Friday, August 29, 2008

Soldiers of Press, and IHL




International Humanitarian Law and press


By Julhas Alam with Samaha M Karim


This is not an irrational question at all: Why does a journalist need to know about law? Being journalists, especially at the time of complexity through which the world is going on, the matter has come to our minds very pertinently. When it comes to the International Humanitarian Law (IHL), a reporter who is interested to cover conflict must have a good idea about the rules of warfare. Why? Because journalists, who are deployed to cover war, are the “soldiers of the press”.

Kent Cooper, General Manager of the New York-based news agency the Associated Press (AP), used the term “soldiers of the press” in 1943 in an address to the AP Board of Directors to pay tribute to all who were then covering the World War II when Hitler stepped out on the road to ruin.

And war is all about chaos, killing, rape, destruction, and, of course, the presence of the “soldiers of the press” on the ground, no matter whatever the causes.

In this modern age of chaos and brutality, understanding the IHL and keeping it in mind under fire is not a luxury.

Being the prime advocate of promoting IHL and spreading knowledge among the journalists, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has put it this way:

"Whether IHL is respected or violated is an important part of the story in contemporary armed conflicts. Violations of the laws are often at the origin of humanitarian and political crises. When combatants break the laws it can affect the success of their mission. It is increasingly likely that alleged war criminals will be prosecuted and it is important to understand the legal background to such proceedings when reporting on them."

"Understanding what certain actions and events mean in IHL terms will generate more quality war reporting. It will help journalists to ask pertinent questions, look at interesting angles, investigate the story behind the story, and feed the debate on the rights and obligations of the different actors in the field and beyond."

"Quality reporting from an IHL angle can make a difference. It can influence policy and decision-making as well as behaviours, i.e., increase the "will" to abide by the law, to fight impunity, to protect civilians."

While IHL mainly focuses on protection of civilians in conflict situations and puts limitations on the means and methods of warfare, it is also important for the journalists on the ground to be aware of dos and don'ts, no matter one is embedded or working independently. It is important because it is related to a war reporter's personal safety: whether he will be treated as a civilian or not during his assignment in a dangerous situation.

In a recent workshop by the ICRC some two dozen journalists from newspapers, news agencies and television channels get that important message: in reporting armed conflicts it is important for the journalists to know the rules of war.

Surinder Singh Oberoi, a former journalist and now the Communication Officer, ICRC, said: Had he known the law, namely the IHL, he would have been able to write better and his contribution would have been far more effective during his days in the profession.

He believes it is of crucial importance that journalists have some knowledge of the law.
For Bangladeshi journalists it was a great experience especially who are currently involved in global news organizations such as the AP. When it comes to broadcast journalism the knowledge of IHL is a must.

This is a brutal reality that people are dying in war across the globe in this 21st century and everything is getting more and more complex. In this South Asian region, conflict is a reality be it Kashmir, war on terror, Talibanism or crisis in Sri Lanka. Conflict in the Chittagong Hill Tracts is a past but civil disturbance can flare up anywhere in Asia or beyond, and Bangladeshi media will need to deploy their own people there for raw details. Bangladeshi media's presence is now very small in the conflict-ridden areas but being part of that to bring news and photos directly from the scene would be a reality soon to satisfy the audience.

The IHL, in layman terms, the rules of war, has become of great significance to those residing in a region of conflict and also those reporting armed conflicts.

In the two-day workshop on “Situation of Armed Violence-Emerging Challenges, Role and Responsibilities of Media” held on August 22-23, 2008 at the BRAC BCDM, Gazipur, Philippe Stoll, Communication Coordinator of the ICRC, explained some of the essential rules of the IHL.

* One being 'limitation', the IHL states that injuring the enemy is not unlimited, there ought to be a limit to the amount of harm inflicted on the enemy/combatants.


* Another rule signifies 'proportionality'. This is basically that the means and methods of warfare must not be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated.


* Concerning a major fundamental right - 'humanity' is another rule. This includes freedom from torture, degrading and inhuman behaviours. One may not inflict unnecessary suffering on another. One may not kill an individual who is unarmed or no longer actively involved in the hostilities and civilians.


* Another essential rule of the IHL is 'distinction'. It is important to distinguish between civilians and combatants. Another distinction is required to be made between the military objective and the civilian objects.


* The IHL also provides a framework for 'military necessity'. This allows a proportionate use of force in making an enemy submit, however it does not permit military necessity as an excuse for inhuman conduct and does not justify acts prohibited by the law. The IHL seeks to provide a balance between humanity and military necessity.

The IHL is applicable in two situations, in International armed conflicts and non-international armed conflicts. The Additional Protocol II applies in these circumstances providing protection of civilians.

Article 3 common to the four Geneva Conventions prohibits violence against civilians in conflicts “not of an international character” and expands the explicit prohibitions to include forcible displacement (Article 17) as well as “acts or threats of violence, the primary purpose of which is to spread terror among the civilian population” (Article 13). In recent times observance to the Geneva Conventions is universal.

Humanitarian organizations, as the ICRC, and journalists have certain moral obligations in common. They work as the voice of the victims to the authorities/powers. Persons working in these fields work to promote humanity and protection of the civilian population. In carrying out their tasks the common qualities they must convey are neutrality and impartially.

However, there are certain problems being faced, even though they are neutral, they are becoming the target. In recent times there has been increasing news of journalists being battered and killed. The emblem of the Red Cross used fraudulently in illegal activities hampering the universal neutrality and trust they represent.

The ICRC has showed interests to launch training programme for journalists through practical demonstration in the area of war reporting. That would be a great scope as knowledge about law only cannot equip adequately somebody to work on the ground in a dangerous condition. That can be a step forward for quality journalism, war journalism.


Julhas Alam is Correspondent of the Associated Press (AP), based in Dhaka and Samaha M Karim is working with Law Desk

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Crossfire drama


Back from 'crossfire'

Abu Noman Sajib and Golam Mortuja Antu
bdnews24.com correspondents

Dhaka, June 28 (bdnews24.com) – Blindfolded, the man was driven away by the elite RAB force in a microbus from Kaliganj on the other side of the Buriganga. After some time, the black cloth was taken off.

"I understood the place was Shayestaganj in Lalbagh. From there I was taken to a vacant place in Postogola area. They tried to tie me down. I tried to resist. The RAB men fired blank and shouted, 'The terrorist is fleeing. Catch him. Shoot him.'"

"One of them rode on my chest and started beating me. All the time they were asking me to give them the firearms," says Mohammad Babul, 30, of Ispahani area in Aganagar of Dakhhin Keraniganj in Dhaka.

RAB said he was a suspected criminal, an allegation he laughs off.

"One of them said, 'Shoot him in the leg.' One shot me on the right leg. I screamed in pain. Another said, 'Shoot him again' and I took another bullet in my leg. I was praying to Allah all the time (for my life)."

A RAB officer told the officer-in-charge of Lalbagh Police Station on the phone, "We have caught a terrorist from your area. Come over."

"A police car came in and I was taken into it."

From his bed at Dhaka Medical College Hospital, Babul, a clothes trader, recounted how he had survived 'crossfire'.

A bdnews24.com correspondent was stopped at first by policemen from talking to Babul in hospital, as he was under police custody. A phone call to the Lalbagh police chief resulted in the correspondent getting two minutes to speak to Babul.

As Babul was speaking, his wife was wiping tears, her three-year-old son in her arms.

Babul said that he was lucky to be alive and that he was not involved with any criminal activities, a claim the police statements support.

RAB hold onto the "crossfire" story, though. They claim Babul is a 'top terror'.

