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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Redundant depts mock govt’s claim to austerity

By Anwer Sumra


The Punjab government needs to look no further than its doorstep to make its austerity drive more credible.





Bureaucrats believe the government needs to plug the drain on resources


According to a senior official of the Services and General Administration Department (S&GAD), it can begin by abolishing the four offshoots of the S&GAD that have become a mere financial burden on the treasury.


The financial burden placed on the government treasury, in excess of millions of rupees, by four offshoots of the S&GAD has become hard to justify alongside discourse demanding unaccustomed austerity.


Several senior officials concurred that the four branches were largely redundant and had not significantly contributed to governance for the past several months.


The Punjab government has allocated nearly Rs65 million in the 2010-2011 budget for the four subdivisions, namely, the Interprovincial Coordination wing, the Public Policy and Change Management unit, the Former Servicemen Re-employment Board and the Provincial Information and Analysis unit.


Requesting anonymity, a senior officer stated that the S&GAD was currently engaged in discussions to justify and defend the divisions. "In my opinion", he stated, "the Punjab government needs to abolish the branches with immediate effect in order to demonstrate its commitment to good governance. The employees consequently made redundant can easily be accommodated to cover the shortfall in other departments."


The Inter Provincial Coordination (IPC) subsection, reporting to the chief minister, was established in 2007 to help improve coordination between the provincial and the federal governments. Members of the wing have only met once since the current chief minister was administered oath. The overheads of running the department, salary payments and maintenance expenses exceed Rs16.281 million.


The IPC employs 29 officials. Its secretary, a grade-20 officer, Mussawar Abbas Naqvi admitted, "Suspending operations and shutting down the IPC would be a prudent step in the right direction."


The Public Policy and Change Management Unit was created in 2006 to proactively facilitate civil services reform with input from in-house specialists. Off the record, a senior official told The Express Tribune, "It was pulled out of thin air to accommodate Aminullah Chaudhary, a retired bureaucrat."


The department predictably failed to have an impact and was quickly forgotten but has continued to receive fiscal allocations (Rs13.692 and Rs14.653 million respectively in 2009 and 2010). Twenty employees, including six officers remain on its payroll.


The Provincial Information and Analysis Unit (PIAU) formed in the Implementation and Coordination Wing of the S&GAD, under the direct supervision of the chief secretary, was set up in 2009.


Intended to serve as a watchdog and improve departmental efficiency, the branch hired a director (BS-20 officer) and two additional directors (BS-19 each), who collectively withdraw Rs500,000 every month in addition to basic pay. The wing is dominated by District Management Group officers and has been getting Rs25 million from the provincial government.


In much the same vein, the CM's Secretariat performs the duties prescribed for the Former Servicemen Re-employment Board. The wing was last active during the military regime of Pervaiz Musharraf and offered employment to retired servicemen. The idle unit extracts Rs10 million a year in budget allocations on average.

American World Order: The Beginning Of The End

Engr. Mansoor A Malik


The American Euphoria after the surrender of the Japanese on the US Naval Ship in the Pacific soon after the capitulation of the Germans was at its peak in the late 1940s'.The largesse of the American people and their government to re-build Europe and Asia as an aftermath of the Second World War was breathtaking and never again would the world at large ever witness such large heartedness and love for humanity. The US became the unchallenged leader of the Free World with the Dullesian (Secretary of State, Mr. Dulles) aid package flowing all over the world with or without their asking. This was America's finest hour. Under these favorable conditions the Europeans pushed America for the creation of Israel in Palestine to appease the Zionists and putting the USA on the spot in Vietnam and Korea in the Pacific.





The Death of Jumbo


Pakistan ventured to the USA under these circumstances to re-invigorate itself and get out of the log jam of the Partition of India. This first trip to the USA of our first Prime Minister, Mr. Liaqat Ali Khan, soon after Pakistan came into being, however, turned out to be a fiasco. The US administration wanted our Armed Forces involved in the Korean War (1950-1953) after getting the relevant support from the Turkish Armed Forces for this war. Liaqat Ali Khan disappointed them as he referred this decision to the newly established first Democratic Parliament of Pakistan. President Eisenhower rushed his Vice-President Mr. Richard Nixon to India as an affront to Pakistan's political leadership. Mr. Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India refused to entertain him and no hand shaking took place, even for the cameras, as India sought out its leadership role in the Non-Aligned Movement. For face saving, Mr. Nixon flew into Pakistan for a golden hand shake with its leaders and the rest is history. Pakistan was turned into the most allied ally of the USA.


The Nuclear strikes by USAF in Japan at the closing stages of the Second World War was not only a show of strength to the Soviet Union but also heralded the United States as a champion of the Western World in the global political perspective in the times to come. From the world isolation of USA in the 1920s' and 1930s', it thrusted itself, un-prepared, on the World Scene and stretched itself in Asia, Africa and Latin America apart from consolidating its Trans-Atlantic relationship with its distant European cousins. This half cooked policy backfired in Korea in 1950s' and had a tragic ending in Vietnam as far as Asia was concerned in 1970s'. In the European theatre, France and Germany started to take an independent posture and the onus fell on UK to deliver Europe to its WASP (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant) cousins in Washington. Mr. Macmillan may have been an outstanding Prime Minister of UK in his time but he was no match for Addenauer and Willy Brandt of Germany and the good old fox of France, General Charles de Gaulle. These stalwarts were instrumental in pushing the dream of One Europe to be realized thru the European Union in our lifetime. This has made possible for Europe to be counted now at the global level regardless of the Spoilers role of the UK.


The whiz kids in Washington at the turn of this century, the new millennium, wanted to re-fix their Asian Imbroglio as a counter weight to the growing influence of the European Union and China. In the Middle-East, Israel, its proxy, had to be pepped up and left to it to control the region with least opposition. Therefore, after the neutralization of Egypt, Iraq had to be dealt with and Syria isolated from this new political gamble in the making. The de-stabilization of Iraq could not be intelligently simulated in the War Gaming Simulators of the USA with the result that the Asymmetrical Forces were un-leashed around Israel increasing the paranoia of this tinny witty state in the Palestinian lands. Then it was our turn in South- West Asia. Instead of sending a few American commandos to pick up handful of miscreants in Afghanistan and produce them at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for a fair trial, the sovereignty of that country along with that of Pakistan was abused by first firing more than fifty Tomahawk Cruise Missiles by US Navy from our waters in Baluchistan to the Afghan camps at Khost across our border and then came the Daisy Cutters and B-52 Bombers to level off whatever was left of Afghanistan. My generation would now be left with only nostalgic memories of Nirvana about the annual Jashne-Kabul festivities that we attended in out teens in Kabul that was in the 1960s'.


The Israeli spread over from East of the Suez Canal was checked in its stride by the emerging Iranian reality and therefore, a new strategic dimension had to be added to the Middle-Eastern leg. This was achieved thru a two pronged approach by the USA. The first one involved the US-Israeli collusion in the exploitation of Economic Zones in Central Asia and the second, more intriguing one involving US-NATO-Israel-India was un-leashed in Afghanistan. This poor country which was already a melting pot of Central Asian Peoples' became a hot bed of intrigues and counter intrigues due to varied approaches of these four entities, with each having their own axe to grind. The Afghan Resistance grew due to this lack of coherence and self centered policies of all these powerful players. The major contribution of this military campaign fell on the shoulders of USA, whereas, the political benefits were envisaged to be reaped by India as the regional power. The Indo-Israeli nexus was again playing its cards close to its chest and putting the donkey's work on the shoulders of USA similar the one in the Iraqi campaign. If the Iraq War would cost the American tax payers one and a half trillion US dollar by the time all American soldiers go home from this theatre, it would cost half that much in the Afghan campaign. What is the Cost-Benefit Ratio of both these campaigns to the average American?


The economics of it can take its own toll, but the signs of the long term political and diplomatic ramifications to the USA as a global player, has already become visible. Israel is now openly defying the Two State Solution Policy of the USA for Palestine and the body language of America's interlocutor in the Middle-East, Mr. John Mitchell says it all. In Afghanistan, the poorest country in Asia, the existing US policy has miserably failed. While Iraq had its historical reputation of getting its rivers turned red out of martyr's blood after every few centuries including this one, the Afghans being ferociously independent, have never allowed the Czars of Russia, the British Empire and the Soviet Union an easy passage to their rugged country. They have stood their grounds while empires of the past have perished around them. How will America fare differently? Only time will tell.


In brief, Mansoor Malik has been Director General with over 33 year of experience in planning, establishing and managing national level, strategic, high-tech organizations. Director General, Marketing & Industrial Relations Organization (MIRO). Commandant, College of Aeronautical Engineering, Risalpur, Pakistan.


Senior Engineering Manager, PAF Project where he was responsible for the smooth induction of F-16 Aircraft Weapons System in the PAF and making them fully operational.

RAW: The Dangerous Wolf; Threat To World Peace!

Brig Asif Haroon Raja





Cold Blooded Wolf


It is now an established fact that no South Asian state has ever indulged in covert operations or cross border terrorism against its neighbors. The only culprit is India which resorts to this evil practice against all its neighbors, be it Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Maldives, Bhutan, China and Myanmar. It has dovetailed clandestine operations into its war strategy to apply it against its foes during peace time for harassment, intimidation and blackmailing purposes and for weakening them from within. Afghanistan has been used by Russia and India to raise the bogey of Pashtunistan, render support to Pakistani runaways and rebels and to launch covert operations against Pakistan. Karzai has belatedly assured Pakistan that it would not allow its soil against Pakistan. Hopefully he sticks to his commitment. Marching orders given by Karzai to his intelligence chief and interior minister, both venomously anti-Pakistan and favorites of Washington are positive signs though some more steps are needed to scatter away clouds of distrust built over nine years.


