Wednesday, November 01, 2023

SMOKERS’ CORNER: MANUFACTURING A 'HOLY WAR'

Nadeem F. Paracha 
DAWN/EOS
Published October 29, 2023
Illustration by Abro


It is incorrect to frame the so-called ‘Israel-Palestine war’ as a “religious conflict.” Indeed, the region was once part of the Ottoman Empire and had a large Arab Muslim population. But this population had significant Arabic-speaking Christian communities as well.

During the First World War (1914-18), Arab nationalism found increasing traction among Palestine’s Arab majority. This nationalism looked to end Ottoman control and create an independent Palestine. Arab Christians, too, were part of the Arab nationalist movement. In 1919, with the Ottoman Empire crumbling, a Palestinian Arab conference of Muslim-Christian associations was held to address the other issue: Zionism.



Like Arab nationalism, Zionism too was a secular ideology. Formed in Europe in the late 19th century, it declared that Jewish people had faced persecution for centuries and, therefore, needed a country of their own. The Zionists’ first option for this country was Uganda, the second was Argentina. Their third option was Palestine and the narrative of it being a natural choice because “it was the homeland of ancient Jews” was only stressed upon much later.

Zionism was secular because it was a modern nationalist ideology. Even though it eventually sought to create a Jewish homeland in Palestine on the basis of a Biblical narrative, the homeland was to be a modern nation-state and not a Jewish theocracy. After the First World War, when Palestine began being administered by the British, Arab nationalism and Zionism clashed. In the 1930s, Arab nationalists sought to make Palestine part of a larger Arab region.

For decades, Israel has framed its conflict with Palestine as a war between Jews and Muslims, in an attempt to justify and expand its territorial occupation

Most Arab Christians largely sided with the Arab nationalists. They too opposed Zionism and the allotment of lands to Jewish immigrants in Palestine. Just before the eventual emergence of Israel in 1948, Amin Husseini, a prominent Palestinian Arab nationalist, called for the creation of a secular state in all of Palestine that would include Muslims, Jews and Christians.


The same year, Egypt, Syria and Jordan went to war against the newly-formed Israel. This too was a conflict between Arab nationalism and Zionism. This was how it was framed by the involved combatants. It was never explained as a war between Islam and Judaism. Although Israel won the war, the Palestinian diaspora living as refugees in various Arab countries began to revive Palestinian nationalism.

But this nationalism as well was based on Pan-Arabism. It was greatly inspired by the Arab nationalism championed by Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser. It was secular and also supported by Arab-speaking Christians. A Syrian Christian, Michel Aflaq, was the leading ideologue of Ba’ath Socialism — a variant of Arab nationalism that began to dominate the politics of Syria and Iraq.

In 1964, Nasser facilitated the formation of an alliance of various Palestinian nationalist groups. The alliance was dubbed the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO). It was vigorously opposed by Islamist outfits such as the Muslim Brotherhood, but supported by the ‘communist bloc’ headed by the Soviet Union. PLO did not see Israel as a Jewish homeland. It saw it as a Zionist state that had forcibly occupied Arab lands through violence.

It was, in fact, Israel that began to frame the Arab-Israeli animosity as a religious conflict. This worked in Israel’s favour because, although Israel was a secular state, any attack or criticism against it began being portrayed as an act of ‘anti-Semitism’.



Whereas large Islamist outfits such as the Muslim Brotherhood were more invested in challenging Arab nationalist regimes, smaller Islamist groups often circulated old Nazi literature and Hitler’s autobiography (translated into Arabic). Yet, these groups were never taken to task by Israel. In fact, in the 1970s, Israel consciously bolstered the political fortunes of a Palestinian Islamist, Sheikh Yaseen. He was ‘allowed’ to form his own organisation and recruit Palestinians in Gaza.

Yaseen began to build mosques, charity organisations and then a militant wing. He was regularly treated at some of Israel’s finest hospitals. Brigadier-General Yitzhak Segev, a former Israeli military governor in Gaza, is on record stating that Israel aided Yaseen’s Islamist movement, viewing it as a counterweight to the PLO (as quoted in the Wall Street Journal, January 24, 2009).

But this was not the only reason for propping up Islamist movements in territories occupied by Israel. According to the Palestinian-American author and journalist Ali Abunimah, after the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, Zionists began to increasingly frame the tussle as a religious conflict. This, they believed, would better serve Israel’s ambition to turn all of Palestine into a Zionist state.

The framing also romanticised Israel as a Jewish enclave besieged by hostile Muslims who wanted to eliminate Jews, as the Nazis had tried to do. But this narrative could not be strengthened when Israel’s core Arab enemies were secular who were framing the conflict as territorial.

Once the Islamist movements aided by Israel succeeded in weakening the PLO, these movements turned their rhetoric and guns towards Israel. In 1987, Yaseen’s movement evolved into becoming Hamas. Israel finally got itself a powerful Islamist opponent to ‘prove’ that Israel was embroiled in a religious war.

For the past three decades now, Islamists, Zionists and Israel’s Western allies have all been viewing the Israel-Palestine conflict as a war between Muslims and Jews. The Islamists do this to rationalise their militancy and Islamist rhetoric; Israel does it to justify and expand its occupation as a way to eliminate ‘anti-Semitism’; and Israel’s Western allies do it to rationalise oppressive Israeli policies against the Palestinians as a war against Islamist terrorism.

But is it working? Not quite. The recent ‘invasion’ by Hamas militants of Israel was largely denounced by most Muslims, including by the Palestinian diaspora. However, Israel’s indiscriminate bombing of Gaza that has killed thousands of unarmed men, women and children, and the mishandling (if not manhandling) of this fact by the Western media, has uncannily brought back to life the true nature of the conflict: it is a political and territorial dispute rather than a religious one.

