Deepak Sapra May 18, 2004
#33 Posted by avkrishna on May 20, 2004 6:02:21 am
A potential positive fallout of the new political order is that Chidambaram may become the Finance Minister (though he will have tough competition from Pranab Mukharjee).
If it happens, This is a Dream Team for Indian economy. It can hardly get better than this.
Of course, they should be able to resist the pressures of Sonia`s cotorie and Left.
- Avkrishna
If it happens, This is a Dream Team for Indian economy. It can hardly get better than this.
Of course, they should be able to resist the pressures of Sonia`s cotorie and Left.
- Avkrishna
#34 Posted by mumbaikar on May 20, 2004 9:05:41 am
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#35 Posted by rahul_capri on May 20, 2004 9:05:42 am
#30 Mumbaikar.
Looks like I have seen this post somewhere else :-)
Looks like I have seen this post somewhere else :-)
#36 Posted by teshah on May 20, 2004 10:41:10 pm
Only a few days ago the world was all praise for the democracy of India where a revolution has been brought about through the vote of the people. The euphoria, however, proved to be short lived when Sonia Gandhi, who was elected the leader of the majority in the Lower House and as such destined to become the Prime Minister suddenly declined to accept the highest
appointment in the democratic hierarchy of India under dubious circumstances. In her greatness she exposed the meanness of the Hindu mentality which wanted democracy only if it meant Hindu dominance. I was shocked personally but relieved also of the doubt I had in my mind about the political sagacity of the Quaide Azam in rejecting the offer of prime ministership of India by Congress if he forgoes the demand for Pakistan. The Quaide Azam had perhaps the bitter experience of the Hindu meanness, which has now surfaced in the BJP in the shape of Sushma Sawaraj who refused to accept the mandate of the people if it meant Sonia as P.M. of her Bharat Mata. But we are reassured also as India has reasserted its faith in secularism which has reduced the extremists in the BJP like Sushma Sawaraj to a mere lunatic fringe now. Sonia Zinda Bad. You are great. You have resurrected the true spirit of India which we all love.
#37 Posted by harimau on May 20, 2004 10:41:11 pm
All right, let us look at this scenario:
If Varun Gandhi marries a Pakistani (Muslim) woman, how many of you would want Varun`s widow to become the Prime Minister of India?
What if she happens to be the granddaughter of Gen. Hamid Gul?
If Varun Gandhi marries a Pakistani (Muslim) woman, how many of you would want Varun`s widow to become the Prime Minister of India?
What if she happens to be the granddaughter of Gen. Hamid Gul?
#38 Posted by harimau on May 21, 2004 5:31:42 am
Ref teshah #36
[Only a few days ago the world was all praise for the democracy of India where a revolution has been brought about through the vote of the people. The euphoria, however, proved to be short lived when Sonia Gandhi, who was elected the leader of the majority in the Lower House and as such destined to become the Prime Minister suddenly declined to accept the highest
appointment in the democratic hierarchy of India under dubious circumstances. In her greatness she exposed the meanness of the Hindu mentality which wanted democracy only if it meant Hindu dominance. I was shocked personally but relieved also of the doubt I had in my mind about the political sagacity of the Quaide Azam in rejecting the offer of prime ministership of India by Congress if he forgoes the demand for Pakistan. The Quaide Azam had perhaps the bitter experience of the Hindu meanness, which has now surfaced in the BJP in the shape of Sushma Sawaraj who refused to accept the mandate of the people if it meant Sonia as P.M. of her Bharat Mata. But we are reassured also as India has reasserted its faith in secularism which has reduced the extremists in the BJP like Sushma Sawaraj to a mere lunatic fringe now. Sonia Zinda Bad. You are great. You have resurrected the true spirit of India which we all love.]
That true spirit of India was not unique to Sushma Swaraj and the Hindus.
P. A. Sangma, a Christian from one of the Northeastern states (not a so-called mainstream Aryan but from a tribe of Mongol descent) and a former Speaker of Parliament also declared that he would resign from his elected position of MP if Sonia were to become the Prime Minister. In fact, he split from the Congress several years ago and formed the NCP on the basis that Sonia cannot be the leader of India.
Sushma, PA Sangma and hundreds of millions of Indians have accepted Manmohan Singh, a Sikh, as their Prime Minister.
If the Congress had fielded someone with the organizational ability of Abdul Rahman Antulay as their candidate for Prime Minister, not one Indian would have complained. Because, for ill or good, Muslims have been part of India for 1000+ years.
Nor did they complain about electing YSR Reddy, a Christian, to be Chief Minister of Andhra or the continuance of AK Anthony as Chief Minister of Kerala. Nobody ever asks what the religions or the ethnicities of the Chief Ministers of Nagaland, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, Tripura, Meghalaya and Manipur are. At least some of them are likely to be Christian and quite a few likely to be non-Aryan.
