SACW | Jan.27-28, 2007

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Sat Jan 27 17:45:04 CST 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | January 27-28, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2354 - Year 8

[1]  Pakistan : The question of death penalty (Editorial, Dawn)
[2]  Pakistan's Missing Persons (Irfan Husain)
[3]  CPJ Urges Bangladesh To Rescind Emergency Media Rules
[4]  India: A Convention of the Internally 
Displaced in Gujarat (Ahmedabad, February 1,2007)
[5]  UK: Press Release - India's 'war on terror' 
No death penalty for Afzal Guru! (SASG)
[6]  India: Blood Brothers, Blood Money (Mihir Srivastava and Harinder Baweja)
[7]  India: Trial and terror (Editorial, Hindustan Times)
[8]  India: Crushed by state power, justice eludes many (Neelesh Misra)
[9]  India: Ban on Parzania - Online Petition
[10] China's Test May Make India a Star Wars Satellite (J. Sri Raman)
[11] Dharna Against Forced Displacement in Singur (New Delhi, 29 January 2007)
____


[1]


Dawn
27 January 2007

Editorial

THE QUESTION OF DEATH PENALTY

THE HRCP's advice to the government to adopt a 
moratorium on the death penalty deserves positive 
consideration. Over 85 countries have already 
abolished capital punishment. All of them have 
done so on grounds of humanistic principles. 
Regrettably, Pakistan does not belong to that 
camp. Not being a signatory to the International 
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Islamabad 
probably thinks it is exempt from the norms 
recognised by international law. But legally a 
state cannot ignore practices and laws that 
govern the policies of the international 
community. In fact, the data provided by the HRCP 
reflects poorly on Pakistan. In 2005, 361 people 
were sentenced to death in the country and at 
present there are 7,400 prisoners on the death 
row. In a country where human dignity and 
fundamental rights are at a discount, the human 
rights argument may not carry much weight.

There is another convincing and weighty point of 
view put forward by the HRCP and other human 
rights activists that must be heeded. As pointed 
out by them, our judicial system suffers from so 
many basic flaws that the chances of there being 
a miscarriage of justice are immense. One does 
not have to be reminded of the brutalities of the 
police which often result in extracting false 
confessions from prisoners who might actually be 
innocent. Similarly, the investigation 
methodology is very faulty and very often the 
police fail to make a strong case for the 
prosecution. In such circumstances, can one be 
certain that a person held to be guilty and 
awarded the death sentence, has actually 
committed the crime? With death penalty being an 
irreversible measure, would any judge with a 
little conscience adjudge him guilty if there is 
doubt about his crime? A person wrongly adjudged 
guilty can be provided redress any time if he has 
not been sent to the gallows. Such cases of 
abortion of justice have other repercussions as 
well that are best avoided. The use of terror and 
force by the state cannot be justified on any 
ground. The best option would be to replace the 
death penalty with life imprisonment or put a 
moratorium on capital punishment until the 
government makes up its mind on the issue.


______


[2]

opendemocracy.net/
24 January 2007

PAKISTAN'S MISSING PERSONS

by Irfan Husain


The Pakistani state's kidnapping of its critics 
is eroding its own foundations, says Irfan Husain.

On 29 December 2006, a photograph made the front 
pages of most Pakistani dailies, shocking a 
violence-hardened nation. It showed a young man 
with his baggy shalwar pulled down around his 
ankles, being beaten on the legs and buttocks by 
the Islamabad police.

Mahmood Masood's crime was to accompany a small 
group of protestors as they marched towards army 
headquarters to give the vice chief of army staff 
a petition. This demanded the release of their 
relatives allegedly being held by military 
intelligence agencies.

For months now, Pakistani newspapers have been 
reporting on the phenomenon of "missing" citizens 
from all four provinces. In December, the supreme 
court took up forty-five cases, and directed the 
Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) agency to 
produce them. Although this elite spy outfit had 
been denying that it had abducted anybody, 
twenty-one individuals were released. In Sindh 
alone, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan 
(HRCP) has documented 400 cases.

An everyday event

Here are two typical cases. The first (recounted 
by a nephew, Khuda Bux) is of Moula Bux, who was 
returning home from a court appearance in Sehwan 
Sharif, Sindh province, on 10 July 2006, riding 
on the pillion seat of a relative's motorcycle, 
when they were intercepted by a blue Toyota 
Corolla. The car had no number-plates, and 
contained four uniformed policemen.

The cops dragged Moula Bux into the car and drove 
off. He has not been seen since. His wife, three 
sons and a daughter are frantic. Relatives have 
been going from police stations to government 
offices, trying to find out where he is. 
Initially, the police refused to register a case, 
but were forced to do so in November on a 
supreme-court directive.

The second case is of Abid Raza Zaidi, who is 
more fortunate. He was kept in safe houses, moved 
around blindfolded, and tortured for four months 
until he was released recently. A PhD student at 
Karachi University, he tells of being transported 
by train, plane and car. He has no idea where he 
was taken. He was suspended upside down over an 
open sewer, and had his head lowered repeatedly 
into the foul water below. This is a variation of 
the American technique known as "waterboarding". 
To this day, he has no idea why he was picked up. 
His is one of seventy such abductions reported in 
Karachi alone.

Into the void

On 3 December, Ghulam Mohammad Baloch was forced 
into a police van in Lyari. Witnesses say there 
were a number of police officers present, 
including a DSP and an SHO. On 7 December, the 
Sindh high court issued notices to the police and 
several intelligence agencies, directing them to 
produce Baloch. Nobody has thus far accepted 
responsibility for this kidnapping.

According to Sajid Baloch, a relative, 6,000 
Balochis (Baluchis) have disappeared over the 
last couple of years. Most people, especially in 
rural Balochistan (Baluchistan), have never heard 
of the HRCP, and therefore do not report these 
disappearances.

