Saturday, May 11, 2013

Preventing a new Afghanistan by not creating a vacuum- http://tehelka.com

http://tehelka.com/pushing-bangladesh-to-the-right-of-centre/

Tehelka

Pushing Bangladesh to the Right of Centre

The country is headed for a religious civil war as political crises hit the ceiling

Shaik Ubaid .Shaik Ubaid

Conflicting ideas A face-off between conservatives and atheists, Photo: AP Conflicting ideas A face-off between conservatives and atheists, Photo: AP

This past weekend, Bangladesh has moved closer to a civil war. With a population of 150 million, it is the third largest Muslim nation in the world. Due to its strategic location between India, China and Myanmar, any crisis it faces is bound to affect the entire region. If Bangladesh with its Vietnam-like terrain is allowed to destabilise, the consequences will be difficult to contain. Somalia then will look like child’s play and the Afghan problem a minor headache.

Bangladesh came into existence in 1971 with the active intervention of India during a bloody and ruthless civil war between East and West Pakistan. Over 3,00,000 people were killed and tens of thousands of women were raped. This war of independence is deeply embedded in the nation’s collective psyche. The only other instance in recorded history of such a narrative of national victimisation can be seen in Serbia and Armenia, two nations that have held on to the memory of their bloody conflict with the Ottoman Turkey.

When the civil war erupted, it was barely a quarter century since the region of East Bengal (earlier partitioned from West Bengal by the British) had secured independence from the colonial powers and become the eastern wing of Pakistan, the whole breadth of India separating the bifurcated new nation. Millions of Bihari Muslims from the contiguous areas of India had migrated to East Pakistan at the time. In 1970, after years of discrimination of the Bengali Muslims, an overwhelming majority in East Pakistan, rose up against the central (Pakistani) government. The Bihari Muslims wanted no part of the secession. Many Bengali Muslims who were ideologically aligned to Pakistan also refused to join the secession movement but a larger segment of the Bengali Muslim population supported it. In the ensuing disturbance, the Pakistani army unleashed a wave of terror that included mass murder and rapes.

The army used the excuse that they were not only trying to preserve the territorial integrity of Pakistan but were also fighting Bengali terrorists and Indian infiltrators who were killing and raping loyal Biharis. Members of right wing political parties such as Jamat-e-Islami and Muslim League formed armed militias and sided with the federal Pakistani forces.

India had been long hoping for the break-up of its arch rival and wasted no time in supporting the secessionists. Additionally, citing the influx of millions of refugees on its eastern border it invaded East Pakistan, forcing the Pakistani army to surrender after a short war.

Not one of the 90,000 Pakistani prisoners of war from that time were ever tried or brought to justice for war crimes. Shaikh Mujibur Rahman, the popular leader of the newly formed Bangladesh, focussed on rebuilding the poor and devastated nation and chose not to pursue those involved in the rapes and murder of Bengalis. The Bihari victims who had sided with the vanquished army bore the brunt of revenge rapes and murders. Countless victims from both sides were thus left to seethe in anger, their wounds raw and their hurts unhealed.

Within four years, the founder of the new nation along with most of his family members was murdered in a coup by the military which claimed that he had imposed a single party tyranny. The military rulers then used Islam to gain legitimacy amongst the shocked population just as General Zia-ul-Haq was to do a few years later in Pakistan.

Thanks to rampant corruption, new divisions based on wealth and class further polarised the country.

But the biggest chasm that went almost unheeded by all was the growing conflict between the traditionalist Muslims and the liberal elite. Bangladesh hosts the second largest religious assembling of Muslims, after the Haj in Mecca. The non-political Tablighi Jamat holds its annual ijtima (gathering) here. A small group of self-declared atheists have long been openly attacking Islam, ignoring the appeals of moderate mainstream atheists and liberals, not to antagonise the non-political traditional Muslim majority.

It is in this volatile context that the current government, facing low approval ratings, chose to politicise the issue of war crimes. Its main aim seemed to deflect criticism of rampant corruption and to decimate the mainstream Islamist party, Jamat-e-Islami, which is aligned to the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), the main Opposition party. The political calculation was that without the backing of Jamat-e-Islami, the BNP will not be able to defeat the ruling Awami League.

Instead of forming an impartial and independent war crimes tribunal, the government constituted a biased tribunal which has been criticised by the Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and foreign bar associations. Leaked conversations between the chief judge and outsiders have established that the tribunal was acting like a kangaroo court. The chief judge was forced to resign but the tribunal went ahead and issued death sentences to leaders of Jamat-e-Islami.

Cautioning the government against destabilisation, many countries, including its biggest donors, such as Saudi Arabia and the United States asked it not to adopt a confrontational policy. However, with open support from India, the Bangladesh government rebuffed all such appeals.

As was to be expected, Jamat-e-Islami facing decimation and the BNP facing political isolation, have hit back.

The opportunity to launch the counter campaign was provided by the militant atheists, who in a lethal combination of ignorance and arrogance, initiated vulgar attacks on Islam and Prophet Muhammad. In a Muslim country, this is nothing short of suicidal. The proponents seem to have been carried away by the outpouring of nationalistic fervor unleashed by the belated (and politically motivated) punishment to the “traitors” of the war of independence. Hundreds of thousands of Bangladeshis have been demanding the death penalty for the traitors and war criminals in the Shahbagh Square in the capital Dhaka.

The traditionalists, who as a rule do not support political Islam as represented by the Jamat-e-Islami, were enraged at the “blasphemous attacks” and have mobilised the network of their madrassas. Those that had earlier chosen not to side with the Jamat-e-Islami and BNP have now taken to the streets.

