Quantcast
Channel:
Viewing all 2856 articles
Browse latest View live

DNA COMES TO DELHI. FINALLY

$
0
0

articleimage-2

Brace yourselves for a historic Dussehra seven days from now. Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) members will take off their khaki shorts and step into grey trousers. And after half a dozen false alarms, Essel Group’s Daily News & Analysis (DNA) is finally going to hit Delhi’s newsstands.

wp_20161004_001

But does the national capital’s already overcrowded market need yet another newspaper? That’s exactly what DNA asks — rhetorically, obviously — on the front page of its four-page insert, delivered free to homes across Delhi today. It will start off, we are told, with a 32-page edition, including four pages of business news (‘DNA of Money‘). One of the focus areas will be ‘faunetics’. In case you are wondering like we are, it’s something to do with ‘animals’. So ‘fauna + etics’, like phonetics. Punny.

The meta lead visual shows the promo as a flag, strung from a flagpole that is actually a fountain pen called DNA. Saluting this ‘flag’ are people from various daises. On one, labelled “Reader is the king”, is a Gen Z dude in an “I <3 Delhi” tee. There’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and several members of his Cabinet. 

On the Congress dais, Sonia Gandhi and Robert Vadra are busy saluting the ‘flag’, while Rahul Gandhi is hurling a paper plane made from National Herald. Priyanka Vadra is turning her back on supporters who are bowing and praying to the Congress dais even as an angry Arvind Kejriwal marches towards it.

Various regional leaders are seen in the background — there’s Uddhav Thackeray holding a rolled-up DNA Mumbai under his arm, and the mahagathbandhan of Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad sharing a stage with a placard that says ‘2019’ and, erm, a criminal?

Below the fold are voices from eight “influencers and opinion shapers of Delhi”, including Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu, who recalls DNA’s Mumbai launch. And there’s a column by Mumbaikar-turned-Delhiite Shweta Bachchan Nanda.

wp_20161004_002

On the inside double spread, we meet the team led by Rohit Gandhi, the editor-in-chief who also heads Essel’s English news channel, WION (World Is One News). Gayatri Jayaraman of #urbanpoor fame is Senior Editor, Opinion page & integrated desks. For some reason, DNA chose to juxtapose five of its exclusive news stories with the claim that it is “B-Town’s go-to paper”.

wp_20161004_004

It’s only on the back page that the reader is actually told when the paper is going to be launched, in a half-page house ad that screams: “Is junk news ruining your mind?” Clearly, not a reference to Zee News.

wp_20161004_003

Oh, and there’s a quiz. One of the questions is about the renaming of Aurangzeb Road. One of the options is Lajpat Nagar. That’s not even a road! Let’s just hope more thought goes into the news that DNA will dish out come October 11.

NL Subscription Banner


#JUSTSPORTS 4: ISL, LODHA COMMITTEE VS BCCI, AND THE RYDER CUP

$
0
0

 

Samar Khan and Rahul Puri are back with their sporty round-up. At The Ryder Cup, American patriotism raised a few European hackles. Khan and Puri have questions about the Indian Super League (ISL) — is it the Indian Premier League (IPL) of Indian football and what is the ISL’s future? Also, find out more about the murky world of football agents as well as why the BCCI should listen to the Lodha Committee if they know what’s good for them. All this and more.

Listen to #JustSports on iTunes here and Stitcher here

NL Subscription Banner

INSAS, THE DESI KALASHNIKOV THAT WASN’T

$
0
0

article-pic-for-insas

As nationalistic fervour mounts, the Indian defence ministry has issued a Request for Information today seeking a 7.62 mm x 51 mm assault rifle to replace its existing 5.56 mm INSAS rifle.

The ham-fistedly named Indian Small Arms System (INSAS) was the assault rifle that the Defence Research Development Organisation (DRDO) claimed would replace the ubiquitous AK-47 that was in use at the time. While the global tender for the formal techno-commercial bids will only be floated in April 2017, it means that even the advanced version of the INSAS, the Excalibur, has failed to meet the army’s expectations.

The DRDO conceptualised the 5.56 mm calibre, gas-operated INSAS rifles in the 1980s in a bid to reduce the army’s dependency on foreign weapons. Manufacturing began in 1983, but it was only on January 4, 1991, that the Ishapore Rifle Factory could present a prototype. And it was not until 1994 that the first consignment of rifles was handed over to the army. It was used for the first time during the Kargil war in 1999, but not without teething troubles malfunctioning in the cold Himalayan conditions.

rifle-5-56-mm-insas-inside-articleDespite its shortcomings, the INSAS remained a weapon of choice for a long time. Marketed as an indigenous assault rifle suited to battlefields and insurgency-affected areas, it is used by state police forces in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Bihar and Chhattisgarh.

The INSAS can fire 600-650 rounds in a minute with an effective range of 400 metres. Capable of firing a 20-round-magazine, the rifle is easy to assemble and dismantle, and has a multi-purpose bayonet that also works as a saw, wire cutter, hammer and dagger. Chrome-plating of the barrel and firing pin makes it easy to maintain.

According to the DRDO, the desi AK-47 is believed to be better than the original. “The AK-47 has a tendency to fire towards the top-right,” an assistant commander of Border Security Force (BSF) told Newslaundry. “The INSAS is more accurate.” The INSAS also has a transparent magazine made of plastic, as opposed to the metal ones of the AK series. “So, you always have an idea of how many rounds are left,” added the officer.

 

However, its cons far outweigh the pros. Take the plastic magazine, for instance, which tends to break not only when it is dropped but also when pressure is applied by troops who have to crawl. “We have received several complaints of magazines breaking while being used on the ground,” a rifle factory official told us on condition of anonymity.

In terms of design, the INSAS borrows heavily from the AK series, but implementation has been far from perfect. Take the case of the Kalashnikov-inspired rotating bolt, which carries the topmost round on the magazine to the chamber. “The rotating bolt, or chalwale purze as it is commonly known, often moves without carrying the round,” said the BSF officer. “During an attack, a misfeed can prove lethal.”

rifle-5-56-mm-insas-specification-1

There is also an issue with the rifle’s cavity – the bottom part of the round into which the bullet is inserted before it is forced out of the barrel by gas pressure. “The cavity gets stuck during ejection and extraction,” said an officer of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) who admitted to facing this problem while using the rifle. “Even though there is a mechanism to deal with such a malfunction, one doesn’t have the luxury of time during combat.” Another potential hazard was that the cavity was prone to melting during constant firing. This was because it was made thin in order to keep the weight of the rifle to a minimum. Despite this, the “lightweight” INSAS ended up weighing over four kilograms without a magazine. In comparison, the AK-47, even with the magazine attached, weighs 3.9 kilograms.

The long list of drawbacks has led to the INSAS falling out of favour. With the army reverting to the virtually unchanged AK-47 and starting the search for 65,000 units, it is high time we do away with it.

NL Subscription Banner

AMU: MEET THE CANDIDATES STANDING FOR STUDENT UNION ELECTIONS

$
0
0

articleimage-4

Mohd.  Abul Farah (Shazli)

aa1

Farah, 29, from Bakhtayarpur in Bihar is a research scholar in the Department of English. He has been enrolled at AMU since 2002. Degradation of AMU students union is the only reason I quit my job to contest for elections. There is a dire need of a good politician at the place I come from who can advocate social justice and not discriminate among people,he said. Farah admires Nitish Kumar and aspires to become the chief minister of Bihar in the future. He helped mobilise students at AMU following the death of Rohit Vemula.

Farah believes that the political scenario today in the nation is regressive and very communal. This politics of hatred is very harmful for us. The ones sitting on chairs are safe and people on streets fight for them. We need to change this, said Farah.

Md Rizwan

aa2

Rizwan is a twenty-eight-year-old research scholar at the Department of Arabic. He has also been serving as an Imam for the last eight years in a mosque close to the campus. Imam is a leadership position according to Islam. Imams should not only lead people in Muslim prayers but also in all other spheres of social life and that is what I want to do,he said. He participated in the relief work after the Muzaffarnagar riots in 2013 and has accused the Samajwadi Party for considering muslims nothing more than a vote bank. He plans to contest assembly elections in the future and would consider joining the Congress but only after the party promises to restore the Minority Characterof AMU.

Rizwan is very firm about the minority status of AMU and believes it as the varsitys right. Both article 29 and 30 in our constitution guarantee certain right to the minorities. Article 30, mandates all the minorities, whether based on religion or language, the right to establish and administer educational institutions of their choice. Moreover, theyre a plenty of other minority institutions in Delhi but why is the government specifically targeting AMU and Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) for their minority status, says Rizwan. He also plans to do a referendum for the same in the campus.

Faizul Hasan Khan-

aa3

A research scholar in the Department of Sociology, Khan, twenty seven, is one of the three candidates in AMUSU elections. Khan is associated with the Udaan Society which works for the betterment of under reserved and neglected communities. He has no plans to contest assembly elections in future.

Khan is concerned about the low participation of Muslims in the national treasure. None or very low Muslims are taking up government jobs. The ratio of Muslims in government jobs and their population is less than everybody in the country. Id work for uplifting this and would provide such facilities to the students here in campus to study and prepare for civil services exams apart from the course they are pursuing, said Hasan. Hasan himself is preparing for civil services examination.

The Soap Box

The issues of the candidates are somewhat similar to each-other. All of them have considered the campus security, restoring campus democracy and improving health and medical facilities as their prime issue. However these issues have been previously discussed by the previous unions too. Farah came up with a new idea of converting the less-used and abandoned buildings of the varsity into hostels and annexes to solve the accommodation problem of the campus while Rizwan has promised to start a placement cell of AMU in Delhi so that companies do not have to travel all the way to Aligarh and interview students. This, according to Rizwan, would provide better career opportunities to the students.

