Saturday, June 28, 2008
I wish it was said by Indian Prime Minister
Andhra Pradesh: Rules set for Christian yatra
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
About Patriots’ Forum
Mr. D. C. Nath President: dcnath@patriotsforum.org
Mr. R. K. Ohri Secy. General: rkohri@patriotsforum.org
Lt. Gen. Prem Sagar Vice President: premsagar@patriotsforum.org
Mr. D. K. Mittal Hony. Treasurer: dkmittal@patriotsforum.org
Mr. Hari Kak Member: greengold@airtelbroadband.in
Mr. J.P. Sharma Member: sharmajp@gmail.com
Mr. Ranvijay Shanker Member: ranvijayshankar@gmail.com
Mr. Kailash Chandra Member: drkailashchandra@rediffmail.com
The Forum has chosen to remain apolitical, non-communal and nationalist in all its activities.
The announcement of the setting up of the Sachar Committee, the selection of its members and formulation of the terms of reference by the Government of India alerted the Forum to the possibility of another step by the Government in furtherance of its policy to garner minority votes by providing religion based concessions. The Forum, therefore, took up the issue with the Sachar Committee by filing a formal petition, requesting to be invited for further presentation in person as per the terms of the government’s notification.
Not getting any response from the Sachar Committee, the Forum submitted a further “Rejoinder” to the Committee, with copies to all members of Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha as also senior government functionaries like the Prime Minister, Union Home Minister and others. None however took any note. A copy of the ‘Rejoinder’ is attached. After further waiting for government’s action on the Sachar Committee Report submitted to the Lok Sabha, the Forum finally filed a PIL before the Delhi High Court in January 2008 against the proposed implementation of the recommendations of this Report. A detailed update on the progress of the PIL is attached.
Update on Patriots’ Forum’s PIL against Implementation of Sachar Report
The PIL, filed by the Patriots’ Forum in Delhi High Court in the first week of January 2008 against the implementation of Sachar Committee Report, was transferred on 27 March 2008 by the Hon’ble CJ to a Bench comprising Justices TS Thakur and Siddhartha Mridul. The case came up for hearing before this Bench on May 12, 2008. Senior Advocate Shri P.N. Lekhi, appeared both for Patriots’ Forum and Rashtriya Mukti Morcha on whose behalf another PIL was filed by Shri Ravindra Kumar. The Government was represented by Additional Solicitor general PP Malhotra.
Shri Lekhi argued that the Sachar Committee Report was a blatant violation of the Constitution. He dubbed it as an extension of the Pakistan Resolution which had led to partition of the country.
Addressing the Respondent, the Bench commented "You are trying to please one community. Poverty is the common enemy. You should fight against poverty rather than saying that you would fight against poverty for one community only. This is where the rot lies."
"You are saying that more money to be spent for one minority community. Should it not cut across the caste and religion? Does the Sachar Committee say that facilities are available to other communities?" the Bench asked, adding "such issues should not be decided on the basis of emotions".
The Bench further observed, "Does it mean that drinking water facilities are available to the majority community and no person from it lives in slums?" "Under the Constitution, can a welfare state say that it would focus on a particular area because the minority community reside there? Can it say that it would spend more money in that area?" the Bench asked.
The government counsel contended that the PIL was a politically- motivated one and the Court should refrain from deciding these issues. “This is a political issue which cannot be decided in the Court. It is to be decided by the people in election. The High Court had earlier imposed a cost of Rs 50,000 for filing frivolous petition."
Senior advocate P N Lekhi, counsel for the petitioners, objected to the government's contention and said there was nothing called minority community in the Constitution. "The Constitution of India does not recognise any minority or subordinate segment of Indian society as identifiably separate or a sociological group...They (Muslims) cannot be labelled as a minority in the sense of a subordinate group,"
After hearing the contention of both the parties, the Bench was about to issue notice to the Centre but the move was strongly opposed by Malhotra. The Bench, however, objected to the stand of the government saying "it is a serious matter. The area is grey and needs a proper debate." The Court finally passed the following order;
“Post the writ Petition for admission on 21st August 2008 along with the application for intervention filed by Akhil Bharat Hindu Mahasabha.”
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Menace of Bangladeshi Infiltrators: Diabolical Dimensions
During last three decades the problem of continuous infiltration of Bangladeshis into Assam, West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa and almost all north-eastern States has assumed a weird shape. The alien infiltrators are now swarming all over the country and their massive presence is writ large across dozens of cities including Delhi, Mumbai and even far away Coimbatore and Chennai in Tamil Nadu. They have spread out even to many small towns of states like Punjab, Haryana, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. For the last five decades the successive central governments have remained focused solely on the Jammu & Kashmir imbroglio, and in the process willfully ignored our eastern flank. Unfortunately throughout the last three decades India's political leadership has failed to realize that much more than Kashmir, the Bangladeshi influx has the potential to tear asunder the socio-political fabric of India. The north-eastern region will be the first victim of this ‘tectonic tsunami’ the reverberations of which are now being felt all over the country.
Gigantic Dimensions of Illegal Infiltration
On a conservative estimate, the total number of Bangladeshi infiltrators and their progeny presently living in India could be anything close to 5 crores. At a national convention on demography held at New Delhi in April 2005, quite a few participants held the view that by now the total number of Bangladeshi infiltrators and their progeny could be as high as 5 crores. And if we include their fast multiplying progeny, too, the figure may be still higher !The mind-boggling dimensions of the problem were lucidly presented by Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy (a retired R&AW officer) in a research study titled 'Space Invaders' published in the Hindustan Times of February 14, 2003. In his well researched article Nandy highlighted the fact that an analysis of Bangladesh's 1991 census data undertaken by Sarifa Begum (a demographer of the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies, Dhaka) revealed that the 1991 census figure of 104.7 million population of Bangladesh disclosed a clear shortfall of nearly 10 million people. The actual headcount during census 1991 was at enormous variance with the estimate of 116-117 million for the decade projected by the UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) disclosing a huge shortfall of 13 million people. It was found to be lower than even Bangladesh government's own moderate estimate of 112-113 million populations for 1991 census. After a detailed study, Sarifa Begum, a well known economist, attributed the "missing millions" to the unregistered 'out migration'. Through her well researched analysis of the 1991 census data of Bangladesh, Sarifa Begum established that between 1981-1991 nearly 14 to 15 million Bangladeshis had entered India. In another context she had further estimated that nearly 3.5 million people had "disappeared" from East Pakistan between 1951 and 1961, while another 1.5 million had possibly entered India between 1961 and 19741. Thus as per Sarifa Begum's estimate the total number of out migrated or missing Bangladeshis till 1991 comes to 19 million to which must be added another 2 million Bangladeshi citizens, mostly residents of the districts bordering India, whose names were removed from that country's electoral rolls between 1995-96. Obviously those two million Bangladeshis whose names were struck off the electoral rolls could not have migrated to China or Australia. They just stealthily entered India. That makes a grand total of 21 million people who had managed to infiltrate into India by the year 1996. And since then the infiltration has continued unabated. During the last 12 years millions more must have infiltrated into India. These figures based on analytical studies conducted by Sarifa Begum, a Bangladeshi Muslim demographer, highlight the magnitude of the diabolical dimensions of illegal infiltration. According to a sealed affidavit filed in High Court by Delhi Police the capital alone was reported to have 13 million Bangladeshi infiltrators by September 20032. Their numbers in Kolkata and Mumbai are massively higher.
The government of Bangladesh is fully aware that millions of its citizens are out migrating into India. As highlighted by Baljit Rai in his book, Demographic Aggression Against India, the banner headline of Morning Sun, a Dacca based newspaper, on August 4, 1991, was "One Crore People Missing". The write up discussed the mystery of missing millions, as revealed by 1991 census of Bangladesh. Could there be a more convincing and incontrovertible proof about the massive infiltration of Bangladeshis into India?
Additionally, Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy has provided irrefutable statistical evidence about the scale of illegal infiltration. Almost all Indian districts along Indo-Bangaldesh border have recorded abnormally higher population growth, while the corresponding Bangladesh districts have witnessed equally abnormal low population growth rates. The data cited by Nandy tellingly illustrates the point: Greater Jessore and Greater Khulna districts in Bangladesh showed 1.97 and 1.58 percent growth as against the stupendous growth rate of 3.16 in the adjoining North 24 Parganas. Similarly Greater Mymensingh in Bangladesh recorded 1.89 percent population growth as against 3.16 percent growth in the adjacent district of Garo Hills in Meghalaya. Almost all border districts are going through the same pattern. Many semi-urban areas of West Bengal located close to Bangladesh have experienced a virtual population explosion - Gobardanga (8.64 percent growth), Khardah (9.5%), Raiganj (13.93%), Ashoknagar (7.45%) and Tufanganj (22.45). Nandy's research-based conclusions are further strengthened by the fact that in the decade 1981-1991 there was very low population growth in Hindu-concentrated districts of West Bengal.