Apparently, reports of such incidents have 
skyrocketed after 9/11. Almost invariably, the 
police and intelligence agencies deny any hand in 
these disappearances. And when the victims do 
return, most of them are too scared by threats to 
report their experiences to the media, or to go 
to court. In any case, most of them are 
blindfolded during their captivity, and cannot 
prove who had kidnapped them.

Pakistan's prime minister Shaukat Aziz was asked 
to comment on the brutal incident involving the 
public thrashing of Mahmood Masood. Demonstrating 
a breathtaking degree of insensitivity, he 
advised the relatives of the missing people not 
to take to the streets, but to "observe 
protocol". He forgot that in most cases, families 
have spent months going to police stations, 
hospitals and courts in an effort to secure the 
release of their loved ones, and to find out 
where they are being kept. What "protocol" are 
they supposed to follow after exhausting all 
legal avenues?

It is clear that these cases of kidnapping and 
torture are part of a covert state policy. There 
are just too many men disappearing for this to be 
a random crime-wave.

Saleem Baloch, an office-bearer of the Jamhoori 
Watan Party (JWP), told reporters at a press 
conference on 20 December at the HRCP office of 
being kidnapped in March 2006, having being 
released a few days earlier. During his 
eight-month ordeal, Baloch came across many other 
Balochis in similar illegal confinement.

The Balochi factor

It appears that the uprising in Balochistan is 
the cause of many of these covert operations. 
Unable to produce any evidence that would stand 
up in court, the government is resorting to these 
methods to obtain information, and to punish 
people they think might be connected to Balochi 
nationalist organisations, most notably the 
Baloch Liberation Army (BLA). By resorting to 
these tactics, Pervez Musharraf's government is 
taking a page out of the American torture manual: 
Washington's policy of covert rendition and its 
hellhole in Guantánamo Bay are clearly the models 
here.

But apart from suspected Baloch nationalists, 
other people have fallen victim to this policy. 
Moula Bux was an activist who sought a semblance 
of a fair deal for his people as gas was being 
pumped out from their land. In a letter addressed 
to the managing director of ENI, a multinational 
exploiting the local gasfield, Bux wrote in 
January 2004:

     "(1) That in Gas Field's plant as yet has not 
appointed any single said original area 
inhabitant [sic];

     (2) That as by Company constructed road and 
Plant have not yet paid any remuneration amounts 
as in this respect faced losses by land owners 
[sic];

     (3) That small small work and contracts were awarded to outsiders... [sic]"

I have no idea if Moula Bux's agitation for local 
rights was responsible for his disappearance. But 
his family is convinced that this is the only 
possible explanation as he was not involved in 
any other kind of activity that could justify 
what happened to him.

The HRCP also has records of twenty young Shi'a 
men who have been abducted. Again, their families 
insist they were not involved in any subversive 
activities. By behaving like those they seek to 
defeat (nationalists, extremists), government 
functionaries are only strengthening resistance 
to a rule that is being increasingly viewed as 
illegal.

If the state does not follow the rule of law, how 
can it expect others to do so? So while the 
temptation to lash out at its perceived enemies 
might be great, by placing itself above the law, 
this Pakistani government is eroding the very 
foundations of the state.

(Irfan Husain is a columnist with Dawn newspaper in Pakistan.)

______


[3]

Committee to Protect Journalists
330 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001 USA 
Phone: (212) 465-1004     Fax: (212) 465-9568 
Web: www.cpj.org    

CPJ URGES BANGLADESH TO RESCIND EMERGENCY MEDIA RULES

New York, January 26, 2007-The Committee to 
Protect Journalists is greatly concerned about 
new regulations imposed by the Bangladeshi 
interim government that severely restrict news 
reporting. The Emergency Powers Rules of 2007, 
announced on Thursday, restrict press coverage of 
political news and set penalties of up to five 
years in prison for violations.
The new rules aim at a wide range of political 
activities. Those dealing specifically with media 
allow the government to ban or censor print and 
broadcast news about rallies and other political 
activities that it deems "provocative or 
harmful." Under the rules, the government can 
seize printed material and confiscate printing 
presses and broadcast equipment. The government 
also has power under the regulations to censor or 
block news transmitted in any form.
"These rules give authorities sweeping powers of 
censorship that will deprive Bangladeshi citizens 
of independent information at this critical time 
of political upheaval," said Joel Simon, CPJ's 
executive director. "We call on the interim 
government to rescind these repressive rules 
immediately."
Bangladesh has been embroiled in political 
turmoil since October, when Prime Minister 
Khaleda Zia's administration came to an end in 
the run-up to constitutionally mandated 
elections. Voting had been scheduled for this 
week but was postponed when opposition parties 
protested irregularities. President Iajuddin 
Ahmed stepped down as leader of the caretaker 
government and declared a state of emergency on 
January 11, following bitter clashes between 
supporters of the two major rival parties.
The regulations took effect today and will remain 
in force until the government lifts the state of 
emergency, according to Thursday's announcement.
CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit 
organization that works to safeguard press 
freedom worldwide. For more information, visit 
www.cpj.org.

______


[4]

THE UPROOTED
CAUGHT BETWEEN EXISTENCE AND DENIAL

A Convention of the Internally Displaced in Gujarat

February 1,2007

Heerak Mahotsav Hall
Gujarat Vidyapeeth
Ahmedabad, Gujarat

Organized by : Aantarik Visthapit Hak Rakshak Samiti

Nearly five years to the carnage in Gujarat in 
2002, the wounds refuse to heal. And the battle 
against collective, national amnesia must 
continue. It bears repeating that this was a 
massacre unprecedented in independent India. For 
it was a massacre openly led by the State against 
its own citizens, which left over 2000 dead and 
lakhs displaced, terrorized, and scarred. At a 
conservative estimate, well over 300 women were 
sexually brutalized in horrific ways, raped and 
killed in full public view. This was an attempt 
to annihilate Hindutva's 'constructed enemy', the 
Muslim, physically and symbolically, as person, 
citizen and community. The constitutional promise 
of India lay in tatters. And so long as justice 
eludes the survivors, so long as their scars 
remain unacknowledged, and the State does not 
come forward with reparations for harms inflicted 
on scores of innocents, that constitutional 
promise remains violated.

