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Subject: [India Thinkers Net]Ethnic rights,LCA project etc - November04, 2005



[1]


From: Sukla Sen <suklasen@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu Nov 3, 2005
Subject: Conflicting Ethnic Rights: The Moral and Democratic Dilemma  


The Telegraph
November 02, 2005

EVIL DESIGNS

The violence in Karbi Anglong shows that the
government should be more sceptical about demands
for ethnic homelands, says Sanjib Baruah The
author is visiting professor, Centre for Policy
Research, New Delhi

Spare a thought
We may never be able to name and punish the
individuals directly responsible for the recent
killing spree in Assam's Karbi Anglong district.
But one thing is quite clear: there is a
connection between the political agendas of
groups engaged in the early stages of
negotiations with the government of India and
what the violence has tried to achieve on the
ground. The displacement of targeted ethnic
groups from their hearth and home in certain
areas fits well with what leaders of some ethnic
militias seek to achieve at the negotiating
table. Given this pattern, many apparently
moderate leaders of ethnic movements in the
North-east could be accused of complicity with
ethnic cleansing. But our legal and political
processes do not take the crime of ethnic
cleansing as seriously as international law does.

To ensure that such violence is not repeated, it
is important to understand the logic of de facto
exclusive ethnic homelands that has come to
capture the imagination of ethnic militants in
the region. Our decision-makers have taken a far
too benign view of this phenomenon and given
little attention to the long-term costs of
perpetuating the idea.

There is now a perception in the North-east that
exclusionary ethnic agendas - no matter how
unfair they are from the perspective of other
ethnic groups living in the same area - have a
chance of success if there is a demonstrated
capacity for sustained political mobilization.
And with appropriate positioning vis-? -vis rival
ethnic militias, the local counter-insurgency
establishment could even become an ally.

Officials who enter into negotiations with ethnic
militias do not seem to realize that a demand for
a homeland may enjoy the support of a particular
ethnic group, but other ethnic groups living in
the same area may feel threatened by it. The
government's readiness to concede to such demands
has gradually weakened political forces that
stand for a more pluralistic form of politics.

This is not the first time in recent years that
Karbi Anglong and the adjacent North Cachar Hills
districts have seen such mayhem. There has been
widespread violence between Karbis and Kukis in
Karbi Anglong, and between Dimasas and Hmars in
the North Cachar Hills. The two were part of a
single district until 1970, and the present
conflicts in the districts are related. The Mikir
Hills district was renamed Karbi Anglong in 1976.
The Dimasas are a minority scheduled tribe in
Karbi Anglong, but constitute a majority of the
tribal population in North Cachar Hills district.
The demand of the Karbi ethnic militia, the
United Peoples Democratic Solidarity, for a
homeland for the Karbis, and the demand of the
Dima Halam Daogah for a "Dimaraji state" - and
the efforts to rename the North Cachar Hills
district "Dima Halili"- provide the backdrop to
these episodes of ethnic violence.

But a homeland for one ethnic group often
translates into second-class citizenship status
for another, even though materially one may be no
worse off than the latter. Homeland demands in
the North-east therefore inevitably invite
conflict. Ethnic militias seeking a homeland come
in conflict with groups that are seen as
obstacles to the demand. That was the source of
the Dimasa-Hmar violence of 2003. The Dimaraji
envisioned by Dimasa activists is not limited to
North Cachar Hills district. It extends to areas
in neighbouring Karbi Anglong and Cachar
districts, and it also includes Dimapur, the
commercial centre of Nagaland.

DHD activists have reportedly encouraged and
facilitated new Dimasa settlements in the
Dhansiri and Kheroni Charali area in Karbi
Anglong. There were signboards proclaiming
Eastern Dimaraji in these areas. These moves led
to significant tensions between Dimasa and Karbi
militants prior to the recent outbreak of
violence. The government of India's decision,
following the ceasefire with the DHD, to set up
one of the designated camps for DHD militants in
this area, became a source of irritation for
Karbi militants. Indeed, according to several
reports, militants housed in that camp were
responsible for some of the most gruesome
killings of Karbis.

Like the DHD, the UPDS too has signed a ceasefire
agreement with the Centre in 2002. As it often
happens in such situations, it produced a
dissident faction. Members of the anti-talks
factions, now known as the Karbi Longri North
Cachar Hills Liberation Front and the Karbi
Longri North Cachar Hills Resistance Force,
appear to be major players in the revenge attacks
against Dimasas as well as in earlier outbreaks
of violence against Kukis.

