13 May 2015

http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2015/05/12/a_martyr_a_murder_and_hopes_for_a_new_afghanistan_111187.html


A Martyr, a Murder, and Hopes for a New Afghanistan

By Ann Jones
I went to Kabul, Afghanistan, in March to see old friends. By chance, I arrived the day after a woman had been beaten to death and burned by a mob of young men. The world would soon come to know her name: Farkhunda. The name means "auspicious" or "jubilant." She was killed in the very heart of the Afghan capital, at a popular shrine, the burial place of an unnamed ghazi, a warrior martyred for Islam. Years ago, I worked only a few doors away. I knew the neighborhood well as a crossroads for travelers and traders, a market street beside the Kabul River, busy with peddlers, beggars, drug addicts, thieves, and pigeons. It was always a dodgy neighborhood. Now, it had become a crime scene.
In April, at the end of the traditional 40-day period of mourning for the dead woman, that crime scene became the stage for a reenactment of the murder by a group of citizens calling themselves the Committee for Justice for Farkhunda, which was pressing the government to arrest and punish the killers. Shortly after the performance, the office of the attorney general announced formal chargesagainst 49 men: 30 suspected participants in the woman's murder and 19 police officers accused of failing to try to stop it. On May 2nd, a trial began at the Primary Court, carried live on Afghan television. Farkhunda is now dead and buried, but her story has had staying power. It seems to mark the rise of something not seen in Afghanistan for a very long time: the power of people to renounce violence and peacefully reclaim themselves. This makes it worth recalling just how events unfolded and what messages they might hold for Americans, in particular, who have been fighting so fruitlessly in Afghanistan for 13-plus years.
Punched, Kicked, Stomped, Stoned, Crushed, Dragged, and Burned
On Thursday afternoon, March 19th, Farkhunda visited the Shah-e Du Shamshira shrine. There, about 30 other visitors watched as a few young men began the attack that would end her life. Some of the onlookers took up a cry that summoned yet more: Allah-u Akbar ("God is great"). When, less than an hour later, the woman's body was torched, police estimated that the crowd had reached 5,000 to 7,000 people. From the start, onlookers used their mobile phones to take photos or videos, many of which were later posted on Facebook and watched by tens of thousands more throughout the country and eventually the world.
Ashraf Ghani, who had been president of Afghanistan for only six months and had not yet formed a working government, was preparing to spend five days in the United States. During that time, the shocking murder would assume an alarming life of its own, for even in the capital the great mass of illiterate Afghans maintain a word-of-mouth culture in which rumor, gossip, and guesswork travel faster than the speed of social media, and mullahs more often than not have the last word. Before leaving Kabul, Ghani wisely named 10 distinguished Afghans, six men and four women, to a commission charged with uncovering the facts in the killing. Among them were Islamic and legal scholars, parliamentarians, and specialists in human rights.
He also released a statement about the case, pitched straight down the middle between the contending voices already speaking out. He assured one side in the developing argument over Farkhunda's death that dispensing justice is the duty of courts, not individuals, who would be "dealt with strongly" for taking the law into their own hands; while, with a nod to the other side, he also condemned "any action that causes disrespect to the Holy Quran and Islamic values." While the president then cajoled Americans in Washington and New York to support his new regime, the commission in Kabul worked as a single force to retrieve from the stream of accusation and conjecture the hard facts of the death of the woman known only as Farkhunda.
This is what they found: at age 27, she was a very religious woman who had not married but had graduated from high school and devoted herself to religious studies at a private Islamic madrassa, aspiring to become a teacher of Islamic law. She lived at home with her parents, the fourth of their 10 children. That Thursday, she went to the shrine wearing the black abaya of the devout believer, with a black half-veil covering the lower portion of her face. There, she said her prayers and spent some time cleaning the area of the shrine where people pray. After that, she exchanged words with a man who worked as a cleaner at the Shah-e Du Shamshira mosque across the street, while running a little sideline business at the shrine selling tawiz, bits of paper bearing handwritten Quranic verses, widely credited with magical properties.