Accusations of anti-Semitism, often floated by Western institutions against even the most secular Muslims and non-Muslims opposed to Israeli policies in Palestine, are now sounding increasingly cynical. These institutions are aligned with Israel’s ‘religious war’ narrative. But they are struggling to mitigate the reactions Israel’s brutal tactics are triggering.

The discourse is moving back to being about occupiers and the occupied instead of about a Jewish enclave besieged by Muslims. Even one of Israel’s oldest media outlets, Haaretz, isn’t falling for this narrative anymore.

Published in Dawn, EOS, October 29th, 2023
How the West has been on ‘wrong side of history’ in Palestinian tragedy

Aleezeh Fatimah Published October 30, 2023
People take part in a pro-Palestinian protest, as the conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas continues, in Warsaw, Poland, October 29, 2023. — Reuters

KARACHI: As the situation in Gaza continues to deteriorate, people around the world are split between the two sides, trying to figure out which side of history is the ‘right one’. In the midst of this confusion, an online teach-in organised by Pakistani author Fatima Bhutto, tried to contextualise the current conflict, especially for a Western audience.


A number of students from around the world, who were eager to understand the situation in Palestine and how it reached such critical mass, attended the two-day teach-in, which concluded on Sunday. The atmosphere in the online gathering also showed how people were beginning to question the things they’ve learned in the name of history.

“The tragedy is not knowing, but [an even] bigger tragedy is having people who’re not even willing to know and correct themselves, which is why we’ve put together this discussion, to learn ‘unbiased history’ and know which side to choose,” Ms Bhutto said in her opening remarks.

“It is sad that people are still debating about how there are ‘two sides’ of a massacre instead of the fact that it happened, and how many times it has been repeated,” Isabella Hammad, a British-Palestinian author said as she shed light on what’s happening in Gaza at the moment.

Pakistani author Fatima Bhutto, panellists from across Middle East highlight failure of UN’s ‘neutral approach’; ask people to question ‘propaganda’ masquerading as reporting

“I think as people who’re deeply connected to academia, we need to realise that no matter where we come from, where our origin is from, whatever history we’ve studied has a tinge of biasedness in it. We have painted villains as heroes, and we have never allowed people to question, which is exactly why a holocaust is unfolding itself right in front of our eyes, which is also telecasted live through a media outlet, yet we’re deciding what side to pick? I don’t think there is anything more unfortunate than that,” she added.

Is UN neutral?


As questions rolled in regarding the United Nations resolution – demanding an immediate ceasefire – and its rejection by the Israeli government, the panellists pointed how the UN has remained silent and has seemed ‘biased’ on this issue for a long time. This is why their current stance doesn’t seem to carry much weight, as they’ve consistently opted to stay ‘neutral’ over the years, panellists said.

“You see, when you keep talking about something but don’t take a concrete action, nobody would take your serious when you call for one. So when you ask why UNGA passed a resolution in the first place when it has to be rejected, you need to know the history of what UN has exactly done for the oppressed that do not belong to a ‘certain’ colour and caste. The answer is unfortunately ‘nothing’. So, when they call for an action, and the oppressor knows they can get away with anything, who’s going to take them serious?’ Omar Barghouti, a Palestinian author said.

Mr Barghouti serves as one of the founding committee members of the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, and he’s also a co-founder of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement. In recognition of his efforts, he was honoured with the Gandhi Peace Award in 2017.

“When one side can use words like ‘dark’ and ‘light’ while talking about children, which by the way, is openly racist, yet no one calls them out, you know it is not a war. When one side has the authority to cut off water, food, internet and bombs them mercilessly, referring them to animals, you know it is not a war and it definitely has no ‘two sides’,” he said.

When asked if he condemns what Hamas did and how he views it, he smiled knowingly as if he expected this question would come up.

“You see, when Hamas attacked Israel, [Israel] responded back by bombing hospitals, churches, and even housing schemes. It has killed thousands of people. Just today I read a statement by Education Ministry of Gaza which said there would be no student graduating this year since all high school seniors have been killed. Are these kids part of a terrorist organisation? No. So, taking revenge of actions of individuals from an entire population, how is that fair?’ he cross questioned.

“Israel can respond to Hamas, but Palestine does not have the same right, so it sits in the corner helplessly watching its people die, while the world goes on about who’s right and who’s wrong,” he concluded.


Journalism or propaganda?


“The biggest media outlets, who preach about the integrity of journalism, conduct workshops over workshops about misinformation and disinformation yet never bothered to double check if there were ‘actual tunnels’ under a hospital before making a report,” Ahmed Eldin, an American-Kuwaiti journalist said, commenting on Western media coverage of the Israeli campaign against Gaza.

“The BBC implied on Twitter and TV that Hamas built tunnels under hospitals, without proof. The next day, we see a hospital going up [in flames] because well, the oppressor has the right, no? The New York Times all of a sudden dedicated an entire page to Gaza day before yesterday. There are multiple events like that where you and I both can see that there is propaganda going on in the name of journalism,” he added.

“I lived in the Gaza strip, and I remember everything about the shortages that the world is witnessing now, so let me be clear on this, this is not the ‘beginning’ of a genocide, this is just intensification of everything that has been going on for years now. You might think this is because of a Hamas attack, because the Western media has convinced you. However that is not the case,” Diana Buttu, a Palestinian-Canadian lawyer said in her closing remarks.

Published in Dawn, October 30th, 2023
UK police snoop around schools after pro-Palestine demonstrations
Published October 30, 2023

POLICE officers in London have been instructed to gather intelligence from schools after massive protests against Israeli atrocities in Gaza, sparking concerns that it will lead to more discrimination against minority communities, the Guardian has reported.

The officers of London police, also called Metropolitan police, have been ordered to “increase their visible patrols” at schools and engage with school staff in order to obtain information about “community tensions”, according to a letter sent to headteachers.

