Followers

Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Shared unbelonging: The burden of being Muslim is global

 Being a Muslim anywhere in Asia is no passport to a bed of roses. Not even in the continent’s Muslim-majority lands. Thus, in mostly Shia Iran, twenty-three-year-old Mohsen Shekari was hanged in Tehran in December for allegedly injuring a member of the official militia while protesting the death in September of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, who had objected to the regime’s stern dress code for women. Amini and Shekari are only two among the many Iranians who’ve paid a heavy price for little more than expressing their opinion.

In Iran’s Sunni-majority neighbour Afghanistan, a recently imposed ban on university education for women drove a young university lecturer identified as Ismail Mashal to rip his certificates into pieces before a TV audience. “If my mother and sister cannot study,” declared the lecturer, “then I do not accept this education.” How Taliban-ruled Afghanistan can rejoin the world community and begin to lighten its citizens’ burdens is hard to picture at this point.

In fact, it is hard today to identify many Asian nations where the average Muslim feels proud and secure. While Bangladesh, which holds the fourth-largest Muslim population in the world, has seen impressive progress in literacy, health, and per capita income, there are solid questions about that country’s democracy.

Containing more Muslims at this point than any other country, Indonesia headed the G20 assemblage until the end of last year, when the baton was handed to India. Holding national elections regularly from 1999, and possessing significant, though depleting, reserves of oil, Indonesia is ranked 52 in the Democracy Index maintained by an organisation linked to the British journal of historic standing, The Economist.  While recognising that an index of this kind must have imperfections, we may nonetheless note that this Democracy Index places Malaysia 39th  in the world. India is ranked at 46, Singapore at 66, Sri Lanka at 67, Bangladesh at 75, Bhutan at 81, Nepal at 101, Pakistan at 104, and China at 148. (Norway is placed first.)

Two Buddhist countries that lie very close to India, Myanmar and Sri Lanka, have, in recent years, witnessed the promotion of anti-Muslim drives, while Myanmar has, in addition, seen merciless attacks on dissenters of every kind. As for our own land, the deepening anxieties of India’s Muslims are known to many of their non-Muslim compatriots, who, of course, form the great majority. Most Muslims in India remain prudently silent about their worries, but on occasion a frank remark escapes their lips.

“Find jobs abroad and, if possible, take citizenships there.” This is what the Rashtriya Janata Dal’s Abdul Bari Siddiqui, a former Bihar minister, is reported to have told his son studying in the United States of America as also his daughter studying in London. In a widely seen video, Siddiqui adds that his son and daughter “would not be able to cope in today’s India”. Siddiqui’s unmistakable allusion was to the hostility that many of India’s Muslims appear to confront at this time.

Some found his words unpalatable and provocative.  Nikhil Anand, a Bharatiya Janata Party spokesman in Bihar, commented: “Siddiqui’s remarks are anti-India. If he is feeling so stifled, he should… move to Pakistan. Nobody will stop him.” Several TV channels aired the Siddiqui video and the BJP’s response.

Was Siddiqui’s remark really that outrageous? Haven’t millions of Hindu fathers and mothers in India also said to a son or daughter,  ‘Find a job abroad and, if possible, take citizenship there?’  Doesn’t the government of India proudly advertise its efforts to enlarge the quotas that rich countries set for visas for young Indians for study and also for long-term employment?

Moreover, why would Siddiqui or any Indian Muslim wish to go to Pakistan? The economy there seems to be sinking. Politicians are at war with one another and, at this point, the Pakistan army doesn’t seem to know whether or when to assume direct control, something it has periodically done. Top military leaders have been accused of amassing vast fortunes. The province of Balochistan is home to insurgency and repression. Inside Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa or KPK (the former ‘Frontier Province’), the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan has strengthened extremist groups. And Pakistan’s Christian and Hindu minorities, the latter concentrated in Sindh Province, seem as insecure as ever.

It is, in fact, an open secret that countries like the US, the United Kingdom, Germany, a few other European nations, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand offer greater personal security and liberty to Muslims than most Muslimmajority lands. It wasn’t very long ago that India too could claim itself as a place where Muslims felt safe, but the picture has changed quite dramatically.

At this time, when China’s drive to become the next superpower has run into serious hurdles, India still has the opportunity to return in the world’s mind as democracy’s hope. However, that challenge does not attract our energy and passion today. We want, above all, to persuade ourselves, with scant evidence, that ‘the world is finally recognising India’s greatness’. Acknowledging the anxieties of our Muslim brothers and sisters is the last thing on the minds of our land’s most influential men and women.

This means that the responsibility cast on the shoulders of India’s Muslims is immense. With much of the Muslim world in ugly disarray, with their Hindu compatriots focused elsewhere and indifferent when they are not antagonistic, what can India’s Muslims do? Going abroad is an option for only a handful of them.