Interestingly the average growth rate of urban and semi-urban population for West Bengal during the decade 1981-1991 was barely 2.45 percent.
Simultaneously the border areas recorded explosive population growth. In fact, Nandy hoisted a red alert in January 2005 through his article published in The Statesman, New Delhi that Hindus were moving out "in droves" from border areas after selling their lands and property at throw away prices3. Citing one specific instance of the outlying areas of Nadia district he pointed that 5 years ago Hindus owned 60 percent of agricultural land in that area, but now their share has dwindled to less than 40 percent4. By now large agricultural tracts of Nadia and 24 Praganas districts have been overrun and usurped by Bangladeshi Muslims. Yet no one in the central government cared to take notice of his grim warning.
A Deliberately Ignored Problem
The problem of illegal Bangla immigration has been ignored for decades by our minority-centric and selfish political dispension seeking votes of Muslim minority. It has a long history. Nearly 10 years ago, the present Governor of J. & K., Lt. General J.K. Sinha, during his tenure as Governor of Assam, had sent a 42 page report to the President about the menacing proportions of the problem. He drew pointed attention to the fact that this demographic invasion was creating widespread socio-economic unrest endangering maintenance of public order, apart from constituting a grave danger to the security of the nation. The report drew specific attention to the following facts:
i. The population of Muslims had recorded an abnormal increase of 77.42 percent
since 1971 due to illegal influx. No census could be held in Assam in 1981 due to disturbed conditions;
ii. Four districts of Assam (i.e., Dhubri, Goalpara, Barpeta and Hailakandi had acquired Muslim majority status. Now their number is seven;
iii Between 1991 and 1997 in 57 of Assam's 126 constituencies the number of voters had increased by more than 20 percent, as against the all India average of near about 7.4 percent.
iv On a conservative estimate the number of illegal Bangladeshis at that time was estimated at 13.2 million including 5.4 million in West Bengal and 4 million in Assam. Now the all India figure is 5 crore infiltrators - even more!
Unfortunately at that time the political class did not pay any heed to the serious problem for reasons best known to itself. And now the chickens have come home to roost in the shape of repetitive jihadi attacks and bomb blasts across the country.
The situation in Assam is much worse today than it was 20 years ago. Two years ago the present Governor of Assam, Lt. General Ajai Singh, had sent a detailed report to the central government highlighting that on an average 6000 Bangladeshis were entering Assam. In other words, nearly 22 lakhs illegal immigrants are entering that state every year. It means that nearly 1.90 crore infiltrators might have entered our country during the last 9 year. Interestingly if Sarifa Begum's figure of 13-14 million Bangladeshis (missing from that country's census 1991) is juxtaposed with the estimate given by the present Governor of Assam it looks quite logical that by now there could be more than 5 crore illegal infiltrators in India - a figure mentioned by more than one participant in the April 2005 seminar in Delhi.
In another detailed report, packed with facts and figures, submitted 8 years ago, in August 2000, by the Working Group on Border Management chaired by Madhav Godbole it was clearly stated that the number of illegal Bangladeshis was around 1.5 crores at that time and that at least 3 lakhs infiltrators were entering India every year. That adds up to a total of 1.7 crore illegal immigrants by now, i.e., year 2005. Incidentally Madhav Godbole was a former Union Home Secretary having impeccable secular credentials which was reflected in his courage of conviction to fault Narasimha Rao regime for failure to use force, including firing, to prevent demolition of Babri structure in 1992.
It is true that no exact figure about the extent of Bangladeshi influx can be given because of the failure of the central government and concerned state governments to draw up a National Register of Indian Citizens, promised decades ago. But that does not mean that the massive problem does not exist. It is very much there, writ large across the country's eastern horizon and visible all over the country even in several metropolitan cities and mofussil towns, situated as far away as Chennai in Tamil Nadu
A grossly belated development is the candid admission of the gravity of situation by the Chief Minister of West Bengal, Buddhadev Bhattacharjee, on June 23, 2005 during a BSF seminar confessing helplessly that illegal immigrants were spreading "the message of Islamic fundamentalism" and that there was a "serious problem with some of our neighbors. He lamented that while "Bangladesh claims that there were no Bangladeshis in India whereas the entire demography of certain parts of the country and West Bengal is being changed due to infiltration. In many places there are more Banglaeshi settlers than Indians5." Earlier the Marxist had always denied that Bangla influx was a genuine problem. Even the UPA appointed Governor of West Bengal, Shri Gopalkrishna Gandhi, proclaimed that relentless infiltration was "a time bomb" - which indeed it is.
Census 2001 revealed many far reaching and worrisome population changes, not only in the north-eastern region and the Marxist-ruled state of West Bengal, but even in the Hindi heartland state of Bihar. For instance, in the geographically crucial state of Assam, the Muslims have already attained the majority status in six districts, i.e., Dhubri (Muslims: 12,16,455, Hindus 4,05,065), Goalpara (Muslims 4,41,516; Hindus 3,14,157), Barpeta (Muslims 9,77,943; Hindus 6,62,066), Nagaon (Muslims 11,80,267: Hindus 11,06,354), Karimganj (Muslims 5,27,214; Hindus 4,70,708) and Hailakundi (Muslims 3,12,844; Hindus 2,23,191)6. As nearly four years have elapsed since the census enumeration took place in 2001, by now another district, Marigaon, is believed to have become a Muslim majority district, thereby taking the tally to seven districts.
Socio-economic Impact of Influx
During last 3 decades there has been a quantum jump in economic distress caused by growing unemployment all over the northeast, especially in Assam. As mentioned by the Chief Minister of Assam in August 2004, there were more than 2 million unemployed youth in Assam alone, an abnormally high figure by national standards. It could be an underestimate because the State's economic survey for 2003-2004 revealed that employment exchanges had 15, 71,996 job-seekers. As a rule the employment exchange figures are under estimated to the extent of 30 to 40 percent because the rural unemployed don't come to register themselves in employment exchanges. Obviously the state has more than 20 to 25 lakhs unemployed youth. Any guess what could be the jobs and livelihood resources usurped by Bangladeshis? Census 2001 had placed the population of Assam at 2, 66, and 55,528. As per census 1991 in Assam the proportion of Assamese speaking was less than 40 percent indicating that they have already become a minority in their ancestral homestead. That should give us an idea of the size of Bangla influx which could be 70 to 80 lakhs. It means that at least 30 to 35 lakhs jobs and livelihood resources have been usurped by Bangladeshis in Assam alone. Both in India and Bangladesh among the poorest sections of society, at least two members of the family (often both father and mother) work to keep the kitchen fires burning. Thus Nandy is not far wrong in saying that by pushing 15 percent of its population into India Bangladesh has imposed a heavy economic burden on Indian citizens. And this burden is borne by the poorest of the poor living on the margin of starvation because they are the first victims of loss of livelihood sources and petty jobs.
The diehard Doubting Thomases and arm chair philosophers of New Delhi, unwilling to accept truth, will do well to undertake a tour of the border districts of Assam and Bangladesh and interact with the original residents of the border villages, now out migrating due to fear. They will come back to Delhi infinitely wiser and sober. Before concluding I must narrate my interface with a retired para military officer belonging to the northeast, barely 5-6 months ago. After an informal interactive session on the escalating violence in the region I was asked by the retired officer whether the central government and mainstream leadership of India would have dared to remain silent spectators if a similar massive influx of Pakistani immigrants had taken place in north India, through Punjab and Rajasthan border. His question foxed me completely. There is a widespread feeling among citizens across the northeast that the government has thrown them to wolves.
Grave Security Implications for Indian Nation
The dirty role of the ruling political dispensation of Bangladesh, acting in cahoots with the ISI of Pakistan for undermining the security and sovereignty of Indian nation is well known. Pakistan’s role in promoting jihad against India, through trained terrorists, can be ignored only at great peril to the security of Indian citizens. The possibility of carrying out jihad against India through the Indo-Pakistan frontier in north-west has been substantially reduced during the last 6 / 7 years due to the following reasons:
i) Extensive fencing along the Indo-Pakistan border and the line of control has significantly reduced the scope for large scale infiltration, excepting the State of Jammu & Kashmir, and attempts at waging proxy war against India.
ii) After 9/11 the extensive presence of US intelligence sleuths in Pakistan has made it difficult for the ISI to openly carry out anti-India campaigns through Punjab and / or Rajasthan border.
iii) After the Kargil war, India has increased the level of vigil on Indo-Pakistan Border, especially in J & K State, thus making the task of large scale Infiltration into India or mounting Jihadi campaigns for undermining India’s security.
