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You are here: Home / Archives for 2014

Archives for 2014

Pankaj Advani, Vidya Pillai advance in World Snooker

November 20, 2014 by Nasheman

Pankaj Advani and Vidya Pillai won their respective opening league matches as the Seaways-IBSF World Snooker Championship commenced on Wednesday.

Pankaj Advani and Vidya Pillai won their respective opening league matches as the Seaways-IBSF World Snooker Championship commenced on Wednesday.

Bengaluru: Indian hopes Pankaj Advani and Vidya Pillai won their respective opening league matches as the Seaways-IBSF World Snooker Championship commenced here Wednesday.
Advani, holder of 12 World titles, was kept at the table for longer than expected before he pulled through 4-2 against Malaysia’s Keen Hoo Moh while national champion Pillai shrugged off a scratchy start to blank Russian challenger Anastasjia Singurindi 3-0 with a break of 49 in the third frame.

The 29-year-old Advani, champion in 2003 and runner-up in 2010, jumped to a 2-0 lead with breaks of 60 and 85, but lost focus to allow the Malaysian catch up at 2-2 before taking the next two frames to win the match.

“I started well, but I think I lost a bit of focus when leading 2-0. Keen is a tactical player and it was a tough match. I should have won 4-1, but will take the 4-2 result.

“I am happy to get the first match out of the way and yes, it was in a way good to spend more time at the table, but it was a wake-up call for me. I need to improve on my safety play which I was not happy with today,” said Advani after playing his first competitive snooker match in five months.

Pillai, twice bronze medallist in this tournament, was never really troubled by her young Russian opponent who appeared all at sea for the best part of the match, but the Indian champion took a while to settle down as she missed some sitters while looking ill at ease.

The 36-year-old Pillai, however, struck some rhythm in the third frame when she posted a break of 49 that ended when she missed a centre-pocket pink, but the run was enough to win her the frame and match.

“I was not too happy with my performance, even granting it was my first match. It will take a couple of more matches to get used to the conditions, but anyway, it’s a relief to win the first match and I hope to improve as the tournament progresses,” said Pillai.

Elsewhere, China’s 14-year-old prodigy Yan Bingtao eased past Jim Johansson of Sweden 4-1 to start his campaign in the Men’s section in fine fashion.

Though the teenager did not dish out big breaks, he gave a glimpse of his talent and potential that suggested he would go far in this tournament.

(IANS)

Filed Under: India, Sports Tagged With: IBSF, Pankaj Advani, SEAWAYS, Snooker, Vidya Pillai, World Snooker Championships

Yale University scholars 'warn' Congress: There has been 0.8% rise in BJP vote share following every riot

November 20, 2014 by Nasheman

riots-india

by Counterview

In what may prove to a stern warning to those in the Congress party who have come to believe following the recent debacle in the Lok Sabha polls that stressing too much fighting against communal violence may erode their majority Hindu voter base, a recent Yale University research of Indian electoral data, titled “Do parties matter for ethnic violence? Evidence from India”, has reached the drastic conclusion that rise in religious violence in India is a sure sign of the country’s shift away from democracy. Authored by Gareth Nellis, Michael Weaver and Steven Rosenzweig, the scholars base their analysis of assembly election outcomes spread over several decades in 16 major Indian states.

The scholars say, the outbreak of internal religious or ethnic strife in any country is associated with a corresponding 8.5 per cent point decline in a country’s Polity IV Score – a data analysis method used in political science to assess a country’s level of democracy based on evaluation of elections, competitiveness and openness, the nature of political participation in general, and the extent of checks on executive authority. Strife also leads to five per cent point rise in the likelihood of a coup d’etat, the scholars add, indicating, this is what may be happening in India, too.

Insisting that “ethnic-group conflict is among the most serious threats facing young democracies”, the scholars, citing the instance of the Congress and other secular parties, however, say, “A politician hailing from a party relying on a large base of minority support and having a distinctive reputation for curbing ethnic conflict might devote extra effort and resources toward stemming ethnic disorder when in office.” Conversely, they add, “In settings where bureaucratic and police institutions are weak, party systems are volatile, clientelist strategies of voter mobilization predominate over programmatic appeals.”

Emphasising that “Hindu-Muslim violence tends to polarize the electorate along religious lines, bolstering support for majoritarian Hindu candidates and diminishing support for Congress ones”, the scholars seek to prove this on the basis of analysis of electoral outcomes of Congress candidates who won or lost by less than one per cent votes against a non-Congress candidate. They underline, “A full increase in Congress seat share (from zero to 100 per cent) in a district produces an 87 per cent reduction in the number of riots occurring in that election cycle and a 40 percentage point decrease in the probability of that district experiencing any riot at all.”

The scholars say, the impact of Congress incumbency on riots is “strikingly large”, adding, by way of example, “Between 1962 and 2000, the 315 districts witnessed a total of 998 riots. Our estimates suggest that had Congress won every close election that occurred in this sample, India would have seen 106 (10 percent) fewer riots.” Conversely, had Congress lost all close elections, “we predict that India would have seen 120, or 10 percent, more riots. This exercise illustrates the substantial role that Congress MLAs have played in stemming local Hindu-Muslim conflict in India.”