The letter written to headteachers of schools in four London districts by a top Met police officer stated that the engagement would help the force’s “intelligence and information-gathering”, accor­ding to the Guardian.

The publication said that more police officers would be stationed at schools to help create “safe spaces” in collaboration with school staff.

Activists say move will increase discrimination against minorities

Rights activists and community leaders have expressed concerns over the move, saying it would further erode the minority communities’ trust in police.

“It’s very likely these actions will stereotype and criminalise young people, especially those from minority backgrounds,” Stafford Scott, a community campaigner, told the Guardian.

“Trust and confidence in the police in the communities that I deal with is very low. Rather than reassuring children, their presence in schools generally causes alarm and concern on the basis that they disproportionately target children from ethnic minorities.”

‘Ruthless’ against hate crime

Separately, the head of London police has said his officers would “ruthlessly” arrest anyone who commits a hate crime, but there could only be prosecutions when the law is broken, Reuters reported.

Mark Rowley, the head of London’s Metropolitan Police force, said he would support a review into the legal definition of extremism in response to criticism of the way his officers handled pro-Palestinian protests in London.

Some British politicians have criticised London’s police after they failed to arrest people at a pro-Palestinian rally shouting “jihad”. The police later said the phrase could have many meanings, concluding no offence had taken place.

“There is scope to be much sharper in how we deal with extremism within this country,” the Met police chief told Sky News.



“The law was never designed to deal with extremism. There’s a lot to do with terrorism and hate crime, but we don’t have a body of law that deals with extremism, and that is creating a gap.”

UK ministers are reviewing the legal definition of extremism in a move designed to counter hate crimes, including antisemitism, according to one government official. The UK government is also examining potential changes to terrorism legislation, The Sunday Telegraph reported.

Published in Dawn, October 30th, 2023
Police shoot at unarmed, veiled woman in Paris

AFP Published November 1, 2023 
A French police officer wears a jacket, identifying herself as “Police identite judiciaire “), while walking from a metro station after a woman making threats on an RER train was shot and wounded by police, in Paris on October 31, 2023. — AFP


PARIS: French police on Tuesday shot and seriously wounded an unarmed woman at a train station in Paris during morning rush hour.


The incident came with the country on its maximum alert for potential attacks but with the police also under scrutiny over recent fatal shootings of suspects.

Witnesses said the 38-year-old woman, who was wearing a hijab, recited “Allahu akbar” and said “you will all die”, a police source said, adding that “police fired because they feared for their safety”.

After passengers on a suburban train travelling from the eastern suburbs to Paris alerted police, agents managed to “isolate” the woman at the Bibliotheque Francois Mitterrand station on the capital’s south bank which was evacuated, the source said.

Officers fired eight rounds at the woman, causing serious injury

They ordered her to sit on the ground and stop moving, Paris police chief Laurent Nunez told reporters. But instead, he said, she moved towards them and ignored an order to show her hands.

Eight shots fired

Two police officers then fired eight rounds at the woman, inflicting a life-threatening injury to her abdomen, the prosecutor’s office said. It had earlier said that one officer had fired only one shot. No explosives or other arms were found on the woman who was taken to hospital, the police source said.

Police have launched two investigations, prosecutors said. One will probe the woman’s actions, while another is to elucidate whether the police’s firearm use was justified.

Government spokesman Olivier Veran said that there had been “at least three” calls from passengers to rail operator SNCF, which in turn alerted police.

“Police, evaluating the situation to be dangerous, opened fire,” he told reporters.

Footage from the officers’ bodycams and from CCTV at the station would help establish the facts of the case precisely, he said.

Nunez said the woman, a French national, had in July 2021 been arrested by a military patrol, deployed to beef up security amid attack fears. She was detained briefly, and then committed to psychiatric care, he said.

She was never on a radicalisation watchlist, Nunez said, contrary to what two police sources had claimed earlier. France’s anti-terror unit is not part of the ongoing investigation of the incident, prosecutors said.

France on edge


The Bibliotheque Francois Mitterrand station, named after France’s national library which dominates the area, was still closed to the public in the early afternoon.

France has been under “attack alert” since Oct 13, when a teacher in the northern city of Arras was stabbed to death by a former pupil.

Many in France, which has large Muslim and Jewish populations, also fear repercussions from Israeli bombardment of Gaza.

Bomb alerts have led to the evacuation of dozens of airports, train stations and tourist sites — including the Versailles palace — in recent weeks. On Monday, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said that there had been 819 anti-Semitic acts in France since Oct 7, and 414 connected arrests.

Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2023

A racist liberalism

Dr Niaz Murtaza
Published October 31, 2023 


THE post-1945 liberal world order based on human rights and democracy is unique in history given its wide coverage of key issues and global acceptance. Many philosophies had earlier given similar ideas but had left out key issues and groups, such as women and slaves, or lacked global acceptance.

The adoption of this order in the UN conventions with its near-global membership make it the first globally dominant liberal order even if not all states accept all UN tenets. Even autocratic states are judged against, and have to defer partially to, them. It is intellectually simple. Unlike copious metaphysical edicts, all its detailed clauses can be derived from two moral tenets: don’t harm anyone and help those in need. Given these two, a secular person like me doesn’t need even a third one, let alone numerous tenets, to guide my life. Clearly, this order emerged, at least immediately, from the West though it absorbed the earlier ideas of other cultures.

This order had the potential to give a just world after 1945. But it has slowly lost its appeal. Illiberal ideologies such as fundamentalism and populism are now firing the imagination globally given its failure to fulfil its promise. While the acts of autocratic states have undercut it too, a bigger cause has been its hypocritical and racist use by its Western author states such as the US. On issue after issue, they have conjured up excuses for why these tenets can’t be applied when white Western states fight other races — on immigration, trade, global governance or in actual wars.

