Sunday, May 29, 2011

The Identity card By Arati R. Jerath - Timecrest - The Times of India - Mumbai


The most welcome development of Muslim mainstreaming in India is, that unlike all Brahminical political formulations from Congress to BJP to CPM, Muslim regrouping is not based on hate, insecurity and divisionary politics. On the contrary, Muslim leaders are fully aware of the power of inclusion in their quest to provide a healthy, moral and peaceful alternative.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai


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http://www.timescrest.com/society/the-identity-card-5458

TIME CREST, THE TIMES OF INDIA

COMMUNITY CALCULUS

The identity card

Arati R Jerath | May 28, 2011


CHANGING COLOURS The emergence of Muslim political parties is expected to fracture India's complex electoral mosaic even further
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CHANGING COLOURS

The emergence of Muslim political parties is expected to fracture India's complex electoral mosaic even further

The Congress party's hat trick in Assam in the recent state polls almost overshadowed a significant development that marks what could be a new chapter in the Indian Muslim narrative. Here, in only its third election, the six-year old Muslim-dominated All India United Democratic Front, floated by perfume baron Badruddin Ajmal, beat the BJP and the AGP to emerge as the main opposition force. It almost doubled its seats, from 10 to 18, came second in another 17 constituencies and bumped up its vote share from 9 per cent in 2006 to 13 per cent in 2011.

It was a remarkable achievement. Muslim political parties - with two honourable exceptions, the Indian Union Muslim League in Kerala and the All India Majlis-Ittehad-ul-Muslameen in Hyderabad - have rarely been more than a flash-in-thepan phenomenon, never surviving beyond one election. But, as the rise of the AIUDF indicates, things seem to be changing. Indian Muslims, like the Dalits and the OBCs, are increasingly rejecting the politics of patronage and opting for identity politics through community-based parties. In Assam, they've put their faith in the AIUDF. In Uttar Pradesh, it's the Peace Party of India that, in just three years, is making waves in Muslim pockets. And more recently, the ultra-conservative Jamaat-e-Islami Hind, which has consistently opposed electoral politics as "haraam", announced its political debut with the launch of the Welfare Party of India.

The trend is bound to fracture India's complex electoral mosaic further. At the same time, it signals the start of a long over-due process of mainstreaming. For six decades, Muslims have functioned on the margins of Indian politics, haunted by insecurity to seek protection and patronage from the so-called secular parties. In the aftermath of Partition and widespread communal violence, they turned to the Congress. Later, as the BJP rose, and the Congress declined, in the wake of the demolition of the Babri Masjid, they surrendered their votes to regional secular formations like Mulayam Singh's Samajwadi Party and Lalu Yadav's Rashtriya Janata Dal.

Today, they are emerging from the shadows of fear to behave like other social groups that are leveraging their numbers through political parties of their own for a better deal. And like these groups, Muslims too are staking claim for their share of resources and more equitable development. What is significant is that unlike past efforts by Muslim groups to mobilise community votes, the political idiom of the newer parties is notable for the absence of emotive, or communal, rhetoric. Mobilisation is no longer on the basis of religion. Parties like the AIUDF and PPI talk mainly of education, employment, health care and social justice.

The push for a new politics, according to Manzoor Alam, chairman of the Institute of Objective Studies, is coming from the youth who have understood the dynamics of the democratic electoral process and want to leverage it to fulfill their aspirations for a better life. "The idea is developing a better bargaining capacity for the community by influencing votes in Muslim-dominated pockets. It is a strategic and tactical move, nothing to do with communal polarisation, " he says. "Dalits and OBCs have their own resistance. Why not Muslims ? They are only trying to get their due within the constitutional framework."

The eye-opener was the Sachar Committee report which, in 2006, mapped the community's falling human development indices in excruciating detail to declare Muslims as worse off than Dalits. "Muslims realised that mainstream secular parties have done nothing for them. They use Muslims during elections and then forget about them. They make promises without delivery, " says Alam. Since then, the community has been introspecting for effective ways to use its considerable numbers to get ahead.

Given the high level of trust deficit between Hindus and Muslims, there are many who see this as a dangerous trend. Certainly in Assam, the growing political strength of the AIUDF polarised the Hindu vote in favour of the Congress, especially in the communally-sensitive districts. But political scientist Yogendra Yadav of the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies disagrees. "I would say that Muslim politics is finally becoming normal, " he maintains. "Muslims are using their identity like everyone else. They trade it, bend it, stretch it, gerrymander it. Let me stress that it's not communal. The appeal is not Islam. It is identity. Muslim-ness is very much constitutive of that identity. "

The discernible shift in the mood on the ground has sent a frisson of anticipation through the community. It's the hot topic of debate in Urdu newspapers and on Muslim websites which have become platforms for avid discussions on the Jamaat's new political face or the success of the AIUDF. Interestingly, a survey done by psephologist Yashwant Deshmukh's C-Voter in November 2010 found that more than 50 per cent of Muslim students in minority colleges and madarsas wholeheartedly supported the idea of having political parties for, of and by the community.

While the Sachar Committee report was the catalyst for change, the BSP seems to have been the role model. "Muslims have seen how the BSP has given respectability and status to the Dalits, " says social activist Tanweer Alam. "White collar Dalits are coming forward and bargaining with Brahmins. They are talking as equals. After seeing the success of the BSP, Muslims have started realising the value of their vote."

Certainly, the AIUDF and PPI are trying to use the electoral calculus of the BSP to do their poll mathematics. In other words, cultivate a core community vote base and then add to it by putting up candidates from other social groups. The AIUDF, for instance, fielded as many as 30 non-Muslim candidates in the 80 odd seats it contested in Assam. Two of them actually won. The PPI in UP has recently entered into a coalition with seven non-Muslim parties including Ajit Singh's Jat-based Rashtriya Lok Dal.

The alliance has potential in western UP where the Jat-Muslim combination was used by Singh's father, Charan Singh, to lethal effect. Deshmukh acknowledges that he has started factoring in the PPI in his pre-poll surveys for UP where assembly elections are due in 2012.

These are early days yet, but community analysts believe that Muslim politics is finally coming of age in India. "Muslims have moved on, " says Aijaz Ilmi, editorial director of the Kanpur-based Siyasat group of publications. "For decades they were fed on a diet of Islam being in danger. Now they have realised that Muslims themselves are in danger of economic and educational obliteration. So they are taking matters into their own hands and realising that they have other options."

He believes that the Muslim psyche changed after the BJP was comprehensively defeated in the 2004 Lok Sabha elections. Suddenly, the BJP no longer looked invincible and it happened through the power of the ballot. It was a huge affirmation of democracy. This is borne out by Yadav's findings of the Muslim vote share in 2004. The morale of the community was so poor that it recorded a low voting percentage that year. But with their faith in the electoral process restored, Muslims came out in large numbers to vote in 2009, a trend that was seen again in the recent assembly elections.

Muslim politics is still evolving and it is too early to predict whether a pan-India Muslim party can come up or be successful. The community is as disparate and as divided on caste and regional lines as the Hindus. But Manzoor Alam believes that the community is realising the importance of political mobilisation, if only to act as a pressure lobby. In West Bengal, for instance, where Muslims voted almost wholesale for Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress (she won 70 per cent of the seats with sizeable minority populations ), the All India Milli Council has formed a watchdog to monitor delivery on the party's election promises. At the very least, it expects her to implement the recommendations of the Sachar Committee report by increasing the community's representation in government jobs, educational institutions and grassroots political bodies like panchayats and municipal boards. "If she fails to deliver, another Muslim political party may emerge in the state where Muslims are 28 per cent of the population," he warns.

Tanweer Alam too sees the trend increasing unless mainstream secular parties like the Congress start addressing the developmental aspirations of the community. "Muslims should vote for mainstream parties," he says. "Unfortunately, mainstream parties have ignored their needs for too long."
arati.jerath@timesgroup.com

Friday, May 27, 2011

Obama has to tread most carefully with its own media's vested interest agenda - By Ghulam Muhammed

Obama has to tread most carefully with its own media's vested interest agenda
CNN, heavily staffed by Islamophobes and Zionists, has tried its best to put Former Pakistani President on the spot over Pakistan's very genuine reaction to America's blatant rape of Pakistan, a UN member's sovereignty. It is all a planned conspiracy to bring Pakistan into the neo-con planned next targeted nation for the US armed forces to move in.

