SACW | April 21, 2007

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Fri Apr 20 22:10:15 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | April 21, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2392 - Year 9

[1]  Nepal: Keep Promise, Condemn Abduction Based 
on Sexual Orientation (Letter by Human Rights 
Watch)
[2]  Rahul Gandhi insults a nation and its people 
(Jahed Ahmed and Mehul Kamdar)
[3]  Uganda forest protest sparks racial violence (Xan Rice)
      + In defense of a forest (Elizabeth Kameo)
[4] India: Caste Classification and Affirmative 
Action - the recent controversy  
       (i) Target practice (Dipankar Gupta)
      (ii) Get under society's skin (Gail Omvedt)
[5]  India: The Shilpa sequel (J Sri Raman)
[6]  Book Review: Midnight's citizens Amit 
Chaudhuri reviews - India After Gandhi by 
Ramachandra Guha
[7]  Announcements:
     (i) Anhad's Youth Convention (Ahmedabad, 22-23 April 2007)
     (ii) Upcoming on TV: Presented by Ziauddin 
Sardar 'The Military and the Mullahs' (Channel 4 
- 8pm, 23 April, 2007)

____


[1]

Human Rights Watch

NEPAL: KEEP PROMISE, CONDEMN ABDUCTION BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION

April 16, 2007 


Minister Khadga Bahadur Biswokarma 
Ministry of Women, Children & Social Welfare 
Facsimile: +977-1-4241728; +977-1-4241516 

Dear Minister, 

Human Rights Watch is gravely concerned by 
anti-gay rhetoric and violence targeting people 
because of their presumed sexual orientation or 
the exercise of their sexual autonomy on the part 
of the Communist Party of Nepal - Maoist. The 
most recent example of attacks by Maoists was the 
abductions in Sunsari of a woman and a teenage 
girl accused of having a sexual relationship with 
one another, accompanied by Maoist efforts to 
force them to become soldiers. These actions took 
place at amidst mixed messages from the Maoists, 
both recent castigation of homosexuals by senior 
officials and a recently announced policy "not to 
punish homosexuals." As a part of the new 
Nepalese government, we urge you to affirm the 
protections of full equality for all and 
intervene to ensure that the woman and the girl 
are protected from further arbitrary detention or 
harm by party members or their own families; 
prevent the recruitment of child soldiers; permit 
organizations working on sexual rights to work 
free from interference; investigate the 
allegations of abductions and fully punish those 
held responsible; and protect all people of Nepal 
from campaigns which target them for abuse on the 
basis of their sexual orientation or gender 
identity. 

In the most recent incident, Maoists detained a 
16-year-old girl and a woman, Sarita C., age 20, 
on suspicion of being involved in a sexual 
relationship with one another. The two were on 
their way to a celebration of the annual Hindu 
Holi festival in Pankali village in Sunsari 
district organized by the Human Welfare Society 
(HWS), a Nepali non-governmental organization 
working on issues of HIV/AIDS and human rights. 

According to the Blue Diamond Society, another 
Nepali group working in the field of sexual 
rights, health, and HIV prevention, the two were 
held for a total of eight hours at the Maoist 
camp in Singiya village Sunsari. They were 
intensively interrogated about whether they were 
homosexuals, and informed by a Maoist cadre that 
they would have to "undergo a blood test to check 
if they were lesbians." The Human Welfare Society 
was also summoned to the Maoist camp and 
subjected to part of the interrogation. 

The girl and woman had been previously abducted 
and held in the Maoist camp at Lochani village in 
Morang District in late 2006. Prior to that, the 
girl's family had used violence on several 
occasions against the couple and had demanded 
that the Maoists take action against them. At the 
camp, the Maoists called the couple derogatory 
names for homosexuals including "chakka" and 
"hijara." and ordered them to join the Maoists as 
soldiers because it would lead them to the 
"straight life." When they refused to carry 
weapons, they were deprived of food and beaten 
almost daily. After one month, they managed to 
escape. 

These attacks stand in stark contrast with recent 
commitments made by Hisila Yami, the Minister for 
Infrastructure of Nepal's interim government and 
Maoist member of parliament. In January 2007, at 
a program organized by the Blue Diamond Society, 
Minister Yami stated that the party had recently 
adopted a policy "not to encourage homosexual 
behavior but not punish homosexuals either." 

However, we are concerned that other statements 
by Maoist leaders give encouragement to assaults 
on the human rights and on the physical integrity 
of lesbians, gays, and metis (biological men who 
identify as women) in Nepal. In December 2006, 
Maoist senior leader and Minister of Local 
Development Dev Gurung told members of the Blue 
Diamond Society that, "Under Soviet rule and when 
China was still very much a communist state, 
there were no homosexuals in the Soviet Union or 
China. Š Homosexuality is a production of 
capitalism. Under socialism this kind of problem 
doesn't exist." 

Furthermore, as part of a newly-launched Maoist 
campaign against so-called "social pollutants," 
Maoist cadres have targeted suspected 
homosexuals. In December 2006, Maoists in 
Kathmandu, ordered house owners not to rent rooms 
to lesbians and gays. The former Maoist commander 
of Kathmandu Valley, known as Sagar, stated "We 
don't want to evict anyone. So we have asked 
house owners to allow tenants. However, we are 
against any aberrant activity that could have a 
negative and vitiating effect on society." 
Reinforcing the message, Amrita Thapa, general 
secretary of the Maoist women's association, told 
participants at a national conference in March 
2006 that homosexuals were unnatural and were 
"polluting" society. 

All persons, including children, are entitled to 
protection from violence and arbitrary detention 
and enjoy the rights right to freedom of 
association, assembly and expression. Human 
Rights Watch has recently condemned the CPN-M's 
practice of recruiting child soldiers (see 
"Children in the Ranks: The Maoists' Use of Child 
Soldiers in Nepal," a Human Rights Watch report, 
February 2007). The International Covenant on 
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which 
Nepal acceded in 1991, bars arbitrary arrest and 
detention, and prohibits torture and other cruel, 
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. In 
the 1994 case of Toonen v Australia, the U.N. 
Human Rights Committee, the UN body charged with 
monitoring states' compliance with the ICCPR, 
held that sexual orientation should be understood 
as a status protected against discrimination by 
the treaty's equality provisions. Under the 
Convention on the Elimination of All forms of 
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), which Nepal 
ratified in 1991, gender-based violence in both 
public and private may be considered a form of 
gender-based discrimination that CEDAW prohibits. 
Furthermore, the Convention on the Rights of the 
Child, which Nepal ratified in 1990, obliges 
states to protect children from all forms of 
discrimination, arbitrary or unlawful 
interference with his or her privacy, all forms 
of physical or mental violence, and against 
torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading 
treatment or punishment. 

Likewise, restricting the work of the Human 
Welfare Society represents an affront to the 
principles of freedom of association, assembly, 
and expression enshrined in the ICCPR. 

Justice Edwin Cameron of the South African 
Supreme Court of Appeals visited Nepal in January 
2007 for a conference on non-discrimination and 
Nepal's new constitution. He shared lessons from 
South Africa's legacy of apartheid as guidance 
for Nepal's national renewal: 

"A commitment to justice and equality is not 
measured by the easy cases, but by hard casesŠA 
society that aspires to respect human rights 
cannot disrespect people because of sexual 
orientation. It is easy to endorse rights like 
free speech and dignity and socioeconomic 
benefits in the abstract: more difficult is to 
actualize equality and dignity by according 
marginalized groups like gays and lesbians the 
full protection and benefit of the law. And if a 
society fails that test, it fails the test of 
elementary human rights protection." 

