Full-body scanners may be a valuable addition to airport security, but profiling is likely to prove unjustified and ineffective

Balancing security and rights John Wadham guardian.co.uk, The right to life is the ultimate human right. One of the government’s most important jobs is to protect it, and it needs to ensure that the measures it takes enable all of us to travel in safety and confidence. However, the threat of terror is not a trump card which allows governments to disregard all other human rights. Nor is it carte blanche to exercise the power of the state at the expense of civil liberties. In the past, we have sometimes seen governments get carried away – most notably, perhaps, with … Continue reading Full-body scanners may be a valuable addition to airport security, but profiling is likely to prove unjustified and ineffective

Dialogue with Gates

Terrorism and all the complex issues around it topped the agenda for the visit to Islamabad by the US secretary of defence and his flurry of meetings with the president, the prime minister, the COAS and other key officials. Robert Gates mixed praise for Pakistan’s efforts against militancy with warnings of the need for still more endeavour to defeat the militants. His carrot-and-stick strategy was obviously designed to maximise pressure on Pakistan. The request for a guarantee that there would be no further Mumbai-style attacks on India and the warning that there could be military retaliation from New Delhi if … Continue reading Dialogue with Gates

Jyoti Basu’s mixed legacy

Praful Bidwai In communist veteran Jyoti Basu’s death, India has lost its most illustrious politician and the last leader who embodied a personal link between the many phases of Indian politics since the early 1940s. Basu was not just a major Left leader in a country with the world’s biggest Communist party outside China. He participated in numerous processes which shaped politics, including trade union and peasant movements, radicalisation of the intelligentsia, contestations between social-group identities, and crystallisation of the party system. Unlike other distinguished communist leaders — S A Dange, E M S Namboodiripad, P C Joshi, B T … Continue reading Jyoti Basu’s mixed legacy

A general’s snarl

S Khalid Husain In his article, “Cultivating brevity and calmness” (Jan 8), Ayaz Amir appeared to be implying that Indian army chief Gen Deepak Kapoor’s declaration of his country’s new military strategy to fight on two fronts was nothing out of the ordinary. Military chiefs do not usually harp on the warring potential of their countries, unless there are reasons, and Gen Kapoor doing so has a lot to do with President Obama’s visit to China in November 2009, which clearly marked the beginning of a new Sino-US strategic relationship. The West and the US have quietly backed India as … Continue reading A general’s snarl

You don’t scorn stars

Sankhya Krishnan There was a general impression that the India-Pakistan relationship had plumbed the depths and could only get better. The peace initiative by the Jang group and the Times of India group was especially heartening. Low-hanging fruit like sporting contacts appeared to be ripe for the picking. But this week, the fruit tantalisingly slipped out of reach. The unanimous decision of all eight IPL franchises not to bid for any Pakistani players for this year’s edition showed that regressive forces still reign supreme. As a cricket fan, I was looking forward to the Pakistanis playing in the event, hoping … Continue reading You don’t scorn stars

A judgemental opinion and some other issues

Farhat Taj It is ridiculous to compare the foreign-assisted war militias in Afghanistan with the anti-Taliban lashkars in FATA and NWFP. Pakistani lashkars are not supported by any foreign powers. The proof is that they have far inferior weapons than the Taliban and suffer from lack of finances This is in response to Dr Mohammad Taqi’s rejoinder ‘Rallying the diaspora’ (Daily Times, January 17, 2010) to my piece ‘Pakhtun diaspora: irresponsible and insensitive’ (Daily Times, January 9, 2010). I welcome his response to my article, particularly his call to support Aryana Institute for Regional Research and Advocacy (AIRRA). Now I … Continue reading A judgemental opinion and some other issues

Of civility and men

Albert Schweitzer Entering on the question as to what is the real essential nature of civilisation, I come to the pronouncement that this is ultimately ethical. I know that in thus stating the problem as a moral one I shall surprise and even disgust the spirit of our times, which is accustomed to move amidst aesthetic, historical, and material considerations. I have come to the conviction that the essence of civilisation depends on the mental disposition of the individuals and nations who exist in the world. All other things are merely accompanying circumstances of civilisation, which have nothing to do … Continue reading Of civility and men

Countering terror and cowardly apologists for mullahs

Salman Tarik Kureshi One is again hearing whispered preliminaries of the cowardly chorus of this being “not our war, after all”, despite the undeniable fact that Pakistani citizens and members of our armed forces are being blown up, shot and killed in a variety of dramatic ways For nearly a year now, there has been strong and, indeed, enthusiastic public approval of the military’s anti-Taliban operations. Well, one thought, here is yet another example of the basic good sense of the common Pakistani. In spite of whatever claptrap our drawing-room chatterers, pulpit warriors, media jihadists and deluded politicos may dish … Continue reading Countering terror and cowardly apologists for mullahs

Empower women not mullahs!

Finally the National Assembly passed the Protection Against Harassment at Workplace Bill, 2009 after the Criminal Law Amendment Bill was adopted by the Senate. The latter was part of the comprehensive bill passed by the National Assembly on workplace harassment and had been passed there in November 2009 but due to the opposition of the religious parties in the Senate, it faced some delay. The religious parties wanted women to observe an ‘Islamic dress code’ at workplaces to safeguard and protect their modesty. The absurd opposition to this bill is indeed reflective of the anti-women mindset of these so-called ‘religious’ … Continue reading Empower women not mullahs!

For God’s sake, blog!, pope tells priests

In this file photo taken on Dec. 18, 2009, Monsignor Paul Tighe from the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Social Communications illustrates during an interview how Web surfers can now send online Christmas greetings to Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican. –Photo by AP World VATICAN CITY: For God’s sake, blog! Pope Benedict told priests on Saturday, saying they must learn to use new forms of communication to spread the gospel message. In his message for the Roman Catholic Church’s World Day of Communications, the pope, who is 82 and known not to love computers or the internet, acknowledged priests must … Continue reading For God’s sake, blog!, pope tells priests