The US military has starting packing its bags to wind up its business in Afghanistan and go home starting July 2011. The US and Karzai's tilt towards Islamabad are ominous developments for India vying to have complete sway over Afghan affairs after the departure of coalition forces. The entire Indian leadership is in a state of depression. Its spin doctors are at a loss but are still scratching their heads how to retrieve the situation. Indians are feeling out of place since they are akin to traits of a scorpion which stings compulsively.


Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao and Home Minister Chidambaram were here in Islamabad to renew talks. An Indo-Pak talk is a drama staged by India at the behest of USA. India loses all and gains nothing out of composite dialogue, which she had purposely stalled after Mumbai attacks. She stubbornly clung to her one-point agenda of no talks without Pakistan tackling India's concerns about terrorism. After intense pressure from USA, stuck in Afghanistan and urgently requiring Pakistan's services for a bailout, India has reluctantly relented and agreed to resume talks. However, the entire focus of talks was on terrorism. Chronic issues such as Kashmir dispute, Siachin and Sir Creek problems, water problem, RAW's support to terrorists in Balochistan and in FATA were skipped. India wants solution to Kashmir as suggested by former President Gen Musharraf. It had been mutually decided to sideline UN resolutions on Kashmir, convert Line of Control (LoC) into soft border and to put the dispute in cold freezer as had been done during Simla Agreement in 1973.


But for lawyers movement which weakened Musharraf, the sellout plan would have been implemented in 2008. It is for this reason that Indian leaders fondly remember Musharraf and pray for his return. President Zardari was also in favor of this plan as was evident from several statements he had made on Kashmir and the so-called 'good news' he wanted to give to the nation. Had the Army under Gen Kayani not taken a firm stand and had Zardari not lost his reputation and credibility, he would have given a go ahead signal to the plan. Zardari's inability to open up nuclear program for US and IAEA inspection, bring ISI under Interior Ministry and to implement Indian dictated Kashmir solution has disappointed USA and India. To twist his arm, he is off and on subjected to barrage of vilification campaign, most of which is based on facts.


Pakistan had been led up the garden path by India through much hyped composite dialogue in early 2004. It was pledged that all issues including Kashmir would be resolved through dialogue. Four rounds of talks were held but nothing concrete came out of the meetings. While Pakistan lost a lot, India gained a lot. Under the garb of friendship, India successfully completed fencing of LoC, defanged armed resistance in Held Kashmir, redirected all Jihadi outfits towards Pakistan, made Balochistan, FATA and large parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa restive, lowered the image of Pak Army and other institutions through propaganda campaign, consolidated tentacles of RAW within Pakistan, disturbed law and order situation, built several dams over rivers Chenab, Jhelum and Indus and reduced flow of water into Pakistan. India not only enhanced its presence in Afghanistan significantly but also spread hatred amongst Afghans against Pakistan to keep the two neighbors perpetually hostile to each other. Through these acts, it impoverished the economy of Pakistan.


While preaching friendship, Indian military feverishly built up its strength and former Indian chief Gen Kapoor hurled threats of Cold Start and limited war under a nuclear overhang. Pakistan quietly digested all the insults and harms inflicted upon the body of Pakistan under the skewed policy of appeasement and under a misperception that Kashmir issue would be resolved. In return, India didn't budge an inch over any of the disputes and continued to maintain its pre-2004 rigid stance on all issues. It showed its ugly face after Mumbai carnage and reverted to its old policy of antagonism.


Having gained on all fronts, India is unprepared to dole out any concession to Pakistan. It still wants more from Pakistan. It wants Pakistan not to oppose its key role in Afghanistan, its right for a land route to Afghanistan via Wagah, and its membership to UNSC. It also wants Punjab based banned Jihadi groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jamat-ud-Dawa, Jaish Mohammad and Sipah-Sahaba to be crushed and Muredke religious centre to be dismantled. India is keen to extend physical support to help Pak security forces to tackle these outfits. Punjab being the only stable province, it has become an eyesore for India and it desperately wants its destabilization. The likes of Salman Taseer and RAW sponsored Tehrik-e-Taliban are helping India in its nefarious designs.


RAW is among the leading terrorist organization which is bleeding South Asia but surprisingly no finger has ever been raised on it. The US and western think tanks and newspapers never tire of concocting stories against ISI but see RAW, Mossad and CIA chaste and spotless. This is because they are birds of same feather and are flocking together in pursuit of common objectives.


Pakistan and other South Asian countries have remained the victims of intrigues and conspiracies of India for the last 63 years. It pretends to be well meaning and friendly but it always carries a dagger under its armpit and strikes whenever opportunity comes its way. It is principally responsible for impeding the growth of SAARC because of its habit of hegemony and selfishness. It is high time for SAARC countries minus India to get together and collectively combat the Indian menace. Awareness drive should be initiated by Pakistan to expose true face of India.


I propose immediate establishment of a joint intelligence centre at Islamabad or Colombo on the pattern of the one working in Jabal-al-Siraj, north of Kabul. Both are well trained in the art of counter terrorism and have successfully fought RAW sponsored terrorism. The new intelligence setup should have tentacles in all the affected South Asian countries to share intelligence and monitor activities of home based and foreign based terrorists, spies and double agents. Assistance of China may be sought or it may be co-opted. Intelligence Centre should maintain close liaison with intelligence agencies of selected Muslim states which follow independent foreign policies and are not close to India. Intelligence can be exchanged with CIA, FBI and MI-6 prudently and on need basis only.


Besides, a joint media and publicity cell should be opened to counter Indo-US-Israeli propaganda. In addition, each country should raise a counter terrorism force fully equipped with requisite firepower, mobility and technology superior to what the terrorists possess to be able to dismantle terrorist networks, disrupt supply routes and sources of funding. Collective efforts should be made to beat RAW in its own game.


The writer is a security and defence analyst and author of several books. He is a regular writer for www.opinion-maker.org His articles are profusely commented upon in international newspapers/ websites.

Kashmir Rises Again

By Arun Bansi - ZoneAsia-Pk



Not that it ever subsided but the violence in Kashmir is back and the atrocities by Indian security forces equipped with special powers under a Draconian law have started again. The underlying reason is the brutal rape, murder and subsequent cover-up by Indian soldiers in Sopore. This was never forgotten nor will it be forgotten because the 17 and 22 year old girls were killed in cold blood by a brutalized military that uses rape, torture and murder as a weapon.


Read Complete Article Here: http://www.zoneasia-pk.com/ZoneAsia-Pk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=494:kashmir-rises-again&catid=39:warconflict&Itemid=63

Maoists rebels kill 26 policemen in central India


At least 26 policemen have been killed in a Maoist attack in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh, police have told the BBC.



Those killed in the latest attack were members of the paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF).


Two CRPF personnel were injured and police are searching for casualties.


In late May, more than 145 people were killed when a train crashed in West Bengal after Maoist rebels allegedly sabotaged the rails.


The Maoists, also known as Naxalites, say they are fighting for the rights of rural poor who have been neglected by the government for decades.


Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described their insurgency as India's biggest internal security challenge.


Heavily armed


In the most recent attack, the CRPF members were attacked as they were returning after clearing a road, officials say.



Chhattisgarh anti-Maoist operation head Ram Niwas told the AFP news agency that they were ambushed by a large number of heavily armed militants in Dhodai, 300km (190 miles) south of the state capital, Raipur.


Police said the ensuing gun battle lasted three hours. They say that the injured have been evacuated by helicopter and reinforcements have been sent to the area.


In May a Maoist landmine attack in Chhattisgarh destroyed a bus and killed more than 30 people, most of them civilians.


Maoist supporters saw that armed police were on board the bus and an attack was organised extremely quickly.


Correspondents said that the bus attack showed how powerful the rebels have become in remote regions such as the forests of southern Chhattisgarh. The government said it also demonstrated their barbarity.


Following the attack, the home minister said he would request wider powers to deal with the rebels.


A government offensive against the rebels - widely referred to as Operation Green Hunt - began last October.


It involves 50,000 troops and is taking place across five states - West Bengal, Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa and Chhattisgarh.


Ministers in Delhi have always accepted that there is a need to tackle the root causes of the rebellion, such as poverty and the absence of effective local government.

Brace for two-front war, Army told

Rahul Datta | New Delhi


In an unprecedented move that has confirmed India's concerns about China's growing military might, the Government has for the first time given a directive in writing to the armed forces to enhance their military capabilities vis-a-vis the neighbouring country and prepare for a two-front war scenario with China and Pakistan.


Asking the armed forces to prepare themselves to fight simultaneous wars on the eastern and western fronts with China and Pakistan, Defence Minister AK Antony has directed the chiefs of Army, Navy and Air Force to rapidly modernise and upgrade their weapon systems and tone up operational preparedness.


The Services have been assured full support from the Government in this endeavour, sources said.


Explaining the significance of the directive, the sources maintained that it came against the backdrop of the armed forces' apprehensions about the rapid modernisation programme of their Chinese counterparts. The directive will allow the armed forces to build capabilities to rapidly move troops from one theatre of war to the other by procuring more transport planes and improved rail and road network for ferrying weapons systems.


Modern warfare was all about speed, lethality and mobility and the directive would go a long way in helping the armed forces achieve this objective as soon as possible, the sources added.


