Friday, September 20, 2013

A Good Cop/Bad Cop comedy of Modi/Amit Shah that tries to duplicate the old Vajpayee/Advani tragedy

My comments posted on Hindustan Times webpage on Rajdeep Sardesai's article on Advani:

Friday, September 20, 2013
A Good Cop/Bad Cop comedy of Modi/Amit Shah that tries to duplicate the old Vajpayee/Advani tragedy
Barkha Dutt during one of her TV panel discussions aptly described the Modi/Amit Shah combo as a Good-Cop/Bad-Cop jugalbandi.  While Modi is posing as a national leader speaking of development, Amit Shah is concentrating on organizing communal riots and communal issues to revive sagging Hindutva interest in Mandir issues. Both are true replica of the same dual role that had characterized Vajpayee/Advani act. Vajpayee was in the meeting with BJP leaders in Lucknow, on the day prior to December 6, when Advani went to Ayodhya and Vajpayee flew west to New Delhi. Their roles in the Babri Masjid demolition drama was markedly divided and delineated to address to different constituencies even in Sangh Parivar. Nobody will be fooled by Modi/Amit Shah jugalbandi --- as both by their very persona are more Advani than Vajpayee. For Vajpayee at least Good-Cop role fitted like a glove. Modi cannot match Vajpayee role in this new jugalbandi. Modi does not have Vajpayee's dignified demeanor; nor can his past role in Gujarat genocidal riots be ever separated from his 'achievements' in the cause of strident polarizing Hindutva.
For all practical purposes Advani is sidelined in the new line-up, till he may be needed in emergencies in future.
Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai
<ghulammuhammed3@gmail.com>

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Too soon to say goodbye

Rajdeep Sardesai   September 19, 2013
The three most influential politicians of the 1990s were Narasimha Rao, Vishwanath Pratap Singh and LK Advani. At a time when the last of the triumvirate prepares to fade into the political sunset, this may be a good moment to pause, rewind and look back at the life and times and legacy of these men who redefined politics at the turn of the century.

It would be fair to suggest that all three played their part in shaping the destiny of contemporary politics more by circumstance than conviction. If Rajiv Gandhi had not been assassinated in May 1991, one can safely assume Rao would have retired to Hyderabad as a footnote in the Congress, blotted by the memory of being the eternal procrastinator as home minister during the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

VP Singh too, was just another remote-controlled Congress chief minister in the Indira-Sanjay years, till Bofors happened and transformed his persona into a tough anti-corruption crusader. And LK Advani too, was the quintessential party organisation man and would have remained so if the gates of the Babri Masjid had not been opened by the Rajiv government.

The three competing ideologies which they came to represent — market, Mandal and Mandir — were again accidentally constructed because of forces beyond them. The balance of payments crisis of 1991 left Rao with no choice but to open up the Indian economy. If VP Singh had not felt the pressure of being toppled from within the Janata Dal, he might not have pushed ahead with the implementation of the Mandal commission report.

And if the Rajiv government again had allowed a poor Muslim widow, Shahbano, her right to maintenance, it is likely that Mr Advani’s ‘minority appeasement’ politics that culminated in a rath yatra as a symbol of ‘Hindu resurgence’ might have never resonated.

The similarities don’t end there. None of the three were natural mass leaders. Rao had a very brief tenure as Andhra Pradesh chief minister and had to seek refuge in Maharashtra for a Lok Sabha ticket. VP Singh too, had limited influence in his home state of Uttar Pradesh and owed his rise to the benevolence of the Gandhi family. Advani too, has never had a ‘home’ base as such, having been elected from constituencies as varied as New Delhi and Gandhinagar. In a sense, their becoming ‘mascots’ of big ideas gave them a political relevance that their rather dour, uncharismatic personalities would never have otherwise allowed.

A sharp contrast can be drawn for example between an Advani and an AB Vajpayee. The latter was a ‘natural’ politician, a wonderful orator, skilled parliamentarian, and statesman-like leader. He had the ‘common touch’. By contrast, Advani was the strategist and ideologue, uncomfortable in public gatherings but adept at strengthening the party’s organisational base. Vajpayee may get the plaudits as a three-time prime minister, but let’s be clear: without Advani’s perseverance there would have been no alternate pole created to end Congress hegemony. If Vajpayee was a flamboyant Tendulkar-like batsman, Advani was the Dravid-like Wall of the BJP.

With their limited mass appeal, it is also no surprise that the Rao-VP-Advani troika were eventually devoured, or overtaken by their own revolutions. Having unleashed market-friendly economics, Rao was in no position to handle a family-led party that instinctively looked at a non Nehru-Gandhi leader as an outsider. It is typical of the Congress culture that the party chose to credit a bureaucrat like Manmohan Singh for the end of the licence-permit raj rather than a hardened politician like Rao. Singh was ready to be his master’s voice in sharp contrast to a Rao who was emerging as a threat to the dynasty.

VP Singh too, as an upper caste Thakur, could never compete with the rising OBC political juggernaut unleashed by the Mandalisation of north India. Once the Lalus and Mulayams had tasted power in the early 1990s, they were not going to share the power and the glory with anyone else. They had the political chutzpah and the confidence to build their own personality cults. VP, like Rao, passed away a sad, forlorn figure, aware that he was on the wrong side of a history that he had helped create.