The commissioners could not discover just what Farkhunda and the cleaner Zainuddin had said to each other, but that gap in the story has since been filled in by Farkhunda's family and friends. She evidently expressed to the cleaner her disapproval of his business of peddling un-Islamic amulets to poor, superstitious women. That story serves to explain -- and justify to some -- what the cleaner did next. While the commissioners found no witnesses to their exchange, the cleaner himself told them that he had shouted out to the people gathered at the shrine: "This woman is an American and she has burned a Quran." Farkhunda turned to people in the courtyard and said in a strong voice heard by many witnesses, "I am not an American and I have not burned a Quran."
Though the accusations were false, they stirred a quick response. As angry young men approached the accused woman, a policeman intervened and with the help of another young man took her to a room within the shrine. That young man then planted himself in front of the door, saying to others, "Leave her alone. Don't do this." (He was roughly the same twenty-something age as those who would kill Farkhunda and seems to have been the only citizen to offer her help that day.)
The policeman wanted to take her to the police station for her safety. Farkhunda insisted on a female escort, but when a policewoman arrived and opened the door to the inner room where she waited, angry men rushed in and dragged her out. Some of them hit her, tearing off the veil that covered her hair and bloodying her face. She fell to the ground but managed to sit up, supporting herself with one arm and raising the other in defense. Photographs of that moment show the legs of a uniformed policeman beside her.
That policeman or others pulled Farkhunda up and dragged her onto a low roof over which she might have escaped the mob. Another policeman, gripping her leg, pushed her from below, but an attacker struck his wrist with a stick, causing him to let go. Farkhunda then slid from the roof and fell to the sidewalk below. One or more of the police fired shots into the air, but it was too late. Menace had turned to frenzy. Some 10 or 12 men beat, punched, kicked, stomped, and stoned Farkhunda to death. One raised a great stone block and threw it down on her head. Later, to excuse himself, he said, "She was already dead."
Then come significant gaps in the photographic record. Farkhunda lay in the middle of the street and a car ran over her. How she was moved from the sidewalk to the street is uncertain. Mysterious, too, is the appearance of the car that crushed her and then in some undetermined but deliberate way dragged her down the street. There, unknown people seized her and threw her over a low wall running beside the river onto the stones of the partially dry riverbed. A man poured gasoline on his scarf and on Farkhunda. He set the scarf alight and dropped it on her body. As the flames roared skyward others in the crowd threw their own scarves and jackets onto the pyre. In their eagerness to stoke the fire, they stifled it. All the while, armed policemen stood in the riverbed and watched Farkhunda burn.
At last, the riot police appeared and took charge. It had been hard to break through the thousands of onlookers crowding both sides of the river and two bridges to see the burning of the woman who was said to have burned a Holy Quran.
"Working for the Infidels"
Within hours, everyone knew that the murder of Farkhunda was nothing like so many other commonplace acts of violence in Kabul. It was not an act of war, nor was it terrorism, nor political assassination. It was not a revenge killing, nor an honor killing, nor a family murder. In broad daylight, at a popular shrine, a mob of ordinary young men had murdered a young woman unknown to them with their fists and feet and whatever weapons came to hand. While shocked Kabulis struggled to make sense of this, some public figures were quick to tell them what to think.
A number of government officials immediately turned to Facebook to endorse the murder, assuming that if the Quran-burning woman were not actually American, her ideas must have been so. The official spokesman for the Kabul police Hashmat Stanekzai, for instance, wrote that Farkhunda "thought, like several other unbelievers, that this kind of action and insult will get them U.S. or European citizenship. But before reaching their target, they lost their life." The Deputy Minister for Culture and Information Simin Ghazal Hasanzada also approved the execution of a woman "working for the infidels." Zalmai Zabuli, chief of the complaints commission of the upper house of parliament, posted a picture of Farkhunda with this message: "This is the horrible and hated person who was punished by our Muslim compatriots for her action. Thus, they proved to her masters that Afghans want only Islam and cannot tolerate imperialism, apostasy, and spies."
The day after the murder, a great many imams and mullahs also endorsed the killing during Friday prayer services in their mosques. One of them, the influential Maulavi Ayaz Niazi of the Wazir Akbar Khan mosque, warned the government that any attempt to arrest the men who had defended the Quran would lead to an uprising.
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Ann Jones has worked with women’s organizations in Afghanistan periodically since 2002. She is the author ofKabul in Winter: Life Without Peace in Afghanistan and most recently They Were Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars -- the Untold Story, a Dispatch Books original. She lives in Oslo, Norway.

