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Posts archive for: 23 September, 2007
  • Letters from russia and India Now

    Letters from Russia and India Now
    Palash Biswas
    Contact: Palash C Biswas, C/O Mrs Arati Roy, Gosto Kanan, Sodepur, Kolkata- 700110, India. Phone: 91-033-25659551
    Email: alashbiswaskl@gmail.com">palashbiswaskl@gmail.com
    “If our political progress was to be real, the underdogs of our society must be helped to become men” (Rabindranath Tagore, Letters from Russia)
    ” Throughout the ages, civilized communities have contained groups of nameless people. They toil most, yet theirs is the largest measure of indignity. They are deprived of everything that makes life worth living. I had often thought about them, but came to the conclusion that there was no help for them. …..In Russia at last. Whichever way I look I am filled with wonder. From top to bottom they are rousing everyone up without distinction” (in Letter from Russia).

    Leave this chanting and singing and telling of beads! Whom dost thou worship in this lonely dark corner of a temple with doors all shut?
    Open thine eyes and see thy God is not before thee!
    He is there where the tiller is tilling the hard ground and where the pathmaker is breaking stones.
    He is with them in sun and in shower, and his garment is covered with dust.
    No sprituality, the experience of Peace which is not a productible commodity and shapes in hearts full of Love, its elementary humanity comes through more clearly than any complex and intense spirituality in these lines of Rabindra Nath Tagore despite the archaic language of the original translation of Gitanjali.
    Marxist Minister and Dalit Poet Anil Sarkar is influenced by the Subaltern commentry in Rabindra Literature, specially in Chandalika, Rather Rashi and Rashiar chithi.Long before Maybati took over the reins in Uttar Pradesh and specialised in social eingineering, long before the in North India the social leaders Brahmins and kshatrias surrendered to Mayabati`s Casteology to have a share in Power, Tagore fortold in his Rather Rashi that only dalits could lead the polity. And only the Ratha may go ahead when the reins are in the hands of untouchables. In Rashiar Chithi, Tagore expressed his appreciation on the social change generated by revolution and improved conditions of Workers in a communist society. then he wrote on the plights of Indian Untouchables who work most, eat least, wear least and stand as light houses of the Human civilisations., who bears all the heat and dust of the production system. but you may not get much deatails unless you read the bengali original. These tagore works do break the Brahminical Hegemony. thus, Anil sarkar is quite right on emphasising on the relvance of rabindra in National Dalit Movement as per as Karl Marx and baba saheb Ambedkar.The debate on affirmative action in India is long and not always geared to the desired aim: creation of equality of opportunity. Just like Indian secularism, reservation system in India has always a different political aim to make the system more unequal than what it is. Indian secularism, rather than making the state independent of religion, is intended to provide special privileges to certain religious groups. Similarly Indian affirmative system is politically designed to provide restricted rights not equal rights to some chosen people.

    Develop, Displace, Forget The Poor
    WALTER FERNANDES
    Illustration: Naorem Ahish

    "What else did you expect me to do?" was her reply when I asked her why she had pulled her son out of school to turn him into a child labourer. She is one of four lakh parents to have done so in Assam alone, all of them displaced in the name of national development and left to fend for themselves. Assam claims to have displaced 4,51,252 people from 3,91,773 acres between 1947 and 2000. The real figures stand at 19,09,368 people from 14,01,186 acres. West Bengal has done the same to 7 million people from 4.7 million acres in the same period. Similar numbers are found in other states .
    Leave alone rehabilitation, most of them are not even seen as displaced. Assam has rehabilitated those displaced by just about 10 projects out of 3,000 and West Bengal has partially resettled around 10 percent of them. Fifty-six percent of the displaced in Assam and 49 percent in Bengal have turned their children into child labourers. When that is not possible, women sell their bodies to keep the hearth fires burning. Crime is another option.
    Studies indicate that India has deprived some 60 million people of their livelihood in the name of national development. Fewer than 20 percent have been rehabilitated. Since colonial land laws continue and recognise only individual ownership, Assam has not counted the 1 million acres of common land from which it displaced 14.5 lakh tribals, Dalits and others. It has been their sustenance for centuries but the colonial laws declare it State property. The official claim that compensation is rehabilitation is untenable. But the ruling class does not have to worry about them because they are powerless. Tribals are more than 20 million of these 60 million, Dalits are 12 millions and other rural poor are some 10 million. They can be displaced and forgotten.
    That is the future trend too. Nandigram and Singur hog headlines but not Navi Mumbai, other SEZs and the 2.26 lakh acres that West Bengal has committed to industries with private profit as the only criterion. One hundred and sixty eight massive dams are being planned in the Northeast. Former PM Vajpayee declared in May 2002 the dams will turn the Northeast into the powerhouse of India. Many more lakhs of people who will be impoverished by them were ignored.
    http://www.tehelka.com/story_main34.asp?filename=cr290907DoBigha.asp
    GOVERNMENT’S “FOLLOW UP ACTION” ON SACHAR COMMITTEE
    Where Is The Political Will?
    Brinda Karat
    THE UPA government’s minority affairs minister A R Antulay placed a report on “Follow-up action on the recommendations of the Sachar committee” before both houses of parliament in the last week of August. The report is like a pendulum that swings between tokenism and deception. It will be recalled that previous Congress-led governments had ignored the recommendations of successive reports on the conditions of minorities whether it was the Gopal Singh Committee report in 1983, the National Commission of Minorities report in 1995 or the Planning Commission’s sub-group report of 1996. Going by the follow-up report, it is clear that without a strong public campaign the Sachar Committee recommendations will meet the same fate.
    In May 2007 another important report from the Ranganathan Mishra Committee was given to the government. That report which dealt with reservations for dalits in the Muslim and Christian communities was not been placed in parliament at all. It has reportedly recommended just as the Sachar report did that the Constitution should be amended to include dalit Muslims and Christians in the Scheduled Castes list. The government did not accept the demand of the CPI(M) MPs to table the report and accept the recommendations for reservations for dalit Muslims and Christians. This approach exposes the deficit of political will in the government to take concrete action on the recommendations of the Sachar and Mishra Committees to address the discrimination faced by Muslims in different spheres.
    http://pd.cpim.org/2007/0923/09232007_brinda.htm
    NEPAL: DALITS, JANAJATIS AND MUSLIMS-THE MOST NEGLECTED
    TGW
    “The Dalits, Muslims and the Janajatis were more affected by rampant poverty in the country”, a three-year interim plan approach paper prepared by the Nepal’s National Planning Commission has freshly revealed.
    “46 per cent of dalits, 44 per cent of Magar, Rai, Gurung, Tamang and Limbu in the Pahadi-Janajati category and 41 per cent of Muslims living in the country have been found living below the poverty line”, says the NPC report further.
    “These groups have negligible share in the State apparatus, overall resources and the production as well”, says the report.
    Poverty in the country is widespread and is showing an upward trend as compared to the average 31 per cent in the recent past, the report adds.
    Similarly, the paper also declares that the participation of Dalits, Janajatis and Madhesis are negligible in the Government bureaucracy.
    The major objective of the interim plan is to scrutinize earlier plans and to develop strategies to rectify past errors by increasing participation of the marginalized groups in the county, the report concludes.