In a dream scenario, India’s Muslims would fight their way back to real equality with their Hindu compatriots, and they would do so with fraternity, courage, and wisdom. By doing this, they would also offer hope to India’s neighbours and to the entire Muslim world.

However, we live  not in a dateless dream world but in the India that exists at the start of 2023. Moreover, even in a dream, it would be unfair to ask an apprehensive minority to lead a journey towards trust and partnership.

Yet one thing is certain. It is the inalienable right of any and every Indian to fight for dignity, equality, and liberty, and, simultaneously, offer fraternity to his or her compatriots. A Muslim Indian’s right to do this is not less than that of a Hindu. Not one nanogram less.

Rajmohan Gandhi

Source: The Telegraph, 31/01/23

Mind matters: Editorial on the mental healthcare problem

 A National Mental Health Survey conducted four years before the pandemic had revealed that almost 80% of Indians with mental disorders had no access to care.


People with mental ailments have been subjected to discrimination throughout history. A clear example of this embedded prejudice is institutional apathy. Systemic measures implemented by the State can, in effect, reinforce social stigma against those battling mental illnesses. For instance, the asylums of 18th-century Britain served as penal centres owing to the then perception that those suffering from mental disorders are criminals. Even advancements in medical sciences, which led to the changes in terminology over the years — the colonial ‘lunatic asylum’ transitioned to ‘mental hospital’ and, eventually, to today’s ‘mental healthcare institution’ — have failed to root out the deeper biases against patients. A classic manifestation of this is the neglect of the mentally ill inside India’s psychiatric institutions. In fact, a 1982 report on the Central Institute of Psychiatry, Ranchi, had revealed shocking human rights violations committed against the inmates — patients were denied basic facilities,  offered badly cooked meals, and were made to inhabit poorly ventilated and ill-lit cells and so on. Dishearteningly, not a lot seems to have changed. Recent findings by the National Human Rights Commission show that the old malaises remain intact. According to the NHRC, all 46 government mental healthcare institutions in the country present an ambience that is expressly inimical to the well-being and the dignity of inmates. This is just the tip of the iceberg. The ratio of mental healthcare professionals to citizens is very poor. The staff in care institutions often lack basic training, leading to ill-treatment of patients. The scope of societal rehabilitation is limited as a result of persistent stigma. As a result, even those who are medically fit to be released from care facilities end up leading incarcerated lives. A National Mental Health Survey conducted four years before the pandemic had revealed that almost 80% of Indians with mental disorders had no access to care. This is only to be expected in a country which, according to one survey, has 0.8 psychiatric hospital beds per 100,000 people.

 All this is especially alarming in the light of the fact that India, experts believe, is expected to face an avalanche of mental ailments in the near future. Yet, the implementation of the provisions of the Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 has not been uniform across states. Budgetary allocation for mental health remains abysmal — of the meagre 0.8% spent on mental healthcare, only 3% is allocated for mental institutions. Will the upcoming budget rectify this glaring gap?

Source: The Telegraph, 30/01/23

Friday, January 27, 2023

Quote of the Day January 27, 2023

 

“The word impossible is not in the leaders’ dictionaries. No matter how big the challenges, strong faith, determination and resolve will overcome them.”
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid AI Maktoum
“नेतृत्व करने वालों के शब्दकोशों में असंभव शब्द नहीं होता। कितनी ही बड़ी चुनौतियां क्यों न हों, मजबूत विश्वास, इरादे और संकल्प से उन्हें निपटा जा सकता है।”
शेख मोहम्मद बिन रशीद अल मक्तौम

HEIs need to be proactive in sharing their resources for optimal utilisation

 UGC has released guidelines that advocate the optimal utilisation of resources and infrastructure by all higher educational institutes (HEIs). This practice will extend various benefits to undergraduate (UG), postgraduate (PG) students and research scholars. Educators say that the guidelines are in coordination with the NEP 2020 and formalise similar practices that are already being informally followed by various universities.


In a letter to the vice-chancellors (VCs) of various universities, the UGC has said that HEIs may allow their resources, like libraries, laboratories, and equipment to be shared/used during free time by students and researchers of other HEIs.

Need of the hour
It is not possible for all colleges to be multidisciplinary, which is where the practice of sharing resources will act as a boon, says Lingaraja Gandhi, VC, Bengaluru City University. “Our university may need to use UGC’s Information and Library Network (INFLIBNET) centre services, which are currently not available at the campus. In return, the institute can either take a pre-defined amount from us or request to use any of our resources, such as our sports infrastructure.”

With NEP advocating multiple changes in the education curriculum, sharing of faculty by HEIs should be the top priority, says Danish Moin, HoD (department of History), Maulana Azad National Urdu University (MANUU). “As has been the practice thus far, instead of inviting faculty members from other universities for a few lectures in their respective areas of specialisation, the UGC guidelines pave the way for HEIs to invite them to offer more in-depth knowledge to students,” he says.

