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Tuesday, September 06, 2016

Not majority vs minority

Reconfigure triple talaq debate: It is about individual freedom and equality vs coercion and subordination

The offensive and reactionary position taken by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board against reform of triple talaq is a reminder of the institutional cul de sac we have driven ourselves into on issues of personal law reform and common civil code. The All India Muslim Personal Law Board’s authority is itself dubious, and antithetical to the values and modes of reasoning of a progressive democracy. It represents the worst combination of a patriarchal, non-representative institution, shored up by the contingencies of electoral politics that often caves in to the most reactionary elements within communities. It marginalises other voices in the community, seems to have open contempt for women, and is, frankly, a political liability. It could, over the years, have been an instrument for progressive change, responding to demands from below within the community. Instead, it has chosen to act as a fossilised bulwark against justice.
Majoritarianism is a real issue. It is hard to discuss these issues when the risks of majoritarian intimidation are high. But the fear that discussions of personal law reform, or a common civil code, are nothing but majoritarian ruses to intimidate minorities, has now become an intellectually disabling and politically self-fulfilling argument. Often, arguments for a common civil code are made under false pretences of nationalism rather than justice. But that is, in part, because secular and progressive forces vacated that space. No one should underestimate the complexity of the issues involved in working towards a common civil code or equal rights.
Reactionary socially conservative positions of successive governments on a range of legal issues should give us pause on just how long the road to justice will be. The constant appeals by government to “our ethos” rather than public reason (most recently on the surrogacy bill), undermine confidence in the possibility of clear-headed normative arguments. But the AIMPLB’s recourse to specious religious arguments reinforces the legitimacy of ethos-based majoritarian arguments.
One conceptual move necessary to combat communal constructions is this. Every community, majority or minority, often appeals to the thought that something must not be imposed on them if they do not consent to it. The problem is that communities do not often extend the same courtesy to individuals within them. We have tied ourselves in knots trying to distinguish Indian secularism from its other variants, in castigating liberalism as a foreign ideology. But all that liberalism requires to get started is extending the courtesy of the very same argument that communities use to keep other communities out, to individuals within them. The freedom from another community cannot be the freedom to oppress within. As far as possible, we want to live under social arrangements that honour our standing as free and equal individuals. The battle in India is not between majorities and minorities. It is between forces and institutions in each community that want to bend the arc of history away from freedom and equality in the personal space, and forces that want to claim those rights. This is a contest that cuts across communities with varying degrees of intensity. But it is something of an own goal when secularists, rather than reconfiguring the debate as one between freedom and equality on the one hand and coercion and subordination on the other, also come to be invested in the contest of compulsory identities. The only way the long-term threat of majoritarianism can be dissolved is by moving the axis of contest away from the majority-minority distinction, to equal protection of individual rights, freedom and dignity. It is hard to imagine authorities like the AIMPLB even understanding this idea.
As Flavia Agnes, one of the most thoughtful and grounded contributors to this debate has pointed out, we must be wary of a lot of communal myth-making in this area. It is not only minorities who have been advocates of personal law. The Hindu Code Bill, with all its reform elements, was a sectarian reform aimed as much at consolidating a unified Hindu legal identity, as it was aimed at progressive social reform. Arguably the contractual framework for marriage in Islam can be more easily adapted to modern marriage laws than sacramental conceptions. Muslim personal law has also been subject to reform. Despite the cowardly abdication by the Congress in the Shah Bano affair, the Supreme Court has incrementally introduced reform, without opposition, it has to be said. (most notably in the Daniel Latifi case). So, arguably, there is propitious ground for serious, good faith conversation on the issue.
The conversation has to be oriented to the future. For this reason, its sole concern has to be freedom, equality and justice, not nationalism or selective narratives of which community was more oppressive in the past. It is high time we rescued that conversation from being held hostage by three forces: Bodies like the Muslim Personal Law Board that are non-representative and reactionary, Hindutva ideologies that are interested in using the issue to demonise minorities than to expand the space for freedom, and some secularists whose politics of fear has given them an investment in the war of identities rather than the expansion of rights.
The real challenge we should focus on is not the interplay between religion and law. No religious conception can have a veto over the transformative promise of the constitution. The challenge is crafting laws that in addition to being principled, are practical in the context of our state capacities and sociological realities. For instance, as Flavia Agnes has pointed out in her tour d’ force essay in the Oxford Handbook to the Indian Constitution, often reformed laws can have unintended consequences. Outlawing does not seem to have had as much effect on the actual practice of bigamy among Hindus as was hoped, for instance; indeed, the law perversely fails to give protection to people in these relationships because it does not recognise them. In other areas of law, we have also seen the limits of law induced change; often expecting the law to do too much can be counterproductive. Law is effective only when society meets it at least half-way. The real reform debate should not be over one community’s virtues versus the others; it should be about closing the gap between the demands of freedom and equality and social practice.
Whether equal rights within different laws responds to this challenge better than a common civil code, can be debated. But the goal of freedom for all individuals is the best antidote to majoritarianism. We need conversations, institutions, processes that move us in that direction, not trap us in suffocating constructs of majority and minority.
The writer is president, CPR Delhi and contributing editor,‘Indian Express’
Source: Indian Express, 6-09-2016
Viveka Means Learning To Discriminate