In fact, the scholars say, while “incumbency by Congress MLAs reduced Hindu-Muslim riots in Indian districts”, Muslims, who have been historically core Congress supporters, suffered “disproportionately from communal violence.” They add, “For a Congress MLA, disappointing local Muslim voters by failing to be proactive on this issue could therefore hinder her chances of re-election.” Hence, “having a greater concentration of Muslims in a district encouraged Congress MLAs to do more to inhibit rioting…” In fact, “Congress’ strong links to Muslim voters led the party’s MLAs to expend extra effort in reducing riots when in office.”

Comparing this with the Bharatiya Janata Party and its predecessor Bharatiya Jan Sangh (BJP/BJS), the scholars say, “The BJS/BJP saw a 0.8 per cent point increase in their vote share following a riot in the year prior to an election. This suggests that the electoral costs to Congress may indeed be due to polarization. Meanwhile, if Congress is held more accountable for riots because it owns the issue of preserving communal harmony, we should expect to see Congress punished more for riots that break out when its MLAs hold office in a district.”

The scholars conclude, “According to our most conservative estimates, the election of a single Congress MLA in a district brought about a 32 percent reduction in the probability of a riot breaking out prior to the next election. Simulations reveal that had Congress candidates lost all close elections in our dataset, India would have witnessed 10 percent more riots and thousands more riot casualties. The pacifying effect of Congress incumbency appears to be driven by local electoral considerations, in particular the party’s exceptionally strong linkages to Muslim voters”.

The states analyzed are Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal.

The research use secondary historical sources to compile a list of all parties that formed state governments in India between 1961 and 2008. This list included the party of the Chief Minister as well as any other parties in coalition governments. It uses the Wilkinson-Varshney database of Hindu- Muslim riots (1950-95), updated by in 2014 by Anirban Mitra and Debraj Ray.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Anirban Mitra, BJP, Communalism, Congress, Debraj Ray, Gareth Nellis, Michael Weaver, Riots, Steven Rosenzweig, Yale University

India opts out of admonishing Israel

November 20, 2014 by Nasheman

Union home minister Rajnath Singh (left) during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right). Photo: PTI

Union home minister Rajnath Singh (left) during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right). Photo: PTI

by Ninan Koshy

While every other ally of Israel has distanced itself from Israel’s policies after its offensive in Gaza this summer – especially on settlements – India has pledged to strengthen its relations with the country.

A visit by India’s Home Minister Rajnath Singh to Israel this month became an chance for India to proclaim its steadfast support for the country. During the trip, Singh said India sought closer ties with the country adding, “Israel plays a major role in world politics”. India has invited Israel to become a partner in a “Made in India” initiative in the defense sector and Israel has expressed a desire to share cutting edge weapon technologies with New Delhi.

Even before the ink on the indefinite ceasefire agreement in the Gaza conflict had dried in August, Israel announced a decision to grab nearly 1,000 acres (404 hectares) of Palestinian land to build Jewish settlements. This expansionist act was condemned by the US, the UK, the European Union and the United Nations. British Prime Minister David Cameron called it “utterly deplorable”.

Israel had two objectives in the war against Hamas. One was to delegitimize Hamas as a political movement and degrade it to a sheer terrorist organization and if possible to destroy it. The other was to scuttle the process of Palestinian unity which had strengthened with the formation of a unity government.

Israel failed in both objectives. The world witnessed the increasing acceptance of Hamas as a legitimate political movement of Palestine and Palestine as a state. The Swedish government officially recognized the state of Palestine on October 30. Before that came a non-binding resolution in the British parliament, with similar votes in the pipeline in France, Spain and Ireland.

New European Union foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini last week appealed for the establishment of a Palestinian state, saying the world cannot afford another war in Gaza. “We need a Palestinian state. That is the ultimate goal and this is the position of all the European Union”, Mogherini said during a trip to Gaza. “We cannot just sit and wait. If we sit and wait it will go on for another 40 years. We have to have act now”

Israel’s other objective of scuttling the process of Palestinian unity also failed – Fatah-Hamas relations have strengthened since the ceasefire.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meeting with his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu in September, the first such meeting between the prime ministers of the countries in more than a decade, was significant for a number of reasons. During the meeting, Netanyahu said that “the sky is the limit” in terms of prospects for cooperation.

It was also made clear that Modi would seek the views of the Israeli prime minister on the Islamic State. “The two leaders discussed the situation in West Asia. Given that Israel is well-placed in that region PM [Modi] requested and was given a briefing of their understanding of the situation”, the amiable spokesperson of the Ministry of External Affairs helpfully explained. The Indian Prime Minister did not need any briefing on the situation from any other West Asian leader.

The conversation came just before Modi’s dinner with President Barack Obama in Washington and the prime minister’s address to the Council on Foreign Relations, to outline his government’s foreign policy objectives. Netanyahu’s views were sought by Modi in his preparations for these two events.

In fact there was no need to seek Netanyahu’s views on the Islamic State in Modi’s conversation, since the Israel prime minister had clearly stated his views in the UN General Assembly, “Hamas and the Islamic state group are branches of the same poisonous trees, both bent on world domination through terror just as the Nazis were.”

India’s relationship with Israel was sparked by L K Advani, a senior leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), following a visit to Israel in 1995. He returned with rhetoric on civilizational bonds, but also on terrorism. Five years later, Advani returned to Israel, this time as India’s Home Minister.

