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Monday, October 10, 2011

Young Tibetans in exile are educated, unemployed and fast running out of patience.

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Saurabh Kumar Shahi visits McLeodganj to check out the simmering powder keg that threatens the Dalai Lama's 'middle path'

The first thing that strikes you in McLeodganj is the absence of anarchy. Nattily dressed Tibetan youth go about their work. There is no apparent abject poverty, no running open drains. Why then were we looking for McLeodganj in the first place? Well, simply because it is the foremost phenomenon that defines a refugee settlement. I have seen scores of refugee camps of all types and sizes all over the world — Palestinians, Kashmiris, Bangaldeshi Biharis, Chakmas, Rohingyas and what not. There are of course a few similarities among these camps. However if there is one commonality: anarchy. But unlike them, McLeodganj does not fester. Or at least does not appear to fester. But does that mean all is well? We'll see.

Sometime in 2005, on a chilly Tibetan night, Jamyang and his best friend entered Lhasa after days of journeying from Ngari province. They were desperate to get to Dharamsala. Meeting the Dalai Lama was the only motive in their life. Jamyang and his friend covered the inhospitable terrain in 48 days and reached Nepal. A week later they were in Dharamsala to see their beloved spiritual leader. They were promptly enrolled in the classes and their spiritual and worldly studies began.

Half a decade on, sitting in a roadside tea joint near Bhagsu temple, Jamyang remembers the arduous journey that almost took his life. He has all the time in the world for me. He dropped out of school months ago and now lives by his wits. Jobs are extremely hard to come by in the absence of local language proficiency and a defined skill-set. And he can't go back to Tibet. For all practical purposes, he is stuck here.

Does he buy Dalai Lama's "middle path" solution? Yes, but only when he is sober enough. With Manali hash easy to find, chances of his being sober have diminished drastically. As it transpires, Mcleodganj too festers. You just need to scratch a tad.

A cursory survey is enough to reveal that the majority of the population here is made up of youth. With the advent of education, the birth rate has gone down drastically. But still the youth outnumber all other age segments quite easily. Literacy is close to 80 per cent and unemployment is 75 per cent. The place is a veritable powder keg. But it has not exploded. It appears that the Dalai Lama's "middle path" still has many takers. But does that mean that the movement will continue to be as it is? No. We have new voices.

Karma Yeshi, an MP in the Tibetan Parliament-in-exile who also runs the Voice of Tibet radio station, is one such voice. He abhors pity and speaks his mind too often for the comfort of others. "There is a lack of guidance as far as the job market is concerned. Only rallies won’t do." He suggests several ways to change the movement. Many of these are reasonable. "Do we have a single Tibetan expert here who has done higher studies in Chinese diplomacy or UN diplomacy? None. How do we expect to have our voices heard? Where is the intellectual capital?" he asks.

People like Yeshi and others worry about the future of the movement. While Tibetans idolise and revere the Dalai Lama, many worry that they have come to bank far too intemperately on the 75-year-old leader. They fear that his eventual death would profoundly hurt the cause of the Tibetans in exile. "The institution of the Dalai Lama is one of Tibet's big strengths," says monk Lobsang Chonzin. "At the same time, it's our weakness because all of us are dependent on him." What would happen to the movement when the Dalai Lama passes away?

Tibetans in exile widely anticipate that when the fourteenth Dalai Lama dies, the Chinese will push their own reincarnation. They see the instance of the Panchen Lama, Tibet's second highest-ranking religious name, as a prologue. In 1995, the Dalai Lama accepted a six-year-old boy in Tibet as the successor to the 10th Panchen Lama, who died in 1989. China confined the boy and chose another in his place. The Dalai Lama's choice and his family have not been seen since. The Dalai Lama's death will thus lead to two centres of power. The movement in its present form will end up losing its meaning.

When the Dalai Lama fled Tibet, he was accompanied by about 100,000 of Tibetans, most of whom did not doubt his determination to engage in a non-violent crusade. A few Tibetans took part in a guerrilla operation backed by the CIA until financial support dried up and they were booted out of Nepal in 1974.