In this abbreviated report, CNN Wire Staff has not given the full details of the Piers Morgan's goading Musharraf into discussing the subject in the most insensitive direct Q&A interview.

Musharraf did stress that technically it is an act of war, but it is not a declared war by the US. Neither Pakistan is necessarily forced by its people, its military and its politicians to declare a 'war' on the US, for its act of wanton violation of a proud nation's self-respect and dignity.

America and the rest of the Western world are fully aware that Pakistan is an 'epicenter' of terrorism. Obama cannot go far by so arrogantly racking up the same rage from Muslim and Arab lands, that he is at least trying to posture as going an extra mile to damp down.

Obama should beware of the adviser in his own team, who are closet Zionists and find all logic to justify another war front for America to open up.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai

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http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/05/27/pakistan.musharraf.obama/?hpt=T2


Musharraf: Obama is arrogant

By the CNN Wire Staff
May 27, 2011 -- Updated 0957 GMT (1757 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • A Navy SEAL team kills Osama bin Laden during a raid in Pakistan on May 2
  • Musharraf says the raid violated Pakistan's sovereignty and was an "act of war"
  • The former prime minister calls bin Laden's death "absolutely illegal"
  • Pakistani intelligence commits a "terrible failure" in not knowing where bin Laden was

(CNN) -- U.S. President Barack Obama is showing "arrogance" in the aftermath of a mission that killed terror leader Osama bin Laden, said former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf in an interview that aired on CNN Thursday night.

Musharraf further called the May raid an "act of war."

"Certainly no country has a right to intrude into any other country," Musharraf told Piers Morgan. "If technically or legally you see it, it's an act of war."

The American president said this week in an interview on British television that, if the opportunity arose, he would do the same thing again to take out al Qaeda terrorists.

"I think such arrogance should not be shown publicly to the world," Musharraf said. "I think it is arrogance that: 'We don't care. We don't care for your national opinion. We don't care for your people. We will come in and do the same thing.' This is arrogance."

Musharraf conceded that it was a "terrible mishap, a terrible failure" that Pakistani intelligence didn't seem to know more about bin Laden's whereabouts, saying they should have know he was living in a compound in Abbottabad, a short distance from a Pakistan military academy.

A Navy SEAL team killed the al Qaeda leader during a 40-minute assault on the compound in the early morning hours of May 2.

Musharraf called bin Laden's death "absolutely illegal."

Asked by Morgan if it was an unlawful assassination, he responded: "I don't want to get involved in these legalities of the issue," but "technically, theoretically, I'll agree."
 
CNN's Ed Payne contributed to this report

Thursday, May 26, 2011

BOLLYWOOD'S OWN CONTRIBUTION TO THE WORLD TERRORISM DEBATE

BOLLYWOOD'S OWN CONTRIBUTION TO THE WORLD TERRORISM DEBATE:



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYK4j0u4Ah8&feature=player_embedded

Netanyahu relegated himself to the footnotes history By Gideon Levy - HAARETZ

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/netanyahu-relegated-himself-to-the-footnotes-history-1.364110



Thu, May 26, 2011 Iyyar 22, 5771

  • Published 02:51 26.05.11
  • Latest update 02:51 26.05.11

Netanyahu relegated himself to the footnotes history

Now it is certain: Netanyahu will go down in the history of Israel and of the world as a forgotten footnote.

By Gideon Levy



The "speech of his life" must now quickly become the speech of Prime MInister Benjamin Netanyahu's political demise. The hour is pressing, there is no time and nothing is going to come of Netanyahu any more. Even the snake oil peddlers who proffered masses of expectations in advance of the speech, who told us that Netanyahu 2 is different from Netanyahu 1, that the man had "matured," "internalized," "grown wiser" and "become more moderate," that he has learned the lessons of his previous term in office and that we can expect "sensational surprises" from him - they, too, must now admit the bitter truth. 

The Israeli Leonid Brezhnev is occupying the Prime Minister's Bureau. A man of yesterday, frozen and rigid, uncompromising, deaf to the sounds of his surroundings and blind to the changing times. His term in office, heaven forbid, must not drag on for nearly 20 years, the way Brezhnev's did.

In the coming days, he might still be able bask in the warmth of the American legislators' hollow ovations. But once this foam on the surface of the water disperses, the question will arise in full force: What now? Then it will become clear that this prime minister has got us in trouble. Big trouble. We lost the Palestinians a long time ago, and now also the White House's America. Once the speech ended, the chances ended. Before it, we didn't know (ostensibly ) where the prime minister was heading. After it, we know the crystal clear answer: nowhere. To some more gained time after which there is nothing, except for increasing dangers and a chance missed once again.
To Netanyahu's credit it must be said he is not the first. Quite a number of his predecessors wallowed in the belief that empty and lost time will heal all ills. For way too much time here, the belief in time has been the only belief. But the times they are a-changing, there's a battle outside and it's raging and Netanyahu isn't budging from the old road. No and no and no. No to the 1967 borders, no to Jerusalem for two nations, no to the right of return, no to the Palestinians' justified demand to be free, like all peoples.

Now it is certain: Netanyahu will go down in the history of Israel and of the world as a forgotten footnote. What did he do? What did he coin? That we live in "the land of our forefathers" and the settlers are not occupiers. Good job, Bibi. That he is prepared to be "generous," without understanding that we are the occupiers and occupiers, just like robbers, can never be "generous."

Rather, what we have to be is just. We are not "giving up" anything; we can only restore what we have stolen to its rightful owners and restore justice. Who is going to buy the tiny crumbs he has thrown to the Palestinians and to the world? At one time, perhaps, there were buyers in the world for this stale merchandise. No more. There is a new world around us, and Netanyahu refuses to acknowledge its existence. What is he going to tell this world now, a world of popular uprisings, struggles for freedoms and human rights? That he is in favor of freedom for the Arab peoples, just not in our backyard?

What is he going to tell the demonstrators at the fence before September and those who will raise their hands in favor of a Palestinian state in September? That this is the land of our forefathers, exclusively our forefathers? That Congress applauded him? At the end of this oratory season, the Israelis, too, will have to ask themselves: What next? Blind and deaf, will we continue to follow this Brezhnev of ours? And how will we confront the storm raging around us? And what will we do with U.S. President Barack Obama, who at long last will have to act and not just talk?

Netanyahu could have been a successful businessman. He could have been flying around in private planes to his heart's desire, without anyone asking where they came from; he could have been hobnobbing in the palatial abodes of the world's zillionaires, enjoying life's pleasures and having fun with his wife as much as he liked, without anyone asking anything. The most fateful mistake of his life was going into politics. Why did he need this for, all the Mimounas and the primaries, the deals and the spins, the Danny Danons and the Hotovelys, if this is what he's planning to leave behind? Why did he have to run a first time and a second time, if all he's going to leave behind is such emptiness and disaster? Why does he deserve this and, above all, why have we deserved this?

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Lessons From Tahrir Sq. By Thomas L. Friedman - The New York Times

"May I suggest a Tahrir Square alternative? Announce that every Friday from today forward will be “Peace Day,” and have thousands of West Bank Palestinians march nonviolently to Jerusalem, carrying two things — an olive branch in one hand and a sign in Hebrew and Arabic in the other. The sign should say: “Two states for two peoples. We, the Palestinian people, offer the Jewish people a two-state solution based on the 1967 borders — with mutually agreed adjustments — including Jerusalem, where the Arabs will control their neighborhoods and the Jews theirs.”

If Palestinians peacefully march to Jerusalem by the thousands every Friday with a clear peace message, it would become a global news event. Every network in the world would be there. Trust me, it would stimulate a real peace debate within Israel — especially if Palestinians invited youth delegations from around the Arab world to join the marches, carrying the Saudi peace initiative in Hebrew and Arabic. Israeli Jews and Arabs should be invited to march as well. Together, the marchers could draw up their own peace maps and upload them onto YouTube as a way of telling their leaders what Egyptian youth said to President Hosni Mubarak: “We’re not going to let you waste another day of our lives with your tired mantras and maneuvering.”

