Category Archives: Forum

The SANSAD Forum is a space for the discussion of issues of urgent concern to members and friends of SANSAD. Its goal is to develop understanding, solidarity, and direction for change. People are welcome to propose issues that concern them, explaining their urgency if necessary, and focusing them into questions as much as possible. Both questions and responses will be published on the site at the discretion of the moderator. People who raise questions are advised to request particular individuals whose response they consider valuable by email. Comments can be posted directly on the site.

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Writers return honors in protest

 

Another Writer Returns Award, Says, ‘Not The Free India I Lived In’

Another Writer Returns Award, Says, 'Not The Free India I Lived In'

Sara Joseph is the latest to join protest by writers and poets who have resigned and turned down honours in recent weeks.

Thrissur, Kerala:   Joining an increasing number of writers and poets who have returned honours and given up positions in recent weeks, author Sara Joseph said today that she is returning the Sahitya Akademi Award that she received in 2003.

“There is a growing fear and lack of freedom under the present government,” said the writer who had won the award for her Malayalam novel Alahayude Penmakkal.

Condemning the murder of rationalist writer MM Kalburgi and the mob killing of a 50-year-old man in Uttar Pradesh’s Dadri allegedly over rumours that he had eaten beef, she said, “Writers are being killed, people are being killed, ghazal singers are not being allowed to perform – this is not the free India I have lived in.”

The Sahitya Akademi has remained silent over all of this, when it should have been the first to speak out. I am returning my award in protest,” Ms Joseph said.

Joining her, noted poet from Kerala K Satchidanandan and short story writer PK Parakkadavu resigned from their official posts in Sahitya Akademi committees. Mr Satchidanandan had earlier asked the Akademi to pass a resolution against them killing of Mr Kalburgi.

Ms Joseph is the latest to join a protest by writers and poets who have resigned and turned down honours in recent weeks. Yesterday, novelist Shashi Deshpande offered her resignation from the Sahitya Akademi General Council denouncing “growing intolerance” in the country. Urdu novelist Rehman Abbas also returned his 2011 Sahitya Akademi Award on the same day.

Earlier noted writers Nayantara Sahgal and poet Ashok Vajpeyi had returned their literary honours to protest what they termed as an “assault on right to freedom of both life and expression”.

Reducing Religious and Sectarian Violence in Pakistan

By Dur-e-Aden

Whether it’s the shooting of 14 year old girls, killing of 146 school children, targeted killings of Shia doctors, bombings of places of worships of different Muslim sects, or mob violence against minorities, Pakistan is always in the news for the wrong reasons. The country whose name literally translates to “the land of the pure,” has become synonymous with the idea of religious extremism.

On 11 August 1947, three days before Pakistan’s official date of independence, Pakistan’s founding father, Muhammad Ali Jinnah gave his first speech to the constituent assembly of Pakistan. His exact words were as follows:

You are free; you are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other place or worship in this State of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste or creed — that has nothing to do with the business of the State. As you know, history shows that in England conditions, some time ago, were much worse than those prevailing in India today. The Roman Catholics and the Protestants persecuted each other. Even now there are some States in existence where there are discriminations made and bars imposed against a particular class. Thank God, we are not starting in those days. We are starting in the days where there is no discrimination, no distinction between one community and another, no discrimination between one caste or creed and another. We are starting with this fundamental principle: that we are all citizens, and equal citizens, of one State…you will find that in course of time Hindus would cease to be Hindus, and Muslims would cease to be Muslims, not in the religious sense, because that is the personal faith of each individual, but in the political sense as citizens of the State. (Pakistan Movement Historical Documents)

However, in today’s Pakistan, Jinnah’s promise of equal citizenship for all its citizens seems far and far away.

 

Source for the image: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/570479477774866308/

If Pakistan’s founder had such a clear vision of what Pakistan was supposed to be like, how did it get to the position where it is today? There are as many theories as there are scholars as to what went wrong with Pakistan. Was it the partition itself, the trauma that accompanied it, the resulting rivalry with India, the continued alliance with the US, the war in Afghanistan, military regimes, or the corrupt civilian governments…the list goes on and on.  However, the purpose of this report is less on what went wrong, and more on what can be done to make it right.

I begin this report by briefly discussing the origins of Pakistan’s identity debate, which resulted in an evolving relationship of religion with the state and the society. I then discuss how the propagation of a certain kind of religion by the state led to an increase in polarization within the society, of which the current situation is an outcome. I conclude this report by giving certain recommendations, especially with regards to minority rights in Pakistan, and the role of the diaspora, who I believe can play a productive role in changing the drastic conditions within their homeland.

