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Wednesday, November 5, 2008

[mukto-mona] US elections: The Meaning and Significance of Obama Election

(Dear Karthik,

The working conditions of the Blacks did not change on
the very morrow of earning voting rights.
But that in itself was a major gain, an erasure of an
ugly discrimination.
Then came the domino effect.

The situation is only comparable this time.
Of course, to my mind.

Sukla)

It is perhaps Lenin who had termed revolution as the
festival of the masses.

The three articles reproduced below by three different
authors describe the upsurge of hopes and spontaneous
mass festivities triggered by Obama election in the
US, particularly among the Black.

As regards leftist reactions to Obama election, the
http://socialistworker.org/2008/11/05/what-next-for-the-struggle
gives us a number of reactions from well-known Left
figures, mostly from the US, and also a few lesser
known activists.

All are unanimous in their assessments, either
explicit or implicit, of the election as a momentous
event. A watershed in history.

This is an explicit one: "Obama's victory marks a blow
against racism of similarly [i.e. similar to that of
earning voting rights] historic proportion. Despite
McCain's and Palin's best efforts to whip up racial
animosity toward Obama, they failed to garner a
majority of voters for their hate-filled campaign. To
be sure, the changing demographics of the U.S. voting
population has reduced the relative importance of the
white vote, while boosting that of Blacks, Latinos and
other immigrants."

All of them also agree upon the wide rift between the
hopes raised and actual possibilities that the
"system" may permit.

Most of them acknowledge the new opportunities opened.
One (activist) rather effusively puts it: "I think
most of us are walking around with a little bit of
knot in our stomachs, almost afraid to really hope
that this will come out a win. It's a scary time, but
at the same time, assuming Obama wins this election,
and they get a few more progressive members in the
House, I think our work is just only begun."

They do, however, seriously disagree on how to
approach this upsurge of hopes. This keen pining for
"change".

The two major strands are quite succinctly represented
by Mike Davis and Howard Zinn.

According to Mike:

Quote

Only three things, in my opinion, are highly likely:

First, there is no hope whatsoever of the spontaneous
generation of a new New Deal (or for that matter, of
Rooseveltian liberals) without the combustion of
massive social struggles.

Second, after the brief Woodstock of an Obama
inauguration, millions of hearts will be broken by the
administration's inability to manage mass bankruptcy
and unemployment, as well as end the wars in the
Middle East.

Third, the Bushites may be dead, but the hate-spewing
nativist Right (particularly the Lou Dobbs wing) is
well-positioned for a dramatic revival as neoliberal
solutions fail.

The great challenge to small bands of the left is to
anticipate this mass disillusionment, understanding
that our task is not "how to move Obama leftward," but
to salvage and reorganize shattered hopes. The
transitional program must be socialism itself.

Unquote

And this is how Zinn prescribes:

Quote

So it will take a revivified social movement to do for
Obama what the strikers and tenant organizers and
unemployed councils and agitators of the early 1930s
did for FDR, pushing him into new paths, so angering
the superrich that FDR, in one of his best moments,
said, "They hate me, and I welcome their hatred!"

Obama needs such fire. It is up to us, the
citizenry--and non-citizens too!--to ignite it.

Unquote

Sharon Smith puts essentially the same view even more
eloquently:

Quote

Although Roosevelt vaguely promised voters a "New
Deal," it took pressure from below to determine the
content of presidential policy during the Depression
era. The scale of the class struggle was such that
workers not only won the legal right to unionize and
other working-class reforms, but also tipped the
balance of class forces in favor of workers for
decades to come.

We have not seen a rise in class struggle for more
than three decades in the U.S. But the class anger on
display in this election could well be a prelude to
such a rise in coming years.

Obama has promised "change," but the scale of change
that is needed requires mass struggle from below.

Unquote


Tariq Ali echoes thus:

Quote

From day one of the Obama victory, which will unleash
a wave of high expectations on the domestic and global
fronts, activist pressure is crucial to achieve
anything. I think antiwar activists should turn up in
large numbers to the inauguration with banners
reading, "Congrats Barack, now out of Kabul and Iraq!"

Unquote

Highly relevant and insightful is the comment of a
prominent activist:

Quote

I think the Obama victory is going to help people
become organized in general and more involved. You do
not get this excited and optimistic about the future
just because the first African American is elected
president--you want to see this administration
succeed.

Therefore, you won't see people cast a vote and back
off. There will be significant organizing. If there is
such a thing as trickle-down, that is what's going to
trickle down.

Unquote

Another activist comments:

Quote

What we have to bear in mind always is that electing
one individual cannot possibly fix all the systems
that we need fixed. It's only a step toward perhaps a
more open government. I think this is the hope we all
have. But to think the election of Obama or a more
progressive Congress is going to immediately launch us
into a new dawn is just not realistic.

Unquote

There are a few others.

But the most percetive one, of course to my mind, is:

Quote

Lefties will have to fight for renewed political
relevance--largely absent in the current state--in the
form of such things as livable wages, the right to
organize, form unions and bargain collectively,
abolishing the death penalty, ending the murderous and
brutal war and occupation, releasing political
prisoners, acquiring single-payer universal health
care coverage--among too many others to mention at
this time.

These are the kinds of reforms needed in the near term
as we work for more fundamental structural changes, so
that people will one day own and control the
institutions that govern their lives in terms of their
workplaces and governing bodies.

With the advent of an Obama administration, lefties
should recognize that we will be organizing and
pushing for these initiatives among many optimists
satisfied with seeing the end of the terrible Bush
era.

Unquote

I, for one, could have not agreed more.

The prescription by Mike Davis to await the
(inevitable) disillusionment to set in looks pretty
ugly apart from being surely disastrous to me.

Sukla

I/III.
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Watching-history-in-Harlem/381917

Watching history in Harlem
Sandipto Dasgupta Posted online: Nov 06, 2008 at 2326
hrs
After he saw Napoleon march into Prussia after the
Battle of Jena, an elated Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel wrote that he had seen history on horseback.
Barack Obama is no Napoleon, and I am certainly no
Hegel, but there is no way I can avoid the word
"history" when describing what I saw Tuesday night in
Harlem.
From around 5 in the evening, long before any of the
polls closed, people started gathering around the
massive television screen set up a stone's throw away
from the iconic Apollo Theatre, where such legends as
James Brown and Aretha Franklin were created. The mood
was at best one of tepid anticipation. Then, through
the night as state after state went Obama's way in
what could only be called a landslide, they broke
down, some in tears, some into a dance, and most in
disbelief. Some of them had endured the infamous Jim
Crow laws where they could not share the same seat in
the bus with white Americans or drink from the same
tap; some of them had faced the harsh end of an
extremely racialised criminal justice system (in New
York, for example, while African-Americans constitute
about 15 per cent of the population, they're nearly
half the imprisoned population). And almost all of
them knew their history.

They knew — as the governor of New York, David
Paterson, a young African-American himself, recounted
in an emotional speech — that their forefathers had
been brought into this country as chattel, a status
that was enshrined in the US constitution. They knew
that their grandparents did not really have the right
to vote until the '60s when the Voting Right Act was
passed. That they are still one of the worst-off
ethnic groups in the country. And then, at 11 o'clock,
when the results came in from California, they finally
believed that their country has a new president, and
that he is one of their own.

So Harlem took to the streets — singing, dancing,
playing drums, chanting "Yes we can" — ignoring both
the rains and the police who tried in vain to clear
the roads. Complete strangers were hugging each other,
saying "We did it." Drivers leaned out of their cars
to give high-fives to passers-by. People climbed atop
street lamps and bus-stops. New York, which famously
never sleeps or stops, came to a halt.

Make no mistake, this election does not in any way
close the chapter on racism in America. Neither does
it solve the persistent and prevalent inequality in
this country. But it is a moment whose significance
cannot in any way be minimised. Two men in the crowd
walking next to me shouted at a beggar on a street
corner: "Brother, you need not do that any more. We
have a Black president now." An old man outside a
famous jazz bar told me: "Today, Bob Marley is smiling
in his grave; today, Malcolm X is smiling in his
grave." D.L. Hughley, the well-known comedian, said
over the microphone: "To all the kids here, you need
not grow up only to be a rapper or a basketball
player. After today, you can also grow up to be the
most powerful man in the world." Yes, the beggar would
still have to be back on his street corner tomorrow,
and most of the kids in Harlem would perhaps have a
way better shot at being a rapper than coming anywhere
close to the presidency. Moreover, given the present
condition of America and the enormous weight of
expectation on him, President Obama is very likely to
disappoint some. But try telling that to the local
pastor who lead the crowd with the chant: "We are
free, we are free, we are free at last."

Americans are very fond of the phrase "Only in
America". Over the years it has become an empty
slogan, one associated with the jingoistic Right in
this country, and one that most of us non-Americans
view with justified cynicism. But today, those who
elected a black man, with a Muslim middle name, born
outside of privilege, as their president can be justly
proud of once again going boldly where no Western
nation has gone before (or even India — we haven't had
a Dalit prime minister). Tomorrow we can go back to
criticising the country for its role in the global
economic collapse or griping about its bankrupt
neo-conservative foreign policy. But tonight, at least
for tonight, we can raise a toast to the world's first
real modern democracy, as it dances in its streets.

The writer, a graduate student at Columbia University,
New York, has worked for the Obama campaign

express@expressindia.com

II.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/05/us/politics/05civil.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=kevin%20sack&st=cse&oref=slogin

November 5, 2008
The Moment
A Time to Reap for Foot Soldiers of Civil Rights
By KEVIN SACK
ALBANY, Ga. — Rutha Mae Harris backed her silver Town
Car out of the driveway early Tuesday morning, pointed
it toward her polling place on Mercer Avenue and
started to sing.

"I'm going to vote like the spirit say vote," Miss
Harris chanted softly.

I'm going to vote like the spirit say vote,

I'm going to vote like the spirit say vote,

And if the spirit say vote I'm going to vote,

Oh Lord, I'm going to vote when the spirit say vote.

As a 21-year-old student (on right in photo), she had
bellowed that same freedom song at mass meetings at
Mount Zion Baptist Church back in 1961, the year
Barack Obama was born in Hawaii, a universe away. She
sang it again while marching on Albany's City Hall,
where she and other black students demanded the right
to vote, and in the cramped and filthy cells of the
city jail, which the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
described as the worst he ever inhabited.

For those like Miss Harris who withstood jailings and
beatings and threats to their livelihoods, all because
they wanted to vote, the short drive to the polls on
Tuesday culminated a lifelong journey from a time that
is at once unrecognizable and eerily familiar here in
southwest Georgia. As they exited the voting booths,
some in wheelchairs, others with canes, these foot
soldiers of the civil rights movement could not
suppress either their jubilation or their astonishment
at having voted for an African-American for president
of the United States.

"They didn't give us our mule and our acre, but things
are better," Miss Harris, 67, said with a gratified
smile. "It's time to reap some of the harvest."

When Miss Harris arrived at the city gymnasium where
she votes, her 80-year-old friend Mamie L. Nelson
greeted her with a hug. "We marched, we sang and now
it's happening," Ms. Nelson said. "It's really a
feeling I cannot describe."

Many, like the Rev. Horace C. Boyd, who was then and
is now pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, viewed the
moment through the prism of biblical prophecy. If Dr.
King was the movement's Moses, doomed to die without
crossing the Jordan, it would fall to Mr. Obama to be
its Joshua, they said.

"King made the statement that he viewed the Promised
Land, won't get there, but somebody will get there,
and that day has dawned," said Mr. Boyd, 81, who
pushed his wife in a wheelchair to the polls late
Tuesday morning. "I'm glad that it has."

It was a day most never imagined that they would live
to see. From their vantage point amid the cotton
fields and pecan groves of Dougherty County, where the
movement for voting rights faced some of its most
determined resistance, the country simply did not seem
ready.

Yes, the world had changed in 47 years. At City Hall,
the offices once occupied by the segregationist mayor,
Asa D. Kelley Jr., and the police chief, Laurie
Pritchett, are now filled by Mayor Willie Adams and
Chief James Younger, both of whom are black. But much
in this black-majority city of 75,000 also seems the
same: neighborhoods remain starkly delineated by race,
blacks are still five times more likely than whites to
live in poverty and the public schools have so
resegregated that 9 of every 10 students are black.

Miss Harris, a retired special education teacher who
was jailed three times in 1961 and 1962, was so
convinced that Mr. Obama could not win white support
that she backed Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in the
primaries. "I just didn't feel it was time for a black
man, to be honest," she said. "But the Lord has
revealed to me that it is time for a change."

Late Tuesday night, when the networks declared Mr.
Obama the winner, Miss Harris could not hold back the
tears, the emotions of a lifetime released in a flood.
She shared a lengthy embrace with friends gathered at
the Obama headquarters, and then led the exultant
crowd in song.

"Glory, glory, hallelujah," she sang. After a prayer,
she joined the crowd in chanting, "Yes, we did!"

Among the things Miss Harris appreciates about Mr.
Obama is that even though he was in diapers while she
was in jail, he seems to respect what came before.
"He's of a different time and place, but he knows
whose shoulders he's standing on," she said.

When the movement came to Albany in 1961, fewer than
100 of Dougherty County's 20,000 black residents were
registered to vote, said the Rev. Charles M. Sherrod,
one of the first field workers sent here by the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Literacy
tests made a mockery of due process — Mr. Boyd
remembers being asked by a registrar how many bubbles
were in a bar of soap — and bosses made it clear to
black workers that registration might be incompatible
with continued employment.