Nepal quake: Covering disaster sensitively

Pamela Philipose
May 13 2015

THE continuous and unrelenting pace of the news cycle is the enemy of introspection. The injunction from Camus that “in order to understand the world, one has to turn away from it on occasion”, is a luxury that media in India has never indulged in. So trapped are they in the creation of news that there does not seem to be a minute to spare for the understanding of it or, more to the point, for assessing the understanding of it. Yet if the media do not turn the light on themselves every once in a while — the very light that they are so busy shining on the world — others will do it for them and what gets illuminated in the process will not be pretty. 

The bad press the Indian media received for its coverage of the Nepal earthquake would have left many Indian reporters who did great work in reporting on the disaster puzzled and dispirited. But a backlash of this kind does not sift good coverage from bad. It is a swift, unrelenting and in-your-face verdict on a body of work that seen to be marked by bad faith and suffered from serious credibility deficits. The earthquake occurred on April 25 around midday. Within eight days #GoHomeIndianMedia was trending across social media networks. The tweets that constituted this avalanche of opinion were eloquent in their condemnation. One went: “I am more than greatful to your nation for being w/us in darkest time but let’s face it, India has most stupid media”. Some attempted to be sardonic: “Presstitute…It does not carry news on Baba Ramdev adopting ALL the children orphaned by Nepal earthquake.” Others tried to explain what the problem was in greater detail: “It would be great if you don't sent reporters in so close to ongoing rescue site operation. It's an obstruction and distraction for rescue workers to do their job properly and effectively. Do not waste valuable time of the rescue team. You are doing the same thing like you did showing anti-terrorist operation live. Stop it. Stop obstructing. Be Responsible. First change yourself then raise voice for change.” 

The Fascist impulse

May 13, 2015 

In 1922, the theologian Ernst Troeltsch identified the malaise thus: instead of the “ideas of the equal dignity of reason everywhere and of the fulfillment of universal law, we have the conception of a purely personal and unique realisation of the capacities of the mind”.

“War is beautiful,” wrote journalist and founding father of fascism Filippo Marinetti, “because it enriches a flowering meadow with the fiery orchids of machine guns.” Last week seven decades ago, on May 8, 1945, the war Marinetti’s words helped birth came to end — claiming the lives of some 60 million people, an estimated three of every 100 alive when it began.

The fascist impulse, though, has survived — though it is rarely called by its proper name. It has manifested itself in the savageries of Islamism, in the blood-cults of Christ and tribe, in communal pogroms. Fascism’s form, though, isn’t always apocalyptic: “It does not always and of necessity,” as French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lรฉvy put it, “mean storms of iron and blood.” Instead, fascism survives in a thousand movements that denigrate the idea of progress built on reason, with human agency at its core. The vanguard of anti-reason is varied: religious or ethnic identity to the centre of political life; romantic celebration of the tyranny called tradition; even in postmoderns who reject political choice between states built on republican ideals and their nihilist adversaries, choosing instead to wallow in weary cynicism.

Green road to Paris

May 13, 2015

How should India approach the forthcoming, and highly anticipated, climate change negotiations planned for December in Paris (COP-21, as it is called)? The answer is, confidently and constructively, based on a series of green actions domestically that contrast, at least in one key area, with regressive inaction by advanced countries. Start with this contrast.

The cause of climate change has suffered a setback recently because of the large (about 35-40 per cent) decline in international energy prices. But that setback need not have occurred had governments taken offsetting actions to impose taxes on petroleum products. How have the major governments fared on this score? The chart highlights a striking difference between the responses of advanced countries and those of India. The former have reduced taxes while India has increased them substantially. Essentially, advanced countries have stood by passively, passing on the benefits of price reductions to consumers and producers.

Chanakya vs Confucius

May 13, 2015

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s China visit commencing May 14 has been preceded by public debate in India and the US on dealing with China. The mood was set by eminent US strategic thinker of Indian origin Ashley Tellis and Robert Blake, former ambassador to India, in a piece for the Council on Foreign Relations titled “A New US Grand Strategy Toward China”. They recommend US outreach to old and new friends on the Chinese periphery, new preferential trading arrangements like the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership, ramping-up of US military capability to retain the edge and the denial of cutting edge technologies to China. Michael Pillsbury in The Hundred-Year Marathon also explores the incipient hegemonic underpinnings of the Chinese mind. These counter the Henry Kissinger mantras of Chinese rise being a benign historical event and that China should be engaged and not contained.