The abduction of the girl and woman in this case 
is only one of numerous documented cases of 
arrests, rapes, and beatings of lesbians, gays, 
and metis in Nepal over the past several years. 
It also forms one part of a larger pattern of 
abuses of the rights of children by the Maoists. 
We are encouraged by the Maoist's recent 
commitment not to harass lesbians, gays and 
metis; it is a step in the right direction, but 
it is not enough. We urge the government to 
affirm human rights for all people in word and in 
action. We also urge you to work for the 
inclusion of sexual orientation and gender 
identity as statuses protected from 
discrimination in Nepal's new constitution, as 
part of an overall commitment to ending egregious 
rights abuses and assuring equality for all. 

Sincerely, 

Scott Long 
Director 
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program 


CC: 

Minister Dev Prasad Gurung 
Ministry of Local Development 
Facsimile: +977-1-5522045 

Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara 
Ministry of Information and Communication 
Facsimile: +977-1-4221729 

Minister Gopal Rai 
Ministry of Forest Soil Conservation 
Facsimile: +977-1-224892 

______


[2]

New Age
21 April 2007

RAHUL GANDHI INSULTS A NATION AND ITS PEOPLE
by Jahed Ahmed and Mehul Kamdar


Lately an important piece of news has gone 
unnoticed by most of the mainstream news media of 
Bangladesh. In a recent political campaign, Rahul 
Gandhi, a member of the Indian parliament and son 
of a former Indian prime minister, the late Rajiv 
Gandhi, has solely credited his family for the 
division of Pakistan in 1971, which led to the 
independence of Bangladesh. While campaigning for 
a candidate in the state of Uttar Pradesh, 
considered India's heartland, Mr Gandhi managed 
to say, 'Once my family decides on something, it 
doesn't go back. Whether it's about India's 
freedom, dividing Pakistan or taking India to the 
21st century.' The remark clearly implied that it 
was a family vendetta against Pakistan that drove 
the division of the erstwhile East Pakistan and 
led to the creation of Bangladesh. It ignored the 
systematic genocide of three million Bengalis by 
the Pakistani army, the rape and humiliation of 
hundreds of thousands of Bengali women and the 
cascade of events preceding 1971 such as the 
language movement of 1952, six-point based 
agitation of 1966 and the Bengali people's revolt 
in 1969 against Ayub Khan.
    While the incident did not merit any attention 
within Bangladesh for reasons that are completely 
unknown, condemnation both within India and from 
Pakistan was immediate and vociferous. The only 
public protest from a Bangladeshi voice was that 
of the exiled author Dr Taslima Nasrin who spoke 
at a press conference in Bhopal and listed the 
1952 killings of Bangladeshis for asking that 
Bangla be made a state language and of the mass 
movement that began against the country's 
Pakistani rulers in 1969. While she did not 
condemn the casual callousness with which these 
remarks were issued, she could not, because she 
is a resident of India and hopes to get Indian 
citizenship someday, it was clear that she did 
not approve of the cynical attempt by Mr Gandhi 
to suggest that the sacrifices of the Bangladeshi 
people did not mean anything, that it was his 
grandmother's anti-Pakistan vendetta that 
actually split the country up.

    In the meantime, the exiled Pakistani doctor 
and humanist, Dr M Younus Sheikh, who lives in 
Switzerland, released an open letter to members 
of the Indian parliament, condemning the 'foolish 
and immature' remarks that Mr Gandhi had issued. 
Dr Sheikh has authored articles on the repression 
in Bangladesh under Pakistani rule, was one of 
the first Pakistanis to protest what he clearly 
called 'genocide' against Bengalis by the 
Pakistani army, and for this as well as several 
other reasons he was jailed and sentenced to 
death under completely trumped up charges in 
Pakistan until international pressure forced the 
government to release him from prison and exile 
him to Switzerland where he lives today.

    Curiously, the response from Dhaka has been 
muted, to say the least. The Bangladesh high 
commissioner to India would only remark that he 
was grateful to India for its support in the 
struggle for independence and there was no 
statement at all from Dhaka until the writing of 
this article. Indeed, in comparison to the angry 
voices both within India as well as from Pakistan 
(albeit for completely different reasons, because 
the Pakistani government now claims that it now 
has evidence that the whole struggle in 
Bangladesh was merely an Indian inspired 
secessionist plot) the silence from Dhaka has 
been deafening. Few countries are as proud of 
their language and, therefore, of their struggle 
to form a nation based on the suppression of 
their language as Bangladesh, and yet, the 
attempt by Mr Gandhi to suggest that the now 
well-documented horrors of the struggle for 
independence were little more than a task that 
his grandmother had decided to take up to gain 
personal revenge against Pakistan did not receive 
a single note of protest in response.

    One must not mix up the issue of acknowledging 
India's generous role and humanitarian effort 
during 1971 by Bangladesh with the condemnation 
of Rahul Gandhi's infantile remarks. While 
Bangladesh, as a nation, does not have any valid 
reasons to forget India's help during our 
liberation struggle in 1971; welcoming Rahul 
Gandhi's comments by the Bangladesh government - 
as it was reported in some Indian newspapers - 
would not only be just self-degrading, it will 
also be a dishonour to the memory of three 
million martyrs of 1971.

    Perhaps, it is because of the current 
political situation within Bangladesh that this 
silence continues, more than two days after the 
remarks attracted the flak that they did in the 
rest of South Asia. Perhaps, at a time when 
relations between the three major nations of 
South Asia have been visibly improving, no one in 
Dhaka would like to rock the boat. The fact, 
though, is that neither the spokespeople in 
Pakistan nor the segment of the Indian political 
and media establishment that criticised these 
remarks believes that criticizing Rahul Gandhi's 
ridiculous claims is likely to set the process of 
rapprochement back. Criticising a callous 
statement that demeans the struggle of an entire 
nation and its people to emerge from severe 
political repression and hardship to enjoy their 
independence as a people does not amount to a 
declaration of war. It is unfortunate that no 
voice has been raised in Dhaka about these 
remarks yet. The silence speaks as poorly about 
those who choose not to speak about the remarks 
as it does about Rahul Gandhi's personal 
callousness.

    Jahed Ahmed, based in New York, and Mehul 
Kamdar, originally from Tamilnadu, India and now 
settled in Chicago, are co-moderators of 
mukto-mona.com, an online network of South Asian 
humanists.



______


[3] 


The Guardian
April 13, 2007

UGANDA FOREST PROTEST SPARKS RACIAL VIOLENCE

· Three killed, 100 flee as anti-Asian anger erupts
· Scenes revive memories of '72 Amin hate campaign

Xan Rice, East Africa correspondent

Uganda's capital, Kampala, erupted into racial 
violence yesterday, with three people killed 
during a protest against government plans to 
allow Ugandan-Asian industrialists to grow sugar 
cane on protected forest land.

In scenes described as reminiscent of 1972, when 
Idi Amin led a hate campaign against south Asian 
merchants, demonstrators attacked businesses and 
a Hindu temple, where police had to rescue more 
than 100 people seeking sanctuary.

An Asian man was reported to have been stoned to 
death after being pulled off his motorbike. 
Several other motorists were beaten and a sugar 
truck was set on fire. Demonstrators shouting 
anti-Indian slogans hurled rocks at troops who 
set up roadblocks to stop the protests spreading. 
Soldiers retaliated with live ammunition, killing 
two black Ugandans.

The march, which was authorised by police and 
began peacefully, was arranged by 
environmentalists, opposition leaders and 
religious groups angered by a government proposal 
to allow the Mehta Group to clear a quarter of 
the Mabira forest reserve to grow sugar. The 
30,000-hectare (7,400-acre) reserve, east of 
Kampala, contains some of the last patches of 
virgin forest in Uganda and serves as an 
important water catchment area.