RAB officials said after the arrest on Thursday afternoon—Wednesday evening, says Babul—when they along with Babul had gone to recover firearms Babul's "accomplices" used to fire on them.

Babul tried to flee during the firefight and received bullet injuries, RAB claimed.

Babul told bdnews24.com that he had gone to Kaliganj to realise dues Wednesday and a team of RAB-10 arrested him there.

"At about 8pm a team of plainclothes RAB personnel suddenly showed up and asked me to go with them. They took me into their vehicle. At about 9:30 pm they took me to the RAB-10 headquarters at Dhalpur in the capital.

"There they beat me. When I asked them what my fault was, a RAB officer said, 'You have mugged Tk 24 lakh. Where are the arms? Bring them out.'

"I said I have no arms but they weren't listening. They detained me there."

"They took me to Shayestaganj in Lalbagh early Thursday morning for 'crossfire'," Babul said.

Babul admitted to bdnews24.com that there had been a fraud case against him.

But he said he had never been involved with criminal activities.

A RAB-10 official, flight lieutenant Mostafa Humayun Kabir said to bdnews24.com: "Babul is a listed top criminal of Kotwali-Islampur area. There are at least seven extortion and fraud cases against him. Most of them are with Kotwali police."

Kotwali police chief Abdul Hannan told bdnews24.com Friday, "There are a number of fraud cases against Babul. But he is not on the list of criminals, let alone being a top criminal."

RAB's Kabir insisted, "Babul is one of the masterminds behind the mugging of Tk 13 lakh, done by exploding bombs in Islampur area in the first half of this month."

On quizzing Babul, the law-enforcers retrieved a revolver and two rounds of bullet, Kabir said.

RAB-10 commanding officer SM Kamal Hossain alleged: "Babul is a criminal in the guise of a clothes trader. He also ran a syndicate of brand forgers and sold counterfeit clothes."

RAB director general Hasan Mahmud Khandaker told bdnews24.com: "I heard about the incident, but I don't have further details."

RAB was formed on March 26, 2004 during the rule of the BNP-Jamaat alliance government as a specialised force to check crimes. With officers drawn from the army, air force, navy and police, the elite force swung into action on April 14, 2004 with the slogan "War against terrorism".

Human rights leader Sultana Kamal said: "A criminal, however notorious, should be tried under law."

Bangladesh signed the United Nations convention against torture which means the country must prevent extrajudicial killings and torture, said the former caretaker government adviser.

RAB courted controversy for killings in so-called crossfire, which international human rights activists describe as extrajudicial killings. They accuse RAB of simply shooting suspects to death after arrests and making up story of armed gunfight with the cohorts of the suspects.

Human-rights organisation Odikhar recorded 184 extrajudicial killings by law-enforcement agencies in 2007, with 94 of them in the hands of RAB officers.

(REUSED WITH PERMISSION)

Friday, June 20, 2008

Biodiversity Action PLan

http://www.bcas.net/Env.Features/Biodiversity/2004/April2004/1%20to%2015.htm

National Biodiversity Strategy And Action Plan

A long way to home “Biological diversity” means the variability among living organisms from all sources including, inter alia, terrestrial, marine and other aquatic ecosystems and the ecological complexes of which they are part; this includes diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems — Convention on Biological Diversity.

by JULHAS RIPON (NOTE: I used to write as Julhas Ripon when I was in newspaper: Julhas)

The bad news first— around one hundred of 6,000 species of plants known from the country are listed as threatened. Many others, especially medicinal plants, are under severe threats due to loss of habitat and over harvest. Around 220 species of vertebrate animals including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals have been listed in the Red Data Books of Bangladesh as they are faced with the threat of extinction. An analysis of the past and present trends in animal extinctions and population decline has suggested that species that are dependent on the aquatic ecosystem are more vulnerable. On the contrary, amongst plants, the most threatened, rare and endemic species are those that are found in the terrestrial forest ecosystem.

But all hope is not lost. There is good news yet. The country is going to get a national document for the first time with some proposed strategies and action plans to protect the country’s bio-diversity. The draft of the plan is already in place, and hopefully it will be finalised by June.

IUCN Bangladesh has prepared the draft, titled “National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan” with the financial assistance of the Global Environment Facility and in collaboration with the United Nations Development Programme.

The environment and forest ministry initiated formulation of the action plan in lieu of the fast shrinking biodiversity in Bangladesh and to fulfil the government’s commitment to the Convention on Biological Diversity.

Bangladesh is obligated to take steps for protection of biodiversity as a signatory to the convention.

But why does the country’s biodiversity need protection?

This is a vital question and some examples can be put forth for the draft action plan for better understanding of the issue. The draft says that major ecosystem of the country includes the beach and open sea, coral reefs, offshore islands, mangrove, estuarine and fresh water flood plains, haor and bil, natural lakes and forests. And the agro-ecosystems are vital to human livelihoods and economy as they contribute 17 per cent of the GDP.

Forests including the mangrove provide 90 million man-days of job opportunities annually and contribute 7 per cent to the GDP. The different aquatic ecosystems together provide for 11 per cent of the country’s export revenue through fisheries, offer jobs to 5 per cent of the work force and contribute 3.3 per cent to the GDP.

It is very clear that there exists a number of issues related to bio-diversity and its conservation and management. It says over-exploitation of the natural resources, habitat degradation, aggression of invasive and alien species, environmental pollution, lack of awareness, lack of species inventory, inadequate knowledge on ecosystem structure and function, weak national information system, lack of biodiversity concepts in environmental education curricula, lack of institutional capacity, poor co-ordination in management and planning, absence of a national body or institution for bio-diversity conservation issues and lack of synergies are the major issues which must be understood and thus go for action.

“The need for a formal institutional set-up for conservation of the green sector has been strongly emphasised in the National Conservation Strategy and National Environment Management Action Plan document. This is also in response to the demand by environmental activists, conservationists, civil society, NGOs and others to have a permanent set-up to deal with the biodiversity conservation issues of the country in a coordinated and integrated manner” according to the draft.

The action plan of the draft will deal with such issues as biodiversity documentation and valuation, bio-safety procedures and standards to deal with genetically modified organisms, establishment of an implementing mechanism for the plan, review and completion of biodiversity-related legislation, and linking biodiversity conservation to climate change, livelihood and poverty. The plan envisages identification and mapping of biodiversity hot spots.

“Biodiversity hot spots are the localities that sustain high numbers of species with a significant proportion of rare, endemic and threatened species who are faced with enormous threats of habitat loss and degradation. Twenty-five hot spots have been identified in the world and Bangladesh is in close proximity to the Eastern Himalayan biodiversity hot spot,” said the draft action plan.

The draft action plan suggested development of a national system of protected areas. It advocates establishment of a bio-sphere reserve in the hilly parts of Chittagong and the Chittagong Hill Tracts, declaration of Saint Martin’s Island as a national park, conservation of biodiversity of other islands such as Moheshkhali, Sonadia, Kutubdia and Nijhum Dweep, conservation of biodiversity in the newly accreted coastal zones, development of conservation plans for ecologically critical areas and declaration of more habitats such as oxbows namely Jhapar and Bukbhora baors, Kaptai lake (man-made) and natural lakes as ecologically critical areas.

For the promotion and monitoring of sustainable fisheries, the draft plan says for establishment and management of fish sanctuaries both in fresh water and marine ecosystem includes ‘brush piles’ in fresh water ecosystem, protection of Halda River mouth as fish breeding ground. It also emphasises on the development of an agro-biodiversity conservation plan as the introduction of high yielding varieties and changes in management practices agro-biodiversity of the country are eroding at an alarming rate. Currently the country has no facilities for conservation of recalcitrant seeds or vegetive propagated plants.

