Taliban: TTP JA condemn Human Rights groups for double standards on Muslim prisoners

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Central Welfare Commission, Tehreek-e-Taliban, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar 11th November 2014

To all Human Rights Organizations

Subject: Double standards

“Every now and then we hear the condemnation and criticism by the human rights groups over various kinds of human rights abuses. We also hear highly inflated claims of such organizations that are working for the betterment of humanity. Nevertheless when we observe closely we see a pattern in the behaviour of human rights organizations. We feel that campaigning of human rights organizations is quite biased and one sided. You would definately raise your voice when for example Muslims implement Islamic penal code in some area; when Muslim women want to observe Islamic penal dress code and want to have Islamic education or when the Muslims take up arms against the invaders in order to defend themselves. However there is little or no condemnation from the human rights organizations when for example, Muslims are imprisoned without any charge; when the Muslims are brutally tortured in the most inhumane prison cells or when they are executed in some desolate jungle without any trial.

Last year on the 27th December, our brother Ikramullah Mohmand, was arrested by the NATO and Afghan forces in Afghanistan. He had dual nationality of Pakistan and Afghanistan. He was not formally charged with any offence and after spending 9 months he was then handed over to Pakistanis in September this year where he is imprisoned in Mohmand Agency headquarters Ghalani. Pakistan government and army have been involved in some of the worst human rights violations. The prisoners are disgraced and frequently they are executed through a firing squad or by being given lethal injections. These incidences have happened to our companions in the past and we have the details of the incidences with us. There is a concern that Ikramullah and his companions may also meet the same fate.

We understand that we are fighting a war but the wars should be fought with some principles and code of conduct. We Muslims have clearly outlined guidelines in Shariah how we should engage with the enemy and how we should treat the prisoners of war. By and large the prisoners who are released from the Muslims talk high of the treatment they have received during captivity. In contrast our prisoners have endured severe human rights abuses by the hands of our opponents. But you people claim to be champions of justice, so you should really take the notice of abuses that your allied Pakistani government is committing on Muslim prisoners. If Ikramullah Mohmand is executed by Pakistani authorities our brother will be a Shaheed InshaAllah, that would be the greatest success for him. But such extreme act is likely to initiate a storm and our Pakistani enemies and their friends may all take the brunt of it. Seeing the bias and hatred of human rights organizations against Islam and Muslims, it seems that you may also be included in this retribution process.”

End

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights/WOT and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Taliban: TTP JA statement on Khyber Operation

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PRESS RELEASE

9-Nov-14 REF#TTPJA/PR/AT/09/11/14/00023

TO: National, International & Social Media

FROM: Ehsanullah Ehsan (Spoke person of TTPJA)

SUBJECT: Khyber Operation

Government of Pakistan is carrying out an oppressive operation in Khyber agency named “Khyber 1.” The purpose of this operation is to repel the Mujahideen from an area that is used for NATO supply route. This supply is then used by the Crusader forces to shed the blood of Muslims in Afghanistan.

Mujahideen of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Jamaat-ul-Ahrar understand the importance of this area and operation and we have decided to aid the Mujahideen of Khyber. One 50 strong contingent of our Jamaat is already busy fighting in Khyber agency where intense fighting in going on at the moment. Alhamdolillah, with the help of Allah SWT Mujahideen are inflicting heavy losses upon Murtad Pakistan Army.

Yesterday on 9/11/14, enemy indiscriminately bombed the area and as a result Commander Abu Jandal of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Jamaat-ul-Ahrar embraced Shahadah. Commander Abu Jandal belonged to Mohmand agency of Pakistan.

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Jamaat-ul-Ahrar will soon send another 50 strong group of Mujahideen to the battlefield in Khyber agency where they will aid the Mujahideen already fighting there.

We request all the Muslims who wish to establish Khilafah that they should make special Duas for the success of Mujahideen.

End

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights/WOT and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Deaths in detention: Defence of Human Rights group Pakistan on a “high- risk” mission to Swat

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Amina Masood Janjua (left) campaigning  to highlight “enforced disappearances” with families (right)

Amina Masood Janjua, Chairperson Defence of Human Rights (DHR) in Pakistan has issued a press release announcing a “high-risk” mission to Swat region of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa related to “enforced disappearances” extra-judicial killings and ongoing mysterious deaths in internment centres.

Amina’s husband Masood, a well-known educator and businessman of Rawalpind and Islamabad became one of the “disappeared” on 3rd July 2005 alongside his friend 25 year old Faisal Faraz, an engineer from Lahore when they vanished while travelling together on a bus from Rawalpindi to Peshawar.

Many innocent people have become victims of the state in Pakistan as successive governments assisted the US with its War On Terror operations after 9/11. Some individuals were kidnapped and sent abroad to be released years later without charge, many festered in Pakistan’s prisons and internment camps, their whereabouts often unknown to closest relatives. The law of “fair judicial process” to determine innocence or guilt was in many cases thrown out of the window with human rights violated on a massive scale.

Amina set up DHR to support families of the disappeared, to educate the public and campaign for justice.

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Family life badly affected when relatives go missing

DHR latest press statement (9th November 2014)

“Dear All,

You may have come across our reports released earlier about the deaths of enforced disappeared persons who have been detained in various internment centers which have been established under a draconian law namely AACPR (Actions in Aid of Civil Power Regulations).

