SACW | Dec. 20-22, 2007 / Pakistan: Goodbye General, Hello Troika / India: Moditva in Gujarat / Taslima Nasreen under house arrest

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Thu Dec 20 20:48:29 CST 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire | December 20-22, 2007 | 
Dispatch No. 2478 - Year 10 running

[1] Pakistan:
      (i) Goodbye General Musharraf, Hello 'Troika' (Haris Gazdar)
     (ii) Free and Fair Elections Impossible With 
Dismantled Judiciary (Human Rights Watch)
[2] Nuclear Missile Madness in India-Pakistan: 
Terror by clerical error (Jawed Naqvi)
[3] India: BJP On A Downswing In Gujarat (Praful Bidwai)
     + Is Gujarat the New India? (Pamela Philipose)
[4] Bangladesh: VPA: the profile of a black law (M Abdus Salam)
[5] India: Taslima Nareen living in a state of 
virtual of house arrest - cant return to calcutta 
(news reports)
[6] Announcements:
    (i) Peoples' Tribunal on Tsunami 
Rehabilitation (Chennai, 21-22  December 2007)
    (ii) An evening of conversation with Sara 
Suleri Goodyear (Karachi, 24 December 2007)

______

[1]

(i)

Economic & Political Weekly
December 15, 2007

GOODBYE GENERAL MUSHARRAF, HELLO 'TROIKA'

by Haris Gazdar

As Pakistan faces the prospect of returning to 
the "troika" system of governance after eight 
years of direct military rule, political parties 
have important decisions to make about fighting 
elections and electoral fraud. They also need to 
keep an eye on history to make the most of the 
chances that the end of direct military rule is 
likely to offer.

The military regime of general Pervez Musharraf 
ended with a sniffle on Nove mber 28, when he 
passed on the ceremonial baton of the army chief 
to his succe ssor general Ashfaq Kayani. As the 
world looked on, a visibly shaken Musharraf shed 
a tear and also that which he had declared a few 
months ago to be his second skin. The following 
day he took oath as civilian president for the 
next five years. Musharraf's loyal yes-man, 
Shaukat Aziz, who had served him as finance 
minister and then prime minister, suffered the 
indignity of being denied a ticket by his own 
party for contesting the forthcoming elections. 
It was rumoured that Shaukat Aziz, the alleged 
architect of a supposed economic miracle, would 
return to his banking career abroad. Thus ended 
Pakistan's third long experiment with direct 
military rule, with the chief disrobed, and his 
favourite mascot shooed away. 

While all this happened without much fanfare, 
overshadowed by the dark clouds of the emergency, 
it is important to recall how far Pakistan has 
travelled since this time last year when 
Musharraf supporters had vowed to elect him as a 
uniformed president not just once but twice over. 
The lawyers' movement for the restoration of 
judicial independence will stand out as a key 
turning point in  Musharraf's political fortunes. 
The unity of the bar associations in defence of 
the sacked chief justice and the courage of many 
judges in defying the military forced the 
commando general into several retreats and the 
grave strategic error of the November 3 
emergency. 

But there have been other factors too. 
Opposition political parties, much battered and 
maligned, must be given credit for maintaining 
their constituencies and keeping their nerves, 
through eight-long years of suppression, 
vilification and exile.  It is easy to overlook 
their role in the lawyers' movement until one 
realises that nearly all of the 60 or so people 
who have lost their lives in that struggle have 
been political party activists.

Then there is the crucial part being played by 
foreign powers such as the US.  They supported 
Musharraf, almost unconditionally until this 
year, but have remained deeply involved in the 
process of a peaceful regime change - something 
they could not have done if credible 
interlocutors had been unavailable on the 
political side. The shift was precipitated by 
growing unease with the dual game that the regime 
had played in the war against the Taliban and Al 
Qaida. The US and Britain, and lately Saudi 
Arabia are openly involved in negotiations 
between various sides, ostensibly to ensure that 
regime change remains peaceful, and presumably to 
advance their own political interests in the 
country. 

A threesome Now

For over eight years general Musharraf ruled 
Pakistan alone. He did so by virtue of being army 
chief and president, and through closely and 
directly line-managing his prime ministers. He 
went through three of them, kept them at his 
beck-and- call, and exercised authority over them 
well beyond anything sanctioned even in the 
emasculated version of parliamentary democracy 
that his own self-serving con- stitutional 
amendments prescribed. 

Musharraf must revert to the much- reviled 
Pakistani "troika" system of governance that 
prevailed between 1988 and 1997, in which power 
was unstably shared between president, prime 
minister and army chief. Two slots in the 
"troika" are already filled, and the third, that 
of the prime minister, will be occupied once 
elections are held. Even if he gets his way in 
picking a friendly and amenable prime minister, 
that person will enjoy far greater powers than 
the three prime ministers who served Musharraf in 
the previous parliament.

That would be the most favourable outcome that 
Musharraf can look forward to now, and it is the 
one that he is doing every thing in his power to 
ensure. The pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League 
(Quaid-e-Azam), also known as PML-Q, and allied 
regional parties such as the Karachi-based 
Muttahida Quami Move- ment (MQM), are the ones 
that must win the elections called for January 8 
if Musharraf is to retain his slot in the 
"troika". The two main opposition group- ings, 
led, respectively, by Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan 
People's Party (PPP) and Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan 
Muslim League (Nawaz), the PML-N, have already 
indicated that they would not like to keep 
Musharraf as president if they came to office. 
Musharraf today needs the support of civilian 
politicians like he never did before, which means 
that even his former toadies are in a position to 
extract their pound of flesh. 

How to fight fraud

In the meanwhile, the hot political debate is 
about how to approach the forthcoming elections. 
The opposition has demanded an end to the 
emergency and the reversal of draconian measures 
taken under it as preconditions for taking part 
in the elections. Some of these demands will be 
conceded, but one conspicuous action that will 
not be reversed is the en masse dismissal of 
judges. Musharraf believes that restoring the 
chief justice and his close associates will be 
tantamount to political suicide, and he is 
probably right. The judges have become cause 
celebre, and there is an argument that elections 
should be boy-cotted unless the judges are 
restored.  There are indications that the 
government wants to offer a deal through which 
all of the deposed judges, save a handful of 
sen-ior ones including the chief justice, will be 
restored. This is not likely to be accepted at 
the moment by the deposed judges or their lawyer 
supporters.

The post-emergency Musharraf is desperate for 
legitimacy, and sees elections as the way for 
achieving it. Some of his oppo- nents such as the 
lawyers, and smaller parties like the 
Jamaat-e-Islami and Im- ran Khan's 
Tehreek-e-Insaaf believe that an opposition 
boycott of elections will ensure that Musharraf 
is further delegitimised. Nawaz Sharif's PML-N 
has made the judges issue its one-point agenda, 
but maintains ambivalence about an electoral 
boycott while continuing with its cam- paign 
preparations. The PPP and other parties such as 
the Pashtun-nationalist Awami National Party 
(ANP) and the clericist Jamiat-e-Ulema-Islam of 
Maualna Fazlur Rehman (JUI-F) believe that it 
would be wrong to leave the field open for the 
pro-Musharraf parties. A boycott, they believe, 
will play into Musharraf's hands, as people will 
turn out to vote due to local factors, and 
Musharraf will get a parliament full of his own 
supporters. 