IUCN country representative Dr Ainun Nishat, at a workshop recently said that they had adopted both the ‘top-down’ and ‘bottom-up’ approaches to make the action plan participatory. “It will be an open-ended document that will be and should be reviewed and updated time to time in line with new international developments and emerging national priorities.”

Nishat said most countries in the region had already made certain progress to this end and a huge amount of foreign grants had been allocated for conservation of biodiversity.
India and China have been successful in attracting millions of dollars while Bangladesh lags far behind, he added.

Environment Secretary Syed Tanveer Hussain said Bangladesh should make efforts immediately to examine WTO implications for possible negative impacts on the biodiversity and environment sector after 2005, when a new regime of competition and domination will dictate everything in the international arena.

Minister for Environment and Forest Shajahan Siraj said the government is determined to institutionalise biodiversity conservation issues, and is also working for enactment of new regulations and review of existing laws in this regard.

Of course, the government and NGOs will be capable of attracting huge funds from the outside in the name of various projects for conservation, which is positive undoubtedly But will it help us check the degradation of the environment or extinction of our very own species in the future?

Source: Daily New Age, April 14, 2004 (www.newagebd.com)

Friday, June 13, 2008

Free Hasina


Washingtonpost

Freed Bangladesh ex-leader leaves for US

By JULHAS ALAM
The Associated Press
Thursday, June 12, 2008
; 6:29 AM

DHAKA, Bangladesh -- A former Bangladeshi prime minister left for the U.S. on Thursday for medical treatment a day after she was released from jail pending a corruption trial, a party leader said.

Ex-Premier Sheikh Hasina boarded a British Airways flight Thursday from Dhaka's Zia International Airport, ATN Bangla television station reported. Syed Ashraful Islam, a close party colleague, confirmed she had left for the U.S. after seeing her off at the airport.

She is to be treated for hearing impairment, eye problem and high blood pressure, her Awami League party said.

Hasina, 60, was arrested last July on various charges of corruption and was freed Wednesday for eight weeks after 11 months of pretrial detention. No date has been set for her trial.

She and her party have rejected the charges, saying they are politically motivated to prevent her from running in December elections meant to restore an elected government. Bangladesh has been run for more than a year by an interim government that has jailed dozens of politicians, former bureaucrats and business leaders on corruption and other charges.

Hasan Mahmud, a personal aide to Hasina, said Thursday that the release was temporary but unconditional.

"She will definitely return to the country after her treatment completes," Mahmud said.

After the release, Hasina held a meeting with four influential advisers of the military-backed interim government following a party meeting late Wednesday. Hasina also talked to Bangladesh's interim leader Fakhruddin Ahmed by phone during Wednesday's meeting.

Islam, the political aide, later told reporters the party has decided to join a government-sponsored dialogue in the run-up to the national polls, expected to be held in December.

Political analysts and newspaper editorials see Hasina's release and the government talks as a positive sign for reconciliation in Bangladesh's ongoing political crisis.

"Sheikh Hasina's release is obviously a sign of new and dramatic development in national politics," the English-language Daily Star daily said Thursday in an editorial.

The interim government came to power in January last year by declaring a state of emergency after weeks of violent street protests over electoral reforms.

The government has launched a massive crackdown on corruption and arrested Hasina and her archrival, former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, and Zia's two sons as well as many other businessmen and former bureaucrats. Zia also denies the charges.

Before 2007, Hasina and Zia had alternately ruled Bangladesh following its return to democracy in 1991, but under both leaders the impoverished country was labeled as one of the world's most corrupt nations by Berlin-based Transparency International.

Local media have indicated that Zia and her sons may also be freed from pretrial detention following the example of Hasina's case.

© 2008 The Associated Press

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Bangladesh prepares for disasters

http://malaysia.news.yahoo.com/ap/20080603/tap-as-gen-bangladesh-preparing-for-disa-d3b07b8.html


Bangladesh prepares for future storms in wake of cyclone in Myanmar

By JULHAS ALAM,Associated Press Writer AP - Wednesday, June 4

PATUAKHALI, Bangladesh - Children in this small coastal town in southern Bangladesh know the storms will come again.

The people of Patuakhali are used to getting battered by tropical cyclones, and though last month's devastating Cyclone Nargis changed course at the last minute and missed them, authorities are not taking any chances that they will be so lucky in the future.

In the wake of that storm, which left at least 134,000 people dead or missing and more than 2 million homeless in Myanmar, Bangladesh is expanding a disaster preparedness program that has already won international praise and been credited with saving an untold number of lives.

At schools across the flood-prone south, thousands of students are practicing packing emergency kits, listening for warning sirens, and running for higher ground. Plans are under way to expand a network of 2,500 temporary shelters and volunteers are rehearsing their warning calls over megaphones and speakers.

The preparations have worked in the past. Cyclone Sidr killed 3,400 people last year and left millions homeless, a toll that aid officials said would have been far worse if not for emergency warnings.

Preparedness programs are relatively simple. All that is needed are effective warning calls, emergency shelters and access to food and clean water. In Bangladesh's case, the warnings are often sounded by megaphones attached to bicycle handlebars, while shelter can be simply concrete boxes on high ground.

Had Myanmar had such a program in place, scores of lives could have been saved, experts say.

ActionAid Bangladesh, a relief group working on disaster programs, is focusing on preparing children in the classroom.

"When a kid goes to school, he earns a voice in the family," said Farah Kabir, the group's director. "We want the kids to teach others what they learn at schools."

One of the students, Jayonto Roy, 12, said his family stayed in their home during last year's cyclone, even as their tin roof blew away in the storm.

"It was a nightmare," he said. "Next time I will definitely take my family to shelters and tell others to move to safety. I will make my parents understand why we need to move to safe places."

On a recent afternoon at a school in Patuakhali, children carried out an elaborate storm drill, learning skills such as persuading the elderly to head for shelter.

"It is exciting," said Mehedi Hasan, 11. "Now I know how I can survive during a storm and help others."

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Bangladesh-Offshore gas

http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2008/05/07/ap4981977.html

Associated Press

Bangladesh to allow exploration of offshore gas fields
By Julhas Alam

05.07.08, 3:29 PM ET

DHAKA, Bangladesh -Bangladesh will sign deals with oil and gas companies for exploration of new offshore gas fields by October to meet its growing energy needs, an energy official said Wednesday.

Muqtadir Ali, a Director of the government-run Petrobangla, said one domestic and six international companies, from including the United States and China, have taken part in a bid to explore gas fields in the Bay of Bengal.

The country called an international bidding in February, and Petrobangla opened the bid documents on Wednesday to complete evaluation of the proposals in three weeks for a final decision, Ali said.

The government may select more than one companies for the exploration, he said, adding that the final deals would be sealed by October.

The selected companies will have to drill exploration wells and conduct seismic survey after the deals are signed, he said.

The Houston, U.S.-based Conoco-Phillips, Australia's Santos International Pty. Ltd., Longwoods Resources of the U.S.-China joint venture, Korea International Oil Corporation, China National Offshore Oil Corp. (nyse: CEO - news - people ), known as CNOOC, and Bangladesh's Tullow are among the players that have joined the bidding.

"We are satisfied with the response," Ali said, as he unveiled the bid details.

Currently Bangladesh, with about 15 trillion cubic feet (425 billion cubic meters) of proven and recoverable gas reserves, is facing at least 100 million cubic feet of gas shortages a day.

