Saturday, April 04, 2009

AP MINISTER 0N NEW TURF - Tough task for Fareeduddin in Amberpet

By M H Ahssan

Minister Pitted Against Sitting BJP MLA Kishan Reddy Faces Uphill Task In New Constituency

“Do you expect us to drink water which stinks? For the last one month, this is our situation. If this is not rectified, we will not cast our votes,” Vonteddu Shakuntala of Mandula Basthi, Bagh Amberpet thundered on Tuesday. The man at the receiving end of Shakuntala’s ire was Mohd Fareeduddin, minister for cooperation and Congress nominee from Amberpet assembly constituency.

Amberpet constituency is the new avtar of what was once Himayatnagar, represented by BJP’s G Kishan Reddy in the last assembly, against whom Fareeduddin is competing now. Kishan Reddy has begun campaigning much before Fareeduddin, who held the Zaheerabad assembly seat in the last assembly, stepped into the constituency for the first time

No sooner than Fareeduddin had begun his campaigning, he met with inconvenient questions like the one from Shakuntala. But the minister clarified that this could not be rectified rightaway due to the election code. In the meanwhile, he wrote his name and mobile number on a piece of paper and told her, “Call me after the elections and the problem will be solved.”

Yet Shakuntala was not convinced. “You politicians make promises now and do not even recognise us after elections. Are we asking you for money? We are only asking you to solve our genuine problem,” she fumed. Another woman G Saraswathi of Kummariwadi said she had not been getting widow pension and was not even given a white ration card.

Fareeduddin then moved on for door to door campaigning at Bharat Nagar, Amberpet, Bagh Amberpet, Ashur Khana and other areas, accompanied by party workers donning party caps and a brass band. At Bagh Amberpet, Fareeduddin stopped to talk to Ameena Begum, an 81-year-old woman. “Apki Vote ke sath sath apki dua deejiye (Give me your blessing along with your vote),” he requested her.

However not all Congressmen are indulging in this sort of a positive campaign. A local leader Narayana Swami told a resident of Bharatnagar, B Laxmi: “If the Congress does not come to power you will lose your white ration card and there will be no Arogya Sri.”

Apart from its pet schemes, the Congress is banking heavily on the 18 per cent Muslim voters for winning the seat. “Yes, there is a considerable number of Muslim votes but I am not banking only on those votes. All people, irrespective of their religion or caste, are with Congress party,” Fareeduddin told TOI.

The Congress nominee said he was also trying to woo Congress leader V Hanumantha Rao, who had been unhappy at his candidature from thisconstituency. He hopes to get Rao’s support in the elections.

Meanwhile, BJP’s Kishan Reddy who had completed his first round of campaign in the constituency urged the people to vote for him considering the developmental works he had taken in the area. “Last time you voted for me because of my party, this time give your votes to me for my development works and for my party affinity,” Kishan Reddy urged the voters in Tilak Nagar.

The TRS has fielded K Jagadeshwar as its nominee from this segment. The Mahakutami candidate who began his campaign a few days ago is hopeful of getting elected on the Telangana sentiment along with the support of TDP and Communist parties.

CONSTITUENCY PROFILE
Total Voters: 1,91,053
Male voters: 98,600 | Female voters: 92,453

Assembly segments: Kachiguda, Barkatpura, Golnaka, Nallakunta, New Nallakunta, Central Excise colony, Bagh Amberpet, Amberpet, Tilaknagar, Lingampally, Nimboli Adda, New Patel Nagar, Patel Nagar, Chappal Bazar and Rahmath Bagh

Last Nizam’s son tries hand at politics

By M H Ahssan

Imdad Jah Bahdur, one of the three surviving sons of the last Nizam, Nawab Mir Osman Ali Khan Bahadur, an otherwise quiet person who prefers to stay away from public affairs, has now entered a new phase in his life. Last week he filed his nomination to contest for the Secunderabad Lok Sabha constituency, under the banner of a little-known political outfit, Ambedkar National Congress.

You don’t hear of this kind of candidate often. With just 13 days to go for elections, Jah, wearing a white kurtapyjama, is sitting relaxed at his house on Road No. 13, Banjara Hills. He is waiting for the founder president of Ambedkar National Congress, Kazim Ali Khan, who would be holding a press conference and introduce him to the public soon.

It is evident from his talk that he does not appreciate either the turbulent ways of politics or the intricacies of fighting an election. “I have always wanted to serve people, reach out to them. But somehow I could never do that. No political party ever sought me out. If I had gone to some political party on my own offering my services, it would have appeared as if I was seeking a favour. I would never like that. After all I have to respect the name of our father, the late Nizam,” he told HNN.

Kazim Khan had requested him to contest from Secunderabad, he said. “Kazim said that people would vote for me because of the good name of my father. He also said his party has fielded six candidates for the assembly. He has also promised to bear all the election expenses,” Jah added. Now that’s a peculiar statement at a time when most candidates claim to have bought party tickets.

Perhaps that is because like many other Nizam family members, and quite unlike most other political candidates in the fray, Jah is cash-strapped. A few months after the death of his father in 1967, Jah had started a hotel Race View in the palatial house he had inherited from his parents. The business had been good for two years until it ran into trouble and Jah had to sell the property. He shifted to Banjara Hills much later, in 1996.

Though he realizes that the chances of his victory are remote, he plans to serve people, in case he is elected, like his father who had considered Hindus and Muslims both equally important, like two eyes.

Jah is one of the 16 sons and 17 daughters born to the Nizam from different wives. Born in 1944, Jah is the only issue of his mother Jaani Begum, also a scion of Nizam’s family. His surviving half-brothers are Prince Nawazish Jah and Prince Fazal Jah and halfsisters Sahebzadi Basheerunnisa Begum, Sahebzadi Mashhadi Begum and Sahebzadi Sayeeda Begum. Jah has 10 children - five sons and five daughters.

Silence of Maoists baffles cops in AP

By M H Ahssan

Elections are close at hand but the silence of Maoists is deafening. While the sounds of AK-47s are muffled in naxal-dominated districts all along Orissa, Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra borders, AP police are worried it’s only a lull before the storm.

“The unusual lull is strange. The Maoists may resort to ambushes and stray attacks to bamboozle the cops and disrupt the poll process,” an apprehensive police officer told TOI. Heavy Maoist presence is evident in 10 to 15 assembly constituencies that share border with Orissa, 20 to 25 constituencies along the Chhattisgarh border and about 40 in Telangana districts that have borders with all the three states.

Top cops said that Maoist action teams could well aim at specific targets this time. Reports indicate that armed militia are already moving in companies (each comprising 90-100 members). Corroborating this, a DIGlevel officer said the elections are the only means to strike terror and make their presence felt. “They may resort to tactical counter offensive by striking where it hurts the most,” an expert said.

Sources said with assembly polls having been over in Chhattisgarh, Maoists would be more than keen to disrupt the AP assembly polls. “We have specific information that the rebels are holding regular meetings in Khammam-Chhattisgarh border areas to foment trouble,” a senior cop said. Sources said local guerrilla squads (LGS) could enter from the Andhra Orissa Board (AOB) and Chhattisgarh and cause widespread destruction. Regrouping of Maoists in north Telangana districts has also not been ruled out. The massing (over 250 armed men) of Maoists in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra is another major concern.

While paramilitary, CRPF, APSP, Greyhounds and local police have been conducting extensive combing in the forest areas to flush out the rebels, field craft operations are being hampered because of the tough AOB terrain. “Coordination with neighbouring states and sharing of information on movement of naxals has been intensified,” a Maoist-hit district SP revealed.

Police are not only keeping track of movement of couriers and Maoist sympathisers in deep forest tracts but they are also binding over tribal youths having links with Maoists.

The most vulnerable districts in AOB are Koraput, Rayagada, Malkangiri, Ganjam, Visakha Rural, Srikakulam and Vizianagaram, while the Khammam-Chhattisgarh border is another hot spot. Boycott calls have always been a feature of every election and the naxals coerce people against voting, but this time, the Maoists haven’t spread terror like they did prior to 2004 polls.

Women In Metros In India

By M H Ahssan

Indian women living in India have come a long way from being the homemaker to being a pivotal player in charting the success of the company they work for. It is inspirational and interesting to learn how these women have overcome arduous struggles, and ventured out of their homes to move to bigger metro cities in order to explore their hidden capabilities. This has been a commendable decision not just for them, but also for the professions they excel in. More importantly, they bring about a sense and sensibility to the corporate world in a way only a woman can.

Aspirations. Dreams. Self esteem. Satisfaction. Independence. These terms are associated with developing your own identity, but were definitely not associated with women some years back. In the past decade, women in India have leap forwarded tremendously and one sees noticeable changes in the desires of a woman to make a mark for her. This is reflected through her choice of attire, or shifting home base to pursue her career, or speaking up confidently in the boardroom of her organization. This is just one part of the story that will unfold in the following paragraphs to come. The other part is that in order to walk closer to their goals, women in India are increasingly moving to metro cities – mainly Mumbai, New Delhi and Bangalore to carve a niche for themselves.

The interesting thing is that this migration to bigger cities is not just limited to popular careers like photography or entering the well acclaimed Bollywood, but is seen across various professional streams like modeling, graphic designing, IT, print and electronic media, education and academics. Women in mini-metros or other smaller cities are not inhibited by the fact that they will leave the sheltered cocoon of their parents and live by themselves in a metro city’s world of its own.

Life in a metro and a smaller town has a huge difference and can be quite a rude shock when you have just begun life in a big city and trying to settle down as quickly as possible. The contrasts in culture, sense of dressing, language used, working at odd hours, nightlife as well as attitude towards life can be as vast as the ocean. Despite prior knowledge to all these factors and more, the fairer sex (well, not accurate anymore in today’s world of metro sexuality and fairness creams for men!), chooses to take the bold decision of moving from the kitchen to the boardroom.

COMMON TEETHING PROBLEMS
To be a part of this mammoth change, Radhika did not have to try hard to convince her parents to let her go to Mumbai to realize her dream of becoming an actor. Hailing from another of the country’s metro cities – New Delhi, Radhika took her own time to adjust to this city of dreams. Coming from an influential political family did not make things easy for her, as she did not want to use her father’s name at every place and make the going easy for her. She wanted to learn things the hard way. Through a friend’s friend, finding her first home was not difficult at all; blissfully unaware of what was in store for her half a year down the line.

Radhika had agreed to battle these nitty-gritties on her own as she knew that no other city in India would give her the kind of opportunity that this metropolitan city offered. As much as she thought of New Delhi every single day and the time she spent there, she knew that it was only in Mumbai that she could realize her dream of being known as an actor. And the very fact of achieving something in life and making herself and her family proud made her keep ticking through the tough initial phase of knocking the doors of producers’ offices, working for lesser money than the market conditions, delayed paychecks and much more.

Around the time that Radhika was getting her way through crowded local trains and serpentine queues for buses, Anushka packed her bags to be known for her writing talent and be a journalist. With a bagful of faith in herself, she too entered the mammoth city. But it was not entirely unknown to her, having come to Mumbai every summer vacation to be with her grandparents. She at first stayed at her relatives’ place and when things didn’t work out in her favor, Anushka moved to a paying guest accommodation. Not once did she feel that she was leaving the big house where she grew up to a smaller apartment. It was at this apartment that Anushka and Radhika met.

Driven by a desire to achieve their goals professionally, Anushka and Radhika learnt not only various new aspects of the other’s professions, but their talks were also a lesson of how professional Mumbai a city is and practical tips to make the teething problems seem easier. Practical tips like not being soft-spoken, being able to negotiate salary, leaving home more than an hour before the scheduled appointment to account for the traffic, keeping make-up and perfume in the purse were really helpful. These things are not a part of any book, but are important in a big city where being presentable is really important, which is not always the case in smaller cities.

If Anushka had decided to continue pursuing her career in her hometown where she had obtained her professional degree in journalism, it was clear that her options were limited to the two big dailies of the state. Nothing more, nothing else. While the scenario in Mumbai, or any other similar metro for that matter, would be entirely different. “I not only had a variety of newspapers to choose from, there were other journalistic options that I had as well. Equally interesting options would have been working at a magazine or as a website content developer or working as an ad copywriter. I knew that there would be no dearth of choices to select from in these big cities. Maybe that is why they are called metro cities,” opined Anushka when asked about her move to Mumbai city.

WANTING TO GO BACK HOME
Meanwhile, as Anushka and Radhika took their first steps in the direction of where they wanted to be, Mili was nervous to step in to this western India’s metro city. From birth, she had always lived in a very small town of Gujarat, another state in western India. Though confident about her talent and work as a graphics designer, she was nonetheless jittery about how she would sustain herself in such a big city that looked exponentially more complex than her hometown. The sheer size of the city with the largest population was enough to make her more timid that what she already was.

Being used to reach any place within five minutes from her home, using three different modes of transport only to reach her work place irked her initially. What made her hold onto staying in Mumbai was the sheer work satisfaction she was getting and the number of different jobs she could hop onto when she felt the need to leave a particular job to climb up the professional ladder. That apart, she was being groomed naturally to a more confident person. A very natural, sub-conscious improvement was her getting better at spoken English.

SOUTHERN MINI-METRO
Moving from the western metro city to an almost southern metro city, there are many who go to Bangalore for their career aspirations to come true. Bangalore, popularly known worldwide as the Silicon Valley of India, is a booming city for Information Technology (IT). Again, there are a large number of options that one can choose from. If you are qualified and lucky, you may land up a job at an IBM or an Infosys. Other job opportunities are that of a call center, or IT solution provider companies as well, or similar professions given a boost by the huge outsourcing wave from foreign-based companies.

“After finishing my masters in German language, I got an offer from a German BPO and now I am working with them. I chose to come to Bangalore as it has more options to choose from than the small city I come from, which is based in western India,” said Harini on the reason she opted to come to Mumbai. For others, who are certain that they are meant to fit themselves in the IT world, then coming to Bangalore is a wise decision as more and more companies are investing their money to set up base in Bangalore, despite the traffic conditions and the city getting over crowded with every passing day.

CAPITAL CITY
Having covered southern and western metros, it’s now the turn of the north Indian metro and the nation’s capital – New Delhi. Like Mumbai, here too one can make a mark for themselves in any field. Being the country’s capital, most news channels have their studios here and it is also home to one of the biggest newspapers of the country – The Hindustan Times. Thus, if you are an aspiring journalist or a media person, then opting for New Delhi is not a bad idea at all.

“I opted to come to New Delhi after my first job stint in Hyderabad because the professionals there lacked in proper attitude and professionalism, which is not the case in a big metro city like Delhi. Plus, I get automatically molded to a stronger person by nature, as we girls brave everyday situations like being eve-teased or being taken for granted in office, or on the roads,” voiced Natasha Mittal from New Delhi, who is a hardcore workaholic who believes in working hard and partying harder.

Tarana too, a Lucknow-based girl, who had graduated in Hotel Management opted to move to New Delhi as she bagged a couple of job offers from some of the biggest names in the hotel industry. When asked if she willingly migrated from home to her paying guest accommodation, she said, “Why not? The idea of living in a metro appealed to me immediately for the main reason being that these big hotels would look very impressive on my resume and it would eventually help me do better when I want to start my own restaurant.” For these ladies to protect themselves from the somewhat uncouth crowd of the capital city, they both learnt basic self-defense techniques in case of any kind of harassment. And these lessons did not go waste when Natasha was being harassed in the bus in Delhi.

What you have just read are stories that give a peek in the life of only a handful of successful women who are treading the path of their dreams and for that have willingly stepped out of home to come out of the protective cocoon and explore the harsh realities of the world. And it is these women who have made aspirations, dreams, self-esteem, satisfaction and independence come true.

Women in Politics - Beyond numbers

By Saleha Fatima

Recent reports in India indicating that many women politicians are finding it difficult to participate in politics, let alone equalize the gender gap that exists, point to an increasing need to analyse the role that women play in Indian politics. The latest elections, with its saga of violence and conflicting rhetoric, further support this need.

A recent "Times of India" report corroborates much of what has been discussed in this handbook: namely that "domestic responsibilities, lack of financial clout, rising criminalization of politics and the threat of character assassination" are making it increasingly difficult for women to be part of the political framework. Moreover, women politicians point out that even within the political parties, women are rarely found in leadership positions. In fact, "women candidates are usually fielded from 'losing' constituencies where the party does not want to 'waste' a male candidate".

In this section we examine the results of a study of women parliamentarians in India during the Twevlth Parliament. The discussion focuses on three main areas: the social profile of women parliamentarians; the routes they have taken to get to their political position; and the public policy areas in which they were involved.

The Indian Political System - Party System and Women's Representation
India is a bicameral parliamentary democracy, with a strong multi-party political system. The lower house is called the Lok Sabha (Peoples' Assembly) and has 545 members. The upper house is called the Rajya Sabha (States' Assembly) with 250 members. In 1991, women constituted 5.2 per cent of the membership of the Lok Sabha and 9.8 per cent of the membership of the Rajya Sabha.1 This was lower than the preceding 1989 parliament. The election results in 1996 showed a further decline in women's representation. This trend is worrying given the recent state-led initiatives to ensure women's representation in political institutions.

One of the reasons for this decline may be the strength of the party system itself, which can lead to the marginalization of issue-based politics, or to an expropriation of movements that are based on single issues. The women's movement in India has had to confront this issue. Indian political parties are, however, organizationally weak and dependant on local elites. This might be a second factor for the resistance to implementation of gender-sensitive political initiatives.

Women's Movement and the Issue of Representation
The demand for greater representation of women in political institutions in India was not taken up in a systematic way until the setting up of the Committee on the Status of Women in India (CSWI) which published its report in 1976. Before this the focus of the growing women's movement had been on improving women's socio-economic position. The CSWI report suggested that women's representation in political institutions, especially at the grass-roots level, needed to be increased through a policy of reservation of seats for women. In 1988, the National Perspective Plan for Women suggested that a 30 per cent quota for women be introduced at all levels of elective bodies. Women's groups insisted that reservation be restricted to the panchayat (village council) level to encourage grass-roots participation in politics. The consensus around this demand resulted in the adoption of the 73rd and 74th amendments to the Indian Constitution in 1993.

In 1995, the question of quotas was raised again, but this time the focus was women in parliament. Initially, most political parties agreed to this proposition. But soon doubts surfaced. When the bill addressing this issue was introduced in the Eleventh Parliament in 1997, several parties and groups raised objections. The objections focused around two main issues: first, the issue of overlapping quotas for women in general and those for women of the lower castes; second, the issue of elitism.

Most women's groups felt that the caste issue was a divisive one for women. Also, many felt uneasy about giving special privileges to elite women by ensuring seats for them in the parliament, while they had previously supported quotas for women at the grass-roots level of the panchayats. To date, the amendment has not been passed by parliament. However, the current government of the Hindu nationalist BJP has committed itself to introducing another quota bill for women in parliament.

The 39 women representatives in the 1991­1996 Indian Parliament were mostly middle-class, professional women, with little or no links to the women's movement. A significant number of them accessed politics through their families, some through student and civil rights movements, and some as a result of state initiatives aimed at increasing representation from the lower castes.

Gender and Caste in Parliament
Caste has been an important feature of Indian public and political life. Most of the women MPs in the Tenth Parliament were members of the higher castes. For example, there were six women from the Brahmin caste. This represents a sizeable 17.14 per cent of the women MPs, while Brahmins comprise only 5.52 per cent of the population. However, it is important to guard against making an easy correlation between caste and political representation. For example, of the six women who are Brahmins, two are MPs from the Communist Party of India. In both cases the caste factor is less important than their privileged class backgrounds. Further, both were products of political movements, the nationalist struggle and the anti-emergency movement.

The number of women who are able to avail of India's caste-based reservation system remains small. While 22 per cent of the parliamentary seats were reserved for the Scheduled Castes, women occupied only 4.1 per cent of the reserved seats. Two women MPs were from what are called the Scheduled Tribes. However, out of 39 women MPs in the Tenth Lok Sabha (representing seven per cent of the total), 14 per cent were from the Scheduled Castes. Two women MPs belonged to the "backward" castes and represented open constituencies. Caste, therefore, affects the profile, loyalties, and work of representatives in the Indian Parliament.

Out of the 39 women MPs in the 1991­1996 Lok Sabha, 32 had postgraduate qualifications; in the Rajya Sabha 14 out of the 17 women were graduates. The class position of these women is obviously more important to their educational levels than caste. Only one out of the seven lower caste women MPs was not a graduate, and the one Scheduled Caste woman MP in the Rajya Sabha had postgraduate education. The levels of education are also reflected in the professional profiles of these women. Thirty per cent of women MPs in the Rajya Sabha for example were lawyers, and 25 per cent in the Lok Sabha were either teachers or lecturers.

Most of the women MPs (about 65 per cent) were between their late 30s and 60s, and therefore did not have the responsibility of bringing up a young family. Given the almost universal marriage pattern that exists in India, the figure for unmarried MPs is extraordinarily high, and indicates the social pressures on women who join public life. For those who are married, the pressures of public life are eased a bit by their class situation. Most MPs are able to afford paid help in the home. In many cases the joint family system, or at least strong family support also helps. However, the constraints of family life continue to be real concerns even for privileged women.

Women have different strategies to cope with these constraints. If the family has accepted a woman's career in politics, she can negotiate with her family. This is more likely if the family is an elite political family with more than one member participating in politics. If the woman was already active in political life before she married, she can face tremendous pressures from her husband's family to conform to a traditional role that allows little scope for pursuing an active political career. A woman politician's options in this case are either to conform to the expectations of the family and retreat from public life, or to leave the family in pursuit of an uncertain future in party politics. In the latter case, the lack of family support and the stigma of divorce are a clear disadvantage for a woman in politics.

Class also mediates the influence of religion. With only one woman Muslim MP in the Rajya Sabha and one in the Lok Sabha, Muslim women are significantly under-represented. Dr. Najma Heptullah, who was also the Deputy Speaker of the Rajya Sabha, is from an elite class and educational background, and enjoys support for her work from both her natal and marital family. Margaret Alva, a Christian, and then Minister of State, and Founder Chair of the National Commission for Women of India, is from a similar background. In both cases the families were involved in the national movement, were influenced by liberal ideology, and were highly educated.

Thus, the majority of women in the Indian Parliament are elite women. While their public role challenges some stereotypes, their class position often allows them far greater range of options than are available to poorer women.

Surprisingly, active participation in the women's movement has not been one of the entry routes into formal party politics for women MPs.

Kinship or more?
"Male equivalence" has been a dominant explanation for how women access political life. The assumption here is that women access political life with the support, backing and contacts of the family, in particular that of the husband. In the sample of 15 women surveyed, 1/3 of the women MPs, for example, have "family support" in the background. However, in a well-argued critique of this theory, Carol Wolkowitz points out that "male equivalence" is an inadequate conceptual framework. First, because it is the public sphere (e.g. state institutions, press, and political discourse) that has to be negotiated if the family decision to put forward a woman in politics is to succeed; it is not a private, but a public matter.

Second, in many cases the husbands do not support the candidature of the wife at all. It is the pressure of party political bosses that forces the issue in many cases. The centralized system of distribution of seats in mass political parties helps in this context. A party's concern with levels of representation of certain groups within its ranks, and consequences for legitimacy of the party among the under-represented groups might be the motive for including women.

Social and Political Movements
Together with "kinship link" and state initiatives, an important factor impacting on women's access to political life seems to be social and political movements. These movements have created windows of opportunity and some women have been able to take advantage of these opportunities to access political life.

For example, the national movement was an important mobilizer of women. Gandhi's contribution to bringing women into politics is well-documented; the left movement also mobilized women. Women's organizations were constituted under the umbrella and control of the party ­ the Mahila Congress and the All India Women's Federation (CPI). However, none of the women interviewed in this survey had strong links with the women's wing of their party prior to their entry into parliamentary politics.

The civil rights and anti-emergency movement led by Jaiprakash Narayan (JP) in 1975­1977 was an important political movement that brought students to the forefront of national politics. Many women, both on the right and on the left wing, joined this movement and continued on in politics. Finally, in the context of current politics in India, fundamentalist and communal parties are mobilizing women. One of the most charismatic woman MP's is Uma Bharti, the product of the rise of Hindu militancy in Indian politics. She is the member of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, a mobilizational wing of the BJP and a "preacher" of Hindu texts by profession. She was in the forefront of the movement that brought down the Babri Mosque in Ayodhyaya.

The influence of individual national leaders is also an important factor that militates against the "male equivalence" theory. While Indira Gandhi, for example, did little to promote women's representation in politics, Rajiv Gandhi accepted the principle of reservation of seats for women. He initiated measures that had a direct impact on the inclusion of women in politics, e.g., the 1993 provision for reservation of 33 per cent of elected seats on village panchayats for women. As we have mentioned, who is able to take advantage of such reservations is mediated by class, ethnicity and caste.

However, the support of the state and state / political leaders can be important to women who want to access the political system. Quotas for women as a strategy for accessing the political arena has growing support among women MPs, despite the fact that very few have accessed the system through that route, and are firm believers in the meritocratic argument. Most women MPs have supported the 81st Amendment, which would ensure a 33 per cent quota for women in parliament, even though party discipline has not allowed them to vote for this. This issue highlights the constraints that the party system poses for women politicians.

Gender and Public Power: What do Women MPs do ?
Out of the 20 Congress women MPs in the 1991­1996 Lok Sabha, none was a Cabinet minister; two were Ministers of State; and two were Deputy Ministers of State. In the Rajya Sabha, out of seven Congress women MPs, one is a Minister of State. The portfolios of these Ministers included, Human Resource Development, Civil Aviation and Tourism, Health and Family Welfare, and Personnel and Public Grievances. All these are generally regarded as "soft portfolios"; this does not, however, take away from the responsibility that these women ministers have. One Congress woman MP is the Deputy Chairperson of the Rajya Sabha. At the level of the party, one MP was on the disciplinary committee of the party, and one was the President of the Mahila Congress. Among BJP women, the one Rajya Sabha member was the spokesperson on the economy and general political line of the party. Of the 10 members of the Lok Sabha, one was one of the vice-presidents of the party, and two were on the National Executive Committee of their party.

The system of institutional incentives and disincentives at the level of the party and parliament impact on the issues that women espouse in parliament. Most women MPs interviewed did not have women's issues high on their list of interests. Rather, they wanted to be on committees relating to economy, international relations, and trade. As ambitious women these MPs want to be where power and influence converge.

The Accountability Question
One of the important issues for any discussion on gender and representation has to deal with the constituency that women represent. As there are no "women's only" constituencies, women MPs are not accountable to women as women. And yet, when issues regarding women are raised in the parliament, these women are expected to, and do participate in the debates. Issues such as the welfare of women and violence against women are particularly important in uniting women MPs.

These issues are discussed in the "ladies room" in the parliament. However, as all the MPs questioned made clear, they are "party women first"; party whip is rarely flouted.

Some women MPs are also asked by the party leadership to get involved in the women's wing of the party. While the women MPs do not necessarily see this role as an enhancement of their status within the party, some have made a success of this role and as a result gained influence with the leadership of the party.

As "party women" with political ambitions, women MPs respond to the institutional incentives and disincentives that are placed on them. All these factors limit the potential of these women MPs representing the interests of Indian women across a range of issues. As a result there seems to be little regular contact between women's groups and women MPs. The exception here is of course the women's wing of political parties that do liaise with women MPs. This does allow the possibility of women MPs becoming conduits between the party's leadership and its women members. They are also consulted from time to time by the party leadership on issues regarding the family, and women's rights. But non-party women's groups do not seem to approach women MPs.

Conclusion
Women's representation in the parliament, while important on the grounds of social justice and legitimacy of the political system, does not easily translate into improved representation of women's various interests.

While we cannot assume that more women in public offices would mean a better deal for women in general, there are important reasons for demanding greater representation of women in political life. First is the intuitive one ­ the greater the number of women in public office, articulating interests, and seen to be wielding power, the more the gender hierarchy in public life could become disrupted. Without sufficiently visible, if not proportionate, presence in the political system ­ "threshold representation"11 ­ a group's ability to influence either policy-making, or indeed the political culture framing the representative system, is limited. This fact is confirmed by the various other contributions in this volume. Further, the fact that these women are largely elite women might mean that the impact that they have on public consciousness might be disproportionately larger than their numbers would suggest.

Second, and more important, we could explore the strategies that women employ to access the public sphere in the context of a patriarchal socio-political system. These women have been successful in subverting the boundaries of gender, and in operating in a very aggressive male-dominated sphere. Could other women learn from this example? The problem here is, of course, precisely that these women are an elite. The class from which most of these women come is perhaps the most important factor in their successful inclusion into the political system. We can, however, examine whether socio-political movements provide opportunities for women to use certain strategies that might be able to subvert the gender hierarchy in politics. Finally, we can explore the dynamics between institutional and grass-roots politics. As this study demonstrates, the "politicization of gender" in the Indian political system is due largely to the success of the women's movement.

Women representatives have thus benefited from this success of the women's movement. However, there has been limited interaction between women representatives and the women's movement ­ one of the important areas of weakness behind both the effectiveness of women MPs as well as that of the women's movement. This is, perhaps, the issue that the women's movement needs to address as part of its expanding agenda for the 1990s.

Hyderabad Elections 2009 - Women Psyche

By Samiya Anwar

From the public lavatory to lanes, at every passage and wall we find the big pictures of bade bade neta, their posters with symbols of palm, flower, etc. Off course the rallies of Praja Rajyam not to forget is a part of every ones breakfast table with a hot cuppa of tea early morning. Well known today’s aam janta everyone is talking about the forthcoming elections, it is been more than sixty years of independence India is a free country. First it was poor and underdeveloped. Now it is counted as a developing country. We have traveled a long way. And it won’t be anonymous to say government builds the road we are traveling. The government will always affect our lives.

An election means a call upon to elect a new government. It is no joke. Election is a serious stuff, not fluffy and downy. The rich have been harvesting the benefits of progress, while the gigantic mass is in the dumps into poverty and hunger. It is every one’s primary right to exercise vote if he/she has attained the age of 18 or above. But how many of them actually do it. There is less percentage of people who is enjoying this right in reality.

For some women when it comes to elections it is very different to get the head around, like my mother always voted the person my dad opted. Why the question is always troubled me. When I turned 18, I felt an adult. I thought I am grown and can vote to any person of my choice. My parents and I had a different person to choose. They want me to vote for the candidate they wish. It was not only with me but also to most of my friends. There parents want them to vote accordingly. With the passage of time, things changed when I realized the power of vote

With the present elections in the state there are many women who dare not talk about elections at all. What we are seeing is deeply worrying. But they are confused and disoriented because the aspirations of the people remain unfulfilled after elections. The bag-full of promises seems to be nothing today in their eyes. Should Naidu be given a second chance is the question of many. As we see that the current government failed to maintain the quality of all that Chandrababu Naidu has done for the city and has done nothing for the urban population strongly feels some women in Hyderabad.

As election race shifts further women find it a brutal joke .it is like multiple choice questions for many to answer the best of the option given. It is a number game to many. Whosoever comes into power there is less development than what is being promised to them. It is no mindful decision, some vote blindly and some don’t, especially rural women. They need active encouragement to be dragged to the polls

It is no same mind frame of all women. A recent study shows that women are on par with men while excising voting rights. According to 2009 electoral polls women voters are in majority in six states namely Andhra Pradesh, Meghalaya, kerala, Manipur, mizoram, puducherry. Andhra has 2.86 crore women voters as opposed to 2.80 crore men. It has been witnessing a steady increase in the number of women voters

Today’s women are independent and free like India, our country. They are not dependent on men in decision and voice their opinion openly. The urban women run their life on their own. The traditional India has transformed to more advanced and globalize country going the west way. Women play a decisive role in the polls. They exercise it in much greater numbers and greater percentages than men. The vote of women - individually and collectively - can make or break elections, candidates, and outcomes.

Women walk the talk while men just talk and walk away. Women are the ultimate decision makers. They are doing great in every field. It is women who know a lot about what their families and their communities need. They have equal power to men in taking political decisions. As election fever has gripped the city. Who better tell the government what does community needs than women? How do you expect things around you to change when you don't cast your valuable vote thinks Manisha, my friend and a call center employee?

There are more women issues than men to be addressed. Isn’t it? First, it is the safety of women in society she dwells in. many women in the Old City do not trust police. They go through domestic and physical violence and don’t complain. We need a system where women can approach cops fearlessly. The issues like water shortage, frequent power cuts, road accidents and physical abuse of women at workplace should be given first thought.

The self-realization and self-confidence are absolutely essential. Education and work will bring real freedom to the rural woman and Child labor and kids begging at traffic signals are serious issues. The price increase of several commodities and economic slowdown has affected many families. The young college graduates have no job openings and the rest working is fired at any moment. There is no security and safety. What does the future hold for the children is worrisome by women.

The college students especially women are trying to spread awareness about the election campaigns held in Hydrabad and important of “one vote” to save the life of many. Every vote is a precious. We are the tax-payers and only our vote decides the party coming into power. Women’s vote is for the betterment of family and community. So we should think twice before casting vote. Our vote is valuable and so should be our decision.

Nevertheless the world needs more cool brains than hot heads. We need to have a collective effort to select the right candidate. The woman in Hyderabad expects very responsive governance from the future government. Women HOPE for a change.

Friday, April 03, 2009

Globocop versus the TermiNATO

By M H Ahssan

The people of Strasbourg have voted in their apartment balconies for the French-German co-production of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's 60th birthday this Saturday. Thousands of "No to NATO" banners, alongside "Peace" banners, sprung up all around town until forcibly removed by French police.

Prime "liberal democracy" repression tactics were inevitably on show - just as in the much-hyped "we had 275 minutes to save the world and all we could come up with was half-a-trillion dollars for the International Monetary Fund" Group of 20 summit in London. Protesters were tear-gassed as terrorists. Downtown was cordoned off. Residents were forced to wear badges. Demonstrations got banished to the suburbs.

Then there's the musical metaphor. When NATO was created in Washington on April 4, 1949, the soundtrack was Gershwin's It Ain't Necessarily So. When seven countries from the former Warsaw Pact were admitted in 2004, the soundtrack came from the ghastly Titanic blockbuster. For the 60th birthday bash in Baden-Baden - with the Barack Obama, Nicolas Sarkozy, Angela Merkel trio attending - it's Georges Bizet's Carmen.

As much as Carmen is a gypsy who believes a fortune-teller and ends up dead, NATO is a global traveler who may end up dead by believing fortune-teller Washington.

Sultans of swing
NATO certainly has plenty to celebrate. France, under adrenalin junkie Sarkozy - known in NATOland as the "Sultan of Bruni", in reference to his smashing wife Carla - is back to NATO. Obama is presenting his new, comprehensive Afghanistan-Pakistan strategy to NATO. NATO "secures the peace" in Mafia-ridden Kosovo (an entity not recognized even by NATO members such as Spain and Greece). NATO, in full "war on terror" mode, acts like a supercop in the Mediterranean. NATO patrols the Horn of Africa looking for pirates. NATO trains Iraqi security forces. For a body of 60, NATO is fully fit.

Physically, NATO is a bureaucratic nightmare occupying a huge, horrid building on Blvd Leopold III in Mons, outside of Brussels, employing 5,200 civilians divided into 320 committees sharing an annual budget of $2.7 billion. These committees manage 60,000 combat troops scattered all around the world.

NATO should have been dead immediately after the fall of the enemy it was created to fight - the Soviet Union. Instead, NATO had a ball during the 1990s, when Russia was down and out and Russian president Boris Yeltsin spent more time filling up his vodka glass than worrying about geopolitics.

In 1999 - to the delight of weapons makers in the US industrial-military complex - NATO expanded to the Balkans via its devastating air war on Russian ally Serbia, sold to world public opinion by then US president Bill Clinton on humanitarian grounds when it was, in fact, humanitarian imperialism.

To say that NATO - a North Atlantic body - is overextended is an understatement. Members Romania and Bulgaria are nowhere near the Atlantic Ocean. Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia are landlocked. In Central Asia, Afghanistan (or at least the non-Taliban-controlled parts of it) is de facto occupied by NATO. Mega-bases such as Ramstein (Germany), Aviano (Italy) and Incirlik (Turkey) now have a counterpart halfway around the world in Bagram (Afghanistan).

Decades after the British Empire, "Europe" tries to (re)occupy the Hindu Kush. Afghanistan is NATO's first war outside Europe and first ground war ever. It involves all 26 members (now 28; Albania and Croatia were finally admitted) plus 12 "partners", including five European nations that used to be neutral: Austria, Finland, Ireland, Sweden and Switzerland. All of them are bound by NATO's first-ever invocation of Article 5 of its charter, which determines mutual military assistance.

In a mix of reading the writing on the wall (this is an unwinnable war) and appeasing the fury of their pacifist public opinions, most European governments will never relent to Obama's appeal - as charm offensive-laden as it may be - for more troops in Afghanistan. Opposition to the Afghan war in Germany, for instance, is around 70% (humanitarian aid is a different story).

Many countries, including the most powerful, will shun Obama's demands based on secret "national provisos". As lawyers in Berlin told NATO, for example, German soldiers are prohibited from launching a pre-emptive, on-the-ground attack on the Taliban.

That utterly misleading acronym, ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) used to be in charge of the Western occupation of Afghanistan starting in December 2001 - until, Transformer-style, it became a huge counter-insurgency (COIN) drive expanding all over the country all the way to western Pakistan. The management of this COIN is obviously American - first and foremost because it totally bypasses NATO's very complex political voting mechanisms.

There's nothing "international" about ISAF. ISAF is NATO. And with swarms of combat troops and air strikes there’s nothing "assistance" about it either.

ISAF/NATO is headquartered in Kabul, in a former riding club on renamed Great Masoud Road which was rebuilt into a veritable fortress. The buck stops with - what else is new - not an European, but an American, four-star General David McKiernan. As much as his personal mission in the 1970s was to prevent the Warsaw Pact from infiltrating West Germany, his mission nowadays is to prevent al-Qaeda from, in his words, "infiltrating Europe or the United States".

By the way, if anybody had any doubts, this whole thing still falls under ongoing "Operation Enduring Freedom", according to the Pentagon. This really "enduring" freedom applies to no less than Afghanistan, Pakistan, Cuba (because of Guantanamo), Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Jordan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, the Philippines, Seychelles, Sudan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Uzbekistan and Yemen.

McKiernan's big thing had to be the upcoming Obama Afghan surge - which will be executed by American, not NATO soldiers. After all, hardcore combat has nothing to do with ISAF's original mandate. But the problem is in the fog of war and ISAF/NATO has become a TermiNATO - ensnared as much as the Americans in a peace-by-Predator logic. Call it the coalition of the unwilling. No wonder European public opinion is horrified.

And that leads to the breakdown of Obama lecturing NATO on his "AfPak" war, which needed, according to him, a "more comprehensive strategy, a more focused strategy, a more disciplined strategy". In the end, Obama is reduced to hitting up the Europeans for more money.

The ISAF/NATO commander for all of southern Afghanistan, Dutch Major-General Mart de Kruif, believes the surge is the right thing - as US troops will go to "where they are most needed: to Kandahar and Helmand provinces", where Taliban commanders "are capable of launching major operations". As he told Dutch daily NRC Handelsblad, "we need more boots on the ground" and "we will also be able to transport more men and material via air transport".

But when De Kruif talked about Petraeus' Iraq-surge-replay plan of arming local militias, he at least let it be known how hard it will be. "If you're going to arm local militia you need to make sure that they mirror the local power structure," he said. "Also, the local police has to be effective enough to guide and control the militia. You don't want some vague commander running the militia. You need to give the militia members the prospect of a job in the police force. And you need to have an exit strategy, a way to disband the militia again without having all those weapons disappear."

Another Dutchman, pro-Iraq war Bush "poodle" Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, has been NATO's secretary general since January 2004 (he leaves next July). At least he's now admitting - to German weekly Der Spiegel - that the Afghan war "can't be won militarily". Instead, he believes success lies in capturing the "hearts and minds of the people". Certainly not by accumulating bomb-a-wedding "collateral damage". ("We must be careful to avoid civilian casualties while battling the insurgents," he says.) Scheffer is also forced to admit that "cooperation with Iran" in Afghanistan is essential.

Time for PATO?
Key NATO powers France and Germany simply can't afford to antagonize Russia. Germany is a virtual energy hostage of Gazprom. Unlike irresponsible Eastern Europeans, no French or German government would even contemplate being a hostage of a New Cold War between Russia and the US (one of the key reasons why NATO membership for Georgia and the Ukraine is now virtually dead in the water). Paris and Berlin know Moscow could easily station missiles in Kaliningrad or in Russian-friendly Belarus pointed towards them.

Russia's colorful ambassador to NATO Dmitry Rogozin has the definitive take on NATO's spy-versus-spy obsession of encircling Russia. As he told Der Spiegel, "The closer their bases get to us, the easier it is for us to strike them. We would have needed missiles in the past. Today, machine guns are sufficient." As for Georgia and Ukraine as NATO members, Rogozin adds, why not invite "Hitler, Saddam Hussein and [Georgian president Mikhail] Saakashvili."

Russia, Rogozin told French daily Le Monde, expects NATO to become "a modern political and military alliance", not a "globocop" (as Der Spiegel dubs it). Russia expects a partnership - not encirclement. Rogozin could not be more explicit on the Russian position regarding Afghanistan: "We want to prevent the virus of extremism from crossing the borders of Afghanistan and take over other states in the region such as Pakistan. If NATO failed, it would be Russia and her partners that would have to fight against the extremists in Afghanistan."

The NATO-Russia Council is bound to meet again. Moscow's official view is of a security order stretching "from Vancouver to Vladivostok". Something even more ambitious than NATO: "Perhaps NATO could develop into PATO, a Pacific-Atlantic alliance. We just cannot allow troublemakers to deter us."

Messing with Russia, anyway, was never a good idea - except for history and geography deprived neo-conservatives. In 2008 alone, no less than 120,000 US and NATO troops transited through Manas airbase in Kyrgyzstan (the base will be closed this year). This, along with the neo-Taliban bombing of NATO's supply routes in the Khyber Pass, has forced Petraeus to turn to the Caucasus (Georgia and Azerbaijan) as alternative military transit routes, and beg Kazakhstan and Tajikistan in Central Asia for help; this will only materialize if Russia says "yes". Magnanimously, meanwhile, Russia has opened its territory for the transit of NATO supply convoys.

What is NATO for?
As much as Palestine is an invaluable test lab for the Israeli Defense Forces, Afghanistan, and now AfPak, is a lab for both the US and NATO for test driving weapons systems and variations of Petraeus' COIN.

On the other hand, NATO incompetence has been more than evident in the drug front. Afghanistan under NATO occupation was back to being the world's number one producer and exporter of opium. And that, in turn, led to the current US/NATO drug war.

So AfPak has really been a true Transformer war - from the hunt for Osama bin Laden to war against that portmanteau word "the Taliban" and to a Colombia-on-steroids drug war. And all this leaves aside the eternally invisible Pipelineistan angle - centered on the $7.6 billion Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline which the Bill Clinton administration wanted to go ahead with via an (aborted) deal with ... the Taliban, who were in power in the second half of the 1990s.

Watching Obama's actions so far, and considering the Pentagon mindset, there's no evidence to support the possibility that Washington and NATO would abandon crucially strategic Afghanistan, which happens to be a stone's throw from the heart of Eurasia.

Just ask China, Russia and observer member Iran of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). The SCO was founded in June 2001, at first to fight transnational drug smuggling and Islamic fundamentalists and then started to promote all sorts of cooperation on energy, transportation, trade and infrastructure.

Both the US and NATO have totally ignored one of the SCO's aims: to find a regional, non-weaponized solution for the enduring Afghan tragedy. The US and NATO's intransigence during the Bush era is much to blame for the process of the SCO turning into Asia's NATO. In Asian and Russian eyes, NATO has nothing to do with "nation-building", peacekeeping or "humanitarian assistance". And Afghanistan proves it. Asians don't need a globocop - much less a TermiNATO.

Obama, McKiernan, Scheffer, no one will admit it - but many in Washington and Brussels would actually love NATO to really be a borderless TermiNATO, bypassing the UN to perform humanitarian imperialism all over the globe, taking out "al-Qaeda" and "terrorists" anywhere, protecting Pipelineistan and pipeline lands for Western interests in all directions.

The US, supported by NATO, was the midwife of a new incarnation of "Islamic fundamentalism" which should, as it did, get rid of the Soviets in Afghanistan and in the former, energy-rich Soviet republics. The fact that, millions of dead and millions of displaced people later, NATO is now asking for Russian help so as not be stranded in Afghanistan is just another bitter irony of AfPak history, and certainly not the last.

India split over terror trial

By M H Ahssan

In the aftermath of the Mumbai terror attack last November in which nearly 200 people were killed and property worth millions of dollars destroyed, intense public debate has erupted over the fate of the lone surviving terrorist. Opinion is sharply divided over whether Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab should be given a fair trial, and whether - given the magnitude of his crime - Kasab can rightfully claim legal help.

Kasab's trial is set to start on April 6 in Mumbai, and a few vital points need to be raised. These include India's international obligations, its human-rights stand and the constitutional rights guaranteed to every citizen - Indian or foreign - in this regard.

Firstly, the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, ratified by India, protects the "presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law at which the defendant has had all the guarantees necessary for his defense". So, failing to provide legal support to Kasab would sully India's reputation as a democracy - the world's largest - rooted in the principles of justice and social equity.

Secondly, the Indian constitution guarantees a right to legal aid and representation and ensures that every individual get a "fair, just and equitable procedure" in court for any defendant, "regardless of his nationality". The right to life guaranteed under Article 21 of the constitution includes the right to legal aid. Similarly, Article 39A mandates equal justice and free legal aid. Section 303 and section 304 of the Criminal Procedure Code mention the right of an accused to be "defended by a lawyer and the state's duty to provide legal aid".

Even the Supreme Court states, "Free legal assistance at state cost is a fundamental right of a person accused of an offence which may involve jeopardy to his life or personal liberty." This in short is the essence of the country's criminal justice system. As Home Minister Pranab Mukherjee told the media recently, "Every person in India who is accused or prosecuted is entitled to have a fair trial and the Indian judiciary is known for its transparency and for its fair deal."

However, while the law is unequivocal about Kasab's right to fair representation, a section of the Indian public has expressed severe displeasure over this prospect. This segment feels a fair trial for Kasab is "unpatriotic". After all, they argue, how can a criminal - who has been caught on camera unleashing terror in a city and mercilessly killing innocent people - lay claim to justice? Kasab was captured by the security forces outside Chatrapati Shivaji railway terminus, from where he was heading to other targets.

The groundswell of public anger against Kasab is enormous. And unfortunately, undesirable elements are taking advantage of the situation by giving the case a political spin. Maharashtra-based political parties like Shiv Sena, for instance, are demanding that Kasab be executed at the same terminus where he and his accomplices killed several innocent people.

To carry forward its moral policing agenda further, the Sena has even threatened Indian defense lawyers who agreed to represent Kasab in court. Senior lawyer Anjali Waghmare, a government legal aid panel lawyer and wife of a city cop, who has now agreed to defend Kasab, albeit under a heavy security cover. She had earlier withdrawn from the case following a violent protest outside her home in Mumbai by hundreds of Shiv Sainiks.

On Monday, over 300 Sainiks pelted stones at Waghmare's house and forced her to sign a statement promising she would drop the case. This senior lawyer is the perfect choice for the Kasab's defense, as she has appeared in many high-profile crime and corruption cases and has been a member of the governmental legal aid panel for the past 12 years. Despite the harassment, she confirmed on Wednesday that she will continue as Kasab's lawyer.

Waghmare is not the first lawyer to have faced Shiv Sena's ire. In December, a local lawyer, Dinesh Mota, was selected to represent Kasab but withdrew at the last minute, citing personal ethics. As legal experts point out, the protestors are missing a vital point: if Kasab doesn't get a lawyer, the case will not even proceed. He may even be acquitted. Clearly, this crucial case can't be decided by the pressures of mob rule or a kangaroo court but by a constitutionally appointed court of law.

Kasab has been under detention and interrogation since being captured. The mayhem unleashed by him and his militant colleagues has earned worldwide condemnation in the strongest possible terms. The international community has also been exerting pressure on Pakistan to act swiftly on terror and fulfill its promises to curb terrorism.

However, Islamabad is still reluctant to accept the fact that the attackers were Pakistani nationals and were specially trained for the purpose by militant outfits. On the same grounds, Pakistan has also refused any legal aid to Kasab.

It was against this backdrop that the Indian government stepped in to offer legal assistance. However, a major twist in the case came when the Mumbai Bar Association unanimously passed a resolution telling its members not to defend Kasab in a court of law. Expressing solidarity with other like-minded groups, the association said that Kasab should be tried on circumstantial evidence and no legal aid should be provided to him in view of the gravity of his crime.

The association ignored the fact that not representing Kasab would be a gross violation of the Indian constitution and is against the principles of natural justice. It is beyond a shadow of doubt that Kasab deserves stringent punishment for his crime, but his conviction should come in a dignified and just manner, supported by the rule of law. By providing legal aid to Kasab, India has nothing to lose as sentencing in this case looks inevitable. By giving a fair trial to the terrorist, India will also gain an edge over Pakistan.

Diplomatically too, Indian can then leverage this opportunity to showcase its impartiality in the global arena and apply indirect pressure on Pakistan to curb the menace of terrorism. The country can also be seen as upholding its respect for human rights. Simultaneously, Kasab's case can also demonstrate to the world that India has incontrovertible evidence that the Mumbai massacre was the handiwork of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba.