Saturday 25 August 2012

The Assam situation; and mass exodus of north-easterners from southern states.

25 August 2012:
(…..compiled from reports in various newspapers, television and other media including the Economist of UK, and analytical discourses in various discussion forums on internet and elsewhere)

Introduction
The mass exodus from our southern cities by thousands of panicked fellow Indians of the north-eastern region returning to their homes earlier this month has underscored deep social fissures in our country, as also the power of social media and the peril of weak political leadership – according to analysts quoted in the media over the last two weeks.
Hate messages and threats spread on social net-working sites of supposed violence against northeasterners studying or working in major southern cities/States, sparked off fear among tens of thousands of such people – the main cause for this panic that triggered the move for en masse return to their native states.
Intelligence agencies were quick to identify the source of these hate messages with fake and morphed images of torture and mutilation as emanating from Pakistani websites, and the government lost no time in ordering the blocking of these rumour-spreading rogue sites including accounts on facebook and twitter.

Brief backgrounder
Not everyone is aware of the full facts. In brief, on July 6th, a month after an altercation at a mosque in Assam run by (non-Muslim) tribesmen in north-east India, four men on motorcycles shot and killed two Muslims. Six weeks later, some 80 people were killed in communal bloodletting; the army was deployed in Assam with orders to shoot to kill.

It was then that tens of thousands of north-easterners in other parts of India suddenly fled homeward in fear of their lives; India accused Pakistanis of being the origin of doctored video messages designed to stir up religious hatred; and 400,000-500,000 Indians are alleged to be homeless or displaced within Assam, statedly the largest involuntary movement of people inside the country since independence. How on earth did a local conflict, one of many in the area, produce such devastating nationwide consequences?

Analytical summary of events
As per reports in newspapers, television and other media, the spark for the extraordinary sequence of events was the fight in western Assam between indigenous Bodo tribesmen (pronounced Boro) and Bengali-speaking people. The Bodo claim (…a claim vehemently supported by the opposition parties in India's parliament) that the incomers are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and want them kicked out.

The migrants are mostly Muslim. The Bodo are animist or Christian. It is alleged that Muslim population in the State has grown in the three decades to 2001; this, not necessarily the reason for the latest violence. In some villages now the Bodo are supposed to be a minority. They say they feel swamped by Muslim immigrants.

However, the conflict is not primarily about religion. It is about land. The Bodo hold land in common. The Bengali-speakers are settled farmers, anxious to establish private-property rights as protection against dispossession. In 2003, after a long, violent campaign for autonomy, the Bodo got their own Bodo Territorial Council, on whose turf outsiders may not own property. The Bodo consider all Muslims outsiders—hence the dispute at the mosque.

Assam's conflict has been going on for decades. A massacre in 1983 was far more brutal than this year's violence. Yet until now the dispute, like other insurgencies of the north-east, has had no real impact elsewhere in the country.

This time, there were riots in Mumbai and attacks in nearby Pune on people from Manipur. According to some reports some 30,000 north-easterners fled from Bangalore, nine of them being thrown off a moving train. Governments countered these claims, but HT Sangliana – a north-easterner, but former DGP of Karnataka, former BJP MP from Bangalore, and current Vice-Chairman of the country's Minority Commission – pleaded in an interview on national televion that complaints of mal-treatment of north-easterners should not be ignored by the government; they need to be verified. Amidst the panic, it appeared like some authorities encouraged the exodus by laying on special trains: reportedly 30,000 tickets to Guwahati, Assam's capital, were sold in three days.

The impact of mobile phones with almost everybody today, has made a difference. On August 12th people started getting text messages warning north-easterners to go home before the end of Ramzan (August 20th). They also got video messages with doctored images purporting to show the bodies of Muslims killed in Assam – images that were in fact of victims of Cyclone Nargis in 2008 in Myanmar.

Based on intelligence inputs, Union Home Secretary RK Singh appeared on national television to disclose that the mischievous websites that spread the messages were identified as from Pakistan and Home Minister Shinde asked for the Pakistani government's help in closing them down. Pakistan denied involvement, following which India ordered the blocking of over 250 websites and asked mobile-service providers to restrict the number of SMS messages. Yet the images have gone viral.