Most Tibetan exiles today still revere the Dalai Lama as their spiritual leader but a section wants a more radical approach to be adopted. The latter group is turning increasingly vocal. Young Tibetan exiles — most of whom were born outside their homeland — openly vent their impatience with the Dalai Lama’s "middle way".

But this movement will need much more than enthusiasm to sustain it. And that is where Tsewang Rigzin and his Tibetan Youth Congress come in. The Tibetan Youth Congress, which was started in the early 1970s and claims close to 40,000 active members today, has suggested violence in the past, argues for hunger strikes and other forms of protestation not condoned by the Dalai Lama and reserves the right to use force in the future.

"We want to look at things that his Holiness has enforced, his policy called the Middle Way, and it's been in place for the last almost three decades now. There has been little interaction. We had dialogues with Chinese officials. But the bottomline is that nothing has come out of all this. We need to change that," says Rigzin, dressed in a primly cut suit. He advocates outright independence for Tibet.

Critics maintain that these groups play into the hands of the Chinese government but the radicals respond that Tibetans have little to lose. But how has it affected the relationship with the locals with whom they had little or no interaction for fear of getting assimilated? The Tibetan refugees live in relative isolation to conserve their distinct religion and culture.

Lately, they have been facing a degree of subterranean hostility, because local people have developed a certain antipathy. The demographic and cultural wallop of refugees has led to a sense of vulnerability among the indigenous populace here.

The strain could be seen everywhere. As one local restaurateur told me on seeing my camera and Dictaphone, "Purane log sab wadiya thhey. Ab nawe munde to kattar hain..." (The oldies were gentlemen, these new kids are fundamentalists.)

But the question is, are the Chinese feeling the heat? Oh yes. The Tibet protest prior to the Beijing Olympics caught them by surprise. Also, the global support that the movement got rattled them to the core. They came back with the iron hand, something they cannot afford to employ for too long in a globalised world.

"We have used Facebook and Twitter as our weapon. The potential of these sites is unlimited. It is so easy to connect with Tibetans these days. Our call for protest suddenly has a world audience," beams Rigzin. But will the ministry of external affairs like their involvement. It has tolerated the Dalai Lama because some way or other he has toed its official position of 'One China'. A reckless youth movement can slip out of its hands and might prove to be a headache. But Rigzin is not concerned. "Our slogan is 'Free Tibet, Safe India'. After all it was after the annexation of Tibet that the Chinese managed to invade India," argues Rigzin. Clearly, he knows how to play. If you believe him, he has had his share of successes too.

Rigzin and his group have started interacting with Non Resident Chinese and indulge in healthy debates. "Initially it is very difficult to break them. But slowly, they have started to see reason," he quips. This has helped enhance his optimism. Quiz him about taking on an emerging superpower and Rigzin comes across as an eternal optimist. He believes that China will get democratised one day and a democratic China will be more accommodating of Tibetan aspirations.

But difficult times lie ahead. After the Dalai Lama, the unanimous world support will waver. Many organisations and individuals who support the Dalai Lama's peaceful struggle might find Rigzin's methods too unorthodox. And, as it happens with many causes, the two wings of the movement — fundamentalist and pacifist — will begin to work at cross-purposes. It would be interesting to see how Rigzin takes his movement out of this dichotomy.

He also needs to take the movement out of the hands of the foreign flock that who merely pays lip service to the cause. People who really care are quietly doing their bit. There is no sight as revolting as an Israeli army conscript fresh from his barracks and high on Manali hashish, speaking about "oppression" and "human rights violations". Trust me.

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Friday, October 07, 2011

The sandy villages of Rajasthan were the battleground for Aruna Roy’s crusade for the Right to Information Act.

