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العلاقات العامة والإعلام منتدى آسيا والشرق الأوسط

Millions of workers in India strike for labour rights, better pay

Nearly a dozen unions have organised a nationwide two-day strike, with universal security coverage and an increased minimum wage on the list of demands.

Millions of workers have begun a nationwide two-day strike across India to express their anger at the government’s economic policies and press their demands for improved rights for industrial workers, employees and farmers.

About a dozen labour unions that organised the strike on Monday want the government to provide universal social security coverage for workers in the vast unorganised sector, hike the minimum wage under a flagship employment guarantee program and stop the privatisation of public-sector banks.

The strikers are also demanding that the government halt plans to sell state assets.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government says privatising some state-owned banks would overhaul the banking industry and that asset sales would help raise money to spur economic growth.

The strike had little impact in India’s capital, New Delhi, and the financial hub of Mumbai, but daily life was affected elsewhere, including southern Kerala, where the state government led by the opposition Communist Party of India backed the protest.

In some states, demonstrators blocked highways and railroad tracks, affecting public transportation.



Banking and transportation expected to be impacted

The All Indian Trade Union Congress, one of the country’s largest trade unions, said it expected more than 200 million formal and informal workers would join the strike, but the figure could not be independently verified.

The Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh, an important trade union affiliated with the governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said it wouldn’t participate in the strike, calling it “politically motivated.”

Essential services related to banking, transportation, railways and electricity were expected to be impacted in several states. 

A number of public-sector banks, including India’s largest lender, the state-run State Bank of India, said banking services may be affected because many employees were expected to join the strike.

India’s economy has bounced back after experiencing a major blow during the first two years of the pandemic. But many jobs have disappeared, with unemployment rising to 8 percent in December.

Modi’s government grappled last year with huge farmer protests demanding the repeal of new agriculture laws it had billed as necessary reforms.

The protests by farmers, who feared the laws would dramatically reduce their incomes, forced Modi to make a rare retreat just ahead of crucial state elections that his party eventually won.

Source: AP

خلافات بين غانتس وبينت قبيل زيارتهما للهند

أعلن وزير جيش العدو بيني غانتس اليوم (الخميس) أنه سيغادر متوجهًا إلى الهند يوم الثلاثاء المقبل للاحتفال بالذكرى الثلاثين للعلاقات الأمنية بين الهند وكيان العدو، بحسب القناة 12 العبرية.

ستكون زيارة غانتس قبل ثلاثة أيام من زيارة بينت للهند، والتي تم الإعلان عنها قبل أيام قليلة، والتي ستجرى في 2 أبريل وتستغرق ثلاثة أيام.

إعلان غانتس اليوم عن زيارته جاء وسط توترات عميقة بين المكتبين، واتضح أن الزيارتين لم يتم التنسيق بشأنهما بين الاثنين على الإطلاق.

غانتس سيسافر للهند على رأس وفد أمني موسع إلى جانب رئيس “مافات” (مديرية  الأبحاث وتطوير للأسلحة والبنية التحتية التكنولوجية)، ورئيس القسم  الأمني والسياسي في وزارة الجيش، ووفد من كبار الشخصيات في الصناعات الأمنية  “الإسرائيلية”.

من بين أمور أخرى، سيلتقي غانتس مع وزير الدفاع الهندي “راجانات سينغ”، وسيبحث معه تحسين العلاقات الثنائية.

ومن المتوقع أن يلتقي رئيس وزراء العدو نفتالي بينت في زيارته مع رئيس الوزراء الهندي “ناريندرا مودي”.

بالإضافة إلى الاجتماع معه، سيعقد بينت اجتماعات مع كبار المسؤولين الحكوميين الآخرين، كما سيزور الجالية اليهودية في البلاد.

وقال مكتب بينت: “إن الزيارة هي استمرار مباشر للعلاقة المهمة بين الدول والقادة، وستتم بمناسبة الذكرى الثلاثين لإقامة العلاقات بين إسرائيل والهند”.

المصدر: شبكة الهدد الإخبارية

India says ties with China can’t be normal with border tension

India’s foreign minister says ties with China cannot be normal as long as there is a huge deployment of troops along their disputed border.

After a three-hour meeting with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in New Delhi, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar told a news briefing on Friday that frictions and tensions on the border cannot be reconciled with normal relations.

Yi arrived in the city unannounced on Thursday, the most senior Chinese official to visit India since border clashes in the northern Himalayan region of Ladakh in June 2020 led to a sharp deterioration in relations between the Asian giants.