Even as people's struggle seeking justice for the 
death of loved ones occasionally enters public 
consciousness, what has remained hidden from view 
for five years, is the slow death inflicted upon 
the scores of internally displaced Muslims - 
people who fled their homes, villages and towns 
at the height of the violence in 2002 and have 
never been able to return.

Some families returned to their original places 
of residence, many condemned to a life of 
permanent compromise and second-class 
citizenship. Numerous cases were reported of 
Muslims being "allowed" to return only if they 
withdrew legal cases, stopped using loudspeakers 
for the azaan, quietly moved out of certain 
businesses, and basically learned to live with 
downcast eyes. Many of these compromises were 
brokered by public officials carrying out the 
State's mandate of forcing 'normalcy' and 
creating an illusion of public order.

Many families, however, were never able to 
return. Today these internally displaced families 
number approximately 5000. Even as the nation 
appears to have moved on in these five years, and 
public imagination is apparently occupied with 
other pressing matters, these people are still 
surviving in no-man's land, caught between 
existence and denial. They live in makeshift 
colonies hastily constructed by NGOs and 
community organization, on the outskirts of towns 
and villages, both literally and symbolically, on 
the margins of society. Their futures are 
uncertain.

Thousands of these families are gathering in 
Ahmedabad on February 1, 2007 to ask for 
acknowledgment as internally displaced people, to 
tell the world that they exist and to demand 
recognition, reparation and rehabilitation from 
the Indian State. 

In the space of a few months( December 
2006-January 2007), several colonies that house 
survivors have formed committees of the 
internally displaced (Antarik Visthapit Samitis). 
Each district has formed a coordination committee 
and a State coordination forum has been formed.

SCHEDULE FOR THE CONVENTION

10.00-1.00 ARRIVAL  AND LUNCH
1.00-5.00- CONVENTION
5.00- CLOSING

THE INTERNALLY DISPLACED PEOPLE (TOTAL 8-10 ON 
EACH THEME) WILL DEPOSE (5 MINUTES EACH) ON THE 
FOLLOWING THEMES IN FRONT OF A PANEL. EACH 
SESSION WILL BE CONDUCTED BY SENIOR ACTIVISTS:

1.	WOMEN AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED
2.	ATTEMPT TO RETURN
3.	SITES AND SERVICES, INFRASTRUCTURE
4.	LIVLIHOOD AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED
5.	DISCRIMINATION, EXCLUSION AND ECONOMIC BOYCOTT
6.	POLICE INTIMIDATION AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED
7.	CHILDREN, YOUTH AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED


EFFORTS TOWARDS RECOGNISING THE STATUS OF INTERNALLY DISPLACED

CHARTER OF DEMANDS

RESPONSE FROM THE PANEL

PANEL MEMBERS

SYEDA HAMEED, MEMBER PLANNING COMMISSION

DILIP PADGAONKAR, MEMBER NATIONAL MINORITY COMMISSION

JUSTICE  RA MEHTA

REPRESENTATIVE FROM NHRC

MEDIA REPRESENTATIVE

MAHESH BHATT- TO BE CONFIRMED


To be released at the convention

The Uprooted: Caught between Existence and Denial
A Document on the State of the Internally Displaced in Gujarat

Published by Centre for Social Justice & Anhad

5 years of Gujarat Genocide 2002-2007

Contents

1. Introduction
2. Excerpts from the 'Status Report on 
Rehabilitation of Victims of Communal Violence 
in  
     Gujarat', October 2005
3. The Unseen Existence  - A Photo Essay
4. The Complaint on Internal Displacement Submitted to the NCM
5. Reports of the NCM visit to Gujarat
6. Excerpts from the Recommendations made to the Prime Minister
7. Select Media Reports on the Issue
8. The UN Guiding Principles on Internal 
Displacement, which provide a framework to 
articulate demands, accepted by all well meaning 
nation states including India
9. Survey of the Internally Displaced Colonies


SUGGESTED CONTRIBUTION: RS. 150 / US $ 10

Pages: 124

BOOK YOUR COPIES IN ADVANCE.

Anhad
23, Canning Lane, New Delhi-110001
Tel-23070740/ 23070722
e-mail: <mailto:anhad.delhi at gmail.com>anhad.delhi at gmail.com

______


[5]

Date: Sat, 27 Jan 2007 09:35:07 +0000
Subject: PRESS RELEASE India's 'war on terror' No death penalty for Afzal Guru!

PRESS RELEASE

LONDON PROTEST DEMANDS THAT THE INDIAN PRESIDENT 
REVOKES THE DEATH PENALTY ON AFZAL GURU

On Friday, 26 January, India's Republic Day, more 
than 50 people gathered in a vocal protest 
against the death penalty faced by Afzal Guru, 
one of the accused in the attack on the Indian 
parliament in 2001. They handed in a letter 
addressed to the President of India and signed by 
British MPs Jeremy Corbyn, Roger Godsiff and John 
Mcdonnell and several South Asian community 
organisations, including South Asia Solidarity 
Group, South Asian Alliance, 1857 Committee, 
Asian Women Unite, Association of British 
Kashmiris, and the Anti-Mangla Dam Association. 

