. "Qazi Hussain said that the rulers had given total authority to the Aga Khan Foundation for establishing a new education system in the country.
"The MMA chief said that the same task was assigned to the Qadiani community but the people of Pakistan launched a movement against them and finally they failed in their plans. He warned the Aga Khan Foundation and Ismaili community that people would also launch a movement against them if they continued to impose a secular education system in Pakistan".
This is not the place for a detailed discussion on a "secular system of education" and an "Islamic system of education". Both systems can have a great deal in common and need not be antithetical to each other. Aided regrettably by the Urdu press which is so important a part of our media sector because it commands over 90 per cent of all readership, the religious sector has completely distorted the real meaning of the word "secular" which is often translated into Urdu as laadiniat or "without faith" or "atheistic".
Whereas the relevant meaning of "secular" is simply that politics and religion should be treated as separate realms, as in the context defined by Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah in his speech to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on August 11, 1947, when he said that the religion of citizens should not affect the work of the state. A secular state can have more truly religious values in its policies than a state that claims to be religious but which applies non-Islamic elements of dictatorship, monarchy, persecution of minorities, and which permits barbaric torture in police stations. So the continuing portrait of an ideal Muslim state or society as being opposite to a "secular" state is misleading, ill-founded and untenable.
The Aga Khan's education services facilitate and assist the government of Pakistan only by invitation, not by imposition, to help improve content, teaching skills and resource development. The final responsibility for deciding what goes into school textbooks rests jointly with the federal and the provincial governments and not with a non-official body like the Aga Khan Foundation.
The views and threats by the politico-religious leader are offensive for the following reasons: a) violation of the Constitution of Pakistan whose principles of public policy and whose substantive provisions guarantee freedom of religion and security of citizens and which prohibit persecution or harassment of any individual or community on the basis of religion, sect, gender or race; b) such statements are also subject to the enforcement of relevant provisions of the Pakistan Penal Code such as Sections 295-A and 298-A which categorize utterances that outrage anyone's religious sensibilities and use of derogatory words against someone's religious beliefs as being subject to punitive action; c) the said statement violates the values and norms of a civilized society in general and of a Muslim nation in particular; d) the statement injects into the political discourse of the country a new and poisonous virus of mistrust and hate.
Do the facts justify the threats? The Ismaili community is a minority sect within Islam with certain distinct practices and features which certainly set them apart from the mainstream Sunni and Shia sects. However, the Ismailis accept the finality of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him). Therefore, the attempt to equate Qadianis with Ismailis, in however indirect a manner, is wholly baseless and unjustified. The reverence with which the Aga Khan is regarded by the members of the Ismaili community is quite distinct. Yet it is not very different from the blind obedience with which members of other sects in Islam pay tribute to their respective leaders. The spectacle of virtual tomb worship and self-abnegation which is visible at every major shrine and dargah throughout the country is testimony as to how a showy piety has taken the place of genuinely good actions. The grandfather of the present Aga Khan had a controversial role with the British as a colonial power before Independence in 1947, even though the same Aga Khan played a crucial role in the founding of the All India Muslim League in Dhaka in 1906. But controversy of one kind or another is also associated with several other political leaders, including Maulana Abul Ala Maudoodi whose writings are the inspiration for the Jamaat's foundation and who, in the opinion of many, was opposed to the creation of Pakistan and to the Quaid-i-Azam. The philanthropy of the Aga Khan and the services rendered by the network of the Aga Khan Foundation and by Ismaili-related organizations have benefited our country directly in the fields of education, health, management enterprise, hotels and tourism.
Most recently, through an open and transparent process, the Aga Khan group has secured management control of Habib Bank Limited, one of the premier financial institutions of our country. In practical terms, the Ismaili community has benefited the lives of millions of Pakistanis, the overwhelming majority of whom are non-Ismailis. In all the work associated with the Aga Khan Foundation, whether it be the hospital and the university in Karachi, whether it be the numerous other health centres and institutions, where educational programmes are developed, standards of excellence have been set and maintained. It is also true that there is a perception amongst many that in its services and priorities, the network tends to discriminate in favour of Ismailis. There are also frequent complaints about excessive financial charges or of occasional negligence and incompetence in its health services. However true or false some of these perceptions and some of this information may be, one has never come across a single charge laid against the Aga Khan or against the Ismaili community of trying to convert non-Ismailis to their own sect, or of in any way interfering with the practices of other religions and sects. The very opposite is true.
Ismailis are among the most tolerant, peaceful, law-abiding and disciplined citizens of the country. They are highly productive and industrious, contributing substantially to wealth generation, to income tax and other taxes, to public service and to national development. It is ironic that the Ismaili community and the Jamaat-i-Islami have much in common. Both are minorities. One as a sect of Islam, the other as a political party. Both are tightly disciplined entities and practice a high work ethic. Both follow a professional approach in their respective areas of interest and both have strong, stable financial resources. But here the similarities end.