As to the intolerance of Hindus, you probably are not aware -- after all, isn`t ignorance bliss and stupidity heavenly -- that it was the ``secular`` Congress and Sonia Gandhi who opposed the candidacy of AP Alexander, a Christian, for President of India when his name was floated by the BJP. Their ``secular`` logic was Indians won`t accept a Christian in both the Presidency and the Prime Ministership and they wanted the Prime Ministership reserved for Sonia Gandhi.
For your information, AP Alexander was a life-long adviser to the Nehru family.
So much for a Christian`s (Sonia) way of thanking someone for life-long service.
I am sure you find it perfectly acceptable that the Pakistan constitution (ha, ha, ha) does NOT permit a NATIVE-BORN CITIZEN of Pakistan to become the Prime Minister or President if he is a Christian, Hindu, Sikh or Parsi. Or Ahmadiyya.
[Only a few days ago the world was all praise for the democracy of India where a revolution has been brought about through the vote of the people. The euphoria, however, proved to be short lived when Sonia Gandhi, who was elected the leader of the majority in the Lower House and as such destined to become the Prime Minister suddenly declined to accept the highest
appointment in the democratic hierarchy of India under dubious circumstances. In her greatness she exposed the meanness of the Hindu mentality which wanted democracy only if it meant Hindu dominance. I was shocked personally but relieved also of the doubt I had in my mind about the political sagacity of the Quaide Azam in rejecting the offer of prime ministership of India by Congress if he forgoes the demand for Pakistan. The Quaide Azam had perhaps the bitter experience of the Hindu meanness, which has now surfaced in the BJP in the shape of Sushma Sawaraj who refused to accept the mandate of the people if it meant Sonia as P.M. of her Bharat Mata. But we are reassured also as India has reasserted its faith in secularism which has reduced the extremists in the BJP like Sushma Sawaraj to a mere lunatic fringe now. Sonia Zinda Bad. You are great. You have resurrected the true spirit of India which we all love.]
That true spirit of India was not unique to Sushma Swaraj and the Hindus.
P. A. Sangma, a Christian from one of the Northeastern states (not a so-called mainstream Aryan but from a tribe of Mongol descent) and a former Speaker of Parliament also declared that he would resign from his elected position of MP if Sonia were to become the Prime Minister. In fact, he split from the Congress several years ago and formed the NCP on the basis that Sonia cannot be the leader of India.
Sushma, PA Sangma and hundreds of millions of Indians have accepted Manmohan Singh, a Sikh, as their Prime Minister.
If the Congress had fielded someone with the organizational ability of Abdul Rahman Antulay as their candidate for Prime Minister, not one Indian would have complained. Because, for ill or good, Muslims have been part of India for 1000+ years.
Nor did they complain about electing YSR Reddy, a Christian, to be Chief Minister of Andhra or the continuance of AK Anthony as Chief Minister of Kerala. Nobody ever asks what the religions or the ethnicities of the Chief Ministers of Nagaland, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, Tripura, Meghalaya and Manipur are. At least some of them are likely to be Christian and quite a few likely to be non-Aryan.
As to the intolerance of Hindus, you probably are not aware -- after all, isn`t ignorance bliss and stupidity heavenly -- that it was the ``secular`` Congress and Sonia Gandhi who opposed the candidacy of AP Alexander, a Christian, for President of India when his name was floated by the BJP. Their ``secular`` logic was Indians won`t accept a Christian in both the Presidency and the Prime Ministership and they wanted the Prime Ministership reserved for Sonia Gandhi.
For your information, AP Alexander was a life-long adviser to the Nehru family.
So much for a Christian`s (Sonia) way of thanking someone for life-long service.
I am sure you find it perfectly acceptable that the Pakistan constitution (ha, ha, ha) does NOT permit a NATIVE-BORN CITIZEN of Pakistan to become the Prime Minister or President if he is a Christian, Hindu, Sikh or Parsi. Or Ahmadiyya.
#39 Posted by Humsab on May 21, 2004 5:31:43 am
# 36
What is this Hindu mentality and where is your logic? It seems logic is a subject they don`t teach in your country.
The mandate you are talking about came from the same majority Hindu population. Learn to differentiate between people and political party. In any case this whole episode has no reflection on Indian Democracy.
By the way is it possible that your soft corner for foriegners is because you people are taught to admire your conquerers and hate yourself?
Regards
What is this Hindu mentality and where is your logic? It seems logic is a subject they don`t teach in your country.
The mandate you are talking about came from the same majority Hindu population. Learn to differentiate between people and political party. In any case this whole episode has no reflection on Indian Democracy.
By the way is it possible that your soft corner for foriegners is because you people are taught to admire your conquerers and hate yourself?
Regards
#40 Posted by nb on May 21, 2004 5:31:44 am
I see your point, harimau, but can we please wish poor Varun well? He`s the brightest of the lot. Since he`ll win an election whenever he wants and become PM whenver he wants, if we are to have The Family, regardless of what you and I may want, we may as well have him.