    See nepal and see india! What is the difference you see!
    Dr.Dipak Basu writes:
    `Immediately after the revolution, Lenin proclaimed the affirmative action known as korenizatsiia to provide affirmative preferences for non-Russians backward ethnic groups and poorer Russians. To gain the support of the non-Russian, who were mainly illiterate except in Georgia and Armenia, for the new state, a Sovietization in three phases was developed. First the ‘blooming’ (rastsvet) of the different peoples through a determined promotion of their respective culture, their national conscience, and the creation of national elites which eventually would lead to the second phase which was ‘rapprochement’ (sblizhenie) and finally to the third phase of ‘merging’ (sliianie).n the sphere of social engineering the Soviet system had imposed the rule that sons and daughters of the educated professional people cannot go to the higher education directly, they need to work as ordinary workers in factories or farms for a few years first. The idea was to diminish the class-consciousness. East Germany even had prohibited the admission of the children of the educated professional class in the universities; they had to be workers for one generation and their children in turn would get priority in admission to the universities. However, admission to the elite universities and institutes were still based on merit, there was no compromise in that sphere.
    Due to this social engineering, within two decades the Soviet Union had eradicated illiteracy and had the best educated population among all nations of the world. In 1917 Azerbaijan had a predominately Muslim population that was 98-percent illiterate. Its people suffered great poverty and hunger. Little developed industry existed outside the capital city of Baku. As a result of this deliberate affirmative action programs, in 1939, 97 percent of the population became literate. Women had been accorded full legal and civil rights. Literacy Rate in 1926 in Ukraine was 41.3, and in Russia 45.0, Kazakhs 7.1, and Kalmyks 10.9. Within a few years, by 1940, they were all educated.’

    Tagore’s “Letters from Russia” generated considerable awareness and critical understanding within the Indian intelligentsia about the Soviet system. After a visit to Russia, wherein Tagore was greatly impressed by all he saw, Tagore had also written extensively on his visit in Visva-Bharati in 1930. This was later published as Letters from Russia.Tagore's aristocratic upbringing and his creed of individual freedom and choice notwithstanding, he was greatly struck by the Russian Revolution: "If I had not come to Russia, life's pilgrimage would have remained incomplete. Before judging the good and the bad of their activities here, the first thing that strikes me is: What incredible courage!" Having been a victim of tradition whose "innumerable doors are guarded by sentries whose number is legion", Tagore is awed by the Russians having "torn it up by its roots: there is no fear, no hesitation in their minds... " It would seem that the debate within the Communist party (CPI) on the issue of withdrawing support to the government over the nuclear issue is continuing, and is not a done deal. Initially, there were just plain suspicions that there would be tension between the West Bengal unit of the CPI and the central Politburo; there were unnamed sources in the West Bengal unit who claimed that the attitude of the central leadership was not comfortable to the West Bengal unit. They are in a state which needs to develop rapidly, it's people are looking for development and they have already faced a mini-revolt over the issue of earlier land acquisition for development, with Mamta Banerjee leading the protest.As the tension between the Left and the Congress escalated, and the Congress got support from its other allies, there must have been a lot of thinking going on in the West Bengal leadership about what this means for the state. For many of their measures, such as rural electrification, industrialization and SEZ's, they need to have a friendly Central Government. In a small indicator of what a uncooperative center can mean, the West Bengal Government faced problems regarding getting funds for rural electrification. Of course, a Congress aligning with Mamta Banerjee is the worst nightmare for the Left (and by Left, I primarily mean the CPI(M), since the CPI, RSP and Forward Bloc don't seem to care all too much).

    MYSORE: Eleven Dalits were injured when a mob of over 150 people from “upper caste” attacked a Dalit colony of Chikka Ankanahalli in Srirangapatna taluk of Mandya district on Friday night.
    Three injured Dalits have been admitted to K.R. Hospital, Mysore. On learning about the incident, the police rushed to the village and resorted to lathicharge to control the situation.
    When this did not have any effect, they lobbed teargas shells to quell the mob. The situation is now under control and adequate police force has been deployed in the village, according to Superintendent of Police Seemanth Kumar Singh.
    Mr. Singh, who is camping in the village, told The Hindu that nine persons had been arrested in this connection and a search was on to arrest others involved in the attack.
    In 1916, Tagore undertook a voyage through China and Japan to Amrica and suffered humiliation from the Japanese for his trenchant criticism of nationalistic chauvinism which was the cause of the first world war. He repeated the same warning to Japan through his letters to the Poet Noguchi (1938).
    Kalidas Nag writes(Discovery of Asia, Calcutta : The Institute of Asian African Relations, 1957, pp. 9-13.):
    In 1920, I had the privilege of travelling with him through France and other European countries. I saw how in his sixtieth year, Tagore plunged with the enthusiasm of a youth, into the planning of an Asian Research Institute at Santiniketan. He had already inspired Pandit Vidhusekhar Sastri to learn Tibetan with a view to restoring some of the forgotten Indian texts, luckily preserved in Tibetan translations. While in Paris, he came to learn from my venerable professor Sylvain Levi that a large number of valuable Indian scholars could be induced to learn Chinese. And although the financial resources of the Santiniketan School were very low in 1921, Rabindranath at once decided to invive Professor Sylvain Levi to inaugurate the department of the Sino-Indian studies at the cost of over ten thousand rupees. Thus Professor Levi spent some of the happiest months of his life in Santiniketan and the Visva-Bharati was founded in December, 1921, as the first institute of Asian Culture, developing under the joint collaboration of the scholars from the East and the West...
    On my way back from China and Japan, I visited in 1924 our ancient culture colonies of Champa (Viet Nam) and Cambodia in Indo-China, as well as the islands of Java and Bali. In 1927 Tagore sailed for Indonesia leaders of Java and Bali; on his return journey he spent some time in Siam, Malaya and Burma as well. Some of the significant poems that he wrote in this period should now be translated from original Bengali into different Asian languages. The entire East Asia with its rich legacies of Sino-Japanese art (mainly inspired by Indian Buddhism), the art and culture of Indonesia, Siam, Burma, in fact, of the whole of South-East Asia, was made for the first time real to our consciousness by the exploratory zeal and the creative genius of Rabindranath.
    In 1930-31 I had again the privilege of travelling with the Poet through Europe and America. We watched how the venerable Poet, almost in his seventieth year, was still dreaming of exploring fresh fields of cultural collaboration. Visiting Soviet Russia in 1930, Tagore was deeply moved to find how eager were the rural folks of Russia, specially of Soviet Asia, to come to the aid of our unfortunate exploited rural population. Tagore’s Letters from Russia written in Bengali (but not then permitted to be published in English), should now be published by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, pioneer of inter-Asian Relations, for the benefit of all those who cannot read them in the original, and specially for the numerous nations of Soviet Asia who sent such a large and brilliant delegation to the Asian Conference. When in 1931-32. I had the privilege of assembling and publishing The Golden Book of Tagore, messages flocked in from his admirers of Europe and America as well as from Soviet Russia, China, Japan, Indonesia, the Middle East and the Far East.