Where the head of the Ismaili community is chosen according to the principle of heredity, the head of the Jamaat-i-Islami is elected, albeit by a relatively small number of electors, but through an open and competitive process. The quoted observations by the head of the MMA are extremely unfair. They have already created unwarranted misperceptions about Ismailis in the minds of thousands of people who attended the public meeting on May 25. These, in turn, will share these misperceptions with thousands more. The consequences are unpredictable and potentially destructive. A small sign was the fact that in response to the brutal killing of Mufti Shamzai in Karachi on May 30, mobs burnt an Aga Khan Foundation Diagnostic Centre in Gulshan-i-Iqbal and another on Business Recorder Road. Other targets were also hit by the mobs. But was this also partly due to the wholly false allegations made by the Jamaat-e-Islami leader against the Aga Khan five days earlier, painting him as an "un-Islamic" or a "secular" figure?
It is pertinent to remember that, whereas religious leaders are free and able to make such false utterances to thousands of people and to have them reported widely by the press and media, there is no reciprocal reaction by the Aga Khan and his followers. This is partly due to perhaps their desire not to fuel a controversy and mainly due to the relatively docile, non-violent and non-intimidatory character of the Ismaili community as a whole which tries to tread very carefully in such situations. Be that as it may, the scope for inflaming passions remains heavily weighted in favour of the religious parties. The silence of the federal and provincial governments concerning the remarks quoted at the start of this article and the absence of any statement by any political leader refuting the accusations are indicators of how easily official as well as political leadership is intimidated by those who claim to be the sole custodians of Islam and who have, de-facto, become a self-appointed clergy in a faith that does not permit such interlocutors between Allah and His believers.
If we continue to permit inflammatory falsehoods to be spoken in public and be reported in the media, we are worsening conditions for violence at precisely the time when we need to build peace through tolerance and cohesion. The government should take immediate cognizance of the baseless charges made on May 25 by taking appropriate action and by requesting the courts to hold accountable all those who make such statements. The writer is a former senator and information minister.
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[2]
The Economic and Political Weekly
June 05, 2004
Need of the Hour :Beyond 'Detoxification'
In order to undo the damage that had been inflicted on us by the previous regime, it is necessary to go beyond the immediate task of cleansing the crucial institutions. Merely shunting out the heads of institutions and bureaucrats will not do.
By Sumanta Banerjee
Well-wishers of the UPA government have been expressing the ardent hope that there would now be a detoxification of the Indian polity and civil society freeing the system of the communal poison of religious intolerance that had been injected by the Vajpayee-led government during the last five years or so. This should indeed be the priority of the new government. But in order to undo the damage that had been inflicted on us by the previous regime, it is necessary to go beyond the immediate task of cleansing the crucial institutions (e g, police, bureaucracy and education in particular) of the Sangh parivar agents (who had been carrying out the parivar agenda thanks to the official positions that they occupy). Mere transfer of these heads of institutions, or bureaucrats and police officials, would not destroy the deadly toxin of Hindu communalism that had seeped into the body politic.
In his first statement on May 20, as the prime minister-designate, Manmohan Singh promised that he would never allow a repeat of Gujarat of 2002 and the anti-Sikh riots of 1984. If he has to keep his promise, his government will have to formulate a long-term strategy that prioritises the task of ridding our society of religious intolerance and communal fanaticism of all hues. It is no easy task given the deeply ingrained religious prejudices and superstitions that rule our society, and the ease with which the Sangh parivar (or any other orthodox religio-political formation for that matter) can exploit them to serve their interests.
Any government committed to this task, will have to prepare itself for a long and bitter haul. A judicious mixture of force and persuasion, firm coercive steps against the saffron brigade and patient ideological education of the people, can be a possible basis for an effective multi-pronged strategy to wipe out the monstrosity known as the Sangh parivar from the Indian political scene.
A selective purging of RSS agents and their fellow-travellers from positions of control can be the first step that will go a long way in detoxifying the administration and educational institutions. Such a step will, of course, lead to a hue and cry about witch-hunting by sections of the Indian liberal intelligentsia a cry that will be picked up by the Sangh parivar ideologues to project themselves as victims of Leftist conspiracy. In fact, soon after his defeat, the erstwhile BJP minister of HRD Murli Manohar Joshi, expressed the fear that the Left would reverse his policies of saffronisation of education and culture. Asking them to leave our values alone, he said that no attempt should be made to change the Indian ethos of our education and history (Hindustan Times, May 18). Our values are clearly the RSS values that inspired Joshi to introduce astrology in universities, employ hacks to write history books distorting facts and figures, and valorise Hindu communal leaders like Savarkar and Hedgewar and spew anti-Muslim venom in school text-books.
It is this Indian ethos as constructed by Joshi and his parivar which was sought to be imposed on the Indian educational system and cultural scene. De-saffronising Education The Sangh parivar, quite understandably, concentrated on educational and research institutions, since they are major tools in the hands of any ruling power to mould the minds of the younger generation and recruit ideologues. The cultural commissars of the Sangh parivar, under the HRD ministry who ruled over important institutions like the NCERT, ICSSR, ICHR for the last five years, had done irreparable damage to elementary education and academic research, in their fanatical zeal to spread their ideology. In a typical show of intolerance of democratic functioning, the ministry also got embroiled in an unseemly tussle with the IIMs when it tried to encroach on their autonomy.