Despite the rhetoric, the key issue facing the 
political parties is not the restoration of 
judges, but the prospect of massive electoral 
fraud. The government's actions indicate that it 
is preparing to fix the elections. Caretaker 
administrations are stacked with PML-Q and its 
allies, and the Election Commission is widely 
believed to be partisan or toothless. The 
question for the main opposition parties is 
whether participation or boycott will create a 
stronger momentum for an anti-government movement 
against electoral fraud. They veer towards 
participation because they believe that 
mobilisation for the election campaign will give 
them a headstart for possible agitation in case 
elections are massively rigged. Then there is 
also the possibility that vigourous electoral 
partici- pation might make rigging more 
difficult.  A boycott, they argue, will obviate 
the need for rigging and will let Musharraf and 
his supporters off the hook.

Back to the 'troika'

The "troika" system was first put together in 
1988 as a precondition for the transfer of power 
to Benazir Bhutto when she won the election held 
following the end of  Zia-ul-Haq's military 
regime. The PPP was allowed to take office after 
agreeing to the oversight of the president who 
was to protect the corporate interests of the 
military and ensure continuity of key strategic 
policies. It was a deal underwritten by the US, 
which sought policy continuity with respect to 
Afghanistan and the cold war. In truth, the 
"troika" was not a three-way sharing of power, 
but simply a check placed upon the elected 
civilian government by the military. The 
president was the constitutional lever through 
which the military acted. 

The "troika" arrangement broke down with 
clockwork regularity, and almost always at the 
expense of the prime minister. The courts waved 
through Benazir Bhutto's two dismissals in 1990 
and 1996 respectively. The Supreme Court did come 
to Nawaz Sharif's rescue when his first 
government was dismissed in 1993. He was 
nevertheless forced to leave office because the 
army chief stepped in to resolve the crisis 
between him and the then president, getting both 
of them to resign. In his second tenure Sharif 
had a large enough majority to restore de jure 
parliamentary sovereignty over the president, 
thus ending the "troika". According to the then 
US ambassador, however, an informal US- brokered 
power-sharing deal was in place between Sharif 
and Musharraf a month before he made a botched 
attempt to dismiss the army chief, triggering the 
coup. 

Limited options

When the dust settles on the present regime 
change, there is little to indicate that any of 
the options before Musharraf, the judges and the 
lawyers, and the opposition parties including the 
boycotters, will leave us in a place other than 
the dreaded "troika". If Musharraf gets his way 
with the new parliament he would have to work 
with the military chief Kayani and the new prime 
minister. If the opposition parties win the 
elections they may get a new president, but they 
will have to work within the "troika" at least 
until Musharraf's constitutional amendments can 
be over- turned. Finally, in any agitation 
against Musharraf, or against electoral fraud, it 
is the military that will be looked upon as the 
implied arbiter. Short of directly con- fronting 
the military - something that no democratic 
firebrand has advocated as yet - all political 
outcomes of an agitation will require the 
cooperation of the generals. 

The 1988-97 interregnum showed that the "troika" 
is not a stable arrangement. It was simply the 
price that needed to be paid to get a breather 
from direct military rule. The previous round 
also demonstrated that judicial and legislative 
means are not enough to ensure constitutional 
government. Politics are important, and there is 
no alternative for the political parties other 
than to strengthen their organisations, expand 
their outreach, and cooperate more actively with 
one another.  Moreover, they can use the current 
favour- able international opinion of Pakistan's 
democratic politics to end the military's 
monopoly in shaping relations with the rest of 
the world.

Haris Gazdar (gasht at yahoo.com) is a political 
economist who works with the Karachi-based 
Collective for Social Science Research.

o o o

(ii)

Human Rights Watch Press Release

Pakistan: End Persecution of Lawyers and Judges
FREE AND FAIR ELECTIONS IMPOSSIBLE WITH DISMANTLED JUDICIARY

(New York, December 19, 2007) - Scores of 
lawyers, judges and other government critics 
remain detained in Pakistan despite the lifting 
of the state of emergency on December 15, Human 
Rights Watch said today in a new report. 
President Pervez Musharraf's dismantling of an 
independent judiciary and the crackdown on the 
vocal lawyers' movement mean free and fair 
elections, scheduled for January 8, 2008, will be 
impossible.

The 84-page report, "Destroying Legality: 
Pakistan's Crackdown on Lawyers and Judges," 
presents eyewitness accounts of police violence, 
arbitrary arrests, and mistreatment of detained 
lawyers across Pakistan since November 3, 2007. 
The report details police beatings of lawyers 
peacefully protesting government policies from 
within the grounds of Pakistan's high courts. It 
is the most detailed account to date of the 
November crackdown, showing how Musharraf used 
the emergency as an excuse to disempower the 
judiciary, the legal profession and civil society 
in the name of fighting terrorism and Islamic 
extremists. 

"The lawyers' movement had done more in eight 
months to challenge the pillars of military rule 
than the political opposition had done in eight 
years," said Ali Dayan Hasan, South Asia 
researcher at Human Rights Watch. "Musharraf's 
crackdown on legal institutions is a huge setback 
for human rights and the rule of law in 
Pakistan." 

Since March 9, 2007, the movement of lawyers and 
the growing independence of the nation's 
judiciary had made genuine progress in putting 
Pakistan back on the path to democracy, Human 
Rights Watch said. 

Under the revised constitution, unilaterally 
imposed by Musharraf, the government has new 
powers to disbar lawyers involved in peaceful 
anti-government activities, and the military can 
now try civilians for a wide range of offenses 
previously under the purview of the country's 
judiciary, including charges as vague as causing 
"public mischief." 

Deposed Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar 
Mohammad Chaudhry remains under strict house 
arrest along with his family and most of the 
other justices on the Supreme Court who refused 
to accept the suspension of the constitution on 
November 3. Leaders of the lawyers' movement, 
including Supreme Court Bar Association President 
Aitzaz Ahsan, retired Justice Tariq Mehmood, and 
former Bar Council Vice Chairman Ali Ahmed Kurd, 
also remain under house arrest. 

Restrictions on the media remain in force and the 
government has repeatedly warned it will not 
tolerate the "politics of agitation." 

Human Rights Watch noted that in such a 
repressive political environment, elections 
scheduled for January 8, 2008, cannot to be free 
or fair. 

Given the well-documented history of 
election-rigging by the Pakistani military, the 
emergence of an independent judiciary provided 
the best hope for a free and fair election. A 
military-backed ruler who dispensed with the 
constitution in order to get rid of such a 
judiciary is unlikely to preside over an 
electoral exercise that could bring his political 
opponents to power. 

"A genuine election campaign is impossible when 
the media remains muzzled, leaders of civil 
society remain under arrest, and the legitimate 
judiciary of the country has been deposed and 
replaced by hand-picked supporters of the 
government," said Hasan. 

Human Rights Watch faulted the United States and 
the United Kingdom, which consider Musharraf an 
indispensable ally in the "war on terror," for 
failing to back formulaic statements of concern 
with concrete measures such as sanctions. Human 
Rights Watch urged both countries to press for 
the immediate release of all persons arbitrarily 
detained, the restoration of the judiciary, and a 
return to genuine constitutional rule. 