During the visit in June 2005, Advani said at the Indian Embassy in Tel Aviv, “In recent years we have been facing a growing international security problem. We are concerned with cross-border terrorism launched by proxies of Pakistan. We share with Israel a common perception of terrorism as a menace, even more so when coupled with religious fundamentalism. Our mutual determination to combat terrorism is the basis of discussions with Israel whose reputation in dealing with such problems is quite successful.”

Rajnath Singh had a helicopter tour of the Jordan valley and Israel’s northern and southern regions with National Security Adviser Yossi Cohen “to get a sense of the security situation there”. The security situation there is simply the military preparedness of Israel, mainly against the Palestinians.

Of course, Rajnath Singh was following in the footsteps of his illustrious predecessor Advani who in 2000 had “visited northern border areas to study border management that Israel has displayed so successfully”.

The talk about cross-border terrorism and border areas seems unlikely considering Israel has refused to define its borders and is grabbing more and more Palestinian territory borders on legitimizing occupation. During the Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres’ visit to New Delhi in January 2002, the Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson had said, “India finds it increasingly beneficial to learn from Israel’s experience in dealing with terrorism since Israel has long suffered from cross-border terrorism”.

What are the borders of Israel crossed by terrorists, the spokesperson was speaking about? As Robert Fisk asked, “Which particular Israel? The Israel of 1948? The Israel of the post-1967 borders? The Israel which builds and goes on building vast settlements for Jews and Jews only on Arab lands, gobbling up even more of the 22% Palestinian land still left to negotiate?”

India-Israel cooperation in counter-terrorism is based on equating the Palestinian struggle with cross-border terrorism. It is this flawed and skewed stance that is reflected in India’s attitude to Israel’s periodic wars against Palestinians.

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing. Articles submitted for this section allow our readers to express their opinions and do not necessarily meet the same editorial standards of Asia Times Online’s regular contributors.

Ninan Koshy is a political commentator based in Trivandrum, Kerala, India, and formerly Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School, is the author of War on Terror: Reordering the World and Under the Empire: India’s New Foreign Policy.

(Copyright 2014 Ninan Koshy)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Benjamin Netanyahu, Gaza, Israel, Narendra Modi, Palestine, Rajnath Singh

Sant Rampal arrested, 5 women and a child die in violent stand-off

November 20, 2014 by Nasheman

Sant Rampal being taken to Panchkula General hospital after arrested from Hisar Ashram on Wednesday. (Source: Express photo by Jaipal Singh)

Sant Rampal being taken to Panchkula General hospital after arrested from Hisar Ashram on Wednesday. (Source: Express photo by Jaipal Singh)

Chandigarh: After weeks of standoff and loss of six lives, self-styled ‘godman’ Sant Rampal was finally arrested in his fortress-like ashram in the Hisar district of Haryana after the police raided the premises on Wednesday.

In a well-orchestrated strategy, the police stormed the 12-acre ashram around 9 pm on Wednesday after evacuating a majority of the followers who had been camping inside. Rampal was taken into custody in less than 20 minutes after launching the raid.

Rampal will be produced before a local court in Rohtak on Thursday and the Punjab and Haryana High Court on Friday.

Jubilant scenes were witnessed outside the ashram as several people danced and praised the police for arresting the ‘godman’. The arrest is said to have been an outcome of negotiations to ensure that the standoff ended at the earliest. Many of his followers who were stranded inside chose to leave the premises.

Earlier, silence descended on the ashram premises as close to 11,000 followers, some who were forced to camp inside to defend Rampal, walked away from the mayhem.

Police suspected that around 5,000 followers were camped inside the ashram, with several of them refusing to vacate premises, thereby delaying Rampal’s arrest.

Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar finally broke his silence on Wednesday saying that the High Court order would be upheld and the operation would end with Rampal’s arrest.

At 8:30 am, ashram volunteers handed over bodies of five women and an infant to the district administration. There were no injury marks on the women’s bodies and the cause of death remains to be ascertained through post-mortem, said Director-General of Police S N Vashist. Among them, was a 20-year-old woman, suffering from a heart ailment, who died at hospital in Hisar in the early hours of Wednesday. The infant who died was suffering from congenital jaundice.

Meanwhile, the police on Wednesday booked Rampal on fresh charges of sedition. Besides charges of murder and contempt of court, he now faces charges for waging war against the state, conspiring to commit offences against the state and collecting arms with the intention of waging war against the state.

The police did not enter the ashram on Wednesday maintaining that its first priority was to evacuate those inside. Rampal’s brother, Purshottam Dass, who challenged the police to arrest the ‘godman’, was nabbed while trying to escape. At least 270 people from the ashram have been detained and 70 booked, sources said.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Baba Rampal, Hisar, Sant RAMPAL, Satlok Ashram

Jaffer Sharief and associates to infuse Rs. 125cr into Amanath Bank

November 20, 2014 by Nasheman

Amanath-Bank

Bengaluru: Former railway minister C K Jaffer Sharief who has challenged the merger of Amanath Bank with Canara Bank, would deposit a sum of Rs. 124 crore within a week.