President Yoweri Museveni last year ordered a 
study into whether to allow Scoul, a local sugar 
firm owned by Mehta, to use 7,100 hectares of the 
forest. The state has a 30% share in Mehta.

Though conservationists said the move would ruin 
an area containing hundreds of species, the 
government pushed ahead with its plans for the 
reserve, which has been protected since 1932.

Critics say President Museveni is moving ahead at 
the expense of the environment. A decision to 
allow a rainforest to be cleared for a private 
palm plantation on the Ssesse Islands in Lake 
Victoria caused a storm of protest last year. 
Olav Bjella, a Norwegian environmentalist who 
headed Uganda's National Forestry Authority quit 
in protest, saying it was against his conscience 
to implement the order.

The Mehta Group took out newspaper advertisements 
that branded the opponents of the Mabira forest 
scheme as "anti-development" and dismissed 
concerns about the environmental impact. Analysts 
say that the company's aggressive stance, coupled 
with the government's intransigence, amplified 
and charged the debate.

Angelo Izama, a commentator at the Daily Monitor 
newspaper in Kampala, said: "What happened today 
was less about the environment than resentment by 
the oppressed Ugandan economic class towards the 
Asian commercial class."

Some of the 500 protesters chanted slogans 
praising Amin, who expelled south Asians from 
Uganda in 1972 - including the wealthy Mehta 
family who fled to Britain and India - and 
confiscated their property. One of the placards 
read: "Mehta, do you want another Amin?"

In the 1990s the Mehta family was among thousands 
of Asian-Ugandans who returned to reclaim their 
properties, under a campaign to encourage foreign 
investment. Many have flourished, particularly in 
the manufacturing, banking and hotel sector. 
Their success has led to resentment by some black 
Ugandans, who say the government is not doing 
enough for them.

o o o

[Uganda Weblog]
IN DEFENSE OF A FOREST

18 April 2007, by Elizabeth Kameo.

I woke up to news headlines all over the city 
bill copies announcing that an Asian businessman 
who wants to destroy Mabira Forest Uganda's 
biggest Tropical Rainforest is come up with 
demands if he is to leave our forest alone. Just 
how much more can Ugandans take from investors 
who are hell bent on destroying whatever little 
is left of the country in terms of natural 
resources and its beauty. Now here was a man who 
made a "deal" with President Yoweri Museveni that 
got him 7,100 hectares of lands making demands in 
a country that is not his if the owners of the 
country do not want him to destroy their natural 
resources. And for US$200 million, Mahendra Mehta 
said he would steer clear of our forest and not 
destroy it. One wonders where he even got the 
nerve to stand up and start making demands from a 
people of a country who are set at saving 
whatever little of forest cover is left in the 
country that has lost so many natural resources 
in the name of investment.

This year as the world marked the Forest Day in 
March, there was nothing to celebrate in Uganda 
thanks to recent developments in the country's 
forest sector. What started as a simple protest 
against President Museveni's giving away 7,100 
hectares of Mabira Forest to Sugar Corporation of 
Uganda Limited for conversion into a sugarcane 
plantation has turned into a nightmare. And fast 
forward April, a demonstration against the 
giveaway turned nasty and racial with Ugandans 
attacking Asians living in the city and killing 
one and injuring lots more. Sugar Corporation of 
Uganda Limited is owned by Asian business tycoon 
Mahendra Mehta.

"Save Mabira Forest", reads a petition on the 
internet calling upon Ugandan to sign a petition 
that will perhaps save the country's biggest 
Tropical Rain Forest from being destroyed to pave 
way for sugarcane plantations.
It is not the first petition; every Ugandan with 
a mobile phone has in the past received a text 
message or two and even more urging them to save 
the forest by signing the petition and not buying 
sugar produced by the company which is set to 
replace the forest with sugarcane plantations. It 
seems like it will not be the last but on whether 
it will produce results that remains to be seen 
because for once, Ugandans are speaking as one, 
petitioning as one and demonstrating against the 
giveaway of their natural forest as one.

"We, the undersigned, ..., do not believe that 
Mabira Forest should be degazetted by the 
Government of Uganda in order to plant sugar 
cane. Mabira Forest is part of our heritage and 
our children's future. Mabira Forest is a 
tropical hardwood forest which is proposed to be 
cut down for the production of sugar in Uganda. 
The forest is one of the most biodiverse forests 
remaining in Africa. It also has added value for 
the communities that inhabit it and surround it. 
The value of the forest to Uganda and her people 
is beyond the values of the trees, but it is also 
a frequented tourism site for bird watching, 
forest walks, and other activities; it has 
cultural and historical values; it significantly 
impacts the environment as a natural water 
filtration system and a natural regulator of 
global climate. We are asking the private 
investor to withdraw their request and take 
others up on their offers of land in Uganda to 
develop their sugar cane fields in other arable 
land," reads the petition. By the second week of 
April, over 9116 people had signed the petition 
put up by Ugandans who refer to themselves as 
"Save Mabira Forest".

Over the past few weeks, seven civil society 
organisations have sued the government over the 
planned giveaway and degradation of the forest. 
Ugandans are yet to see if their move will bring 
about any change. But in a country where the 
government has little respect for whatever 
decisions judiciary makes, not much can be 
expected to result from this petition.  The 
petitioners include; Advocates Coalition for 
Development and Environment (Acode), Green Watch, 
Environmental Alert, Environmental Action 
Network, Nature Uganda, National Association of 
Professional Environmentalists (Nape) and the 
Anti Corruption Coalition Uganda. Interestingly 
the National Environment Management Authority is 
not part of the petitioners and seems to have 
kept out of this even if they claim to be a the 
forefront of protecting Uganda's natural 
resources.

Mabira is not the first forest reserve to be 
given away to Museveni's investors whom he holds 
in high esteem. Butamira Forest was already given 
away to Kakira Sugar also for conversion into a 
sugarcane plantation and before that government 
gave away Bugala Islands Forest Reserve located 
to Bidco Oil Refineries and its subsidiaries.
And now it is just more than protesting the 
destruction of the forest. On April 12, what was 
supposed to be a peaceful demonstration in a bid 
by Ugandans to save the forest turned into a 
nightmare with crowds targeting Asians living in 
Kampala, attacking them and killing one Asian. It 
is clearly more than just the destruction of a 
forest by an Asian businessman as demonstrators 
held placards with messages that read, "Asians 
should go", "For one tree cut, Five Asians dead". 
Clearly the plan by President Museveni to give 
away part of the forest to an Asian Investor has 
sparked more controversy than he probably thought 
it ever would.

While I may not agree with the way the 
demonstration turned out, there is no doubt that 
like any Ugandan I am against the destruction of 
Mabira Forest. I cannot imagine driving to Jinja 
and where once there was a forest with trees, 
hundreds and hundreds of years old, there stands 
pathetic looking sugarcane plantations. And are 
we going to have to change our history books just 
because a rich Asian who wants to grow sugarcane 
wants a part of our heritage? Let's look at the 
facts, Mabira Forest reserve is not just a 
forest. It is home to 312 species of tree, 287 
species of bird and 199 species of butterfly. 
Recent Exploratory Inventories carried out in 
Mabira (for both the production and buffer zones) 
show that there are close to 2.5 million trees in 
every hectare. Mabira has wild Robusta coffee, 
dioscoria tubers, yams and other plants whose 
value is unknown." And being the only large 
forest in the bio-geographical zone of the Lake 
Victoria Crescent, it provides the only watershed 
for this already water stressed area. Mabira 
Forest Reserve is listed by BirdLife 
International as an Important Bird Area (IBA). 
The forest contains over 300 species of bird, 
including the Endangered Nahan's Francolin 
Francolinus nahani.
The forest also supports nine species of primate, 
a recently identified new mangabey subspecies in 
Uganda, Lophocebus albigena johnstoni and a new 
species of Short-tailed Fruit Bat. Studies have 
shown that the potential revenue from tourism 
alone at Mabira was in excess of the costs of 
managing the Reserve.
Mabira Forest Reserve is located within 50 km 
from Kampala, the capital city of Uganda, and is 
surrounded by four major towns used by tourists.
Other economic losses involved in 'giving-away' 
Uganda's forests are thought to include lost 
revenue from selective logging, a local impact on 
livelihoods and possibly from changing climate; 
the forests help maintain central Uganda's wet 
climate - removing them could bring about drier 
weather negatively impacting on crop yields, 
conservationists have argued.

