SACW | March 20-22, 2007

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Mar 20 22:38:30 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | March 20-22, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2380 - Year 9

[1] Pakistan: The common enemy (Asma Jahangir)
[2] Bangladesh / India: Of bigotry, severed heads 
and writers' rights (Syed Badrul Ahsan)
[3] India: Citizens Appeal for impartial 
prosecution of Sajjan Kumar Congress (I) M.P.
[4] Mobilising and exposing the Far Right in India:
  - Day 1 at peoples tribunal against fascism - 
testimonies of Godhra victims (Smriti Kak 
Ramachandran)
  - Convention Against Communalism in Kushinagar, UP (Subhashini Ali)
[5] India: What Is Justice for Survivors of 
Gujarat 2002? (Sheba George, Kalpana Kannabiran)
[6] India: Criticism of the dominant communist party
- Party games (Yogendra Yadav)
- CPM  and the agrarian underclass (Anand Chakravarti, Uma Chakravarti)
[7] India: A Tribute to Bhagat Singh  (B.B. Rawat)
[8] Book Review: Secularism Not yet a lost cause (K. N. Panikkar)
[9] Events: Lecture on "Women and War", (New Delhi, 22 March 2007)

____


[1]


Daily Times
March 21, 2007

THE COMMON ENEMY
by Asma Jahangir

The lawyers' movement has acquired a broader 
agenda, addressing the survival of civil 
institutions under the weight of militarisation

At every judicial crisis, the legal fraternity 
finds itself in a snare. It has little choice but 
to protest attempts to undermine the judiciary by 
the executive. At the same time the actions of 
the lawyers have often made unworthy heroes of 
victimised judges. The present crisis is no 
exception. Lawyers continue to complain that 
judges balk at them when on the bench but bank on 
them when on the mat. Yet the bar has no option 
but to protect the feeble autonomy of a crumbling 
institution even if its champions are created 
undeservedly.

Lawyers crave a system where they receive a fair 
hearing and an assured delivery of justice. They 
have consistently urged the judiciary to stand 
its ground, but found few instances to rejoice. 
The immobilised chief justice of Pakistan was no 
role model for the bar, but his act of defiance 
in refusing to resign in the face of executive 
oppression has made him an instant hero.

The contents of the reference filed by the 
president are now irrelevant. The central issue 
is the process adopted by the government in 
making the chief justice 'non-functional' and the 
subsequent violent attacks on the media and 
lawyers. The lawyers' movement has acquired a 
broader agenda, addressing the survival of civil 
institutions under the weight of militarisation. 
Their support has widened, not out of love for 
the judiciary, but because of the shared 
abhorrence of military rule.

Pakistanis have matured. They can clearly see 
through hypocrisy. Ironically, the very 
authorities that made a mockery of the 
Constitution are now taking refuge behind it. 
After having strangulated the spirit of the 
Constitution the military government expects the 
lawyers to follow the letter of a mutilated 
document and abandon all protest as long as the 
matter of the chief justice remains sub judice 
The president and his ministers insist that the 
reference against the chief justice 
(non-functional) is a purely legal matter, that 
his detention and manhandling was merely a 
'tactical' error and therefore the matter should 
not be politicised. But a planned removal of the 
chief justice and his subsequent humiliation is 
neither a mere legal issue nor can it be 
explained away as a blunder. Over the years the 
Musharraf government has become increasingly 
unaccountable and deceitful.

The military action in Balochistan was twisted as 
a bid by the government to restore its writ. The 
cold-blooded murder of Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti was 
painted as an accident and the state's refusal to 
hand over his body to the bereaved family was 
glossed over. All 'disappeared' persons are being 
portrayed as 'jihadis' and suicide bombers who 
have supposedly left their families voluntarily. 
But according to the information collected by the 
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, a majority 
of those reported to have been abducted by 
government agents have no connection with 
'jihadi' groups. Almost sixty percent are Baloch 
and Sindhi nationalists. There is overwhelming 
evidence that security and intelligence agencies 
have violated human rights.

In the past those who wished to defend the 
president believed that he was misguided. Others 
took a less generous view and blamed him of 
living in self-denial. However, Musharraf's 
interview with Geo TV (on Monday, March 19, 2007) 
gives the impression that the president has lost 
his touch in being able to deceive skillfully.

According to him, the filing of the reference was 
a matter of "routine" and there was no intrigue 
or pre-planning. Yet all members of the Supreme 
Judicial Council miraculously arrived in 
Islamabad in a synchronised and timely manner. 
Fortunately, the media brought the reality to 
life. It was an eye-opener for all Pakistanis - a 
rude shock and a chilling realisation that no one 
was safe from the excesses of the rulers.

