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Archives for February 2010

India and Pakistan: an eternal stalemate?

Soutik Biswas | 16:15 UK time, Friday, 26 February 2010

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Pakistan paper headlinesThere is no place for miracles when it comes to dialogue between India and Pakistan. Even modest breakthroughs in resolving disputes have eluded the neighbours. So the media have been predictably jaded about the between the two sides since the 2008 Mumbai (Bombay) attacks.

The Indian papers , but held out a tiny glimmer of hope. Some spoke about the two countries breaking the ice though the "chill remains".

The headlines were predictable: about talks which were essentially about talking more. "Talks to go on," was one headline. One report actually echoed what I had been telling colleagues - the two sides were like an "estranged couple nudged into another rapprochement bid."

That is how exciting India-Pakistan talks can get these days.

But I have been struck by the feeling of hopelessness and cynicism on the front pages of Pakistani newspapers following the talks. "Meaningless talks end in meaningless way," headlined . "Delhi's double talk derails dialogue," was another , virtually writing off any hopes for the future. "Vague promises to stay in touch," was the assessment of one influential publication. The cheeriest among them was: "Pakistan, India fail to break logjam on peace process."

The mood was more conciliatory elsewhere. Indian Foreign Minister SM Krishna told the parliament that the talks marked an "encouraging step towards restoring dialogue." And Pakistan foreign secretary Salman Bashir said talks were "exploratory" and "cannot be judged on the basis of success and failure." They are both correct.

Both countries know the odds of failure are high - and there are a disconcertingly large number of people in India who believe there is no use in talking to Pakistan any more. They believe Pakistan is playing a duplicitous game when it comes to taking on anti-India militant groups on its soil. Pakistan denies the allegation - one paper today said: "We suffer many, many hundred of Mumbais."

But if Pakistan's headlines offer any clues to a downbeat public mood there, it also appears that there was some expectation and a desire to break some ground in these talks. But there is a lot of bad blood on both sides. And as commentator Stephen Cohen once wryly said, "stalemate seems to be more attractive to each side than finding a solution."

It is a tragic stalemate. But we all live in hope. I would be interested in finding out whether readers of this blog - including Indians and Pakistanis - share the gloom of their media about the future of talks.

How does Sachin Tendulkar do it?

Soutik Biswas | 13:14 UK time, Wednesday, 24 February 2010

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Sachin Tendulkar after his world record innings in Gwalior, IndiaHow does do it? How does a 36-year-old cricketer stay at the top of the game for 20 years? How does he retain this insatiable hunger for achievement after scoring more than 30,000 runs in the long (Test) and shorter (50 over) versions of the game?

Cricket fans are asking these questions again after Tendulkar by firing the first double century in one-day internationals.

It was an unbelievable innings of brutal finesse - he smacked 25 fours and three sixes and batted just 147 balls to score 200. He simply toyed with South Africa's formidable bowlers.

"Take a bow master!", "You little champion!", gasped the commentators as Tendulkar walked back to the pavilion and the crowds went delirious.

"If anybody is deserving of this feat, it is Tendulkar and nobody else," gushed another commentator, and then ran out of words.

You are indeed lost for words trying to explain the genius, elegance and sheer power of one of the greatest cricketers ever born, but more so after his breathtaking display at Gwalior on Wednesday.

I think the best tribute to Tendulkar's genius came from former cricketer and present day guru of cricket writing

"Viv Richards could terrorise an attack with pitiless brutality, Lara could dissect bowlers with surgical and magical strokes, Tendulkar can take an attack apart with towering simplicity. From the start he had an uncanny way of executing his strokes perfectly. Tendulkar was born to bat," he once wrote.

Tendulkar is India's biggest icon and proudest possession - I remember the rising crescendo of noise when he walked up to receive an award in a stadium filled to the brim in Mumbai two years ago. There were other cricket and Bollywood stars being feted that evening. Nobody could match the reception that Tendulkar got.

If you want to know how difficult it has been for Tendulkar to become the greatest cricketer India has ever had, listen to Roebuck again:

"The runs, the majesty, the thrills, do not capture his achievement. Reflect upon his circumstances and then marvel at his feat. Here is a man obliged to put on disguises so that he can move around the streets, a fellow able to drive his cars only in the dead of night for fear of creating a commotion, a father forced to take his family to Iceland on holiday, a person whose entire adult life has been lived in the eye of a storm."

It has been an incredible journey for this magician of cricket. And he is still pulling off new tricks and hitting fresh milestones. How does he do it?