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


New York Times

The Opinion Pages

Op-Ed Columnist

Lessons From Tahrir Sq.

By
Published: May 24, 2011
Cairo
Josh Haner/The New York Times
Thomas L. Friedman
 
Being back in Cairo reminds me that there are two parties in this region that have been untouched by the Arab Spring: the Israelis and the Palestinians. Too bad, because when it comes to ossified, unimaginative, oxygen-deprived governments, the Israelis and Palestinians are right up there with pre-revolutionary Egypt and Tunisia. I mean, is there anything less relevant than the prime minister of Israel going to the U.S. Congress for applause and the leader of the Palestinians going to the U.N. — instead of to each other?

Both could actually learn something from Tahrir Square. To the Palestinians I would say: You believe the Israelis are stiffing you because they think they have you in box. If you resort to violence, they will brand you terrorists. And if you don’t resort to violence, the Israelis will just pocket the peace and quiet and build more settlements. Your dilemma is how to move Israel in a way that won’t blow up in your face or require total surrender.

You have to start with the iron law of Israeli-Arab peace: whichever party has the Israeli silent majority on its side wins. Anwar Sadat brought the Israeli majority over to his side when he went to Israel, and he got everything he wanted. Yasir Arafat momentarily did the same with the Oslo peace accords. How could Palestinians do that again today? I can tell you how not to do it. Having the U.N. General Assembly pass a resolution recognizing an independent Palestinian state will only rally Israelis around Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, giving him another excuse not to talk.
 
May I suggest a Tahrir Square alternative? Announce that every Friday from today forward will be “Peace Day,” and have thousands of West Bank Palestinians march nonviolently to Jerusalem, carrying two things — an olive branch in one hand and a sign in Hebrew and Arabic in the other. The sign should say: “Two states for two peoples. We, the Palestinian people, offer the Jewish people a two-state solution based on the 1967 borders — with mutually agreed adjustments — including Jerusalem, where the Arabs will control their neighborhoods and the Jews theirs.”

If Palestinians peacefully march to Jerusalem by the thousands every Friday with a clear peace message, it would become a global news event. Every network in the world would be there. Trust me, it would stimulate a real peace debate within Israel — especially if Palestinians invited youth delegations from around the Arab world to join the marches, carrying the Saudi peace initiative in Hebrew and Arabic. Israeli Jews and Arabs should be invited to march as well. Together, the marchers could draw up their own peace maps and upload them onto YouTube as a way of telling their leaders what Egyptian youth said to President Hosni Mubarak: “We’re not going to let you waste another day of our lives with your tired mantras and maneuvering.”
 
Crazy, I know. Bibi is reading this and laughing: “The Palestinians will never do that. They could never get Hamas to adopt nonviolence. It’s not who the Palestinians are.”

That is exactly what Mubarak said about the Egyptian people: “They are not capable of being anything but what they are: docile and willing to eat whatever low expectations I feed them.” But then Egyptians surprised him. How about you, Palestinians, especially Hamas? Do you have any surprise in you? Is Bibi right about you, or not?

As for Bibi, his Tahrir lesson is obvious: Sir, you are well on your way to becoming the Hosni Mubarak of the peace process. The time to make big decisions in life is when you have all the leverage on your side. For 30 years, Mubarak had all the leverage on his side to gradually move Egypt toward democracy — and he never used it. Then, when Mubarak’s people rose up, he tried to do it all in six days. But it was too late. No one believed him. So his tenure ended in ruin.

Israel today still has enormous leverage. It is vastly superior militarily and economically to the Palestinians, and it has the U.S. on its side. If Netanyahu actually put a credible, specific two-state peace map on the table — not just the same old vague promises about “painful compromises” — he could get the Americans and Europeans to toss in anything Israel wanted, including the newest weapons, NATO membership, maybe even European Union membership. It could be a security windfall for Israel. Does Bibi have any surprise in him or do the Palestinians have him right: a big faker, hiding a nationalist-religious agenda under a cloak of security?

It may be that Israeli and Palestinian leaders are incapable of surprising anyone anymore, in which case the logic on the ground will prevail: Israel will gradually absorb the whole West Bank, so, together with Israel proper, a Jewish minority will be ruling over an Arab majority. Israel’s enemies will refer to it as “the Jewish apartheid state.” America, Israel’s only true friend, will find itself having to defend an Israel whose policies it does not believe in and whose leaders it does not respect — and the tensions between the U.S. and Israel displayed in Washington last week will seem quaint by comparison.


Monday, May 23, 2011

Pak nuke security in focus again after naval base attack By Chidanand Rajghatta | Comments by Ghulam Muhammed

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/usrmailcomment.cms?msid=8538305&usrmail=ghulammuhammed3@gmail.com&mailon_commented=1

Comments posted on The Times of India website article - Pak nuke security in focus again after naval base attack By Chidanand Rajghatta:

YOUR COMMENT
Ghulam Muhammed (Mumbai) 11 mins ago (11:42 AM)
Brahmins of India, must now own up their most selfish motives that forced them to discriminate and ostracize Indian Muslims and to agree for partition, in the fond hope that they can rule India, for themselves. It is time that now they should realize how dangerous that policy of 'Muslim cleansing' turned out in the short historical span of just 60 years. And in 64 years, Brahmin India has yet to find its place in the sun. Now the threat of extremists, with their convenient Muslim identities is knocking on our doors. The Brahmins must realize the seriousness of the unfolding events and should not indulge in any 'motivated' actions that will bring the day of reckoning, much closer. They must have a holistic view of entire subcontinent and study the flaws in their limited vision of India, before taking drastic redressing measures to undo the injustices of partition. We cannot fight fire with fire. We have to give diplomacy a chance and let us be more sincere about it. Let not Chanakya be our guide. This is the time for nation building in an altogether a different world where freedom and justice has become common currency available to each and every individual.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/Pak-nuke-security-in-focus-again-after-naval-base-attack/articleshow/8538305.cms

Pak nuke security in focus again after naval base attack

Chidanand Rajghatta, TNN | May 23, 2011, 09.32pm IST

WASHINGTON: It's a subject Americans can't stop discussing and one Pakistan hates talking about. The terrorist attack on the Pakistani military facility in Karachi has once again focused world (and Washington's) attention on the security of the country's fast-growing nuclear arsenal.

The Obama administration on Monday did not publicly go beyond "strongly" condemning the attack on Pakistan Naval Station (PNS) Mehran and appreciating the "service and sacrifices of their brave Armed Forces," but the incident has re-ignited the simmering debate about vulnerability of its nuclear weapons. US analysts noted that Mehran is only 15 miles away from the Masroor Air Base, where Pakistan is believed have a large depot for nuclear weapons that can be delivered from the air.

While Pakistan insists that its "crown jewels" are under foolproof security, at the heart of the debate is worry that they are vulnerable to internal pilferage or attack by a "jihadized" military, judging by multiple attacks on military facilities by terrorists who seemingly have the inside track on security, including in the Mehran strike. A recent Wikileaks cable citing Pakistani military officials admitting sabotage of F-16s by "Islamists amongst the enlisted ranks" has added to the concern.

Pakistani militant attacks over the last five years include strikes against three nuclear facilities, in Wah, Sargodha, and Kamra, according to Prof Shaun Gregory, a security specialist at Bradford University. But each time, the Pakistan military establishment, which has itself suffered attacks at its General Headquarters and training and recruitment centers, insists that there was no danger to its nuclear assets.

But Gregory says the attacks illustrate "a clear set of weaknesses and vulnerabilities" in Pakistan's nuclear security regime, a danger brought home by the ease with which militants are now penetrating military installations. Concern is growing in the west about the internal dynamics in a military that was once thought to be "westernized and professional."

Washington is leery of expressing its views openly, but New Delhi, which has more proximate reasons to be troubled by a nuclear heist, isn't holding back. "We are concerned with the safety of Pakistan's nuclear installations," senior officials traveling with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Africa were quoted as saying on Monday. "The real risk is internal – who guards the guardians."