The fate of the government is at stake. It may 
survive or perish, but fundamental lessons must 
be learnt by the bar and bench. Judges must learn 
to distance themselves from the executive and the 
bar should remain united in promoting the 
independence of the judiciary without demonising 
or lauding individual judges. The process of 
selection and accountability of judges to the 
superior courts must be transparent. Judges 
should not take over as acting governors or seek 
office after retirement. Similarly, serving 
judges must not be appointed as election 
commissioners and they should stay away from 
being members of law commissions. More 
importantly, we have to realise that once the 
military takes over, all civilian institutions 
must resist in order to survive with dignity.

Asma Jilani Jahangir is a Pakistani lawyer and human rights activist


_____


[2]

The Daily Star
March 21, 2007

GROUND REALITIES
OF BIGOTRY, SEVERED HEADS AND WRITERS' RIGHTS
by Syed Badrul Ahsan

Somewhere in India, a Muslim bigot has decreed 
that Taslima Nasrin be beheaded. The one who can 
accomplish the deed, or misdeed, will be rewarded 
with nothing less than a tidy sum of five hundred 
thousand rupees.

When you sit back and reflect on the edict, 
disturbing as it is, you cannot but wonder at the 
temerity with which the so-called defenders of 
the faith have regularly taken it upon themselves 
to define the course of life for people who 
happen to think of temporal existence in terms of 
the literary and the philosophical.

It is quite another point whether or not you 
agree with a writer. But it becomes a positive 
threat to decency and human dignity when an 
individual thinks nothing is remiss when he lets 
the world know that a writer who has aroused his 
ire must be dispatched with swiftness to the 
grave.

Such a threat was held out back in 1989 to Salman 
Rushdie when Ayatollah Khomeini, convinced that 
he was the new guardian of Islamic religious 
thought, ordered a bounty on the writer's head. 
It was a bad move. It went against the principle 
of liberal thinking. It made Muslims everywhere 
shudder in unease.

History is, of course, replete with instances of 
individuals and groups and governments persuading 
themselves that they ought to be arbiters of the 
moral parameters which underpin, or should 
underpin, life. There is the story of Leni 
Riefenstahl, the German film-maker and admirer of 
Hitler (until the Third Reich collapsed in a 
heap), for whom life after 1945 was essentially a 
tale of unbridled vilification.

There has been nothing to suggest that she 
collaborated with the Fuhrer in the latter's 
nefarious attempts to reshape German society 
according to Aryan specifications. Not a shred of 
evidence has been found to implicate Riefenstahl 
in any of the crimes the Nazis committed in their 
twelve-year dominance of their country. But the 
film-maker continues to be reviled.

In our times, the Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, 
whose Nobel certainly ought to have come later, 
is a man whose running battles with the state 
convince us that the historical image of the 
writer being at the receiving end of persecution 
is a reality that has acquired permanence of a 
definite kind.

Naguib Mahfouz was never in the good books of the 
regime, any regime, in his native Egypt. And if 
you remember the trauma that Boris Pasternak went 
through once the Nobel for literature came to him 
in 1960, you will have cause to comprehend anew 
the many shades of darkness courageous writers 
live under from day to day.

It is these shades of darkness Taslima Nasrin has 
been living through for the past thirteen years. 
There has been no official decree formalising her 
exile abroad; and yet no government in Bangladesh 
since 1994 has felt any compulsion of bringing 
her back home.

There are the bigots who man the ramparts, here 
in Bangladesh, intent on ensuring that Nasrin 
does not make her way back to her country. In the 
mid-1990s, with the Awami League holding 
political authority in Bangladesh, the natural 
expectation arose that conditions would be 
facilitated for the writer to end her exile 
abroad and come home. The expectation turned out 
to have been misplaced, for the ruling classes 
were afraid of the consequences should Nasrin 
return to Bangladesh. The BNP-wallahs, of course, 
were never expected to warm to Nasrin. And they 
never did.

Today, it is our collective reputation as a 
nation proud of its democratic sensibilities that 
stands threatened through the hypocrisy defining 
our attitude toward Taslima Nasrin. By every 
measure, Nasrin is a good writer. In terms of 
social commitment, she remains one of the 
foremost defenders of courage as a weapon in the 
war against obscurantism.

Yes, to be sure, there are times when something 
of the worryingly judgmental comes into her 
analyses of conditions around her. But judgment 
ought never to be challenged through a brazen 
display of ignorance. You do not finish off the 
idea that is Federico Garcia Lorca by pumping 
bullets into his head. You may find Ayaan Hirsi 
Ali's views on the faith she has deserted 
repugnant to the core, but when you decide that 
she should die for her heresy, it is your 
attitude which threatens to become a good deal 
more reprehensible than hers.

Taslima Nasrin's thoughts have never been 
repugnant. Writers, in the true spirit of a 
formulation and dissemination of ideas, are 
careful to state the truth. Any writer who 
believes that treading a fine line between truth 
and the lack of it is what the calling of writing 
should be is making a dreadful mistake.