Kerala's marvelous mud haven

Soutik Biswas | 16:13 UK time, Monday, 22 February 2010

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Wayanad mud resort is in fine fettle. As I travel north from brooding capital, Trivandrum, into more salubrious country my spirits lift. I drive past rustling coconut palms, simple homes, derelict madrassas and Communist party and Muslim League flags fluttering in the breeze. Women in designer burqas emerge from the mist. My car wheezes up the steep hill past the red and yellow passenger buses which merrily rattle down in the opposite direction. An empty bus topples into a deep gorge minutes after I negotiate the road, and both the driver and his assistant survive. All is well.

The air smells sweet in the sublime heart of Malabar country. Invest in Wayanad billboards promising ugly apartment blocks now dot the roads - rapacious real estate agents are threatening to invade this unmolested oasis. Poky shops selling honey, cardamom, tea, cashew nuts, figs and coffee line the narrow ribbon of tar.

Then, in the dappled light, I see her standing there.

A mud haven - India's only "earth" and possibly the largest of its kind in Asia - nestling in 35 acres of greenery stacked with pepper, coffee and tea plantations and ponds. The 20,000 sq ft two-storey structure in the Banasura hills is made entirely out of mud with bamboo and coconut palm leaf roofs: a paean to Mother Earth.

The 31-room resort is the result of talent and ingenuity. It is owned by a Virginia-based software engineer from Kerala, whose company straddles two continents. Shankar Thiruvillakat initially thought of setting the place up as a getaway for his employees. But fired by the imagination of , one of India's best known architects who works with traditional building technologies and is an enthusiast for mud buildings, it became an audacious architectural marvel.

Mr Pandala got his workers to scoop up mud from the site and used it to build the structure. Earth is immensely malleable, the softly-spoken, award-winning architect tells me. It can be moulded, shaped and pressed when wet. It hardens when exposed to sun, making it a durable building material. In this case, Mr Pandala used a mere 5% cement as an additive.Wayanad mud resort

When most of India's architects are designing energy-guzzling glass and chrome buildings that are supposed to mark the arrival of a new India, Mr Pandala offers a different vision - the Wayanad earth resort is elegant and utterly modern. Tourists have begun trooping in already.

"There are traditional mud buildings in India which date back to 100 years.They are still standing strong. We lost our "mud consciousness" in the last half century. It is time to revive it," says Mr Pandala, taking me around the place. He is doing his bit, building mud monuments and buildings and green projects for tsunami survivors. But the resort in Wayanad is a crowning achievement.

I come away with the feeling that if we only had more architects like Mr Pandala and sensitive entrepreneurs like Mr Shankar, India's architectural look could be so different. Mr Pandala's creation is a glorious return to tradition, deftly adapted to modern-day needs.

The thought hits me as I leave the departure hall of the airport in to catch my flight to Delhi. I get up from a hideous looking chair, and walk past a miserable aphrodisiac advert to step out into the tarmac. Wayanad's mud haven already seems like a dream.

Why India and Pakistan must talk

Soutik Biswas | 01:17 UK time, Wednesday, 17 February 2010

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Indian and Pakistani soldier at a ceremony at the Wagah border"You don't have to fall in love to be a good neighbour; in fact romance can have harmful side-effects," says Indian analyst about India and Pakistan. "But good neighbours do not pelt each other with stones (through media) or test nerves with sniper fire during their waking hours."

Unfortunately, this is easier said than done. India and Pakistan are not two ordinary sparring neighbours - they are nuclear-armed estranged siblings with a of three wars, brinkmanship and endless sniping.

Also, South Asia's defining conflict is rooted in religious differences and struggle for control over the disputed region of Kashmir. It is also an example, as says, of a "psychological paired-minority conflict" where key groups on both sides - even a majority - feel that they are the threatened, weaker party, under attack from the other side. The dispute is as knotty and intractable as that between Israel and some of its Arab neighbours. It is also energised by plenty of hate and distrust, some of it rather petty.

So a militant strike on Indian soil originating from Pakistan like the 2008 makes it difficult for any Indian government to hold back from spewing fire and brimstone on its neighbour and continue negotiations. And stones have to be pelted at each other through the media to satisfy tired domestic constituencies in both countries. It is all cheap triumphalism, and does little to mend fences.

Still the decision of the two countries to - the peace process has been in the cold storage since the Mumbai attacks - on 25 February is to be welcomed. Both sides know it is not going to be easy. Expectations are low. There are severe misgivings. India is not happy with the progress that Pakistan has made on cracking down on militants who plot and launch attacks on India. Pakistan believes it is doing all it can in its fight against the tyranny of terror on its own soil.