Unfortunately, Bangladeshi Hindus have been caught in the crossfire of this conflagration because of their sympathies for the current government. Many Hindu temples were destroyed.

Unfortunately, the political Left in the country has not responded positively so far. Most of them are unwisely supporting the stand of the Indian security establishment that crushing the Islamists in Bangladesh is in India’s interest. This can, at best, be described as a most short-sighted perspective and at worst, a disastrous one.

The Bangladesh government and the militant atheists miscalculated badly. The government was slow in distancing itself from online vulgar attacks on Islam by the atheist bloggers.

If India does not stop its unconditional support of the Bangladesh government that has acted arrogantly and undemocratically, it will be seen by most Indians as Iran is viewed by most Syrians for its support of the unpopular Assad government.

This past weekend, Bangladesh has erupted in a fury.

After physically being put on the defensive as millions of common Muslims have taken to the streets, the ruling party has launched a media campaign in the West, pointing out to the similarity in the demands between the Bangladeshi traditionalists and the Pakistani Taliban.

The traditionalists have resorted to their own demonisation of “atheists”, a hated term used interchangeably with Marxists, that goes back to the times of the Cold War and the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

The war between “Talibans” and “atheists” is set to destabilise the whole region.

The world must act before Bangladesh reaches a point of no return. Prime Minister Shaikh Hasina Wajid is known to be stubborn and arrogant. It is imperative that she be brought under pressure by India to seek a solution to the current crisis in the form of an independent war crimes tribunal and a truth and reconciliation commission. The Indian Muslim seminary of Deoband that has considerable influence on the Bangladeshi traditionalists, must be asked to dissuade them from further confrontation. The mainstream liberals, atheists and Marxists in Bangladesh must rein in their militant wing from launching incendiary attacks on Islam.

The window to act is small and getting smaller by the day. Time is of real essence.

letters@tehelka.com
 
(Published in Tehelka Magazine, Volume 10 Issue 20, Dated 18 May 2013) - See more at: http://tehelka.com/pushing-bangladesh-to-the-right-of-centre/#sthash.ZPdR66O5.dpuf

Monday, May 6, 2013

Anti- Terrorist Squad ex-chief wanted me killed: 7/11 blasts accused - By Swati Deshpande - TNN - The Times of India, Mumbai, India.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/ATS-ex-chief-wanted-me-killed-7/11-blasts-accused/articleshow/19903276.cms.

The Times of India



ATS ex-chief wanted me killed: 7/11 blasts accused

, TNN | May 6, 2013, 12.53 AM IST

MUMBAI: An accused in the July 11, 2006, Mumbai train blasts case informed the special court that former anti-terrorism squad (ATS) chief K P Raghuvanshi threatened to have him killed in an encounter if he did not admit to involvement in the crime that took the lives of about 200 people.

"Raghuvanshi told me that if I do not admit to the crime, he would have me killed in an encounter as they had killed one person,'' Ehtesham Siddiqui (31) said on Friday in a detailed deposition before special Maharashtra Control of Organized Crime Act (MCOCA) judge Y D Shinde.

Raghuvanshi, however, told TOI that the accused "have been saying many things''. He said he was not fazed by the allegations and added, "We have submitted evidence in court and the court will decide the case based on the evidence.''

Siddiqui, accused of preparing pressure cooker bombs in Govandi, said not only was he never there, but that when he denied knowledge of the blasts, he was tortured at Raghuvanshi's behest. He told the court that after his return from Bangalore to Mumbai, where his underwent a narco-analysis test in which he denied planting any bomb, he was being taken to the Bhoiwada lock-up, when cops escorting him got a call and he was taken to Raghuvanshi's office in Nagpada on September 13, 2006. "He called police inspector Khandekar and then inspector Tajne to his cabin. He told them to get a big rope and tie me, and then to take me to the jungles in Borivli national park, and when I start to run, to shoot me,'' he said.

Siddiqui said Raghuvanshi, the ATS chief then in his first stint, told the cops to give him "special treatment".

Detailing his torture, he said, "I was taken to the detection room at Kalachowkie, where there were handcuffs in four corners. I was handcuffed to one. Sound absorbers were in all corners,'' said Siddiqui, who has been in jail since his arrest in August 2006.

"...Additional commissioner of police Jaijeet Singh, assistant inspector Khanwilkar and other cops came into the room at midnight with a rope and belt. They tied my hands behind my back and made me sit on the floor with legs stretched in front. A constable sat in the chair behind, with a leg entangled in my hands, which were tied. Ropes were tied to my legs with the other ends held by two cops on either side. Two constables started stretching my legs outwards. The additional CP sat on a chair opposite me. He was continuously asking me only one question: Who was behind the blasts? Each time I said I did not know anything, my legs were stretched apart all the way to 180 degrees... the next day I bled when I passed urine. The officer said I would be okay and refused medical help.''

He said, "Raghuvanshi told me to sign some documents and then they would not do anything to me. I refused to sign anything false.'' He said he was then taken to another room. "There was a handcart there. I was tied and the top part of my body lowered. A cloth was put on my face and they started pouring water on my nose and mouth. I had difficultly breathing...''

He said the third degree torture stopped only when deputy commissioner of police (DCP) Naval Bajaj and an officer of the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) came. "Bajaj scolded the officers and asked if they wanted to kill me,'' but the next day, he said, the police gave him electric shocks, including on his private parts, after removing all his clothes. They later let drops of water dribble on his head for two hours, resulting in pain, he said.

A few days later, when produced in the Mazgaon court, his face was not unveiled and the magistrate did not ask him anything. He said he did not say anything out of fear.

