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Subject: [India Thinkers Net]News Updates 1-6 - March08, 2006



[1]

From: yogi sikand <ysikand@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue Mar 7, 2006 9:37am Subject:
Persecution of Ahmadis in Pakistan


Daily Star (Bangladesh) March 05, 2006

Unwelcome home A Brit-Pak-Ahmadi spends Eid in Pakistan Kiran Malik

No dome, no minaret, no call to prayer, just an unmarked house in a secret
location. This is Eid prayers for the Ahmadiyya Muslim community of Karachi,
Pakistan.

As our taxi turns the corner, my mother recognises the "place of worship" by
the obvious blank space where its signboard once was. She says nothing as we
drive past it, then asks the driver to drop us at the end of the road.

At the gate, a man asks us who we are, where we're from, who we're related
to. Satisfied, he lets us in.

He is right to be suspicious. The Ahmadiyya Muslim sect -- of which I am a
British Pakistani member -- was recently described as, "one of the most
relentlessly persecuted communities in the history of Pakistan" by the BBC's
Aamer Ahmed Khan.

In 1974, following riots orchestrated by Pakistan's Jamaat-e-Islami party,
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto caved into pressure from the Mullahs and passed a motion
to declare Ahmadis non-Muslim.

Ignoring warnings from prominent judges, human rights activists and
academics, Bhutto argued that appeasing the Mullahs would put an end to
sectarian problems.

But more than 30 years on, Pakistan's Muslims are in a state of civil war.
As well as the persecution of Ahmadis and recent attacks on the minority
Ismaili sect, extremists from Pakistan's dominant Sunni and Shi'ite sects
are intent on destroying each other.

Mosques and mullahs As we enter the mosque, a small television in the corner
plays MTA, the television channel run by the Ahmadis out of London. On it is
a re-run with the Pakistani poet Obaidullah Aleem exchanging humorous
couplets with the third Caliph of the Ahmadi Jamaat, Hazrat Mirza Tahir
Ahmad.

Although watching MTA in your own home is not forbidden under Pakistani law,
this seemingly innocuous action has led to targeted attacks on Ahmadis all
over Pakistan.

The Khutba is on the importance of giving charity and helping others. There
is no mention of Ahmadi persecution, no demand for rights, no cries for
vengeance.

At the end of the Khutba our Caliph asks us to pray for those killed in the
earthquake which took place a few weeks earlier. He also asks us to remember
those Ahmadis killed in an attack on an Ahmadi mosque around the same time.
That's it.

We say our salaams and wish Eid Mubarak to those around us. If caught, we
would face a minimum of three years in prison.

Freedom of expression During my two weeks in Pakistan this January, I come
across four articles citing recent anti-Ahmadi propaganda. All report
inflammatory speeches from various mullahs describing the "Qadiani problem"
(Qadiani is what detractors call Ahmadis) as "the greatest problem facing
Muslims today," nearly all compare Ahmadis to Jews and insist they are
agents of Israel.

One Mullah, not satisfied that Ahmadis are legally forbidden from calling
their places of worship "mosques," from giving Azan, from voting and from
calling themselves Muslim, insists on a social boycott of all remaining
"Qadianis" -- "Anyone who speaks to Qadianis will be considered an agent of
the Qadianis and deserves to be punished."

In another speech quoted by The Herald, a local mullah insists it is a good
Muslim's duty to "wipe Ahmadis off the face of Pakistan." Another allegedly
tells his audience at Majlis-e-Khatm-e-Nabuwat that Ahmadis are "non-Muslims
who deserved to be killed."

In light of recent events, when Muslim groups in Pakistan and the world over
have urged the media to consider practicing freedom of expression with
responsibility it seems ironic that for Pakistan's mullahs, freedom of
expression is a one-way street.

Irfan Hussain, a columnist with Pakistan's Daily Times and Herald magazine,
is one of the few voices maintaining pressure on the Pakistani
administration to resolve the Ahmadiyya issue. He argues that Musharraf's
policy of enlightened moderation is ineffective until the will to change is
passed through the entire system. A system which, under Zia-ul-Haq, was
progressively Islamised.