The US has forked out over $ 100 million to improve Pakistan's nuclear security but Washington now admits it has no idea how the money was spent. There is consternation in Washington about the speed with which Pakistan is ramping up its nuclear arsenal with some analysts predicting that it could soon have the world's fourth largest nuclear arsenal, behind US, Russia, and China, and ahead of France and UK.

Like Singh, President Obama is also currently out of the country on a six-day, four-country tour of Europe. But Pakistan is never far from his mind; he has held at least half-a-dozen White House Situation Room meetings with key principals where the sole topic of discussion has been the deteriorating situation in Pakistan.

Washington is thick with speculation about American contingency plans in the event of a nuclear heist in Pakistan, notwithstanding assurances (most notably by Senator John Kerry) that the US has no designs on Pakistani nukes. But every U.S statement is dissected in Pakistan for hidden meanings amid fears that Washington is planning to neutralize its nuclear arsenal.

On Monday, in the aftermath of the naval base attack, the Obama administration merely said it is "committed to working with Pakistan in our joint effort to combat violent extremism and bring to justice those behind this attack." The pledge came after Wikileaks cables revealed that US special forces have been embedded with Pakistani troops in joint operations since September 2009.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Obama's Surrender at AIPAC - God Save America from Israel - by Feroze Mithiborwala (23-05-2011)

World was witness to a bold Obama being applauded again and again by the Zionist Americans of AIPAC meeting.

However, it could not see Obama's tail deeply embedded within his legs.

The orator gave a point by point explanation of his otherwise presumed public ultimatum to Israel to move fast on peace negotiation, based 1967 borders, with mutual swaps negotiations to accommodate each others concerns.

His stress was clearly on 1967 border in his first speech. When Netanyahu roared, Obama capitulated and switched the emphasis to 'mutually agreed swap', as the key element that he was holding out to Israel.

Obama's ill-planned media exercise to sooth Arab and Muslim nerves with his fake 'even-handed' approach to Israel-Palestine imbroglio, after a wave of indignation over the  US assassination of Osama gripped the Muslim world, failed miserably.

With Pak Taliban attacking Karachi Naval base, a signal has gone out that the Muslim world is still as divided as ever, over America's sanctimonious posturing as the peace maker of the world.

Much that US warmongers are now trying their best to pull out from their fool-hardy forays in Muslim world by the use their enormous fire power, there is no sign they and their interest in and around world will be protected with their duplicitous media management.   

US is now realizing, it may be easy to win war, and Bush kept winning a single war so many times over; it is difficult to win peace. And without peace neither America nor its allies, both declared bankrupts, will ever have their paramountcy back.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai







http://www.facebook.com/notes/feroze-mithiborwala/obamas-surrender-at-aipac-god-save-america-from-israel-by-feroze-mithiborwala-23/10150189243006144


Obama's Surrender at AIPAC - God Save America from Israel

by Feroze Mithiborwala (23-05-2011)

For all those Israeli's who believed that Obama had introduced a new element into the rather stagnant peace process by mentioning the forbidden words "The 1967 Borders", were well placated by Obama, who in sentence after sentence received rapturous applause from an audience braying for Palestinian blood.

Obama challenged every UN resolution & International law, that actually provide a basis for the solution of the Palestine-Israel conflict. He clearly restated Netanyahu's position that "the changes that have taken place over the last 44 years, including the new demographic realities on the ground" need to be taken into account. He clearly stated that the two sides will negotiate a border "that is different from the one that existed on June 4, 1967."

These is the precise position & words that Netanyahu has been scripting. Thus Obama has accepted the fact that the illegal Settlements that house 500,000 armed fanatical settlers, that continue to be built on the Palestinian lands of 1967 & are to be part of a future Jewish state of Israel.

Thus we have Obama negating UN Resolution 242, which calls upon Israel to withdraw from the Occupied territories of the war of 1967 & for a resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict so that a durable & just peace is ensured for all.

This is true to his recent form at the UN, where the US vetoed the resolution condemning the Israeli Settlements as illegal This is also in direct contravention of UN resolution 446 adopted on March 22, 1979 that stated "that the policy and practices of Israel in establishing settlements in the Palestinian and other Arab territories occupied since 1967 have no legal validity and constitute a serious obstruction to achieving a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in the Middle East".

There is a method to Obama's seeming madness, where we see how he has undermined the UN & International Law to launch his very own war on Libya & the expansion of the conflict in Pakistan.

Obama went into his ramble on Israel's security & the total commitment of America, who despite a financial crunch have raised support & that the US will guarantee that Israel maintain the military edge with the latest weaponry ensured.

The next round of applause was guaranteed when Obama vilified Iran & said that the sanctions regime on Iran ensured it's international isolation & the matter that Iran would be prevented from acquiring nuclear weapons. Then came the demonization of Hamas & the Hezbollah & the crowd was on its feet.

Not once did Obama have the humanity (or is that too big a word for him) to even mention the 1.5 million Palestinians under siege in a Nazi-prison-cum-concentration camp called Gaza. Not once did he mention how US made, Israeli war planes & tanks killed thousands civilians (in a ratio of 1000:1), when he mentioned the Hamas rockets that killed Israeli civilians. He demanded that Gilad Shalit be freed, but never once though it right to mention the 11,000 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails be freed as well. He mentioned how the Jews had a longing for their homeland, but never once mentioned that similarly, there are more than 7 million Palestinian refugees, who were ethnically cleansed from their country in 1948 & who under UN resolution 194, have both the moral & the legal "Right of Return" to their homes & hearths.

Obama than shamelessly went though his AIPAC report card & said that his administration have gone to all lengths to defend Israel within the international arena. He proudly stated as to why he boycotted the Durban Conference against racism, then as to how he vetoed both the Goldstone Report (that dealt with the Israeli genocidal war on Gaza) & also how he recently vetoed the UN resolution on the Settlements & said that "Israel's legitimacy is not up for debate". Here Obama seems blissfully unaware & oblivious of the increasing levels of the pariah status that Israel is viewed upon by the overwhelming nations of the world.

Not once while he tried to speak eloquently about the Two-States living side-by-side, did he mention the core issue of Jerusalem, not once. Nor did he mention the issue of the Refugees, or the fact that the monstrous Apartheid Wall should be demolished, or that the 550 Check-points should be dismantled, or that the control of the water resources should not be used as an instrument of coercion, or that the Olive trees should not be uprooted & farms destroyed, or that the assassination & torture should end. That due to Obama's own record in Guantanamo & Abu Gharaib, as well as the daily murder of civilians by the killer drones, we well understand.

He ended with two ominous warnings.

The first was that he rejected the participation of Hamas in the dialogue process & called upon Fatah to end the unity with Hamas. Here Obama is basically again trying to drive a wedge between the unity arrived at, so as to weaken the resistance movement, as well as the unity of the masses at the grass-roots & we have seen the disastrous consequences of that since 2007.

He never once mentioned that Hamas is willing to negotiate a 10 year truce with Israel if it withdraws to the borders of 1967, as well as its acceptance on the "Right of Return". This offer was made by Khalid Mishal the political leader of Hamas to Jimmy Carter in a meeting in Damascus. Thus every peaceful overture by Hamas has been rejected by the Israeli's.

The second was when he stated that "No vote at the UN will create an Independent Palestinian state", which is scheduled for September. Here he once again reiterated Netanyahu's position by stating that "only direct negotiations" can achieve the same.

President Mahmud Abbas is confident that "We have more than 130 nations set to recognize the Palestinian state within the 1967 borders and even if we make no further efforts, that number could be increased to 140 or 150" Both Obama & Netanyahu have clearly threatened President Mahmud Abbas with dire consequences, from following this path.

It is utterly futile to believe that the US is an honest broker. It is utterly futile to believe that independence can be won by only negotiations. And it is good that the chimera of Obama stands shattered for ever.

But the Arab Revolution presents new possibilities & the epic 94 year old struggle of the Palestinian people, a proud & ancient nation, which has inspired the world for generations, will finally see a new awakening & with it, a new hope, a new Intifada, the Third Intifada!!