Siddiqui also said video-recordings of his narco test were edited to remove denials and add morphed admissions. He said on September 29, 2006, the then police chief also told him to admit he was behind the blasts as they planned a press conference.

On October 5, 2006, he was taken to a DCP in Matunga, who asked him his name and address. He then told two officers to torture him that night, and made him sign two pages the next day after officers threatened to involve his father and brother. He said he relented and signed the papers and later two typewritten pages, which a DCP told him was his confession.

His deposition will continue on Monday

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Mumbai Train Blasts Accused: We weren't on the trains - By Sukanya Shantha - The Sunday Indian Express, Mumbai, INDIA

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/we-weren-t-on-the-trains.../1111537/0


The IndianExpress

We weren’t on the trains...

Sukanya Shantha : Sun May 05 2013, 00:31 hrs
 

The Sunday StoryAfter one of the blasts, at Matunga on the Western Line of the Mumbai suburban railway

On April 25, a nodal officer from Bharti Airtel walked into the dock to face the defence lawyer in the 7/11 Mumbai train blasts case. The point of contention was whether the three men who allegedly planted bombs on seven Mumbai trains on the Western Railway Line on July 11, 2006, killing 187 people and leaving over 900 wounded, were present at the spot of the incident.
While the prosecution has all along claimed that the three alleged bombers—Ehthesham Kutubuddin Siddiqui, Asif Bashir Khan alias Junaid alias Abdulla and Mohammad Faisal Ataur Rehman Shaikh—boarded the trains bound to Virar and Borivali from Churchgate station and got off at Dadar, the call data records (CDRs) produced in the special MCOCA court that is hearing the case have drilled holes in the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad's theory. The records have supported the claims of the accused that they were at their work places or were home when the blasts took place.

Though the prosecution has said that the accused did not use their mobile phones during the alleged operation and that they could have left the phones with their family or friends, the defence argued that in that case, it is for the prosecution to probe who had been using these phones.

What lends further credence to the defence theory is that two years after the 13 men were arrested and the cases handed over to the ATS, the Crime Branch of the Mumbai Police arrested five alleged Indian Mujahideen men and claimed they were responsible for the July 11, 2006, Mumbai blasts. On October, 18, 2008, DCP Vishwas Nagrepatil recorded a confession of Mohammad Sadiq, an alleged IM member, under Section 18 of MCOCA.

***

Ehthesham Siddiqui says he had been in Mumbai for only a couple of years, making a living getting books printed for a commission, when he was arrested in August 2006. On the day of the blast, Siddiqui claims to have gone to meet one of his clients at Mira Road. According to a letter he wrote to the trial court in 2006, a claim that was also supported by the CDRs, Siddiqui was at Mira Road throughout the day.

But according to the prosecution, the 24-year-old was the Mumbai secretary of the banned Students' Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) and had allegedly harboured Pakistani terrorists in the city. He allegedly surveyed local trains in Mumbai before the blasts, helped assemble bombs and attended conspiracy meetings. One of the bombs exploded at Mira Road station.

Siddiqui, now 31, says he filed over 1,500 RTI applications while in prison. Over 400 of these were directly related to the train blast case. "I asked for the minutest of details—date of arrest, place where we were kept, platforms on which the trains had halted. Initially, the replies were vague, today our defence case stands on the information gathered under the Act," says Siddiqui.

The soft spoken Siddiqui has regularly sought, and got, answers through RTI applications and through petitions in courts—on the condition of the cramped Anda cell in Arthur Road Jail where he and the other accused are being held, the size of the beds in prison, the "behaviour" of the superintendent who "regularly thrashed" the inmates and many more.

Siddiqui, who had a diploma in chemical engineering when he was arrested in 2008, is now studying for his masters in tourism management from Indira Gandhi National Open University. On weekdays, he attends court and on weekends, he goes to K J Somaiya College at Vidyavihar in Central Mumbai for his classes. "Two constables stand guard while I sit through my three-hour class," he says.

Siddiqui has played a key role in strengthening the defence's stand. "Earlier, even when we screamed out loud that we were innocent, no one listened to us. Today, we are backing it with evidence," he says.

Siddiqui says he always wanted to study further, "but could never pursue it". "I am putting these years in jail to good use. Life in prison can bring out the worst in a person. If the mind if not channeled into doing something constructive, the strongest of men can break down."

While Siddiqui had been implicated in two other cases for his alleged SIMI activities, he has been acquitted in one of them. Another case is in its final leg.

While in jail, Siddiqui's parents rarely visited him. "But they are supportive. Travelling from Jaunpur in Uttar Pradesh is difficult, but they know what's happening here." His two younger brothers support his parents back home, he adds.

***

Asif Bashir Khan, 40, the 'second bomber', was arrested three months after the blast for allegedly placing a bomb in a 17:37-hour Virar Slow local. The bomb he allegedly planted in the first-class compartment of the train exploded between Mira Road and Bhayander stations. He was arrested on October 3 from Karnataka.

The ATS claims he supplied and distributed the RDX which was used in the train blasts and later in the 2006 Malegaon blasts. But the attendance register at Khan's office showed he was at his workplace in Kandivali from morning until 6 pm, something the CDRs of his phone too indicate, says defence lawyer Sharif Shaikh.

"I was in my office in Kandivali that day. I signed my muster roll in the morning, worked through the day and left in the evening," says Khan, a civil engineer who worked as a site in-charge with the Lokhandwala Group at the time of his arrest. His claims are supported by the nodal officer of the cellphone company and matches the CDRs furnished in court.

