Defending the right to live
By Kuldip Nayar
Friday, 10 Apr, 2009
IT was a small albeit a significant gesture by those who took out a procession at the historic Jantar Mantar in New Delhi to express their solidarity with the people of Pakistan in their hour of challenge from terrorists.
It is a coincidence that thousands of people demonstrated on the same day at the Mall in Lahore to warn terrorists, some of whom had attacked a police academy.
In both countries the message was that the people would not allow bombs and bullets to defeat freedom and fraternity. Without any arms or security the participants of the demonstrations have made it clear that determined people are a far bigger force than all the gun-toting fundamentalists put together.
Civil society in both countries knows that the battle between terrorism and peace may last long. The loss may be enormous. But there is no doubting the victory of those who leave the comfort of their home to come on the streets to defend their right to live and to live without fear. They want to build an environment where children can play without their parents worrying about them, where elders can go about their business with confidence and where every man can command respect regardless of his faith.
Unfortunately, neither New Delhi nor Islamabad comes up to a standard that prepares them for a firm response to terrorism. They are not even on speaking terms, much less anywhere near planning joint steps to fight the scourge. Who gets the better of the other in diplomacy or tactics has little significance when the people they represent have begun to feel as if they are on their own. Both societies are an exasperated lot and have little faith in their governments.
What happened in Mumbai or elsewhere a few months ago and what is happening in Pakistan in some shape or the other every day shows that the battle with the enemy the terrorists is yet to become a joint one. People do not see any short or long-term strategy which the government on either side has charted to exterminate terrorism.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has a point when he says that when the Pakistani government is not doing enough to bring the perpetrators of the recent Mumbai attacks to justice, there is no use resuming dialogue with Islamabad. The Pakistani reply that it will not agree to any precondition too makes sense. But asking for a quick trial is not equal to putting conditions.
The simple fact is that neither appreciates the enormity of the danger posed by the terrorists to the two countries.
True, Islamabad created the Taliban for reasons of strategic depth in Afghanistan. But now it finds that Frankenstein is killing the master. Pakistanis are dying by the dozen. Would putting blame on Islamabad help New Delhi?
By reaching within six kilometres of the Wagah border, the Taliban are giving a warning to India that they are not too distant. Kashmir has already reported the entry of the Taliban through Gurez in the north of the state. The Indian army has verified that some infiltration has already taken place.
The Taliban seem to have a well-worked-out plan to undo both India and Pakistan. As regards India, the threat is to the countrys secular structure. In Pakistan, they want society to go back to a mediaeval way of living. Armed with fatal weapons of firearms and fanaticism, the Taliban are killing those who differ with them or come in their way.
David Kilcullen, former adviser to top US military commander Gen David Petraeus has warned that Pakistan could collapse within months in the face of the snowballing insurgency. Is this prospect good for New Delhi? Imagine a buffer state between the Taliban and India disappearing. What is India doing except feeling smug? There may be Indians who are chuckling over the maelstrom of terrorism and thoughtlessness in which Pakistan is caught.
Both New Delhi and Islamabad should realise that hostility towards each other is only helping the Taliban and weakening the forces which believe in democracy and the rule of law. The more the two countries grow apart, the more viability they give to fundamentalists who have built a make-believe world on hatred and extremism. All problems pale into insignificance when the fight is for the survival of the basics for which people live.
India should be able to appreciate this much more than Pakistan because the former has been a stable democratic country for more than six decades. Unfortunately, when it comes to Pakistan, India does not act as a visionary. Note how New Delhi has stopped officials in the Pakistan High Commission from going to nearby Gurgaon or Noida to play golf indicating the former does not want people-to-people contact.
It is too much to ask the two nations to cleanse the slate of bias and bitterness. But can the two nations cobble together a plan to confront the Taliban? New Delhi should give a unilateral undertaking to keep the eastern border, along with Kashmir, quiet so as to enable Pakistani forces to fight on the western front, adjoining Afghanistan and Fata.
The gaping wounds of Mumbai will take time to heal. The Pakistani government should be seen doing all it can to punish the perpetrators. Let that process continue. Yet the two countries should be seen openly joining hands for exterminating terrorism. Islamabad must take steps to stop the alleged activities of the ISI in helping Al Qaeda and the Taliban. Only the other day some US generals accused the intelligence agency of doing so.
The matter was also raised during the Pakistani army chiefs recent visit to Washington where it was indicated that it would be in Pakistans interest to be clear on the issue. The Pakistani intelligence considers India a bigger enemy than the Taliban. The mere transfer of troops from the border with India to the NWFP from where the Taliban operate will not do. The attitude has to undergo a sea change. The plea that only rogue elements in the intelligence are mixed up does not wash.
On the other hand, New Delhi has to learn how to adjust and live with its neighbour. It has been the same story of deadlocks and dialogue for the last six decades. Pakistan genuinely feels that India, a far bigger and more powerful country, will one day gobble it up. This is not true. Both sides have to bury the hatchet to enable people to exercise their right to live.
The writer is a leading journalist based in New Delhi.