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India’s Blood-Stained Democracy

COMMENTARY

BY

KIB

Yes, democracy is one of the biggest HOAX  the West has concocted. They exported it to India. America observed atrocities in Iraq and quickly reacted through UN Resolutions on emergency basis to invade and Free the Iraqis. Yet America remains blinded to the atrocities on Kashmiri  by the Indian Forces. Why? Because India acquired the American practice of Double Standard. What an atrocity in the world’s largest Democracy …………….Human insufficiencies.

India’s Blood-Stained Democracy

London

Rouf Bhat/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Kashmiri women attend a protest organized by the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons in Srinagar in November 2010.

LAST September, a lawmaker in Indian-controlled Kashmir stood up in the state’s legislative assembly andspoke of a valley filled with human carcasses near his home constituency in the mountains: “In our area, there are big gorges, where there are the bones of several hundred people who were eaten by crows.”

I read about this in faraway London and was filled with a chill — I had written of a similar valley, a fictional one, in my novel about the lost boys of Kashmir. The assembly was debating a report on the uncovering of more than 2,000 unmarked and mass graves not far from the Line of Control that divides Indian- and Pakistani-controlled Kashmir. The report, by India’s government-appointed State Human Rights Commission, marked the first official acknowledgment of the presence of mass graves. More significantly, the report found that civilians, potentially the victims of extrajudicial killings, may be buried at some of the sites.

Corpses were brought in by the truckload and buried on an industrial scale. The report cataloged 2,156 bullet-riddled bodies found in mountain graves and called for an inquiry to identify them. Many were men described as “unidentified militants” killed in fighting with soldiers during the armed rebellion against Indian rule during the 1990s, but according to the report, more than 500 were local residents. “There is every probability,” the report concluded, that the graves might “contain the dead bodies of enforced disappearances,” a euphemism for people who have been detained, abducted, taken away by armed forces or the police, often without charge or conviction, and never seen again.

Had the graves been found under Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s compound in Libya or in the rubble of Homs in Syria, there surely would have been an uproar. But when over 2,000 skeletons appear in the conflict-ridden backyard of the world’s largest democracy, no one bats an eye. While the West proselytizes democracy and respect for human rights, sometimes going so far as to cheerlead cavalier military interventions to remove repressive regimes, how can it reconcile its humanitarianism with such brazen disregard for the right to life in Kashmir? Have we come to accept that there are different benchmarks for justice in democracies and autocracies? Are mass graves unearthed in democratic India somehow less offensive?

The Indian government has long been intransigent on the issue of Kashmir — preferring to blame Pakistan for fomenting violence rather than address Kashmiris’ legitimate aspirations for freedom or honor its own promises to resolve the issue according to the wishes of Kashmiri people and investigate the crimes of its army. And almost a year after the human rights commission issued its report on mass graves, the Indian state continues to remain indifferent to evidence of possible crimes against humanity. As a believer in a moral universe, I expected better. But it is an all too familiar pattern.

In March 2000, a day before President Bill Clinton visited India, about 35 Kashmiri Sikhs were massacred by unidentified gunmen in the village of Chattisinghpora, 50 miles from the Kashmiri capital, Srinagar. Soon after, L. K. Advani, then India’s home minister, declared that the terrorists responsible for the killings had been shot dead in an “encounter” with the Indian Army. But the truth turned out to be more sinister. Under pressure from human rights groups and relatives, the bodies of the so-called terrorists were exhumed, and after a couple of botched investigations in which DNA samples were fudged, it was revealed that the dead men were innocent Kashmiris.

It took nearly 12 years — primarily because of the Indian government’s refusal to prosecute those involved in the murders — to reach the Supreme Court of India. On May 1, in awidely criticized decision, the court left it to the army to decide how to proceed, and the army has opted for a court-martial rather than a transparent civilian trial. In the eyes of Pervez Imroz, a Kashmiri lawyer and civil rights activist, the court’s decision “further emboldens the security forces” and strengthens “a process that has appeared to never favor the victims.”

