Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Bangladeshi Hindus -Update

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=69190

They have not forgotten the night before the eighth parliamentary election in 2001 which brought them some horrible experiences. The musclemen of former BNP lawmaker Shahjahan Omar, a graft accused, swooped on them with lethal weapons, trained guns on the men, assaulted the women and guarded their houses so that they couldn't go to poll centres.

The Hindus said those who dared to start for the polling centres were blocked on the way and beaten up irrespective of gender.

Anil, who made it to the polling centre, was stripped off his clothes in a public gathering during a victory meeting of BNP the next day, they added.

Shahjahan was so cruel to the community that even the poor among them had to pay his musclemen toll during wedding of their daughters to save them from being snatched from the bridal stage.

Most of those musclemen prevail. And some of those whisper to the ears of the helpless Hindus that it's not certain who would come to power and the army won't save them throughout the year.

"We will know who of you have voted for Boat and who for Sheaf of Paddy," said a whisper in the ears of the Hindu community.

When approached, none of the Hindus, however, dared to talk about the issue yesterday evening despite repeated attempts.

Finally, a BNP activist, who is also a victim of Shahjahan Omar's gang, after seeing the ID card helped this correspondent win the trust of a Hindu family.

"We cannot say whether we can vote as everything changes at the night before polls," said a middle-aged member of the family.

"We can say it for sure after the night tomorrow and once we safely reach the polling centre," added the mid-aged farmer. He stressed the necessity of special security on their way to and from the polling booths.

Requesting not to publish his name he continued, "If my name is mentioned, that might cost either my life or my honour or both."

Christianisation of Nepal - Update

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Row_in_Nepal_over_sacking_of_Indian_priests_at_Pashupatinath/articleshow/3912870.cms


Prachanda takes the first steps towards the Christianisation of Nepal.


""The people have become suspicious about their intention after the Maoists' attack on the age old tradition," she said yesterday.

The Maoist government has sacked three South Indian priests including chief Priest Mahabaleshwor Bhatta and appointed Bishnu Dahal as head of the temple.

There has been South Indian Priests since the time of Malla Kings in 1747 AD."

Ancient Hindu Prayer To Open Oregon House Of Representatives

http://www.officialwire.com/main.php?action=posted_news&rid=83269&catid=854

Thanksfully there is no Brinda Karat in the USA to cry hoarse about oppression of minorities.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

What happened to cross border trade - Update

Srinagar: The absence of telecom and banking facilities is hitting the recently-started cross-border trade in Jammu & Kashmir. Fruit growers and traders in the Valley have decided to stop sending their consignments to Muzaffarabad in PoK.“We don’t know what happened to the 7,000 fruit boxes we sent to Muzaffarabad.

They were worth Rs 35 lakh,” says Haji Farooq Ahmed Malik, president, Kashmir Valley Fruit Buyer's Association. The cross-LoC trade began on October 21 on the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad and Poonch-Rawalkote routes after 60 years.


Question - What normally happens to apples?

Answer - Possibly, the Pakis ate them.


Kandhamal Update

http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/174C4CB0FFFFF3406525752F00558674?OpenDocument

in the face of the John Dayals and Brinda Karats who were shreiking about Hindu terrorism and RSS Fascism.

Excellent interview presenting the Hindu POV

http://www.zeenews.com/zeeexclusive/2008-12-27/493174news.html

A well known columnist, Rakesh Sinha has done a deep study of the RSS and the philosophy of Hinduism apart from following BJP’s rise to power. Besides being a professor of Political Science in Delhi University, he has also authored a book on the RSS founder titled ‘KB Hedgewar – A Biography’. In another of his famous works ‘Shri Guruji- & Indian Muslims’, he describes the thoughts and ideologies of RSS Sarsanghchalak MS Golwalkar. Being such an authority on the saffron ideology, he talks candidly to Zeenews.com’s Himanshu Shekhar , about the issues in the limelight especially the new face of terror, called ‘Hindu Terrorism’.

Excerpts:

Himanshu : ‘One man’s terrorist is other man’s freedom fighter’ is a saying. How will you react to the term called ‘Hindu Terrorism’ which has actually put the BJP and RSS in a Catch 22 situation?

Rakesh : Hinduism has a rich history and no one can actually tarnish its image. It is shabby media reporting which has coined terms like Hindu Terrorism. It is a religion propagated by the likes of Ramkrishna Paramhans and Swami Vivekananda. It is my firm belief that there may be some aberrations, but Hinduism has never taught any violence.

BJP has opposed the high handedness of the political system and its ideological pre-disposition in handling the Malegaon case. Sadhvi’s affidavit has exposed the poltical pressure on criminal justice system. However, in the larger interest of democracy and judiciary one has to maintain faith in the judicial system.

Himanshu : Do you think that very usage of terms like ‘Hindu Terrorism’ or ‘Islamic Terrorism’ is hitting the contours of Indian nationalism and secular fabric?

Rakesh : Of course it will have an impact, but in the long run India is strong enough to weather such things. People, who have come out on streets in Mumbai against terrorism, don’t want to see politicians. But surprisingly there has been increased voter turn out in recent elections which indeed is a welcome sign. Results of the recent elections also indicate that Indian democracy is vibrant enough to tackle any issue- even terrorism and separatism.

Himanshu : That does not answer my question on coinage of Hindu Terrorism and its impact?

Rakesh : Terrorism in Islamic countries is a worldwide phenomenon. I condemn media for using terms like Islamic terrorism. But you need to understand that things like ‘Jihad’ exist in Islam. Quran says that reaching to Allah is only possible if you practice Islam. I understand that people misinterpret it in different ways. Hinduism on the other hand says ‘Ishwar’ is one and there are uncountable numbers of ways that you can connect to him. It becomes the responsibility of the community to send a message that what is wrong is wrong, whosoever does it. And whatsoever faith they practice. It’s the educated Muslims who have taken to Jihad which is disturbing. Hinduism by and large is free from it mainly because there is no such concept like Jihad and I assure you there never will be.

Himanshu . The basic ideology which instils divisive politics is the philosophy of We and They. Guruji ( MS Golwalkar) was of the view that the Indian Constitution made a grave mistake by treating Hindus (WE) and Muslims (THEY) equally. Where does BJP or RSS stand on this Anti-Semitism now?

Rakesh : Guruji (MS Golwalkar) never used ‘They’ for all Muslims. The very use of the word ‘They’ is there in a book that is titled ‘We or our Nationhood defined.’ We was actually an abridged version of GD Savarkar’s book written in Marathi and Guruji just did a translation. As a matter of fact I would also like to make it clear that ‘They’ was specifically used in reference to people in Muslim League, who never thought of one India. In Pirpur, Muslim League passed a resolution which charged Mahatma Gandhi of protecting Hindu Fascism, which was not true.

Himanshu : …Why such hatred against the Mahatma then?

Rakesh : There is no hatred. Mahatma was a man whose secular credentials can never ever be questioned. It was he, who said, ‘…Iswar Allah Tero naam...’but he still had to face such charges from the Muslim League. He could have easily taken steps to save India. But it turned out that he could not. The man whom Gandhiji called Qaid-e-Azam was the chief motivator behind India’s partition. Appeasement was accepted by the Congress then and people like Guruji stood up against it. When people have a problem in calling India a mother, or have problems in singing ‘Vande Matram’, then it is an issue. Appeasement just can’t be accepted.

Himanshu : Today Indian politics is fragmented on basis of regionalism, casteism and communalism. Especially after the Mumbai attack, when there is so much public anger, what should political parties do to win back people’s trust?

Rakesh : The question is do you accept the existence of India. There is a growing intolerance in various sections of societies. I believe it is appeasement which has increased people’s militancy. India has to fight terrorism, naxalism and corruption in a big way. Only a united India can fight it. An India, which parts ways with the pan-Islamic approach, and works on Indianization of Islam. Politics is a reflection of society and it is the society which should work towards change.

Himanshu : Do you think that political-social degeneration has also affected RSS ideology, which has resulted in waning of committed cadres and to add, has BJP lost the tag of the party with a difference?

Rakesh : RSS ideology and organizations are unaffected by political environment. But there is an element of truth that the Bhartiya Janta Party is certainly affected by new rules and behavioral systems of competitive politics, still as a party BJP has shown more resilience than others. But, it also needs to do self introspection.

Himanshu : That means RSS has given up the long standing practice of screen testing people before they could actually get to join BJP. Is RSS losing its hold over the BJP?

Rakesh : It is an issue which media has often talked about. But let me tell one thing again that RSS never interferes with BJP’s inner strategy. Yes it’s a fact that people like Atal Bihari Vajpayee and LK Advani proudly claim to be Swyamsevaks, but there is no law in the BJP which states that only a Swyamsevak can get party membership

Himanshu : BJP’s chief Rajnath Singh gave a clean chit to Sadhvi Pragya and Saraswati Dayanand Pandey, where does RSS stand on the issue?

Rakesh : Infact Rajnath Singh has opposed the politics behind Malegaon case. His opposition was vindicated by bail granted to Sadhvi and Dayanad Pandey. Pragya was an activist of ABVP but she later began her own mission in a different manner. In Hindutva movement RSS had hegemonic position but there are small streams some of which radically disagree with RSS. It is a misnomer to consider ‘Hindutva’ movement as monolithic and it is wrong to blame RSS for activities of any ‘Hindutva’ activist.

Himanshu : How does the RSS see itself in today’s era where moderation and inclusive politics are the key words? Is modern day RSS shifting its ideology and taking a more realistic approach?

Rakesh : It has expanded its base. RSS talks of one nation and talks of Hindu rights but if someone hates to hear the word Hindu, then there is a problem. What can you say to people who object to calling India as ‘Mother India?’ How will you explain the fact that 100 acres of land given to a Hindu shrine board had to be taken back? If RSS talks of all this, they are termed as playing divisive politics. Though there is no denying the fact that Indian politics is by and large inclusive and RSS has a responsibility towards generation next, which has more pragmatic things to worry about e.g. jobs, security and freedom.

Himanshu : RSS and BJP have for long talked of ‘Cultural Nationalism’ and alleged Congress of being pseudo-secular. But in a country with over 150 million of Muslims, what have they done to earn their trust?

Rakesh : This is one area where a lot of work needs to be done. We are not against Muslims, but we are for ‘One India’ and that is what should be showcased. But yes, there is an urge among current leadership in the RSS to be more proactive and send the right signals.