DHR Pakistan has reports of at least 98 such deaths. We have filed a petition in Supreme Court of Pakistan on 5th November 2014 to address the issue of the mysterious deaths taking place in these internment centers. (see link below and attachment “In the Supreme Court of Pakistan” following this statement)

http://www.dawn.com/news/1142544/commission-sought-to-investigate-mysterious-death-of-missing-persons

A delegation of DHR Pakistan headed by myself shall be leaving for Swat, a hill city of northern province of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa. The area of Swat is most affected in terms of enforced disappearance and extrajudicial killings.The purpose of the visit is to conduct further research into the matters as well as to strengthen the resolve and will of the terrified victim families to take stand and come forward to institute legal action against the perpetrators.

We are taking up this mission, starting from 10th to 13th November 2014, despite fears of repercussions and certain other risks as the area is still under effective control of military authorities after the military operation of 2009. You are requested to keep a watch on our expedition for the security of the delegation. We shall keep you updated via Facebook, Twitter and email.

Amina Masood

Chairperson
Defence of Human Rights

Email, website, Twitter and Facebook

mrsjanjua@gmail.com , chairpersondhr@gmail.com   http//www.dhrpk.org

Tweet: AminaMJanjua    On Facebook under Amina Masood Janjua Fanpage

“Justice delayed is Justice Denied”

CJP

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Amina Masood Janjua seeks solutions through the courts

Attachment: In the Supreme Court of Pakistan

In the Supreme Court of Pakistan (Original Jurisdiction)
CMA No. ______ of 2014

in

HRC No. 965/2005
Amina Masood Janjua
Verses
The State through MOI etc.
Subject:
Immediate Justice regarding Deaths of missing persons detained in internment centers
Respectfully Sheweth,
Brief facts of the case are:

1) That the petitioner is chairperson of Defence of Human Rights Pakistan which is a human rights organization for the recovery of forced disappeared persons of Pakistan.

2) That the petitioner is representing hundreds of families of the missing person in this Court.

3) That the petitioner became aware of a number of deaths of missing persons who had been declared in different internment centers established under AACPR (Actions in Aid of Civil Power) Regulation 2011..

4) That the deaths referred to in point No.3 above is a relatively new issue and stands quite distinct from the tortured/ bullet ridden dead bodies of missing persons thrown at different places often in body bags.

5) That on further inquiry this petitioner got information, through different sources, and prepared a list of about 98 such deaths which reportedly have taken place under mysterious circumstances.

6) That petitioner due to limited resources could confirm only a limited number of deaths through research. Out of these following cases remained under adjudication in this Apex Court:

a) Gul Faqir son of Issa Khan
Details: That Gul Faqir was enforced disappeared on 12 Aug 2011. Supreme Court was petitioned via CMA No. 4064/13 resultantly he was surfaced as detained in Internment Center Kohat. Family had a meeting with him and found him quiet healthy but hardly after one month of the meeting i.e, on 13 July 2014 his tortured dead body was handed over to the family. His head was smashed and ears and mouth were bleeding. An application from the brother of Gul Faqir is attached as annexure-A.

b) Hafiz Muhammad Jamil son of Jalal Khan
Details: Hafiz Muhammad Jamil was abducted on 18 January 2011 and through the efforts of this Honourable Court via CMa No. 2993, it was discovered that the said detenue is detained in internment center KOHAT under Actions in Aid of Civil Power Ordinance 2011. Under court orders the family was allowed a meeting with the detenue. The family was in great distress when it found the detenue in a terrible condition in CMH Rawalpindi. Fearing for his life a petition number 1840/14 was filed on 5th November 2013 in this August court to save his live. It was a state of emergency but that petition could not be taken up. Dead body of the detenue handed over to the family on 13 Jul 2014. The family was threatened of dire consequences if it dared to conduct post mortem or any other legal action.

c) Hammad Amir son of Amir Bin Mehmood
Details: Hammad was arrested by Police from his home on 17 Nov 2009. A petition No. 4887/13 was filed in Supreme Court for his recovery. He was surfaced in Internment Center Kohat by the intervention of this August Court. The family of detenue met him in Internment center a couple of time. On 24 Aug 2014 father of the detenue was sent for by Interment authorities to hand over dead body of the detenue with explicit instructions to not to conduct post mortem. (An application from father of Hammad Amir is attached at Annexure-B)

7) That this petitioner earlier filed a Petition No. 2996/13 regarding the Internment centers in which worrisome conditions of these Internment
centers had been disclosed to this court and it was requested to address the unlawful circumstances surrounding the whole affairs of these internment centers.

8) In the petition referred to i.e. 2996/13 it was prayed to kindly:

a) Order the Governor KPK and Commandants of 11 Corps Peshawar to immediately make arrangements and establishment of clear procedures to facilitate meetings between detainees and their families.

b) Order the internment authorities in command of these internment centers to proceed in accordance with law, abstain from use of torture (both physical and mental), charge the detainees with a cognizable offence if there is any, and initiate a legal proceeding in any civil court at the earliest.

c) Order the Federal government to declare all the persons under AACPR within one month’s time, who are as of yet detained incommunicado.

d) Order that after the expiry of one month’s notice by the Honourable Supreme court the AACPR shall lose its retrospective effect.

e) Order that the internment authorities controlling the internment centers (11 corps) must release all those innocent and hand them over to their relatives. Not more than one month deadline should be given to comply by the orders of the Honourable Supreme Court.