The letter pointed out there is no direct 
evidence against Afzal Guru, and he is known not 
to have injured or harmed anyone. Also that the 
Courts have found that the investigating agencies 
deliberately fabricated evidence and forged 
documents against him and others accused.

The letter urged the President to use his 
prerogative of exercising clemency and revoking 
the death sentence.

Slogans and placards at the picket drew attention 
to the fact that Afzal , a Kashmiri was 
repeatedly and brutally tortured and forced to 
confess to a crime he did not commit. (For 
details see his wife Tabassum's letter: 
http://justiceforafzalguru.org/background/tabassum.html 
)He has also been the target of a hostile media 
campaign in India. The protesters drew parallels 
with the US and Britain's 'war on terror' and the 
treatment of prisoners in Abu Ghraib

Currently Afzal is in Tihar prison where even 
after enormous efforts by his campaign he is 
being denied basic rights - he is not allowed to 
go out of doors for even half an hour of sunlight 
and the Red Cross who have access to Kashmiri 
prisoners have not been allowed to visit him.

SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION AT: http://www.petitiononline.com/CMAG/petition.html

Further details: South Asia Solidarity Group
sasg at southasiasolidarity.org


_____


[6]

Tehelka
Februray 03 , 2007

BLOOD BROTHERS, BLOOD MONEY

Aijaz and Yasin Guru smelt opportunity when their 
brother Afzal Guru was sentenced to death in the 
Parliament attack case. Mihir Srivastava and 
Harinder Baweja report on how they got rich 
collecting money in Afzal's name

Behind Afzal: Protests in Srinagar against Afzal's death sentence
The voice from the street in Kashmir is near 
unanimous. Spare Afzal Guru the death sentence or 
the Valley will go up in flames because a dead 
Afzal will emerge as a potent symbol of 
separatism. The voices, ironically, straddle the 
deep political divide and include the major 
mainstream parties as well as the sloganeering 
secessionists. In fact, if there is one thing 
that the ruling Congress and the hardline 
Hurriyat leaders agree on, it is this - that 
President APJ Abdul Kalam grant clemency to the 
man sentenced to the gallows by the Supreme Court 
for his involvement in the conspiracy that led to 
the dramatic day-light attack on Parliament on 
December 13, 2001.

All shades of political opinion - barring the bjp 
which is clamouring for an early execution - 
reflect one common concern: Afzal's hanging will 
only further alienate the Kashmiris.

Encashing 'Martyrdom': Yasin and Aijaz
After Afzal's wife made a statement that no one 
had helped her, leaders from the Valley called to 
say that they had given money to the brothers. 
They stood exposed
The voices favouring clemency are shrill, even 
hysterical. Former National Conference (nc) Chief 
Minister Farooq Abdullah makes a grim forecast, 
saying, "Go right ahead and hang him. It will 
destroy relations between Hindus and Muslims and 
the entire nation will go up in flames. Hanging 
Afzal will make him a hero for centuries." His 
son, Omar Abdullah who now heads the party says, 
"Our efforts are currently focused on restoring 
the atmosphere of peace and security in the 
state. Afzal's execution has the potential to 
make matters worse." Mehbooba Mufti, President of 
the Peoples Democratic Party, a member of the 
ruling coalition, agrees, as does the Congress, 
its coalition partner. Says Abdul Ghani Vakil, 
the Congress vice president, "The Central 
government has always been very generous when it 
comes to making concessions to Kashmir. So it 
would be good if they respect the public 
sentiment in Kashmir and grant pardon to Afzal."

The public sentiment that Vakil talks about has 
been tested on the ground. The Valley has seen 
bandhs, violent protests, processions and 
teargassing. Kashmir always treads a thin line 
between peace and violence and the protest 
against Afzal's hanging has drawn thousands out 
of their homes. The demand varies from granting 
outright pardon to Afzal, to the Hurriyat 
Conference's Chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq saying 
that he be given clemency on humanitarian 
grounds. Even the cpi(m)'s Yusuf Tarigami says, 
"The need now is for the peace process to go 
ahead and not be disrupted."

Rank Opportunist: Aijaz Guru
Leaders of all shades in Kashmir agreed to
having paid money to Aijaz and Yasin in the 
belief that it would be used for Afzal's legal aid
Yet, in the midst of this overwhelming support 
for clemency, Tehelka has unearthed a horrifying 
fact. A fact as stunning as it is disgusting. 
Even as ordinary Kashmiris step out of the safety 
of their homes to join the clemency processions, 
Afzal's own family is split right down the 
middle. Tabassum, Afzal's wife has returned to 
her parents' home in Baramulla, 60 km north of 
Srinagar, from her in-laws house in village 
Doabgah in Sopore. The reason - instead of 
helping her in her fight for clemency, Afzal's 
brother Aijaz Guru is using the death sentence to 
earn quick bucks for himself.

Instead of joining the battle for clemency, Aijaz 
and Yasin Guru, brother of co-accused Shaukat 
Guru who has been sentenced for ten years by the 
Supreme Court in the attack on Parliament, have 
been approaching Hurriyat Conference leaders and 
asking for funds in the name of "legal aid".

Aijaz told Tehelka that he had not once visited 
Afzal in all the six years that he has been on 
death row - from the trial court right up to the 
Supreme Court which upheld the sentence. His 
sudden trips to individual Hurriyat leaders are 
also a bit odd considering the fact that he 
swears to hating Afzal from the core of his 
heart. "I use to love him more than my son but I 
hate him so much now, I can't even begin to tell 
you,'' he says in a startling revelation.