The directive follows the Cabinet Committee on Security's (CCS) nod to the Army to raise two more mountain divisions (each division has 10,000 troops) on the China front. With the focus on improving infrastructure, the Army was last year allowed to raise two mountain divisions. It means that in the next four or five years, it would have four divisions on the China front.


The Government has also removed the 10-year cap on recruitment and permitted the Army to go for fresh intakes. Coupled with this important development, the Government has cleared the proposal to acquire more than 200 Howitzer guns for these divisions through the foreign military sale route from the US.


"The Howitzer guns are light. These can be dismantled and carried on horseback or by helicopters to the remote and rugged terrain of Arunachal Pradesh and other such regions in Jammu & Kashmir where road infrastructure is non-existent," sources said.


While the two-front war concept was in public domain and being discussed in seminars and TV debates, the political leadership had so far refrained from joining the debate. The recently-issued directive clearly indicates that the Government has finally heeded the concerns of the armed forces and given them unambiguous orders to go ahead and do the needful, sources said.


This decision would give the necessary momentum to the security establishment to improve the infrastructure, including all-weather roads right up to the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and airports and helipads in remote regions of States like Arunachal Pradesh. In fact, the armed forces are already engaged in upgrading nearly 25 airports in the North-East and the project is likely to be over within the next two years.


India and China have a 5,000-km-long disputed border and the Chinese have over the years rapidly improved their logistical lines by building roads right up to their side of the LAC. India is in a disadvantageous position as the terrain on its side is hilly and building roads there takes more time than in the plains, sources said, adding that the slopes on the Chinese side are gentler.

India's Muslims in Crisis

By ARYN BAKER


The disembodied voice was chilling in its rage. A gunman, holed up in the Oberoi Trident hotel in Mumbai (formerly Bombay), where some 40 people had been taken hostage, told an Indian news channel that the attacks were revenge for the persecution of Muslims in India. "We love this as our country, but when our mothers and sisters were being killed, where was everybody?" he asked via telephone. No answer came. But then he probably wasn't expecting one.





A gunman walks at the Chatrapathi Sivaji Terminal railway station in Mumbai


The roots of Muslim rage run deep in India, nourished by a long-held sense of injustice over what many Indian Muslims believe is institutionalized discrimination against the country's largest minority group. The disparities between Muslims, who make up 13.4% of the population, and India's Hindus, who hover at around 80%, are striking. There are exceptions, of course, but generally speaking, Muslim Indians have shorter life spans, worse health, lower literacy levels and lower-paying jobs. Add to that toxic brew the lingering resentment over 2002's anti-Muslim riots in the state of Gujarat. The riots, instigated by Hindu nationalists, killed some 2,000 people, most of them Muslims. To this day, few of the perpetrators have been convicted. (See pictures of the terrorist shootings in Mumbai.)


The huge gap between Muslims and Hindus will continue to haunt India's - and neighboring Pakistan's - progress toward peace and prosperity. But before intercommunal relations can improve, there are even bigger problems that must first be worked out: the schism in subcontinental Islam and the religion's place and role in modern India and Pakistan. It is a crisis 150 years in the making.


The Beginning of the Problem


On the afternoon of March 29, 1857, Mangal Pandey, a handsome, mustachioed soldier in the East India Company's native regiment, attacked his British lieutenant. His hanging a week later sparked a subcontinental revolt known to Indians as the first war of independence and to the British as the Sepoy Mutiny. Retribution was swift, and though Pandey was a Hindu, it was the subcontinent's Muslims, whose Mughal King nominally held power in Delhi, who bore the brunt of British rage. The remnants of the Mughal Empire were dismantled, and 500 years of Muslim supremacy on the subcontinent came to a halt.


Muslim society in India collapsed. The British imposed English as the official language. The impact was cataclysmic. Muslims went from near 100% literacy to 20% within a half-century. The country's educated Muslim élite was effectively blocked from administrative jobs in the government. Between 1858 and 1878, only 57 out of 3,100 graduates of Calcutta University - then the center of South Asian education - were Muslims. While discrimination by both Hindus and the British played a role, it was as if the whole of Muslim society had retreated to lick its collective wounds.


Out of this period of introspection, two rival movements emerged to foster an Islamic ascendancy. Revivalist groups blamed the collapse of their empire on a society that had strayed too far from the teachings of the Koran. They promoted a return to a purer form of Islam, modeled on the life of the Prophet Muhammad. Others embraced the modern ways of their new rulers, seeking Muslim advancement through the pursuit of Western sciences, culture and law. From these movements two great Islamic institutions were born: Darul Uloom Deoband in northern India, rivaled only by Al Azhar University in Cairo for its teaching of Islam, and Aligarh Muslim University, a secular institution that promoted Muslim culture, philosophy and languages but left religion to the mosque. These two schools embody the fundamental split that continues to divide Islam in the subcontinent today. "You could say that Deoband and Aligarh are husband and wife, born from the same historical events," says Adil Siddiqui, information coordinator for Deoband. "But they live at daggers drawn."


The campus at Deoband is only a three-hour drive from New Delhi through the modern megasuburb of Noida. Strip malls and monster shopping complexes have consumed many of the mango groves that once framed the road to Deoband, but the contemporary world stops at the gate. The courtyards are packed with bearded young men wearing long, collared shirts and white caps. The air thrums with the voices of hundreds of students reciting the Koran from open-door classrooms.


Founded in 1866, the Deoband school quickly set itself apart from other traditional madrasahs, which were usually based in the home of the village mosque's prayer leader. Deoband's founders, a group of Muslim scholars from New Delhi, instituted a regimented system of classrooms, coursework, texts and exams. Instruction is in Urdu, Persian and Arabic, and the curriculum closely follows the teachings of the 18th century Indian Islamic scholar Mullah Nizamuddin Sehalvi. Graduates go on to study at Cairo's Al Azhar or the Islamic University of Medina in Saudi Arabia, or they found their own Deobandi institutions.


Today, more than 9,000 Deobandi madrasahs are scattered throughout India, Afghanistan and Pakistan, most infamously the Dara-ul-Uloom Haqaniya Akora Khattak, near Peshawar, Pakistan, where Mullah Mohammed Omar and several other leaders of Afghanistan's Taliban first tasted a life lived in accordance with Shari'a. Siddiqui visibly stiffens when those names are brought up. They have become synonymous with Islamic radicalism, and Siddiqui is careful to dissociate his institution from those who carry on its traditions, without actually condemning their actions. "Our books are being taught there," he says. "They have the same system and rules. But if someone is following the path of terrorism, it is because of local compulsions and local politics."


Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, who founded the Anglo-Mohammedan Oriental College at Aligarh in 1877, studied under the same teachers as the founders of Deoband. But he believed that the downfall of India's Muslims was due to their unwillingness to embrace modern ways. He decoupled religion from education and in his school sought to emulate the culture and training of India's new colonial masters. Islamic culture was part of the curriculum, but so were the latest advances in sciences, medicine and Western philosophy. The medium was English, the better to prepare students for civil-service jobs. He called his school the Oxford of the East. In architecture alone, the campus lives up to that name. A euphoric blend of clock towers, crenellated battlements, Mughal arches, domes and the staid red brick of Victorian institutions that only India's enthusiastic embrace of all things European could produce, the central campus of Aligarh today is haven to a diverse crowd of male and female, Hindu and Muslim students. Its law and medicine schools are among the top-ranked in India, but so are its arts faculty and Quranic Studies Centre. "With all this diversity, language, culture, secularism was the only way to go forward as a nation," says Aligarh's vice chancellor, P.K. Abdul Azis. "It was the new religion."


This fracture in religious doctrine - whether Islam should embrace the modern or revert to its fundamental origins - between two schools less than a day's donkey ride apart when they were founded, was barely remarked upon at the time. But over the course of the next 100 years, that tiny crack would split Islam into two warring ideologies with repercussions that reverberate around the world to this day. Before the split became a crisis, however, the founders of the Deoband and Aligarh universities shared the common goal of an independent India. Pedagogical leanings were overlooked as students and staff of both institutions joined with Hindus across the subcontinent to remove the yoke of colonial rule in the early decades of the 20th century.


Two Faiths, Two Nations


But nationalistic trends were pulling at the fragile alliance, and India began to splinter along ethnic and religious lines. Following World War I, a populist Muslim poet-philosopher by the name of Muhammad Iqbal framed the Islamic zeitgeist when he questioned the position of minority Muslims in a future, independent India. The solution, Iqbal proposed, was an independent state for Muslim-majority provinces in northwestern India, a separate country where Muslims would rule themselves. The idea of Pakistan was born.


Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the Savile Row-suited lawyer who midwifed Pakistan into existence on Aug. 14, 1947, was notoriously ambiguous about how he envisioned the country once it became an independent state. Both he and Iqbal, who were friends until the poet's death in 1938, had repeatedly stated their dream for a "modern, moderate and very enlightened Pakistan," says Sharifuddin Pirzada, Jinnah's personal secretary. Jinnah's own wish was that the Pakistani people, as members of a new, modern and democratic nation, would decide the country's direction.


But rarely in Pakistan's history have its people lived Jinnah's vision of a modern Muslim democracy. Only three times in its 62-year history has Pakistan seen a peaceful, democratic transition of power. With four disparate provinces, more than a dozen languages and dialects, and powerful neighbors, the country's leaders - be they Presidents, Prime Ministers or army chiefs - have been forced to knit the nation together with the only thing Pakistanis have in common: religion.