High racist walls are being erected around Fortresses Europe and US to exclude coloured immigrants, both documented and undocumented, on the openly racist pretext of protecting racial dominance and cultures. The logic is often couched in terms of economic burden, though studies show that immigrants of all status boost economic growth.

High racist walls are being erected in Europe and the US.


The plan to have rules-based global trade via the WTO remains unfulfilled. Western states have exacted concessions from weak southern states on issues beneficial to them such as foreign investment and intellectual rights but refuse to lower barriers in areas critical for southern ones like agriculture. Western states have stubbornly refused to democratise the IMF, World Bank and the UN. The US has shamelessly aided megalomaniac autocrats in many southern states despite the abuses its allies were inflicting locally. Even within Western states, coloured people are often treated as second-class citizens.

But this racist liberalism has unleashed its powers most destructively in wars pitting Western powers against hapless southern peoples, as in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine. Elaborate UN, and their own, laws on protecting civilians are tossed into the trash bin as the US and its Western allies pursue their military interests. The aim of eradicating terrorism has been used as free licence to inflict grievous harm on southern civilians without remorse.

Nowhere is this done more viciously now than by Israel in Gaza. We are told ad nauseam that Israel has the right to defend itself even though it’s an occupier. A rational view on this right would cover Israel beefing up its air, land and sea border security, eliminating attackers from its land and strengthening its intelligence against future attacks. These steps alone can pre-empt a similar Hamas attack, which too was wrong in targeting Israeli civilians. But only a highly racist view would include under this right indiscriminate bombing of a dense civilian area to destroy Hamas when it also kills thousands of Gaza women, kids and elderly.

The Israeli attacks are more about revenge and repairing bruised egos. Gazans are being treated like sheep locked in a small pen, not allowed to leave while being butchered brutally by a mass murderer. Yet racist Western liberal conscience remains unmoved by the sight of such ghastly suffering. Coloured lives matter less than white ones is the clear message from the West.

These actions of domestically democratic Western states globally mirror those of unaccountable autocrats. Liberalism, though, is not inherently racist, only so in the hands of Western elites who adopted liberalism as it aided capitalism to spread nationally. While capitalism exploits weaker classes in markets only, racism exploits weaker ethnicities in all facets of life. But the entire West is not complicit in this hypocrisy as the marches of hundreds of thousands in Western cities against Israel show. Resistance to Western racist liberalism exists among many whites too. The path forward is for southern progressives to link with Western ones to challenge racist liberalism and pursue a global liberalism.

The writer is a political economist with a PhD degree from the University of California, Berkeley.
murtazaniaz@yahoo.com
X (formerly Twitter): @NiazMurtaza2

Published in Dawn, October 31st, 2023
Desperate Israel erases 50 lives in Jabalia camp strike

A WHOLE FAMILY ISRAEL CLAIMS ARE TERRORISTS

Agencies Published November 1, 2023 
 Updated about 6 hours ago
Palestinian fighters offered stiff resista­nce to invading forces, but the relentless Israeli bombing of the besieged enclave claimed at least 50 lives in the Jabalia refugee camp.


• Hamas fighters offer stiff resistance as Tel Aviv’s forces push into north Gaza

• Palestinian death toll crosses 8,500

GAZA STRIP: Palestinian fighters offered stiff resista­nce to invading forces, but the relentless Israeli bombing of the besieged enclave claimed at least 50 lives in the Jabalia refugee camp, on Tuesday.

This takes the total number of those killed in Israel’s brutal bombing campaign to 8,525, including 3,542 children, according to the latest count by the health ministry.

The director of Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital told Al Jazeera that more than 50 Palestinians were killed and 150 wounded in Israeli air strikes on a densely populated area of the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza.

AFP video footage from the scene showed at least 47 bodies recovered from the rubble after the strike hit several houses in the densely crowded camp.

Dozens of onlookers could be seen standing on the edges of two vast craters as people searched for survivors.

Ragheb Aqal, a Jabalia resident, described the strikes as “an earthquake” which shook the entire refugee camp.

“I went and saw the destruction… homes buried under the rubble and body parts and martyrs and wounded in huge numbers,” the 41-year-old told AFP.

“There’s no exaggerating when they talk about hund­reds of martyrs and wounded. People were still “transporting the remains of children, women and elderly”, he added.

The Jabalia camp is Gaza’s largest refugee camp. Accor­ding to the United Nations agency for Palestinian Refugees, the densely populated camp is situated in the north of the besieged enclave and covers an area of 1.4 square km. There are approximately 116,000 registered refugees in the camp.

The camp also housed three UN-run schools, which had subsequently been converted into shelters for hundreds of displaced families.

Fourth night of invasion

On Tuesday, Tel Aviv said it struck 300 targets during its fourth night of land operations in northern Gaza.

A man stands near a donkey-drawn cart loaded with sacks of garbage, collected from a street in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on Tuesday.—AFP

Warplanes kept up a relentless barrage of strikes on Gaza, while Israel also claimed that its forces were engaging Hamas fighters inside their vast tunnel network beneath Gaza.

“Over the last day… IDF struck approximately 300 targets, including anti-tank missile and rocket launch posts below shafts, as well as military compounds inside underground tunnels belonging to Hamas,” an Israeli military statement said.

Footage from the Israeli military showed tanks and armoured bulldozers churning up bomb-scarred dirt tracks and troops going from building to building.

In addition, AFP images showed plumes of smoke rising above Gaza and Israeli helicopters raining down rockets on the northern Gaza Strip.

Meanwhile, Hamas said in a statement its fighters were engaging in fierce battles with Israeli ground forces, who were taking losses. “The occupation is pushing its soldiers into proud Gaza, which will always be the cemetery of invaders,” Hamas said.