The Chinese top diplomat also met India’s powerful national security adviser, Ajit Doval.

Neither side had announced the visit before Wang landed in New Delhi late on Thursday. Footage from the Reuters’ India partner ANI showed him coming out of the commercial airport rather than the defence facility nearby where most foreign dignitaries land.

Jaishankar noted in a speech on Thursday the deterioration in ties and stressed the importance of the coordination of foreign and defence policies, which he said were “joined at the hip”.

“Few would have anticipated … the turn that India’s relations with China have taken in the last two years,” he said.

“Any prudent policy therefore backs its posture with capabilities and deterrence. A big responsibility of Indian diplomacy, therefore, is to create the widest set of options for such contingencies.”
Wang drew a rebuke from the Indian government ahead of his trip for remarks made in Pakistan this week on the disputed Kashmir region. India and Pakistan rule Muslim-majority Kashmir in part but claim in full, and China has generally stood by its close ally Pakistan.
Relations between China and India worsened after a June 2020 border clash in the Ladakh region of Indian-administered Kashmir killed at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers.

The two sides are expected to talk about the border tension as well as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Both consider Russia a friendly nation and have rejected Western calls to condemn the aggression from Moscow, which it calls a special military operation.

Yi visited Pakistan and Afghanistan this week and was set to fly to Nepal later in the day on a whirlwind tour of South Asia where China is trying to deepen its
influence.

Border tensions

Thousands of Indian troops remain deployed along India’s remote border with China in Ladakh’s Galwan valley in the Himalayas, where hand-to-hand fighting broke out in 2020 – the first deadly encounter between the nuclear-armed neighbours in decades.

Their unmarked 3,500km (2175 miles) long frontier has remained largely peaceful since a border war in 1962, and both countries still claim vast swathes of each other’s territory.

After the Galwan clash, senior officers from the two militaries have held more than a dozen rounds of talks to de-escalate the standoff in Ladakh, but progress has been limited.

Last February, after multiple military talks, Indian and Chinese troops completed a pullout from a lake area in Ladakh. Days later, Wang Yi and Jaishankar agreed to set up a hotline.

Beijing has repeatedly said that the border standoff does not represent the entirety of China-India relations, while New Delhi has maintained that peace along the frontier is essential for the two countries to work together.

New Delhi, however, has numerous other concerns regarding China’s activities in almost all of India’s neighbours.

Aside from the tensions in the Himalayas, India’s mistrust stems from Beijing’s support of old foe Pakistan, the competition for influence in Nepal, and concern over China’s economic clout in Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.

Trade relations

China is India’s largest trading partner, with bilateral trade expanding exponentially since the turn of the century to $95bn in 2021-22.

Trade remains heavily tilted in Beijing’s favour. India’s trade deficit with China is the largest it has with any county, and the imbalance has been steadily widening.

More than 100 Chinese companies operate in India, including state-owned enterprises and electronics manufacturers that have come to dominate India’s mobile phone market.

Since 2020, however, New Delhi has tightened the screws on Chinese players in Asia’s third-largest economy by increasing scrutiny of investments or imports and banning some mobile apps.

The Indian government had previously held up investments worth billions from Beijing, but last week said that approvals for 66 proposals from neighbouring countries – including China – totalling $1.79bn had been approved.
Last month, India also blocked access to dozens of Chinese apps over security concerns, increasing the tally of such restricted mobile apps to more than 300.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

Pakistan PM lauds UN for International Day to Combat Islamophobia

Imran Khan welcomes UNGA’s approval to resolution introduced by Pakistan setting March 15 as the International Day to Combat Islamophobia.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan has welcomed a decision by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) to approve a resolution setting March 15 as the International Day to Combat Islamophobia.

The resolution, adopted on Tuesday by consensus by the 193-member world body and co-sponsored by 55 mainly Muslim countries, emphasises the right to freedom of religion and belief and recalls a 1981 resolution calling for “the elimination of all forms of intolerance and of discrimination based on religion or belief”.
The resolution was introduced by Pakistan on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC). It marks the day when a gunman entered two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, killing 51 people and injuring 40 others.

In a tweet on Tuesday evening, Khan congratulated Muslims around the world “as our voice against the rising tide of Islamophobia has been heard”.

“Today UN has finally recognised the grave challenge confronting the world: of Islamophobia, respect for religious symbols and practices and of curtailing systematic hate speech and discrimination against Muslims,” Khan posted.