The Identity Debate: 

Pakistan was created in the name of Islam, therefore, it is supposed to be an Islamic country. If not, why did it separate from India in the first place? This is a common charge that is often heard from the political right, especially the religious parties (Devji 2013). On the other hand, the political left has Jinnah’s 11 August speech (mentioned above), as well as his own secular credentials and lifestyle on their side (Hamdani 2013). So what kind of country was Pakistan supposed to be? Jinnah died just a year after the creation of Pakistan without drafting any constitution which would determine the country’s future trajectory. However, as long as Jinnah was alive, his practical steps corroborated his inclusive vision of this new country. He appointed Sir Zafarullah Khan, who was an Ahmadi, as the first Foreign Minister of Pakistan. Moreover, the very first Law Minister of Pakistan was a Hindu named Jogendra Nath Mandal. The appointment of the law minister is particularly interesting since it gives rise to the question; if Jinnah wanted an Islamic state with Sharia law, why would he appoint a Hindu law minister? Shouldn’t he have appointed an Islamic scholar? Nevertheless, after his death, a document known as The Objectives Resolution was passed on March 12, 1949, which steered the country’s direction towards a path where religion would hold some sway over the matters of the state (Haqqani 2005).

The very first constitution of Pakistan was passed in 1956, which declared Pakistan as an “Islamic” Republic. This constitution was suspended in 1962 when Ayub Khan’s military government took over. The new constitution drafted during his government took out the word “Islamic” and declared Pakistan just as a “Republic.” Nevertheless, that constitution was also suspended by the subsequent governments and the current constitution, which was passed in 1973 during the reign of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, declares Pakistan as an “Islamic Republic.”

 

Source for the Image to the left: http://www.geo.tv/article-48777-May-12-JI-Observes-Black-Day

Source for the image to the right: http://www.topnews.in/regions/quetta

Religion and the state:

A renowned Pakistani scholar, Ayesha Siddiqa argues that after Jinnah, subsequent governments in Pakistan emphasized a singular identity of Islam in order to legitimize their rule, and to unite an ethnically and linguistically divided society. However, once religion comes into the political arena, it cannot be controlled in a way one would like, since others in that arena can also use it according to their own purposes (Siddiqa 2014). It is interesting to note that before partition, Jinnah himself thought along the same lines. He disagreed with Gandhi’s use of religion, even when it was to emphasize non-violence and create intra-communal harmony. William Darlymple argues that according to Jinnah, “it was a crime to mix up politics and religion the way [Gandhi] had done,” as “doing so emboldened religious chauvinists on all sides” (Darlymple 2015). Ironically, the same thing happened in the country that he created. Elites who were in charge of the state wanted to use religion because it bolstered their credibility, however, they were not knowledgeable in its subject matter. As a result, they ended up giving space to religious scholars, who then interpreted religion according to their own interests and/or understanding. This power made them a formidable pressure group and they were able to exert a considerable influence in the matters of the state despite being out of electoral power. This led to a change in both the laws of the state, as well as the curriculum in schools (Siddiqa 2014). Some of the most visible examples of these changes were the second amendment to the 1973 constitution, which officially declared Ahmadis to be non-Muslims, and the modifications in the pre-existing blasphemy laws during Zia ul Haq’s era which specifically targeted minorities. Finally, religious minorities were excluded from holding high level offices, such as those of President or Prime Minister, in Pakistan (Yousaf 2015).

Now we have a society where religious parties control the ideological narrative or discourse, even if they are not in the electoral power. Not to mention that the increased interference of religion in the state led to an increase in the violence against minorities. Before 1986, there were only 16 Blasphemy related cases in the country. That number has gone up to 1300 over the last three decades (Yousaf 2015). It happened because discrimination on the basis of religion was made legal by the state. Furthermore, since in a religious state, sovereignty belongs to God and not the people, mere accusations of blasphemy have started to result in mob violence. Now, people don’t even wait for a case to get to the court so that the accused can get a fair hearing. Their argument is that blasphemy is a violation against God’s law, and if state cannot prevent it, we have a right to take the law in our own hands, since “the laws of God take precedence over the laws of man” (Lieven 2012).