Mabira is 29,974 hectares. For whoever destroys 
part of that forest, there is so much more to 
gain from the timber form trees that have been 
standing for hundreds of years. In fact I am 
beginning to believe the gossip going around that 
the President gave the forest away to Mehta with 
the understanding that he takes the land to grow 
sugarcane and harvested timber will belong to the 
President. After all you can imagine how much one 
stands to gain from cutting down 7,100 hectares 
of forest.

Destroying Mabira is the worst that could happen 
in Uganda today seeing that the country's forest 
loss in the highest in Africa with an annual 
forest loss of 2 percent. Forest cover went down 
from 4.9million hectares to 3.6 million between 
1990 and 2005. The country's annual deforestation 
rate has climbed 21 percent since the end of the 
1990s. 100 years ago forest cover in the country 
Winston Churchill described as "the Pearl of 
Africa" was 70 percent, today it is a mere 24 
percent and more forests are still being cleared. 
In comparison, neigboruing Kenya loses less than 
0.5 percent of forest cover yearly.

While it is reported that the leaders in Africa 
are realising the significance of protecting 
forests, President Museveni is doing the 
opposite. Even threatening those who dare protest 
against his short sightedness as far as forest 
reserves go. In fact hilariously, he claims that 
he is thinking of the future when giving away the 
forests. And it is clearly a future without trees 
and one where deserts will rule.
Many Ugandans view the clearing of one of the few 
remaining tracts of primary forest for sugar 
cane, a low value commodity product, as a poor 
use of a resource that could attract ecotourists 
and supply valuable ecological services. In fact 
for many Ugandans, they would rather have the 
forest and no sugar.
The destruction of Mabira forest will threaten 
some of the highest concentrations of 
biodiversity in Africa: Uganda is home to more 
than 5,000 plant species, 345 species of mammals, 
and types of 1,015 birds.

It has been said that the damage of cutting away 
part of Mabira Forest in terms of carbon credit 
is estimated at $316m. The value of the land is 
estimated at about $5m and the value of the wood 
at another $568m.
That means the Ugandan public stands to lose 
almost $890m (about 1.5 trillion shillings) as a 
result of the Government's plan to degazette part 
of the forest.
This was calculated by the experts of the 
Environmental Alert, one of four environmental 
groups that have launched a massive campaign to 
stop the proposed give-away.
"The biomass of Mabira, the total weight of all 
trees, shrubs and grasses, is estimated at 300 
tonnes per hectare," explains Dorothy Kaggwa of 
the Environmental Alert. "That is an equivalent 
of 550 tonnes of carbondioxide absorbed per 
hectare per year."

Carbondioxide emissions from factories, cars and 
planes trap the heat from escaping from the 
earth, leading to global warming. The Kyoto 
Protocol and the UN Convention on Climate Change, 
to both of which Uganda is a signatory, oblige 
countries to stay within certain carbondioxide 
limits. Manufacturers who exceed those limits can 
choose between installing costly remedy 
mechanisms or compensate by paying for planting 
trees or maintaining existing forests elsewhere, 
the so-called carbon credit.

Mabira forest receives more than 62% of all 
tourists visiting forest reserves in the country. 
Eco-tourism is the second largest foreign 
exchange earner and the potential for Mabira 
forest as tourist destination cannot be 
over-emphasised. There is already an ecotourism 
programme being run by the local within Mabira 
and an Ecolodge owned by Zahid Alam is yet to be 
completed. Interestingly since time immemorial, 
the foundation of Uganda has been its beauty, its 
nature known throughout the world it had 
Churchill marvel and immediately call this 
country to Pearl of Africa. That Pearl 
unfortunately is no more and if things continue 
the way they are, Uganda will soon be a shadow of 
its former self. It is hard to understand why a 
leader who only a year or two ago paid millions 
of US dollars to have Uganda feature on CNN and 
help us revive the tourism sector is the same one 
destroying the very bloodline that would see 
tourism boom. And it is the same President who 
gave his son-in-law's company the go ahead to 
carry out a programme dubbed "Gifted by Nature" 
to sell Uganda and its beauty to the rest of the 
world.



______


[4]    India: Caste Classification and 
Affirmative Action - the recent controversy  


Hindustan Times
March 29, 2007

TARGET PRACTICE

by Dipankar Gupta

The Supreme Court has not just stayed the central 
law, which ordains 27 per cent reservation for 
Other Backward Classes (OBCs), it has also 
severely admonished the government for indulging 
in "vote-bank politics". The significance of this 
remark should be seen in the context of the 
Supreme Court's astonishment that while the 
government is advocating 27 per cent reservation, 
it has done so without the necessary homework. It 
neither has a clear idea of the basis on which 
these classes have been identified, nor the 
number of OBCs in the country.

It was earlier decreed by the courts that OBCs 
cannot simply be identified on the basis of caste 
as this goes against the spirit of the 
Constitution. While the Constitution allowed for 
Scheduled Castes (SCs)  to be identified purely 
on the basis of caste and their attachment with 
the ugly prejudice of untouchability, OBCs need 
something more than just caste identification.

Hence, the Mandal Commission came up with three 
criteria, viz., social, educational and economic, 
to determine backwardness. These criteria were 
flawed from the start for excessive weights were 
given to markers of social backwardness, which 
were unverifiable, and fewer points were given to 
economic backwardness, for which there were 
tangible indices. Clearly, the framers of the 
Mandal Commission set out to provide a charter 
for the upwardly mobile, well-to-do agrarian 
classes in the garb of 'backwardness'.

Sneaking in privileges for certain castes in this 
fashion surely does harm to the democratic nature 
and content of our polity and the Supreme Court 
is correct when it observed that reservations for 
OBCs were not only yielding to "vote-bank 
politics" but also dividing society on the lines 
of caste and birth.

All of this is relevant especially when one keeps 
in mind that by the government's reckoning, even 
Yadavs and Jats are among the backwards. Things 
have come to such a pass with the caste-obsessed 
vote-bank politics that successive governments 
have indulged in, that few know that the OBCs was 
devised to specifically to keep castes out of the 
picture. This fact has now become completely 
obscured in popular political discourse.

The apex court's query as to how many can be 
counted as belonging to the OBCs is a perfectly 
logical one, especially as the government is 
enforcing quotas in higher education. This job 
should have preceded the enactment of the 
government Bill. If there are to be quotas, then 
we need the numbers, which were nowhere in sight. 
Had it been a question of 'affirmative action', 
then perhaps numbers are not that necessary, but 
a different set of legislations are required and 
one that unambiguously steers clear of any quota, 
or quota-like consideration.

In terms of figures, we have a host of issues. 
The first, which should not be undermined and has 
already been mentioned, is the set of criteria to 
be employed in denoting backwardness and it just 
cannot be my favourite castes. Economic 
backwardness has to play a dominant role, 
followed by educational backwardness. The 
criteria social backwardness as it stands is 
highly dubious, made worse by the fact that 
communities get rewarded if their boys and girls 
get married before the legally permissible age. 
Now that can hardly be allowed!