9) In the similar case of infamous Adyala-11 this Court has already saved lives of seven missing person.

10) To assist the Court a reference list of concerning cases is attached as annexure-C.
Prayer
In the interest of Justice, along with the relief sought in CMA No. 2996/13 it is prayed to kindly:

1) Form a commission to probe in the deaths of detainees i.e Hammad Amir, Gull Faqee and Hafiz Muhammad Jamil, as well as, 98 detainees as mentioned in annexure C.

2) Bring the responsible of these assassinations to justice.

3) Make a powerful commission to visit internment centers and provide this August Court with the fact finding report, regarding the mysterious conditions prevailing in Internment Centers.
Amina Masood Janjua Chairperson Defence of Human Rights Pakistan
Petitioner in person

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights/WOT and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Taliban: TTP announce new spokesman and a “full scale war”

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Mullah Fazlullah head of TTP

Tehreek e Taliban Pakistan announces following statements
dated 7 November 2014

1. TTP dismisses Shahidullah Shahid (now former) Spokesman and appoints new
TTP’s Supreme Council had decided to dismiss its central spokesperson Respected Shahidullah Shahid sometime ago. TTP’s Supreme Council makes formal announcement of dismissal of respected Shahidullah Shahid and appointment of new central spokesperson respected Muhammad Khurasani, today.

2. TTP formally announces to wage full scale War in Khyber Agency
As Pakistani apostate army has started an unjust, anti-Islamic operation in Khyber Agency against general Muslim masses and our brotherly jihadi organization Lashkar e- Islam.
TTP in time of this difficulty announces its complete solidarity with Lashkar-e- Islam and other Muslim brothers, TTP announces to wage full scale war and dispatches armed mujahedeen. A group of TTP despatched mujahideen is in the battlefield already. Moreover, all mujahideen who have pledged allegiance with TTP’s Ameer Truth-Seeker respected Fazlullah Khurasani, should stay on HIGH ALERT.

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights/WOT and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Pakistan: Are those that “target kill” alleged blasphemers the worst blasphemers of all?

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Shehzad and Shama beaten and burnt alive for alleged blasphemy

(image Dawn media)

Once again this week we have seen an horrific case of mob rule in Pakistan, the beating and burning alive of a young Christian couple Shehzad and his pregnant wife Shama Masih for alleged “blasphemy”. The incident took place at Kot Radha Kishan around 60km southwest of Lahore and has shocked any decent minded Muslim who can only condemn such extreme violence.

What is blasphemy?

A definition of “blasphemy” in the Oxford Dictionaries states, “the action or offence of speaking sacrilegiously about God (Allah) or sacred things; profane talk:” 

Shama Masie was said to be illiterate according to Pakistani media. She had taken up the task of disposing of some possessions that had belonged to her deceased father and a local vendor claimed to have found desecrated pages of the Quran at the site of the brick kiln where the couple worked. In a frenzy of hatred, around 600 villages are believed to have descended on a dwelling where the couple were taking refuge. A First Investigation Report (FIR) reveals the extent of the savagery and was quoted in DAWN media which states,

“some villagers tore apart the roof of the room and forcibly took the couple out.

They thrashed the couple before dragging them to the kiln where 18 accused, including the kiln owner Mohammad Yousaf Gujar and his accountants Shakeel and Afzal, allegedly removed a lid from one of the openings of the furnace and threw the couple into it.

Both Shama and Shahzad were reduced to ashes in no time”

Police called to the scene had been unable to save them and had themselves come under attack. Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has announced 5 million rupees compensation for the family and 10 acres of land but no amount of money can replace the loss of a mother and father to the three orphaned children left behind. Imran Khan, chairman of political party, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) said, “I condemn in strongest terms the burning alive of Christian couple in Bhatta in Kot Radha Kishan. Oppression & killings of minorities must end.”

Blasphemy Cases

Human Rights activists, fearful themselves of a backlash, have called for blasphemy laws to be revised. In a country where 97 per cent of the population is Muslim, they claim laws are often used to target minorities and to settle disputes and personal vendettas.

One case in question is that of Asia Bibi, a Christian mother of five, whose death sentence was recently upheld by a Lahore Court after spending 4 years in prison. She was alleged to have insulted the prophet Muhammad (PBUH) when an arguement broke out with Muslim neighbours over wanting to drink the same water as the group. Asia was it appears considered too “unclean” to share the water due to her religion. Had these so called Muslims who quibbled over giving water to their fellow worker forgotten that the Prophet PBUH had narrated to his companions the virtue of saving the life of a dog by giving it water and quenching its thirst!

Samira Shackle writing in the Guardian argues that blasphemy laws are open to massive abuse and states,

“blasphemy carries a maximum penalty of death, yet the law sets out no standards for evidence, no requirement to prove intent, no punishment for false allegations and, indeed, no guidance on what actually constitutes blasphemy.