Himanshu : Atal Bihari Vajpayee was BJP’s most neutral face. Now that he has distanced himself from active politics, do you think LK Advani can gain that support, in case BJP falls short of a majority?

Rakesh : Well, long time back a US journalist asked Pandit Nehru: ‘Who after Nehru?’ And the reply was, “India is a vast and fertile land.” Whenever such situation arises, people come and take responsibilities. There are people who can easily step in the role but it won’t be good to name and single out people.

Himanshu : Thank you for sharing your thoughts with us.

RakeshWelcome.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Don’t forget, don’t forgive

http://dailypioneer.com/DisplayContent.aspx?ContentID=146798&URLName=Don%25u2019t-forget-don%25u2019t-forgive

Of late, Mr Pranab Mukherjee has been adopting a tone and tenor worthy of the Foreign Minister of a great nation like India while dealing with a rogue state like Pakistan, which has made sponsorship of terrorism a key instrument of state policy. But if Mr Mukherjee is to take these threats to their logical conclusion and make our country terrorism-proof, he and the Union Government need to get an unambiguous signal from across the country that India will neither forget nor forgive Mumbai 26/11.

This can happen only if we shake off the tentativeness and confusion that has permeated national discourse in regard to Pakistan, and come face to face with reality. Though Pakistan was created on the premise that Muslims constitute a separate nation, it broke up into two within a quarter century of its birth and most South Asian experts predict a further disintegration of that country. Second, unlike India, which has become a vibrant democracy, Pakistan chose to become an Islamic state and this had a major social and political impact. For example, on the social side, Pakistan has virtually extinguished its Hindu population. The Hindus, who constituted 25 per cent of Pakistan’s population at the time of its birth, are now reduced to just 1.64 per cent. On the political front, the absence of democracy has encouraged the Army to often take control and to display belligerence towards India to retain its hold on the Government.

Often, even when there is a civilian Government, the Pakistani Army has resorted to unilateral military action. It made the first attempt to grab Indian territory when it sent in infiltrators into Jammu & Kashmir in October 1947. Instead of following the advice of top class military men like Field Marshal Cariappa and Gen Thimmiah, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru foolishly rushed to the United Nations complaining about Pakistan’s aggression. The UN promptly ordered a cease fire and India lost 30,000 square miles of territory to Pakistan.

Indians soon forgot what Pakistan had done. Worse, they even forgave Pakistan for this act of aggression. This suicidal Indian trait tempted Pakistan to do an encore in August 1965. The Indian Army pushed back the infiltrators and captured strategic positions in Haji Pir and Tithwal areas to effectively prevent further incursions. This clash resulted in a war, which concluded after the UN called for a cease fire. As the hostilities ended, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto swore in the Security Council that Pakistan would launch a ‘thousand-year war’ against India. When the Indian delegation walked out in protest, Bhutto said, “The Indian dogs are going home.”

This may seem incredible, but soon after Mr Bhutto showered these abuses on us, we bartered away the key territorial acquisitions at the negotiating table at Tashkent. This encouraged Pakistan to attack India yet again in 1971 when the latter objected to the brutality unleashed by the Pakistani Army in what is now Bangladesh, leading to the influx of 20 million refugees into our country. This led to a full-scale war in which the Pakistani Army was disgraced. India captured 93,000 Prisoners of War and 5,000 square miles of territory.

But all this was returned to Pakistan by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi during the Simla Summit without reclaiming even a part of the 30,000 square miles of territory that we lost in 1947. Everything was given back on a platter to Mr Bhutto, who by now had become Pakistan’s Prime Minister. Why? Because we did not want to ‘humiliate’ this uncouth politician who had classified us as ‘dogs’! We would never have suffered the embarrassment of 26/11 if only we were in the habit of reminding ourselves and every successive generation of Indians of Mr Bhutto’s abuses and bravado.

Strangely, even those who appeared wise when they sat in the Opposition benches have made terrible compromises on national security. The prize for the best somersault by an Indian politician vis-à-vis Pakistan goes to Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee. He had opposed the policy of appeasement followed by the Governments of the day after the 1965 and 1971 wars and scoffed at then Foreign Minister Swaran Singh for saying that the Simla Accord was the ‘first step’ towards durable peace.

Speaking in the Lok Sabha on July 31, 1972, Mr Vajpayee had said: “In the last 25 years, we have always been taking the first step. We took the first step when Nehru met Liaquat Ali Khan, then yet again when Nehru met Ayub Khan. We again took the first step when Shastri met Ayub Khan at Tashkent. And now, again at Simla we are taking the first step. How many times do we keep taking the ‘first step’ towards durable peace with Pakistan?”

Twenty-seven years later, Mr Vajpayee became the Prime Minister. It was now his turn to forget and forgive. Succumbing to pressure, Mr Vajpayee started speaking the language of Swaran Singh. So he ventured on an ill-advised bus ride to Lahore that culminated in that spurious bear hug with Mr Nawaz Sharif. Pakistan returned the compliment by invading Kargil. We lost hundreds of brave soldiers while reclaiming our territory. Soon thereafter, Mr Vajpayee was again under pressure and he invited Gen Musharraf to Agra for an ill-fated summit. Pakistan gave us a return gift by way of the assault on our Parliament House on December 13, 2001. In a short span of three years, Pakistan betrayed Mr Vajpayee thrice.

Now that the Congress is back in power and is, as usual, under the influence of many resident non-Indians, those of us who wish to secure India for posterity need to remind the Government of the following: If we had not forgotten the loss of 30,000 square miles of territory in October 1947, August 1965 would not have happened; if we had been firm and unyielding in 1965, Pakistan would not have had the courage to wage war on us in 1971; if we had driven in the knife in 1971, when we had 93,000 Pakistani Prisoners of War and territory, Pakistan would never have had the nerve to intrude into Kargil in 1999; if we had not forgotten Kargil, December 13, 2001 would not have happened; if we had not forgiven Pakistan for the audacious attack on our Parliament House, India would not have suffered the humiliation it did on 26/11.

The terror attacks in Mumbai offers us yet another opportunity to get our act together to protect our unity and territorial integrity. But we cannot achieve this unless we shun the policy of forget and forgive when it comes to Pakistan.

Politics with Terror - Update 2

Congress denies another BJP rules state sufficient security against terror - http://deccanherald.com/Content/Dec292008/state20081229109461.asp?section=updatenews

Seems like the congress is determined to punish the people of Karnataka for electing the BJP with almost a unanimous verdict just like they are punishing the people of Gujarat for electing Modi. It is an ode to the electoral gimmics of the Congress party which is determined to be back in power at all posssible costs even at the cost of lives of Indian citizens. In the event of any terrorist (on gunmen if you are from the BBC) strike in Bengaluru the lack of speed in response, caused by the congress denial of an NSG hub, will undoubtedly be used in the fingerpointing that will certainly follow.

Congress pats itself on its back - for what??

http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/south-asia/india-responded-to-terror-attack-with-maturity-minister_100136251.html

India has acted with maturity and diplomatically…

Pakistan should act. It’s the responsibility of Pakistan to check militant activities in its soil. It must honour its commitment and assurances (to India and international community) that it will dismantle terror outfits

As a mature democracy of the world, India does not want to fix any timeframe for Pakistan to initiate action against culprits of the Mumbai terror attacks,
(http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008\12\30\story_30-12-2008_pg7_40)

Politics with Terror - Update

While Pakistan seems to have won the first battle with India in wriggling out of the situation it found itself in after the Mumbai attacks, the Congress party seems to be determined to notch up a couple of "victories" of its own in the domestic front. Here is Digvijay Singh making a couple of claims - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Terrorists_demands_were_rejected_Digvijay/articleshow/3910277.cms

But the Maharashtra Home minister denies it outright - http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=2&theme=&usrsess=1&id=238174

Confused? The Congress hand is with you. They are just as confused.

Bharat let down again by the Leaders

The usual bungling by DhimmiMohan Singh and team. Pakistan has got away yet again after aiding, arming, training and funding terrorist activities against India from Pakistani soil. Our Government yet again is confused and soft in dealing with an avowedly terrorist state. A country with ambitions of entering the global league of powers find itself incapacitated for lack of ideas and confidence. Bharatiyas let down again by the Congress cabal.
Seems like Indian hopes of US and UK support went no further than lip service form the self proclaimed supporters of democracy.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1217482

"If Pakistan has won round one in the eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation following the Mumbai terror attacks, India has only its own poorly-thought-out strategy to blame.

The worldwide outrage following the Mumbai carnage and strident calls for action against terror outfits based in Pakistan appear to have fizzled out, with the international community shifting focus from terror to stopping a military escalation on the India-Pakistan border."

Land Grabbing Islamists

http://deccanherald.com/Content/Dec292008/district20081228109366.asp

Landgrabbing by pious mohammedans. This is a story that is repeated all over the world. Claim historical connection with a prime piece of land and shriek about it till the lies become truth. One hopes the government calls their bluff.

Jeans un-islamic

http://deccanherald.com/Content/Dec292008/national20081229109423.asp

wonder how far the "school" will go in banning pieces of clothing. Hugh Hefner must be looking at this very closely!!

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Bangladeshi Infiltrator - Update

http://www.organiser.org/dynamic/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=269&page=33

ABVP fighting the Bangladeshi infiltrator problem. With the government not heeeding the opinion of the public, seems like mass mobilisation by the public is the only option.

Excellent article by Subramaniam Swamy

http://expressbuzz.com/edition/story.aspx?Title=A+strategy+to+deter+terrorism&artid=|Ci|Xx68mic%3d&SectionID=XVSZ2Fy6Gzo%3d&MainSectionID=XVSZ2Fy6Gzo%3d&SectionName=m3GntEw72ik%3d

Pakistani involvement is not because its civil society wants it, but because of the Islamic fervour in the army that is not reconciled to the defeat of its forces in Bangladesh.The same fervour has turned the Bangladesh establishment against India, and hence with the help of the ISI, al Qaeda has through its Indonesian wing established a base to help these terrorists and also to develop the HuJI, which is emerging as the human infrastructure of terrorists in India. Thus, Islam is the heart and Pakistan is the brain of terrorism in India.