In the circumstances, Pakistan has fine tuned its old strategy of waging the ‘war of a thousand cuts’ against India by shifting ISI’s focus to infiltration of thousands of Jihadi warriors and spies through the porous Indo-Bangladesh border. No wonder, in recent years presently Bangladesh has become the major operational ground for waging proxy war against India. Pakistan’s ISI and Al Qaeda have a grand design to set up a caliphate from Indonesia to the Balkans through Malayasia, Thailand, Bangladesh, via India and through Pakistan right into the Balkans. In this global Islamic design India is the only bulwark, populated by non-Muslims, against the Islamic dream of a trans-Asian caliphate. In this gigantic endeavor a number of Jihadi organizations like HUJI-B (i.e., Harkat-ul-Jihad-e Islami Bangladesh), Jamat-e-Islami, Okiya Jote, duly aided by Assam-based militant outfits like Muslim Liberation Tigers of Assam, Islamic Liberation Army of Assam, Muslim Security Force, Al Jihad-e Islami and Adam Sena, have joined hands to make an attempt at tearing away Assam and some other parts of north-east from the Indian Republic. In fact, HUJI-B was clearly involved in the year 2002 terror attack on American Center in Kolkata. In recent year names of Jihadi operators belonging to HUJI-B are believed to have been involved in attack on Sankat Mochan temple, Varanasi, in 2006, Mumbai bomb blasts, twin blasts in Hyderabad last year and the latest bomb blasts in Jaipur, Rajasthan. Recently in the first week of March 2008, the U.S. government has declared HUJI-B as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (F.T.O.).
An important instance of the perfidy of Bangladesh-based jihadis attacking Indian civilization was the dastardly attack on the make-shift Ramjanambhoomi temple on July 5, 2005, which was planned in Bangladesh. One of the masterminds was Maqbool Hussain, a Dhubri born Jaish-e-Mohammad jihadi terrorist and a close confidante of the notorious Maulana Azhar Masood, chief of JeM. Maqbool was arrested on October 29, 2005, by Delhi Police along with his associate Adnan a Pakistani national and seasoned jihadi warrior. Originally from Assam, Maqbool had taken up residence in Dhaka and used to operate under different identities. The code name assigned to him by JeM was Zahid, while in Bangladesh he was known as Anwar. After traveling to Karachi on forged documents Maqbool had even met Masood Azhar at Bahawalpur. He had studied for 5 years at the great fount of jihadi terrorism, Deoband in India from 1992 to 1997. Similarly one of the masterminds of Sankatmochan bomb blast at Varanasi in March 2006, the Pesh Imam of a mosque in Allahabad (U.P.), too, had studied at Dar-ul-uloom, Deoband and had allegedly a Bangladesh connection.
Tackling the Growing Menace of Infiltration
To be candid till date neither the Central Government, nor the State Government has ever tried to tackle the problem in a serious manner. The problem is not totally intractable, provided we do some out of box thinking. The following steps can substantially alter the scenario.
1. Apart from making a concerted attempt across the country to identify and deport all Bangladeshi infiltrators, a crash programme of resettling ex-servicemen and retired personnel of para military personnel all along Indo Bangladesh border should be undertaken. A well-planned string of ‘Sentinel Settlements’ of ex-servicemen should be set up along the Indo-Bangladesh border. As far as possible, the settlers should be from the north-eastern region itself. But they must be financially supported by the government to buy farmland and licensed arms for defending their farms / orchards and the adjoining border areas. For better management and prompt results, cooperatives of ‘sentinel settlements’ should be patterned on the Israeli concept of “armed kibbutz”. The settlers must be fully armed and well-equipped to take on the Jihadi infiltrators. In due course of time, such ‘sentinel settlements’ should be set up along all our borders, including Indo-Pak border in Gujarat, Rajasthan and Punjab – even Himachal Pradesh border adjacent to Doda-Kishtwar region of Jammu & Kashmir.
2. It is time that the Government of India enacted and enforced a stringent law prohibiting employment of any ‘illegal foreigner’, as has been done by the Government of United Kingdom. Like United Kingdom, a law should be enacted for imposing on-the-spot fine of Rs. fifty thousand on all those who give employment to any foreigner. Under the British law, titled The Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act, passed in 2006, an employer giving a job to any illegal immigrant is liable to be fined 2000 pounds (equivalent of Rs. 1, 60,000 Indian currency) on the spot every time an illegal immigrant is employed. Also finger printing of all suspected illegal immigrants should be made compulsory. If governments of U.K. and several other countries can enact such laws, why cannot India do that? In the Indian law a provision should also be incorporated for punishing all illegal immigrants taking up a job or occupation in India, without obtaining a prior permission from central government. That would make it more stringent and deter all attempts at infiltration.
3. The long pending task of registration of all Indian nationals should be completed at an early date. It should be done first and foremost in Assam, West Bengal and all north-eastern States. Every Indian citizen should be issued a Photo-ID card and there should be full documentation of all foreigners, legal as well as illegal. This high priority task should be implemented without delay.
4. Another important measure to counter the menace will be motivate the people to boycott Bangladeshi hawkers, vendors and Rickshaw-pullers, as was done by a vigilant youth group of Dibrugarh, known as Chiring Chapori Yuva Manch, in May 2005 which made thousand of infiltrators flee from that district. In fact, public opinion needs to be mobilized across the country to boycott all Bangladeshi infiltrators by denying them jobs, residential accommodation and refusing to have any dealings with them.
***
References:
1. Prakash Singh, Bangladeshi Immigration: Are we heading for another partition?
Dialogue, New Delhi (a journal of Ashta Bharati), October 2001, Vol. 3, No.2, p.37.
2. Bhadra Sinha, Can't deport Bangladeshi immigrants, Times of India, New Delhi, September 25, 203.
3. Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy, Secular Claims, The Statesman, New Delhi, January 25, 2005.
4. Ibid.
5. A news item, 'Bengal CM speaks BJP lingo, assails influx from Bangladesh' Times of
India, New Delhi, June 24, 2005, p.1.
P.S. The writer is a former Inspector General of Police who has served in the Northeast.
Copyright @ R.K. Ohri
Menace of Bangladeshi Infiltrators: Diabolical Dimensions
During last three decades the problem of continuous infiltration of Bangladeshis into Assam, West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa and almost all north-eastern States has assumed a weird shape. The alien infiltrators are now swarming all over the country and their massive presence is writ large across dozens of cities including Delhi, Mumbai and even far away Coimbatore and Chennai in Tamil Nadu. They have spread out even to many small towns of states like Punjab, Haryana, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. For the last five decades the successive central governments have remained focused solely on the Jammu & Kashmir imbroglio, and in the process willfully ignored our eastern flank. Unfortunately throughout the last three decades India's political leadership has failed to realize that much more than Kashmir, the Bangladeshi influx has the potential to tear asunder the socio-political fabric of India. The north-eastern region will be the first victim of this ‘tectonic tsunami’ the reverberations of which are now being felt all over the country.
Gigantic Dimensions of Illegal Infiltration
On a conservative estimate, the total number of Bangladeshi infiltrators and their progeny presently living in India could be anything close to 5 crores. At a national convention on demography held at New Delhi in April 2005, quite a few participants held the view that by now the total number of Bangladeshi infiltrators and their progeny could be as high as 5 crores. And if we include their fast multiplying progeny, too, the figure may be still higher !The mind-boggling dimensions of the problem were lucidly presented by Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy (a retired R&AW officer) in a research study titled 'Space Invaders' published in the Hindustan Times of February 14, 2003. In his well researched article Nandy highlighted the fact that an analysis of Bangladesh's 1991 census data undertaken by Sarifa Begum (a demographer of the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies, Dhaka) revealed that the 1991 census figure of 104.7 million population of Bangladesh disclosed a clear shortfall of nearly 10 million people. The actual headcount during census 1991 was at enormous variance with the estimate of 116-117 million for the decade projected by the UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) disclosing a huge shortfall of 13 million people. It was found to be lower than even Bangladesh government's own moderate estimate of 112-113 million populations for 1991 census. After a detailed study, Sarifa Begum, a well known economist, attributed the "missing millions" to the unregistered 'out migration'. Through her well researched analysis of the 1991 census data of Bangladesh, Sarifa Begum established that between 1981-1991 nearly 14 to 15 million Bangladeshis had entered India. In another context she had further estimated that nearly 3.5 million people had "disappeared" from East Pakistan between 1951 and 1961, while another 1.5 million had possibly entered India between 1961 and 19741. Thus as per Sarifa Begum's estimate the total number of out migrated or missing Bangladeshis till 1991 comes to 19 million to which must be added another 2 million Bangladeshi citizens, mostly residents of the districts bordering India, whose names were removed from that country's electoral rolls between 1995-96. Obviously those two million Bangladeshis whose names were struck off the electoral rolls could not have migrated to China or Australia. They just stealthily entered India. That makes a grand total of 21 million people who had managed to infiltrate into India by the year 1996. And since then the infiltration has continued unabated. During the last 12 years millions more must have infiltrated into India. These figures based on analytical studies conducted by Sarifa Begum, a Bangladeshi Muslim demographer, highlight the magnitude of the diabolical dimensions of illegal infiltration. According to a sealed affidavit filed in High Court by Delhi Police the capital alone was reported to have 13 million Bangladeshi infiltrators by September 20032. Their numbers in Kolkata and Mumbai are massively higher.