The Assam conflict also spread because people elsewhere sought to capitalize on it. Mumbai saw rival protests by a big Muslim organization – the Raza Academy, then a big Hindu one, by the Maharashtra Navnirman Samiti. The opposition (Hindu-nationalist) Bharatiya Janata Party said Assam's problem is illegal immigration from Bangladesh. Tarun Gogoi, the chief Minister of Assam which is ruled by the Congress party, countered bluntly "…there are no Bangladeshis in the clash but Indian citizens." The Assam conflict has not been such partisan fodder before.

What now for possible action:
It may be likely and hoped that these reverberations across the rest of the country will force the Central Government to focus at last on the chronic failings of its policy in the north-east. Linked to the rest of the country only by a "chicken's neck" stretch of land 22km wide, the region has remained isolated, poor and different. Assam, easily the biggest state in the north-east, is one of India's poorest. With a mixture of oriental mongoloid features in various degrees, North-easterners look different: and take offense at being called "Chinky". It is not uncommon though for North-easterners to call the rest of the country "mainland India".

Over the decades since India's independence one of the manifestations of this distinctiveness is the persistence of insurgencies in the region. The Institute for Conflict Management, a think-tank, lists 26 active armed groups in the region, and ten organizations proscribed by India's home ministry. Five of the seven states are troubled by armed separatists. In the early 2000s the death toll was reportedly 1,700 a year.

Dealing with such a region was always going to be hard. Yet successive governments have made things worse. They have attempted to placate insurgent groups by giving them more autonomy. The north-east has 16 such areas, more than the rest of India. But giving each group a place of its own creates restive new minorities within the area—as in Bodoland.

National politicians have also shied away from dealing with illegal migration, partly because the issue is toxic and partly because local politicians like to register newcomers as voters. For a while, Assam even had its own immigration policy, until that was struck down by the Supreme Court. By letting ambiguity about incomers' legal status persist, politicians leave the field open to armed extremists who want to kick all Muslims out.

The report card over the past decades indicates that the successive Central governments have attempted to buy peace. Between 20% and 55% of north-eastern states' GDP comes in fund transfers from the centre—a huge proportion. It keeps their economies going, but turns local governments into client states surrounded by autonomous areas ruled by former insurgents, while armed gangs wage guerrilla campaigns at the margins.

On the other side of the coin, there is reason to believe that there have been some improvements in the region. Fatalities have fallen since 2008, thanks to a deal with Bangladesh which denied some insurgents their former bases. But as is clear from the Bodo conflict, the grievances which produced the insurgencies remain. India's long-term goals in the region are to encourage its integration with the rest of the country, to use the north-east to boost economic ties with South-East Asia, and to check China's influence in Myanmar. At the moment, none of those aims is being advanced.

From a policing perspective…

i) The cause of exodus of residents hailing from NE areas to return home are SMS texts originating from Pakistan. It is indeed shameful to admit/allege that a neighbouring country was able to intrude our communication system and networks. However, we need to revisit the knee-jerk strategy adopted by the Government as immediate remedy to tackle this menace - and examine whether at all the answer really lies in blocking social net-working sites or in harnessing their potential for initiatives and positive propaganda to counter - by beating the enemy using their own stick! We need to be progressive in our approach. Banning a thing comes naturally to us. Our intelligence and understanding of issues will be better appreciated if we can be one up on technology, and harness the same for our greater benefit.

But I pray, while doing so, let us not ride on the Pakistani canard alone - the majority of sites (..over two third) identified for blocking are still non-Pakistani – possibly by Muslims and others in India too. Veteran journalist John Dayal has posted on his facebook page that 20% of these sites were by Hindus. So what in the name of follow up is being done about this? ...and why no hype on this score?

ii) Governmental responses:
(….role of DMs and SPs, the state leaderships in the IAS and IPS, and of political leaders).
That such mischief (…be it by Pakistanis, or others) could be expected, what has amazed all is that everyone sat down to watch this exodus continue without meaningful intervention. In silence it appeared all approved of this movement. Where were the MPs, MLAs in south India, the various CMs, religous leaders and social activists who survive on official doles. They all seem to have gone home to hole up. Where were the DMs and the police chiefs assuring the people to stay back for they will keep them safe. No DM held any press conference to deny rumours. Police chiefs were also absent from streets to prevent the human exit from their districts. Where were the employers of these people to tell them to stay back and promise them protection.