Sharief also asked for the appointment of an ad hoc committee to overlook the process. His counsel furnished a list of names, which included Jaffer Sharief, Iqbal Huttur, Congress leader C M Ibrahim and JD(S) MLA B Z Zameer Ahmed Khan, who would be the members of the committee. The court however, refused to appoint the committee with the members suggested by Sharief.

It said that the committee cannot be constituted as per the wish of the petitioners and said the Court will decide who will be in the ad-hoc committee.

Hearing the petition, Justice Ram Mohan Reddy issued directions to deposit the money in the Amanath Cooperative Bank within a week after calculating the shortfall of money. During the earlier hearing, the Court had directed the petitioners to deposit over Rs 200 crore, which has been now reduced to Rs. 124 crore.

Meanwhile, the court has asked all the petitioners to appear before it on November 27 with proper identity proofs.

Filed Under: India, Indian Muslims Tagged With: Amanath Bank, B Z Zameer Ahmed Khan, C M Ibrahim, Canara Bank, Iqbal Huttur, Jaffer Sharief, Justice Ram Mohan Reddy

Archaeologists Unearth Three Ancient Greek Mosaics in the Ongoing Excavation in Zeugma, Turkey

November 19, 2014 by Nasheman

Workers clear a mosaic depicting the nine Muses

The Zeugma excavation project conducted by Oxford Archaeology and supported byPackhard Humanities Institute and the Ministry of Culture of Turkey has recently unearthed three ancient Greek mosaics in the Turkish city of Zeugma. Zeugma had received some press and support in 2000 after flooding caused by construction began to bury and damage artifacts in the region.

The mosaics, created in the 2nd century BC, are constructed of boldly colored glass and are being covered for protection until excavation is complete. The head of the project, Professor Kutalmis Görkay, recently gave the Hurriyet Daily News more details about the plan for the future of the excavation.

From now on, we will work on restoration and conservation. We plan to establish a temporary roof for long-term protection. We estimate that the ancient city has 2,000-3,000 houses. Twenty-five of them remain under water. Excavations will be finished in the Muzalar House next year.

The muse Thalia

The muse Thalia

Ocean and Tithys

The Centro di Conservazione Archeologica created this video about the flooding and excavation projects at Zeugma.

photos via Greek Reporter

via Greek Reporter

Filed Under: Cabinet of Curiosities Tagged With: Archaeology, Greek Mosaics, Mosaics, Turkey, Zeugma

Spain to cast symbolic vote in recognition of Palestinian state

November 19, 2014 by Nasheman

spain-palestine

by Al-Akhbar

Spanish lawmakers were set to vote on Tuesday in favor of recognizing Palestine as a state, parliamentary sources said, in a symbolic move intended to promote a “two-state solution.”

The non-binding vote was brought forward by the opposition Socialist party but has the support of the ruling People’s Party (PP) and other groups in the lower house of parliament, sources from the two parties said.

“It (the vote) is not binding, it does not set a timeline for the recognition, it gives the government the margin to proceed with the recognition when it feels it will be opportune,” Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo told reporters in Brussels on Monday.

“If we want to be effective this recognition must be done in coordination with the European Union,” he added.

The motion calls on the Spanish government to “recognize Palestine as a state,” according to a draft text presented by the Socialists, and urges Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy “to promote in coordination with the European Union the recognition of the Palestinian state as sovereign, contiguous, democratic and independent which lives in peace and security with the state of Israel.”

It echoes similar moves in other European countries intended to increase pressure for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Britain and Ireland approved similar non-binding motions last month that call on their governments to recognize Palestine. Neither government has heeded that call.

France is also eyeing a similar non-binding resolution for November 28 after Sweden’s center-left government took the lead by officially recognizing the state of Palestine within days of taking office last month.

The EU’s new foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, said the bloc’s 28 foreign ministers discussed at a meeting in Brussels on Monday how they could start “a positive process with the Israelis and Palestinians to re-launch a peace process.”

The moves reflect mounting frustration in the European Union at Israel’s illegal settlement plans on land the Palestinians who support a two-state solution want for a state following the collapse of US-sponsored peace talks.

The roots of the Israel-Palestine conflict date back to 1917, when the British government, in the now-famous Balfour Declaration, called for “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.”

Israel then occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank during the 1967 Middle East War. It later annexed the holy city in 1980, claiming it as the capital of the self-proclaimed Zionist state – a move never recognized by the international community.

In November 1988, Palestinian leaders led by Arafat declared the existence of a State of Palestine inside the 1967 borders and the state’s belief “in the settlement of international and regional disputes by peaceful means in accordance with the charter and resolutions of the United Nations.”

Heralded as a “historic compromise,” the move implied that Palestinians would agree to accept only 22 percent of historic Palestine, in exchange for peace with Israel. It is now believed that only 17 percent of historic Palestine is under Palestinian control following the expansion of illegal Israeli settlements.

The Palestinian Authority this year set November 2016 as the deadline for ending the Israeli withdrawal from the territories occupied by Israel during the Six-Day War in 1967 and establishing a two-state solution.

It is worth noting that numerous pro-Palestine activists support a one-state solution, arguing that the creation of a Palestinian state beside Israel would not be sustainable.

They also believe that the two-state solution, which is the only option considered by international actors, won’t solve existing discrimination, nor erase economic and military tensions.

The Palestinian Authority estimates that 134 countries have now recognized Palestine as a state, although the number is disputed and several recognitions by what are now European Union member states date back to the Soviet era.

