What's new

India's Orwellian drift

Asfand

FULL MEMBER

New Recruit

Joined
Jan 8, 2008
Messages
28
Reaction score
0
DURING the early rule of Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, someone in his government placed two evidently unusable anti-aircraft guns of Second World War vintage on a visually prominent rampart of Delhi’s 16th-century fort, the Purana Qila.

The idea apparently was to deter airborne terrorists from attacking an approaching national day ceremony, but the subtext was not too hidden either. It became the first step towards a national campaign to instil fear — not unlike what had happened in America — of unknown and eventually unidentifiable terrorists. It was also a way for the government to farm out its growing list of phobias among the people, making them unwitting participants in a series of misadventures under the sobriquet of fight against terror.

Only this week, a Gujarat court controversially sentenced 11 Muslims to death and handed life sentences to another 20 for their alleged role in the death of 58 Hindus in a train inferno blamed on Muslims. Some 60 of the Muslims of Godhra, where the train tragedy occurred on Feb 27, 2002, were discharged last month as conspirators by the same court. They included men the prosecution called the masterminds.

The episode was of a piece with India’s prevailing ‘a-jaw-for-a-tooth’ mindset. A key parliamentary committee this week advocated death penalty for hijackers. What seemed odd was that a communist deputy headed the group. And Sitaram Yechury is no ordinary partisan. He is a politburo member of the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M), the country’s largest leftist group.

Several questions arose from the committee’s decision. Take Mr Yechury’s assumption that hijackers fear death, that capital punishment would deter them. In an era of suicide bombers what could be the significance of any decision to flaunt the gallows as retribution for ideologically-driven crimes, leave alone hijacking?

Hitherto the standard test of communist partisans in India was their readiness to listen to reason, their willingness to look for deeper causes of a given malaise, their fabled scientific diligence and a keen eye for humane remedies. There was a time in India when even its bourgeois political class displayed greater sensitivity to commonplace crimes that would be bracketed after a fashion (or expediency?) as acts of terror.

Before Mr Yechury’s advent as a parliamentarian, India was handling its problems with hijackers in a uniquely Indian way — with compassion, even humour.

Dalit Buddhists, Kashmiri Muslims, Sikhs and Brahmins had all hijacked planes in India. Their motives ranged from separatist politics to a laughable quest, if hijacking allows for humour, of seeking the postponement of college exams!

Two hijackers became Congress party leaders, one of them even a minister. Both men in the 1978 incident were Brahmins. In fact, they were brothers. Armed with toy guns they told the pilot they wanted Indira Gandhi freed from prison where she languished briefly after her opponents defeated her in 1977. Should they have been hanged?

A 1993 hijacker, Satish Chandra Pandey, was an admirer of Mr Vajpayee. A stated motive for his hijacking a plane on a cold January morning was to be urged by his hero, Mr Vajpayee, to surrender, which he did. The same year, four students claiming to be armed with explosives took charge of a domestic airliner to demand postponement of their annual university exams. Other passengers overpowered them. It was India’s second hijacking in two weeks and the third that year.

The students demanded that the government allocate Rs50m ($1.6m) to their college to begin a new Master’s programme. Would Mr Yechury want them dead?

On March 27 that year, a former trucker claiming to be a member of India’s governing Congress party took over another domestic airliner with 203 people on board to voice his frustration over the state of affairs in the country. The 37-year-old unemployed hijacker, who called India’s politicians “crooks”, surrendered to the police in Amritsar after failing to get permission for the plane to land in Lahore. Put him before a firing squad?

In January 1994, a lone hijacker, claiming to be a neo-Buddhist Dalit , commandeered an Indian Airlines Bangalore-Madras A-320 Airbus. The hijacker wanted Marathwada University to be renamed after Dr B.R. Ambedkar. Try tinkering with that, Mr Yechury.

I met one officially pampered hijacker in a Srinagar jail, where he was distributing copies of his memoirs to visiting journalists while armed guards at the high security jail offered generous rounds of Pepsi Cola with freshly baked pastries to the guests.

With a little bit of luck and more help from Indian intelligence agencies that are believed to be helping him vis-à-vis one of their mysterious agendas, Hashim Qureshi harbours ambitions to become chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir.

It would be tempting to look for comparison in Mr Yechury’s approach to any more recent hijacking with the more rightwards-leaning parties of India. The surprising fact is that during the Vajpayee era, which was as right as India has been as yet, there were three occasions when the Bharatiya Janata Party appeared to prefer the standard Indian middle course. It freed seven Sikh hijackers that Indira Gandhi had extradited from Dubai. It chose to save scores of precious lives rather than to allow insane criminals to blow them up, and it welcomed back Hashim Qureshi, a mastermind of the Ganga hijack episode of 1971, from Holland. Which of these would Mr Yechury have sent to the gallows?