But the victims have not forgotten Kashmir’s estimated 8,000 “disappeared.” Perhaps the most telling reminder is the women who stage a symbolic protest every month in a Srinagar park like the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires, who protested weekly after their children became “desaparecidos” under the Argentine dictatorship of 1976-83. Each woman wears a headband bearing a blank photo — steadfastly refusing to forget in the face of the Indian government’s callous and immoral indifference.

IN the long and bloody narrative of India’s injustices in Kashmir, there come seasons that are etched in the public consciousness as collective epitaphs of mourning and loss. In the summer of 2010, there was a mass uprising against Indian rule in Kashmir — an Arab Spring before the Arab Spring.

It came after police killed a teenager; thousands of people came out into the streets across Kashmir. The Indian paramilitary forces and police yet again reacted with brute force, keeping the region under virtual siege for over two months and killing 120 people, many of them teenagers. The youngest, Sameer Rah, not even 10, was beaten to death by irate paramilitaries. The provincial government promised “speedy justice.” But once again, no one has been charged with these killings, let alone convicted of them.

The Indian government must do what may seem inconceivable to the hawks in the military establishment but is long overdue. Before it can even begin to contemplate negotiating a lasting political solution in consultation with Kashmiris it must act to deliver justice — for the parents of the disappeared; for the young lives brutally extinguished in 2010; for the innocent dead stealthily buried in unmarked graves in the mountains; for the Kashmiris languishing in Indian prisons without any legal recourse; for the exiled Kashmiri HinduPandits who fled in 1990 after some were targeted and killed by militants; and for the mother of Sameer Rah, who still doesn’t know why her young son was bludgeoned to death and his body left by a curb.

A journalist and the author of the novel “The Collaborator.”

Reference

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FUNNY VIDEO ON PANMANO BUMBH:INDIANS CRY WOLF, WHILE QUIETLY ACCELERATING NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROGRAM

Fears as India ditches nuclear watchdog

Former Atomic Energy Regulatory Board chairman  Adinarayan Gopalakrishnan says the new authority was being formed to allow vested interests to control, and profit from, India's nuclear industry.

Former Atomic Energy Regulatory Board chairman Adinarayan Gopalakrishnan says the new authority was being formed to allow vested interests to control, and profit from, India’s nuclear industry. Photo: Glenn Campbell

INDIA, Australia’s newest uranium export destination, will dismantle its nuclear regulator, replacing the current expert panel with a government-controlled body critics say will be a ”sham”.

Legislation before the Indian parliament will result in the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, which has monitored the use, transfer and disposal of nuclear material in India for 28 years, being replaced with the Nuclear Safety Regulatory Authority. The authority will be answerable to a clutch of government ministers who can direct the regulator, and even sack its members, giving rise to allegations the new body will be captive to government.

The move comes as Australian Foreign Affairs officials prepare to begin negotiations with India over the sale of Australian uranium to India’s civilian nuclear program.

The Labor Party this month overturned a decades-old ban on selling uranium to India, which had refused to sign the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. India remains outside the treaty but has signed up to other international agreements and is now subject to inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. But nuclear experts say safety will be compromised under the new domestic regulator.


Former Atomic Energy Regulatory Board chairman Adinarayan Gopalakrishnan said the new authority was being formed to allow vested interests to control, and profit from, India’s nuclear industry.

”The Nuclear Safety Regulatory Authority Bill will not lead to an independent or transparent regulator in this sector,” Dr Gopalakrishnan said.

”The bill aims at a formal ‘regulatory capture’ of the nuclear sector, so that a few top people in the executive branch, in collusion with some of the senior atomic scientists, bureaucrats and politicians, can help the Indian and foreign corporate sectors in importing foreign power reactors into India on their terms, irrespective of their relative safety or cost merits.”

Prabir Purkayastha, from the Delhi Science Forum, said a government embarrassed by a nuclear accident, or faced with allegations of mismanaging its nuclear plants, could prevent regulators from investigating.

”The regulator may want to investigate an issue at a nuclear power plant, but if the government of the day says ‘no, it is safe, you cannot inspect it’, it has that authority. You really have no regulator at all, because it’s not independent.”

