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Sunday, November 30, 2008

[mukto-mona] Terror in the Name of God

Terror in the Name of God

By Yoginder Sikand

 

"Never forget that the life of this world is only a game and a passing delight, a show ….the life of this world is nothing but means of deception:. (The Quran, Al-Hadid: 20)


"There is no Hindu, there is no Muslim" (Baba Guru Nanak Sahib)

 

According to media reports, it is possible that the recent deadly assault on Mumbai was masterminded by the Lashkar-e Tayyeba, a Pakistan-based self-styled Islamist terrorist outfit.  Whether the attacks were indeed the handiwork of the Lashkar, as is being alleged, or of some other agency, such as the CIA and the Israseli Mossad, as others believe, remains to be fully investigated, but there can be no doubt that radical Islamism, like radical Hindutva, poses a major threat to peace and security in both India and Pakistan.

What makes such terror-driven self-styled Islamist groups thrive in Pakistan? It would appear that the very foundational myth of Pakistan, the so-called 'two nation theory' on which the country was founded, is itself conducive to militaristic interpretations of Islam. In a mirror image of the thesis propounded by the early ideologues of Hindutva—that the Hindus and Muslims of India were two entirely different nations and that the latter could live in India only if they agreed to turn Hindu or else be stripped of all civic rights—the ideologues of the Pakistan movement claimed that the Hindus and Muslims of pre-Partition India were two irreconcilable nations that could not live together. On the basis of this specious argument, they demanded a separate state for the Indian Muslims. This is how Pakistan came into being.

Thus, the very basis of the Pakistan movement was the myth of undying hatred and hostility between Hindus and Muslims. This so-called 'two-nation theory' remains the official ideology of the state of Pakistan, and is taught to every Pakistani child in school through carefully doctored textbooks. To question the theory, as many Pakistanis privately do, is considered a punishable crime and as akin to sedition. Accordingly, the Pakistani state has, since its inception, seen its survival as being crucially dependent on actively promoting as well as indirectly abetting anti-Indian and anti-Hindu sentiments. As movements for autonomy in provinces increasingly restive of Punjabi domination mounted, first in the erstwhile East Bengal, and then in Baluchistan and Sindh, the Pakistani state came to increasingly rely on an instrumental use and cynical manipulation of Islam and on the bogey of Hindu or Indian domination to ensure its survival and increasingly threatened legitimacy. Naturally, this expanded the space and scope for groups, not just the Lashkar, but scores of others as well, who claimed to speak in the name of Islam to whip up anti-Indian and anti-Hindu sentiments. For them hatred of India and the Hindus were considered as among the defining features of Pakistani nationalism.

The rise of the Lashkar and similar self-styled jihadist groups thus cannot be understood in isolation from these broader political processes. These groups received a major impetus under the American-backed and hugely unpopular military dictator, General Zia ul-Haq, who cynically backed radical Islamist groups to win public support as well as to pursue the CIA-funded war against the Soviets in Afghanistan. It was at around this time that self-styled Islamist groups began entering the political arena in a major way, setting up political parties and fighting elections. This led to all sorts of compromises, to widespread corruption and to rapidly escalating militancy by different Islamist groups competing with each other to prove to the electorate their purported claims of representing and speaking for Islam. The more obscurantist a group's approach was with regard to a whole host of issues—women's rights, the Kashmir question, relations with India and so on—the more ardently 'Islamic' it considered itself to be and it presented itself so to the public whose support it sought to win.

Under Zia, several dozen radical Islamist groups were liberally funded by the Saudis and the Americans in the war in Afghanistan, but soon these went out of control. They turned against their American patrons and started dreaming of exporting their self-styled jihad to the rest of the world. Some of them, including the Lashkar, even went to the extent of calling for the establishment of a global so-called Islamic Caliphate and for conquering the entire world under the 'Islamic flag'. Whether or not the leaders of these groups actually believed all this bombastic rhetoric no one can say, but it certainly appealed to vast numbers of youth, particularly from impoverished families, who were fed on a steady diet of fanciful tales about the luxuries they would wallow in if they died or were 'martyred' in the cause of what was presented to them as a divine mission.

These groups went on to serve what were seen as the strategic interests of the Pakistani state, as for instance in Kashmir, where they were sent to battle Indian forces as well as Kashmiri nationalist groups struggling for a sovereign Jammu and Kashmir, which would be independent of both India and Pakistan. Since Pakistan was a crucial ally of the West, America chose to remain mute in the face of these developments. Likewise, these groups were solidly backed by the Pakistani state in its desperate effort to install the pro-Pakistan Taliban regime in Afghanistan, and this also received American support. The Lashkar set up several training camps in Afghanistan and gave the Taliban considerable military and moral support.

It is thus the consistent assistance given by the Pakistani state to self-styled Islamist groups that has allowed them to flourish in the country, so much so that now, when the Pakistani state has itself begun to face an immense threat from these very groups, it finds itself helpless. It is an indicator of how powerful these groups have become in Pakistan that even though the present government might want to clamp down on them it cannot do so. Large parts of Pakistan are today characterized by extreme lawlessness where the writ of the state does not run. Decades of cynical manipulation of Islam by the Pakistani state for the narrowly construed ends of Pakistan's elites have now led to a situation where even if the state wants to curb these self-styled Islamist groups it finds itself helpless. Powerful sections within the Pakistani state apparatus, including in the ISI and the Army, are fiercely averse to taking any action against these groups, and are said to be consistently providing support to them.

But is the Pakistani state serious in its claims of being determined to take on Islamist terror groups that have mushroomed across the country? It appears not, just as the Indian state has not taken any serious steps against Hindutva terror groups in India. The Pakistani government claims to have banned the Lashkar, to have frozen all its assets and to have put its leaders under arrest. But ample indications exist to suggest that, in actual fact, the Lashkar is being permitted to operate freely after being conveniently allowed to change its name and re-christen itself as the Jamaat ud-Dawa. The Jamaat ud-Dawa's website is freely accessible on the Internet, relaying incendiary, hate-driven speeches of its senior leaders, who seem to be under no control whatsoever. The Markaz's magazines in English, Arabic and Urdu continue to be published, with a reported circulation of several hundred thousand. On a visit to Lahore three years ago I chanced upon a bookshop in the very heart of the sprawling Urdu Bazaar that specializes in Lashkar literature that spews venom and hatred against India and the Hindus, but also against a whole host of Muslim groups that the Lashkar does not consider genuinely Islamic—including the followers of the Sufis, the Barelvis, the quietistic Deobandi-related Tablighi Jamaat and the Shias, all of which it brands as 'enemies of Islam' or their 'agents'. And, I was told, despite the fact that the Lashkar was officially 'banned', it still operated from its headquarters in Muridke, not far from Lahore, and also managed several dozens of centres across the country under various names. Is one to imagine that the Pakistani government is so weak in the face of radical groups as to be unable to close all these institutions down?