Anyway, just by being a Gandhi, the stain of being General Gul`s granddaughter will wash off, she will be more Indian than me, and if I question that, I`m a Hindu supremacist.
Now, does anyone know why the authorities in the US questioned Rahul? Did it have something to do with the Colombian link?
Anyway, just by being a Gandhi, the stain of being General Gul`s granddaughter will wash off, she will be more Indian than me, and if I question that, I`m a Hindu supremacist.
Now, does anyone know why the authorities in the US questioned Rahul? Did it have something to do with the Colombian link?
#41 Posted by Tmk on May 21, 2004 5:32:09 am
Welcome awaits India`s PM in Pakistani birthplace
By Tahir Ikram
GAH, Pakistan (Reuters) - The people of Gah in Pakistan have a good feeling about Manmohan Singh.
He may have left more than 60 years ago, but this native son has become India`s prime minister-elect.
``I am very happy a son of our village is going to be the prime minister of India,`` said Raja Gulsher, a farmer who served in the medical corp during the 1965 war, one of three fought with India since Partition in 1947.
``If any of the air and water in this place has had an effect on him, he will strike a friendship with Pakistan.``
In a quirky happenstance, both leaders of the nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan were born in what is now enemy territory.
Pakistan`s President Pervez Musharraf was born in Delhi.
Both men carry memories of those tumultuous times when the subcontinent was divided, millions of Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus were killed, and Pakistan was created.
Singh has pledged to work with Musharraf to put decades of enmity between their now nuclear-armed nations behind them.
Gulsher said he knows it won`t be easy for Singh.
``We know his constraints. Even then I am sure he will maintain friendship with us. If he comes to our village I`ll be the first to welcome him.``
The pace of life in this rural backwater some 80 km southwest of Islamabad hasn`t changed much since Singh was raised here in the 1930s.
Traffic races over the nearby motorway, but there is no road from it to Gah. Women still draw water by hand from the wells, where Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs of a bygone era once filled their pitchers from separate pools.
They have electricity these days, and some have televisions.
But the modern world makes few intrusions among the mud walled homes or down the narrow uneven lanes of this community of less than two thousand people and their cattle, sheep and goats.
What has changed now is that everyone is a Muslim.
PRIMARY SCHOOL
When Singh attended the government primary school in the late 1930s, Hindus and Sikhs accounted for about half of Gah`s population.
``We used to live without any problem. We used to help each other,`` said Mohammad Khan about relations between Muslims and Hindus. ``They were half of the population. We used to play together, we used to fight together, we used to study together.``
Khan was serving with the British Indian Army in Malaysia in August, 1947 when independence came, and recalls raising a Pakistan flag, while a Christian soldier hoisted India`s tricolour.
Memories of Partition in Gah were less proud.
Baz Khan was 12 years old.
``I was grazing cattle when people came running towards me saying the village has been attacked. I could see smoke and fire coming out of the village.``
Muslims from other villages had attacked Hindu and Sikh households. Some Muslims from Gah, Khan says, gave shelter to their Hindu and Sikh neighbours.
Manmohan Singh`s father moved his family from Gah some years earlier and and during the upheaval of Partition, the dried fruit merchant moved to Amritsar.
Memories in Gah have faded.
Ahmed Khan can`t remember attending class with the young Manmohan Singh, though the school register shows they were contemporaries.
But Khan, while tilling his field under the scorching sun with temperatures soaring above 40 Celsius, said he was proud of the fact today.
``It`s a matter of great happiness. I would want him to be prime minister of India and he should come and visit his village,`` Ahmed Khan told Reuters.
Farmer Mohammad Ashraf at first didn`t remember any Manmohan Singh either.
But asked if he knew a son of Gurmukh Singh Kohli, Ashraf`s seventy-year-old wrinkled face broke into a grin.
``Oh, you mean little Mohna.``
He has no idea what happened to little Mohna after 1941.
``I failed class four, and he passed, after that I don`t know where he went.``
Singh`s new address is 7, Racecourse Road, New Delhi, official residence of the Prime Minister of India. It`s a long way from Gah.
By Tahir Ikram
GAH, Pakistan (Reuters) - The people of Gah in Pakistan have a good feeling about Manmohan Singh.
He may have left more than 60 years ago, but this native son has become India`s prime minister-elect.
``I am very happy a son of our village is going to be the prime minister of India,`` said Raja Gulsher, a farmer who served in the medical corp during the 1965 war, one of three fought with India since Partition in 1947.
``If any of the air and water in this place has had an effect on him, he will strike a friendship with Pakistan.``
In a quirky happenstance, both leaders of the nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan were born in what is now enemy territory.
Pakistan`s President Pervez Musharraf was born in Delhi.
Both men carry memories of those tumultuous times when the subcontinent was divided, millions of Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus were killed, and Pakistan was created.
Singh has pledged to work with Musharraf to put decades of enmity between their now nuclear-armed nations behind them.