    Dr Amartya sen writes:
    Tagore would also oppose the cultural nationalism that has recently been gaining some ground in India, along with an exaggerated fear of the influence of the West. He was uncompromising in his belief that human beings could absorb quite different cultures in constructive ways:
    Whatever we understand and enjoy in human products instantly becomes ours, wherever they might have their origin. I am proud of my humanity when I can acknowledge the poets and artists of other countries as my own. Let me feel with unalloyed gladness that all the great glories of man are mine. Therefore it hurts me deeply when the cry of rejection rings loud against the West in my country with the clamour that Western education can only injure us.
    In this context, it is important to emphasize that Rabindranath was not short of pride in India's own heritage, and often spoke about it. He lectured at Oxford, with evident satisfaction, on the importance of India's religious ideas—quoting both from ancient texts and from popular poetry (such as the verses of the sixteenth-century Muslim poet Kabir). In 1940, when he was given an honorary doctorate by Oxford University, in a ceremony arranged at his own educational establishment in Santiniketan ("In Gangem Defluit Isis," Oxford helpfully explained), to the predictable "volley of Latin" Tagore responded "by a volley of Sanskrit," as Marjorie Sykes, a Quaker friend of Rabindranath, reports. Her cheerful summary of the match, "India held its own," was not out of line with Tagore's pride in Indian culture. His welcoming attitude to Western civilization was reinforced by this confidence: he did not see India's culture as fragile and in need of "protection" from Western influence.
    In India, he wrote, "circumstances almost compel us to learn English, and this lucky accident has given us the opportunity of access into the richest of all poetical literatures of the world." There seems to me much force in Rabindranath's argument for clearly distinguishing between the injustice of a serious asymmetry of power (colonialism being a prime example of this) and the importance nevertheless of appraising Western culture in an open-minded way, in colonial and postcolonial territories, in order to see what uses could be made of it.
    Rabindranath insisted on open debate on every issue, and distrusted conclusions based on a mechanical formula, no matter how attractive that formula might seem in isolation (such as "This was forced on us by our colonial masters - we must reject it," "This is our tradition—we must follow it," "We have promised to do this—we must fulfill that promise," and so on). The question he persistently asks is whether we have reason enough to want what is being proposed, taking everything into account. Important as history is, reasoning has to go beyond the past. It is in the sovereignty of reasoning—fearless reasoning in freedom—that we can find Rabindranath Tagore's lasting voice.
    Sreeparna Chakrabarty in New Delhi reports for rediff.com:
    Casting doubt over the guilt of 10 people lynched in Bihar for stealing, the National Commission for Denotified and Nomadic Tribes said the mob, which killed them, was not even aware of the theft.After an inquiry into the sequence of events leading up to the beating to death of the alleged thieves in Vaishali district, the commission, in a letter to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, said: 'They were not caught red-handed, in fact the scene of theft was nearly five kilometres away from the scene of mob violence.'
    When the commission visited the house where the theft had allegedly taken place, the residents said that Rs 16,000 in cash, ornaments and clothes were stolen from there.
    'But none of these were found on the youths beaten to death by the mob,' Chairperson Balkrishna Sidram Renke told PTI.
    'Apart from this, the time difference between the theft and the violence shows that the mob indulging in the violence was not even aware of the theft,' Renke said.
    In a savage retribution for frequent thefts in Dhelpurwa village, hundreds of people took the law into their own hands and mercilessly beat up 11 suspected thieves with sticks and iron rods, killing 10 of them on September 13. The critically injured person, Ranjit Kureri, is being treated at a hospital in New Delhi.
    The alleged thieves belonged to the extremely backward nomadic tribe of Kureris, who are traditionally involved in bird catching and honey gathering.
    Govt gives go ahead to first ever caste-based survey
    Sumit Pande / CNN-IBN

    New Delhi: After seeking permission from the Union Government, for the first time in 75 years, Commission for Economically Backward Classes has started conducting a caste survey.

    “Centre has done nothing for the people of the upper caste especially those belonging to the economically backward classes,” says Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati.

    Taking a cue from the UP Chief Minister, the Congress at the Centre has woken up to stem another breach in its votebank.

    So, a nearly defunct Commission for Economically Backward Classes under the Social Justice Ministry has initiated a flurry of activities in the last one month.

    The Commission set up to suggest affirmative action for the castes not covered by the reservation policy has sent a questionnaire to all the states seeking caste-based data, information on social and economic conditions of the upper castes, including the landholdings.
    Yes we have sought this data from the state and want them to furnish this by the end of this month,” says Member Secretary of NCEBC, Mahendra Singh.

    The last time such caste-based information was collected was in the 1931 census.

    In independent India, successive government's have so far refrained from conducting such an exercise. So, the Commission did seek permission from the Union Government before proceeding on this caste data collection exercise.

    This data may prove to be politically sensitive in the future and with the reservation debate on, politicians and bureaucrats will definitely fall back on it for policy-making.
    Dr Amartya Sen writes:
    An ambiguity about religious experience is central to many of Tagore's devotional poems, and makes them appeal to readers irrespective of their beliefs; but excessively detailed interpretation can ruinously strip away that ambiguity.10 This applies particularly to his many poems which combine images of human love and those of pious devotion. Tagore writes:
    I have no sleep to-night. Ever and again I open my door and look out on the darkness, my friend!
    I can see nothing before me. I wonder where lies thy path!
    By what dim shore of the ink-black river, by what far edge of the frowning forest, through what mazy depth of gloom, art thou threading thy course to come to see me, my friend?
    Sen writes:
    Some of the ideas he tried to present were directly political, and they figure rather prominently in his letters and lectures. He had practical, plainly expressed views about nationalism, war and peace, cross-cultural education, freedom of the mind, the importance of rational criticism, the need for openness, and so on. His admirers in the West, however, were tuned to the more otherworldly themes which had been emphasized by his first Western patrons. People came to his public lectures in Europe and America, expecting ruminations on grand, transcendental themes; when they heard instead his views on the way public leaders should behave, there was some resentment, particularly (as E.P. Thompson reports) when he delivered political criticism "at $700 a scold."
    Reasoning in Freedom
    For Tagore it was of the highest importance that people be able to live, and reason, in freedom. His attitudes toward politics and culture, nationalism and internationalism, tradition and modernity, can all be seen in the light of this belief.11 Nothing, perhaps, expresses his values as clearly as a poem in Gitanjali:
    Where the mind is without fear
    and the head is held high;
    Where knowledge is free;
    Where the world has not been
    broken up into fragments
    by narrow domestic walls; ...
    Where the clear stream of reason
    has not lost its way into the
    dreary desert sand of dead habit; ...
    Into that heaven of freedom,
    my Father, let my country awake.
    Tribal students face discrimination in schools: NCERT