An AFP count puts the number of states that recognize Palestine at 112.

(AFP, Reuters, Al-Akhbar)

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Balfour Declaration, EU, European Union, Israel, Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo, Palestine, Spain

Is there a civil war brewing in Jerusalem and the West Bank?

November 19, 2014 by Nasheman

Anadolu / Salih Zeki Fazlıoğlu

Anadolu / Salih Zeki Fazlıoğlu

by Juan Cole

Observers of the evolution of the relationship between Israel and the Palestinians have long argued that there are only two likely outcomes of the alternating violence and diplomacy between the two sides that has gone on nearly 70 years now. One is a “two-state solution” wherein Israel accepts a rump Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank. That possibility has by now been more or less forestalled because of the massive land theft and colonization drive of Israeli squatters on Palestinian land in the West Bank. (The UN General Assembly partition plan of 1947, whatever one thinks of its legitimacy, awarded the West Bank to Palestine). The other is a “one-state solution” wherein Israel bestows Israeli citizenship on the stateless Palestinians. There is no obvious path to such a decision on the part of what are essentially fascist ruling parties in Israel and it is hard to imagine a scenario in which such a thing happens.

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman have another ending to the story in mind. And that is the “transfer” of Palestinian-Israelis and of Palestinians in the West Bank to some other country, probably Jordan. This crackpot plan of uprooting and moving 5 million people is also not very likely on the face of it.

But there is one scenario in which “transfer” (i.e. ethnic cleansing) could occur. That would be a repeat of the 1947-48 civil war in British Mandate Palestine, which eventuated in the ethnic cleansing by Jewish militias of 720,000 Palestinians out of a pre-war total of 1.2 million. Jewish terrorist organizations such as the Stern Gang simply mowed down Palestinian villagers with machine guns to scare their neighbors into fleeing their homes, which the nascent Israelis then usurped. After Israel was established, Prime Minister David Ben Gurion simply locked the Palestinians out of their homeland for good, creating a massive refugee problem in the West Bank, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon that has never really been resolved to this day (only Jordan gave the Palestinians citizenship, and even there it is sometimes revoked).

Israel conquered the West Bank in 1967 and militarily occupied it, then contravened the Geneva Convention of 1949 on the treatment of occupied populations by flooding Israeli squatters into the territory. It also illegally annexed part of the Palestinian West Bank and awarded it to the Israeli district of Jerusalem, which is roughly 35 percent Palestinian. It also has gradually forced many Palestinians in East Jerusalem to depart, confiscating their property, and is building Jews-only squatter settlements all around Jerusalem with an intent of turning Jerusalem into a Jews-only city.

The Israeli government has now put 600,000 Israeli squatters into the Palestinian West Bank (including Palestinian Jerusalem), among nearly 3 million Palestinians. There is constant Israeli construction of housing on usurped Palestinian land. Squatters dig their wells deeper into aquifers and cause the wells in Palestinian villages to go dry. There is a low-intensity struggle between the incoming squatters and the indigenous Palestinians. Israelis have attacked mosques and villagers. Palestinians have killed Israelis whom they view as land thieves.

These two populations are not separate from one another in the West Bank. Nothing would be easier than for tit-for-tat killings to spiral out of control. Then you’d have a war on the West Bank, which of course the Israelis would win, being very well armed by the US and very well organized.

In the course of this coming civil war in the West Bank, Israeli squatter organizations would seek to repeat the Stern Gang’s achievements in 1947-48 of making the Palestinian population flee its homes for Jordan. Jordan, a country of 6 million, would suddenly be a country of 9 million.

On past experience, no one would do anything about such an ethnic cleansing of the West Bank Palestinians, who would end up penniless and living in tents in the desert. The spokesmen for Western governments would say they regret that it happened and maybe offer some aid money. The Arab publics would be outraged but the governments would do nothing. Some European governments might slap ineffectual sanctions on Israel. Others would praise the Israeli ethnic cleansing campaign.

The fascist parties in Israel would lock the Palestinians out of the West Bank permanently and flood in more settlers. They might even “transfer” the Palestinian-Israelis, stripping them of their citizenship and making Jordan 10 million, half of them in refugee tents in the desert). They would give press conferences where they regretted that the Jordanian government did not treat its new citizens well enough.

The Jordanian state likely could not survive being almost doubled in population overnight overnight, with most of the newcomers hostile to the Hashemite monarchy. There would likely be a republican revolution in Jordan against King Abdullah II. Extremism would flourish and an ISIL- like state in Jordan would not be impossible. The ethnic cleansing would be extremely destabilizing for the Middle East for decades to come and Israel’s security environment would deteriorate drastically. Eventually reprisals with things like small rockets would create such a sense of crisis that gradually Israelis might begin emigrating abroad in fair numbers, a process that could snowball.

The killings at the Jerusalem synagogue yesterday and the spate of Israeli killings of Palestinians in the West Bank are all small harbingers of this coming civil war.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Avigdor Lieberman, Benjamin Netanyahu, Conflict, Israel, Jerusalem, Palestine, West Bank

The end of an era – Mohammedan Sporting, Ambedkar Stadium and Football in Delhi

November 19, 2014 by Nasheman

by Jamal Kidwai

Caught up in the launch of the Indian Soccer League (ISL) and its promotion by television and big Bollywood stars, very few noticed that the Kolkata based 123-yr-old Mohameddan Sporting, has effectively decided to close down due to a financial crisis. According to its management, they will stop playing for a year outside Kolkata and have disbanded the senior team.