Second, we have to get the numbers right. The 
apex court is right that there has been no census 
enumeration on caste grounds since 1931, so where 
have these figures come from? The 1931 census is 
not only over 75 years old, but the criteria that 
was used then have long become defunct. 
Additionally, it must be borne in mind that the 
understanding of 'forward' and 'backward' has 
changed over time. In 1911, for example, there 
was a furore as certain castes resented their 
placement down the hierarchy. Today, they would 
fight if they figured as high castes. How 
political calculations have changed.

But keeping this reality in mind, it has to be 
admitted that even in 1931, the figures for 
'backwards' could be spurious, and had to be 
adjusted on a number of counts, not least of all 
because of political and status motivations. 
Further, certain castes that existed in 1931 have 
either disappeared or have morphed themselves or 
have become part of other caste clusters. The 
arrival of caste associations from the late 19th 
century onwards, and with greater rapidity after 
1920, has also led to significant changes in 
caste nomenclatures and relative positioning.

The Supreme Court's consternation is further 
compounded by the fact that the National Sample 
Survey (NSS) puts the proportion of OBCs to 
approximately 32.1 per cent of the population 
while the National Family Health Survey pitches 
the figure at 29.8 per cent. These figures 
contrast starkly with Mandal Commission's data, 
according to which 52 per cent of the population 
should be counted as OBCs. Surely, not all three 
can be right and, therefore, the court is 
perfectly justified in asking for authentic 
figures.

Further, it needs to be remembered that by 
Mandal's own admission, reproduced in the Mandal 
Commission report, state governments did not come 
up with the required information on educational 
and social profile of backward classes. He admits 
that the exercise done by the commission was not 
scientific or academic and would certainly not 
pass stringent criteria. If all this be true, how 
can the government calmly proceed with the 
Central Educational Institution Reservation in 
Admission Act in 2006 and reserve seats on a 
quota basis for OBCs. The 'C' now clearly stands 
for 'Castes'.

It might be recalled that following the Indra 
Sawhney case in 1992, the Supreme Court ordered 
the setting up of a committee headed by Justice 
R.P. Prasad to look into the matter of the 
'creamy layer' so as to exclude such people from 
benefiting from OBC reservations. It must be made 
clear that the creamy layer does not apply to SCs 
or STs. The Prasad Committee made a series of 
recommendations as to who the benefits cannot be 
extended to, regardless of their caste status. It 
kept in mind economic factors, position in the 
services categories as well as land owned. It is 
interesting that the government has overruled any 
consideration of the 'creamy layer' when it comes 
to OBC reservations. In other words, it does not 
matter for the UPA-led government how well-off or 
powerful a person or family may be as long as the 
caste is right. This is vote-bank politics with a 
vengeance.

Caste is used as a resource in perpetuity by the 
advocates of OBC reservation. The Ambedkar-led 
reservation policy for SCs and STs was motivated 
with the aim of rooting caste out of all public 
considerations in the county. In Mandal-type 
reservations, the aim is not to eliminate caste 
but to represent caste. This makes a great 
difference to how democracy is practised. It is, 
therefore, in the fitness of things that the 
Supreme Court raised the red flag of OBC quotas 
and the exacerbation of social differences.

Finally, let us ask the all-important question: 
why did the founders of the Constitution not 
favour the identification of OBCs with caste. The 
reason simply was that such straight correlations 
were not possible on a national scale. Some 
castes are powerful in villages but not in 
cities, some in one province and not in another. 
In addition, the fact that other than SCs, no 
other caste faced discrimination in terms of 
temple entry or drawing water from the village 
well or going to school, surely must have added 
as a disincentive for those framing our 
Constitution in looking beyond the SCs for fixing 
reservation-based quotas.

The truth is that OBCs, such as they are listed 
today, have never faced historical disprivileges. 
If they must be given reservations, then 
injustices and discriminatory practices against 
them have to be established. Failing this test, 
the rationale for OBC reservation crumbles and 
degenerates to a species of vote-bank politics.

Dipankar Gupta is Professor,  Social Sciences, at 
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

o o o

Hindustan Times
April 19, 2007

GET UNDER SOCIETY'S SKIN

by Gail Omvedt

The Supreme Court's recent decision and 
reiteration to stay the order regarding OBC 
admissions until accurate data is available has 
brought forth the expected reactions. Defenders 
of 'equality' won by ignoring caste are hailing 
it; proponents of reservations are trying to put 
on a brave face. But in one way, the decision is 
helpful: the Supreme Court has given cogent 
arguments for the need for information to 
underlay policy. However, what many of the 
opponents of reservations may not appreciate is 
that this brings up squarely, once again, the 
argument for a caste-based census.

The demand for this is now rising, and the 
Congress has issued a statement rejecting such an 
option. Why it has done so is hard to understand. 
If getting information about caste is 'divisive', 
then so is trying to remedy the situation. How do 
we remedy it without really good information? 
There is no adequate answer to this question.

Many Indians opposed to a caste-based census have 
for years argued the issue in terms of 
divisiveness. Some have even made wild 
projections of chaos, violence and fragmentation. 
Yet, for decades, the United States has had not 
only fairly far-reaching programmes of 
affirmative action, but also a race-based census: 
people are asked their race, and do not consider 
this an insult. The policy has not led to chaos 
and violence, but rather has provided the 
foundation for efforts to remedy the situation.

In the 1960s, the US did have a certain amount of 
violence, with ghetto rebellions, fights with the 
police and uprisings of angry young Black men and 
women. The situation was too extreme to ignore; 
instead, policy decisions were made. Now Blacks 
have penetrated more fields than ever before, and 
race riots are a thing of the past, even if 
racism itself has not been entirely overcome. 
Recognising the existence of race, like caste, is 
not  the road to ruin, but is a necessary 
prerequisite for dealing with, and resolving, the 
issue.

Those who argue for 'merit' ignore the fact that 
merit is not linked to caste. Here, biological 
inheritance and social conditioning have to be 
carefully differentiated. The reason that people 
of 'higher' caste origin perform better lies in 
their environmental advantages, which range from 
the fields of education, socialisation to 
economic well-being.

The same, of course, has been true for race. 
Only, in the US, the arguments for and against, 
'nature' versus 'nurture', have been made 
endlessly. One of the seemingly solidly 
documented books arguing for the reality of 
racial differences, Richard Hernstein and Charles 
Murray's The Bell Curve, spent hundreds of pages 
arguing that IQ tests, in fact, reflected the 
existence of real intelligence - and since Blacks 
performed on the average significantly lower than 
the White average, they claimed that this 
reflected their actual capacities. Yet, the book 
let slip one important fact about IQ tests - that 
average scores have risen over the last few 
decades, by about the same amount as the 
'difference' between average White and Black 
scores.

In other words, IQ tests reflect a degree of 
environmental advantage and socialisation, even 
'learning' about taking IQ tests. Even at an 
early age, this environmental difference is 
there. In many European countries, the average 
scores had risen because the scores of the lowest 
deciles rose faster: in other words, the spread 
of mass education had made a difference.

In India, there has been no such extensive 
academic and general intellectual debate about 
test scores, heredity and environment; only a 
good deal of frantic and self-justifying 
outpourings. But the examinations here, as well 
as interviews, are much less objective, much more 
culture-bound than IQ tests. Education is much 
more unequally distributed. Denial of caste 
inequalities has been less reasonable, more 
ingrained, more emotional.

In comparison with race, though, it is 
superficially easy to avoid dealing with caste: 
it is not so easily visible as race is, though 
both are equally social and not biological 
factors. There is a good deal of social 
interaction directed at understanding the other's 
caste, but these are less obvious and visible. As 
a result, a superficial 'passing' is much easier, 
particularly for employment, if not for more 
personal issues such as marriage. Yet the scars 
of caste remain, of this there is no doubt. What 
is needed is more informed discussion and debate, 
not a closing of eyes, ears and mouths to mimic 
the monkey reaction to reality.