"When I set out that day after work, I heard trains were being targeted. I was both sad and worried," he says. "Sad" that innocents were killed and "worried" for his community. "I knew the police would go after Muslims. But I didn't know I would be one of the several Muslims to be rounded up," Khan says.

The ATS alleged that Khan masterminded the blasts and harboured Pakistani terrorists at his home in Mira Road. They alleged that he had bought rexine bags, utensils, ammonium nitrate, detonators and helped assemble bombs at his house.

What followed the arrest, Khan says, is "deplorable", something even "real bombers" should not be subjected too. "The officers tried every tactic possible to extract a confession from me. I would be stripped naked and beaten by any and every officer handling the case. They threatened to get my family from Jalgaon and abuse me in their presence," Khan says. "It is a systematically executed operation. Muslims are targeted not just by a few communal minds, but an entire system which works on one agenda," he says.

Through RTI, Khan was able to trash the testimonies of two of the prosecution witnesses who claimed that they had seen Khan board the train at Churchgate and get off at Dadar. He says it wasn't easy to procure the CDRs. "But this delay in a way proved to be a blessing in disguise. Had the case been wrapped up soon after we were arrested, most of these revelations would not have happened."

***

For Faisal Shaikh, 37, 2006 had begun well. Two of his brothers had got jobs in software companies, he had started his new business and was planning to set up a small workshop at Jogeshwari. "My youngest brother Muzzamil had just got a job with Oracle and my other brother, Rahil, had shifted to London. But then, the blasts happened and everything changed overnight," he says, standing in a small passage at the Kala Ghoda sessions court in south Mumbai.

ATS claimed Shaikh was chief of Lashkar-e-Toiba's Mumbai unit and worked for Azam Cheema, Lashkar's commander-in-chief (training) in Pakistan. While Shaikh was picked up for planting a bomb which exploded near Jogeshwari station, his brother Muzzamil, then 22 years old, was subsequently arrested for being a 'conspirator'. The chargesheet names Shaikh's other brother, Rahil, as one of the 15 absconding accused. "I was picked up on July 19 but official records show that I was arrested on July 27. The tower readings show how several calls were made from my phone in and around Jacob Circle road," Shaikh says. He is tall and broad built, speaks a distinct Mumbaiyya tongue. Shaikh says life hasn't been the same for his family since the arrest. "Relatives, who earlier said they considered us to be their role models, had suddenly distanced themselves," he says.

He says he has made friends with a few policemen in jail. "But when I begin to narrate my story of discrimination and how my family was targeted, they do not want to believe. 'Kuch toh kiya hoga', they say."

The CDR revelation, Shaikh says, "has directly questioned the ATS's story. But we hear no noise." He blames the media, too. "They never question the police version. We have to fight our own battles," says Shaikh.

TRIAL TRAIL

July 20 to October 2, 2006: State ATS arrests 13
Muslim men

November 29, 2006: Chargesheet filed and all 13 accused booked under MCOCA and sections of IPC

December 18, 2007: Trial commences with the examination of first witness
2008: Accused move Supreme Court, trial stayed. Stay lifted two years later, on April 23, 2010

August 16, 2012: Defence seeks warrant on ATS to trace the CDRs of the seized mobile phones of the accused. This data, with the ATS, was not produced in court. Trial court rejects application

December 10, 2012: HC quashes the trial court order

March 7, 2013: Three nodal officers quote amount of Rs 34 lakh in court to retrieve the CDRs. Later, Vodafone, Loop, Airtel and Tata Teleservices make the CDRs available free of cost

The Retractions

Muzamil Jaleel

Between July 20, 2006, and October 3, 2006, Mumbai Police's ATS arrested 13 people and claimed to have cracked the case. The ATS claimed that these men had confessed to their crime. In November 2006, all the accused filed written submissions to the court, saying they were made to confess under severe custodial torture. Extracts from the submissions of three of the accused:

Ehthesham Siddiqui, Accused No. 4

"On 07.11.2006, my Test Identification Parade was held at Arthur Road Jail's open ground. The witnesses were kept in (a) room inside the jail...I and Mohammed Ali (were) made to stand between 12 dummies. (We had) beards and the other 12 dummies were clean shaven...so we both can be easily identified. I was identified by three witnesses...ATS cell ACP Vinod Bhatt, a respectable ATS officer, met me twice, first time he asked me about myself and my past. When he met me second time, I told him that I am innocent...He said that you are innocent and all other accused are also innocent. I am (under pressure) from superior officers of ATS to falsely implicate you and other accused in the said case. He had named specifically ATS chief K P Raghuvanshi, A N Roy (then Commissioner of Mumbai Police)...Mr Vinod Bhat was a good and honest officer, he had committed suicide but I say that the ATS officers had killed him because he was not cooperating (with) them to falsely implicate us in the case.

I was given shock treatment (after getting me to strip)...They used to tie wire on the thumb of (my) leg, then they used to give shock treatment at regular intervals. I was also given shock (treatment) on my private parts at regular intervals...They used to tie me upside down...and my both hands were tied by rope. Then they used to pour water into my nose at regular intervals...They warned me that my brother and father will be also (included) in the bomb blast case if I do not sign on the confessional statement. They also warned that (women) members of my family will be brought and...molested."

(Written submission to court on March 9, 2006)

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

My comments posted on The New York Time article by Thomas L. Friedman - By Ghulam Muhammed

My comments posted on The New York Time article by Thomas L. Friedman -


Thank you for your submission. We'll notify you at gh***@gmail.com when your comment has been approved.


  1. Friedman writes:

    "This is a popular meme among radical Muslim groups, and, to be sure, some Muslim youths were deeply angered by the U.S. interventions in the Middle East. The brothers Tsarnaev may have been among them.