iii) Lessons to be learnt:
The loss of confidence in institutional management of society seemed total. Now we know how in future our new generations will act and our official agencies will sit back and watch this 'entertainment'. We as a nation are sitting ducks to be knocked out into dust by mere SMS, and not a bullet fired.
This exodus illustrates that we do not have an effective Civil Defence System on ground. Any small disciplined organisation can create absolute chaos by using rumours . Let us see how our district police units worked. Did we have a counter action system on ground to wave away rumours. Why did no DM hold any press conference to deny rumours. Why were the Police chiefs also absent from streets to prevent the human exit from their districts. Was it because no crime was committed?
The people have lost trust in the khaki uniform to be their guardian angels. This is very unfortunate. In six decades we have allowed the police system to only slide down and our words do not carry weight in people's mind. This is a time of trial for our system which is supposed to serve the people.

iv) Migrations:
A point in issue that popped up in discussion forums is the question why at all did so many thousands had to leave their homes in the NE in search of jobs in far off places? Then is it that in their work place they were exploited, and they could visit their homes only once a while at enormous cost of travel and loss of wages? In the 60 years after Independence what have the Governments – at the Centre and State, done to provide employment to the youth of NE? Instead of going into the reasons for this hapless lot to leave their homes, is it just our diversionary tactic to throw the blame on someone else… ?
Migration is an interesting phenomenon when looking at social development. A lot of positives cab be seen when there is movement of people for jobs. Such churning would dissolve firmly held social practices which otherwise we want to eradicate but find it difficult to. Its also an important factor showing more upward mobility of a nation when lots of people opt for migration for economic betterment.
We can't and shouldn't cry down migrations... Greener pastures and aspirations for bettering one's exposure and opportunities for jobs and lifestyles will always remain a motivating factor. There are advantages and disadvantages!
Nobody cried over Bihari migrations when at one stage (...and perhaps still do) they flooded the cities of the country to escape the conditions in their home state (.....just an example - I am not singling out any particular state). Wherever the Biharis went, with their endeavour and intellect they contributed to the development and prosperity of the chosen cities/states - enough to be feared by locals of a Bihari dominance if not Bihari take-over! Giving rise to local goons in the name of partisan interests to become heros and even national power wielders in their quest to oust the outsiders. I don't need to name places where this has happened.
But sticking to the north-east, those of us who served in the north-eastern states know how very clannish the local communities can be in their attitude towards outsiders. But when outside their own local environment/ communities/ and State, they are the friendliest of people. I remember when I was a college student in Bangalore in the '60s some of my best friends were Nagas, Manipuris, Khasis and other north-easterners who flooded Bangalore even in those days for higher studies and in search of class and culture.
As it should be, the north-easterners (and particularly some prominent tribes from the region) have taken full advantage of the tribal concessions and reservations to join the All India  and Central Services in large numbers. Whichever be the cadre to which they were/are allocated, I fear at any given point in time a large number of them if not the majority, would be serving in their own state - having wangled a berth back home by hook or by crook even on deputation through local political connections and obvious mismanagement by cadre authorities fanned by reluctance on the part of cadre officers to serve in the north-east... !
In the circumstances, over the last decade or so I have viewed the tendency for youngsters from the north-east moving out for jobs elsewhere in the country - and not necessarily only for studies - as a great positive and something to be encouraged !!!!!!  
 Shunning their "frog-in-the-well" attitude to life and venturing out of their cocoon comfort zones to take up jobs elsewhere is a wonderful development; which shows their acceptance of and growing confidence in the country which they are part of; something the country could not achieve in the 50-years prior to this decade! Today it is common to find Mizos and Nagas serving as shop assistants and waiters in restaurants - a sight by no stretch of imagination that could be dreamed of earlier!
Hence there is a great stake involved here for the nation - of restoring that confidence - which has been shattered and lost among our north-eastern brethren by the recent conspiracy ingeniously engineered by spreading rumours through the social-network medium.
Zeroing on Police functions, the phenomenon of migration needs to be understood by the police and appropriate response devised. An urgent need is apparent to have better and well thought out strategies to deal with problems of crime arising out of migration, rather than blaming migration for problems. It would be worthwhile to group-think on this issue on social discussion forums, on the current background of the Assam related rumour-mongering on social media.
Do Police need to have real time communication with people on state police websites and twitter and facebook? How useful is using state power to shut down sites etc and demonstrate effectiveness of force?
Police recruitment policies should factor in representation of all significant minorities. NYPD follows this, enabling them to present themselves as everyone's police force and getting valuable intelligence resources in the process.
Formation of social bodies and NGOs representing minorities should be encouraged. Leaders who emerge out of such organic growth should be engaged with and recognized.
Localities and public places, including places of worship, frequented by specific minorities should be mapped out and festivals.
IPS officers, who have some minority connection, should be tasked with being 'brand ambassadors' for inclusive policing.