Moreover, there were two more candidates, Salman Khan (Bachelors of Engineering) and M. Hashmuddin (Bachelor of Arts, Geography) who filed their nomination for the post of President in AMUSU election. However, they are now not interested in contesting for the post and refused to comment.

NL Campus Politik Banner

WHAT ARE THE INDICATORS THAT MAKE YOUR CITY A SMART ONE?

$
0
0

smartcity

The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) has recently developed a draft of ‘Smart Cities – Indicators’.Comments on these indicators can be sent till 29th November 2016.

Two types of indicators have been developed with respect to cities.

  • City Indicators: The indicators are divided into 17 sectors with each area comprising both core & supporting indicators. The core indicators are considered essential for assessing the performance management of city services and quality of life. The supporting indicators are given to promote best practices. 46 core indicators and 47 supporting indicators have been developed. The draft explains the data source alongside detailed explanation of the data indicator.
  • Profile Indicators: The list of profile indicators provides basic statistics & background information about the city. These indicators are to be used as informational reference about the city.

The cities would need to maintain the data online with the framework developed by the Ministry of Statistics & Program Implementation (MoSPI). The framework is known as ‘Basic Statistics for Local Level Development (BSLLD). These indicators are applicable to any city or municipality that wishes to measure its performance.

City Indicators smart-city-indicators_1

smart-city-indicators_2smart-city-indicators_3smart-city-indicators_4smart-city-indicators_5smart-city-indicators_6

 City Profile Indicators

smart-city-indicators_cpi1smart-city-indicators_cpi2

NL Subscription Banner

Disclaimer : The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Newslaundry.com. Newslaundry.com does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for their authenticity.

BCCI VS LODHA PANEL: HOW IT HAPPENED

$
0
0

articleimage-6

It has been more than a year since the Supreme Court–appointed Justice RM Lodha Committee was set up to clean up the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), after its highly popular T-20 league was hit by spot-fixing allegations.

In the course of the last one year, while there has been much back and forth between the panel and the BCCI, nothing substantial has happened by way of actual reform. Ironically, while the BCCI is the world’s richest cricket body, it is also notorious for its opaque functioning and lack of accountability.

On Tuesday, the BCCI made a startling declaration: it doesn’t have enough money to finish the ongoing series between India and New Zealand. India has already sealed the Test series by winning the first two matches. The third Test and a five-match One Day International series are left.

The Board was reacting to an email sent by the panel that asked BCCI and its banking partner, Yes Bank, to “not to take any steps towards financial disbursement of the amounts as resolved/approved after the direction dated 31.8.2016”.

Claiming BCCI was misinterpreting the communication, the Lodha panel said it had not asked the board to stop funds for “routine cricket matches”, but had only asked it to stop giving “large funds” to state associations.  Lodha told ANI, “We have not frozen any of the accounts.”

Despite the clarification, BCCI adopted a confrontationist attitude. Board president Anurag Thakur said, “I cannot say anything about India-New Zealand series. The BCCI is the richest board that hosts the IPL, but we have to deal with matters like this.” Former cricketer and now politician Kirti Azad took umbrage to the BCCI’s stance, saying that it was only issuing “empty threats”.

Here’s a recap of the BCCI-Lodha confrontations:

April, 2015: The committee sent an 82-point questionnaire to BCCI, about the board’s election process, the role of BCCI’s stakeholders, how its various committees were formed, conflict of interest, bringing the board under Right to Information (RTI) Act, and more.

January 4, 2016: The committee unveiled its recommendations, which included the one-state-one-vote system for the cricket body’s elections, and putting limits on tenure in office. It said that serving ministers and bureaucrats, or those above the age of 70 should not hold a position on the board, or on state associations.

January 7, 2016: The BCCI secretary sent an email to all state associations, asking them to study the report, figure out how they would be affected by the recommendations, and to submit their findings by January 31, 2016.

February 19, 2016: The board secretary filed an affidavit stating that there were “anomalies and difficulties” in implementing the Lodha panel’s recommendations.

February 22, 2016: Mumbai Cricket Association filed an application in the SC, highlighting “inconsistencies and difficulties” that made it difficult to implement a number of the panel’s suggestions. This was read as a ploy by the BCCI to ask its powerful state associations to file applications against Lodha reforms.

March 2, 2016: The BCCI filed an affidavit in SC, detailing some recommendations it had implemented, and the ones it had reservations against. Key concerns were one-state-one-vote rule, age cap of 70 and restriction on advertisements during Tests and ODIs.

March 3, 2016: The SC said it would ask the panel to reconsider some of the suggestions, but made it clear that it was not particularly happy with the BCCI’s “reluctance” to accept the panel’s recommendations.

April 5, 2016: The court criticised the BCCI’s method of disbursing funds to state associations, and said it was not asking what was being done with the money.

April 26, 2016: The court said that BCCI was running a “prohibitory regime”.

May 2, 2016: The court made it clear BCCI and all its state associations will have to implement the reforms recommended in response to an intervention plea filed by the Haryana Cricket Association objection to the panel’s suggestions.

July 18, 2016: The apex court accepted a majority of the panel’s suggestions, giving BCCI between four to six months to implement the proposals.  

August 3, 2016: The BCCI appointed a four-member panel of eminent judges, headed by retired Justice Markandey Katju to interact with the Lodha panel.

August 9, 2016: Katju recommended BCCI to not meet the Lodha panel, and instead file a review petition in the SC. He termed the Lodha panel “bogus”, and its recommendations “unconstitutional” and “illegal”. The Lodha panel gave BCCI time till October 15 to implement the proposals.

August 16, 2016: BCCI moved SC seeking a review of its July 18 verdict.

September 21, 2016: Defying the Lodha panel, the BCCI appointed a 5-member selection panel.

September 28, 2016: In its status report, Lodha panel said that reforms in Indian cricket were impossible unless the present leadership stepped down.

October 1, 2016: In an act of complete defiance, at its Special General Meeting, BCCI rejected key recommendations of the Lodha panel, most of which were expected to hit the current leadership of the board.

October 3, 2014: Lodha panel wrote to Indian banks asking them to not disburse funds from BCCI to state association with regard to two financial decisions taken at the board’s emergent working committee meeting on September 30.

NL Subscription Banner

INDIA VS PAKISTAN: THE WAR IN TV STUDIOS

$
0
0

 

What good could come of two warring nations exchanging threats of complete annihilation and nuclear doomsday? When the nations are India and Pakistan, the answer is great TV news entertainment. Don’t get us wrong, the attack on Indian Army soldiers in Uri and everything that’s followed is sombre business – on the diplomatic, military and political front. Not that you’d guess from the way TV news is hell bent upon jingoism, fantabulous rhetoric and scaling new heights of TRPs, no matter what the cost.

On both sides of the Radcliffe Line, we’ve seen Hindi and English news channels essentially passing off war hysteria and petty bickering as news. You, the viewer, should ideally weep at what TV news and its practitioners think they can get away with serving you, but why cry when you can laugh? Watch this little video that Newslaundry has painfully collated for you and give thanks to our media for being as insane as it is.

NL Subscription Banner

ALL BOW TO THE CULT OF JAYALALITHAA

$
0
0

amma_article

In India, there are political parties. And then there is the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK). A party that takes loyalty to its leader to an altogether different level. 

Sample this. On Tuesday, former minister Valarmathi, party spokesperson CR Saraswathi and a dozen other women AIADMK activists prayed at a temple in Chennai before proceeding to eat rice and sambhar served on the floor. A huge photograph of Jayalalithaa was held behind them to complete the picture. But ask them if this kind of televised sycophancy is needed in today’s day and age, and they bristle and tell you that it is their love and affection for their “Amma”.

For nearly two weeks now, the AIADMK has been in prayer mode. Apprehensive, anxious, on the edge. The unusual levels of secrecy surrounding her ailments have given wings to rumours that are pushed into cyberspace with the push of a button. For ten days, Apollo Hospitals where she is admitted, stuck to a narrative of “fever and dehydration and on a normal diet” before it realised that it was being ambushed by talk on the street that the CM was, in fact, on the ventilator. The hospital confirmed in its medical bulletin on Monday that Jayalalithaa is indeed on “respiratory support”, sending AIADMK cadre into a tizzy. 

The AIADMK, by its own admission, is a one-woman party. Unlike MG Ramachandran, who had seasoned politicians in his party and cabinet, Jayalalithaa presides over a party of political pygmies. It is obvious in the manner in which veteran leaders fall at her feet. She axes ministers without assigning any reasons and there is never a revolt or even a murmur heard. 

Though the hospital maintains the CM is showing improvement, the AIADMK is worried about how long she will take to recover and whether she will be the Jayalalithaa of old. It is known that her movements were restricted even during the election campaign this May. Since she returned to power, she has largely operated from home and the Secretariat, choosing to inaugurate projects through video conferencing. 

But now the big difference since September 22, when she was rushed to hospital, is that Jayalalithaa is not visible. The AIADMK tried to make it appear it is business as usual by putting out that the CM presided over a meeting on Cauvery issue at in her hospital room. But with the hospital confirming she is on the ventilator, no one believes that she could have chaired a meeting in the Critical Care Unit. DMK chief Karunanidhi asked for photographs of the CM to be released, which was rejected by the AIADMK. 

The Opposition is already accusing the government of being in pause mode. It says it is because of lack of political leadership that the Centre has sided with Karnataka by refusing to form the Cauvery Management Board. The Board to handle river water disputes has been a long-standing demand by Tamil Nadu. With no clear second-rung leadership in the party or the government, governance is on auto pilot.

But the police realise it is important to handle the information flow about Jayalalithaa’s health well, lest emotional cadre resort to extreme steps like self-immolations. Tamil Nadu has seen people harming themselves when MGR died in 1987 and the police realise that things can swiftly get out of hand, with several troublemakers using social media to foment unrest. 

Medical opinion is that the chief minister cannot be discharged for another three weeks at the least. Sources say doctors will simply not allow her to move out for the simple reason that the procedure is to wean a patient away slowly from the ventilator, oxygen support and sedation. That will take time. 