And so to Advani, the man who has outlived his contemporaries. Through the 1980s and 1990s, Advani mentored a generation of young BJP leaders, including a certain Narendra Modi, who even was his charioteer during his Ayodhya rath yatra. Cut in the Hindutva cloth, some of these leaders showed the aptitude and the appetite to sharpen the ideological base which Advani had nurtured by adding the mantra of good governance.
None did it better than the Gujarat chief minister. Hindu nationalism plus ‘suraj’ (good governance): why would a younger, more restive BJP rank and file not back a new poster boy and discard the old warhorse? A demographic shift necessitated a political coup.
Ironically, it was to protect the original Hindutva constituency that Advani had chosen to insist on Modi continuing in Gandhinagar in the aftermath of the 2002 riots. Removing Modi at the time, felt the BJP’s ideologue, would send the wrong message to the party’s cadres. Among the many ‘what ifs’ in Indian political history we can add one more: what if during the BJP’s national executive in Panaji in 2002, the BJP had chosen to follow Vajpayee’s ‘rajdharma’ and change the Gujarat chief minister instead of following the Advani line? In his more reflective moments, the eternal political yatri must surely ask himself that question.

Post-script: Most pundits have been writing political obituaries of Advani. The fact is, similar epitaphs were written of Vajpayee in the early 90s after the rise of Advani. And yet, in 1996, coalition compulsions made the ‘inclusive’ Vajpayee the BJP’s prime ministerial choice. What if the NDA doesn’t get the 272-plus, a Modi candidacy promises? Will there be another final twist in the Advani saga?
Rajdeep Sardesai is editor-in-chief, IBN 18 network

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

CRIMINAL CHARGES AGAINST MODI (SUMMARY) - Filed by Citizens for Justice and Peace, Mumbai

DOCUMENTATION:





Extract from written legal submissions submitted to 11th Metro Court Judge BJ Ganatra on dt.18.9.2013

CRIMINAL CHARGES AGAINST MODI (SUMMARY)

Introduction:-

The Zakia Jafri (supported by Citizens for Justice & Peace) Criminal Complaint against Narendra Modi and 59 Others was ordered to be investigated by the Supreme Court. Zakia Jafri & CJP have been attempting to get serious criminal charges registered and investigated since 8.6.2006.  The Special Investigation team (SIT) originally asked to further investigate None Major Trials was assigned the task (27.4.2009). An Amicus Curiae was also appointed to assist the Court. The SIT in its reports from 2010 arrived at the conclusion that while several of the allegations were found to be correct , there was not sufficient material to prosecute the accused.

In stark contrast, the Amicus Curiae senior advocate Raju Ramachandran looking at the same evidence collected by the SIT, came to a contrary conclusion, stating clearly that there was evidence enough to prosecute Narendra Modi. Faced with this dilemma of two contrary assessments, the Supreme Court remanded the matter to a lower Court directing SIT to file its Final Report there. The SC specifically directed that if the SIT filed a closure report, the Complainants were fully within their legal rights to file a Protest petition and access all Investigation papers/documents. (This is a right under Indian law but was specifically outlined by the Supreme Court in its final judgement dated 12.9.2011).
Predictably, the SIT filed a closure report on 8.2.2012 and remained adamant against making Investigation papers available to the Complainants in contempt o the Supreme Court order. The Magistrate granted the Complainant her right to the Investigation Papers on 10.4.2012 but it took Zakia Jafri & CJP another year to access all the Investigation reports of the SIT submitted to the Supreme Court. The SC directed this on 7.2.2013 after which the Protest Petition was filed on 15.4.2013. From June 24-August 29, 2013 rigorous arguments in support of the Zakia Jafri Protest Petition were made before Judge Ganatra, 11th Metropolitan Magistrate, Ahmedabad. The final day of arguments on behalf of the Complainant will be on 18.9.2013. Thereafter the Judgement of the Magistrate will be awaited.
Narendra Modi faces Fifteen Serious Charges of :-
Ø  1.   Willfully Ignoring Messages from State Intelligence about the Violent Repercussions of the RSS-VHP called ‘Mahayajna’ before the tragic Godhra incident on 27.2.2002 and deliberately not initiating precautionary measures that are imperative under Standard Operational Procedure; messages from 7.2.2002 to 25.2.2002, including specific ones that stated that batches of 2,800 and 1,900 kar sevaks had left for Faizabad-Ayodhya and had been behaving provocatively and aggressively against minorities on the way. As cabinet minister for home and chief minister, he is directly responsible MOS Home Gordhan Zadaphiya is a constant Co-Conspirator.
  
Ø  2.   Deliberately concealing knowledge of the provocative, anti-Muslim sloganeering by kar sevaks at the Godhra station when the Sabarmati Express reached five hours late on 27.2.2002, which information had been sent to him directly by DM/Collector Jayanti Ravi and willfully failing to take stern action and allowing violent incidents to escalate after the train left Godhra by about 1.15 p.m. especially at Vadodara station where a Muslim was attacked and killed and at Anand where the train stopped hereafter ensuring that the state allowed a hate-filled and threatening atmosphere against Muslims build right up to Ahmedabad where the train finally reached around 4 p.m. and where bloodthirsty slogans were being shouted. FIRs in 19 brutal incidents against Muslims are recorded on 27.2.2002 in Ahmedabad itself. Curfew was not imposed despite these incidents resulting in deaths breaking out.

