Just In :

Petraeus requests 2,000 more troops for Afghanistan         NEWSWEEK Poll: Democrats May Not Be Headed for Midterm Bloodbath         Karzai: Exit timetable has boosted insurgency         US drone strike kills four militants in Pakistan         IT exemption limit to be raised to Rs. 2 lakh         Afghanistan calls for sanctions against Pakistan         Microsoft to power Yahoo search         Al-Qaida in Yemen more dangerous than those in Pak: CIA         Iran unveils unmanned aerial bomber         Hundreds protest planned Islamic center in Manhattan        

 

        Date: 07-Sep-2010

                   HOME              ABOUT US              NEWS               VIEWS              CONTACT US              READERS' FORUM

Q :

Do u want that there should be no border between two parts of J&k?

why :

So that people from both parts of Kashmir can freely meet
& understand each other ; for free flow of goods and for free flow of information.

Vote

Name :

City /Town

 

Yes No

 

 

 

South Asia News Links Today

The News ,Pakistan

Dawn , Pakistan

Daily Times ,Pakistan

Frontier Post ,Pakistan

Daily Outlook, Afghanistan

Institute For Afghan Studies

Sunday Observer , Srilanka

Himalayan Times , Nepal

Daily Star, Bangladesh

 

 

 

   
Historical Events / Personalities

The Passions of Arthur Koestler-Roger Boylan

Present historic: Carlyle, Robespierre, and the French Revolution-ii-Ann Talbot

Present historic: Carlyle, Robespierre and the French Revolution-1-Ann Talbot

Rosa Luxemburg & the Mass Strike-Lea Haro

Chris Harman: Selected Writings

Sartre: Conversations with a “Bourgeois Revolutionary”-Joseph L. Walsh

Stalin's Secret War Plans: Why Hitler Invaded the Soviet Union -Richard Tedor

Shays’ Rebellion and the American Revolution -John Peterson

 

 

   
   
   
Dissident Voices

Marxism and anarchism-Paul Blackledge

The Legacy of Andy Stern-Melvyn Dubofsky

Hands off Cuba! Defend the Cuban revolution – fight for International socialism

Inside the Castro Family-Robert H. Miller

What was communism? -Fred Halliday

Not all Marxism is dogmatism: a reply to Michel Husson

Horror in Haiti – Imperialism to blame

From hero to villain —Ernest Mandel

 

 

Read more ----

   
   
   
 

 

State News

An Afghan woman’s case against the U.S. war -Malalai Joya

, 06-Feb-2010 It’s difficult to imagine even the faintest glimmer of hope when it comes to Afghanistan. If the past thirty years are any indication, the cycle of invasion, occupation, war, misery, and betrayal shows little sign of ending.

As the U.S./NATO occupation enters its eighth year, and with Barack Obama ordering an escalation of U.S. troops, progressives and activists of all stripes will find an excellent resource as well as a tremendous source of inspiration—and even hope—in Malalai Joya’s recently released book.

Joya, who spent most of her childhood in the refugee camps of Iran and Pakistan, may be a familiar name to those who follow events in Afghanistan. In 2005, she ran for Afghanistan’s parliament by building a grassroots campaign based on outspoken criticism of the warlords who, with the help of their U.S. backers, have been literally running the country into the ground.

But it’s plain to see from her book that Joya is no politician. The reasoning behind her campaign was to use the visibility of a parliamentary seat to give voice to the indignation and demands of ordinary Afghans. Contrary to the politicians we’ve become accustomed to, who talk tough during the campaign then inevitably back down once in office, Joya’s plan was to take the gloves off after winning the election. And she had no illusions about what she was up against.

I knew that the U.S.-installed Afghan government and its stooges might try to benefit from my presence in Parliament—to show to the world that there was a real democracy in Afghanistan because even a critic of the occupation and warlords could be elected. And there were a few Afghans who criticized me for joining this corrupt, warlord-ridden parliament. I simply told them an Afghan proverb: how can you catch tiger cubs without entering the tiger’s lair? I was ready to go to the lair, to hunt them in their own house.
Indeed, she was so outspoken that she was suspended from parliament in 2007 for “insulting” fellow representatives. Her struggle to gain back her rightful parliamentary seat has garnered international attention and support in the form of defense committees and various informal activist networks. “My enemies have accidentally given me a gift,” as she puts it.

Beyond the remarkable story of her victorious campaign and her daily dealings with some of Afghanistan’s most infamous criminals, Joya uses her life story to give Western readers a much fuller and much more accurate picture of Afghanistan, its people and history, than we get from the pathetic excuse for journalism that dominates the major media outlets. She also puts forward key arguments that help cut against some longstanding myths that even the most well-meaning folks believe.

Many people, for example, are still swayed by the argument that women are better off with foreign troops on the ground because, at the very least, they counteract the brutality of the fundamentalist Taliban. It’s certainly hard to overstate just how terrifying the situation is, and readers will find that some of the most painful passages in Joya’s book describe the harrowing existence for so many girls and women in Afghanistan. Along with the stifling level of poverty, Afghan women suffer the highest rates of depression in the world. This is why much of Joya’s time working in an orphanage and as an underground schoolteacher was spent trying to convince women not to commit suicide. It’s no wonder. It’s still the case that women cannot safely go to school and get an education, nor can they go anywhere without an acceptable male chaperone. Prostitution has reached unprecedented rates. Divorce is all but unobtainable for most women and the horrors of domestic violence and rape are daily realities for which perpetrators face no consequences. So profound is the feeling of despair that over the past few years hundreds of Afghan women have chosen the almost unimaginable act of self-immolation as the only escape.