But political opinion seems to be at variance with medical opinion. Since Monday, leaders of other smaller parties and outfits who are visiting the hospital are coming out to say that Jayalalithaa would go home in two to three days. This has led to suspicion that this chorus is being choreographed because medical opinion is clearly against discharging her from hospital any time soon. 

But the public is getting impatient with the stingy approach to information on Jayalalithaa. The Madras High court has also stepped in, asking the government to provide details of her medical condition, arguing that the public is anxious. 

As of now, it looks unlikely that anyone else will be appointed as an interim CM. Tamil Nadu has seen MGR even winning an election from his hospital bed in America. But 2016 is different from the 1980s and sooner than later, pressure will start building up not just from the opposition, but even from the cadre and the public, to clear the air on Jayalalithaa.

NL Subscription Banner

Disclaimer : The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Newslaundry.com. Newslaundry.com does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for their authenticity.


LITTLE HAS CHANGED FOR DALITS IN GUJARAT AFTER DALIT ASMITA YATRA

$
0
0

unagujarat

“Hum Gujarat ke Dalit log Dr Ambedkar ki saugandh lekar kehte hain, aaj ke baad Gujarat mein kabhi bhi, Gujarat ke kisi bhi koney mein bhi, Gujarat ke koi bhi gaon mein, mare hue pashu ke nikalney ka kaam nahi karenge. Gujarat ke Dalit ke log,Dr Ambedkar ki saugandh lekey kahte hain na keval Dalit balki sabhi vanchit-shoshit vargon ke liye bhi kaam karenge. Hum ye bhi pratigya lete hain ki aaj ke baad hum gutter mein utarne ka kaam bhi nahi karenge.

(We Dalits of Gujarat swear upon Dr Ambedkar that from today, at any point of time in Gujarat, at any place of Gujarat, in any village of Gujarat, we won’t remove carcasses. Dalits of Gujarat swear upon Dr Ambedkar that we will not only fight/work for Dalit, but also for the unprivileged and oppressed classes. We also pledge that from today we will not do the job of cleaning sewage.)

In August this year, these words resounded across 380 kilometres of Gujarat. As the Dalit Asmita Yatra made its way from Ahmedabad to Una, Dalits gathered in villages and towns and took this oath. They demanded land, they demanded respect and to shouts of “Inquilab zindabad,” they demanded to be noticed.

Two months later, there were no trending hashtags about Dalits from Gujarat. What remained was what had started the movement in the first place – oppression, segregation and violence on the basis of caste.

While caste politics is a term that’s bandied about for states like Uttar Pradesh, those at the bottom of Gujarat’s social hierarchy are rarely either the object of political attention or the subject of conversation. While significant minorities (who are economically and socially powerful), like the Patidars, have grabbed headlines, Dalits have not entered the conversation in the state that is often held up as a model of Indian prosperity. The reason: numbers.

Forming only seven per cent of Gujarat’s population, Dalits have been a largely-silent minority in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state. As you travel through the Dalit neighbourhoods in villages and towns in Saurashtra, it’s impossible to not to notice certain indicators of development: water taps in almost every house, the numerous pucca houses, the fact that some even own small plots of land. However, as the infamous flogging incident at Una showed, the Gujarat model hasn’t really brought social progress to the state.

The horrific humiliation and beating that Vashram Sarvaiya and his brothers suffered at the hands of both the cow vigilantes and the state police shocked the nation. It was proof of how powerful imagery can be – the video of the Sarvaiya brothers went viral and spurred millions into reacting. Some took to social media and many took to the streets, protesting against the atrocity. Returning to Una and its surrounding areas after the dust of outrage and protest had settled, Newslaundry found that the struggle continues, but in a quieter vein.

Some, like the Sarvaiyas, have stopped doing the work of removing carcasses as an act of rebellion, but there are others who no longer do so because they’re afraid of being attacked by cow vigilantes. In Motha village, Ajay Shondarva [name changed] said, after the Una flogging, there is a fear of cow vigilantes and hence he is wary of taking up the job of skinning. But, for Dalits like Ashokbhai Parmar, the little money that is brought in by skinning carcasses is critically important.

 

Yet Dalits are damned if they do remove the carcasses, and damned if they don’t. On August 21, Nagji Rathod, 41, and his 25-year-old nephew Mahesh were supposedly asked by the sarpanch of Mandal village to remove the carcass of a calf. “I told him that our community has given up the job of removing carcasses and skinning animals,” said Rathod. “He first misbehaved with me and then started beating me and my nephew with an iron rod.” A first information report (FIR) was registered under the Scheduled Caste/ Scheduled Tribes Atrocities Act. The sarpanch and three others were arrested.

One day later, a counter FIR was lodged by the sarpanch’s family. Nine Dalits, including Rathod, were arrested. They were later granted bail.

Fear in the Dalit community comes from knowing that they are considered insignificant and that for all the attention that the flogging at Una received, there are violations and atrocities against Dalits that go unnoticed. Because in Gujarat, ‘normal’ is a system rooted in caste-based prejudice.

According to farmers like Uggabhai Tapabhai Chauhan, being Dalit is reason enough to be killed. On June 19, 2012, Chauhan’s brother Hembhai was walking in Samter village. He was hit by a motorbike, which led to an altercation. The rider happened to be from the Darbar community and didn’t take kindly to being reprimanded by a Dalit.

 

On September 13, 2012, Lalji Sarvaiya was burnt alive in his house, which was attacked by a Koli mob, allegedly at the behest of the sarpanch of Akolali. The sarpanch had suspected Lalji of runningaway with his granddaughter, which was later proved baseless. His brother Piyush Kadabhai Sarvaiya told Newslaundry, “Though it was a mob of over 500, only 11 people from Koli community (a dominant OBC) are accused in the case.” They are still awaiting trial.

“We [the family] left the village on the same day and never returned,” said Piyush.

The Sarvaiyas were the only Dalit family in Akolali.

On September 6, 2016, Ramila Ben Sarvaiya, 21, was stopped on the road in Timbi village by Manu Jeeva Koli, 30. “When I objected to his advances, he started beating me with a stick, tore my clothes and pinned me down,” she told Newslaundry. Her brother, Narsee Dayabhai Sarvaiya, was willing to come on camera and describe what his sister suffered and his harrowed expression speaks volumes about the trauma undergone.

 

Koli, his mother and his wife were arrested three days later, on September 9, under the SC/ST atrocities act.

Beginning at the anganwadi and ending at the burial ground, prejudice marks every aspect of a Dalit’s life in Gujarat. In Harmadiya, Dalit labour built the Krishna temple that has been standing in the village for generations. However, Dalits are not allowed to enter it. There are three temples in Umrala, but only one of them is for Dalits. “Woh bolte hain yahan mat aao, yeh tumhara bhagwan nahi hai (They say, don’t come here, this is not your god),” said Anu Chandpa, 19, an undergraduate student from Dr Bharat Barad College.

 

The Dalits of Harmadiya built their own temple eventually. In Ukadiya village, Dalits did the same because they weren’t allowed to enter the village temple. However, building one’s own place of worship doesn’t necessarily mean freedom to worship, regardless of what the Indian constitution promises its citizens.

Last year, the Dalit community of Motha installed a statue of Buddha in their newly-constructed Bodh Vihar, which is built on land owned by the government. Two months later, the structure was demolished although those responsible did ensure that the Buddha statue was removed before the Bodh Vihar was razed to the ground. “Wahan pe teen aurbadde-chotte mandirthe aur 30 aspaas ke makaan (There were three other big and small temples, and 30 houses),” said Sanjay Sondarva, 41, an advocate based in Motha. “The department didn’t even touch those constructions.” Dalits in Motha are convinced that their Bodh Vihar was demolished at the behest of the dominant Darbar community.

Discrimination begins early in Gujarat. Gunjan Dholiya, 45, lives in Umrala, where 300 of the 700 families are Dalit. Her mother, Manjilaben, runs one of the three anganwadis. The elementary education centre is meant to eradicate illiteracy and malnutrition. There is, however, one detail that sets Manjilaben’s anganwadi apart: it has no children from savarna families. “All Dalit children of our village come to my mother’s centre,” Gunjan told Newslaundry. All dominant and upper caste children go to different anganwadis. This system of segregation didn’t strike Dholiya as odd because it’s standard practice here. In village after village – Kodinar, Harmadiya, Nangdla – the same story was repeated to us.

 

No one could explain how the Gujarat administration had succeeded in demarcating these anganwadis according to caste. For most, there seemed to be nothing to question since there is reportedly no caste discrimination in schools. Sunil Makadiya, 23, who is from Ukadiya village, told Newslaundry, “It is an unsaid rule here. There are two different anganwadis. One is for Dalits and the other, for everyone.” Makadiya told Newslaundry “even Muslims” don’t send their children to the anganwadi for Dalit children, which goes to show just how deeply-embedded prejudice is and how much of a victory it is that the Dalit Asmita Yatra was able to bring these communities together.

Vipul Sondarva, 18, of Motha village said that he had to get a haircut in another village. Why? Because the predominantly-savarna Motha won’t sully itself by cutting Dalit hair (in the Hindu social hierarchy, barbers are in any case low in the pecking order). Consequently, Dalits take turns to become barbers for their community. If there is no one who has chosen this profession, then Dalits need to go to a nearby village.

Not just that, Dalits of Motha are not to use the village well. Again, the oppression has been intense enough to establish this as an order that will not be questioned.

 

When we asked why this system was being followed, upper-caste villagers said it was to “protect our traditions.” Ramesh Makana, 26, belongs to the upper-caste Darbar community. He said, “See, this has been going for hundreds of years. In our village, we have to follow our traditions and customs.”

To question these traditions and customs as a Dalit is to ask for trouble, but that’s exactly what all those who supported August’s Dalit Asmita Yatra did. There have been consequences to their defiance. Chandpa’s education has been interrupted because there was violence in her college against Dalit students.