Ø  3.   Conspiring with the Vishwa Hindu Parishad to plot and allow reprisal killings all over Gujarat. The first phone call that Modi makes after DM Ravi’s fax reaches him is, not to appeal for peace and calm, but phone secretary VHP, Gujarat, Dr Jaideep Patel and direct him to Godhra. The Conspiracy between Modi and the VHP is hatched and unfurled to cynically ensure state-wide reprisal killings. Phone call records show these phone calls between PA to Modi AP Patel and Jaideep Patel immediately after the chief minister receives news of the Godhra tragedy. Phone call records made available by Rahul Sharma (IPS, Gujarat) also show that Powerful Accused were in touch with the chief minister’s office (CMO) and the landline numbers of the chief minister.

Ø  4.   Brazenly supporting the Bandh call called by the VHP and allowing the streets and public spaces of Gujarat to be used for mass attacks and violence. By 12 noon on 27.2.2002, state intelligence and the police were aware of the Bandh call ; the bandh was uses by the police machinery to clear the streets of ordinary citizens so that aggressive mobs could target minority populations and their establishments.

Ø  5.   Cynically, and illegally allowed Post Mortems Illegally out in the Open at the Railway Yard, Godhra where the burnt and mutilated corpses were laid in full view of an aggressive and irate crowd of RSS and VHP men and women, who were gathered there in violation of Curfew Orders @ Godhra. Deliberately allowing photographs of the burnt corpses to be taken and widely circulated by the RSS-VHP and media in general, despite it being prevented under law;

Ø  6.   Personally instigating individual RSS-VHP men and women at the railway yard at Godhra assuring them that enough time will be allowed by the Modi-led government and administration to extract a revenge for Godhra.

Ø  7.   Directing that the unidentified bodies of Godhra train victims should be handed over to Jaideep Patel, a non-governmental person, that too belonging to a supremacist and communal VHP to be brought to Ahmedabad where aggressive funeral processions in full public view were allowed. Modi directed this at a meeting at the Collectorate in the evening of 27.2.2002 before he returned to Gandhinagar. Jaideep Patel was allowed to be present at an official meeting at the Collectorate. Jaideep Patel is a co-conspirator and also facing trial for mass crimes in the ongoing Naroda Gaam case. Modi is specifically guilty of allowing the escalation of violence from Godhra to other parts of Gujarat and taking decisions contrary to law.

Ø  8.   Specifically instructing his top policemen and administrators not to act evenhandedly in the days to follow and “allow Hindus to vent their anger.” Two senior bureaucrats present at the meeting have stated that cabinet ministers were present at a meeting that went on well past midnight. Haren Pandya, a minister in Modi’s cabinet in 2002 had given evidence of this to the Concerned Citizen’s Tribunal headed by Justice Krishna Iyer and PB Sawant in 2002 itself. Later in 2009 a serving officer from the state intelligence, Sanjiv Bhatt also gave the same evidence before the SIT and the Supreme Court.

Ø  9.   Preventing the Imposition of Curfew. Curfew was deliberately not imposed at Ahmedabad while over 3,000 RSS workers were allowed to gather at the Sola Civil Hospital where Jaideep Patel arrived with the bodies of the Godhra victims at about 4 a.m. The crowd was aggressive and violent as proved from the police control room records. No steps were taken to disperse the crowd that attacked the hospital staff and doctors, a High Court judge, Violent funeral processions were allowed to wind through the streets of Ahmedabad for several hours at two locations; worst Acharya Giriraj Kishore was given police escort to come and further provoke the aggressive mob; the cremations took place only in the evening and attacks on Naroda Patiya, Naroda Gaam and Gulberg Society where over 200 persons were massacred (and rapes allowed) in broad daylight on the same day, 28.2.2002, while violent and aggressive funeral processions were willfully allowed by Modi and the police and administration.

Ø  10.   Making a pretence of verbally calling in the Army on the late evening of 28.2.2002 but not actually allowing its deployment in Ahmedabad, Godhra and Bhavnagar and Varodara until 2.3.2002 and 3.3.2002. Worse badly affected districts like Mehsana, Panchmahals, Dahod, Anand, Kheda were not given ant Army or Paramilitary at all.

Ø  11.   Fourteen out of Gujarat’s 25 districts were allowed to burn as Ministers were specifically deployed by Modi to interfere with Police functioning and sit in the State Control Room and Ahmedabad City Control Room; in Eleven Districts where Violence was controlled, the Police Officers in Charge were given Punitive Transfers to send a Political Message. Modi heads the Home department that bends the Police Bureaucracy and Police to his Will.

Ø  12.   Modi allowed violence to continue unabated until early May 2002 when KPS Gill was sent by PM Vajpayee to the state; the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), April and July 2002 and Central Election Commission (CEC) were misled about the spread and intensity of violence. This was willful subversion of the justice system.

Ø  13.   Partisan prosecutors belonging to the RSS-VHP were appointed to ensure that cases were killed in their infancy; bail was easily granted to powerful accused until the Supreme Court stepped in, in 2003 and 2004. Two trials, the Best Bakery trial and the Bilkees Bano cases were transferred out of the state.

Ø  14.   Hate Speech was indulged in by Modi himself, on 27.2.2002 and right until the infamous Becharaji speech made top set off his election campaign on 9.9.2002 and also cynically permitted by the Home Department under him to spread poison and incite violence against Muslims and Christians. The State Intelligence under ADGP-Int RB Sreekumar had specifically recommended prosecution of the VHP for a series of incendiary pamphlets but this was ignored. SP Bhavnagar, Rahul Sharma too had recommended the prosecution of Sandesh, the Gujarati mainstream newspaper for publishing false and provocative photographs and reports. Both the NHRC and Editor’s Guild had also strongly recommended prosecution of those guilty of hate speech. Modi had, instead sent congratulatory letters to those newspapers who had spread lies and venom. RB Sreekumar, Rahul Sharma and Sanjiv Bhatt are among the officers persecuted by the Gujarat government under Modi (home minister).