The mullahs don't agree. They see Musharraf's modernisation drive as a
sinister plot to create a "Qadiani state." Their criticisms would be
laughable if the repercussions were not so sinister.

One rants: "Musharraf is giving the Qadianis free reign, they are saying
Assalamo-Alaikum with impunity. We have evidence that they are praying in
the Muslim way and many have the Kalima in their homes."

In fact, according to figures published last November,
756 people have been booked for the "crime" of displaying the Kalima
-- which carries the death penalty, 404 for "posing as Muslims," and 27 for
celebrating the Ahmaddiyya Centenary in 1989. More than 1,300 others have
been charged under similar provisions of this law -- all facing punishment
ranging from three years and a fine to life imprisonment or the death
penalty.

In one case, Nazir Ahmad Khoso, a seventeen-year-old Ahmadi boy from Sindh,
was charged with "injuring the religious feelings of Muslims," and other
related blasphemy charges and sentenced to
118 years in prison.

And the entire population -- 35,000 people -- of Rabwah, a town built by the
Ahmadis -- was charged under "PPC 298-C" in 1989. The crime -- having
inscribed the Kalima Tayyaba and other Quranic verses on their graves,
buildings, offices of the community, places of worship, and business
centres. They were also charged with having said Assalamo-Alaikum to
Muslims, for having recited the Kalima Tayyaba, and for having repeatedly
indulged in similar Islamic activities.

Of course, I haven't researched any of this as I make my way to Rabwah
-- the centre of the Ahmadi community in Pakistan.

Houris and bureaucrats On the face of things, Rabwah is an ordinary town.
Unusually clean and well-ordered compared to its surrounding area perhaps,
but ordinary in every other way.

Flanked on one side by the river Chenab, it is built on land purchased by
contributions from the community's faithful.

But Ahmadis have not even been able to find peace here. Local government
bodies, from which Ahmadis are excluded, have maintained an incessant
campaign of harassment against the townspeople.

In 1985, eleven years after declaring Ahmadis non-Muslim, the Punjab
Assembly ruled that the town be declared an open town, and forcibly changed
the name to Chenab Nagar.

Prior to this, in 1976, local mullahs took over Ahmadi-owned land on the
eastern part of Rabwah as police and local government forces looked on.
Ahmadis petitioned the Lahore High Court, and, unusually, the court upheld
the Ahmadis rights to the land.

Despite this, numerous mullahs and their acolytes are still in illegal
occupation of the land and have established a mosque, a seminary, and a
"Muslim Colony" there -- with government support.

"Muslim Colony" is flourishing and the various Mosques set up in it take
every opportunity to use their loudspeakers to spew hatred filled sermons at
their "Qadiani" neighbours. Ahmadis are, of course, legally prevented from
using loudspeakers in their own "place of worship."

And during my trip, the District Housing Committee Jhang, a government body,
advertises empty plots in Rabwah on the riverside in the press. In direct
violation of the Lahore High Court hearing, the text of the advert reads:
"Plots will be sold by auction, but only to those who believed in 'complete
and unconditional end of prophethood' and who is not a disciple of anybody
who claimed to be a prophet in any sense of the word or was an Ahmadi/
Qadiani/Mirzai/Lahori."

And a few weeks earlier, local authorities shut off Rabwah's water supply
for four days, leaving "citizens groping for drops," according to a
Lahore-based newspaper.

This, under Musharraf's policy of enlightened moderation.

As we drive to my grandmother's grave, my mother tells me about the
university graduate she met on a train who insisted he had seen naked houris
dancing in the Ahmadi graveyard in Rabwah. My mother politely suggested that
this was maybe hearsay, but the man was adamant he had seen them "with his
own eyes."

Disappointingly, no such visions of loveliness greet us at our arrival to
the Chiste-Mukhbara, where my grandmother is buried alongside other
practising Ahmadis.

Instead, an ordinary graveyard, with two old men acting as guards.