 

Though no one was stopped from attending the rally in Una on August 15, there was violence in Una during the rally. After the rally, many of those returning faced angry groups of upper-caste men and women, particularly Darbars. “We still live under constant fear,” said advocate Sanjay Sondarva. Parvesh Parmar, 28, who lives in Motha, said that every Darbar in his village is a gau rakshak. “Dar bahot hai gaon men (There is a lot of fear in the village),” said Dileep[name changed], 28, a Dalit resident of Samter. “Police hata diya gaya toh hum ghum bhi nahi payenge (If the police are removed, we won’t be able to move around freely).” There are also hints of a social boycott by non-Dalits.

 

Sagar Rabari of Gujarat Khedut Samaj pointed out that few Dalits want to confront the upper caste community in their own villages. “They have to live in the villages with the same upper caste community,” Rabari pointed out. “I have cautioned [Jignesh] Mevani to speak carefully – woh bhashan de kar nikal jayega. Jo gaon mein hoga usey Dalit ko hi jhelna padega (he’ll give a speech and leave. What happens in the village will have to be suffered by Dalits).”

And yet, despite all the pressures and the anxieties, the resistance to everyday casteism in Gujarat is building momentum. In Ahmedabad, the upper caste sentiment was “yeh sab rajkaran se ho raha hai (this is all politically motivated),” which is a woefully blinkered point of view. Meanwhile, the state’s response to the growing Dalit resistance is to earmark leaders like Mevani as troublemakers who need to be detained.

Not only is that a violation of civil liberties, the Gujarat administration appears to be missing how the temperament and thinking of the state’s Dalit community is changing. As Chandpa put it in a nutshell, while pointing at a picture of Dr BR Ambedkar, “Now, my family and I consider him our God.”

NL Subscription Banner

CLOTHESLINE – EPISODE 79

$
0
0

 

Bhupendra Chaubey attempted to be the next Arnab; India struck back at Pakistan; Sushma Swaraj took the bull by the horns at United Nations; Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Jayalalitha’s health became a mystery case; Donald Trump finally came face to face with Hillary Clinton at the US Presidential Debate. Television news has rarely been this dramatically entertaining. Also, the former Interior Minister of Pakistan, Rehman Malik, earned himself the Fuckwah Award this week because of his absurd (and certainly unmerited) medical prowess. Catch all this and more ROTFL moments of news media.

 

NL Subscription Banner

KERALA’S LOVE AFFAIR WITH SOVIET LITERATURE

$
0
0

keralas-love-affair

 

By Maya Palit

There Once Lived a Mother Who Loved her Children Until They Moved Back In.

There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbour’s Baby.

There Once Lived a Girl Who Seduced Her Sister’s Husband, and He Hanged Himself: Love Stories.

When an uncle gifted me these books by the Russian author Lyudmila Stefanovna Petrushevskaya and said he thought that I would really get them, I took one look at the titles and assumed that he was commenting on my odd taste in fiction. Once I had dipped into them though, I think I understood his point. There was something so relatable about the way the author fused vulnerability and toughness: her grim-as-they-come narratives about alcoholism, mad parents, abuse, prostitution and poverty in the post-Soviet era are unembellished and written with such caustic humour that at the end of each story, youd catch yourself smiling at the unbelievable darkness of her portraits.

There are several 20th-century Russian writers, like Vera Panova and Mikhail Bulgakov, who grabbed life by the scruff of its neck in their writing. Then there are the Russian folktales for children, which a friend described as picking up on a side of family life you wouldnt find in Enid Blyton,and the classic Russian writersthe 19th-century guysof whom the older generation cant seem to get enough.

A case in point is the mania over Oru Sangeerthanam Pole a Malayalam novel about Fyodor Dostoevskys affair with his stenographer Anna Snitkina, which sold over a whopping 2.5 lakh copies in the 1990s. Perumbadavam Sreedharan, the author, and the president of Kerala Sahitya Akademi released the 66th edition of the book at Dostoevskys home in St Petersburg last year. It was Sreedharan’s first trip to Russia.

The 77-year-old author apparently kissed the floor of Dostoyevskys museum in St Petersburg upon entering. He was reported to have remarked, I had grown up reading the books of Dostoyevsky, Leo Tolstoy, Anton Chekhov, Alexander Pushkin etc. So when I finally landed in Russia, it was a sacredmoment for me.

Bizarrely, it was an acting role that took Sreedharan to Russia: he stars as himself in the new docu-fiction film, In Return Just a Book, based on his novel and his creative engagement with Dostoevsky. Directed by Shiny Jacob Benjamin and scripted by another literary giant,Paul Zacharia, the films release is highly anticipated. It addresses how Sreedharan managed to capture miniscule details about Dostoevskys epileptic seizures, gambling, alcoholism and his tumultuous romance, and how his depiction of the Russian novelist seized the public imagination. (Reviews on Goodreads still gush about how his Dostoevsky tales were far juicier than any of the novelists own writing; not least because of grandiose one-liners like his characterisation of the Russian novelist as the man with gods signature on his heart.) But while we wait for the film, its worth remembering that Sreedharan was hardly the only Dostoevsky-obsessed person in Kerala. The states association with Russian literature goes way back, and last November, the fifth Russian Language and Literature festival was held in Thiruvananthapuram.

Communist thought entered Kerala and began taking root in the 1930s and 40s, but it was only in the ’50s that Russian literature was introduced to the public. Initially, it came through Kesari Balakrishna Pillai’s translations. He ran a periodical called Kesari and his translations which started with Chekhovs works were part of active literary discussions in Kerala. In 1952, the publishing house Prabhath Book House, registered under the ownership of the Communist Party of India, secured the rights to import Russian books. According to Kottayam-based author and journalist KR Meera, the publications were beautiful and glossy, with shiny pages that cost only Rs 2 or 3 because they were heavily subsidised by the Soviet Union. To emphasise their legacy, she describes how PK Rajasekharan, a journalist and well-known critic told her that on the day of the dissolution of the Soviet Union, he went to the Prabhath Book House and bought all the books possible just to preserve the memory of the Soviet Union. 

Although the author NK Damodarans first translations of Dostoevsky’s works from English to Malayalam were regarded very highly, the real harbinger of Russian literature in a massive way was a man named K Moscow Gopalakrishnan. The joint editor of the Soviet Review in Delhi, he was recruited into the Malayalam section of Progress Publishers and left for Moscow in 1966. Over their 25-year stay, he and his wife Omana Gopalakrishnan translated close to 200 Russian books into Malayalam, including Party literature, folk tales, the works of Marx, Engels and Lenin etc. A few years ago, Gopalakrishnan told the crazy story of how Omanas translation of Anna Karenina was burnt after their publishing house shut down, once the USSR had fallen.

The children of the ’70s were shaped more by the Soviet Union than India. Maybe that explains the predominant left leaning among the readers who belong to that generation, Meera said. . Or was it the other way around? Was there an ideological common ground that was the basis for so much Russian literature permeating the Malayali literary scene?

NS Madhavan, journalist and author of the modern classic Litanies of Dutch Battery, said, It was an indirect way for the Communist Party to make money in India. The socialist realist novels had a huge readershipand there wasnt a single barbershop in Kerala that didnt have a Soviet Land magazine. After 65, once the ideological game had stopped, there was less availability.

A friends mothers anecdote, however, disproves the idea that you had to have communist values to be into Russian literature. Reading Dostoevsky led to a hilarious misunderstanding when she moved to Mumbai:Whenever I got free time I would go back to The Idiot. It was a hard read, and a colleague who observed me for a while suddenly asked, Why are you reading commie books? And I thought he meant comic, I wasnt familiar with the short term. Thats when I realised there was that instant connection people made, even though you wouldnt call Dostoevsky Communist by any stretch of the imagination!

You could get a hard-bound Dostoevsky for Rs 15, say friends parents who were brought up in Kerala. They remember their introduction to Dostoevsky, Gorky and Tolstoy through Malayalam publications, which by all accounts, were very colourful, printed on great quality paper, beautifully-produced and really cheap. The journalist Sunny Sebastian recalls devouring comic books with fascinating illustrations, science periodicals, and a regular children’s magazine called Sputnik. Even after leaving Kerala for Rajasthan, he kept up to speed with the literature by visiting the Russian books’ outlet in Chameliwala market in Jaipur.

When Meera says Russian literature was everywhere, she means itbefore brown paper came along, they used to cover notebooks for school with the glossy paper from Soviet Land magazines. All the literature came to her through Malayalam renditions. The book that got Meera to start reading was Stories and Pictures by Vladimir Sutev. Amma, a translation of Maxim Gorkys Mother, was a present for winning an elocution competition in Class V, and she remembers reading the fairy tale The White Deer as Velutha Kalaman. She read War and Peace as a child, but only really got itlater when she re-read it as a student. The books gave her an exposure to another world, but also hit her with the realisation that people are the same everywhere.

Keralas tender lyublyu for Russian literature appears to have tempered down a bit over the generations. What can I say except that they missed out on the Lyudmila years.

NL Subscription Banner

Disclaimer : The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Newslaundry.com. Newslaundry.com does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for their authenticity.

OF MOLECULAR MACHINES AND MERCHANTS OF DREAMS

$
0
0

article-pic-for-science-ans-art

This year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry has been awarded to

Jean-Pierre Sauvage (University of Strasbourg, France), James Fraser Stoddart (Northwestern University, USA), and Bernard Lucas Feringa (University of Groningen, the Netherlands), for their pioneering work in constructing Molecular Machines.

Richly deserved, the award comes as a recognition of human ingenuity, and especially of those who inhabit the enthralling if esoteric world of Chemistry. From the time Friedrich August Kekulé dreamt up the structure of Benzene, as a snake catching its own tail, chemists have had this incurable itch to conjure up molecules that don’t exist, sometimes literally out of thin air. If you can dream it you can make it, said the father of modern organic chemistry Robert Burns Woodward, who got the Nobel Prize in 1965, and would have shared his second with Roald Hoffmann in 1981 for Woodward-Hoffmann Rules had he not passed away in 1979.