    But what in God’s name does that have to do with planting a bomb at the Boston Marathon and blowing up innocent people? It is amazing to me how we’ve come to accept this non sequitur and how easily we’ve allowed radical Muslim groups and their apologists to get away with it.

    Would he be willing to accept the paraphrasing of his logic to the following:

    " Yes, Americans are genuinely angered over 9/11. But what in God's name, what that have to do with US invading and killings hundreds of thousands in Iraq and Afghanistan?"

    "Why US is so radicalized. By Friedman's logic, US should have gone to Iraq and Afghanistan, not to bomb but to build schools, hospitals for Muslims, so that they may not think US as an enemy. Why bomb innocent people in Iraq and Afghanistan? What kind of sick madness is this?"

    "Friedman never gave that pacifying advice to Israel, when it matched rockets with rockets against its adversaries. He never told Israel: go build schools, hospitals in Gaza.
    "
    This only proves that even the best brains in America are yet to get their logic straight when it comes to their violence against our violence.

    Friedman wants others to do all the pacifying, while the neo-cons are free to carry on with their warmongering. That is fooling people.
-----------
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/28/opinion/sunday/friedman-judgment-not-included.html?emc=tnt&tntemail1=y

New York Times

Op-Ed Columnist

Judgment Not Included

Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
A suicide bombing in Peshawar, Pakistan, this month. Innocent Muslims are killed by radical Muslims in the Middle East weekly.
By
Published: April 27, 2013 9 Comments
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AS police investigators peel away the layers of the Boston Marathon bombing, there are two aspects of this unfolding story to which I want to react: the mind-set of the alleged bombers and the role of the Internet in shaping it. Important news about both was contained in a single Washington Post article on Tuesday. 
Josh Haner/The New York Times
Thomas L. Friedman

Readers’ Comments

“The 19-year-old suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings has told interrogators that the American wars in Iraq and Afghanistan motivated him and his brother to carry out the attack, according to U.S. officials familiar with the interviews,” The Post reported. The officials said, “Dzhokhar and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev ... do not appear to have been directed by a foreign terrorist organization. Rather, the officials said, the evidence so far suggests they were ‘self-radicalized’ through Internet sites and U.S. actions in the Muslim world. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has specifically cited the U.S. war in Iraq, which ended in December 2011 with the removal of the last American forces, and the war in Afghanistan.”
This is a popular meme among radical Muslim groups, and, to be sure, some Muslim youths were deeply angered by the U.S. interventions in the Middle East. The brothers Tsarnaev may have been among them.
But what in God’s name does that have to do with planting a bomb at the Boston Marathon and blowing up innocent people? It is amazing to me how we’ve come to accept this non sequitur and how easily we’ve allowed radical Muslim groups and their apologists to get away with it.
A simple question: If you were upset with U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, why didn’t you go out and build a school in Afghanistan to strengthen that community or get an advanced degree to strengthen yourself or become a math teacher in the Muslim world to help its people be less vulnerable to foreign powers? Dzhokhar claims the Tsarnaev brothers were so upset by something America did in a third country that they just had to go to Boylston Street and blow up people who had nothing to do with it (some of whom could have been Muslims), and too often we just nod our heads rather than asking: What kind of sick madness is this?
It’s a double non sequitur when it comes from Muslim youths who lived and studied in America, where, if you’re upset about something, you have many ways to express your opposition and have an impact — from organizing demonstrations to publishing articles to running for office. In fact, an American guy named Barack, whose grandfather was a Muslim, did just that. And he’s now president of the United States, a job he’s used to unwind the wars in Iraq and in Afghanistan.
Moreover, some 70,000 people, most of them Muslims, have been killed by other Muslims in the Syrian civil war, which the U.S. had nothing to do with — although many Muslims are now begging us to intervene to stop it. And every week innocent Muslims are blown up by Muslim suicide bombers in Pakistan and Iraq — every week. Thousands of them have been maimed and killed in attacks so nihilistic that the bombers don’t even bother to give their names or make demands. Yet this does not appear to have moved the brothers Tsarnaev one iota.
Why is that? We surely must not tar all of Islam in this. Having lived in the Muslim world, I know how unfair that would be. But we must ask a question only Muslims can answer: What is going on in your community that a critical number of your youth believes that every American military action in the Middle East is intolerable and justifies a violent response, and everything Muslim extremists do to other Muslims is ignorable and calls for mostly silence?
As for the role that Web sites apparently played in the “self-radicalization” of the two Chechen brothers, it is yet another reminder that the Internet is a digital river that carries incredible sources of wisdom and hate along the same current. It’s all there together. And our kids and citizens usually interact with this flow nakedly, with no supervision.
So more people are more directly exposed to more raw information and opinion every day from everywhere. As such, it is more important than ever that we build the internal software, the internal filters, into every citizen to sift out fact from fiction in this electronic torrent, which offers so much information that has never been touched by an editor, a censor or a libel lawyer. That’s why, when the Internet first emerged and you had to connect via a modem, I used to urge that modems sold in America come with a warning label from the surgeon general, like cigarettes. It would read: “Attention: Judgment not included.”
And that’s why the faster, more accessible and ultramodern the Internet becomes, the more all the old-fashioned stuff matters: good judgment, respect for others who are different and basic values of right and wrong. Those you can’t download. They have to be uploaded, the old-fashioned way, by parents around the dinner table, by caring but demanding teachers at school and by responsible spiritual leaders in a church, synagogue, temple or mosque. Somewhere, somehow, that did not happen, or stopped happening, with the brothers Tsarnaev.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