The accuser can refuse to repeat the offending statement in court, and judges can choose not to hear evidence in case it perpetuates the blasphemy and offends religious sensibilities. This means that in some cases, the accused can go through a whole trial without knowing what they are supposed to have done or said”

Human rights lawyers at Reprieve (UK) recently highlighted the disturbing case of Mohammed Asghar, a 70-year-old British citizen and grandfather said to be suffering from paranoid schizophrenia who was given a death sentence for blasphemy in Pakistan in 2010. They had fought for him not to be deported to Pakistan due to concerns over his safety and point out that, “over 51 people accused of blasphemy have been murdered before the conclusion of their trial in the country.”

The concerns proved correct as Mr Asghar is now in hospital after being targeted by a prison guard and shot in the back while on death row in Adiala, a maximum-security jail in Rawalpindi. As a qualified psychiatric nurse, I question how could someone with severe mental health problems be considered fit to stand trial for blasphemy?

There is a history of target killings against alleged blasphemers in Pakistan. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the assassination of minorities minister Shahbaz Bhatti, a Christian who had challenged a law that prescribes the death penalty for insulting Islam. Prior to this, the governor of Pakistan’s Punjab province, Salman Taseer died after being shot by one of his bodyguards in the capital, Islamabad. He had also questioned blasphemy law. Now yet another case has emerged on Wednesday, a Pakistani policeman, Faraz Naveed was arrested after allegedly killing Tufail Navqui with an axe because he suspected this man of being a blasphemer.

Who are the worst blasphemers?

With regard to assassinations and mobs that target alleged blasphemers there are a number of points to consider. The first is that there are some individuals and institutions acting on behalf of Pakistan that are failing to lead by example and uphold current laws. The country has become notorious for “enforced disappearances” torture in custody and extrajudicial killings. This makes it difficult to persuade ordinary citizens not to take the law into their own hands as seen in the lynching of the Masihs.

Second, there must also be trust in a fair judicial system. It seems that there is little support for the man -made laws in Pakistan. Many people are currently violating these laws… perhaps it is because “to err is human” and man- made laws reflecting this are inherently flawed. Laws can appear in practice as “selective justice” and not to protect all equally within society. Is it time then to consider alternatives such as Shariah (Islamic law) as there is such a resistance to upholding the laws of man?

The third point to ponder is whether those that incite violence and attack and kill blasphemers are themselves committing blasphemy (which could be dozens of villagers in the Shehzad and Shama case). These individuals coming together in hatred are placing themselves ABOVE Allah as judge, jury and executioner? Is such behaviour the way to bring people to Islam…a religion that teaches tolerance for others…more than likely it will cause those considering reverting to run a mile!

There is a terrible hypocrisy here… Do the target killers and mindless mobsters consider themselves greater than Allah through their words and deeds? Isn’t that in itself blasphemous? Have they forgotten how to SUBMIT? Are they failing to show RESPECT and REVERENCE to Allah and dissenting from the teachings of Islam. Perhaps these people are the ones who should be put on trial for blasphemy (through lawful means of course) and if proven guilty, they could turn out to be the worst blasphemers of all?

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights/WOT and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

 

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Pakistan Taliban: TTP JA claim responsibility for Wagah attack and warn of more to come

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Victims of the blast flood local hospitals (NDTV and Agence France- Presse)

In a chilling message to journalists, Ehsanullah Ehsan spokesperson for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Taliban Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (TTP JA) claimed responsibility for an attack on the border post of Wagah in east Pakistan on Sunday. Over 60 people were killed with an estimated 110 injured when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives following a flag lowering ceremony on the outskirts of Lahore. Officials claimed 3 members of the border force were killed in the blast which occurred not far from the parade ground at a security checkpoint, women and children are among the dead. Kamal Hyder, a journalist for Al Jazeera in Islamabad, reported that eight members of the same family had been killed in the explosion.

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Popular ceremony at Wagah border crossing between Pakistan and India (Dawn)

A statement from Ehsanullah read,

“TTP JA claim the responsibility of Wagah border attack. Our friend Hanifullah operated this attack. This is the start of attacks of TTP JA and InshaAllah we will continue such attacks in the future. Some other groups claim the responsibility of this attack but these claims are baseless. We will soon release the video of this attack. INSHALLAH. This attack is the revenge of the killing of those innocent people who have been killed by Pakistan Army particularly of those who have been killed in North Waziristan”

The Pakistan military who have been battling the Taliban for years, launched operation Zarb -e Asb back in June in North Waziristan in an attempt to wipe out insurgents groups. There are conflicting reports on how successful this has been so far with Taliban saying military have failed to curb their operational ability.

Anger is growing among thousands of civilians that have no choice but to leave the affected area and join the ever growing numbers of Internally Displaced persons (IDPs). In recent days operations Khyber 1 and Khyber 2 have also begun with civilian casualties reported from journalists close to the action but afraid to report openly for fear of reprisals, see,

“Khyber agency: A note from the border during Pakistan military operations”

https://activist1.wordpress.com/2014/11/02/khyber-agency-a-note-from-the-border-during-pakistan-army-military-operations/

There was initial confusion as to who was responsible for the Wagah attack as media reported alleged claims from 4 different groups at one point. However Ehsanullah informed me via Twitter that, “they don’t have any proof, soon we will issue his (the bomber’s) photo and video….other groups don’t have the ability to do such attacks.” The perpertrator was referred to as Hafiz Hanifullah and another member of the Taliban called the bombing “a gift to Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif”.