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has been diligently selling the safety of the Indian industry. ”The safety track record of our nuclear power plants over the past 335 reactor-years of operation has been impeccable.”

It is believed negotiations over Australian uranium sales to India will start next year, but a spokeswoman for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said there were no set time frames for talks to start, or finish.

Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson was unavailable for comment.

Greens nuclear spokesman Senator Scott Ludlam said Australia long had a policy of exporting nuclear material without real regard for the integrity of any regulatory regime. ”In India it has been a blatant disaster for years. They have had a number of quite scary near-miss accidents there,” Senator Ludlam said.

He said the independence of the new body seemed to be in name only and that Australia had to decide whether it took responsibility for exported material once it arrived in foreign countries.

The opposition declined to comment and Labor minister, and famous anti-nuclear campaigner, Peter Garrett is on leave. With

RICHARD WILLINGHAM

Date
December 23, 2011

Ben Doherty Delhi


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ESSAY: FREEDOM OF MEDIA

David Barsamian
“I have worked on Chhattisgarh, the Gujarat pogrom, Narmada dams…. But it’s all about Kashmir. The official narrative must not be contested.”
ESSAY: FREEDOM OF MEDIA
Dead Men Talking
The Indian state can silence the living, not the voice of the silent
 
 
 

On September 23, 2011, at about three in the morning, within hours of his arrival at the New Delhi airport, the US radio journalist David Barsamian was deported. This dangerous man, who produces independent, free-to-air programmes for public radio, has been visiting India for 40 years, doing dangerous things like learning Urdu and playing the sitar. He has published book-length interviews with Edward Said, Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Ejaz Ahmed and Tariq Ali. (He even makes an appearance as a young, bellbottom-wearing interviewer in Peter Wintonick’s documentary film on Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman’s Manufacturing Consent.) On his more recent trips to India he has done a series of radio interviews with activists, academics, filmmakers, journalists and writers (including myself). Barsamian’s work has taken him to Turkey, Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Pakistan. He has never been deported from any of these countries.

So why does the world’s largest democracy fear this lone, sitar-playing, Urdu-speaking, left-leaning radio producer? Here is how Barsamian himself explains it: “It’s all about Kashmir. I’ve done work on Jharkand, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Narmada dams, farmer suicides, the Gujarat pogrom and the Binayak Sen case. But it’s Kashmir that is at the heart of the Indian state’s concerns. The official narrative must not be contested.”

News reports about his deportation quoted official “sources” as saying that Barsamian had “violated his visa norms during his visit in 2009-10 by indulging in professional work while holding a tourist visa”. Visa norms in India are an interesting peephole into the government’s concerns and predilections. Taking cover under the shabby old banner of the War on Terror, the Union home ministry has decreed that scholars and academics invited for conferences or seminars require security clearance before they will be given visas. Corporate executives and businessmen do not. So somebody who wants to invest in a dam or build a steel plant or buy a bauxite mine is not considered a security hazard, whereas a scholar who might wish to participate in a seminar about, say displacement or communalism or rising malnutrition in a globalised economy, is. Foreign terrorists with bad intentions have probably guessed by now that they are better off wearing Prada suits and pretending they want to buy a mine than wearing old corduroys and saying they want to attend a seminar. (Some would argue that mine-buyers in Prada suits are the real terrorists.)

David Barsamian did not travel to India to buy a mine or to attend a conference. He just came to talk to people. The complaint against him, according to “official sources”, is that he had reported on events in Jammu and Kashmir during his last visit to India and that these reports were “not based on facts”. Remember Barsamian is not a reporter, he’s a man who has conversations with people, mostly dissidents, about the societies in which they live. Is it illegal for tourists to talk to people in the countries they visit? Would it be illegal for me to travel to the US or Europe and write about the people I met, even if my writing was “not based on facts”? Who decides which “facts” are correct and which are not? Would Barsamian have been deported if the conversations he recorded had been in praise of the impressive turnouts in Kashmir’s elections, instead of about what life is like in the densest military occupation in the world? (Six lakh actively deployed armed personnel for a population of 10 million people.) Or if they had been about the army’s rescue operations in the 2005 earthquake instead of about the massive unarmed uprisings that took place on three consecutive summers? (And which received no round-the-clock media attention, and no one thought to call “the Kashmir Spring”).