The minimum penalty that these commissars of the HRD ministry deserve is getting the sack following their mentor, Murli Manohar Joshi, who had been shown the door by the electorate. One can understand Joshis concerns and fears. Education is a crucial area for his parivar. They believe in the American motto: catch em young. Thousands of Saraswati Shishu Mandirs have been set up by the parivar in far-flung villages where children are brain-washed into believing that Muslims are foreigners and all minorities must be homogenised under the hegemony of Hindutva. In tribal areas, Vanavasi schools have been set up to incorporate tribal children into the folds of Hindutva by initiating them into the tenets and rituals of Hindu religion. It is these students, reared upon a system of fanatical beliefs and norms of violent offensive, who form the storm-troopers of the Sangh parivar as evident in the participation of the tribals in the anti-Muslim pogrom in Gujarat, or their en masse voting for the BJP in places like Chhattisgarh or Jharkhand (indicating how little political influence the Naxalites have over them despite their boast of wielding power in those areas!). But a complete dismantlement of the Sangh parivars educational infrastructure in the rural areas cannot be brought about by a mere ham-handed crackdown on the RSS- and VHP-run schools.
In large areas of the country particularly in inaccessible tribal zones the government-run primary schools are dysfunctional, what with the absence of teachers, or even suitable buildings. The vacuum had been filled up by the RSS cadres dedicated to their goal of indoctrination who had set up parallel schools, imparting to the tribal children not only the three Rs, but also the hate-filled doctrine aimed against Muslims and other minorities. In order to offset the impact of their dangerous teachings on the growing generation, the new HRD ministry will have to overhaul the system that prevails in the government-run primary schools. They need to be reinvigorated with adequate and qualified staff to provide education that would develop the scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform, as envisaged in our Constitution.
A re-iteration of these words from the fundamental duties chapter of the Constitution is necessary not only to reverse the obscurantist trend of hegemonic Hindutva that had marked the writing of history text books under the BJP regime, but also to avoid a drift into the other extreme mode of re-interpreting history by casting it into yet another simplistic mould that may suit certain political views and wishful thinking about the past. We may mention in this connection the bias betrayed by Congress historians who privilege Gandhi and his non-violent tactics over the various other movements (e g, peasants, working-class, armed revolutionaries) that had dominated the freedom struggle. Historical facts are stubborn, and refuse to go away, however, much text-book writers may try to suppress some and use other facts selectively to serve their respective political purposes. One hopes therefore that under the new regime, our children are given the opportunity to look at their past history without blinkers, and are thus allowed to develop the scientific temper and spirit of inquiry from the point of view of humanism.
De-energising Sangh Parivar It would be a much more challenging task to dismantle the murderous outfits of the Sangh parivar which had been at the forefront of the communal violence that had rocked India since Advanis notorious rathayatra in October 1990, followed by the demolition of the Babri masjid in December 1992, and reaching its nadir in Gujarat in 2002. The sadhus and politicians of the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) along with the activists of the RSS, Bajrang Dal and Shiv Sena, had played a decisive role during the last decade in determining the policies of the Indian state and bullying the Indian people by their acts of terrorism. They had been the main power supply for the BJP whether in winning elections or running state governments. They are still around. Let us take into account the stark facts.
The BJP (which includes the RSS, VHP and Bajrang Dal candidates) alone has won 138 seats, and with its allies occupy 186 in the present Lok Sabha thus accounting for a little over one-third of MPs. Twenty one odd per cent of the Indian electorate still support the BJP. As the main opposition in the new Lok Sabha, the Sangh parivar is not willing to give up easily. Soon after its defeat, the BJPs general secretary Pramod Mahajan contacted a leader of his ally the Shiv Sena party and suggested that they should lie low for some time, take stock of the situation, and start reorganising from June (from a television interview on March 13). The RSS spokesman Ram Madhav blamed the defeat on the dilution of the ideology of Hindutva by some of his leaders, and said: our effort will be to bring the ideology back to centre stage (The Indian Express, May 14). The next day, the BJP leader Bangaru Laxman echoed similar sentiments saying that his party had lost because it had abandoned the issue of Hindutva. It is quite likely therefore that the Hindutva issue may be revived in a more aggressive way by the Sangh parivar by bringing back the Ayodhya tangle to centre-stage. The VHP president Ashok Singhal described the BJPs electoral loss as a categorical rejection by people for failing to fulfil the aspirations of Hindus (The Times of India, May 22, 2004). The aspirations, according to the VHP, are centred around the building of the Ram temple on the site of the demolished Babri masjid. But the Ramjanmabhoomi issue may not attract the vast Hindu masses today as it did in the 1990s.