"Foreign policy that tries to appease the 
Pakistani military at the expense of democracy is 
as dangerous as it is flawed," said Hasan. "If 
the United States and the United Kingdom are 
genuinely interested in Pakistan's political 
future and stability, they should focus on 
restoring the judiciary and lawyers to their 
status prior to November 3." 

--
Destroying Legality
Pakistan's Crackdown on Lawyers and Judges
	This 84-page report presents eyewitness 
accounts of police violence, arbitrary arrests, 
and mistreatment of detained lawyers across 
Pakistan since November 3, 2007. The report 
details police beatings of lawyers peacefully 
protesting government policies from within the 
grounds of Pakistan's high courts. It is the most 
detailed account to date of the November 
crackdown, showing how Musharraf used the 
emergency as an excuse to disempower the 
judiciary, the legal profession and civil society 
in the name of fighting terrorism and Islamic 
extremists.

HRW Index No.: C1919
December 19, 2007    Report
Download PDF, 1770 KB, 86 pgs
http://hrw.org/reports/2007/pakistan1207/


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[2]

Dawn
December 20, 2007  

TERROR BY CLERICAL ERROR

by Jawed Naqvi

INDIA's top missile scientist unveiled plans last 
week to build a ballistic missile defence by 2010 
that should effectively tackle the threat from 
Pakistan's nuclear arsenal. Dr V.K. Saraswat was 
also quoted as saying that the proximity of 
Pakistan's assets would give India just three to 
four minutes to respond to a perceived attack.

The missile defence system now on the anvil would 
protect 'high-value' assets and major cities like 
Delhi and Mumbai.

Informed people would consider the plan 
delusional, and therefore dangerous. Russia and 
the United States, with far greater lead-time to 
respond to each other's nuclear threat and with a 
highly refined command and control mechanism, 
still do not have a completely trustworthy system 
in place.

The official doomsday scenario written by the US 
government during the Cold War - called The 
Emergency Plan Book - would make countries like 
India and Pakistan look not just ill-prepared to 
consider the use of nuclear weapons but also 
ill-advised to flaunt them. For all its 
sophistication and years of preparedness for 
nuclear attack on its territory, the United 
States looked pretty vulnerable as recently as 
Sept 11, 2001. How the administration went round 
like a headless chicken in the aftermath is 
nicely recorded in The Doomsday Scenario, a 2002 
book based mostly on the Emergency Plan, which 
author L. Douglas Keeney wangled from a library 
during a brief period when it was declassified.

During the Cold War, more than $45bn was spent to 
protect both senior US government officials and 
the general public in the event of a nuclear 
attack. This funding supported everything from 
the production and distribution of films and 
pamphlets instructing citizens how to mitigate 
the effects of a nuclear blast and fallout to the 
secret construction of massive underground 
facilities to allow the government to continue to 
operate during and after a nuclear war.

The extensive and extremely expensive plans to 
build massive blast and fallout shelters for the 
populace were systematically rejected by US 
presidents on the grounds that they did not want 
to create a national panic. The Congress balked 
at the price tag and the military leaders argued 
that it was more sensible and cost-effective to 
invest in offensive weapons to deter war and, if 
need be, wage war. One fallout of the Sept 11 
attacks was that for the first time the United 
States activated its Continuity of Government 
plans (COG), some of which have been lampooned in 
Michael Moore's film Fahrenheit 9/11.

But the real emergency envisioned in The Doomsday 
Scenario, cited by Keeney, pertained to "kiloton 
and megaton-sized bombs" that would "pummel our 
industrial, transportation, communication, and 
financial centres in a sustained downpouring of 
warheads". The national landscape, according to 
the American response plans, "would be blurred 
with smoke and haze and littered with death and 
destruction and contamination, with only the most 
rudimentary fragments of community and government 
surviving".

Said the Emergency Plans Book, "12,500,000 are 
suffering from blast or thermal injuries and have 
an immediate and evident need for treatment." The 
surviving labour force is "engaged in large 
numbers in disposing of the dead".

America's shipping ports would be clogged with 
sunken ships; it would be a nation of people 
scrounging for food, "with crematoriums working 
around the clock".

Ironically the current discourse on nuclear 
weapons in Islamabad and Washington DC and Dr 
Saraswat's plans to defend India's high-value 
assets, whatever that means in the context of 
millions dead, are so obviously unreal. America's 
headache stems from the fear of Muslim extremists 
taking control of the nuclear trigger. That the 
bomb looks any more secure with the followers of 
other faiths is one of the big fallacies of our 
times.

We did feel (or know) during the 2002 
India-Pakistan stand-off that a more real nuclear 
threat could come from any 'mad major' lurking 
within the chain of command of either country. 
And why blame the mad major when the political 
leadership of that period on both sides looked 
quite prepared to do the job of, let's say, 
Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper?Do we remember 
the delusional commander of a US air force base 
in Dr Strangelove who initiated an attack plan to 
strike the Soviet Union with nuclear weapons? He 
had set out to thwart what he believed was a 
Communist conspiracy to "sap and impurify" the 
"precious bodily fluids" of the American people 
with fluoridated water which he believed had 
caused his impotence. Change the bodily fluids 
with some other catchphrase that sells with our 
people and we are in the same league with Stanley 
Kubrick's villainous brigadier.

The advent of Al Qaeda as the all-pervasive ogre 
out to destroy the world tends to lull us into 
the false belief that the messianic zeal of the 
president of the United States is any less 
threatening. The readiness to use tactical 
nuclear weapons against Iran or any other country 
(don't forget the Seventh Fleet flexing its 
muscles in the Bay of Bengal not too long ago) is 
at par with the clarion call for "aar paar ki 
larai" (fight unto finish) that emanated from the 
Indian leadership.

Pakistan's nuclear doctrine too comes ironically 
from a highly disciplined and professional army, 
not gun-toting mullahs. It signals the readiness 
to be the first one to stage a nuclear strike. 
Add to this conundrum the bristling tensions 
between the United States and Europe on the one 
side confronted by an increasingly insecure but 
militarily powerful Russia, and we have a serious 
problem on our hands.

In our self-absorption with Narendra Modi in 
India and the hurly-burly of January elections in 
Pakistan, there has been a tendency to miss out 
on the subversive action underway in our 
vicinities that is of equal if not more serious 
consequence to the region. Last month Russia's 
parliament voted to suspend compliance with a key 
Cold War treaty limiting conventional forces in 
Europe as Moscow signalled it was weighing new 
force deployments on its western flank. Last week 
Russia's defence officials warned that any 
Iran-bound missile from Europe travelling over 
Russian air space could be read as enemy action 
by its trigger-ready retaliatory system.

Stanley Kubrick's film was loosely based on Peter 
George's Cold War thriller novel Red Alert, also 
known as Two Hours to Doom. Dr Strangelove 
satirises the Cold War and the doctrine of mutual 
assured destruction. For India and Pakistan, with 
just three to four minutes to take evasive 
action, if Dr Saraswat's count is right, there 
won't be any time for Brigadier General Ripper to 
deliver all his humorous lines before doom 
strikes us suddenly. Whether the threat comes 
from a Muslim cleric or a clerical error of a 
secular nature, it would still spell disaster for 
millions.

