---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Yasir damda <yasir.damda@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 7:56 PM
Subject: [NRIndians] When did India Become Part of Israel’s Stable?
To: nrindians@googlegroups.com
From: Yasir damda <yasir.damda@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 7:56 PM
Subject: [NRIndians] When did India Become Part of Israel’s Stable?
To: nrindians@googlegroups.com
When did India Become Part of Israel’s Stable?
by DR. PAUL LARUDEE
Amazing
stuff, India ink. A few drops spread vigorously with a roller for
several minutes on an iron plate are enough for eight sets of
fingerprints and two sets of handprints on four ancient double-sided and
folded Indian police fingerprint forms. By contrast, the mug shot was
taken with a digital camera. After that, I was issued an official
deportation order, for which I signed to acknowledge receipt. My
passport remained in police custody until I got to the security check at
the airport, when it was returned to me.
My crime? I had spoken to an
audience of 22,000 youth at a Student Islamic Organization conference in
Kerala State without having a visa that authorized public speaking or
conference participation. India is perhaps the only “democracy” where
free speech for foreigners depends upon the visa they are carrying. In
fact, it is probably the only such country that has no visit visa
category at all, and which has one of the most convoluted, bureaucratic
and invasive visa application procedures this side of North Korea.
Not that the visa restrictions
are always enforced. However, the myriad regulations and procedures
(“for public protection”) permit the security apparatus to control
individuals and events at their discretion without having to cite the
true reasons for their enforcement. Every effective police state knows
the drill.
In my case, I used a tourist
visa, because the conference visa is a truly onerous procedure unless it
is a state-sponsored event. In fact, that is the only type of
conference participation permitted, because even private groups must
seek state sponsorship in order to bring speakers from outside. In
today’s India, however, state sponsorship is hardly a routine
bureaucratic procedure.
It shouldn’t have been this
way. India was supposed to have been the model for tolerant
multi-ethnic, multi-linguistic, multi-confessional societies. And when
India was a leader of the Non-Aligned Movement, carefully balancing its
relationships among great and small powers and supporting those who
might otherwise be a mere pawn in world affairs, this promise seemed
plausible.
Regrettably, India has now
become a home-grown Raj, choosing sides and fomenting discord between
competing interests as a means of governing and controlling, in the best
traditions of its colonial past. Thus, for example, conservative
Salafist clerics are welcome when they attend conferences on tourist
visas, while human rights speakers like David Barsamian, John Esposito,
Yvonne Ridley, Wilhelm Langthaler and myself are unwelcome, and are
denied visas or expelled, and/or their hosts are prosecuted.
The Salafist treatment is part
of a Machiavellian formula hatched by India with its newest partner,
Israel. Salafists deserve free speech as much as anyone, but the reason
India accords more of it to them is on the advice of Israel. Israel
promotes Islamophobia as part of its strategy of demonizing Palestinians
and Arabs, a majority of whom are Muslims, and the Salafist brand of
Islam fits Israel’s agenda of portraying Islam as an extremist
ideology. This stokes the flames of the more extreme nationalist Hindu
groups in India and plays on the fears of many other non-Muslim groups,
as well. Since Pakistan is an external Muslim enemy, such demonization
helps to unify non-Muslim India and permit popular tolerance of greater
government control as well as encroachment of security forces on civil
rights and privacy.
In fact, India has its own
version of the U.S. Patriot Act, curbing the rights of its people. It
is called the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), and while the
title is more honest than “Patriot”, it is also a bit scary. It implies
that people can be snatched from the edge of a sidewalk on the pretext
that they were intent on jaywalking. No need for the infraction to
happen first.[i]
UAPA is an illustration of the degree to which human rights have been
marginalized in the land of M.K. Gandhi and Abdulghaffar Khan.
Not that India doesn’t have
real security concerns. Communal strife is as old as India itself and
has sometimes risen to the level of genocide, which drove the 1947
Pakistan secession. However, it is one thing to use law enforcement to
prevent fighting and quite another to use it to drive a wedge between
communities with a view towards playing them off against each other.