It is only the resistance on the ground, within Palestine, across the Palestine diaspora, across the Arab nations & then across the entire world, will we finally witness the rebirth of a nation. The people across the world are on the march. The millions at the Tahrir Square have inspired humanity to march again. And the teeming millions of Palestinians are on their way to the borders of the Holy Land & we will be marching with them, shoulder to shoulder, holding their hands to Jerusalem.

Freedom is nigh.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Comments posted on Economic Times website article: Sino-Pakistan ties a serious concern for India

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Comments posted on Economic Times website article: Sino-Pakistan ties a serious concern for India


More than China, India should study the genesis of the breaking of relations between Pakistan and US. US as a common friend of both India and Pakistan, even though rightly described as 'fair weather friend' to both of them, had been never the less a buffer between the two nation's fundamental differences, that not even war can solve. With that cover gone, India may be dragged into a series of challenges, right from Pakistan, Afghanistan and China, for which it might have to mortgage its freedom of action to the US. India must avoid such a trap at all costs and come out with enlightened diplomacy to put out fires in its neighborhood, without getting into knee-jerk reactions that may snowball into avoidable conflict situations.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai



The Economic Times

Politics/Nation


21 May, 2011, 01.34PM IST,AFP

Sino-Pakistan ties a 'serious concern' for India

NEW DELHI: India views with "serious concern" growing defence ties between China and Pakistan and says it will have to bolster its own military capabilities to meet the challenge.

"It is a matter of serious concern for us. The main thing is we have to increase our capability -- that is the only answer," Defence Minister A.K. Antony told reporters in New Delhi late on Friday.

The comments followed reports China plans to accelerate supply of 50 new JF-17 Thunder multi-role combat jets to Pakistan under a co-production pact.

Antony added safe havens for militants in Pakistan is another "main concern" for New Delhi and told Islamabad to "disband and destroy" all guerrilla outfits if it "sincerely" wants to improve relations with India.

The killing by US commandos of Osama bin Laden who was hiding out near the Pakistani capital Islamabad has "internationally stamped the nation's position as the core of terrorist activities in the South Asian region," he said.

India has long accused Pakistan of providing shelter and support to militant groups planning attacks on Indian soil and has pushed the global community -- the United States in particular -- to censure Pakistan.

Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan have fought three wars since attaining independence in 1947, two of them over the disputed territory of Kashmir.

Antony declined to comment on remarks by senior Indian military leaders that India has the capability to launch a strike like the one the US carried out in Pakistan to kill bin Laden.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said India would not undertake such a strike.

But a leaked diplomatic cable published earlier in the week quoted India's home minister as saying in 2009 that India would have to respond to another attack on its soil by Pakistan-based militants.

Discussing the prospect of another raid after the Mumbai 2008 assault which killed 166 people, home minister P. Chidambaram said, "The people of India will expect us to respond," according to the WikiLeaks whistleblowing website.

Antony added that India may sign a contract to buy 126 fighter jets for its air force by the end of March 2012.

"This fiscal (year) ends on March 31, 2012. The deal can happen before that," Antony said.

Last month, India shortlisted France's Dassault Aviation SA and European consortium Eurofighter GmbH for the contract. The deal, estimated at $10 billion, is considered the biggest of its kind globally in the past 15 years.

India has allocated 1.64 trillion rupees ($3.6 trillion) for the defence sector in the fiscal year through March 2012, up from 1.47 trillion last year. The budget is nearly double the 890 billion rupees in the 2006-07 year.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Mamatas and Ajmals are the fresh hope of India By M. BURHANUDDIN QASMI - Arab Times

Muslim voting strength for their own political choices, has shown a big confidant streak in the recent Assembly elections. Besides the expected reactions from both so-called secular political parties, there is a sense of alarm even in the ranks of so called Progressive/Liberal/Secular Democrat Muslims. They would not like Muslims to enjoy the freedom of choice and would like Muslim voters to remain in bondage to other political parties. However, it is apparent that the changes in the confidence of the Muslim voters is deeply entrenched in grass-root consensus and is not affected by media's scare tactics.

A clear trend is visible in Muslim political initiatives, that they have been opening up their doors to non-Muslims from the very outset of their operations. There is no such restrictive exclusivity that characterizes Hindutva and/or Brahmin political parties, who are duty bound to ostracize Muslims and they feel no qualms about such discrimination. Muslim political parties are more open and welcoming to a wide array of communities, both as candidates as well as voters.

In Assam, Muslim candidates winning seats have distinct credential of being non-corrupt and non-criminals. That is not the criteria that is adhered to by Congress, BJP, Communists and other regional parties. Those progressive Muslims who are critical of Muslims candidates fielded by Muslim-led political parties, should at least acknowledge that new Muslim faces are clean and untainted by the prevailing malaise of corruption. They should be the harbingers of a new moral force in Indian politics.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai

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


 http://arabnews.com/world/article412917.ece?comments=all


Arab news

Mamatas and Ajmals are the fresh hope of India

By M. BURHANUDDIN QASMI
 
Published: May 18, 2011 21:56 Updated: May 18, 2011 21:56


It is good that there is change in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Kerala. Mamata Banerjee and Jayalalithaa have rooted out the nonperforming communist and the most corrupt DMK-Congress alliance from their states.


Importantly, out of 294 assembly seats Muslims won a significant 59 in West Bengal. In the outgoing West Bengal assembly Muslims had only 46 seats. This is 20 percent representation in the house where Muslims have 25 percent share in the state population. TMC has 25 Muslim MLAs and Congress has 15, the remaining 19 are from the Left Front.

Thanks to the All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF) impressive win of 18 candidates, including 2 non-Muslims and one woman, Assam has also sent a high figure of 28 Muslims this time; in 2006 they had only 25 in a 126-member house. Muslim representation in the legislative assembly reached 22 percent this time when they are 31 percent of the total population. The Muslim figure breakup shows16 are from AIUDF, 8 from Congress, one from Assam Gana Parishad (AGP) and one independent.

Similarly Kerala has also improved Muslim representation in this assembly election from 25 in 2006 to 36. This is 26 percent of the 140-member house, interestingly one percent more than their population share in the state of Kerala. Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) has alone sent 20 MLAs to the house.

It would be interesting to see how they are actually going to perform in the next five years. The Muslims are most backward in West Bengal and Assam. And hold on, numerical superiority is no guarantee of actual performance and sometimes a lesser number even performs better.
A political analyst from the United States of America applauded the success of Maulana Badruddin Ajmal-led AIUDF in Assam. He observes, “this is the way to go for Muslims in Indian politics. Form a secular party, control it and include non-Muslims in it. I hope Muslims in other states especially UP follow this example.”

Indeed Ajmal not just deserves congratulations and compliments for this stupendous feat, at a tough time when his own — Arshad Jamiat had deserted him owing to Congress manipulation, but also for showing the way forward to Muslims in rest of the country.


An interesting fact is this, that most of the successful candidates in the AIUDF list are not regular, run-of-the-mill politicians but real representatives of the community. At least four ulema — three of them huffaz, three Qasmis and one mufti, are to be found in this list. This shows that you do not have to give up on your values and community's interests to succeed in politics.

One of my friends puts it simply: “This is the most significant electoral achievement for the community since independence. Muslim organizations, leaders and intellectuals must come together to build on this. Right lessons must be drawn from the remarkable success we have registered in Assam, West Bengal and Kerala.”

Muslims are worst off in West Bengal as compared to other states of India, and even Gujarat fared better. The percentage of Muslims is very low in government jobs and the ever-increasing ‘poverty’ among them too is visible to the sympathetic eye. Albeit credit must be given for the absence of communal riots but it is an open secret that violence is a part of Bengali life. All this upset the chances of the ‘secular’ Left, who never tired of singing the Muslim song only in its 34-year-long tenure in the state but the Muslims along with general voters have got an alternative to try their luck — they pushed the EVMs smartly this time and showed the Left its way out.

Remarkably Mamata Banerjee, a postgraduate in Islamic History from University of Calcutta, is a true made in India product — self made. She is not the daughter, sister or wife of a famous politician. She is today where she is all on her own merit. This feisty woman is a good example of true feminism, for her no crisp cotton saris, a la Sonia style and without any trace of make up on her transparent face. Even her worst detractors are now saying that, we will follow Mamata's style of protest!