As we are guided to my grandmother's grave we walk past hundreds of graves
which have had the Islamic inscriptions written on them scraped off. Even in
death, there is no respite.

I come across one positive story though. A family friend tells us of how a
teenager was arrested for saying Assalamo-Alaikum to a military man.
Apparently, after the boy had offered the greeting, the man asked him if he
was "Qadiani" to which the boy replied truthfully. This admission of "guilt"
was then used to drag the boy to the local police station. Apparently, the
police officer on duty that particular day saw the absurdity of the charge
and admonished the boy saying, "Did you have to wish Salaam on this man? If
you had just told him to go to hell I wouldn't have to arrest you."

Preaching and PR After Rabwah, I go to Lahore where I meet up with an uncle
who has just come back from the earthquake zone.

A trauma surgeon at Chicago's Cook County, he is one of 60 American Ahmadi
doctors who came to help following the earthquake in northern Pakistan.

Like other overseas Pakistanis, Ahmadis have been active in the earthquake
effort and the community's charity has donated over 286 tons of Aid and
helped over 50,000 earthquake survivors.

Yet they are unable to disclose who they are in the region, for fear of
being accused of missionary activity.

In the meantime, the earthquake region has turned into a PR battlezone for
Jamaat-e-Islaami and other extremist parties -- each loudly claiming its
role in helping the citizens of Pakistan and no doubt recruiting members as
they go.

Another positive story (kind of). I meet a lady in Lahore whose cousin died
in an attack on an Ahmadi mosque the day before the quake. Seven Ahmadis
were gunned down and 21 injured after gunmen attacked the mosque in Moong,
near Mandhi Bahuruddin.

She tells me of how local Sunnis rallied round their Ahmadi neighbours at
the time, and were the first to condemn the attacks: "Relations between
Ahmadis and other Muslims had always been good in Moong," she says. "It was
trouble-makers from outside, they came on motorcycles."

Ahmadis, Ismailis and the rest Back in Karachi, it hits me that this rage
and spirit of sectarianism doesn't stop with the Ahmadis. As we drive past a
KFC in my uncle's lower-middle-class neighbourhood of Gulshan-e-Iqbal, my
cousin tells me of how it was rebuilt only months ago after it was burnt
down by protestors in May last year.

The protestors were not the usual anti-US suspects, but an enraged Shi'ite
mob that not only torched the building but prevented emergency services from
saving the workers trapped in the building. Four were burnt alive and
another two froze as they hid from the rabble in the freezer.

They were victims of a revenge attack after three men from a militant Sunni
group, including a suicide bomber, stormed the local Shi'ite mosque during
evening prayers.

It wasn't the first time violence flared between the two largest sects and
the latest Shi'ite-Sunni clashes in the NWFP show that it isn't likely to be
the last either.

And last year, a new group was formed. The Difa-e-Islam Mahaz: "Front for
the Defence of Islam" purports to protect Islam from the "evils" of the
"Aspostate Ismailis." They do this by burning down charitable schools and
hospitals built by the Aga Khan Foundation, which is patronized by the
spiritual leader of the Ismailis, the Aga Khan.

While Pakistan's Shi'ite and Sunni clerics continue to war amongst
themselves, police collusion and government apathy make Ahmadis an easy
target. In a country where Ahmadis are not allowed to defend themselves
through legal means (any defence of Ahmadi beliefs constitutes missionary
work and is thus a jailable offence), they reject violent resistance.

And the persecution of Ahmadis in Pakistan, codified in law and completely
institutionalised, takes far more insidious forms than the killings that
make the news.

There are tragic stories of forced conversions, of people who keep the truth
about their beliefs secret from their neighbours and colleagues and of other
Muslims who have been forced to cut all links with Ahmadi friends and family
after threats of violence. In one particularly obscene example, a Sunni
doctor was brutally beaten after tending to an Ahmadi child. This is the
state of tolerance in Pakistan.

Hatred at home and abroad In Naeem Mohaiemen's recent film, Muslim or
Heretics (muslimsorheretics.org), an anti-Ahmadi protestor in Bangladesh
raises his hands up to the sky as he prays, "Oh Allah! We are happy to live
side-by-side with our Ahmadi brothers, as we do with Hindus and Christians,
but that they call themselves Muslim, this we cannot bear!"