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Ehsanullah Ehsan, warning TTP JA can attack on both sides of the border

Ehsanullah went on to say “this is message for the governments of both sides of the border, if we can attack on one side, we can also attack on other side (India). Referring to earlier claim of responsibility allegedly from Jundullah, he added, “it is requested to media that they should not give such a coverage to a fictitious group Jundullah, who only exist in thoughts.” Another key member of TTP JA claimed, “Jundullah is an imaginary group created by government to divide Mujahideen.There is only one man in this group who is the chief and is spokesman and worker.”

Imran Khan, Chairman of political group Pakistan Tehreek -e-Insaf (PTI) strongly condemned “this act of terror” while spokesperson Shireen Mazari, tweeted that it was “strange why government didn’t act despite having intelligence report about a possible attack at Wagah during the parade ceremony 2 days ago.”

Pakistani journalist Hasan Abdullah who regularly reports on insurgency in the region had this to say,

“religious fanaticism, sectarianism, economic woes, political turmoil and much more. Most of us in Pakistan are still living in a state of denial. Our thoughtless patriotism, misplaced superiority complex and the inability to introspect will prove costly”

He likened the situation to the Titanic with each compartment failing one by one and time about to run out.

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Muslims under fire: Resurrected “heroes” poppy hijabs and the battle of remembrance

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Khudadad Khan awarded Victoria Cross 31st October 1914

Hero or traitor?

The past week has seen an extraordinary attempt at revisionist history to pressurize Muslims to participate in and remember the events of the First World War. This post is in no way meant to belittle the courage of those who served on the front lines, in the trenches and in the most horrendous conditions. What is disturbing however is how the 100 year remembrance activities are being used to try to force Muslims to declare their “Britishness” and (if we are honest) wave a sometimes uncomfortable flag of patriotism.

For years I have been among a minority highlighting that remembrance is not a purely white event but that it is essential that we remember that many who fought on the battlefields of Europe and beyond were in fact from what was once British India and the British West Indies. An estimated 500,000 Africans were also deployed in the French and British forces, some as labourers, others as fighting soldiers.

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Men of the British West Indies Regiment cleaning their rifles; Albert-Amiens Road, September 1916

On remembrance day, we do see members of the Commonwealth gather at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, London to lay their wreaths of poppies but history taught in schools does not always reflect the diversity of serving soldiers. We may be very familiar with Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon through their war poetry, taught as part of school curriculum but the contributions of Sepoy Khudadad Khan (awarded the Victoria Cross) and black officer Walter Tull have until very recently largely been erased from history.

Tull was born in Folkestone in April 1888, Walter’s father, the son of a slave, had arrived from Barbados in 1876. He was a professional footballer and after joining the army became the first black officer to lead white British soldiers in battle.

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Walter Tull was killed by machine gun fire while trying to help his men retreat.

In recent days we have witnessed the launch of women sporting a “poppy hijab” as the BBC said in their headline, “to mark Muslim soldier’s Victoria Cross 100 years on” (referring to the remarkable achievement of Kudadad Khan). According to a letter written to the Telegraph signed by General Lord Dannatt, Former Chief of the General Staff and a number of other well known co- signatories in support of valuing Khan, “he was just one of the 1.2 million Indian soldiers, and the 400,000 Muslims, who fought alongside British troops in 1914”. The BBC states that Khan, born in what is now Pakistan,

“was the sole survivor of a team assigned to defend vital ports in France and Belgium from being taken by German troops.

Despite being outnumbered, Khan managed to hold off the enemy advance long enough for British reinforcements to arrive”

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The introduction of the poppy hijab to celebrate centenary events and raise money for soldiers is promoted by a “think tank” British Future and various media but has not gone quite according to plan. For a start, one of the young women featured wearing the headscarf is now claiming she was not informed this was for a national campaign and thought she was only posing for photographs for a designer friend. She has apparently suffered some backlash from fellow Muslims and is clearly not happy that she was unable to make an “informed choice” regarding participation in a somewhat controversial campaign.

From comments received on a photo of Khudadad Khan which I posted on Facebook, not everyone considers him a hero. Though many will honour him, some Muslims describe Khan as a “traitor” for serving colonists. We must remember that in 1915 there was in fact a Sepoy uprising in Singapore against the British by those who saw themselves deployed to look after imperial interests and often treated as second class citizens.

The last straw was said to be “a rumour that the Sepoys were to be shipped to the European theater and made to turn their weapons against the Turkish sultan, a fellow Muslim”. The mutiny lasted nearly seven days, 47 British soldiers and local civilians lost their lives. Eventually the situation was brought under control by British forces and Allied naval detachments. Forty five members of the 5th Light Infantry mutineered against their “oppressors” which led to twenty two men being executed for their revolt.

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Sepoy uprising 1915, mutineers shot to death

The poppy hijab and highlighting of Khudadad Khan is now being used very publicly as a propaganda tool to attack jihadist group, Islamic State (IS) in Iraq and Syria. This is an ill-advised attempt to counteract the fact that some Muslims from the UK, already disillusioned with British foreign policy and our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are heading off to join IS fight against the Assad regime in Syria. Using forgotten and only recently resurrected Muslim soldiers from the past to attack in the present will likely lead to more resentment.