In this context, the question arises as to why Pakistani civil society has been unable to effectively challenge the venomous (and what I, as someone who has studied Islam for the past two decades, regard as a wholly distorted) version of Islam that is propelled by self-styled Islamist groups such as the Lashkar. This issue is particularly intriguing given the fact that radical Islamist groups have consistently received only a relatively small share of the vote in successive elections, indicating that their hate-driven vision of Islam does not appeal to the majority of Pakistani people.

There are several reasons for this, among the most salient being the fact that the liberal, progressive middle class in Pakistan is very miniscule, the country still remaining largely feudal, tribalistic and extremely patriarchal in its set-up and ethos. Efforts by the few liberal Islamic scholars that exist in Pakistan to articulate progressive interpretations of Islam on a range of issues—including women's rights, relations with non-Muslims and relations between India and Pakistan—have generally met with stern opposition and even violence from Islamist outfits, with some of these scholars being forced to flee for safety to the West. The sheer fear of being killed for publicly opposing radicals and their perverted brand of Islam keeps numerous progressive thinkers in Pakistan silent, thus perpetuating a vicious circle in which the radicals are allowed to go unchallenged. Furthermore, the state has consistently denied space to progressive Islamic scholars, fearing their potential for dissent from the official view, seeing the radicals as more pliable and amenable to manipulation. This explains, for instance, the fact that despite its bombastic 'Islamic' credentials, Pakistan is yet to produce any well-known Islamic intellectual who has sought to deal creatively with the manifold demands and challenges that modernity poses. The status of Islamic, in addition to social science, research in Pakistan is woeful, and this can be explained, in part, by the fear on the part of the establishment of voices of dissenting scholars that might challenge ruling myths. The fact that Pakistan spends less than 2 per cent of its budget on education and that numerous Vice-Chancellors of Pakistani universities are retired army generals are indicators of this mind-set.

Terrorism—and this includes terror resorted to by non-state actors as well as by the state—today poses a grave threat to the peoples of both India and Pakistan. Islamist and Hindutva terrorism feed on each other, while posing to be each other's most inveterate foes. I recall reading some years ago—I cannot recall where, though—the perverse pleasure that a senior Lashkar expressed when the BJP-led NDA government came to power. Syed Maududi, the chief ideologue of the Jamaat-e Islami, who can be considered the major architect of modern-day Islamism, is on record as having declared that he would prefer India to be an officially Hindu country to being secular because that would further his case for the 'Islamic state' that he dreamed of establishing in Pakistan. Islamist outfits in Pakistan find ready fodder for whipping up anti-Indian and anti-Hindu passions by pouncing on acts of terror and anti-Muslim violence spearheaded by Hindutva groups in India, often abetted by the state. Likewise, gruesome acts of terror committed by Pakistan-based Islamist groups are quickly seized upon by Hindutva forces in India to further demonise Muslims and to build their Hindu vote-bank. Hindu and Islamist terror thus enjoy a symbiotic or mutually beneficial relationship while claiming to oppose each other. This obvious fact must be recognized when conceiving responses to the challenge of terrorism in our region.

There are no easy solutions to the predicament we find ourselves in today. But there is surely at least one thing that we must do, and this was suggested to me by the noted New Delhi-based Arya Samaj scholar, Swami Agnivesh, who has consistently been speaking out against all forms of terror, including in the name of Islam and Hinduism as well as state terrorism. The most effective way to challenge terrorism in the name of religion, Swami Agnivesh suggested, is for Muslims to denounce and stiffly oppose terror engaged in by self-styled Islamic groups who claim to speak in the name of Islam, and for Hindus to do likewise with regard to terror spread by militant Hindu groups.  Sadly, today, the approach of many of us to the phenomenon is selective and skewed, with many Hindus denouncing only the terror unleashed by self-styled Islamist groups, and many Muslims denouncing only acts of terror masterminded by Hindu groups. At the same time, many Hindus and Muslims continue to turn a blind eye to, or even support, forms of terror being perpetrated in the name of the very religion which they claim to follow.

And there is something else that we need to do as individuals, and I have found that this simple principle works wonders even at a very personal level.  It might sound 'unfashionable' or even 'purile' for those who do not find any place for God in their lives, but for millions of people in India and Pakistan who do believe in some higher force, no matter what they name it, it would strike an immediate chord.

This principle I owe to Rano Devi, a landless Dalit labourer from the Bhil tribe who had been released through the efforts of a human rights' group from slavery-like conditions in the estate of a powerful landlord. I Rano met while on a visit to Sindh in southern Pakistan three years ago. A powerful woman she was—dark and tall, and walking proud and erect. A courteous hostess, she welcomed me into her one-roomed hovel built on a scrawny patch of land that a social activist friend of mine had provided her and plied me with milk-less tea and a roti, which was all that she could afford.

Rano told me her story, of how she was enslaved by a landlord, who happened to be a Muslim, and who kept her for four years in shackles.  Then, after a protracted legal battle, she was released through the efforts of my friend and his comrades, all of who happened to be Muslims.

She went on to enunciate a simple but very compelling principle thus:

'Live for your religion, don't die or kill for it. Express your religion through love and service, like the brothers who rescued me did, not through oppression, murder and mayhem, for that is a heinous crime in God's eyes. After all, we are all accountable for all our actions to God. To Him we shall return after we die, when He will decide our fate till eternity based on our deeds in this world'.

'If we were to realize that this world is temporary and that real, eternal life starts after death,' Rano continued softly, tears welling up in her eyes, 'and if we were to constantly keep this in mind, perhaps people would dread to misuse God's name for un-Godly acts'.

And there was another thing that Rano said that inspires me as I write these lines:

'We call Him Ishwar, and Muslims call Him Allah, but He is one and the same', said Rano. 'There are good people in every community, just as there are bad people, too. Just as that landlord who enslaved me claimed to be a Muslim, the brothers who freed me were also Muslims. And there are both good and bad people among Hindus as well. Remember that, brother. It is only when good people in every community join hands that this Hindu-Muslim problem or the problems between India and Pakistan can ever be resolved'.

That sage advice from this impoverished Pakistani Dalit woman is, to my mind, a basic premise we need to start from in our joint struggle against terror in the name of religion and national chauvinism.

 


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Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
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Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
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Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona 
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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
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German Bangla Radio Interviews Mukto-Mona Members:
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               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




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[mukto-mona] Everyone should unite to uproot terrorism

Dear Editor,
 
Hope you are doing well and thanks for publishing my previous write-ups.
 
This is an article titled "Everyone should unite to uproot terrorism". I will be highly honoured if you publish this article. I apprecite your time to read this article.
 
Thanks
 
Have a nice time
 
With Best Regards
 
Ripan Kumar Biswas
New York, U.S.A
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

Everyone should unite to uproot terrorism

 

Ripan Kumar Biswas

Ripan.Biswas@yahoo.com

 

"Whoever kills an innocent soul, it is as if he killed the whole of mankind, and whoever saves one, it is as if he saved the whole of mankind [The Quran, 5:32]." Such is the value of a single human life, that the Qur'an equates the taking of even one human life unjustly, with killing all of humanity.