There is possibly little change since the 1931 
census, which gave extensive information about 
caste. However, there is need for investigation: 
have some OBCs really become 'affluent'? Aside 
from a few of their members, this is doubtful. 
The very fact that these are mostly rural-based 
groups, and the rural economy is in recognised 
crisis, should indicate that the average has 
improved. There is no point, however, in 
endlessly arguing. We need the data.

How does one handle a caste-based census? There 
has been, again, a lot of talk about the 
complications of the matter. The solution is 
simple: let everyone self-identify his or her 
caste. Those who want can say 'no caste' (in 
fact, this itself would be an important data from 
the census). Those who are out of mixed marriages 
or confused about their caste in anyway can also 
say this. A panel of experts at the State level 
can then make broad classifications out of the 
responses. There is, in other words, no great 
dilemma about how to do it. It only takes social 
will.

Gail Omvedt is a social scientist and author of 
Dalit Visions: The Anticaste Movement and Indian 
Cultural Identity and Growing Up Untouchable: A 
Dalit Autobiography Among Others

______


[5] 

Daily Times
April 19, 2007

THE SHILPA SEQUEL
by J Sri Raman

Shilpa had evolved for a section of Indian 
viewers from a mere victim of Western racism into 
a symbol of Indian Womanhood. The Shilpa-Gere 
show was a cruel letdown for the 'cultural 
nationalists'

It was two and a half months ago that we talked 
in these columns of Bollywood belle Shilpa Shetty 
and her battle in the Celebrity Big Brother 
programme of Britain's Channel 4 ('The Shilpa 
effect', February 2). The svelte, tall star 
stages a comeback now, though the context could 
not have been more different.

We talked then of the contest Shilpa won offering 
"a striking contrast to the world competitions 
where would-be divas of the Indian big screen had 
worsted their rivals". Equally striking is the 
contrast the current controversy over Shilpa 
offers to her earlier racism-to-riches story.

She had then endured crudely ethnic and racist 
taunts from a competitor to emerge the winner at 
the end of the ordeal. What most Indians abroad 
and at home then admired was the fact that she 
coped with the situation and stayed the course, 
without running away from relentless abuse. To 
them, this exemplified the manner in which modern 
India must break into the big, bad West-dominated 
world, playing by its rules. Her victory then was 
a metaphor for globalisation.

What Shilpa is now undergoing illustrates another 
aspect of the same globalisation that India's 
middle class desires so devoutly but yet dreads 
secretly. She is now facing the full-blast fury 
of far-right groups, led by the Shiv Sena, with 
an obscene ideology that holds apparently 
inexplicable sway in the country's most 
industrialised state of Maharashtra for letting 
Hollywood actor Richard Gere peck her on the 
cheek in public. We won't pause to wonder whether 
this rings a bell for the Pakistani reader.

The point is that the devout Buddhist Gere was 
not being racism driven, when, to the delight of 
his audience at a New Delhi rally to promote HIV 
awareness, he mimicked the hero of a typical 
Bollywood romance. He struck a dancing posture 
with Shilpa who had figured in dozens of such 
film scenes without provoking mob fury, and 
planted a series of what Hollywood would have 
considered brotherly pecks.

No angry reaction had greeted Geoffrey Boycott's 
admiring if un-brotherlike response to attractive 
Shilpa. Veteran actor Naseeruddin Shah, had, in 
fact, made a public gift of a Shilpa portrait to 
Boycott, amidst the laughter of a television 
studio audience. Cricket, perhaps, covered the 
multitude of sins that the far-right sees in the 
fun scene Gere was trying to enact. If his action 
is now condemned as an assault on Indian culture, 
it was possibly because of two reasons.

In the first place, at some point during the Big 
Brother battle, Shilpa had evolved for a section 
of Indian viewers from a mere victim of Western 
racism into a symbol of Indian Womanhood. Without 
having done anything through her entire career to 
earn such a halo, she came to symbolise the 
'ideal Indian woman' expected at all times and at 
all places to bear the burden of 'Indian 
culture'. It was not for no reason that, soon 
after the contest, she received an invitation 
from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to join it. 
The Shilpa-Gere show was a cruel letdown for the 
'cultural nationalists'.

The second reason why the far-right has pounced 
on the issue is that it has been presented to 
them in the midst of a fresh campaign of 
'cultural nationalism'. Just as the Shiv Sena 
hordes were indulging in violence at a film 
shooting venue, they were also vandalising a 
major television channel's Mumbai premises to 
protest its support for a young Hindu-Muslim 
couple that had eloped to flee their enraged 
clans.

Both the incidents followed in the wake of the 
controversy over the famous compact disc (CD) of 
the BJP, issued as a propaganda material in the 
ongoing assembly elections in India's most 
populous State of Uttar Pradesh.

The CD carried dramatised illustrations of the 
alleged villainy of the minority Muslims, against 
which the Hindu majority had to be vigilant and 
act by voting for the BJP. One of the episodes in 
the CD tells the heart-rending tale of a Muslim 
pretending to a false faith and seducing away a 
Hindu girl, only to force her into marriage with 
an over-aged crony of his community.

In all these cases, the feared attack on Indian 
culture takes the form of an attempted sexual 
assault on the Indian woman, the Indian 
Womanhood. Nothing else can rouse the machismo of 
the far-right middle class, which seeks to go 
'phoren' and stay fervently nationalist at the 
same time.

With the insecurities of globalisation, perceived 
as an inevitable as well as an irresistibly 
enticing prospect, such incidents can only be 
expected to increase. And the threats to the 
indigenous 'culture' from foreigners as well as 
aliens within will also be countered increasingly 
with attempts to curtail the freedom of the 
Indian female.


______


[6]

The Guardian
April 21, 2007

Midnight's citizens

Amit Chaudhuri is impressed by Ramachandra Guha's 
shrewd survey of India since the second world 
war, India After Gandhi


India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy
by Ramachandra Guha
688pp, Macmillan, £25

It's in the nature of nations to be addicted to 
their own histories. Older, pre- national 
communities, one imagines, occupied themselves 
with mythology. The secular nation, agog, 
rehearses its history, the very reasons and 
outcomes of its existence, to itself. What's 
common to both activities is the endless 
familiarity of the subject-matter to the 
audience. It's safe to assume that very few 
people in a group of devotees listening to, say, 
the Indian epic Ramayana being read out would not 
have heard it before. It's equally prudent to 
assume that almost all the Indian readers of 
Ramachandra Guha's capacious history of 
democratic India would be familiar with a great 
deal of the story. What is it, then, that gives 
myths and national histories their appeal?

Article continues
In mythic retelling, it is repetition itself, 
accompanied by improvisatory flourishes, that 
transfixes the audience by returning it to known 
terrain. Historical narrative, too, depends on 
familiarity enlivened by interpretative freshness 
and the surprise of new archival research; but 
there's also, at times, something else. Guha 
reminds us, more than once, that it's the 
historian's job to tell us what happened, and not 
spend too much time speculating on what might 
have. Yet it is precisely the possibility of what 
might have happened but didn't that gives an 
immediate but inexhaustible magic to some of the 
20th century's most triumphal historical 
narratives. Both the American film-maker 
embarking on the new second world war movie and 
the Englishwoman wearing a poppy are thinking, 
yet again, of events that took place many years 
ago, but also, in some hidden but urgent way, of 
the world that might have come into existence had 
the other side won.

