Thursday, December 28, 2006

Where are the Muslims?

Not too long ago, the Government at the Centre made an attempt to count the number of Muslims in the Indian armed forces. Even before the process could be initiated, certain people with political background opened a front against the Government, with full backing of certain sections of the media. Eventually, the plan had to be shelved and a figure that would have been of much interest to the planners and social activists remained hidden behind veil, very much like the face of a devout Muslim woman.
Those who do not want the Muslims to come in the mainstream may have succeeded for the time being. BJP has already cashed in on this and its victory in the recently concluded mayoral elections was a consequence of this. But the truth is out there in the open for all those who value truth and justice over narrow-minded issues and petty gains.
Today, Muslims are worse than the tribals and dalits, in terms of education and jobs. Nearly 51 per cent Muslims do not know how to write their names. With these figures, you can very well guess the education status of women. Out of those children who go to school, 90% leave school before they reach class X. Of those who appear for Class X exams, only 7.2% are Muslims. In cities, 4.8% and in rural areas only 1.5% Muslim youths go the college. The fact has not escaped the eyes of UNESCO’s Education for Global Monitoring, which says that of the 1.3 crore children in India who are unable to go to schools, majority of them are Muslims. This is in spite of Sarv Shiksha Abhiyaan continuing for years now, which clearly suggests that the benefits of this have not reached the Muslim concentrated areas yet.
One of the main reasons for backwardness of Muslims is poverty. In rural areas, 29% Muslims are merely spending 300 rupees per month. Naturally, when there is not enough to eat, how can they think of education for children. When these people send their children to work on dhabas and shops, so that they can at least get two meals a day, the children are picked up, under the new child labour laws, and parents are coerced by police. In order to get their children released, the parents end up paying whatever little they could have saved till then.
In terms of jobs, there are only 6.4% Muslims in government jobs, though their population in the country is said to be 14%. There are merely 11.2% Muslims in government jobs in Assam, which has nearly 31% Muslim population. In West Bengal, the situation is worse. There are a mere 4.2% Muslims in government jobs when they number nearly one quarter of the population. In UP, there are just 5.1% Muslims in government jobs when their population is 18.5%.
All this would just appear to be statistics if we do not give live examples. The exact position of Muslims in the armed forces may never be known to elucidate their true position and how they have continued to lag behind the mainstream each passing year, ever since Independence. Not just the Government, fact remains that the presence of Muslims is far worse in the private sector where it is possible to find companies which employ hundreds of people and the number of Muslims is so low that it can be counted on the fingers of two hands. The condition is so pathetic that we won’t be surprised if there are companies which employ a few hundred employees with not even one Muslim on its rolls.
BJP may have thwarted the Government’s plan to go ahead with counting the number of Muslims in the armed forces, but there are certain areas where the numbers are starkly visible.
Media is supposed to be secular and above sectarian or communal divisions. From listings given on their own pages, we counted the number of Muslims which prestigious media-houses like Outlook, The Week and India Today employ. This is to be remembered that such listings give the names of employees in key positions only. And from the internet, we got the lists of judges in various courts in north India, where the number of Muslims amount to nearly one fourth of the entire population. Results are there for you to see.
Of the 89 names listed in India Today as their key employees, only one Farzand Ahmed is a Muslim (1.12%). The Week, another leading newsmagazine, too has only one employee, Tariq Ahmad Bhat at Srinagar, out of 78 names that it has listed (1.28%). And Outlook gives names of three Muslims on page 1 viz. Ajaz Ashraf, Saba Naqvi Bhaumick and Prayaag Akbar out of 101 names that it mentions (2.97%). Outlook’s City Limit likewise gives 43 names with none of the names appearing to be of Muslims. If you are of opinion that Muslims may not be favouring the English media, Outlook (Hindi) has 62 names given of which there is not a single Muslim.
We wish to clarify here that Vinod Mehta, the Editor-in-Chief of Outlook Group is known to be one of the biggest champions of secularism in the country. If this is the condition of his publications, it is certainly not due to any nefarious plans but because there are not too many Muslims capable of entering his publications on merit.
See now the list of Muslims in judiciary in some of the North Indian states. Allahabad High Court has four Muslim judges (Justice Syed Rafat Alam, Justice Imtiyaz Murtaza, Justice Sibghat Ullah Khan and Justice Barkat Ali Zaidi) in the Allahabad bench comprising 65 judges and a Chief Justice (6.06% when there are 18.5% Muslims in UP). Lucknow bench has just 2 judges (Justice Abdul Mateen and Justice Allah Raham) out of 21 judges (9.52 %). Rajasthan High Court has only one Muslim judge viz. Justice Mohammad Rafiq in the list of 30 judges (a mere 3.33%). High Court of Gujarat too has just one Muslim judge (Justice Abdul Hamid Qureshi) among 33 judges (3.03%). Only Patna High Court is a marginal better with 5 Muslim judges (Justice Aftab Alam, Justice S. Nayer Hussain, Justice Syed Mohammad Mahfouz Khan, Justice Anwar Ahmed and Justice Smt. Sheema Ali Khan) out of 27 judges (18.52%). The self-proclaimed champions of the Muslim cause, the Leftists, who have been in power in West Bengal for decades now are lagging behind in this area as well. Muslims number one-fourth of the State’s population and there is not even a single name that appears to be that of a Muslim in the list of 45 judges in the Calcutta High Court.
Now see the condition of Delhi that has remained mostly under Congress rule till now. Delhi High Court has a lone judge (Justice Badar Durrez Ahmed) in the list of 34 judges (2.94%). Out of 100 Additional District Judges at Tis Hazari Court, there is not a single Muslim. Likewise, there is no Muslim among 24 Civil Judges in Tis Hazari Court and 4 in Karkardooma Court. There is not a single Muslim among 4 Rent Controller/Addl. Rent Controllers. Out of 44 Addl. Sessions Judges at 3 courts, there is no Muslim though there are several Sikhs, numbering far less than Muslims. Out of 22 judges posted as Matrimonial Judges and at Labour Courts & Industrial Tribunals, again there is no Muslim. In all, out of 228 judges posted at various courts in Delhi, there is only one who is a Muslim (a mere 0.44%). Should we pity the system or pity the Muslims?
While reading all this, it must be kept in mind that most of the figures given are from North India where the population of Muslims is far more than their national average of 14%. In the entire listings of 823 people that we have given above, only 19 are Muslims (2.31%). Imagine the position of Muslims in South Indian states where Muslims measure far less than North India.
In one of his letter to Hi Time Express, Justice Kamleshwar Nath, Retired Judge Allahabad High Court, writes: “The greatest obstacle in our progress as a nation is a strange aloofness – exclusiveness of the largest minority of our Nation, the Muslims. I am quite perplexed when I hear self-serving politicians say: ‘We should do something to bring the Muslims into the mainstream of our society’. Haider saheb: This is putting the cart before the horse; the truth is just the other way round. I write this to you because of the youthful fervour I like in your write-ups and the paper’s moto: “For the young, of the young, by the young”. It is the youth which makes life vibrant, and I wish your paper to smoothen out the aberrations which have dogged and continue in aggravated form – the good, and much needed spirit of one-ness of our people. Please think over the malaise and project a remedy – God will bless you.”
Hope we are doing the same. May God bless us!