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Anil Sharma tells the story of a little woman’s big work

Undulating sand dunes, camels returning home against the setting sun, women in bright ghagra-odhni traversing the desert with vessels of water balanced on their heads, dancers wriggling in the exquisite Kalbeliya dance and the haunting strains of the sarangi and algoze travelling miles through the dark nights. These are some of the picturesque images that the mind conjures at the very mention of the sandy state of Rajasthan. Behind these picture postcard images, however, is the story of a hardy people struggling against geographical odds and a feudal past.

Every desert has its share of oasis and its human embodiment can well be found in Aruna Roy, the petite silver-haired woman of substance who worked hard for the enactment of the Right to Information Act in 2005. Roy, who received the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership was recently described as one of the 50 most illustrious women of the modern India, is well known among the common people of the state. There are many who still recall the first jan sunwai, (public hearing) was held at Kot Kirana village in Rajsamand on December 1994. When the jan sunwai began at 9 am, the sarpanch, ward members and government officials, who were all invited, were conspicuously absent. Shankar Singh, Roy's associate in a long and intense struggle, wielded the microphone. With puppets in hands, he started singing: ‘I don’t want Campa Cola, neither pizza, Coca Cola nor liquor, I only seek accounts’. It set the mood. Villagers began to congregate. And then Roy came forward and began the post-mortem of work done using government funds. This was the first step towards the Right to Information Act. Living as the poor lived and eating as the poor ate, Aruna and her comrades began assisting villagers to assert themselves against the local power structures.

She made a choice to be a social activist when she had power and prestige for the asking. Born in Chennai and raised in Delhi, Aruna had joined the IAS in 1968 and after serving as a bureaucrat for six years, she took the first train from Delhi to join her one time classmate and husband Sanjit "Bunker" Roy at Tilonia in Rajasthan where he had set up the Social Welfare Research Centre (SWRC) and started working there with the villagers. Her experience at SWRC convinced her that poor people must be the agents of their own economic and social improvement and, moreover, that political action is fundamental to their success.

In late 80s Aruna and Shankar Singh founded the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathana (MKSS), when she found that people, particularly the rural folk, did not know about their rights and the idea of right to information was born. Using traditional forms of protest such as hunger strikes and sit-ins, MKSS-led villagers insisted that local people hired for state projects be paid the legal minimum wage. They held open-air public hearings at which official records of state development projects were exposed to the scrutiny of the intended beneficiaries. Shocking revelations followed: of toilets, schoolhouses, and health clinics recorded as paid for but never constructed; of improvements to wells, irrigation canals, and roads that remained noticeably unimproved; of famine and drought relief services never rendered; and of wages paid to workers who have been dead for many years.

Information was the key to every success: bills, vouchers, employment rolls. People have the right to audit their leaders, was what Roy said. Thus, its campaign of public hearings also became a campaign for transparency in government. "Our money, our records," chanted villagers. Why don’t villages develop despite panchayats getting sufficient funds? Where does this fund go? Who eats it up? Aruna Roy and her friends were posing these simple questions to villagers. This was the time when the then Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi, had famously said the 1 rupee that the Centre sends becomes 15 paisa by the time it reaches villages. Where do the remaining 85 paisa go to?

Aruna, finally achievied her target of making the RTI an Act in 2005 and today her action point is to demystify the Right to Information Act for the layman. Much before her achievement on the RTI front, she was honoured with the Magasaysay award in 2000. Aruna decided to use the award money of US $ 50,000 to set up a trust to support the process of democratic struggles. It was her spirit and the commitment to the task that forced the Union government to recognise that people have a right to information.

"She organised a number of campaign educating the masses on their right to information and has been stressing that the government cannot distance itself from the people and should provide all the information relating to the government’s working. Now a common man can obtain the information by filing an application. The Right to Information Act is the biggest gift to the people and Aruna is trying to make people know what is RTI and how to get the information through this Act" says Nikhil Dey, her long-time associate.

"The right to information will not only help control corruption and the arbitrary exercise of power – it will also merge with and strengthen the aspirations of people for participatory democracy. The adopted process of implementation is not smooth and there is apathy of the bureaucrats in answering the questions raised by the applicant. However, it must be understood that this legislation will only be effectively used over time," says Roy, a crusader who does not believe in resting on her laurels.