The government of Bangladesh is fully aware that millions of its citizens are out migrating into India. As highlighted by Baljit Rai in his book, Demographic Aggression Against India, the banner headline of Morning Sun, a Dacca based newspaper, on August 4, 1991, was "One Crore People Missing". The write up discussed the mystery of missing millions, as revealed by 1991 census of Bangladesh. Could there be a more convincing and incontrovertible proof about the massive infiltration of Bangladeshis into India?
Additionally, Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy has provided irrefutable statistical evidence about the scale of illegal infiltration. Almost all Indian districts along Indo-Bangaldesh border have recorded abnormally higher population growth, while the corresponding Bangladesh districts have witnessed equally abnormal low population growth rates. The data cited by Nandy tellingly illustrates the point: Greater Jessore and Greater Khulna districts in Bangladesh showed 1.97 and 1.58 percent growth as against the stupendous growth rate of 3.16 in the adjoining North 24 Parganas. Similarly Greater Mymensingh in Bangladesh recorded 1.89 percent population growth as against 3.16 percent growth in the adjacent district of Garo Hills in Meghalaya. Almost all border districts are going through the same pattern. Many semi-urban areas of West Bengal located close to Bangladesh have experienced a virtual population explosion - Gobardanga (8.64 percent growth), Khardah (9.5%), Raiganj (13.93%), Ashoknagar (7.45%) and Tufanganj (22.45). Nandy's research-based conclusions are further strengthened by the fact that in the decade 1981-1991 there was very low population growth in Hindu-concentrated districts of West Bengal.
Interestingly the average growth rate of urban and semi-urban population for West Bengal during the decade 1981-1991 was barely 2.45 percent.
Simultaneously the border areas recorded explosive population growth. In fact, Nandy hoisted a red alert in January 2005 through his article published in The Statesman, New Delhi that Hindus were moving out "in droves" from border areas after selling their lands and property at throw away prices3. Citing one specific instance of the outlying areas of Nadia district he pointed that 5 years ago Hindus owned 60 percent of agricultural land in that area, but now their share has dwindled to less than 40 percent4. By now large agricultural tracts of Nadia and 24 Praganas districts have been overrun and usurped by Bangladeshi Muslims. Yet no one in the central government cared to take notice of his grim warning.
A Deliberately Ignored Problem
The problem of illegal Bangla immigration has been ignored for decades by our minority-centric and selfish political dispension seeking votes of Muslim minority. It has a long history. Nearly 10 years ago, the present Governor of J. & K., Lt. General J.K. Sinha, during his tenure as Governor of Assam, had sent a 42 page report to the President about the menacing proportions of the problem. He drew pointed attention to the fact that this demographic invasion was creating widespread socio-economic unrest endangering maintenance of public order, apart from constituting a grave danger to the security of the nation. The report drew specific attention to the following facts:
i. The population of Muslims had recorded an abnormal increase of 77.42 percent
since 1971 due to illegal influx. No census could be held in Assam in 1981 due to disturbed conditions;
ii. Four districts of Assam (i.e., Dhubri, Goalpara, Barpeta and Hailakandi had acquired Muslim majority status. Now their number is seven;
iii Between 1991 and 1997 in 57 of Assam's 126 constituencies the number of voters had increased by more than 20 percent, as against the all India average of near about 7.4 percent.
iv On a conservative estimate the number of illegal Bangladeshis at that time was estimated at 13.2 million including 5.4 million in West Bengal and 4 million in Assam. Now the all India figure is 5 crore infiltrators - even more!
Unfortunately at that time the political class did not pay any heed to the serious problem for reasons best known to itself. And now the chickens have come home to roost in the shape of repetitive jihadi attacks and bomb blasts across the country.
The situation in Assam is much worse today than it was 20 years ago. Two years ago the present Governor of Assam, Lt. General Ajai Singh, had sent a detailed report to the central government highlighting that on an average 6000 Bangladeshis were entering Assam. In other words, nearly 22 lakhs illegal immigrants are entering that state every year. It means that nearly 1.90 crore infiltrators might have entered our country during the last 9 year. Interestingly if Sarifa Begum's figure of 13-14 million Bangladeshis (missing from that country's census 1991) is juxtaposed with the estimate given by the present Governor of Assam it looks quite logical that by now there could be more than 5 crore illegal infiltrators in India - a figure mentioned by more than one participant in the April 2005 seminar in Delhi.
In another detailed report, packed with facts and figures, submitted 8 years ago, in August 2000, by the Working Group on Border Management chaired by Madhav Godbole it was clearly stated that the number of illegal Bangladeshis was around 1.5 crores at that time and that at least 3 lakhs infiltrators were entering India every year. That adds up to a total of 1.7 crore illegal immigrants by now, i.e., year 2005. Incidentally Madhav Godbole was a former Union Home Secretary having impeccable secular credentials which was reflected in his courage of conviction to fault Narasimha Rao regime for failure to use force, including firing, to prevent demolition of Babri structure in 1992.
It is true that no exact figure about the extent of Bangladeshi influx can be given because of the failure of the central government and concerned state governments to draw up a National Register of Indian Citizens, promised decades ago. But that does not mean that the massive problem does not exist. It is very much there, writ large across the country's eastern horizon and visible all over the country even in several metropolitan cities and mofussil towns, situated as far away as Chennai in Tamil Nadu
A grossly belated development is the candid admission of the gravity of situation by the Chief Minister of West Bengal, Buddhadev Bhattacharjee, on June 23, 2005 during a BSF seminar confessing helplessly that illegal immigrants were spreading "the message of Islamic fundamentalism" and that there was a "serious problem with some of our neighbors. He lamented that while "Bangladesh claims that there were no Bangladeshis in India whereas the entire demography of certain parts of the country and West Bengal is being changed due to infiltration. In many places there are more Banglaeshi settlers than Indians5." Earlier the Marxist had always denied that Bangla influx was a genuine problem. Even the UPA appointed Governor of West Bengal, Shri Gopalkrishna Gandhi, proclaimed that relentless infiltration was "a time bomb" - which indeed it is.
Census 2001 revealed many far reaching and worrisome population changes, not only in the north-eastern region and the Marxist-ruled state of West Bengal, but even in the Hindi heartland state of Bihar. For instance, in the geographically crucial state of Assam, the Muslims have already attained the majority status in six districts, i.e., Dhubri (Muslims: 12,16,455, Hindus 4,05,065), Goalpara (Muslims 4,41,516; Hindus 3,14,157), Barpeta (Muslims 9,77,943; Hindus 6,62,066), Nagaon (Muslims 11,80,267: Hindus 11,06,354), Karimganj (Muslims 5,27,214; Hindus 4,70,708) and Hailakundi (Muslims 3,12,844; Hindus 2,23,191)6. As nearly four years have elapsed since the census enumeration took place in 2001, by now another district, Marigaon, is believed to have become a Muslim majority district, thereby taking the tally to seven districts.
Socio-economic Impact of Influx
During last 3 decades there has been a quantum jump in economic distress caused by growing unemployment all over the northeast, especially in Assam. As mentioned by the Chief Minister of Assam in August 2004, there were more than 2 million unemployed youth in Assam alone, an abnormally high figure by national standards. It could be an underestimate because the State's economic survey for 2003-2004 revealed that employment exchanges had 15, 71,996 job-seekers. As a rule the employment exchange figures are under estimated to the extent of 30 to 40 percent because the rural unemployed don't come to register themselves in employment exchanges. Obviously the state has more than 20 to 25 lakhs unemployed youth. Any guess what could be the jobs and livelihood resources usurped by Bangladeshis? Census 2001 had placed the population of Assam at 2, 66, and 55,528. As per census 1991 in Assam the proportion of Assamese speaking was less than 40 percent indicating that they have already become a minority in their ancestral homestead. That should give us an idea of the size of Bangla influx which could be 70 to 80 lakhs. It means that at least 30 to 35 lakhs jobs and livelihood resources have been usurped by Bangladeshis in Assam alone. Both in India and Bangladesh among the poorest sections of society, at least two members of the family (often both father and mother) work to keep the kitchen fires burning. Thus Nandy is not far wrong in saying that by pushing 15 percent of its population into India Bangladesh has imposed a heavy economic burden on Indian citizens. And this burden is borne by the poorest of the poor living on the margin of starvation because they are the first victims of loss of livelihood sources and petty jobs.
The diehard Doubting Thomases and arm chair philosophers of New Delhi, unwilling to accept truth, will do well to undertake a tour of the border districts of Assam and Bangladesh and interact with the original residents of the border villages, now out migrating due to fear. They will come back to Delhi infinitely wiser and sober. Before concluding I must narrate my interface with a retired para military officer belonging to the northeast, barely 5-6 months ago. After an informal interactive session on the escalating violence in the region I was asked by the retired officer whether the central government and mainstream leadership of India would have dared to remain silent spectators if a similar massive influx of Pakistani immigrants had taken place in north India, through Punjab and Rajasthan border. His question foxed me completely. There is a widespread feeling among citizens across the northeast that the government has thrown them to wolves.