Gulsher said he knows it won`t be easy for Singh.
``We know his constraints. Even then I am sure he will maintain friendship with us. If he comes to our village I`ll be the first to welcome him.``
The pace of life in this rural backwater some 80 km southwest of Islamabad hasn`t changed much since Singh was raised here in the 1930s.
Traffic races over the nearby motorway, but there is no road from it to Gah. Women still draw water by hand from the wells, where Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs of a bygone era once filled their pitchers from separate pools.
They have electricity these days, and some have televisions.
But the modern world makes few intrusions among the mud walled homes or down the narrow uneven lanes of this community of less than two thousand people and their cattle, sheep and goats.
What has changed now is that everyone is a Muslim.
PRIMARY SCHOOL
When Singh attended the government primary school in the late 1930s, Hindus and Sikhs accounted for about half of Gah`s population.
``We used to live without any problem. We used to help each other,`` said Mohammad Khan about relations between Muslims and Hindus. ``They were half of the population. We used to play together, we used to fight together, we used to study together.``
Khan was serving with the British Indian Army in Malaysia in August, 1947 when independence came, and recalls raising a Pakistan flag, while a Christian soldier hoisted India`s tricolour.
Memories of Partition in Gah were less proud.
Baz Khan was 12 years old.
``I was grazing cattle when people came running towards me saying the village has been attacked. I could see smoke and fire coming out of the village.``
Muslims from other villages had attacked Hindu and Sikh households. Some Muslims from Gah, Khan says, gave shelter to their Hindu and Sikh neighbours.
Manmohan Singh`s father moved his family from Gah some years earlier and and during the upheaval of Partition, the dried fruit merchant moved to Amritsar.
Memories in Gah have faded.
Ahmed Khan can`t remember attending class with the young Manmohan Singh, though the school register shows they were contemporaries.
But Khan, while tilling his field under the scorching sun with temperatures soaring above 40 Celsius, said he was proud of the fact today.
``It`s a matter of great happiness. I would want him to be prime minister of India and he should come and visit his village,`` Ahmed Khan told Reuters.
Farmer Mohammad Ashraf at first didn`t remember any Manmohan Singh either.
But asked if he knew a son of Gurmukh Singh Kohli, Ashraf`s seventy-year-old wrinkled face broke into a grin.
``Oh, you mean little Mohna.``
He has no idea what happened to little Mohna after 1941.
``I failed class four, and he passed, after that I don`t know where he went.``
Singh`s new address is 7, Racecourse Road, New Delhi, official residence of the Prime Minister of India. It`s a long way from Gah.
#42 Posted by sadna on May 21, 2004 12:07:50 pm
nb #40
``Anyway, just by being a Gandhi, the stain of being General Gul`s granddaughter will wash off, she will be more Indian than me, and if I question that, I`m a Hindu supremacist. ``
Understand that Hindu = extremist/supremacist/hegemonist by definition. Add to this that Muslim = liberal by definition, hence being anti-Hindu is liberalism.
For inhabitants of the country overflowing with liberals on our west, only a self-abnegating Hindu is not a extremist/supremacist. This holds true across the whole spectrum of liberals from Naqshbandi to Najam Sethi.
``Anyway, just by being a Gandhi, the stain of being General Gul`s granddaughter will wash off, she will be more Indian than me, and if I question that, I`m a Hindu supremacist. ``
Understand that Hindu = extremist/supremacist/hegemonist by definition. Add to this that Muslim = liberal by definition, hence being anti-Hindu is liberalism.
For inhabitants of the country overflowing with liberals on our west, only a self-abnegating Hindu is not a extremist/supremacist. This holds true across the whole spectrum of liberals from Naqshbandi to Najam Sethi.
#43 Posted by dost_mittar on May 21, 2004 12:43:18 pm
sadna#40:
``For inhabitants of the country overflowing with liberals on our west, only a self-abnegating Hindu is not a extremist/supremacist. This holds true across the whole spectrum of liberals from Naqshbandi to Najam Sethi.``
It is quite unfair of you to blame the liberals on our west. This was the same concept used by the Nehruvian secularists and our western liberal friends are just sticking to the old definition. I know! I lived through that period and was one of them myself once.
``For inhabitants of the country overflowing with liberals on our west, only a self-abnegating Hindu is not a extremist/supremacist. This holds true across the whole spectrum of liberals from Naqshbandi to Najam Sethi.``
It is quite unfair of you to blame the liberals on our west. This was the same concept used by the Nehruvian secularists and our western liberal friends are just sticking to the old definition. I know! I lived through that period and was one of them myself once.
#44 Posted by nakhok on May 21, 2004 6:24:48 pm
# 36 by teshah
+++++
I was shocked personally but relieved also of the doubt I had in my mind about the political sagacity of the Quaide Azam in rejecting the offer of prime ministership of India by Congress if he forgoes the demand for Pakistan.
+++++
teshah is overstating the sagacity of ``the Quaide Azam``.