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

I do not speak a lie, Allah is witness. Imaan se!

Another New Year is about to begin. One more year added to your life or one cut short – depends on how you look at it. There are some who do not wish to look at all; celebrate life as it comes, they say.
But how do we celebrate? In UP it is not possible to show your wealth or else the kidnappers would be strolling past your door. Unless you have too much of it, the police won’t react. If you have more, and the CM promises that the child would be returned, he returns. ‘Kitna kuch jhatpat badal gaya,’ says Amitabh Bachchan in his new advertisement to promote UP. How true is this!
A lot has clearly changed! As I write this, IBN-7-Cobra Post is doing its breaking ‘khulasa’ (hope you are not too tired of this word – khulasa). ‘Khulasa’ is about the members of Haj Committee taking bribes to send Hajis to Makkah. Not knowing that they are being shown on TV, the bearded representatives of Muslim community continue to say: “Main jhoot nahin bolta, Allah gawah hai. (I don’t speak a lie, Allah is witness to it)”. Some are even talking of going to mosque and confessing the truth in front of Allah. How much of duality has encroached human nature. A maulana, when asked to give reaction is saying smilingly: “Khoon jal raha hai is waqt. (My blood is burning)” This maulana smiles even when his blood burns.
Change is happening on another front. Inability of the male libido to remain faithful is leading to unchecked rise in AIDS cases. Hence the ‘Bindas bol’ campaign! Day is not far when 2-3 year olds will be shouting at top of their voices ‘Condom, condom’, just as they can be seen shouting ‘mohar lagegi haath par’ whenever elections draw near. But with reports coming that AIDS could even spread through mosquito-bites, the subject of being faithful would not remain attached with AIDS in future as people, in 2007, would proudly boast: “I was bitten by a mosquito, a big one… who carried AIDS virus.”
UP is not just the breeding ground for mosquitoes. It is breeding ground for corruption as well. Here I give arguably the most unthinkable way of how people earn illicit money. You are surely not aware of this, unless you are a politician’s kin or have political genes in your DNA. This man is posted at a railway crossing and charges 10 rupees daily from each of the vendors present to close down the crossing several minutes before the train is to arrive. Vendors sell more as traffic comes to a halt. Inspiration from seniors, you may say!
Whatever, 2007 is here to stay… for next 365 days. On the eve of this highly cherished moment of lives, I do not wish to discuss politics and business anymore, even if Ratan Tata is now talking on TV of why he decided to invest in West Bengal and landed in a quagmire, courtesy the politicians. All I wish to do now is to make wishes for 2007. I wish that Sonia Gandhi goes public with her intention to make Rahul the Prime Minister. I wish that AB Vajpayee gets married, finally. I wish that Karunanidhi calls for peace with Jayalalitha. I wish that Laloo Prasad either takes up dairy farming or goes teaching at Harward, post retirement. I wish Kalyan and Rajnath come to realize that they have ‘Singh’ in common. I wish Bret Lee learns Hindi as he has shown willingness to do so in song ‘Han main tumhara hoon’, so that he gets a chance to act and sing in Bollywood. I wish Salman, Pal, Tiwari, Akhilesh and Sri, all come together to work as one family… for one family. And I wish that ‘ho agar agla janam mera to ho Ganga ke tat par’, so that I could aspire to win the Yash Bharati Samman. After all, I am no Abhishek.
You know, being a beardless Muslim, I do not speak a lie. I WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR. Imaan se!