Officials and experts say the crisis will aggravate in the near future.

The nation has only one offshore gas field, which is managed by the Edinburgh, Scotland-based Cairn Energy PLC. It has been producing gas from the Sangu plant in the Bay of Bengal since 1998.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

River-linking project

Environmentalists decry India's river-linking project

Source: Copyright 2004, Associated Press
Date: August 24, 2004
Byline: Julhas Alam, Associated Press
DHAKA, Bangladesh — A proposed Indian plan to divert water from some South Asian rivers would turn parts of neighboring Bangladesh into desert and cause unseasonal flooding in Nepal, a regional meeting was told recently.
India wants to divert water from 37 rivers to its drought-prone areas by building reservoirs, dams, and canals. But Bangladesh officials object to the plan, saying it would reduce water levels in this South Asian delta nation and threaten the livelihoods of millions of people.

"We are very much concerned" about the project, Bangladesh foreign ministry official Reaz Rahman told a meeting of environmentalists and experts from Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan.

Most of Bangladesh's 250 rivers originate from the Himalayas, traveling through Nepal and India before emptying into the Bay of Bengal.

Environmentalists warned the plan to divert water to India could turn parts of Bangladesh into desert, damaging the impoverished country's fishing and farming sectors.

"Such diversion will cause a disaster in Bangladesh," said Farhad Mazhar, an activist with the Bangladesh People's Initiative Against the River Linking Project, which organized the meeting.

Dipak Gyawali, a former water resources minister in Nepal, said the project would cause unseasonal flooding in the Himalayan kingdom where most of the rivers flowing through India and Bangladesh originate.

Rahman said India's new government, which took power in May, seemed willing to discuss the issue. Indian officials could not be immediately reached for comment.

http://www.waterconserve.info/shared/reader/welcome.aspx?Linkid=34485

Copyright 2004, Associated Press

Cyclone Sidr

http://www.cbn.com/CBNnews/272849.aspx


$120M in Cyclone Aid, 10K Deaths Expected

By Julhas Alam, Associated Press Writer
November 20, 2007
CBNNews.com - PATHARGHATA, Bangladesh - Bangladesh sought more foreign aid Tuesday to help thousands of survivors after Cyclone Sidr killed more than 3,100 people, according to an official tally that still was expected to rise.



Food, fresh water and temporary shelter still had not reached many of the hungry and exhausted survivors of the storm that tore across the country's coast last Thursday.

"At this time we will welcome support from the international community," said a statement from Bangladesh foreign ministry. "We are doing as best as we can do ourselves."

The government said international aid worth about $120 million has so far been promised. But relief items such as tents, rice and water have been slow to reach most survivors of the worst cyclone to hit Bangladesh in a decade.

In Patharghata, a hard-hit trading town on the Bay of Bengal, more than 100 women - many of them clad in veils - gathered Tuesday hoping to get supplies.

"I've been waiting here for several hours hoping to get some food and drinking water," said Safura Begum, 45, who has three children. "But I'm not sure it will come."

"Some biscuits and a few bottles of water are what I've gotten in the past three days," she said.

The government is using helicopters to deliver aid to survivors - many of whom are still living without shelter. Some relief agencies are also using boats to ferry relief to remote pockets.

Mike Kiernan, spokesman for the charity Save the Children, stressed that even those that survived the storm might still be lost to its aftermath.

"Just the fact that people were able to survive this does not mean they will survive the second wave of death that comes from catastrophes like this: from lack of clean water, food, basic medicines and shelter," Kiernan said.

On Thursday night, Nasima Begum, 30, woke up to howling winds and high waves rolling from the sea into her thatched hut near Patharghata. Before her house collapsed she managed to gather her children and fight her way through the water to a nearby tree. She held on to the tree and asked the children to cling to her body.

"We were there for almost an hour before the storm subsided and the water began to recede. I don't know how I survived. But Allah has helped us," she said.

By Monday the official death toll stood at 3,113 after reports reached Dhaka, the capital, from storm-ravaged areas that earlier had been largely cut off because of washed-out roads and disrupted phone services, said Lt. Col. Main Ullah Chowdhury, a spokesman for the army.

The Bangladesh Red Crescent Society, the Islamic cousin of the Red Cross, has suggested the final figure could be around 10,000 once rescuers reach outlying islands.

Every year, storms batter Bangladesh, a delta nation of 150 million people, often killing large numbers of people.

A similar cyclone in 1991 killed 139,000 people along the coast. The most recent deadly storm was a tornado that leveled 80 villages in northern Bangladesh in 1996, killing 621 people.

Associated Press writers Farid Hossain in Dhaka and Pavel Rahman in Barguna contributed to this report.

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Workers' demand

Thousands of Bangladeshi women demand fair trade for poor nations

Nov 25, 2005, Friday

DHAKA, Bangladesh -- Thousands of women rallied Friday to demand that developed nations open their doors to workers and products from poor nations.

Some 5,000 women, mostly employees at garment factories, joined the rally organized by a labor rights group, Karmajibi Nari or Working Women. They marched through downtown Dhaka, shouting slogans such as "Fair Trade!" and carrying banners. One read, "No more cheating with poor nations."

The protest was timed ahead of next month's meeting of the World Trade Organization, or WTO, in Hong Kong.

"We are here to say that the developed world must hear our voice and act accordingly to benefit the world's poor nations," the labor group's spokeswoman Shirin Akhter told The Associated Press. "Poor nations feel that WTO is the club of the richest nations. It brings no benefits to the poor people.".

Bangladesh is one of Asia's poorest nations. Almost half its 140 million people live on less than $1 a day. It derives about 80 percent of its annual $5 billion export earnings from garments, mostly to America and Europe. Most of the industry's employees are women.

Akhter said that allowing workers from poor nations to find jobs in developed countries would benefit both sides, but said there were obstacles to free movement of labor.

"We see developed nations are not giving us that scope, even sometimes they are closing their doors in the name of security or other concerns," she said.

Amina Begum, 22, who earns about $33 a month at a garment factory, said she was worried about her future.

"I don't know that much about WTO," she said at the rally. "I just want to do my job to feed my five-member family."

http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/11/26/business/news/

Monsoon Death

Doctors: many monsoon deaths preventable

By Julhas Alam, Associated Press Writer
Aug. 11, 2007

DHAKA, Bangladesh - Josna Rani Das sat crying and clutching her husband's hand Saturday as she watched doctors struggled to find a vein on her unconscious eight-month old daughter.

Das' daughter, Mukti, was one of several thousand people brought to a special hospital in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka that treats diarrheal diseases.

"The baby was minutes away from death," said Tahmeed Ahmed, a doctor, as he finally found the vein and inserted an intravenous saline drip to rehydrate the child. She survived.

At least 2,120 people have died this year in a particularly calamitous monsoon season in South Asia, double the number killed last year. Some 600 have perished in the past two weeks alone and on Saturday, officials said at least 40 people died.

Many of the deaths in the region could have been easily prevented, doctors said, blaming lack of access to basic medication and ignorance of how to treat the waterborne diseases that followed the deluge.

Ahmed said the case of Mukti Das, where the baby had been suffering from severe diarrhea and vomiting for five days before being brought to the hospital, was unfortunately typical among impoverished, illiterate villagers who mistrusted doctors.

"The illiterate parents initially do not take their babies to doctors, and it is often too late when they take them to the hospital," Ahmed said.

Also, ignorance about how to rehydrate people with diarrhea using an oral solution, or simply by drinking water with some sugar and salt mixed in, led to many preventable serious cases or even deaths, he said.

