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Point Abid
Ullah Jan
Struggle
for self rule & reparations
“Why don´t you go back to your country” has become a typical
response to any non-Westerner, who lives in the West but continues to criticize
the Western governments´ double standards, outright lies and continuing
massacre for consolidating occupations.
Many prominent “scholars” now use this sarcastic, childish remark
in a way as if approving modern-day barbarism is a prerequisite to living in
the West. However, this is a sign of the defeatist mentality, not an argument
that may exonerate modern day barbarians.
Apparently, it may seem that the suffering part of the humanity is manipulating
elite nations´ good intentions and concerns for human rights simply
to secure living in the West. There is no doubt that millions of people cheat
one way or the other to reach and stay in the Western countries. However, it
is wrong to assume that the Western nations are victims of their respect for
human rights or lax immigration policies.
Undoubtedly, Western countries allow immigrants and provide protection to thousands
of asylum seekers each year. Nevertheless, they are victim only of their double
standards for human rights and their past and present deadly interventions
in the less developed countries. The West is directly responsible for these
states´
low standard of development, political instability and inability to stem the
tides of migrants to the West.
Provide Palestinians and Algerians, for instance, with real justice and the West
would not need to house many refugees out of its human rights concerns. But as
long as dictators like Musharraf and Mubarak are officially welcomed at the highest
levels, accommodating their victims at lower level must not be taken as a manipulation
of good intentions.
In the case of genuine asylum seekers and legal immigrants, the West is behind
sustaining repressive governments and lack of opportunities respectively in their
respective countries. In the case of fake asylum seekers and illegal immigrants,
the West is responsible for the compounding problems in these countries.
Of course, China, Germany and Japan are good examples of discipline and responsibility,
which took these nations from ashes to the most stable positions. That, however,
is not the case with many former colonies — particularly Muslim countries,
where the masses never get relief from the yoke of indirect occupation and
continued interventions of their former colonial masters.
No one leaves home to live in the West simply for the values and ideals that
the West cherishes for itself. Critics of the West continue to live in the West
not because of its professed ideals and values, but because of its sponsoring
the denial of these values and opportunities in other lands. If all are not genuine
asylum seekers, most of the legal and illegal immigrants to the West are definitely
economic refugees.
The luxurious lifestyle of the elite classes and facilities availed by common
man in the imperialist nations attracts many legal and illegal economic refugees
from the oppressed world. Very few however know that a major portion of this
glamour is a direct result of the West´s super-exploitations of physical
and human resources of the former colonies.
Now that the West is closing its doors on mainly Muslim and partly other little
brown immigrants, former colonies also reserve the right to demand both self-rule
and damages for years of occupation, plunder and genocide to make life easy for
their people in the East.
It is interesting to note that Western governments ask for restitutions from
Libya for its alleged involvement in the bombing of Pan Am 103. Similarly, their
milking of Iraq never comes to an end for its 6 months occupation.
On the other hand, the more than 100-years long British occupation of the Indian
sub-continent, for example, is considered justified and any talk of reparation
is at best laughable for the occupiers.
The seeds of mutual destruction and animosity sown by the colonial powers are
compounding problems in former colonies. Take the example of India. Pakistan
topped the list of refugee claimants in Canada in 2001. India was not far behind
at 6th place.
History tells us that these colonies have starved their people to death in anticipation
of a third major war. Responsibility for this deadly resolve for mutual destruction
and a steady flow of immigrants in search of peace and security for securing
a better future goes to the British imperialists.
Prof B. N. Pande´s speech in the Indian Upper House of Parliament,
the Rajya Sabha, made on July 29, 1977 clarifies the fog of British innocence
surrounding this issue. He says:
"
Indian history and its distortion by the British historians, while India was
under British rule, portraying the Hindus and the Muslims as being divided into
two warring camps with little in common between them,.... the histories of India
which have been taught in our schools and colleges for generations past were
originally compiled by European writers.... A glimpse into official British records
will show how this policy of Divide-et-Impera was taking shape. The Secretary
of State Wood in a letter to Lord Elgin [Governor General Canada (1847-54) and
India (1862-63)] said: ´We have maintained our power in India by playing
off one part against the other and we must continue to do so. Do all you can,
therefore to prevent all having a common feeling.´ George Francis Hamilton,
Secretary of State of India wrote to Curzon, ´I think the real danger
to our rule in India not now, but say 50 years hence is the gradual adoption
and extension of Western ideas of agitation organisation and if we could break
educated Indians into two sections holding widely different views, we should,
by such a division, strengthen our position against the subtle and continuous
attack which the spread of education must make upon our system of government.