However, universities need to communicate better with each other to make the best use of this opportunity, adds Gandhi. “Proper coordination is needed between both the universities so that the entire system works smoothly, and students can avail the maximum benefits in the form of a variety of skill enhancement and value-added courses that are made available to them,” he says.

Already in place
Gandhi adds, “Colleges under the ambit of any university already follow the practice of sharing resources with each other. The UGC guidelines emphasise upon extending this practice to other universities as well. The path ahead requires colleges to become proactive and requesting to share the resources they need to have better infrastructure.”

Vikas Gupta, registrar, University of Delhi (DU), says, “Since 2020, we have already signed multiple MoUs with universities in remote districts of Sikkim, Gangtok, and Ladakh among others. The aim is to improve the research and innovation infrastructure at these HEIs by handholding them and providing adequate support in the form of laboratories, books, journals and more.”

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 58, Issue No. 3, 21 Jan, 2023

Current Affairs-January 23-24, 2023.

 

INDIA

  • President Droupadi Murmu conferred Pradhanmantri Rashtriya Bal Puraskar awards on 11 children for exceptional achievement in six categories including Art, Culture, Bravery, Innovation, Social Service, and Sports.
  • The first B20 meet being organized as part of the G20 will conclude in Gandhinagar.
  • PM Modi interacts with youngsters selected under ‘Know Your Leader’ programme at his residence.
  • Ayush Ministry signs MoU with ITDC for promotion of medical value travel in Ayurveda and other traditional systems of medicine.
  • Foundation day of Uttar Pradesh is being celebrated on January 24.
  • Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) directed YouTube and Twitter to take down links sharing the BBC documentary ‘India: The Modi Question.’
  • The Indian Navy commissioned the fifth diesel-electric Kalvari-class submarine Vagir.
  • Centre to send a proposal to UNESCO for nominating Charaideo moidams of the Ahom kingdom as a World Heritage Site.
  • Assam: Men marrying girls below 14 to be booked under POCSO Act.

ECONOMY

  • SEBI launches information database on municipal bonds.
  • World Bank lauds Bangladesh as one of the world’s greatest development stories.
  • Atal Pension Yojana records 10 million enrolments in a calendar year.
  • Jammu and Kashmir launches Rs 879-crore food processing project.
  • RBI gave banks time till end of December 2023 to complete renewal of agreements for existing safe deposit lockers of customers.

WORLD

  • United States launches several new initiatives and schemes to reduce delays in visa processing in India.
  • Amazon India announced the launch of Amazon Air -dedicated air cargo service in India to speed up deliveries.
  • Russia and Estonia expelled the ambassadors from each other’s countries in a tit-for-tat move.
  • Brazil declares medical emergency in Yanomami territory after reports of children deaths from malnutrition.

SPORTS

  • India’s Sania Mirza and Rohan Bopanna advances to mixed doubles quarter-finals in Australian Open Tennis.
  • Thai shuttler Kunlavut Vitidsarn wins India Open Badminton title.
  • FIH Men’s Hockey World Cup: New Zealand enters quarterfinals beating India in penalty shoot-out.

Current Affairs-January 25, 2023

 

INDIA

  • The Supreme Court of India simplifies procedure for passive euthanasia.
  • National Voters’ Day observed with the theme of ‘Nothing Like Voting, I Vote For Sure’.
  • 901 Police personnel awarded Police Medals on the occasion of Republic Day.
  • First India Stack Developer Conference to be held in New Delhi
  • National Girl Child Day is being observed on January 24.
  • Union Minister Hardeep Puri inaugurates demo-run of Inland Water Vessel in Guwahati.
  • Indian Institute of Technology Madras is hosting a G20 University Connect lecture series to engage the youth.
  • Himachal Pradesh Statehood Day observed on January 25.

ECONOMY

  • IMF confirms India’s assurance to restructure Sri Lanka’s debt
  • Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation, EPFO, has added 16 lakh 26 thousand net members in the month of November last year.
  • Domestic air passenger traffic goes up by 47% last year compared to 2021
  • India’s maiden tranche of Rs 8,000-cr sovereign green bond debuts.

WORLD

  • India bags Oscar nominations for original song and 2 documentaries
  • Chris Hipkins sworn in as the 41st Prime Minister of New Zealand
  • NASA, DARPA collaborate to test ‘DRACO’ rocket engine that’ll send humans to Mars
  • Microsoft announced its multi-billion investment in OpenAI, the research lab that recently created ChatGPT.

SPORTS

  • Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill pair registers highest opening stand against New Zealand in ODIs.
  • FIH Men’s Hockey World Cup: Germany enters quarterfinals defeating France
  • India becomes No. 1 ODI team in ICC Rankings after 3-0 series win over New Zealand