The writer is Dawn's correspondent in New Delhi.

______


[3]

Kashmir Times
December 22, 2007

BJP ON A DOWNSWING IN GUJARAT
Is Modi losing ground?

by Praful Bidwai

If there's one thing on which most of Gujarat's 
politicians, social scientists, civil society 
activists, bureaucrats, and public-spirited 
citizens agreed a month ago, it was the dead 
certainty of the Bharatiya Janata Party's victory 
in the Assembly election. The BJP would 
inevitably romp to power-for the fourth time. Its 
entrenched position in Gujarati society, 
Hindutva's appeal, and Chief Minister Narendra 
Modi's strong leadership would ensure this. If 
there was any question-mark at all, it was over 
the margin of the win, not the win itself.

The tide seems to have turned. Today, the very 
same people will tell you, the BJP could lose the 
election. What seemed unthinkable only weeks ago 
could actually happen. The Congress ran a 
remarkably timid campaign, skirted all issues 
pertaining to the terrible communal violence of 
2002, always looked uneasy while countering the 
BJP's "Gujarat Gaurav" campaign, and didn't 
gather the nerve to put up more than half-a-dozen 
Muslim candidates in a state where 20 Muslim MLAs 
used to get elected. But it might yet get 
catapulted into power.
All exit polls after the first phase of voting in 
87 constituencies (of Gujarat's total of 182) 
point to a vote-swing away from the BJP. An NDTV 
poll in 86 constituencies forecasts a loss of 13 
seats for the BJP, placing it behind the Congress 
by 3 seats. Plausibly, the trend might get 
strengthened in the second phase.

A BJP defeat in Gujarat will deliver the party a 
seismic political and organisational shock and 
mark a historic setback for the entire Sangh 
Parivar. Mr LK Advani's laughable anointment as 
the party's Prime Ministerial candidate won't 
mitigate, but aggravate, the shock. In terms of 
power, the setback will of course be much lesser 
than the BJP's rout in the 2004 Lok Sabha 
elections.

But ideologically, the setback will be far more 
severe. It will have proved that divisive 
politics based on religious hatred, which rejects 
pluralism and secularism, is not sustainable even 
in the most favourable of conditions. Gujarat, 
after all, was "Hindutva's laboratory".

On December 23, we'll get to know how the BJP has 
fared. But it's worth noting that estimates by 
state civil servants and intelligence agencies of 
its likely tally vary from 70 to 80, way, way 
below its 2002 score of 127 seats. Even the state 
BJP's internal assessment is reportedly that it's 
sure to win only 63 seats. Optimistically, it 
could at best win another 15. But even then, it 
would still fall short of a majority.
Assuming that the estimates conform broadly to 
reality, how and why has this change come about? 
Even if the BJP does not get routed in the 
election, what can explain the downturn in its 
prospects and its likely reduced share of the 
vote?

Four broad factors seem to have been at work: 
recent shifts in the BJP's social support-base; 
reassertion of what may be called normal or 
mundane politics vis-Š-vis ideology- or 
personality-driven politics; major changes in 
intra-Sangh Parivar relations; and Mr Modi's 
intensely personalised and confrontationist 
election campaign.
To start with, the long expansion of the BJP's 
social base in Gujarat seems to have come to an 
end. During the period stretching from the 
anti-Babri mosque movement to the massacre and 
beyond in 2002, the BJP managed to split the 
Congress party's traditional base among Gujarat's 
"core minorities", comprised of Adivasis, Dalits 
and Muslims, and among subaltern but numerous 
layers like the Kolis, who form about one-fifth 
of the state's population.

Thanks to the appeal of militant Hindutva, the 
BJP attracted a significant proportion of votes 
from the first two groups in 2002. Using the 
state machinery, it browbeat and effectively 
disenfranchised Muslims and prevented them from 
voting against it.

However, over the past year or longer, not only 
are these groups returning to the Congress; the 
BJP has suffered a severe erosion of support 
amongst Kolis, and even more important, the 
prosperous and politically powerful Leuva Patels, 
who wield a great deal of clout in Saurashtra and 
Kutch (which elect almost a third of Gujarat's 
MLAs).

These shifts in social base can eliminate the 
small 3 percentage-point vote lead that the BJP 
enjoyed over the Congress in the 2004 
Parliamentary elections, itself down from 10 
points in 2002. Indeed, they can even give the 
Congress the upper hand. This seems to be 
happening in Saurashtra and the southern tribal 
belt, and also in parts of central and northern 
Gujarat.

It's only among urban upper caste-upper class 
Hindus that the BJP enjoys firm, unshakable 
support. And although Gujarat is India's most 
urbanised state, with 40 percent of its 
population living in cities, the upper-crust 
elite is too small to ensure electoral success.

Second, Mr Modi has concentrated all power in his 
own hands and tried to demolish normal, routine 
or mundane politics based on deal-making and 
patronage. He has consistently bypassed the party 
organisation and the Sangh Parivar, and barred 
not just opposition leaders, but even senior BJP 
functionaries, from establishing access to 
himself. He has tried to stamp a distinctly 
authoritarian Moditva imprint upon the state and 
all its programmes.
Mr Modi's calculation was that the combined 
banner of Gujarat's asmita (self-esteem or 
glory), "development" and "Vibrant Gujarat" would 
work magically. But the asmita slogan couldn't 
cover up chasms in Gujarat's society, nor the 
prevailing sleaze. "Development" got reduced to 
mere "GDP-ism" or worship of growth without 
inclusion. And "Vibrant Gujarat" is going exactly 
the way "India Shining" did in 2004-exposing the 
BJP to popular scorn and ridicule for celebrating 
elite-oriented, highly dualistic growth.

Reality is now catching up with Moditva. In the 
absence of a communally charged atmosphere, 
Hindutva has become irrelevant to the public's 
mood and its voting choices. "Normal politics" 
and mundane issues of survival and governance, 
like high electricity bills and a wilting 
Bt-Cotton crop, are chipping away at the 
artificial edifice Mr Modi tried to construct out 
of the tacky slogans of "Gujarat's glory", and 
tall claims about investment and 
industrialisation.

As this Column noted seven weeks ago, Gujarat's 
is a case of unbalanced growth and warped 
development. It's falling behind other large 
states in gender, health and environment indices. 
As many as 74 percent of Gujarat's women and 47 
percent of its children are anaemic. Gujarat's 
infant mortality and malnutrition rates remain 
stubbornly high, especially in the rural areas.

Gujarat's indices of patriarchy are frightening. 
The sex-ratio is an abysmal 487:1000 in the 0-4 
age-group and 571 in the 5-9 group (national 
averages, 515 and 632). Gujarat's health indices 
have been declining and are barely higher than 
Orissa's. In social sector spending (as a 
proportion of public expenditure), Gujarat ranks 
Number 19 among India's 21 major states.

Mr Modi's claims about abundant electricity 
supply are belied by facts. The Mumbai-based 
Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy says the 
Gujarat's power deficit averaged 10.7 percent and 
peaked at 23.7 percent in the past year. Given 
the rising weight of these issues, the Congress 
has succeeded in putting Mr Modi on the mat on 
the "development" agenda.