Congress resents Dhimmis getting free

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/rise-of-bjp-in-j&k-worrying-sign-azad/403866/

So finally a party thats half nationalistic, BJP, get 11 seats in JK. After a hitwicket in Rajasthan and Delhi, something to cheer for.
Funny that some "experts" point towards communal voting to explain the good showing by BJP but the same verbiage wasnt used to explain the success of PDP and NC in JK, Muslim League in Kerala, MAJLIS ITTEHADUL MUSLIMEEN in Hyderabad......
Its communal only when hindus assert their identity.

Taliban will kill "school girls"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7799926.stm

More love forthcoming from the religion of peace.

Israel pounds Gaza

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7801662.stm

Something to learn from the Israelis. PM DhimmiMohan Singh probably should read up and introspect during his "sleepless night" bouts.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Marad killings: Five years on, 63 found guilty

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Marad_killings_Five_years_on_63_found_guilty/articleshow/3900654.cms

Some interesting snippets from the article -

"The case relates to the murder of eight Hindu fishermen by an armed mob at Marad beach on the night of May 2, 2003. One of the assailants was also killed during the attack."

"This assumes significance given that a one-man judicial commission under District Judge Thomas P Joseph, which probed the incident, had hinted at a foreign angle to it and raised fingers at the role of some Muslim League leaders."

"The commission's report was hard hitting and blamed some bureaucrats and politicians for their alleged role in the communal frenzy. In particular it pointed to the role of the then district collector T O Sooraj. He had taken control of the Marad Juma Masjid soon after the clashes following information that some of the accused had fled into it.

But then he allowed Muslim League MP E Ahmed, who is currently Union MoS for external affairs to enter the mosque. Later police recovered a huge cache of arms from the place of worship."

And the current PM asks people to eschew vote bank politics. This is the pot calling the kettle black!

Manmohan decries what Congress party stands for

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/002200812272028.htm

Appealing political parties to eschew the temptation of focussing on narrow agendas, Singh also asked the people to work together to "devalue the currency of so-called vote bank politics and mint a new currency of the politics of national development and unity".

Congress will be left with no election plan in that case.

Terrorists say they are muslims , PM says they have no religion

http://expressbuzz.com/edition/story.aspx?title=Faith+and+terrorism&artid=qbxugWu2T4w=&SectionID=d16Fdk4iJhE=&MainSectionID=HuSUEmcGnyc=&SEO=Malegaon&SectionName=aVlZZy44Xq0bJKAA84nwcg==


An excellent article by S Gurumurthy.
Enough has not been written about how islamists are not "misguided" neither are they "faithless". Their inspiration is the koran and they are very much muslim.
Somebody needs to tell our PM.

Truths about Teesta

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/teesta-setalvads-former-confidant-files-fir-against-her/80979-3.html?from=rssfeed


Raees Khan, who has been accused of distorting facts in the affidavits of six Naroda Gam witnesses, alleged Friday that activist Teesta Setalvad has been threatening him and said he has filed a police complaint against her.

Pakistan among donors to Indian NGOs

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Foreign_funds_to_Indian_NGOs_soar_Pak_among_donors/articleshow/3882898.cms


Pakistan among list of donors. Receipients and their intentions and activities must be investigated.
TN receives largest donations proportional to the number of conversions to christianity. Jesus loves, but a little bit of money helps.

Pak Text books build hgate against India and hindus

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Pak_textbooks_build_hate_culture_against_India/articleshow/3898659.cms

" One factor that has played a crucial role in creating this culture of hate is the educational policy of the government of Pakistan pursued since 1977. The officially prescribed textbooks, especially for school students, are full of references that promote hate against India in general, and Hindus in particular."


Is there any surprise then as to why Mumbai like incidents happen over and over again. And our PM talks about peace.

Friday, December 19, 2008

The confession statement of a terrorist

http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/dec/11mumterror-confession-of-caught-terrorist-mumbai.htm

Another vehicle passed in front of us and stopped at some distance. One police officer got down from the said vehicle and started firing at us. One bullet hit my hand and my AK-47 dropped down. I bent to pick it up when second bullet hit me on the same hand. I got injured. Ismail opened fire at the officers who were in said vehicle. They got injured and firing from their side stopped.We waited for some time and then went towards the said vehicle. Three bodies lying there. Ismail removed the three bodies and drove the said vehicle. I sat next to him. While we were moving in the said vehicle, some police men tried to stop us. Ismail opened fire towards them while we were on the move; our vehicle got punctured near a big ground by the side of road. Ismail got down from the driver seat, stopped a car at the gun point and removed the three lady occupants from the said car. Then Ismail carried me to the car and sat me inside as I was injured. Then he drove the said car.

Amnesty criticises new terror law

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7791188.stm

The human right vultures swoop in.

Shahi Imam of Fatehpuri Masjid backs Antulay; demands probe

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200812192066.htm

"On November 26 when Mumbai attack took place, ATS chief at the first movement was killed along with his associate officers. If Antulay asks for an inquiry in these killings then there should not be any hesitation," the Shahi Imam said, adding "I demand a high level probe by a sitting judge of the Supreme Court of India".

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Union Minister AR Antulay - I owe explanation to none

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/antulay-offers-to-resign-but-not-retract/400303/


Earlier, there was talk of a “formulation” under which Antulay could propose “regret” of some sort but he declined to do so maintaining he wasn’t questioning the fact that the attacks were carried out by Pak terrorists but only asking how and why three senior officers went off together in the same car only to be killed. “I have been doing politics for 60 years,” Antulay told The Indian Express. Asked if the PM or Sonia Gandhi spoke to him, he said: “Nobody has spoken to me. If they feel any need, they can call me...I owe explanation to none. I have not said anything which has embarrassed the Government and the Congress party. In fact, I have helped the government...If I come to know I have embarrassed the government, then you know my nature is not to stick to positions.”

Of course we do Antulayji, not having a stand on anything worth taking a stand on has been the policy of the congress party for the last 60 years.

Sonia discovers that Mumbai attacks are a "deliberate assault"

http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/dec/18mumterror-attacks-a-deliberate-assault-on-india-sonia.htm

Antonio Maino AKA Sonia Gandhi in a moment of rare clarity states categorically that the Mumbai attacks on 26/11 are a "deliberate assault". Really? Most of us were convinced that it was Holi celebrations in advance.

And then she drops the "S" bomb - "a brazen attempt to destroy the fabric of our society and our secular democratic way of life,"

Oh man just when i was beginning to like you Antonio Maino!! oh well, you know what they say about Italians - too greasy to be easy.

Sonia Gandhis Education

An older article but worth reproducing as this is not a stale issue -

http://www.ivarta.com/columns/070620-sonia-gandhi-education.htm

After the disastrous and wholly avoidable dark day of partition of India on the 15 August 1947, we as a nation sank to abysmal depths of irretrievable degradation yesterday which in my view is the darkest day in our legal history. All the patriotic and LAW abiding citizens of India owing their allegiance to the letter and spirit of the Indian Constitution are shocked beyond words by the fact that the Supreme Court on Friday dismissed a special leave petition filed by Janata Party president Subramanian Swamy against a judgment of the Allahabad High Court that did not allow the court to go into the veracity of an affidavit filed by Congress president Sonia Gandhi regarding her educational qualification while contesting the poll from Rae Barelli constituency. A three-Judge Bench comprising Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan and Justices B P Singh and G P Mathur asked Dr Swamy: "Should the Supreme Court go into all the affidavits to find out they are false or not. Further investigation is not possible into a stale issue and it should be dropped." Dr Swamy pointed out that Ms Gandhi had filed an affidavit that she was educated at Cambridge University, London, whereas she had studied only language teaching course from a "teaching shop" and not the University. He said that since the filing of an affidavit regarding educational qualification was because of a Supreme Court judgment, no false affidavit could be filed by a person. He told the Bench: "If you take such a large-hearted view that the matter should be dropped, I have nothing more to say." What has been completely overlooked by the Supreme Court in this case is the fact that Sonia Gandhi committed the offence of perjury when she wittingly dropped her claim regarding her bogus educational qualifications from Cambridge University in the Affidavit which she filed before the Returning Officer of Rae Barelli Constituency in 2006. In 1999 Sonia Gandhi was elected to Lok Sabha. Soon after her election she had furnished details relating to her educational qualifications to the Speaker of the Lok Sabha based on which those details were incorporated into a Lok Sabha publication "Who is Who In Lok Sabha? After verifying the factual details of the bogus and false claim of Sonia Gandhi regarding her fictitious education in Cambridge, Dr Subramanian Swamy wrote to the Speaker of the Lok Sabha in 2000, complaining that Sonia Gandhi had committed a Breach of Privilege by giving false information to the Speaker. The Speaker after keeping Dr.Swamy"s petition in a special incubator (!!) finally wrote to Sonia Gandhi and requested her to give a suitable reply to him. It is understood that in 2003 Sonia Gandhi gave a reply to the Speaker that she had unwittingly signed a letter/document without applying her mind to it and that the whole problem lay in a typing mistake. In my view this became the longest typing mistake in the tortuous history of typography and legitimately qualified for inclusion in the Guinness Book of World Records. Despite this known and factual background, Sonia Gandhi repeated the same mistake by including her bogus educational qualifications again in her Affidavit to the Returning Officer of Rae Barelli Constituency during Parliamentary Elections in 2004. Thus she showed her supreme contempt towards the Indian Constitution, Indian Parliament, the Rule of Law and if I may say so, even the Supreme Court of India. To crown it all, in her Affidavit to the Returning Officer of Rae Barelli Constituency before her reelection in 2006, Sonia Gandhi very quietly dropped her false claim made in 1999 and repeated again with calculated impunity in 2004. Thus in her Affidavit of 2006 presented to the Returning Officer of Rae Barelli Constituency she tacitly admitted her earlier offence of perjury. Every honourable citizen in India (not privileged to have the extra-Constitutional status of a Queen of India like Sonia Gandhi) would like to know whether he or she would get the same consideration on the same issue (all facts being pari passu and equal on all fours) from the highest Judicial Tribunal in the land. Perhaps George Orwell had the Indian Judicial System in view when he wrote: "Though all of us are created equal, some are more equal than others".In 2006, the Samajwadi Party (SP) and the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) strongly criticized the decision of the Election Commission (EC) to drop the Office-of-Profit Case against Sonia Gandhi in the Office-of-Profit Case following her resignation from the Lok Sabha. The Samajwadi Party (SP) General Secretary Amar Singh and TDP Parliamentary Party Leader K.Y.Yerran Naidu said: "Jaya Bachchan was disqualified from the Rajya Sabha with retrospective effect. We demand that the same treatment that has been meted out to Jaya Bachchan should also be meted out to Sonia Gandhi." By indulging in open political discrimination between Jaya Bachchan and Sonia Gandhi on the same issue, involving the same principles of law and procedure, the Election Commission of India covered itself with everlasting disgrace and infamy when it sent its recommendation to the President for closing the case against Mrs.Sonia Gandhi. In 2006, I had written an article in these columns about the reprehensible conduct of the Election Commission. I am quoting from my own article which is as relevant today as it was in 2006: "The matter is not so simple, harmless and innocuous as the Election Commission or the Congress Party would have the nation to believe so cozily in this matter. The people of India would like to know why Sonia Gandhi"s name has been dropped by the Election Commission. If Jaya Bachchan can be disqualified with retrospective effect, in what way is Sonia Gandhi enjoying a special status above the law of the Constitution? The straight and simple course is for the Election Commission to apply the same law with the same effect in the sane manner along the same channel for the same reason and finally for the same result in respect of Sonia Gandhi as well. For a neutral and Constitutional body, why should the honour of Sonia Gandhi alone be more important and vital than the letter and spirit of the Indian Constitution?" As a citizen believing in the Rule of Law, Rule of Equality Before the Law and the Majesty of Law, I am not convinced by the observation of the Supreme Court. "Further investigation is not possible into a stale issue and it should be dropped." In this context, I would like to quote the brilliant words of American Chief Justice William Hubbs Rehnquist (1924 - 2005) in the landmark case of MILLS v. HABLUETZEL, 456 U.S. 91 (1982): "This Court has held that once a State posits a judicially enforceable right of its citizens, it can never get circumscribed or circumvented by a State"s interest in avoiding the prosecution of stale or fraudulent claims". In my humble opinion neither the incontrovertible facts or the irrefutable points of law raised by Dr Subramanian Swamy can be viewed as STALE in any sense of the word/term. Of course there is nothing fraudulent in or about them. I would also like to cite from another historic case in the American Supreme Court which is very relevant to the Indian situation in the case under review. To quote Justice Felix Frankfurter (1882- 1965): ""To argue that no genuine issues of material fact remain for trial, is to sweep the entire expanse of American History under the rug as well, and to substitute in its place a veritable host of fictions and fictitious nonsense, of which the American People now have had about all they are willing to take .. Competent waivers of fundamental rights must be knowing, intelligent, affirmative acts done with sufficient awareness, other relevant circumstances and likely consequences." All the enlightened citizens and the myriad millions of India are shocked by the recent verdict of the Supreme Court. They do not consider it as a stale view on a stale subject. They are of the view that the survival of India as an independent sovereign nation has been completely lost sight of by the highest tribunal of law in the land. All of them quote the following words of Rt. Honourable Srinivasa Sastri (1869 -1946) with approval: "If the salt has lost its flavour, wherewith shall it be salted? It is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out and trodden under foot of men."