Joya helps to explain that this horror is not due to some intrinsic flaw in Afghan society. Nor is it the case that it’s just the Taliban who produce this living hell for women.

Frankly, it’s impossible to tell the difference between those who call themselves Taliban and those who hold all the power in Kabul today. The latter dress up like democrats, only to hide their Taliban mentality. And because of them, after more than eight years of intervention by the United States and NATO, women’s rights have not been brought to Afghanistan, and we have achieved neither democracy nor justice. It seems clear that the U.S. government simply wants any gang in Afghanistan that will obey its directions accurately and act according to U.S. policies, and these fundamentalist bands of the Northern Alliance have proved throughout their life that they are ready to sacrifice Afghanistan’s national interests for their lust for power and money.
The brutality faced by women and girls in Afghanistan, among other tragedies, is the outcome of a society plagued by occupations and war—and the continued presence of foreign troops only makes the situation worse by the day.

Joya doesn’t stop there, though. The driving force behind her book is her unyielding faith in the capabilities of ordinary Afghans to shape their own future.

Today, we Afghans remain trapped between two enemies: the Taliban on one side and the U.S./NATO forces and their warlord hirelings on the other… But the situation is not hopeless. I believe in the power of the people, and I know that there are millions of women and men standing and waiting—eager to play their role in history.

Anyone who wants to better understand Afghanistan and to better explain why the U.S. has no business there should read this indispensable and beautifully written book.

http://www.isreview.org/issues/69/rev-joya.shtml

ISR


Fair Use Notice

Discalimer


As nationalism rises, will the European Union fall?-Charles Kupchan

 

The Left and the Jihad-Fred Halliday

 

Biopiracy, GM Seeds and Rural India -Priya Kumar

 

Biopiracy, GM Seeds and Rural India -Priya Kumar

 

The End Of Capitalism? What Lies Ahead?-Alex Knight

 

A Left Approach to Development-Prabhat Patnaik

 

Working-class Intellectuals-Gus Hall

 

Contradiction as Source of Structure and Development in Nature, Society, and Thought-Erwin Marquit

 
 

Read more ----

 

 

 

PAKISTAN IN GLOBAL POLITICS

Afghanistan: Interests & stakes-Saleem Safi

 

Afghanistan: A case of drug based economy-Jawayria Malik

 

Benazir Bhutto :THE report of the United Nations Commission of Inquiry -Palpable fraud -A.G. NOORANI

 

All Kayani’s Men-Anatol Lieven

 

Taliban: the unanswered questions-Iqbal Haider

 
 

Read more ----

 
 

NUCLEAR / DEFENCE DEALS

Chinese duplicity

 

NUCLEAR DEAL-Hidden side

 

Mortgaging nuclear crown jewels

 

A Global Approach to Iranian Nuclear Ambitions

 

Revelations unravel hype and spin -Nuclear Deal

 

123 Agreement-Brahama Chelleny

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

LITERATURE & ARTS

Varieties of Activist Experience — Civil society in South Asia: Edited by David N. Gellner;

 

COLLECTED PAPERS IN THEORETICAL ECONOMICS - 4 Volumes: Kaushik Basu

 

A critical study on Tilak, Jinnah -B. SURENDRA RAO

 

The Sino-Indian enigma -A. MADHAVAN

 

Che Guevara — Jo Chale Toh Jaan se Guzar Gaye-Dr Saulat Nagi

 

Cold War's myths -A.G. NOORANI

 

Marx at the Margins-Kevin Anderson

 

Reflections on existence - Shelley Walia

 

Philosophy in the Present-Alain Badiou and Slavoj Žižek

 

Gauhar Jaan

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

SCIENTIFIC FRONTIER

Stem cell biology and its complications -Gina Kolata

 

Pioneering geneticist creates synthetic life -Ian Sample

 

Newton's tree to experience zero gravity, in space -Richard Luscombe

 

The ethics of egg manipulation

 

Protein 'behind Alzheimer's fits'

 

What Stem Cells Can Do?and Can't

 

Mammoth's genome pieced together

 

Humans owe their identity to 'junk' DNA

 

Lung Cancer Gene Discovery A Sign of Cancer's Future

 

At the frontier of physics

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

OPINION AND ANALYSIS

The Holocaust, genocide studies, and politics-Martin Shaw

 

Back to Marx: How can his work help us to understand modern times? - Laurent Etre

 

No pressure, then: religious freedom in Islam-Patricia Crone

 

Capitalism and the Ecological Footprint-Samir Amin

 

ISLAM - people and politics

 

What was communism? -Fred Halliday

 

Women and Media in Saudi Arabia: Changes and Contradictions-Naomi Sakr

 

History and its Uses-Tim Stanley

 

How Italy's Floundering Left Has Helped Keep Berlusconi in Power-Yascha Mounk

 

‘Sovereignty’ and international order -Farhad Mazhar

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 

        Editor -in-Chief - : M.M.Gupta                                                                                                          Consulting Editor - : Dr. Agha Ashraf Ali

 EDITORIAL BOARD           HOME           ABOUT US           NEWS           VIEWS          CONTACT US           DISCLAIMER            FAIR USE NOTICE            CORPORATE MAIL

 

Developed & Maintained By : Say Technologies