Hamas has also released footage of battles within Gaza, including what it said was a military vehicle on fire.

The al-Qassam Brigades said fighters also clashed with Israeli forces invading Gaza’s south early on Tuesday, hitting four Israeli vehicles with missiles.

The fighters also fired at two Israeli tanks and bulldozers in northwest Gaza, the group said.

Hazem Qassem, a Hamas spokesman, denied that a Hamas commander had been in the area struck by Israel fighter jets in Jabaliya, according to The New York Times.

Hamas has told mediators it will release a number of foreign prisoners in the coming days, Abu Ubaida, the spokesman of the group’s armed wing, al-Qassam Brigades, said in a video on its Telegram account on Tuesday, Reuters reported.

He also said his group clashed with the Israeli army on three fronts and was able to “kill and injure a number of Israeli soldiers” as well as destroy 22 military vehicles. The unit’s navy also used an underwater missile called ‘Aasif’ for the first time in the conflict, Abu Ubaida said.

Abu Ubaida also denied that a prisoner freed by Israel had been in Hamas’ hands, saying a number of prisoners were being held by other groups and individuals in the Gaza Strip.

But even as Israel’s staunchest allies voiced concern about the humanitarian crisis in southern Gaza, the UNRWA said there was not nearly enough aid to meet the “unprecedented” needs.

Hisham Adwan, Gaza director of the Rafah crossing with Egypt where some aid has been allowed in, said 36 trucks had been waiting there since the previous day.

Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2023


Hamas said Israeli strike killed at least 50 in Jabalia refugee camp

Issued on: 01/11/2023
02:07
Video by: FRANCE 24

An Israeli air strike killed about 50 people in a refugee camp, according to Palestinian health officials. Israel said the attack killed a senior Hamas commander and other combatants. While many Arab states have condemned the strike as beyond proportional, the US has refrained from categorising the attack as a war crime, saying it is still analyzing the situation.


Israeli strike on Jabalia refugee camp draws criticism of indiscriminate bombings


Issued on: 01/11/2023 - 
06:12
Douglas Herbert on Israeli strike on Gaza refugee camp
FRANCE 24

Video by: Douglas HERBERT

The Hamas-run health ministry said at least 50 people were killed Tuesday in Israeli bombardment of the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza. The Israeli attack represents the international community's worst fears of indiscriminate bombings and disproportionate response from Israeli forces, FRANCE 24's International Affairs Editor Douglas Herbert said.






Women behind bars — The nightmare of prisons in Pakistan

Women prisoners, who do not have anyone to take care of their children, bring them to the prison with them. Jails in Pakistan are one of the worst places for their upbringing.
Published October 31, 2023 

A housewife from Sheikhupura was five months pregnant when she was sentenced to one-year imprisonment in 2021. “I felt as though I had sentenced my unborn child to a life behind bars since I did not know when they would let me out,” said the 26-year-old, who asked to remain anonymous.


She served her sentence in Kot Lakhpat Jail in the neighbouring district of Lahore. Her baby was not just born in the jail hospital, he also stayed with her until she completed her sentence. She also has an older child who was taken care of by her family during her prison stint.

Another former inmate, whose two-year-old child stayed with her during her three-year prison stint, complained of jail food neither being sufficient nor nutritious enough for children. Education facilities too, are woefully inadequate, she said. “Teachers were unqualified and they did not take classes regularly. Books were so old and tattered that they were hardly legible,” she explained. The government, in fact, does not even provide these basic educational facilities — they are facilitated by various non-government organisations.

She also lamented the lack of privacy needed to breastfeed children. “Since we had to do this in the open, we were often ridiculed,” she said. The jail wardens would routinely make lewd remarks and often beat them up for “shamelessly exposing” themselves. Even the children were not spared from the violence, she said, which leaves long-lasting effects on their emotional and mental wellbeing.

Moazzam Ali Shah, a Lahore-based lawyer who also champions prison reforms, said children living with their imprisoned mothers are usually under the age of six.
Double jeopardy

The prison infrastructure is often ill-equipped to cater to the special needs of women prisoners. For one, they lack arrangements and products for women going through menstruation.

Amina Begum, who spent two years in Kot Lakhpat Jail for possessing drugs with the intent to sell them, lambasted the jail authorities for not taking care of women’s sanitary needs. “It was very rare that we got the sanitary pads we needed. I have seen many women tearing off pieces of their shawls to use as pads,” she said.

Sabah Begum endured much worse. She spent six years behind bars after being sentenced on multiple counts of theft. “I was slapped, made to beg for menstrual pads and do much more that I cannot speak of.”

“The Bangkok Rules provide a clear gender-specific guideline for the treatment of female prisoners,” said Shah. Officially known as ‘The United Nations Rules for the Treatment of Women Prisoners and Non-custodial Measures for Women Offenders’, the rules were adopted by the United Nations General Assembly, which includes Pakistan, on Dec 22, 2010. Consisting of 70 sections, “These guidelines clearly acknowledge that women have unique healthcare needs, which includes menstrual health, and that all women must be provided sanitary products free of charge and in a manner that respects their privacy and dignity.”


Under its international commitments, Pakistan is obligated to follow these guidelines, but current conditions show that this obligation exists merely on paper.

Sabah Begum shared that she has not been allowed back into her home since her release because her husband and in-laws know that she was subjected to sexual violence in prison because wardens bragged about having taken advantage of her situation.

A report by Justice Project Pakistan, a Lahore-based NGO working on prison reforms, reveals that such shocking sexual mistreatment is common in Pakistani prisons. The report states that 82 out of 134 female prisoners in Faisalabad jail reported to have been sexually violated.

One of the major reasons for such rampant abuse in Pakistani prisons is the shortage of women-only sections in jails. Punjab, the most densely-populated province in the country has just one women-only jail in Multan — other jails may have areas specifically designated for women, but given the overcrowding, they are often times forced to share spaces with men.