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Maharashtra police rebuff Antulay

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/nothing-fishy-about-karkares-death-pol.../399745/

Maharashtra police rebuffs Crazy Antulay says nothing fishy in the deaths of Karkare, Amte and Salaskar. Someone give Antulay a shovel to dig himself out of this hole!

28 Christians embrace Hinduism

http://www.expressbuzz.com/edition/story.aspx?Title=28+Christians+embrace+Hinduism&artid=JM0AmZfGuLk%3d&SectionID=vBlkz7JCFvA%3d&MainSectionID=fyV9T2jIa4A%3d&SectionName=EL7znOtxBM3qzgMyXZKtxw%3d%3d&SEO

Argument on terror lands man in trouble

http://deccanherald.com/Content/Dec172008/city20081217107224.asp


On Tuesday morning, things heated up after he started allegedly abusing Indians and wished that terrorists targeted Bangalore. Though the unwanted discussion started at around 9.30 am things turned worse when Jameel hailed the group of terrorists for holding the country for ransom and creating flutters at the Mumbai attack.

Union minister doubts terrorists killed Karkare

http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/dec/17antulay-karkare-malegaon-mumbai.htm


AR Antulay hints that Hindus might be responsible for Karkare. With elections around the corner, no telling what the UPA will be up to. Kanchan Gupta was right when he said there are closet islamists in PMs cabinet.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Perjury by Teesta Setalvaad

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/sc-affidavit-wrong-didnt-know-what-we-signed-riot-victim/399007/


"SC affidavit wrong, didn’t know what we signed: riot victim"


Malek said the affidavit was “fabricated” and had “incorrect” information. He alleged it was drafted in English without his knowledge by Rais Khan, coordinator of the Citizens for Justice and Peace (CJP), who made him sign on the affidavit. “I had mentioned this in my statement to the SIT too,” he said.

But Rais Khan claims it was CJP secretary Teesta Setalvad who sent him affidavits for signatures. “Teesta Setalvad used to send me these affidavits through e-mail. I used to take printouts and get them signed after calling the persons concerned to Shahpur. All these affidavits were drafted by Setalvad along with some legal experts,” Khan said. When contacted, Setalvad declined comment.

Give citizenship to Hindus

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/mp-cm-presses-for-indian-citizenship-for-pak-.../399231/

"There are 2,647 Hindus of Sindhi community living in Madhya Pradesh. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh should consider a proposal of providing them with country's citizenship, a statement issued from Chief Minister's office in Bhopal said. "

Monday, December 15, 2008

India will have to fight in its own way

http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/dec/15mumterror-india-will-have-to-fight-in-its-own-way.htm

Nice article, worth reproducing in full -

India will have to fight in its own waySheela Bhatt December 15, 2008 20:36 ISTOn the geopolitical chess board that is South Asia, the Mumbai terror attacks have ensured that the big players have to make a few moves that will decide the direction in which the region will move in the coming months.
The attack on Mumbai came at a time when:
The Indian government has less than four months remaining in power.
The elected government in Pakistan has not yet stabilised.
The United States-led war in Afghanistan is about to undergo a new strategic shift under the leadership of incoming President Barack Obama.
India's conventional capability and advantage against Pakistan is seriously challenged because of Islamabad's nuclear weapons, which form a potent part of Pakistan's propaganda to neutralise many of India's options.
No less important is the fact that the attacks have come at a time when the economic meltdown -- the real impact of which has just begun to unfold in South Asia -- is the biggest worry for India, China and the rest of the world.
Contemporary history shows that the international community's support to India is limited to words and is not likely to go beyond it. Then, in India as well as Pakistan there is a big and effective lobby that argues that 'terrorism' is merely an issue in a long list of things to do and relations between the two countries can't be limited to one subject.
Even though assembly elections are being held in Jammu and Kashmir with fair success, no one in New Delhi is ignoring the fact that when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited the Kashmir valley on Sunday, curfew had to be imposed in Srinagar and the Congress party had to ferry people to Khundroo, where he spoke.
As things stand, time does not favour any player except the terrorists. Everyone else in this game would like to buy time, kill time and defy time to come out as the winner. The main players in the given circumstances -- the Pakistan president, the Indian prime minister and the Pakistan army -- are likely to do everything to come out unscathed within their country and in the region.
What will the victory that India wants and what can Pakistan's democratic government do and how far it can go are the debating points.
In India at least, most critics -- be it right wing or left wing, radical or moderate -- and strategic thinkers believe war is not the answer for the Mumbai attacks.
Though it might come as a relief, the prime minister very well understands that by eschewing the military options his government cannot avoid the fundamental issue of dealing with terrorism emanating from Pakistan. He said clearly that India had always wanted to have good relations with that country, but 'our kind desire should not be treated as a weakness.'
The options confronting India are more difficult to implement and achieve than for Pakistan.
For India, one policy option could be as Oscar Wilde said, 'Always forgive your enemies. Nothing annoys them so much.'
India could well concentrate on achieving eight per cent growth in these times of adversity, but for the fact that elections are around the corner. It is very important for the ruling party to be seen as doing something to give a fitting reply for the attacks. Otherwise, it can lose precious votes.
US Senator John Kerry is in New Delhi. Before him, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, Senator John McCain and US Joint Chief of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen have come and gone. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble have also suggested that they want Pakistan to do more than just banning the Jamaat-ud-Dawa.
A former Indian ambassador to the US told rediff.com, "Khel khatam nahin, abhi shuroo hua hain (The game has not ended with the Mumbai attacks, it has just started).
Rediff.com presents a series where strategic thinkers like former national security advisor Brajesh Mishra, former ambassador to the US Naresh Chandra, former foreign secretary Kanwal Sibal and others discuss India's options.
Flagging off the series is former national security advisor and principal secretary to then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Brajesh Mishra.
Mishra, a former member of the Indian Foreign Service, is a man of few words. But even before he begin listing India's diplomatic options, he asked this counter-question: "Can you tell me what steps has the United Progressive Alliance government taken so far?"
Mishra, who was the main strategist in setting the diplomatic tone in the aftermath of the Parliament attack on December 13, 2001, claims he is not angry. He says he is weighing his words and claims that he has thought out what India's strategy should be.
In 2001, the National Democratic Alliance government had moved the army to the border with Pakistan in a one-of-its-kind operation. But now, Mishra says he is not satisfied with the diplomatic steps taken so far by India:In international relations, unless you have something to give you don't get anything.
If you have your hat in your hand the only thing you will get is sympathy. If you have your hands in your pocket, you may expect something substantial.
I heard the prime minister has said during his visit to Jammu and Kashmir that our relations with Pakistan will not improve until it curbs terrorism. But I think unless we are able to say that let Pakistan punish its people who are engaging in terrorism in India and control its army nothing means much.
My point is what is going on in New Delhi when the foreign dignitaries are arriving is mere 'sympathy'. These are just words and nothing more is attached to it. In spite of so many visits Pakistan has come out with the statement that they are not banning the Jamat-ul-Dawa. What are the US and Britain going to do about it? Are they going to cut off finances to the instrument (the Pakistan army) that is supporting the outfits carrying out terrorism in India? What are you getting so far? Words of sympathy only.
I don't believe neither the Indian people nor the government are against the people of Pakistan. But we are not talking about ordinary people here. I am talking about the Pakistan army and the Inter Services Intelligence, no one in India is talking about President Asif Ali Zaradari or the elected government. That's common sense.
If you argue that the NDA's Operation Parakram was at a huge cost then I would ask what is the cost we are paying now -- Humiliation of a billion people?
How has the US-led war in Afghanistan helped us? As far as I see, the American agenda in Afghanistan cannot succeed unless Pakistan agrees to support, wholeheartedly.
But Pakistan doesn't want to help the American war against the Taliban. Pakistan wants the Taliban to come to power in Kabul. It will give their military, as suggested by their military doctrine, a strategic depth. Do you think Pakistan is taking the war against the Taliban seriously?
India will have to fight in its own way. I disagree with the opinion that India doesn't have many options. We had options in 2001 and we have enough options today, but I can't violate the Official Secrets Act and elaborate to you what we did in 2001 and how.
I believe the composite dialogue with Pakistan is already off. But India definitely does have options to respond effectively against the perpetrators of the Mumbai attacks. And no one is talking about war here.
Neither the prime minister nor the government of India is talking about war. The Bharatiya Janata Party has stopped talking about war. Just because one or two television anchors like Arnab Goswami or Rajdeep Sardesai talk of military options that can't be construed as the opinion of India.