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A satirical response to the poppy hijab

Muslims in Britain have never felt so under scrutiny to account for themselves and prove their loyalty. Those that who have shown no support for IS are now declining to be coerced into campaigns to promote Britishness as the hypocrisy of the establishment is not lost on them. They express feeling manipulated that suddenly there is great emphasis on celebrating Muslim soldiers of the First World War that few cared to remember over the past 100 years. In a satirical swipe at the poppy hijab, (and not to be left out) a photo appeared of a man sporting poppies in his beard, having a dig at the freshly created history of “tolerance for diversity” in the armed forces.

When I began tweeting on this hypocrisy myself, I suddenly received replies from Matthew Rhodes of British Future initially polite who tried to ensure that I tweeted the “right” version of history. Rhodes is a solicitor who previously worked for the Rt Hon Stephen Timms MP. Another member of the organization Sunder Katwala also dropped in to the conversation to remind me that there was a book too, “A God in Every Stone” from Pakistani novelist Kamila Shamsie. This was described in the Guardian as a fictionalized account of “the bonds between Pashtun men – in Flanders and during the struggle for Indian independence,  captured in this wartime story of a London archaeologist’s travels to Peshawar” ….see the following link,

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/apr/18/a-god-every-stone-kamila-shamsie-review-story-histories

Over a period of several hours I was repeatedly trolled by an increasingly irate Mr Rhodes who did everything in his power to force me to condemn the actions of IS. I had absolutely no intention of doing so, for the simple reason that whatever my personal views might be, I do not respond to outright intimidation.

Rhodes became increasingly paranoid and vile attempting to put words into my mouth and tweeting statements that I had never uttered in a public attempt to defame me. He then tried to allege that I did not support human rights, questioning my loyalty to Britain. What I had in fact highlighted was the failure of British government to protect human rights which should not be selective and must apply to all.

I believe I was remarkably patient with Rhodes considering his attack on British Muslims and attempts to coerce me into making statements against my will. Like a terrier dog at my heel, he would have given Jeremy Paxman a run for his money with his interrogation style. This attack on my loyalty to country really irritated me given the fact that the British government are not actually deserving of any loyalty from me. They (alongside US authorities) unlawfully killed my husband and brother in law and many others in what can only be described as “bio-terrorism” and then covered up their wrongdoing!

This remembrance Sunday I won’t be wearing a poppy hijab but I will be thinking quietly of all those that have served their country in wars past and present whatever their race and religion. The emphasis will not be on “glorious victory” but on how many soldiers were manipulated by the state for the British government’s own interests. I will remember the terrible reality of war and how our nation has exploited other countries, plundered their resources, abused and annihilated local populations as in Iraq and Afghanistan.

I will also say a prayer for my grandfather Gunner Thompson who fought at Ypres and in the Battle of the Somme. Fred was a young man who saw his commanding officer blown to pieces in front of him and suffered the horrors of mustard gas, treated in a Canadian field hospital for exposure. I still have his first weeks pay, coins on a piece of string and his gas card. The only time he  vocalized the First World War war was in his dying hours when delirious, Gunner Thompson once again relived the nightmare of his time in the trenches as he lost the exhausting and final battle for life.

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Khyber Agency: A note from the border during Pakistan army military operations

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Since October 13, 171,559 people have moved from Khyber to Peshawar and Kohat. PHOTO: REUTERS

Dear Carol,

Just arrived from the border of Bara Tehsil, Khyber Agency. Artillery firing was on and within the span of five minutes we heard a big fire. Then its sounds echoed in from the mountain. It has really made the people tense and psychologically disturbed.

Met with a tribal chief, who told me that the firing is going on for last five days. And it hit the population because artillery shells have not an exact target. They go there dispersively. Some times hit houses, killing people.

I myself saw helicopters surrounding in the sky. The people of the area told me they haven’t slept because this heavy sound of shelling is not letting their eyes shut. People are terrorized by this operation.

The chief further stated that nobody is favoring us. People are forced to leave the area. But Taliban had already distributed pamphlets warning the people not to leave the area that easily. Just see how “sandwiched” are our people. Political agent says that he’s not having any authority in operation. While army uses the mighty policies and hears nobody.

The tribal chief told me, the army had invited us to form some kind of Amn Lashkars / the local militia that was formed in Swat. But he said, that they had clearly told the army officials “they [Taliban] were your product. Now without you nobody can erase them. We are never siding with you nor with Taliban”.

Regards,

Tribal Area Journalist

(Name withheld for fear of reprisals)

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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What comparisons can be made between violence and colonialism in “Battle of Algiers” and the occupation in “Paradise Now”?

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“Battle of Algiers”, the colonizers and the oppressed

The films Battle of Algiers (1966) and Paradise Now (2005) though set almost 40 years apart are both films which deal with the ongoing international theme of terrorism within lands occupied by colonists/ oppressors. In order to explore the question of the relationship between violence and occupation it is important to define the word “terrorism” and consider within each film to whom that term might apply. For this purpose I quote the CIA definition of terrorism,

The term “terrorism” means premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against non-combatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience.

The term “international terrorism” means terrorism involving the territory or the citizens of more than one country.

The term “terrorist group” means any group that practises, or has significant subgroups that practice international terrorism.