The fact is that the near total silence of the parliamentary Left on the increasing militarisation of the Indian state — as also its growing participation in its self-defeating prescriptions on terror — seems akin to the last scene from George Orwell’s satire on communist Russia. The pigs in Animal Farm — depicting the ruling classes in Stalin’s Moscow — were beginning to walk on their hind legs, an act of hero-worshipping those they had sworn never to imitate.
 
.
Why change the heading of the article? Deliberate attempt to flame?

article written by a known paranoid.
 
.
The article is called India's Orwellian drift. It would good if you can provide the link and correct the title as well.

Ontopic, you have to read George Orwell's Animal Farm and 1984 to understand what Naqwi is talking about. I think in the last decade all countries have been affected by an Orwellian drift by curbing freedom of private citizens and curbs on privacy. Its important to turn around the clock before it becomes to late. And that also means that we have to understand when you become terrorised by terrorists acts and curb your freedom and values, then the terrrorists have won.
 
. .
^^^ Exactly ; whats the point here ?? That the hijackers must be granted public pardon and made ministers or that anti-terror laws/actions must be discontinued :undecided:
 
.
I don't belive every muslim is terrorist.
But I don't know why every terrorist at the end found to be Muslim.
 
.
I don't belive every muslim is terrorist.
But I don't know why every terrorist at the end found to be Muslim.

Hmm as samjota express terrorist ? As Tamir tigers who were made by RAW ? list is long....
 
.
Hmm as samjota express terrorist ? As Tamir tigers who were made by RAW ? list is long....

Samjauta express is blamed on LeT ; executed by Arif Qasmani . But anyway what it has got to do with topic in hand. ?
 
.
^^That was based on earlier investigations by the Indian agencies, post Aseemanand that has changed. However, Qasmani is still believed to be involved in other cases like 2006 Mumbai train bombings. But yes this has nothing to do with the current topic.

The topic is not about giving ministerial positions to hijackers but to have a balance between civil liberties and privacy versus security practices and scare mongering.

Should hijackers be given the death penalty? Or should that be the case only if they kill people which would basically be a murder charge? And ofcourse if people think that the death penalty will deter say 9/11 style suicide attacks that ofcourse thatisthe height of naiveity because such hijackers are not worried about the death penalty.

What should be focussed more on is improving the professionalism among police forces. We have numerous cases of false arrests and torture that do nothing to improve the security posture. Our terrorism conviction rates are pathetically low which has exposed the shoddy investigation work done by the police and investigative agencies. ONly recently has the NIA started to get some good results in investigation and convition cases.

On the other hand, Rich people who do massive amounts of corruption are released on bail and investigations against them are closed because of "lack of evidence" like the Quatrocchi case. Similarly, politicians involved in murders and assault are treated with kids gloves. These are important aspects that should be fixed before bringing "tougher laws" that will fix nothing in reality.
 
.
^^That was based on earlier investigations by the Indian agencies, post Aseemanand that has changed. However, Qasmani is still believed to be involved in other cases like 2006 Mumbai train bombings. But yes this has nothing to do with the current topic.

My mistake. I should have been more specific.

Regarding Samjauta there are now two sets of confessions one from David Headley (Dawood Gilani) corroborated by his wife Fazia Talha and the other ofcourse the other one from Aseemanand. (But given the political overshadows and the stupid reasons given by him I,personally have much reason to doubt it).

Let the courts decide. I was just against the pre-emptive declaration of guilt on Right wing orgs,

The topic is not about giving ministerial positions to hijackers but to have a balance between civil liberties and privacy versus security practices and scare mongering.

I am of the firm opinion that civil liberties are only for civil persons and for those arrested after the crime has been committed based on police investigation.

Those who are caught red-handed doing heinous crimes like hijackings should not be spared any mercy, whatever be their reason.

Should hijackers be given the death penalty? Or should that be the case only if they kill people which would basically be a murder charge? And ofcourse if people think that the death penalty will deter say 9/11 style suicide attacks that ofcourse thatisthe height of naiveity because such hijackers are not worried about the death penalty.

True those who are brainwashed about their supposed place in heaven will never be deterred but this is kind of symbolic justice which can atleast console the victims.

Actually the more important point to be debated about hijackings is whether the IAF should be authorized to shoot down the aircraft to avoid Kandahar like incidents happening again. I believe the Parliamentary Commitee has authorized that too as a last ditch effort.

What should be focussed more on is improving the professionalism among police forces. We have numerous cases of false arrests and torture that do nothing to improve the security posture. Our terrorism conviction rates are pathetically low which has exposed the shoddy investigation work done by the police and investigative agencies. ONly recently has the NIA started to get some good results in investigation and convition cases.