 

Source for the image: http://www.christiansinpakistan.com/the-notorious-blasphemy-law/

Current Situation: 

According to the data available at South Asia Terrorism Portal, since 2003, approximately 20487 civilians have lost their lives in terrorist violence. Further, according to the Pew Research Centre’s report (based on the data collected from 2007-2012), Pakistan topped the list of countries with most religious hostilities (Pew 2014). Pew’s most recent report also includes Pakistan among the countries with highest restrictions on religion (Pew 2015). Since its inception in 1947, over 20,000 Shias have been killed in Pakistan (Shahid 2012).

While society is going through this increased polarization, state is not fulfilling its basic duties of protecting its citizens. Increasingly, hate speeches by religious clerics go unchecked, Madrassas imparting a restricted and narrow world view are not regulated, and as a result, create a generation of militants which is increasingly challenging the writ of the state itself. In other words, state is still facing violence from religious militants who think that despite incorporating religion in the constitution, Pakistani state is not “Islamic” enough. The most famous episode of this phenomenon was the incident of the Red Mosque in 2007, when military was in confrontation with the faculty and students of a madrassa, who wanted their form of Sharia law to be the official version of the state (CBC News 2007; Al Jazeera 2013)

The most surprising and depressing aspect of the current situation is that people are not ready to accept the severity of the problem. Part of it has to do with the global politics after 9/11 and the increased victimization of Muslims worldwide. As a result, Pakistanis have come to view the problems within their own state as a result of these global policies, and the debate over internal reform is not taking place with the same vigour as it should. In other words, the society is becoming latently radicalized. Ayesha Siddiqa defines latent radicalization “as the tendency to be exclusive instead of inclusive vis-à-vis other communities on the basis of religious belief. Such an attitude forces people to develop bias against an individual, a community, a sub-group or a nation on how faith is interpreted for them.”  Moreover, in this narrative, one’s own group is seen as the righteous one and others are held responsible for all ills. A person doesn’t necessarily have to be violent at this stage, but this kind of radicalism makes the mind vulnerable to accept the message from militant organizations (Siddiqa 2010).

Therefore, after every terrorist attack, while people condemn the violence, they often don’t accept that its causes might have more to do with Pakistan’s own policies, and the relationship between the religion and the state, as opposed to external factors (Almeida 2014). Christine Fair argues that Pakistani government can tie the country’s internal threats with external threats, for example, by saying that Pakistani Taliban are agents of foreign agencies who want to destabilize the country. And the people who bolster this narrative, the “uncivil” society actors, hold a lot more sway in Pakistan today than the “civil” society actors who genuinely wanting to bring change (Fair 2014).

In such a polarized and volatile environment, it is the responsibility of the leaders to tell the truth. Benazir Bhutto did use to argue that even if foreign countries interfered in Pakistan before, they were acting in their own self-interest, Pakistan was not. Even a child brought up by abusive parents has to take responsibility for itself (Bhutto 1988; Bhutto 2008). That kind of courage is needed in today’s Pakistan to transform the national narrative.

 

Source for the image: http://www.christiansinpakistan.com/uscirf-presents-a-fact-sheet-on-sectarian-violence-in-pakistan/

What can we do? 

Pakistani diaspora is a community of thoughtful and educated citizens who play an important part in their adopted countries. However, as minorities, they are in the best position to understand how important rights such as freedom of speech and freedom of religion are, as they prevent “tyranny of the majority.” Just as you would like to have equal rights as citizens in your adopted countries, it is your responsibility to fight for the rights of minorities in your homeland, along with arguing for a separation of church and state, and universal human rights.

So what can be done? It depends on each individual’s own status and interests.

  • You can donate money to human rights organizations working on the ground in Pakistan
  • You can talk to your MPs in your adopted countries, and pressure them to bring the issues regarding minority persecution while meeting with their Pakistani counterparts
  • You can start online petitions, and write to the politicians within Pakistan to pay attention to this issue, or
  • You can volunteer your time to a cause in Pakistan when you happen to be there.

Our organization, the Maria-Helena Foundation, firmly believes in taking practical steps in addressing these issues in Pakistan, and is already involved with different educational and vocational projects with our Pakistani counterparts. For the purposes of our current project, we argue that promoting respect of elders of minorities will increase their status as sons and daughters of their homeland, and will reduce hatred towards minority communities. Based on this thesis, our recommendations are as follows:

  1. The Government should establish science scholarships in the name of our first Nobel Laureate, Dr. Abdus Salam, and the house where he was born be declared a protected property. His achievements brought prestige to Pakistan as a country, irrespective of any religious affiliation, and we need to promote his status as a learned Pakistani scientist and a role model for future students.
  2. The Lahore Municipal Government should rename Mall Road as Shahra-e Sir Ganga Ram. Sir Ganga Ram was the grandfather of philanthropy in Lahore who help built many schools, hospitals and other buildings during the British rule. Sir Ganga Ram Hospital is just one of his many gifts to the citizens of Lahore.
  3. Similar recommendations should be given to Parsi benefectors of Karachi.