Indeed, Woodward enjoyed such a formidable reputation in synthesising impossibly difficult molecules – Chlorophyll, Vitamin B-12, Erythromycin, to name a few – that, during the Nobel Prize ceremony in 1965 – the year Richard Feynman also received the Nobel – when a light-hearted debate ensued as to who was greater – Woodward or Feynman, someone shouted from the audience, “Given ample time, Woodward can synthesise Feynman.”

Chemistry is fun; it is the closest science can come to being conducted satisfactorily in a run-down garage. Fumes, explosions, bubbling test-tubes, danger, colour – it has everything to excite and confound a curious mind. Things have moved on since the good old days of Science-for-Science-sake, what with funding cuts and Science-for-the-nation clarion calls by Prime Ministers and Presidents, but Chemists more than any other category of scientists have retained this heirloom. The three who received this year’s Nobel epitomise this, and among them the one who epitomises it most is James Fraser Stoddart.

This writer had the good fortune of spending a summer in the laboratories of Fraser Stoddart. The year was 1993. Fraser had moved recently from Sheffield to Birmingham and was already a mini-celebrity, having dreamt up a molecular shuttle and then gone ahead and synthesised it. Birmingham gave him an entire floor and a three-dozen strong workforce to dream further.

In the middle of my undergraduate degree at Cambridge, and nothing planned for the summer months, I wrote to him expecting a rebuff. Instead, the response came in the form of an invitation to “Come and have a look-around”. Those three months ended up providing some of the most memorable moments any impressionable sophomore could wish for.

Upon landing in his lab, when I asked him what my project was to be, Fraser smiled and said, “Think of something, I’ll provide the glassware.” It didn’t take long for a google-eyed undergrad to think of something, although looking back that ‘something’ yielded nothing in terms of a publication or a result that could be followed up. But the inspiration to “think of something” was everywhere in Fraser’s lab – Journal cover prints displaying his Esher-like molecular creations, mostly – and dumped on the coffee table in his sprawling office were Hofstadter’s Escher, Gödel, Bach and Drexler’s Nanosystems. The Barcelona Olympics had just got over and in celebration Fraser had dreamt up Olympiadane, a giant molecular machine with five interlocked rings. His lab was busy making it. Why? Well, to paraphrase Edmund Hillary, “Because it can be dreamt.” Two years of back-breaking work later, the Stoddart lab eventually succeeded in synthesising Olympiadane in 1994. It served absolutely no purpose at all, quite useless it was at eradicating poverty or educating the girl child. But it was beautiful to look at. Sometimes, that is enough. Back in the 60s, taken in by the excitement of the Space Race and the Apollo moon-landing, appeared a molecule called Apollane.

fig-1

Source: Chemistry of Plant Natural Products

In 2003, Japanese chemists, inspired by a flower and a fragment of Buckminsterfullerene, synthesised Sumanene, the Sanskrit word for sunflower. Then there is a molecule called Bullvalene, not to mention Penguinone, Propellane, Lampane, and Basketane, that resemble a penguin, a propeller, a lamp, and a basket in that order. The magnificent book, Organic Chemistry: The Name Game, lists many such molecules along with delightful anecdotes surrounding their discovery and synthesis.

Source: Organic Chemistry: The Name Game

Chemists are anoraks. Shapes excite them, especially this notion of visual pleasure trumping functionality. What does Music do – does it cure a disease; is it a vaccine? When it comes down to it, Science is but Art. Was it to emphasise this understanding, or just an accident of literary flair, that the 1965 Nobel Prize Citation for RB Woodward read: “For his outstanding achievements in the art of organic synthesis”?

Is it Yakshini, the Hindu goddess guarding Kuber’s wealth, or is it the B-form of DNA?

Is it the mechanism of DNA replication or the first patent granted to a Zipper?

What do you want to look at today? What object of beauty shall provide you with that inspiration, that spark, that idea that might change the world?

In 1991, Fraser dreamt up something absurd. He had been tinkering with making interlocked chains, called Catenanes, and then suddenly, like Kekule I imagine, this idea, of passing molecular rings over a molecular rod, like bangles clinking around a hennaed forearm, must have struck him. A molecular shuttle. Devastatingly simple and yet profound in its implications. As Einstein said of Piaget’s discovery: It was an idea so simple only a genius could have thought of it.

Using negatively charged Hydroquinol moieties, “stations”, connected with a linker and flanked with molecular blockers so that the “bangles” wouldn’t slip off the arm, Fraser inserted positively charged bipyridine groups-containing bangles into the axle. The opposites were drawn to each other, as they do in real life, and the bangle came to rest over the station. When warmed up, the positively-charged bangle shuttled between the two negatively-charged stations, and when cooled, it rested over one of them. 0 and 1. Binary achieved through applying an external, controllable stimulus. There it was – a molecular machine.

The world of Molecular Machines, and in particular Molecular Shuttles, has come a long way since Fraser conjured the first one up in 1991. In a mind-boggling advancement, chemists in 2014 managed to incorporate a molecular shuttle inside a metal lattice. The implications for building a molecular computing machine are not lost on the Asimovs. There now exist molecular elevators, axles, rotors, gears, propellers, even computer chips.

One late night back in 1993, I gathered up enough courage to ask Fraser when and how he got the idea. He waved his hand and said, “Oh, it was nothing. Just a flash.” That flash has won him this year’s Nobel Prize.

In a seminal commentary in the journal Science, Robert Service once asked: Can Chemists Assemble a Future for Molecular Electronics? The question was loaded – Service had thrown the gauntlet at Chemists, not Biologists or Physicists or Engineers. Sauvage, Stoddart, and Feringa seem to be saying, “Yes, we can.”

The Nobel Committee agrees.

NL Subscription Banner

WHAT’S DATING GOT TO DO WITH DNA?

$
0
0

article-pic-for-dna

Are you from Delhi and are still single despite going on multiple dates? You’re decent looking, dress well and speak well. All you can talk about – that too in incorrect English – is chiffon sarees, how to spot a fake Gucci bag and how to identify EDM (that’s Electronic Dance Music for the geriatrics amongst you). And all that matters is finding the perfect way to land the man of your dreams, while speaking in a guttural North Indian accent.

No, this is not me being a parochial Bengali and looking down my brown not-so-aquiline nose at the gori-chitti Punjabis. This is DNA’s idea of how to pitch their newspaper to the women of Delhi. Really. I kid you not.

If you receive newspapers in your house in Delhi and the NCR, for the past few days you will also have received a four-page DNA pullout which has warned us about the imminent arrival of DNA In Delhi in our lives. This pullout advertisement tells us – including the female readers – why there is room for another newspaper in our lives. And that DNA will give us “stories that help you engage; and most importantly, we give you stories to think, discuss and debate”.

All good. How can we complain?

As part of their publicity, DNA has released a video starring Mallika Dua who has made a series of videos – the majority of which are hilarious – spoofing Delhi women and their idiosyncrasies. Her characters include Dadi, Komal and Kanchan and Makeup Didi. They’re short, fun videos making fun of how Delhi women behave and talk.

That DNA would rope her in to be part of their campaign is a great move as well – other than for the fact that the video is for a newspaper claiming that it’s a serious newspaper, which will save you from the junk newspapers you’ve had to live with till date in Delhi.

What does reading a newspaper have anything to do with being a woman – unless you’re specifically a women’s newspaper – or have anything to do with your readers’ love lives?

The video shows Mallika playing Gifty, a Delhi girl, who’s out on multiple dates with a Madrasi, a boy from Faridabad, a boy whose origins we are not told. But each boy rejects her because of her vacuous conversation skills because as her sister tells her, “Problem tere me nahin hai, tere paper mein hai, Gifty. Itni bakwaas padegi, toh bakwas hi hoga”. So she starts reading DNA and they all line up to date her.

This article is made possible because of Newslaundry's subscribers.Click here and Pay To Keep News Free

First off, it’s just a bizarre plug for a newspaper claiming to be serious and non-bakwaas. The USP of Mallika’s videos are that they’re bakwaas and timepass. It’s fine for a laugh, but to sell a newspaper claiming to be better than the rest? Hmm. It’s a bit of a self-goal I’d say.

Second, for all DNA’s claims that they’re the thinking woman’s newspaper, their own four-page supplement devotes a ¼ page of Page 1 to Amitabh Bachchan’s daughter Shweta Bachchan “making a case for the newcomer called DNA”. This is like getting Johnny Depp’s daughter to write a column endorsing a New York Times’ edition. Three quarters of an entire inside page tells us that DNA is “B-TOWN’S GO-TO PAPER” with pictures of “After Hr Addicts” Imran Khan and Sonakshi and guest editor, Anushka Sharma, while Varun and Alia “point and pout”.

image-2

image-1

I am thinking that if Gifty be reading this junk, she ain’t going to be getting lucky anytime soon.

The video is accompanied by this descriptor:

Politics? Science? Bollywood? Music? Why don’t I know anything? Embarrassed, aren’t you? Well, that’s because you’ve been reading the wrong stuff! It’s DNA to the rescue…

All you read is crap
Update yourself in a snap
DNA is your ideal news hunk
Because #SayNoToJunk

A snapshot of the latest news on the newspaper’s website shows Shahid Kapur sharing space with Najeeb Jung. But hey, maybe DNA’s junk is better than the junk of other newspapers.

image-3

Third, do we really want to read a newspaper which is “the ideal news hunk” for the ditzy Delhi woman. And what kind of a pitch is this? To tell Delhi’s women that they aren’t the brightest sparks and that DNA is their knight in newsprint? I know in North India we believe that women are just pretty faces without an intelligent thought in their heads, but let’s not take this stereotype so seriously. And if that’s the demographic you’re hoping to win over, you should publicise your dedication to entertainment news. Nothing wrong with that. But even I, a Bengali from Kolkata, felt bad for the poor Delhi chicky – and for DNA’s marketing team who doesn’t seem very on the ball either.