Lucius Holloway Sr., 76, said he lost his job as a
post office custodian after he began registering
voters in neighboring Terrell County. He said he was
shunned by other blacks who hated him for the trouble
he incited.

Now Mr. Holloway is a member of the county commission,
and when he voted for Mr. Obama last week he said his
pride was overwhelming. "Thank you, Jesus, I lived to
see the fruit of my labor," he said.

The Albany movement spread with frenzied abandon after
the arrival of Mr. Sherrod and other voting-rights
organizers, and Dr. King devoted nearly a year to the
effort. The protests became known for the exuberant
songs that Miss Harris and others adapted from Negro
spirituals. (She would go on to become one of the
Freedom Singers, a group that traveled the country as
heralds for the civil rights movement.) In the jails,
the music helped while away time and soothe the soul,
just as they had in the fields a century before.

But the movement met its match in Albany's
recalcitrant white leaders, who filled the jails with
demonstrators while avoiding the kind of violence that
drew media outrage and federal intervention in other
civil rights battlegrounds. The energy gradually
drained from the protests, and Dr. King moved on to
Birmingham, counting Albany as a tactical failure.

Mr. Sherrod, 71, who settled in Albany and continues
to lead a civil rights group here, argues that the
movement succeeded; it simply took time. He said he
felt the weight of that history when he voted last
Thursday morning, after receiving radiation treatment
for his prostate cancer. He thought of the hundreds of
mass meetings, of the songs of hope and the sermons of
deliverance. "This is what we prayed for, this is what
we worked for," he said. "We have a legitimate chance
to be a democracy."

Over and again, the civil rights veterans drew direct
lines between their work and the colorblindness of Mr.
Obama's candidacy. But they emphasized that they did
not vote for him simply because of his race.

"I think he would make just as good a president as any
one of those whites ever made, that's what I think
about it," said 103-year-old Daisy Newsome, who
knocked on doors to register voters "until my hand was
sore," and was jailed in 1961 during a march that
started at Mount Zion Baptist. "It ain't because he's
black, because I've voted for the whites." She added,
"I know he can't be no worse than what there's done
been."

Mount Zion has now been preserved as a landmark,
attached to a new $4 million civil rights museum that
was financed through a voter-approved sales tax
increase. Across the street, Shiloh Baptist, founded
in 1888, still holds services in the sanctuary where
Dr. King preached at mass meetings.

Among those leading Sunday's worship was the associate
pastor, Henry L. Mathis, 53, a former city
commissioner whose grandmother was a movement
stalwart. He could not let the moment pass without
looking back.

"We are standing on Jordan's stony banks, and we're
casting a wishful eye to Canaan's fair and happy
land," Mr. Mathis preached. "We sang through the years
that we shall overcome, but our Father, our God, we
pray now that you show that we have overcome."

III.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Race_to_equality/articleshow/3679439.cms

Race to equality


6 Nov 2008, 0438 hrs IST, Subodh Varma, TNN

Which doll do you like, black or white? Back in 1939,
when psychologist couple Kenneth and Mamie Clark
showed black and white dolls to children across
American cities, they came up with shocking results.
Most children chose the lighter coloured dolls,
describing them as "good" and the dark as "bad",
showing the way racial prejudices got ingrained so
early in life. These "doll experiments" became a
famous argument against segregation in schools. Almost
70 years later, Barack Obama's victory in the US
presidential elections has redeemed the people of
America. Centuries-old walls of racial discrimination
and prejudice have been broken.

To understand the enormity of this, one will have to
look back at over 350 years of discrimination and
violence. Between 1650 and 1800, 6.6 million African
people were forcibly brought to America and the
Caribbeans to work as slaves in cotton and fruit
plantations. After slavery was outlawed in Europe, a
fierce civil war was fought out in the United States
between those who wanted to continue this barbaric
practice, and those who wanted to abolish it.

Slavery might have died after the civil war of 1863,
but discrimination, and violence, against the colored
people — newly liberated slaves — continued. Several
southern states enacted the oppressive Jim Crow laws,
which prevented blacks from getting educated, ensured
segregation in public life and treated them as second
class citizens. Violence continued, often through such
macabre organizations as the Ku Klux Klan.

This led to massive migration of black families into
the cities of the north where they started working in
factories. The biggest migration occurred during the
First World War, even as 350,000 blacks were fighting
in Europe, in blacks-only units. Even in the north,
they were subject to violence as whites thought that
they were grabbing their jobs.

There was complete segregation in schools, residential
colonies, restaurants, buses, restrooms — everywhere.
In most southern states, blacks couldn't vote due to
property and educational conditions. As a reaction to
this, the '50s and '60s saw a huge upsurge of protest.
Thousands of blacks, supported by progressive whites,
took to the streets demanding integrated schools,
voting rights, equal pay, and, above all, respect as
human beings. This tumultuous period threw up iconic
leaders like Martin Luther King Jr, and later, the
more militant Malcolm X.

In the '60s, the civil rights movement converged with
the anti-Vietnam war movement, symbolised by the
conversion of Cassius Clay to Muhammed Ali, and his
refusal to accept the draft for Vietnam.

There was a huge white backlash to this demand for a
better deal for the blacks. Race riots erupted in 110
cities, TV showed hair-raising scenes of police dogs
attacking black protestors, the National Guard was
deployed in scores of towns, and several black
leaders, including Martin Luther King, were
assassinated.

Yet the massive public protest, the biggest upsurge
ever seen in the US, forced the government to make
several changes in laws, helped along by decisions of
the courts. In 1964, the Civil Rights Act was passed
by Congress establishing equality before law. In 1965,
the Voting Rights Act was passed giving equal voting
rights to all, irrespective of the colour of their
skin, and in 1967, the Supreme Court made laws banning
interracial marriage illegal.

Even in post '60s America, blacks continue to be
poorer than whites. In 1975, mean per capita annual
income was $16,111 for whites and $10,401 for blacks.
The number of black families below the poverty line
was four times more than white families. Not much has
changed since then. In 2005, the mean annual income of
white persons was $76,546, but the blacks were still
far behind at $48,606. Nearly a quarter of black
families still live below the poverty line.

Barack Obama was a young boy in that tumultuous decade
of the '60s. More importantly, he was not living in
mainland America — he was being schooled in Hawaii and
Indonesia. By the time he returned to the US and
joined Harvard, much of the battle was over. And, he
hardly had any contact with his black father who had
separated from his mother when Barack was just two.
So, though Barack may not carry within him the fire of
Martin Luther King, his victory is still historic. It
represents the biggest ever recognition given to
blacks.

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

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[mukto-mona] An Open Appeal to Obama: For a Nuclear Weapons Free World

Please visit:
http://www.wagingpeace.org/menu/action/urgent-actions/appeal_to_next_pres/
to sign the appeal.