Following the 1971 civil war, when East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, broke away, the populist Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto embarked on a Muslim-identity program to prevent the country from fracturing further. General Mohammed Zia ul-Haq continued the Islamization campaign when he overthrew Bhutto in 1977, hoping to garner favor with the religious parties, the only constituency available to a military dictator. He instituted Shari'a courts, made blasphemy illegal and established laws that punished fornicators with lashes and held that rape victims could be convicted of adultery. When the Soviet Union invaded neighboring Afghanistan in December 1979, Pakistan was already poised for its own Islamic revolution.


Almost overnight, thousands of refugees poured over the border into Pakistan. Camps mushroomed, and so did madrasahs. Ostensibly created to educate the refugees, they provided the ideal recruiting ground for a new breed of soldier: mujahedin, or holy warriors, trained to vanquish the infidel invaders in America's proxy war with the Soviet Union. Thousands of Pakistanis joined fellow Muslims from across the world to fight the Soviets. As far away as Karachi, high school kids started wearing "jihadi jackets," the pocketed vests popular with the mujahedin. Says Hamid Gul, then head of the Pakistan intelligence agency charged with arming and training the mujahedin: "In the 1980s, the world watched the people of Afghanistan stand up to tyranny, oppression and slavery. The spirit of jihad was rekindled, and it gave a new vision to the youth of Pakistan."


But jihad, as it is described in the Koran, does not end merely with political gain. It ends in a perfect Islamic state. The West's, and Pakistan's, cynical resurrection of something so profoundly powerful and complex unleashed a force that gave root to al-Qaeda's rage, the Taliban's dream of an Islamic utopia in Afghanistan, and in the dozens of radical Islamic groups rapidly replicating themselves in India and around the world today. "The promise of jihad was never fulfilled," says Gul. "Is it any wonder the fighting continues to this day?" Religion may have been used to unite Pakistan, but it is also tearing it apart.


India Today


In India, Islam is, in contrast, the other - purged by the British, denigrated by the Hindu right, mistrusted by the majority, marginalized by society. There are nearly as many Muslims in India as in all of Pakistan, but in a nation of more than a billion, they are still a minority, with all the burdens that minorities anywhere carry. Government surveys show that Muslims live shorter, poorer and unhealthier lives than Hindus and are often excluded from the better jobs. To be sure, there are Muslim success stories in the booming economy. Azim Premji, the founder of the outsourcing giant Wipro, is one of the richest individuals in India. But for many Muslims, the inequality of the boom has reinforced their exclusion.


Kashmir, a Muslim-dominated state whose fate had been left undecided in the chaos that led up to partition, remains a suppurating wound in India's Muslim psyche. As the cause of three wars between India and Pakistan - one of which nearly went nuclear in 1999 - Kashmir has become a symbol of profound injustice to Indian Muslims, who believe that their government cares little for Kashmir's claim of independence - which is based upon a 1948 U.N. resolution promising a plebiscite to determine the Kashmiri people's future. That frustration has spilled into the rest of India in the form of several devastating terrorist attacks that have made Indian Muslims both perpetrators and victims.


A mounting sense of persecution, fueled by the government's seeming reluctance to address the brutal anti-Muslim riots that killed more than 2,000 in the state of Gujarat in 2002, has aided the cause of homegrown militant groups. They include the banned Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), which was accused of detonating nine bombs in Mumbai during the course of 2003, killing close to 80. The 2006 terrorist attacks on the Mumbai commuter-rail system that killed 183 people were also blamed on SIMI as well as the pro-Kashmir Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT). Those incidents exposed the all-too-common Hindu belief that Muslims aren't really Indian. "LeT, SIMI - it doesn't matter who was behind these attacks. They are all children of [Pervez] Musharraf," sneered Manish Shah, a Mumbai resident who lost his best friend in the explosions, referring to the then President of Pakistan. In India, unlike Pakistan, Islam does not unify but divide.


Still, many South Asian Muslims insist Islam is the one and only force that can bring the subcontinent together and return it to pre-eminence as a single whole. "We [Muslims] were the legal rulers of India, and in 1857 the British took that away from us," says Tarik Jan, a gentle-mannered scholar at Islamabad's Institute of Policy Studies. "In 1947 they should have given that back to the Muslims." Jan is no militant, but he pines for the golden era of the Mughal period in the 1700s and has a fervent desire to see India, Pakistan and Bangladesh reunited under Islamic rule.


That sense of injustice is at the root of Muslim identity today. It has permeated every aspect of society and forms the basis of rising Islamic radicalism on the subcontinent. "People are hungry for justice," says Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani journalist and author of the new book Descent into Chaos. "It is perceived to be the fundamental promise of the Koran." These twin phenomena - the longing many Muslims feel to see their religion restored as the subcontinent's core, and the marks of both piety and extremism Islam bears - reflect the lack of strong political and civic institutions in the region for people to have faith in. If the subcontinent's governments can't provide those institutions, then terrorists like the Trident's mysterious caller will continue asking questions. And providing their own answers.


- With reporting by Jyoti Thottam / Mumbai and Ershad Mahmud / Islamabad

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Army called in as Held Kashmir boils again

* Three more killed as security forces fire at stone-pelting mob


* 13 people injured in fresh clashes across IHK


* Mobile services blocked


* Chidambaram pledges support to IHK govt


* Blames anti-national elements for 'trying to exploit the situation'



By Iftikhar Gilani


NEW DELHI: The Indian-held Kashmir government sought the army's help on Tuesday and imposed a curfew in the region to control continuing unrest, when firing by security personnel on stone-pelting protesters left three more people dead. The army moved in Sopore and the adjoining Baramulla township, as violence spread to South Kashmir and more areas of North Kashmir.


At least 13 people were injured in fresh clashes between protesters and security forces across the valley, police said.


On Tuesday, deaths were reported from the southern Anantnag district where protesters had gathered on the streets. Police identified the killed protesters as Ishfaq Ahmed Khanday, Imtiyaz Ahmad Itoo and Shujatul Islam. The victims were part of a mob hurling stones at Central Reserve Police Force personnel in Anchidoora in Anantnag town, 55 kilometres of Srinagar, police said.


Locals alleged that the CRPF personnel barged into houses and shops while chasing a violent mob protesting the rise in killings by security forces, and shot the victims in a house and a bakery. Death toll in the firings has reached to eight in a week. Two people had died in CRPF firing in Sopore and Baramulla on Monday.


Reports of violence were also reported from across the valley in Kupwara, Bandipur, Budgam, Pulwama Kangan and Sumbal areas.


In the northern town of Kupwara, at least five protestors and four policemen were injured when CRPF and police resorted to baton-charge and teargas shelling to disperse hundreds of people from Kupwara and adjoining areas who protested and tried to march towards Sopore. Massive protests were also held in nearby Handwara. Protestors from Rajwar, Handwara and Kulangam assembled at the Handwara Chowk to march towards Sopore.


Services blocked: Under the current situation, mobile services in North Kashmir and SMS service in the entire valley were blocked on the instructions of the government.


Separately, Indian Home Minister P Chidambaram pledged support to the IHK government to enforce curfew restrictions sternly and end rioting. In a statement after a high-level meeting of security chiefs to review the situation in IHK, the minister blamed anti-national elements for attempting to exploit the situation, and appealed to the people to help restore law and order.


Anti-state elements: "There are reliable reports that anti-national elements are trying to exploit the situation. Some militants may also have sneaked into the valley to trigger violence. I appeal to all those who believe in peace and development to stand by the state government and help it restore law and order," he added.

DALIT YOUTH STRANGLED

Peeyush Khandelwal, Hindustan Times


The spate of honour killings in and around the Capital showed no sign of abating as yet another case emerged on Thursday - a young man was strangled and left hanging from a tree by his girlfriend's father and three other of her relatives.


Police found the body of Sonu Kumar Jatav (20) in a mango orchard in Ghaziabad's Badauda village, 45 km east of the Capital. Investigations revealed that he had been involved with Reena (19), whom he wanted to marry, but whose parents disapproved of the relationship.





Both of them were Dalits.


"The girl's family had already threatened the man. His worried family members had in fact sent him away from home for his own safety," said Capt. M.M. Baig, Superintendent of Police.


On Wednesday, however, police said, Reena's father forced her to call Sonu and invite him over to discuss their marriage. "He turned up the same evening," Baig said.


"They were after my son's life and planned the murder," said Kishan Kumar, Sonu's father. The suspected killers are all absconding.

Dalit woman stripped, beaten up in Mumbai slum


Rape of a minor girl triggered the attack


'Neech jaat' (low caste) was a word Kavita (name changed) kept hearing when she was being stripped and beaten up. "They beat me with bamboo sticks. I kept saying 'no.' They ripped off my gown, pulled my hair and dragged me out of the house to a nearby shop. Many were filming the act on mobile phones. In Hindi, they kept saying, 'neech jaat [low caste], come, take your turn.' Men were beating me too," Kavita told The Hindu on Saturday.


From a polythene bag, Kavita's mother fished out a clump of hair plucked from the woman's head.


The shocking incident took place last week in a Mumbai slum, where a group of upper caste women assaulted the 22-year-old Scheduled Caste woman. A case under the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act (POA) has been registered at the Sewree police station. The police have arrested 10 women and two men.


The arrest of Kavita's brother in a case of the rape of a minor girl triggered the assault. However, deep-seated caste hatred towards the family runs a long way back. There are two water pumps in the locality. "The main reasons are water and house. Ours is the only Dalit Marathi family in this area, and they want to oust us from here," said her mother.


"It all began in 2007 when a water pump was sunk here. Sharda Yadav and Mumtaz [residents, now under arrest] would routinely demand money for the water supply. It's a community pump. We refused to pay up. I would fight against these illegal practices all the time. I have complained to the police several times about it. The women would say, 'These people have gotten too big for their boots. Sticks should be shoved inside them.' They have used such abusive words that I cannot even utter them," she said with difficulty.