On the other side — Ajmal, a simple graduate from Darul Uloom Deoband, besides being a son of a rich man — Haji Ajmal Ali, has no political patrimony to inherit. His assets are his undying labor and being with the people in need, even when he has not dreamt about knocking the door that opens to politics. His advantage is his strong faith; he is a silent fighter against all odds. 

India needs more such Mamatas and Ajmals… to remain away from the self-proclaimed protectors of minorities such as the Congress, which stabs them in the back time and again. Mamata and Ajmal are refreshing breath of hope for the common Indian as well as the ‘deprived’ Muslims. They need to perform well to keep the light of hope burning and alive.

— M. Burhanuddin Qasmi is editor Eastern Crescent and director of Mumbai-based Markazul Ma'arif Education and Research Centre. He can be contacted at manager@markazulmaarif.org


Re

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Barack and Bibi - By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN - The New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/18/opinion/18friedman.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha212

New York Times

The Opinion Pages

Op-Ed Columnist

Bibi and Barack

By
Published: May 17, 2011
Reading the headlines from the Middle East these days — Christians and Muslims clashing in Egypt, Syria attempting to crush its democracy rebellion and Palestinians climbing over fences into Israel — you get the sense of a region where the wheels could really start to come off.
Josh Haner/The New York Times -Thomas L. Friedman
In such a moment, President Obama has to show the same decisiveness he showed in tracking down Osama bin Laden. A useful analogy for this moment comes from climate science, where a popular motto says: Given how much climate change is already baked into our future, the best we can do now is manage the unavoidable and avoid the unmanageable.

In Middle East terms, the “unmanageable” we have to avoid is another war between Israel and any of its neighbors. The “unavoidable” we have to manage is dealing with what is certain to be a much more unstable Arab world, sitting atop the world’s largest oil reserves. The strategy we need is a serious peace policy combined with a serious energy policy.

Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu of Israel is always wondering why his nation is losing support and what the world expects of a tiny country surrounded by implacable foes. I can’t speak for the world, but I can speak for myself. I have no idea whether Israel has a Palestinian or Syrian partner for a secure peace that Israel can live with. But I know this: With a more democratic and populist Arab world in Israel’s future, and with Israel facing the prospect of having a minority of Jews permanently ruling over a majority of Arabs — between Israel and the West Bank, which could lead to Israel being equated with apartheid South Africa all over the world — Israel needs to use every ounce of its creativity to explore ways to securely cede the West Bank to a Palestinian state.
I repeat: It may not be possible. But Netanyahu has not spent his time in office using Israel’s creativity to find ways to do such a deal. He has spent his time trying to avoid such a deal — and everyone knows it. No one is fooled.

Israel is in a dangerous situation. For the first time in its history, it has bad relations with all three regional superpowers — Turkey, Iran and Egypt — plus rapidly eroding support in Europe. 

America is Israel’s only friend today. These strains are not all Israel’s fault by any means, especially with Iran, but Israel will never improve ties with Egypt, Turkey and Europe without a more serious effort to safely get out of the West Bank.

The only way for Netanyahu to be taken seriously again is if he risks some political capital and actually surprises people. Bibi keeps hinting that he is ready for painful territorial compromises involving settlements. Fine, put a map on the table. Let’s see what you’re talking about. Or how about removing the illegal West Bank settlements built by renegade settler groups against the will of Israel’s government. Either move would force Israel’s adversaries to take Bibi seriously and would pressure Palestinians to be equally serious.

Absent that, it’s just silly for us to have Netanyahu addressing the U.S. Congress when he needs to be addressing Palestinians down the street. And it is equally silly for the Palestinians to be going to the United Nations for a state when they need to be persuading Israelis why a Hamas-Fatah rapprochement is in their security interest.

As for managing the unavoidable, well, Obama just announced that he was opening up more federal areas for oil exploration, as Republicans have demanded. Great: Let’s make America even more dependent on an energy resource, the price of which is certain to go up as the world’s population increases and the greatest reserves of which lie beneath what is now the world’s most politically unstable region.

Frankly, I have no problem with more oil drilling, as long as it is done under the highest environmental standards. I have no problem with more nuclear power, if you can find a utility ready to put up the money. My problem is with an energy policy that focuses exclusively on oil drilling and nuclear power. That is not an energy policy. That is a policy for campaign donations. It will have no impact at the pump.


A real energy policy is a system. It has to start with a national renewable energy standard that requires every utility to build up their use of renewable energy — wind, solar, hydro, nuclear, bio — to 20 percent of their total output by 2020. This would be accompanied with higher auto mileage standards and higher national appliance and building efficiency standards. All these standards would then be reinforced with a price on carbon. That is how you get higher energy prices but lower energy bills, because efficiency improvements mean everyone uses less.

We are going to have to raise taxes. Why not a carbon tax that also reduces energy consumption, drives innovation, cleans the air and reduces our dependence on the Middle East?

We don’t want the Arab democracy rebellions to stop, but no one can predict how they will end. The smart thing for us and Israel to do is avoid what we can’t manage, and manage what we can’t avoid. Right now we’re doing neither.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Amma in Tamil Nadu: Muslims “wait and watch” - Md. Ali. TwoCircles.net

http://twocircles.net/2011may17/amma_tamil_nadu_muslims_%E2%80%9Cwait_and_watch%E2%80%9D.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Twocirclesnet-IndianMuslim+%28TwoCircles.net+-+Indian+Muslim+News%29


Amma in Tamil Nadu: Muslims “wait and watch”

Submitted by admin4 on 17 May 2011 - 4:25pm
By Md. Ali, TwoCircles.net,

New Delhi: AIADMK chief J Jayalalithaa was sworn in as the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu for the third time yesterday. She has inducted one Muslim in her cabinet. He is N Mariam Pitchai. He has been given Environment and Pollution Control, Minorities Welfare including Wakf. Muslims across the state had a guarded response to the victory of Amma who is known for her pro-Brahmin and anti-Muslim stand, including support of Karseva which resulted in the demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992.

TwoCircles.net talked to people representing a cross section of the Muslim society in Tamil Nadu and the most prominent reaction was “let’s wait and watch.” Although few also talked about a new era in Muslim politics in the state in the form of Prof. Jawahirulla-led MMK fighting elections on its own symbol and winning two seats while being in an alliance with the AIADMK.


AIADMK General Secretary, Ms J. Jayalalithaa, being sworn in as the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, by the Tamil Nadu Governor, Mr Surjit Singh Barnala, in Chennai on Monday. [Photo: thehindubusinessline.com]

What could have set the ominous tone better than the temple music pervading the swearing in ceremony? Temple music has been used the first time in these kinds of state functions. Normally Tamil music is used, informs Shafi Ahmad Ko, a senior journalist based in Chennai. Many people might consider it as symbolic for the future direction of Amma’s regime when it comes to Muslims and secularism. But Ahmad also cautions from any knee-jerk reaction from Muslims’ side as far as receiving Jayalalithaa’s government is concerned. “Let’s not exaggerate what Amma stands for.

Although she is known for her uncharitable steps towards Muslims but it’s better to wait and watch at least for now,” adds Ahmad.


While talking to TwoCircles.net, Shafi Ahmad points out that “Karunanidhi is seen as pro-Muslim while Amma is notorious for her anti-Muslims steps, for instance, Anti-Conversion Bill, which had to be withdrawn after huge hue and cry by the secular civil society.” But he also adds that “while few might be apprehensive of Amma’s regime but the general attitude of Muslims is, wait and watch.”

SM Pasha, a veteran observer of Muslim politics in Tamil Nadu, welcomes Amma becoming the CM. “I am sure Amma will be much better for the Muslims in the state than Karunanidhi. It’s high time Muslims should explore new options,” says Pasha.

Pasha also talks about the quality of Muslim MLA than the quantity. Calling the MLAs of the Muslim League as the “bootlickers of DMK” he hopes that something good will come out of the MMK’s alliance with AIADMK.”

