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Thursday, September 14, 2006

ME ANGRY!!!

Has it ever happened to you? You have been very angry at someone..they promised you something but u never got that..you are angry, damn mad at them. Whenever you then confont them, you just swift away with your face full of attitude...trying to show that buddy i m busy. The face tries to picturise and project that whatever they did is unacceptable but beneath, you are laughing...or atleast smiling.

They call on you, you act as if your ear-drums have gone for a vacation, they ask you something, you try to keep the response as short as possible and just nod if the words really are not required…trying to be a snob, a good one.
You wished that they would come to you, bribe you for something but nothing happens….all in the dreams..and even if they turn up, you move to the other place..perfect snob!

I had been once told by my junior, "one bad thing done by youcan erase your 1000 good deeds to that person". How true. Not that i did not know it before but sometimes it so happens that these small messages by someone remain etched in your mind forever.
And its cause of this that my anger always fails with such people. It is as if some other soul living in my body shouts and reminds me how valuable that person is, how much i have learnt from them n that whatever I am today it could not have been possible without them. Everything washes off!! But still you try to be angry, try n try.
And not even an hour passes that you come back to normal…. Chattering all the way!!

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Three 9/11s — choose your own

Another cliche "9/11 shook the world". World here for sure is synonymous to United States...in the history of mankind there have been two much more important 9/11s. Noone seems to remember that. We like to hang ourselves only to destruction and glorify war. Not on a single channel i could see a documentary or any kind of short film on Gandhi but talk of 9/11 of 2001, it was everywhere. Whole world seemed to remember how one unfateful day around 3000 innocents were killed but what about the daily killings in Iraq and Afghanistan..for that whole of our life will be gone in rememebering if ever started.

an article by P.Sainath..i know its long but do read it(i know u wont though), P.Sainath is one hell of a journalist!big fan of his articles n knowledge!

P. Sainath
There were three 9/11s in history. The New York one of 2001. The neo-liberal one of Chile 1973, and the non-violent one of 1906 — Gandhiji's satyagraha in South Africa. The authors of all three tried to change the world. Two brought bloodshed, destruction, misery, and chaos. But the Mahatma's WMD — Weapon of Mass Disobedience — helped change the world for the better.


FIVE YEARS on, the world is a more dangerous place than it was prior to September 11, 2001. Acts of terror, real and presumed, cause panic each month across the globe. Hundreds of people have been killed in terror attacks in many countries. Tens of thousands have been slaughtered in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan alone. Both nations have been ravaged and devastated. Millions of lives have been disrupted forever. Lebanon lies shattered. And more and more flashpoints — even nuclear ones — emerge. In a divided planet, there is one zone of agreement: the worst is yet to come.
The appalling crime committed in New York on 9/11 — when close to 3,000 people were murdered in the WTC bombing — is still fresh in memory. One claim of the time was that it had "changed the world forever." Did it? And in what ways? The West's search for security against a global threat continues. It was there in the 1960s too, when the satirical song writer Tom Lehrer sang an ode to it in his "MLF Lullaby." The `multilateral force' set up to `deter' the Russian threat was its subject. "MLF, will scare Brezhnev," crooned Lehrer, "I hope he is half as scared as I."
Changing the world in terms of `exporting democracy' has come a cropper. The bloodied streets of Iraq show us just how insane that notion was and is. As for Afghanistan, it gets more bizarre each month. Take the recent claim by British Foreign Office Minister Kim Howells. "Across the country progress is being made. Afghanistan had economic growth of 14% last year." Well, in 2003, the same country had the fastest rate of growth in the world — 21 per cent. More than half of that coming, as the United Nations noted, from opium. In any case, Afghanistan's figures improve if you just stop the bombing for a few hours. It's not hard when your base is zero. Or worse.
Both the crazies who brought down the WTC and those later responding to them, stay firmly convinced they are changing the world. The world itself remains somewhat stubbornly resistant to these notions. In every society, the Muslim-non-Muslin divide has deepened as neighbour suspects and lives in fear of neighbour. The war on terror translates too, into a war of suspicions and nerves. Meanwhile the basic pretexts for the assault on Iraq have collapsed. A U.S. Senate panel finds that Saddam had no link with Al-Qaeda whatsoever. And the weapons of mass destruction story has ceased to be even a joke.