Similarly, a "What if?" animates Guha's 
reconstruction of the past 60 years of Indian 
history. Since 1947, the possibility of disaster 
has taken the form of certain questions and 
crises: "What if India were to disintegrate; or 
to become a totalitarian society; or a military 
dictatorship; or a Hindu state?" All these are 
scenarios that appeared plausible, at one time or 
another, to both the Indian and foreign observer. 
Guha tells us what happened elegantly, sometimes 
doggedly: but it's by constantly implying what 
might have, while disavowing it with the 
professional historian's gesture, that he brings 
his copious material to life. Guha's book reminds 
us of what some other recent studies of India 
have been getting at, but without this civilised 
single-mindedness: that it's not just the story 
of independence that's worthy of being counted as 
one of the great triumphal stories of 
20th-century world history; that the survival and 
perhaps the flourishing of free India counts 
legitimately as another. Once this fact is 
acknowledged, its political and cultural 
consequences, I'm sure Guha will agree, need to 
be viewed with suspicion.

Guha begins at the beginning, sketching the 
indeterminate setting for the project, with 
Nehru's poetic ruminations on India's "tryst with 
destiny" on the stroke of midnight. (Has any 
modern politician's speech, except Churchill's 
wartime orations, had as much currency?) Quickly, 
the demons of which the Indian psyche has still 
not exorcised itself appear: the irony of a 
secular Muslim gentleman, the pork-eating 
spoilsport Jinnah, being responsible for creating 
Pakistan. Then Partition, the original sin of our 
creation-myth, for which blame is apportioned to 
a variety of people - Jinnah, the British, Nehru, 
Gandhi - but more commonly to the ordinary Muslim 
citizen. There's the nightmare of Kashmir, a 
continual challenge to the moral high ground that 
India, with its public posture of post-colonial 
certitude and humanitarian dignity, has tried to 
occupy since independence. Guha also brings back 
to us, as he must, the border dispute with China, 
which led to a small war that India lost, with 
deep repercussions for the self-esteem of a 
generation of Indians.

And yet, despite Kashmir, and various forms of 
governmental wrongdoing and blunders, the Indian 
middle class and intelligentsia, unlike their 
counterparts in Japan, England or Pakistan, have 
never really known what it means to inhabit a 
morally uneasy position. There's a mysterious 
surplus to being Indian, a feelgood element 
comparable only to the sense of self that 
Americans possessed until Vietnam. Visitors 
wonder at how happy the poor are in India, 
putting it down to ancient reserves of 
spirituality; equally wondrous is how impervious 
the Indian secular middle class is, despite all 
sorts of setbacks, to the sense of guilt, of 
being morally compromised. This has less to do 
with spirituality than with the unassailable 
constitutional promise of what it means to be an 
Indian. The absence of moral ambiguity means that 
there sometimes seems to be very little critical 
thinking in India, only one kind of debate, a 
nationalism in various forms, repeated 
infinitely. With a few exceptions, Indians don't 
know how to fashion eloquence out of a sense of 
being wrong or having wronged, at least not 
without the unmistakable timbre of 
self-congratulation.

There are reasons for that tenacious feelgood 
experience. Guha delineates them effectively: the 
establishment of the machinery and the miracle of 
the elections (there's an excellently 
orchestrated chapter on how the first one 
happened); the creation of provinces along 
linguistic lines (which should have led to 
conflict) by forgotten historical figures; the 
survival of democracy and free speech in spite of 
poverty, corruption, sectarian strife, Indira 
Gandhi and, more recently, the waning of power at 
the centre and the rise of an opportunistic 
federalism. Every dubious development has a 
positive outcome; it's a story of incorrigible 
resilience and charm. The first two-thirds of the 
book, where Guha is describing the consolidation 
of the shaky state, are, notwithstanding the 
deluge of facts, surprisingly absorbing; by 
quoting frequently and shrewdly, Guha allows us 
to eavesdrop on the multiplicity and richness of 
the conversation - between politicians, writers, 
civil servants, well-wishers, detractors - within 
which change took place.

One thing the book lacks, despite its 
comprehensiveness, is a sense of interiority. 
It's hardly alone among recent Indian histories 
in this regard. Guha's understanding of the 
secular basis for Indian democracy is a 
constitutional one; that is, the "secular" is a 
product, in India, of ideals, laws and 
institutions articulated and validated by the 
constitution. But the "secular" in India is not 
only a political construct; it is a cultural 
space. The domain of culture was inhabited and 
produced by writers and artists and their 
audience from the early 19th century onwards; 
it's a domain that comprises the interior life of 
Indian secularism. In this sense, independence 
and the Nehruvian era that followed are not 
really the beginning of a history, but the last 
phase in the story of Indian humanism. From the 
1980s onwards, the secular middle class and its 
culture is completely redefined; the parameters 
for a new free-market understanding of 
"Indianness" are put in place. As it happens, the 
single chapter Guha devotes to culture, or 
"entertainment", as he calls it, is the weakest 
one in the book, with Wikipedia-like accounts of 
cultural achievements; it attempts to place 
culture in the constitutional idea of secularism 
- as providing instances of pluralism and 
fellow-feeling - but doesn't locate the 
constitutional in the interior life that culture 
represents.

The epilogue, "Why India Survives" (echoing RK 
Narayan's unflappable assurance to Naipaul in the 
60s: "India will go on"), is a strangely moving 
coda, and clarifies the country's peculiar 
appeal. At one point, Guha mentions he's 
"speaking as a historian rather than as citizen"; 
but allowing the historian to be in commerce with 
citizenship is what provides the book with 
impetus, and gives it its most palpable strength. 
Guha, as a citizen, has been "exasperated" by 
India, but, in the light of historical evidence, 
has been won over by it. This mixture of distance 
and surrender is fairly emblematic of why many 
middle-class Indians continue to invest 
themselves, emotionally, in the country; it's 
quite distinct from patriotism. To suggest the 
ambiguity of his own relationship with the 
country of his birth, and also his utter 
investment in it, Guha has often in the past used 
some oddball Englishman of distinction who's 
lived in India or thought about it as a metaphor: 
Verrier Elwin, EP Thompson. In his epilogue, Guha 
invokes the biologist JBS Haldane, who, moved by 
the "wonderful experiment" India had embarked on, 
decided to become an "Indian citizen". Guha's 
book reminds us that the citizenly pride that 
permeates it is not incompatible with judgment, 
hindsight, intelligence and distance; that 
citizenship is not a natural thing, but that it 
is, in some cases, inevitable.

______


[6]  ANNOUNCEMENTS

(i)

Dear Friends,

I am attaching below the details of the Youth 
Convention being organised on April 22-23, 2007 ( 
Sunday and Monday) at the ATIRA auditorium, near 
Gujarat University, Navrangpura, Ahmedabad.
Activists, civil society members over 25 years of 
age can play the role of only listening to the 
young voices. I hope you will spare sometime to 
come and attend the youth convention.
Sincerely
Shabnam Hashmi
ANHAD
1914 Karanjwala Building
Near Khanpur Darwaza, Khanpur
Ahmedabad- 380001
Telephone- 25500844
April 20. 2007