However, even in these designated areas, guards and wardens are often men due to the shortage of female prison staff. Female prisoners frequently report having been coerced to engage in sexual acts with male prison guards in exchange for small favours.

The lack of modern monitoring mechanisms, such as security cameras and the absence of publicly accountable and socially responsible prison supervision means that this abusive behaviour often goes unchecked. Prisoners who do wish to report the abuse they suffer often cannot do so due to a total absence of accountability mechanisms. In fact, they fear more retaliation if they dare complain about the misbehaviour of guards and wardens to their superiors.

Sabah Begum’s experience of submitting her complaint shows how it turned out to be a futile exercise. “I filed a complaint form but I did not have any proof so there was not much else I could have done,” she said. “But they protected each other and I was laughed at.”

Packing prisoners like sardines


Six prisoners died inside Lahore’s Camp Jail within 12 days of December 2021. The reason for death was they did not have adequate clothing and heat to protect them from the freezing winter temperatures, which was further exacerbated by the ill-equipped healthcare infrastructure within the jail. A news report by the Express Tribune revealed that a total of 200 prisoners had died across Punjab that year.

It seems like more of a miracle that prisoners in Pakistan — particularly women — do not suffer from such medical exigencies more frequently. Otherwise, the fact that there are only 24 female health workers available to cater to the medical needs of several thousand female prisoners across Pakistan is nothing short of a recipe for disaster. In 2020, the Federal Ministry of Human Rights report ‘Plight of Women in Pakistan’s Prisons’, highlighted the urgent need to increase medical staff for female prisoners, particularly gynaecologists and mental health specialists.

Another major reason for the lack of adequate healthcare for prisoners is their sheer number. The prisons are so overcrowded that it is impossible to keep them tidy and free from disease-causing conditions. This problem was underscored by the Islamabad High Court in a landmark verdict in January 2020. It noted that holding prisoners in an overcrowded prison without sufficient sanitation is “tantamount to cruel and inhumane treatment”.


In its 38-page verdict, the court went to the extent of ruling that “the incarcerated prisoners, subjected to the unimaginable degrading and inhumane treatment highlighted in these proceedings, may have become entitled to seek damages against the prison authorities and the state”.

To cite just one instance of this overcrowding, Kot Lakhpat Jail, which was built in 1965 to house 1,053 prisoners now houses more than 4,000 — neither having the physical infrastructure nor the money to take care of prisoners adequately.

Women prisoners are even worse off. The sole women-only prison in Punjab has an official capacity to cater to just 166 women, but it currently holds 877 women. Living in such overcrowded premises is neither easy nor conducive to a mentally stable environment.

Requesting not to be named, a woman who spent five years in Kot Lakhpat Jail explained: “The lack of space meant that sometimes 10 of us would share a cell built for four. It was difficult to even find a place to sleep”.

While serving time on charges of financial fraud, she reported routine violations of her personal space. She would be forced to use unsanitary and unhygienic facilities for bathing and washing since there was no other alternative, causing her to contract a host of medical problems including skin diseases such as scabies and lice. “Overcrowding was not just uncomfortable, it was also dangerous because it allowed disease to spread quickly among the prisoners,” she said.

She also experienced immense anxiety and depression during her imprisonment and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) to this day. She pointed out that she was not the only one. “Everyone experienced them, at times either becoming violent towards others or inflicting self-harm.”
Reform or bust

A report released by the Human Rights Watch, a New York-based human rights organisation in March 2023 titled A Nightmare for Everyone, puts prisons in Punjab under the spotlight, documenting “widespread deficiencies in prison healthcare in Pakistan”.

Following the report, the Punjab government considered introducing reform mechanisms aimed at reducing the number of prisoners and improving the quality of food and hygiene at the jail.

On April 21, 2023, former Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif visited Kot Lakhpat Jail, where he specifically inspected the healthcare facilities designated for female prisoners and directed the administration to improve sanitation and hygiene.

In reality, however, the prime minister’s directives are all but forgotten and the provincial government’s reforms did not see the light of the day. Former prisoners still give vivid descriptions of massive overcrowding and the accompanying problems of poor sanitary and hygiene conditions.


Shah believes that the central reason why prisons are so bad is “the existence of colonial-era laws governing the prison system”. He argues that “legislation in Pakistan has not been made to fit modern human rights standards.”

The most important aspect of Shah’s 13 years of advocacy includes campaigning for a decrease in the number of prisoners in Lahore’s jails by approximately 50 per cent. This reduction, he believes, can partly be achieved by providing under-trial prisoners with greater access to paroles and by awarding community service sentences to minor offenders under the Probation of Offenders Ordinance of 1960.

The 2020 report by the Ministry of Human Rights reveals that 66pc of all women in prisons were still being tried by courts without convictions.

Jails, he said, must also introduce modern monitoring technologies such as digital record-keeping, biometric access controls and close-circuit television cameras for surveillance and monitoring of both, the prisoners and the prison staff.

Shah also stressed the importance of a third party with the power to conduct regular inspections of prisons and hold incompetent and corrupt jail staff accountable as a mechanism to ensure transparency and accountability in prison administration. He cited the example of India’s Tihar Jail in Delhi, where regular inspections have helped make it an efficient prison with a “flourishing internal industry that focuses on providing employable skills and vocational training to prisoners”.

Deena Jamal, an A-Levels student at Lahore Grammar School 55 Main, is passionate about investigative journalism and documentary filmmaking. Deena is interested in humanitarian and environmental issues, and is driven by an unrelenting curiosity to uncover the hidden truths in our world. She is also a strong supporter of women and child rights.

Fatima Shafi is an aspiring poetess and journalist, currently in her first year of A Levels at Lahore Grammar School.