Neo-Liberal 9/11
September 11, 1973. Then it was the export not of democracy but of terror. This was the day the elected government of Salvador Allende in Chile was brought down. By the Chilean armed forces led by General Augusto Pinochet. And fully supported by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Allende was pushing measures that favoured his nation's poor. But even the most modest re-distribution of wealth was intolerable to the Chilean elite. As also to the U.S. corporations controlling so much of the economy.
"Make the economy scream," President Nixon ordered CIA boss Richard Helms in 1970. His order was duly carried out. A vast array of overt and covert actions were launched to wreck that nation's economy. "I don't see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people. The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves," declared Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The 9/11 of 1973 saw what analyst and author William I. Robinson called "the bloodiest coup in Latin American history." Over 3,000 people were murdered after the armed forces bombed and stormed the Presidential Palace. Allende himself went down in the battle. Estimates of people killed in the years that followed range from 3,000 to 20,000. Well over 100,000 people were arrested in the first three years. Many simply "disappeared." The film Missing starring Jack Lemon was inspired by this period.
Chile's National Stadium was used as a concentration camp. Thousands suffered gruesome tortures. And many of them were slaughtered. Among those tortured and put to death here was the legendary Victor Jara, one of Latin America's greatest musicians.
Chile's 9/11 also marked the start of the imposition by force of a neo-liberal economic model on an unwilling nation. U.S. economist Milton Friedman and his "Chicago Boys" ran riot in Chile. While the putschists raped, tortured and murdered pregnant mothers and children, neo-liberal policies had the same impact on the economy of the poor.
Some 25 years later, the U.S. and the Britain were still holding Gen. Pinochet's hand. The leader of Chile's bloody putsch was arrested in London while there on a visit. This followed an Interpol Red Notice. A warrant had been issued against him in Spain for crimes his junta had committed against Spanish citizens in Chile during his 17-year dictatorship. But his old friends in the West did not desert him. (The same powers are driving trials of war criminals in Iraq and elsewhere.) Pinochet is back in Chile — facing murder charges there too.
Latin America, though, is seeing a wave of anti-neo-liberal globalism protests. And a trashing of pro-U.S. regimes. Whether in Venezuela or Ecuador or Bolivia. Last year, tiny Uruguay became the first nation in the world to ban water privatisation. Others too, are reclaiming their natural resources from foreign corporations. The world is changing, but not in the way the authors of 9/11, 1973, hoped for. Moral authority in Latin America belongs to a Castro or a Chavez. No pro-U.S. leader comes anywhere close.

Non-violent 9/11
The first of the 9/11s did help change the world. That was the day Gandhiji's Satyagraha in South Africa first began — September 11, 1906. Today is the 100th anniversary of that launch of his non-violent resistance movement. Gandhiji was quite clear it was a war he was fighting against racism and colonial oppression in South Africa. A war he saw as touching anti-colonial sentiment in India as well. A war he felt he had a strategy for. "Only the general who conducts a campaign can know the objective of each particular move," he later wrote. "And as this was the first attempt to apply the principle of satyagraha to politics on a large scale, it is necessary any day that the public should have an idea of its development."
For decades, the weapon of mass disobedience he had developed rattled the British in India. Gandhiji always referred to 9/11, 1906, as the day it all began. "The term satyagraha was invented and employed in connection therewith," he wrote. And listed the times where he used it again — in India. It was to be used yet again in South Africa much later. It was also used by Martin Luther King in the civil rights struggle in the United States.
On that day in Johannesburg, the Indians Gandhiji spoke to were more than a little mystified by his notion that the might of the Empire could be engaged differently. It's a debate that lasts to this day. With no easy answers. Gandhiji himself acknowledged there were no "miraculous qualities as such in satyagraha..." And that a movement which lost sight of the truth would find the technique of little use.
Yet, the struggle put the South African government in the dock. It saw the repeal or suspension of some of the more obnoxious laws the Indians there were opposed to. Very importantly, it brought about a vital measure of Hindu-Muslim unity amongst Indians in South Africa for the first time. New factors were to make things a whole lot worse later. But at the time, it set off a process that caught on in many other parts of the British Empire. Not the least within India, led by Gandhiji himself.
The British had to contend with the rising of millions of ordinary people. His weapon and its allied tools helped forge great changes in Indian history. But this General was not for war. "War with all its glorification of brute force is essentially degrading," he wrote. "It demoralises those trained for it. It brutalises men of naturally gentle character. It outrages every beautiful canon of morality."
That was in an era when another global figure, then bigger than Gandhiji, had declared "War is the most natural, the most commonplace thing... War is life. ... all struggle is war." Hitler too, changed the world.
Three 9/11s. One that helped change the world for the better. Two that had much in common. The bloody slaughter of innocents, the brutalisation of millions. And the imposition of regimes hated and despised. Juntas with no legitimacy at all. Think of a Pinochet now hiding behind pleas of age, ill-health, and senility to escape justice Think of an Iraqi regime whose leaders almost no one can name. Or of a Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan whose writ barely runs across the presidential palace in Kabul. Who has to at all times be protected from his own people by American soldiers. Think also of a Henry Kissinger who has curbed his travel in recent years for fear of facing war crimes charges in more than one country in Europe. Think, too, of an old man who warned: "An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind."

Monday, September 11, 2006

WATER PRIVATISATION-SOLUTION OR A PROBLEM?

Another boring article from my side. This one has been written for the economics magazine of our college. U can read first para n jump last if u wish to or u can read alternate ones..anything u wish..n leave ur comments if u wish to!!!Heartiest thanks to those who read it completely!n also to the ones who "try to"!