Ø  15.   Modi is guilty of ordering the Destruction of Crucial documents including Wireless Intercepted Messages, Vehicle logs, Police Control Room records and others on 30.3.2008, four days after the Supreme Court appoints the Special Investigation Team (SIT) on 26.3.2008. He has headed the Home ministry portfolio since that date.


_________________________________________________________________________
Nirant, Juhu Tara Road, Juhu, Mumbai – 400 049. Ph: 2660 2288 email: cjpindia@gmail.com,  teesteesta@gmail.com

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Divide and campaign By Mihir S Sharma - Business Standard

http://www.business-standard.com/article/opinion/mihir-s-sharma-divide-and-campaign-113091301161_1.html

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Mihir S Sharma: Divide and campaign

More than any other party, the BJP can figure out exactly what is likely to infuriate and mobilise their core voter


Mihir S Sharma











Related News
At some point, you have to just lose yourself in admiration for the strategists of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). More than any other party, and definitely far more easily than the aristocratic, out-of-touch planners for the Congress, they can figure out exactly what is likely to infuriate and mobilise their core voter.


Take, for example, the wonderful words "love jihad". This is the idea, first developed in the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh's southern "laboratory" of Mangalore, that young Muslim men gather in packs, wear colourful shirts and pass around the hair gel, and then dash off on snazzy motorbikes, humming Salman Khan songs, to woo young Hindu or Christian women in order to convert them to Islam. Karnataka's BJP government informed people that "this appears to be a serious issue" - unlike, say, illegal mining - and put a special detachment of the Crime Investigation Department on the case.

Now, of all the forms of jihad the Right would like us to worry about, this might seem the most harmless. Unless, of course, you believe the Honour of a Community is Borne By its Girls and stuff like that. Which, it turns out, the Sangh Parivar imagines large numbers of prospective voters do, and so it has happily tried to replicate its southern experiment elsewhere. More than one person has told me that local ABVP and BJP activists in Delhi monitor the notices of upcoming inter-religious marriages that are required to be accessible under the Special Marriage Act; if the girl's name sounds Hindu to them, they go and complain to, or otherwise harass, her family.

It turns out, to the surprise of absolutely nobody, Jat-dominated Western Uttar Pradesh is the most fertile ground for this. According to the Vishwa Hindu Parishad's (VHP's) Ashok Singhal, the khap mahapanchayat that was held in Muzaffarnagar on September 7, after which almost 40 people have been killed in religious violence, was a "Bahu beti bachao mahapanchayat" - a grand assembly to save the girls of the house. (Though many would say, if the girls of the house need saving, it's from the khap.)

One of those who addressed the mahapanchayat was BJP MLA Sangeet Som - the youngest man in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly. The Uttar Pradesh police claim that Som is one of those who uploaded a video that went viral that supposedly showed Muslims murdering Hindus in Muzaffarnagar. Actually, the video was from somewhere in AfPak, with Muslims murdering other Muslims. Two things are worth noting immediately: first, it is impossible to underestimate the intelligence of the average Indian internet user; and, second, can we stop wailing that our politicians are too old? Judging by Som, having younger politicians would not help at all.

And what followed the mahapanchayat, a similar meeting after Friday prayers, and various mislabelled viral videos and altered photos of newspaper headlines? The VHP's Singhal told The Hindu: "What has happened after that is the reaction on the lines of post-Godhra in Gujarat. Hindus did not sit back."

Singhal's invocation of the most glorious moment in the recent history of Hindu nationalism is, perhaps, not a coincidence. Youth Icon Sangeet Som paused in his headlong flight from arrest to call Hindustan Times and tell them that he would arrange for a Narendra Modi rally in Muzaffarnagar at the earliest opportunity. Nothing can calm the flames of religious violence like Narendra Modi speech, and a few well-chosen dead puppy metaphors. Other politicians hand out free food at rallies; Narendra Modi charges Rs 5, but hands Muslims "back presents" of burqas and skullcaps, and suggests they put them on.

A Delhi-bound Modi hasn't talked about Muzaffarnagar yet - which is amazing in a way, since he is willing to talk about all sorts of things he doesn't quite understand, like the rupee or relations with Bangladesh. Perhaps he's just preoccupied with his coronation. But while I wouldn't for a moment want to underplay the culpability of the Samajwadi Party, whose rule of Uttar Pradesh has always been notable for its tolerance of thuggishness and violence, it is difficult not to note that, coincident with Modi's rise in the BJP, there's been a startling outbreak of religious violence across north India, from Jammu to Uttar Pradesh to Bihar.

As I said, the BJP's planners are brilliant, brilliant men. Without a sharply increased number of seats in UP, and a good performance in Bihar independent of former partner, the Janata Dal (United), Modi doesn't stand much of a chance in 2014. And they know just how to make that happen. If, in the process, the Congress' ally and Jat leader Ajit Singh finds himself in a tough position, so much the better.

After all, what's the downside of religious polarisation for a Modi-led BJP? As the minuscule fallout of the letter written by Gujarat's former head policeman and current prisoner D G Vanzara shows, Modi's mantle of blood and smoke doesn't bother those who've made up their mind to vote for him. More darkly amusing, however, are the excuses made by those who feel slightly guilty about Modi-sympathy. Such as the claim that poor Modi is basically just a misunderstood development visionary. Or that the Congress did 1984, so what's the fuss? (Sorry, but I'll only think that's relevant when I see a spate of attacks on Sikhs by Congressmen across north India in 2013.)