 

Either they are wrong who released pigeons symbolizing peace and light candles in memory of those who were killed, or the ten gunmen who have the deviant beliefs and misleading ideologies. People were taking autographs and congratulating them as the commandos ended a three-day rampage in Mumbai on Saturday, November 29, 2008, but not the militants who killed nearly 200 people in a strike on India's financial heart. Even the little Muslim boy, who carried a placard with the slogan "Don't destroy the beautiful place of Allah" during a rally in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad against the Mumbai attacks, also carried a message against the obscurantists that they are wrong in every sense.

 

In a sensational disclosure made by Ajmal Amir Kasab, the jihadi nabbed alive by Mumbai cops, his fellow colleagues had been motivated enough to kill innocents indiscriminately. "Please don't keep me alive. Kill me. I have come to die," he begged. They targeted ten different places which are always crowded for different public services. Cama Hospital, a hospital for women and children, was also in their target list. Very obviously these people had come on a suicide mission - to kill as long as they lived.

 

Is it one of many ways to beat them—the infidels, the gentiles, the heathens, or the pagans! In their blogs, websites, and by different ways, some Islamic extremists praised the Mumbai attacks, including the targeting of Jews, the Americans, the Britons, and other foreigners saying that it's all right for Muslims to set them castles on fire, drown them with water and take some of them as prisoners, whether young or old, women or men, child or adult, strong or disable. But a handful of the beguilers bring the entire faith into disrepute and besmirching the religion. "Anyone who slaughters people and screams `Allahu Akbar' (God is Great) is sick and ignorant," said Kazim al-Muqdadi, a political science lecturer at Baghdad University. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad referred to the attacks as terrorism while the authority of Saudi Arabia said that no civilized nation can allow killings of innocents and civilians.

 

So far they denied any responsibility of killing more than two hundred, mostly civilians including a Mumbai Police Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) chief Hemant Karkare, but the Indian Government has accused the Pakistan-based group Lashkar-e-Taiba, according to the many sources the authority said including the clue given by Ajmal, only alive jihadi. Giving reason, government pointed out that India had terrorist attacks before, but this attack was different as it was an attack by highly trained and well-armed terrorists targeting the largest city. They came with the explicit aim of killing large numbers of innocent civilians, including foreign visitors and destroying some of the best known symbols in India. About 30 foreigners were killed including five Americans, two French, two Australians, and two Canadians and also nationals from Germans, Israelis, Britain, Italy, Japan, China, Thailand, and Singapore.

 

Earlier at the beginning of attack on Thursday, November 27, 2008, a previously unknown group calling itself the Deccan Mujahideen, which e-mailed news organizations, claimed that it had carried out the attacks. The group, however, may be connected with (or even an alias of) the Indian Mujahedin, which claimed responsibility for several terrorist strikes earlier this year. According to the Indian terrorism experts, both are likely to have connections to, or simply be renamed versions of Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Toiba or the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI).

 

Mumbai has frequently been targeted in terror attacks, including a series of blasts in July 2006 that killed 187 people. The city has been hit repeatedly by attacks since March 1993, when Muslim underworld figures tied to Pakistani militants allegedly carried out a series of bombings on Mumbai's stock exchange, trains, hotels, and gas stations. Authorities say those attacks, which killed 257 people and wounded more than 1,100, were carried out to revenge the deaths of hundreds of Muslims in religious riots which had swept India. Ten years later, in 2003, 52 people were killed in Mumbai bombings blamed on Muslim militants and in July 2006 a series of seven blasts ripped through railway trains and commuter rail stations. At least 187 died in those attacks.

 

The human beings in this world who want to live in peace and prosperity are a majority. The terrorists are a puny and sickly minority. When people are shooting at civilians, throwing grenades, attacking hotels and hospitals, it doesn't really matter what their grievances are. They have forfeited their right for peaceful change and when they attack innocent people, they are terrorists, pure and simple. Religion is Love. Treat a human with respect and love. Never forget what we do to others will return to us. Terrorism has not helped anyone and it doesn't have any religion.

 

There is no justification of killing innocent people. In simple words the act is terrorism, without any debate. The point in light is this that why these common people become terrorists? What force them to leave their families and loved ones? What transforms them to be such a brutal? What are the causes? Unless and until we don't address such issues that we will be facing such incidents and blame game will continue for ever.

 

On the other hand, the terrorist organizations use religion frequently every time that it feels that religion justifies their stand and action. Whatever they are doing is permitted to them by religion. This very concept of these organizations rattles everyone and arise questions to these terror outfits. Does God allow killing of innocent people? What arguments do the militants have to justify their acts of terrorism and violence? Or the misinterpretation by Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the leader of the Lashkar-e-Toiba terrorist organization "Democracy is part of the system we are fighting against and it is not possible to work within a democracy and establish an Islamic system" is right?

 

Every religion considers all life forms as sacred. However, the sanctity of human life is accorded a special place. The first and the foremost basic right of a human being is the right to live. The fact is that these terrorists have no religion and they are trying to create fear and tension in the world for some unclear reasons. There are good and not so good people in all religions. Negative has no meaning. Islam is no better or worse than Christianity or Hinduism. Each proclaims it is the best. Obviously, this is not so. In the face of such an enemy, we believe it is vital that democratic political forces in all countries unite. We need a global movement of solidarity linking together communities threatened by terror.

 

Blaming each other or resigning from the posts as what the interior minister of India Shivraj Patil did taking the "moral responsibility" due to the attack, is not the ultimate solution. The latest Mumbai attack should spur everyone on to redouble the efforts to unite communities against terror, from India to Pakistan, Middle-east to Western, or Asia to Europe.

 

 

Monday, December 01, 2008, New York

Ripan Kumar Biswas is a freelance writer based in New York

 

__._,_.___

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Sign the Petition : Release the Arrested University Teachers Immediately : An Appeal to the Caretaker Government of Bangladesh

http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/university_teachers_arrest.htm

*****************************************
Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
http://www.mukto-mona.com/news/daily_star/daily_star_MM.pdf

*****************************************

MM site is blocked in Islamic countries such as UAE. Members of those theocratic states, kindly use any proxy (such as http://proxy.org/) to access mukto-mona.

*****************************************
Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/5_yrs_anniv/index.htm

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Earth_day2006/index.htm

*****************************************
Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona 
http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/kansat2006/members/


*****************************************
MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
http://www.mukto-mona.com/project/Roumari/freedom_fighters_union300306.htm

*****************************************
German Bangla Radio Interviews Mukto-Mona Members:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/german_radio/


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/index.htm

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Some FAQ's about Mukto-Mona:

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VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

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"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




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[ALOCHONA] India’s 9/11 is a lesson that wars have become unwinnable for all


George Bush's acts should be seen as the last futile attempt through conventional means and there is a need to explore the possibilities of peace, even if they demand a harsh price because wars don't seem to be winnable anymore. If wars can't be won, what option is there except to look for peace? Given the global economic scenario where patronage for military acts is severely in decline, the world may well have reached a phase where wars are just not economically and strategically possible,

writes Afsan Chowdhury


THE attack in Mumbai is already being called the '9/11' of India and everyone is drawing comparisons and many are suggesting similar actions taken by the US after that day. The nature of the attack including its choice of high-profile targets, search for western citizens, the frontal assaults and other elements make it an excellent example of a deadly terror attack of a global nature.