Youth Convention SCHEDULE
April 22-23, 2007

ATIRA auditorium, Near Gujarat University, Navrangpura, Ahmedabad

Over 400 young delegates are gathering in 
Ahmadabad to discuss issues around democracy, 
freedom of expression, economy, unemployment, 
education, governance, law and order, status of 
the marginalized section and many other issues 
that bother the young minds.
Young delegates all under 25 years of age are 
coming from Sabarkantha, Banaskantha, Panchmahal, 
Vadodara, Ahmedabad, Modasa, Patan, Mehsana, 
Surendranagar, Dangs, Anand, Narmada, Kutch, 
Jamnagar and many other
districts. They represent various sections of the 
society, some are from the rural background and 
some from the urban.
Young delegates will debate and discuss in an 
open atmosphere their concerns and aspirations. 
They will discuss the impact of 'vibrancy' and 
'development' on their lives, on the lives of the 
marginalized sections of the society. They will 
do a critical analysis of the law and order 
situation and the 'good governance'.
The two-day reflection by the young people on a 
vast number of issues will result in a 
resolution, which will be adopted by the Youth 
Convention and an action plan for the future.
Along with these discussions and open sessions 
there will be a number of documentaries and 
feature films that will be screened. Vidya Shah a 
well known singer from Delhi will sing Sufi and 
Bhakti songs on the 22nd evening.
A poster exhibition made by school and college 
children along with the Anhad exhibition: In 
Defense of Democracy will be displayed at the 
venue. Anhad, a voluntary organization, which 
works on issues concerning communalism and 
democracy, is organizing the Convention.
In each session 5-6 young people under the age of 
25 will make presentations, the facilitators 
weaving together the presentations will add to 
the debate on each topic and then each session 
will have open discussion sessions.
This is probably the first time a platform like 
this is being provided to young people at a State 
level convention where only young people under 
the age of 25 years are allowed to speak. Young 
scholars most under 35 are will be facilitating 
the sessions.
Two young activists, Manan Trivedi and Shruti 
Upadhyaya will coordinate the whole convention. 
Nimisha Shivpuria, Ayesha Khan, Prakash Parmar, 
Kabir Thakore, Avinash Kumar, Sanjay Bhave, 
Mahesh Pandya, Nayan Patel and Jhanvi Andaria 
will facilitate different sessions.
Mallika Sarabhai, well known artist, actor and a 
symbol of resistance in Gujarat, will inaugurate 
the Youth Convention.

---------------------------------------------------------

YOUTH CONVENTION SCHEDULE

9.00-9.30- INAUGURATION by Mallika Sarabhai

SESSION I
9.30-10.30

STATUS OF WOMEN IN GUJARAT - Facilitated by Nimisha Shivpuria
SESSION II

10.30- 11.30

Screening of Documentary : Xeno- 8 minutes

STATUS OF MINORITIES IN GUJARAT- Facilitated by Ayesha Khan

11.30- 12.00- TEA BREAK


SESSION III

12.00-1.30
STATUS OF TRIBALS AND DALITS IN GUJARAT - Facilitated by Prakash Parmar

1.30- 2.15 - LUNCH BREAK
SESSION IV

2.15-3.30

Screening of Documentary Film: Khadda- 9 minutes
STATE OF ECONOMY AND GOVERNANCE - Facilitated by Avinash Kumar
SESSION V

3.30-4.30
STATE OF EDUCATION- Facilitated by Sanjay Bhave

4.30-5.00- TEA BREAK

5.00-7.00- FILM Lage Raho Munna Bhai

7.00-8.00- DINNER

8.00-9.00- VIDYA SHAH SINGS SUFI BHAKTI MUSIC
DAY II

8.30-9.30- BREAKFAST

9.30-11.00- SESSION VI

Screening of Documentary: Words in Stone- 20 minutes


SYNCRETIC TRADITION, ASSAULT ON CULTURAL HERITAGE- Facilitated by Kabir Thakore

11.00-11.30- TEA BREAK
11.30-1.30- SESSION VII
Screening of Documentary: Safdar- 30 minutes
YOUTH , DEMOCRACY AND POLITICS  - Facilitated by Mahesh Pandya

1.30-2.30- LUNCH

2.30-4.30- SESSION VIII
YOUTH AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY- Nayan Patel and Jhanvi Andharia

4.30-5.00- tea break

5.00-7.30- Film followed by discussion

_____


(ii)

www.asiansinmedia.org/
20th April, 2007

PAKISTAN - BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE

A special Dispatches programme on Channel 4 next 
week will "take stock of the nation" 60 years 
after its independence and examine whether the 
'war on terror' is driving the country to 
meltdown or helping it on a path to recovery.

Presented by the writer and broadcaster Ziauddin 
Sardar, the hour-long programme will explore how 
Pakistan has become engulfed in a bitter conflict 
between the two dominant forces in the country: 
the military and the mullahs. He told AIM 
magazine that he was "shocked" by the 
militarisation of the country but expressed hope 
for the future.

The first overwhelmingly Muslim country to 
develop nuclear weapons, Pakistan has been ruled 
by the military for two-thirds of its existence. 
In recent times it has become a become a key 
player in America's 'war on terror'.

The military and religious forces co-existed and 
even cooperated in the past especially during the 
Afghan war against the Soviet Union. But 
President Musharraf's political alliances have 
drawn violent dissent from its powerful religious 
clerics.

With elections looming and the General's position 
at its most precarious, Dispatches will examine 
whether the nation is likely to become further 
destabilised - the consequences of which could 
reverberate across the world.

"I think it is necessary to take the stock of the 
nation after 60 years of independence. I went to 
Pakistan with a totally open mind; and was 
shocked at what I discovered. I did not expect 
the Jihadis to have taken over large parts of the 
country," Ziauddin Sardar told AIM magazine.

For the documentary he examines the impact of 
General Musharraf's political decisions and how 
it has ignited an internal feud threatening to 
tear the country apart.

His journey begins at the notorious North West 
Frontier Province (NWFP), near the Afghanistan 
border, a no-go area for journalists and a haven 
for the jihadi groups. He discovers that the 
Pakistani military have suffered major casualties 
in the region and have had to allow Islamic 
hardliners known as the "Pakistani Taliban" to 
control and run this turbulent province.

The problem for Pakistan, he said, was "a deeply 
entrenched military that now controls almost 
every aspect of Pakistan's political and economic 
life".

He added: "And the Mullahs, who are hell bent on 
imposing their own pathological brand of Islam on 
everyone. Pakistan's future depends on containing 
these two, undemocratic, militant forces."

For the documentary Sardar travels across the 
country to show how this conflict is unfolding on 
the streets of Pakistan.

In the month Sardar he was in the country, there 
were five suicide attacks. 15 people died, 25 
were injured and 12 people arrested as suspected 
suicide bombers. He is seen accompanying the 
anti-terror police as they embark on a raid to 
arrest suspect terrorists.

He speaks to those accused and tries to gain an 
understanding of their mindset. He visits a 
renowned madrassah, reputed to have taught most 
of the Taliban leadership, and speaks to a cleric 
about the role of the mullahs in religious 
schools and the intense scrutiny they face.

It is hard to predict which direction the country 
will take and how its destiny will be shaped. But 
it is more likely that the impact will be felt 
across the world.

In the programme Sardar looks at the future for 
democracy in Pakistan. He meets secular 
politicians from mainstream political parties and 
speaks to people who accuse politicians of 
corruption.

In which direction did he see the country going 
in? Can there be hope? "I think there is always 
hope. Most of the people of Pakistan are very 
resilient; and it is astonishing how much they 
have achieved despite all the odds," he said.

"I was full of hope with the work the Edhi 
Foundation does in providing emergency support. I 
met numerous young volunteers, some as young as 
17, running the switchboards, organising 
ambulances and other essential support services."

He added: "I was equally impressed at the work of 
Citizen's Foundation, which provides free 
schooling for the most deprived. I visited one of 
its schools in Karachi's Mosquito Colony and 
found the pupils to be articulate, very 
intelligent, and full of high aspirations for 
Pakistan. When you see such endeavours, hope 
emerges almost naturally."

The BBC too is broadcasting a programme later 
this year to mark the country's 60 years of 
independence.

The Military and the Mullahs will be aired at 8pm 
on Monday 23rd April at 8pm on Channel 4
Producer / director: Faris Kermani
Executive producer: Tommy Nagra


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

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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