Sukla

The text of the letter:

Nuclear weapons could destroy civilization and end
intelligent life on the planet.

The only sure way to prevent nuclear proliferation,
nuclear terrorism and nuclear war – before the next
blinding flash – is to rid the world of nuclear
weapons.

The era of nuclear weapons must be brought to an end.
This can be done. It will require leadership and
commitment. Nuclear weapons were created by humans,
and it is our responsibility to eliminate them before
they eliminate us.

The United States, as the world's most militarily
powerful nation, must take the initiative in convening
and leading the nations of the world to urgently take
the following steps:

*De-alert. Remove all nuclear weapons from high-alert
status, separating warheads from delivery vehicles;
*No First Use. Make legally binding commitments to No
First Use of nuclear weapons and establish nuclear
policies consistent with this commitment;
*No New Nuclear Weapons. Initiate a moratorium on the
research and development of new nuclear weapons, such
as the Reliable Replacement Warhead;
*Ban Nuclear Testing Forever. Ratify and bring into
force the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty;
*Control Nuclear Material. Create a verifiable
Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty with provisions to
bring all weapons-grade nuclear material and the
technologies to create such material under strict and
effective international control;
*Nuclear Weapons Convention. Commence good faith
negotiations, as required by the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, to achieve a Nuclear Weapons Convention for
the phased, verifiable and irreversible elimination of
nuclear weapons;
*Resources for Peace. Reallocate resources from the
tens of billions currently spent on nuclear arms to
alleviating poverty, preventing and curing disease,
eliminating hunger and expanding educational
opportunities throughout the world.

We call upon the next President of the United States
to make a world free of nuclear weapons an urgent
priority and to assure US leadership to realize this
goal.

----------

Dear Friends,

The election of Barack Obama as President of the
United States is a great moment for America and the
world - a time of celebration and tears. The American
people have chosen hope over fear, unity over
division. In doing so, we have repudiated policies of
violence, lawlessness and closed-door rule. We have
restored hope and made possible the restoration of
America's credibility in the world.

President-elect Obama has already made many statements
about US nuclear policy during his long campaign for
the presidency. The one I like best is: "A world
without nuclear weapons is profoundly in America's
interest and the world's interest. It is our
responsibility to make the commitment, and to do the
hard work to make this vision a reality. That's what
I've done as a Senator and a candidate, and that's
what I'll do as President."

He has also said, "I will make the goal of eliminating
nuclear weapons worldwide a central element of US
nuclear policy." He has also wisely stated that "if we
want the world to de-emphasize the role of nuclear
weapons, the United States and Russia must lead by
example." He has made clear that he does not seek
unilateral disarmament, but that America must lead in
achieving the global elimination of nuclear weapons.

Among the specific steps for US leadership that the
newly elected President emphasized in his campaign are
the following:

lead an international effort to de-emphasize the role
of nuclear weapons around the world;
strengthen the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty;
lock down the loose nuclear weapons that are out there
right now;
secure all loose nuclear materials within four years;
immediately stand down all nuclear forces to be
reduced under the Moscow Treaty and urge Russia to do
the same;
seek Russia's agreement to extend essential monitoring
and verification provisions of the START I [Strategic
Arms Reduction Treaty] before it expires in December
2009;
work with Russia to take US and Russian ballistic
missiles off hair-trigger alert;
work with other nuclear powers to reduce global
nuclear weapons stockpiles dramatically by the end of
his presidency;
stop the development of new nuclear weapons;
seek dramatic reductions in US and Russian stockpiles
of nuclear weapons and material;
set a goal to expand the US-Russian ban on
intermediate-range missiles so that the agreement is
global;
build a bipartisan consensus for ratification of the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty;
cut investments in unproven missile defense systems;
and
not weaponize space.
President-elect Obama has proven himself a man of
vision and integrity. For the first time since
Presidents Reagan and Gorbachev met at the Reykjavik,
Iceland Summit in 1986 and came close to reaching an
agreement on abolishing nuclear weapons, the vision of
a world free of nuclear weapons appears to be within
the realm of possibility. This will require
presidential leadership, and the President-elect will
need support and encouragement from the American
people and from people throughout the world.


In peace,

David Krieger
President
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation

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[mukto-mona] It̢۪s a victory for everyone

Dear Editor,
 
Hope you are doing well and thanks for publishing my previous write-ups.
 
This is an article titled "It's a victory for everyone". 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
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It's a victory for everyone
 
Ripan Kumar Biswas
Ripan.Biswas@yahoo.com
 
The victory was not only for the President-Elect of the US Barack Obama, not for the estimated crowd of up to 240,000 people, who were present at Chicago's Grant Park and enjoyed the historical moment with him on November 5, 2008. The victory was for everyone who believes spirit, democracy, ideals of humanity, respect to the opponents, secularism, and above all, who puts the country's interest first.
 
The victory is for Teimouri, 26, an Iranian and a journalist by profession, who expects America needs a leader who can fix its image in the world. This is a victory of Duncan Adel, a computer technician in Kenya over Bilal al-Bodour, deputy minister of culture for the United Arab Emirates. Bilal al-Bodour believed that Americans would never vote for someone who is black and belongs to an immigrant family because that's the American mentality whereas Duncan Adel was happy and thankful to all Americans as this election restored his faith in democracy. Duncan Adel had a day off on Thursday along with others Kenyan as it was declared a national holiday by the Kenyan government. Balaji Samanthapudi, 36, a technology consultant in Bangalore, India, was jubilant as the market prices were going up. The message of this election was that everyone must believe in democracy that people of any color can unite and stand up and give hope to all over the world.
 
The victory is the answer for those who are in doubt that a country is usually recognized by its might of the arms or the scale of the wealth. Everyone got goose bumps all over again listening to his speech. "All those who have wondered if America's beacon still burns as bright -- tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from our the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope," Obama applauded the power of democracy in America and called America is a place where all things are possible in his acceptance speech after being elected as America's first black president.
 
This is the opportunity to them to learn, who hardly respect their opponents, especially in politics. "He fought long and hard in this campaign, and he's fought even longer and harder for the country he loves," Obama offered gracious words to his vanquished opponent, Sen. John McCain of Arizona while McCain acknowledged defeat and urged all Americans to congratulate Obama and put aside their differences in the nation's interest. "To do all in my power to help him lead us through the many challenges we face," McCain pledged his support and help for the new president. Calling him President-Elect, President George W Bush congratulated his apparent successor and promised to make a smooth transition.
 
It is indeed a great momentous occasion for the entire world. This is big 'NO' to disruptive, divisional, and hate-mongering politics. This is a big 'YES' to civility, intelligence, intellectual thinking, and inclusiveness. This ushers in a new era - like a breath of fresh air. There is optimism in the air. There is faith in humankind.
 