Does the hatred have something to do with the 
fact that his mercenary motives have been found 
out. That Afzal's wife is now willing to spill 
the beans when she says, "Aijaz and Yasin have 
collected five to seven lakh and invested the 
money in property. Not a paisa has been given to 
me." None of the money being collected in the 
name of clemency has been shared with Tabassum 
who has been fighting the battle, right from the 
time that the case was being heard in the lower 
court, until now, when the clemency petition was 
handed over by her to President Kalam.

Tabassum says her conscience did not allow her to 
go out with a begging bowl. "I did not collect 
any money for Afzal Sahib. Mera zamir nahin kehta 
(my conscience didn't permit). Afzal will not 
like it. Aijaz sahib and Yasin wanted to collect 
money and I told them that I did not like the 
idea of collecting money. I told them, if you 
have to collect money then take a big basket and 
beg in the street."

Tabassum told Tehelka that she discovered the 
whole business of Aijaz-Yasin money-collection 
drive when she made a statement in Kashmir that 
all those leaders who were now pleading for 
clemency had not once come forward to help her 
when she needed it most. This statement from 
Afzal's wife made headlines in the Valley papers 
and it was then that the Hurriyat leaders started 
calling her to say that they had actually helped 
out and had in fact given money to Aijaz and 
Yasin. "After my statement, many leaders called 
me and told that that they all gave money to 
Yasin. Vo phir nange ho gaye (they then stood 
exposed). They collected lakhs and kept it. They 
used this money to buy property," Tabassum says. 
She alleges that Yasin bought land in Mundi, 
Sopore with the money. "The whole racket is the 
handiwork of Shaukat's brother Yasin. He is with 
Aijaz. Yasin is the mind behind Aijaz," she says. 
This fact was not hard to verify. When Tehelka 
went to meet Aijaz, Yasin was present there too. 
Asked about the Hurriyat leaders' assertions that 
they had personally paid money to the duo, they 
bluntly denied having taken money from anyone in 
the name of Afzal's death sentence.

But their claims fell flat when leaders of all 
shades in Kashmir agreed on record to having paid 
money to Aijaz and Yasin in the belief that it 
would be used as legal aid for Afzal. Mirwaiz 
Omar Farooq, Chairman, Hurriyat Conference 
categorically stated that it was not Afzal's wife 
but his brother and Yasin who had visited 
Hurriyat leaders, individually, to collect money. 
In other words, the Hurriyat was not approached 
as the conglomerate of different parties that it 
is, but its leaders were asked for money 
individually. "His (Afzal's) brother has been in 
touch with us. In fact he is in touch with every 
party, and leaders at individual levels. We have 
all helped him whenever we can. This has been 
happening since the time the case was in the 
court. Everybody has helped him whether it is 
Geelani sahib or Shabir Shah."

It is a classic case of money being made by 
marketing the miseries of those on the death row 
or in prison. Senior Hurriyat leader, Professor 
Abdul Ghani Bhat had this to say about Yasin: "Do 
you know, Yasin is a teacher. He is very well 
paid. But he would almost behave like a beggar 
asking for money." He pointed that the lust for 
money has eclipsed the whole struggle in the 
Valley.

"Vice is tied to the tail of money. In Kashmir, 
the movement has got suppressed in the three 
ways. One: the whole movement has been 
communalised. Two: it has been commercialised. 
Three: it has been criminalised." Aijaz and Yasin

are no exception he explained. The Mirwaiz 
explained another facet of the mania for money: 
"You do not know how much incentive they 
(security forces) get for catching guns. 
Therefore, every time, the same guns are 
recovered from different militants."

Self-Proclaimed Terrorist's Terror: DSP Devinder Singh
Afzal's wife moved out of her in-laws' house. 
Instead of helping her fight for clemency, Aijaz 
was busy making money
People's Conference chairman Bilal Ghani Lone 
also confirmed that Yasin had approached him for 
money. "Yasin also came to me. I and my brother 
Sajjad were together at that time and we both 
helped him," he said. Another leader, Shabir 
Shah, acknowledged that he too had extended help. 
"These kinds of things keep happening. These 
things have happened and I am aware of it. But I 
would want you to ask these questions to the 
family. Ask them what role I played? What help I 
extended to them," he says.

When Aijaz and Yasin were confronted with these 
questions they were outraged. "Who told you 
this?" Yasin asked. "These are baseless 
allegations." They were baffled when told that 
different Hurriyat leaders have confirmed this on 
record.

Aijaz reacted by saying: "Jinke pass karoron 
arbon pade hain unse koi hisaab nahin mangta 
hai... boltain hain aap ne paisa khayaa hai. Ye 
baat to aamne-saamne hoti hai Š Agar aap Hurriyat 
valon ke upar se aadhe ghante ko security hata 
len Kashmir ke log unki chamdi kheench lenge 
(Those who have crores of rupee, no one asks them 
to account for their wealth. These same people 
say you (referring to self) embezzled money. Such 
things should be discussed in the presence of 
both parties Š If you remove security from 
Hurriyat leader for half an hour, the people of 
Kashmir will flay them."

Yasin concurs, saying: "Baat aisi hui ki Hurriyat 
valon ke pass koi agenda nahin hai. Kabhi iske 
saath hain kabhi uske saath hain, kabhi India ke 
saath hain kabhi Pakistan ke saath hain. Hum log 
sidhe-sadhe log hain. Ab ye bol rahen hain ki 
humne Yasin ko paise diye. Agar koi bhi Hurriyat 
vala bole ki Yasin ne paise liye hain to main 
bolunga kab diye. Humare pas to itne resources 
bhi nahin hain ki truck chhura len. (Fact is, 
that Hurriyat is left with no issue. Sometimes, 
they are on the side of India, sometimes they 
speak for Pakistan. We are straightforward 
people. If Hurriyat says we have taken money, I 
will say where is the money. We could not even 
release our truck from the police)."

Surprised perhaps by the charge that they had 
taken money, Yasin continued to speak in his 
defence: "How can you (or anyone) just say that 
Shabir Shah gave Rs 50,000, or Geelani sahib (the 
Hurriyat hardliner) gave two lakh or the Mirwaiz 
gave Rs 10 lakh. Let them say that to us. Such 
things are discussed face to face. Like you 
(Tehelka) are asking us to our face."
On the face of it, there is a visible difference 
in Aijaz's lifestyle. He lives in his own 
bungalow in Baramulla while his brother and 
mother live in their village home. Unlike Aijaz 
who is running a sawmill even though he is an 
employee with the state veterinary department, 
his brother Hilal is a daily-wage labourer. And 
quite unlike Hilal, Aijaz has just bought a new 
car.

In the murky place that Kashmir has become, death 
money has added yet another sordid chapter to the 
state's bloody history.

_____


[7]

Hindustan Times
25 January 2007

Editorial

TRIAL AND TERROR

The story of Tariq Ahmad Dar is reminiscent of a 
Kafkaesque nightmare where the victim is thrown 
in jail twice in two countries on unsubstantiated 
charges. The Kashmiri, who went to Bangladesh to 
become a model and businessman, first attracted 
the attention of the Bangladesh law enforcement 
authorities who branded him an Indian spy and 
imprisoned him for 40 days. On being released 
after desperate efforts by his family, he came 
back to India only to find the Intelligence 
Bureau locking him up for 90 days on suspicion 
that he was a militant. Nothing at all was found 
against the young man whose plight this newspaper 
highlighted last November. The only silver lining 
in the cloud was that Mr Dar has been finally 
freed.

For many, a brush with the law in India has 
proved fatal. So-called encounter killings have 
long been one of the preferred options for the 
police when dealing with alleged terrorists. Two 
innocent businessmen were shot dead in cold blood 
in New Delhi in 1997 on suspicion that they were 
terrorists. Similarly, two people were gunned 
down by the Delhi Police in a shopping mall, in 
what was described as a 'pre-emptive killing'. Of 
course, encounter deaths and detention are par 
for the course in Kashmir and in parts of the 
North-east. All this shows that our law 
enforcement agencies do not observe even the 
standard protocol of producing evidence before 
hauling someone off to the lock-up - or gunning 
them down.

To kill someone on the suspicion that they may 
carry out some subversive act is unheard of in 
any civilised democracy. The worst part is that 
the police and other law enforcement personnel 
get away with such excesses, often under the 
guise that they acted to preserve national 
security. During the militancy years in Punjab, 
scores of people vanished with no trial or even 
questioning. The logic often trotted out by the 
police and politicians was that a lengthy legal 
procedure would enable anti-national elements to 
get off the hook. So, the short-cut method was to 
do away with them or lock them up and throw away 
the key. The State cannot descend to such 
methods. There is a due process of law and 
everyone is entitled to it. Whenever any arm of 
the State seeks to circumvent this, it should be 
taken to task. Fortunately, today we have a far 
more vigilant civil society than before and this 
gives us hope that such violations will decrease 
and ultimately end.

______


[8]

Hindustan Times

CRUSHED BY STATE POWER, JUSTICE ELUDES MANY

Neelesh Misra

New Delhi, January 25, 2007

S Nambinarayanan has never met Kashmiri model 
Tariq Ahmad Dar - but in a way, they know each 
other well. The top space scientist is still 
seeking justice 13 years after police and 
intelligence officials ruined his career by 
calling him a spy and traitor.

Hundreds of miles to the south of the New Delhi 
prison that Dar left on Thursday after police 
dropped charges of terrorist links, Nambinarayan 
and many others relived their similar pain, of 
being framed under espionage and 
terrorism-related laws. They were acquitted, but 
lost much else.

"It has become very easy for the state to call 
people spies and terrorists", said Kashmiri 
journalist Iftikhar Gilani, who was jailed on 
espionage charges for more than seven months, but 
acquitted.

The false cases have cost people their careers, 
life's savings, reputations and health. Friends 
abandoned them. The media indicted them. But even 
after being proved innocent, officials who 
brought the false cases are rarely known to have 
been punished.

"My entire life is ruined. But who cares for 
this?" Nambinarayanan, who made a landmark 
contribution to India's space research programme, 
told the Hindustan Times from his 
Thiruvananthapuram home. He was acquitted, but is 
still wrapped up in litigation.

In his worst days, rickshaw-pullers would not even take him to a temple.

Nambinarayanan was granted an interim 
compensation of Rs 10 lakh by the National Human 
Rights Commission in 2001. But the Kerala 
government is blocking the payment, and has gone 
to court saying the police acted without malice. 
He has separately sought damages of Rs 1 crore, a 
case that is making tortuous progress.

Instead, the state government sued him for 
criminal defamation for allegedly maligning the 
reputation of the police, by saying in a 
newspaper interview that he had "claimed 
damages". When a court threw out the case after 
four years and numerous hearings, the state has 
gone in appeal.

"It is an unequal fight. But I have nothing more 
to lose than what I already have", he said. "I 
took heavy loans to fight the cases, and the 
interest is piling up".

Many others have been similarly accused, but 
"almost nobody files complaints and nobody seeks 
damages", said lawyer VK Ohri, who successfully 
defended journalist Gilani.

"Tariq Dar was lucky to get out of jail in three 
months. There are so many others I met in prison 
who are languishing endlessly on similar 
charges", said Gilani. "They never get written 
about".

Others have suffered in the past. Navy captain 
B.K.Subbarao, accused of leaking nuclear secrets 
and arrested in Mumbai, spent five years in 
prison during which his son had to give up on his 
chance to study at the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology, the family ran out of money, and 
Subbarao finally studied law books in prison to 
fight his own case. He got acquitted.

Email Neelesh Misra: neelesh.misra at hindustantimes.com

______


[9]

BAN ON PARZANIA - ONLINE PETITION

Dear friends,
The goondas of Bajrang Dal have succeeded in 
twisting the arms of the cinema owners and ban 
the release of Parzania in Gujarat. By doing this 
they have made it clear that they will not allow 
any discussion, debate or acceptance of the 
carnage that tore up the people of Gujarat in 
2002.

If you are as angry as we are with these threats 
and hooliganism then PLEASE SIGN on the online 
petition at: 
http://www.PetitionOnline.com/Parzania/petition.html 
Please do mention if you are from Gujarat. 
DRISHTI is trying to organize special screenings 
of this film and we need to know how many in 
Gujarat will be willing to come.

PLEASE FORWARD TO ALL

In harmony,

Stalin K.
Co-founder & Director
DRISHTI - Media, Arts & Human Rights
103, Anand Hari Tower
Bodakdev, Ahmedabad 380054
TEL: +91-79-2685 1235 and 6661 4235
www.drishtimedia.org

_____


[10]

China's Test May Make India a Star Wars Satellite
by J. Sri Raman
truthout.org
26 January 2007

When China destroyed one of its own aging weather 
satellites with a ground-based ballistic missile 
on January 11, the media recorded a more than 
mildly earthshaking event. The impact of the 
event on South Asia, however, needs greater 
notice than it has received.
The successful anti-satellite missile (ASAT) test 
has sounded an alarm about a global arms race in 
outer space. An important step towards the race 
may be witnessed in China's immediate, southern 
neighborhood.  India's response to the test may 
become part of a reckless reply from the US under 
the George Bush administration to the apparently 
unexpected Beijing move.
The official Indian response has been guarded. 
The "security think-tank," known to speak for the 
politically more circumspect establishment, has 
greeted the test with a clear enough call for the 
country moving for a closer tie-up with the 
Bush-modified missile-defense program.
Officially, concern was voiced over the test, 
with Indian Air Force chief S. P. Tyagi talking 
of the major role for space "in all future wars" 
and adding:
"If we have assets in space, somebody will try to 
knock them off through hard kills or soft kills. 
We must be ready for all this." Former chief 
adviser to India's Defense Research and 
Development Organization (DRDO) K. Santhanam was 
more explicit: "China's ASAT test is definitely a 
concern for all countries with satellite launch 
capabilities. Satellites, after all, form an 
important part of C3I (communications, command, 
control and intelligence) systems."
The think-tank's point was made trenchantly in an 
editorial of January 20 in the well-known daily 
Indian Express, with National Security Advisory 
Board member C. Raja Mohan as its Strategic 
Affairs Editor. Said the paper: "Amidst the 
emergence of a brash new space power in its 
neighborhood, India can either respond with a 
robust military space effort in collaboration 
with the US or consign itself to the status of a 
second-rate power in Asia."
The paper spelt out its meaning by voicing 
outrage at past opposition to "offers from the 
Bush administration to assist India in the 
development of (its) missile development 
program." Stating that "India needs partners in 
space," the article added:
"It does not take a rocket scientist to figure 
out that the US leads the list of such partners:"
Mainstream Indian media are assisting official 
and crypto-official attempts at publicizing an 
alleged commonalty of space security perceptions 
and interests between India and the US. They are, 
thus, making out a case for extending the 
much-advertised US-India "strategic partnership" 
to space.
Unnamed sources in the space research 
establishment have been quoted as vouching that 
India has the technology to build a 
satellite-killer similar to China's, but vowing 
that India won't "use its prowess for military 
purposes." These sources also suggest that India, 
too, like the US, has a policy and program that 
accord military importance to its space assets.
The claim has been made in connection with 
India's Cartosat-2 satellite, sent into space by 
a polar satellite launch vehicle (PSLV) on the 
eve of China's ASAT test. With the launch of 
January 10, say the sources, India's 
satellite-based surveillance and reconnaissance 
program is "finally heading towards completion."
The program, they add, "will allow India to keep 
closer tabs on troop movements, missile silos, 
military installations and airbases of 
neighboring countries, as well as augment 
surveillance over Indian airspace."
It needs to be noted that all the important 
missiles tested by India are nuclear-capable. 
Among missiles of a lesser range, Prithvi (Earth) 
II (with a 250-km reach and a relatively light 
payload) has been hailed as ideal for nuclear 
missions. New Delhi has claimed that the Agni 
(Fire) series of intermediate-range ballistic 
missiles will only deliver conventional warheads. 
Experts, however, say that the cost of any of 
these missiles cannot be justified unless it is 
used as a nuclear delivery vehicle.
Agni III, tested without success last July, has 
long been projected as a deterrent against China. 
With a range of over 3,000 kms, it is capable of 
hitting Chinese cities, including Beijing and 
Shanghai. The security think-tanks are silent on 
any links between the failure of the test and the 
flurry of "offers" from the Bush administration 
to assist in India's missile program.
The idea of India's induction into the US missile 
defense and theater defense is nothing new. The 
first major indication of an attempt at US-India 
"strategic partnership," in fact, came with 
former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's warm 
welcome to the missile programs of the Bush 
administration. Appropriately, it came on the 
third anniversary of India's nuclear weapons 
tests, falling on May 11, 2001.
Vajpayee applauded "President Bush's vision of 
nuclear disarmament" and read the missile-defense 
programs as a move for "sharp reductions" in the 
US nuclear arsenal. The two countries promptly 
began talks on the proposal of an anti-missile 
shield that was tabled by Washington.
Vajpayee's successor, Prime Minister Manmohan 
Singh, has only carried the idea further. In my 
Truthout report last July ("Star Wars" Premiers 
in India!), I noted the next major move towards 
missile defense and development cooperation. On 
June 27, 2005, former US defense secretary Donald 
Rumsfeld and India's former defense minister 
Pranab Mukherjee signed a ten-year agreement 
titled the New Framework for US-India Defense 
Relationship (NFDR). The agreement has a 
provision for India's induction into the 
missile-defense program. The Bush administration 
lured India into its global missile-defense (GMD) 
program with the bait of a weapons system (PAC3) 
that was bound to destabilize the subcontinent.
We noted then the irony of the Bush regime, which 
prided itself as a promoter of the India Pakistan 
peace process, taking a step that was bound to 
trigger a fresh arms race in South Asia. 
Considerations of peace in the region are not 
likely to weigh any more heavily on Washington in 
the present instance as well.
India's induction into the missile-defense 
program will have even larger implications now. 
It cannot remain unlinked to the US role as a 
security guarantor for Taiwan - a role that 
China's ASAT 1 test is seen to threaten seriously.