The Sangh parivar therefore is putting their eggs in many other baskets. They are exploring other avenues to whip up a mass frenzy against the new incumbents. Soon after their defeat, they dug up the long-forgotten (and legally rejected) issue of Sonia Gandhis foreign origin, and fielded their two representatives the perpetually belligerent Hindu sanyasin Uma Bharti and the equally intemperate Sushma Swaraj to oppose Sonias candidature. Both reduced themselves to butts of ridicule by their abrasive and uncouth behaviour, and Sonia stole the show by refusing the post of prime minister, thus taking the wind out of the BJPs sails. Having lost on the bogey of Sonias foreign origin, the Sangh parivar has found another issue which ironically enough has been offered to them on a platter by the UPA government itself. By inducting politicians tainted by pending criminal cases (Laloo Yadav, Taslimuddin, Jagdish Tytler) as ministers in his cabinet, Manmohan Singh has made himself, as well as his cabinet, vulnerable to the charge of appeasement of corrupt politicians in order to run the government.
Although the BJP itself sheltered similar corrupt politicians in its cabinet during its regime (George Fernandes, Dilip Singh Judeo for instance), it will have no qualms in flinging the mud back at the UPA government. It is obvious that the Sangh parivar is just awaiting a chance to swoop down upon any lapse of the UPA government to launch a violent agitation. Given the number of their cadres and their wide network, it is an easy game for them to mobilise a few thousands, disrupt rail traffic, create communal riots and bring the economy to a standstill.
It is this dangerously violent potentiality of the Sangh parivar which needs to be nipped in the bud, and its manifestations ruthlessly suppressed by the new government. In reality, they are not as powerful as they make themselves out to be. Incarceration of their leaders in jail, and severe police action against their followers in the streets, are enough to put the fear of god in them.
Past experiences in places like West Bengal have shown that strict administrative steps can prevent riots. If the UPA government is serious about stopping the saffron brigade from creating troubles, it can take preemptive measures. But will the Congress-led UPA government demonstrate the courage necessary to put an end to Hindu communalism once and for all? The track record of the Congress so far does not inspire enough confidence. It was at the intervention of the then prime minister Rajiv Gandhi that in February, 1986, the locks of the Babri masjid were opened allowing Hindus to worship there. (It was Rajiv Gandhi again who was to appease the Muslim orthodox elements a few months later by overturning a Supreme Court judgment on the Shah Bano case and enacting in May 1986, the infamous Muslim Womens Act that was denounced by womens organisations and Muslim women throughout the country). It was again another Congress prime minister Narasimha Rao, who remained a silent witness to the demolition of the Babri masjid by the Sangh parivar hoodlums in December 1992. Since then we have had hardly seen any Congress leader determinedly leading his followers to resist the onrush of the juggernaut of Hindutva. On the contrary, many among them entered into a competition with the Sangh parivar in trying to appease Hindu communal sentiments their politics acquiring the term soft Hindutva. Their statements and gestures quite often overlapped with those of the Sangh parivar. The then Madhya Pradesh Congress chief minister Digvijay Singh campaigned against cow-slaughter; Keralas chief minister Antony made statements attacking minorities; the Maharashtra chief minister Shinde joined the Shiv Sena-BJP camp in launching an offensive against the historian and biographer of Shivaji, James Laine.
One can argue that all these Congress stalwarts were so awe-struck by the success of the BJPs Hindutva card as to veer round the view that Hindutva (in a milder form) would have to be incorporated into its politics. The terms of political discourse were dictated by the Sangh parivar till the recent elections. Now that their assumptions have been proved wrong (with the majority of the voters rejecting the BJP, for some reason or other), these Congress leaders are inclined to revert to slogans of secularism. Are they honest in their commitment to secularism, and promise to fight the Sangh parivar? Will the new prime minister be able to break out from his partys traditional practice of compromising with religious bigots to serve immediate political interests ? Will he draw lessons from the past to recognise that such compromises have paved the way for the resurgence of religious fanaticism? More importantly, will he and his colleagues in the government, be able to muster the courage necessary to bring about the elimination of murderous religious forces that are masquerading as political parties?
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[3]
Indian Express
June 10, 2004
Vajpayee is an honourable man So why did he do nothing when Gujarat burned?
MADAN BHATIA
The BJP, while demanding the resignation of charge-sheeted ministers, has said that L.K. Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi and Uma Bharti, who had also been charge-sheeted and were made ministers, belonged to a different class because the crimes with which they were charged did not involve moral turpitude.
This differentiation exposes the depravity of the party. According to it, if you destroy a place of worship for Muslims, drive a wedge of hatred between Hindus and Muslims and strike at the basic foundation of secularism on which the Constitution is based and thereby commit an offence under Section 153A of the Indian Penal Code, punishable with imprisonment extending to five years, such an offence is merely part of political ideology and bereft of any moral turpitude. No wonder the BJP has been identified with fascism. By this logic, Hitler and his Nazi party which committed crimes against Jews and resorted to the final solution by exterminating 6 million Jews did not commit any crime which involved moral turpitude; those crimes were committed in furtherance of the Nazi ideology.