You are not a writer if you cannot, or will not, 
write in all the boldness your heart can call 
forth. That is where the difference between 
politicians and writers lies. A politician, with 
his sights on gaining power over the state, will 
hedge his arguments; will compromise to reach the 
top of the mountain. A writer has no such 
compulsions, for it is not the peaks he aspires 
to.

He is content with the open valley before him, 
for in that valley he spots beauty he sings 
praises of, and notes cacti he thinks ought to be 
out of the way. There is Ahmad Faraz in Pakistan. 
Courage in the face of adversity has been his 
forte. In Bangladesh, Ahmad Sharif and Shaukat 
Osman, all these years after their passing, 
remain emblematic of the principles that once 
underlined, and continue to denote, writing. Araj 
Ali Matubbor was an iconoclast all his life. In 
death, he remains an inspiration from whom men 
and women given to thoughts of life and 
nothingness draw a certain strength of will, a 
form of sustenance as it were.

The bizarre spectacle of the severed head of 
Taslima Nasrin on a platter is an image that 
should bring men and women of conscience in India 
together. The man who has issued that threat is a 
grave danger to decency, to civilised life 
everywhere, and ought to be dealt with as such.

For us, here in Bangladesh, it is time to ask 
that the state move to reinstate the rights of a 
woman who has been wronged for the past thirteen 
years, through opening the door for her re-entry 
into the country she was born in, and to which 
her devotion has been as pronounced as ours.

And much of the shame our impotence puts us to 
can be scratched away when, and only when, those 
who dominate Bangladesh's literary ambience in 
these times come together in a defence of Taslima 
Nasrin's unquestioned right to be back where she 
belongs. And she belongs here, whether or not you 
like it.

Syed Badrul Ahsan is Editor, Current Affairs, The Daily Star.

_____


[3]

www.sacw.net - March 20, 2007
http://tinyurl.com/2nsqmv

Press release :
20th March, 2007

APPEAL FOR IMPARTIAL PROSECUTION OF SAJJAN KUMAR CONGRESS (I) M.P.

	In November 1984, following the 
assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, 
almost 3,000 Sikhs were slaughtered and burnt to 
death in Delhi,. Witnesses and survivors of these 
killing categorically indicted the Delhi Police 
and some leaders of the Congress (I) for 
permitting the mobs to kill with impunity. 23 
years later the families of the victims are still 
awaiting justice.

The C.B.I. has filed an Appeal filed before the 
Delhi High Court, against the acquittal of 
Congress (I) M.P. Sajjan Kumar, in a case 
pertaining to the murder of one Nevin Singh 
husband of Anwar Kaur on 1st November, 1984 at 
Sultanpuri in North - West Delhi. Senior Advocate 
S.S. Gandhi appeared on behalf of the CBI to 
argue the Appeal on 12th March, 2007.

It is pertinent to draw attention to the fact 
that the same lawyer, Shri S.S. Gandhi, Senior 
Advocate, had appeared on behalf of Delhi Police, 
before the Justice Nanavati Commission of Inquiry 
(1984 Anti - Sikh Riots). The Ranganath Misra 
Commission, Kusum Mittal Committee, the Justice 
Jain Aggarwal Committee, the Nanavati Commission 
Report and court judgments have all pointed to 
the unholy nexus between the Delhi Police and the 
rioting mobs of 1984, during the carnage and in 
the investigation of cases. The Nanavati Report 
endorsed the findings of the Misra Commission and 
the Kusum Mittal Committee that, either the 
police "were negligent in the performance of 
their duties or that they had directly or 
indirectly helped the mobs in their violent 
attacks on the Sikhs."(pg.183, Nanavati Report) 
As many as 90 Delhi police officials were 
indicted for lapses by these inquiries and 
summary dismissal of 6 senior Delhi Police 
officers was recommended.

While considering the evidence against Sajjan 
Kumar, the Nanavati Report specifically states 
that, "There is ample material to show that no 
proper investigation was done by the police even 
in those casesŠThere is also material to show 
that police did not note down the names of some 
of the assailants who were influential persons. 
One witness has specifically stated that he had 
named Shri Sajjan Kumar as one of the assailants 
yet his name was not noted in his statement by 
the police."(pg. 161 Nanavati Report). The 
Nanavati Commission  recommended to the 
Government to examine those cases where the 
witnesses have accused Shri Sajjan Kumar 
specifically and yet no chargesheets were filed 
against him and these cases were terminated as 
untracedŠ" by the Delhi Police.