Finally, as one of the senior retired police officers commented on a web discussion forum: "….one wonders why the younger generation is not so assertive to retain a social order around themselves. Is this generation of 'Dum Maro Dum' thinking?"

Wednesday 21 April 2010

Extortion scam at some Intl airport -

---sent in by : Jayonto Choudhuri on 10 April 2010 07:27

An Indian was detained in Bangkok for stealing a box of cigarettes in a duty-free shop in Bangkok International Airport . He had paid for chocolates and a carton of cigarettes. The cashier put a packet of cigarettes extra into his bag and he thought it was a free pack. He was arrested for shop-lifting and the Thai Police extortion price was 30,000 Baht for his release. He spent two nights in jail and paid 500 Baht for an air-conditioned cell, 200-300 baht for each visitor and 11,000 baht for his final release. The Police shared the money in front of his eyes. On top of that, he was charged in court and fined 2,000 baht by the magistrate and handcuffed and escorted to his plane. His passport was stamped "Thief". While there, his relatives requested help from the Indian Embassy and was told that they are helpless, many Asians are victimized similarly daily and letters and phone-calls to the Thai authorities are ignored. He shared a cell with a Singaporean the first night who paid 60,000 baht for his release. The second night was a Malaysian national who paid 70,000 baht.

Mind you this was not in a shanty shop in downtown Bangkok but in a duty free shop at the Bangkok Int'l Airport . BE WARNED.  

The above is 100% correct information because Mr.Rajan Khera's customer from India faced exactly the same scenario mentioned above when he was in transit at Bangkok Int'l Airport coming to Taipei .

Someone who went through the same ordeal in Dubai . He bought stuff at the Duty Free upon entering. The girl at Duty Free put a bottle of cologne in his shopping bag (he did not even see it happen). He was arrested for stealing (this is before he even picked up his lugg age). He sat at the airport jail where he was harassed for the whole day. NO FOOD, NO WATER for one day and only after he paid a fine (bribe of US 500...). That is all the cash he had in his pocket at the time. They let him go. These are scams that are happening all over the place. Please BE CAREFUL! All of this is pre-planned and the people who work at the airport know who to target.

Unbelievable but apply caution.... the duty free employees intentionally put extra items to scam the passenger and we think that our country is the most corrupted one.....

ALWAYS TAKE A RECEIPT FOR ANY FREE GIFT THAT THE DUTY FREE SHOP GIVES. PLEASE BE CAREFUL AND WATCHFUL WHEN YOU ARE BEING BILLED AND ITEMS PACKED IN INTERNATIONAL AIR PORTS (DUTY FREE SHOPS).

US Justice is Fast - Unlike India.

This is a dream judgement, especially the judge's observations. the US justice system certainly has its priorities right, giving a befitting outcome to the blood, sweat and tears of police investigators.
 
Richard Colvin Reid, aged 37, commonly known as the shoe bomber, is a self-admitted member of Al Qaeda who was convicted by a U.S. federal court of attempting to destroy a commercial aircraft in-flight by detonating explosives hidden in his shoes. His motive was terrorism. He is currently serving a life sentence without parole in a super maximum security prison in the United States. His crime led to the new requirement of U.S. airline passengers having to remove their shoes for inspection before boarding.
 
Richard C. Reid
 
I wonder how many remember this person who got on a plane with a bomb built into his shoe and tried to light it?
 
Did you know his trial is over?
Did you know he was sentenced?
Did you see/hear any of the judge's comments on TV or Radio?
Didn't think so. A few people do know about it !!!
Everyone should hear what the judge had to say.
 