 

 In a country not a stranger to such violent attacks, this has been the most deadly and violent. Hundreds have died, more have been wounded and the loss of property and resources, now and future can only be guessed at this point. While most of the dead and wounded are from Mumbai, the death of UK and US citizens there has already made it a global event. Whether this is Indian 9/11 or not, the echoes from this event will reverberate far more widely around the world than any previous attacks of this kind in India.


   For the moment, there are questions as to whether it is an al-Qaeda attack or a more Indian edition though al-Qaeda inspired. Western observers are saying that it is dominantly al-Qaeda driven because it was anti-western in nature and the attacks were on hotels and places where most westerners were. More tellingly, they attacked a Jewish synagogue which points to a wider jihadist agenda than a purely anti-Indian or pro-Kashmiri sentiment-based violence. However, most of the victims are Indian, and not western, so, in all probability, it is a mixture of targets that is shared by the jihadist extreme. It might even be a mixture of participants and, in this age of globalisation, local-level extremist violence may itself be an obsolete idea. One may not know the exact identity of the attackers but the brazen success of the attack points to some seriously disturbing future trends, for India and the rest. Even Bangladesh will not be free from such anxieties. Al-Qaeda has also become an idea rather than the name of an organisation.
   
   Pakistan-India relations and terrorism
   Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh has not only promised all action to hunt down the attackers and those responsible but also hinted that they came from 'external sources' which means Pakistan. Scattered reports say that police radio picked up Hindi and Punjabi conversations amongst the attackers pointing to the common languages of India and Pakistan.

 

A merchant vessel has already been apprehended which is presumed to have brought the attackers to Mumbai though it's not yet confirmed. Other facts will continue to surface and even though the Pakistani leadership has already denied any connection, this is hardly going to matter. A lot of minds and opinions are going to be made up as far as Pakistani links are concerned. Meanwhile, the Pakistan government (though initially decided to send the chief of Pakistan intelligence) has agreed to send a representative to visit India and help with the investigation.


   Such hostilities already have a long history. In 2001, India accused Pakistan over the attack on its parliament and the incident almost led to a war. Although relationships have improved somewhat since then, the fragility of this warmth is obvious and the immediate future of bilateral relationship looks very grim for the moment.


   The problem between India and Pakistan are historic but the extreme animosity between the two is kept alive by the Kashmir problem. The collective national rage over the issue on both sides is so high that no Indian or Pakistan leader can even dare to seek peace. Having used Kashmir as an internal heater of popular sentiments, both countries are now paying a steep price as it lights fires in each other's households. The future price may even be bigger.


   Extremist movements in India have many strands and most are geographically located. The Indian north-east has the largest number of insurgencies going on and they are all turned towards the central government and its local supporters. Despite a heavy security presence and large-scale counterinsurgency actions these insurgencies have gone on for decades and show few signs of abating.


   Sentiments in India are already strong for taking heavy-handed actions against elements that have attacked Indian cities so often, so recently. However, India has seen only one major successful example of its counterinsurgency which was in Punjab and it related to the Khalistan movement. It's recorded that a major cause for the insurgency lay in the manipulative politics from the centre which pushed local anger to a stage of confrontation. When the Sikh extremists took shelter in the Golden Temple, the holiest place of the Sikhs, it was stormed by federal Indian troops triggering a global insurgency that took many lives including that of Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi, triggered large-scale Hindu attacks on the Sikhs and provided a section of the Indian leadership with a dubious example to follow in the future in dealing with sub-national unrest.


   Kashmir, however, is a different kettle of fish because it has led to several cross-border wars with Pakistan and the insurgency there have not been cowed down by military action. Insurgents and militants there do seek and get Pakistan's support in their battle with central/federal India. Kashmir is not only the source of India's maximum security headache at the border but is also the biggest internal security problem. It is also responsible for providing fuel to the general resentment and selective rage amongst a section of Indian Muslims which has led in part to the sense of 'legitimacy' in the mind of the insurgency supporters. It would be intelligent to assume that this sense of socioeconomic marginalisation that Indian Muslims in general feel also contributes to the creation of such platforms of violence.


   Worse perhaps for India is the recent rise of terrorism by Indian Hindu extremists aimed at the Muslim population. It puts a new and violent spin to the whole issue. If these action-reaction trend increases, and sadly it may, India will be dealing with a national problem it has not faced before. One shudders to think if sophisticated and trained people on both sides of the communal divide decide to fight their own wars on a common battlefield.
   
   Pakistan: terrorism generator and victim, both
   That Pakistan is being blamed is only fair because this country has invested heavily in destabilising India and Afghanistan for its anti-Indian objective and taking Kashmir. Its nation-building project is a continuation of the siege mentality that powered its state-creation project in 1947. As an idea, it has proven to be fundamentally flawed as its majority part, East Pakistan, parted ways with Pakistan in 1971. The smaller Pakistan has continued to be ruled by those who believe in military manipulation and clandestine insurgencies as a method of advancing its national agenda. Although it is now in a state of acute distress, financially and militarily, there is no record that Pakistan has given up its old ways which are largely determined by its military elite who see governance as a military exercise and foreign policy objectives as battlefield targets.


   Unfortunately for Pakistan, its biggest proxy-war gamble backfired and the Taliban which it sponsored to take over Afghanistan but who were then intended to turn towards Kashmir didn't do so. Instead they turned towards Pakistan and have brought it to near collapse. Apart from that almost all the extremist outfits in Kashmir enjoy Pakistan support.


   The situation of the US is curious because it shares a common cause against 'terrorism' with both India and Pakistan, is the ally of both and is involved with its own global war. It is also concerned that the hostility between the two countries through accident or mishap may lead to a nuclear nightmare. The US is really stuck in the middle of its own wars and it is linked to other wars through its allies. Its allies are again linked to other wars and, as a result, the dominant mentality that prevails within India, Pakistan and the US is that of war managing and not peacemaking. It does seem that while the US has empowered the theology of military action globally, it is quite weak when it comes to the quest of peace. It probably doesn't know how to resolve conflicts without violence and historically has no evidence of being a believer in that as a way of achieving foreign policy objectives.


   Yet today, it is struggling to make both ends meet as it funds two wars, both unwinnable and now admits its war on terror is going badly. In fact, while attacks on the US mainland have definitely vanished, terror attacks as a whole have intensified globally, especially for its allies. Although Osama bin Laden is supposed to be isolated, it has had little impact on the terror war which seems to get more sophisticated, dangerous and un-checkable.


