Thank you Kamayani for this report .

A prima facie conclusion is that to divide people wherever possible , to 
strengthen the case for violent solutions  and fascist methodology and 
propaganda , attacks are taking place on  the poorer classes of Dalit and 
Minority groups of whom a large section are  sociologically originally dalits 
or other backward class groups . This is to consolidate support for fascist 
groups or so called secular parties  in fact representing Corporate groups 
national and international who gather support citing these attacks , to present 
the people with limited electoral choices .

This will not suceed as from region to region the feeling is growing that the 
upper caste/class groups are behind this violence as there is no attempt to 
prevent or control it . Moreover our country being as diverse as it is , 
monolithic organizations of any religious or caste group will be repelled and 
seen for what they are .

In this context a retired Police Officer , a former Deputy Commissioner of 
Police Mr. Y.C.Pawar has clearly stated on Times Now   during the course of a 
panel discussion on 3rd March 2010  on the use of the underworld in Mumbai , 
that without  covert political  support  and the support of police agencies 
criminilized groups cannot operate.

Even in the context of 9/11 in the USA , strategic experts from Europe opined 
that it was obvious that such false flage operations could  not be staged 
without the support of Intelligence and security agencies in charge of internal 
and external security . While engineering and technical experts have questioned 
the official version of events .

We are actually facing a situation when all institutions are under attack . The 
Constitution , the Legal system , the Judiciary , the Police among several 
other institutions from fascist organizations operating from within the system 
and from outside , assissted by corrupt and covert forces to strangle 
democratic functioning and dissent , including police investigation as was 
clear from the assassination of Jt. Commissioner of Police Mr. Hemant Karkare 
and Mr. Kamte along with 12 other policemen to foster terror and  to assist in 
the total financialization of the economic system to the detriment of 
livelihoods and the survival of  citizens .

The pattern being adopted is on the lines of the US and UK economies now facing 
SOVEREIGN DEBT DEFALUT   except that in our case it is not even an independent 
operation but " Recolonization " of course with internal collaboration , hence 
even for investigation of cases we have the FBI among other agencies called in .

 For the seizure of resources and its implications for India , we have to 
recall the East India Company among other companies who held sway over India 
before we declared ourselves a Republic . The WTO is a world trade order which 
gives primacy to companies over the well being of societies . A Company as we 
understand it is an economic and profit oriented artificial legal entity with 
limited liability without HEAD OR HEART . WHEREAS A POLITICAL SOCIETY NEEDS 
NURTURING , PRIVATE  COMPANIES IF IN CONTROL OF  THE POLICIES OF GOVERNMENT 
EVEN  RESORT TO WAR AND DESTRUCTION IF THE BALANCE SHEET REQUIRES IT AND 
POLICIES  DO NOT IMPOSE ANY AUTO  LIMITATIONS ON PROFITS .

A Company under constitutional and legal regulation of its financial and 
economic structure with limitations on overall accumulation can be an 
instrument of production .In political control it devastates whole countries , 
regions and in two World Wars millions were killed . In the Second World War 
over 75 million . Therefore the Constitution of India in the Directive 
Principles of State Policy required restrictions on access to financial 
resources as those who framed the Constitution were aware that Corporate rule 
led to fascism in Europe with world wide destruction of several regions .

We face the same situation to-day all over the world and even worse as weapons 
have been advanced and perfected to kill humanity .

Unregulated control over the financial and productive resources of society with 
Companies and Financiers as the arbiters destroys societies which economic 
history teaches us . It is necessary for us to make a study of the US and UK 
economies among others with special reference to financialization and 
unemployment .

Even Azim Premji highlighted on BBC ,in a panel that major private companies it 
was well known could not cater to employment as that was not feasible given the 
economies of scale and not  their priority . If this is so then what is the 
alternative before Companies and Financiers other than unregulated sway of the 
Indian economy and for that purpose DIVIDE AND RULE .