______


[11]

New York Times
January 26, 2007

Debate in India: Is Rule on Yoga Constitutional?

Students did breathing exercises in Madhya 
Pradesh, an Indian state that wants to require a 
yoga practice called the sun salutation. (Sanjeev 
Gupta/European Pressphoto Agency)

By Somini Sengupta

NEW DELHI: Hollywood celebrities swear by it. 
Yuppies the world over have fallen on their knees 
to embrace it. Now, the question of whether 
public school students in India should be 
required to take up the sun salutation, or "surya 
namaskar" as the common yoga exercise is known in 
Sanskrit, has engendered a legal and political 
dispute in this country, revealing lingering 
questions about how secularism is practiced and 
challenged in Indian politics.

At issue is a measure by the Hindu 
nationalist-led government of the state of Madhya 
Pradesh, in central India, that required public 
school students to practice the sun salutation 
and recite certain chants in Sanskrit during a 
statewide function on Thursday. The state 
government, controlled by the Bharatiya Janata 
Party, said that it complied with a central 
government policy to encourage yoga in schools 
and that it was inspired by a recent visit from a 
popular Hindu spiritual leader.

Muslim and Christian groups in the state took 
issue not so much with the yoga exercise, but 
with the chants, which they said were essentially 
Hindu and in worship of the sun. They argued in 
court on Wednesday that it violated the Indian 
constitutional provision to separate religion and 
state.

A state court ruled Wednesday that neither the 
chants nor the sun salutation could be forced on 
students. A state education official said by 
telephone that five million children in Madhya 
Pradesh voluntarily took part in the program on 
Thursday, when the state government also 
announced that it would incorporate lessons on 
the importance of yoga into textbooks.

In a country that contains all of the world's 
major religions (and several minor ones), 
questions over the divide between state and 
religion have come up from time to time, and just 
as frequently have been obfuscated or at least 
delicately massaged. The official list of Indian 
holidays reflects a careful balance of holy days 
of all the major religious groups; there are 15 
religious holidays in all, along with 28 others 
that Indians can opt to take.

Whether yoga is religious practice is, like 
everything in this country, a matter of debate. 
Some people note that its recitations sometimes 
invoke Hindu gods, but others argue that its 
physical exercises have nothing to do with Hindu 
ritual. The Indian health minister, Anbumani 
Ramadoss, last month floated the idea of 
compulsory yoga in all government schools to 
combat obesity.

Soma Vatsa contributed reporting.

_____


[12]

DHARNA AGAINST FORCED DISPLACEMENT IN SINGUR

The people's resistance to forced acquisition of 
their lands by the Tatas at Singur has acquired a 
new urgency with the Tatas performing a 'Bhoomi 
Puja' even as Section 144 of the Cr.P.C. has been 
imposed in the area to undermine collective 
protest there. That section 144 needed to be 
imposed itself is indicative of the wide 
opposition to the project. The people's 
resistance in Singur, along with the 'war-like' 
situation prevailing in Nandigram, and the bitter 
opposition to SEZs elsewhere in the country has 
brought to the forefront, yet again, how 
'development' is being rammed down the throats of 
people it is supposed to benefit.

We are organizing a dharna in front of the office 
of the Resident Commissioner, West Bengal 
government, on Monday, 29 January 2007, at 3 pm 
to:

PROTEST against the forced acquisition of land 
and suppression of the democratic and 
constituional rights of the people of Singur, the 
complete lack of transparency and lack of consent 
in the process of land acquisition, the 
imposition of Section 144, the violence 
perpetrated on resisters in Singur, the rape and 
murder of Tapasi Mullick, and the huge tax 
handouts to Tatas and industry in general; and

DEMAND an immediate stoppage of any further 
construction of the Tata Motor Plant till lands 
coercively acquired are returned to the people 
and issues raised by the protesting people in 
Singur are resolved.

This call for a dharna is being given by a number 
of organizations, women's and democratic rights 
groups, student bodies, unions, and individuals.

Please circulate this email widely, mobilize, 
contact the Press, bring your songs and music, 
and let us together raise our voice against this 
development process that is actively undermining 
the livelihoods and lives of sharecroppers, 
adivasis, agrarian working women, the urban poor, 
and dalits not only in Singur and Nandigram but 
in many parts of the country.


Date: 29 January 2007, Monday
Time: 3 pm onwards
Venue: Office of the West Bengal Resident 
Commissioner, West Bengal Emporium (near Shivaji 
Stadium bus depot), Baba Kharak Singh Marg, 
Connaught Place


Kashipur Solidarity Group, Delhi Solidarity 
Group, AIFTU,  Saheli, Lok Raj Sangathan and 
others

For more information, contact Malavika 
(9313900378), D. Manjit (9868471143), Vijayan 
(9868165471), Nagraj Adve (26856749)

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

Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), 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/
SACW archive is available at: bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/

DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
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