A third adverse factor for Mr Modi is serious 
infighting in the Gujarat BJP, where more than 40 
"rebels" are contesting against the official 
candidates or engineering their defeat. Worse, 
the RSS, Vishwa Hindu Parishad, Bharatiya Kisan 
Sangh and other Sangh front organisations have 
decided not to help the BJP.

Absence of door-to-door campaigning by RSS 
pracharaks will deliver a major blow to the BJP, 
especially in the cities. No less significant 
will be the absence of canvassing by the Vanavasi 
Kalyan Ashram in the tribal areas. The synergy 
these groups generated together was crucial to 
the BJP' victory in past elections. Now some of 
them will work against it-a double whammy, which 
could cause great damage.

Finally, Mr Modi has run a sectarian, foul and 
demagogic campaign, which used every conceivable 
low-level tactic. But he has still failed to 
attract large audiences. No other BJP leader has 
got a worthwhile public response either. By 
contrast, top Congress leaders' rallies were 
well-attended. Although the Congress's election 
campaign was weak on secularism and social 
justice, it managed to corner Mr Modi on 
governance and development issues.

In response, a desperate Mr Modi played the 
anti-Muslim card. He shamelessly justified the 
cold-blooded murder of Sohrabuddin Shaikh in a 
"fake encounter", and maligned Muslims. This 
blatantly violated the Election Commission's Code 
of Conduct, which prohibits hate speech and 
vilification of any religious group. It was an 
implicit and shocking admission of the state's 
complicity in the murder. Ironically, this will 
only encourage Muslims to go out and vote.

The Election Commission rightly took note of this 
grave electoral malpractice. Sadly, to appear 
"even-handed", it also issued notice to Ms Sonia 
Gandhi for her "merchants of death" speech. But 
the two speeches aren't even remotely comparable. 
The EC must correct this error of judgment and 
severely punish Mr Modi. But what Mr Modi most 
richly deserves is political punishment. 
Gujarat's electorate should send him packing.

o o o

IS GUJARAT THE NEW INDIA?

by Pamela Philipose
http://tinyurl.com/38b5jv

______



[4]

New Age
December 22, 2007

VPA: THE PROFILE OF A BLACK LAW

The Vested and Non-Resident Property 
(Administration) Act, 1974 is an iniquitous law. 
Now is the time to get rid of this black law. We 
hope that the non-party caretaker government led 
by Dr Fakhruddin Ahmed will take the necessary 
steps, writes M Abdus Salam


As the citizens of an independent and sovereign 
state, we have the authority to make our own 
laws. We also have the authority to rescind any 
law which we think is against our interests. 
Unfortunately we have been unable to invalidate 
such a law which is called the Vested and 
Non-Resident Property (Administration) Act, 1974. 
Because of this black law, many of us have lost 
their lawfully earned properties.

    On 6 September 1965, Pakistan proclaimed a 
state of emergency under the Defence of Pakistan 
Ordinance at the outbreak of war with India. In 
exercise of the powers conferred by the 
ordinance, the central government of Pakistan 
promulgated on the same day the Defence of 
Pakistan Rules. Under the rules, the governor of 
East Pakistan passed an Order on 3 December 1965 
regarding enemy property by which the property of 
the minorities was declared 'Enemy Property'.

    After independence from Pakistan, the 
president of Bangladesh, in Order No. 29 of 1972, 
changed the nomenclature of the law from the 
Enemy Properties Act (EPA) to the Vested Property 
Act (VPA). Clause 2 of the Order further states: 
'Nothing contained in this Order shall be called 
in[to] question in any court.' The Order of the 
president was not subsequently subject to 
judicial review.

    A circular of 23 May 1977 on the Ministry of 
Lands of the Government of Bangladesh empowered 
the tehsildars to find out the lands suitable for 
enlisting as 'vested' property. Since there was a 
provision for rewarding the successful tehsildars 
they felt encouraged to bring many undisputed 
properties of the Hindus under this list. Hindu 
peasants were thus left with no alternative but 
to migrate, as they could not expect any remedy 
from the additional deputy commissioner, the 
sub-divisional officer, or the circle officer 
who, like the tehsildar, were similarly entrusted 
with the responsibility and similarly promised 
reward. Many Hindus sold their lands to Muslims 
after 1970 as usual. In many cases the tehsildars 
enlisted any land as vested property only if it 
was owned by a Hindu during the period of 
1965-1969 even if that owner never left East 
Pakistan or Bangladesh and even if that land was 
owned by a Muslim at the time of enlistment. Thus 
a large number of Muslims have lost their legally 
purchased land and could not find any legal way 
to get it back.

    The Sayem government cancelled the provision 
for selling vested properties by the 
sub-divisional committee. The government of 
President Ershad passed an order for selling the 
vested properties (land and buildings), 'the 
dilapidated and kutcha houses' not required by 
the government, to the existing lessees and if 
the lessees were unwilling or unable to purchase, 
through public auction. Subsequently, President 
Ershad passed an order for selling all vested 
properties by December 1983 but on an appeal made 
to him by a conference of the representatives of 
the Hindu community on 31 July 1984, General 
Ershad scrapped the order and also the enlisting 
of new vested properties. He further offered that 
vested properties would be governed according to 
the Hindu law of inheritance. The policy of the 
government of Khaleda Zia was to sell vested 
properties to those occupants who could pay 10 
per cent higher than the prevailing market price 
and not sell any vested property below the market 
price. Moreover, the government of Khaleda Zia 
passed an order for the release of vested 
property in land up to eight bighas outside the 
'pourasabha'

    Abul Barkat and Shafiquzzaman, of Bangladesher 
Grameen Samaje Arpito Sampattite Ainer Probhab: 
Ekti Anusandhan, in their report to the National 
Seminar of Association for Land Reform And 
Development, 13 April 1996, pp-7, said: 'On the 
devastating effects of the vested property Act on 
the material and psychological conditions of the 
Hindus it was calculated that from 1964 each day 
on an average 538 Hindus have 'vanished'. The 
basis of calculation was the uniformity of the 
death rate for all religious communities in 
Bangladesh, the birth rate among the Hindus which 
has been 13 per cent less than that of the 
Muslims, and the difference between the migration 
figures coupled with total Hindu population and 
the figures of the census. Thus, had there been 
no migration, the Hindu population in Bangladesh 
would have been 16,500,000 instead of the census 
figure of 11,200,000. The same report calculated 
that the vanishing rate has not been uniform over 
periods; in 1964-71 it averaged 703 per day, 
between 1971 and 1981 it was 537, and in 1981-91 
the figure stood at 439. The report further said: 
'The sample survey, on the basis of which the 
report was prepared, showed that out of the 161 
dispossessed, 13 per cent were near landless, 
whereas 40 per cent became landless through 
dispossession, and 15 per cent of the surveyed 
persons were rich before dispossession but the 
figure came down to 6 per cent later.
    Prof. Abul Barkat of Dhaka University opined 
in an article that 50 lakh people of the Hindu 
community have, meanwhile, lost 20 lakh acres of 
land under Enemy/Vested Property tussle. The 
present day value of those property would be one 
lakh ninety thousand crore Taka (Prothom Alo, 4 
November 04).
    According to a report of the Land Ministry of 
October, 2004, which was submitted to a 
parliamentary standing committee: '445,726 acres 
of vested property out of 643,140 acres ended up 
in encroachment across the countryŠGrabbers 
gabbled up more than two-thirds of vested 
property as the government lost control over the 
lands as the custodian and its long-line 
dithering blocked anti-encroachment efforts" (The 
Daily Star, 15 October, 2004). It may be recalled 
that 'Transfer of Property Act' is ignored in 
case of the Hindus by keeping the Enemy Property 
Act as The Vested Property Act. So the 
property-based crisis deepened and disturbed 
society at the root.
    Justice Debesh Bhattacharjya (1914-2004) was 
the founder president of Bangladesh Enemy 
Property Act Repeal Committee and some of his 
verdicts have been precedent-setting judgments.