People around the world may now trust in American values and the integrity of a man who convinced not only the majority of the voters but also people all around the world. With Obama's leadership, America will be more comfortable to join the rest of the world in solving the problems of the time-global warming, sustainable living, learning to live in peace. If he will work so hard and efficient as he did in campaigning he will be a great president and a leader of the world. According to Rashid Haider, a Pakistani student in New York, Pakistan doesn't need American weapons instead it needs institutions like America. If America can squeeze the leaders to implement good policies for the people in Pakistan, it would be the greatest contribution to the Pakistani people.
 
It's all been building - there have been signals of hope, of change, but according to the critic,  this is the first time in recent history that Americans, as a nation, have stepped up together and, in the political arena, voted for change. Nationwide Obama gathered 349 electoral votes and pulled 53 percent of the popular vote compared to McCain's 173 electoral votes and 46 percent of the popular vote. Obama's victory was sweetened by Democratic gains in both houses of Congress. When Obama and running mate Joe Biden will take their oath of office on Jan. 20, 2009, Democrats will control both the White House and Congress for the first time since 1994. According to the last news, Democrats clinched 56 in Senate and 254 in House while Republicans got 40 and 173 respectively. Four seats in Senate and 8 seats in House are still to be decided.
 
Like Clayborne Carson, a former activist and now a Stanford University historian, many Americans believe that America was a democracy in name only. It's only since the mid-1960s that Americans have had the experiment in a multicultural and multiracial democracy. It was inconceivable then that the United States would elect an African-American president.
 
Barack Obama, with his fairy tale family, has personal charisma to spare. He describes his struggles as a young adult to reconcile social perceptions of his multiracial heritage. Having black African-American father and white American mother Ann Dunham from Wichita, Kansas, Barack Obama becomes a proud, self-identified "African-American" who moves easily between the realms of the ethnic minority and the mainstream majority. He seems to transcend the race issue, giving voters of all stripes something with which to identify -- an African American success story, an immigrant "American Dream" story, or just a middle-class Midwesterner making good. Barack is an exceptional African American -- which something about the plurality of his own racial background makes him accessible to all American voters in a way that other leaders aren't. According to another African-American Colin Luther Powell, the former US secretary of state of Bush administration, Obama is the president of all Americans.
 
The Columbian graduate became the exact successor of Martin Luther King, Martin Luther King Jr., Jesse Jackson, or Malcolm X in the arena of political freedom. Some people might think that a president should come from right here, born, raised, bred, fed in America. To go outside and bring somebody in from another nationality, now that doesn't feel right, but according to the renowned black author and essayist Debra J. Dickerson, Obama isn't black" in an American racial context. He shows that he can be profoundly patriot and yet find a common understanding with the rest of the world. And the world is indeed in serious need of positive coalitions to tackle the enormous challenges ahead: terrorism, hunger, global warming, diseases, and genocide.
 
Obama's acceptance speech wasn't only inspirational but also a blend of energy, policy, and personal anecdotes. Obama proposed specific policies to Americans and gave assurance to those, who would seek peace and security around the world. Barack Obama carried a message of hope not just for the US but for the whole world.
 
November 06, 2008, New York
Ripan Kumar Biswas is a freelance writer based in New York

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[mukto-mona] Protima of “MA DURGA” along with other protima was demolished by the communal quarter and the quarter is threatening the Hindu leader to slaughter, police is cool with communal attitude in Goplagonj, take urgent actions!!

Dear Sir,

 

I want to draw you immediate attention on the case of brutal attack on the " Hatbair  Sarbojonin Puja Mondop" in Hatbaria, Goplagonj in Bangladesh.  I have visited the place of incident in and find out them struggling for security and justice.

 

Please find out the details and raise your voice to stop the minority repression in Bangladesh.

 

With Thanks

 William Gomes

Email: 01912342809

Email: CDA.exe@gmail.com

www.persecutionbd.org

 

 

Back ground information:

 

Hatbaria is located in the Goplagonj district of Bangladesh. This area is highly Hindu populated area .As I have analysis the law and order situation of the Thana, I have find out a horrible picture of "Minority repression" In different trends.

 

Incident:

 

According to Subash Chandra Biswas of secretary of Hatbaria of Sarbojonin Puja Udjapan Committee, on 1-11-08 early in the morning he finds out the idols of the demolished. As he come back to home earlier in 31-10-08 around 11 pm everything was alright.  He latter council with the local leaders of the Hindu community and officallly complained about this shameful, communal, atrocity in local police station in 1-11-08. But the police filed a case after two days in 3-11-08.  The

 

 

Present situation:

 

As I went the place of incident on 4-11-08 the local people shared their present situation like this:

 

 Local hindu leader Sadan Biswas claimed that he was threaten over mobile on 3-11-08 by the unidentified people that if they take any legal action about the said incident they will slaughter him.

 

Sadan also said that those who can demolish the Matir protima of MA Dugra they can also slaughter man.

 

Prof.Subdeb biwas said that in past 20 years we had never face this kind of communiula tack on "Ma Durga" and on our community.

 

 

Recommendations:
Immediate and decisive action is needed by the government  and   concerned person to address the situation .


1.  Publicly condemn attacks against Protima of " MA DURGA" .
2. Take decisive action to protect members of the Hindu community against attacks.

3. Initiate a full, impartial and independent investigation of the attacks and make the result of this investigation public.

4. Bring to justice all perpetrators of the attacks regardless of their position in society or in any political party.

5. Provide compensation to victims of the attacks.

7. Take appropriate disciplinary or criminal action against any police personnel who have failed to ensure the protection of members of the Hindu community.

 

 

Please call immediately:

The local Sp and officer in charge seemed cool to find out the   perpetrators. They are engineering to turn to case as there are conflicts inside of the Hindu community.  

 

To ensure the security of the local Hindus of that area:

 

  1. I G police: Mobile :01713373000
  2. SP Gopalgonj ,Mobile : 01713373569
  3.  OC Gopalgonj., Moibile:01713373572
  4. Investigative officer: 01712030480
  5.  

 

Please call the local Hindu leaders that you are concerned about the alarming situations :

 

1.Prof.Subdeb  ,Mobile : 01710929358

2.Sadan Biswas ,Mobile : 01734757810

 

Please raise your voice against the minority repression in Bangladesh. Please take some time to help the minorities on this case, call local and concerned authorities.

 

Fell free to communicate with us for further details...

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[ALOCHONA] India declare Ganga a national river

India declare Ganga a national river


NEW DELHI, Nov. 4: The government today decided to declare the Ganga as the first 'national river' and set up a high powered Ganga River Basin Authority headed by the Prime Minister to protect the ancient river from pollution and degradation.

"It was decided that there is a need to replace the current piecemeal efforts taken up in a fragmented manner in select cities with an integrated approach that sees the river as an ecological entity and addresses issues of quantity in terms of water flows along with issues of quality," a PMO release said after a meeting chaired by the Prime Minister and attended by ministers of water resources, environment and forests and urban development.
 