To borrow from DNA’s video campaign’s lingo – What da fuck DNA. Izzat ki chop kyun kara rahe ho? If you keep releasing ads like this, compro toh karna padega, and we will have to keep reading the junk we are.

NL Subscription Banner


Disclaimer : The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Newslaundry.com. Newslaundry.com does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for their authenticity.

AMU: SU ELECTIONS HAVE ELECTRIFIED THE CAMPUS

$
0
0

amu1

Perched on decrepit chairs at a dhaaba adjacent to Aligarh Muslim University’s Purani Chungi Gate, a small group of students are discussing AMUSU elections. A rally of Mahfooz Alam, contesting for the post of union secretary, passes by. With him leading the rally, approximately 20 of his supporters on bicycles are shouting with excessive passion, “Mahfooz ka tempo high hai”. At the dhaaba, a student quips “Isko kaunsi lobby ladwa rahi hai bhai?” (Does he have the backing of a regional lobby?).

Students coming from various parts of the country have their lobbies in AMU. Controlled by two or three persons who were AMU students years ago, these lobbies push their candidates in elections. Since the student wings of political parties are not permitted on the campus, elections come as a chance for these lobbies to establish their dominance. A PhD researcher at the Centre of Women’s Studies, Arafat Hasan Rizvi, contesting for Vice-President, says that he is challenging this domination of lobbies. “Lobbyism will have to end for a better and effective students’ union. This is what I am fighting for,” he said. Endorsing this view, Kehkashan Khanam, a female vice-president candidate, blames these lobbies for fomenting troubles in the university. “They also hamper the chances of winning for deserving candidates,” she says.

Last year, elections were not held. Therefore, the excitement and expectations are running high this year. The centre of activity is the Sir Syed North Hall. Almost all the candidates fighting for the posts of President, Vice-President and Secretary have their camps in this hall. Bikes parked at the gates are in numbers rarely seen. Colourful posters are hanging on walls. Stacks of colourful cards are occupying every inch of available space. Majority of them belong to those contesting for cabinet posts, with candidates’ ballot numbers engraved on them. Virtually every camp has one person continuously making tea. Paper plates are strewn everywhere. Behind one camp, biryani is being served from a big handi.

Each candidate is promising more than their counterpart. The focus is on basic issues like hostel accommodation, security, and better infrastructure. Apart from fixing basic issues, Emraan Ghazi, a secretarial candidate, promises to start a community radio and a special students’ grievance cell. He also intends to “establish communication between students and the union to bring transparency in the working of the union.”

Picture credit: Abdullah Zaini

Surprisingly, the minority status case of the University, which is currently in the Supreme Court, is not an election issue for any of the candidates. Questioned on it, Faizul Hasan, contesting for President, argued that the government should consider supporting the minority status for AMU. “Politics aside, I would urge the government to focus on bringing Indian Muslims to the mainstream. Educating them is the only way and AMU has been doing that since years.” Almost all the candidates I talked to expressed the same stance, except Nabeel Usmani, a Secretary candidate. “Sir Syed Ahmad Khan built AMU with the purpose of educating Indian Muslims. This is directly related to AMU’s existence,” he averred. Incidentally, there is currently no provision of reservation for any religious group or caste in AMU.

Picture credit: Abdullah Zaini

The complete absence of political parties appears to have restricted the entry of national political discourse into AMUSU elections. So the binary of “nationalist” and “anti-national” is absent. I specifically asked some candidates about the interventions that local BJP leaders—including the BJP MP of Aligarh—tried to make in the past in the functioning of the University. “AMU is an autonomous university and must remain the same. The Vice-Chancellor must not decide under the pressure of any political party or group,” said Faizul Hasan. Responding to the same question, Abul Farah accused the Vice-Chancellor of serving the BJP. “He has devoted himself in the service of BJP. He is an agent of the central government,” he said, before leaving to address a meeting in Nadeem Tarin hall, wearing the traditional sherwani and topi.

For more stories from AMU, click here.

NL Campus Politik Banner

CAN NRI VOTING HAVE AN IMPACT ON ELECTION RESULTS?

$
0
0

voting

Extending voting rights to NRIs has been a long pending demand. With the government now in favour of implementing the same, it will be interesting to see if NRI voting can make an impact on elections.

In January 2015, it was a historical milestone, when Government of India accepted the proposals made by Election Commission in response to the PIL by the members of Pravasi Bharat, a campaign group on NRI Voting rights.

The Journey

The journey wasn’t smooth though. The campaign that started in mid 2012 has gone through various phases like marching, demonstrations, petitions & hunger strike. The concrete result of extending voting rights to NRIs was the outcome of a Public Interest Litigation (WP(Civil) 80/2013) filed in the Supreme Court of India. A twelve(12)  member committee was setup by the ECI based on the directions of the Supreme Court to study the feasibility of different options for voting by NRI voters. This 12-member committee was headed by the then Deputy Chief Election Commissioner Shri Vinod Zutshi. The committee studied various options of remote voting systems adopted worldwide and also sought inputs from all six national parties of India. The committee then submitted a 50 –page report to the Supreme Court, proposing e-postal & proxy voting as the recommended options.

The impact of this process of extending voting rights to NRIs is already visible. Political parties and governments seem to have started reaching out to the NRI community. Some states like Andhra Pradesh & Telangana have now set up special departments to look after NRI affairs. Few more states are expected to do the same. States like Uttar Pradesh organized their own Pravasi Bharatiya Divas. The ECI has also initiated online voter registrations for eligible NRIs.

NRIs are expected to play a bigger role in policy inputs and engagement with the state once they are extended voting rights. It will become a constituency that every political party would want to reach out to.

Will NRI Voting really make an impact?

There are approximately 10 million Indian citizens currently residing outside India as per the data compiled by the Ministry of External Affairs. Other estimates, such as from the British Tabloid Daily Mail puts this figure at about 25 million. Whatever be the actual number, NRIs do make up for one of, if not the largest diasporas in the world according to the UN Migration report in 2015.

nri-vote-impact_1

nri-vote-impact_indian-disapora-in-millions

These numbers have the potential to affect the election results if NRIs do vote in large numbers. With 10 million Indian citizens staying abroad, and with 543 Lok Sabha constituencies, it comes to an average of 18000 such voters per constituency. These additional votes, if polled, will have a significant impact on the result.

Annual Remittance by NRIs, highest in the world

Over the years, NRIs have excelled in various fields and brought laurels to India. NRIs also contribute to investment in the country by the way of remittances, accounting to over 3.4% of our country’s GDP. The remittances for 2015 reached  $68.91 billion, which is the highest remittance contribution of any diaspora in the world as per the World Bank’s Migration & Remittances Data for 2015.

nri-vote-impact_annual-remittance-in-billions-of-dollarsnri-vote-impact_annual-remittance-in-billions-of-dollars-2

NL Subscription Banner

Disclaimer : The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Newslaundry.com. Newslaundry.com does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for their authenticity.


JNU: PROCTOR SUMMONS STUDENTS FOR BURNING EFFIGY OF GUJARAT GOVERNMENT

$
0
0

articleimage
On September 19, 2016, Jawaharlal Nehru University’s (JNU) Youth Forum for Discussions and Welfare Activities (YFDA) called for a protest demonstration against the government of Gujarat for failing to check the menace of the gau rakshaks in the state. At the venue they burnt an effigy of the state government to condemn the alleged lynching of Mohammad Ayyub by the gau rakshaks in Ahmedabad. About a fortnight later, on October 4, four students—all from the Centre of Political Studies, were slapped a notice from the Proctor’s office asking them to appear before the University Proctor on October 14 to explain their “position in this regard.”

Mohammed Ayyub, a 25-year old man was allegedly beaten by an unidentified group of men on September 13, 2016 for supposedly transporting cows for slaughter. The students had gathered at 9:30 pm and had sloganeered against the “fascist regime” that has been “perpetuating communal tensions in the society in the name of cows.”

The effigy burning program took place at the Sabarmati Dhaba, one of the iconic sites for protests and gatherings in JNU. Some hundred students responded to the call for the protest by YFDA. The organizing group is among the twenty-five active political factions in JNU and came into existence last year to create a public forum for minorities, especially Muslims, as well as to initiate alternative discourses on empowerment and development.

SK Abdul Matin, the convenor of YFDA and a first generation learner in his family, is one of the four students who have been served the notice. Being critical of the administration which he calls “a tool of Sangh parivar,” Matin says: “The administration is clearly hounding the students from marginalized sections. Out of the four students who have been asked to report, one belongs to the OBC community, two are Dalits, and one is a Muslim. We are being attacked for raising our voices, but we shall not stop our war on communalism and Brahminism.”

Rama Naga, former Vice President of JNUSU, is also amongst the four students who have been summoned. The students of JNU have been wary of the growing surveillance in the campus, permissions for public meetings are not granted and if they are, the meetings are recorded; show cause notices are being sent for petty reasons, there are usually no follow-ups on the particular issue. The relations between the administration and the Students’ Union appear to be at its worst especially after the February 9 incident.

Manikanta and T Praveen Kumar, members of Birsa Ambedkar Phule Students’ Association (BAPSA) have also been summoned to the Proctor’s office for participating in the event. Manikanta and his group had been busy mobilizing students for the Academic Council meeting protest that took place today. Hostel accommodation and introduction of minority-deprivation points are the key demands of the Students’ Union this year and the political parties have been gearing up for a show of strength. Despite his busy schedule, Manikanta made time to speak to the reporter at 1:30 am where he said: “The stifling of the political expression of students, especially from the marginalized sections shall have grave consequences. The way proctorial notices are being issued one after the other is aimed at weakening our movements. The students are being penalized for writing Jai Bheem on the walls, and this should worry all of us.”