    New Delhi: Often used as "servants" by their own teachers and criticised for the clothes they wear and the dialect they speak, the tribal students are a discriminated lot in schools, affecting their education, according to a report by the NCERT.
    "Discrimination is a major root cause for social exclusion of SC/ST students. Tribal children are used as servants by high caste teachers," the report on 'Empowerment and Upliftment of ST girls through Action Research' said.
    There is "institutionalised discrimination" against these children which alienates them from school and results in high level of child labour, the report prepared by NCERT's department of Women's Studies said.
    Discrimination on the basis of caste, class, tribe and gender characterises social relations between school personnel, teachers and high caste children on one hand and SC/ST children on the other in schools and classrooms, it said.
    The report gives examples of how the tribal students face discrimination in schools.
    Teachers in Madhya Pradesh feel that teaching "Korku" children is equivalent of "teaching cows". Similarly in Bihar, teachers' belief about "Mushar" children is that they are not just interested in education and that they do not have any tension in life.
    Such presumptions set effective limits in the teaching efforts of teachers, it said.
    "Levels of prejudice, hostility and indifference to Dalit and tribal cultural traits and value system are high. Studies have shown that teachers perceive Dalit and Adivasi children in a negative light, seeing them as unclean, dishonest, lazy, ill-mannered etc," it said.
    Amartya sen writes:
    Nationalism and Colonialism
    Tagore was predictably hostile to communal sectarianism (such as a Hindu orthodoxy that was antagonistic to Islamic, Christian, or Sikh perspectives). But even nationalism seemed to him to be suspect. Isaiah Berlin summarizes well Tagore's complex position on Indian nationalism:
    Tagore stood fast on the narrow causeway, and did not betray his vision of the difficult truth. He condemned romantic overattachment to the past, what he called the tying of India to the past "like a sacrificial goat tethered to a post," and he accused men who displayed it - they seemed to him reactionary - of not knowing what true political freedom was, pointing out that it is from English thinkers and English books that the very notion of political liberty was derived. But against cosmopolitanism he maintained that the English stood on their own feet, and so must Indians. In 1917 he once more denounced the danger of ‘leaving everything to the unalterable will of the Master,' be he brahmin or Englishman.21
    The duality Berlin points to is well reflected also in Tagore's attitude toward cultural diversity. He wanted Indians to learn what is going on elsewhere, how others lived, what they valued, and so on, while remaining interested and involved in their own culture and heritage. Indeed, in his educational writings the need for synthesis is strongly stressed. It can also be found in his advice to Indian students abroad. In 1907 he wrote to his son-in-law Nagendranath Gangulee, who had gone to America to study agriculture:
    To get on familiar terms with the local people is a part of your education. To know only agriculture is not enough; you must know America too. Of course if, in the process of knowing America, one begins to lose one's identity and falls into the trap of becoming an Americanised person contemptuous of everything Indian, it is preferable to stay in a locked room.
    Tagore was strongly involved in protest against the Raj on a number of occasions, most notably in the movement to resist the 1905 British proposal to split in two the province of Bengal, a plan that was eventually withdrawn following popular resistance. He was forthright in denouncing the brutality of British rule in India, never more so than after the Amritsar massacre of April 13, 1919, when 379 unarmed people at a peaceful meeting were gunned down by the army, and two thousand more were wounded. Between April 23 and 26, Rabindranath wrote five agitated letters to C.F. Andrews, who himself was extremely disturbed, especially after he was told by a British civil servant in India that thanks to this show of strength, the "moral prestige" of the Raj had "never been higher."
    A month after the massacre, Tagore wrote to the Viceroy of India, asking to be relieved of the knighthood he had accepted four years earlier:
    The disproportionate severity of the punishments inflicted upon the unfortunate people and the methods of carrying them out, we are convinced, are without parallel in the history of civilized governments, barring some conspicuous exceptions, recent and remote. Considering that such treatment has been meted out to a population, disarmed and resourceless, by a power which has the most terribly efficient organisation for destruction of human lives, we must strongly assert that it can claim no political expediency, far less moral justification.... The universal agony of indignation roused in the hearts of our people has been ignored by our rulers - possibly congratulating themselves for imparting what they imagine as salutary lessons…. I for my part want to stand, shorn of all special distinctions, by the side of those of my countrymen who for their so-called insignificance are liable to suffer a degradation not fit for human beings.
    Both Gandhi and Nehru expressed their appreciation of the important part Tagore took in the national struggle. It is fitting that after independence, India chose a song of Tagore ("Jana Gana Mana Adhinayaka," which can be roughly translated as "the leader of people's minds") as its national anthem. Since Bangladesh would later choose another song of Tagore ("Amar Sonar Bangla") as its national anthem, he may be the only one ever to have authored the national anthems of two different countries.
    Tagore's criticism of the British administration of India was consistently strong and grew more intense over the years. This point is often missed, since he made a special effort to dissociate his criticism of the Raj from any denigration of British—or Western—people and culture. Mahatma Gandhi's well-known quip in reply to a question, asked in England, on what he thought of Western civilization ("It would be a good idea") could not have come from Tagore's lips. He would understand the provocations to which Gandhi was responding - involving cultural conceit as well as imperial tyranny. D.H. Lawrence supplied a fine example of the former: "I become more and more surprised to see how far higher, in reality, our European civilization stands than the East, Indian and Persian, ever dreamed of…. This fraud of looking up to them—this wretched worship-of-Tagore attitude is disgusting." But, unlike Gandhi, Tagore could not, even in jest, be dismissive of Western civilization.
    Even in his powerful indictment of British rule in India in 1941, in a lecture which he gave on his last birthday, and which was later published as a pamphlet under the title Crisis in Civilization, he strains hard to maintain the distinction between opposing Western imperialism and rejecting Western civilization. While he saw India as having been "smothered under the dead weight of British administration" (adding "another great and ancient civilization f

  • Southwest Monsoon Vigorous as CPM Vows Not To Allow Strategic Allaince and BJP Plans a Coup

    Southwest Monsoon Vigorous as CPM Vows Not To Allow Strategic Allaince and BJP Plans a Coup
    Global Agenda to Achieve Sustainable Development With Indian business leaders United to Operationalise the Nuke deal
    Palash Biswas
    Contact: Palash C Biswas, C/O Mrs Arati Roy, Gosto Kanan, Sodepur, Kolkata- 700110, India. Phone: 91-033-25659551
    Email: alashbiswaskl@gmail.com">palashbiswaskl@gmail.com
    BJP to use Ram Setu to revive Hindutva vote bank

    With Ayodhya receding to the background, the BJP appears to have found an emotive issue in Ram Setu to revive its Hindutva vote bank as it feels mid-term elections are "imminent". In a clear move, the BJP National Executive passed a resolution on the Ram Setu issue to make it its campaign theme, opposing the Sachar Committee report on the status of Muslims.