                              Niloufer Bhagwat        

            

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kamayani 
  Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2010 10:49 PM
  Subject: [humanrights-movement:2299] FACT FINDING ON INCIDENTS IN PUNJAB


  REPORT OF THE ALL INDIA CHRISTIAN COUNCIL FACT FINDING TEAM

  ON INCIDENTS IN BATALA AND OTHER AREAS OF PUNJAB

  18-21 FEBRUARY 2010


  EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ISSUED ON MARCH 2, 2010

  NOTE: The full fact finding report is available from aicc Delhi office: 
[email protected]


  Attempted Murders

  The Punjab police are hiding the fact that Sangh Parivar-led hoodlums in 
Batala, Punjab tried to burn five Christians alive. The Christians were from 
two families who live in the Church of North India’s historic Church of the 
Epiphany compound built in 1865. Batala is a small business town in Punjab’s 
Gurdaspur district. On February 20th, the CNI church was set on fire and all 
its furniture burnt. Attempts were made to destroy a nearby Salvation Army 
church, raised in 1958, where the pastor was seriously injured. “We pleaded 
with the police to help, but they did not,” said the Pastor, Maj. Gurnam Singh.


  Even as the larger group of attackers focused on burning the CNI church, a 
group of men armed with sticks and rods, and came to the CNI Deacon’s house. 
The deacon, Victor Gill, and his wife Parveen, hid themselves under the bed. 
The assailants damaged the doors, tried to enter the room forcibly, and told 
the couple they would be burnt alive if they did not come out. Meanwhile, at a 
second CNI house, the group overturned a scooter, took out the petrol, and 
doused teacher Christopher Morris and his daughter Daisy with the fuel while 
the mother, Usha, cringed in their home. They tried to set the two on fire, but 
the matchbox had also been soaked in the petrol and despite three attempts to 
strike a match, the matchsticks would not ignite saving the family from being 
burnt alive. The police were watching. The fire brigade came later but was 
blocked by a mob for quite some time.


  Police Bias

  No police report has been filed on the attempted murders even as the top 
police and administrative officers enforced a one sided “peace accord” on the 
local Christian leadership. Christians were instructed not to press for charges 
immediately so that a number of Christian youth who were arrested – together 
with a few Hindu men – could be released. The strategy of the assailants was 
eerily reminiscent of what was practiced and perfected against churches in 
Orissa in 2008. Police forcibly cleaned up the Church of the Epiphany. They 
removed burnt furniture and made the presbyter whitewash the walls to remove 
traces of fuel oil used in the blaze. This was done before a formal enquiry 
could be conducted by the government.


  Background on Violence

  The Christians, all of them of Dalit origin, were trying to enforce a closure 
or "bandh" in Batala markets to protest a blasphemous picture of Jesus Christ 
holding a can of beer in one hand a lit cigarette in another which appeared on 
roadside banners to celebrate the Hindu "Ram Nauvmi" festival. The banners were 
sponsored by a coalition of local political, media and business leaders, 
together with the trading community which is almost entirely Hindu.


  The Sangh Parivar reacted to the Christian protest by mobilising shopkeepers 
and youth in attacks that left many injured, two churches damaged, and clergy 
traumatised. We noted that local shopkeepers routinely enforce closures e.g. a 
bandh during the last week of February to protest the execution of two Sikhs by 
the Taliban in Pakistan.


  Timeline

  16-17 February -- people noticed Jesus Christ image on banners, newspapers, 
posters

  18 February -- Jalandhar protests; two people arrested for printing posters

  19 February -- road protests in various villages, violence in Majitha

  20 February -- Batala churches burnt; widespread violence

  21 February -- police firing on Christian protesters in Tibbar village and 
others places; many arrested, injured; peace accord reached in Batala

  22 February -- curfew partially lifted

  23 February -- curfew completely lifted


  Police Reaction

  The police force was outnumbered and looked on during the violence. Despite 
intelligence reports of the Christian anger and the Hindutva plans to 
counterattack, the sub-divisional magistrate of Batala, Mr. Rahul Chaba, PCS, 
said he could not enforce a quick curfew until late on 20 February 2010 because 
most of the police force were sent to the Pakistani border nearby where Union 
Home Minister P. Chidambaram inaugurated a defence outpost. By the time the 
police returned and a curfew was imposed, violence had already occurred. The 
curfew was relaxed on 22 February 2010.