    Earlier Justice Abdur Rahman Choudhury and 
Justice A.T. M.Afzal in their judgement (31 DLR, 
p 343) opined: 'Such high handedness, if 
overlooked and allowed to go unchecked, might 
undermine confidence of the citizens in the 
administration and bring a slur on the fair name 
of the Government.' Former Chief Justice Syed 
Kamal Uddin Hossain also opined: 'The laws on 
abandoned property, non-resident's property and 
the like although enacted as temporary laws to 
meet peculiar and emergency situations had been 
continuing for indefinite time in one form or 
another causing untold sufferings to honest 
citizens and burdening the courts with 
unnecessary cases.'
    Here are two judgments of the High Court:

    (1) Custodian of enemy property treating a 
property as being a vested property without 
lawful basis for treating it as vested property 
and leasing out the same to another is 
unauthorised and illegal. [31 D L R (HR) 359].
    (2) It appears from order sheet of Vested 
Property Miscellaneous Case that even before the 
property in question was declared as vested 
property, the third party applied for lease and 
succeeded in obtaining a favourable report from 
local tahsilder. Thereafter it was apparent from 
the records that the Tahsilder and the interested 
party acted in collusion with each other in 
securing the impugned order and throwing the real 
owner out of their possession. It is our 
considered opinion; it would be just to award 
exemplary cost against the Tahsilder and Sona 
Meah, who are responsible for harassing a 
helpless widow and her son and depriving them of 
their lawful right to enjoy their own 
property.[31 D L R (HR) 343].

    Here is an another Judgment of the Appellate 
Division (civil) dated 14th August 2004 on Saju 
Hossain Vs Bangladesh (58DLR (AD)(2006) Enemy 
Property (continuance of Emergency Provisions) 
Ordinance (1of1969) Section 2: ' Since the law of 
enemy property itself died with the repeal 
Ordinance No. 1 of 1969 on 23 March 1974 no 
further vested property case can be started 
thereafter on the basis of the law which is 
already dead.'
    It is needless to say that Vested Property Act 
is a law against the spirit of the constitution 
of Bangladesh. The Act violates the fundamental 
rights of the people guaranteed in the 
constitution:
    Article-27: 'All citizens are equal before the 
law and are entitled to equal protection of law';
    Article-28(1): 'The State shall not 
discriminate against any citizen on grounds only 
of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of 
birth'; Article-29(1): 'There shall be equality 
of opportunity for all citizens in respect of 
employment or office in the service of the 
Republic' and
    Article 29(2): 'No citizen shall, on grounds 
only of religion, race, caste, sex or place of 
birth, be ineligible for, or discriminated 
against in respect of, any employment or office 
in the service of the Republic".
    Article 11 in Part-II of the constitution 
(Fundamental Principles of State Policy) says: 
'The Republic shall be democracy in which 
fundamental human rights and freedoms and respect 
for dignity and worth of the human person shall 
be guaranteed*** [, and in which effective 
participation by the people through their elected 
representatives in administration at all levels 
shall be ensured].'
   
    A man-made problem

    'This is a man-made problem contrary to the 
spirit of humanity. We have to get rid of this 
uncivilised state of affairs to establish a 
civilised society. Otherwise, we have to face a 
bigger historic catastrophe,' Professor Abdul 
Barkat, who teaches economics, insists in his 
research paper, 'Deprivation of affected million 
families: Living with Vested Property in 
Bangladesh'. Some 12 lakh or 44 per cent of the 
27 lakh Hindu households in the country were 
affected by the Enemy Property Act 1965 and its 
post-independence version, the Vested Property 
Act 1974.
    Barkat points out that 53 per cent of the 
family displacement and 74 per cent of the land 
grabbing occurred before the country's 
independence in 1971 after the then Pakistan 
government, following the India-Pakistan War in 
1965, introduced the Enemy Property (Custody and 
Registration) Order II, which was widely 
criticised as a tool for appropriating the lands 
of the minority population.

    The Sheikh Hasina-led Awami League government 
annulled this Act in 2001. It wanted to return 
the 'vested' property to their original Hindu 
owners. The move was criticised as a 'political 
tokenism' aimed to appease minority voters prior 
to the general elections.

    But in reality, as Professor Barkat study 
shows, the Hasina largesse did not benefit the 
members of the Hindu minority community who owned 
land at the time of partition. In fact, it ended 
up displacing most of them from their ancestral 
land.

    Political elements, locally influential people 
in collaboration with the land administration, 
trickery by land officials and employees 
themselves, use of force and crookedness, fake 
documentation, contracted farmers and death or 
exile of original owners have contributed to the 
phenomenon, according to Professor Barkat's study 
covering 6 districts across the country. The 
professor doesn't think the land grab was a 
problem of 'Hindu versus Muslim' polarisation. 
'Criminals do not bother whether a piece of land 
is owned by a Hindu, a Muslim or a Santal and 
they simply loot property. The problem highlights 
the "inability" and "weakness" of the majority 
people to raise protests though they are 
non-communal" (The NewAge, the daily Janakantha, 
the daily Manabzamin, 27 May.07).

    The Vested and Non-Resident Property 
(Administration) Act, 1974 is an iniquitous law. 
Now is the time to get rid of this black law. We 
hope that the non-party caretaker government led 
by Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed will take the necessary 
steps.

    M Abdus Salam can be reached at: karnafuli at myway.com

______


[5]  TASLIMA NAREEN LIVING IN A STATE OF VIRTUAL OF HOUSE ARREST:
Govt's of India and West Bengal must ensure her 
return to Calcutta (see 5 news reports pasted 
below)

(i)

The Times of India
21 Dec 2007

TASLIMA FRETS IN 'HOUSE ARREST'
[0109 hrs IST, Times News Network & Agencies]

KOLKATA: The Centre has told controversial 
Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen that she will 
have to stay put where she is and would not be 
allowed to return to Kolkata under any 
circumstances.

Nasreen has been living in an undisclosed 
location in the National Capital Region under 
heavy security since she was hounded out of 
Kolkata a month ago.

The 46-year-old author, who has been living in 
exile after death threats to her in Bangladesh, 
said she was told by a senior MEA official that 
she would also not be allowed to come out in 
public or meet people -- restrictions she 
described as "house arrest". "If I live in India, 
I will not be allowed outside. I will not be 
allowed to meet any friend. I will have to live 
this way in India and it must not be in Kolkata," 
she said, quoting the government decision as 
conveyed by the official. Nasreen said she told 
the official, "I am not a criminal."