In fact, it appears that India took Pakistan by surprise when it offered talks earlier this month - the influential Pakistani newspaper found the offer surprising since India had indicated a willingness to move beyond the "one-point agenda it has clung to since the Mumbai attacks i.e. that Pakistan must shut down the terror infrastructure on its soil that allegedly poses a direct threat to India." Few will disagree with what the newspaper said next: "Looked at from any angle, the problems between India and Pakistan are simply too serious for them to avoid talking to each other."Demonstration against Pakistan in India

Analysts often pontificate on how the peace constituencies - people wanting peace - in both countries have grown over the years. After all, a lot of people on both sides share the same language, food, music, cinema, and literature. But such heady exchanges - a virtual cross-border cultural sponsored by two newspapers was in progress in Delhi when India offered talks - are no substitute for serious, official interaction. Romanticising the shared cultural and personal ties, many believe, will not help in solving the real problems. They also cut no ice with the vast majority of Indians and Pakistanis.

Everybody knows that there is obduracy and denial on both sides in taking on the real issues. Everybody knows that there is a deficit of bold and innovative leadership. And as far as the so-called peace constituencies go, all it needs is another Mumbai type attack to return to the odious rhetoric of hate and risky hostilities. Already, naysayers in India have been pointing to the at a bakery in Pune over the weekend as a good reason to call off the talks.

But talk the two countries must for their own good.

So are the talks going to be an exercise in limited engagement over reining in India-hating militants in Pakistan? It is difficult to see Pakistan agreeing to that. Or will there be a slow return to the 'composite dialogue' on eight main issues bedevilling relations? It is surely going to a tight rope walk for India here.

Pakistani analyst Hasam Askari has warned that a one-dimensional dialogue over terror would result into a "non-starter." He says: "There will be no result if India talks about terrorism and Pakistan talks about its concerns [over India's strategic involvement] in Afghanistan. There has to be composite dialogue and terrorism is one of the eight issues."

Hawks in India say that the government has succumbed to international pressures to resume talks - there is a lot of talk in Delhi that the international community wants India to engage with Pakistan to help bring regional stability. Most agree that there are no short cuts to peace in a region which Bill Clinton once called the "most dangerous place in the world." But not talking doesn't help matters - especially between petulant neighbours like India and Pakistan.


Why doesn't Bollywood take a stand?

Soutik Biswas | 10:43 UK time, Monday, 8 February 2010

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Shah Rukh Khan's poster being burnt by Shiv Sena supportersWhy is Bollywood so ineffectual? Why don't its leading lights stand up and protest when one of their own (megastar Shah Rukh Khan, no less) is by a local right-wing group (Shiv Sena)?

One reason is that Bollywood - or most commercial Hindi language cinema - is largely estranged from the realities of modern-day India. They reside in a strange, make-believe, ersatz wonderland and, as Suketu Mehta says, "disbelief is easy to suspend in a land where belief is so rampant and vigorous".

There was a time when the films, even in their song-and-dance idiom, tried to engage with Indian society, and glorified the underdog hero. Since the liberalisation of the Indian economy, Bollywood's divorce from contemporary realities has been complete. Pretty-looking films with prettier faces, lilting songs and noisy soundtracks shot on foreign locations are good "timepass" - as they say in India - for most audiences. And the "diaspora film" is partly to blame for killing the industry's imagination. "The diaspora," says Mehta, "wants to see an urban, affluent, glossy India, the India they imagine they grew up in and wish they could live in now." The result, in my view, is some of the most mindless and regressive cinema to be produced anywhere in the world.

But now the fans in India are beginning to feel cheated. A movie-mad policeman in Mumbai lamented to me recently that "Scotland Yard detectives and police commissioners are the ones solving crimes and grabbing all the attention" in Bollywood movies these days. "When I was growing up in the 1970s, the constable and the chief of the local police station were valued," he said.

And when Bollywood attempts to wrestle with contemporary issues - like the plight of Muslims after 9/11 - the results can be embarrassingly naïve and comical. A recent film had a dashing teacher of Islam falling in love with a svelte student - both roles played by reigning stars - and then moving to the US where the girl discovers that her young professor is actually a terrorist. What could have been a gripping film becomes vapid and silly - the professor, for example, is shown teaching a class full of white, American students in an American university in Hindi. As sociologist tells me: "Bollywood is mythical, not historical. It works at the level of the myth. There is no engagement with history."

Another friend and film writer says Bollywood is alienated from realities because it is "essentially an industry of shopkeepers trying to sell their products at any cost". The film, he says, is just another commodity. And the film makers and performers are unapologetic about their offerings - their definition of cinema begins and ends with formulaic entertainment. A Bollywood film

Things are changing slowly though. After half a century of making escapist fun which has offered millions of Indians some of the best entertainment they have had in their dreary lives, Bollywood is now giving space to a small group of young, impressionable filmmakers who have begun serving up intelligent and entertaining mainstream cinema. But Bollywood is still a long way from making, say, a cracking good political thriller. So forget about a or from the industry anytime in the near future.

