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The
present war is not about the evil Taliban and their spiritual
inspiration Osama bin Laden. Along with the Northern Alliance they
have been the hired guns of the CIA to dispose of the Najibullah
Government for several years.
This is a war about the oil from the Caspian, the US estimating as
much as 270 billion barrels of it, and transporting it the quickest
and cheapest route through Afghanistan. The giant US oil company
Unocal has been looking at this since 1996.
The
events of September 11th, real or invented, gave the US the
opportunity to launch the war to install a government that has the
confidence of the oil companies.
An
accompanying side issue, is that it has given the industrialized
countries an opportunity to launch a full scale attack on the civil
liberties in their own countries.
Opposition
being generally described as "Terrorist". I used to
describe this as the phraseology of the "armed state against
the armed opposition". In the opinion of the US Government,
these days, the opposition doesn't have to be armed to qualify for
the definition.
The Muslim population being the main scapegoats on this occasion.
The ENCARTA world English dictionary tells me that Sindh is a
historical region of south-eastern Pakistan in the lower Indus
valley. A province of British India from 1843, becoming part of
Pakistan after partition in 1947, with a population of 21.6 million
but only 14 million of them speaking Sindhi. The World Sindhi
Congress claiming 30 million and 15 million for two those figures
respectively.
Squeezed
between India and Pakistan, now both armed with atomic weapons, they
will have no friendly ally in either.
India
because it has a Hindu fundamentalist government based on the
Rastriva Swayamsevak Sangh (Organization of National Volunteers)
founded in 1920, and violently anti-Muslim. The Bhratiya Party (BJP)
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee is a member.
Their
electoral success being based on the failure of the Congress Party
to live up to the ideas and teachings of Pandit Nehru and Mahatma
Ghandi.
Pakistan,
a legacy of the Raj and because like Israel it is based on religion,
(which I believe is ritualized opinion), is an insecure democracy
and in or out of office dominated by the military.
In a Liberation pamphlet published in 1985, the situation in Sindh
is described as follows
"Their rights have been severely curtailed both in the economy
and in the government: of the 2,000 enterprises in Sindh only 500
are controlled by Sindhis, and they constitute only 5% of the
Federal civil servants. Only 2% of the army service men are Sindhis.
The
military authorities of Islamabad, by encouraging the population
from the other provinces to migrate to Sindh, have caused
considerable damage to the economic situation of the peasants who
originally settled there. The wave of immigration ran particularly
high when alongside the commissioning of major irrigation systems,
free lands were being developed. Most of the land (75 %) was
distributed on easy terms or generally free of charge among their
arrivals from the other provinces, especially the retired military
and clerks from Punjab and the North-West Frontier Province. A
typical example is the recent distribution of 38,000 acres of highly
fertile tracts in Thatta District. This land was sold by installments
for 30 years at the ridiculously low price of seven rupees per acre
to police and civilian officers, mostly of Punjab stock.
Sindh
culture has suffered considerably under military rule. No sooner had
military rule been imposed, when the number of newspapers and
magazines published in the Sindhi language was halved. Overall two
and a half times more English and four times more Urdu periodicals
are published than those in the vernacular. Radio and television
have been cutting down on the volume of Sindhi language broadcasts -
daily broadcasting time is now just 30 minutes. Scant consideration
is given to the development. of the Sindhi language which is
systematically being subjected to discrimination.
As
a matter of fact, discrimination applies to the culture of all
nationalities inhabiting Pakistan, a sequel to the undemocratic
policy pursued by the military regime in sheer disregard of the
national culture and language of the Nunjabis, Pustuns and Baluchis
and in pursuit of the creation of a "single Islamic
culture"."
I
have not heard of any improvement since.
Opposition to these two regimes of India and Pakistan is dealt with,
either by imprisonment or murder, judicial or otherwise.
The
present leader of Pakistan, by dint of a military coup was an
erstwhile friend and backer of the Taliban and certainly no friend
of the Northern Alliance.
Since
he came to power General Pervez Musharraf has done a balancing act
between the Sunni and Shi`ite Muslims. At the outbreak of the war he
showed, as a key player in the game, the ability to hold the lid
down on the warring factions. No doubt under the influence of US
money he will continue to do what is best for the US oil companies.
After
this demonizing of all and sundry, you may well ask, what is the
alternative for the people of Sindh.
Certainly
not "self- determination" (whatever the World Sindhi
Congress means by this) which I believe is fools gold. But human
rights, water rights, democracy, equality before the law for men and
women, universal education, respect for cultural heritage and a free
health service, yes. But self determination, which breaks up of a
country and its influence into small parts, and makes it more
vulnerable to the power of the multi-nationals.
As
for international alliances, Sindh need look no further than China.
Unlike Japan which is in deep recession, their economy is on the up
with a 7.5% growth for the outgoing year and in the largest world
population of 1.2 billion. With recent membership of the World Trade
Organization they have shown they are not afraid of the wind of
change through some of their more backward industries, notably
agriculture and state owned enterprises.
Thank You
Organizers: World Sindhi Congress & Baloch Voice (Sindhi
Baloch forum)
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