Notes on recently concluded BJP conclave

‘Mayawati is the daughter of wealth’

Even Mayawati, otherwise thought to be a future ally of BJP, was not spared. The CD released on the eve of the 3-day conclave presented her as a daughter of wealth, who was befooling the Dalits and does not care for them at all. She was shown wearing a crown of pearl and it was said that her dream was to see UP as her mayanagri (city of wealth). Her frequent traveling on government’s exchequer, Taj Corridor issue, fleecing money from government officers on the occasion of her birthday – all these were shown as reasons to label her as the daughter of wealth.
In spite of this, the venom spilled out against Mayawati was far less compared to the amount of attacks made on Congress and SP, thereby giving a signal that BJP was also looking at possibility of forming a government jointly with BSP, if it failed to win a clear majority.

Notes on recently concluded BJP conclave

RSS shows its strength

It was a show not by the BJP but by RSS and its sister organizations like VHP. It were they who mobilized the workers, it were they who set the agenda. Return to hard-line Hindutva was a result of their efforts. And the stalwarts of the BJP followed meekly to the dictates, like mice behind the pauper.

Notes on recently concluded BJP conclave

Look who’s speaking on farmer’s problems

In a press conference held at BJP office Arun Jaitley spoke at length on the problems of the farmer community. He spoke on how the fertile land at Singoor in West Bengal has been given to TATA and how unfair treatment was resulting in more suicides. In nutshell, he blamed the Left parties and the government in the Centre and UP for the plight of farmers.
A shade prior to elections, Arun Jaitley was apt in focusing on the problems of one of the largest chunks of vote – the farmers. After all, most of the political parties have been using farmers only for votes and have done little for them. What Jaitley didn’t spell out however was that it was the Vajpayee government at the Centre that formulated most of the strategies that went against the interests of the farming community. Bowing down to the pressures of the World Bank, removing the limit on hoarding and allowing FDI in agro-business are all attributed to the BJP. Unless corrective measures are taken immediately, greater problems are in store for the farmers in the near future.

Notes on recently concluded BJP conclave

If there is a meeting of the BJP, Muslims ought to be there

If there is a meeting of the BJP, Muslims ought to be there, albeit not through their physical presence but through presence in the form of issues built around their community. As soon as the signal was issued by the RSS headquarters, it was pre-decided that during these three days, more was to be said about Muslims (one side of it), than has ever been said before.
Needless to point out, Muslim appeasement was top on agenda. The Congress was blamed for trying to count their presence in the armed forces. Jehadi terrorism and national integrity were hot topics and Congress was labelled to be the party that was favouring the Muslims (our cover story will tell you how far they are correct).
As leader after leader vied with each other to surpass each other in attacking the Muslims, it was evident that the dictate had come from the RSS headquarters and these leaders were merely trying to score points. Not just Atalji, Advani Ji, Rajnath ji but also the likes of Arun ji, Sushma ji and others spoke. After all, the venue was Saraswati Shishu Mandir, run by an RSS affiliate organization and the mob too had come courtesy RSS, who all wanted to listen to this and nothing else.

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Notes on recently concluded BJP conclave

Chhattisgarh full of surprises

Politics was not the only thing discussed during the 3-day BJP conclave held at Lucknow recently. Brijmohan Agrawal, Tourism Minister, Government of Chhatisgarh, came armed with CDs and brochures to showcase the tourism potential of this highly neglected state so far. No doubt, Agrawal has left no stone unturned to harness this State’s potential to invite tourists from the rest of the country.
From going on a wonderful experience of discovering ‘one of the last frontiers of tribal India – Bastar’ that is bestowed with a great deal of natural bounties besides possessing marvels like Battisha Temple, Bhorum Dev’s Temple, Mandir Tala, Kanker Palace and Twin Ganesh at Barsur, places of Buddhist importance like Bodha Vihar at Sirpur, the State has a rich potential in flora and fauna. The state also has several other places of religious importance for the Hindus like at Malhar, Pali, Chitrakoot, Tirathgarh, Dongergarh, Ratanpur and Kabir Chabutra. The Rajim Kumbha was held in this state between 13th to 26th February, 2006.The presentation made by Brijmohan Agrawal on this occasion was worth witnessing as the Minister presented the bouquet of tourist destinations in front of the media persons from Lucknow. If Agrawal has his way, Chhatisgarh with its largely unexplored and virgin tourist attractions, would go on to become much-visited destination for the tourists.