"The rape case was just a pretext. Owing to the fights over water, there was already much anger [against the family]. So they targeted her [Kavita]. Her mother was also beaten up. The mother ran to the police, and they called the police control room," Assistant Commissioner of Police Dilip Waghmare told TheHindu on telephone.


On the day of the incident, the victim's mother was the first to be beaten up. "They had a meeting somewhere. All of them entered together. The whole lane was packed with people. After I ran to the police chowky, help arrived on time. The molesters were arrested. They were laughing even while being taken away," Kavita's mother said.


In 2008, she had written to the police about the death threats her family had received and the harassment her daughter suffered. "As my son was here, nobody dared touch us, but when he was arrested, they saw an opportunity."


The family said Ms. Yadav, who led the attack, was a Shiv Sena worker, a claim Mr. Waghmare has denied.


None came to the rescue of Kavita, except her neighbour Sayeeda Quazi, who put a dupatta around her. Sayeeda's statement has been recorded.


The entire neighbourhood, meanwhile, is tight-lipped. "Something happened, but I was on work," said a resident. Some said they were away at their native places, or away from home.


"Basically women were enraged by the rape of a girl. When they went to [Kavita's] house, her mother shot back, saying [it wasn't as if] it had happened to them. Any woman would be enraged by that, won't she?" asked a shopkeeper, who claimed to know nothing of the incident.


Kavita and her mother have been given police protection. "A police guard has been posted here. He checks on us at regular intervals," her mother said.

Punjab slammed on sharing of river water

By IANS


Chandigarh: Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) chief Om Parkash Chautala Monday slammed the government of neighbouring Punjab for demanding royalty for river water that enters Haryana through the state.


"It is an old practice of Punjab that whenever election approaches, their government picks up some irrelevant issue to divert the attention from other burning issues that are plaguing their state. This time they are illegitimately demanding royalty over water," said Chautala, a former chief minister of Haryana, while addressing reporters here Tuesday evening.


"The central government is also not taking this matter seriously. We demand an all-party meeting to deliberate on this issue. They should draft some strict law to ensure that every state gets its due share of water without any problem," he added.


In the past few weeks, Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal has repeated on various occasions his demand for royalty from Haryana over water.


"We are not beggars, water is our right and we have adhered to all laws in getting our share. It's really surprising that a senior leader like Parkash Singh Badal is demanding royalty as there is no law regarding this and no case is pending in any court over this," stated Chautala.


"Nobody knows that which royalty they are talking about. If they have anything beneath their land then they are supposed to get it but for anything that is flowing over the land it is illegal," he said.


If his demand is taken seriously then other states like Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir will also start asking for it and even countries like Tibet and China will start demanding it as all water is coming from there, he said.

Indian police kill two protestors in Kashmir (IHK)


Police in Indian-administered Kashmir have fired at protesters who had taken to the streets in defiance of a curfew.


Indian Held Kashmir.JPG


Protesters clash with police on the streets


At least two people have been killed in the most recent clashes in the towns of Sopore and Baramullah, police say.


Their deaths take the number of civilian deaths in the region this June to eight.


The demonstrators were on the streets on Monday to protest against the rising number of civilian deaths.


At least 16 people have been injured in the disturbances, police say.


The state government has accused the security forces of being "trigger happy" and has called on them to exercise more restraint.


No-one from the paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) - accused of most of the killings - was available for comment.


The BBC's Altaf Hussain in Srinagar says that the recent deaths have caused much embarrassment to the state government.


Hundreds of thousands of troops are based in Kashmir to fight a two-decade insurgency against Indian rule.


Anti-India sentiment runs deep in Muslim-majority Kashmir, over which India and Pakistan both claim sovereignty and have fought two wars.


Procession


Some of the most serious clashes on Monday took place in the northern town of Sopore, 50km (30 miles) from Srinagar.


Local residents say that the paramilitary CRPF opened fire after the funeral of Bilal Ahmed - killed in firing by the CRPF on Sunday night - had been completed.


They say that Tajamul Ahmed was killed in the firing on Monday and a number of others were wounded.


The CRPF have been blamed for at least six of the eight civilian deaths this month.


Four civilians have now been killed protesting in Sopore in as many days, with little sign of the protests abating.


In Baramullah the CRPF was accused by protesters of firing on marchers as they tried to go towards Sopore.


The state authorities say that the security forces have been guilty of "excessive use of force" against the protesters.


On Sunday night, Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah spoke to India's Home Minister P Chidambaram and expressed his concern over the killings.


State Law Minister Ali Mohammad Sagar told a press conference on Sunday night that the CRPF had ignored the chief minister's clear instructions to exercise restraint while dealing with protesters.


Mr Sagar said the killing of Bilal Ahmed had "no justification at all".

Pak-India friendship

Ali Sukhanver


Desire for peace is the first step leading to the struggle for peace. The people of Pakistan and India are certainly lucky enough to have this desire in abundance. Although the relationship between the two countries at state-level has never been very much amiable and cordial yet the people have always made sincere efforts to breach these artificially developed distances between the two countries. Last Friday, the same passion for peace gave a new color to the morning at the Wahga border when baton for the XIX Commonwealth Games reached India from Pakistan. Almost 5,000 spectators, officials and armed personnel were there to witness joyfully the celebrations of the Queen's Baton Relay on both sides of the border. One could feel the hidden and inexpressible desire of friendship among the people who were participating in the scenario. As reported by


The Hindu, ''Friendship through sports' was the theme of the celebration, and the mood on either side was befittingly upbeat, a positive sign for both the countries on the heels of the Foreign Secretary-level talks in Islamabad.' The Times of India has also commented the celebration in the same way, 'This extravaganza (Delhi Games 2010) will not only bring closer the people of the subcontinent but also the participating countries. It is a great day for sports in India. It is because of Pakistan's efforts that India got the Games and it shows that India's relationship with Pakistan will improve if we concentrate on sports ties.' In short it was all very wonderful and colorfully imaginative. After the Wagah celebrations, relaxing on the rear seat of my chauffer driven car returning to the hazardous life of Lahore, I was thinking of the artificially distorted relationship between the two countries.


My eyes were gazing at the road leading westward to Pakistan and eastward to India. This small village is called the Berlin of Asia. It was divided into two portions in 1947 at the time when British India gave birth to two autonomous states of Pakistan and India. I was pondering over the reasons and causes which drew a line of demarcation between the people living together for the last many centuries. If the Hindus had not behaved brutally, if the Muslims were not treated callously and if the majority had not treated minority cruelly, this unnatural but compulsory division would never have ever taken place. Even after this division the situation could be bettered and improved if things were taken care of in a sensible way. The two countries could have developed and sustained a better working relationship if rules of equality and justice were keenly observed and the basic root-causes of conflicts were rooted out in a proper way at the proper time. It is something very optimistic that no issue of conflict between the two countries is unfathomable. The Kashmir issue, the water problem and the wave of terrorism growing rapidly in both the countries, nothing is unsolvable. The 90% of the total conflict would no more be there if the people of Kashmir are given a free hand to decide their future and the Indus water treaty is strictly observed. After that the two neighbouring countries could devote all their attention, efforts and resources to curb and crush the problem of terrorism. Although both the countries must share equal responsibilities in this regard yet India being a big country with a lot of resources will have to sacrifice more for the peace and calm of the whole region.


As a result of the so-called War on Terror of USA, Pakistan is facing a lot of problems. It is really a very tough time for the people of Pakistan though they are bearing the consequences of this hypocritically imposed war on terror with marvelous determination and resolve. In such a painful situation the Raw supported criminals disguised as Islamist terrorists are adding salt to the injury. The activities of these criminals are on one hand trying to cause unrest in Pakistan and on the other hand defaming the efforts and struggle of the Afghan volunteers who are doing their utmost to save their land from the clutches of foreign invaders. It might be true that the political government of India is neither behind all these activities of Raw nor in their support but it is very much true that it has never tried to put a check on the activities of this so-called intelligence agency. According to various reports the democratic government of India has lost a total control over this agency and the hi-ups of Raw are most of the times guided, commanded and directed by the CIA and the Mosad. Moreover this agency has very close relationship with different Hindu extremist organizations. As a result of this nexus Raw has to look after the benefits and interests of the CIA, the Mosad and the Hindu extremist organizations like Shiv Sena.


Internationally the Muslims are blamed and defamed for suicide bombing through out the world from Palestine to Pakistan but nobody ever refers to the Hindu suicide bombers. It would be a matter of great interest for the readers to know that RAW had many times used its suicide bombers in Sri Lanka to create panic and fear during the period when the LTTe tigers were waging a war against the Sri Lankan nation. These suicidal terrorists were trained by the organizations that follow the Hindutva ideology. Other than carrying on the operation against the people of Sri Lanka, the aim and objective of these organizations is to target all the minorities in India including the Muslims, Christians and the Sikhs. A longstanding peace and harmony between India and Pakistan is not only inevitable for the two neighbouring countries but for the whole of the South-Asian region. Still there is an ample time to review and revive the worsening state of affairs. If the people of two countries have a strong desire for peace, why are the Raw and the Hindutva followers given a free hand to crush their desire?


The writer is a Pakistan based bilingual analyst on strategic and defense affairs.

Afghan Aid on Hold as Corruption Is Probed

By PETER SPIEGEL in Washington and MATTHEW ROSENBERG in Kabul


The chairwoman of the House subcommittee responsible for foreign aid said she was stripping from pending legislation $3.9 billion in funding for Afghanistan following revelations that billions of dollars, including large amounts of U.S. aid funds, were flowing out of the country through Kabul's main airport.