   What seems obvious is that in every place where terror and violence strikes, it rarely disappears because in today's world, asymmetric wars have become far more 'efficient and successful'. In the last 10 years, despite incredibly huge investment, this has proven to be the most difficult war to win of them all. George Bush's acts should be seen as the last futile attempt through conventional means and there is a need to explore the possibilities of peace, even if they demand a harsh price because wars don't seem to be winnable anymore. If wars can't be won, what option is there except to look for peace? Given the global economic scenario where patronage for military acts is severely in decline, the world may well have reached a phase where wars are just not economically and strategically possible.


   It might be more inexpensive and functional to address the root causes of violence and terrorism. One must end the Kashmir, north-east, Middle East, Iraq, Afghanistan and all other wars because wars have not only become almost impossible to win but too costly to run as well.


   Times have changed and wars as a diplomatic management process appear fully dysfunctional. Whether world leaders have changed accordingly and see peace as an inevitable alternative remains to be seen.

 

http://www.newagebd.com/2008/dec/01/edit.html


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[ALOCHONA] Militants could start regional war - Zardari

Militants could start regional war - Zardari
 
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has appealed to India not to punish his country for last week's attacks in Mumbai, saying militants have the power to precipitate a war in the region, the Financial Times reported on Monday.
Zardari, whose wife, Benazir Bhutto, was assassinated by Islamist militants last year, warned that provocation by rogue "non-state actors" posed the danger of a return to war between the nuclear-armed neighbours.
 
"Even if the militants are linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba, who do you think we are fighting?" asked Zardari in an interview with the Financial Times.
"We live in troubled times where non-state actors have taken us to war before, whether it is the case of those who perpetrated (the) 9/11 (attacks on the United States) or contributed to the escalation of the situation in Iraq," said Zardari."Now, events in Mumbai tell us that there are ongoing efforts to carry out copycat attacks by militants. We must all stand together to fight out this menace."
 
Analysts say the Mumbai assaults by Islamist militants, which killed nearly 200 people, bore the hallmarks of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan-based group blamed for previous attacks in India.
 
Indian officials have said most, perhaps all, of the 10 attackers who held Mumbai hostage with frenzied attacks using assault rifles and grenades came from Pakistan, a Muslim nation carved out of Hindu-majority India in 1947.
The fallout from the three-day rampage in Mumbai, India's commercial centre, has threatened to unravel India's improving ties with Pakistan and prompted the resignation of India's security minister at the weekend.
 
CANDLELIGHT VIGILS
Mumbai residents returned to schools and offices on Monday for the first time since the attacks.Candlelight vigils were held in New Delhi and at various spots in Mumbai on Sunday, with people holding hands, singing songs and holding posters, some in remembrance of victims, others protesting over what they saw as government inaction.
 
Candles, flowers and pictures were also strewn at the bullet-scarred Cafe Leopold and at the barricades in front of the Taj and Trident hotels, where the gunmen holed themselves up during a 60-hour siege.
 
More vigils and remembrances are planned in the city, with messages going out as mass texts, e-mails and Facebook messages.The White House said that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice would travel to India on Wednesday.
 
"Secretary Rice's visit to India is a further demonstration of the United States' commitment to stand in solidarity with the people of India as we all work together to hold these extremists accountable," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said in a statement.
 
Rice has been in contact with the foreign ministers of India and Pakistan in recent days to ease tensions between the states, and this is expected to be a dominant theme in her meetings with Indian officials.
 
Analysts say the United States could get ensnared in tension between New Delhi and Islamabad, and it may prove to be a setback in the war on Islamic radicals on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
 
New Delhi said on Sunday it was raising security to a "war level" and had no doubt of a Pakistani link to the attacks, which unleashed anger at home over intelligence failures and the delayed response to the violence that paralysed the country's financial capital.
 
Officials in Islamabad have warned any escalation would force it to divert troops to the Indian border and away from a U.S.-led anti-militant campaign on the Afghan frontier.Zardari has vowed to crack down if given proof.
But security officials in Islamabad said Pakistan would move troops from its western border with Afghanistan, where forces are battling al Qaeda and Taliban fighters as part of the U.S.-led campaign against militancy, to the Indian border if tension escalated.
 
"It's part of the usual blackmail of the United States that Pakistan does to take more interest in India-Pakistan issues," said B. Raman, a former head of Indian intelligence agency RAW.
 
"They think this kind of argument will make the United States sit up and take notice of their sensitivities and do something about it," he added, referring to warming ties between Washington and New Delhi, including a nuclear accord.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Sunday he would boost and overhaul the nation's counter-terrorism capabilities, an announcement which came after Home Minister Shivraj Patil resigned over the attacks.
 

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[mukto-mona] Mumbai Massacre: Joint Statement from Pakistan-India

This Joint Statement was released to the press
simultaneously in Pakistan and India on November 30
2008.

Mumbai bloodbath

We are deeply shocked and horrified at the bloody
mayhem in Mumbai, which has claimed more than a
hundred and ninty lives and caused grievous injuries
to several hundred people, besides sending a wave of
panic and terror across South Asia and beyond. We
convey our profound feelings of sorrow and sympathies
to the grieving families of the unfortunate victims of
this heinous crime and express our solidarity with
them.

As usual, all sorts of speculations are circulating
about the identity of the perpetrators of this act of
barbarism. The truth about who are directly involved
in this brutal incident and who could be the culprits
behind the scene is yet to come out and we do not wish
to indulge in any guesswork or blame game at this
point. However, one is intrigued at its timing. Can it
be termed a coincidence that it has happened on the
day the Home Secretaries of the two countries
concluded their talks in Islamabad and announced
several concrete steps to move forward in the peace
process, such as the opening of several land routes
for trade – Kargil, Wagah-Attari, Khokhropar etc –,
relaxation in the visa regime, a soft and liberal
policy on the issue of release of prisoners and joint
efforts to fight terrorism? Again, is it just a
coincidence that on this fateful day the Foreign
Minister of Pakistan was in the Indian capital holding
very useful and productive talks with his Indian
counterpart? One thing looks crystal clear. The
enemies of peace and friendship between the two
countries, whatever be the label under which they
operate, are un-nerved by these healthy developments
and are hell bent on torpedoing them.

We are of the considered opinion that the continued
absence of peace in South Asia - peace between and
within states - particularly in relation to India and
Pakistan , is one of the root causes of most of the
miseries the people of the region are made to endure.
It is the major reason why our abundantly
resource-rich subcontinent is wallowing in poverty,
unemployment, disease, and ignorance and why
militarism, religious and sectarian violence and
political, economic and social injustice are eating
into the very vitals of our societies, even after more
than six decades of independence from colonial rule.

At this moment of unmitigated tragedy, the first thing
we call upon the Governments of India and Pakistan to
do is to acknowledge the fact that the overwhelming
majority of the people of India and Pakistan ardently
desire peace and, therefore, the peace process must be
pursued with redoubled speed and determination on both
sides. The sooner the ruling establishments of India
and Pakistan acknowledge this fact and push ahead with
concrete steps towards lasting peace and harmony in
the subcontinent, the better it will be not only for
the people of our two countries but also for the whole
of South Asia and the world. While the immediate
responsibility for unmasking the culprits of Mumbai
and taking them to task surely rests with the
Government of India, all of us in South Asia have an
obligation to join hands and go into the root causes
of why and how such forces of evil are motivated and
emboldened to resort to such acts of anti-people
terror.