The offences committed by the Sangh Parivar and with which the BJP leaders had been charged were crimes against the integrity of India. They are so heinous that Section 8 of the Representation of the People Act provides that if a person is convicted of an offence punishable under Section 153A of the IPC, he shall be disqualified for a period of 6 years. The BJP leaders criminal conduct does not stop there. On February 27, 2002, two bogies of the Sabarmati Express were set on fire near Godhra station by a mob of Muslims; 59 passengers were burnt to death in a gruesome manner. Those who perpetrated the cold blooded murders were guilty of a crime against Indias integrity. The might of the state should have been directed at catching them and they ought to have been tried in the manner of the Nuremberg trials. Retribution ought to have been swift and exemplary. What actually took place was an occurrence the like of which had never taken place in independent India. There was state-sponsored terrorism and riots in which thousands of innocents, Muslim men, women and children, were butchered. Women were raped. Lootings went on unchecked. Thousands left their homes and huddled like animals in makeshift camps.
While all these events were taking place, the Modi government, to borrow from the Supreme Courts observation, fiddled like Nero. Modis conduct made him the abettor of all these crimes. This abetment did not stop at Modi. The then home minister, L.K. Advani, and the then prime minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, were equally guilty of abetment. The Gujarat disturbances called for the immediate deployment of the army. Advani desisted from deploying these forces. He declared it was a law and order problem which did not fall within the Centres purview. Vajpayees only concern was the media which was exposing the events. When disturbances broke out on February 28, all that Advani did was to make an announcement on the evening of February 28 that a decision had been taken to instruct the army to stand by. Only 600 troops reached Ahmedabad on March 1 but they were not deployed. It was only in late afternoon that they were sent in by which time the carnage had spread to different parts of the state. The stand taken by Advani and the Vajpayee-led Union government that what was happening was a matter of law and order which fell within the state governments purview, and that the Union had no constitutional responsibility, was specious, indefensible and contrary to Article 355.
The US Constitution which is purely federal in character obliges the federal government under Article 4 Section 4 to protect each state from foreign invasion and on application by the Legislature or the Executive of a State against domestic violence. There is no such restriction contained in Article 355 of the Indian Constitution. But even in the US, the Supreme Court has nullified the restriction of an application by the legislature or the executive of a state before the federal government can intervene to put down domestic violence by declaring: No trace is to be found in the Constitution of an intention to create dependence of the Govt of the Union on those of the States for the execution of the great powers assigned to it. Its means are adequate to its ends and on these means alone was it expected to rely for the accomplishment of its ends...We hold it to be incontrovertible principle that the Govt of the US may by means of physical force exercised through its official agents, execute on every foot of American soil, the powers and functions that belong to it. This necessarily involves the power to command obedience to its laws and hence the power to keep the peace to that extent.
Each word of the US Court applies with equal force to the Indian Union. For the protection of life, liberty and fundamental rights of citizens and for preserving Indias integrity and secular fabric, the writ of the Union runs on every foot of Indian soil. Advani and Vajpayee, therefore, neglected their constitutional duty. Their complicity, and that of the BJP, in the Gujarat events stood exposed at the meeting of its National Executive in Goa at which Modi was hailed as a hero and Vajpayee virtually declared that it was Muslims themselves who were responsible for the carnage. Modi is liable to be chargesheeted for the crimes committed in Gujarat 2002 as accomplice and abettor of those crimes. Advani and Vajpayee are liable as abettors under Section 107 of the IPC for having failed to perform their constitutional duty to crush the disturbances. Their utterances at Goa and conduct in protecting Modi demonstrate their indifference and omission to perform their constitutional duty to protect the lives, liberty and rights of Gujarats Muslims was deliberate.
Vajpayees admirers may describe him as the best prime minister India has had after Nehru. But for his indefensible and morally, politically and constitutionally reprehensible role during the Gujarat disturbances, posterity shall not forgive him. If the BJP removes Narendra Modi and Uma Bharti as chief ministers and Advani resigns as leader of the Opposition and Vajpayee and Advani are chargesheeted and face trial for abetment of the crimes committed in Gujarat, the nation will support the BJPs demand for the resignations of Laloo Prasad Yadav and other chargesheeted ministers. If the BJP is not willing to do so, it has no locus standi or moral justification to make such a demand.
The writer, a barrister, is a former Congress MP
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[4]
The New Nation
May 26th, 2004
Editorial Page
Pathology of aid dependency in Bangladesh and budget
By Golap Monir
Though the aid dependency in Bangladesh is decreasing day by day, but per capita debt burden is increasing. This is a cruel truth, often pronounced by our economists. According to our finance ministry, the amount of foreign aid Bangladesh got in 1991 equals to 5.9 per cent of our GDP. In 2003 it becomes 2.8 per cent of GDP. The remittance we get through our expatriate Bangladeshis is double of the aid we are getting each year. In 1972 our per capita debt burden was only Taka 67, while in 2004 it reaches to Taka 7200. In 1991 per capita overseas loan was 119 dollars that now stands at 122 dollars.