The writer, who spent a night in Jaipur and a 
week in Rajasthan House after virtually being 
thrown out of Kolkata, said she has been told she 
would not be able to lead a normal life in Delhi.

"I had told the official I should be allowed to 
lead a normal life at least in Delhi," said 
Nasreen, who recently offered to delete some 
controversial portions from her novel 
'Dwikhandita' to pacify those opposed to her 
writings.

"The officials told me if I stay in India, I will 
have to stay under house arrest," Nasreen told 
TOI , adding, "I don't have any wish to leave 
India." The author said she had hardly any option 
now but to agree to MEA's terms.

o o o

(ii)

TASLIMA'S APPEAL: 'PLEASE LET ME LIVE IN KOLKATA'

Suhasini Haidar / CNN-IBN

TimePublished on Fri, Dec 21, 2007 at 01:20, 
Updated at Fri, Dec 21, 2007 in Nation section


TASLIMA GETS ULTIMATUM: The Centre sent a 
representative to tell Taslima to leave India.

The controversial writer says she did not leave Bengal on her own accord.

New Delhi: Controversial Bangladeshi author, 
Taslima Nasreen has nowhere to go and the Indian 
Government went about in a convoluted way to tell 
her to leave the country.

Taslima was shifted out of Kolkata after outbreak 
of large-scale violence in the city during a 
'shutdown' called by a Muslim outfit - All India 
Minority Forum - for cancelling her visa, which 
was extended by the Government till February 17 
next.

She has angered conservative Muslims by her 
writing and fled her homeland in 1994 after 
radical Muslims demanded her execution. She was 
attacked by activists of Majlis Ittehadul 
Muslimeen at a book release function on August 9 
this year in Hyderabad.

In an exclusive telephone conversation with 
CNN-IBN this is what she had to say.

Taslima Nasreen: The Central Government came to 
me and told me that I will not be able to go back 
to Kolkata now. When I asked the person who came 
to deliver the news when will I be able to go 
back to Kolkata, he said that he did not know.

Then I asked him whether I could live a normal 
life in Delhi if I cannot live in Kolkata and he 
said that I would not be able to lead a normal 
life in Delhi either.

I hope the Government will be able to reconsider 
the issue and I will be able to go back to 
Kolkata. If I can have security in Kolkata, then 
I can live there.

However, if I cannot go back to Kolkata, then I 
want to have a normal life in Delhi. I know that 
the people who live in Kolkata want me to come 
back and live there.

I love Kolkata and I have got support, 
,solidarity and sympathy from the people there. I 
know that nothing would happen if I go back to 
the city and start living there. I have a home 
there and I am missing my home.

I am hoping that the Government will rethink this 
and let me go back to my home and will allow me 
to have a normal life there.

No writer likes to censor his or her work and I 
was forced to delete certain paragraphs of my 
work. I hope that nobody will be angry with me 
and that I will be able to live a peaceful life 
in Kolkata.


TASLIMA SPEAKING TO CNN-IBN VIDEO
http://www.ibnlive.com/videos/54629/taslimas-appeal-please-let-me-live-in-kolkata.html

o o o

(iii)

The Hindu
December 21, 2007

   I F   I   C A N N O T   G O   B A C K   T O  
 K O L K A T A ,   A R R A N G E   F O R   M Y  
 S T A Y   I N   D E L H I :   T A S L I M A 
 
 M a r c u s   D a m 
 
 K o l k a t a :   B a n g l a d e s h i  
 w r i t e r   T a s l i m a   N a s r e e n  
 h a s   n o   i n t e n t i o n   o f  
 l e a v i n g   I n d i a ,   a n d  
 i n s i s t s   o n   l i v i n g   i n  
 K o l k a t a ,   whic h   s h e   c a l l s  
 h e r    h o m e . 
 
 
" I   w a n t   t o   l e a d   a   n o r m a l  
 l i f e   a n d   i f   I   a m   n o t  
 p e r m i t t e d   t o   r e t u r n   t o  
 K o l k a t a ,   l e t   t h e m   [ t h e  
 C e n t r e ]   a r r a n g e   f o r   m e  
 t o   le a d   o n e   i n   D e l h i " 
  
 M s .   N a s r e e n   t o l d   T h e 
 H i n d u   o v e r   t e l e p h o n e   o n  
 T h u r s d a y   e v e n i n g ,   a   d a y  
 a f t e r   s h e   w a s   t o l d   b y   a n  
 E x t e r n a l   A f f a i r s  
 M i n i s t r y   o f f i c i a l   t h a t  
 s h e   w o u l d   n o t   b e   a b l e   t o  
 r e t u r n   t o   K o l k a t a . 
 
" T h e   o f f i c i a l   a l s o   t o l d  
 m e   t h a t   i f   I   d e c i d e   t o  
 l i v e   o n   i n   I n d i a ,   I   w i l l  
 h a v e   t o   l e a d   a   l i f e   i n  
 c a p t i v i t y & .   I   a s k e d   h i m  
 f o r   how   l o n g   w i l l   I   n o t  
 b e   a l l o w e d   t o   g o   b a c k   t o  
 K o l k a t a   o r   w i l l   h a v e   t o  
 c o n t i n u e   t o   l e a d   a   l i f e  
 w i t h   s u c h   r e s t r i c t i o n s ,  
 w i t h o u t   a n y   f r e e d o m   o f  
 m o v e m e n t .   T h e   a n s w e r   w a s  
" I   d o   n o t   k n o w " , 
   s h e  
 s a i d . 
 
 M s .   N a s r e e n   w a s   s p e a k i n g  
 f r o m   a n   u n d i s c l o s e d  
 l o c a t i o n   w h e r e   s h e   h a s  
 b e e n   p u t   u p   s i n c e   s h e  
 l e f t   J a i p u r   a   d a y   aft e r  
 a r r i v i n g   t h e r e   f r o m  
 K o l k a t a   o n   N o v e m b e r   2 2 .  
" I   a m   a p p e a l i n g   t o   t h e  
 G o v e r n m e n t   o f   I n d i a   t o  
 r e c o n s i d e r   t h e   de c i s i o n .  
 W h y   d o   I   h a v e   t o   l e a d   a  
 l i f e   i n   c a p t i v i t y ?   A l l  
 I' m   a s k i n g   f o r   i s   t o   b e  
 a b l e   t o   l e a d   a   n o r m a l  
 l i f e " 
   s h e   s a i d . 
 D e m o n s t r a t i o n s 
 
 T h e   a u t h o r   l e f t   K o l k a t a  
 a   d a y   a f t e r  
 d e m o n s t r a t i o n s   i n   t h e  
 c i t y ,   d e m a n d i n g  
 r e v o c a t i o n   o f   h e r   v i s a ,  
 t u r n e d   v i o l e n t   o n  
 N o v e m b e r   2 1 .   H e r   v i s a   i s  
 d u e   t o   e x p i r e   o n  
 F e b r u a r y   1 7 ,   2 0 0 8 . 
 