    Don`t hurry to sign N-deal: Karat
    In a veiled threat to the UPA, the CPI(M) today said the Congress should realise it has only 145 MPs and not act in haste on the nuclear deal issue as the government is "running on the Left`s critical support".
    http://zeenews.com/index.asp?rep=2&
    So, here you are! Floods are so often! Tsunami always threatening. Weather cycle disturbed. Chemical ecology cahnging in Nature as well as in society, economy and polity. Southeast Monsoon is vigorous as CPM vows to stall strategic regrouping in Indian Ocean regio with US Lead while the political face of Nazi Hindutva plans a coup to gain the statepower to implement zionist hindu post modern Manusmriti agenda. Vice President of India , the left candidate also speaks on a global agenda for sustainable development in the same line as West Bengal Marxists Buddhadeb, Nirupam, Biman and Jyoti Basu plead for! The Kulin Brahmin from Kiranhaar, Pranab Mukherjee seems busy as Bee or a spider always weaving the Web.Indian Business community, inspired by Sensex Bltz and neoliberal policy with unbound MNC Promoter Builder Raj, SEZ PCPIR Retail drive stand united rock solid to operationalise the Indo Us Nuke deal.
    No element in Indian Polity or society is mobilised to annihilate the Brahminical Hegemony infinite or the Islamophobia or Untouchability.
    Plese see the Nation and nationalities from here, from this point!

    Incessant overnight rain which started Saturday evening left the city and its adjoining areas waterlogged and threw life out of gear Sunday, while the situation turned "flood-like" in many districts of south Bengal.No untoward incidents have so far been reported in the bordering districts of Burdwan, Purulia and Bankura during the 24-hour bandh called by the Maoists in Jharkhand, Bihar and Chhattisgarh today. Kerala Agriculture Minister Mullakkara Ratnakaran today said the Government would submit a special package of Rs 1,000 crore to include the State in the 'Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana', a Rs 25,000 crore project announced by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The policy of the Left Democratic Front government in Kerala was to provide houses to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes families in the state, Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan said today. Achuthanandan Saturday handed out title deeds to 1,717 tribal families in the Aralam farms. Trouble erupted at the retail giant Spencer's outlet in Kozhikode after local retailers, under the banner of Kerala Vyapari Vywasayi Ekopana Samithi, protested proliferation of retail giants in Kerala. A Central team, led by Union Minister of State for Home Radhika Selvi, today undertook an aerial survey of the flood-ravaged districts of Dharwad, Gadag and Bagalkot in Karnataka.Monsoon was weak over North Interior Karnataka. Karnataka has sought an immediate release of Rs.5 billion from the union government for flood relief in the northern part of the state.
    Members of the ruling DMK in Tamil Nadu today attacked the offices of the BJP, Hindu Munnani and the VHP to condemn the 'fatwa' issued by a former BJP MP against Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and DMK President M Karunanidhi for his critical remarks on 'Lord Ram'.
    Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and DMK President M Karunanidhi, welcoming the ''fatwa'' issued against him by VHP leader and former BJP MP Ram Vilas Vedanti for his remarks on 'Lord Ram and Ramayana,' said it showed the precious value of his head and tongue.''
    Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari today suggested small countries take advantage of the 'positive dimension' of the global agenda to achieve sustainable development, which includes evolving strategies aiming at reducing import dependence and pressing on export expansion. Despite snowfall on upper reaches and rains in the plains, night in the Kashmir valley remained hot while the day was cold with icy cold winds sweeping the entire region forcing people to wear woollens. On the other hand,the southwest monsoon has been vigorous in Gangetic West Bengal and Orisdsa and active in Jharkhand. It has been subdued in Assam and Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura, Sub-Himalayan West Bengal and Sikkim, Rayalaseema and interior Karnataka. Seeing the onset of an 'imminent mid-term poll' thrust on the country by an 'unstable and incompetent' UPA government, the Bharatiya Janata Party today vowed to ride back to power on the Hindutva wave on the Ram Sethu plank, gifted by the UPA and cash in on the government's failure to check prices of essential commodities and unabated suicides of farmers. Vice-President Hamid Ansari Sunday inaugurated a conference of small nations of the Commonwealth and underlined the need for more regional and global cooperation to tackle cross-border issues, ranging from terrorism and pandemics to sustainable development and democratic governance.
    Three persons were killed, railway tracks blasted and vehicles torched on Sunday by Maoists who went on rampage in their stronghold areas of Bihar, Gaya, Rohtas and Aurangabad districts, to enforce a 24-hour bandh. Maoist insurgents blew up a railway station and tracks in Jharkhand and Bihar on Sunday, severely disrupting the eastern rail network, but a day-long strike called by the rebels had limited impact, officials said.In Bihar, the guerrillas set fire to about a dozen lorries, blocked highways and attacked a police patrol, killing three people, including one officer.Late on Saturday, the rebels had distributed a leaflet announcing a strike in retaliation for the arrest of people police said were connected to the insurgency, but whom the Maoists said were civilians with no ties to the movement.