Given cover by these excuses from those who know better, the smart men of the BJP will proceed with their master plan. And after the BJP comes to power, I'm sure the economy will revive instantly - because who doesn't want to invest in a country throbbing with the potential for internecine violence? Blood is good for business.

<mihir.sharma@bsmail.in>
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Saturday, September 14, 2013

The Mystery of Kawwal: Were Muzaffarnagar riots based on distortion of facts? - NDTV

http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/the-mystery-of-kawwal-were-muzaffarnagar-riots-based-on-distortion-of-facts-418666?pfrom=home-topstories

Latest News

The Mystery of Kawwal: Were Muzaffarnagar riots based on distortion of facts?

Written by Sreenivasan Jain (with inputs from Niha Masih and Tanima Biswas) | Updated: September 14, 2013 18:00 IST

In the popular narrative, the genesis of Muzaffarnagar riots sets it up in this way: on August 27, two Jat boys, Sachin and his cousin Gaurav, from Malikpura village killed Shahnawaz, a Muslim from the nearby village of Kawwal because was harassing their sister.

In retaliation, a Muslim mob killed the boys. The administration acted in a partisan manner, which set off a chain of violence and retaliation.

The deaths of all three are a verified fact, as are some serious doubts over the police response.

But the reasons ascribed to justify the killing of Shahnawaz (and by default the riots that followed) -- the supposed protection of the honour of Jat women -- are not borne out by the facts. (Muzaffarnagar clashes: Latest developments)

Sachin's sister Ritu says she has never been to Kawwal nor does she know Shahnawaz. She spoke of harassment by the Muslim youth of Kawwal in a general sense; "we do not like going there on our own," she said.

Shahnawaz's father, Salim says Gaurav and Shahnawaz clashed when their motorcycles collided in the village lanes.

In the police records at Jamsath thana, under which Kawwal and Malikpura fall, there is no mention of the harassment of women.

Two separate FIRs were registered. According to the FIR for Sachin and Gaurav's death, registered by Gaurav's father, Ravinder Kumar, he says his son had a bike accident with someone called Mujassim, which led to the altercation. The other accused, apart from Mujassim, are Mujibulla, Furqan, Jehangir, Afzal, Nadeem and Kalua.

The FIR for Shahnawaz's death names Gaurav, Sachin, Prahlad, Vishan, Tendu, Devendra, Yogender and Jitendra. It says all the accused came to Kawwal, forcibly entered Shahnawaz's house and took him out. They were armed with knives and swords. They injured him and left him half-dead. He died later on the way to the hospital.

The other grievance held by the Jats is that the police did nothing to arrest those that killed Sachin and Gaurav, and instead named their fathers in the FIR. The government only two days ago dropped the names of the fathers from the FIR. As for the arrests, the police say they have only picked up one boy, Furqan, but are still verifying the names of the rest to avoid anyone being falsely implicated.

For that matter, the police have not arrested any of the Jat boys named in the FIR for the killing of Shahnawaz.

So how did a possible clash between a group of hotheads from neighbouring villages turn into an alleged assault on the honour of Hindu women? Especially in the Jat heartland, where community identity takes precedence over religious identity?

BJP MLA Suresh Rana, from Shamli adjacent to Muzaffarnagar, claims the harassment of women is what he had heard when he visited Malikpura.

NDTV had reported earlier that Hindutva groups like the VHP have made what they call 'Love Jihad' (the alleged abduction or harassment of Hindu women by Muslim youth) part of their propaganda. The district president of the VHP told us that the Kawwal incident is very much in keeping with this trend, though he had no empirical evidence to prove it.

A fake YouTube video circulated by BJP MLA from nearby Meerut, Sangeet Som, also played on similar themes. It shows two boys being beaten to death by a mob, indicating that they are Sachin and Gaurav.

The video was, in fact, shot in Sialkot in Pakistan, and is two years old. Som has been booked by the police for inciting hatred amongst communities.

A massive Mahapanchayat called by Jats on September 7 demanding justice for the Kawwal incident was labelled a 'bahu bachao, beti bachao' sammelan (Save our wives and daughters meeting). As the meeting dispersed, violent clashes broke out, a cycle of retaliation which continues to this day.

It is perhaps a sobering thought that the basis of this anger rested on distortion of facts.
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Story first published:
September 14, 2013 16:39 IST
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Thursday, September 12, 2013

Let Muslims again rule India (‘Akhand Bharat’) - Hem Raj Jain -

Let Muslims again rule India (‘Akhand Bharat’)

 
 
Hem Raj Jain
11:25 AM (7 hours ago)

to me, girls.school, globalwireless., gm, mail-noreply, gnsaibaba, goldstarele, goodluckplasti., gopalvhprkp, goyal_dr2000, gpolya, graceful.ali, grambabu, gs.sdpi
To
The Editor

Sub:- Killing of Hindus & Muslims in Muzaffarnagar riots should constrain Muslims to launch their political party

Ref:- (i)- Congress in 1984 at Delhi, BJP in 2002 at Gujarat, SP in 2013 at U.P. proved that Hindus are simply unfit to rule India.

(ii)- UP Muslims should take lead in reviving spirit of Indian Muslims to once again rule undivided India with legacy of Akbar the Great.

(iii)- Like Mayawati in UP, Muslims can also come to power with ~ equal % age of their support base in entire India.