Though our overall dependency on aid is decreasing, but some of our projects in different sectors dominantly dependent on foreign aid. The projects of health, population and family welfare sectors still bear the dependency rate of 74 per cent, public administration sector 73 per cent, oil, gas and natural resources sectors 46 per cent, and, media sector 43 percent. The aid dependency on our ADP is decreasing gradually. The dependency rate of our ADP on aid in 1991 was 87 per cent, but in the financial year 2003-2004 it is only 42 per cent.
In this perspective our economists rightly say that Bangladesh at this present stage is able to formulate its annual budget without depending on foreign aid. They opine that as the donors are increasingly applying different odd conditionalities before granting their aid, so Bangladesh should avoid all the foreign aid except the technical assistance. And if we were some-how strategic, we can easily avert foreign aid in formulating our annual budget each year. More over, if we could collect our revenues successfully, definitely we needed no aid at all. It also should keep in mind that 70 per cent of the aid we get, is being looted by the interest group(s), but as a whole the people is to bear the burden of this debt. As our finance minister is always busy with the issues on collecting aid from abroad, he always is in a tension mood and unable to think for other national issues very much vital for the national interest.
These are some of the opinions our economists and intellectuals hold. Needless to say, if we go through a little bit austerity and be strict enough to curb the corruption in the state level, it is quite possible for us to formulate our own budget without foreign aid. In that case we also should be cautious while accepting development projects to avert wastage. We are to be aware of that in the coming years that the donors would dictate more odd coditionalities against granting aid to the developing countries like ours one. So it's the time to think for formulating aid-free budget.
To understand the aid mechanism, first of all we should clear our idea on 'foreign aid' and 'aid dependency'. When you go through a dictionary, you would find that it gives the definition of 'foreign aid' as: 'The administered transfer of resources from the advanced countries for the purpose of encouraging economic growth in the developing countries'. So not to confuse it with the investments of multinational corporations and commercial banks, many economists opine that 'foreign aid' to meet two distinct criteria: 01. Its objective must be non-commercial from the point of view of the donors and 02. It should be characterized by concessional terms. In practice, transfer of resources from advanced countries to less developing countries goes in many ways and means, chiefly in two ways: multilaterally and bilaterally. Multilaterally, as with the many international agencies such as World Bank or various departments of the United Nations.
Bilaterally, which is an agreement between two countries for a specific amount or item of aid. Direct food aid is granting of preferential tariffs by developed countries to third world, while exporting manufactured goods. No doubt different form of foreign aid effects differently in different countries. The idea of foreign aid began to be attractive to both donors and recipients during the 1950's. In that decade the ex-colonies began to realise just how dependent they still were on the former imperial powers.
The USA, plus the major European nations believed that providing foreign aid would not only allow a measure of continuing control over their former charges, but also help to contain the threat of communism. That's the way in which the very aid merry-go-round began, although the people in the recipient countries were always in the high hopes for ending poverty, ignorance and decease utilising the aid they provided with. Now let we have a look at on the issue of aid dependency.
We have a dependency theory as well, and it posits that their reliance and dependence on more economically developed countries cause the cause of low levels of development in the less economically developed countries. It clears that less economically developed countries are undeveloped because they rely on the more economically developed countries. Some proponents of this dependency theory assert that less economically developed countries will remain less developed because the surplus that they produce will be siphoned off by more economically developed countries - under the guise of multilateral corporations. There is, as such, no profit left for investment and development. As a corollary of this theory, less economically developed countries should cut off ties with the more economically developed countries, retain their surplus production, and follow economically independent ideas in order to develop their economies further.
Figures kept between 1960 to 1986 show that Official Development Assistance (ODA) has increased from an annual rate of 4.6 billion dollars in 1960 to more than 37 billion dollars in 1986. These figures include bilateral and multilateral grants, loans, food and technical assistance. The statistics, however, are misleading as in real terms there has been a steady decline since 1960 in the actual percentage of GNP of the developed countries devoted to ODA. It declined from an overall percentage of 0.51 per cent in 1960 to 0.36 per cent in 1986. The United Nations recommends a minimum of 0.7 per cent of GNP from developed nations towards ODA. But in a recent study of contributions to ODA by developed countries only 5 of 18 studied managed to reach and pass this figure. They were, in order to ranking Norway - 1.03 per cent, Netherlands - 0.91 per cent, Sweden - 0.86 per cent, Denmark - 0.80 per cent and France - 0.78 per cent. The United Kingdom was twelfth with 0.34 % of GNP devoted to development assistance of all forms, While the USA came to the bottom of the table with 0.24 per cent of GNP going towards foreign aid. However, besides Japan the USA remains the largest donor in real terms with contributions totaling 24 per cent of all ODA.
Bilateral aid is the direct transfer of specific resources or money between two countries. Many of the industialised nations in the West have their own official development agencies. Such as the USA has the United States AID and the UK has its Overseas Development Administration. Bilateral aid is really an outright grant of money. It is usually a low interest loan. However, in the majority cases it is a tied-loan, which means that the recipient of the loan is required to purchase goods and services from the donor country. Most multilateral aid is channeled through the World Bank, the IMF and various agencies of the United Nations. The IMF is something of a misnomer here as its loans are really cocessional, but it is still regarded as an important adjunct of development. The two main agencies, World Bank and IMF, claim that their international status make them totally objective and enables them to make value free decisions the distribution of ODA. Their stated aim is to promote and implement economic policies favourable to development. To this end, especially during 1960's and 1970's, many of their lending policies were directed towards the economic infrastructure of a country, such as development of transports, communication and power systems.