The historic Mohammedan Sporting won the Calcutta league 11 times, the IFA Shield five times,  the Rovers Cup six times, the DCM tournament four times and the Federation Cup and the Durand Cup twice each.

Mohammedan Sporting team that won the Calcutta League in 1940

Mohameddan Sporting, along with Mohun Bagan (established 1889) and East Bengal (established 1924) were the most popular clubs of India for over a century. Mohun Bagan drew its fan-following from the elite and the aristocracy of Bengal and its aim was to inspire young people to lead a principled life: for example, those who failed in school and college were not allowed to play and smoking and drinking in the club premises were prohibited. East Bengal, on the other hand, represented the working class and the lower-middle classes who came to stay in Kolkata from east Bengal, which later became Bangladesh.

Given the pan-Indian religious character of Mohd Sporting, it had easily the largest fan following across India. All the big tournaments patronized Mohd Sporting as it drew the largest crowds. The other major clubs like Dempo and Salgaocar came from Goa with a very limited support base outside Goa and Mumbai. 

In the history of Indian football, Mohd Sporting will always stand apart. It has many firsts to its name. Mohd Sporting was the first Indian club to win the Calcutta League four times in a row from (1934-38) and the first Indian club to win the Calcutta League and IFA Shield in the same season in 1936. And in 1948, it became the first Indian team to win the Calcutta league after Independence. This win had immense politically significance. They won in the backdrop of the brutal communal mistrust and violence that was raging in Bengal during the Partition. The victory was seen as a message of reassurance to Muslims as the win demonstrated fair play by the Hindu-dominated football establishment, the referees on the field and the authorities off the field. That win became a symbol of reconciliation between Hindus and Muslims.

The Club was so popular that the Prince of Nepal, a keen player himself, came all the way to Kolkata to play for this famous club and became the first Hindu to represent Mohammedan Sporting.

Mohd Sporting Club after it decided to shut down

Mohd Sporting Club after it decided to shut down

Ambedkar Stadium

I remember watching these and other clubs play at good old Ambedkar Stadium at Delhi Gate in the mid-1980s and early 1990 in the Durand Cup and the DCM cups. East Bengal, JCT, Mohd Sporting, Mahindra, Mafatlal, Dempo, Salgoacar were regular participants. Mafatlal, Mahindra and JCT have already shut shop some years ago. The DCM Cup has been disbanded and the Durand Cup, run by the defense ministry, has lost its sheen. Both these tournaments are amongst the oldest tournaments of India.

Given the standard of Indian soccer then and even now, there is very little to say about the quality of the game that that these clubs played. For soccer fans like me and many others, what drew us to watch these tournaments was the display of cultural and communitarian contests among the fans in the stands along with the game of soccer that was played on the field.  For most of the people in the crowd their support of a club was rooted in their identity and the sense of pride they would get if their club won.

Ambedkar stadium is located at Delhi Gate, at the entrance, as it were, of Daryanganj, also one of the entrances to old Delhi, home to several local Delhi clubs like the City Club, Youngmen, National Club and many others. Football, like kite flying, cock fighting and carom remains an integral part of Old Delhi sub-culture. The location and architecture of the stadium was of a piece with the culture that these tournaments represented. A very large number of fans that thronged the stadium and were supporters of Mohd Sporting came from old Delhi. It was also very well connected by DTC bus routes like 429/425, connecting the stadium and Chitranjan Park in South Delhi, residence to a large Bengali population.

Unlike modern stadiums like the Jawaharlal Nehru stadium where the ISL is being played, Ambedkar stadium is built in such a manner that it gives a sense of intimacy and allows personal proximity while watching the match. The distance between the fans and the players is minimal, the warm up area where the players do drills before the match is situated at the entrance and fans can almost touch the players when they are warming up and then passing through the public corridor when going from the dressing rooms to the field.

Seating arrangements, the selection and preference of the stands chosen by fans to watch matches, the management, the timing of the matches, logistics and other support structures for these matches was also integrated into the overall social and cultural milieu. So canteen services and hawking were handled by two people, both belonging to Old Delhi. One served vegetarian snacks and food, the other non-vegetarian but they had the distinct and authentic taste of original Old Delhi cuisine. Many supporters of  East Bengal, Mohun Bagan, JCT and others who came to the stadium would get kababs and other non-vegetarian food packed for home as they would otherwise had to go all the way to old Delhi to buy it.

There was a section of stands towards the north-west direction of the stadium that was converted into a makeshift masjid where the fans offered zhohar and asar namaaz (the afternoon and late afternnon) namaaz), The south-west side of the stadium’s balcony was always occupied by what were typically called the juaaris (betters). They were always present in the stadium whether it was a big tournament or a school tournament like the Subroto Cup. And they would bet on any and every aspect of the game. Bets would be placed on winning teams, on the number of goals that would be scored, on the number of fouls before half time and so on. There were two kinds ofjuaaris. First were those who had no loyalty to any team and would bet on each game. But the second were those who would not place any bet if the club they supported was in action.  Like the fans, the majority of the juaaris were residents of old Delhi.