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"Thorns to Competition" amongst the top 10 best sellers of the week.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Superstructure loses intellectual base

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Chandrasekhar Bhattacharjee talks to intellectuals from Kolkata who have been opposing the ruling Left Front right from the Singur-Nandigram days and tries to find out if they are veering towards the right

Professor Walden Bello, a fellow of the Transnational Institute and professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines Diliman, made a pertinent remark two years back on the dilemma of the public intellectual of today. It is especially valid when it comes to the Left circle of intellectuals in India. “The tension between truth and politics becomes greatest when the public intellectual is part of a political organisation. What happens when the demands of truth and the demands of the organisation begin to diverge? This has been the greatest fear of intellectuals of the left, for, as I said, our moral or political side is very demanding. In the interests of the bigger battle against the right, against reaction, and against imperialism, it is a very great temptation to ignore, rationalise and defend abuses committed by our side and close ranks.” Bello, president of the Freedom from Debt Coalition, said this at his speech at the 49th Annual Convention of the San Francisco-based Outstanding Public Scholar Award Panel, International Studies Association.

Bello’s words help us understand the clear divide among the Left towards the official Marxist parties, the CPI(M) in particular. The disillusionment about what is still the largest Leftist entity in the parliamentary arena was evident during the Kolkata Film Festival in 2007 when Argentine film maker Fernando Ezequiel 'Pino' Solanas said that he would never come again to the Film Festival of Kolkata. It was in November when the so-called ‘Operation Sunrise’ was on in Nandigram and a section of film-makers and theatre personalities such as Aparna Sen, Shaonli Mitra, Bibhas Chakraborty, Kaushik Sen, etc. boycotted the festival and came out in protest. Artistes and cultural activists, who went to demonstrate outside Nandan, the festival venue, were manhandled and arrested. Solanas was kept from watching TV news, daily newspapers were not delivered to his hotel room and even his movement was restricted. The chagrin was against the chief minister and CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, projected as a cultural cognoscenti not only by CPI(M) but its allies as well.

The issue raises a controversy as to whether the dissenters are shifting towards the right? Bibhas Chakraborty, a leading light of the theatre movement in Bengal, contests this perception: “Who says we are turning against the Left? We are not. Our criticism is against a party that is pseudo-Left. And I won’t say this is something new in the global sphere. It happens at a time when several intellectuals all over the globe are brainstorming over the theory and practice of official Marxism and raising big questions. The authoritarian trend in the erstwhile socialist countries and even in China today is a fact of life. The protest from intellectuals and artists is a natural reaction.

Rabindranath Tagore warned against this in his Letter from Russia. Lenin sensed this before Tagore in his ending years. Mikhail Satrov’s play Blue Horse on the Red Grass, a day in Lenin's life set in 1921, is a vivid testimony of this.

Shaonli Mitra, one of the well-known stage artistes of Bengali theatre, is against the right-left dichotomy. She told TSI: “I don’t care about the Left or the Right. Our and my protest is always against injustice, oppression and trampling of freedom of expression. That is why we went to Singur, Nandigram and Lalgarh. That is why we braved the state’s autocratic threats and sided with the oppressed and poor people. We wrote to the chief minister thrice but he did not care to reply to our plea. But erstwhile Governor Gopal Krishna Gandhi responded readily, gave us a patient hearing and assured us of conveying our resentment to the administration. Take the 26-day hunger strike by state Opposition leader Mamata Banerjee demanding return of land to unwilling farmers of Singur. We wrote to the chief minister and Mamata Banerjee, asking them to hold talks to try to break the deadlock. Kaushik Sen, Bratya Basu and I met with Mamata Banerjee to discuss the situation while the CM didn’t even care to reply to any of our letters. This attitude of the Left Front government and its captain has distanced those who are not involved in party politics. It’s not a question of who is Left or not." She adds, “People in the cultural field do not have a single way of assertion. There are several transitional layers.”