The `Prashnottara Ratna Malika' by Adi Shankra contains precise, profound answers to equally short, profound questions: “Who is the truly intelligent?“ The sage replies, “Viveka“ ­ one who is endowed with the power of discrimination. The question, “Who is the vigilant?“ evokes the same answer.Viveka is the human faculty that enables one to discriminate between the real and unreal, the eternal and ephemeral, shreya, the good and preya, the pleasant. It is wisdom crystallised by satsang, holy company , and svadhyaya, study of scriptures made possible by contemplation on Brahmn Chintana, Absolute Reality . Viveka comes naturally to a prodigy as the result of prarabdha karma, righteous actions in past life.
The Katha Upanishad compares the Self of man to the Supreme seated in a chariot, with the body as chariot, intellect as charioteer, mind as reins, senses as horses, and sense objects as the road along which the chariot is driven. The unbridled horse can drive the chariot on a perilous journey .However, the one who has discriminative intellect can direct the senses with the reins of the mind, to attain self-control and purify consciousness.
Viveka helps one to find release from the cycle of birth and death. It also cultivates bhakti, reverence for the Supreme Reality which is at the root of the phenomenal world. With discriminative cognition one realises that the objective existence of name and form is maya, a delusion. The sole reality is the witness to the phenomena called Brahmn in its macroscopic form and Atman in its microcosmic manifestation.
Brahmn is eternal, immutable and self-existent. Yet, in its conditioned state, it is mobile and subject to change.Brahmn is unaffected by individual actions, bodily changes, states of mind, time, space and causation.
The growth of viveka in a person undergoes three stages: inquisitiveness, jnanadiptih or inner illumination and viveka-khyati, total awareness of Reality.Without discriminative discernment, the individual entangles himself in mundane pursuits ­ his consciousness gets stuck in the chakras, lower nerve plexuses ­ muladhara, svadhishthana and manipura ­ and fails to move upward towards sahas rara, the cranial psychic force centre, the “thousand-petalled lotus“ signifying illumination.
Muladhara is at the base of the spine; svadhishthana is in the sacral area and manipura in the navel region.
The light of viveka removes the fog of avidya, nescience, annihilates ahamkara, ego, raga-dvesha, feelings of attraction and repulsion and vasana, subtle desires and helps one to get established in one's true divine nature.
With viveka one can perceive the cosmic Self in the individual self, the cosmic mind in the individual mind and cosmic consciousness in individual consciousness. As the spiritual aspirant sheds his finite individuality to be with the infinite being he ceases to do ignoble deeds and is filled with love and compassion for others. He realises the unity of existence and finds the world around as his own Self magnified.
The power of discrimination can be maximised by controlling manomayakosha, mind sheath, and empowering the vijnanamayakosha, the intellect sheath, in the subtle human body . This can be done by cultivating the habit of deep breathing for better control over sense organs, associating with noble people, observing regulation in eating and sleeping, practising silence, and remaining detached.
Sri Ramakrishna said: “By turning the mind within, one aquires discrimination, and then one thinks of truth“.Viveka resurrects man, relieving him of his sorrows, delusions and bondages.