Andhra CM son-in-law's mammoth christian-evangelical meet draws flak

http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/dec/15-andhra-cm-son-in-laws-religious-meet-draws-flak.htm

After it was revealed that Anil Kumar was the chief minister's son-in-law, the TDP and BJP demanded an inquiry into the source of funding for such large-scale publicity, insisting that ill gotten money was being used to promote the Evangelist. While Anil Kumar avoided the media, YSR quipped, "What is wrong in it," when asked about the publicity machinery being used to promote his son-in-law.

Islamists says we'll kill. NYT says they're upset!

http://dailypioneer.com/143431/Sanitised-by-media.html


Wonderful piece by Barry Rubin. Shows the huge disconnect between islamists intentions and Secularists understanding of their intentions.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Pak scientists offered bin Laden N-weapons before 9/11

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/pak-scientists-offered-bin-laden-nweapons-be.../398334/

Repeat with me - "Pakis sponsor Jihad" ..............""Pakis are a threat to the world"................

China’s Reaction to Mumbai Terror Strikes: Pro-Pakistan Bias?

http://www.c3sindia.org/terrorismandsecurity/434

Alarming news from the Chinese policy makers -


"The main current in the opinions of China analysts seems to be in favour of preventing by China of a fourth India-Pakistan war. This being so, options for China if a war breaks out, are also being discussed, which include support to Pakistan and launching a diversionary attack in the Sino-Indian border to put pressure on India.
‘China can firmly support Pakistan’ in the event of a war, says an analysis (CIISS, 4 December 2008), adding that while the latter could benefit from its military cooperation with China while fighting India, the PRC may have the option of resorting to a ‘strategic military action in Southern Tibet to thoroughly liberate the people there’. A write-up next day (CIISS, 5 December 2008) has been more categorical; it says that an India-Pakistan war will not be in China’s strategic interests and that Beijing-Islamabad alliance is meant to give advantages to the PRC on the Sino- Indian border issue. In the context of a possible war, it stresses the importance of the ongoing China-Pakistan cooperation to link Kashmir with China through the Karakorum highway project, an expansion programme for which was announced on 16 November 2008. Stating that during the second India-Pakistan war, China had lent its support to Pakistan, but the same did not happen in the third conflict due to constraints that arose in China due to the Cultural Revolution factor, the comment declares that this time, the PRC would like to ‘display its capacity to influence’.

Hindus easy targets in Pakistan

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/Nagpur_man_kidnapped_in_Pakistan/articleshow/3820912.cms


TOI makes a mess of this article, here is the jist of the story.
A hindu family migrates from Pakistan to India, currently in Nagpur. Three men from this family travel back to Pakistan ostensibly for bussiness reasons and are kidnapped. Lady of the house says, that this is a common occurance in Pakistan of Hindus getting kidnapped for ransom.

GOVT. SHOULD PREPARE ITSELF FOR A FURTHER SURGE IN JIHADI TERRORISM

http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers30/paper2981.html

"The danger of a further surge in jihadi terrorism against Indian nationals and interests in the coming months, if not weeks, would call for immediate measures for strengthening the physical security in all metro cities, namely, Delhi, Mumbai,Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore and Hyderabad as well as in Goa, which has been a favourite destination for Israeli tourists. "

Mumbai attacks: How Indian-born Islamic militants are trained in Pakistan

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/india/3741868/Mumbai-attacks-How-Indian-born-Islamic-militants-are-trained-in-Pakistan.html

Homegrown Jihad a reality now (for those Bleeding Heart Liberals and Nehruvian Secularists who did not know yet)

Saturday, December 13, 2008

China And The Mumbai Bloodshed

http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers30/paper2975.html

The China Radio International (CRI), an official radio station under the Ministry of Radio and Television and also the Party Propaganda Department, blamed the attack on India’s failure to resolve social problems left over by the British. The CRI’s charter resembles USA’s cold war propaganda apparatus like the Radio Free Europe, and the ongoing Voice of Tibet. The CCP mouth piece, the People’s Daily, the most authentic newspaper which projects the position of the CCP and the Chinese government, highlighted (December 02) that the attack was a “major blow to India’s big power ambition”.

On on the other hand we are holding joint military excercises?

Celebrating treason

http://www.dailypioneer.com/143240/Celebrating-treason.html

With no logic, no legal figment and no public support at their command, the NGO brigade descended to wringing out every drop of emotion, with the help of a misguided section of the media. They spun out a tear-jerker that could be a Bollywood scriptwriter's envy. The leading light of the India-baiting jholawala brigade, one Nandita Haksar, was in her element on the forecourt of Rashtrapati Bhawan.Caressing seven-year-old Ghalib, son of death merchant Afzal Guru, she claimed that the (tutored) child told President Kalam that his life's ambition to become a doctor would remain unfulfilled if his father's life were snatched away. The boy cutely stood, suitably melancholic, under Haksar's ample protection while his mother and grandmother recounted their interaction with a sympathetic President. Split TV screens, meanwhile, kept zooming in on that blabbering classes' icon Arundhati Roy who can be guaranteed to cheerlead any gathering that aims to berate India's pride, rule of law, or economic progress.Those who have made a profession out of running India down have found a new cause celebre in the death row convict. Having tasted blood by successfully browbeating the system into exonerating Afzal's co-conspirator SAR Geelani, the India bashers are convinced they can notch up another victory by getting the pusillanimous Congress leadership to buckle under pressure. A jittery Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad spoke out in their favour, warning that the Valley may erupt if the hanging happens. Although his Cabinet colleague, Jammu leader Mangat Ram Sharma, was forced to sound a dissenting note and one of the party's few mass leaders, former Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijay Singh picked up courage to demand Afzal's execution, the Congress is petrified at the thought of taking a decision either way.To begin with, I fail to see why there should be a debate at all. The matter is clear-cut. Afzal Guru was tried, convicted and sentenced to death by a POTA Court -- a verdict upheld by the Supreme Court.The same process of law failed to find sufficient evidence against his cohort SAR Geelani and acquitted him much to the chagrin of patriotic civilians as well as the security establishment.Geelani breezed out of Tihar and held a Press conference amid the raucous applause of the 'Hate India' brigade, in which he extolled the virtues of the Indian judiciary, while slamming the political establishment.Consequently, Geelani faced an awkward dilemma when the Hate India-wallahs started baying for the judiciary's blood in the Afzal case, claiming the convict did not get a fair trail. This was reiterated by his wife Tabassum, who falsely asserted before TV cameras that her husband did not even get the services of a lawyer -- a charge she apparently conveyed to the President. The duplicity of the jholawalas who took control of Tabassum, in a way reminiscent of Teesta Setalvad's stranglehold over Zahira Sheikh prior to the latter's somersault, is mindboggling.If SAR Geelani got a fair trial in the same case, how come Afzal Guru did not? The bottom line of the NGO brigade's contention is that justice must conform to their likes and dislikes. So, if the Supreme Court refuses to stop construction of the Sardar Sarovar dam, it shows the Indian judiciary to be contemptible; if it awards the death penalty to Afzal Guru, there's a miscarriage of justice. But if it frees Geelani, the judiciary covers itself with glory.Unable to explain the logic behind these contradictory assertions, some professional agitators claimed that most terrorist outrages in India are suspect. I heard one of them tell a TV channel that the Chittisinghpora massacre (on the eve of President Bill Clinton's visit) was "staged", while the Nanded bomb blasts were the handiwork of Bajrang Dal, the attack on the RSS headquarters at Nagpur "suspect", and there were big question marks on the Malegaon incident. First, each of these claims is patently false. Second, to obliquely suggest that the attack on Parliament was "staged" by Indian agencies reveals the depravity of their minds.To be entertained, a mercy petition by a death row convict must consider whether he is remorseful or at least regrets his action. In the present case, the death peddler is not only unrepentant, but has actually refused to sign his mercy petition. At least he is an honest jihadi who carried out the Parliament attack in the belief (howsoever misplaced) that by seeking to destabilise India he was responding to a higher call.Afzal was driven by the same conviction that motivated several well-educated, sophisticated men to hijack planes and fly them into the WTC towers on 9/11 the same year.Like them, Afzal was ready to die in the process, just as his five Pakistani colleagues did that morning. Why then, should his life be spared? Especially when we already have the example of Azhar Masood who had to be freed in exchange for passengers on IC 814? May be it is precisely in the hope that fellow jihadis will stage yet another successful hijack and get Afzal released that the Hate India agitators have mounted their tear-jerker campaign.After all, their sole aim is to weaken and eventually destroy the Indian state and subsequently the civilisation itself. In any self-respecting country they would have been declared Fifth Columnists and prosecuted for treason. In India, on the other hand, they are celebrities who hog large chunks of airtime and column centimetres.However, while the agenda and modus operandi of the NGO brigade is transparent, the Congress party's surreptitious scheming needs to be deplored roundly. Afzal's hanging, like Geelani's acquittal, is not a Muslim issue. The average Indian Muslim is not batting for Afzal. Like the rest, the Muslims regard Afzal as a traitor who has been sentenced to death by the due process of law and, therefore, deserves to be hanged. But bereft of any achievement in governance, the Congress has decided to aggressively fragment Indian society on caste and communal lines hoping to reap an electoral windfall. It believes that Arjun Singh's systematic destruction of institutions of excellence will get OBCs flocking to the party while clemency for Afzal will drive Muslims in droves into the Congress kitty. If in the process India gets irreparably mauled, so be it.The people of India have repeatedly seen through such games. Had they been stupid, VP Singh would not have been reduced to a mere jhuggi-jhopri dwellers' leader today. The same fate could well be awaiting those Congress stalwarts who are plotting against the nation in cahoots with the jholawalas.