(iv)- Solution of Kashmir problem & of infiltrators in N-E is bound to usher in unified India (Akhand Bharat)

(v)- ‘Akhand Bharat’ will have 2:1 Hindu Muslim ratio (much beneficial to Indian Muslims) instead of present 5.5:1 ratio

(vi)- Muslims should also push aggressively the Islamic Banking in India to garner support of majority of Hindus.

(vii)- Indian Muslims should also take lead for solving globally hugely important (also for India) gory Arab-spring problem.

Dear Sir / Madam

Hindus or Muslims etc are not the victims of communal / caste riots, but what is relevant & important is the citizens of the country who are the victims in any riot.  The history of incessant communal riots / genocides in India (with Congress in 1984 in power at Delhi, with BJP in 2002 in power at Gujarat, with SP in 2013 in power at U.P. (Muzaffarnagar, where 48 persons have already been killed and many more injured and displaced) to name only the few, have proved irrefutably that Hindus are simply incapable of ruling India (Hindu politicians meekly allowed partition also where India lost one third of its territory along with horrible killings & migration of millions of people) .

Hence it is time Indian Muslim come forward to again rule (through their political party) not only present day India but even undivided India (‘Akhand Bharat’ with Pakistan & Bangladesh in it) as given below:-

(1)- First and foremost this Muslim Political Party (MPP, with any suitable name) should rest assured that Hindus or Muslims in India historically have no problem with Muslim or Hindu rulers (in present case political party) as long as ruler rules with justice and (to use present democratic vocabulary)  with secular credentials like famous in this regard, Akbar the Great.

(2)-  Secondly like Mayawati in UP, Muslims can also (with proper alliances & social engineering) come to power with ~ equal % age of their support base in all the States of India. If MPP is launched immediately then they can easily be the king maker in all the States and parliamentary elections of 2013 & 2014 to start with. Moreover with passage of little time MPP can come in power through majority seats in number of States and also at centre.

(3)- For this spectacular political miracle to happen, Indian Muslims will have to do four things:-

(i)- MPP should demand Solution of Kashmir problem (by retrieving POK, may be even military) and of the problem of rehabilitation of millions Kashmiri Pundits & POK refugee. This will constrain Pakistan to merge with Indian Federation. MPP should also demand (after identifying and tracking them) the expulsion of millions of infiltrators in N-E which is bound to usher in the merger of Bangladesh in Indian Federation.

(ii)-  In India where thousands of farmers have been committing suicide and where two third of pauperized India (~ 810 millions) are so poor that they can’t afford even food without immense government help (through Food Security Program), MPP should push aggressively for Islamic Banking in India to garner support of majority of farmers and small entrepreneurs from Hindus, who will get interest free loan under Islamic Banking for boosting their economic condition.

(iii)- MPP should demand that in view of collapse of present ‘Veto Power Global Order at UN’, there should be new global order at UN with voting rights to all UN members as per formula based on contribution of men (including martial for Peace Keeping Force & civilians as election conducting personnel), material (m/c, equipments, armaments etc) and money (mainly based on GDP of the member countries) to UN. This will not only deprive China (India’s arch military rival since 1962) the veto power at UN but will also solve the problem of gory Arab-spring too in Muslim NAME & Neighboring countries who are very important due to huge petroleum imports and remittance to India from this region. In this regard MPP should also demand that:-

 (A)- Optional protocol OP – 1 of ICCPR should be replaced with mandatory protocol MP – 1 so that UN can intervene (even militarily through Peace Keeping Force) in case of serious violations of human rights in any erring member country of UN.
(B)- Elections in NAME etc should be under Secular Constitution (chosen out of 4 – 5 secular democratic models) offered by UN Election Commission (UNEC), which will ensure that fundamentalist (including terrorist) forces do not gain ascendancy in these Muslim democratic countries.
(C)- ‘International Political Parties’ (IPP) should be there which will be regulated by UNEC. This will give direct influence of countries of established democracies through membership in IPP in the newly democracy acquiring Muslim countries also.

(iv)- In order to achieve economic miracle and harmony in India, MPP should demand genuine federalism in India where only martial subjects would be with Union and all civilian subjects (including natural sources) shall be with States.

(4)- There will be one very great advantage to Indian Muslims in Unified India because then ‘Akhand Bharat’ will have 2:1 Hindu Muslim ratio (much beneficial to Indian Muslims) instead of present 5.5:1 ratio in present partitioned India. Therefore in ‘Akhand Bharat’ there will be less chances of communal riots (without balance heavily tilted against Muslims as is the case in present partitioned India of 5.5:1 Hindu Muslim ratio).

(5)- Indian Muslims have every thing to gain and nothing to loose by launching MPP, hence Indian Muslims should not listen to Muslim leaders in existing political parties of India / States (including in U.P. where Muslim leaders from ruling and opposition parties will shed crocodile tears for the victims of Muzaffarnagar riots and will especially appeal to Muslims to give them another chance for politically patronizing Muslims in U.P.).  

(6)- Instead Indian Muslims should launch their own political party, the MPP immediately. Of-course for the launch of MPP the initiative should come from presently angered Muslims of U.P. (which will have tremendous impact in view of coming Parliamentary elections as presence of MPP in U.P. will be decisive in shaping the destiny of ruling party / alliance at the centre).

Yours truly 
 Hem Raj Jain 
A-3, Mahavirdham, Shri Mahavirji - 32220,  District Karauli, Rajasthan 
Presently at: S-72, Maya Indraprastha, J.P. Nagar VI th, Bengaluru – 560078, India.  