UN: India 50 yrs behind edu goals
New Delhi:


India will be half a century late in achieving its universal education goals, according to a Unesco report released on Monday .This means the country will achieve universal primary education by 2050, universal lower secondary education in 2060 and universal upper secondary education in 2085.The 2030 deadline for achieving sustainable development goals will be possible only if India introduces fundamental changes in the education sector, the Global Education Monitoring (GEM) report says.
The report says over 60 million children in India receive little or no formal education and the country has over 11.1 million out-of-school stu dents in the lower secondary level, the highest in the world.
At the upper secondary level, 46.8 million are out of school, while 2.9 million students do not even attend primary school. The report says that by 2020 there will be a shortage of 40 million workers with tertiary education.
GEM report director Aaron Benavot told TOI, “Striving for development will mean little without a healthy planet. So, the new 2030 agenda for sustainable development unites global development and environmental goals.“
The report says 40% of students worldwide are taught in a language they don't understand. While the curriculums of half of the countries do not explicitly mention climate change, in India some 300 million students currently receive environmental education.

Source: Times of India, 6-09-2016

Monday, September 05, 2016

WISH YOU A VERY HAPPY TEACHERS DAY

Teachers through education encourage young minds to discover their hidden talents and seek their own path. Great teachers build great human beings who build great nation. This Teachers’ Day We would like to thank all the teachers who direct their students along the right path and are the building blocks of our nation.”

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Vol. 51, Issue No. 36, 03 Sep, 2016