“Next challenge is to ensure implementation of this landmark resolution.”
The resolution expresses deep concern at “the overall rise in instances of discrimination, intolerance and violence, regardless of the actors, directed against members of many religions and other communities in various parts of the world, including cases motivated by Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, Christianophobia and prejudices against persons of other religions or beliefs”.
The resolution asks all countries, UN bodies, international and regional organisations, civil society, the private sector, and faith-based organisations “to organise and support various high-visibility events aimed at effectively increasing awareness of all levels about curbing Islamophobia”, and to observe the new International Day to Combat Islamophobia.

Formally introducing the resolution, Pakistan’s UN envoy Munir Akram on Tuesday said Islamophobia has become a “reality” that is “proliferating in several parts of the world”.

“Such acts of discrimination, hostility and violence towards Muslims – individuals and communities – constitute grave violations of their human rights, and violate their freedom of religion and belief,” Akram said in the General Assembly.

“It is particularly alarming these days, for it has emerged as a new form of racism characterised by xenophobia, negative profiling and stereotyping of Muslims.”

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

India in bind over Russian arms amid standoff with China, Pakistan

US sanctions against Russia over its offensive in Ukraine create complications for India whose 60% defence equipment come from Moscow, experts say, while New Delhi is locked in a bitter standoff with Pakistan and its ally China in disputed Kashmir.

India is exploring ways to avoid a major disruption in its supply of Russian-made weaponry amid US sanctions following Moscow’s military campaign in Ukraine, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s tightrope walk could become more difficult due to a continuing border standoff with China and Pakistan.

Experts say up to 60 percent of Indian defence equipment comes from Russia, and New Delhi finds itself in a bind at a time when it is facing a two-year-old standoff with China in eastern Ladakh over a territorial dispute, with tens of thousands of soldiers within shooting distance. Twenty Indian soldiers and four Chinese soldiers died in a clash in 2020.

“The nightmare scenario for India would be if the US comes to the conclusion that it confronts a greater threat from Russia and that this justifies a strategic accommodation with China. In blunt terms, concede Chinese dominance in Asia while safeguarding its European flank,” Shyam Saran, India’s former foreign secretary, wrote in a recent blog post.

Would China, drawing lessons from Ukraine, be an aggressor in disputed eastern Ladakh or in Taiwan?

“It is very possible they might do it,” said Jitendra Nath Misra, a retired diplomat and distinguished fellow in the Jindal School of International Affairs.

President Joe Biden has spoken about unresolved differences with India after the country abstained from voting on United Nations resolutions against Russian aggression in Ukraine. Modi has so far avoided voting against Russia or criticising Putin for Ukraine military offensive.

In the early 1990s, about 70 percent of Indian army weapons, 80 percent of its air force systems and 85 percent of its navy platforms were of Soviet origin. India is now reducing its dependency on Russian arms and diversifying its procurements, buying more from countries like the United States, Israel, France and Italy.

From 2016-20, Russia accounted for nearly 49 percent of India’s defence imports while French and Israeli shares were 18 percent and 13 percent, respectively, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

India not only depends on Russian weaponry, but it also relies hugely on Moscow for military upgrades and modernisation as it moves toward self-reliance in its defence sector, said lieutenant general DS Hooda, a former Indian military commander.

“Russia is the only country that leased a nuclear submarine to India. Will any other country lease India a nuclear submarine?” Hooda asked.

Sushant Singh, a senior fellow at the Center for Policy Research, said: “India’s navy has one aircraft carrier. It’s Russian. India’s bulk of fighter jets and about 90 percent of its battle tanks are Russian.”

India’s air force presently operates more than 410 Soviet and Russian fighters, comprising a mix of imported and license-built platforms. India’s inventory of Russian-made military equipment also includes submarines, tanks, helicopters, submarines, frigates and missiles.

Misra said the US hasn’t shown any willingness to provide technology transfers to India.

“I would like to ask our American friends: What kinds of defence technology have you given us? What the US is offering is the F-16 fighter aircraft rebranded as the F-21. The F-16 is obsolete from the Indian point of view. We went for the Mig-21 in the 1960s because the F-104 was denied to India. We are seeing the same kind of thing,” he said.

“Under the AUKUS agreement, the US is willing to share the nuclear propulsion technology for submarines with Australia but is not willing to share it with India,” he added, referring to the trilateral security pact between the US, UK and Australia.

As the Ukraine crisis deepens, the challenge for India is how to navigate international sanctions against Russia.

The Russian S-400 missile system deal with Moscow has put India at risk of US sanctions after Washington asked its partners to avoid purchasing Russian military equipment. The S-400 is a sophisticated surface-to-air defence system and is expected to give India strategic deterrence against rivals China and Pakistan.