How to become a crorepati overnight

http://www.dailypioneer.com/142636/How-to-become-a-crorepati-overnight.html

When the spectrum controversy began to spin out of control and Telecom Minister A Raja was recently attacked by political leaders from within the UPA and outside for his questionable decisions, his mentor and DMK leader M Karunanidhi condemned the critics as people who could “not tolerate the rise of a humble Dalit”. As it turns out, the ‘humble Dalit’ allowed his ministerial clout and official address to be used for businesses which later connected with the spectrum deal, now under the scanner of the high court and the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC).Not only did a commercial organisation, with the Minister’s wife as a director, begin operating from his official residence, well-placed sources said the information was concealed from the Prime Minister in violation of Service Rules. The Minister did not also deem it necessary to file an affidavit of ‘non-conflict of interest’ between his family’s business activities and his role as a Union Minister. In course of time, the address was changed and his wife officially withdrew from the firm. But the company’s association with the Raja family continued as closely as before, with the shares distributed among his kith and kin.Green House Promoters Private Limited was formed barely four months after Raja became a Cabinet Minister (in charge of Environment and Forests) for the first time in May 2004. The Chennai-based real estate company was floated with an initial capital of only Rs 1 lakh, with AM Sadhick Batcha — a close associate of Raja — as managing director and Sadhick’s wife Reha Banu as a director. Sadhick hails from the Minister’s Perambalur constituency in Tamil Nadu. Documents filed with the Registrar of Companies show that Raja’s close relatives — such as his brother, nephew, niece and a few others — subsequently became directors in the company. With these high-profile inductions, the share capital of the firm surged to a respectable Rs 3 crore within 14 months of the operations being launched.Three years later, in February 2007, the Minister’s wife, MA Parameswari, was added to the board as a director. Raja neither informed the Prime Minister of his wife’s and other relatives’ business activities, which he was mandated to do according to the Services (Conduct) Rules, nor filed an affidavit assuring there would not be a conflict of interest between his duties as a Minister and the business deals of his wife and other relatives.Even as Green House Promoters Private Limited continued to expand its real estate activities in Tamil Nadu (and Karnataka), with the Minister’s official residence doubling up as his wife’s business address, Raja was jolted by a report in early 2008 in a section of the media that pulled up the then Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil for using his official address as the business address for his son. Sensing trouble ahead, Raja got into damage control mode. His wife resigned from the directorship of the company on February 2008, but not before transferring her shares to another relative. Documents available with The Pioneer show the shares were transferred to Raja’s niece, Malarvizhi. The 29-year-old is the wife of Raja’s nephew, a Government pleader in Tamil Nadu. The joint managing director of Green House is Raja’s elder nephew RP Paramesh Kumar. The Minister’s brother, A Kaliaperumal, is also a director of Green House. Another director of this company is R Ram Ganesh, the 22-year-old son of Raja’s elder brother A Ramchandran, who is an Indian Forest Service officer.From a humble beginning of Rs 1 lakh, the company soon soared to great heights. One of the Green House company’s accounts at Canara Bank’s T Nagar branch in Chennai had remittances of more than Rs 150 crore over the last four years. The money came from the Middle East, Hong Kong and Singapore, besides India, though it remains unclear why these remittances were made.As the volume of business transactions increased, the company opened an office in Singapore in 2006. According to sources, it was done to cut down on the direct flow of funds into its Indian accounts and escape public scrutiny.The failure to inform the Prime Minister and file an affidavit was not a one-time lapse or an ‘oversight’ by Raja. Wife Parameswari and the Minister’s relatives became active partners in another company floated a month after Green House came to exist. Breaching rules again, Raja did not inform the Prime Minister and filed no affidavit of non-conflict of interest. The new company, once again dealing in real estate, had a miraculously high turnover of Rs 755 crore in its very first year of operation.

New law on Terror - What? really?

http://deccanherald.com/Content/Dec132008/national20081213106510.asp?section=updatenews

"Earlier, addressing the International Conference of Jurists on Terrorism, Rule of Law and Human Rights, Bhardwaj said time had come for a "really very effective" legislation to combat the menace in the aftermath of the Mumbai mayhem last month.
"We would arm ourselves with laws specifically aimed at terrorist and disruptive elements. The Government would very soon declare the contents of the law," he said.
The Minister said the country never thought that it will face terrorism to such an extent. "But now the time has come for really very effective laws," he said."

Didnt they repeal the effective law called POTA? congratulation to UPA on solving the problem that they themselves created. Congratulations on realising that we are facing Jihad.

Bleeding Heart Liberals to get a bleeding ulcer after PMs statement

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-may-be-overlooked-to-fight-terror-pm/80505-3.html

"But Manmohan Singh also tempered his statement with a healing touch saying that it has to be taken care that no specific group or section of the society is targetted while fighting terror."

Yes, sleeper cell Prime Minister, punish the hindus every time there is a jihadi attack. Of course, the hindus must have done it.

some justice in this world after all

http://www.timesnow.tv/Newsdtls.aspx?NewsID=23471

In a new turn in the case involving acid attack on two engineering girl students, police have shot dead the three accused boys, claiming the police party was attacked by them. The main suspect Srinivas and accomplice Sanjay and Harikrishna were shot dead when they allegedly attacked the police party which went to recover a motor cycle used by them in the incident at Mavunoor last night, district Superintendent of Police Sajjanar said. The police action comes in the wake of a huge public outcry over the acid attack in which the faces of the two girls were disfigured and they were in a critical condition. Two police officials were suspended yesterday for failing to act promptly on a complaint by the father of one of the girls who is battling for life after being subjected to acid attack by a jilted lover in Warangal district of Andhra Pradesh. "They (accused) tried to spray the acid and the weapons and the knives. And so our people reacted and the three accused were killed. Definitely they had criminal intention to harm us," said Sajjanar. On Friday (December 12), Home Minister K Jana Reddy was gheraoed by angry activists of women organisations when he visited the private hospital where Swapnika, a final year B.Tech student and her friend are undergoing treatment. Swapnika and Pranitha were injured when Srinivas threw acid while they were going home on a bike last Wednesday. Meanwhile, the police action immediately attracted adverse comments with a civil rights lawyer questioning the gunning down of the accused. "It is spine-chilling. A system that loses faith in the judicial system and in the rule of law is complete anarchy. We are heading towards chaos," said civil rights lawyer L Ravichander. Referring to a media headline which said justice had been done, she said, "Do they understand what kind of lack of safety they are heading towards when they permit the police to decide to become justice administrators?" The police action comes in the wake of a huge public outcry over an acid attack on two engineering girl students on Wednesday. However, the girls' relatives endorsed the police action saying it would serve as a deterrent for the potential criminals in future. "We feel justice has been done. The attackers did not deserve to live," Swapnika's father Devender Rao, an ex-serviceman, said. "This will save many other girls who could have become their target," her mother Subhashini said. "God is great. The attackers deserved death penalty," Pranitha said. On the other hand, the family members of the slain suspects strongly protested against the police action and said they had been shot dead in fake encounter without conducting proper investigation. "If my son has committed a sin, he should have been punished by the courts. But, the police came under political pressure and staged a fake encounter," the mother of Harikrishna said. The TDP, Left parties and Lok Satta condemned the police action saying the policemen should not be allowed to take law into their hands and hand out instant justice in such cases. Fast Track courts should be set up to try such cases instead of police taking law into their own hands, former TDP minister K Srihari said. Revolutionary Balladeer Gadar demanded an inquiry by sitting High Court judge into the alleged encounter. The President of Human Rights Forum (HRF), Dr Balagopal, said such killings would set a bad precedent and result in public losing faith in the judicial system. Facing mounting criticism, Home Minister K Jana Reddy said Director General of Police S S P Yadav has been asked to submit a report on the encounter and action would be taken based on it. "I have asked the DGP to inquire into the circumstances that led to the encounter and whether it was done as per the law or not," the minister said. The youths were produced before the media here last evening. Police said Srinivas had confessed during interrogation that he bore a grudge against Swapnika as she refused to reciprocate his love and was seeing another boy, adding, he planned the attack with two friends to disfigure Swapnika so that no one would be attracted to her.

MPs forget to pay homage to Parliment attack heroes

http://www.zeenews.com/Nation/2008-12-13/490771news.html

http://www.zeenews.com/nation/13-12-2008/490627news.html

why bother remembering the people who died, since they are dead already.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Only words, no action

http://dailypioneer.com/139118/Only-words-no-action.html

Rajiv Dogra

The terrorists have succeeded beyond their wildest expectations. After the Prime Minister's bluster, the Government now appears to be at a loss as to how to pin down Pakistan. Meanwhile, the world is gaping at a toothless, spineless wonder called the UPA GovernmentOnce again the nation is mourning. But even in catharsis the form is ritualistic. There is much shaking of fists, pledges of firm action against the perpetrators of terror and a resolve to never let it happen again. Then as an expectant nation awaits the details of that resolve, there is deafening silence from the leadership. Their sullen mood having lasted for the duration of the terror attack, the focus shifts to other issues; the GDP growth, a flood somewhere or the next election. Meanwhile, the masters of terror remain focussed, as they prepare for the next even more horrendous strike.

Evidence suggests that unlike our squabbling politicians, the terror masters are a determined lot. Their game plan clearly is to raise the bar of audacity with every strike, and to maximise the terror. In the past few years there were an average of two major terrorist strikes annually. This year there have been eight already, and the year is not yet over. It is a fact of history that civilisations that get ravaged and nations that are supine can never rise to greatness. But a nation that has been brutalised repeatedly is at least expected to learn from its mistakes.