The students have not yet decided whether they will report to the Proctor on October 14. Several students and teachers have spoken up against the regressive attitude of the administration and have suggested that the students boycott the meeting with the Proctor. Under the given circumstances it is difficult to predict how the events will shape up in the future.

Voices supporting the idea of “oppressed unity” are slowly gaining ground in JNU. Abdul Matin believes this is because people have realized that it is not “a politics of identity,” as is popularly perceived, but “a politics of dignity.” He ends, “Muslims are getting harassed and we showed our condemnation in the form of a protest, and if we are being sent notices for that, then I believe there is a serious problem with our government and our University. The concept of minority is not about numbers, it is about marginalities, it is about the powerlessness. We will keep protesting against the historical wrongs.”

For more stories from JNU, click here.

NL Campus Politik Banner

WHY THE RIGHT WING IS WRONG ABOUT FAWAD KHAN

$
0
0

right-wing

Every time there’s talk of a war or an insurgency, the Right wing begins to appear a little more farcical. This isn’t their fault entirely. Jingoism provides a platform for those who want to look like hawks to drum-up their chests. Saner voices are drowned out in the noise. For instance, whether you are on the Right or to the Left, you would not want Arnab Goswami to be your mascot. But as the very opinionated host of “India’s most watched TV news programme”, he becomes the truth of you. 

I spoke to a soldier recently who has served at the border and doesn’t wish to be named. He finds things a bit surreal. He’s very confused, for example, about why a party and demagogue who, just years ago, was rooting to have his family and friends beaten up and thrown out of Maharashtra, now wants to represent his interest by sending Salman Khan to Pakistan. Others representing his interest include a retired Army general and a Major. One keeps railing from his armchair about how jawans should be sent off to war. The other writes endless open letters about how the Army is dampened by the fact that Fawad Khan is a Bollywood film star. 

 On occasions, the traditional Right-wing media – like Organiser or Panchajanya – actually appears more measured in their reporting and opinionating than TV news. “The masochist calls for deep strikes into Pakistan may represent an expression of anger of the general public, but they do not fall in the ambit of practicality,” wrote Jaibans Singh in Organiser after the Uri Terror Attack. “Indian real estate along the Line of Control (LOC) and International Border (IB) with Pakistan is highly developed and economically vibrant. The Pakistan side, on the other hand, is desolate and underdeveloped.”

He also noted: “The terror camps are temporary in a nature. Going for a deep or shallow strike over there is not going to accrue any worthwhile tactical or strategic advantage.” 

The Right-leaning media does have its days, though. Panchajanya editor Hitesh Shankar began his post “Surgical Strike” editorial with a Premchand quote to seemingly invoke military action: “Bhay ki charam seema hi saahas hai (rough translation: On the outer boundary of fear, lies courage)”. The first line of Organiser Editor Prafulla Ketkar’s editorial read: “Vijayadashmi arrived in Bharat even before the starting of Navaratri.” 

What militarism should mean

There’s reason why Vijayadashmi doesn’t arrive before the starting of Navratri. Militarism, simply defined, is “the belief that a country should maintain a strong military capability and be prepared to use it aggressively to defend or promote national interests.” Without getting into the Rubik’s Cube of how the strikes may be evidenced – taking the Indian Army on their word for their occurrence and the politicians and media on theirs for the significance of this event – let’s assume that these strikes have demonstrated our preparedness to aggressively defend national interests. 

But what about maintaining a “strong military capability”? Kishalay Bhattacharjee wrote in Newslaundry that, according to the CAG, India wouldn’t be able to sustain a 10-day war with the ammunition it had. “The armed forces should ideally work with 30 per cent cutting edge equipment, 40 per cent current technology and the remaining 30 per cent with obsolete weapons,” he wrote.

In the NL Hafta before the last one, Bhattacharjee spoke about how this state of preparedness would adversely affect India trying to climb the “escalation ladder” with regard to Pakistan. 

Lt Gen H S Panag, also a Newslaundry columnist, refuted this in the next NL Hafta, saying the situation envisaged by the CAG, where all soldiers and weapons would be employed by the Indian Army all at once, was a hypothetical situation. This doesn’t resolve the question of obsolete defence inventory, however. Or the story behind it.

Read Report No. 19 of 2016, by the CAG on the “Army, Ordinance Factories and Defence PSUs”, which reviews the Defence Ministry’s performance in this in 2014-15. (Report No. 17 looks at the Indian Navy, 18 at the Airforce.) 

Here’s an excerpt from the Army report overview: “Inordinate delay in supply of critical weapons and equipment by Defence PSUs during XI Army Plan (2007-12), hampered the modernisation and capability enhancement plan of Indian Army. Audit observed that contracts valuing Rs 30,038 crore which account for 63 per cent of the total value of DPSUs contracts concluded by the Ministry during XI Army Plan, were delayed. Major reasons for delay were undue time taken in development, delay in successful evaluation of pilot sample, heavy dependence of DPSU on foreign vendors, ambiguity in contractual terms, etc.”  

Chapter VIII on Defence Public Sector Undertakings, over and above indicting one government or the other, establishes a continued culture of ham-handedness in dealing with the defence sector. Will the shift to private sector, indicated by the recently announced Reliance defence deal – which set the Reliance stocks climbing – aid in curing this malaise? How will governments monitor private companies if they couldn’t successfully hold to account those it owned? These are questions militarists should ask, but they seem nowhere on the horizon.

Even more disconcerting are the findings of the CAG with regard to the food that is provided to the troops at the borders. “The overall deficiency in actual procurement against the indented quantities for 2014-15 was upto 66% in four out of six items procured,” Chapter II, on the Ministry of Defence, says. On quality of rations, “68 per cent of the feedback reports received from the consuming units were graded as satisfactory and below.” 

“Army continues to consume ration,” the report says. “Even after the expiry of original shelf life.” On extensions granted to the Estimated Storage Life (ESL) of rations: “In some cases extension was granted even up to 28 months after expiry of the ESL.”  The CAG found further that the Parliamentary Accounts Committee had submitted twelve recommendations in 2011 to improve and streamline the supply chain management of ration. Only two have been implemented in full. 

But where’s the outrage?

Chapter 1, the introduction of the report, says, “The Ministry of Defence did not send replies (March 2016) to 17 paragraphs out of 23 Paragraphs featured in Chapters II to VIII.” 

As Bhattacharjee has mentioned, this report is in the public domain. It was put there, knowing fully well that potential enemy nations would have access to it, because civil society and media – from the Right and the Left – would have an opportunity to question the government and demand that armed forces get what they really need.

But when the report was tabled this year, it got practically no play. Because, obviously, the only way we can buttress the morale of our troops is by screaming slogans, banning Pakistani actors and arresting students at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Providing them with the food and equipment they direly need, must not be real solutions.

Pakistani actors are not an issue

What has gotten play, instead, is news about Pakistani star actors. We may be at war soon. We seem to be making strides in international diplomacy but the issue of the verifiability of the surgical strikes will have to be watched closely. Attempts at counterstrikes by terrorists continue. 

But Fawad Khan – not Indo-Pak trade and professional relations on the whole, mind you – has captured a bulk of our news space and, consequently, imagination. Put yourself in the shoes of an outsider for a moment, and imagine what this does to our newly-acquired international standing. Here’s a nation that’s trying to define new paradigms for dealing with terrorism but can’t seem to rid itself of a hair-tearing obsession with a foreign film star who has infiltrated its cinematic pantheon.

What a quandary.

Why has this become a big issue? Because a party gasping for relevance has marshaled Right-wing sentiments to blow wind into its own trumpet. The Maharashtra Navnirman Sena was down to one Member of Legislative Assembly in the last Assembly polls, and even that MLA was considering whether he should leave, according to reports. But, like McCarthyism, which rode on the bullying of the Hollywood Ten, Raj Thackeray believes Bollywood will resurrect him.

Last season, he made Amitabh Bachchan his target for orchestrating a broader attack on fellow Indians from other states. Now, three years after Bachchan shared stage with Thackeray at his party’s seventh anniversary celebrations, he’s expanded his ambit to uber-nationalism and foreign immigrants (“Are we short of artistes in our country? Why do we need Pakistani artistes?”).

But most importantly, Raj Thackeray isn’t Joseph McCarthy, because the latter was appointed by the government to chair a senate committee for his witch-hunt. Thackeray has appointed himself. Still, an array of voices have jumped onto the bandwagon of a party that was last prominently in national news for violating noise pollution norms. There is the Shiv Sena, that’s desperately trying to remind everyone that, notwithstanding the promise of young Aditya Thackeray, they were the first word in unreasonableness.

The BJP has been pulled into this inconsequential debate via a questionable and relatively insignificant politicians, Sangeet Som, whom the party is often wont to tuck away in that box they label ‘fringe’.

An argument for some voices on the Right, as well as liberals is: Why can’t Pakistani Actors simply condemn the Uri attack? The answer: Because it’s not so simple. They have a Prime Minister whose stance on Uri is a study in unreasonableness that even Raj Thackeray may not be able to aspire to. Nawaz Sharif refused to condemn the attacks, despite pressure from the US and UK – say reports. According to him, “India had no regret over its atrocities and brutalities” in Kashmir. Further, he believes, the attack was either an “Indian false flag operation” carried out to malign Pakistan and divert attention from Kashmir or a “retaliatory attack by the oppressed Kashmiris who are facing the worst form of brutalities from the Indian state terrorism”.

Ridiculous as Sharif may sound, it basically means that Pakistani actors condemning Uri would be taking a stance against their Prime Minister, in a country not particularly known for upholding free speech. If Ramya saying, “Pakistan is not hell” could get her charged with sedition in India, can you envision what Fawad and Mahira Khan taking this stand in the current scenario would mean for them in Pakistan?