 

 
  You would be better off wearing a Prada suit and pretending you want to buy a mine than wear corduroys and say you want to attend a seminar.  
 

David Barsamian is not the first person to be deported over the Indian government’s sensitivities over Kashmir. Professor Richard Shapiro, an anthropologist from San Francisco, was deported from Delhi airport in November 2010 without being given any reason. Most of us believe it was the government’s way of punishing his partner, Angana Chatterji, a co-convenor of the International People’s Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice, which first brought international attention to the existence of unmarked mass graves in Kashmir. May Aquino, from the Asian Federation against Involuntary Disappearances (AFAD), Manila, was scheduled to visit Kashmir in September 2011. She was deported from the Delhi airport. Earlier this year, on May 28, the outspoken Indian democratic rights activist Gautam Navlakha was deported to Delhi from Srinagar airport. (Farooq Abdullah, the former chief minister of Kashmir, justified the deportation, saying that writers like Navlakha and myself had no business entering Kashmir, because “Kashmir is not for burning”—whatever that means.) Kashmir is in the process of being isolated, cut off from the outside world by two concentric rings of border patrols—in Delhi as well as Srinagar—as though it’s already a free country with its own visa regime. Within its borders, of course, it’s open season for the government and the army. The art of controlling Kashmiri journalists and ordinary people with a deadly combination of bribes, threats, blackmail and a whole spectrum of unutterable, carefully crafted cruelties has evolved into an art form.

 


Photograph by Reuters, From Outlook, October 10, 2011

Cacophony of the deceased
It’s insensitive of the unmarked graves to embarrass the Government of India just when India’s record is due for review before the UNHRC.

While the government goes about trying to silence the living, the dead have begun to speak up. It was insensitive of Barsamian to plan a trip to Kashmir just when the state human rights commission was finally shamed into officially acknowledging the existence of 2,700 unmarked graves from three districts in Kashmir. Reports of thousands of other graves are pouring in from other districts. It is insensitive of the unmarked graves to embarrass the Government of India just when India’s record is due for review before the UN Human Rights Council.

Apart from Dangerous David, who else is the world’s largest democracy afraid of? There’s young Lingaram Kodopi, an adivasi from Dantewada, who was arrested on September 9, 2011. The police say they caught him red-handed in a marketplace while he was handing over protection money from Essar, an iron ore mining company, to the banned Communist Party of India (Maoist). His aunt Soni Sori says that he was picked up by plainclothes policemen in a white Bolero from his grandfather’s house in Palnar village. Now she’s on the run too. Interestingly, even by their own account, the police arrested Lingaram but allowed the Maoists to escape. This is only the latest in a series of bizarre, almost hallucinatory accusations they have made against Lingaram and then withdrawn. His real crime is that he’s the only journalist who speaks Gondi, the local language, and who knows how to negotiate the remote forest paths in Dantewada, Chhattisgarh, the other war zone in India from which no news must come.

 

 
  Kashmir is being isolated by two concentric rings of border patrols, in New Delhi and in Srinagar, as though it’s already a free country with a visa regime.  
 

Having signed over vast tracts of indigenous tribal homelands in central India to multinational mining and infrastructure corporations in a series of secret Memorandums of Understanding—in complete contravention of the law as well as the Constitution—the government has begun to flood the forests with hundreds of thousands of security forces. All resistance, armed as well as unarmed, has been branded ‘Maoist’. (In Kashmir, the preferred phrase is “jehadi elements”). As the civil war grows deadlier, hundreds of villages have been burnt to the ground. Thousands of adivasis have fled as refugees into neighbouring states. Hundreds of thousands are living terrified lives hiding in the forests. Paramilitary forces have laid siege to the forest. A network of police informers patrol village bazaars, making trips for essential provisions and medicines a nightmare for villagers. Untold numbers of nameless people are in jail, charged with sedition and waging war on the state, with no lawyers to defend them. Very little news comes out of those forests, and there are no body counts.