Separate electorates and the Pakistan Movement in British India were all predicated on the argument that one-man one-vote democracy is unsuitable for a pluralistic society like pre-partition India.
Shrill complaints against the ``tyranny of the majority`` was the foundation of the Pakistan Movement. But it is as ironic as it is apt, that in post-partition era, Jinnah`s Pakistan continued to be plagued by the very same premises that gave it birth, namely, that one man one-vote democracy is unsuitable for a pluralistic society.
The ruling elite in West Pakistan which had once inveighed against the Hindu majority in pre-partition India, found themselves inveighing against the Hindu-tainted majority of East Pakistan. ``Separate Electorates`` and ``Parity`` were the neo-shibboleths to neutralize the majority voters in East Pakistan from having a significant say in Pakistan`s affairs.
Pakistan`s ruling elite could not live under the ``tyrannjy of the majority``. So even in independent Pakistan it took to insisting on living under ``tyranny of the minority``!!!
Today, it is Pakistan`s military that has emerged as the crown jewel of Pakistan`s ruling minority.
Regardless of what teshah might claim, many a Pakistani journalist has been drawing the attention of readers of mainstream Pakistani newspapers to India`s democracy as an edifice worthy of replication in Pakistan. Here`s a typical example:
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_22-5-2004_pg3_2
Daily Times, Lahore, Pakistan
Saturday, May 22, 2004
A remarkable election
By Abbas Rashid
..... it is not a mean achievement for democracy in India that it now has persons belonging to minority communities occupying the two highest offices: the prime minister is a Sikh and the president is a Muslim. .....
teshah will do well to recall that Pakistan`s lawmakers have expressly saddled the country with laws that prohibit non-Muslims from occupying the high public offices of the country.
Abbas Rashid went on to write, ``Undoubtedly, India deserves to celebrate a mature political transition and the strengthening of its democracy.``
Here are a few more comments from the Pakistan Press:
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_21-5-2004_pg3_2
Daily Times, Pakistan
Friday, May 21, 2004
The political transition in India
..... The right lesson to be drawn from India`s election is that sensible economic management pays but arrogance and bigotry does not. And, above all, that we should have faith in the good sense of the common man exercised via the power of the vote.
http://www.jang-group.com/thenews/may2004-daily/18-05-2004/oped/o4.htm
The News, Karachi, Pakistan
Tuesday May 18, 2004-- Rabi-ul-Awwal 27, 1425 A.H.
India`s elections and us
By Inayatullah
pacade@brain.net.pk
..... ..... The India elections - the smooth transfer of political power and the way democracy works in our neighbouring country, should jolt us into a serious and sincere review of how we have messed up our institutions, the administration and the society. .....
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_18-5-2004_pg3_6
The Daily Times, Pakistan
Tuesday, May 18, 2004
The great Indian shift
By Rashed Rahman
..... The relatively peaceful huge election exercise (minor incidents of violence notwithstanding) and the peaceful transfer of power have once again demonstrated the strength of Indian democracy, irrespective of warts and all. .....
http://www.dawn.com/2004/05/16/ed.htm
DAWN, Karachi, Pakistan
16 May 2004 Sunday 25 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1425
EDITORIAL
Neighbourhood pointers
..... the intense electoral exercise that our next-door neighbour, facing many of the same problems as us, has just gone through holds several lessons for us. First and foremost of course is that this was India`s 14th general election since independence; we had no national poll until 1970, and since then have had eight elections.
Even this number does not represent democratic progression because of the abrupt dismissal of governments and assemblies, and also because some electoral exercises were tainted by rigging. .....
..... Yet the overall outcome of a general election has never been in dispute, and has been accepted with grace by the losers. .....
..... Even Bangladesh might soon begin to rival us in terms of continuity and endurance of the political and democratic process. Is a comparison with Bangladesh, which was once a part of us, also injudicious? .....
http://www.dawn.com/weekly/ayaz/ayaz.htm
DAWN, Karachi, Pakistan
21 May 2004 Friday 01 Rabi-us-Saani 1425
Triumph of pragmatism
By Ayaz Amir
..... Every villager in Pakistan knows the story of the farmer who went to a village festival (mela) and there lost his blanket. Looking everywhere for it and not finding it, he said the whole purpose of the mela was to steal his blanket.
Pakistanis can be forgiven for thinking that the whole purpose of holding the Indian elections was to heap scorn on Pakistan. There was nothing unusual about Atal Behari Vajpayee conceding defeat when it became obvious that his party was trailing the Congress. This is what happens in every parliamentary democracy and this was not the first time it was happening in India.
But for Pakistanis this normal exercise was thoroughly amazing. Conditioned to the marvels of military rule, the idea of a peaceful transfer of power after an election, no one crying foul and everyone accepting the result, seemed so alien and unbelievable. They were not slow to express their wonder.