Ruling by Judge William Young, US District Court.
 
Prior to sentencing, the Judge asked the defendant if he had anything to say. His response: After admitting his guilt to the court for the record, Reid also admitted his 'allegiance to Osama bin Laden, to Islam, and to the religion of Allah,' defiantly stating, 'I think I will not apologize for my actions,' and told the court 'I am at war with your country.'
 
Judge Young then delivered the statement quoted below:
January 30, 2003, United States vs. Reid.
Judge Young:   'Mr. Richard C. Reid, hearken now to the sentence the Court imposes upon you.
'On counts 1, 5 and 6 the Court sentences you to life in prison in the custody of the  United States  Attorney General.  On counts 2, 3, 4 and 7, the Court sentences you to 20 years in prison on each count, the sentence on each count to run consecutively.  (That's 80 years.)
'On count 8 the Court sentences you to the mandatory 30 years again, to be served consecutively to the 80 years just imposed.  The Court imposes upon you for each of the eight counts a fine of $250,000 that's an aggregate fine of $2 million.  The Court accepts the government's recommendation with respect to restitution and orders restitution in the amount of $298.17 to Andre Bousquet and $5,784 to American Airlines.
'The Court imposes upon you an $800 special assessment. The Court imposes upon you five years supervised release simply because the law requires it.. But the life sentences are real life sentences so I need go no further.
'This is the sentence that is provided for by our statutes.  It is a fair and just sentence.  It is a righteous sentence.
'Now, let me explain this to you.  We are not afraid of you or any of your terrorist co-conspirators, Mr. Reid.  We are Americans.  We have been through the fire before.  There is too much war talk here and I say that to everyone with the utmost respect.  Here in this court, we deal with individuals as individuals and care for individuals as individuals.  As human beings, we reach out for justice.
'You are not an enemy combatant.  You are a terrorist. You are not a soldier in any war.  You are a terrorist.  To give you that reference, to call you a soldier, gives you far too much stature. Whether the officers of government do it or your attorney does it, or if you think you are a soldier, you are not ----- you are a terrorist.  And we do not negotiate with terrorists.  We do not meet with terrorists.  We do not sign documents with terrorists.  We hunt them down one by one and bring them to justice.
'So war talk is way out of line in this court.  You are a big fellow But you are not that big.  You're no warrior.  I've known warriors. You are a terrorist.  A species of criminal that is guilty of multiple attempted murders.  In a very real sense, State Trooper Santiago had it right when you first were taken off that plane and into custody and you wondered where the press and the TV crews were, and he said: 'You're no big deal.'
'You are no big deal.
'What your able counsel and what the equally able  United States  attorneys have grappled with and what I have as honestly as I know how tried to grapple with, is why you did something so horrific.  What was it that led you here to this courtroom today?
'I have listened respectfully to what you have to say. And I ask you to search your heart and ask yourself what sort of unfathomable hate led you to do what you are guilty and admit you are guilty of doing?  And, I have an answer for you.  It may not satisfy you, but as I search this entire record, it comes as close to understanding as I know.
'It seems to me you hate the one thing that to us is most precious. You hate our freedom..  Our individual freedom.  Our individual freedom to live as we choose, to come and go as we choose, to believe or not believe as we individually choose.  Here, in this society, the very wind carries freedom.  It carries it everywhere from sea to shining sea.  It is because we prize individual freedom so much that you are here in this beautiful courtroom, so that everyone can see, truly see, that justice is administered fairly, individually, and discretely.  It is for freedom's sake that your lawyers are striving so vigorously on your behalf, have filed appeals, will go on in their representation of you before other judges.
'We Americans are all about freedom.  Because we all know that the way we treat you, Mr. Reid, is the measure of our own liberties. Make no mistake though.  It is yet true that we will bear any burden; pay any price, to Preserve our freedoms.  Look around this courtroom  Mark it well.  The world is not going to long remember what you or I say here.  The day after tomorrow, it will be forgotten, but this, however, will long endure.
'Here in this courtroom and courtrooms all across  America  , the American people will gather to see that justice, individual justice, justice, not war, individual justice is in fact being done.  The very President of the United States through his officers will have to come into courtrooms and lay out evidence on which specific matters can be judged and juries of citizens will gather to sit and judge that evidence democratically, to mold and shape and refine our sense of justice.
'See that flag, Mr. Reid?  That's the flag of the  United States of America  . That flag will fly there long after this is all forgotten. That flag Stands for freedom.  And it always will.
'Mr. Custody Officer.  Stand him down.'
 