A town where even school dropouts are builders! - By Zeeshan Shaikh - The Free Press Journal, Mumbai, INDIA



A Muslim ghetto town, Mumbra, in the suburb of Mumbai could have been a model town, if the Muslims had not been discriminated against by the communal government of Mumbai City and Maharashtra State. Hundreds and thousands of supposed 'illegal' buildings all over the city and suburbs of greater Mumbai, are made legal through the very outset by the authorities through under the table exchange. However, for Muslim entrepreneurs, even that route is closed. So there remains no alternative for the so-called dropout 'builders' other than to take the 'criminal' routes. They are forced to remain outside of the legal and official framework. Mumbra could have been a planned city, just like Sharad Pawar's LAVASA. But Muslims have no political clout and no access to bank finances. They are forced to work with whatever means available to them, to make a living. At least they are getting employment for themselves and their workers. If they had finances available like the Bohra communities' Bhendi Bazaar Project, they could have come out with flying colors with their flair for entrepreneurship. The politically correct analysis in Free Press Journal, by Zeeshan Shaikh, falls short of taking the wider and deeper issues that surrounds the upcoming of a new ghetto in the suburb of Mumbai city. The disaster of the crash of a 7-story building could have been avoided if the authorities had cooperated with the genuine need of hundreds and thousands of families uprooted in Mumbai riots. Since Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation is still ruled by the same Shiv Sena, that had unleashed the post-Babri riots of Bombay, the gulf between the two communities is still wide and glaring. Muslims are never given an inch lest they catch up and make a success of their existence in the burgeoning city of Mumbai.

The situation can easily be compared to the civil disobedience movement of Mahatma Gandhi, who had realised that without an anti-British movement, Indians will never get their  rights. Since all doors to legitimate progress and survival is closed to Muslims, the wider implication of this uncharted and unplanned movement of 'Civil Disobedience' against a institutionally adverse government, has to be recognised as such and the ruling oligarchs and civic administration should shed their prejudices against their Muslim compatriots and treat them at equal footing with all others.
Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai
<ghulammuhammed3@gmail.com>

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THE FREE PRESS JOURNAL - MUMBAI

Mumbai    April 24, 2013 12:07:59 AM | By Zeeshan Shaikh

A town where even school dropouts are builders!

Mumbra : It is hard to believe that in Mumbra there are 25 builders below the age of 20 who are flourishing in the illegal construction industry and are also living a lavish lifestyle by selling flats constructed in a few months. Most of them are school or college drop outs and joined the race of becoming rich to fulfill their increasing demands.

Mumbra could be the only city in India, where construction industry has builders below the age of 20 in huge numbers. “In Mumbra everyone wants to grow as fast as possible and Mumbra is the only city in the state where a person can become a builder by just investing Rs 2 lakh to Rs 5 lakh,” said Hussain Syed, a theatre artiste and a resident of Mumbra.

According to Syed, there are around 250 builders who are working full-time in construction business and there are more than 700 of their accomplices who are working for them as a sleeping partner. Among these 250 odd developers, around 25 individuals who are flourishing in the illegal construction business and their age is below 20, added Syed.

“These under-20s youth do not belong from a well to do family and most of them are school or college drop outs. At some point of time these youths were handed some cash by their family members and they selected the easiest path of constructing illegal towers in the vicinity”, said Syed.
One of these builders, Feroze Khan, 19, who has a light growing moustache on his face every evening visits Sahil Hotel, located on the main road of Kausa, with his white Honda Activa. While speaking to FPJ Khan said, “I was not interested in studies due to which I flunked my SSC board exams. My father after seeing my result informed me that he had saved Rs 3 lakh for my further studies, as he wanted me to become an engineer”. After observing the construction boom in the vicinity, Khan requested his father to allow him to enter the construction business with Rs 3 lakh in 2009, when he was just 15-year-old. Till 2013, Khan had developed more than five illegal buildings with three ongoing illegal construction which is stopped after the mishap.

According to Khan, “It is easy to enter the illegal construction industry of Mumbra, as these developers have a famous roadside restaurant, Sahil, which is famously known as the junction where deals worth of crores take place in few minutes. Every evening the G+1 restaurant, owned by a local corporator, is full of builders finalising their deals, politicians waiting for their share, contractors waiting for their money, TMC officials are also bribed at the same place and even police officials also halt there to take their envelopes full of cash.

“In the words of K P Naik, suspended senior police inspector of Diager police station, Sahil Hotel, is a Vidhan Bhavan of builders,” said a police official requesting anonymity.

“If anyone wants to enter the illegal construction industry of Mumbra, the locals advise him to start visiting Sahil Hotel and pay bills, bring pan, buy a cigarette for big developers,” said Khan.

“It is the most easiest and safest way to catch hold of one group from Sahil and flourish in the market of construction. Even I found a group in Sahil hotel who were ready to take me as a partner with Rs 3 lakh,” added Khan.

“What great would I have done after becoming an engineer, I would be employed under some firm working nine to five for some pennies. Today more than 150 people are employed under me and the construction business is worth doing some other business,” said Khan.

Apart from Sahil Hotel, these under-20 youths have discovered a small restaurant, Sugar and Spice which is a stone’s throw away from Sahil. Luxurious cars and bikes are parked every evening at Sugar and Spice, where these youths show off their power to each other with their accessories and clothes 
every day.

Ehsaan Dalvi, a professor and a resident of Mumbra said, “These youths are not at all interested in education and are looking for easy money by any means. The illegal construction industry provides them the way to earn easy money, and they are completely disabled to approach municipal corporation for legal construction work”.

Khan and his bunch of business partners who like to spend their nights in Konkan Palace or Bhiwandi Dhaba hardly showed any remorse over the death of 74 people but were in a worried condition for their blocked investment.