Advocate Vrinda Grover, had appeared as a witness 
before the Nanavati Commission and shown through 
her research study of court judgments that the 
acquittals in the 1984 trials in Delhi, were a 
direct consequence of the incompetent, casual and 
partisan investigation by the Delhi Police. She 
stated in her affidavit that "the police had 
functioned not as an agent of the rule of law but 
as an agent of the ruling party". After her 
deposition before the Commission she had been 
cross examined by Shri S.S. Gandhi, Sr. Advocate 
on behalf of the Delhi Police.

According to Section 35 of the Advocates Act, 
1961, the definition of professional misconduct 
includes 'changing sides'. Having appeared for 
the Delhi Police before the Justice Nanavati 
Commission it is against professional etiquette 
and ethics for Sr. Advocate S.S.Gandhi to now 
represent the case of the victims through the 
State, in the Delhi High Court. Although it is 
Congress M.P. Sajjan Kumar who is being 
prosecuted by the CBI, the negligence of the 
Delhi Police in investigation and recording of 
witness statements would be relevant issues 
during the Appeal. It is apprehended that such 
conflict of interests may compromise the 
prosecution. The prosecution of a sitting M.P. of 
the ruling Congress (I) party deserves to be 
conducted in a fair and impartial manner, for 
justice must not only be done but must also seem 
to be done.

At stake are the secular claims of the UPA, the 
institutional autonomy of the CBI and the faith 
of the people who have sought justice for 23 
years, in the legal system of Indian democracy.

We the undersigned appeal that Mr. S.S. Gandhi be 
discharged and the CBI appoint a senior counsel 
of high professional competence and impeccable 
integrity as counsel in the Appeal pending in the 
Delhi High Court against Sajjan Kumar.

Signatories:
-  Pushkar Raj for Peoples Union for Civil Liberties ( PUCL Delhi)
- Sudha Bhardwaj for Peoples Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL Chhattisgarh)
- Nagraj Adve for Peoples Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR)
- Mukul Sharma (Director, Amnesty International India)
- Dr. Uma Chakravorty (Historian)
- Javed Anand (Co-Editor Communalism Combat)
- Harsh Mandar (Columnist and social activist)
- Sadhana Arya for Saheli, Womens' Resource Centre
- Farah Naqvi (Journalist and Activist)
- Gautam Navlakha (Journalist and activist)
- Dr. Apoorvananad (Professor Department of Hindi, Delhi University)
- Aseem Srivastava (Columinst)
- Amit Sengupta (Journalist)
- Jamal Kidwai (Director AMAN Trust)
- Vrinda Grover (Advocate)



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[4]   MOBILISING AND EXPOSING THE FAR RIGHT


Report on day one at Peoples Tribunal against the rise of Fascism
[http://communalism.blogspot.com/2007/03/convention-against-communalism-in.html]


The Hindu
March 21, 2007

DOCUMENTING TESTIMONIES OF GODHRA VICTIMS

Smriti Kak Ramachandran

"Government shying away from recognising growth of fascism"

# Over 200 victims, activists testify before Independent People's Tribunal
# Concrete evidence of people's experiences

NEW DELHI: Yet to fathom the difference between a 
prison and a cage, Mohammed Zaheer Iqbal's 
five-year-old son thinks that his father lives in 
a cage. Iqbal is one of the 221 people arrested 
under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) and 
now languishing in jails in Gujarat.

"Whenever our son misses his father, I take him 
to the jail where Iqbal is lodged. The little boy 
thinks that we are visiting his father in a 
cage," said Afrin, who has been fighting for the 
release of her husband.

In the capital on Tuesday to narrate her story 
that is being documented at the Independent 
People's Tribunal (IPT), Ms. Afrin said: "My 
husband was taken away for an inquiry by the 
Crime Branch officers in 2003. When he was picked 
up in the dead of night, we were assured that he 
will return home in the morning. He never came 
home, instead he was charged with the conspiracy 
of carrying a tiffin bomb. When that case was 
discharged, they promptly slapped another case, 
this time he was accused of being an ISI agent."

Ms. Afrin alleged that the families were not even 
allowed to be present at hearings.

Driven out of village

Another victim of the communal violence in 
Gujarat, Niyaz Ben Malek, who now lives in Rahat 
Colony, recalled how she was driven out of her 
village Ognaj by people who grew up with her 
sons. "I have filed a case against the people who 
attacked us with tridents and swords, my houses 
have been razed and all I have got is a 
compensation of Rs. 2,500 against the loss of 
property worth Rs. 10 lakh."

Harrowing experiences

Sharing their harrowing experiences during the 
riots that followed the Godhra carnage, over 200 
victims, activists and academicians from across 
17 States have come together to testify before 
the IPT.

Their testimonies on the rise of fascist forces 
in India will later be released as a report.

"We are documenting the testimonies of these 
people, trying to make sense of it and present it 
as concrete evidence of people's experiences. We 
will try to reflect on what happened and also 
suggest what can be done," said Akoijam Bimol, 
who, along with Subharanjan Dasgupta, Nikhil 
Waghle and Sandeep Pandey, is a member of the 
jury on Gujarat.