American soldiers near Kandahar carry a wounded comrade to a helicopter for evacuation on Monday. Combat operations have begun to escalate.


Rep. Nita Lowey (D., N.Y.) called the revelations "outrageous," and Capitol Hill aides said she had the backing of Rep. David Obey (D., Wis.), the chairman of the full House Appropriations Committee.


"I do not intend to appropriate one more dime for assistance to Afghanistan until I have confidence that U.S. taxpayer money is not being abused to line the pockets of corrupt Afghan government officials, drug lords, and terrorists," Ms. Lowey said.


At least $3.18 billion in cash has been flown out of Afghanistan since 2007 after being legally declared to customs officers, according to documents reported Monday in The Wall Street Journal.


U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said Monday that the Afghan government has gradually improved its ability to monitor the flow of money in and out of the country, and that officials planned to explain to Ms. Lowey's committee the improvements made by both Kabul and the U.S. to better account for aid money.


U.S. officials say they believe at least some of the cash is siphoned from Western aid projects and U.S., European and North Atlantic Treaty Organization contracts to provide security, supplies and reconstruction work for coalition forces in Afghanistan. NATO spent $14 billion in Afghanistan last year.


Profits reaped from the opium trade are also a part of the money flow, as is cash earned by the Taliban from drugs and extortion, officials say. Almost all the money is sent to Dubai, where wealthy Afghans have long parked their lawfully and unlawfully earned money.


Mr. Crowley said while some of the money leaving through the Kabul airport was likely from Afghanistan's illicit drug trade, the State Department believed most was the product of Afghanistan's growing economy and the need to move funds to a country with a better-functioning banking system, such as Dubai.


"I don't think we have any evidence at this point that the money flowing out of Afghanistan is U.S. money," Mr. Crowley said. "We think for the most part it's the result of legitimate commerce."


He added: "No one's saying there's not work to do, no one's saying there isn't some flow of illicit money leaving Afghanistan, but we think Afghanistan has made significant progress over the last several months."


In Kabul, the Afghan government said its top anticorruption watchdog will launch an investigation into the allegations. The Journal's article was discussed at an Afghan cabinet meeting Monday, and Afghanistan's High Office of Oversight and Anti-Corruption plans to open an inquiry into who is carrying the money, where it comes from and why it is being shipped out of the country, said Waheed Omar, a spokesman for President Hamid Karzai.


A U.S. official familiar with the money flows said it was good the Afghan government was finally discussing the matter publicly, but that there was little reason to believe the investigation would yield major revelations, because those believed to be sending out money include relatives of Mr. Karzai, senior officials in his administration and large Afghan companies with ties to the presidential palace.


Ms. Lowey's move, however, has the potential to be more problematic for the Obama administration, which is already facing significant questions about its Afghan strategy-particularly on issues of Afghan government corruption-from Democrats on Capitol Hill.


The House subcommittee is scheduled to debate the funding bill, which includes appropriations for the entire State Department and U.S. diplomatic operations, on Wednesday. Matt Dennis, a spokesman for Ms. Lowey, said the bill introduced for debate will now contain only humanitarian aid, which totals less than $100 million.


Ms. Lowey also said she would hold oversight hearings into the revelations after next week's July 4 recess.


Of the approximately $4 billion the administration requested in Afghan aid, the vast majority, or about $3.3 billion, was in economic aid. The rest of the money that will be stripped from the bill was largely funding for drug interdiction and military exchange programs, Mr. Dennis said.


The Senate subcommittee responsible for foreign aid has yet to schedule a date for its deliberations, and the money could be put back in when the Senate and House bills are reconciled.


But the removal marks the latest in a series of moves on Capitol Hill, including increasingly vocal criticism of the war effort, that have begun to signal weakening political support for the conflict.


Afghan and U.S. officials say the sums legally leaving through Kabul's airport could amount to about $3.65 billion a year, more than a quarter of Afghanistan's $13.5 billion gross domestic product.


The money is being shipped through private money-transfer networks known as "hawalas," which have been used for centuries across the Muslim world as a fast, cheap and legitimate way to transfer funds.


The murkiness of the money's origins prompted U.S. officials to begin investigating the cash flow. A special U.S.-trained Afghan anticorruption unit under the Interior Ministry has also been investigating.


Separately, the Afghan parliament Monday confirmed Gen. Bismullah Khan, the former army chief of staff, as the country's new interior minister overseeing law enforcement and police. The previous minister, Hanif Atmar, was fired this month by President Karzai amid disagreements over the country's security policies.Four other ministers were approved, but two of Mr. Karzai's nominees were rejected. They include the transport minister-designate, Daud Ali Najafi, who oversaw Afghanistan's election commission during last year's flawed presidential election.


Altogether, seven ministerial posts remain vacant. They have been open since parliament rejected most of President Karzai's Cabinet picks in the wake of last year's election.


Also still open is the top job at the country's intelligence agency. Its previous occupant, Amrullah Saleh, was fired at the same time as Mr. Atmar.


-Maria Abi-Habib in Kabul


contributed to this article.


Write to Peter Spiegel at peter.spiegel@wsj.com and Matthew Rosenberg atmatthew.rosenberg@wsj.com

Gen Kayani, ISI chief to visit Kabul today for talks


Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and Director-General of the Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) Ahmed Shuja Pasha will be in Kabul for a "morning-to-evening trip" on Monday, ISPR chief Major-General Athar Abbas said on Sunday. According to Gen Abbas, both Kayani and Pasha are on a 'routine' trip.



Pakistan's top military leaders will be arriving in the Afghan capital to discuss various aspects of a new counter-insurgency plan with Afghan and allied leaders. The plan is said to be making considerable headway.


Although the visit is ostensibly to attend a gathering of a tripartite commission of Pakistan, Afghanistan and allied forces, officials said there is also a possibility of a bilateral meeting with President Hamid Karzai. However, this was not confirmed by Gen Athar Abbas.


The visit is taking place on the heels of reports that Karzai had earlier held two meetings with Afghan Taliban commander Maulvi Sirajuddin Haqqani, whose group is based in Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region.


There are speculations that Pakistan is pushing for a 'deal' between Karzai and various warring factions of Afghan Taliban, allowing them to have a place in any future political dispensation in Kabul.


Kayani has during the past week been holding meetings with various top political and military officials of the United States, Britain and Afghanistan.


On Friday, US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee Admiral Mike Mullen met him in Rawalpindi.


A day ago, William Hague, the UK secretary of state for foreign and commonwealth affairs, discussed with Pakistan's military chief the prospects of a negotiated settlement in Afghanistan.


US special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke and Afghan Foreign Minister Zalmai Rassoul were also among those who met Kayani during the week.


Admiral Mike Mullen is already in Afghanistan and discussed with Karzai last week the new scenario emerging out of the sacking of Gen. Stanley A McChrystal, the allied commander in the country.


Experts believe visit by Kayani and Pasha to Kabul might have impact on the future of reconciliation plan initiated by Karzai to attract Taliban to a negotiating table.

The Trophies Of Operation Green Hunt

When rape is routine and there's a paucity of condemning voices


NANDINI SUNDAR





Security personnel with the body of a suspected female Maoist after the June 16 encounter in the Ranjha forests near Lalgarh


If the security forces can treat dead women like hunting trophies, not only trussing their bodies to poles, but taking pride in displaying their kill, is it surprising that their behaviour towards the living is so atrocious? After every deadly attack by the Maoists, 'civil society actors' are summoned by TV channels to condemn the incident, substituting moral indignation for news analysis. And yet, the same media is strangely silent on police or paramilitary atrocities against civilians. On June 9,The Hindu published stories of rapes in and around Chintalnar in Dantewada by special police officers (SPOs) of the Chhattisgarh government. To my knowledge, no one's asked P. Chidambaram, Raman Singh or the Chhattisgarh DGP to condemn these incidents or even asked what they are going to do about it. These are people in positions of power, who are elected or paid to uphold the Constitution, and the 'buck stops with them', not with ordinary citizens.


If channels can run all-day programmes on justice for Ruchika Girhotra, why not for the adivasi girls who were raped and assaulted in and around Chintalnar between May 26-28? Is it because they are not middle class and their plight will not raise TRP ratings? Or because they are considered 'collateral damage' in the war between "India" and the "Maoists"-who, not being part of "India", are presumably from outer space-that TV commentators advocate?


While rape is often described as a weapon of war, it is not uniformly practised, and indeed nothing distinguishes the two parties in a guerrilla war more than their attitude to rape. In her careful analysis of sexual violence during civil war, the political scientist Elizabeth Woods points out that while it was common in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Rwanda and Sierra Leone, sexual assault was less frequent in El Salvador, Sri Lanka and Peru. In the latter cases, the vast majority of rapes were committed by the government or paramilitaries, this also being a primary reason why women were motivated to join the insurgents. The rebel armies-who carried out other violent acts, including the killing of civilians-almost never committed sexual violence, including against female combatants in their own ranks. In Mizoram, women recalling the regrouping and search operations of the 1960s described only rapes by Indian soldiers and none by the Mizo National Front. One said to me, "It is as if the vai (outsider) army was hungry for women." Today, despite government claims that the Maoists sexually exploit young women, the distinction between insurgent and counter-insurgent is clear for the women of Dantewada. They are safe from one army (the PLGA) but not from the other (the Indian paramilitary and SPOs/police). And in any war to win hearts and minds ('WHAM'), surely this is not an unimportant distinction.