Chandan Sen is an eminent theatre personality of Bengal, who is a state committee member of the CPI and had once contested the Assembly election. He said, “Chilean President Salvador Allende regretted just before his death as to why the Left intellectuals did not help him by pointing out his failures or wrong steps. Of course, we pointed out the mistakes and wrong steps of our Left Front government but our suggestions went unheard. But we tried sincerely.” Sen had joined the massive rally of the civil society against the state and CPM-sponsored ‘Operation Sunrise’ in Nandigram on November 14, 2007, along with his like-minded comrades like Meghnad Bhattacharjee. Talking to TSI, he added, “I feel the intellectuals and the civil society’s response was justified. Their role is limited to just pointing out the wrongs. They did it and will continue to do so in future.” Shamik Bandopadhyay, another noted Left-minded intellectual of Bengal who is presently attached with JNU in Delhi, wrote an excellent piece in a vernacular publication by narrating the days of torture and execution of the greatest Russian theatre personality, Vsevolod Meyerhold, during Stalin's rule. The Left Front rule, at least in the last decade, has seen a spurt in injustice, oppression and trampling of freedom of expression, opposed even by Left intellectuals. One can remember the last minute intervention of Chinmohan Sehanabis, an intellectual leader of CPI, to thwart CPM's attempt to outlaw some of the novels of Samaresh Basu. “Had he not objected, the Left Front government could not take credit for organising the funeral procession of Samaresh Bose,” remarked poet Amitabha Dasgupta over a decade back. “Taslima Nasreen was thrown out of the city in a secret plot hatched by a section of CPM men, who triggered unprecedented violence in Kolkata,” said a leading poet of Bengal.

Mahasweta Devi is candid: “We cannot tolerate this. We will continue this even after the government changes.”

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Saturday, October 01, 2011

Shahid Husain steals glimpses of the life in a taluka of the Sindh province in Pakistan that has considerable Hindu populace

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The Lone Doctor

When Dr. Mohammad Shafi Memon graduated from Liaquat Medical College (LMC), Jamshoro, Sindh on August 10, 1967, his father Hamid Ali Memon, a hakeem by profession, summoned him to his room.

“My father asked me to perform ablution and come along with the Holy Qur'an,” recalls Dr. Shafi Memon. “He asked me to take oath on the Holy Qur'an never to take bribe, never issue a fake certificate in medico-legal cases, never charge money for performing post-mortem, always respect community elders and serve the inhabitants of Diplo,” Dr. Memon told TSI. His father is now dead. In the meanwhile, almost every doctor from Diplo has migrated to greener pastures. But Dr. Memon still remembers his oath. He is the lone doctor in Diplo taluka, in district Tharparkar and caters to more than 70 per cent of the patients in the area. His face glows and he looks much younger than his years as he narrates his story.

Memon says people hailing from the district headquarter Diplo have been traditionally well off. They were traders and businessmen. Amazingly, Diplo headquarter has 100 per cent literacy rate.

“Once a teacher in Diplo gave 110 marks out of 100 to a student,” Memon reminisces. “When asked how this could be possible, the teacher said that the student earned 100 marks on merit while he was given 10 marks out of admiration.”
He recalls that during the 1971 Indo-Pakistan war, almost every Muslim migrated from Diplo. “Only four Muslims stayed in Diplo but there was never a gap in prayer call from the local mosque,” he says. “There were only 1200 Rangers defending Diplo and an army major wrote me a letter that I should immediately leave Diplo,” he recalls. “During the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war everybody left Diplo.”