Accusing the Government of "shying away from 
recognising the growth of fascism in the 
country," Shabnam Hashmi of non-governmental 
organisation Anhad said: "At this two-day event, 
we are trying to show that fascism is on the rise 
and not just in Gujarat. But surprisingly both 
the civil society and the Government are refusing 
to acknowledge it. These testimonies will help us 
push for action."

Organised by the Human Rights Law Network and 
Anhad, the IPT is being supported by 
organisations such as Aman Samudaya, Antarik 
Visthapit Hak Rakshak Samiti (Gujarat), Insaaf, 
and People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL).

o o o

http://communalism.blogspot.com/2007/03/convention-against-communalism-in.html

CPM CONVENTION AGAINST COMMUNALISM IN KUSHINAGAR

A report by Subhashini Ali
[March 20, 2007]

Padrauna, the headquarter of Kushinagar district 
which adjoins Gorakhpur in Eastern U.P., was the 
worst affected in the communal clashes organized 
by the Gorakhpur M.P., Adityanath. A CPI(M) team 
visited the affected areas at the end of February 
and met with district officials for compensation 
for those who had lost their homes and all their 
belongings and to bring the guilty to book. Some 
progress had been made since then. Also a 
convention was held against communalism on the 
18th March by the party in Kasia, a large town of 
the district.


______


[5]


Economic and Political Weekly
March 17, 2007

WHAT IS JUSTICE FOR SURVIVORS OF GUJARAT 2002?
The United Nations Committee on the Elimination 
of Discrimination against Women recently pulled 
up the government of India for an inadequate 
response on the 2002 Gujarat riots despite 
specific queries by the committee on the issue. 
The concluding comments of the CEDAW offer a 
significant advocacy tool for human rights 
organisations working to secure justice for the 
riot victims.

by Sheba George, Kalpana Kannabiran

http://www.epw.org.in/showArticles.php?root=2007&leaf=03&filename=11186&filetype=pdf



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[6]   INDIA - PROGRESSIVES' CRITIQUE THE DOMINANT COMMUNIST PARTY:

o o o

Indian Express
March 21, 2007

PARTY GAMES
BETWEEN NANDIGRAM AND A PARTY THAT SWEARS BY 
HUMAN RIGHTS AND LOFTY DEMOCRATIC IDEALS LIES 
VAST HYPOCRISY

Yogendra Yadav


  Nandigram did not surprise me. I was anguished 
and angry but not surprised. I had heard the 
story of Alipurduar from Jugal Kishore Raybir.

This dalit activist, a believer in Gandhian 
non-violence, was the founder of UTJAS, (Uttar 
Bango Tapsili Jati O Adibasi Sangathan) an 
organisation of dalits and adivasis of north 
Bengal. Through the 1980s it demanded greater 
regional autonomy and justice for sons of the 
soil. Not only did the government turn a deaf 
ear, the ruling party launched an offensive 
against them, branding them 'separatist' or 
'bichhinatabadi'.

The story of Alipurduar goes back to January 10 
1987, twenty years before Nandigram. On that day, 
UTJAS had organised a rally of what they 
estimated to be about 50,000 people in 
Alipurduar, the headquarters of Cooch Behar 
district. As the rally started, they noticed 
something unusual: The police was nowhere in 
sight. Soon the rallyists found themselves 
surrounded by and under attack from the armed 
cadre of the CPM. The rally was dispersed as 
unarmed protesters were beaten and chased. The 
police surfaced, only to arrest the victims, once 
the party cadre had finished their job.

They say Jugal Raybir's commitment to 
non-violence prevented a blood bath that day. But 
that day also marked the end of the rise of UTJAS 
as a political challenge to the Party. For the 
next few months, the UTJAS cadre was hounded by 
the police, attacked by the CPM and not allowed 
to hold even indoor meetings. This dalit movement 
wilted under the onslaught of the state, police 
and Party. That prepared the ground for the rise 
of militant outfits like the Kamtapur Liberation 
Organisation. But that is a different story.

Note the parallels between Nandigram and 
Alipurduar: The Party faces a political 
challenge, decides to nip it in the bud and 
executes an onslaught in sync with the police and 
administration. The only difference this time was 
that there was unexpected resistance. And that an 
anti-SEZ movement makes more news today than a 
dalit movement did twenty years ago. There were 
no Gopal Gandhi or Tanika and Sumit Sarkar then 
to point out that the emperor had no clothes.