After the 76 CRPF men were killed at Chintalnar, many in the media pointed to the complete lack of intelligence on the ambush. What kind of intelligence do they expect from villages from where young girls are picked up and kept as sexual slaves in Salwa Judum camps? In July '08, I recorded two testimonies from the village of Mukram, right next to the site of the attack. These, along with several others, were submitted to the nhrc, which was investigating the situation on behalf of the Supreme Court, and to the National Commission for Women, but till date, nothing has come out of it. But this is how the testimony of Kawasi Lakhmi (all names of victims changed) went:


"I was four months pregnant and was visiting my parents' house in June 2007 when Salwa Judum leaders and SPOs attacked my village. It was about 9 or 10 pm and I was sleeping when they surrounded my house. They beat up my parents and dragged me to the main road. From there, along with Hidme and Madvi Unga, a 20-year-old boy, I was taken to Jagargunda camp. There I was kept for a week and raped every night by different SPOs. I do not recognise the others, but I recognised Bhima aka Ramesh of Jonnaguda village and Somdu of Kunder village.


"We (the two girls) were kept locked up in one house and Unga was kept separately. We were given only a little food and not allowed out at all, except to relieve ourselves. My clothes fell apart in tatters and my jewellery was taken away. After a week, I was given a small cloth to cover myself. Unga was badly beaten and was ill for a long time. Hidme and I were also ill and could not work for two months. The Chintalnar police took money from our families for having saved us."


The benevolent police of Chintalnar had told the girls' families that they had sent a wireless message to Jagargunda camp and the girls were safe. In return for this, they had extracted Rs 1,500 from each family. The same SPOs appear in other testimonies, such as this one from Kottaguda:


"Around April '07, Salwa Judum, SPOs, police officers and CRPF men came to our village. I was on my way to fill water while Kosi was at home at this time. The Judum and security forces caught us, called us Naxalites and forcibly took us to Jagargunda camp. There they kept us in a room where SPOs raped us several times during the next few weeks. We can recognise them and know some of them by name also because they are from nearby villages, like Bhima of Jonnaguda village, Somdu of Kunder village, Dasru of Millampalli, Nanda of Lakhapal village and Muka of Nagram village."


Another common pattern that emerges is of gangrapes by SPOs on combing operations. For the young girls, who have so little to begin with, the loss of jewellery and clothes is an important part of the narrative. And yet their resilience in the face of horror is remarkable. A 17-year-old I met in Arlampalli village recounted:


"On July 29, '07, I was breaking tora in the courtyard of my house when four SPOs came. I ran inside but they dragged me out and took me about one km away. There they tied my hands and feet and blindfolded me and all four gangraped me. They tore all my clothes and broke my jewellery. After that, I managed to escape on the pretext of drinking water and hid in a grain bin in someone's house. I recognise three of the SPOs-Rajesh from Polampalli, Kiche Soma of Korrapad and Linga from Palamadgu. Even after this incident they came to my house and threatened me. I was too scared to report to the police and, anyway, what would have been the point? I was even too scared to go to the market for fear of being caught and raped again. After being beaten and raped, my body was badly swollen. I was also bitten by a snake while running away that day, but could not go to a doctor. I was treated with local medicine."


Rape cannot be justified as action done in the line of duty. Unlike an encounter, there is no question of who fired first.


Nothing brings out the hollowness of the government's claim on WHAM more than its stand on sexual violence. Rapes cannot be justified as actions done in the line of duty. Unlike an encounter, there is no question of who fired first. Even if rogue police or armymen commit rapes, a concerned government can take steps to identify and punish the guilty. And yet, the record on this is abysmal, from Kashmir to Manipur to Chhattisgarh. In practice what emerges is that, rather than WHAM, the Indian government is following a 'cost-benefit approach' aimed at making the costs-including starvation, murder, torture and rape-far higher than any benefit the public might gain from supporting the guerrillas or remaining neutral.




In Dantewada, the police have bent over backwards to defend the SPOs and Salwa Judum leaders accused of rape. Take the case of Markami Budri, originally from Bhandarpadar village. In March '09, she wrote to the Dantewada SP complaining that she had been raped by SPOs in Konta thana, who picked her up when she was on her way to a relative's house. Among those she accused was one Soyam Mooka, Salwa Judum leader in Konta. Since the SP refused to file an fir, she and five other girls were helped by a local NGO to file a case in the lower court. Her first deposition was on June 16, a hearing which the police clearly had knowledge of. In the meantime, we had already filed her complaint with the Supreme Court. In a letter to the SC dated June 17-a day after her court deposition- the SP Dantewada wrote that "the police enquired about her", and "nobody knows as to where she has gone away". Further, the people he had enquired from, Salwa Judum leaders Boddu Raja, Soyam Mooka and Dinesh (the very people accused by her), claimed the charges were fabricated to malign them. On October 30, the Konta magistrate issued an arrest warrant for Soyam Mooka and the other accused. On December 10, the police declared they were all absconding. But less than a month later, on January 6, 2010, Soyam Mooka was seen under police protection leading a demonstration of the Ma Danteshwari Swabhimaan Manch (a new name for the Salwa Judum) against Medha Patkar and others in Dantewada town.


Once rapes become routine, what any responsible commander should be worried about is not so much the brutality of the other side, but the degeneration of his own. The victims will be not just the adivasi women of Dantewada or Lalgarh, but women from all the areas where the jawans come from. What do we want-an India at war with its women?


(Nandini Sundar is the author of Subalterns and Sovereigns: An Anthropological History of Bastar 1854-2006.)

Monday, June 28, 2010

David Miliband: How to end the war in Afghanistan

David Miliband, the former foreign secretary has written an open letter to General David Petraeus, the new commander of Nato forces in Afghanistan setting out plans to accelerate moves towards a peace deal in Afghanistan:





David Miliband is the frontrunner for the Labour Party leadership.


Dear David,


You and I both know the Afghan mission is at a decisive moment. Stanley McChrystal was a remarkable commander who had the fierce loyalty of the men and women under his command. He brought rigour and drive as well as compassion to the mission in Afghanistan. President Obama's decisive action to put you in charge shows the urgency and importance that the President rightly attaches to this mission. There is now a race against time to persuade the Afghan people that the correct strategy is in place and show our own people it can succeed.


The first time we met, you told me there is no way to kill your way to victory in a counter insurgency. As we have discussed, the purpose of military effort and civilian improvement is to create the conditions for political settlement. The battle for power is fought in the minds of the local population, insurgents and western publics.


Better Afghan Security Forces are necessary but not enough. Better schooling and economic opportunities are vital for the loyalty of the Afghan people. But none of them are durable or possible without a political settlement. We need the tribes inside the system, al qaeda outside, and the neighbours onside. The process required is therefore two-pronged - national and regional.


First, include the excluded. Within Afghanistan, a political settlement needs arrangements, whether formal or informal, to ensure that the legitimate tribal, ethnic, and other groups that feel excluded from the post-Bonn political settlement are given a real stake in the political process and are able to compete for political representation. A peace settlement must include the vanquished as well as the victors. All of this would encourage Afghans to play a part in building stability and security so that and this is a key objective of many of the insurgents the international forces will be able to withdraw from combat, initially into a training and support role, and then altogether.


Second, go local. The provincial and district governors and their associated assemblies of elders should be given new governing powers, so they have the confidence, competence, and capacity to govern in the best interests of those they represent. Recruiting the right people for these jobs is essential and in view of the challenges of upholding justice and the rule of law, the police chief and local magistrates are equally important.


Third, a new legislative process should be established not necessarily involving constitutional change between President and parliament, in order to give parliamentarians a real stake in the success of the political settlement.


Fourth, underpinning all this must be a more concerted effort to prevent and reduce the corruption that corrodes trust. President Karzai's promises to tackle the culture of impunity and to establish a new anti-corruption unit are only a start.


Regionally, all of Afghanistan's neighbors and the key regional powers must recognise two simple facts: no country in the region, let alone the international community, will again allow Afghanistan to be dominated, or used as a strategic asset, by a neighboring state; and the status quo in Afghanistan is damaging to all. Crime, drugs, terrorism, and refugees spill across its borders when Afghanistan's great mineral wealth and agricultural land should instead be of benefit to the region.


There will be no settlement in Afghanistan without Pakistan's involvement, but India, Russia, Turkey, and China are also key. Moreover, the Iranian regime whose nuclear policies have flouted the UN and that has a record of attempting to destabilize its neighbors must acknowledge that the best way to protect its investments or promote the interests of Afghans that share its Shia faith is to work to promote peace, not undermine it.


I know there is an argument over when the time is right to go down the political track, but in truth it has already begun. It is shaped and reshaped every day in the minds of the people. The job of the Afghan government, with our strong support, should be to define a political endgame that creates a stake for all those willing to live within the Afghan constitution - and then march towards it.


You have said yourself that 70 to 80 per cent of the insurgency are not ideologically linked to al-Qaeda. Engagement with those who have been involved in attacks is difficult. But allowing space for discussion to bring people from the insurgency into Afghan society, removing the violence, is not appeasement. It is exactly what we want to achieve: the end of the war, with the sustainable capacity in the country to prevent its restart.


Now is a time for determination but also clarity. We are counting on you.


Yours,


David

'My daughter was raped by a monster'

Abhishek Anand


Brutal sexual assault on 5-year-old in southeast Delhi; victim's private parts to be reconstructed





Bruised innocence: Payal at her home


Crime and the Capital have long shared an unhealthy liaison. But certain criminal acts make you wary of the dark side of the human mind.