Grave Security Implications for Indian Nation.
The dirty role of the ruling political dispensation of Bangladesh, acting in cahoots with the ISI of Pakistan for undermining the security and sovereignty of Indian nation is well known. Pakistan’s role in promoting jihad against India, through trained terrorists, can be ignored only at great peril to the security of Indian citizens. The possibility of carrying out jihad against India through the Indo-Pakistan frontier in north-west has been substantially reduced during the last 6 / 7 years due to the following reasons:
i) Extensive fencing along the Indo-Pakistan border and the line of control has significantly reduced the scope for large scale infiltration, excepting the State of Jammu & Kashmir, and attempts at waging proxy war against India.
ii) After 9/11 the extensive presence of US intelligence sleuths in Pakistan has made it difficult for the ISI to openly carry out anti-India campaigns through Punjab and / or Rajasthan border.
iii) After the Kargil war, India has increased the level of vigil on Indo-Pakistan Border, especially in J & K State, thus making the task of large scale Infiltration into India or mounting Jihadi campaigns for undermining India’s security.
In the circumstances, Pakistan has fine tuned its old strategy of waging the ‘war of a thousand cuts’ against India by shifting ISI’s focus to infiltration of thousands of Jihadi warriors and spies through the porous Indo-Bangladesh border. No wonder, in recent years presently Bangladesh has become the major operational ground for waging proxy war against India. Pakistan’s ISI and Al Qaeda have a grand design to set up a caliphate from Indonesia to the Balkans through Malayasia, Thailand, Bangladesh, via India and through Pakistan right into the Balkans. In this global Islamic design India is the only bulwark, populated by non-Muslims, against the Islamic dream of a trans-Asian caliphate. In this gigantic endeavor a number of Jihadi organizations like HUJI-B (i.e., Harkat-ul-Jihad-e Islami Bangladesh), Jamat-e-Islami, Okiya Jote, duly aided by Assam-based militant outfits like Muslim Liberation Tigers of Assam, Islamic Liberation Army of Assam, Muslim Security Force, Al Jihad-e Islami and Adam Sena, have joined hands to make an attempt at tearing away Assam and some other parts of north-east from the Indian Republic. In fact, HUJI-B was clearly involved in the year 2002 terror attack on American Center in Kolkata. In recent year names of Jihadi operators belonging to HUJI-B are believed to have been involved in attack on Sankat Mochan temple, Varanasi, in 2006, Mumbai bomb blasts, twin blasts in Hyderabad last year and the latest bomb blasts in Jaipur, Rajasthan. Recently in the first week of March 2008, the U.S. government has declared HUJI-B as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (F.T.O.).
An important instance of the perfidy of Bangladesh-based jihadis attacking Indian civilization was the dastardly attack on the make-shift Ramjanambhoomi temple on July 5, 2005, which was planned in Bangladesh. One of the masterminds was Maqbool Hussain, a Dhubri born Jaish-e-Mohammad jihadi terrorist and a close confidante of the notorious Maulana Azhar Masood, chief of JeM. Maqbool was arrested on October 29, 2005, by Delhi Police along with his associate Adnan a Pakistani national and seasoned jihadi warrior. Originally from Assam, Maqbool had taken up residence in Dhaka and used to operate under different identities. The code name assigned to him by JeM was Zahid, while in Bangladesh he was known as Anwar. After traveling to Karachi on forged documents Maqbool had even met Masood Azhar at Bahawalpur. He had studied for 5 years at the great fount of jihadi terrorism, Deoband in India from 1992 to 1997. Similarly one of the masterminds of Sankatmochan bomb blast at Varanasi in March 2006, the Pesh Imam of a mosque in Allahabad (U.P.), too, had studied at Dar-ul-uloom, Deoband and had allegedly a Bangladesh connection.
Tackling the Growing Menace of Infiltration
To be candid till date neither the Central Government, nor the State Government has ever tried to tackle the problem in a serious manner. The problem is not totally intractable, provided we do some out of box thinking. The following steps can substantially alter the scenario.
1. Apart from making a concerted attempt across the country to identify and deport all Bangladeshi infiltrators, a crash programme of resettling ex-servicemen and retired personnel of para military personnel all along Indo Bangladesh border should be undertaken. A well-planned string of ‘Sentinel Settlements’ of ex-servicemen should be set up along the Indo-Bangladesh border. As far as possible, the settlers should be from the north-eastern region itself. But they must be financially supported by the government to buy farmland and licensed arms for defending their farms / orchards and the adjoining border areas. For better management and prompt results, cooperatives of ‘sentinel settlements’ should be patterned on the Israeli concept of “armed kibbutz”. The settlers must be fully armed and well-equipped to take on the Jihadi infiltrators. In due course of time, such ‘sentinel settlements’ should be set up along all our borders, including Indo-Pak border in Gujarat, Rajasthan and Punjab – even Himachal Pradesh border adjacent to Doda-Kishtwar region of Jammu & Kashmir.
2. It is time that the Government of India enacted and enforced a stringent law prohibiting employment of any ‘illegal foreigner’, as has been done by the Government of United Kingdom. Like United Kingdom, a law should be enacted for imposing on-the-spot fine of Rs. fifty thousand on all those who give employment to any foreigner. Under the British law, titled The Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act, passed in 2006, an employer giving a job to any illegal immigrant is liable to be fined 2000 pounds (equivalent of Rs. 1, 60,000 Indian currency) on the spot every time an illegal immigrant is employed. Also finger printing of all suspected illegal immigrants should be made compulsory. If governments of U.K. and several other countries can enact such laws, why cannot India do that? In the Indian law a provision should also be incorporated for punishing all illegal immigrants taking up a job or occupation in India, without obtaining a prior permission from central government. That would make it more stringent and deter all attempts at infiltration.
3. The long pending task of registration of all Indian nationals should be completed at an early date. It should be done first and foremost in Assam, West Bengal and all north-eastern States. Every Indian citizen should be issued a Photo-ID card and there should be full documentation of all foreigners, legal as well as illegal. This high priority task should be implemented without delay.
4. Another important measure to counter the menace will be motivate the people to boycott Bangladeshi hawkers, vendors and Rickshaw-pullers, as was done by a vigilant youth group of Dibrugarh, known as Chiring Chapori Yuva Manch, in May 2005 which made thousand of infiltrators flee from that district. In fact, public opinion needs to be mobilized across the country to boycott all Bangladeshi infiltrators by denying them jobs, residential accommodation and refusing to have any dealings with them.
***
References:
1. Prakash Singh, Bangladeshi Immigration: Are we heading for another partition?
Dialogue, New Delhi (a journal of Ashta Bharati), October 2001, Vol. 3, No.2, p.37.
2. Bhadra Sinha, Can't deport Bangladeshi immigrants, Times of India, New Delhi, September 25, 203.
3. Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy, Secular Claims, The Statesman, New Delhi, January 25, 2005.
4. Ibid.
5. A news item, 'Bengal CM speaks BJP lingo, assails influx from Bangladesh' Times of
India, New Delhi, June 24, 2005, p.1.
P.S. The writer is a former Inspector General of Police who has served in the Northeast.
Copyright @ R.K. Ohri
Friday, June 20, 2008
Hindu Samhati leaders arrested after attack by 6,000 strong Muslim mob in West Bengal
Registered in: New York, USA. Contact: hindusamhati@gmail.com.
Other contact info:
a) District Magistrate, South 24 Parganas Phone: 033-24793713 Email: dm-ali@wb.nic.in
Thursday, June 19, 2008
DARK SIDE OF SUFISM
R.K. Ohri, IPS (Retd)
For centuries the Sufi creed and Sufi music have been tom-tomed as great symbols of spiritualism and promoters of peace and harmony between the Hindus and the Muslims. The cleverly marketed concept of Sufi spiritualism has been unquestioningly accepted as the hallmark of Hindu-Muslim unity. It is time we studied the history of Sufis, tried to track the narrative of their coming to India and analyzed their explicit missionary role in promoting conversions to Islam. More importantly, it needs to be assessed how did the Sufis conduct themselves during reckless killings and plunders by the Muslim invaders? Did they object to the senseless mass killings and try to prevent unremitting plunder of Hindu temples and innocent masses? Did the Sufis ever object to the capture of helpless men and women as slaves and the use of the latter as objects of carnal pleasure? These are some of the questions to which answers have to be found by every genuine student of Indian history.
Prominent Sufis in India
1. Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti of Ajmer had accompanied the army of Shihabuddin Ghori and finally settled down at Ajmer in the year 1233 A.D.
2. Khawaja Qutubuddin came to Delhi in the year 1236 in the train of Shihabuddin Ghori and stayed on to further the cause of Islam.
3. Sheikh Faridudin came to Pattan (now in Pakistan) in the year 1265.
4. Sheikh Nizamuddin Auliya of Dargah Hazrat Nizamuddin came to Delhi in the year 1335 accompanying a contingent of the Muslim Invaders.