Nandigram may not have been the worst case of 
police firing. We have seen similar incidents in 
Orissa, Rajasthan and UP in recent times. West 
Bengal is certainly not the only state where the 
ruling party uses the state machinery to crush 
its political rivals. Om Prakash Chautala could 
still teach the CPM a lesson or two in this game. 
But there is one thing Chautala never did. He 
never talked of human rights and lofty democratic 
ideals. A Chautala could not have issued the 
injured yet clinical statement that the CPM's 
Politburo did after the Nandigram killings. The 
cold-bloodedness of the statement reminds you of 
the BJP top brass's reaction after Gujarat.

This gap between the CPM's preaching and practice 
did not surprise me. I have been looking at 
Christophe Jaffrelot's research on the social 
profile of MLAs in India. His analysis shows that 
the proportion of upper caste MLAs is on the 
decline all over the country since the 1960s. 
There is only one exception: In West Bengal the 
proportion of upper castes has increased in the 
state assembly after 1977, after the Left Front 
came to power. A coincidence? Not if you 
calculate the caste composition of successive 
Left Front ministries: About two thirds of the 
ministers come from the top three jatis (Brahman, 
Boddis, Kayasthas). Perhaps you did not notice 
that West Bengal was the last major state to come 
out with an OBC list to implement Mandal. You 
might say, the CPM believes in class, not caste. 
Fair enough, but then why is the CPM in Delhi so 
aggressive about championing Mandal? Why does it 
present itself as more Mandalite than thou?

Or read the data supplied by the West Bengal 
government to the Sachar Committee. With 25.2 per 
cent of Muslim population, the state government 
has provided just 2.1 per cent of the government 
jobs to Muslims. West Bengal has the worst record 
of all Indian states in this respect. Gujarat has 
just 9.1 per cent Muslims and has 5.4 per cent 
Muslims among government employees. The irony, of 
course, is that the CPM was the first party to 
come out with a statement demanding 
implementation of the Sachar Report!

Will the CPM stop playing games? A few months ago 
the Party held an unprecedented State Secretariat 
meeting to discuss the Cricket Association of 
Bengal elections. The CM was openly backing 
Kolkata's police chief only to be opposed by his 
own sports minister and Jyoti Basu. The Party 
finally declared that the CPM will not play 
politics with games, at least not with cricket. 
But what about playing games with politics? Will 
the CPM stop that as well?

Perhaps we should ask: Can the CPM stop playing 
games? Or are these games essential for survival 
for a party that has lost touch with the times, 
has lost faith in its own ideology and has come 
to fear its own cadre and election machine. 
Satyajit Ray's Shatranj ke Khiladi was a 
brilliant depiction of the games nobility played 
at the time of its historic decline. Alimuddin 
Street may not have time for such bourgeois 
indulgence, but the point of this film would not 
be lost on an avid cinema buff like Buddhadeb 
Bhattacharjee. Sometimes it is not the player who 
plays the game; it is the game that consumes the 
player.

The writer is a political scientist at the CSDS, New Delhi

o o o

Economic and Political Weekly
March 17, 2007

Letters

CPI(M) AND THE AGRARIAN UNDERCLASS

We would like to follow up on Sumanta Banerjee's 
commentary 'Peasant Hares and Capitalist Hounds 
of Singur' (December 30, 2006) and further the 
argument that the Left Front government in West 
Bengal is indulging in a massive betrayal of the 
agrarian underclass in Singur.  By agrarian 
underclass we mean the categories at the bottom 
of the spectrum of land control, who physically 
labour on the land for their livelihood, 
comprising landless agricultural labourers and 
'bargadars' (sharecropping tenants who perform 
the various tasks of cultivation themselves). Our 
argument is based on three premises:

(i) the Left Front government is reversing the 
spirit and substance of operation barga by 
acquiring land in Singur for the Tata Motors 
small car project; (ii) there is no valid reason 
why the class interests of the agrarian 
underclass should be sacrificed for the benefit 
of industrial capital in a professedly 
left-oriented state; and (iii) the conduct of the 
state in West Bengal reflects its alienation from 
the agrarian underclass - the very class that is 
supposed to be its ideological foundation.

Operation barga (launched in 1978), the main 
plank of the land reform programme of the Left 
Front government in West Bengal, aimed at putting 
into practice the fundamental socialist premise 
that the tiller of the land should be given 
control over the means of production. The 
relevant legislation protected the bargadar, as 
the de facto cultivator, from arbitrary eviction, 
and thus assured "him" a secure livelihood from 
the soil on which he and his family laboured. 
Short of abolishing proprietary rights, or 
ownership of the means of production, the 
programme radically scaled down the power of 
capital over the actual producer. In a 
predominantly agrarian economy, this was 
undoubtedly a progressive step that favoured the 
labouring cultivators.