New Delhi has sought support from Washington and its allies in confronting China, a common ground for the Asia-Pacific security alliance known as “the Quad” that also includes Australia and Japan.

Tracing the history of India’s acquisition of Soviet arms, S C S. Bangara, a retired navy admiral, said India began looking for arms and ammunition after its war with China in 1962.

The Cold War resulted in the United States cosying up with China. Pakistan as a facilitator held a trump card that could be used to enlist the complete support of the US government in the event of an India-Pakistan conflict, he said.

During India’s war with Pakistan in December 1971 that led to the creation of Bangladesh, the US deployed a task force led by the USS Enterprise in the Bay of Bengal in support of Pakistan.

In the mid-1960s, India negotiated a series of acquisition agreements with the Soviet Union that continued for the next 40 years, Bangara said.

Even as India diversifies its defence acquisitions, it may take 20 years to get over its dependence on Russian supplies and spares, Bangara said.

China Urges India, Pak to Hold Talks; Conduct ‘Thorough Probe’ Into Accidental Missile Firing

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said that Pakistan and India are important countries in South Asia and they share the responsibility to uphold regional security and stability.

Beijing: China on Monday, March 14, said India and Pakistan should hold a dialogue as soon as possible and launch a thorough investigation into the recent accidental firing of a missile from India which landed in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian, during a media briefing here, said that Pakistan and India are important countries in South Asia and they share the responsibility to uphold regional security and stability.

Asked by a Pakistani journalist about China’s response on the accidental firing of the Indian missile, he said: “We have noted the relevant information.”

“We called on relevant countries to have dialogue and communication as soon as possible and launch a thorough investigation into this incident, strengthen information sharing and establish a notification mechanism in time to ensure the recurrence of such incidents and prevent miscalculation,” Zhao added.

On Friday, the Indian government said it accidentally fired a missile two days back that landed in Pakistan and that the “deeply regrettable” incident was caused by a technical malfunction in the course of its routine maintenance.

India’s defence ministry said that the government has taken a serious view of the incident and ordered a ‘Court of Enquiry’ into it, a day after Pakistan said a high-speed projectile launched from India entered its airspace and fell near Mian Channu in Khanewal district of the Punjab province.

“On March 9, in the course of a routine maintenance, a technical malfunction led to the accidental firing of a missile. The government of India has taken a serious view and ordered a high-level Court of Enquiry.

“It is learnt that the missile landed in an area of Pakistan. While the incident is deeply regrettable, it is also a matter of relief that there has been no loss of life due to the accident,” the Defence Ministry said in a statement.

On Saturday, Pakistan’s Foreign Office (FO) said it was not satisfied with India’s “simplistic explanation” on the “accidental firing” of the missile and demanded a joint probe to accurately establish the facts surrounding the incident.

The FO summoned the Indian Charge d’Affaires and registered its protest over the “unprovoked” violation of its airspace and said that such “irresponsible incidents” reflected India’s “disregard” for air safety.

Pakistan also called upon the international community to take serious notice of this incident of grave nature in a nuclearised environment and play its due role in promoting strategic stability in the region, the FO said.

Though the statement by India’s defence ministry did not specify the name of the missile, the description given by the Pakistan military indicated that it could be a Brahmos missile.

Ties between India and Pakistan nose-dived after a terror attack on the Pathankot Air Force base in 2016 by terror groups based in the neighbouring country. Subsequent attacks, including one on an Indian Army camp in Uri, further deteriorated the relationship.

The relationship deteriorated after India announced withdrawing the special powers of Jammu and Kashmir and bifurcation of the state into two union territories in August, 2019.

India’s move to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir in 2019 outraged Pakistan, which downgraded diplomatic ties and expelled the Indian High Commissioner in Islamabad.

It also snapped all air and land links with India and suspended trade and railway services.
India has said that it desires normal neighbourly relations with Pakistan in an environment free of terror, hostility, and violence. India has said the onus is on Pakistan to create an environment free of terror and hostility.

SOURCE:  The Wire

US recalls cable saying India & UAE ‘in Russia’s camp’

NEW DELHI:  The US State Department has recalled a cable to American diplomats that instructed them to inform counterparts from India and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) their position of neutrality on Ukraine put them “in Russia’s camp”, Axios reported.

The recall of the strongly worded cable indicates either a process error with a fabled and vital work product — or a policy dispute inside the US government involving two key allies.