It is extremely important to remind the leaderships of
Pakistan and India that issuing statements and
signing agreements and declarations will have meaning
only when they are translated into action and
implemented honestly, in letter and spirit and without
any further loss of time. It assumes added urgency in
the prevailing conditions in South Asia , with the
possibility that so many different forces prone to
religious, sectarian and other forms of intolerance
and violence may be looking for ways to arm themselves
with more and more sophisticated weapons of mass
murder and destruction. The bloodbath in Mumbai must
open the eyes of our governments, if it has not
already happened.

We urge upon the governments of India and Pakistan to
immediately take the following steps:

1. Cessation of all hostile propaganda against each
other;
2. Joint action to curb religious extremism of all
shades in both countries;
3. Continue and intensify normalization of
relations and peaceful resolution of all conflicts
between the two countries;
4. Facilitation of trade and cooperation between
the two countries and in all of South Asia . We
welcome the fact that the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad and
Poonch-Rawlakot borders have been opened for trade and
that the opening of the road between Kargil and Skardu
is in the pipeline.
5. Immediate abolition of the current practice of
issuing city-specific and police reporting visa and
issue country-valid visa without restrictions at
arrival point, simultaneously initiating necessary
steps to introduce as early as possible a visa-free
travel regime, to encourage friendship between the
peoples of both countries;
6. Declaration by India and Pakistan of No First
Use of atomic weapons;
7. Concrete measures towards making South Asia
nuclear-free;
8. Radical reduction in military spending and end
to militarisation.

Signatories:


Pakistan

1. Mr. Iqbal Haider, Co-Chairman, Human Rights
Commission Pakistan and former federal Minister of
Pakistan
2. Dr. Tipu Sultan, President, Pakistan Doctors for
Peace & Development, Karachi
3. Dr. Tariq Sohail, Dean, Jinnah Medical & Dental
University , Karachi
4. Dr. A. H.. Nayyar, President, Pakistan Peace
Coalition, Islamabad
5. Justice (Retd) Rasheed A. Razvi, President,
Sindh High Court Bar Association
6. Mr. B.M.Kutty, Secretary General , Pakistan
Peace Coalition, Karachi
7. Mr. Karamat Ali, Director, PILER, Karachi ,
Founding member, PIPFPD
8. Mr. Fareed Awan, General Secretary , Pakistan
Workers Confederation, Sindh
9. Mr. Muhammad Ali Shah, Chairman , Pakistan
Fisherfolk Forum, Karachi
10. Mr. Zulfiqar Halepoto, Secretary, Sindh
Democratic Front, Hyderabad
11. Professor Dr. Sarfraz Khan, Area Studies Centre
( Central Asia), Peshawar University
12. Syed Khadim Ali Shah, Former Member National
Assembly, Mirpur Khas
13. Mr. Muhammad Tahseen, Director, South Asia
Partnership (PAK), Lahore
14. Mrs. Saleha Athar, Network for Women's Rights,
Karachi
15. Ms. Sheema Kermani, Tehreek-e-Niswan, Karachi
16. Ms. Saeeda Diep, President, Institute of Secular
Studies, Lahore
17. Dr. Aly Ercelan, Pakistan Labour Trust, Karachi
18. Mr. Suleiman G. Abro, Director, Sindh
Agricultural & Forestry Workers Organisation,
Hyderabad
19. Mr. Sharafat Ali, PILER, Karachi
20. Mr. Zulfiqar Ali Shah, PILER, Karachi
21. Mr. Ayub Qureshi, Information Secretary ,
Pakistan Trade Union Federation
22. Ms. Sheen Farrukh, Director, Interpress
Communication Pakistan , Karachi
23. Mr. Zafar Malik, PIPFPD, Lahore
24. Mr. Adam Malik, Action-Aid Pakistan , Karachi
25. Mr. Qamarul Hasan, International Union of Food
Workers (IUF), Karachi
26. Prof. Muhammad Nauman, NED University , Karachi
27. Mr. Mirza Maqsood, General Secretary, Mazdoor
Mahaz-e-Amal
28. Ms. Shaista Bukhari, Women Rights Association,
Multan

India

1. Kuldip Nayar, journalist, former Indian High
Commissioner, UK., Delhi
2. S P Shukla, retired Finance Secretary, former
Member, Planning Commission, Delhi
3. PEACE MUMBAI network of 15 organisations, Mumbai
4. Seema Mustafa, Journalist, Delhi
5. Manisha Gupte, MASUM, Pune
6. Dr. Ramesh Awasthi, PUCL, Maharashtra
7. Jatin Desai, journalist, Mumbai
8. Prof. Ritu Dewan, University of Mumbai
9. Prabir Purkayashta, DSF, Delhi
10. Prof. Pushpa Bhave , Mumbai
11. Paromita Vohra, filmmaker, Mumbai
12. Achin Vanaik, CNDP, Delhi
13. Meena Menon, Focus on the Global South, Mumbai
14. Romar Correa Professor of Economics, University
of Mumbai
15. Anjum Rajabally, film writer, Mumbai
16. Anand Patwardhan, filmmaker, Mumbai
17. Kamla Bhasin, SANGAT, Delhi
18. Dr. Padmini Swaminathan, MIDS, Chennai
19. Sumit Bali, CEO, Kotak Mahindra Prime Limited
20. Dr Walter Fernandes, Director, North Eastern
Social Research Centre , Assam ,
21. Rabia, Lahore Chitrkar
22. Rakesh Sharma, filmmaker, Mumbai
23. Prof. Kamal Mitra Chenoy, JNU, Delhi
24. Prof. Anuradha Chenoy, JNU, Delhi
25. P K Das, architect, Mumbai
26. Neera Adarkar, architect, Mumbai
27. Datta Iswalkar, Secretary, Textile Workers
Action Committee, Mumbai
28. Madhusree Dutta, filmmaker, Majlis, Mumbai
29. Amrita Chhachhi, Founding member, PIPFPD
30. Mazher Hussain, COVA, Hyderabad
31. Prof. Manoranjan Mohanty, Delhi
32. Prof. M C Arunan, Mumbai



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[ALOCHONA] Mumbai Attacks Look Like A Western Intelligence Operation

Right, right.
No Terrorist Attacks anywhere in the world look like JehaaDi Operations. Even the one's in Bangladesh and everyday Terrorists Attacks of Taliban in Pakistan look like a Western Intelligence Operations. Lets blame the West and pray to Allah to destroy the West ...!

--- On Sun, 11/30/08, Isha Khan <bd_mailer@yahoo.com> wrote:

Mumbai Attacks Look Like A Western Intelligence Operation
 
The recent terrorist attacks in Mumbai India appear to be the work of a western intelligence agency.. Sophisticated terrorist attacks are usually only executed by an institution with a vast amount of resources at their disposal, and not by terrorists living in a cave somewhere.
 