    CPM General Secretary Prakash Karat today asserted the CPM would not support any agreement of the UPA Government that would make India a strategic ally of the United States. The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) Sunday said it would take a firm decision and chalk out strategies on the Indo-US nuclear deal during its four-day meet to be held in Kolkata over the next weekend. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will approach the electorate on the issues of national, social, food and economic securities, party president Rajnath Singh said Sunday. The Bihar Government today issued a high alert across the state following a 24-hour shutdown called by CPI-Maoists to register their protest against the arrest of their top leader, Tushar Kant Bhattacharya, and his aide Brajmohan Ram. Terrorist organisations operating from Pakistan and Bangldesh were eyeing the historical Buddha statue at Hussain Sagar lake here after successfully triggering blasts at Mecca Masjid on May 18 and Lumbini park and Gokul chat on August 25, which claimed about 50 lives, intelligence sources said. Claiming that the BJP was in election mode, Party President Rajnath Singh today said recent developments had strengthened the possibility of a mid-term poll and time was ripe to oust the UPA from power. In an attempt to bring the BJP in the election mode, Leader of the Opposition L K Advani today asked the partymen to take advantage of the present internal crisis in UPA andgear themselves to present before the people a "clear, capable and reliable alternative" to the present Government. Denying the allegation that the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) was interfering in the affairs of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), party President Rajnath Singh today said it welcomed ''the RSS wholetimers to man the organisational positions.'' Accusing the Congress of pushing through the Indo-US nuclear deal without a mandate in Parliament to operationalise it, senior BJP leader L K Advani today charged the ruling party of being hellbent on going ahead with the deal, knowing fully well that the government could fall because of the 'standoff'.
    India received recognition as the most advanced nation in nuclear fuel cycle technology at the International Atomic Energy Agency meet and there was greater awareness of the 'larger role' of nuclear power in meeting global energy needs, Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Anil Kakodkar said on Sunday.Kakodkar, who attended the UN atomic watchdog's 51st General Conference, remained mum on whether there were any discussions with the IAEA on the India-specific safeguards agreement, a pre-requisite for the operationalisation of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal.Left parties, which have been stoutly opposing the deal, have demanded that its operationalisation be put on hold for six months failing which the UPA government will have to face 'grave' consequences.
    "I will not say anything on that," Kakodkar said, shortly before his departure when asked about his informal discussions with IAEA Director General Mohammed ElBaradei.
    On the other hand, Indian business leaders see the civilian nuclear deal with the US as a treaty to increase American investments back home, but said political change will not shake investors' confidence.Reports rediff.com:Had the civil nuclear agreement not sailed into a political storm, it would have lent a different charm to the Indian industry's efforts to promote the country as a brand!The UPA government faces stiff opposition on the nuclear deal from the Left allies, which wants the agreement to be put on hold and not be operationalised for six months. However, the Bush administration is understood to be keen that India should complete the process this year.
    Four Indian Americans have made it to the Forbes list of richest Americans this year. They are acoustics pioneer Amar Bose, Google founder director Kavitark Shriram, venture capitalist Vinod Khosla and Bharat Desai, CEO of an info-tech outsourcing firm.The 77-year-old Sultan of sound, Amar Bose, shares the 271st place in the list with the founder director of Google Kavitark Shriram, with a net worth of US$ 1.8 billion.Both Bose and Shriram shared the 242nd spot last year. Though they rank lower on the list this year, their personal fortunes have gone up from US$ 1.5 billion to US$ 1.8 billion.Bose, an acoustics pioneer, formed his firm 43 years ago, which today thrives on the latest in iPod speaker docks, home theatre systems, noise-killing headphones, with a sale of US$ 2 billion.Fifty-one-year-old Kavitark Shriram, an India-born financier, is an early investor and a board member of Google who owns 1.7 million shares worth US$ 870 million. Another NRI Bharat Desai and his wife Neerja Sethi, founders of an info-tech outsourcing firm Syntel, have been ranked 286th with a fortune of US$1.7 billion in the list.Venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, who has appeared in the list frequently, is ranked 317th this year with a net worth of US$ 1.5 billion.
    "If this (123 Agreement) was to go through, this will be a very big signal... It will enhance US investments into India. Not only US but also other countries like France [Images], Germany [Images]... We are very hopeful that this will go through," said Nandan Nilekani, who is steering the 'Incredible India@60' brand building event in New York from Sunday.
    Richard Stratford, Director, US Nuclear Energy, Safety and Security said he was hopeful that India will get a 'clean, unconditional exemption' from NSG.
    "Since we have a timeframe, we want India also to complete the process of safeguards before the deal is placed for Congressional vote," Stratford told PTI.
    'Incredible India@60' is an event celebrating the 60th year of India's independence.The CII along with the Ministries of Tourism and Culture is organising the week-long event that seeks to sell the story of the 'new India' to Americans and the rest of the world on the sidelines of the 62nd session of the UN General Assembly.
    "This country works on signals...that will generate a lot of movement...this event if nothing else will generate a great amount of positive signal," said Confederation of Indian Industry President Sunil Mittal, who is also the chairman of Bharti Enterprises. Both Nilekani as well as Mittal admitted that India still faced a lot of challenges in winning investors' confidence, but said the difficulty quotient of doing business in the sub-continent nation was getting lesser and lesser.
    To a specific question on whether the thought of political change bothered investors, Kakodkar told reporters: "It is not an issue (for the investing community)."India also has to secure changes in the guidelines of the Nuclear Suppliers' Group to gain access to nuclear commerce.Describing the week-long IAEA meet as 'successful,' Kakodkar told PTI it was so particularly this year because of the 'greater awareness of the larger role of nuclear energy in meeting the global energy needs.'He said the meet was important for several reasons 'particularly India's recognition as the most advanced nation in nuclear fuel cycle technology by the world leaders.'
    During the two-day scientific meet, an integral part of the General Conference of the IAEA that was attended by about 500 participants, the importance of 'closed nuclear fuel cycle' was widely discussed by scientists as also India's expertise in the field.Experts were curious to know about India's thorium-based power plant and fast-breeder reactors.
    "We were also the first to pilot a resolution on the development and deployment of Small and medium reactors supported by several countries and passed unanimously at the general conference," Kakodkar said.
    Making a strong pitch for international nuclear energy cooperation with India at the forum, Kakodkar while addressing the forum had made it clear that nuclear power was an 'inevitable option' and pressed for 'reformation' of global thinking on it.Kakodkar favoured a closed fuel cycle to reduce the risk of proliferation of fissile material, a proposal backed by several countries.Currently, the spent fuel from atomic power plants is stocked in high security facilities. This fuel can be reprocessed to extract plutonium, which can be used to create nuclear weapons.
    Kakodkar also emphasised that in order to meet the huge energy demands of the world community it was important to have inclusive partnership and make sure that those countries, which are keen to develop nuclear power for the first time should have basic minimum infrastructure and human resource needed for it.
    Russia's Atomic Energy Agency chief Kirienko Sergeit said he would like India to have a waiver from NSG, which would enable the two countries to have nuclear trade.
    India was also the first country to ratify the amendments that were negotiated at the IAEA conference for the convention on Physical Protection of Nuclear Materials that concluded in Vienna on Friday.
    India donated a teletherapy machine Bhabhatron's latest version developed by Bhabha Atomic Research Centre to IAEA which in turn handed it over to Vietnam. A tripartite agreement was signed in this regard during the conference.

    From: Carl Date: Sep 22, 2007 7:45 PM
    Subject: [SECULARHUMANIST] CIA Trained 9/11 Pilots at Florida School
    To: Air America air_america at yahoogroups.com
    This is at least one reason why GW and Dicky boy refused to testify under oath concerning 9/11 because they did not want to reveal this and if they denied it under oath they could be brought up on charges of perjury.