AND WE ARE STILL TOILING WITH KASAB WHO IS JUST ANOTHER COWARDLY RICHARD REID!

Saturday 10 April 2010

How valuables are stolen at the airport from Check-in Baggage

....sent in by Anil Agrawal to IndiaTopCop on 10 April 2010 10:00
HOW EASILY THEY OPEN AND STEAL FROM YOUR SUITCASE WHICH LOOKS PROPERLY LOCKED WHEN YOU REGAIN IT FROM THE BELT

"If you are travelling, with zippered suitcases, think again. Watch the attached video to see how loaders can steal from your locked zippered suitcases without even opening the lock. At some airports there is an option to shrink wrap the bag. I wish it was available everywhere".

After you watch this, you will not leave anything valuable in your suitcase anymore.

This is the way a bag is opened at the airport without your knowledge...
Many people would have things missing from their baggage, even when they received them at the arrival port UNOPENED and UNTOUCHED!

How did the thief (at the airport) do it? ..... Just watch the video

Don't leave your gold ingots and diamond necklaces in your zippered bags, okay?
They don't have to open lots of bags.
Only those with valuables, as told to them by the X-ray machines!


Saturday 20 February 2010

20100221: Echoes of injustice

 
Deccan Herald
Sunday 21 February 2010

 
Echoes of injustice
Prasenjit Chowdhury

Jarnail and his family barely managed to survive the horror. But his account is replete with accounts of how police, save some gutsy officers like Maxwell Pereira, became complicit in acts of butchery.

I ACCUSE...THE ANTI-SIKH VIOLENCE OF 1984 Jarnail Singh Penguin, 2009, pp 165, Rs 350I ACCUSE...THE ANTI-SIKH VIOLENCE OF 1984
Jarnail Singh
Penguin, 2009,
pp 165, Rs 350

It was Milan Kundera who in his book The Book of Laughter and Forgetting said that a totalitarian state wants its people to be forgetful. But forgetting as horrendous a crime as the anti-Sikh carnage is a crime and a greater crime if one urges to forget it.
Jarnail Singh, who shot to fame for having flung his Reebok runner at the Union Home Minister P Chidambaram — he waxed eloquent on the CBI's clean chit to Congress leader Jagdish Tytler accused as a prime instigator — at a press conference in New Delhi and came to be riled and adored in differing circles though he missed his target, manages to hit his target on the dot this time.

He pores deep into the skulduggery of covering up the truth, in apparent quest of which one government after another set up various committees and commissions — the Marwah Commission, the Mishra Commission, the Kapur Mittal Committee, the Jain Banerjee Committee, the Potti Rosha Committee, the Jain Aggarwal Committee, the Ahuja Committee, the Dhillon Committee, the Narula Committee and the Nanavati Commission — one after the other. It was an instance of a state-sponsored, state-directed and state-supported violence.

There was something crudely comical about the whole exercise because the massacre of Sikhs in 1984 on the streets, roads and bylanes of Delhi still awaits redressal and justice, and rankles the collective memory(26 years down the line). In the intervening years, the ardour for justice has been blunted by the State. Surely the memory has dimmed for those who needed to move on and the call for justice has been made far less strident. Some intractable souls like Nirpreet Kaur whose father Nirmal Singh was burnt alive still grope for justice.

 Recalling the charged times of the 1980s, Khuswant Singh in his book, The End of India, rightly notes that "the Bhindranwale chapter in Indian history is a perfect illustration of the disastrous results of not keeping politics separate from religion." The Congress under Indira Gandhi, the then President Zail Singh and the Akali Trinity, consisting of Harchand Singh Longwal, the party leader and 'dictator' of the agitation, Gurugharan Singh Tohra, who controlled the Sikh shrines including the Golden Temple, and Prakash Singh Badal, a former chief minister of Punjab were all responsible for the situation of volatile Punjab to worsen further and Bhindranwale to hold sway for their narrow political ends. To my mind, the cult of hatred must be traced long before Indira Gandhi authorised Operation Blue Star, by doing which, as Inder Malhotra says, "she knew she had also signed her death warrant."