The acquisition of land in Singur by the 
government for the benefit of the Tatas denies 
the right of the agrarian underclass (the 
bargadars, in this context) to an assured 
livelihood from the soil on which they labour. 
Implicitly, therefore, labouring on the land for 
sustenance pales into insignificance in relation 
to the generation of profit by an industrial 
giant. Needless to say, by prioritising the 
interests of a big industrial house, the Left 
Front government is going against the grain of 
social justice, thus epitomising the anti-thesis 
of progressive, people-oriented policies. 
Therefore, the statement of Communist Party of 
India-Marxist (CPI(M)) general secretary Prakash 
Karat that the party programme "sets out the task 
of establishing a worker-peasant alliance that is 
the moving force of the people's democratic 
revolution" ('Karat Counters Charge of 
Doublespeak', The Hindu, January 26, 2007) is 
hypocritical, to say the least. It is 
inconceivable to imagine that a people's 
democratic revolution can be brought about by 
dispossessing  the agrarian underclass of its 
control over the means of production, as in 
Singur.  It is indeed ironical that it is a 
left-oriented state that is propelling the 
depeasantisation of the bargadars. The 
proletarianisation of the small producer, 
typically associated with the development of 
capitalism, is being achieved by capitalism 
riding piggyback on communism! Clearly, then, the 
CPI(M) by its actions shows that it is partial to 
the very "ruling class" interests condemned by 
Karat in his statement.

It is obvious, therefore, that the conduct of the 
state in West Bengal strikingly displays 
"doublespeak", inspite of the denial by Karat. 
The violence unleashed by party cadres and the 
police on those resisting the acquisition of land 
in Singur is symptomatic of the state following a 
logic conforming to the interests of capital, but 
diametrically opposed to those of the "working 
people and the poor" (Karat's words) for whom the 
party now stands only in name.

Anand Chakravarti,
Uma Chakravarti
Delhi

______


[7]   www.sacw.net

A Tribute to Bhagat Singh
by B.B. Rawat

On 23rd March 1931 the British government hanged 
three Indian revolutionaries namely Bhagat Singh, 
Rajguru and Sukhdev. All of them embraced death 
in an entirely heroic way and therefore became 
legend for the common Indian masses. None of the 
youth leaders of India's independence movement 
inspired a whole lot of generation as Bhagat 
Singh. Unfortunately, the ruling elite of the 
country reduced Bhagat Singh into a 'terrorist'. 
The result was that these revolutionaries who 
were non violent in their thought and process and 
wanted to change India remain outside the purview 
of college students, many of them liked Bhagat 
Singh for being 'violent' and Gandhi for being 
'non violent'. However, in the absence of 
idealism and understanding of Indian situation, 
revolutionaries like Bhagat Singh are grossly 
under evaluated and misrepresented.
[. . .]
http://www.sacw.net/free/VBrawatMarch07.html

______


[8]

Book Review / The Hindu
March 20, 2007

NOT YET A LOST CAUSE

K. N. PANIKKAR

Secularism in Asia and Eastern Europe which have 
histories of multiculturism and religious strife

THE FUTURE OF SECULARISM: T. N. Srinivasan - 
Editor; Oxford University Press, YMCA Library 
Building, Jai Singh Road, New Delhi-110001. Rs. 
595.

The recent literature on secularism has certain 
predictability. It is either concerned with its 
European origin and its consequent irrelevance to 
societies like India or concentrates on the 
inadequacies of secular practices of the state. 
What happens at the ground level, particularly in 
political practice and social relations is often 
missing.

The essays, collected together in this volume, 
substantially depart from this well-trodden path. 
They are different in two significant ways. 
Firstly, beginning with the editor himself who, 
though very briefly, locates secularism as a 
philosophical doctrine, the concept of secularism 
receives critical consideration. Secondly, most 
of the essays are detailed empirical enquiries 
into secular political practice in different 
countries in Asia and Europe, which affords a 
comparative perspective. The latter form a 
distinct contribution of this volume.

South Asia

The major part of the book deals with South Asia. 
There are six essays on South Asia, five on India 
and one on Pakistan. Among the rest two are on 
Indonesia, one on Iran and one on Yugoslavia. 
Collectively they offer considerable insight, 
through empirically rich and theoretically 
nuanced studies, into the complex relationship 
between secularism, nationalism and religion, set 
in different ideological and political contexts. 
The implication of invoking religion in politics 
has different possibilities and implications in 
different systems. It may lead to entirely 
different consequences in a democracy like India 
or dictatorship like Pakistan or a controlled 
polity like Indonesia. Yet, in all of them the 
process of secularisation of polity and society 
is likely to be adversely affected by the 
intrusion of religion into politics. That is the 
idea, either explicit or implicit, running 
through all essays, which provides a unity for 
the volume.