    CIA links to "terrorist" flight training
    by Jerry Russell
    According to some reports, the airliners that struck the WTC towers and the Pentagon were flown with exquisite skill, executing maneuvers that you might see at an aerobatic exhibition or flight show. These feats could well have been impossible for typical general aviation pilots with low flight hours. But there is reason to believe that the "terrorist" pilots could have received the very best of training, courtesy of the US government.
    Various records and testimony show that two of the alleged hijackers, Mohamed Atta and Marwan Alshehri, took flight training at Rudi Dekkers' Huffman Aviation flight school in Venice, Florida. Investigator Daniel Hopsicker, following the funding trail, found that Huffman Aviation is closely linked to Brittania Aviation and Caribe Air. Brittania had no visible assets or qualifications other than its association with Caribe Air, but was awarded a massive regional service center contract by the US government. Caribe Air, in turn, has a long history of association with CIA drug-running operations out of Mena, Arkansas, and is also allegedly linked to fraudulent Enron-funded offshore investment partnerships.
    Hopsicker also notes that according to reports from Newsweek, three alleged terrorist pilots trained at the Pensacola Naval Air Station in Florida, while Knight Ridder stated that suspects Mohamed Atta, Abdulaziz Alomari, and Saeed Alghamdi had attended various other prestigious military exchange officer's training programs. These reports were never categorically denied by US government sources.
    Certain unnamed flight instructors told Washington Post reporters that the alleged hijackers had very poor flying skills. This is self-serving testimony, considering other stories that the "suicide pilots" also had a peculiar lack of interest in landings.
    Why weren't these suspicious characters reported to the proper authorities? According to their flight instructors, the "terrorists" were such terrible pilots, they probably couldn't hit the side of a mountain, much less a New York skyscraper. That's why they weren't more concerned.
    But with the understanding that these flight instructors could well have been funded through CIA channels, in order to pay for the training of these pilots, it becomes clear that the "terrorists" may have had very solid flying skills indeed.
    UPDATE 9/28/2002:
    I have become aware of additional, well-sourced accounts detailing the poor flying skills of some of the "terrorists", especially Hani Hanjour who allegedly piloted the flight which struck the Pentagon. Also, even in the reports from Hopsicker, there is no information indicating specifically that the terrorists had aerobatic training in jet aircraft.
    A 'RAW' deal with a twist: NDTV
    The hunt is on, but for what, no one is quite sure.After booking former RAW and army officer VK Singh for leaking official secrets, CBI officials landed at the publisher's office in the capital.Just a day before, the agency had ruled out booking the publishers saying, only Singh was responsible for India's External Intelligence: Secrets of Raw.But now they aren't willing to take any chances and are thus looking for clues 3 months late.
    ''What will we have? We've just published it, its between the author and the agency,'' said Vikas Garg, Publisher.
    Undeterred, CBI sleuths picked up a CD that contained the first draft of the book and also the agreement Singh had signed with his publishers.An elaborate search at Singh's house on Friday hasn't revealed any official secrets yet, but his computer is still under scrutiny.Legal experts are of the opinion that the move was a futile attempt.
    ''I think the Official Secrets Act should be buried in history, in these days of modern communication, there is nothing left as a secret,'' said KTS Tulsi, Legal Expert.He also clarified that, usually the OSA is just a weapon to harass those the government doesn't like.After all, a month after Singh's book, RAW veteran B Raman released what many consider a more damaging book in terms of disclosing RAW's secrets.No action has been taken against Raman so far.And in this case it seems, VK Singh is having the last laugh.
    ''I want to thank the government, this book has nothing and because the government picked it, it has become a hit,'' said Anuj Bahri, Bookseller.
    When NDTV spoke to Singh on Friday, he was smiling. The government frowning has meant a jump in sales.
    The deadline for the government to come clean on what led to Bofors accused Ottavio Quattrocchi to be released from Argentina was on September 22.
    One of the documents the CBI has desperately tried to keep under wraps is the order of the Argentine court, which the Supreme Court now wants to examine following a PIL.
    The government has been hiding it in the pretext of translation from Spanish but NDTV has managed to get a copy. The 15-page order makes it clear that:
    India did not lose the case because of lack of evidence

    The merit of evidence is not even part of its jurisdiction

    Argentina turned down Quattrocchi's extradition because the order says there were 'deficiencies in the request for extradition'.For instance, while Quattrocchi was arrested on the basis of the 1997 warrant, India seems to have forgotten to include it as part of their legal caseInstead, they put in a new warrant but its invalid as it does not cite the grounds for the decision.
    Quattrocchi may have flown away but the post-mortem is far from over.The issue of Bofors pay-offs case accused Ottavio Quattrocchi walking to freedom created an uproar in Lok Sabha.The BJP-led NDA staged a walkout and Left parties accusing the Government of ''deliberate inaction''
    Meanwhile, CBI's Director of Prosecution, SK Sharma became infamous as the man who gave a clean chit to Bofors accused Ottavio Quattrocchi. And now, he seems to have been rewarded.The Government has given Sharma, yet another extension. His term ended on June 30. It is unprecedented for anyone to occupy this position for such a long time especially since his handling of the Bofors case has come under so much fire.Sharma handled the CBI's failed attempt in Argentina to extradite Quattrocchi.In 2005, Sharma had said that it was no use pursuing the Bofors case. That statement was used by Quattrocchi's lawyer to win his case against extradition.Sharma was also part of the team that got a technically weak warrant for Quattrocchi.
    The government still has to explain its lack of effort in the extradition case to the Supreme Court.
    To add insult, the government is now trying to calculate how much money they have to pay Quattrocchi for his legal expenses. After all, by withdrawing the appeal they have also withdrawn their right to contest paying up to him.