As if this first shock to Pakistani sensibilities wasn`t enough, a second was administered when Mrs Sonia Gandhi declined the prime ministership, passing the mantle instead to Manmohan Singh (honoured son of Chakwal). It doesn`t happen this way in India and it certainly doesn`t in Pakistan.
Consider the grace and dignity Mrs Sonia Gandhi has shown. Consider her measured words, no empty rhetoric (Ms Bhutto please note), no verbosity. Compare this with the desire for eternal power evident in Islamabad and it is tempting to conclude that the Pakistani political class and leadership are simply incapable of getting it right about the country`s affairs.
Like all his military predecessors Gen Musharraf thinks he is saving Pakistan. A bit of Sonian renunciation, or call it Sonian wisdom, should do him a world of good.
The political situation here is so poised that if Musharraf overcomes his fears and settles for democracy, the genuine thing rather than the fake currency we have to soil our hands with, he stands to gain the most. .....
http://www.dawn.com/weekly/ayaz/20040514.htm
DAWN, Karachi, Pakistan
14 May 2004 Friday 23 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1425
We don`t get it, do we?
By Ayaz Amir
India goes to the polls and the world notices. Pakistan plunges into another exercise in authoritarian management and the world notices but through jaundiced eyes. Are we so dumb that the comparison escapes us? .....
..... In India, if Pakistanis haven`t noticed, the chief election commissioner is the chief election commissioner. Apart from his mistress, if he has one, no one dare meddle in his affairs. In Pakistan the election commission gyrates to orders from above. Do I divulge a state secret? Everyone here knows this to be true.
When will we wake up? When will we learn? When will it dawn on us that it is not India`s size, population, tourism or IT industry making us look small but Indian democracy? Figure this out how you will, this is how the chips fall.
http://jang.com.pk/thenews/may2004-daily/21-05-2004/oped/o1.htm
The News, Karachi, Pakistan
Friday May 21, 2004-- Rabi-us-Sani 01, 1425 A.H.
The failure of our democracy
By Shafqat Mahmood
smahmood@lhr.comsats.net.pk
The success of Indian democracy is a huge blow to the ego. One feels self-conscious, almost ashamed at the ease with which the Indians manage free and fair elections and transfer of power. We, on the other hand, are still ruled by a General fifty-six years after independence and in the twenty first century. Our elections are almost never free
and transfer of power right from the start has been anything but smooth. What accounts for this? What is so inherently wrong in our system or psyche that does not allow democracy to take root or flourish? .....
+++++
I was shocked personally but relieved also of the doubt I had in my mind about the political sagacity of the Quaide Azam in rejecting the offer of prime ministership of India by Congress if he forgoes the demand for Pakistan.
+++++
teshah is overstating the sagacity of ``the Quaide Azam``.
Separate electorates and the Pakistan Movement in British India were all predicated on the argument that one-man one-vote democracy is unsuitable for a pluralistic society like pre-partition India.
Shrill complaints against the ``tyranny of the majority`` was the foundation of the Pakistan Movement. But it is as ironic as it is apt, that in post-partition era, Jinnah`s Pakistan continued to be plagued by the very same premises that gave it birth, namely, that one man one-vote democracy is unsuitable for a pluralistic society.
The ruling elite in West Pakistan which had once inveighed against the Hindu majority in pre-partition India, found themselves inveighing against the Hindu-tainted majority of East Pakistan. ``Separate Electorates`` and ``Parity`` were the neo-shibboleths to neutralize the majority voters in East Pakistan from having a significant say in Pakistan`s affairs.
Pakistan`s ruling elite could not live under the ``tyrannjy of the majority``. So even in independent Pakistan it took to insisting on living under ``tyranny of the minority``!!!
Today, it is Pakistan`s military that has emerged as the crown jewel of Pakistan`s ruling minority.
Regardless of what teshah might claim, many a Pakistani journalist has been drawing the attention of readers of mainstream Pakistani newspapers to India`s democracy as an edifice worthy of replication in Pakistan. Here`s a typical example:
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_22-5-2004_pg3_2
Daily Times, Lahore, Pakistan
Saturday, May 22, 2004
A remarkable election
By Abbas Rashid
..... it is not a mean achievement for democracy in India that it now has persons belonging to minority communities occupying the two highest offices: the prime minister is a Sikh and the president is a Muslim. .....
teshah will do well to recall that Pakistan`s lawmakers have expressly saddled the country with laws that prohibit non-Muslims from occupying the high public offices of the country.
Abbas Rashid went on to write, ``Undoubtedly, India deserves to celebrate a mature political transition and the strengthening of its democracy.``
Here are a few more comments from the Pakistan Press:
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_21-5-2004_pg3_2
Daily Times, Pakistan
Friday, May 21, 2004
The political transition in India
..... The right lesson to be drawn from India`s election is that sensible economic management pays but arrogance and bigotry does not. And, above all, that we should have faith in the good sense of the common man exercised via the power of the vote.
http://www.jang-group.com/thenews/may2004-daily/18-05-2004/oped/o4.htm
The News, Karachi, Pakistan
Tuesday May 18, 2004-- Rabi-ul-Awwal 27, 1425 A.H.