Dr Manmohan Singh told the meeting that there was a need to set up a model for cleaning of rivers through the new institutional mechanism. The proposed Authority headed by the Prime Minister would have as its members chief ministers of states through which the 2510 km long river flows. It flows through Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal.

The details of the authority to be vested with appropriate powers would be worked out in consultation with state governments and Central ministries. Dr Singh referred to the special place Ganga has in the hearts and minds of all Indians and stated that this emotional link needs to be recognised. "The country should set up a model for river cleaning through the new institutional mechanism," said the PMO statement.

The proposed authority will promote inter-sectoral coordination for comprehensive planning for the river. Various agencies working on different aspects of river conservation and pollution management would be brought together under this proposed authority.

The Ganga with its source at Gangotri glacier in Gaumukh in Uttarakhand which has been receding rapidly enters the Bay of Bengal at the Sunderbans delta and the industries along its banks cause immense pollution, a cause of concern for the government.

Dr Singh wanted detailed final proposals to be prepared within two months after necessary consultations. It was also recognised that the spirit of the Ganga Action Plan as conceived in 1985 by then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi of making the cleaning of the Ganga a people's movement should be restored. Last month, the PM had met a delegation led by Shankaracharya Swami Swaroopanand Saraswati and Magsaysay awardee Rajendra Singh who pressed for making the Ganga a national river as it continued to be polluted despite the government having spent a huge amount on pollution control projects.

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[ALOCHONA] Jang/News - Ammar Ali Jan on The Indian Threat

'Saj' is a Pakistani liar.
Pak Army had not permitted even high ranking Officers to have their families in East Pakistan. Only a few had but all of them had flown their families back to West Pakistan with Suite Cases full of Pak Currency from the banks and rich Bangalis that they had looted at least a month before Indian Attack because they knew, they would lose and become POWs. Pak Airport Workers were the witness, how much looted money those women had brought from East Pakistan. They told everybody about it in Pakistan but government-controlled newspapers in Pakistan never published their stories.

There were hardly any Civilian Workers from West Pakistan had left before Indian Attack and Indian Army had not taken any Civilian POWs unless someone had thought if he did not become a POW by lying about his status, he would be killed by Bangladeshis. So, a few of those are possible, not tens of thousands.
Such few Civilians were not kept as POWs by Indian Army and they were released after their lie had gotten exposed or they told the truth after reaching India.

--- On Fri, 10/24/08, Robin Khundkar <rkhundkar@earthlink.net> wrote:

Dear Sajloo the "independent" comedian:

Whatever floats your boat is fine with me! As long you are happy & contented.

Whats a few thousand among dosts!

The fact is your piara Pakistani Army Bhaiyas (regular forces or otherwise) did surrender to the "INDOO" enemy.

Tauba tauba! astak firrulla!

Your admirer

Robin Hood

PS: In case you have forgotten but as a CPA/CA (in your day job) you will appreciate the original document. Dont you agree? No numbers mentioned but you get the picture old boy!

http://en.wikipedia .org/wiki/ Image:Instrument OfSurrender. jpg

-----Original Message-----
From: Saj


Hello Robin Hood.
 
Yar, there is not only this single article. But you can find numbers of others. Such as one publsihed in Jang, assissting Army Chief to take over the country and install martial law.
 
Just like any other country, we also not short of culprits and you copied the article of one of them. May be because he is your like mind? whatever...
 
This so called columnists, just like you, do not know that Gen. Niazi did not surrendered 90,000 troops. Infact, less than half of them were military men and under his command. The rest were picked up by your masters to make the large number. What kind of columnist he is? He failed to demonstrate his knowledge by not acknoledging that those 90,000 also include employees and families of employees of different organisation. Such as shiping company, PIA, Railway etc etc. What you say.
 
Do I need to produce a long long list of articles, research reports etc to prove that what this culprit, your brother, had wrote, is wrong? Oh, I am not going to do that, as everone knows, what he intending to say and what you intending to do.
 
Keep visiting the same site and they will have plenty of material for the ill minded people like you to copy here and there.
 
____________
 
We all need to unite and stand as one against the common enemies
 
Sajjad Ahmad
 
Freelance Writer & Researcher
Rawalpindi, Pakistan
 
 
Author and Moderator
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2008 3:58 AM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Jang/News - Ammar Ali Jan on The Indian Threat

The notion that everything wrong with Pakistan was India's fault was the most popular perception of the 90s and its now creeping back in

By Ammar Ali Jan

The News

http://jang. com.pk/thenews/ oct2008-weekly/ nos-19-10- 2008/dia. htm#5

As a child of the nineties, I remember how India was the number one whipping boy with our establishment and the government-controll ed media. Every night, on PTV Khabarnama, we would hear about the atrocities being committed by the Indian army against the "freedom fighters" in Jammu and Kashmir. Not only was there an outright condemnation of everything Indian, there was also a plethora of songs and TV serials (my childhood favourite being Alpha Bravo Charlie) in favour of the jawans. At the same time, we were told that everything wrong that happened in Pakistan was somehow a "Hindu" conspiracy. Like many other kids my age, I believed the only way to be patriotic was to hate India and to love the Pakistani military.

This depiction of India as enemy number one has been the main reason for the army's enormous influence in all the decision-making in Islamabad .This concerted effort to glorify the army was being carried out when the establishment was also busy vilifying all politicians as corrupt and "national security threats". This perception ensured the smooth takeover by the military on Oct 12, 1999. The fact that Musharraf could not act as strongly as he promised vis-a-vis India not only meant that public attention was diverted from the "Indian" threat, it also undermined the rais'on d'etre(reason for being) for a powerful national security state.

However, with the return to civilian rule, we are witnessing another attempt by the establishment to demonise the Indian state and to portray the civilian government as "weak" on national security. Unfortunately, people like Ansar Abbasi and Shireen Mazari, who otherwise supported the democratic movement against the generals, have started taking an extraordinarily hawkish line on India in their recent articles. From the Balochistan insurgency to suicide bombings to the trouble in the tribal regions, everything is being blamed on the Indians. Knowing the disastrous consequences (read military takeover) of a view that depicts civilians as weak on national security, it is important to demonstrate the problems with this hypothesis and also to show how no one but our own national security apparatus has to be blamed for the mess we find ourselves in today.

To begin with, we must review the history of our India policy. Immediately after partition, Pakistan went to war with India in 1948 over the disputed territory of Kashmir. This resulted in the formulation of India as an existentialist threat for the new state, at least in the minds of our establishment. Pakistan moved closer to the US with the signing of the Baghdad pact in 1954 in order to counter India's strategic partnership with the Soviet Union. Relying on our friend Uncle Sam, our establishment tried to "liberate" Kashmir by launching operation Gibraltar in 1965. In this operation, the Pakistan army sent in fighters and arms into Kashmir in order to ignite a rebellion in the State. This adventure was a terrible failure and lead to the 'surprise' attack on Lahore by the Indians.