Jarnail and his family barely managed to survive the horror. But his account is replete with accounts of how police, save some gutsy officers like Maxwell Pereira, became complicit in acts of butchery. The army was not deployed, the then President Zail Singh turned out to be a milksop, the then Union Home Minister Narsimha Rao played dud, a role he repeated during his prime ministership during the Gujarat riots, the Doordarshan tried to inflame base passions by pointing out ad nauseam that Indira Gandhi was killed by his two Sikh bodyguards, the print media chose largely to give a sparse coverage to the killings, and the main accused — H K L Bhagat rose to become a cabinet minister in the Rajiv Gandhi government — the list of omissions and commissions is endless. 
 Unfortunately, there is no writer of Orhan Pamuk's standing in India — recall his gall to remind Turkey of its past riddled with Armenian genocide — to remind us of the sin of our own genocides. And Jarnail Singh is no Raj Kamal Jha either to weave a gut-churning masterpiece like his Fireproof. But he speaks straight from the heart and brings alive the horror so graphically that for three days in November 1984, some parts of Delhi became virtual Mano Majras — a small Indian frontier village in Khuswant Singh's novel Train to Pakistan — with all the killings, flames, raping and pillaging. In effect, Jarnail's tale is one of not only the murder of over 3,000 Sikhs, but also of justice for those who "exist in a twilight of bitterness and despair."

Thursday 6 August 2009

Let's blame the damned cops for everything

Anshul Chaturvedi Tuesday August 04, 2009

(Kudos to Anshul Chaturvedi for this piece posted on the Times of India Blogs. For once, someone has called a spade a spade. The police in India are not paragons of all virtue. But so are not many others placed above them on the hierarchical rungs. Hang them first, before yo start attacking the only ones delivering goods in India today).