  Results of Violence and Political Reaction

  On February 21st, protest rallies were held across the western districts of 
Punjab and in Chandigarh against the desecration of the churches. There were 
reports of police who broke up protest meetings in villages with lathi charges 
and indiscriminate arrests. At present, there are no Christians or Hindus in 
police custody barring the printer and publisher of the banners.


  On February 23rd, Punjab Chief Minister Sardar Prakash Singh Badal assured 
the aicc delegation’s head, Dr. John Dayal, aicc Secretary General and member, 
National Integration Council, that he viewed the matter seriously and has 
ordered officials to unravel the “entire conspiracy”. Dr. Dayal demanded a 
judicial enquiry into the incidents during the meeting.


  Part of Larger Religious Discrimination in Punjab

  At the last meeting of the National Integration Council in New Delhi on 13 
October 2008 chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Dr. Dayal had personally 
briefed Mr. Badal on the tension brewing in the rural districts of western 
Punjab where tens of thousands of Christians, most of them of Dalit origin, 
live and are suffering from caste oppression and attacks on their freedom of 
religion. Church meetings are routinely denied permission, for example, and 
caste epithets are used against the Christians. The chief minister had promised 
to have the situation investigated and remedial action taken.


  The recent incidents also exposed the utter lack of Christian representation 
among the Punjab government. Less than half a dozen Christian leaders, many of 
them related to each other, hold positions in the Akali Dal, Bharatiya Janata 
Party (BJP), and the Indian National Congress. They have little connection with 
the masses living in villages, slums and poorly constructed ghettos outside 
some villages. Most live in shadow of mansions owned by local Jat Sikhs with 
relatives living abroad or the trading classes. Class and caste barriers are 
clearly evident. In some villages, we were shocked to find Dalit Christian 
working under bonded labour conditions with family in brick kilns, and many 
employed in the fields during the sowing or harvesting season where they 
compete with cheaper labour from Bihar. The exception is Christians who have 
risen to high positions in academics, the military, and the Church, with one 
becoming a CNI bishop some years ago.


  Punjab’s Christian population is around 300,000, about 1.2% of the state 
population, mostly concentrated in Amritsar and villages in west Punjab. The 
government is Akali-BJP coalition elected in February 2007.


  Fact Finding Team Composition

  The fact finding team included: Dr. John Dayal; Rev. Madhu Chandra, aicc 
Regional Secretary, Delhi; M. Adeeb, Human Rights Law Network lawyer; and Mr. 
Marang Hansda, aicc assistant. They visited Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Amritsar, and 
Gurdaspur districts, including villages deep in the rural hinterland from 22 to 
25 February 2010, and Chandigarh.

  -----------------




  Kamayani Bali Mahabal

  The world does not need a war against ‘terrorism’, it needs a culture of 
peace based on human rights for all.
  -- Irene Khan

  www.otherindia.org
  www.binayaksen.net
  www.phm-india.org

  I carry a torch in one hand
  And a bucket of water in the other:
  With these things I am going to set fire to Heaven
  And put out the flames of Hell
  So that voyagers to God can rip the veils
  And see the real goal.......
  Rabia (Rabi'a Al-'Adawiyya)






  -- 
  "After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting all 
rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a society 
doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and leads it 
back to war.”
  -- Maria Julia Hernandez


  www.otherindia.org
  www.binayaksen.net
  www.phm-india.org
  www.phmovement.org
  www.ifhhro.org



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