Colonel SG Mehdi, who was heading the SSG just before the 1965 war, wrote a fascinating article in 1998 that demonstrated how childish the entire plan was and why he opposed this needless provocation on part of the Pakistani military high command. He also states in the same article that if a thorough inquiry had been conducted into the failures of the 1965 war, we could have avoided the 1971 debacle. (http://www.defencej ournal.com/ july98/1965war. htm) However, our official historians celebrate the 6th of Sept as Defence day by narrating the heroics of the Pakistan army in saving Pakistan from a disaster. They never explain how the army high command created that disaster to begin with.

During this time, our establishment played the India card to quell any opposition to the state. Wali Khan, leader of the National Awami Party (NAP), was declared an Indian agent and hence incarcerated. Nationalist leaders in Balochistan, Sindh and East Pakistan met the same fate. In fact, a military operation was launched against the people of East Pakistan on charges that they had joined "Hindu" India in a conspiracy to break the "Muslim" Pakistan.

This nonsensical conspiracy theory for the 1971 war is endlessly repeated in our history books. What this analysis ignores is the treatment meted out to the Bengalis by the Pakistani state. They were denied provincial autonomy and control over their resources, their leadership was jailed, their demands were rejected and on top of all that, a brutal military operation (termed genocide by the Bengalis) was launched against the eastern wing resulting in thousands of casualties.

Keeping in mind the track record of the establishment in dealing with its subjects, is it fair to put the entire blame of this defeat on the shoulders of a foreign player?

Those who thought the '71 defeat would instill some sense into our establishment were to be disappointed. Rather than attempting to improve the relationship between the two countries, ZA Bhutto's government devised the "strategic depth" policy in which Afghanistan was supposed to give strategic depth to Pakistan in case of a war with India. Islamabad needed a friendly government in Kabul and for this purpose Rabbani's men were trained in Pakistan to set-up a friendly regime in Afghanistan. During General Zia's time, this theory was implemented by added intensity, especially after the Soviet invasion. The Pakistani state, in collaboration with the US, set-up a network of training camps inside Pakistan to wage the Afghan "Jihad". Thousands of youngsters were trained and sent to "liberate" Afghanistan from the Soviet occupation. madrassahs mushroomed all over the country, giving "strategic depth" to the Mullahs in our society. Anyone who opposed this made in Washington policy was thrown into Zia's notorious jails as a communist sympathiser or an Indian/Hindu agent.

After a victory in a shattered Afghanistan, our establishment now took upon its shoulders the task of liberating its Kashmiri brethren. The boys from the Afghan Jihad were redirected to Kashmir in 1989 and for the next 13 years, our state gave full support to the Kashmiri "freedom fighters". This, of course, changed in 2002 when General Musharraf declared these groups as terrorists and rounded up its cadres. Many remain missing even today.

Today, we are witnessing the blowback effect of an incredibly short-sighted policy by our establishment. The tribal areas are in a complete rebellion, the list of suicide bombings is increasing at an alarming rate and a security threat is posed by the madrassahs as demonstrated by the Lal Masjid crisis. Those jihadis nurtured by the state for the past thirty years, supposedly to protect us from the Indian threat, have been a threat to the very survival of the Pakistani state.

In such circumstances, those who are blaming India for all the security problems being faced by Pakistan are delusional at best. We can't be sure what role India is playing in escalating these tensions, but we should have a consensus that the role played by our security apparatus, the agencies that are suppose to protect us, has been terrible to say the least. While those in charge of the security apparatus have made a fortune for themselves, as shown by Ayesha Siddiqui in her book Military Inc., they failed miserably in their real job of protecting Pakistanis by adopting policies without a clear vision.

Even if we take the hawkish line that some journalists and political parties are taking these days, have the army generals fared any better than the civilians even on that account when they were in power? Ayub Khan conceded defeat at Tashkent in 1966, General Niazi surrendered his ninety thousand soldiers to the Indian army at Dhaka, General Zia conceded defeat on Siachin and General Musharraf banned all those groups whom he use to refer to as freedom fighters. Not a heroic record by any stretch of the word!

This does not mean that the Indian security apparatus is any better. They have consistently pointed their fingers at Pakistan whenever something goes wrong. The Indian establishment, much like ours, has failed to recognise its own mistakes, especially in Kashmir where the Indian army has been particularly brutal.

Khalil Jibran in his play Satan makes the point that the priest needs Satan if he wants to remain in business. The same is true for the establishments of India and Pakistan. They need to create fear of the other in order to justify their own existence. What we need is a genuine, people's peace movement in both these countries that can challenge this concept of a national security state. Especially in Pakistan, we need to stop blaming India for the current mess we find ourselves in. Identifying the real culprits will facilitate true accountability, weaken the grip of the army on our state and consequently, will help the democratisation of our State and society.

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[ALOCHONA] Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim men on how to discipline their wives:

If no reform in Islam takes place, our coming generation in the Western countries would start feeling ashamed of being Moslim.

--- On Tue, 10/28/08, Farida Majid <farida_majid@hotmail.com> wrote:

    Yet another violation of rights of women due to ignorance of the very precepts of the Holy Qur'an that attempt to restore women their rights as Allah's 'best creation'.
     It comes from the Land of Jahiliya, otherwise known as the KINGDOM of Saudi Arabia.
     Mired in jahiliya they cannot even sense the unintended humor!
 
[Consider this: In the rest of the world, it is people who are named after the name of the land of their origin (or 'asli' in Arbi) -- thus people from Germany are called Germans, people from China are called Chinese, people from Bengal or Bangla are called Bengali or Bangali, etc. Where in the modern world is a country that is named after the personal name of a family?]
 
             Farida Majid




Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2008 11:29:59 -0400
Subject: "Beat her like a Lady" :: Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim men on how to discipline their wives:


Saudi Cleric lectures Muslim young men on how to beat their wives

BEAT HER  LIKE A LADY

From a television program aired last year in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait during which cleric Muhammad al-'Arifi advised young men on how to discipline their wives. 


Translated from the Arabic by the Washington-based Middle East Media Research Institute.

http://www.memritv. org/clip/ en/1594.htm

 

"Men beat women more often than women beat men. Allah created women delicate, fragile, supple, and soft because they use their emotions more than they use their bodies. While a man may use beating to discipline his wife, she sometimes uses her tears to discipline him. For men, women's emotions may be fiercer than the strike of a sword.

 

"Before you beat a woman, first admonish her—once, twice, three times, four times, or ten. If this doesn't help, you must turn to the teaching "refuse to share their beds." Thus, a husband distances himself from his wife in bed and in conversation. If a husband comes to eat a meal and his wife asks him, "How are you? Do you want anything?" he must not answer. The husband should not sleep with his wife. He should sleep in another room.