Unfortunately, we seem to have decided that ignorance must remain our bliss. Like Don Quixote we want to keep tilting at the windmills. Naturally our response remains accidental. After every fresh terror strike our intelligence agencies look bewildered, wondering how could it happen again? The security agencies take time to gird up and join the battle. And having joined it, some like the marine commandoes hold boastful Press conferences even as terrorists continue their mayhem. Fortunately, our younger officers and their colleagues have so far acquitted themselves well. But their guts alone will not save India.

We live in a tough neighbourhood and the physical reality for India is getting grimmer by the day. Pakistan is staring into the abyss. Its economy is as parlous as its security situation. The intentions of those who govern Pakistan; the ISI and its Islamic puppets are clear. They want to drag India down into the same morass. This recent terror strike, recent because their have been so many, in Mumbai was meant to clang shut the gateway of democratic India. The strikes on India's financial system were multiple and synchronised. This time it was not a stray suicide attack, the strike was meant to maim the financial system with the special aim of killing foreigners. The objective was to hit at the decision makers of the financial world. The terrorists have succeeded beyond their wildest expectations. For the first time they have also brought India's response to international scrutiny. And the world may well begin to wonder if under sustained attack India might become an example of democracy that failed. Clearly, we are under observation. But so far our response has been haphazard.

The Prime Minister took the exceptional step of addressing the nation on the first day of the terrorist attack. The address should have shaped the national mood. But our kind-hearted Prime Minister sounds apologetic even when he wishes to threaten. Moreover, his speech writers have not served him well. The essence of his threat to the future terrorists was three fold. He said; "We will curb the flow of funds to suspect organisations. We will restrict the entry of suspects into the country. We will go after these individuals and organisations and make sure that every perpetrator, organiser and supporter of terror, whatever his affiliation or religion may be, pays a heavy price for these cowardly and horrific acts against our people."These are brave words. Sadly, they will not deter the terrorists. Let us examine the three elements outlined by the Prime Minister. First, he wishes to curb the flow of funds to suspect organisations. But as we all know the ISI does not depend on the normal channels of bank transfer. It has virtually set up a parallel mint to that of the Government of India which churns out huge amounts of fake Indian currency. Ask any cashier or shop assistant and he will tell you that his daily nightmare is how to detect counterfeit Rs 500 notes.Secondly, he wishes to "restrict" the entry of suspects. But when you talk of "restrict" as opposed to "stop", you leave open the gates for some to enter! In any case the terrorists who landed next to the Naval Headquarters in Mumbai came without visas. The third part of the Prime Minister's resolve was that, "We will go after these individuals and organisations..." Surely this is a hollow threat.

In what must rank as a major blunder, the Prime Minister is reported to have asked the Pakistani Prime Minister to send the ISI chief to "assist" in the investigations! This invitation defies belief. It is like inviting the main suspect in a murder to join the police in investigations.But would the Opposition have fared any better if it were in governance?

The record of the NDA does not inspire confidence. It postured impotently after the attack on Parliament, wasting thousands of crores and exposing our military strategy when it lined up our troops for well over six months on the international border. Nor did the NDA cover itself with glory in the Kandhar episode. And it was former US President Bill Clinton's goodwill that saved us during Kargil. What then is the way forward? Is all lost? Will we continue to depend on the luck and pluck of some brave youngsters to tide us through the future crisis, because despite Prime Minister's brave words the terror strikes are not going to cease.

Hopefully, all is not lost yet. If we look at the examples from around the world we will easily find many where determined leadership has effectively challenged and checked the threat of terror to their countries. At times like these one thinks of Mrs Indira Gandhi. Her response would have been sure-footed and vastly different. She would have chosen the time, finetuned the tactics and carefully decided the extent of damage that she wished to inflict. Thereafter, she would have made sure that the results were obtained for the nation. Then, with a beguiling smile, she would have addressed the nation.The window of our options is getting narrower by the day. The sponsor of terror across the borders is determined and resilient. Even in this limited window there is hope and sufficient time to emulate Mrs Gandhi.

Pakistan tells DhimmiMohan Singh - take a hike

http://dailypioneer.com/139603/Pak-refuses-to-hand-over-20-terrorists-wanted-by-India.html

Pakistan will not hand over any of the listed 20 terrorists wanted by India in the wake of the terror attacks in Mumbai, according to a media report.Some of the terrorists in the list currently do not live in the country while others are under constant surveillance by Pakistan's security and intelligence agencies, official sources told the The News daily."There is no precedent of handing over any alleged suspect to India and vice versa. So turning these 20 persons over to India is out of question because we have our own surveillance apparatus in place and we have confirmed that none of them was involved in any suspected activity while some of them are currently not even living in Pakistan," the paper quoted an official as saying."The organisations banned by the (Pervez) Musharraf regime in the wake of the 9/11 incident have been under constant surveillance and all those freed have already been cleared by intelligence agencies after thorough investigations," he said.There has been no official word on the names included in the list, which was discussed at a meeting of political parties convened yesterday by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to evolve a consensus on dealing with the tensions with India.Emerging from the meeting, former federal minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said the names of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and Tiger Memon and Jaish-e-Mohammed founder Maulana Masood Azhar figured in the list. Ahmed also said there was nothing new about India's demand for handing over these men.The name of Lashker-e-Taiba founder Hafiz Mohammed Saeed is also on the list, official sources said. The LeT has been blamed by Indian security officials for carrying out the Mumbai attacks

we kill you cos you dont like us no more

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/jihadi-world-angry-with-india-says-alqaeda/79655-3.html


Abdel Bari Atwan, The Editor-in-Chief of Arabic newspaper Alquds Alarabi, is an expert on al-Qaeda. He became one of the very few Western journalists to interview Osama bin Laden, when he met the elusive figure in Tora Bora caves in Afghanistan in 1996. He went on to write The Secret History of al-Qaeda, an authoritative account of the terror organisation and its methods.
Abdel Bari Atwan talks to Shishir Prasad and Charles Assisi on the ramifications of the Mumbai terror attacks.
Question: What is the significance of the attack on Mumbai in light of what is happening in the Middle East, Pakistan and Afghanistan?
Answer: The most significant reading is that Islamic radical groups are gaining momentum. The US war against terror has failed in its objective. Now that al-Qaeda has returned home [al-Qaeda began in Afghanistan] after seven years in Iraq, they are sharing all their knowledge gathered in Iraq with other Islamic radical groups like Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar. Al-Qaeda is freely operating inside the tribal belt on the edges of Pakistan.
Question: Why do you think a Jewish organisation was targeted in the Mumbai attacks?
Answer: There has always been a criticism of radical Islamic organisations that in most of their attacks they end up killing Muslims only rather than Jewish people (as most of their operations are in the Middle East). The Islamic radical groups are also accused of not being able to attack Israel. They tried to do so in Mombasa [in 2002] but failed to shoot down the plane. I think they were trying to set the record straight.
Question: But why choose an Indian city to attack Israel?
Answer: For a mix of reasons. Many in the Arab world, especially states like Saudi Arabia and UAE think India has switched its allegiance away from the Arab world. There was a time India was firmly behind the idea of Palestine as a free country. Today India is seen as moving closer to Israel in business ties as well as importing weapons from Israel.
But apart from the Israel angle, there has been anger in the Jihadi world over India’s support to the Karzai government in Afghanistan.
Question: What is the reaction that you get to hear in Jihadi world as well as official Arab world position on India?
Answer: I think the official position of Arab states towards India has not changed. They still view it as a friend but the radical groups don’t like the shift in India’s stance. Most Arab states are very scared of the emergence of Iran as a regional superpower. Iran’s nuclear programme may give them nuclear weapon capability soon and that really worries Saudi Arabia and UAE. And radical groups in these places don’t like that India has had close relationship with Iran.
Question: After this attack on Mumbai, what do you think of the position of Pakistan?
Answer: Pakistan is a semi-failed state. And radical groups thrive on such states. Taliban has almost 80,000 people under its Army now. And they would love to see Pakistan descend into anarchy. India should think about this before it considers a confrontation with Pakistan.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Blaming the victims - TIME magazine