Diplomatic cables are typically circulated through relevant parties at the State Department and vetted by numerous officials before being cleared for distribution to embassies.

They are the primary ways of communicating internal policy decisions and instructions from “Main State” to diplomats posted abroad, Axios reported.

The cable was blasted to US embassies in the nearly 50 countries represented at the UN Human Rights Council on Monday but recalled on Tuesday afternoon.

“The language in question was never intended for clearance and the cable was released in error, which is why it was recalled,” a State Department spokesperson said on Wednesday.

“The inquiry was not the reason for the recall,” the spokesperson said.

The cable, rated sensitive but unclassified, suggested some frank language for US diplomats to use to try to persuade India and the UAE to change their positions, Axios reported.

“Continuing to call for dialogue, as you have been doing in the Security Council, is not a stance of neutrality; it places you in Russia’s camp, the aggressor in this conflict,” said draft talking points in the cable, a template for conversations with Indian and Emirati diplomats.

“We strongly encourage you to take the opportunity to support Ukraine in the UNHRC, an opportunity you failed to seize in the UNSC.” -IANS

SOURCE:

الرقابة تلقي بظلالها على الحرية الرقمية في الهند (تقرير)

بانقطاعات متكررة ورقابة مفرطة، تخضع الحرية الرقمية في الهند لمزيد من القيود، رغم مبادرة الحكومة الحالية بتوسيع البصمة الرقمية في البلاد.

وفي 12 مارس/آذار من كل عام، تحتفل منظمة “مراسلون بلا حدود” باليوم العالمي لمكافحة الرقابة الإلكترونية.

وفي تصريح للأناضول، قالت جيتا سيسو، المؤسس المشارك لمؤسسة “FreeSpeech Collective” المناصرة لحرية التعبير (مقرها نيودلهي)، إن قطع الإنترنت في الهند عادة ما يُفرض “لأسباب سخيفة”.

وأضافت سيسو: “تم قطع الإنترنت في أجزاء من ولاية غرب البنغال (شمالي الهند) قبل يومين، للحد من الغش في الامتحانات المدرسية (..) اللوائح المفرطة والرقابة تؤثر على الحريات الرقمية في البلاد”.

وتصف سيسو عمليات قطع الإنترنت في الهند بـ”التعسفية”، لأنها لا تتبع أي قواعد قانونية، وتبدو في ظاهرها كإجراء لمعالجة قضايا تتعلق بالنظام والقانون، لكنها في الواقع يتم استخدامها لإحكام الرقابة على المواطنين.

وتعليقا على قطع الإنترنت في مقاطعة جامو وكشمير، قالت سيسو: “الإغلاق غير المسبوق لجميع الاتصالات في كشمير عشية إلغاء المادة 370 في أغسطس/آب 2019، أدى إلى تعتيم إعلامي وشلل لجميع وسائل الإعلام”.

ووفق بحث أجرته شركة أبحاث الخصوصية والأمن “Top10VPN” (مقرها المملكة المتحدة)، عانت الهند من أكبر تأثير اقتصادي في العالم في عام 2020 بسبب قطع الإنترنت.

وكلف قطع الإنترنت، وإغلاق منصات التواصل الاجتماعي، وتقييد سرعة الإنترنت من قبل الحكومات، الاقتصاد العالمي 5.5 مليار دولار في عام 2021، وفق بيانات الشركة ذاتها.

وبحسب تقرير للجنة برلمانية هندية، يخسر مشغلو الاتصالات في الهند 24.5 مليون روبية (حوالي 321 ألف دولار) في الساعة بكل منطقة يتم فيها قطع الإنترنت أو تقييد سرعته.

وتُظهر سجلات موقع “متتبع إغلاق الإنترنت” في الهند أنه منذ عام 2012، شهدت البلاد أكثر من 500 عملية قطع للإنترنت، وأن أعلى معدل لقطع الانترنت تم بين عامي 2018 و2020.

** الأمية الرقمية

ودعت سيسو، إلى ضرورة تعزيز الوعي الإلكتروني ومحو الأمية الرقمية، للتعامل مع قضايا مثل تزييف الأخبار والتي غالباً ما تكون السبب وراء قطع الحكومة للإنترنت.

وأضافت: “الدولة الديمقراطية الناضجة، عليها أن تثق في مواطنيها وتكسبهم الثقة بأنفسهم حيال هذه القضايا، بدلاً من أن تتركهم في تعتيم إعلامي”.