Chaturvedi's article:
"India's status as the world's largest democracy is undermined by a police force that thinks it is above the law," says Brad Adams, Asia Director of Human Rights Watch, in a recent report.
I disagree.
I think India's status as a democracy - irrespective of size - is firstly undermined by a political class that thinks it is above the law, by an administrative machinery that thinks it is above the law, and - going by how upset they are at being asked to divulge their financial assets - a judiciary that thinks it is above the law, too. The cops are way, way down the line. And, oh, incidentally, along the way, they get shot, too. None of the others run that risk.
We have made a culture out of branding men in uniform. The local police, the central paramilitary forces, and whenever we get a chance, the army. And anybody who thinks otherwise risks being promptly branded a right-winger or a closet BJP sympathiser (some blog commentators seem to be in an endless pursuit of hidden clues to expose all writers as such!).
Anyways, leaving that aside, I am not in the least saying that whatever the police do is right. I am also not in the least denying that the degree of corruption at the grassroots in the local police across the country is simply unacceptable, with perhaps the traffic cops ahead of the rest by a fair margin. I also think our reaction as a society to many things the police do is a combination of mixed reactions and double standards - as in the case of police 'encounters'.
What I am saying is that we seem to look at our police forces the way the Sri Lankan population looked at the IPKF - a force which worked with one hand tied behind its back, did some things wrong and many things right, was handicapped by policy and structural drawbacks, fought pitched battles against well entrenched opposition, and, at the end of the day, earned nobody's sympathy.
Officers who were heroes and took immense personal risks when the anti-Khalistani battle was being fought in the fields and towns of Punjab were sidelined, shunted or locked up when peace was established. Some spent time in jails, some committed suicide. It was reduced to a pathetic Congress vs Akali issue. We will be fools to forget the difference between Operation Bluestar and Operation Black Thunder, the difference between letting loose tanks to handle internal security and letting a coordinated Centre-State policing operation sort out complex issues.
Punjab was won back from a period of endless violence by the police - brutally, yes, but if anyone had any other way to do it, I don't remember hearing much about it in those years, when everyone would shut the doors at night, and CRPF gypsies with an LMG on top and thick wooden panels as improvised bullet-proofing would be the only vehicles for endless miles on the lonely Punjab roads. The local police - a very high proportion of which was Sikh - fought a bloody battle for years. The price they paid ranged from attacks on the then DGP Ribeiro, to dozens of officers killed, to the long night when militants in a coordinated manner selectively killed 40-odd relatives of policemen, across villages. Yet, the force displayed the spine to keep the fight going. The fact that the Punjab Police is today back to being a relatively easy, not-too-averse-to-financial-perks sort of mindset does not change the reality of the bloody mess from which Punjab came back to what it is today. And how.
In J&K, a lot has gone wrong. But what went wrong in J&K didn't go wrong because the men in uniform went to set Kashmir alight. Once it went wrong, they were sent in to salvage it, and the familiar cycle of operations in insurgency-hit areas played itself it out. There is no hundred per cent clean, sanitised, and friendly way to handle situations once they reach those levels when AK-47s are in free circulation. No country in the world has been able to do that. Questions will arise, action will need to be taken, and if men cross the lines they shouldn't, action will need to be taken against them too. But there is more to the issue and the Forces than the headline-grabbling episodes of misbehaviour.
The CRPF seems to have been getting tagged as some sort of a bunch of deranged mavericks in hormonal overdrive, and faces the bulk of the current flak in Kashmir. "Send the CRPF back" is currently a very popular sentiment. However, not too long back, it was "send the BSF back". Come to think of it, hasn't it been "send the Army back" for some time? Ergo, send them all back? And it will be peace and harmony - courtesy the Lashkar?
Now, while the men in the CRPF are no better or no worse temperamentally than those in any similar force, the branding has been quick. And the horrendous PR machinery of the uniformed forces means that there is hardly any counter-move. But when two uniformed men are killed in the heart of Srinagar this Saturday, that is fair game. Coincidentally, they reflect the way men in khaki, across faiths and across their taglines, are fair game so often - the CRPF's BB Ghosh and the state police's Mohammed Shafi Bhat were the two men shot sans provocation, to make a point. In 24 hours, their names have no recall value for anyone. There will be no bandh or rally. There will be no write-ups in the local press expressing anything. This is just information. New road inaugurated by Minister. Flights cancelled due to bad weather. Two jawans killed in militant attacks. What's the difference?
And the same CRPF which is supposedly a bunch of maniacs in J&K is the first lot sent ahead to clear the way when West Bengal needs to reclaim "liberated territory" from the Maoists. The CRPF alone has lost 40-odd men killed in the interiors of the country - Chattisgarh and Jharkhand - this year alone. It's bizarre. The numbers of men killed just don't seem to register on us in terms of magnitude. The massacre of 36 policemen including the district SP of Rajnandgaon less than a month back is just a blip on our radar screens - we're probably back to watching Rakhi's swyamwaar with much greater focus.
As they say, the policeman's lot is not a happy one. The Indian policeman's lot is generally a miserable one, more so, if he isn't the sort who wants to stash himself with notes and believes in the old-fashioned world of duty unto death. Pity him.
So when Human Rights Watch says that the Indian police culture breeds brutality, it is no surprise. Yes, it does. It, however, despite the system and the culture, breed better things too - if only we would stop to give the devil his collective due.
If our status as the world's largest democracy is under threat, Mr Adams, I really don't think the neighbourhood cop is the first guy I think of as being responsible for that, at least not yet. He has a long way to catch up, so far as that list goes.

Thursday 30 July 2009

Cell phone Guns... !!!!!

The mobile phone gun...!!!
Most of us see airport security as a pain..
Some of us even feel violated.
Perhaps when one sees the pictures below,
one can see the reason why cell phones
need to be sent through the x-ray machine.
If you get asked to test your cell phone at the airport,
do cooperate.
Cell phone guns have arrived.
AND they are real.
Beneath the digital phone face is a .22 caliber handgun
capable of firing four rounds in rapid succession
using the standard telephone keypad.
European law enforcement officials are stunned
by the discovery of these deadly decoys.
They say phone guns are changing the rules of engagement in Europe.
Only when you have one in your hand do you realize
that they are heavier than a regular cell phone.
Be patient if security asks to look at your cell phone
or turn it on to show that it works.
They have a good reason!
Wake up to our NEW WORLD!!
We shouldn't complain about airport security 'invading our privacy.

FunFunky.Com

FunFunky.Com

.............sent in by Rakesh Vaid: New Delhi