Zeeshan Shaikh

Life in America Unraveled for Brothers - By ALAN CULLISON and PAUL SONNE in Moscow and JENNIFER LEVITZ in Cambridge, Mass.- Wall Street Journal

Was that a FBI set-up? If the elder brother was under constant surveillance by the FBI, where were the FBI men, when the brother or brothers were able to assemble their crude bombs?

Life in America Unraveled for Brothers

Where did the alleged bombers of the Boston Marathon come from? What were their career aspirations? What can we learn from their online media presence? WSJ's Jason Bellini has "The Short Answer."
The two Chechen brothers accused in the Boston Marathon bombing set about building American lives after coming to the U.S. about a decade ago.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26 years old, became a successful Golden Gloves boxer. His younger brother, Dzhokhar, 19, was a nursing student and became an American citizen just last year, on Sept. 11.
But a close examination of the Tsarnaev family's life in the U.S. shows a hopeful immigrant trajectory veering off course.
For nearly 24 hours, a dragnet of cinematic proportion played out in Boston's eerily quiet streets after the two brothers were branded as the architects of Monday's Boston Marathon bombings. A gunbattle in Watertown, Mass., left Tamerlan dead by early Friday morning, and police put Boston on lockdown after Dzhokhar eluded capture. Later Friday, however, he was apprehended.

More Video

The ethnic Chechens suspected of planting the Boston Marathon bombs have put the spotlight on Chechnya, the embattled Russian republic that’s been engaged in fierce fighting for its independence. WSJ’s Mark Scheffler reports.
On Friday, details from their lives emerged through interviews with neighbors and relatives, and from their online activities. Acquaintances recalled the brothers as strong students and avid athletes. They left few clues suggesting they would be capable of the gruesome acts the police say they committed.
But the patriarch of the family, a talented auto mechanic named Anzor Tsarnaev, struggled to make a living. Tamerlan, his eldest son, failed to make a career out of boxing, dropped out of community college for lack of money and struggled to find work.
Living on public assistance in a multifamily house in Cambridge, the family began to fray, friends said. The parents separated. Anzor Tsarnaev returned to Russia, battling illness.
Along the way, Tamerlan's attitude seemed to sour. "I like the USA," he told the Lowell Sun newspaper in 2004 while competing in a boxing tournament shortly after arriving in the U.S. "America has a lot of jobs." But a caption accompanying an online photo of him a few years later reads: "Originally from Chechnya, but living in the U.S. since five years…I don't have a single American friend, I don't understand them."
Ruslan Tsarni, an uncle of the two brothers, told reporters outside his Maryland home Friday that his nephews were "losers" who were unable to settle into American life "and thereby just hating everyone who did." He said he didn't think there was an ideological motive. "This has nothing to do with Chechnya," he said. He also indicated there was a rift between him and his brothers. "It's personal," he said, "I didn't like them."
Getty Images
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, at right in photo, in a 2009 Golden Gloves boxing match in Salt Lake City.
The boys' mother said in a television interview with the Russian state-run news channel RT Friday night that anyone calling her son a loser is a loser himself. "I am really sure, like I am 100% sure, that this is a setup," Zubeidat K. Tsarnaev said. She also said that she had been contacted by the FBI about her older son, before Monday's deadly attack, as he grew more religious.
The boys' father, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, said he was present when the FBI interviewed Tamerlan in Cambridge. He said they visited for what they called "prevention" activities. "They said: We know what sites you are on, we know where you are calling, we know everything about you. Everything," Mr. Tsarnaev said.
Another relative—Maret Tsarnaev, the paternal aunt of the brothers—defended the sons. "Nothing points out that my nephews did [the bombings]…I demand evidence," she said.

Photos: FBI Releases

Review the images released by the FBI
Federal Bureau of Investigation/Associated Press
This photo released Friday by the FBI shows a suspect that officials identified as Mr. Tsarnaev.
The Tsarnaev family, which included two boys and two girls, had come to America after facing discrimination as ethnic Chechens living in Kyrgyzstan during wars in their ethnic homeland. A separatist rebellion there, with elements of radical Islam, had been crushed by the Kremlin under presidents Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin.
Before arriving in the U.S., the family lived in a number of places. Anzor, the father, grew up as an ethnic Chechen in Kyrgyzstan, and said he briefly returned to Chechnya with the family in the early 1990s before moving back to the Central Asian republic. He then left Kyrgyzstan again, facing discrimination. The family lived for a few years in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, where Ms. Tsarnaev's family is from, before moving to the U.S.
U.S. law-enforcement officials said the two brothers came to the U.S. at different times. Dzhokhar arrived with his parents in 2002, just before he turned 10. Tamerlan arrived on his own around 2004. The family was granted legal permanent residence in the U.S. in March 2007, a law-enforcement official said.
An aunt, who already lived in the U.S., helped them get established. Soon they moved into a house in a poorer neighborhood near the border of Boston's Cambridge and Somerville suburbs. There they faced headwinds that many immigrant families encounter.
Associated Press
Younger brother, Dzhokhar, in an undated photo after graduating from Cambridge Rindge & Latin High School.

Map: Boston Area

See the locations of key incidents in the search for the suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings.

Terror in the U.S.