فيما قالت تورشا ساركار، باحثة القانون والسياسة التكنولوجية في “مركز الإنترنت والمجتمع” للأناضول، إنه في الوقت الذي تتزايد فيه عمليات قطع الإنترنت بالهند، فإن هناك بعض التطورات المهمة التي تستحق الاهتمام.

ودعت اللجنة البرلمانية الدائمة لتكنولوجيا المعلومات في الهند، في تقرير حمل عنوان “تعليق خدمات الاتصالات والإنترنت وتأثيراتها”، إلى تحديد المعايير وإنشاء آليات قوية لعملية قطع الإنترنت.

وقالت ساركار إن “القانون الحالي المتعلق بقطع الإنترنت تم الطعن عليه أمام محكمة جواهاتي العليا (..) التطورات بعد هذا القرار سيكون لها تأثير كبير على حالات قطع الإنترنت في الهند”.

وأوضحت: “قطع الإنترنت يؤثر على الشركات والعاملين في الوظائف المؤقتة الذين يعتمدون في عملهم على الإنترنت، والطلاب لا سيما أثناء تطبيق الدراسة عن بُعد عقب تفشي وباء كورونا بالعالم”.

كما دعا غورشاباد جروفر، باحث مستقل في مجال الإنترنت، إلى إجراء مراجعة قضائية شاملة، قبل تنفيذ أي عملية قطع للإنترنت.

وأكد جروفر للأناضول، أن المراجعات القضائية من شأنها تقليل وتيرة قطع الانترنت في الهند.

وتؤكد الحكومة الهندية أن أوامر الإغلاق للإنترنت تصدر بسبب حالة الطوارئ أو السلامة العامة في البلاد.

كما قالت وزارة الاتصالات الهندية، في مخاطبة للبرلمان، إن حكومات الولايات المسؤولة عن النظام العام، تعلق خدمات الاتصالات “للحفاظ على السلامة العامة”.

المصدر:

أحمد عادل/ الأناضول-

Anti-Muslim sentiment spreading in Asia at alarming pace — seminar

Experts at a two-day seminar in Istanbul expressed concerns about the worsening conditions of Muslims in Asia, with India and Myanmar being the two glaring examples of violence against Muslims being normalised.
Political leaders in Asia are exacerbating the problem of anti-Muslim sentiment by giving incendiary speeches for electoral gains, said Hassan Abdein, head of Muslim and Minorities department at OIC, at a two-day international seminar on Muslims and human rights in Istanbul.

Abdein said Asia is capitalism’s new home, and despite it being far more diverse than elsewhere, hosting hundreds of ethnic peoples, it is suffering from dark electoral populism, one of the exploitative effects of globalisation.

Under the garb of national security, he added, Muslims are being targeted and criminalised across the continent.

“Both in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, we see one particular group mobilising hate speech,” said Abdein, referring to Buddhist monks who have openly given calls of genocide against Muslims.

The academic said that since Buddhists have become a minority in the Hindu dominated subcontinent, they have engineered the narratives of victimhood to mobilise Buddhist populations in Buddhist-majority countries like Myanmar and Sri Lanka.

Abdein urged the audience to find ways to stand against this religious warfare, as ignoring anti-Muslims sentiment will only provide aggressors with more space and opportunity.

We need to celebrate the leadership that took concrete steps after the Christchurch Attack, Abdein said. He also applauded the Emergency Meeting held in Istanbul in 2019 to discuss the terrorist attack on the two mosques in New Zealand.

Ambassador Zamir Akram, Former Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan to the UN, said that despite more than 200 million Muslims living in India, a version of fascism is taking place at the hands of Hindutva.

Millions of Muslims are suffering from religious and racial discrimination, ethnic cleansing, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and even genocide.

An esteemed panel of experts, diplomats, community leaders, and activists addressed “The Situation of Muslims in Asia” at the two-day seminar on human rights violations faced by Muslims in Istanbul, February 16-17 2022.

Explaining that the Modi government has been “seducing India on the basis of hate and envy when it comes to Muslims”, Ambassador Zamir said Muslims are facing problems on the pretext of “the slaughter of cows and eating beef, marrying Hindus”, while “attacks on mosques, forced conversion to Hinduism, removal of Muslim names from streets, sale of Muslim women on mobile apps and open call for genocide against Muslims” have been normalised in the country’s national discourse.

Zamir said that the Modi government is using the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) as a weapon to disenfranchise the Indian Muslims and force them out of the country.

Although the largest Muslim population is living in Asia, Muslims suffer from social and economic discrimination, and in some Asian countries like Myanmar and India, there is an escalating trend of systemic targeting of Muslim communities, said El Habib Bourane, Director of Muslim Communities and Minorities of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

Habib said the OIC has been engaging in constructive dialogue with China for the past three years about the Uighur and Kazakh and Uzbek Muslim minorities.