India`s elections and us
By Inayatullah
pacade@brain.net.pk
..... ..... The India elections - the smooth transfer of political power and the way democracy works in our neighbouring country, should jolt us into a serious and sincere review of how we have messed up our institutions, the administration and the society. .....
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_18-5-2004_pg3_6
The Daily Times, Pakistan
Tuesday, May 18, 2004
The great Indian shift
By Rashed Rahman
..... The relatively peaceful huge election exercise (minor incidents of violence notwithstanding) and the peaceful transfer of power have once again demonstrated the strength of Indian democracy, irrespective of warts and all. .....
http://www.dawn.com/2004/05/16/ed.htm
DAWN, Karachi, Pakistan
16 May 2004 Sunday 25 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1425
EDITORIAL
Neighbourhood pointers
..... the intense electoral exercise that our next-door neighbour, facing many of the same problems as us, has just gone through holds several lessons for us. First and foremost of course is that this was India`s 14th general election since independence; we had no national poll until 1970, and since then have had eight elections.
Even this number does not represent democratic progression because of the abrupt dismissal of governments and assemblies, and also because some electoral exercises were tainted by rigging. .....
..... Yet the overall outcome of a general election has never been in dispute, and has been accepted with grace by the losers. .....
..... Even Bangladesh might soon begin to rival us in terms of continuity and endurance of the political and democratic process. Is a comparison with Bangladesh, which was once a part of us, also injudicious? .....
http://www.dawn.com/weekly/ayaz/ayaz.htm
DAWN, Karachi, Pakistan
21 May 2004 Friday 01 Rabi-us-Saani 1425
Triumph of pragmatism
By Ayaz Amir
..... Every villager in Pakistan knows the story of the farmer who went to a village festival (mela) and there lost his blanket. Looking everywhere for it and not finding it, he said the whole purpose of the mela was to steal his blanket.
Pakistanis can be forgiven for thinking that the whole purpose of holding the Indian elections was to heap scorn on Pakistan. There was nothing unusual about Atal Behari Vajpayee conceding defeat when it became obvious that his party was trailing the Congress. This is what happens in every parliamentary democracy and this was not the first time it was happening in India.
But for Pakistanis this normal exercise was thoroughly amazing. Conditioned to the marvels of military rule, the idea of a peaceful transfer of power after an election, no one crying foul and everyone accepting the result, seemed so alien and unbelievable. They were not slow to express their wonder.
As if this first shock to Pakistani sensibilities wasn`t enough, a second was administered when Mrs Sonia Gandhi declined the prime ministership, passing the mantle instead to Manmohan Singh (honoured son of Chakwal). It doesn`t happen this way in India and it certainly doesn`t in Pakistan.
Consider the grace and dignity Mrs Sonia Gandhi has shown. Consider her measured words, no empty rhetoric (Ms Bhutto please note), no verbosity. Compare this with the desire for eternal power evident in Islamabad and it is tempting to conclude that the Pakistani political class and leadership are simply incapable of getting it right about the country`s affairs.
Like all his military predecessors Gen Musharraf thinks he is saving Pakistan. A bit of Sonian renunciation, or call it Sonian wisdom, should do him a world of good.
The political situation here is so poised that if Musharraf overcomes his fears and settles for democracy, the genuine thing rather than the fake currency we have to soil our hands with, he stands to gain the most. .....
http://www.dawn.com/weekly/ayaz/20040514.htm
DAWN, Karachi, Pakistan
14 May 2004 Friday 23 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1425
We don`t get it, do we?
By Ayaz Amir
India goes to the polls and the world notices. Pakistan plunges into another exercise in authoritarian management and the world notices but through jaundiced eyes. Are we so dumb that the comparison escapes us? .....
..... In India, if Pakistanis haven`t noticed, the chief election commissioner is the chief election commissioner. Apart from his mistress, if he has one, no one dare meddle in his affairs. In Pakistan the election commission gyrates to orders from above. Do I divulge a state secret? Everyone here knows this to be true.
When will we wake up? When will we learn? When will it dawn on us that it is not India`s size, population, tourism or IT industry making us look small but Indian democracy? Figure this out how you will, this is how the chips fall.
http://jang.com.pk/thenews/may2004-daily/21-05-2004/oped/o1.htm
The News, Karachi, Pakistan
Friday May 21, 2004-- Rabi-us-Sani 01, 1425 A.H.
The failure of our democracy
By Shafqat Mahmood
smahmood@lhr.comsats.net.pk
The success of Indian democracy is a huge blow to the ego. One feels self-conscious, almost ashamed at the ease with which the Indians manage free and fair elections and transfer of power. We, on the other hand, are still ruled by a General fifty-six years after independence and in the twenty first century. Our elections are almost never free
and transfer of power right from the start has been anything but smooth. What accounts for this? What is so inherently wrong in our system or psyche that does not allow democracy to take root or flourish? .....