Yasar Adnan, an aspiring writer from Lahore Grammar School, currently serves as their head of council. He has a keen interest in political and investigative journalism.



Private jails in Balochistan’s fiefdoms
PAKISTAN

Gender inequality


Parvez Rahim 
Published November 1, 2023 


THE issue of gender inequality is not peculiar to Pakistan. Realising that such discrimination prevailed in every sphere of life everywhere, the International Lab­our Organisation framed the Equal Remu­neration Convention (C 100), 1951. This was followed by three more conventions on gender equality: the Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention (C 111), 1958; Workers with Family Responsibilities Convention (C 156), 1981, and Maternity Protection Convention (C 183), 2000.

Recently, the UN issued a gender equality and women’s empowerment report, which observes: “Gender equality is not only a fundamental human right, but a necessary foundation for a peaceful, prosperous, and sustainable world. There has been progress over the last decades, but the world is not on track to achieve gender equality by 2030. Women and girls represent half of the world’s population and therefore also half of its potential. But gender inequality persists everywhere and stagnates social progress.”

C 100 makes it obligatory upon the member states to “ensure the application to all workers of the principle of equal remuneration for men and women workers for work of equal value”. Seventy-two years have lapsed since the release of this convention, yet, according to the UN, women “still earn 23 per cent less than men globally. On average, women spend about three times as many hours in unpaid domestic and care work as men”. Women work for eight hours a day but the household responsibilities keep them busy too.

C 111 has also been ratified by Pakistan. Each member must ensure “equality of opportunity and treatment in respect of employment and occupation, with a view to eliminating any discrimination in respect thereof”.

It’s a long journey towards achieving gender parity.

In the late 1970s, I was working at an MNC at Daharki. A woman, who had graduated in chemical engineering from the UK, came for an interview for the position of operations manager. She was capable and ambitious and had no inhibitions about working with male colleagues. However, the management did not offer her the job as she would be the only female working at the plant.

There are certain jobs, especially in industrial establishments, viewed as gender-specific, for instance, the job of industrial relations manager, who has to negotiate the labour union’s charter of demands periodically. During discussions union officials, in the heat of the moment, may utter words considered inappropriate in the presence of women. According to my own experience, though, the presence of women in negotiation teams had a sobering effect on union officials, who would refrain from using foul language.

C 156 “applies to men and women workers with responsibilities in relation to their dependent children. Such responsibilities restrict their possibilities of preparing for, entering, participating in, or advancing in economic activity”. Their employers should be considerate and allow them the time required to see to their obligations towards their families without reducing their pay. Besides, family duties should not be a valid reason for terminating employment.

C 183 prescribes that members shall “ensure that pregnant or breastfeeding women are not obliged to perform work, which has been determined by the competent authority to be prejudicial to the health of the mother or the child”.

Gender inequality is rampant in our society. People’s general attitude towards women remains a topic of critique in articles and editorials. Some observations published recently in this newspaper are summed up here.

— Discrimination includes the fact that there may be about 3.5 million eligible women voters who are not registered on the electoral rolls.

— Women don’t want to contend with the stares and harassment they face when they step outside their safety zones.

— Pakistan not just features as one of the world’s most dangerous countries, it is, in fact, anti-women, and has been unable to enforce international conventions regarding the issue.

Commenting on the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to the jailed Iranian human rights activist Narges Mohammadi, the UN secretary general said the award was “a tribute to all those women, who are fighting for their rights at the risk of their freedom, their health and even their lives”.

Harassment of women at the workplace is one of the major issues affecting women’s taking up a job, retention, productivity, and advancement. The UN aspires to achieve gender equality and women’s empowerment by 2030. This appears to be a gigantic task and an ambitious target, but it will still be a great achievement if most of the developing countries are able to remove key gender inequalities by the deadline.

The writer is a consultant in human resources at the Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi.


Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2023
Dark future


DAWN
Editorial 
Published November 1, 2023 

REFUSING to budge from the Oct 31 deadline, which ended last night, Pakistan is looking to deport an estimated 1.7m ‘illegal’ Afghan immigrants, along with other undocumented foreigners.

Condemnation, criticism and concern from both within the country and abroad have fallen on deaf ears. What will happen to the millions of Afghans who sought shelter in a country they had come to call home for decades?

They fled hostile conditions back in Afghanistan, where foreign and civil wars, both, were fought over the years, and where a deeply conservative Taliban regime awaits them upon return.

Fears of persecution run rampant among the droves of Afghans who were heartlessly provided less than 30 days to pack up the lives they had built in Pakistan, some over generations. All they have been allowed to take with them is Rs50,000 per family. Among those to have had it the worst, first in their country of origin and until recently, their country of refuge, are the Hazaras.



Major clashes with the Taliban when they first came into power in Afghanistan, drove the ethnic minority out, and here too, they suffered religious persecution, only to be driven out again.

The decision has led to “harassment, assault, and arbitrary detention” of Afghans, according to Human Rights Watch. Even those registered with UNHCR are not immune and must bribe their way out.

The state, in its zeal to safeguard security interests, seems to have overlooked the significant economic ramifications of such an abrupt exit. The contribution of Afghans to various sectors, including agriculture, construction and informal labour markets warrant serious consideration. Many established small businesses contributing to local economies and sent remittances back home.

Their deportation could disrupt these economic flows and harm businesses reliant on their patronage. Afghans over time also invested in real estate.

Their departure might result in a surplus of properties in certain areas, potentially affecting property values and the real estate market. Furthermore, they have played a vital role in cross-border transportation of goods and services.

Their removal could disrupt supply chains and impact the cost of goods, particularly in border regions. The deportation of Afghans will also likely further strain relations with Afghanistan and impact regional connectivity.

While the state may have valid concerns, it must strike a balance between national security and the preservation of economic stability and inclusivity.

Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2023

Afghan refugees detained and deported in Pakistan as deadline expires


Issued on: 01/11/2023 
03:13
FRANCE 24
Video by: Shahzaib WAHLAH

Pakistani security forces on Wednesday rounded up, detained and deported dozens of Afghans who were living in the country illegally, after a government-set deadline for them to leave expired, authorities said. Some 200,000 undocumented Afghans out of the 1.7 million living in Pakistan have already left the country voluntarily. Afghans in Pakistan have been facing harassment from authorities since several years, FRANCE 24’s Islamabad Correspondent Shahzaib Wahlah said.




Afghan refugees leave Pakistan as deportation threat looms

Issued on: 01/11/2023 - 
02:32

Hundreds of thousands of Afghans living in Pakistan faced the threat of detention and deportation on Wednesday, as a government deadline for them to leave sparked a mass exodus. Six hundred thousand Afghans found refuge in Pakistan after the Taliban took control of the country in August 2021. An Afghan journalist who has applied for asylum at the French embassy says she no longer leaves her house for fear of deportation



Mass exodus of Afghans leave Pakistan as deportation threat looms

Issued on: 01/11/2023

02:32
Video by:Sonia GHEZALI|
Shahzaib WAHLAH

In what one lawyer in Pakistan calls a "human rights disaster", hundreds of thousands of undocumented Afghans are facing a November 1 deadline to leave Pakistan or face deportation. Six hundred thousand Afghans found refuge in Pakistan after the Taliban took control of the country in August 2021. FRANCE 24's Shahzaib Wahlah and Sonia Ghezalia report.

Island in the sun

Grenada briefly stood out as a shining example.


Mahir Ali 
Published November 1, 2023
BY 1983, it had been eight years since US troops had finally departed from Indochina. Much to the consternation of some in the military-industrial-political hierarchy, the so-called Vietnam syndrome — the psychological repercussions of a superpower being defeated by a small Asian country — militated against the idea of dispatching combat troops to distant lands.

The Beirut deployment of 1982 in the wake of Israel’s invasion of Lebanon was technically a peacekeeping mission, alongside France and Italy. (None intervened to pre-empt or halt the Sabra-Shatila massacre later that year.) But when a suicide bomber drove a truck into US military barracks near Beirut airport on Oct 23, 1983, the 241 fatalities added up to the worst single-day toll for US forces since the first day of the 1968 Tet Offensive.

The Beirut attack was blamed on Hezbollah. Two days later, the US was prepared to demonstrate it remained the big boss. So, 40 years ago last week, the Reagan administration achieved a long-desired objective by invading a Caribbean island that measures no more than 350 square miles, with a population of 98,000.

Grenada had been on America’s radar since the March 1979 New Jewel Movement (NJM) revolution, which had overthrown the repressive government of Sir Eric Gairy, who straddled the island’s 1974 hop from a British colony to an independent neocolonial outpost on the southern fringes of the Caribbean, close to Venezuela but fairly distant from the US.

Grenada briefly stood out as a shining example.

The NJM was inspired by the civil rights movement in the US and liberation struggles in Africa as much as by the Cuban revolution, but its revolution was more or less peaceful. Its dozens of poorly armed cadres took the army by surprise while Gairy was out of the country — possibly having left behind instructions that the NJM, by then the main opposition party, be eliminated.

It wasn’t the fact of power changing hands that bothered the US as much as what came next. The People’s Revolutionary Government (PRG), as the new regime styled itself, lost little time in making amends for the centuries of colonial exploitation and years of postcolonial continuity. In the four-and-a-half years it was in power, unemployment fell from 49pc to 14pc. A mass literacy programme took just a year to reduce national illiteracy to 2pc. Secondary education became free, and university education almost free. Healthcare improved, as did GNP.

Equal rights and pay for women were introduced, alongside paid maternity leave. Women’s, youth and workers’ organisations were set up; these were consultative rather than decision-making bodies, but the boast of participatory democracy wasn’t an empty one. The ruling NJM, however, remained restricted to 100 or so members, and there were growing tensions between its central committee and the PRG. The prime minister, Maurice Bishop, was not only popular among Grenadians but also established an international presence disproportionate to the size of his nation.


The direction of his administration meant that his overtures to Washington went unrewarded, and the usual sources of international credit dried up. Grenada’s closeness to Havana and friendly ties with Moscow led the US to claim, with no evidence, that an airport being built with Cuban help would serve as a Soviet base. But it was game-planning an invasion for a different reason: Grenada’s successes, however modest, offered an inspiring alternative to the typical neo-imperialist model. That’s why Nicaragua was simultaneously being destabilised and the Allende experiment in Chile had been aborted a decade earlier. Fidel Castro remained the biggest thorn in Uncle Sam’s side, but invading Cuba would not have been a Grenada-style slam dunk.

It wasn’t the US invasion, though, that killed off the NJM experiment, but ructions within the party on seemingly ridiculous grounds that pitted the pragmatic Bishop against the majority of his central committee comrades. After he was placed under house arrest, a popular uprising on Oct 19, 1983, managed to liberate him, but just hours later, he and some of his colleagues were lined up against a wall and machine-gunned to death. His NJM rivals accused him of being insufficiently Leninist. They, in turn, were referred to by Castro as “hyenas” and “the Pol Pot group”.

Suffice it to say that by the time the US marines and their token Jamaican and Barbadian cohorts landed at the incomplete airport the Americans had objected to, they were effectively vultures feeding off the corpse of what the locals idealised as a ‘revo’.

The same airport today bears Bishop’s name, and this year Grenada for the first time marked his anniversary as National Heroes Day. It’s all very well to memorialise that remarkable revo, but the main lesson must be about what even the tiniest nation can achieve under appropriate guidance.

mahir.dawn@gmail.com
Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2023