Memon recalls that the first person who acquired education in Diplo was Sain Haji Abu Talib, father of Professor Saleh Memon. Talib was the first teacher from Diplo and was paid five rupees a month as his salary. Today, about 200,000 people inhabit the taluka Diplo and about 70 per cent patients from the surrounding areas of its headquarter visit Memon when they are ill. “Tuberculosis is very common in Tharparkar,” says Memon. “People are also lacking in health education.”
After graduation, Memon got his first posting in district Sanghar in Sindh where he worked for about three years. His father passed away on Sept 24, 1971. In November that year Memon shifted to Diplo. After his retirement in Grade 20 from Taluka Hospital Diplo, he is serving patients in accordance with his father’s wish. He also treats women since all female doctors hailing from Diplo prefer to have relatively lucrative jobs outside Diplo.

“Prof Saleh Memon, who was also personal physician to President Ziaul Haq and the King of Saudia Arabia, was the first doctor from Diplo. He died two years ago,” says Memon.

During the month of Ramadan Memon write letters to all his acquaintances to collect donations. “Snake bite is very common in Tharparkar and I have never been short of anti-venom vaccine,” he says with a sense of pride.

“During the last 40 years I have performed only seven post-mortems, four pertaining to murder while three were suicide cases,” he says indicating extremely low crime rate in Tharparkar where 40 per cent population comprises of Hindus and schedule castes.

A visit to two villages in taluka Diplo was equally fascinating. Moolan, 35, a woman in Khari Bheel village in taluka Diplo, some 48 kilometre from Tharparkar’s district headquarter Mithi, has eight children. She works in the fields and makes handmade rillis (hand-made colourful bed sheets) at home besides doing embroidery work. “A new rilli costs me 1,000 rupees. I don’t sell them. I make them for my daughters’ dowry,” she says.

Her husband Anopo, 37, has acquired education till Intermediate from Diplo and is a bookkeeper at Union Council-based Poverty Reduction Programme. Interestingly he has been nominated for this job by women’s voluntary organisation called Sojhro. He is also involved in construction work as a contractor. The Poverty Reduction Programme is being run with the support of a non-governmental organisation, Thardeep Rural Support Programme (TRDP).

Anopo told TSI that eight out of the 70 families of the small village have availed a loan of 12,000 rupees each as their income generation activity and purchased goats.

“I availed a loan of 12,000 rupees and bought three goats. I am sure I will benefit from the deal. They will give birth to new ones and I will be able to give milk to my children,” says Seeji. She has already paid two installments of her loan.
TRDP through funding from Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund has installed solar panel in the village that has been a boon for the impoverished people. Freshwater is available in the village at a depth of 120 feet since it is near the coastal area.
Anopo’s daughter Teejan studies in grade II and goes to school all by herself that is about three kilometre away. “Give us a school, here” pleads Anopo.

Jey Ram, 27, a young man from Meghwar community lives in Bitri village, about 60 km from Tharparkar’s district headquarter, Mithi. He passed his high school examination from Naukot and Intermediate from Degree College Tando Jam. Unlike the Bheel community that migrates to barrage areas during drought and harvesting, people from the Meghwar community do not migrate.

“I worked for seven years in a garment factory in Karachi and earned about 7,000 rupees a month,” says Jey Ram. “Then I got a job at National Commission for Human Development in my village. Here I am paid 3,000 rupees but I enjoy living with my family. I make 800 rupees every month through stitching clothes. I also work in my field and look after my cattle. When there are rains I fetch 10,000 to 12,000 rupees in a season through my Guar and Bajra field,” says Ram.

“The problem of availability of fresh water has been solved,” he continues. “Thardeep has given us a hand pump and a well. We also have a rain water harvesting pond,” he says.

But many problems persist in the village. “The road is seven kilometre away from here. If a snake bites somebody, the person has to be carried on shoulders. There are lots of snake biting cases in our village,” says Kanoon, 40, who works in a field and is also involved in household chores such as cooking.

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
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Kapil Sibal’s voters want Jan Lokpal, not Government-proposed Lokpal Bill
IIPM: What is E-PAT?

IIPM RANKED NO.1 in MAIL TODAY B-SCHOOL RANKINGS
IIPM ranks No 1 in International Exposure in the 'Third Mail Today B-School Survey'
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"Thorns to Competition" amongst the top 10 best sellers of the week.
 

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