#45 Posted by sadna on May 21, 2004 6:24:49 pm
dost-mittar #43
Quite true, I did have them in mind too. And why unfair? Pakistanis are as responsible for their own mindsets as are Indians.
Quite true, I did have them in mind too. And why unfair? Pakistanis are as responsible for their own mindsets as are Indians.
#46 Posted by m_souza on May 21, 2004 11:10:46 pm
39 by Humsab on May 21, 2004 5:31am PT
# 36
What is this Hindu mentality and where is your logic? ......The mandate you are talking about came from the same majority Hindu population. Learn to differentiate between people and political party. In any case this whole episode has no reflection on Indian Democracy.
By the way is it possible that your soft corner for foriegners is because you people are taught to admire your conquerers and hate yourself?
Regards
Humsab
If some fanatic Hindus retaliate excessively to the burning of 50 Hindus in the hands of muslims and resort to extreme means then Pakis say..all hindus are like that
If Hindus go on to have a muslim president then that is no proof of their secularism...no word there
If Hindus with other, go ahead and vote against a ruling Hindu party, then that is no proof of their secular minds
It was their secular/tolerant nature because of which they let all foreigners rule them and convert them and they are the ones who are slapped again and again for being secular.
Hindus are just sick and tired of proving their ages-old secular nature to these descendents/coward converts of Mughal conquerers, these citizens of a holy land of Islamic state of Pakistan
# 36
What is this Hindu mentality and where is your logic? ......The mandate you are talking about came from the same majority Hindu population. Learn to differentiate between people and political party. In any case this whole episode has no reflection on Indian Democracy.
By the way is it possible that your soft corner for foriegners is because you people are taught to admire your conquerers and hate yourself?
Regards
Humsab
If some fanatic Hindus retaliate excessively to the burning of 50 Hindus in the hands of muslims and resort to extreme means then Pakis say..all hindus are like that
If Hindus go on to have a muslim president then that is no proof of their secularism...no word there
If Hindus with other, go ahead and vote against a ruling Hindu party, then that is no proof of their secular minds
It was their secular/tolerant nature because of which they let all foreigners rule them and convert them and they are the ones who are slapped again and again for being secular.
Hindus are just sick and tired of proving their ages-old secular nature to these descendents/coward converts of Mughal conquerers, these citizens of a holy land of Islamic state of Pakistan
#47 Posted by m_souza on May 21, 2004 11:10:46 pm
To all those Pakistanis who find Sonia’s foreign origin issue a reflection on India’s non-democratic nature
I wish to know that if :
Jamima Khan becomes the leader of the ruling party in Pakistan (if democracy comes to Pakistan that is) and then Jamima Khan wishes to become the Prime Minister, would she be accepted by the Paki people or the other political Muslim groups???
Then,
Will Pakistanis let Pakistan have a Hindu President and a Christian Prime Minister?
Answer is obvious but......
I wish to know that if :
Jamima Khan becomes the leader of the ruling party in Pakistan (if democracy comes to Pakistan that is) and then Jamima Khan wishes to become the Prime Minister, would she be accepted by the Paki people or the other political Muslim groups???
Then,
Will Pakistanis let Pakistan have a Hindu President and a Christian Prime Minister?
Answer is obvious but......
#48 Posted by nb on May 22, 2004 4:35:41 am
So, dost-mittar saheb, with great respect (it was a shock to hear you`re actually older than Mnmohan Singh, though I have gathered overe my time on chowk that you`re no spring chicken), are you not a self-abnegating Hindu anymore? I don`t mean to be sarcastic. I think establishing a Hindu identity-or identities, given the pluralistic nature of Hinduism-is important-in our own mind. Even more so now when the RSS and VHP are coming out and saying Vajpayee didn`t do enough for Hindus, which is why he lost. Maybe there is some truth in that, not that he didn`t do enough (no government does enough for anyone) but that he didn`t appeal enough to the baser instinct of the Hindu on the basis of their religion, as against Laloo, Mayawati and Mulayam appealing to the baser instinct of the so-called backward castes and Dalits.
Where is the cut-off?
Sorry if I seem obsessed with the Yadavs, but for me they epitomise all that has gone wrong in the Hindi belt. For those of us with memories, even the Mandir issue would not have arisen without them. I was in India over Holi and couldn`t go to Varanasi because I was warned it wasn`t safe. I do believe I should be able to visit what is a holy city to me without having to worry about being assaulted or kidnapped.
Where is the cut-off?
Sorry if I seem obsessed with the Yadavs, but for me they epitomise all that has gone wrong in the Hindi belt. For those of us with memories, even the Mandir issue would not have arisen without them. I was in India over Holi and couldn`t go to Varanasi because I was warned it wasn`t safe. I do believe I should be able to visit what is a holy city to me without having to worry about being assaulted or kidnapped.
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