Hollywood is also profit-seeking and its offerings can be riddled with cliches. But some of it's best-known names have taken courageous stands over issues that have divided the nation. went ahead with the release of his controversial inspite of protests from religious communities even before the film was released. took a firm stand against the Iraq war, travelled there and wrote a series of engaging pieces. The Vietnam war was reflected in Hollywood - remember , or In contrast, Bollywood's last successful contribution inspired by the India-Pakistan rivalry was an abominable jingoistic hit.

So, muzzling Bollywood has never been difficult. Maverick filmmaker has said in the past that a "filmmaker is a vulnerable animal, especially when his film inches towards release. You can blackmail and make him kneel down." Bhatt should know: he resisted demands for cuts in his 1998 film (Wound). But most other filmmakers have kowtowed to the Shiv Sena, the self-appointed cultural police of Mumbai. , one of the top directors, organised a special screening of his film - a love story set against the backdrop of the 1993 religious rioting in the city - for the Sena leader Bal Thackeray even after the censor board had approved the film's release. , a filmmaker who showed early promise, showed Mr Thackeray two of his films before release.

So is it any surprise that ageing superstar publicly declares his allegiance to Mr Thackeray, who rebukes Shah Rukh Khan for supporting the inclusion of Pakistani players in a cricket auction (even though Khan's own team did not sign any)? Is it any surprise that Mr Bachchan's son, a star himself, tells a reporter that he believes that "arts and culture should be above politics"? When Khan refused to retract his support for Pakistani players and defied Mr Thackeray, he became an accidental hero in an industry which has no opinion.

The perils of chauvinism

Soutik Biswas | 09:03 UK time, Wednesday, 3 February 2010

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Shiv Sena supportersArticles 19d and 19e of the Indian constitution give its citizens the right to move freely and reside anywhere in the country. But 62 years after independence, India is in the grip of a tedious over this inalienable fundamental right.

Provoking this specious and dangerous discourse, again, is the Mumbai (Bombay)-based right-wing Hindu fundamentalist party . It recently said that Marathi-speaking people - the indigenous people of Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital - should get first preference for jobs.

There is always a sense of déjà vu when the Shiv Sena rakes up the issue. The party was set up by a firebrand ex-cartoonist with a liking for Cohibas cigars in the mid-1960s on the back of a "sons of the soil" movement. and his men targeted the south Indian migrants and the Communists in the city in their early days. During the high noon of radical Hindu nationalism in the 1990s, they railed against Muslims. The transmogrification of Shiv Sena into a Hindu nationalist force even gave it a brief national profile when it became part of the BJP-led federal government in 1999.

With radical Hinduism finding fewer takers - Indians have repeatedly demonstrated that they want to live in peace despite the country's nettlesome right wing groups - these days the Shiv Sena is back to square one, raising the abhorrent spectre of the "son of the soil" in India's most economically energetic city. To complicate matters, its nativist agenda has now been hijacked by Mr Thackeray's estranged nephew, Raj, who from the party to form Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, which is essentially Shiv Sena Lite, appealing to a section of the indigenous Marathi people of Mumbai.

The Sena is now reduced to on Valentine's Day as it "defiles" Indian culture, whatever that means, railing against Australian cricketers to protest at attacks on Indians in Australia, and showering invective at Pakistani cricketers for daring to sign up for the Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket tournament. Many analysts believe that this is the sign of a party which has run out of ideas and steam.Shiv Sena slogan in Mumbai

This game of competitive chauvinism - between Mr Thackeray and his nephew - does not please or reflect the sentiments of most residents of Mumbai and India. But it gets disproportionate media coverage. Chauvinists and demagogues thrive in India largely because of the importance the media accords them. They are also astute in manipulating the thrill-seeking news TV by attacking women's bars, vandalising shops selling Valentine's Day cards, and thrashing poor migrant workers. With such saturation coverage, people begin to believe in the myth of the power of petty demagoguery.

India has huge and seriously daunting problems to attend to. Instead, much precious time is spent debating things like whether people should be allowed to live and work anywhere they choose or whether a Bollywood star's film should bebecause the star - in this case, Shah Rukh Khan - expresses his dismay that Pakistani cricketers were not signed at the controversial IPL auction. In any open society, free movement and free speech are non-negotiable positions guaranteed by the rule of law. It is the job of the police to bring to book the vandals - political or otherwise - who break the laws. The media and political leaders could maybe concentrate on matters of greater substance.

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