Dr. Sattar, Tamil Nadu chief of All India Majlise Mushawarat, prefers to be calm and cool about Amma’s regime saying that Muslims should campaign and lobby for proportionate reservation for the community. “Reservation is the only thing which can help Muslims in the long run,” says Sattar.
A surgeon by profession, Dr. Sattar doesn’t favor Muslims going with any one particular party.

Instead he advocates that Muslims should be present in all the parties as it is happening these days. So that they can lobby for the interests of the community irrespective of whichever party is in power. It’s also important because Muslims in Tamil Nadu can’t be a united vote block because they are just 5-6 % and they are affiliated to either DMK or AIADMK.”

Sattar rubbishes the talk of MMK heralding new kind of Muslim politics in the state, saying that “people didn’t vote for MMK, they voted against Muslim League and the DMK.”

“With just two seats they won’t be able to do anything at all. It’s better for Muslims to side with mainstream regional parties like DMK and AIADMK,” Sattar concludes.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Nakba Day - Wikipedia.org

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakba_Day


Nakba Day

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Nakba Day (Arabic: يوم النكبة Yawm an-Nakbah, meaning "day of the catastrophe") is an annual day of commemoration for the Palestinian people of the displacement that accompanied the creation of Israel in 1948.[1]

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Defining Nakba


During the 1948 Palestine War, an estimated 700,000 Palestinians were expelled or fled, and hundreds of Palestinian villages were depopulated and destroyed.[2][3] The vast majority of Palestinian refugees, both those outside the 1949 armistice lines at the war's conclusion and those internally displaced, were barred by the newly declared state of Israel from returning to their homes or reclaiming their property.[2][3] They number several million people today, divided between Jordan (2 million), Lebanon (427,057), Syria (477,700), the West Bank (788,108) and the Gaza Strip (1.1 million), with another at least quarter of million internally displaced Palestinians in Israel.[4]

This dispossession and dispersal of the Palestinian people is known to them as al-Nakba, meaning "the castastrope," or "the disaster."[5][6]

Prior to its adoption by the Palestinian nationalist movement, the "Year of the Catastrophe" among Arabs referred to 1920, when European colonial powers partitioned the Ottoman Empire into a series of separate states along lines of their own choosing.[7] The term was first used to reference the events of 1948 in the summer of that same year by the Syrian writer Constantine Zureiq in his work Ma'na al-Nakba ("The Meaning of the Nakba"; published in English in 1956).[8]

Initially, use of the term Nakba among Palestinians was not universal. For example, many years after 1948, Palestinian refugees in Lebanon avoided and even actively resisted using the term, because it lent permanency to a situation they viewed as temporary, and they often insisted on being called "returnees."[9] In the 1950s and 1960s, terms they used to describe the events of 1948 were more eupheumistic and included al-ightisab ("the rape"), al-ahdath ("the events"), al-hijra ("the exodus"), and lamma sharna wa tla'na ("when we blackened our faces and left").[9] Nakba narratives were avoided by the leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in Lebanon in the 1970s, in favor of a narrative of revolution and renewal.[9] Interest in the Nakba by organizations representing refugees in Lebanon surged in the 1990s due to the perception that the refugees' right of return might be negotiated away in exchange for Palestinian statehood, and the desire was to send a clear message to the international community that this right was non-negotiable.[9]

Though the Nakba refers to the events of 1948, their continued salience due to the irresolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has prompted Palestinians like Mahmoud Darwish to describe the Nakba as, "an extended present that promises to continue in the future."[6]

[edit] Timing

Nakba Day is generally commemorated on May 15, the day after the Gregorian calendar date for Israel's Independence.

In Israel, Nakba Day events by Arab citizens have been held on Yom Ha'atzmaut (Israel's Independence Day), which is celebrated in Israel on the Hebrew calendar date (5 Iyar). Because of the differences between the Hebrew and the Gregorian calendars, Independence Day and the official May 15 date for Nakba Day usually only coincide every 19 years.[10]

[edit] Commemoration

Palestinian girl in a protest on Nakba Day 2010 in Hebron, West Bank. Her sign says "Surely we will return, Palestine." Most of the Palestinian refugees in the West Bank are descendants of people whose families hail from areas that were incorporated into Israel in 1948.[4]

Commemoration of the Nakba by Arab citizens of Israel who are internally displaced persons as a result of the 1948 war has been practiced for decades, but until the early 1990s was relatively weak. Initially, the memory of the catastrophe of 1948 was personal and communal in character and families or members of a given village would use the day to gather at the site of their former villages.[11] Small scale commemorations of the tenth anniversary in the form of silent vigils were held by Arab students at a few schools in Israel in 1958, despite attempts by the Israeli authorities to thwart them.[12] Visits to the sites of former villages became increasingly visible after the events of Land Day in 1976.[11] In the wake up of the failure of the 1991 Madrid Conference to broach the subject of refugees, the Association for the Defense of the Rights of the Internally Displaced in Israel was founded to organize a March of Return to the site of a different village every year on May 15, so as to place the issue on the Israeli public agenda.[13] By the early 1990s, annual commemorations of the day by Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel held a prominent place in the community's public discourse.[11][14]

Meron Benvenisti writes that it was "…Israeli Arabs who taught the residents of the territories to commemorate Nakba Day."[15] Palestinians in the occupied territories were called upon to commemorate May 15 as day of national mourning by the Palestine Liberation Organization's United National Command of the Uprising during the First Intifada in 1988.[16] The day was inaugurated by Yasser Arafat in 1998.[17]
The event is often marked by speeches and rallies by Palestinians in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, in Palestinian refugee camps in Arab states, and in other places around the world.[18][19] Protests at times develop into clashes between Palestinians and the Israel Defense Forces in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.[20][21][22] In 2003 and 2004, there were demonstrations in London[23] and New York City.[24]

In 2002, Zochrot was established to organize events raising the awareness of the Nakba in Hebrew so as to bring Palestinians and Israelis closer to a true reconciliation. The name is the Hebrew feminine plural form of "remember".[11]

[edit] 2011 commemoration

For the 63rd commemoration of Nakba Day, Palestinians and other Arabs from the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Syria, and Lebanon marched towards their respective borders with Israel to mark the event. At least 12 Palestinians and their supporters were killed as a result of shootings by the Israeli Army. According to the BBC, the 2011 Nakba Day demonstrations were given impetus by the revolutions and uprisings taking place throughout the Arab world.[25]

At the Qalandia checkpoint in the West Bank near East Jerusalem, a standoff between Israeli soldiers and around 100 Palestinian protesters ensued with Palestinians hurling stones at Israeli forces who responded with tear gas and rubber bullets. Dozens of Palestinians were injured in the clashes. Further clashes took place in various cities in the West Bank and neighborhoods in East Jerusalem. In East Jerusalem, Nakba Day commemorations began on May 13. Israeli authorities arrested 70 people throughout the city and clashes resulted in one Palestinian death in Silwan.[26] Roughly 1,000 Palestinians marched towards the Erez Crossing in the Gaza Strip. Israeli forces intermittently fired at them with tanks and machine guns resulting in at least one death and the injury of around 80 demonstrators.[26][25] Hamas, which governs the territory, reportedly asked protesters to withdraw from the border.[26] Hundreds of Arabs as well as Jews held the first public commemoration of the Nakba in Jaffa to protest the "Nakba law" passed by the Israeli Knesset in March. Demonstrators chanted Palestinian and pan-Arab solidarity slogans [27]

Tens of thousands of demonstrators, mostly Palestinian refugees, in Lebanon marched to the Israeli border chanting "By our soul, our blood, we sacrifice ourselves for you, Palestine" as the Lebanese Army fired warning shots in the air to scatter the crowds. Israeli forces then fired at demonstrators who they accused of vandalizing the border fence. The Lebanese military stated at least ten protesters were killed while scores were injured. From Syria, thousands of Palestinian supporters managed to enter the Golan Heights, currently under Israeli occupation. The Israeli military stated it fired warning shots when several protesters attempted to breach a border fence and enter the Arab town of Majdal Shams.[25] The Syrian government said four Syrian citizens were killed and dozens injured as a result of Israeli fire.s.[26] Israel stated the demonstrators committed a "serious" incursion and that Israeli forces struggled to contain the crowds. Syria condemned Israel stating it "will have to bear full responsibility" for its actions which they described as "criminal." Israel responded by saying "Syria is a police state. Demonstrators do not randomly approach the border without the prior approval of the central government" and that the demonstrations were an "Iranian provocation, on both the Syrian and the Lebanese frontiers, to try to exploit the Nakba day commemorations."[25]

Nakba Day commemorations took place in other parts of the Arab world as well. At least 120 Egyptians were injured as Egyptian security forces forcibly prevented the storming of the Israeli embassy in Cairo by thousands of protesters who gathered outside. Around 20 protesters were arrested.[28] Although Egyptian forces largely blocked access to the Sinai Peninsula to prevent a Nakba Day march towards the Rafah crossing, about 80 activists managed to reach it.[29] In Jordan, 200 Palestinian students attempted to march towards the Israeli border, but were restrained by Jordanian security forces resulting in the injury of six people.[30]

[edit] Objections to commemoration of Nakba Day

Criticism of the observance of Nakba Day in the Israeli media involves claims that it is marked by Palestinians to celebrate their alleged wishes for the dismantling of the Israeli state and the Jewish majority population, and that the greater tragedy resides in the inability to solidify a stronger national movement for Palestinian citizens.[31][32] Arab citizens of Israel have also been admonished for observing Nakba Day in light of their relatively higher standards of living when compared to that of Palestinian residents living under Israeli military occupation,[33] or in neighbouring Arab states.

Israeli media also reports that displacement and loss of property during the 20th century is not unique to the Palestinian, and that in 1940 approximately 800,000 jews lived in Arab states (mostly in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Iraq and Egypt), who in the following years were banished and were disinherited from most of their property.[34]

On 23 March 2011, the Knesset approved, by a vote of 37 in favor to 25 against,[35] a change to the Government budget, giving the Israeli Finance Minister the discretion to reduce funding to any non-governmental organization (NGO) that organizes Nakba commemoration events.[36][37]
Israeli group Im Tirtzu has launched a campaign, stating that "the Nakba is a myth and a scam, aimed at rewriting history and making the victim the aggressor".[38]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ David W. Lesch, Benjamin Frankel (2004). History in Dispute: The Middle East since 1945 (Illustrated ed.). St. James Press. p. 102. ISBN 1558624724, 9781558624726. "The Palestinian recalled their "Nakba Day", their "catastrophe" — the displacement that accompanied the creation of the State of Israel — in 1948."
  2. ^ a b Morris, Benny (2003). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-00967-7, p. 604.
  3. ^ a b Khalidi, Walid (Ed.) (1992). All That Remains: The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948. Washington: Institute for Palestine Studies. ISBN 0-88728-224-5.
  4. ^ a b Figures given here for the number of Palestinian refugees includes only those registered with UNRWA as June 2010. Internally displaced Palestinians were not registered, among others. Factbox: Palestinian refugee statistics
  5. ^ Samih K. Farsoun (2004). Culture and customs of the Palestinians (Illustrated ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 14. ISBN 0313320519, 9780313320514.
  6. ^ a b Derek Gregory (2004). The colonial present: Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq (Illustrated, reprint ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. p. 86. ISBN 1577180909, 9781577180906.
  7. ^ Antonius, George (1979), The Arab awakening: the story of the Arab national movement, Putnam, p. 312, "The year 1920 has an evil name in Arab annals: it is referred to as the Year of the Catastrophe (Am al-Nakba). It saw the first armed risings that occurred in protest against the post-War settlement imposed by the Allies on the Arab countries. In that year, serious outbreaks took place in Syria, Palestine, and Iraq"
  8. ^ Rochelle Davis (2010). Palestinian Village Histories: Geographies of the Displaced (Ilustrated ed.). Stanford University Press. p. 237. ISBN 0804773130, 9780804773133.
  9. ^ a b c d Ahmad H. Sa'di, Lila Abu-Lughod (2007). Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the claims of memory (Illustrated ed.). Columbia University Press. pp. 253–254. ISBN 0231135793, 9780231135795.
  10. ^ Hertz-Larowitz, Rachel (2003). Arab and Jewish Youth in Israel: Voicing National Injustice on Campus. Journal of Social Issues, 59(1), 51-66.
  11. ^ a b c d Nur Masalha (2005). Catastrophe remembered: Palestine, Israel and the internal refugees: essays in memory of Edward W. Said (1935–2003). Zed Books. p. 221. ISBN 1842776231, 9781842776230.
  12. ^ Hillel Cohen (2010). Good Arabs: the Israeli security agencies and the Israeli Arabs, 1948–1967 (Illustrated ed.). University of California Press. p. 142. ISBN 0520257677, 9780520257672.
  13. ^ Masalha, 2005, p. 216.
  14. ^ In 2006, for example, Azmi Bishara, an Arab member of the Knesset told the Israeli newspaper Maariv: "Independence Day is your holiday, not ours. We mark this as the day of our Nakba, the tragedy that befell the Palestinian nation in 1948." (Maariv article (in Hebrew))
  15. ^ Mêrôn BenveniÅ›tî (2007). Son of the cypresses: memories, reflections, and regrets from a political life. University of California Press. p. 164. ISBN 0520238257, 9780520238251.
  16. ^ Shaul Mishal, Reʼuven Aharoni (1994). Speaking stones: communiqués from the Intifada underground. Syracuse University Press. p. 96. ISBN 081562607X, 9780815626077. "May 15, which denotes the nakba, will be a day of national mourning and a general strike; public and private transportation will cease, and all will remain in their houses."
  17. ^ Rubin, Barry and Rubin, Judith Colp (2003). Yasir Arafat: A Political Biography. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-516689-2, p. 187.
  18. ^ "Anger over Palestinian Nakba ban proposal". BBC News. 2009-05-25. Retrieved 2010-05-19.
  19. ^ Bowker, Robert (2003). Palestinian Refugees: Mythology, Identity, and the Search for Peace. Lynne Rienner Publishers. ISBN 1-58826-202-2, p. 96.
  20. ^ Analysis: Why Palestinians are angry, BBC News Online, 15 May 2000.
  21. ^ Violence erupts in West Bank, BBC News Online, 15 May 2000.
  22. ^ Israel - Palestinian Violence, National Public Radio, 15 May 2000.
  23. ^ Pro-Palestine rally in London, BBC News Online, 15 May 2003.
  24. ^ Al-Nakba Day Rally in Times Square, 2004.
  25. ^ a b c d Israeli forces open fire at Palestinian protesters. BBC News. 2011-05-15.
  26. ^ a b c d Palestinians killed in 'Nakba' clashes. Al-Jazeera English. 2011-05-15.
  27. ^ Hartman, Ben. Hundreds hold first-ever Nakba Day march in Jaffa. JPost. 2011-05-15.
  28. ^ Scores injured at Nakba rally in Cairo. Al-Jazeera English. 2011-05-15.
  29. ^ Egyptians rally at Rafah for Palestinian rights. Ma'an News Agency. 2011-05-15.
  30. ^ Muir, Jim. Palestinian protests: Arab spring or foreign manipulation?. BBC News. 2011-05-15.
  31. ^ The Palestine Nakba Controversy
  32. ^ The real Nakba, By Shlomo Avineri, 09/05/2008
  33. ^ Time to stop mourning, By Meron Benvenisti
  34. ^ The Other Nakba: How Arab-Jews' property was robbed, By Tani Goldstein, 14 May 2011
  35. ^ Knesset Approves Nakba Law, by Elad Benari, 23 March 2011
  36. ^ Elia Zureik (2011). Elia Zureik, David Lyon, Yasmeen Abu-Laban. ed. Surveillance and Control in Israel/Palestine: Population, Territory and Power (Illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 17. ISBN 0415588618, 9780415588614.
  37. ^ MK Zahalka: Racist laws target Arab sector, by Roni Sofer, 22 March 2011
  38. ^ Im Tirtzu new campaign: "Nakba Harta", by Amihay Ataeli, 13 May 2011

[edit] External links

This page was last modified on 16 May 2011 at 03:36.