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1862650-1,00.html

The disembodied voice was chilling in its rage. A gunman, holed up in the Oberoi Trident hotel in Mumbai (formerly Bombay), where some 40 people had been taken hostage, told an Indian news channel that the attacks were revenge for the persecution of Muslims in India. "We love this as our country, but when our mothers and sisters were being killed, where was everybody?" he asked via telephone. No answer came. But then he probably wasn't expecting one.
The roots of Muslim rage run deep in India, nourished by a long-held sense of injustice over what many Indian Muslims believe is institutionalized discrimination against the country's largest minority group. The disparities between Muslims, who make up 13.4% of the population, and India's Hindus, who hover at around 80%, are striking. There are exceptions, of course, but generally speaking, Muslim Indians have shorter life spans, worse health, lower literacy levels and lower-paying jobs. Add to that toxic brew the lingering resentment over 2002's anti-Muslim riots in the state of Gujarat. The riots, instigated by Hindu nationalists, killed some 2,000 people, most of them Muslims. To this day, few of the perpetrators have been convicted. (See pictures of the terrorist shootings in Mumbai.)
The huge gap between Muslims and Hindus will continue to haunt India's — and neighboring Pakistan's — progress toward peace and prosperity. But before intercommunal relations can improve, there are even bigger problems that must first be worked out: the schism in subcontinental Islam and the religion's place and role in modern India and Pakistan. It is a crisis 150 years in the making.
The Beginning of the Problem On the afternoon of March 29, 1857, Mangal Pandey, a handsome, mustachioed soldier in the East India Company's native regiment, attacked his British lieutenant. His hanging a week later sparked a subcontinental revolt known to Indians as the first war of independence and to the British as the Sepoy Mutiny. Retribution was swift, and though Pandey was a Hindu, it was the subcontinent's Muslims, whose Mughal King nominally held power in Delhi, who bore the brunt of British rage. The remnants of the Mughal Empire were dismantled, and 500 years of Muslim supremacy on the subcontinent came to a halt.
Muslim society in India collapsed. The British imposed English as the official language. The impact was cataclysmic. Muslims went from near 100% literacy to 20% within a half-century. The country's educated Muslim élite was effectively blocked from administrative jobs in the government. Between 1858 and 1878, only 57 out of 3,100 graduates of Calcutta University — then the center of South Asian education — were Muslims. While discrimination by both Hindus and the British played a role, it was as if the whole of Muslim society had retreated to lick its collective wounds.
Out of this period of introspection, two rival movements emerged to foster an Islamic ascendancy. Revivalist groups blamed the collapse of their empire on a society that had strayed too far from the teachings of the Koran. They promoted a return to a purer form of Islam, modeled on the life of the Prophet Muhammad. Others embraced the modern ways of their new rulers, seeking Muslim advancement through the pursuit of Western sciences, culture and law. From these movements two great Islamic institutions were born: Darul Uloom Deoband in northern India, rivaled only by Al Azhar University in Cairo for its teaching of Islam, and Aligarh Muslim University, a secular institution that promoted Muslim culture, philosophy and languages but left religion to the mosque. These two schools embody the fundamental split that continues to divide Islam in the subcontinent today. "You could say that Deoband and Aligarh are husband and wife, born from the same historical events," says Adil Siddiqui, information coordinator for Deoband. "But they live at daggers drawn."
The campus at Deoband is only a three-hour drive from New Delhi through the modern megasuburb of Noida. Strip malls and monster shopping complexes have consumed many of the mango groves that once framed the road to Deoband, but the contemporary world stops at the gate. The courtyards are packed with bearded young men wearing long, collared shirts and white caps. The air thrums with the voices of hundreds of students reciting the Koran from open-door classrooms.
See TIME's Pictures of the Week.
Founded in 1866, the Deoband school quickly set itself apart from other traditional madrasahs, which were usually based in the home of the village mosque's prayer leader. Deoband's founders, a group of Muslim scholars from New Delhi, instituted a regimented system of classrooms, coursework, texts and exams. Instruction is in Urdu, Persian and Arabic, and the curriculum closely follows the teachings of the 18th century Indian Islamic scholar Mullah Nizamuddin Sehalvi. Graduates go on to study at Cairo's Al Azhar or the Islamic University of Medina in Saudi Arabia, or they found their own Deobandi institutions.
Today, more than 9,000 Deobandi madrasahs are scattered throughout India, Afghanistan and Pakistan, most infamously the Dara-ul-Uloom Haqaniya Akora Khattak, near Peshawar, Pakistan, where Mullah Mohammed Omar and several other leaders of Afghanistan's Taliban first tasted a life lived in accordance with Shari'a. Siddiqui visibly stiffens when those names are brought up. They have become synonymous with Islamic radicalism, and Siddiqui is careful to dissociate his institution from those who carry on its traditions, without actually condemning their actions. "Our books are being taught there," he says. "They have the same system and rules. But if someone is following the path of terrorism, it is because of local compulsions and local politics."
Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, who founded the Anglo-Mohammedan Oriental College at Aligarh in 1877, studied under the same teachers as the founders of Deoband. But he believed that the downfall of India's Muslims was due to their unwillingness to embrace modern ways. He decoupled religion from education and in his school sought to emulate the culture and training of India's new colonial masters. Islamic culture was part of the curriculum, but so were the latest advances in sciences, medicine and Western philosophy. The medium was English, the better to prepare students for civil-service jobs. He called his school the Oxford of the East. In architecture alone, the campus lives up to that name. A euphoric blend of clock towers, crenellated battlements, Mughal arches, domes and the staid red brick of Victorian institutions that only India's enthusiastic embrace of all things European could produce, the central campus of Aligarh today is haven to a diverse crowd of male and female, Hindu and Muslim students. Its law and medicine schools are among the top-ranked in India, but so are its arts faculty and Quranic Studies Centre. "With all this diversity, language, culture, secularism was the only way to go forward as a nation," says Aligarh's vice chancellor, P.K. Abdul Azis. "It was the new religion."
This fracture in religious doctrine — whether Islam should embrace the modern or revert to its fundamental origins — between two schools less than a day's donkey ride apart when they were founded, was barely remarked upon at the time. But over the course of the next 100 years, that tiny crack would split Islam into two warring ideologies with repercussions that reverberate around the world to this day. Before the split became a crisis, however, the founders of the Deoband and Aligarh universities shared the common goal of an independent India. Pedagogical leanings were overlooked as students and staff of both institutions joined with Hindus across the subcontinent to remove the yoke of colonial rule in the early decades of the 20th century.
Two Faiths, Two Nations But nationalistic trends were pulling at the fragile alliance, and India began to splinter along ethnic and religious lines. Following World War I, a populist Muslim poet-philosopher by the name of Muhammad Iqbal framed the Islamic zeitgeist when he questioned the position of minority Muslims in a future, independent India. The solution, Iqbal proposed, was an independent state for Muslim-majority provinces in northwestern India, a separate country where Muslims would rule themselves. The idea of Pakistan was born.
Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the Savile Row–suited lawyer who midwifed Pakistan into existence on Aug. 14, 1947, was notoriously ambiguous about how he envisioned the country once it became an independent state. Both he and Iqbal, who were friends until the poet's death in 1938, had repeatedly stated their dream for a "modern, moderate and very enlightened Pakistan," says Sharifuddin Pirzada, Jinnah's personal secretary. Jinnah's own wish was that the Pakistani people, as members of a new, modern and democratic nation, would decide the country's direction.
But rarely in Pakistan's history have its people lived Jinnah's vision of a modern Muslim democracy. Only three times in its 62-year history has Pakistan seen a peaceful, democratic transition of power. With four disparate provinces, more than a dozen languages and dialects, and powerful neighbors, the country's leaders — be they Presidents, Prime Ministers or army chiefs — have been forced to knit the nation together with the only thing Pakistanis have in common: religion.
Following the 1971 civil war, when East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, broke away, the populist Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto embarked on a Muslim-identity program to prevent the country from fracturing further. General Mohammed Zia ul-Haq continued the Islamization campaign when he overthrew Bhutto in 1977, hoping to garner favor with the religious parties, the only constituency available to a military dictator. He instituted Shari'a courts, made blasphemy illegal and established laws that punished fornicators with lashes and held that rape victims could be convicted of adultery. When the Soviet Union invaded neighboring Afghanistan in December 1979, Pakistan was already poised for its own Islamic revolution.
Almost overnight, thousands of refugees poured over the border into Pakistan. Camps mushroomed, and so did madrasahs. Ostensibly created to educate the refugees, they provided the ideal recruiting ground for a new breed of soldier: mujahedin, or holy warriors, trained to vanquish the infidel invaders in America's proxy war with the Soviet Union. Thousands of Pakistanis joined fellow Muslims from across the world to fight the Soviets. As far away as Karachi, high school kids started wearing "jihadi jackets," the pocketed vests popular with the mujahedin. Says Hamid Gul, then head of the Pakistan intelligence agency charged with arming and training the mujahedin: "In the 1980s, the world watched the people of Afghanistan stand up to tyranny, oppression and slavery. The spirit of jihad was rekindled, and it gave a new vision to the youth of Pakistan."
But jihad, as it is described in the Koran, does not end merely with political gain. It ends in a perfect Islamic state. The West's, and Pakistan's, cynical resurrection of something so profoundly powerful and complex unleashed a force that gave root to al-Qaeda's rage, the Taliban's dream of an Islamic utopia in Afghanistan, and in the dozens of radical Islamic groups rapidly replicating themselves in India and around the world today. "The promise of jihad was never fulfilled," says Gul. "Is it any wonder the fighting continues to this day?" Religion may have been used to unite Pakistan, but it is also tearing it apart.
India Today In India, Islam is, in contrast, the other — purged by the British, denigrated by the Hindu right, mistrusted by the majority, marginalized by society. There are nearly as many Muslims in India as in all of Pakistan, but in a nation of more than a billion, they are still a minority, with all the burdens that minorities anywhere carry. Government surveys show that Muslims live shorter, poorer and unhealthier lives than Hindus and are often excluded from the better jobs. To be sure, there are Muslim success stories in the booming economy. Azim Premji, the founder of the outsourcing giant Wipro, is one of the richest individuals in India. But for many Muslims, the inequality of the boom has reinforced their exclusion.
Kashmir, a Muslim-dominated state whose fate had been left undecided in the chaos that led up to partition, remains a suppurating wound in India's Muslim psyche. As the cause of three wars between India and Pakistan — one of which nearly went nuclear in 1999 — Kashmir has become a symbol of profound injustice to Indian Muslims, who believe that their government cares little for Kashmir's claim of independence — which is based upon a 1948 U.N. resolution promising a plebiscite to determine the Kashmiri people's future. That frustration has spilled into the rest of India in the form of several devastating terrorist attacks that have made Indian Muslims both perpetrators and victims.
A mounting sense of persecution, fueled by the government's seeming reluctance to address the brutal anti-Muslim riots that killed more than 2,000 in the state of Gujarat in 2002, has aided the cause of homegrown militant groups. They include the banned Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), which was accused of detonating nine bombs in Mumbai during the course of 2003, killing close to 80. The 2006 terrorist attacks on the Mumbai commuter-rail system that killed 183 people were also blamed on SIMI as well as the pro-Kashmir Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT). Those incidents exposed the all-too-common Hindu belief that Muslims aren't really Indian. "LeT, SIMI — it doesn't matter who was behind these attacks. They are all children of [Pervez] Musharraf," sneered Manish Shah, a Mumbai resident who lost his best friend in the explosions, referring to the then President of Pakistan. In India, unlike Pakistan, Islam does not unify but divide.
Still, many South Asian Muslims insist Islam is the one and only force that can bring the subcontinent together and return it to pre-eminence as a single whole. "We [Muslims] were the legal rulers of India, and in 1857 the British took that away from us," says Tarik Jan, a gentle-mannered scholar at Islamabad's Institute of Policy Studies. "In 1947 they should have given that back to the Muslims." Jan is no militant, but he pines for the golden era of the Mughal period in the 1700s and has a fervent desire to see India, Pakistan and Bangladesh reunited under Islamic rule.
That sense of injustice is at the root of Muslim identity today. It has permeated every aspect of society and forms the basis of rising Islamic radicalism on the subcontinent. "People are hungry for justice," says Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani journalist and author of the new book Descent into Chaos. "It is perceived to be the fundamental promise of the Koran." These twin phenomena — the longing many Muslims feel to see their religion restored as the subcontinent's core, and the marks of both piety and extremism Islam bears — reflect the lack of strong political and civic institutions in the region for people to have faith in. If the subcontinent's governments can't provide those institutions, then terrorists like the Trident's mysterious caller will continue asking questions. And providing their own answers.