"India has recently seen an important development on the water entitlement issue with the state of Maharashtra passing, after years of study and EXTENSIVE consultation with civil society, local communities and all political parties, the Maharashtra Water Resources Regulatory Authority Act, 2005, the heart of which is the creation and management of a water entitlement system" says John Briscoi, senior water advisor, World Bank(Hindu, 22nd March 2006)
It’s interesting to know how the bill was passed on the last day of Maharashtra’s assembly amidst other 16 bills. The bill was not read, forget being debtated by the assemply but yes certainly passed. And the result? World bank announced Rs.1700 crores towards water projects in the state.
More interesting is the "two-child norm" on which this act is based on. It says that if the farmer has more than two children, he will have to pay one and a half times the new rates of irrigation. Thankfully the law has not been enforced yet!
As India is moving towards becoming world’s one of the fastest growing economy, at the same time it is also easily succumbing to the pressure of International Organizations like World bank and IMF to move towards privatisation. Privatisation of water is becoming one of the most disturbing trends in developing countries. According to an estimate by Mande Barlow, "water business" is worth $400 billion(annually) worldwide.
In 2005, through filing an RTI by Parivartan, an NGO exposed on how Delhi Jal Board changed its criteria, deleted scores by officials for giving a multi-million water supply contract to PriceWater House Cooper(PWC). Arvind Kejriwal of Parivartan aptly termed it as an "ideological corruption".
Water Privatisation is infact one of the conditions that determine the extent of loan under World bank’s Assistance strategy.
Many countries under the pressure of World Bank privatised water distribution. Suez, a French multinational increased water rates by 140% in South Africa forcing 11% of the community to reply on river water. This led to 1,20,000 people being affected by Cholera. Bolivia is another country where water privatisation led to manifold increase in water rates. All those who couldn’t afford it were denied water supply. Masses led by Oscar Olivera protested against this injustice which eventually led to the set up of an enterprise which is neither private nor state-owned. As Mr.Olivera puts in "Private enterprises are for rich people and state enterprises are basicallt private enterprises of a political party". True to an extent
World Bank it seems is propogating "Survival of the Richest".
Chile and Latin-America rejected privatisation of state run water company. Uruguay went ahead for an amendment in their constitution saying, "Water is a natural resource essential to life. Access to water and sanitation are ‘fundamental human rights’ and ‘public service of water supply for human consumption wil be served exclusively and directly by state legal persons" India today needs to learn from such a small African Country working for its "aam aadmi".
It’s inefficiency on the part of government they say is leading them towards Privatisation.Leakage losses in Delhi are as high as 40%, highly inefficient for sure but is privatisation the answer?
Rajendra Singh, perhaps can be termed as "Water God", revived five dead rivers in dry state of Rajasthan, has since 1985 built some 4,500 earthen check dams, or johads, to collect rainwater in around 850 villages in 11 districts in the State. Residents of Neembi in Jamwa Ramgarh tehsil of Jaipur district spent Rs.50,000 in building johads and is today earning around Rs. 3 crores annually by selling agricultural products.
Some further argue that increased prices will lead to greater incentive for producers to produce more of the good and better efficiency! Sounds a good justification for propagating free market theory involving basic necessities and making richer "more" richer.
Another set of argument says that privatisation is the only effective way to deal with "water crisis". The very concept of terming the situation as "water crisis" is questionnable. Billions of litres of water guzzle out daily in private water parks, golf course all over the world. There is never a "water crisis" at such places. Coke itself used 283 billions litres of water worldwide in 2005. We already know what happened in Rajasthan.
The solution doesn’t lie in privatising. We have seen it through examples all over the world that privatising basic commodities will only led to exclusivity of water consumers (if that term can be used). MNC’s are certainly not charitable organizations, their aim cannot be prosperity of common man but just profit as seen in countries like Bolivia, Canada, Argentina, South Africa. One can understand any businessman making profit but making profit at the cost of human misery is an unpardonable offence.
In France, "Electricite de France", a government owned company provides 95% of electricity in France and ranks as the world’s largest electircity company in terms of production capacity.
Delhi Metro is the perfect exampls of how public sector can run as efficiently as an successful private company.
Solution lies in forming water cooperatives as already in existence in towns of Rajasthan where people are coming forward, collecting money to build their own water distribution system. Government has also formulated a policy to encourage such cooperative efforts in water resource management and distribution giving 50% grants to such water cooperations. Obviously it should be 100% funded by the government but as it is said "something is better than nothing".
In 1990 Nobel Laureate Octavio Paz in his Nobel Lecture said, "Market economy cannot be simply a cause for joy. As a mechanism the market is efficient, but like all mechanisms it lacks both conscience and compassion.
We must find a way of integrating it into society so that it expresses the social contract and becomes an instrument of justice and fairness. The advanced democratic societies have reached an enviable level of prosperity, at the same time they are islands of abundance in an ocean of universal misery. A society possessed by the frantic need to produce more in order to consume more sends to tends to reduce ideas, feelings, art, love, friendship and people themselves to consumer good. Everything becomes an item to be bought, used, and then thrown on the rubbish dump."