Colourful Fans and Colourful Players

Other than the football match, what added color to the matches at the Ambedkar stadium were some individuals who had a distinct manner of making their presence felt and entertaining the crowd. There was an old Sikh who carried a ghanta (iron dong) which he would play sparingly only at moments when he got annoyed with something that happened on the field, like a bad decision by the referee echoing the sentiment and displeasure of the crowd. He would play that also at time when a match was delayed because of some chief guest who would have come to inaugurate the match. Being a Punajabi, he was the supporter of JCT Mills teams. There was another fan from old Delhi known as pehelwan (wrestler). He had a very sharp voice which would stand out loud and clear even when the stadium was packed with 25000 fans.  He would shout out the choicest of abuses against a player or a referee if he didn’t like a decision or a tackle or a missed goal by a player. There were two hawkers, one who would sell tea and samosas and another who sold cigarettes, paan masaala and cold drinks. Because of their resemblance to very different kind of personalities, one was called Sadaam, after Sadaam Hussien, the [former] ruler of Iraq who was very popular among the old Delhi crowd as he was seen someone who had consistently challenged the U.S. The other was known as Cheema as he resembled the famous Nigerian player Cheema Okerie. But more than what they sold and their looks, they were popular because of their funny one-liners and their knowledge of the game.

 

In their heyday, because of widespread support, Mohd Sporting was flush with funds. They were the first to introduce football boots, and got players from outside Kolkata to play regularly for the team. There was Juma Khan and Bachi Khan who were brought from North western provinces of Peshawar and Quetta, goalkeeper Usman Jan from Delhi and centre forward Rashid from Ajmer. Mohd Sporting is also the first Indian club to win a tournament on a foreign soil when it defeated Indonesia’s Makassar 4-1 in the final of the Aga Khan Gold Cup in Dhaka in 1960 and the first Indian team to win the Durand Cup in 1940.

The Durand Cup, instituted by the British army is named after Mortimer Durand, a British foreign secretary in charge of India, is the third oldest football tournament in the world. It was played in Simla until 1940, then shifted to Delhi. The only period when the Durand Cup was not held was during the two World Wars, years that saw the turmoil of Partition and the Indo-China war. Football commentator and historian Novi Kapadia in a paper titled Triumphs and Disaster: The Story of Indian Football 1889-2000 has described the win of the Mohd Sporting when the Durand Cup final was first held in Delhi on 12 December 1940. Mohammedan Sporting played the final against Royal Warwickshire in front of 100,000 at the Irwin Amphitheater, where New Delhi’s National Stadium now stands (at India Gate). Eminent Muslim politicians flew in from far-off cities like Kolkata, Dhaka, Hyderabad and Bhopal for the match, while other supporter arrived in trains and tongas to watch the clash. Kapadia adds that the final was also the first time a football game of such importance had been presided over by an Indian referee, Captain Harnam Singh. Then a civilian sergeant in the Army Office in the Delhi cantonment, the referee had been even been given a police escort from his house in the cantonment area to the stadium. At the ground, however, there was a minor crisis. The British linesmen, Warrant Officers Oliphant and Greene refused to officiate as they said it was below their dignity to be linesmen under a comparatively junior referee like Harnam Singh. They felt slighted and backed out from the match. The Durand Society organizers tried to persuade the recalcitrant duo, but in vain.

As per tradition, the then Viceroy of India, Lord Linlithgow arrived at the Stadium to inaugurate and attend the final. When informed of the crisis, Lord Linlithgow threatened to court-martial Warrant Officers Oliphant and Greene. Sensing trouble, they relented. Musing on the incident later, Harnam Singh said, “This tension only added to my pre-match nervousness. I felt better when Major Porter gave me a hot cup of cocoa laced with brandy.” Eventually, centre forward Hafiz Rashid and inside left Saboo scored the goals for the Kolkata team as Mohammedan Sporting beat their British opponents 2-1. This victory by a team consisting of 11 Muslim players was a massive boost to the Muslim national movement. For generations, stories of this famous victory were narrated in the houses and by lanes of Old Delhi.

Besides the glitz and the hectic promotion by Bollywood stars and TV sports channels, one of the major attractions of the newly-launched ISL are some international footballers who were earlier playing in some second or third division teams in Europe and Latin America.

The early-1980s was the period when Indian clubs first started recruiting foreign players. However, unlike the ISL, none of these players came to India with the intention of playing professional football. Many of them arrived here during as refugees/students from countries like Iran and Afghanistan when their countries were going through political turmoil. The others came from Africa, mostly Nigeria, to study in different Indian universities.

The Iranians and the Nigerians were the most sought after footballers in the 1980s. The Iranian-trio of Majid Bhaskar, Jamshed Khabadji, Jamshed Nassiri came in India to study in Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) and were spotted by various clubs during the inter-university tournaments. In those days, the AMU football team would be comprised only of foreign students and would win all the major university tournaments. Among the Nigerians, the iconic Cheema Okeri was a student in Vishakapatnam Univeristy and Chibuzur and Emeka Euzugo came to study at the Chandigarh University.  Jamshed, Majid and Cheema have settled down in India. Jamshed has become a coach, Cheema married a girl from Assam and runs a children’s home besides being a businessman. Some years ago, I heard a rumour that Majid Bhaskar had taken to drugs and was spotted in a rehabilitation centre in Kolkata. 