Additionally, the famous Sufi Shihabuddin Suhrawardy of Baghdad was brought to India for carrying out the missionary work of conversions by Bahauddin Zakariya of Multan several decades after the Hindu ruler had been defeated and the kingdom laid waste after repetitive plunder and manslaughter. Like all Sufi masters, his main task was to apply the balm of spiritual unity on the traumatized Hindu population and then gradually persuade them to convert to Islam. Not a single Sufi, the so-called mystic saints, ever objected to the ongoing senseless manslaughter and reckless plunder, or to the destruction neither of temples, nor for that matter to the ghoulish enslavement of the so-called infidel men and women for sale in the bazaars of Ghazni and Baghdad. Operating from the sidelines of spiritualism they even participated in the nitty-gritty of governance to help the Muslim rulers consolidate their authority in the strife torn country. And significantly, their participation in the affairs of the State was not conditional upon the Muslim rulers acting in a just and even handed manner. On the contrary, the Sufis invariably tried to help the Sultans in following the path shown by the Prophet and the Shariah.
Sufis were practicing Muslims and not even Secular
It may be recalled that the great Sufi master of the eleventh century, Al Qushairi (A.D.1072) had unambiguously declared that there was no discord between the aims of the Sufi ‘haqiqa’ and the aims of the Sharia. The definition given by Al Hujwiri should be able to quell any doubt about the commitment of Sufis in upholding the supremacy of the Islamic faith over all other religions. That dogma has been the key component of the philosophy of Sufism not only in India, but across the world - from India to Hispania (i.e., the Spain). The great Sufi master, Al Hujwiri, laid down the golden rule that the words “there is no god save Allah” are the ultimate Truth and the words “Muhammad is the Apostle of Allah” are the indisputable Law for all Sufis. In other words, the Sufism and the ulema represent the same two aspects of the Islamic faith which are universally accepted and obeyed by all Muslims. By definition therefore Sufi masters could be no exception. The renowned ninth century Sufi master, Al Junaid, also known as “the Sheikh of the Way”, and widely revered as the spiritual ancestor of Sufi faith, had categorically proclaimed that for Sufis “All the mystic paths are barred, except to him who followeth in the footsteps of the Messenger (i.e., Prophet Muhammad) [Source: Martin Lings, What is Sufism, George Allen & Unwin Ltd, London, 1975, p.101].
Sufis and Muslim Laws
Sufism leaves no scope for Hinduism
Sufis against Hindus
If the narrative of the preaching and acts of Khawaja Moinuddin Chishti of Ajmer are taken as indication of his religious philosophy and deeds, he emerges as a Sufi master who nursed a deep hatred against the infidel Hindus and showed utter contempt for their religious beliefs. As elaborated by S.S.A. Rizvi in ‘A History of Sufism in India, Vol. 1 (Munshiram Manoharlal, 1978, p. 117), there is a reference in the book, Jawahar-i- Faridi, to the fact that when Moinuddin Chishti reached near the Annasagar Lake at Ajmer, where a number of holy shrines of Hindus were located, he slaughtered a cow and cooked a beef kebab at the sacred place surrounded by many temples. It is further claimed in Jawahar-i-Faridi that the Khwaja had dried the 2 holy lakes of Annasagar and Pansela by the magical heat of Islamic spiritual power. He is even stated to have made the idol of the Hindu temple near Annasagar recite the Kalma. The Khwaja had a burning desire to destroy the rule of the brave Rajput king, Prithiviraj Chauhan, so much so that he ascribed the victory of Muhammad Ghori in the battle of Tarain entirely to his own spiritual prowess and declared that “We have seized Pithaura alive and handed him over to the army of Islam”. [Source: Siyar’l Auliya, cited by Rizvi on page 116 of ‘A History of Sufism in India’].
Sufis and Patronage of Muslim Rulers
Sufis were not pro-Hindus
Sufi Philosophy is one-way street
**************
Copyright @ R.K. Ohri
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Myth Of Muslim Backwardness
For decades a myth, or call it an unsubstantiated belief, has been propagated across by partisan politicians that as a community the Muslims are more backward than the Hindus. In recent years this impression has gained considerable credence thanks to the sustained efforts of vote-bank besotted politicians and ignorant opinion-makers, including to some extent, the ill-informed mainstream English media. Interestingly no one has ever cared to scientifically analyze and compare the standard human development indices of the two communities.
Making use of the prevalent presumption of the so-called backwardness of Muslims sometime ago the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, constituted a High Level Committee, under the chairmanship of retired Justice Rajindar Sachar. The Committee instead of trying to find out the truth went into an overdrive by resurrecting the Frankenstein of communal reservations - once again, barely 59 years after India's partition along communal lines. The sudden appointment of Sachar Committee by the Prime Minister succumbing to political pressure of fundamentalist politicians awakened our study group to the need for an in-depth research for assessing the relative socio-economic status of the two communities in a scientific manner. The result of the research, which was entrusted to me by our study group, startled even us. It revealed that in respect of at least three major globally accepted determinants of socio-economic status, namely infant and child mortality, degree of urbanization and average life expectancy at birth, the Hindus are more backward than the Muslims, as analyzed in the following pages.
A. Incidence of Infant & Child Mortality
Incidence of infant and child mortality is an important indicator of socio-economic status of a community. Infant mortality is arrived at by calculating the number of deaths of children below 1 year for every 1000 live births in a community or group. Similarly child mortality is arrived at by calculating the rate of death among children below the age of 5 years for every 1000 live births. In essence the relative incidence of infant and child mortality constitutes by far the most important and universally recognized human development indices and is accepted, both by economists and the World Health Organisation, as a barometer of socio-economic status. The following data compiled by S. Irudaya Rajan gives an overall picture of Infant and Child mortality for Hindus and Muslims of India1 :
Estimates of Infant and Child Mortality for Hindus and Muslims of India
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Source Infant Mortality Child Mortality
Hindus Muslims Hindus Muslims
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Census (1991) 74 68 97 91
NFHS-1 (1992-93) 90 77 124 106
NFHS- 2(1998-99) 77 59 107 83
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Note: NFHS stands for National Family Health Survey. Two such surveys have been held, one in 1992-93 and another in 1998-99.
A mere glance at the National Family Health Survey-2, held in 1998-1999, shows that for the country as a whole there were 77 cases of infant mortality (per 1000) among Hindus as against only 59 such cases among Muslims thereby showing more than 30 percent higher incidence of infant mortality in Hindu community. Furthermore, according to National Family Health Survey- 2, there were 107 cases of child mortality per 1000 births amongst Hindus compared to a meager 83 such cases among the Muslims. In other words, the incidence of child mortality, too, is nearly 29 percent higher among Hindus as compared to the Muslims. It is universally recognized that high incidence of infant and child mortality is a direct consequence of poor nutritional intake resulting from acute poverty. It clearly establishes that a great majority of Hindus (mostly living in rural areas, especially marginal farmers and landless laborers) are economically more disadvantaged than Muslims. In terms of this important parameter the Hindus are far more backward than the Muslims. Surprisingly the difference in child mortality between the Hindus and the Muslims appears to have widened between 1991 and 1999. As analyzed by S. Irudaya Rajan, though in a different context, according to census 1991 the incidence of child mortality per 1000 births was 97 among Hindus and 91 among Muslims indicating that child mortality among Hindus was higher by 6.6 percent than Muslims. Subsequently the NFHS-1 held in 1992-93 revealed that the incidence of child mortality among Hindus was 124 per 1000 against 106 for Muslims which translated into a higher incidence of nearly 17 percent among Hindus. And NFHS -2 held in 1998-99 disclosed even a higher increase in child mortality of Hindus vis a vis Muslims, the differential graph rising to 24 percent - the proportion being 107 cases of child mortality among Hindus and only 83 among Muslims for every 1000 live births. Prima facie between 1991 and 1999 the economic status of Hindus (mostly rural poor and backwards) further deteriorated in comparison with the Muslims. Apparently there was a substantial decline in the socio-economic status of Hindu community between 1991 and 1999 which alone could explain the sharp rise in child mortality of the community. It may be mentioned that in terms of census 2001 nearly 74 percent Hindus live in rural areas which have witnessed a spate of suicides by impoverished peasantry. Although no field studies and religion-wise analysis of suiciding farmers have been carried out till now it would be difficult to deny that the ugly spectacle of nearly 7000 suicides committed in recent years was a direct consequence of monumental neglect of the rural sector by successive central and state governments. Their rightful claim for "affirmative action" to ameliorate their lot has been denied primarily because the farmers happen to be too poor and disorganized to use the tool of "grievance politics", or act as a "political vote bank".
B. Degree of Urbanization
Degree of urbanization, or the relative proportion of a community's population living in urban areas, is the second important global norm for assessing socio-economic status of a community, or group. According to Census 2001 (Religion Data Report) the proportion of Hindus living in urban areas is 26 percent while that of Muslims living in urban areas is 36 percent - far ahead of Hindus by a whopping 39 percent. In numerical terms, out of 82,75,78,868 Hindus only 21,63,15,573 live in urban areas whereas out of 13,81,88,240 Muslims as many as 4,93,93,496 live in urban areas.2 It is a universally established fact that the urban population, or city-dwellers, are socio-economically more advanced and better placed than their rural counterparts. On this score, too, Muslims are socio-economically far ahead of Hindus.
C. The Average Life Expectancy at Birth
The average life expectancy at birth is another important determinant of socio-economic status. According to NFHS-2, held in 1992-93, the crude death rate per 1000 was 9.6 for the Hindus and 8.9 for the Muslims which meant that the crude death rate of Muslims was lower than Hindus by nearly 13 percent. A similar difference was also noticed among those aged more than 5 years. In order to minimize any sampling error Mari Bhat and A.J. Francis Zavier, two well known demographers, averaged the age-specific death rates of both communities in terms of two NFHS Surveys held in 1992-93 and 1998-1999 and found that the life expectancy at birth for Muslims was 62.6 compared with 61.4 for the Hindus. Thus Muslims have an advantage of a little more than 1 year over Hindus in the matter of longevity.3 No one can question the fact that a community which has better nutritional food intake, better economic status and good health care facility will live longer. It conclusively shows that in terms of these globally accepted standard human development indices Muslims are better placed than Hindus.
D. Comparative Literacy Average
According to Census 2001 the national average of literacy for all communities is 64.8 percent. Among Hindus the percentage of literacy is 65.1 which is barely 0.3 percent higher than the national average. For Muslims the percentage is 59.1 which are lower than the national average by 5.7 percent. However, the literacy averages of Christians, Buddhists and Sikhs at 80.3, 72.7 and 69.4 respectively are much higher than the national average. The point to note is that the literacy average of Hindus is more or less equal to the national average. The literacy percentage of Muslims is, however, somewhat lower than the national average. Interestingly Kingsley Davis, a noted sociologist, had observed that even when Muslims ruled India they paid relatively little attention to education and depended upon literate Hindus to carry on their paper work. After advent of the British into India Muslims resisted westernization and refused the advantages of modern education more stolidly than did the Hindus.4
It may be pointed out that there are substantial variations in the percentage of literacy from State to State, as revealed by the latest census data. According to Statement 8 of Census 2001 (Religion Data Report, p.Xliii) there at least 13 states and U.Ts., including some big states like Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Gujarat where Muslims are ahead of Hindus in the matter of literacy. Even female literacy among Muslims is higher than Hindus in 13 states, namely Orissa, Chhatisgarh, Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Pondicherry, Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Andaman & Nicobar Islands.5 Interestingly as revealed by Statements 8a and 8b of Census 2001 (Religion Data Report, pp. xliv and xlv respectively) in Andhra Pradesh the percentage of literacy, both among males and females, is higher among Muslims than Hindus. In that State the percentage of male literacy among Hindus is 69.5 as against 76.5 among Muslims indicating an advantage of 7 percent for Muslims. Similarly the percentage of female literacy is 49.2 for Hindus and 59.1 for Muslims which shows a whopping advantage of 10 percent for Muslim women.6 Yet the state government had no qualms in ordering five percent reservations for Muslims which decision was struck down by Andhra Pradesh High Court. In a rare show of determination to bestow the political largesse of reservations on their Muslim constituency, the state government has filed an appeal in the Supreme Court against the verdict of the Andhra High Court.
Mari Bhat and Francis Zavier have pointed out that some analysts try to juggle with statistics in a bid to show that Muslims constitute only 3 percent of those employed in administrative services, police, railways and nationalized banks thereby suggesting that there was discrimination against them. But the figures quoted fail to show any high degree of discrimination if one takes into account the fact that Muslims form only 5 percent of the persons graduating from colleges and that there might be some difference in the quality of education acquired.7 Similarly there is no justification in blaming the government or the society for lower educational performance of Muslims. If only government could upgrade the educational attainments of Muslims, then the community should have at least have fared much better at least in the two left-oriented and self-proclaimed Muslim-friendly states of Kerala and West Bengal. Unfortunately the educational performance of Muslims, especially their women, is worse in these 2 states. The proportion of Muslim population is 21 percent in Kerala and 27 percent in West Bengal, but the percentage of Muslim women graduating is abysmally low at 5 percent in Kerala and 2 percent in West Bengal.8 Frankly no amount of reservations or state intervention can promote the love for education and knowledge in any community. The real cause of the inadequate inclination of Muslims towards higher education lies elsewhere. During British rule a report on the Progress of Education in India, 1907-1912, brought out that apart from social and historical perspectives, one important difficulty in promoting education among Muslims was that most Muslim parents often chose for their children (read sons) an education which would secure for them an honored place among the learned members of the community rather than the one which would secure for them success in modern professions or in official life.9 That problem continues till date as is evident from phenomenal emphasis on religion-specific education, as reflected in the massive growth of madarasas all over the country. Thus the real solution of the problem lies in the hands of the leaders of the community.
E. Poverty Level and Per Capita Income
It is true that the per capita income of Muslims is lower than that of Hindus. Similarly the percentage of Muslim families below poverty level is higher than that of Hindus, as revealed by the data collected and analyzed by the National Sample Survey Organisation. But there is an important critical difference between the 2 communities which needs to be understood. This crucial factor is the larger size of Muslim households when compared with their Hindu counterparts by at least one additional member which increases the dependence burden of the Muslim householders. This is the main causative factor responsible for lower earnings of Muslims. Clearly the real reason for lower per capita income of Muslims is their larger family size and fast paced population growth. According to National Family Health Survey-2 held in 1998-99 on an average every Muslim household has at least one extra family member compared to Hindu households.10 The same survey further revealed that on an average a Muslim woman was giving birth to 1.1 child more than her Hindu counterpart. The reason is well known, namely the non acceptance of small family norm due to diktats of their religious scholars and community leaders.
Another important reason for lower per capita income of Muslim community is the abysmally low work participation by Muslim women. It is almost axiomatic that in every community the earnings of women through work participation add substantially to household income and family earnings. The all India average of Female Work Participation (all communities) is 23.6. The female work participation by Hindus is 27.5,
Christians 28.7 and by Sikhs 20.2. In sharp contrast the ratio of female work participation among Muslims is nearly 50% lower than Hindus, a meager 14.11 The reason again is the custom of veil (i.e., the mandatory burka) and the scriptural taboo forbidding women from going out to work.
In terms of overall male work participation the Hindus have a small edge over the Muslims, their respective percentages being 52.4 and 47.5. But the overall work participation by Muslims in city-based household industries is much higher at 8.1 percent which is nearly twice that of 3.8 percent for Hindus. Similarly in the 'other professions' the Muslim percentage is 49.1 as against 35.5 percent for Hindus. Here attention may be drawn to the fact that Muslims being more urbanized, a higher percentage of the community are now employed in small scale industries (e.g., carpet weaving, embroidering, garment stitching, etc.) and occupations like iron-smithy, tailoring and other sundry professions.12 Most of these trades involve acquisition of substantial occupational skills which generate fairly good income, invariably better than that of the indigent peasantry, because of growing opportunities in cities and towns as a result of liberalization in recent years. Yet many of them are counted as 'unemployed'.
The low per capita income of Muslims is essentially a direct consequence of their non-acceptance of small family norm and abysmally low work participation by their womenfolk. In terms of other major human development indices, or determinants of economic status, the Muslims are fairly ahead of the Hindus. It follows that unless the Muslims as a community accept the small family norm and allow their womenfolk to go out for work, there is little chance of any tangible improvement in their economic status, even through the odius ploy of reservations.
On the contrary, if we analyze the respective percentages of the two communities in the 0-6 years age group of cohorts (Statement 7 on page Xlii of Census 2001 Religion Data Report) it becomes clear that the existing fast paced growth of Muslim population is likely to register a huge quantum jump in the coming decades, say within the next 20 to 40 years. At all India level the percentage of Muslim cohorts in 0-6 year’s age group is 18.7 as compared with 15.6 cohorts among Hindus. This 21 percent higher proportion of Muslim cohorts vis a vis Hindus, coupled with low acceptance of family planning by the community (at least to the extent of 25 percent, if not more) is poised to speed up growth in Muslim numbers across the country during the next four decades. In the absence of acceptance of small family norm, that will surely cause greater unemployment in the community thereby creating a vicious circle of more aggressively voiced demands for reservations and perhaps in a higher proportion, too. Eventually the political ploy of reservations will fail to remedy the situation. It will only create more fissures in the society. A brief analysis of the religion-wise 0-6 years cohort population is appended as an Annexure to this Seminar Paper for ready reference.
In recent years India has witnessed a sharp accretion in the count of billionaires and their number has now risen to 311 - up by 71 percent from the previous year.13 Though the richest Indian billionaires is Azim Premji, an enlightened Muslim entrepreneur, most of the billionaires (perhaps more than 300) and lakhs of multi-millionaires and millionaires happen to be Hindus, mostly city-dwellers. Their high income upgrades the overall per capita income of the Hindu masses a large proportion of whom (i.e., 74 percent) live in rural areas. The ongoing spectacle of suicides by agriculturists in recent years, mostly rural Hindus entrapped in debt and dire poverty , underlines the plight of a large proportion of the community and its abysmal economic condition. That alone can explain the high incidence of child mortality and lower ratio of urbanization among Hindus vis a vis Muslims. Unfortunately the upgraded per capita income of the Hindus (buoyed by the huge individual earnings of a few lakh members of the community) creates an illusion that as a religious group the Hindus are far more prosperous than the Muslims. The truth, however, is altogether different. An overwhelming majority of Hindus, being agriculture-dependant, live in rural areas where Monthly Per Capita Expenditure (MPCE) per person is a measly sum of Rs. 503. According to a first time conducted "Situation Assessment Survey of Farmers" carried out by the National Sample Survey Organisation in 2003 (59th Round) the MPCE of farming households, calculated at Rs 503 in the year 2003 was arrived at by clubbing together the prosperous zamindars and marginal farmers together. It is barely Rs 75 above the Rural Poverty Line and 55 percent of this amount is spent on food, while clothing, footwear, fuel and light take up close to 18 percent.14 Prima facie the plight of the rural poor deserves far greater attention than the urban population, irrespective of the fact whether the former are Hindus or Muslims.
The biggest cause of the poor development indices of the majority community, the Hindus, is their abnormally high concentration in rural areas which are now in a state of near terminal decline due to prolonged governmental neglect. As pointed out by Manoj Pant in an interesting article in The Economic Times of October 13, 2005, during the last decade the contribution of agricultural sector to India's economy declined sharply by 25 percent and during the ninth and tenth five year plans (i.e. a span of 10 years) the agricultural sector recorded a pathetically poor growth rate of 2 percent.15 That has led to rapid impoverishment of rural population and its impact can be widely seen in growing numbers of suicides by agriculturists. On the other hand, there has been a spectacular growth in urban-based sectors like industry, services and export. For instance, during the last 2 years the growth in GDP (Gross Domestic Product) averaged between 7 to 8 percent. Last year industry grew by around 9 percent, services by 12 percent and exports by a whopping 20 percent, but the benefits growth in all these sectors were shared mainly by the city dwellers, or urban population, where proportion of Hindus is only 26 percent while that of Muslims is 36 percent. Perhaps that should explain the increasing incidence of infant and child mortality in Hindu households vis a vis their Muslim counterparts.
Thus on overall assessment in terms of three globally accepted basic human development indices namely, the incidence of child mortality, degree of urbanization and life expectancy at birth, the Hindus happen to be more backward than the Muslims. The relatively lower per capita income of Muslims is largely due to non acceptance of small family norm and poor work participation by their womenfolk. Unfortunately both these factors are controlled rather rigidly by Mullahs and religious scholars of the community.
Justice Sachar Committees’ Motivation
The foregoing facts clearly show that there is no justification for classifying the Muslims as a socio-economically backward religious group, especially when they have better human development indices than the Hindus. Prima facie the appointment of Justice Sachar Committee appears to be motivated by the desire to prepare ground for religion-based reservations in pursuit of vote bank politics. The Committee's attempt to divide the society by raising communal temperature in the country raises the following five important questions:
1. Is it possible by any rational process of thinking, or scientific analysis, to classify as 'backward' a minority group which has superior human development indices like infant and child mortality, higher degree of urbanization and better life expectancy at birth than the majority community? It is a matter of common sense that only a community which has higher nutritional intake and access to better medical facilities will have these superior human development indices.
2. Can there be any constitutional justification for providing reservations to a community solely because it happens to be a minority? Will that not constitute
a flagrant violation of the right to equality enshrined in Article 14 which stipulates that the state should give equitable treatment to all citizens?
3. Is it ethically and politically correct to dole out benefits like reservations and
lucrative financial packages to such a group simply because they happen to be an aggressively organized vocal minority?
4. It has been calculated by Mari Bhat and Francis Zavier that during the next 95 years , i.e., by 2001, the population of Muslims would have grown by 130 percent, while that of Hindus will increase only by 50 percent.16 Taking a long term view of the impending fast-paced demographic changes all over India (unmistakably visible in the 0-6 years cohorts population) is it then desirable to institutionalize the principle of reservations? On the face of it the proposed political stratagem is a sure recipe for destroying the fragile unity of the Indian nation.
5. Will the opening of the proposed Pandora's box of reservations on grounds of religion not lead to demands for similar reservations first on the basis of caste and then on the basis of other grounds (e.g., for Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Jats, Gujjars, Agarwals, Sunnis, Shias, etc.) and then for reservations in terms of regions and states (e.g., North Indians, South Indians, East Indians, or Punjabis, Haryanvis, Tamilians, Maharashtrians, Gujaratis, Biharis, Bengalis, Oriya, etc.) ? Once religion specific reservations are conceded, it will surely open the floodgates of similar demands for reservations on the ground of denominational identity.
An honest and objective attempt must be made by all opinion-makers and enlightened citizens to answer the above mentioned important questions which bear the stamp of serious long term consequences for the Indian nation.
Resurrection of Convoluted Grievance Politics
According to press reports, Sachar Committee has been busy interacting mostly with Muslim academicians, intellectuals and activists for preparing its report on social, economic and educational status of that community. Prima facie its members are not interested in taking cognizance of any research-based truth lest it overturns their politics-oriented applecart. A host of bizarre demands have been listed before Sachar Committee one of which envisages the provision for at least one Muslim member in every selection board, including Services Selection Boards of defence forces and para military organizations. The High Level Committee is believed to be considering recourse to the so-called "affirmative action" in the form of reservations for raising the representation of Muslims in police forces in proportion to their population percentage. Among other things, the Committee is said to be considering the provision for setting up Minority Cells in Union Public Service Commission, Subordinate Services Selection Boards and even in Indian Institutes of Technology for the Muslims. The note prepared by Sachar Committee is reportedly inclined to concede even the demand for proportionate reservations in political institutions, including nominations to Parliament, State Assemblies and municipal bodies, wherever necessary, on the analogy of the benefit available to Anglo-Indian community.
Those of us who were witness to the sordid communal politics of the pre-partition years will recall how the dubious strategy of "grievance politics" was fine-tuned by the Muslim League to divide the gullible masses in furtherance of their goal of partitioning the Indian nation. Whatever is happening today is not something new. The current scenario has a familiar historical recall in our recent past when deft practitioners of convoluted grievance politics were successful in lighting the prairie fire of divisiveness and communal strife across the country.
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References / End Notes :
1. S. Irudaya Rajan, District Level Fertility Estimates for Hindus and Muslims,
Economic and Political Weekly, January 29, 2005, p.440 [Source: Irudya Rajan and Mohanchandran (2000); IIPS (International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai) -1995 and IIPS -2000.
2. Source: Statements 1 and 4 of Cenus 2001 Religion Data Report, pp. xxvii and xxxix.
3. P.N. Mari Bhat and A.J. Francis Zavier, Role of Religion in Fertility Decline - The
Case of Indian Muslims, Economic and Political Weekly, January 29, 2005, p.390.
4. Ibid, p.392. [Source: Davis 1951:193]
5. Literacy rate by religious communities, Census 2001 Religion Data Report, p.xliii
6. Source: Statements 8a and 8b of Census 2001 Religion Data Report, p.xliv and p.xlv respectively showing Literacy rates of Males and Females by religious communities.
7. P.N. Mari Bhat, A.J. Francis Zavier, Role of Religion in Fertility Declie: The Case of Indian Muslims, Economic and Political Weekly, Mumbai, January 29, 2005, p.392.
8. Ibid
9. Dr. Y.B. Mathur, Muslims and Changing India, p. 59 [Source: Sharp H., Progress of Education in India, 1907-1912, Calcutta], para 601.
10. P.N. Mari Bhat and A.J. Francis Zavier, Role of Religion in Fertility Decline - The
Case of Indian Muslims, Economic and Political Weekly, January 29, 2005,
p. 392.
11. Statement 9b of Census 2001 Religion Data Report, p. Xlviii.
12. R,B. Bhagat and Purujit Praharaj, Hindu-Muslim Fertility Differentials, Economic
and Political Weekly, January 29, p.44 - [Source: Census 2001 Religion Data
Report].
13. 'Billionaires net worth up 71% : Premji stays in top spot; 133 new members in
in club', Business Standard, New Delhi, November 9, 2005, p.1.
14. P. Sainath, Falling farm incomes, growing inequities, The Hindu, New Delhi,
November 18, 2005.
15. Manoj Pant, 'Take out excess farm labour', Economic Times, New Delhi, p. 16.
16. P.N. Mari Bhat and A.J. Francis Zavier, Economic and Political Weekly, Mumbai, Role of Religion in Fertility Decline, Case of Indian Muslims, p.385.
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P.S. The writer is a retired Inspector General of Police presently associated with a voluntary study group, known as Patriots Forum as it’s Secretary General.
@Copyright R.K. Ohri