A case in point is the role
that Israel is playing. The self-proclaimed Jewish state is selling
itself to India as a worthwhile ally on the basis that it is a) an
experienced and effective leader in the fight against Islamist extremism
and terrorism, b) a supplier of high-tech weapons and intelligence, and
c) a means of access to U.S. support and cooperation. In effect,
Israel is saying that both states have common friends and enemies and
that Israel is in a position to provide what India needs.
India appears to be buying,
and is currently the largest customer for Israeli military arms systems
and services. Never mind that the expensive Iron Dome systems are
effective less than 50% of the time against rockets from Gaza that use
16th century technology. Like
most governments, India has been seduced by the promise of omniscient
surveillance systems and the prospect of winning battles rather than
preventing them.
This is obviously a devil’s
bargain. True to the nature of such contracts, however, are the
surprises that await the unwary. It is instructive to remember that
Israeli agents once planted bombs in Baghdad synagogues to encourage
Iraq’s Jews to emigrate to Israel. (It worked, and encouraged Iraqi
thugs toward violence, as well.)
Since then, Israel has stolen
nuclear weapon technology and weapons grade fissionable material from
the U.S., conducted the most massive spying operation in U.S. history
against its “ally”, and staged numerous assassinations and “black ops”
actions outside its borders, including friendly countries. Questions
currently surround the killing of Israeli tourists in Bulgaria and the
putative assassination attempt on Israeli diplomats in India. Israel
blamed both of these on Iran on the basis of flimsy evidence, possibly
fabricated in collaboration with its allies, the violent
Mujahedin-e-Khalq Iranian exile group.
India would do well to be more
circumspect toward friends like this. Vilifying Iran is high on
Israel’s current agenda, and Israel reportedly provided “evidence” and
pushed the Indian government to prosecute the case. The result was the
arrest of journalist Syed Mohammed Ahmed Kazmi, who anchors a news
program on West Asia providing alternative views of events in the
region. His open advocacy of better relations with Iran and his Iranian
contacts were enough make him an Israeli target and an Indian suspect.
After seven months of incarceration, however, the Indian government had
to release him for lack of evidence.
Kazmi and I shared the podium
at the SIO conference in Kerala and I was able to chat with him
privately just prior to the event. He is a courageous man, willing to
accept the risk of speaking in public so soon after his release, but
appears to hold no bitterness. Peaceful dissent of this kind needs to
be encouraged in India, which is well advised to heed John F. Kennedy’s
warning that, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”
Sadly, Israel sees violent
revolution in foreign countries to be in its national interest, under
the “divide and conquer” principle. However, one would think that
India’s principle would be the opposite if it wants to remain a
successful unified nation with a highly diverse population seeking
assurance that all their voices are heard in a national consensus.
Furthermore, there is no need for India to acquire the same enemies as
Israel. It may be in Israel’s perceived interests, but is it in
India’s?
My few days in Kerala were an
inspiring glimpse of what is possible. I saw thousands of young Indian
Muslims whose religious and social mission is to benefit all mankind, to
alleviate the social ills of Muslims and non-Muslims alike, to promote
interfaith cooperation and to create an umbrella that is inclusive of
everyone.
Although this was a Muslim
event, many who attended were not Muslim and were invited directly by
their Muslim neighbors. I was invited to be the keynote speaker even
though I am not Muslim and spoke more generally about human rights and
about Palestinian issues, which are not specifically Muslim or Indian.
Roughly 40% of the attendees were young women, in a society not always
known for its success in promoting women’s rights.
These young people were
politically aware, committed, well organized and motivated. Society is
supposed to create models for young people, but in this case it was the
young that created a model for their society.
Dr.
Paul Larudee is a human rights advocate and one of the co-founders of
the movement to break the siege of Gaza by sea. He was deported from
India on 31st December, 2012.
Jazakallah
Mohamed Yasir