On the 4th of June, 5-year-old Payal was raped at the railway quarters in Pul Prahlad Pur area in southeast Delhi. She was rushed to AIIMS and the accused Jugnu (26) was nabbed the next day and sent to Tihar Jail. But the victim's troubles are far from over. Her vaginal system has been completely damaged in the incident and she is allowed to eat very little, with doctors fearing further complications.


"My daughter was playing outside our home when she was kidnapped. I searched for her for 2 hours without luck. At around 3.30 pm she returned home. She was dripping blood and her cloths were torn. She told me that a boy took her to the railway quarters and raped her. I took her to the spot and a found a lot of blood there; the blood was literally flowing down the stairs.


My daughter was crying with pain. I called the police and they took her to the hospital. The doctors have operated upon her private parts twice, but she is yet to recover. 2 more operations are to be conducted for complete reconstruction of the parts. Doctors told us that it seems like she was raped by a monster; her private parts are badly ravaged," said Madhu (name changed), mother of the victim.


"We have done 2 surgeries trying to reconstruct the busted muscles. But the wounds are severe and she needs time to recover. At this time she is unable to egest anything from her body," said Doctor Jyoti, a medical expert treating the victim.


The family is in a state of trauma. The victim's father is a plumber by profession and doesn't have enough money for providing adequate treatment to his daughter.


"The monster took away all the happiness in our lives. Payal is suffering unbearable pain. She always carries a catheter; she can't eat, can't go to the washroom. The culprit must be hanged. My daughter is just 5 years old, what wrong could she have done? Why did this happen to my daughter?" asked Shiv Nath (name changed), father of the victim.


The police say they have done their best.


"We received a PCR call at around 4 pm from railway colony and on reaching the spot we found a 5-year-old girl lying in a pool of blood. We immediately took her to the hospital. We arrested the accused within 24 hours of the incident and sent him to jail", said a police officer.


(All names have been changed)

No Welfare, No State

In an inversion of the system, people in Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh are fighting the government to get the law enforced, writes RAJESH SINHA


THE CRPF camp in a village school off Bundu, barely 30 km from Ranchi, the Jharkhand capital, is the only visible sign of government for miles. But its writ doesn't run. The CRPF men stopped going to the villages about a month ago.


A Maoist living in a hut within striking distance of the school feels this is a result of the State suffering reverses in Lalgarh (West Bengal), Orissa and Dantewada (Chhattisgarh). "We have never seen the government take interest in this area or its people," says the rebel. "We only have unpleasant experiences with the government officials who come to harass us or make money in the name of non-existent development work," he says. "The government wants to clear these forests of the original inhabitants and hand over all the riches of our resources to big industrial houses and multinationals," he adds, "We will not allow this. We shall fight them tooth and nail.





Miles away A life of dignity is a far cry for tribals as they struggle against uncaring and deceitful government officials. Photo: SHAILENDRA PANDEY


There can be no acceptance accorded to Maoists who take law in their own hands, challenge the authority of the State, levy 'taxes' and generally break the law in several other ways. But neither can acceptance be accorded to a government that also frequently breaks the law and conspires with the rich and powerful against the poor. These strong words find credence in Chhattisgarh. Land claims filed by the villagers in many parts of the State under the Forest Rights Act (FRA) are nowhere near any settlement. With no proper resettlement and rehabilitation policy in place, tribals get a pittance as compensation, losing land and livelihood for 'development' that benefits others.



People who resist the State are branded Maoists



Until February 2010, Chhattisgarh had given land rights to 2,14,633 families out of the 4,86,101 claims filed. A larger number of claims - 2,71,468 - were rejected. In areas like Dantewada, where villages lie abandoned as people have been forced to move to Salwa Judum camps, the FRA has become infructuous. Those who refuse to move are branded Naxalites. Caught between the Naxalites and the police, several hundred Adivasis have walked to Orissa or Andhra Pradesh. There are other shortcomings as well in the government claims. As in Jharkhand, the land rights given in Chhattisgarh for 1-2.5 acres are far smaller than traditional land holdings. Community rights granted over forest land, for an entire village in Chhattisgarh, averages seven hectares, which is far more than the 1 acre that is granted in Jharkhand.


There are other ways in which rules have been brazenly flouted. According to the FRA, the claims of families are to be decided by the Gram Sabha's Van Adhikar Samiti (Forest Rights Committee). However, its decisions are rejected at the sub-divisional or divisional level by the state. During the claim verification process, meant to be done by representatives from the forest department, the revenue department and the village committee, the forest department functionary coerces villagers into agreeing to his assessment. In Kantartoli panchayat, though 368 applications were filed, only nine were approved, according to Nawal Sai, chairman of the VAS. No community land rights have been given. The land was measured by a forest department representative.


The most blatant violation is of the legal obligation that the government may not start the process for acquiring land till the process of settling claims under FRA is over. This has been given a complete go-by. In Salka village near Kantartoli, the villagers filed applications under FRA over a year ago. Though there has been no word about their applications, the village land has been acquired for a power plant and Rs 1.5 lakh in compensation distributed to a majority, says Ram Dayal, the husband of sarpanch Madhu Shukla. The power plant has been stalled thanks to resistance in other villages in the area.


There is resistance and opposition, but the villagers are wary of becoming "too active"- after all, it is easy to be branded a Naxalite. People are on the backfoot after what happened to Binayak Sen and Himanshu Kumar. Sen was jailed and freed only after the Supreme Court intervened. Himanshu Kumar's office was destroyed and he finally had to flee.


It is easy to be branded a Naxalite and people are scared. This is an achievement the Chhattisgarh government is proud of. This approach of suppressing democratic protest helps the Maoists.


WRITER'S EMAIL: sinha.rajeshsinha@gmail.com

Trend of ‘honour killings’ rising in India

By Jason Burke


NEW DELHI: Shobha and Monica were cousins. They walked to school together through the narrow, fly-ridden alleys of Wazirpur, a once rural village now overtaken by the sprawling suburbs of northern Delhi. They were often in each other's homes, narrow apartments with little privacy.


They sometimes met at the dairy, an ill-lit room stacked with steel churns and basins of curd where a friend, Deepak, 18, remembered Shobha as "pretty, fun, outgoing".


Shobha, 20, had a rebellious streak. Sometimes, she even took the bus to McDonald's or the mall in the upmarket neighbourhood just a mile or so away. Friends said she wanted to be a model.


Monica, 24, was more serious. She had married a local boy, Kuldeep, four years ago and was, relatives said, happy with her new life.


Shobha, Monica and Kuldeep were each shot twice in the head on June 20. They had no reason to suspect their murderers. One was Shobha's brother, Mandeep. The other was Monica's brother, Ankit. The third was a local boy known to them both.


There are 1,000 "honour killings" a year in India, according to one recent study, but few reveal the underlying causes as the triple murder of Wazipur. Significantly, the Indian capital itself has seen an unprecedented spate of such incidents in recent weeks.


All six of those involved in last weekend's murders were living on frontiers: between Wazirpur, their working-class neighbourhood, and Ashok Vihar, the adjacent upmarket suburb; between the increasingly cosmopolitan Indian capital and its deeply conservative hinterland; between the crushing poverty of their parent's childhoods and the relative wealth of their own.


It is a world in which caste, traditional authority and arranged marriage clashed with aspirations to Bollywood-style romance. The age of all those involved is significant, according to Professor Surinder Jodhka of Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University.


All were born around the time of the major changes that liberalised India's economy in the early 1990s, sparking rapid growth.


"They grew up in post-reform India. This is a new generation reaching the age of marriage," Jodhka told the Guardian.


Monica and Kuldeep were on the point of crossing the gulf between the old India and the new. They lived in a rented flat and Kuldeep commuted to his job in a call centre.


They had eloped too - the first from Wazirpur ever to do so. They had also ignored India's system of prejudice and hierarchy as they came from different castes. Yet, their parents had accepted the match. "We were not against it," said Jai Singh Naggar.


Unlike in many "honour killings" - such as that of a girl and her lower caste boyfriend beaten to death with iron rods in another Delhi neighbourhood earlier this month - older family members were not involved.


Nor was there any direct sanction given by community elders. "We cannot stop them. What has to happen will happen. But we do not think it was a good thing to do," said Mahinder Kahri, 64, head of the local council.


The spark for the killing appears to have been the disappearance of Shobha's sister with her own "boyfriend". Shobha herself had previously run away with a man. She had come back home alone but the damage had been done.


"For years her brother had got no respect round here. Even his friends were taunting him. When Shobha did the same thing, he just felt he had to act," Saurav, 18, told the Guardian.


Shobha's brother thus sought out Ankit, the brother of Monica. He too was being taunted for the shame his sister's unauthorised marriage brought the family. The two enlisted a mutual friend.


Prem Chowdhry, a respected historian and researcher, said it was unsurprising that young men had taken the lead role. In the neighbouring state of Haryana, foeticide of girls has led to a ratio of 800 women to every 1,000 men. Women also "marry up" - Monica's husband came from the higher rajput class - leaving more than a third of lower caste men without wives, she said.


"The social situation is very volatile. The marriage market is very tight and that causes huge problems. Youngsters react very strongly. If a woman makes an independent choice she has to pay the penalty," Chowdhry said.


In Wazirpur, teenage boys were backing the murderers. "Whatever happened is for the best. There's a limit to how much you can take. I'd do the same to my sister," said Rohit, 17.


After the killings, the three Wazirpur men fled in a borrowed car, first to Ghaziabad and then to the spiritual centre of Rishikesh, where they threw the home-made murder weapon into the waters of the Ganges. Hours later they were arrested.-Dawn/The Guardian News Service

 
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