Explaining that the Uighur’s are not left alone in their plight, Habib also urged the OIC member states to build consensus on specific issues.

“The OIC delegations have visited the region twice to understand what is really going on. Until now, the UN has not been allowed to visit the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China,” said Habib, highlighting the importance of building on this dialogue.

Habib also highlighted the OIC’s efforts in Myanmar during the past 20 years, and the steps they have taken, together with the UN and European Union, to advocate for the Rohingya Muslims’ cause.

“Myanmar must fully comply with the provisional measures issued by the International Court of Justice,” Habib said, referring to the case of genocide brought against Myanmar by The Gambia at the UN court.

The people of Rohingya have been suffering for almost half a century now, said Reza Uddin, the Chairman of the Human Rights Committee and Council Member of the Arakan Rohingya Union.

“Restriction on religion, marriage, land ownership, deprivation from education and health, gang rape and human trafficking… all these violations are a blueprint of genocide,” he added.

Reza pointed out that Myanmar has been killing hundreds of their own people since the military overthrew the democratically elected government on February 1 2021. This is partly because of the government’s tendency to comply with the International Court of Justice’s ruling on the Rohingya case.

Why do we need to talk about Kashmir?

“Kashmir was known as the paradise in the world, renowned for its extraordinary beauty, but has become a hell for its people,” said Syed Ghulam Nabi Fai, Secretary-General of the World Kashmir Awareness Forum. He described Kashmir as “the most beautiful prison on earth.”

“Today Gregory H Stanton, the founder and president of Genocide Watch, warns that Kashmir is on the brink of a genocide,” Fai said.

Fai said Modi’s rhetoric on foreign tours is entirely out of step with the reality in India. Giving an example from Modi’s 2019 visit to Texas, Fai said Modi lied to the American people by calling India the world’s “largest democracy”, whilst the headlines from places like Kashmir tell a different story.

Fai gave an example of an article titled “As Kashmir Is Erased, Indian Democracy Dies In Silence”, published by The Huffington Post when Kashmir was under a strict military curfew.

Fai said the human rights situation has deteriorated to dangerous levels in the disputed region, referring to restrictions on freedom of speech under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), a draconian law used by the Indian state against civilians, especially journalists and human rights activists.

The UAPA legislation allows the Indian government to jail an individual for six months without a trial or bail, stonewalling any judicial intervention. The state often justifies the UAPA by saying the law is used to “prevent terror-related activities, unlawful associations, and activities that may endanger the sovereignty and integrity of India.”

The UN has said that the UAPA utilises “imprecise criteria, contains a vague and overly broad definition of ‘terrorist act’, allows people to be held in lengthy pre-trial detention and makes securing bail very difficult,” and that the UAPA does not meet international human rights standards.

Khurram Parvez, a well-known human rights activist from Kashmir, was arrested on November 22 2021, under the draconian UAPA. Mary Lawlor, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders, called Parvez’s arrest “disturbing.”

Fai said the news media in Kashmir has been brought to extinction in order to silence dissent, urging the OIC members to initiate a solution. He also demanded the immediate release of political prisoners and the protection of the Kashmiri people before a full-scale genocide takes place.

SOURCE: TRT World

الصين وباكستان تحثان العالم على تجنيب أفغانستان “كارثة إنسانية”

رئيس الوزراء الباكستاني والرئيس الصيني أكدا أن إحلال السلام والاستقرار في أفغانستان من شأنه تعزيز التنمية الاقتصادية والتواصل في المنطقة

إسلام أباد / الأناضول

دعت الصين وباكستان، الأحد، المجتمع الدولي إلى مساعدة الشعب الأفغاني بصورة بعاجلة وتجنب “كارثة إنسانية” في أفغانستان.

جاء ذلك خلال لقاء جمع رئيس الوزراء الباكستاني، عمران خان، اليوم، مع الرئيس الصيني شي جينبينغ، في العاصمة الصينية بكين، بحثا خلاله جملة من القضايا ومنها الأمن الإقليمي والتعاون الاقتصادي.

وذكر مكتب رئيس الوزراء الباكستاني، في بيان أن هذا أول لقاء يجري بين الزعيمين منذ زيارة خان إلى الصين في أكتوبر/ تشرين الأول عام 2019، حيث يزور خان الصين، منذ الخميس لحضور افتتاحية الألعاب الأولمبية الشتوية لعام 2022.