Most of the cases occur because people don't have clean drinking water and drink from stagnant pools left behind by the flood waters or from wells contaminated by filth washed in by the floods.

About 1,000 people have visited the hospital daily compared to about 150 before the floods, said Alejandro Cravioto, executive director of the International Center for Diarrheal Diseases and Research which runs the hospital.

To cope with the influx, tents were strung between palm trees on the hospital grounds. Inside, makeshift beds covered with plastic sheets were set up in rows as health workers went from patient to patient, giving them rehydrating solutions and putting cool water on their foreheads to bring down fever.

The devastating monsoon floods laid waste to much of northern India and Bangladesh over the last few weeks, killing thousands and displacing millions. More than 200 people have also died in Pakistan where the death toll from rains and a storm that struck southern Pakistan this week rose to at least 35 on Saturday, as buildings weakened by downpours continued to collapse.

Even as the waters drew back, doctors were still struggling to contain the diseases of the aftermath.

In the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, "paramedics visiting affected villages don't have adequate supplies of medicines," said Ramakant Rai, chief of state's Voluntary Health Association. He said clean drinking water was running low.

Families lined up for aid finally reaching their villages.

Doctors have treated at least 1,500 people in Uttar Pradesh for diarrhea in the past 10 days, said L.B. Prasad, director-general of the state's health services. Rai's group said the scope of the suffering was greater, with more than 22,000 people contracting waterborne diseases.

In neighboring Bihar state, the government canceled vacations for doctors in flood-ravaged districts.

The monsoon rains are vital to farmers whose crops feed hundreds of millions of people. The monsoon season runs from June to September as the rains work their way across the subcontinent.

This year, the rainfall has been unevenly distributed across South Asia due to unusual patterns, India's Meteorological Department said. While parts of central India received less rain, the north faced stronger storms for longer than usual.

UN Peacekeeping

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/080406/world/bangladesh_un_peacekeeping_1&printer=1

12 countries join US military-led peacekeeping exercise in Bangladesh

Sun Apr 6, 11:47 PM

By Julhas Alam, The Associated Press

RAJENDRAPUR CANTONMENT, Bangladesh (AP) - Multinational peacekeeping exercises kicked off in Bangladesh with troops from 12 countries participating in the U.S.-led drills, officials said.

Some 400 soldiers from nations such as India, Indonesia, South Korea, and Sri Lanka were taking part in the three-week exercises dubbed "Ambassador of Peace."

American Lt. Col. Edward Tanguy, commander of the 249th Regional Training Institute in the United States, said Sunday the drills will involve checkpoint and convoy operations, patrols, and search-and-disarmament skills.

"This exercise provides us the opportunity to exchange tactics, techniques and procedures at the tactical level with all the multinational forces," Tanguy said at the training site at Rajendrapur Cantonment near the capital Dhaka.

"Our goal is to enhance the readiness and interoperability of the Bangladesh Armed Forces, the U.S. Army and other multination participant forces," he said.

Many of the nations' soldiers participating have worked in relief operations after natural disasters struck their countries, and these experiences were valuable for UN peacekeepers, Tanguy said.

Bangladeshi soldiers were called in after a devastating cyclone last year killed about 3,400 people. Indonesian, Indian, and Sri Lankan troops helped out after the devastating 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami left more than 200,000 people dead.

S.M. Ziaur Rahman, Bangladesh's Air Force chief, said such exercises would create more confidence among soldiers contributing to UN peacekeeping missions.

Bangladesh is the second largest contributor of troops for UN operations with 9,856 soldiers. Pakistan tops the list with 10,610 peacekeepers and India is third with 9,357.

Troops from the U.S., Bangladesh, Malaysia, Nepal, Brunei, Cambodia, Mongolia, and Tonga will also participate in the "Ambassador of Peace" manoeuvres.

Editors want free press

http://in.us.biz.yahoo.com/ap/080514/bangladesh_press_freedom.html?.v=1

AP

Bangladesh editors, journalists call for free press
Wednesday May 14, 9:21 am ET
By Julhas Alam, Associated Press Writer

Bangladesh journalists call for end to emergency rule, greater press freedom
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) -- Senior editors and journalists from more than a dozen leading Bangladesh newspapers and television stations have demanded an end to the country's state of emergency and called for greater press freedom.

The journalists met in Dhaka on Tuesday to discuss threats to the media, said Ataus Samad, a former BBC Bengali service reporter who chaired the meeting.

In a statement, they called for government agencies to stop interfering in the media's work.

A state of emergency was declared in Bangladesh on Jan. 11, 2007, after weeks of street violence over electoral reforms. An interim government backed by the influential military currently runs the country.

"The media have been working with limited rights and under pressure of the emergency rules that curtail many rights," the journalists said.

"Different agencies -- military and civilian -- have been interfering with media activities," they said. "Regular interference in day-to-day work of the media is not acceptable."

Shyamol Dutta, editor of the Bhorer Kagoj newspaper, who attended Tuesday's meeting, said emergency rule was disrupting normal media activities.

"We want emergency rule to go as it has curtailed media rights," Dutta said Wednesday.

Bangladesh has a history of intimidation of the media, but there has been growing discontent among journalists about alleged interference by security officials.

Many publications have resorted to self-censorship, according to the journalists.

The editors said they regularly receive telephone calls telling them to stop publishing or broadcasting certain news, while television stations have been asked not to invite some commentators to their talk shows.

"The journalists who are critical of the military-backed government's activities have been blacklisted for television talk shows," Iqbal Sobhan Chowdhury, editor of the Bangladesh Observer newspaper, said recently. "I am one of them."

The journalists decided Tuesday to create a formal committee to deal with the matter, Samad said.

The spokesman for the Ministry of Information could not be reached for comment Wednesday, while a military spokesman declined to comment.

Global rights groups including the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists and Human Rights Watch have criticized the interim government for failing to protect press freedom.

Journalists in Bangladesh are routinely threatened, assaulted or killed for writing about political violence, corruption or organized crime, according to media rights groups. At least 11 journalists have been killed and dozens maimed since 1997, they say.

The interim government has pledged to hold elections in the third week of December.


Sunday, May 11, 2008

US wants open polls


http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/wire/sns-ap-bangladesh-us-democracy

Los Angeles Times

Bush administration wants open elections in Bangladesh
By JULHAS ALAM, Associated Press Writer
3:13 AM PDT, May 9, 2008


DHAKA, Bangladesh -- Bangladesh's military-backed government should lift emergency rule to facilitate open elections that it has promised to hold by the end of the year, a State Department official said Friday.

Richard A. Boucher, assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs, said Washington will not accept any "deviation" from the path of a credible vote and establishment of democracy.

"I would expect it (lifting of emergency rule) would happen ... certainly we think that you can't have an open election under strict emergency," he told a news conference.

Boucher, accompanied by a senior State Department counterterrorism official, arrived Thursday for a two-day official visit to discuss the elections and other issues with interim leader Fakhruddin Ahmed and military chief Moeen U. Ahmed.

He said the U.S. would continue to support Bangladesh so all major political parties can participate in the polls.

The makeshift government came to power in January 2007 by declaring a state of emergency after more than 30 people were killed in weeks of violent street protests over electoral reforms.

With many democratic rights curtailed and media coverage often dictated by security agencies, there are growing concerns of voter intimidation. Several newspaper editors met Thursday, expressing concerns that the interference is increasing.

Boucher said Washington is working with the government to help overcome many challenges for development and democracy in Bangladesh.

The partnership is important, he said, as Bangladesh is working on challenges to make the society stronger and healthier "to be able to resist the influences of extremism and terrorism, which is an important process for both you and us."

Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation of 150 million people that is ruled by secular laws, has been hit in recent years by terrorist attacks by Islamic militants who want to establish strict religious rule. The government says it has broken up the terrorist network and is working with global partners, including the U.S., to keep it from rebounding.

The government also has launched a massive crackdown on corruption, and two former prime ministers are in jail awaiting trial.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Lecture-Sonia Gandhi


WHAT I LEARNT FROM INDIA

By SONIA GANDHI

I am delighted to be here in these beautiful surroundings. I thank you for this honor. Those of you who are familiar with India will know that we are famously loquacious. Indeed as Nobel Laureate and Nexus lecturer Amartya Sen has remarked in his book The Argumentative Indian, what grieves and frustrates an Indian most about the prospect of dying is that he will no longer be able to argue back! Not surprisingly therefore, public life in India is characterized by vigorous debate and vehement contention. The cacophony of politics is the very music of our democracy. However, outside the compulsions of public life, I must confess that I am not a frequent speaker. I still have a long way to go before becoming the proverbial Argumentative Indian. But when my husband's friend Ruud Lubbers brought up the idea of delivering the Nexus Lecture, I could not refuse.

I was also impressed by the Nexus Institute itself, which is a significant European centre for the exchange of thought and ideas. The Nexus Lecture has become a prestigious event that commands respect far beyond the borders of Europe. Since the end of the Cold War, we are still struggling to come to terms with new and rapidly changing realities. I believe that the European viewpoint, if one can call it that, must continue to be heard. A forum such as the Nexus Institute can and should be central to how the debates of the 21st century are conducted, and how the emerging new world order takes shape. Mr Riemen and Mrs Wallgreen, founders of the Nexus Institute, have much to be proud of, and it is a pleasure for me to deliver the 14th Nexus Lecture.

It is appropriate that I speak to the theme of my lecture in this fascinating country, because the story I have to tell, is a bit like the works of two of your greatest artists. Like Rembrandt's, it is a story of light and darkness, of mystery and the hidden hand of Destiny. Like Van Gogh's, it is also a story of inner struggle and torment, a story of how the experience of loss can impart a deeper meaning to life.

I was born in Europe, but was soon claimed by another world more diverse and more ancient. Mine was a middle-class family from a provincial town in the north of Italy. It was a close-knit family typical of its time, conservative and in essence not very different from a traditional Indian family: strong in adherence to values such as loyalty and obedience, to modesty and truthfulness, to generosity and respect for elders. Yet my father, for all his forbidding ways, was progressive enough to encourage me to learn languages and travel abroad. At school, I learnt of the Risorgimento, of Mazzini and Garibaldi and the unification of Italy. But of India, its great history and its emergence as a modern nation-state, I was taught nothing. My discovery of India happened differently, through the encounter with a remarkable human being. This discovery would take up the rest of my life! That is, in fact, my theme today. I can speak only of my experience, of what I have seen, felt and thought. And if at times, I express myself too much in the first person singular, I hope you will forgive me.

I first met Rajiv Gandhi when I was enrolled in a language school in Cambridge. It was very soon evident to both of us that we would spend our lives together. Two years later, I came to India to marry him. That was almost forty years ago. Not in my wildest dreams could I have imagined then the course my destiny would take. My husband was not in politics when we began our married life.

He was a pilot, absorbed and fascinated by the world of aviation; a devoted husband and loving father to our two children; a man of wide interests who pursued his passion for nature, wildlife and photography in the company of his family and a few close friends.

Though his mother Indira Gandhi headed the government, and we lived in the Prime Minister's house, the life that we made together was essentially private. This was the life we had chosen, a life that brought us joy and deep fulfillment. Yet it was a life permeated by the turbulence of politics. Looking back, I can say that it was through the private world of family that the public world of politics came alive for me: living in intimate proximity with people for whom larger questions of ideology and belief as well as issues relating to politics and governance were vivid daily realities. There were other aspects of living in a political family that had an impact on me as a young bride. I had to accustom myself to the public gaze, which I found intrusive and hard to endure. I had to learn to curb my spontaneity and instinctive bluntness of speech. Most of all, I had to school myself not to react in the face of falsehood and slander. I had to learn to endure them as the rest of the family did.

My mother-in-law was regarded as a strong, rather formidable personality. Indeed, she had the calm authority of a natural leader. She had come a long way from the shy and agonized young woman she had been. But I knew her also as a sensitive, intuitive person with a love for the arts and for the conservation of nature, a sense of humor and the ability to laugh at herself. In the midst of preoccupation with affairs of state, she never failed to make time for personal concerns—a grandchild's birthday, the illness of a friend or a relative, the problems of a staff member. Her breadth of spirit was evident: although rooted in a traditional society, she had accepted her son's decision to marry a girl from a distant land. She opened her heart, her family, and her culture to me, treating me like the daughter she never had. Along with my husband, she guided me patiently through the confusions and hesitations of my early adjustments to India. In time I came to relish the flavors of India's many cuisines, to feel comfortable in Indian clothes, to speak Hindi and acquaint myself with the cultural heritage of my new homeland. The glorious and multi-hued palette of India came to be as dear and precious to me as it was to them.

Over the years we drew closer together. She shared her experiences about her personal life, her loneliness as a child with her mother ailing and her father imprisoned, of her involvement from her childhood in the freedom movement, of the values that took shape in those formative years. I watched her deal with crises and triumphs. I saw her interact with the common man and with heads of state, with allies and with opponents. She faced adulation and acclaim as well as criticism, slander, rejection and imprisonment.

At the time I entered my new family, India was not quite 21 years independent from British colonial rule. The Congress Party, now led by my mother-in-law, was still pre-eminent, but was beginning to face a resurgent political opposition. Her father, Jawaharlal Nehru, had passed from the stage less than four years earlier, and his successor, Lal Bahadur Shastri, was Prime Minister for less than two years.

Indira Gandhi, who succeeded him, was as yet untested in statecraft. She had come to power in the wake of two wars and two famines. Her first challenge was a trial by fire, as she strove to establish her authority over her party and government. In that struggle, her shield was her ability to connect directly with the people; her sword was her empathy with the poor, and the policies she initiated on their behalf.

My first political classroom thus echoed to momentous unfolding events.

Two stand out in my memory. The first was the 1971 crisis which transformed Mrs Gandhi into a statesman. Following a crackdown by the Pakistan military in what was then East Pakistan, more than 10 million refugees flooded into India from across the border— that is, about two-thirds of today's population of the Netherlands. Obviously India could not shoulder such a burden. My mother-in-law traveled to all the major world capitals, striving to convince the international community to intervene in what was a humanitarian catastrophe. She was met largely with indifference, and in some cases, opposition. When India was attacked, her response was swift and sure. She withdrew Indian forces immediately after a representative government took charge in the new-born country of Bangladesh. Evident here was the importance in politics of patience and tenacity, of daring and courage and, above all, of action at the opportune and decisive moment.

Another memory I have of her as a political leader is of her steely determination to raise India out of the cycle of famine and dependency on imports of food grains. She took tough decisions which laid the foundations of the Green Revolution that transformed our economy. Her actions saw India move from being seen as indigent and helpless to becoming self-sufficient in food grains production. This reflected the driving force of her passion to uphold the dignity and independence of her country. That was the mainspring of her political creed.