The first part of the book on South Asia has five 
essays on India. The tone of the volume is set by 
two excellent essays in this section by Rajiv 
Bhargava and Romila Thapar. In a theoretically- 
nuanced piece Rajiv Bhargava, while dismissing 
that secularism is conceptually flawed argues 
that it faces an internal threat due to the 
failure to "realise the distinctive character of 
Indian secularism." These distinctive 
characteristics which he identifies are the 
"full-blooded self-recognition of its multi-value 
character" and the rejection of the claim that 
"separation must mean strict exclusion and 
neutrality." The distinctiveness of Indian 
secularism, Bhargava argues, can be understood 
only when the cultural background and social 
context are properly understood.

In India

Romila Thapar's essay, "Is Secularism Alien to 
Indian Civilisation", complements Rajiv 
Bhargava's thesis in as much as it brings out the 
proto-secular trends in Indian history. Thapar 
views secularism as a process of "gradual change 
affecting not just politics but the social and 
cultural life of society." She suggests that the 
"notion of secularisation of society is more 
appropriate than the limited notion of the 
ideology of secularism." Viewed in that light 
Indian society, like all other societies, have 
undergone a process of secularisation, 
particularly as a part of modernisation. Although 
she does not directly engage with the arguments 
of "anti-secular secularists" like T. N. Madan 
and Asish Nandy her essay is a powerful 
refutation of their argument.

The commentator on Thapar's essay, Shyam Sunder, 
points out that secularism is best seen not as a 
state of affairs, but as a value, a structural 
dimension, in human societies. The relationship 
between caste and communalism is a relatively 
unexplored and untheorised area. The recent 
communal conflagrations like that of Gujarat in 
which the lower castes had actively participated 
adds urgency to a proper understanding of this 
evolving connection.

In a brief but interesting essay Dilip Menon 
argues that communalism is a "deflection of the 
central, unaddressed issue of violence and 
inegalitarianism within the Hindu religion" and 
that communalism is the highest stage of 
casteism. He also locates communal violence in 
the context of lower caste mobility and 
assertion. This is an attractive proposition 
which however requires much more empirical 
substantiation than what is marshalled in the 
essay. Most of the ideas and arguments, in these 
essays are tested in the remaining essays on 
predominantly Muslim societies like that of 
Pakistan and Indonesia. In them the relationship 
between religion, nationalism and secularism form 
the main focus.

In the Balkans

In a brief but excellent exposition of the 
Yugoslovian situation Amila Buturovic 
demonstrates the inter-relationship between the 
three and examines its consequences as unfolded 
in the Balkans. The essays in this volume 
possibly do not provide a clear indication about 
the future of secularism. What they all highlight 
is the tension that secularism is facing in these 
societies, particularly in the wake of the rise 
of fundamentalism and militancy, and the efforts 
to cope with it.

The editor rightly observes that secularism is 
facing a serious threat in all these societies 
under discussion. Hindu communal forces have made 
considerable headway in India, Pakistan lost its 
initial urge for secularism and religious 
conservatives established their hold on the 
state. Although Indonesia is not an Islamic 
state, the radical conservative Islam has been on 
the rise. Despite such tendencies secularism is a 
powerful idea, which continues to engage the 
political discourse in all these countries. 
Secularism, both as an idea and as a practice has 
considerable vitality and therefore is not a lost 
cause. The essays provide enough proof for this 
optimism.

______


[6]  EVENTS:


Zubaan,

Italian Cultural Institute

&

India International Centre

Invite you to a lecture on

"Women and War"
by
Prof. Benedetta Bini


Conference Room I, India International Centre, 40 Max Mueller Marg

6:00 p.m.

Thursday , 22 March 2007

Chair: Dr. Shobhana Bhattacharji, Jesus and Mary College, University of Delhi

Please join us for Tea @ 6.00pm


Benedetta Bini is Director of the Department of 
Classical and Modern Languages and Civilizations 
and teaches English Literature at the University 
of Tuscia (Viterbo). Her work on the sentimental 
novel of the XVIIIth century had led her to 
devote special attention to the tradition of 
women's writing: she was the first to introduce 
to the Italian public the work of an important 
writer like Elizabeth Bowen's, whose fiction on 
the Second World War, together with that of 
Virginia Woolf, has led her to study the diaries 
and memoirs of Italian and Anglo-Italian women of 
that same period.   She has also written on 
Elizabeth Gaskell, Vernon Lee, Edith Wharton, and 
while working on gender and sexuality in 
fin-de-siècle Britain she has discovered and 
edited the work of Mary Cholmondeley.

She is currently researching on women's styles of 
life in the Second World War, both in England and 
Italy, and translating Vita Sackville West's All 
Passion Spent. She has been for many years a 
broadcaster for the cultural programs of Radio 3 
Italy and she is a regular contributor to the 
arts pages of Il Sole 24 ore where she reviews 
mainly fiction in English. She was from 1996 to 
2000 Director of the Italian Cultural Institute 
in London and she has always been a keen observer 
of the cross-cultural relations between Britain 
and Italy .


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

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
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.




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