Custodial torture: It’s a shame that so much that is shameful thrives

Can one be proud to be an Indian and ashamed to be an Indian?
One cannot be one without the other.
This reflection has been occasioned by two recent court judgments.
The first of these is the extraordinary judgment of Madras high court’s chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Justice Pushpa Sathyanarayana in the writ petitions pertaining to the right of free thought and expression. Occasioned by the psychological tormenting of the Tamil novelist Perumal Murugan for his story One Part Woman, the order says “Surprisingly, on the issue of a liberal ethos on the relationship of man and woman, sex and religious mores, the ancient scriptures seemed to be more liberal than at times what appears to be the current norm”. And affirming the right to free speech, it says: “The author…should be able to write and advance the canvas of his writings”. In a final sentence that has an ‘all-time and everywhere’ resonance to it, Justice Kaul and Justice Sathyanarayana observe: “Let the author be resurrected to what he is best at: Write.”The judgment recalls the words of Milton in Areopagitica: “Lords and Commons of England, consider what Nation it is whereof ye are, and whereof ye are the governors: a Nation not slow and dull, but of a quick, ingenious, and piercing spirit, acute to invent, suttle and sinewy to discours, not beneath the reach of any point the highest that human capacity can soar to….Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties.”
The second is the judgment of the Supreme Court of India in which Justice Madan Lokur and Justice Uday Lalit have ruled that the armed forces cannot escape investigation for excesses in the discharge of their duties even in “disturbed areas”. Hearing a PIL demanding an inquiry into 1,528 deaths in counter-insurgency operations and related incidents in Manipur, the court said the provisions of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act have to yield to the larger principles of human rights. Responding to the arguments of the government, the judges said: “The submission of the learned attorney general is nothing but a play on words and we reject it and hold that an internal disturbance is not equivalent to or akin to a war-like situation and proceed on the basis that there is no war or war-like situation in Manipur but only an internal disturbance, within the meaning of that expression in the Constitution – nothing more and nothing less.” The 85-page order makes it clear that action against terrorists cannot be indistinguishable with disappearances and extra-judicial killings.The judgment recalls the words of Milton in Areopagitica: “Lords and Commons of England, consider what Nation it is whereof ye are, and whereof ye are the governors: a Nation not slow and dull, but of a quick, ingenious, and piercing spirit, acute to invent, suttle and sinewy to discours, not beneath the reach of any point the highest that human capacity can soar to….Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties.”
It is a matter of pride that our courts can call the shameful to account. It is a shame that so much that is shameful thrives in India.
Our criminal investigative system has some truly remarkable achievements to its credit. The rule of law owes a great deal to our police. Bravehearts among their ranks keep us from personal and collective harm. The martyrdom of Hemant Karkare in Mumbai on November 26, 2008, places him in the world’s annals of duty performed in the face of death. The recent killing of two police officers in Mathura at the hands of a violent cult whose unauthorised headquarters they were sent to break up, is another example of policemen courting death for the security of the State and society. The loss suffered by their bereaved families is no different from that of soldiers killed in war. These instances can and should make us proud of them, honour them.
But India does not permit pride to stay where it is.
We have had earlier this year a masterpiece of a research document placed in our hands by the Centre on the death penalty set up by the National Law University (NLU), Delhi. The product of direct interviews with persons on death row in different states, Death Penalty India Report 2016 gives hard evidence to tell us that India is home to some of the grossest of criminal investigative malpractices. The report tells us: “Of the 270 (Death Row) prisoners who spoke about their experience in police custody, 216 (80%) admitted to have suffered custodial violence”. The report is about convicts on death row but there is no reason to doubt that what is true of them is also true, more or less, of other prisoners as well, many if not most of who will be found later to have been innocent. Custodial torture degrades not just the system within which it operates but all of us. From needles inserted into fingernails, heads crashed against walls/glass, water-boarding, being forced to sit on a slab of ice, have electric current passed through the wet body, we have them all in India, the India that is asking the world to visit India, Incredible India! with its upside down exclamation mark, to Make In India, Trust India, Adore India.
That it is possible in India to investigate shaming truths, as the NLU has done, reassures us. That torture, custodial torture, is rampant in India, shames us.
The government should tell us why India, which signed the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (commonly known as the United Nations Convention against Torture) in October 1997, has yet not ratified it. Why has the Prevention of Torture Bill, which will pave the way for ratification, not yet been passed? Is India afraid that the world will castigate it, call it hypocritical? Or is one part of the State unwilling to shake off this ‘secret weapon’ in its investigative armoury?
We, as a people, are not asking these questions. But do we really care about custodial torture? Do we look upon it as a national shame? In truth, we do not. And there lies the bigger shame.
Gopalkrishna Gandhi is distinguished professor of history and politics, Ashoka University . The views expressed by the author are personal.
Source: The Hindu, 4-09-2016

Rights for abducted children

India’s accession to the Hague Convention would resolve the issue of inter-country parental child removal.