Arun Shourie, a hallooed voice from the right, similarly cautioned Prime Minister Modi against being swept by Chinese pomp and economic carrots as fundamental areas of dissonance and persistent Chinese conduct, impinging on national security, need addressing. Promptly contradicting voices were heard, including one absolving Chinese of responsibility for Pakistani sponsorship of terror. He forgot that the Chinese transfer of missile and nuclear weapon technology to Pakistan is what emboldens persistent errant behaviour, its nuclear deterrence negating conventional Indian military retaliation.

For a ‘Look Northwest’ policy

HAPPYMON JACOB
May 13, 2015 

It is worrisome that while the most formidable challenges to India’s national security invariably originate from its northwestern frontiers, New Delhi’s focus has been on the global stage and its southern and eastern neighbours.

The uneventful visit of the Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani to New Delhi last month has further strengthened the widespread belief that India is losing strategic influence and geopolitical standing as far as its northwestern frontier is concerned, especially Iran and Afghanistan. Just a year ago, during the Karzai presidency, India was the “most favoured nation” in Afghanistan. Today, there is a perceptible change in the new Afghan government’s attitude towards India. For instance, no major agreements were signed during Mr. Ghani’s visit and the India-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement of 2011, hardly figured in the agenda.

Indeed, India’s new northwestern strategic environment, in which the relegation of the Indo-Afghan strategic partnership is merely one element, is undergoing a grand geopolitical transformation, but New Delhi seems to be clueless about how to engage with it. Moreover, it is worrisome that while the most formidable challenges to India’s national security invariably originate from its northwestern frontiers, both historically and presently, the focus of the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government has primarily been on the global stage and the country’s southern and eastern neighbours.

Modi’s Impending visit to China

12 May , 2015

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to visit China from 14 to 16 May this month. ‘Hometown diplomacy’, took President Xi Jinping to Modi’s home state when he visited India last September; it will now be Modi’s turn to visit Xian during his visit.

While ties between India and China have been steadily growing for years, it got a major boost under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has signalled his wishes to pursue a more vigorous foreign policy. Xi is the first Chinese head of state to visit India in eight years, while Prime Minister Li Keqiang made India his first overseas destination shortly after taking office last year.

This return visit by Modi in May 2015 comes in less than a year to Xi’s visit to India. He will visit Mongolia and South Korea thereafter. Modi sets foot on Mongolia’s soil after completing China visit, the first leg of his three-nation tour. And from there Indian PM would head to South Korea for his third and final leg of the tour starting 18 to 19 May.

Despite the Modi government’s effort in pushing hard for better ties with the Himalayan neighbour ever since they came to power last year on May 26, 2014. The greatest hurdle continues to be the land border dispute between the two Asian giants. Bitter experience of 1962 war continues to haunt all Indians even after 52 years of that debacle. The sense of betrayal and deep seated mistrust has not diminished in over past half a century or so. Nehru foolishly though, going against all the professional advice had blindly invested complete faith in Mao. The Panch-Sheel and the slogan of Hindi – Chini Bhai Bhai had completely mesmerised Nehru. China in return back stabbed India. The Red army swarmed into the Indian territories routing the ill equipped Indian Army ending in its worst ever modern military defeats. Chinese have since than occupied approximately 38,000 sq. kms of Indian Territory in Jammu and Kashmir illegally.

Construction Work on India’s First Domestically-Produced Aircraft Carrier Progressing Rapidly

Chris Biggers
May 10, 2015

New satellite imagery shows that India’s first indigenous aircraft carrier has made significant progress since it was launched in August 2013, helping India inch towards the goal of a two carrier battle group.

Imagery acquired by commercial satellite firm DigitalGlobe in February 2015 shows further assembly on INS Vikrant, a 40,000 ton aircraft carrier and India’s soon-to-be largest vessel once commissioned. Additional ship modules now welded to the hull have enlarged the deck width — measuring almost 60 meters. The erection of the superstructure reported last November was also confirmed. India’s first domestically produced carrier is currently under construction at state-owned Cochin Shipyard Limited, the country’s largest shipbuilding and maintenance facility located in Kerala on the west coast.

Like other vessels built in India, significant cost overruns and delays have hampered shipbuilding progress. The South Asian country is already four years behind schedule on the project with the latests estimates pushing an operational date closer to December 2018, if not beyond. However, the Indian Navy expects that the vessel will “undock” sometime this month after mounting the propellers on the engine shafts, according to an April statementfrom Vice Admiral Ashok Subedar. Afterward, the shipyard will continue with the fitting out process.