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A 47-YEAR-OLD woman,
Amita Uddaiya, has disclosed that she was flown from Mumbai to the US for
questioning by ‘white men’. She was there for two days and then flown back. She
was asked to tell that she had gone to Satara, not very far from Mumbai. Amita
had seen six terrorists arriving in the fishermen colony on the seaside. They
were part of a group of 10 who attacked Mumbai.
Surprisingly, none from the media has followed up the whisking away of Amita.
Nor has the government come out with any explanation. Local police have
rubbished her story. But she has stuck to it. Many questions remain unanswered.
Why did she go? Who forced her to undertake the journey? What did she tell her
husband, who was in hospital, before she left? It is apparent that it was a
hush-hush job which was in the knowledge of the top. That America needed her was
clear, probably to prepare the dossier on the perpetrators of Mumbai carnage.
Was there something more than meets the eye?
America’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is known for such covert
operations. Taking away Amita is not beyond them. But why has she been flown all
the way to America? Probably, the FBI has its most sophisticated equipment to
interrogate, record or what not. This establishes one thing that the FBI enjoys
carte-blanch in India. I would not be surprised if the agency has its network in
the country, some with New Delhi’s consent but most without it. Not long ago,
the agency sought permission to open its office in India. I do not know whether
Amita is an isolated case because this is the only one which has come to light.
There may have been more.
The question is not that of numbers, but that of sovereignty. Has America
extended similar facilities to India? This is not related to extradition treaty.
This is related to the extra-constitutional authority which America has come to
wield throughout the world. I hope President Barrack Obama, known for clean
methods, puts an end to FBI’s mechanisations. In his inaugural speech, he said:
“Our power alone cannot protect us, nor does it entitle us to do as we please.”
In the past, whenever I would read about Pakistan handing over its nationals to
America—the number so far is nearly 500—I explained to myself that a beleaguered
country, financially and democratically weak, could not probably resist the
pressure. How could India with its traditions of defiance and dissent act like a
hapless state? Was the necessity of building diplomatic pressure on Pakistan so
much that we had to surrender the independence of institutions? If this is the
price we had to pay to get Washington on our side, it is much too much.
If we, claiming to lead the non-alignment movement, begin to behave like a
supplicant nation, small and weak countries would have no reprieve from big
powers. It looks as if we are being sucked into American orbit of influence,
without even realizing it. The India-US nuclear treaty was responsible for it.
The world even saw us voting against the age-old friend Iran at a crucial
meeting concerning International Atomic Energy Agency. We have lowered our
tariffs to enable subsidized goods from the West to compete with our indigenous
products. Thousands of small entrepreneurs have gone out of business and many
shops are shut.
Permission given to foreign newspapers to print their facsimile edition from
India, with 100 per cent equity may not disturb our press. But it indicates a
change in policy. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru did not allow The New York
Times to have its facsimile edition from India in the fifties. Such things were
considered a blemish to India’s independent identity and avoided.
While framing India foreign policy, Nehru wrote to Krishna Menon, then India’s
High Commissioner to the UK “how naïve the Americans are in their policy. It is
only their money and their power that carries them through, not their
intelligence or any other quality.” When new US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton says that America wants to strengthen political and economic ties with
India, she should realize that we are looking for friends, not masters.
Whether or not it was Washington’s pressure, Islamabad has changed its stand in
the last few days. The dossier which was “mere information” has become “useful
and good.” Pakistan could have done the same thing without bringing US Assistant
Richard Boucher into the picture. Now he looks like the whistle-blower. America
has become a court of appeal for both India and Pakistan. Had Islamabad
addressed New Delhi’s fears earlier, its loss of faith in Pakistan would not
have been so much as it is today. No doubt, tension has lessened but the feeling
of alienation has increased.
In Mumbai the fallout has been irrational. The Pakistani artists, staging their
plays to full houses, were forcibly ousted from the city. Fortunately, these
artists also saw how the common man reacted. They came up to them to tell that
they were sorry for what the Shiv Sainiks had done. Happily, the story was
different at New Delhi where another Pakistani troupe got a deafening applause.
Again, Mumbai witnessed some policemen visiting book shops to tell the owners to
remove off their shelves the works by the Pakistani authors. No explanation was
available from the State government. Did it order such a search or the policemen
contaminated as some of them are, did it on their own?
The cultural vandalism is, however, an indication of people’s mood. There have
been a very few voices of condemnation. We say that music knows no border or
that terrorism has no religion. But when prejudice takes over such observations
mean little. The Mumbai attack has drastically cut the number of liberals in
India and exposed the peacemakers. Some human rights activists on both sides are
trying to repair the relationship. I hope they can do it.
How to pick up the thread from the Mumbai carnage is the question. Now that the
Asif Ali Zardari government has assured India that it would bring the
perpetrators to book, the confidence will start building. But the probe should
be authentic and transparent. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said that India
wants the whole thing to be out, from beginning to the end. If done, this may
falsify the impression in India that Pakistan always gets away with whatever it
does.
If Islamabad is once again seen indulging in window dressing, the distrust would
deepen. Even if there is no conflict, there will be no peace. Even if there is
no hostility, there will be no harmony. Such a situation is neither conducive
for India nor Pakistan. |