 

Source for the image on the left: https://hafsakhawaja.wordpress.com/2012/01/29/salam-abdus-salam/

Source for the image on the right: http://www.milligazette.com/news/12665-88th-death-anniversary-of-father-of-modern-lahore-sir-ganga-ram-observed

Conclusion:

Often times, when confronted with huge problems which carry tremendous historical baggage, people get discouraged because they feel that they cannot change these conditions. However, we should remember that every action, no matter how small, has the potential to play an important part in impacting the issue that it targets. Every big historical change, from abolition of slavery to women rights movements, did take a long time before they could challenge deeply entrenched societal and government structures. Not to mention that these struggles are still ongoing, albeit in a different manner. These examples only illustrate that the process of change is ongoing, and that it matters. Therefore, taking action against injustice is the responsibility of thoughtful citizens both in their native and adapted countries. As Margaret Mead put it beautifully, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”

Dur-e-Aden is a PhD student at University of Toronto where her research focuses on rebel recruitment within Islamist insurgent organizations. She holds a MA in Political Science from University of British Columbia, and tweets @aden1990. She worked as a research intern with the Maria-Helena Foundation during the course of this project. 

References

Al Jazeera. “Inside the Lal Masjid (Red Mosque).” July 27, 2007. Available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9U9SyJBgeY

Almeida, Cyril. “Yes, Pakistanis are united against terrorism. But not on terrorists.” The Guardian. December 18, 2014. Available at http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/18/pakistan-united-against-terrorism-not-on-terrorists-mumbai

Bhutto, Benazir. Daughter of the East. Hamilton Press, 1988.

Bhutto, Benazir. Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy and the West. Harper Collins, 2008.

CBC News. “Red Mosque standoff continues in Pakistan’s capital.” July 6, 2007. Available at http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/red-mosque-standoff-continues-in-pakistan-s-capital-1.660697

Dalrymple, William. “The Great Divide: The Violent Legacy of Indian Partition.” The New Yorker. June 29, 2015. Available at http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/06/29/the-great-divide-books-dalrymple

Devji, Faisal. Muslim Zion: Pakistan as a Political Idea. Harvard University Press, 2013.

Fair, C. Christine. “Fighting to the end: The Pakistan Army’s Way of War.” Book Talk given at Hudson Institute. May 28, 2014. Available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3DIOjTmX0M

G. Allana. “Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s first Presidential Address to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan (August 11, 1947).” Pakistan Movement Historical Documents. Available at http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00islamlinks/txt_jinnah_assembly_1947.html

Hamdani, Yasser Latif. “Jinnah unequivocally wanted Pakistan to be a secular state.” Pak Tea House. August 13, 2013. Available at http://pakteahouse.net/2013/08/13/jinnah-unequivocally-wanted-pakistan-to-be-a-secular-state/

Haqqani, Hussain. Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military. Carnegie Endowment, 2010.

Lieven, Anatol. “Above the Law.” Foreign Policy. February 29, 2012. Available at http://foreignpolicy.com/2012/02/29/above-the-law/

Pew Research Centre. “Latest Trends in Religious Restrictions and Hostilities.” February 26, 2015. Available at http://www.pewforum.org/2015/02/26/religious-hostilities/

Pew Research Centre. “Religious Hostilities Reach Six Year High.” January 14, 2014. Available at http://www.pewforum.org/files/2014/01/RestrictionsV-full-report.pdf

Shahid, Kunwar Khuldune. “#ShiaGenocide in Pakistan.” LUBP. December 9, 2012. Available at https://lubpak.com/archives/232697

Siddiqa, Ayesha. “Red Hot Chilli Peppers Islam: Is the Youth in Elite Universities in Pakistan Radical?” Heinrich Boll Foundation, 2010. Available at http://pk.boell.org/sites/default/files/downloads/Red_Hot_Chilli_Peppers_Islam_-_Complete_Study_Report.pdf

Siddiqa, Ayesha. “Religion, State and Society in Pakistan.” Lecture given at Berkeley. October 26, 2014. Available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0Grmh21pQs