(Central Intelligence Agency, 2002: www.cia.gov )

Battle of Algiers made in black and white and set in the city of Algiers was based on the memoirs of military commander of the National Liberation Front (FLN), Saadi Yacef, a former prisoner of the French and explores the war of independence within French occupied Algeria between 1954 to 1960. Director Gillo Pontecorvo was also heavily influenced by the work of writer and psychiatrist Frantz Fanon who examined the psychological effect of colonization on a nation living with domination and oppression and the growth of a resulting movement towards decolonization as portrayed in his book Wretched of the Earth (1961).

In the first film we follow a group of FLN insurgents as they take over the casbah and plan terrorist activities against the French. Pontecorvo explores the move towards a more radical Islamism with a growing clampdown on western influences such as alcohol and a more liberal dress code with an emphasis on ridding the streets of both Algerian criminals and traitors spying for the French. In the film Pontecorvo portrays an organised response to the violence perpetrated by the French invaders who attempt to suppress “native” resistance by any means necessary.

The colonists provoke an uprising by determining who will be allowed to move in and out of the casbah, curbing freedoms and governing through their own laws as they adopt a supremist mentality and display a lack of morality which degrades and dehumanises the colonized Algerians. As we enter the lives of those living within the walls of the casbah subjected to discrimimination, violence and poverty we are reminded of the words of Noam Chomsky, (author, linguist, philosopher and political activist).  He argues that, the oppression of states is often to ensure that supplies of raw materials and cheap labour keep flowing to western corporations and that the arming of regional powers to destablize neighbouring countries could be described as the “real terrorist network” (Karim, 2002: 102).

The viewer is encouraged to explore the reactionary anger as felt by the colonized as plans are made to bomb a French cafe where both women and children are recruited to assist with the smooth running of the operation. The women become mules, carriers of explosives whilst a young boy acts as messenger for the insurgents including key character Ali La Point, a local criminal recently out of prison. It is through Ali’s eyes that the action unfolds.

One particular scene shows how the Algerian women recruited to carry the bombs abandon their traditional dress and go through a process of physical transformation to mimic the dress code of French women in order to both exit the casbah (bombs in handbags) through a security checkpoint and enter their target the Parisian influenced coffee bar.

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Algerian women adopt dress code of French women in order to avoid suspicion when planting a bomb

The viewer is caught up in the tension of a “minute by minute” countdown as we follow in the footsteps of the three women who become complicit in acts of terrorism. There is also a challenge to gender stereotypes on screen and in the media that tend to portray terrorists as male, suggesting women as the “homemakers”/ “nurturers” are incapable of such acts. In reality we have examples of the Chechen widows and the female Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka.

Although it is uncomfortable viewing we are to some extent allowing ourselves to be “guided” by Pontecorvo to engage with these young women in Battle of Algiers and in terms of understanding, consider how they might have allowed themselves to become competent carriers of destruction. They does not detract however from the horror of the “terrorist” attack as we see the cafe explode into a cloud of white with casualties emerging dazed and injured from the broken building.

The film does not shy away from depicting the violence perpetrated by both sides as we also witness the systematic torture, intimidation and murder inflicted on locals by the French colonizers, in this case a group of paratroopers.  We also witness the internal conflict experienced by French Colonel Mathieu as comparisons are made with regard to his own earlier experience as a resistance fighter against the Nazis so we are made aware he has himself battled against an occupying force yet now becomes the occupier. How then does he adjust to his role in Algiers as part of a colonizing army and what sympathies might he hold for those who raise a violent struggle to bring about decolonization?

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French Colonel Mathieu who has been both resistance fighter and occupier

Viewing Battle of Algiers in 2014 we are reminded of current occupying forces in Afghanistan and Iraq and resistance movements within those territories and the ongoing conflict within Israeli-occupied territories who inflict their own powers of colonization onto the Palestinians as seen in Paradise Now.

The camera work often looks down on the occupied who retain a lower position in society in every way than the occupiers. The soundtrack can be heard to conjure up resistance by using the repeated drum roll of the marching Algerian protesters alongside the traditional chants and wailing of the local women. It is a soundtrack of violence once again reflecting the nature of occupation and resistance through gunshot, screams, explosions and the machinery of war. We also have an accompanying score which enhances the drama of fear, conflict and battle through the music of Ennio Morricone.

It is important to recognise the role of both the book, Wretched of the Earth (Franz Fanon) and the film, Battle of Algiers in influencing later resistance movements particularly the rise of the Black Power movement in the US against white oppressors who denied Blacks their civil rights.

Later works by Black Panther activists such as Huey P Newton, Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver and Angela Y Davis incorporated much of Fanon’s thinking into their own political ideology and led some individuals and groups to engage in violent struggle against the State. Battle of Algiers is also used as a training film to assist the US defence department at the Pentagon to understand Islamism and engage with the thought processes of the colonized thereby entering the mind of the potential “terrorist”. Pontecorvo does show both sides of the Algerian conflict and it is largely a balanced portrayal of that period in history but it could be argued that his sympathies lie with the occupied as opposed to the occupiers.