We should so plan educational text-books that the differences between community
and community are further strengthened (Hamilton to Curzon, 26th March 1886).
.... Cross informed the Governor-General, Dufferin, that ´This division
of religious feeling is greatly to our advantage….´ (Cross to
Dufferin, 14 January, 1887)."[1]
India and Pakistan are still reaping fruits of the British strategy to divide
religious feelings. Raising Babri mosque to the ground is nothing before crimes
of the colonialists because the Indian government did not officially order
its destruction. However, the Colonialists issued official orders, stating: "Every
civil building connected with Mahommedan tradition should be levelled to the
ground without regard to antiquarian veneration or artistic predilection.”[2]
Compare these crimes with the Taliban´s destruction of the Bamiyan
statues, who, at least, did not order to level every church and temple to the
ground. To day the same Barbarians are once more occupying Afghanistan to teach
them democracy and respect for human rights. In the process they are further
prolonging a transition to self rule and pro-people development on the one
hand and accumulating debt for the damages they are inflicting on helpless
nation.
Haiti is a good example for the oppressed world to follow with regard to claiming
reparations. According to the Wall Street Journal´s January 2, 2004
report, the Haitian government is preparing a legal brief demanding nearly $22
billion in "restitution" for what it regards as an act of gunboat
diplomacy of France.[3]
More than two decades after rebellious former slaves vanquished troops from
Napoleon´s
army in Haiti in 1803, France´s King Charles X made the fledgling republic
of Haiti an offer it couldn´t refuse. In 1825, as the king´s
warships cruised just over the horizon from Haiti, a French emissary demanded
150 million gold francs in exchange for recognizing the new republic. The implicit
alternative was invasion and re-enslavement. It was a huge sum, about five times
Haiti´s annual export revenue. Haiti reluctantly agreed, taking on
a crushing debt.
Haiti now wants its money back — with interest. France´s response
hasn´t been encouraging. In June, French President Jacques Chirac addressed
the issue by warning Haitian authorities "to take care over the nature
of the actions of their regime."
The interesting point in the Haiti´s saga is the tone of Wall Street
Journal´s report, which also tries to dismiss Haiti´s claim
for the reason that Aristide just wants their money to pay his goons. This tone
represents the point of view that even if reparations are paid, it will be wasted
by corrupt regimes. Actually, the Wall Street Journal´s reporter forgets
that since September 19, 1994 invasion, Bill Clinton always listed restoring
priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power at or near the top of his accomplishments,
called "restoring democracy to Haiti."
In fact, there are so many Aristides sitting in power due to intervention of
the "civilized" world in the name of democracy and liberation. The
West would do a favor by letting them remove their respective Aristides and
paying them damages for real development. If Kuwait deserves damages for living
under
Iraqi occupation just for six months, there is no reason others do not deserve
damages for suffering under imperial occupation for 100 years in some cases.
What the West must not forget at its peril is that the clock that runs at a rate
of $34 a second for Haiti, runs at a much higher rate in favor of the rest of
the world that lived and is still living under its occupation.
Former colonial masters must brace for honestly assessing the situation, say
good bye to needless interventions and attempt to find ways for calculating and
paying damages. Failing to so will never change the rule of nature: first or
last, a nation must pay its entire debt. Some events may stand for a time between
a nation and justice, but it is only a postponement.
The suffering nations must also muster enough courage to remind the slave masters
that a nation is wise, which dreads a prosperity achieved on blood and bones
of other nations. Unless the victims demand for reparations and struggle for
their right, they will remain doomed as ever.
Analysts, who criticize Western double standards, continue to live in the West
simply because they consider their countries more in the hands of Western tyrants
than their own people. The Western barbarians cannot commit the crimes against
innocent persons at home which they can commit through their stooges in the East.
Deportations from the West for torturing citizens in the oppressive regimes in
the East are glaring examples in this regard.
There is no need to ask why critics of the Western barbarism do no go back to
their countries. They definitely will, once their movement for self-rule and
securing reparations bear some fruit. At the moment countries under the direct
and indirect occupations belong more to the imperialists in the West than to
analysts from these countries.
February 7, 2004
Abid Ullah Jan´s latest book, The End of Democracy, has just been
released in Canada.
Notes
[1] History in the Service of Imperialism, by Dr. B. N. Pande Source: http://cyberistan.org/islamic/pande.htm
[2] Letter No. 9 dated 9 October 1857, from Prime Minister Palmerston (1784-1865)
to Lord Canning Viceroy of India, Canning Papers.
[3] “Impoverished Haiti Pins Hopes for Future On a Very Old Debt,” The
Wall Street Journal Friday, January 2, 2004.
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