There were also many Afghani footballers, not as popular as the Iranians and the Nigerian who played in the less glamorous Delhi Soccer league and were students at the various colleges of Delhi University. They came to India to escape the tyranny of the Russian-backed dictatorial regime of Najeebullah in Afghanistan. The Iranians and the Afghanis drew lots of their countrymen to watch matches and stadiums would also become a venue for the political meetings and discussions for them. On many occasions Afghani fans would come with anti-Najeebullah banners and stay on in the stadium post match to have a political meeting.

Many years after he retired from playing football, I met Cheema when he was visiting Delhi. He told me that he came to study in Vishakapatnam University with the hope of returning to Nigeria to join the civil services.  His father had given him strict instructions to focus on academics and not waste any time on sports or any other so called extra-curricular activities. Cheema said he in any case never considered himself a good footballer as he was considered an average player when he played the game in his neighborhood as a child. While in Vishakapatnam University Cheema would watch the University football team practice on the ground from the window of his hostel room. One day he went up to the coach and said that he too would like to join the practice session. According to Cheema, the moment he first kicked the ball, the coach was so impressed that he immediately asked him to be a part of the university team.

Cheema, like Jamshed, was one of the most expensive players during the 1980s. During one of the transfer season in Kolkata, where players were bought and sold for the next season, Cheema was `kidnapped’ by the management of Mohd Sporting club and kept in a hotel until the transfer deadlines were over. It was rumored that he was paid what was considered in those days a whopping amount: Rs 3 lakhs for the whole year by the club.

The football riot

It was sometime in the mid-1980s when a semi-final match of the DCM Cup between Mohd Sporting and East Bengal was played. Ambedkar stadium was jam-packed with over 25000 spectators, a vast majority of whom belonged to Mohd Sporting.

Until midway half time, the scores were level. Then the famous Prasanto Banerjee of East Bengal scored a goal, and the Mohd Sporting players demanded that the goal be disallowed as they claimed that Banerjee was off-side. The referee did not entertain the protest and the decision was upheld. Within no time, the field was invaded by spectators, chairs from the west side balcony were being flung onto to the lower stands and there was complete chaos. I was a teenager and watching the match alone. I panicked because my eyes had started burning and watering and there was a stampede.

Somehow, I managed to exit from the nearby gate. Outside the stadium there was greater chaos. People were running aimlessly, there was a jam at the busy Delhi-gate crossing, police was charging people on horseback and I could hear gunshots. I reached home many hours later with swollen eyes and heard on the AIR news that one person had died in the firing, several people were injured in the lathi-charge and the tear gassing that the police had to use to disperse the rioting crowd.   Until now this is still the most violent event in the history of sport in Delhi.

The newly formed ISL is drawing huge crowds. It offers lots of foreign players, spectacle, entertainment, TV replays and all that comes with modern technology and big finance. But it cannot invoke the kind of passion, communitarian spirit and the spirit of ownership that the old clubs and spectators offered.

Without Mohd Sporting and Ambedkar stadium, football will never be the same again in Delhi.

Filed Under: India, Sports Tagged With: Ambedkar Stadium, Delhi, Football, Mohammedan Sporting Club, Soccer

Ebola: 26-yr-old man tests positive, quarantined at Delhi airport

November 19, 2014 by Nasheman

Representational image. Reuters / Susana Vera

Representational image. Reuters / Susana Vera

by Aditya Kalra, Reuters

New Delhi: India has quarantined a man who was cured of Ebola in Liberia but continued to show traces of the virus in samples of his semen after arriving in the country, the Health Ministry said on Tuesday.

The ministry said in a statement that the Indian national had been shown to be negative for Ebola in tests conforming to World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines, but had been quarantined as a precautionary measure when he arrived at New Delhi airport on Nov. 10. Later, tests of his semen detected traces of the virus.

“It is a known fact that, during convalescence from Ebola Virus Disease, persons continue to shed virus in bodily fluids for variable periods,” the ministry said. “However, presence of virus in his semen samples may have the possibility of transmitting the disease through sexual route up to 90 days from time of clinical cure.”

India has screened thousands of passengers travelling from Ebola-hit West Africa in recent weeks.

The Indian man carried with him documents from Liberia that stated he had been cured. He will be kept in quarantine until the virus is no longer present in his body, and will undergo tests over the next 10 days or so, a senior Health Ministry official said.

“It is not an Ebola case, he is an Ebola-treated patient who is negative in blood but whose body fluid is positive. He has no symptoms,” the official said, declining to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Peter Piot, a former WHO official who was one of the discoverers of the virus, has in the past expressed concerns about the disease spreading to India. There are nearly 45,000 Indian nationals living in West Africa.

Many experts say densely populated India is not adequately prepared to handle any spread of the highly infectious haemorrhagic fever among its 1.2 billion people. Government health services are overburdened and many people in rural areas struggle to get access to even basic health services.

Hygiene standards are low, especially in smaller towns and villages, and defecating and urinating in the open are common.

The current outbreak of Ebola is the worst on record. It has killed at least 5,177 people, mostly in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, according to the latest figures from the WHO.

(Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Ebola, Ebola Virus, Liberia

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