Fully agreed except the part that NIA has now started showing results. What results you are talking about ?

On the other hand, Rich people who do massive amounts of corruption are released on bail and investigations against them are closed because of "lack of evidence" like the Quatrocchi case. Similarly, politicians involved in murders and assault are treated with kids gloves. These are important aspects that should be fixed before bringing "tougher laws" that will fix nothing in reality.

True but not relevant to the topic.
 
. .
Some facts about the conditions of Indian Muslims disclosed in the Sachar Report.

1) 138 Million Muslims across India are severely under-represented in government employment, including Public Sector Units. Ironically, West Bengal, a communist ruled state reported 0 (zero) percent of Muslims in higher positions in its PSUs!

2) It has found that the share of Muslims in government jobs and in the lower judiciary in any state simply does not come anywhere close to their population share.

3) The only place where Muslims can claim a share in proportion to their population is in prison! (Muslims convicts in India is 19.1%, while the number of under trials is 22.5%, which exceed their population ratio) .

4) A note sent on January 9 by the army to the defence ministry in 2004 says that only 29,093 Muslims among a total of 1.1 million personnel — a ratio of 2.6 %, which compares poorly with the Muslims’ 13.8 % share in the Indian population. Officially, Indian Army don’t allow head count based on religion.

5) The average amount of bank loan disbursed to the Muslims is 2/3 of the amount disbursed to other minorities.

6) There is a clear and significant inverse association between the proportion of the Muslim population and the availability of educational infrastructure in small villages

7) The presence of Muslims has been found to be only 3% in the IAS, 1.8% in the IFS and 4% in the IPS.

8) Muslim community has a representation of only 4.5% in Indian Railways while 98.7% of them are positioned at lower levels. Representation of Muslims is very low in the Universities and in Banks. Their share in police constables is only 6%, in health 4.4%, in transport 6.5%.

Getting housing for Muslims is harder because they are Muslims, Hindus and Christians do not want to lease out their property to them.

9) Substantially larger proportion of the Muslim households in urban areas are in the less than Rs.500 expenditure bracket.

10) Most of the variables indicate that Muslim-OBCs are significantly deprived in comparison to Hindu-OBCs. The work participation rate (WPR) shows the presence of a sharp difference between Hindu-OBCs (67%) and the Muslims. The share of Muslim-OBCs in government/ PSU jobs is much lower than Hindu-OBCs.

11) There are about 5 lakh registered Wakfs with 6 lakh acre land and Rs 6,000 crore book value. But the gross income from all these properties is only 163 crores i.e. 2.7%.

Indian textbooks are to be scrapped off because of their Anti-Muslim bias:

Indian school textbooks to be scrapped because of anti muslim bias | World news | The Guardian
 
.
The lack of representation of the Indian Muslims is reflected in every field of life:

In rural areas: 94.9% of Muslims living below poverty line fail to receive free food grain.

Only 3.2% of Muslims get subsidized loans,

Only 2.1% of Muslim farmers have tractors, while just 1% own hand pumps.

54.6% of Muslims in villages and 60% in urban areas have never been to schools. In rural areas, only 0.8% of Muslims are graduates, while in urban areas despite 40% of the Muslims receiving modern education only 3.1% are graduates. Only 1.2% of Muslims are post-graduates in urban areas.

While West Bengal has 25% Muslim population, only 4.2% are employed in state services. In Assam , with a 40% Muslim population, only 11.2% are in government employment. Kerala has 20% Muslims, but only 10.4% of government employees are Muslim.

A better picture is projected by data collected in Karnataka, where against Muslim population of 12.2%, 8.5% are employed in government services. While in Gujarat, of the 9.1% Muslim population, 5.4% are in state jobs , in Tamil Nadu, against a 5.6% Muslim population, 3.2% are employed in government.

Though West Bengal is known as a political bastion of the left bloc, the ones who have always spoken strongly against parties entertaining communal bias, the state has zero% Muslims in state PSUs. While Kerala has 9.5% in state PSUs, Maharashtra has only 1.9%.

Though the Sachar committee was not able to secure data regarding the presence of Muslims in the armed forces, it is fairly well-known that their percentage here is not more than three.

Muslims form only 10.6% of the population in Maharashtra , but 32.4% of the prison inmates here are Muslims. In New Delhi , 27.9 % of inmates are Muslims, though they form only 11.7% of the population here. While in Gujarat , Muslims form 25.1% of the ones imprisoned, they form 9.1% of the population. In Karnataka, Muslims form 12.23% of populace and 17.5% of those imprisoned.
 
.
^^^ you truly seem to take issue with the Muslim under-representation in India and the financial position of Muslims in India. Are you certain that you are not a Congress Party candidate for a future CM post in India??? :undecided:
 
. .
Back
Top Bottom