" T h e r e   i s   n o   q u e s t i o n   o f  
 c h o o s i n g   t o   l i v e  
 a n y w h e r e   e l s e   i n   t h e  
 c o u n t r y   [ o t h e r   t h a n  
 D e l h i ] ,   i f   I   c a n n o t   g o  
 b a c k   t o   Kolk a t a , 
   s h e  
 s a i d .   I t ' s   a   s l o w   d e a t h  "
 
 O n   W e d n e s d a y ,   s h e   s a i d :  
" I   h a d   m a d e   t h a t   c i t y   m y  
 h o m e ;   i t   w a s   a  
 l o n g - c h e r i s h e d   d r e a m  
 a f t e r   I   w a s   f o r c e d   t o  
 leave   B a n g l a d e s h   1 3   y e a r s  
 a g o .   W h a t   h a v e   I   d o n e  
 t h a t   I   a m   n o t   b e i n g  
 a l l o w e d   t o   r e t u r n   h o m e ?  
 I   h a v e   b e c o m e ,   i t  
 appe a r s ,   a n   e m b a r r a s s m e n t  
 t o   a l l   a n d   I   h a v e  
 n o w h e r e   t o   g o .   I t   i s   a  
 s l o w   d e a t h .   I ' m   d y i n g ."

o o o

(iv)


NDTV.com
CENTRE ISSUES ULTIMATUM TO TASLIMA

Barkha Dutt
Thursday, December 20, 2007 (New Delhi)
This time it is not the Marxists but the UPA 
government that has decided that controversial 
Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen cannot return 
to her adopted city of Kolkata.

Moreover, Nasreen has been told that if she wants 
to live in Delhi, she will not be allowed to take 
part in any public functions.

Speaking exclusively to NDTV's Managing Editor 
Barkha Dutt, Taslima Nasreen said that the 
decision had been communicated officially to her 
by a senior official of the Ministry of External 
Affairs.

Nasreen also claimed that her security was cited 
as the reason for the Centre's decision.

The controversial author, who has already 
withdrawn parts of her writing considered 
offensive to certain Muslim groups, has been in 
hiding for the past month.

Breaking down on the telephone, she claimed that 
she was being made to live under house arrest.

''I appeal to the government to change its mind,'' she said.

Nasreen also asserted that she will leave India 
if she is refrained from returning to Kolkata.

The author has been in a government safe house 
since November and has courted trouble over her 
perceived anti-Islamic writings.

Meanwhile, the CPM, which had sent Taslima off to 
Jaipur last month, washed its hands off her, 
saying that this was between Taslima and the 
government.

''It is between Taslima and the Central 
government and we have nothing to do with this,'' 
said Shyamal Chakravarthy, Leader, CPM.

The Congress party too reiterated its earlier 
stand that no one who is allowed to stay in India 
can hurt the sentiments of the people.


o o o

(v)

The Hindu - December 20, 2007 : 2120 Hrs

I WILL NOT BE ALLOWED TO RETURN TO KOLKATA: TASLIMA

New Delhi (PTI): Hounded out of Kolkata, 
controversial Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen 
on Thursday said she has been told by the Central 
government that she cannot return to the eastern 
metropolis and should live here in seclusion 
under protection.

"Yesterday a senior official of the External 
Affairs Ministry told me that it is the decision 
of the government that I will not be allowed to 
go to Kolkata. He also said I am not allowed to 
live a normal life in Delhi," she told NDTV after 
reports that the government took the decision 
following discussions between the IB Director and 
Home Secretary. "I love India. I love Kolkata. I 
love Bengali culture and I will not leave India," 
she said.

Home Minister Shivraj Patil and Home Secretary 
Madhukar Gupta, however, refused to make any 
comment on the reported government decision.

______


[6]  ANNOUNCEMENTS:

(i)

Tribunal to amplify tsunami survivors' plight
PEOPLES' TRIBUNAL ON TSUNAMI REHABILITATION TO BE HELD IN CHENNAI ON
21ST AND 22ND DECEMBER

CHENNAI: A People's Tribunal on the status of 
tsunami rehabilitation will be organised by 
Voices from the Margins at ICSA centre,  Jeevana 
Jyothi campus, Opposite Egmore Museum, Chennai on 
December 21st and 22nd 10 am to 5.30 pm.

voices from the Margins is a broad platform of 
organisations of marginalized communities and 
support groups. This tribunal is an outcome of a 
recent study by Voices from the Margins that 
exposed several discrepancies and shortcomings in 
tsunami rehabilitation.
The tribunal aims to conduct an impartial and 
independent enquiry on tsunami rehabilitation 
after three years and to compile a policy report 
based on the testimonies by the affected people, 
observations of experts and community leaders. 
This report will be submitted to concerned state 
departments and donor groups that supported 
tsunami rehabilitation.

The People's Tribunal will have a jury consisting 
of eminent persons including Justice Mr. H. 
Suresh (retired judge, Mumbai High Court) , Dr. 
Asghar Ali Engineer (eminent social activist and 
winner of Right to Livelihood award), Dr. 
K.N.Panikkar (historian and former vice 
Chancellor, Sankaracharya University) and 
Dr.Yasodha Shanmugasundaram (former vice 
Chancellor, Mother Teresa Women's University). 
The jury will be assisted by a panel of experts 
on various issues related to tsunami disaster, 
relief and rehabilitation, including 
Dr.R.K.Sivanappan, Mr. Ossie Fernandez, Advocate 
Henri Tiphagne, Dr.  P.V.  Unnikrishnan, Mr. 
Vasudevraju, Prof Ms.V.Kadhambari, Ms. Chaman 
Pincha, Dr. Constantin Varidaiah and Mr. Sumesh 
Mangalassery.

The outcome of the people's tribunal will be 
submitted to the Prime Minister of India, Chief 
Ministers of Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry, and 
donors. It will be used as policy paper to bring 
effective changes in the final phase of tsunami 
rehabilitation.
Several civil society organizations have come 
forward to take part in and support the People's 
Tribunal. Poet Ms Malathy Maithri and 
S.M.Prithiviraj are the conveners of Pondicherry 
and Tamilnadu respectively.

Contact:  Mobile : 9843080963, 9443090175 & 9444224866
E-mail: voicesfromthemargins at gmail.com
Web: http://voicesfromthemargins.com

o o o

(ii)

Oxford University Press and The Second Floor 
(t2f) invite you to an evening of conversation 
with Sara Suleri Goodyear.

Sara Suleri Goodyear, Professor of English at 
Yale University, is the author of Meatless Days, 
The Rhetoric of English in India, and Boys will 
be Boys: A Daughter's Elegy. She was a founding 
editor of The Yale Journal of Criticism, and 
serves on the editorial boards of YJC, The Yale 
Review, and Transition.

Date: Monday, 24th December, 2007
(t2f is closed on Mondays but will open on the 24th specially for this session)

Time: 6:00 pm

Venue: The Second Floor
6-C, Prime Point Building, Phase 7, Khayaban-e-Ittehad, DHA, Karachi
Phone: 538-9273 | 0300-823-0276 | info at t2f.biz
Map: http://www.t2f.biz/location

Seats are limited and will be available on a 
'first come, first served' basis. No reservations.


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

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