Following the publication of the Brandt report-1980, there was a noticeable shift, especially by the World Bank, in policies relating to development assistance. The aim was to redirect the emphasise of international aid away from capital intensive projects in order to help the rural poor. To this end, the higher proportion of the Wold Bank funds were sent to agriculture, education, health and the provision of technical assistance. The IMF and the World Bank are held in great esteem by private lending institutions and have been referred to as 'police of development'. Other official and private lenders tend to lend or not to lend according to whether the government in question has the approval of these two agencies. This gives them a great amount of leverage when negotiating economic policy decisions with developing nations.
The US AID through its 'food for peace' programs is the main purveyor of the direct export of food to underdeveloped countries. This policy has been criticized in certain quarters as some commentators believe that it creates a dependency culture, distort the local markets and provides a discouragement to agricultural programs to create self-sufficiency. Another aspect of the food aid is the green revolution, where hybrid strains of food crops have been developed by some western nations so that the cereals would grow faster and be more productive. How does the green revolution works against the interest of the poor?
It has been noticed that through green revolution process dramatic increase in agricultural production from genetically hybrid grains that produce high yields. But in return it requires high inputs of chemical fertilizes and pesticides. Economically less developed countries are importing three times cereals from economically much developed countries because the green revolution has made these less developed countries increasingly dependent on foreign grain imports although the revolution was supposed to promote self-sufficiency. Green revolution intensifies the need for chemical fertilizers, mechanised farming, irrigation etc, which clears the way to be over dependent on the developed countries. The green revolution also creates for the industrialised countries and plunges under-developed countries into deeper and deeper dependency. It brings a radical transformation in agrarian class- structures.
The cost favours he large landowners and widens the gap between the rich and the poor. Then the poor are forced to sell their land to the well-off farmers and join the labour force. These are cases with the countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan, India, Thailand, Mexico, Philippines etc. There was a time when we have no other way but to go for aid. The emergence of Bangladesh as an independent country through an arms struggle was accompanied by a devastation of the economy. Then it was impossible for us to run the country without help from the international community. But now it is the time to initiate a self-reliant budget free of foreign aid for our national interest as depending on aid we could not assure our national development in the past three decades. Our economists are signaling the very thing to initiate a self-reliant budget in near future. And the question is whether we should go for this or not.
Copyright 2003 by The New Nation
______
[5] Indian Express
June 6, 2004
Editorial
Circle of unreason
Closure on an unfortunate episode in Mushirul Hasans life. Elsewhere, censors roam It has been some years since India rehabilitated Salman Rushdie. And vice versa. The midnights child who in 1999 bid farewell to the country, in his novel The Ground Beneath Her Feet, has in subsequent years become a frequent traveller to the land of his birth, commenting on its politics and people and reclaiming family landmarks. Closure on the violence on the streets and in attitudes of The Satanic Verses episode has, however, been slower for others. Twelve years ago historian Mushirul Hasan became the target of a shrill campus protest for merely suggesting that banning books, in this case Verses, is unwise. Then pro-vice chancellor of the Jamia Millia Islamia, he was even forced to flee the campus for a while. His appointment this month as vice chancellor of Jamia, thus, formally ends an unfortunate chapter in intolerance.
The anger against Rushdies book is now spent. Unfortunately, the search for texts and creative work to rally vast segments of the population into passionate indignation continues. Whether it be a Saraswati painting by M.F. Husain, a polemic by Arun Shourie or a novel by Taslima Nasreen, street protests in years past have been common. In any case, there was something curiously manufactured about the beginnings of the campaign against Hasans opinion on the banning of books. All these years later, passions are being whipped up in Maharashtra over historical works concerning Shivaji. The plunder at Punes Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute is a case in point. It is shocking that James Laines book on Shivaji stands banned, and that the legal case against him is alive. There are also reports about other books on Shivaji being scrutinised by self-appointed censors. The hatred and violence over The Satanic Verses was, in retrospect, so unnecessary and so very harmful. No one won any debating points on that issue. Yet, the censorship roadshow carries on, moving to different sites, carrying different protagonists, waging different political battles. A true beginning would be made in fighting this dangerous trend if the state kept away from these bursts of intolerance and desisted from banning books.
____
[6] UPCOMING EVENTS:
(i)
Center for Asian Studies and the Amsterdam School for Social science
Research have the honour to invite you to the 15th Wertheim lecture by
Professor Dr. Ghanshyam Shah.