History has shown that high profile terrorist attacks which get top billing in the media are in fact government sponsored. Already, India is blaming Pakistan for the attacks and we've also seen an onslaught of propaganda from media outlets attempting to place the blame for this attack on the fictional CIA founded organization Al-Qaeda. There are even eyewitness accounts saying that the attackers did not look like Indians but instead appeared to be western.
 
In fact, some of the attackers have already been identified as British citizens of Pakistan origin. Of course none of that matters, since the media needs to sell the Al-Qaeda myth to the dumbed down masses here in America. Considering that Barack Obama has gone on the record talking about the possibility of using military force in Pakistani territory to go after Al-Qaeda terrorists, it looks as if this event is going to conveniently provide him the excuse to do so when he takes power in a few months.
 
 He can say that he is going after Al-Qaeda in Pakistan and the media will sell it as the right thing to do. Let's face it; the only groups that would gain from the killing and wounding of hundreds of innocent people in India are western governments. It is allowing them to continue to sell the phony terror war to the dumbed down American sheep, it effectively plays off India against Pakistan and it provides the excuse for future U.S. military intervention into Pakistan.
 
Let's get into more detail about who will gain and why they stand to gain from these attacks. First, the attacks allows the media to re-introduce the idea of the phony terror war back into the public eye. Despite the fact that there is little to no evidence that this was pulled off by some sort of Islamic terrorist group it is being billed as such an attack by Al-Qaeda.
 
In addition, we have coincidentally seen terror alerts with claims that Al-Qaeda is planning to attack subways and Amtrak stations the same day of the Mumbai attack here in the United States. Even though the government can provide no specifics on the intelligence that lead them to conclude that this was a possibility, this has given them the excuse to pump more fear into the minds of the American people through the mass media propaganda complex. It has effectively brought the horror of the terror attacks in India closer to home in order to continue the media sell of the bogus terror war.
 
Second, it allows India and western governments to blame the attack on Pakistan as a pre-text to launch military operations on Pakistan soil. Obama has already said that he would take action against so called terrorists in Pakistan. Such attacks would not have anything to do with fighting the bogus terror war but instead would be used to exercise continued western influence in that portion of the world.
 
Third it serves as a way to create more tension between India and Pakistan both of which are nuclear powers and both of which have been fighting over the region of Kashmir for many years now.
 
Conveniently a new Al-Qaeda tape was released on the Internet yesterday showing the supposed number two of Al-Qaeda Ayman Al-Zawahri challenging the Bush administration to send the military into Pakistan. With each Al-Qaeda video and audio release it is becoming increasingly more obvious that Al-Qaeda is actually intentionally making statements to help fulfill the agenda of the west. If Al-Zawahri were really living in a cave somewhere it would be a little more difficult to make all of these video and audio tapes. Al-Qaeda is a fictional group created by the CIA, so considering that fact; wouldn't it make more sense if Al-Zawahri were actually working for the CIA, instead of a phony organization that is really just a list of names? By challenging the Bush administration to send troops into Pakistan, he's in fact giving credibility to the idea that there are terrorists that need to be defeated there.
 
Whenever these attacks occur, one has to look at who would gain the most from them. Clearly, the west has the most to gain from such an attack. They get to use these attacks to sell their phony terror war, play off India against Pakistan and it serves as a fantastic excuse to justify a future military invasion of Pakistan. The war on terror is a fraud and this appears to be yet another manufactured event that will allow the bloodthirsty criminals in Washington DC to continue their efforts in consolidating their power and control.
 

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[mukto-mona] Mumbai Massacre – Lesson for India

SAN-feature Service

SOUTH ASIAN NEWS-FEATURE SERVICE

November 01,2008

 

Mumbai Massacre – Lesson for India

 

Dr.A.H. Jaffor Ullah

 

As the story of gunmen killing hostages in ritzy Taj Mahal hotel was unfolding, a U.S. counterintelligence expert opined that the signature marks of two known terrorist groups' operating from Kashmir , Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e Mohammed, were visible.

 

SAN-Feature Service : On Thanksgiving Day, November 27, we woke up to listen all day the terrible news of terrorists' attacks in central business district of Mumbai.  The gunmen targeted a posh hotel, an expensive restaurant, a Jewish center, and a busy train station not only to maximize the casualties, but also to capture the attention of the foreign press.  The gunmen had specifically targeted the areas of Mumbai where foreign nationals gather to carry on theirs business dealings.

 

The gunmen seized Mumbai for over 48 hours killing 185 or more people including visiting foreigners from multiple nations.  At the city's Jewish Center, the terrorists killed an American Rabbi and his wife.  Many bystanders were killed too.  As per the news, the government flew an elite anti-terrorist squad from New Delhi who joined the Mumbai police to kill all the terrorists.  In the end, 9 gunmen were killed; only a lone gunman by a stroke of luck survived. India 's Home minister, Mr. Shivraj Patil, tendered his resignation because he became very unpopular in the aftermath of the terrorists attack.

 

As the story of gunmen killing hostages in ritzy Taj Mahal hotel was unfolding, a U.S. counterintelligence expert opined that the signature marks of two known terrorist groups' operating from Kashmir , Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e Mohammed, were visible.  These terrorist organizations were organized by Pakistan 's ISI to foment political trouble inside the Indian-held Kashmir .

 

When the lone injured gunman was taken to a hospital, the authorities found that the group of assailants had come from Pakistan by sea.  The 21-year terrorist was recruited from a town near Multan , which is in southeast Punjab .  Given how much negative propaganda goes on day in, day out in Pakistan against India 's control of the majority of Kashmir, it won't be difficult to assemble a group of jihadists to carry on a terrorist attack in India .  And in all likelihood, that is what has exactly happened.

 

As per news reports, the Pakistani gunmen had assembled in Karachi from where they took a vessel to come to the coast of Gujarat .  From there, they finally arrived in Mumbai but in the process they killed an Indian coastguard personnel.  In the wee small hours of the night, the gunmen came ashore by rubber dinghies when they quickly seized Taj Mahal Hotel.  By now, we all know what happened.

 

In the Internet, a freethinker South Asian forum started in earnest an intense debate over why is it that there is no dearth of supply of jihadists from Islamic world to carry out terrorist attacks on foreign soil?  One enthusiastic writer filled his blog space by penning an essay entitled "Faith's Virus."  In it the author, Dr. Avijit Roy, claimed that jihadism is like a virus which when infects a young mind makes the victim irrational.  Thus, infected with the virus, the jihadist then embarks on a journey to amend things, which his delusional mind thinks had gone awry.  The behavior of a "virus-infected" terrorist could explain why Mohammad Ata, the leader of 9-11 terrorists, was able to rationalize his dastardly action even though he knew how many innocent lives will be lost because of the action taken by his group on that fateful September day.