South Asia Terrorism Portal. Datasets available at http://www.satp.org/

Yousaf, Farooq. “Pakistan’s minorities: A case of systematic marginalization.” CRSS. July 10, 2015. Available at http://crss.pk/story/pakistans-minorities-a-case-of-systematic-marginalization/

Indian justice disgraced by hanging Yakub Memon

The Hypocrisy of Indian Justice Revealed in Yakub Memon’s Execution

 Vinod Mubayi
The midnight vigil at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi failed. The 2.30 a.m. wake up call for justice addressed to the Chief Justice of India by eminent lawyers like Indira Jaising and civil society organizations failed.The Indian justice system, which Memon trusted enough to return to the country with his family, was shown to be a complete fraud. Yakub Memon was hanged by the neck simply because (1) his community and religion is not an important vote bank especially in his state, (2) the Hindu supremacists’ thirst had to be satisfied, and (3) every official organ, from the judiciary to the executive to the legislative as represented by the major political parties (BJP, Congress) was hell-bent on the execution.  There were some honorable exceptions. Justice Joseph of the Supreme Court who issued a dissenting opinion, individual members of mainstream political parties, all the left parties, former high-ranking retired judges, and the greater portion of the intelligentsia, including the editorial columns of leading newspapers like the Indian Express and the Hindu. Most pointed out the utter hypocrisy of the justice system from its lowest levels all the way to the Supreme Court in imposing and executing the death penalty.Rabindra Pal aka Dara Singh who committed the gruesome murders of Graham Staines and his small children was absolved of the death sentence because the judge cited proselytizing by missionaries as a mitigating factor in his case! Babu Bajrangi who carried out the truly horrifying killing of Kauserbi and her fetus by slitting open her belly and tossing her unborn child into a fire was never sentenced to death; probably the judge who convicted and sentenced him to life imprisonment was afraid for her own life if she had pronounced the death penalty. If so, her fears were amply justified for the Gujarat government and its judicial system has now released this brutal killer, who boasted of his crimes, on bail, along with others like Maya Kodnani who were also given life imprisonment but barely served a year in jail, while the judge is now receiving death threats. Meanwhile, the killers of innocents on the Samjhauta express, the bombers of Mecca Masjid, and the purveyors of many other crimes and killings have remained fairly undisturbed, some on bail, some absconding, and a few in jail. In the new Hindutva dispensation, cases involving capital crimes committed by RSS members, followers, or sympathizers are turning cold as witnesses sensing the change in political winds are becoming hostile. This was stated by none other than a senior public prosecutor in Maharashtra, Ms. Rohini Salian, who related how agents belonging to central agencies are putting pressure on her to withdraw or go slow on cases against those close to RSS, even those accused of extremely serious crimes involving murder in the first degree.

This is the climate in which Memon was hanged. This foul deed not only smacks, it shrieks of official complicity and bias. More than a thousand innocent people, mostly poor Muslims, were killed by Shiv Sena and their associated goondas along with members of the Bombay police in Mumbai in the post Babri Masjid demolition riots. The names of those guilty and their abettors are amply documented in the Srikrishna Commission report. Yet no action has been taken against anyone remotely important; a few slaps on the wrist on a few low-level persons sufficed. Yet Yakub Memon has been hanged although his role was minor compared to others who got lesser sentences. Perhaps it was because his brother, the mastermind, remains beyond the arm of Indian law or perhaps official India had to produce a scapegoat as it had to last year in the person of Afzal Guru. Who can then blame a rabble rouser like Owaisi if he gives voice to the claim of systemic bias of all organs of the Indian state against the Muslim minority?

Meanwhile, we mourn again the passing of our comrade and friend Praful Bidwai, who powerful pen would have voiced our own outrage.

Vinod Mubayi is the editor of Insaf Bulletin, www.insafbulletin.net

Global Jihad and America

Indian Free Press Journal

Global Jihad and America

— By M.V. KAMATH,  October 05, 2014

Global Jihad and America: The Hundred-Year War Beyond Iraq and Afghanistan. Taj Hashmi. Sage Publications; pages: 324; price Rs 995

 

Global Jihad and America questions the assumption if Islamist terrorism, or “Global Jihad,” poses the biggest threat to modern civilization in the East and West.