Communalism gains new ground in rural India - Gyan Varma - MINT with Wall Street Journal

http://www.livemint.com/Politics/Lmv1m7PQ9zb9YQlWidPwzO/Communalism-gains-new-ground-in-rural-India.html?ref=dd



Communalism gains new ground in rural India

Incidence of violence grows in scale as rural areas turn into a battleground for communal politics
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First Published: Thu, Sep 12 2013. 07 55 AM IST
Security forces chase rioters, unseen, during a curfew in Muzaffarnagar on Monday. Photo: AP
Security forces chase rioters, unseen, during a curfew in Muzaffarnagar on Monday. Photo: AP
Updated: Thu, Sep 12 2013. 12 46 PM IST

For 29-year-old Kherunisa Qureshi, who lost her husband and two other family members in the Hindu-Muslim riots raging in Muzaffarnagar and its vicinity, returning to her village is no longer an option.

A resident of Shamli district, adjacent to Muzaffarnagar, she managed to escape with her two daughters, aged 5 and 10, and with bullet and stab wounds, took refuge at the local government hospital. She doesn’t want to return home because she fears being attacked once again after security forces deployed in her village are withdrawn.

Qureshi’s predicament captures the new battleground of communal politics: rural India. It is worrying because, in the past, communal violence tended to be concentrated in urban areas. This time, the spectre of Hindu-Muslim violence is also threatening to alter the political landscape in western Uttar Pradesh, a region that last seen riots of such scale, again mostly in urban areas, in the 1980s.

Not only is it causing a cleavage between rural communities, it is, in the run-up to the next general election, likely to further polarize the electorally crucial states of UP and Bihar, both of which have been witness to several low-intensity episodes of communal violence over the last two years. Such violence has grown in scale in recent months.

It is yet unclear whether and how it will alter the electoral arithmetic in UP, which at present is perceived to be a largely four-cornered contest between the state’s ruling Samajwadi Party, Congress, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). UP sends 80 members to the Lok Sabha, the largest contingent from any single state.

“It is true that such riots are now happening in more rural areas. People in villages are more close knit and everyone knows each other. However, one needs to go deeper to find out why the communal forces are targeting villages,” said Badri Narayan, a professor at the G.B. Pant Social Science Institute, University of Allahabad.

The rural phenomenon

NH 58, a normally busy highway to Muzaffarnagar, an industrial town in western Uttar Pradesh, is almost deserted. There are check posts at regular intervals manned by the army and paramilitary forces. In the city, no shops and business establishments are open because of curfew.

Jats make up around 30% of the population of western Uttar Pradesh, Muslims some 40%, Dalits 10% and Brahmins and Rajputs together the remaining 20%, said Vishesh Gupta, an associate professor and head of the department of sociology at Mahatma Jyotiba Phule Rohilkhand University in Bareilly.

Gupta attributes the spread of violence to rural areas to the involvement of the “new generation” and the growing distance between communities in the hinterland.

“Riots have happened in villages because of the involvement of new generation.
The dialogue and harmony between communities which was present in the earlier times have gone down and the new generation is getting into conflicts with each other,” Gupta said.

According to the city administration, 38 people have died in the violence so far. Ambulances speeding by with their sirens wailing are evidence that the violence in the rural areas and the city hasn’t ended yet.

“The situation in both city and rural areas has improved but it is still tense. We are keeping a close watch and curfew was relaxed twice today so that people could buy essential commodities,” said Arun Kumar, the additional director general of Uttar Pradesh who is in-charge of the law and order situation in the state. “I have served in Muzaffarnagar as superintendent of police in 1995 but never heard of any violence in rural areas. This is a new phenomenon.”

A surgeon at the Muzaffarnagar civil hospital, who did not wish to be identified, said violence had spread to nearby villages in districts like Baghpat and Shamli.

“Violence in villages is not known. This is the first time. We have received 68 injured so far and some have been referred to government hospital in Meerut equipped with better medical facilities,” the surgeon said. “Most of the people coming to the hospital have either have bullet wounds or wounds made by sharp-edged weapons.”

As a consequence of the violent attacks, daily wage labourers, both Hindu and Muslim, have fled. Business associations in Muzaffarnagar are concerned that they may never return.

“Most of the labourers are Hindus or Muslims. There was never any differentiation on the basis of religion,” said Pankaj Aggarwal, chairman of the local paper mills association.

Electoral politics

Most residents are blaming political parties and the state administration for allowing the violence to escalate to such a scale.

“This is a very unfortunate incident which looks like it was sponsored by the ruling Samajwadi Party and Bharatiya Janata Party. BJP can do well in the Lok Sabha election only by polarizing the people. The SP government wants to appease the people of a particular community (Muslims) for vote-bank politics,” said Dinesh Kumar, a retired principal of SD Degree College, the biggest in Muzaffarnagar.

Mulayam Singh wants to be Prime Minister and believes this to be shortest way to success,” said Dinesh Kumar, referring to the president of the Samajwadi Party.

The riots that started on 7 September and went on unchecked for nearly three days have brought back memories of the Hindu-Muslim clashes that erupted in the summer of 1987 in Meerut. Around 350 people died in those clashes, according to a report by the People’s Union of Civil Liberties (PUCL).

Some see a pattern underlying the revival in communal violence. The genesis, say analysts, was the overt attempts by both the Congress and the SP to woo the crucial Muslim vote in the state. Sensing a vacuum, fringe Muslim and Hindu groups sought to stoke communal sentiments, Mint reported on 4 December, 2012.