With all the political twists and reversals that formed the background of our first thirteen years of marriage, our domestic life had remained relatively tranquil. Then suddenly our world was devastated by a succession of tragedies. In June 1980, my husband's only brother died in an air-crash. My mother-in-law was shattered. Her younger son had been active in public life. She now turned to my husband for support. He was tormented by the choice he had to make, between protecting the life he had chosen and stepping forward to his mother's side when she needed him most. Months elapsed before I could bring myself to accept that if he felt such a strong sense of duty to his mother, I would stand by his decision. In 1981 he was elected to Parliament.

Though I often traveled with him to his constituency and became involved in welfare work there, my main concern remained to ensure a warm and serene environment at home. Politics had now entered our lives more directly, but I resisted its further ingress.

Four years later came the event that shook our nation and forever altered the destiny of our family. My mother-in-law, the pivot of our lives, was assassinated by her own bodyguards in our home. Within hours of her death, the Congress party asked my husband to take over the leadership of the party and government. Even as I pleaded with him not to accept, I realized that he had no option. I feared for his life. But his sense of responsibility to the country, and to the legacy of his mother and grandfather, were too deeply ingrained in him. The life we had chosen was now irrevocably over. One month later, he led the Congress Party to a landslide victory in the general elections. He was 40 years old when he became Prime Minister.

I now had official duties as the Prime Minister's wife. But I also had to balance this with our family life, bringing up our children and ensuring they had as normal an existence as possible, given the extensive security restrictions around us all.

Our world had been overturned with the death of my mother-in-law. As often happens when one loses a loved one, I sought to reach out to her through her writings. I immersed myself in editing two volumes of letters between her and her father.

Through most of her youth, while her father was in British jails, their loving and close relationship found expression in a flourishing correspondence, recording a rich and vivid interplay between two lively minds. These exchanges brought alive to me the freedom struggle as it was felt and acted by two people who went on to play important roles in shaping modern India. Along with the books of Jawaharlal Nehru, which I had read earlier, they provided a philosophical and historical underpinning to my direct experience of observing my husband as he carried forward their vision for India.

I accompanied him on his travels to the remotest and poorest parts of the country. We were welcomed into people's huts and homes. They opened their hearts to him, speaking of their sufferings, as well as their hopes and aspirations. I came to understand and share his feelings for them; to see what it was that drove him to work as he did with so much energy, enthusiasm and attention to detail. His commitment to making a real difference to their lives brought a fresh and vigorous approach to the imperatives of combining growth with social justice. He mobilized Indian scientists and technologists to tackle basic areas like tele-communications, drinking water, mass immunization and literacy. It is a matter of satisfaction to me to see so many of the seeds he sowed now yielding flourishing harvests. To name a few: India's recognition as an IT power in the world owes much to him; space satellites and telephone networks are improving the living standards of large segments of our population, especially the rural and urban poor; India's entrepreneurial talents, which began to be unshackled in the early 1980s, are now spearheading our country's impressive rate of economic growth; the revival of local self-government institutions is strengthening the foundations of our democracy. These were all cherished endeavors of his. But the time given to him by Fate was all too short.

My husband remained Prime Minister for five years. Soon after came the moment I had been dreading since the trauma of my mother-in-law's death. On May 21, 1991, while campaigning in the national elections, he was assassinated by terrorists. The Congress Party asked me to become its leader in his place; I declined, instinctively recoiling from a political milieu that had so devastated my life and that of my children.

For the next several years I withdrew into myself. I drew comfort and strength from the thousands of people who shared our grief, cherished my husband's memory, and offered my children and me their love and their support. We set up a foundation to take forward some of the initiatives closest to his heart.

The years that followed saw change and turbulence in India. Economic growth was accelerating. New groups and communities, long deprived, were seeking their legitimate share. Democracy was making India much more egalitarian, but it was also giving new power to some old forces -- forces that sought to polarize and mobilize communities along religious lines. They threatened the very essence of India, the diversity of faiths and cultures, languages and ways of life that have sprung from its soil and taken root in it.

The Congress Party was being buffeted by these currents. This was the party that had fought for India's independence and nurtured its infant democracy till it became a robust institution. It now found itself in the midst of uncertainty and turmoil. In 1996 it lost the national elections.

Pressure began to build up from a large number of Congress workers across the country urging me to emerge from my seclusion and enter public life.

Could I stand aside and watch as the forces of bigotry continued in their campaigns to spread division and discord? Could I ignore my own commitment to the values and principles of the family I had married into, values and principles for which they lived and died? Could I betray that legacy and turn away from it? I knew my own limitations, but I could no longer stand aside. Such were the circumstances under which the life of politics chose me.

I was elected President of the Congress Party in 1998 when it was in Opposition. This gave me an opportunity to travel to all corners of the country. I found the people at large responded to me spontaneously. Intuitively, they seemed to understand that, like them, I too valued their traditions, their philosophy and their way of life. This seemed to build a bond between us, especially with the poor who welcomed me and opened their hearts without hesitation. Again and again, I have been moved and humbled by the gaze of trust and hope in people's eyes.

This link between successive generations of Indians and my family is no abstract one. I had witnessed it in the case of both my mother-in-law and my husband: the almost electric charge that sparked between them and the people: a meeting of eyes, sometimes hands, a communication that surged across all barriers. The attachment accorded so generously to this family is to some extent in recognition of their sacrifices, achievements and selfless devotion to the country. But perhaps their appeal also lay in their transcending the four basic markers of the Indian identity -- religion, caste, language and region. They came to embody the all-inclusive ethos of our country, its essential oneness.

At times people refer to the Nehru-Gandhi 'dynasty'. What this word fails to signify is two crucial elements: one is the sovereignty of the people. Through the democratic process, they have repeatedly vested their expectations in one or another member, and equally on other occasions, they have chosen to withdraw their support. The other essential factor, one that lies at the heart of this relationship, is not the exercise of power but the affirmation of a sacred trust. It is this love and faith that imposes its own responsibility and obligations, that has inspired even a reluctant politician such as myself to enter the public domain.

Success in the 2004 national elections came after six years of political work. I was unanimously elected as my party's leader in Parliament. The next step was to form the government. But I always knew in my heart that if I ever found myself in that position, I would decline the post of Prime Minister of India. I have often been asked why I turned it down. In trying to explain that choice to my colleagues in the party, I described it as dictated by my "inner voice." Indeed, that voice has been my wisest guide in political life. The plain fact is that power for itself has never held any attraction for me. My aim in politics has always been to do whatever I can in my own way to defend the secular, democratic foundations of our country, and to address the concerns and aspirations of the many whose voice often remains unheard.

Too often, we think of politics as a public arena, quite apart from our private world -- let alone the inner life. But experience has taught me that such separations are illusory: to pretend a distinction between the values we bring to our personal lives and to our public dealings inevitably deprive both of meaning.

The India to which I belong can aptly be likened to a mosaic in which each element retains its distinct identity but as part of a unified whole. No doubt it is flawed by cracks and fissures, some old and some new. Yet, it holds together with unmatched beauty because of our people's deeply ingrained commitment to it. Indeed, it can be difficult to comprehend the great mosaic that is India—a land which is home to no fewer than 22 major languages, more than 400 dialects and 4,635 distinct communities. It is a land that has given rise to four of the world's major religions. It is home to the world's second largest Muslim population. It welcomed Christianity long before Europe embraced it. It offered refuge to people fleeing from religious persecution, whether they be Jews or Zoroastrians. It is a land comprising different ecological and cultural regions, each with its own distinctive history. India is thus a multi-religious, multi-linguistic, multi-ethnic and multi-regional civilization without parallel.