 


Photograph by Sanjay Rawat

Lingaram Kodopi
He was arrested while apparently handing protection money from Essar. His real crime: he knows Gondi as well as the forest paths in Dantewada.

So it’s not hard to see why young Lingaram Kodopi poses such a threat. Before he trained to become a journalist, he was a driver in Dantewada. In 2009, the police arrested him and confiscated his jeep. He was locked up in a small toilet for 40 days where he was pressurised to become a Special Police Officer (SPO) in the Salwa Judum, the government-sponsored vigilante army that was at the time tasked with forcing people to flee from their villages. (The Salwa Judum has since been declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.) The police released Lingaram after the Gandhian activist Himanshu Kumar filed a habeas corpus petition in court. But then the police arrested Lingaram’s old father and five other members of his family. They attacked his village and warned villagers not to shelter him. Eventually, Lingaram escaped to Delhi where friends and well-wishers got him admission into a journalism school. In April 2010, he travelled to Dantewada and escorted to Delhi the witnesses and victims of the barbarity of the Salwa Judum, the police and paramilitary forces, enabling them to give testimony at the Independent People’s Tribunal. (In his own testimony, Lingaram was sharply critical of the Maoists as well.)

That did not deter the Chhattisgarh police. On July 2, 2010, the senior Maoist leader, Comrade Azad, the official spokesperson for the Maoist Party, was captured and executed by the Andhra Pradesh police. Deputy Inspector General S.R.P. Kalluri of the Chhattisgarh police announced at a press conference that Lingaram Kodopi had been elected by the Maoist Party to take over Comrade Azad’s role. (It was like accusing a young schoolchild in 1936 Yenan of being Zhou-en-Lai.) The charge was met with such derision that the police had to withdraw it. They had also accused Lingaram of being the mastermind of a Maoist attack on a Congress legislator in Dantewada. But perhaps because they had already made themselves look so foolish and vindictive, they decided to bide their time.

Here stands, India’s ‘gravest’ threat
Paramilitary forces have laid siege to the forest. All resistance, armed or unarmed, has been branded ‘Maoist’. Entire villages are being burned.

Lingaram remained in Delhi, completed his course and received his diploma in journalism. In March 2011, paramilitary forces burned down three villages in Dantewada—Tadmetla, Timapuram and Morapalli. The Chhattisgarh government blamed the Maoists. The Supreme Court assigned the investigation to the Central Bureau of Investigation. Lingaram returned to Dantewada with a video camera and trekked from village to village documenting first-hand testimonies of the villagers who indicted the police. (You can see some of these on YouTube.) By doing this, he made himself one of the most wanted men in Dantewada. On September 9, the police finally got to him.

 

 
  The case against Kopa has begun unravelling with witnesses disowning their statements. But it doesn’t matter. In India, the process is the punishment.  
 

Lingaram has joined an impressive line-up of troublesome news-gatherers and disseminators in Chhattisgarh. Among the earliest to be silenced was the celebrated doctor Binayak Sen who first raised the alarm about the crimes of the Salwa Judum as far back as 2005. He was arrested in 2007, accused of being a Maoist and sentenced to life imprisonment. After years in prison, he is out on bail now. Several people followed Binayak Sen into prison—including Piyush Guha and the filmmaker Ajay T.G. Both have been accused of being Maoists. These arrests put a chill into the activist community in Chhattisgarh, but didn’t stop some of them from continuing to do what they were doing. Kopa Kunjam worked with Himanshu Kumar’s Vanvasi Chetna Ashram, doing exactly what Lingaram tried to do much later—travelling to remote villages, bringing out the news, and carefully documenting the horror that was unfolding. (He was my first guide into the forest villages of Dantewada.) Much of this documentation has made its way into legal cases that are proving to be a source of worry and discomfort to the Chhattisgarh government.