 

It is about the time India should think rationally and ask a rhetorical question about why she has external enemy?  India has joined two other nations, Israel and America , where terrorists from other nations have attacked killing many innocent citizens.  Scores of suicide bombers both young men and women have undertaken dangerous missions deep inside Israel only to kill themselves along with a few Israelis.  The Scripture is not powerful enough to convert an innocuous Arab young person to become a suicide member.  All the social injustices done to the displaced Palestinians who spent years and years of agonizing days in temporary decrepit camps have fueled the flame of hatred among Palestinians.  This was a mistake on the part of Israelis.  After all, to a Palestine the occupied territories in the West Bank and Gaza strip were theirs.  They were uprooted by the influx of European Jews in the aftermath of the Second World War. 

 

In 1948, Israel was established but the Zionists did not really care about the well beings of the uprooted Palestinians.  One should do a Google search on what the Israeli PM Golda Meir or Menachem Begin had said about the plights of Palestinians to know what an utter benign neglect and so much distrust they had for Palestinian people.  A grave injustice was being done by most Israeli leaderships against the Arabs who called themselves Palestinians.  Is it a small wonder that the Intifada II Movement had no problem finding volunteers to carry out suicide terrorist operations deep inside Israel ?

 

Why was America targeted by 19 or so Arab terrorists on September 11, 2001?  Again, the issue in the eyes of the Mohammad Ata's gang was the social injustice done to the Palestinian people.  The Scripture alone in my view is not enough to persuade a would-be-terrorist to become a live bomber.  Israel became a very powerful nation vis-à-vis militarism in the Middle East only because American taxpayers' money had made the nation a powerful one.  This has not gone unnoticed by Arabs.  On top of this, the Hollywood 's domination of entertainment industries has not sit well with many people in Arab world.  The invasion of airwaves allover the world by American made movies, TV programs have angered many a people allover the world who values modesty, chastity over nudity and promiscuity.  All these are contributing factors when 19 angry Arab men took control of four passenger jetliners in eastern seaboard in America on September 11, 2001.

 

In South Asia, India is doing very well economically ever since the nation had open-heartedly embraced the mantra of globalization in the late 1980s.  The mushrooming of call centers and silicon workstations in Bangalore , etc., had made India the envy of the South Asian nations.  The glitz and ritz of Mumbai, New Delhi , Gurgaon, Bangalore , Hyderabad , etc, as viewed by millions in the satellite TVs in the neighboring countries had made an impression that India is an emerging economy. 

 

However, beneath the veneer of this ostensible display of new riches lies the harsh reality of political dominance over Kashmiri people and impoverishment in northeast India where cessationist movements are common occurrence.  India is doing what one may call – a band aid method to squish the rebelliousness of the Kashmiri and NEI dissidents.

 

Come to think of it, Kashmir has always been a thorn by the side of India .  In 1947 when Brits left India while dividing the nation into two separate nations, they left hundreds of principalities without assigning them to India or Pakistan based on the census data.  In Kashmir , Muslims were the majority but the king was a Hindu one.  When forces from Pakistan invaded the Jammu valley, the king asked India to come to his aid.  The first full-scale war over Kashmir was fought during 1947-1948.  A ceasefire broke out in the end while Kashmir was divided into two parts one controlled by Pakistan and the other by India .  Since then, 3 more war broke out between these two countries. 

 

In 1948, the U.N. mandated that a plebiscite be given to Kashmiri people to decide whether they should join Pakistan or remain with India .  This plebiscite never did take place due to the vehement opposition of Indian government.  The movement to make Kashmir an independent landlocked country never gathered steam because of India 's persistent protest.  In the meantime, sixty years have gone by but Kashmiri Muslims have lived under Indian rule unhappily, of course. 

 

Because of the mass-scale discontent in Kashmir , many young Muslim Kashmiris were indoctrinated by such Islamic terrorist groups as Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e Mohammed.  The western counterintelligence organizations think that these two terrorist outfits were the brainchild of Pakistan 's Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI), an integral part of Pakistani military.  These organizations have blasted bombs allover Kashmir and its volunteers fought pitch battle with the Indian army from time to time.  In the hands of New Delhi , Kashmir has become a virtual police state where civil rights of Kashmiri Muslims are routinely violated everyday.  Consequently, homegrown terrorist attacks are on the rise against Indian army.

 

Under this dire political backdrop, a group comprising of 10 Pakistani terrorists have come ashore on November 26, 2008 to undertake a violent attack on innocent civilians.  They targeted the foreigners to attract the attention of foreign press.  In the end they died; however, their actions opened the question – why is it that India attracts foreign terrorists similar to Israel and America .  The answer lies in social injustice these countries have meted out to various ethnic and political groups.  America 's involvement in arming Israeli army had made America a prime target for terrorist organization such as al-Qaeda..  Israel has drawn ire from Palestinians and neighboring Arabs because of their scorched-earth policy against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza strips. 

 

India may deny the social injustice charge that has been leveled against them vis-à-vis their treatment to Muslim Kashmiris.  But it is a bitter truth that India 's heavy-handed approach to control the dissident Kashmiris is viewed as an act of gross civil rights violation, which has fueled anti-Indian feeling among Muslims in the South Asian subcontinent. Add to this the cultural domination of neighboring nations by cheap Bollywood flicks and sexually explicit TV programs that may not sit well in Islamic nations.

 

India should take positive steps to find a permanent solution in Kashmir .  If the division of Kashmir is anathematic to Indian politicians, then perhaps allowing the Kashmiris to make their country an independent nation is the best alternative solution.  This suggestion would invariably fall on the deaf ear in New Delhi . 

 

In summary, the Kashmir problem, which was started in 1947, is the mother of all problems that confront India .  Unless this issue is resolved to the fullest satisfaction of Kashmiri Muslims, Mumbai, New Delhi , or any other big urban center may face the possibility of more terrorist attacks.  This should be the take home message for Indian ruling elites from the Thanksgiving Day massacre in Mumbai.--SAN-Feature Service                                      

 

Dr. A.H. Jaffor Ullah, a researcher and columnist, writes from New Orleans , USA.e-mail: jhankar@bellsouth.net

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Sign the Petition : Release the Arrested University Teachers Immediately : An Appeal to the Caretaker Government of Bangladesh

http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/university_teachers_arrest.htm

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Daily Star publishes an interview with Mukto-Mona
http://www.mukto-mona.com/news/daily_star/daily_star_MM.pdf

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MM site is blocked in Islamic countries such as UAE. Members of those theocratic states, kindly use any proxy (such as http://proxy.org/) to access mukto-mona.

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates 5th Anniversary
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/5_yrs_anniv/index.htm

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Mukto-Mona Celebrates Earth Day:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Earth_day2006/index.htm

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Kansat Uprising : A Special Page from Mukto-Mona 
http://www.mukto-mona.com/human_rights/kansat2006/members/


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MM Project : Grand assembly of local freedom fighters at Raumari
http://www.mukto-mona.com/project/Roumari/freedom_fighters_union300306.htm

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German Bangla Radio Interviews Mukto-Mona Members:
http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/german_radio/


Mukto-Mona Celebrates Darwin Day:

http://www.mukto-mona.com/Special_Event_/Darwin_day/index.htm

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               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




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