To wrap, since this is a season for surprises, let’s end with two very surprising squeaks of reason from the Right. The first from Yogi Adityanath, who has said, “our fight is not against art and culture, it is against terrorism.” 

The second? Our god of banned things, Central Board of Film Certification Chief Pahlaj Nihalani. On the IMPPA deciding not to work with Pakistanis, Nihalani said, “By whose authority are they asking for this ban? Not one producer member of IMPPA is working with a Pakistani artist.” He also pointed out that, rather, the piracy of Indian films in Pakistan was a more pertinent issue. 

But, critically, if such an embargo must be imposed on Pakistanis, “Not just actors, but all professionals from Pakistan must be prohibited from working in India until relations between the two countries improve.” 

Then of course Nihalani, staying true to self, calls for a cessation of all trade and professional exchange, not only on Pakistan but also on China, for “supporting Pakistan”. This may be premature. And the fallout of this would be sizeable. The government would have to think of how to compensate or facilitate the businessmen and professionals affected. But, even if an extremely hawkish foreign policy, this is a policy, which can therefore be debated. Sending Fawad Khan back to Pakistan two months after he went there is not.

NL Subscription Banner

Disclaimer : The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Newslaundry.com. Newslaundry.com does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for their authenticity.

NL TIPPANI: WHEN ABP NEWS WENT FILMY WITH ITS #SURGICALSTRIKE REPORT

$
0
0

 

What does a news channel do in times of footage crisis — when they are high on steroids about a news report but do not have the access to the right visuals? Simple. Take in the shots of a Bollywood film, make the star anchor stand in front of a chroma screen to create a simulating background and add a dramatic soundtrack and voice-over. And you have a news report. At least that’s what ABP News thinks is the right thing to do.

In its 8 minute 30 second “exclusive” report, anchored by journalist Dibang, which aimed to give a minute-by-minute report of the surgical strike carried out by the Indian army, ABP News thought it proper to use shots from the war scenes of Farhan Akhtar-directed 2004 film Lakshya.

Watch what Madhu Trehan has to say about that in this week’s Tippani.

NL Subscription Banner

DADRI: WHAT’S THE ‘MARTYR?’: THE CHANGING NARRATIVE OF THE MOHAMMED AKHLAQ’S LYNCHING

$
0
0

dadri_3

On the evening September 28, 2015 a mob of Hindus burst into the home of 50-year-old Mohammad Akhlaq, accusing him and his family of eating beef. The group beat him to death, severely injured his son, attempted to molest his 18-year-old daughter, and tore apart the house on the suspicion that the family had beef in their house.

22-year-old Ravin Sisodia was one of the 18 people arrested in October 2015 for the murder of Akhlaq, and for the last year, he was incarcerated in the Kasna district jail. On September 30 of this year, Sisodia’s family claimed that he was suffering from Chikungunya, and pleaded with the local court for him to be shifted to the district hospital for proper treatment. Sisodia died in Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Narayan Hospital on October 4.

Allegations that he was tortured surfaced despite doctors claiming that dengue was the suspected cause of death. Giving voice to these allegations is Sanjay Rana, a former-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) eader. 12 of Rana’s relatives, including his son are also accused in the death of Akhlaq. Speaking to Newslaundry, Rana said that this was a case of “custodial death”. “We suspect that there has been torture. There needs to be a thorough probe into this,” he said.

For his native Bishada village, Sisodia is not simply a man accused of murder whose cause of death is unclear, but a martyr in a holy war. This is the story of the changing narrative of the Dadri lynching – where the oppressors become the oppressed, where the accused become martyrs.

Yesterday, leaders of the Hindu Raksha Dal, Gau Raksha Dal, and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) held a Mahapanchayat in Bishada, sitting in protest with Sisodia’s family, and his body, at the spot where Akhlaq was lynched. Irony, in Dadri, is in short supply.

In speeches made during the Mahapanchayat, under the gaze of heavy police security, local leaders spoke of extracting revenge for the Hindu community. A local leader, Kapil Bhati said, “Hinduon ne chudiya nahi pehni hain. In Mullo ko jad se ukhad fenkengey hum. In Mullon mein itni shamta nahi ki humaarey balak ka bhi saamna kar sake. Bhaiyon ek jut ho jao, ek taraf aa jao. Rajput, Gujjar, Thakur, Bhati – inmein mat bato. Jaatiwaad ko chod do (Hindus haven’t worn bangles. We will uproot these Muslims. These Muslims don’t have the capacity to even face our young boys. Don’t divide yourselves along caste lines. Leave aside caste considerations.).”

While no specific Muslims were mentioned, it seems strange to speak of revenge, when it was precisely such rhetoric that landed Sisodia in jail in the first place.

Asked about the provocative nature of these speeches, Abhishek Yadav, Superintendent of Police, Gautam Budh Nagar, Noida, told us, “We have recorded the events of today and we are going through the clippings to see if objectionable statements were made. If we find evidence to that effect, then we will take appropriate action against the violators.”

The Akhilesh Yadav government in Uttar Pradesh has offered a compensation of Rs 10 lakhs to Sisodia’s family, which they duly rejected. Their demand is a compensation of one crore rupees. Sadhvi Prachi of the VHP slammed the Akhilesh government, and supported the family’s demand for greater compensation.

While it might be puzzling to find the family of a man accused of murder demanding monetary compensation from the government, for Bishada, it is a way of getting even with Mohammad Akhlaq’s family. Various rumours floated around the district, describing the financial assistance extended to Akhlaq’s family in the aftermath of the lynching. Earlier in July this year, when this correspondent visited Dadri, some people claimed that the Delhi Chief Minister, Arvind Kejriwal and Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi had both given financial aid to the family. There was also talk that the family was given four flats in Noida. Others insinuated that the family was “close” to Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi. All of this, was of course, speculation.

When Newslaundry asked Akhlaq’s son Danish about the aid his family received, he said that they were only given four flats in Noida at highly subsidised rates.

But these details do not matter in Bishada. All that matters is perception. Sisodia’s casket, wrapped in the tiranga (the national flag) carries with it Hindu victimisation and nationalism

This is a blatant violation of the Flag Code of India, which states that “disrespect to the Indian National Flag means and includes using the Indian National Flag as a drapery in any form whatsoever except in state funerals or armed forces or other para-military forces funeral”. Sisodia was neither, and the punishment for disrespecting the Indian flag is “imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both.”

It is not just the fringe Hindutva groups that have descended upon Bishada. Mahesh Sharma, Minister of State for Culture and Tourism in the Union government and the Member of Parliament from Gautam Budh Nagar, visited the village today to show his solidarity with the deceased’s Sisodia’s family. He said that he salutes the soil of Bishada, and will stand with the villagers. Sharma also blamed the Uttar Pradesh government for Sisodia’s death.

Some of the villagers have formed a committee to press for a full-fledged probe into the death. Sharma said that he will support the committee “like a pillar”. Sharma referred to the others from the village who are still incarcerated for the murder, as “dying every day”. Sisodia’s death may have provided the pitch for this latest flare-up of emotions in Bishada, but it was always simmering beneath. Seven months after the killing of Akhlaq, a Sangharsh Samiti (a committee to fight) was set up by villagers demanding a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into the arrest of the 18 accused. The villagers we spoke to feel that their “boys” had been wronged, and while Akhlaq’s death was tragic, his family has milked the incident.

Even as early as July, the sense we got was that it was revenge and not remorse that directed life in the village. Infact, a First Information Report was filed against Akhlaq and his family for cow slaughter following his death. This was spurred by a forensic report release on June 2, which said that the meat collected from the crime scene belonged to a cow or its progeny – contradicting an earlier report from December, 2015, which said that the meat had came from a goat.

In September, a report in The Hindu said officials investigating the case had concluded that there is no evidence to prove a cow was ever killed. The journalist quoted “highly placed sources in the UP police”, who said that the investigation had yet to “yield any proof.” It quoted Anurag Singh, Circle Officer of the area, who said “there is no credible evidence in this case.” Without evidence, charges cannot be formulated. Singh later backtracked from his statement in his interview to the PTI. This report raised the hackles of many, and the Noida Police issued a clarification that the investigation was still open.

Given Sharma’s statements, there is little doubt about where the BJP stands in this case. While the probe into Sisodia’s death only just underway, Yadav’s decision to compensate the family speaks volumes. With the assembly elections in the state only months away, peace in Bishada may be a long time coming.

NL Subscription Banner

HAFTA 88: SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT RELEASE THE VIDEO FOOTAGE OF #SURGICALSTRIKE?

$
0
0

 

Should the Indian government release the video footage of the surgical strikes? Should journalists or politicians ask proof of the Indian Armed Forces’ actions? Deepanjana Pal, Madhu Trehan, Anand Ranganathan and Manisha Pande discuss the sustained media coverage of the surgical strikes as it continues to dominate news – there’s the Indian Express scoop and CNN News18’s ‘Global Exclusive’. The team also discusses Delhi Tourism Minister Kapil Mishra’s bizarre face-off with Jammu & Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti. Down south, rumors around Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa’s health dominated news. How does she manage to invoke such devotion from her supporters? The team also pours over the recent developments in the Rohith Vemula case and dissects some of the most talked-about news stories of the week. Listen-up.

For reference:

  1. Hindustan Times: Rohith Vemula An unfinished portrait
  2. Newslaundry: India vs Pakistan: The War In TV Studios
  3. Newslaundry: Little Has Changed for Dalits in Gujarat After Dalit Asmita Yatra
  4. The guardian: Who murdered Giulio Regeni?
  5. The Indian Express: The whitewash: Probe alleges Rohith Vemula’s mother faked Dalit status, blames him for his suicide
  6. The Indian Express: Surgical strikes: Bodies taken away on trucks, loud explosions, eyewitnesses give graphic details

Listen to NL Hafta on iTunes here and Stitcher here

NL Subscription Banner

Viewing all 2856 articles
Browse latest View live