 

In May 2009, the Vanvasi Chetna Ashram, the last neutral shelter for journalists, writers and academics who were travelling to Dantewada, was demolished by the Chhattisgarh government. In December 2009, on Human Rights Day, Kopa was arrested. He was accused of colluding with the Maoists in the murder of one man and the kidnapping of another. The case against Kopa has begun to fall apart as the police witnesses, including the man who was kidnapped, have disowned the statements they purportedly made to the police. It doesn’t really matter, because in India we all know the process is the punishment. It will take years for Kopa to establish his innocence, by which time the administration hopes the arrest will have served its purpose. Many villagers who were encouraged by Kopa to file complaints against the police have been arrested too. Some are in jail. Others have been made to live in roadside camps manned by SPOs. That includes many women who committed the crime of being raped. Soon after Kopa’s arrest, Himanshu Kumar was hounded out of Dantewada. In September 2010, another adivasi activist, Kartam Joga, was arrested. His offence was to have filed a petition in the Supreme Court in 2007 about the rampant human rights abuses committed by the Salwa Judum. He is being accused of colluding with the Maoists in the April 2010 killing of 76 crpf personnel in Tadmetla. Kartam Joga is a member of the Communist Party of India (CPI) which has a tense, if not hostile relationship with the Maoists. Amnesty International has named him a Prisoner of Conscience.

Meanwhile, the arrests continue at a steady pace. A casual look at the First Information Reports (FIRs) filed by the police give a pretty clear idea of how the deadly business of Due Process works in Dantewada. The texts of many of the FIRs are exactly the same. The name of the accused, the date, the nature of the crime and the names of witnesses are simply inserted into the biscuit mould. There’s nobody to check. Most of those involved, prisoners as well as witnesses, cannot read or write.

In plain sight
A YouTube video grab in which Kodopi records a villager’s testimony indicting the police in the burning of three Dantewada villages

One day, in Dantewada too, the dead will begin to speak. And it will not just be dead humans, it will be the dead land, dead rivers, dead mountains and dead creatures in dead forests that will insist on a hearing.

Meanwhile, life goes on. While intrusive surveillance, internet policing and phone-tapping and the clampdown on those who speak up becomes grimmer with every passing day, it’s odd how India is becoming the dream destination of literary festivals. There are about 10 of them scheduled over the next few months. Some are funded by the very corporations on whose behalf the police have unleashed their regime of terror. The Harud Literary festival in Srinagar (postponed for the moment) was slated to be the newest, most exciting one—“As the autumn leaves change colour the valley of Kashmir will resonate with the sound of poetry, literary dialogue, debate and discussions….” Its organisers advertised it as an “apolitical” event, but did not say how either the rulers or the subjects of a brutal military occupation that has claimed tens of thousands of lives, bereaved thousands of women and children and maimed a hundred thousand people in its torture chambers can be “apolitical”. I wonder—will the literary guests come on tourist visas? Will there be separate ones for Srinagar and Delhi? Will they need security clearance? Will a Kashmiri who speaks out go directly from the festival to an interrogation centre, or will she be allowed to go home and change and collect her things? (I’m just being crude here, I know it’s more subtle than that.)

The festive din of this spurious freedom helps to muffle the sound of footsteps in airport corridors as the deported are frog-marched on to departing planes, to mute the click of handcuffs locking around strong, warm wrists and the cold metallic clang of prison doors.

Our lungs are gradually being depleted of oxygen. Perhaps it’s time to use whatever breath remains in our bodies to say: Open the bloody gates.

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AN INDIAN OPINION: US-Pak ties functional, not cosy

 

 06 July 2012
OPINION
Tridivesh Maini on how the relationship has deteriorated into a series of transactions
THE WASHINGTON-ISLAMABAD relationship seemed to touch rock bottom over the last year as a result of numerous factors: CIA drone missile strikes, the Navy SEAL raid — dubbed Operation Geronimo — that killed Osama bin Laden last year and the release of a CIA contractor, Raymond Davis, accused of killing two Pakistanis. The final nail in the coffin seemed to be the closure of NATO supply lines in November by Pakistan, after 24 Pakistani soldiers were killed on 26 November in an attack by NATO forces. US combat helicopters and fighter jets had mistakenly attacked two border posts.
This deterioration in relations between the two, who were close allies at one time, was reiterated by some harsh statements by Secretary of State Leon Panetta, who recently stated that the US was losing patience with Pakistan. Even the discourse emanating from Washington DC’s academic community and think-tanks seems to be much harsher, with those who were earlier Pakistan sympathisers claiming that it has lost all face and Washington is left with limited options to deal with the former. This transformation in the Washington-Islamabad relationship has ironically coincided with an improvement in the New Delhi-Islamabad relationship.
Washington and Islamabad seem to have at least for the time being ensured that a functional or ‘transactional’ relationship between the two remains intact. On 3 July, a meeting of the DCC chaired by the Pakistan Prime Minister Raja Parvez Ashraf, also attended by army chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, announced Pakistan’s decision to re-open supply lines. The reason given by the civilian government was Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s phone call to her Pakistani counterpart where she expressed her regret over the killing of Pakistani soldiers. In a statement following the conversation, Clinton said, “We are sorry for the losses suffered by the Pakistani military. We are committed to working closely with Pakistan and Afghanistan to prevent this from ever happening again.”
Information minister Qamar Zaman Kaira stated that Clinton’s apology was a major victory for Islamabad, since a superpower like the US ‘apologised’ for impinging upon Pakistan’s sovereignty. Said the minister, “The main thing is that a superpower has acknowledged our principled stance, and they have shown flexibility,”
Pakistan has been firm that nothing less than an apology from the US would force Islamabad to change its decision. In a recent meeting between Kayani and isaf Commander General John Allen, the latter had apologised to Kayani, who rejected this saying that this was a matter not only between two armies, but two governments — hinting that nothing less than a statement coming from someone consequential in Washington could mend the damage.
It would be naïve to assume that Clinton’s call was the only factor for Islamabad’s decision. While this could have sealed the decision, there are many other possible causes for Islamabad’s decision.
Firstly, Pakistan has realised that none of its other long-time allies such as China, Saudi Arabia are ready to provide financial assistance as Washington. The US on the other hand, in spite of the strained relationship, has been providing aid to Pakistan and one of the immediate ramifications of the decision to open NATO supplies was Washington’s decision to release $1.1 billion to the Pakistani military from a US ‘coalition support fund’ designed to reimburse Pakistan for the cost of counter-insurgency operations. Islamabad has also realised that some of its trusted allies like Saudi Arabia are quite happy to distance themselves from the former, in case it is in their interest. The Abu Jundal extradition is a perfect example of it.
Second, in the ever-changing geo-political scenario in South Asia, the relationship between Washington and the Pakistan army has been tense, but the US has been supportive of the civilian government headed by Zardari. The PPP too has tried its hardest to ensure that the US and Pakistan ensure a working relationship. It might be mentioned here that in May itself, Pakistani foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar had made an offer to the US which did not go through. However, since Islamabad’s terms were not acceptable to the US. Pakistan was supposedly demanding $5,000 as transit fee for allowing trucks to use the two routes into landlocked Afghanistan. The United States which paid $250 in the past, was not ready to go beyond $500.
IF ONE were to look at the US point of view, they had found alternative routes through Russia and Central Asia which were much more expensive, costing the US military about $100 million a month, according to an estimate by the Pentagon. Only last week, the Pentagon had asked Congress for approval to transfer $2.1 billion from other funds to cover costs largely resulting from the closure of the Pakistan supply routes. Opening up of the routes will thus reduce the burden on the US government and the tax payer.
While the development may have come as a relief to both the US and Pakistan in many ways — especially financial, it has some important political ramifications for both the PPP administration in Islamabad and the Democrats in Washington.
In the case of Pakistan, the civilian government will have to contend with criticism from hardliners within the political setup and outside. Interestingly, apart from opposition from the Taliban which has threatened to attack Afghanistan-bound NATO vehicles, Imran Khan, the head of the opposition (Tehreek-E-Insaaf), Movement for Justice, came down heavily on the government’s decision, saying that the government had meekly surrendered to the US while the latter continued to carry out drone strikes on Pakistani soil.
In the case of the US, in election year Republicans will use this opportunity to attack President Barrack Obama for having meekly surrendered to Pakistan. Mitt Romney has already accused Obama of being in the habit of apologising on behalf of the US, even when it is not necessary. At a transactional level, Islamabad’s decision benefits both. It remains to be seen who can draw more political mileage from it.
The writer is a New Delhi based-author and foreign policy analyst.