Ask anyone interested in politics what they think of Jihad and the finger will point at various Muslim organisations the world over as the perpetra¬tors of terror. There are books galore on jihad but hardly has any writer dared to point the finger at West in general and the United States in particular.
Taj Hashmi is practically among the first ones to do so and he has argued his case brilliantly. In the final analysis, who is to be blamed for global terror: the United States or the Muslim fraternity, based primarily in the Middle East.

Hashmi has no illusions. He makes a good case against the western world and the US specifically but at the same time he is very critical of Islamists. As he says, “many Islamists are out and out fascist in their outlook. They believe and promote the concept of global jihad or total war against all non-Muslims, either to forcibly convert them into Muslims or perform qital or mass slaughter of non-Muslims and deviant Muslims”. What has gone wrong?

The trouble with Islamists is that after a couple of centuries of Islamic ascendancy, the Muslim world went on a downward curve because of a number of factors such as complacency, lack of creativity, neglect of science and technology, internal feuds and the rise of European colonial expansion, Muslims were not only overtaken as great rulers but were subjugated. It understandably created international tension.
Hashmi quotes figures exten¬sively to show Islamic backwardness. A clash between the western world led by the United States and Islamists had become inevitable. But Hashmi argues that global jihad is a myth which only exists in the imagination of Islamic fanatics, misinformed people and most importantly in the vocabulary of Islamaphobia. As Hashmi sees it, the prefix ‘global’ only widens the scope of the holy war either to glorify it or to demonise it. “In sum,” says Hashmi, “as it is too simplistic to demonise all mujahideen as terrorist, it is equally wrong to glorify them as freedom-fighters. There is a fine line between them.”
While Hashmi dares to expose Islamist ‘terrorists’ he is not afraid to expose US terrorism, simultaneously. The death toll in World War II, he says, was between 60 to 85 million, but he points out that US-led invasions of dozens of countries since the Korean War, by 2013 led to more than 75 million deaths, mostly civilians. The US invasion of Iraq in March 2003 alone killed more than a million Iraqis by 2007. Since then “hundreds and thousands of Iraqis have died in sectarian violence. And in 37 countries the US invaded since the Korean War, the death toll has been between 20 to 30 million, some 9 to 14 million in Afghanistan alone. What kind of jihadi has the US employed in the circumstances, Hashmi wants to know.
In one chapter, Hashmi asks: “Is America the biggest problem towards world peace? Is not the American legacy of expropriation, mass murder of indigenous people, slavery and apartheid at the core of the American psyche, while the American dogma of freedom and democracy is quite superficial, not applicable to non-Americans?
Hashmi, in the circumstances, believes global jihad is a ‘loaded concept’. He has a warning to give to ‘narco jihad’ and state-sponsored terrorism such as emerging out of Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Bangladesh.
As he sees it “trans-national conflicts, crimes and proxy wars always transcend sub-regional boundaries and, if not contained, they might adversely affect countries beyond particular regions or sub-regions.
One chapter is devoted to highlight “the extra-Islamic dimen¬sions of crime, terror and proxy wars that are destabilising South Asia and the adjoining sub-regions, posing serious threat to global peace. It addresses the issues that have turned Pakistan and Afghanistan into the eyes of the storm that is likely to hit the world very badly in the coming years.
Yet another chapter (Chapter VII) appraises the bogey of nuclear threat from Iran and other ‘rogue states’ in the Muslim world that justifies America’s post Cold War diplomacy or hegemonic behaviour and military intervention in the Muslim world. The point is made that the main challenge to world peace today comes from state-sponsored terrorism and one must be aware if only smaller states or Super Powers are also responsible in the promotion of state-sponsored terrorism and proxy war. Adds Hashmi: “We need to worry about the im¬plications of the New World Order – to perpetuate American global hegemony and the never-ending story of Islamist terrorism in the coming decades.”
Hashmi’s condemnation of the United States is total and unforgiving. Thus he says: “America’s divisive policies and promotion of Muslim autocracies are also responsible for the lack of democracy and civility in many parts of the Muslim world, including Saudi Arabia, Syria, Iraq, Iron and Pakistan. America’s post World War II policy to¬wards the Muslim world has not been about strengthening democracy, secularism and good governance. It was all about serving America’s short-term geopolitical interests. Its State Department hardly has any long-term vision and program, at least not in the third world.” If this isn’t the truth, what else is? For that reason one must give Hashmi the last word.

Hashmi deserves high praise for telling the hidden truth in plain words. We now get a better understanding of global jihad in all its manifestations and who else could have done it except a true-blue Muslim.

M. V. Kamath is a nationally awarded journalist and author in India.