Toay, many Indians live abroad, foreign nationals come to stay in India, and Indians who had earlier moved abroad are now moving back to India. Problems arise when children are caught in this migration, when one parent goes to another country, taking the child along, but without the permission of the other parent. What happens to the child who has been abducted? What are his or her rights?
There are several legal issues confronting the issue of transnational inter-spousal child removal. It is unfortunate that when a child is abducted by his or her own parent to India, while custody issues are pending determination in the courts of his or her habitual permanent residence abroad, there is little that local law enforcement agencies can do to remedy the situation. This is because there are no codified family laws or specific child custody laws under which these children can be returned to their homes in a foreign jurisdiction. An aggrieved parent with a foreign court order requiring return of the child finds no slot in the Indian legal system, wherein a wholesome statutory remedy can be invoked for effective relief. Regardless, the Indian legal system provides succour by invoking the habeas corpus writ. Bitter disputed custody battles requiring conventional evidence to be established fall under the outdated Guardians and Wards Act, 1890. Parents then have to seek resolution of rights of access, custody, guardianship and visitation as a last resort of the proof of their superior parental rights.
Converse reality
This dilemma has now worsened with the converse also taking place, which means that children from India are also being abducted abroad and cannot be traced there or legally directed to be returned. When families get split across countries, conflicting child custody litigations are initiated under the separate legal systems of different nations. Ninety-four states are party to the Hague Convention on Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, which desires “to protect children internationally from the harmful effects of their wrongful removal or retention and to establish procedures to ensure their prompt return to the State of their habitual residence, as well as to secure protection for rights of access”. India is not one of them. The question of India’s accession to the Convention first came about in 2007, but reached no logical end. Meanwhile, in India, the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction Bill, 2007, to secure the prompt return of wrongly removed or returned children, lapsed before reaching Parliament.
Proposed Bill
On June 22, 2016, the Ministry of Women and Child Development (MWCD) uploaded on its website a proposal to enact a draft of the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction Bill, 2016. This was considered as it was imperative to have an enabling legislation in India before accession to the Hague Convention. The proposed Bill, to be renamed as the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction Bill, 2016, was placed on the Ministry’s website for comments till July 13. Hopefully now, a final version may find Parliament’s approval to become a codified law.
The proposed Bill considers the removal to or the retention of a child in India to be wrongful if it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person, an institution, or any other body, either jointly or alone, at a place where the child was habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention. It further stipulates that the removal to or the retention in India of a child is to be considered wrongful where at the time of removal or retention those rights were actually exercised, either jointly or alone, by a person, an institution or any other body, or would have been so exercised, but for the removal or retention.
The draft Bill was prepared following a reference made by the Punjab and Haryana High Court to the Law Commission of India to consider whether recommendations should be made for enacting a suitable law and for signing the Hague Convention. The High Court had made this reference when a minor child remained untraceable after she was removed from the de jure custody of the court and taken abroad by misusing an interim order of 2006. The court had observed in its order that for want of the Indian government acceding to the Hague Convention or enacting a domestic law, children would continue to be spirited away from and to India, with courts and authorities “standing by in despair”.
It is important in this context to look at the watershed verdict of the Supreme Court in Surya Vadanan v. State of Tamil Nadu (2015). The court ruled that: one, the principle of Comity of Courts and nations must be respected and the best interest of the child should apply; two, the principle of “first strike”, namely, whichever court is seized of the matter first, ought to have prerogative of jurisdiction in adjudicating the welfare of the child; three, the rule of Comity of Courts should not be jettisoned except for compelling special reasons to be recorded in writing by a domestic court; four, interlocutory orders of foreign courts of competent jurisdiction regarding child custody must be respected by domestic courts; five, an elaborate or summary enquiry by local courts when there is a pre-existing order of a competent foreign court must be based on reasons and not ordered as routine when a local court is seized of a child custody litigation; six, the nature and effect of a foreign court order, reasons for repatriation, moral, physical, social, cultural or psychological harm to the child, harm to the parent in the foreign country, and alacrity in moving a concerned foreign court must be considered before ordering return of a child to a foreign court.
The above decision set at rest a string of precedents laid down by courts from time to time to evolve a consistent approach in multi-jurisdictional child custody disputes. However, law still needs to be codified. India’s accession to the Hague Convention would resolve the issue since it is based on the principle of reverting the situation to status quo ante. It is also based on the principle that the removed child ought to be promptly returned to his or her country of habitual residence to enable a court of that country to examine the merits of the custody dispute and thereupon award care and control in the child’s best interest. This is because the courts of the country where the child had permanent or habitual residence are considered to best determine the child’s interest.
Anil Malhotra, a practising lawyer, assisted the Punjab and Haryana High Court as Amicus Curiae. Email: anilmalhotra1960@gmail.com