 

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The degradation of Pinki Pramanik

HAS INDIA’S POLICE GONE MAD?
Though South Asians may bicker and fight to death, but they share a common value of respect for women. It is a crying shame that a decent woman has been grabbed by a police service, which has no respect for basic human values. After 1947, South Asian women have won a hard fought freedom from male dominated chauvinistic societies.  But, they are still victims of sheer brutality, as in the case of Pinky. The police in South Asia is dominated by Neanderthals. the policeman in South Asia is still addressed as a Sipahi or Sepoy, a throw-back to Colonial times.  However, the nature of a sipahi has not changed, to women prisoners, he is a sexual predator. Here is a classic case of sipahis taking advantage of a victim, who has the deck stacked against her.  Why are the women’s advocates of South Asia, like Asma Jehangir and Arundhati Roy silent?

The degradation of Pinki Pramanik

 

 

Pinki Pramanik
Pinki Pramanik is an Indian track athlete who specialises in the 400 metres and 800 metres. Pramanik had success with the national 4×400 metres relay team, winning silver at the 2006 Commonwealth Games, … Wikipedia

 

Born: April 10, 1986 (age 26)
Police escort Former Indian athlete Pinki Pramanik (C) to the Barasat District court in Barasat around 35 Km north of Kolkata on June 15 2012.Pinki Pramanik won four gold medals in 2006

This picture tells the story of Pinki Pramanik, a female athlete arrested on charges of rape and facing claims she is actually male.

You can see a policeman groping the feted athlete in the full glare of cameras as she is led away after her arrest last month. Ms Pramanik looks harried and helpless. There are no woman constables in sight, as should have been the case.

Ms Pramanik, by the way, is one of India’s most accomplished athletes. The 26-year-old has picked up a host of gold and silver medals in relay events at international competitions.

She was arrested last month after her live-in partner, who is a woman, charged her with rape. Ms Pramanik denies all charges. Investigations, it is hoped, will reveal the truth.

Meanwhile, Ms Pramanik is living through hell.

She has been lodged in the male ward of a prison in Calcutta, subjected to a battery of inconclusive gender determination tests and herded between prison and court by male policemen. When she went for a medical test, somebody recorded it on a mobile phone and posted the video on the net, where, apparently it has gone viral. As if this was not enough, Ms Pramanik has also lost her job with Indian Railways.

Sections of the local media have reported on her relationship with her partner in lascivious detail. Her fellow athletes have talked about a history of “rough behaviour” and how she “lived on the edge”, without elaborating. They talk about her being a “late-nighter who enjoyed the good things in life”. Her estranged partner talks about how Ms Pramanik “cheated the whole world” by posing as a female athlete.

The imprisoned Ms Pramanik, obviously, cannot respond.

Human rights group are understandably outraged. They say Ms Pramanik has been stripped of her dignity by the state, which should be protecting her rights in the first place. Her custody has been extended as she is being taken through inconclusive gender determination tests in poorly-equipped laboratories. “Why should she be subjected to such harassment and degrading treatment?” asks rights activist Sujato Bhadra.

The travails of Pinki Pramanik prove how the state – and sections of the media – can destroy the lives of the weak and the different in India.

Ms Pramanik, who quit sport two years ago after a road accident, comes from a poor village in West Bengal, which is ringed by Maoist rebel strongholds. She has no rich and powerful friends. And now her sexuality is under a cloud. All this makes her a helpless outlier and an easy target.

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