This trend in polarization got a fillip after the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) attempted to revive the demand for building a temple at the disputed site where the Babri Masjid stood before it was demolished in 1992, Mint reported on 25 August. Hindu nationalists say the site is Ram Janmabhoomi—the birthplace of the warrior-god Ram.

This calibrated polarization is now giving way to large-scale communal clashes.

“The poisoning (of relations) between the two communities that took place during the Ram Janambhoomi agitation is the real cause of this violence. What was the need for VHP leader Ashok Singhal to meet Mulayam Singh Yadav,” said Zahoor Siddiqui, a retired historian from Delhi University who now lives in Bhagpat district, which has also seen a face-off between Hindus and Mulsims.

“The communal clashes in the rural areas are significant because they had never happened in the past. Riots are known to take place in cities and not villages. People have changed,” said Siddiqui, who runs a school for underprivileged children.

Residents of the Muzaffarnagar say the violence is likely to benefit both the ruling Samajwadi Party and the BJP and limit the influence of the Congress party in the entire western Uttar Pradesh region.

The violence erupted after a girl belonging to the dominant Jat community was subjected to street harassment by some young Muslims in Kawal village. The incident led to clashes between Jats and Muslims in the village in which three people died.

“I believe it was premeditated. The SP and BJP have strategically used people to polarise the situation in their favour. We expect more such incidents before the elections because politicians of both the parties will make use of these incidents for election campaigning,” said Ram Kumar Gautam, retired biology teacher in Shri Arvind Inter College.

Anuja contributed to the story
.
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Wednesday, September 11, 2013

SP faces anger within: Give us security, not laptops - Faisal Fareed - The Indian Express

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/sp-faces-anger-within-give-us-security-not-laptops/1167880/0

The Indian Express


SP faces anger within: Give us security, not laptops

Faisal Fareed : Agra, Wed Sep 11 2013, 22:44 hrs


Angry Muslim leaders of the Samajwadi Party Wednesday demanded their government in Uttar Pradesh provide security for their community in the state instead of freebies such as laptops and unemployment allowances while the Muslim face of the party stayed away from its national executive.
They also demanded action against state police chief Devraj Nagar for the communal riots in Muzaffarnagar. Although the opening day of the national executive meeting had taken up the party's political and economic resolution for discussion, the Muslim members chose to focus on Muzaffarnagar.

"Don't give us laptops, unemployment allowance etc. Give us security. All our good deeds have been washed away by these riots," said Abu Asim Azmi, president of the Maharashtra unit of the party, who led the charge against the SP leadership.

Members loudly applauded Azmi as he urged the party to go back to what he said was its Muslim-friendly image when Mulayam Singh Yadav was chief minister.

"We want the old SP where Muslims were safe, we need to change our strategy," Azmi said in the presence of Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav. Azmi was joined by cabinet minister Ahmed Hasan, among others, who demanded action against those responsible for the violence in Muzaffarnagar.

"Why was the DGP spared when action has been taken against district level officials? He too is equally responsible since he was present there on September 7. The incident has maligned our image," Azmi added. His demand was immediately backed by minister of state for panchayati raj Kamal Akhter and other members.

The outburst by the SP's Muslim leaders came as cabinet minister Azam Khan, who is also the party's national general secretary and is considered the SP's Muslim face, skipped the national executive meeting.

While Khan refused to give reasons for his absence when reached by The Indian Express, his staff said he had a fever.

Over the weekend, Khan had strongly criticised the local administration and the Akhilesh government for the trouble in Muzaffarnagar. The SP's national general secretary Ramgopal Yadav sought to downplay Khan's absence saying it was nothing serious. "There are 106 members and only 80 are present. Some people fail to attend as they are busy elsewhere. It should not be taken seriously," he said. "Don't worry, he is not angry with us."

Khan has been avoiding official events and has not attended eight cabinet meetings since June.
Party sources said the SP's Muslim leaders were especially upset over Muzaffarnagar as there were specific examples to show delay, inaction and failure at several levels of the administration right up to the top leading to the loss of innocent lives in the riots.

Sensing the mood, Mulayam chose to focus on Muzaffarnagar in his speech at the meeting and blamed the BJP and its affiliate organizations for stoking violence. "A political party and its affiliate organizations made efforts to instigate violence in Muzaffarnagar. A BJP MLA even circulated a fake video on social networking sites," he said.

"Such incidents will be repeated if we are not alert. Some people who have lost the people's mandate are seeking political mileage from the incident. We will not let it happen at any cost even if we have to pay any price," Mulayam said.

Ramgopal Yadav later told reporters that the party is committed to restoring peace in Muzaffarnagar. "We have instructed our partymen to visit the area. Bhaichara committees will be formed in every village to heal the wounds of hatred. We controlled the violence within two days and the Army was called immediately," he said. He also claimed that law enforcement in UP is better than in Delhi, Bihar and other states.
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QUESTIONS IN PUBLIC ARENA

 
1. Is Abu Asim Azmi becoming the new Muslim voice in Samajwadi Party's national executive?
2. Why SP risked Muslim votes to go soft with BJP. Is there SP plans a future NDA with BJP support?
 
3. Can Ram Gopal Yadav's hollow promise of peace and rehabilitation of rioted-affected Muslim win back the confidence of entire Muslim community of Uttar Pradesh to forgive and forget the acts of omission and commission of Mulayam Singh Yadav and Akhilesh Singh Yadav?
4. Is Congress leadership in UP capable of deserving Muslim votes while High Command is busy lining its own pockets and can spare only fake promises for the Muslims as in the past, without ever intending to deliver?
Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai