Saturday, November 29, 2008

Discordant Conformance - The way ahead

This blog was meant to air my views about things I consider important - for myself, people around me, my world, my country, the world. These were meant to be topics that are generally not discussed in the office pantry, or for that matter with friends over a beer, because of the need to maintain political correctness as also driven by the fact that not many people would actually be interested enough in them to exchange views or they may just simply not wish to discuss them.

A number of times over the past year, I have started creating blogposts - after major events noticed by all or even after events that I thought deserved more column-space in the dailies that what they got on the 6th page besides the Festival Sale advertisement or just happenings in my life that are nowhere in the dailies (and rightly so). However, most of the times, I have given up on it after writing a few lines. The reasons have been numerous including laziness about doing some research, thinking and expressing myself coherently, maintaining a 'correct' facade as also time constraints. Leaving apart the laziness part, one other reason being that I found it quite a challenge to pull together a multitude of threads of thoughts on the topic into an ordered assembly of arguments. Essay writing was one of my fortes in school, clearly that isn't the case now. Additionally, there was always the niggling fear of putting in the public domain my thoughts which, as I mentioned previously, aren't necessarily the most 'hep' or politically correct way of thinking in these times in my circles. Lastly, but not the least, there is the constraint of time to devote to this apart from work and life. But the last one is just an excuse and not a reason, I guess.

Anyways, I have finally decided to try to give vent to my thoughts and opinions, which I'm sure are not worth a penny to anyone besides me - why should they be anyway. Regardless of this, I believe this would give me a chance to arrange my thoughts and look at them in an orderly fashion rather than the mess that they create in my mind. Moreover, this will at the very least allow me to record my thoughts at different points in time and hold myself accountable for any subconscious/gradual perceptible shifts in my opinions or viewpoints.

So here goes the resolution: try to devote at least half an hour every day for jotting down my thoughts, opinions and views (all a load of horsecrap, frankly) on paper or rather on Discordant Conformance.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Fresh Terror Attacks in Mumbai...again

Around 11:00 pm
NDTV started reporting on a shooting incident near Colaba and VT station. These locations were "very far apart in the city". VT station was repeatedly described as one of the largest railway stations in mumbai which gets local as well as outstation trains.

It was funny seeing the anchors with absolutely no idea of Mumbai geography stumbling with the locations, their distance and giving repeated descriptions of the locations.

Around 11:15 pm
"There have been several shooting incidents in Mumbai"
There has been blast at Oberoi hotel.
Shooting inside the VT station.

It wasn’t funny any more.

Around 11:20 pm
People have been evacuated from the VT station. All trains on the Central line have been stopped.

A shooting incident is also reported in Vile Parle.
Shooting also at the Trident Hotel, previously called the Hilton Hotel.

11:20 pm

A Mr. Sharma of the railways says “2 people have been killed by shooting inside the VT station”


Around 11:25 pm
Shooting happening at the VT station. There is news of terrorists holed up inside the station.
There is also news of shooting at the Taj Hotel.

Police are out on the streets of the city with weapons drawn.


Around 11: 30 pm
Abu Azmi – of all people: TV, irony thy name – is brought on the line saying "this is an obvious intelligence failure"

11:40 pm

There is news of terrorists having held up people at Oberoi hotel and the VT station.

There is news of a bomb explosion at the Oberoi hotel as well. Flames are seen at the hotel.

11:45 pm

There has been shooting outside the airport and near Santa Cruz.


Around 11: 50 pm
Milind Deora, MP from South Mumbai comes on camera on NDTV. Says "I am going around South Mumbai. This is clearly not a bomb attack." He almost sounded relieved. People are dying, but hey, it isn't a bomb attack.

"The main message your channel should convey is that people shouldn't panic." Reminded me of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Whatever happens, the solution is DON'T PANIC. And I'm sure in a few days our esteemed Home Minister Mr. Shivraj Patil will come in an impeccably dressed safari suit to say that people should maintain peace and communal harmony.


11:55 pm

PM’s office confirms news of incidents in Mumbai


Around 11:57 pm
News coming in of gun shots being fired at Cama and GT hospitals where the injured are being brought in.

12:00 midnight
Correspondent: “Home ministry has sprung into action. They are confirming reports of 5 incidents in Mumbai. There is going to be something at the Home Minister’s house”

News Anchor: There are clearly more than 5 incidents. Probably 6 or 7.

00:02 am

Anurag (Correspondent): I have seen 20-25 dead bodies with my own eyes at Saint George’s hospital. There was a horrible explosion at a taxi with parts of the taxi being flung up to 4th floor of neighbouring buildings.

00:06 am

City is under an unprecedented scale of attack from north to south of the city. We can confirm at least 25 killed.

00:08 am

A DGP of Maharashtra: “Unknown terrorists have opened fire indiscriminately. There have also been grenade blasts. At least 7-8 places. At least 2 places, terrorists are holed up – Taj and Oberoi Hotel.”