وجاء في البيان، أن كلا الزعيمين أكدا على أن إحلال “السلام والاستقرار” في أفغانستان من شأنه تعزيز التنمية الاقتصادية والتواصل في المنطقة.

وحثا المجتمع الدولي على مساعدة الشعب الأفغاني على وجه السرعة وتجنب “كارثة إنسانية” في البلد الذي مزقته الحرب.

ووفق البيان “استعرض الزعيمان سلسلة كاملة من التعاون الثنائي الباكستاني الصيني، وتبادلا في جو ودي وجهات النظر حول القضايا الإقليمية والعالمية ذات الاهتمام المشترك”.

وأضاف أن “الشراكة التعاونية الاستراتيجية في جميع الأحوال بين باكستان والصين صمدت أمام اختبارات العصر ووقفت الدولتان بحزم جنبًا إلى جنب في تحقيق رؤيتهما وتطلعاتهما المشتركة للسلام والاستقرار والتنمية والازدهار”.

وأشاد خان بدعم الصين المستمر ومساعدتها للتنمية الاجتماعية والاقتصادية في باكستان، “التي استفادت بشكل كبير من التنمية عالية الجودة لمشروع الممر الاقتصادي الصيني الباكستاني (CPEC) الذي تبلغ تكلفته مليارات الدولارات”.

كما رحب بزيادة الاستثمارات الصينية في المرحلة الثانية من الممر الاقتصادي، والتي تركز على التصنيع وتحسين سبل عيش السكان.

كما تطرق خان إلى “الفظائع التي ترتكبها نيودلهي بحق مسلمي كشمير في جامو وكشمير”.

وقال إن “الفظائع التي تُرتكب” في الجزء الخاضع للإدارة الهندية من كشمير” ويطلق عليها جامو وكشمير، إلى جانب “اضطهاد الأقليات في الهند” تشكل “تهديدًا للسلام والاستقرار الإقليميين”، بحسب بيان رئاسة الوزراء الباكستانية.

وختم البيان بتأكيد خان مجددًا على دعم باكستان الكامل للصين في جميع القضايا التي تمس “مصلحتها الجوهرية”، وجدد دعوته الرئيس الصيني لزيارة باكستان.

المصدر: وكالة الأناضول

“التعاون الإسلامي” تدين اعتداءات إسرائيل بحق حي “الشيخ جراح”

وتحث الهند على وقف الاعتداءات المستمرة التي تستهدف المسلمين وأماكن عبادتهم، وتقديم المحرضين ومرتكبي أعمال العنف وجرائم الكراهية ضدهم إلى العدالة.


أدانت منظمة التعاون الإسلامي، الإثنين، الاعتداءات الإسرائيلية على الفلسطينيين في حي الشيخ جراح في مدينة القدس المحتلة.

وأفادت المنظمة في بيان، بأنها “تدين بشدة الاعتداءات الإسرائيلية ضد الفلسطينيين ومحاولة الاستيلاء على منازلهم في حي الشيخ جراح”، مؤكدة أن ذلك “انتهاك صارخ للقانون الدولي”.

وحذرت من خطورة تلك السياسيات الإسرائيلية، داعية المجتمع الدولي إلى التدخل الفوري لتوفير الحماية الدولية للشعب الفلسطيني.

وشهد حي الشيخ جراح في القدس توترا أسفر، الأحد، عن إصابة 31 فلسطينيا واعتقال 12، جراء ممارسات المستوطنين وقوات الشرطة الإسرائيلية.

في سياق آخر، أعربت المنظمة في بيان ثان، عن “قلقها العميق إزاء استمرار الاعتداءات ضد المسلمين في الهند”.

وأشارت إلى “دعوات للإبادة الجماعية للمسلمين بولاية أوتارخاند وتقارير تفيد بوقوع حوادث مضايقات للمسلمات بمواقع التواصل ومنع الطالبات من ارتداء الحجاب في كارناتاكا”.

وحثت المنظمة الهند لـ”تقديم المحرضين ومرتكبي أعمال العنف وجرائم الكراهية للعدالة، داعية لمجتمع الدولي لاتخاذ التدابير اللازمة.

وفي 10 فبراير/ شباط الجاري، استدعت باكستان القائم بالأعمال الهندي في إسلام أباد، سوريش كومار، على خلفية منع طالبات من حضور فصولهن الدراسية في بعض الكليات الهندية لارتدائهن الحجاب، وسط احتجاجات بالهند وباكستان.

المصدر: وكالة الأناضول