'Under-privileged and Communal Carnage: A case of Gujarat'
by Prof. Ghanshyam Shah
The Anti Muslim violence of 2002 in Gujarat was one of the worst
communal carnage in the recent history of South Asia. In this lecture
Prof. Shah contextualises the collective violence in the market driven
globalisation and focuses on some of the unexplored aspects of the
communal carnage. Why would a segment of the poor - the ex-untouchables
in particular- who are on the fringe of the so called mainstream
collaborate with the traditional adversaries - upper caste Hindu
fundamentalists against the equally deprived community of Muslims?
Ghanshyam Shah is currently a fellow at Netherlands Institute for
Advanced Study (NIAS).
Wertheim Lecture is organised by Amsterdam School for Social science
Research (ASSR) University of Amsterdam [ Phone: 020-525 2262].
Date: 14 June 2004
Time: 16:00 - 17:00
Venue:
Oost Indisch Huis (OIH)
Kloveniersburgwal 48
1012 CX Amsterdam
The Netherlands
___
(ii)
Lecture: Fragments of Grace: My Search for Meaning in the Strife of South Asia
Date: June 15th
Time: 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Location: New York
Asia Society and Museum, 725 Park Avenue, New York
Cost: $7 members/NGOs; $10 nonmembers; $5 students w/ID
For five years, Pamela Constable, a veteran foreign correspondent and
award-winning author, traveled through South Asia on assignment for the
Washington Post. Following religious conflicts, political crises, and
natural disasters, she also searched for signs of humanity and dignity
in societies rife with violence, poverty, prejudice, and greed.
Between extended sojourns in South Asia, Constable returned to the West
to reflect on the risks and rewards of her profession, revisit her
roots, and compare her experiences with Islam, Hinduism, and
Christianity. Her book is a uniquely personal exploration of the rich
but solitary life of a foreign correspondent, set against a regional
backdrop of extraordinary political and religious tumult.
Pamela Constable has been covering South Asia for the Washington Post
since April 1999, spending four years as the regions bureau chief. She
is the coauthor with Arturo Valenzuela of A Nation of Enemies: Chile
Under Pinochet. She has been awarded an Alicia Patterson Fellowship and
the Maria Moors Cabot Prize, and she recently completed her tenure as
the Pew International Journalism Programs journalist-in-residence.
Copies of Fragments of Grace will be available for purchase and
signing.
____
(iii)
Roundtable
UMR 7050 Sciences-Po CNRS
Les 14èmes élections législatives nationales
indiennes : analyses et perspectives [The 14th Indian National
Legislative Elections: Analysis and Prospects]
Date: 16 juin 2004
Time: 16h 30 - 19h 00
Venue: 56 rue Jacob
75006 Paris
CHAIR: Jean-Alphonse Bernard, Historian of Contemporary India
Elections 2004: How Congress revived the Idea of India
Zoya Hasan, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
The Defeat of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the National Democratic
Alliance
Christophe Jaffrelot, CERI-CNRS
The Nehru-Gandhi Dynasty: Some Reflections
Max-Jean Zins, CERI-CNRS
The Foreign Policy of the New Indian Governement: Legacies,
Challenges and Prospects
Jean-Luc Racine, CEIAS-CNRS
The discussion will be introduced by Jyotsna Saksena, INALCO
____
(iv)
IRC Annual Lecture (17th June): Readings and discussion for Refugee
Week with Hari Kunzru, Monica Ali and Dave Eggers
International Rescue Committee, UK
International Rescue Committee (IRC) - UK
Prize-winning authors, Monica Ali, Hari Kunzru and Dave Eggers, are
among the guest-speakers attending a special event in London this month
promoting greater understanding of what it means to be a refugee.
Hosted by the International Rescue Committee as part of Refugee Week,
the event will take place on Thursday 17th June at Church House
Conference Centre, Deans Yard, Westminster, London SW1P 3NZ. The Chair
for the evening is Jonathan Freedland of The Guardian newspaper.
Doors: 6.30pm (for 6.45), with drinks reception at 8.15.pm
Tickets should be purchased in advance by calling 020 7692 2737.
Tickets are priced:
£25 lecture and reception, £10 lecture only £6 concessions (NGO staff,
students, pensioners, unemployed, low waged)
ABOUT THE AUTHORS:
Dave Eggers made his name with his first novel, A Heartbreaking Work of
Staggering Genius. He will talk about his work on the lost boys of
Sudan, a group of refugees who spent most of their childhoods on the
move in South Sudan trying to escape capture by Sudanese armed forces.
Many of these boys have now been resettled to the US and elsewhere.
Hari Kunzru, author of the critically acclaimed novel, The
Impressionist, famously rejected the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize as a
protest against hostile rhetoric about immigrants and asylum seekers
published by its sponsor, The Mail on Sunday. His second novel,
Transmission, was published this month.
Monica Alis insights into the experiences of flight and exile provided
much of the material for her internationally successful debut novel,
Brick Lane. The daughter of English and Bangladeshi parents, she spent
the first three years of her life in Dhaka before her family fled to
Bolton during the 1971 civil war.
For further information or to purchase tickets, call:
020 7692 2737
or email
events at ircuk.org
All proceeds from the event will go towards IRCs work with refugees
and displaced communities around the world.
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
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/
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