 

"If this does not help, then the husband's third option is to beat his wife lightly so it will not leave a mark. He must not make her face ugly. Beating in the face is forbidden. Even if you want your camel or donkey to walk faster, you are not allowed to beat it in the face. If this is true for animals, it is all the more true for humans. If a man is angry with his wife—if he says to her, "Watch out, the child has fallen next to the stove," and she says, "I'm busy"—then the husband should beat his wife with a toothpick or something like it. He should not beat her with a bottle of water, a plate, or a knife. Notice how gentle the toothpick used for beating is—this shows you that the purpose is not to inflict pain. When you beat an animal, you intend to cause it pain so that it will obey you, because a camel would not understand if you said, "Camel, come on, start moving." A donkey understands nothing but beatings, but to a wife, a light beating conveys,  "Woman, you have gone too far."

 

"A husband should not beat his wife like he would a child, slapping it right and left. Unfortunately, many husbands beat their wives only when they get angry, and when they start the beating, they use both hands and sometimes their feet, as if they are punching a wall. Remember, brother, this is forbidden; your wife is a human being.





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[ALOCHONA] Pakistan: A forced marriage to the IMF?

False propaganda of Islamists against USA is one thing but their ignorance about functions of IMF is just lack of General Knowledge because I think, Allah has  some kind of curse against them having that.

--- On Tue, 10/28/08, Isha Khan <bd_mailer@yahoo.com> wrote



--- On Tue, 10/28/08, Zoglul Husain <zoglul@hotmail. co.uk> wrote:
 
Iraq was an ally of the US in Iraq-Iran war and later it was the US, which destroyed Iraq.
 
Pakistan was an ally of the US in driving the Soviet Union out of Afghanistan. And Pakistan was an ally of the US when the US destroyed Afghanistan. It is now the US, which is attempting to destroy Pakistan, with the help of Hamid Karzai and Manmohan Singh.
 
One correct lesson from history is that the oppressive, corrupt and anti-people governments never learn from history.
Is similar warning bells ringing for Bangladesh Government with its anti-people crimes and its alliance with the US and India??

Thank you


Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2008 23:13:01 -0700
From: bd_mailer@yahoo. com


Pakistan: A forced marriage to the IMF?

By M Ilyas Khan
BBC News, Karachi
 

A poor family cooking in Rawalpindi
The poorest have been hit hardest by food inflation

There was great hope earlier this year that Pakistan would enter an era of peace and plenty following the return of democracy.
There is now a realisation that peace and plenty require strict discipline, careful planning and loads of hard work.
 
Until now, these benchmarks of success have been in short supply.
The military is yet to deal a decisive blow to the Islamist militants who control large swathes of territory on the country's western border with Afghanistan.
The new civilian government has used up more than half of the country's meagre foreign exchange reserves without enhancing its own capacity to generate income.
 
After the elections in February the country had pinned hopes on a "democracy dividend" from its Western allies in the "war on terror".
It is now contemplating an unpopular bailout by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) which is likely to cut growth, worsen the employment situation and perhaps even affect the size of the government, including that of its powerful military. How has all this come about?
 
'Not sustainable'
Over the last few years, the Pakistani economy has grown 7-8% annually, mainly because of the resources that became available when it agreed to side with the US after the September 2001 attacks in New York and Washington.. .
 
Finance adviser Shaukat Tarin
Finance adviser Shaukat Tarin says Pakistan needs up to $5bn fast
One independent economist, Dr Asad Sayeed, estimates that nearly $70bn (£45bn) flowed into the Pakistani economy in the six years after 2001, on top of aid and assistance from Western governments and financial institutions - including $10bn from the Bush administration.
 
But growth mostly took place in the services sector, especially consumer financing. No significant assets were created in the industrial and agricultural sectors.
 
"It was not sustainable growth, and as a result economic imbalances started to re-emerge in 2006," a former finance minister, Sartaj Aziz, said in a recent television interview.
 
The new government took power at a time when international food prices had already started to soar, and oil prices were to hit the high mark weeks later.
 
By June the country's trade imbalance had become unsustainable, and the gap between its income and expenditure rose to over 6%, making local markets extremely nervous.
 
Twice the central bank, the State Bank of Pakistan, injected dollars from the reserves into the currency market to prevent a freefall of the Pakistani rupee.
In addition, the government had to take measures in the stock market to prevent share values from nosediving.
 
The government, which remained largely embroiled in political problems during its first six months in office, has now awakened to an increasingly bitter reality.
 
Correcting distortions
According to Shaukat Tarin, finance adviser to prime minister, the country needs $4-5bn within a month to cover its trade gap and to pay off debts on bonds and loans from multilateral creditors.
The US seems to be keen to push Pakistan towards the IMF
Sartaj Aziz
former finance minister
It needs up to $15bn over the next 24 months, he says, to stabilise the economy and correct distortions, such as a move from import-based consumer policies to those focusing on import substitution through domestic production.
 
To achieve this it needs sustained foreign assistance and investment in the agricultural, industrial and energy sectors. The country has plenty of long-term commitments from a group of countries called the Friends of Pakistan, but any default on international obligations in the short term may hurt its ability to attract future investment.
 
A US commitment to allow non-military assistance of up to $1bn per year for five years will have to wait until the US Congress has done the requisite legislation.
 
Commitments made by the European Union, the UK's Development Fund for International Development (Dfid), the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the Islamic Development Bank are also likely to take time to mature.
 
Meanwhile, two of Pakistan's closest allies, China and Saudi Arabia, have apparently declined to provide cash for an immediate bailout. China has expressed intent in providing relief through investment. Saudi Arabia is talking about deferring oil bills.
 
Reluctant
Only one short-term window remains open, that of the IMF, with its strategy of achieving stabilisation by cutting growth.
People made homeless by fighting in the district of Bajaur
Displaced by fighting: militancy has played havoc with the economy
Pakistan has been reluctant to go to the IMF because of its various conditions to reduce the size of the government, cut development expenditure, reduce or eliminate politically important subsidies etc, and also because of its strict monitoring regime.
 
But perhaps this is what the international community wants before it commits funds to Pakistan. "The US seems to be keen to push Pakistan towards the IMF," says Sartaj Aziz.
 
Analysts in Pakistan generally agree with him. "The world has moved in a concerted way to hold back their commitments until Pakistan submits to the monitoring regime of IMF," says one government economist, requesting anonymity. The reason is not hard to explain.
 
"Everybody is weary of a state and a nation that has become a danger to the world," he says. "While an economic bailout is essential to prevent it from passing into the hands of the militants entirely, the world would also like to see it does its best to curb militancy, which it has not done in the past despite consuming huge amounts of international assistance."
 



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