The experience of Pakistan, however, shows that branding the Ahmadis
non-Muslim will not be enough. Each concession leads to ever greater
demands.

In Pakistan, appeasing the mullahs has horribly backfired. And putting the
genie back into the bottle is a task that no government in Pakistan,
democratic or otherwise, has managed to do. Today, not only Ahmadis but
Ismailis, Christians, Hindus and even Shi'ites and Sunnis are open targets
in their places of worship. Places which, in all but the most barbaric
societies, are supposed to be sanctuaries.

During my trip, I met a surprising number of ordinary, practicing Muslims
who were genuinely ashamed of the way Ahmadis are treated.

By not speaking out however, those who know better in Pakistan have allowed
those who shout the loudest to hijack the political agenda.

There are a few brave exceptions, but most of the Pakistani media has moved
on -- Ahmadi persecution has become mundane.

And Ahmadis themselves seem resigned to their status as second-class
citizens. Many fear that rocking the boat could lead to more problems for
those who live there.

When I suggested making a documentary about the treatment of Ahmadis in
Pakistan, an Ahmadi Imam warned me against it saying: "Pakistan is not
Bangladesh, doing something like that here is almost impossible."

This indictment of Pakistan is a tribute to Bangladesh, where the battle
against fundamentalist forces is far from over.

As for Pakistan, some argue that the country -- which has the dubious honour
of being the birthplace of the term "secticide"
(the systematic destruction of a religious sect) -- is too far gone. They
say it is only a matter of time before the rest of the country follows the
NWFP into Talibanisation.

Others are more optimistic, and point out that the Islamic parties garnered
less than 5 per cent of the vote prior to the US "War on Terror." They
believe it is not too late to roll back to Jinnah's vision of a secular and
democratic state of Pakistan.

After years of repression, dissenting voices are few in Pakistan. Let us
hope that the example of Bangladesh will inspire Pakistani progressives to
once again speak out. And let us hope that this time, the Pakistani
administration has the will -- and the guts -- to listen.

Kiran Malik is a freelance contributor to The Daily Star.


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

[2]

From: Sukla Sen <suklasen@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue Mar 7, 2006
Subject: The Global Bully as a Friend?
Kashmir Times
March 6, 2006

A GLOBAL BULLY AS A FRIEND?
INDIA-US TIES AFTER BUSH'S VISIT

by Praful Bidwai

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

[3]


From: pavan kumar <pavan_yuva_2025@yahoo.co.in>
Date: Tue Mar 7, 2006
Subject: What will India's innovation and booming economy mean for
Americans -------- MUST WATCH

What will India's innovation and booming economy mean for Americans?


http://abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=1674437

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

[4]

From: Regi P George <george_regi@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue Mar 7, 2006
Subject: Some questions raised by the budget
Some questions raised by the budget
   Brinda Karat

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Mahajanapada

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

[5]

From: MN sanil <mn_sanil2003@yahoo.co.in>
Date: Tue Mar 7, 2006
Subject: Dalit women in Kerala


Chitralekha's condition reveals the casteist practices within the
so called/celebrated kerala model of development.The question of
social democracy is absent in the paradigm of development.One can
jump from Rostow to the current putnam's social capital in a
fashionable manner.we have to realise the context of caste and
region.She is a poor dalit women from the developing kerala.Here,the
social mobility of a dalit woman becomes a problem for the non-
dalit/brahmanic masculinist forces.Similarly,it shows the absence of
dalit feminist standpoint within the progressive populist &theoretical
debates.

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

[6]

From: rkurian@bgl.vsnl.net.in
Date: Tue Mar 7, 2006
Subject: Mr. Bush's Asian Road Trip...Editorial, NYT

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/07/opinion/07tue1.html?_r=1&hp=&oref=slogin&p
agewanted=print


The New York Times

March 7, 2006
Editorial
Mr. Bush's Asian Road Trip

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









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