    In a veiled threat to the United Progressive Alliance, the Communist Party of India-Marxist on Sunday said the Congress should realise it has only 145 lawmakers and not act in haste on the nuclear deal issue as the government is 'running on the Left's critical support.'It also accused the UPA of not adhering to the Common Minimum Programme chalked out with the allies and 'adopting a US agenda.'
    "The nuclear deal is for 40 years and there should be no haste in signing it... They UPA must remember that Congress has just 145 MPs and the Central government is running on the Left's critical support," CPI-M General Secretary Prakash Karat said, addressing a convention on Indo-US civilian nuclear deal in Chandigarh.He said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will have to decide whether 'he would like to go with us, his allies and the people of the country, or prefer to toe the US line.'A debate was already on whether the government should sign the deal and it would be better to see what the next dispensation in the US felt about it, he said.
    "US President George Bush is himself not popular and only 30 per cent of the people support him. So why should we dance to his tunes," Karat asked.He said the Congress leadership was aware of the Left's opposition to the deal and should not move an inch further.
    "Wait for six months and have a detailed debate on the issue in Parliament. Can a minority government deal in such a manner... We have no faith in you. The nuclear deal is not in our interest and we will never accept it," he said.
    The CPI-M leader cautioned that the US was trying to get India to become its subordinate ally and criticised the government for its 'clandestine' military alliance with the US.He also questioned the government holding joint military and naval exercises with other countries.
    "Basically, the US is preparing to bombard Iraq and Iran and want to get its fighter planes refuelled in India," he said, adding that the entire world was against the policies of the Bush administration.Karat later told media persons that the government should not proceed ahead with its steps in the nuclear deal. "If they do so, we will see."
    Good intelligence prevents major calamities
    D. Murali and G. Padmanaban
    Chennai, Sept. 23: A book that seems to have touched raw nerves is ‘India’s External Intelligence: Secrets of Research and Analysis Wing (RAW)’ (www.manaspublications.com) by Major General (Retd) V.K. Singh. It discusses ‘several lacunae in the functioning of the country’s top intelligence agency’ and calls for ‘an increase in accountability of our top intelligence agencies’ since ‘the Indian taxpayer has a right to know how his money is spent’. And, now, the book’s publisher and the author have come under the lens of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
    How does the ‘right to know’ work with regard to intelligence? “Most countries have a 30-year period after which all documents are automatically declassified. If this were not so, we would have never come to know about Enigma – the Ultra Secret code being used by Germany in World War II which the Allies had broken,” answered Mr Singh, when recently interacting with Business Line, over the email.
    “In India, even the 1962 Henderson-Brooks report (about the Sino-Indian War) is still classified, as are the war diaries of 1965 and 1971 wars. Our Army officers still study World War II campaigns, since our own are classified. Most of them, like me, will retire before independent India’s military history is written,” he added on a wry note.
    Mr Singh, former Chief Signal Officer of the Western Army, with a career spanning 37 years in the Army, served in the Cabinet Secretariat (Research and Analysis Wing) between 2000 and 2004. His current research is on the ‘Contribution of the Armed Forces to the Freedom Movement in India’.
    Excerpts from the interview.
    What is ‘intelligence’?
    Intelligence, in simple terms, means ‘useful’ information. For a company applying for a contract, information about its competitor’s bid becomes intelligence. For a young woman, information about her fiancé’s income, girl friends and drinking/smoking habits becomes intelligence. For a nation, information about an enemy country’s military strength becomes intelligence.
    Is there a taxonomy of ‘intelligence’?
    Intelligence has two broad divisions – HUMINT (human intelligence) and SIGINT (signals intelligence). HUMINT relies on intelligence obtained from human sources, verbally or in written form. SIGINT can be further divided into COMINT (communication intelligence) and ELINT (electronic intelligence).
    COMINT refers to technical and intelligence information derived from foreign communications by other than the intended recipients. ELINT refers to intelligence derived from non-communication electromagnetic radiations from foreign sources.
    Another term is IMINT (imagery intelligence), in which the source of intelligence is satellite imagery. In day-to-day working, the term SIGINT is often used for intelligence gained from interception of voice, data or facsimile (fax) signals being transmitted by electronic means, as well as through the Internet.
    How has intelligence evolved in India?
    Intelligence is the second oldest profession in the world. India has been a leader in the field, from the time of Chanakya. During the British Raj, the CID (Criminal Investigation Department) in India was rated as among the best intelligence agencies in the World. In 1914-15, over 5,000 Ghadrites were sent to India to foment violence and incite uprisings. Almost all were caught soon after their arrival, some even before they embarked from the US, Canada or Hong Kong. In 1943-45, many intelligence agents were sent by Subhas Chandra Bose’s INA to India, by submarine or boat. All were caught and eliminated by the CID.
    Who are the major players in Indian intelligence?
    The major players are Research and Analysis Wing, Defence Intelligence Agency, Intelligence Bureau (IB), National Technical Research Organisation, Joint Cipher Bureau, All India Radio Monitoring Service, Joint Intelligence Committee, Signals Intelligence Directorate, Aviation Research Centre, Directorate of Air Intelligence, Directorate of Navy Intelligence, and Directorate of Revenue Intelligence. See also Wikipedia, which lists ‘intelligence agencies’ country-wise.
    On the origins of RAW, and its role.
    RAW was established on September 21, 1968 as part of the Cabinet Secretariat, reporting directly to the Prime Minister. Rameshwar Nath Kao was the first head of the RAW, with K. Sankaran Nair as his deputy.
    The role of RAW is:
    · Collection, production, analysis and assessment of all form of external intelligence of interest to India, in political, military, economic, scientific and technological fields.
    · Conducting special operations abroad, including psychological warfare.
    · Act as nodal agency for counter intelligence operations outside India.
    · Liaison with foreign intelligence and security agencies in India and abroad.
    Has the organisation become more relevant in today’s context, owing to greater threat perception?
    It is difficult to say that there is greater threat perception today than in the past. Within 25 years of gaining independence, India fought four wars – one with China and three with Pakistan. Today, the threat of war appears remote. However, the threat that has increased is of terrorism. Intelligence never becomes irrelevant, in war or peace. To that extent, RAW is as relevant today as it was when it was establishment, nothing more.
    What have been the significant milestones in RAW’s evolution?
    I cannot think of any milestone. RAW has undergone a process of gradual evolution, increasing in size and reach. When it was established, HUMINT had primacy. Today, TECHINT provides the major share of RAW’s inputs.
    How does the Indian outfit compare against similar institutions in other countries?
    If you ask RAW officers, they will say they are the best. The best judge is always an adversary. Most Pakistani sources feel RAW is quite good, which is high praise indeed. Similarly, we feel that ISI is good at its job. I would not place RAW in the same class as CIA, MI 6 or Mossad, but it is perhaps better than the intelligence agencies of most developing countries.
    Have there been costly mistakes that could have been avoided?
    There have been many mistakes, some of which I have mentioned in my book. In fact, B Raman has given details of most of the costly mistakes of RAW. I will list some of them: Kargil, Mujibur Rehman’s assassination in 1975, Arms drop in Purulia, promulgation of Emergency in 1975, Operation Blue Star, support to LTTE leading to IPKF fiasco, and incorrect advice to Rajiv Gandhi in the Bofors cover up.
    Can technology be better leveraged by intelligence forces while at the same time assuring individual privacy for the citizen? How?
    This is a conundrum that all intelligence agencies face. To collect crucial intelligence, the individual privacy of the citizen often has to be given short shrift. This is applicable mostly to internal intelligence agencies such as IB. RAW collects most of its intelligence abroad, using means that are naturally illegal in those countries. One country that uses technology effectively without trespassing on the citizens’ rights is the US, where the laws in this regard are very strict.
    And its resources are extensive?
    Yes. The US has resources that are mind-boggling and cannot be matched by other nations. They have hundreds of satellites that cover every part of the globe. This enables them to photograph the area of interest using high-resolution cameras. They can also listen in on almost every radio transmission, any where in the world. Their code breaking capability is phenomenal, by virtue of their computing ability using super computers.
    Is the human element still critical?

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