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“Paradise Now” friends Said and Khaid prepare for their final hours

The second film Paradise Now directed by Hany Abu- Assad could be described as a “courageously honest” film as it dares to follow and depict the last 48 hours of two Palestinian friends Said and Khaled as they embark on a suicide mission against Israeli targets. As in Battle of Algiers we sense a longing for freedom, the resulting frustration when freedom is denied and increased anger and isolation as both men prepare for the ultimate sacrifice for the “cause” and contemplate their existence within an occupied land. Both films show the impact of colonization on the psyche of the colonized.

In a comparative scene to the women preparing for their terrorist mission in the earlier film, we see the young Palestinians undergo a similar physical transformation as they shave off their hair and beards and change into “western” suits to mimic the dress of Israelis.

Tension is built within the mundane process surrounding the technicalities of preparing for a suicide mission. We hear the contrast between the poignancy of a person’s last words to his family against the munching of food by seemingly unmoved associates as they battle with the camera and realise they have omitted to include a film so that the martyrdom videos must be reshot from beginning to end. We sense the exasperation and annoyance of Said as he attempts to vocalise the reasons behind his actions whilst also leaving practical instructions to his mother on how to obtain a water filter (a reference to the lack of clean water in occupied Nablus).

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Last words for a martydom video

As in Battle of Algiers the viewer is confronted with the inequalities and discrimination experienced by the colonised in Nablus, here too we see walls, checkpoints controls, the lack of facilities and opportunities for the Palestinians with the two young men in dead end jobs holding few prospects for the future.

There is an ongoing dialogue throughout the film between Said and Suha, a young European educated woman and potential love interest whose own father was involved in violent conflict and her own rejection of violence as a tool to fight colonization. In contrast Said is the son of an informer and carries the burdon of this legacy wishing to prove his loyalty to the movement of resistance. As we see things through the eyes of several characters and learn of their viewpoint we are forced to consider what our own morality and boundaries might be given a similar life experience of growing up oppressed under the control of an external enemy.

Again there are similarities with the earlier film through the tense “moment by moment” countdown and effort required to actually reach the intended terrorist target. Neither Suha nor the families of the two men are aware of the young mens’ intended suicide mission but sense impending doom as certain clues emerge which might suggest that this is a final good-bye.

The film uses the dialogue between Said and Khaled and their leaders/mentors to explore the politics of Israeli occupation and the ideology of resistance as opposed to a more visual portrayal of the colonisers in Battle Of Algiers and we start to understand the relationship between occupation and violent retaliation. The colonized in both films feel degraded and dehumanised yet the portrayal of their characters on screen are very human portraying them as ordinary as opposed to extraordinary individuals with characteristics that are both good and bad.

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Strapping on a suicide vest

In Paradise Now as in Battle of Algiers the viewer is engaged in witnessing the moral dilemma regarding a character’s actions. Paradise Now focuses on the two friends and their deliberation whether to continue on their suicide mission when things start to go badly wrong and the question arises – is there an alternative to violence for the colonized? The moral dilemma in Battle of Algiers is played out through the actions and words of Colonel Matthieu as he explores his own internal battle with his conscience.

We are reminded of the “doublethink” concerning war and occupation laid out by Kellner (2004: 148) where screen and other media can talk of a war for “peace”, present occupation as “liberation” and the destruction of necessary infrastructure as “humanitarian action”. Both films focus on realism and the viewpoint is predominantly through the eyes of the colonized taking us on a journey into the mind of the “other”. Although religion plays a part in both films with references to Islam and suggestions of Islamism we are always made aware of the violence of oppression perpetrated by hegemonic states and the effect on dominated societies.

Chomsky (2000) argues that “by referring to the actions of individuals against a state merely as ‘terrorism’, one separates them from state violence by marking them as evil, as unnecessary violence, as opposed to the murder of civilians or sponsorship of the same by the state (eg the US funding of ‘Contra’ death squads in South America)”.

Neither film sets out to portray the insurgents as “evil” but rather as end products of colonization and oppression and we begin to question who does come under the definition of a “terrorist”. If we return to the CIA guidance on what is “terrorism” we could argue that this very organisation itself could fit rather uncomfortably within the CIA’s own definition and could in fact be seen as carrying out state- sponsored terrorism.

Neither film glorifies violence or justifies terrorist acts but both draw attention to the relationship between violence and colonialism/occupation. By viewing both Battle of Algiers and Paradise Now the audience can see many parallels with regard to film technique, characterizations and socio-political representations of “terrorism” and “terrorists” and the “oppressor” and the “oppressed” within each film.

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Pakistan Taliban: TTP invitation to Media and Public, Question and Answer

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Maulana Fazlullah, leader of TTP

Breaking News/ Press Release

As there is a lot of confusion in the media and masses about current ups and downs in TTP, there are many questions about split, reunion, changing loyalties, Waziristan strategy the exit or defeat.

The Deputy to Ameer ul Momineen Mullah Muhammad Omar for Pakistan, Ameer of Tehreek e Taliban Pakistan Maulana Fazlullah has decided to reach out to the people of Pakistan and internationally to encourage questions from the press and interested members of the public. After consideration and in line with the Eid speech of Mullah Omar, we appreciate that it is important to connect with the public and value your interest and support.

Everyone is encouraged to put questions to Chief of TTP but the questions should not be more than two.

If you don’t want to mention your name and address in video/audio interview please let us know.

The time limit for this offer is only three days until Friday morning 0700GMT.

The email address is Askttp.main@gmail.com

 

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad . She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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