Certain peculiarities of property rights in the
hills of north-east India give ethnic militias
unusual capacity to change demographic realities
on the ground. In places that are designated as
forest areas and in lands that are set aside for
shifting cultivation, there is considerable
fluidity in settlement patterns. Many groups may
have settled and begun to cultivate such lands
relatively recently. Since these people do not
have legal papers to prove property rights - and
in any case, most of these lands have not been
surveyed - ethnic militias seeking to displace
them can do so with relative ease.

The only security that such a group can get is
from an ethnic militia of its own. The government
is not in a position to defend their property
rights, especially since the settlement itself,
say in what is technically a forest reserve, may
be illegal.

Thus, whether a particular population is
indigenous to an area or not often becomes a
highly contested issue. At the root of the
Karbi-Kuki violence of 2003 was the Karbi view
that Kukis are an immigrant community occupying
their land. While Kukis living in the Hamren
subdivision of Karbi Anglong are indigenous, say
Karbi militants, those living in the
Singhason-Khonbamon Hill range of Diphu
subdivision are recent migrants from Nagaland and
Manipur.

Yet the latter group of Kukis cultivate a
highly-valued commercial ginger crop that not
only finds its way to other parts of India, but
has invited recent export orders from as far away
as Germany. But Kuki farmers today are too scared
to go to their fields. Plans to set up ginger
candy and ginger paste producing plants in the
area have been shelved. The economic costs of the
violence accompanying homeland politics can be
quite high.

As the plight of these ginger growers highlight,
responding to ethnic militancy and meeting the
challenges of economic development of the
North-east are not separate issues. By giving in
uncritically to the demands for ethnic homelands
we have encouraged more such demands, leading to
more ethnic violence. By giving a short shrift to
the democratic value of equality among citizens
we have risked making the North-east permanently
ungovernable.

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

[2]


From: Hussain Hyder Ali Khowaja <hhalik@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu Nov 3, 2005
Subject: Best wishes of Eid to you  


Best wishes of Eid to you.



from

Hussain Hyder Ali Khowaja
URL: www.hhalik.cjb.net
Email: hhalik@...
Cellular: 0044 (0) 7951 434197

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

[3]

From: Parvez Jamasji <parvez1942@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu Nov 3, 2005
Subject: Re: [iafhistory] Is this aircraft a candidate to tide over delays in LCA project?  

Will we'll see the SA Gripen overtake our '''''state of the art, cutting edge; indigenous tech''''' produced by our behemoths of hype & sloth ?????????

Best Wishes

Parvez Jamasji
http://www.geocities.com/siafdu/vc81.html



"Gp Capt Kapil Bhargava (Retd)" <kapil@...> wrote:SA's first Gripen leaves the factory
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
South Africa's first completed Gripen fighter was unveiled on Friday in a roll-out ceremony as it left the production line.

The aircraft, which will be the first of 28 Gripens delivered to South African Air Force service from 2008, will now be prepared for a rigorous and thorough flight test programme to integrate South Africa's customized avionics and mission systems. Speaking, on behalf of the South African government, at the roll-out ceremony in Linkoping, Sweden, Minister for Public Enterprises, Alec Erwin, highlighted the strategic significance of South Africa's Gripen acquisition and its role as a catalyst for broad industrial, trade and economic development in South Africa.

Sweden's Minister of Defense, Mrs Leni Bj?¶rklund, said Sweden would continue to further develop its already strong strategic political, defence, industrial and economic links between Sweden and South Africa: "The relations between our two countries can only be described as excellent. I would like to take this opportunity to underline and manifest the Swedish Government's desire to further develop and expand these much-appreciated relations." Bj?¶rklund said.

Underlining this sentiment, Saab CEO, Mr. ?…ke Svensson, described the significance of the Gripen programme in establishing South Africa as Saab's second home-market.

Underpinning its commitment to South Africa, Saab has invested in several businesses, including its major investment in Grintek, the South African advanced technology group. "Saab is now a proudly South African company employing around 1 300 of the best technical and marketing brains within Saab Grintek, in which we own a 70% stake" he explained.

Chief of the South African Air Force (SAAF), Lt-Gen Carlo Gagiano, said the Gripen programme was an icon for transformation and modernisation in the SAAF and would strengthen South Africa's contribution to peace and security in Africa. He also expressed his delight with the progress of the Gripen programme. "In an industry notorious for sliding deadlines, Saab has been able to roll out this specific aircraft well ahead of the original schedule. I congratulate you to this achievement!" he said.

 











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