00:13 am

Policemen shown in position outside the famous Taj hotel. “Operation is on in the 2nd floor of the hotel. Commandos and a senior level hotel are inside”

A fire shown raging at the Trident Hotel.

00:15 am

Very serious explosion at Bori Bandar at Victoria Terminus.

“A team of black cat commandos being sent in to help the police engaged in the encounter”

00:17 am

Reports of an explosion inside the Taj hotel as well.

Ibnlive website lists 10 dead at VT station shooting, 10 more by an explosion at a petrol station, 3 dead in a bomb explosion in a taxi at Mazgaon docks and 3 more at the Taj Hotel.

00:24 am

Advani has called up PM and asked about what has happened. Sonia Gandhi calls up CM Vilasrao Deshmukh and asks for a report on the incidents.

It just goes on and on….

Saturday, February 23, 2008

The meritocracy of diversity

The ongoing 2008 Democratic Primaries in the United States present an interesting learning opportunity for India in terms of accepting diversity on the sole basis of merit. Curiously, looking at the ongoing developments in the US the prism of happenings in India that were inherently similar to them, but still very different in character, bring out the learnings that I think could do wonders for us as a nation.

Senator Barack Obama who happens to be of African-American origin is pitted against Senator Hillary Clinton, who by happenstance is the wife of ex-President Bill Clinton. If you thought the usage of the phrases "happens to be" and "by happenstance" slightly incongruous with normal usage of language and with the message, you are spot on. But those phrases have been used with the sole purpose of emphasizing the message of this note.

Senator Obama being of African-American origin or Senator Clinton being a woman are not the reasons for their nominations or for that matter, their strong showing in the hustings. Each of them has a record of activism, business leadership and political experience that is forming the basis of their campaign to earn the Democratic Party's nomination. Both have tried to carve out an identity of themselves that is distinct of their race or gender. This has been the case despite the fact that both of them have a characteristic that was considered as unimaginable for becoming the President of the United States only ten years. Possibilities of a colored individual or a woman qualifying for the top job in the US, which effectively is the same as the CEO of the world if there were such a position, were only possible in the realm of fantasies. But that very fantasy has a distinct possibility of becoming a reality in 2008 given the popularity, or rather the lack of it, of the current incumbent.

The point that I have been striving to make here is that Senator Obama and Clinton are progressing ahead not because of their racial or gender characteristics. On the contrary, they are strong candidates because of their abilities, past performance and policies & vision for the future.

Now compare this, with all the benefits and luxuries that hindsight proffers us, with a situation similar to the US democratic primaries that was played out in India when elections were last held for the positions of the President and the Vice-President of India in July and August 2007 respectively. The results of these elections gave the country its first ever female President and a Vice-President hailing from a religious minority. The similarity with the ongoing electoral processes in the US ends here. Contrary to the emphasis on the individual's qualifications and their abilities to lead the nation in the US, the selection of the candidates by the ruling alliance in India appeared to have been done mainly, if not solely, on the basis of their gender and religion.

This should not be construed as meaning that the candidates did not have merit or the abilities & characteristics as demanded by the august offices for which they were nominated. Pratibha Patil has had a long and illustrious career in public service and politics. Becoming a state legislator at the comparatively young age of 32, she had been a member of both the houses of Parliament, served as a member of as a Cabinet Minister in the Maharashtra Government, was the leader of the opposition of the Maharashtra Assembly, a Deputy Chairperson of the Rajyasabha, Governor of Rajasthan. On the other hand, Mr. Hamid Ansari is widely accepted as a quintessential intellectual and academician. A diplomat by profession, he was a member of the elite India Foreign Services and has served on several positions of high responsibility including as India's Permanent Representative to the UN, Indian High Commissioner to Australia, India's Ambassador to UAE, Afghanistan, Iran and Saudi Arabia and after his retirement from the IFS, as a Vice Chancellor of the Aligarh Muslim University and Chairman of the National Commission of Minorities, amongst others.

But was the nomination of Mrs. Patil for the position of the Head of State based on her qualifications, political experience, assessment of her abilities and her suitability to the position? Apparently Mrs. Patil was a 'consensus candidate' after the first three choices of the Congress were ruled out for different reasons. The Home Minister lacked 'impeccably secular' credentials, the power minister and Maharasthra ex-CM had a plus point of being a dalit that turned a minus point since the UP CM's backing was doubtful and the Foreign Minister could not be spared by the party that remains in dire need of his firefighting skills. And her name was taken up when during a meeting on topic of selection of a presidential candidate, the PM seems to have suggested that we should have a woman as our candidate! Moreover, even during her campaigning for the elections, when she regularly met up with the legislators across the country and attended public events, the emphasis always seemed to be along the lines of that it was 'high time' for a woman in the country's top job and how this spoke well of women's condition in politics and in the country at large! As Amrita Rajan points out here : "Tell me how she's the best person for the job, tell me why she deserves this honor, tell me why I should be proud of her for things she did rather than something decided in her mother's womb. Tell me why she represents me and my country. Don't try to guilt me into accepting her as the face of my country."

Note that here I steer clear of the merits or demerits of the serious allegations that were leveled against Pratibha Patil around the time of her candidature, though several of them deserve since that would be digression from the topic at hand.

Similarly, the question remains whether the current Vice President was chosen by the UPA on the basis of his qualifications par excellence or because the Left and the Congress had with no choice but to field a Muslim candidate since the UNPA, the so-called third front, had announced the candidature of Rasheed Masood. Moreover, Hamid Ansari's views on the United States and the Middle East, that were abundantly publicized previously through his writings were seen to be clincher since that was all but a god-send characteristic as far as the Left was concerned.

Quite ironically, India's last President too was a Muslim. But his nomination was projected as an extension of and honoring his services to the nation as a scientist and as a key contributor to the development of India's missile systems during his tenure at the DRDO. And tellingly, it was the supposed right-wing nationalists who had proposed his name for the position which was accepted by the Congress as well. On the other hand, despite their equally strong credentials, the nomination processes of Pratibha Patil and Hamid Ansari to generate the same unitive feelings in the country. Moreover, that their campaigns did not feel the need to highlight their abilities and their views on key issues that would have given the nation a peek into their suitability for the constitutional posts.

It is fully understood that the US Democratic Primaries and the India's election of its President & Vice-President are not exactly comparable commodities. The posts of the President & Vice-President in India are chiefly ceremonial in nature as against the President of the US also being the Head of the Government. Also, the President & VP of India are elected by the elected members of Parliament and state legislatures as against the US President being elected directly by the people of the country.

So do we have something to learn from the way in which a woman and a black man are fighting it out in the US on the basis of their past credentials and experience as well as their future vision for the country? We need to recognize that putting a woman or a Muslim in our constitutional chairs neither reflects in any way on the current state of the women or the minorities in the country nor is it a statement of our commitment towards improving their status in the future. It is high time that we, as a nation and a society, identify mere tokenism and political posturing that such decisions indeed are.

It is the inherent merit in the individuals that deserves recognition and their capabilities that deserve to be honored. Looking beyond the ink spot at the wider canvas, reservations or affirmative action that adversely affects the merit does no good whatsoever of any note to anyone. The election or selection of a person for a job or a position on the basis of their abilities - caste, religion and gender no bar - should be the direction we head. What better than the farcical selection of candidates for our Head of State and her deputy to put this point across?


Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Kosovo's Pandora's Box

17th February 2008: Kosovo declares independence unilaterally.

The unique saga of the erstwhile Yugoslavia continues in the 21st century. Undeniably, this is just history exacting its toll on geography. The Yugoslav wars have finally ended, hopefully. Slovenia, Crotia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia - the constituents of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia formed after WWII - had already attained their statehood. Now Kosovo, that was under UN & NATO administration since 1999, has declared its separation from Serbia unilaterally.

Whether the world's retaliation against the Serbia, in the wake of the decade long Yugoslav wars, and the trials of the Serbian leaders was an instance of the proverbial 'Victor's Justice' or not is not the discussion point here. The answer to that is obvious considering the scale and nature of violence against the Serbs which has very conveniently gone unnoticed and unremarked upon by the world that just needs someone to blame for all the bloodshed. However, why the declaration of independence? Why should the Republic of Kosovo be accepted by the international community as an independent nation while Serbia is dead against this despite all the incentives that were offered to make it accept the deal? Should past wrongdoings by Serbia, though atoned for and for which reparation has been attempted, hold as enough cause for declaration of statehood by Kosovo?

There were no obvious and overt current threats from Serbia towards Kosovo. The NATO intervention in 1999 and the succeeding world condemnation has caused a significant purgation of the Serbian administration, army and society. Milosevic was arrested and extradited to face trial in the International Court Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Hague for genocide in Bosnia and war crimes in Croatia and in Kosovo and Metohija. Similar was the fate of his coterie and other alleged war criminals including Serbian Army generals, who were arrested and over to the ICTY. The Yugoslav parliament passed a law allowing extradition of all persons charged with war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal. Moreover, Kosovo had significant autonomy on internal matters, a separate Parliament and a Prime Minister as well. So why independence?

Is this to satisfy the 'needs and aspirations' of the Albanians or is this because it was decided that an autonomous Kosovo can never re-integrate in Serbia or is this simply the world atoning for allowing the blood to flow from arms & ammunition supplied by it. And the world, and the Security Council, has split along obvious lines on this issue with the US and EU including the UK & France set to grant immediate recognition to the new nation while Russia and China opposing its independence declaration.

A more worrying issue is whether this model is replicable elsewhere? Close to ground zero, Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina want a separate homeland based on the Kosovo example. Russia has already spoken of using Kosovo precedent to help two provinces secede from neighboring Georgia. Chechen rebels want to use this as a case in point for their independence. It's a surprise that the Mirwaiz has not yet given a fiery speech promising its emulation in Kashmir.