Review other major plots of terrorism on American soil.
One problem was money. The father was unable to find steady work as a mechanic. He struggled to make ends meet by fixing cars on the street for $10 an hour, a practice that prompted neighbors to complain, according to one of the neighbors.
Tamerlan excelled in school but dropped out of Bunker Hill Community College because of money, according to the family's landlord, Joanna Herlihy. In an interview published in a Russian newspaper Friday, the father also recounted his younger son's problems with money, which he said he tried to solve by working as a lifeguard between studies.
Ms. Herlihy, who speaks Russian and helped tutor the children, said Tamerlan's boxing dreams eventually crumbled. "His back was in really bad shape and he couldn't get into the Olympics, and that was the last thing he really worked hard at," Ms. Herlihy said.
Dzhokhar excelled as a student at Cambridge Rindge & Latin School. "I know this kid to be compassionate. I know this kid to be forthcoming," said Larry Aaronson, a retired history teacher at the high school. "Every conversation I had with him—he was generous, compassionate and thoughtful."
A former classmate there said, "His brother and family weren't really Westernized, but Dzhokhar was really integrated into our school community. He was a normal American kid."
Attorney Andrea Kramer said Friday her sons played on the varsity soccer team while Dzhokhar played on the junior-varsity squad. Dzhokhar "wasn't 'them.' He was 'us,'" Ms. Kramer said. "He was Cambridge" and part of a community whose "strength and beauty" is its diversity.
The younger Mr. Tsarnaev was seen on campus at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, where he was studying nursing, in the days after the marathon attack, possibly on Wednesday, according to one student who lived in his dorm. He said his roommate shouted "Yo, Dzhokhar" to him in greeting.
Authorities are now trying to determine whether or not the young men had contact with terrorist figures. Last year Tamerlan traveled to Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, the Russian republic next to Chechnya where his father currently lives and where he has other relatives as well. Dagestan is home to a simmering Islamist insurgency.
Tamerlan came up with money for the trip and unexpectedly left for the Russian region. A law-enforcement official confirmed that Tamerlan flew out of New York on Jan. 12, 2012, for Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport and returned July 17. To travel to Dagestan from the U.S., most passengers go through Moscow.
The brothers' father, Anzor, said Tamerlan was with him while in Dagestan. "He wasn't occupied with anything. He was just visiting relatives," Mr. Tsarnaev said. He said there is no way his son interacted with Islamic fundamentalists while on the trip. "There aren't even any of those here anymore," he said.

FBI Releases Photos of Suspects

Video

Evan Perez and former FBI special agent in charge Andrew Arena, discuss the significance of the Boston Marathon suspects being from Chechnya, Russia. Photo: AP.
Before his departure, Tamerlan was showing signs of stricter religious beliefs, a family friend said. "He started to pray," his father said. About 3½ years ago he had married an American woman who mothered his child and converted to Islam. She was supporting him in recent months as a home health aide, the friend said.
His father said Tamerlan had a domestic incident in his past with his first girlfriend, and had struck her.
Richard Medeiros, who lives in the house behind the suspects, says that six months or so ago, Tamerlan, after being clean-shaven, grew a beard. "He looked like one of those Amish people," said Mr. Medeiros, who is 40 and lives in an apartment building that was evacuated by police and remained cordoned off Friday afternoon. "It made him look really old."
He said he must have shaved it only recently. "That's why I did not recognize him in the photos," he said.
He said his wife wore a black head-covering "down to her eyebrows" and was the friendliest of the group. "She was always asking, 'Hey, how ya doing? Is your leg getting better?'" said Mr. Medeiros, who is on crutches.
Tamerlan also influenced his younger brother. In an interview Friday with a Russian newspaper, his father, Anzor, said Dzhokhar "wouldn't have gotten involved in this against the will of his brother, Tamerlan, and his older brother never would have allowed such things." He denied that his sons were guilty.
In another interview, with a Russian tabloid-news website, he expressed concern about the fate of his sons. "We wanted some peace and calm in life," he said. "And you see what they've found. They were running away from one thing and they met another."
—Lisa Fleisher in West New York, N.J., Sara Germano in New York and David George-Cosh in Toronto contributed to this article

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Sowing the seeds of terror - Editorial - DNA, India

http://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/1825380/editorial-dna-edit-sowing-the-seeds-of-terror






Home > Analysis > Editorial

dna edit: Sowing the seeds of terror

Monday, Apr 22, 2013, 9:00 IST | Agency: DNA


The Boston bombings and the blasts in India and elsewhere bring into focus the new face of terror: The educated man or a regular teenager we encounter on our way to work, at the workplace, in an eatery or a theatre.
But, why would a man with a rational mind give in to the doctrine of hate? The answer lies in the approach the so-called forward nations have adopted towards other cultures and sensibilities that do not conform to their notions of civilisation and justice.

Driven by the idea of a superior civilisation, best articulated by Samuel Huntington’s 1998 book The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of the World Order, the US and its allies have perpetrated massacres in the name of restoring order in Iraq, Afghanistan and other parts of the world.

And, worst of all, it has painted the entire Muslim world with the same brush. Tortured to silence, people have resorted to blasts to make themselves heard. 

If the West wants to counter terror, it can begin by encouraging other voices. Voices that speak reason and articulate the frustrations of oppressed peoples. Voices that will work as counter-point to the West’s ‘infallible logic of aggrandizement’.

As Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen has argued in his critique of Huntington, ‘humanity cannot be classified into distinct and discrete civilizations’. The man behind the act of terror is a victim of that foggy notion.

By choosing to overlook his many identities, and focussing only on his religion or ethnicity, the West has managed to alienate itself from the common concerns of humanity.

In India too, we have fallen into this trap that has widened the cracks between communities after every blast. We view the ‘other’ with suspicion, our vision blinded by prejudice and hatred.   

Terror is only a desperate tool for those who believe that it can lead to empowerment. It is a message to the Goliath of a US that it is breeding Davids in its backyard.