There is no better way of describing this than in the words of Jawaharlal Nehru himself who described India as, and I quote: "…An ancient palimpsest on which layer upon layer of thought and reverie had been inscribed and yet no succeeding layer had completely hidden or erased what had been previously written….though outwardly there was diversity and infinite variety among our people, everywhere there was that tremendous impress of oneness, which had held all of us together for ages past, whatever political fate or misfortune had befallen us." (Unquote)

Soon after India gained her freedom, a British Army chief had remarked: "No one can make a nation out of a continent of many nations." Against all odds, our country has remained united and moved ahead. In a world where nations are increasingly founded on the basis of common faith and common language, as we have seen in many of the new countries in Europe, the Indian experiment is a glorious example that unity can also be based on the values of pluralism and multiculturalism. The driving spirit of our country is its liberal and inclusive ethos. India has never sought uniformity or homogeneity. It seeks to integrate, rather than assimilate.

India is a secular country. For us, the term secularism means equal respect for all religions. Our nation is founded on the conviction that all Indians must be free to practice the religion of their choice, to speak and write in their native language, to give expression to their own regional ethos and culture.

Indira Gandhi had once memorably remarked that everything said of India, and its opposite, are equally true. This is a land of both magnificent diversities and painful contrasts, a land where poverty and prosperity co-exist, where perpetual struggles co-habit with burgeoning opportunities. This is a land where tradition and modernity go together, where science and spirituality intermingle. What appear as contradictions to the external world, are seen by us as two sides of the same coin. We recognize that these polarities are held in a certain balance by opposing tensions. The tendency to establish separateness is countered by the need to assert unity. These are the sources of our resilience.

There is, indeed, huge social ferment under way in India as age-old and stratified social and economic structures are being eroded, as political power flows to deprived people and communities and as aspirations rise. It might appear to some that contentions between different interest groups are hampering stability and progress.

But I submit that this ferment is a natural process, it is a corollary to rapid social and economic change. In some cases, my own party's interests have received an electoral setback from the rise of newly emergent groups or interests. I do see even this as a movement towards social emancipation.

My life in India has been one of continuous learning. But being a direct participant in the rough and tumble of politics has been a whole new process of discovery. I am convinced that India can flourish only as a centrist democracy. Over half a century of elections and democratic governance have clearly demonstrated that no government can last if it is seen to pursue narrow interests and is insensitive to the concerns of all sections of our society. India's many identities, languages, faiths and customs cannot coexist peacefully if any one assumes dominance, or if the collective will of the majority denies rights and space to any of the minorities. The defining principle of our nation has been 'Unity in Diversity'; in practice, we celebrate these diversities in a manner that gives expression to the voices of all our people and by giving shape and flow to their aspirations.

There can be no doubt that India's tradition of tolerance, synthesis and the ability to live with seeming contradictions has provided fertile soil for democracy to take firm root. Our Independence movement, unique in many respects in world history, firmly embedded democratic values in our consciousness. A generation of outstanding men and women created the foundations of the Indian nation-state with a magnificent Constitution as its bedrock. Affirmative action, anchored in law, has given the poor and the disadvantaged the largest stake in our democratic enterprise. Democracy is the most visible engine of social mobility and it is this that has ensured its flowering.

Challenges there are, some arising from the process of economic growth itself. Rapid development, ostentatious consumerism and social insensitivity can sharpen disparities and raise tensions. Unfulfilled expectations can lead to upheavals. Others arise from the forces of fanaticism and terrorism, those who seek to unleash violence and destruction on the innocent in the name of religion or region, thus attempting to polarize our society. Even so, I am confident that the centre of gravity is holding and will continue to hold -- because the spirit of our people wills it so.

I believe that while remaining representative of all interests, politics has a particular duty to those in need. As a politician in a country where many still live in poverty, it is my obligation and my responsibility to strive to empower the poor and the vulnerable. At times, this means being willing to fight entrenched social injustice. Indeed, the Indian, so long disempowered by poverty, has a greater claim on the fruits of our growing prosperity. To eradicate poverty, inequality and injustice from our society is an enormous task and it does remain our motivating goal.

There are some who argue that faster growth will in the long run solve problems of social inequality and poverty and narrow the gap between rich and the poor. This argument has been made in the context of other economies as well, including European ones where migrant communities are yet to be integrated fully. This is an old debate—the relative importance of growth and equity. To my mind, it is not a matter of choosing one over the other. Growth without equity tends to destabilize societies, while equity without growth simply cannot be sustained. Yes, if we had an infinite time at our disposal, economic growth alone would result in a transformation of our economies and societies.

This was true of Europe two hundred years ago. This cannot be true of India or indeed of any developing society now.

As many of you know, in recent years India has achieved a greater integration with the global economy; it has reformed economic regulations that were not in keeping with the times, and has as a result achieved consistently high levels of economic growth. Our entrepreneurs and professionals are playing a critical role in generating and sustaining this momentum, and we are proud of them. Yet, as I travel across the length and breadth of our country, the limitations of growth alone stare me in the face. People constantly demand that the government respond to their basic needs. I am aware that the market in many quarters is seen as the new ruling deity, but our experience shows that there is still a critical role for the state and its institutions.

Market-led growth is necessary, but it is not sufficient. That is why it is important to sustain programs of poverty-alleviation, even though these need constant vigilance to ensure that the budgeted allocations reach the people they are meant for.

Politics may be the art of the possible, but it must be anchored in truth. In India, we are fortunate to have the example of Mahatma Gandhi so clearly before us: a visionary who shunned expedient strategies, who frequently chose the most difficult way because it was the right way. For him, the means had to be worthy of the ends. His transparent commitment to truth was such that it inspired millions of Indians from all walks of life to participate in the freedom struggle and to face untold hardships, including long years of imprisonment. This created a new model for mass movements in the world: one based on an unflinching moral core, on personal sacrifice and a dedication to absolute non-violence.

Mindful of this history, I believe that politics must have at its heart one guiding principle -- to achieve its goals through just and ethical means. It is my conviction that coercion, expediency and the cynical manipulation of popular sentiment and public opinion to attain one's ends, no matter how worthy they are, can never be justified. But I do recognize that this is easier said than done. Very often, practice and precept diverge, sometimes consciously and sometimes unconsciously. When we compromise, we must have the courage and candor to admit to it and not abandon our commitment to basic principles.

It is not easy, in the space of a single lecture, to distill all that India has taught me. It has taught me above all else that politics is not just the art of the possible; it can also be the art of the impossible. To have won freedom and forged nationhood through a unique non-violent movement and to have launched universal adult suffrage more than half a century ago, in a society that was then 85% illiterate and desperately poor, was a daring act of faith. To have helped democracy take root, and to have nurtured it through sixty years amidst continuous challenges, has been a stupendous achievement. Politics everywhere is an exacting mistress, nowhere more so than in India, with its multiplicity of political parties and ideologies pulling in different directions. Its sheer size, diversity and variety, the huge development tasks it is undertaking in a framework of open democracy, the growing aspirations of over a billion people, all make it a formidable mission. The exuberance and vitality of our people, especially our youth, gives me the confidence that India will continue to push the boundaries of the possible, for its own well-being and for that of the world.

My journey from the placid backwaters of a contented domestic life to the maelstrom of public life has not been an easy one. Yet, despite its sorrows and difficulties, I have found in my new existence both fulfillment and a larger sense of purpose. The family to which I first pledged my fidelity was in the confines of a home. Today my loyalty embraces a wider family – India, my country, whose people have so generously welcomed me to become one of them.