Saturday, April 14, 2007

இந்த நகரத்தில் இனி இசை இல்லை!

பெஷாவர் அருகே லாக்கி மார்வாத் நகரில் இசை தடை செய்யப்பட்டுள்ள்தாம்.

அங்கிருக்கும் இசை கலைஞர்களுக்கெல்லாம் இசை தடை செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளது என்று தெரிவித்திருக்கிறார்கள். இசை வாணர்கள் ஊரை விட்டு கிளம்பிக்கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள்.

ஏற்கெனவே அருகே இருக்கும் பெஷாவர் மற்றும் நகரங்களில் இசை தட்டுகளை விற்கும் கடைகளில் மிரட்டல்களும், மிரட்டல்களுக்கு அஞ்சாத கடைகளில் குண்டு வைப்புகளும் நடந்து பலர் கடைகளை மூடிவிட்டு வேற்று ஊர்களுக்கு சென்று விட்டார்கள்.

லாக்கி மார்வாட்டிலிருந்து கிரஹாம் உஷர் என்ற பத்திரிக்கையாளர் எகிப்திலிருந்து வரும் அல் அஹ்ரம் வீக்லியில் எழுதிய கட்டுரை

'No more music in this town'
Six years after the Taliban was removed from Kabul, Talibanisation is reviving -- in Pakistan, writes Graham Usher in Lakki Marwat


During its rule in Afghanistan the Taliban banned music and the employment and education of women. Such practices were "un-Islamic", said its leaders. Others called their prohibitive and primitive interpretation of Islam "Talibanisation". The Taliban regime was ousted in November 2001, when US-led forces invaded Kabul in retaliation for the 9/11 attacks. But Talibanisation persists -- not in Afghanistan but in Pakistan.

Its bases are the remote tribal areas piled up against Pakistan's mountainous border with Afghanistan. Last week one of these areas, South Waziristan, saw ferocious battles between local tribesmen and Uzbek Islamic militants allied to Al-Qaeda. Over 100 have been killed. Taliban leaders, who enjoy good relations with both tribesmen and Al-Qaeda, tried to mediate a ceasefire. For them the priority is the insurgency in Afghanistan, not power struggles in Waziristan.

But war and peacemaking are not their only roles. For the last six months Afghan and Pakistani Taliban have established Sharia courts, police forces, tax collectors and public offices in the tribal areas, "a parallel administration with all the functions of a state," says Ismail Khan, a Pakistani journalist. Ominously this "state" is starting to seep into settled areas like Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and its capital, Peshawar.

Lakki Marwat is a dusty market town in the NWFP. Two months ago religious students or Taliban began "vice" patrols. One of their first edicts was to ban music.

Zai-ul-uddin is a singer from Lakki Marwat. He used to perform at weddings with a full band of flute, drum and harmonium. No longer. "I didn't receive any notice. I was simply told -- no more music in this town. I complied," he says guiltily. "I don't want to land in trouble."

Zai-ul-uddin says 13 musicians have left Lakki Marwat in recent weeks to ply their art in places where music is not banned. "But it's not the same," he says. In a rare performance he sings a Pashu lamentation about a man disappointed in love. But the doors and windows of his cell-like room are shuttered tight. As he says, he doesn't want any trouble.

Neither does Inan-ullah-Khan. After three years in England, he returned to Lakki Marwat in 2005 to set up a clinic and maternity hospital. Both moves have rendered him suspect in the eyes of the Taliban. "They say I'm a British spy and that Britain is an ally of America and America is the enemy of Islam," he says. "They've threatened to destroy the hospital."

They have also threatened his female staff. "I had a woman doctor who came from outside. But the Taliban got to her, and she won't come now. This is a problem. In a place like this, there are certain things only woman doctors can do."

Lakki Marwat is not a small town. But the police are "powerless" against the Taliban, says Inan. In February, two music stores were firebombed for selling "immoral" Western music. The local police chief called a meeting of the town's music-store owners. His advice? "Stop selling the music," says an owner. A visit to his store shows it is being observed. There are no music CDs anywhere, only stacks of Islamic cassettes. "I still sell music," he says, with a wink. "But under the counter, like hashish."

Who are the Taliban? Rahim-ullah-Yousefzai is a journalist in NWFP and an authority on the movement. He says your average Talib is "a young, poor, madrassa student. He is very religious and very frustrated. He is convinced the US is the enemy of Islam and that Pakistan's President Musharraf is Washington's lackey. He cites the occupations of Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine as evidence of this hostility. But if you were to ask me what has radicalised him, I would say Palestine. His supreme hero is Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar. He would say, 'Mullah Omar sacrificed his rule, family and colleagues by defying the US and refusing to hand over Osama bin Laden'."

But, says Yousefzai, the Taliban is not simply bands of disaffected seminary students. "It is a hierarchy" whose local cadres in Lakka Marwat have links to the leadership in the tribal areas, which, in turn, is answerable to Afghan leaders like Mullah Omar. Does this mean the Afghan leaders are behind the Talibanisation campaign in Pakistan? "No", says Yousefzai. "But neither are they unhappy about it."

Mullah Mohamed Ibrahim is a local Talib. He was born in Lakka Marwat but schooled at a madrassa in Waziristan. He is young, with long, black flowing hair and beard, and a mantle thrown around his shoulders. He has promised us an interview with a local Taliban commander so we can get "their side of the story". We drive through a landscape of palm trees, camel carts and women gleaning in wheat fields. We arrive outside Mohamed's madrassa in a village called Jara Bazi Khel. The commander is not at home. Perhaps he thinks we are spies.

As the prospect of an interview with him recedes, others join us. Some are seminary students dressed in white gowns and caps. Some are boys and girls with grimy clothes and unwashed faces. All are beautiful. Their faces light up when we say Al-Salaam Alaikum. What do they think of Talibanisation? A few are non-committal. One boy says it's good if the Taliban "bans bad things like drugs and music and theft". But another, with his first growth of beard, speaks against a murmur of approval. "We have not been infected by the disease of becoming Taliban," he says.

Unchecked by police and state the disease will spread. On 18 March Bashir Hussein's music store in Peshawar was firebombed by a group calling themselves the mujahadeen but assumed to be the Taliban. It was the first time a music store had been hit in this sprawling, ancient city, known, among many other things, for its music. "It won't be the last," says Bashir.

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லாக்கி மார்வாட்டில் ஒரு திருமணத்துக்கு இசைப்பாடல்கள் பாடச்சென்ற குழு பாகிஸ்தானிய தாலிபானால் தாக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
அது பற்றிய டெய்லி டைம்ஸ் செய்தி
Lakki Marwat singers face Taliban wrath

PESHAWAR: Taliban extremists shaved the heads and moustaches of a troupe of singers, then clashed with a marriage party and took six hostages, officials and witnesses said on Thursday, AFP reported. The Islamists intercepted the musicians overnight in the Doda area of Shah Hasan Khel, 20 kilometres from Lakki Marwat, where the group was due to perform at three weddings, local police said. After beating the troupe and smashing up their instruments, the militants then shaved the performers’ heads and moustaches, a witness said. Early on Thursday the angry hosts of one wedding went after the Taliban and a clash erupted in which two local residents were wounded, police said. The militants then took some six people hostage. Online reported that the Taliban tortured a UC nazim Abdul Khalil Ishaq and also shaved his moustache. Ishaq later convened a jirga in Darkhaiz and Jang Khel, which decided to form a lashkar (tribal force). Online said that the lashkar attacked the Taliban in Shah Hassan Khel and clashes were continuing in the area. The local administration has summoned the Frontier Constabulary and police to control the situation.

இவர்கள் மனம் திருந்தி இறைவழி அன்புவழி வர இறையருள் வேண்டுவோம்..

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Crazy peoples!

எழில் said...

பாவம் பாகிஸ்தான் பத்திரிக்கை ஆசிரியர் புலம்புகிறார்...

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=50376

Spectre of Islamic Bhindranwalas

By Imtiaz Alam(The writer is editor current affairs, The News, and editor South Asian Journal)

When Sant Janrnail Singh Bhindranwala fortified himself along with his armed militants in the most sacred Golden Temple of Sikhs in Amritsar in 1984 and posed a serious challenge to the Indian state, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi ordered her armed forces to crush the rebellion. Ironically, Indira Gandhi herself propped up Bhindranwala to counter the popular Akali Dal party, the way General Ziaul Haq had patronised our jihadis and clerics as a counter weight to the PPP. But when Bhindranwala turned his guns against New Delhi, he along with his thousands of followers was so brutally wiped out by the state that no one has dared to challenge the state in the Indian Punjab since then. On the other hand, when the students of Jamia Hafsa and clerics of Lal mosque took over a children's library in the capital and three months later declared their own Shariat court, a legislative body (Darul Fatwa) for issuing edicts, established their own bank (Darul Mal), vowed to enforce their own medieval code on the citizens and placed the state on an one month notice to enforce virtues and wipe out sins, the indifference the state of Pakistan showed has been entirely defeatist, if not opportunist. Would the state of Pakistan surrender or force the challengers-to-its-writ to surrender?

The irony of the situation is that, despite universal condemnation of the Lal mosque rebels, no one is ready to believe that the Jamia Hafsa students can take such an extraordinary step on their own, without the backing of powers that be. The trust and confidence in the government is so low that a lot of people are accusing it of staging this drama to divert attention from the struggle of the lawyers for the independence of judiciary. They are, however, not realising that a spectre of barbaric, tribal, uncivilised and perverted 'Islam' is hovering over Pakistan. The vigilante movement initiated by Taliban and brought to the capital by the Lal mosque can spread like a prairie fire. The cleric of Alkhatib mosque in Haroonabad in southern Punjab has made similar announcements to enforce his code on citizens. And imagine if mullahs in every other mosque or seminary take the same course, the country will be taken over by warring mullahs who besides making the citizens hostage to their edicts will fight turf battles among themselves as is happening in tribal areas and Parachinar.

Thrown out of Kabul, the Taliban took sanctuaries in south and east of Afghanistan and along the porous tribal regions of Pakistan. The Taliban were also groomed and launched by the Pakistani state when the old jihadi parties went berserk and the Americans saw them as a stabilising factor. Both were proved wrong when the Taliban imposed their fascist version of medieval and barbaric creed and turned their guns against their erstwhile masters. They emerged as the most reactionary challenge to modern civilisation and continue to attract the most backward sections of population across the Durand Line. They started to plant their nurseries of ignorance and terror in the tribal soil of our country where combining with the tribal code, they started to enforce their writ by establishing militias, courts, revenue collecting mechanisms and imposing their code of the jungle and exporting the model to the adjoining settled areas of NWFP. The focus of their 'Islamisation' was on culture: banning music and arts and hair-dressing, burning girls' schools, introducing their own strict code of repressing all human sensibilities and using Shariah to ignite the fires of insurgency against both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Those who feel closer to the Taliban creed and prefer their creed over their national identity and loyalty become easy prey to this subversive ideological device. Such an extreme Frankenstein has grown out of our traditional madressahs that even the producers of the product, the religious scholars, are now finding it hard to digest. For decades making fortunes out of a noble cause, the clergy did not realise what kind of dangerous species they were producing that would in turn demolish their priesthood. The national security establishment in Pakistan continued to provide all out backing to these extremist elements to pursue its narrow objectives without realising the basic fact that neither did their surrogates believe in nation state, nor do they subscribe to the mode of life the people of Pakistan, or any other civilised nation, relish. For decades, the Pakistani state continued to coalesce in and allowed these anti-state elements to grow and get away with all kinds of violations of the law of the land. Police were helpless, so were civilian politicians in the face of spreading sectarianism and extremism. Not long ago, a few weeks earlier than 9/11, they had the freedom of having their mock show of guerrilla exercises on The Mall in Lahore.

For the last more than seven years, the great general has been retreating, except of late on the woman's bill, in front of these extremists. The madressahs have even refused to be registered, what to talk of reforms. What the clerics and students of a seminary are now doing in the heart of Islamabad was being done not only in the tribal areas, but also the adjoining settled districts. The national security establishment did not stand up to the challenge. Now it is free for all in the tribal areas from Waziristan to Parachinar. Those who are beating out the Uzbeks are no less radical. Just look at Parachinar where Muslims are slaughtering Muslims. For the sane Islamists it should be an eye-opener how in the name of faith people are killing even children and women, which even the Pakthun Wali (tribal code) abhors. The state is adopting more sophisticated tactics we were told after the North Wazirisitan deal. Supporting one faction against the other might work for a while, establishing writ of the state another.

Now Maulvi Abdul Aziz and his brother Ghazi Abdul Rashid, who run the Hafsa and Faridya seminaries and control Lal mosque, have brought the Taliban's medieval and uncivilised model to the capital of the state and insist to enforce it on the citizens. They grabbed the land of National Book Foundation and the Department of Libraries and established their seminaries where mostly Pakthun students study and are groomed for jihad. The first exhibition of their cultural onslaught was witnessed when they burnt Melody Cinema and started to threaten the administration. They have close links with the jihadi outfits in the tribal areas and have even forbidden the funeral prayers for Pakistan soldiers while fighting Taliban and other terrorists in North Waziristan. And now the first victim of their edict is Federal Tourism Minister Neelofar Bakhtiar for parachute jumping. Encouraged by the success of their otherwise most provocative occupation of a children's library and benefiting from the exposure of lawlessness of state in the dismissal of its chief justice, the two maulanas have gone on an offensive by putting the state on notice: Enforce Sharia or be bombed by the suicide bombers. The challenge to the state is now from within its capital and not just from these two seminaries. Typical of uncultured, intolerant and ignorant Taliban, the attack of these mullahs is also on culture and liberty. Imagine, if the mullahs of all seminaries follow the example being set by the Lal mosque and Hafsa?

There will be no freedom, no culture, no modern technologies, no rule of law, no computer, no CD, no media, no TV, no film, no modern education, no healthcare, no economy, no judiciary, no army, no civilisation but the rule of cavemen infuriated by the glare of the cities which they will bring down to the level of their cave life. These barbarians have given a bad name not only to Pakistan, but also Islam. Thank God the MMA, the religious scholars and the wafaqul madaris are realising the dangers of the perversion of their faith. But it is too late. Not only the ulema and the MMA, but also our security establishment (and the private TV channels that competed in theocratising every other issue) have to pay for the great damage they have done to the fabric and foundation of Pakistan. They still don't ideologically distance themselves from Taliban and do not subscribe their loyalty to the nation-state of Pakistan.

The occupants of Lal mosque and Hafsa have brought the spectre of tribal and medieval Islam to the modern capital of Pakistan to make a Kabul out of it. Should we keep silent or be counted? It is now or never. Where is our Kemal, if not Indira Gandhi?

--

Anonymous said...

நீங்கள் சொன்னதுபோல, ஏ ஆர் ரஹ்மான், நாகூர் ஹனிபா ஆகிய இசைக்கலைஞர்கள் பேசாமல் இந்துமதத்துக்கு திரும்புவதுதான் அவர்களுக்கும் அவர்களது ரசிகர்களுக்கும் அவர்களது இசைக்கும் நல்லது.

எழில் said...

நன்றி சுப்ரமணியன்

நன்றி அனானி

Anonymous said...

Idiots!

எழில் said...

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Those_interested_in_dance_should_go_to_India_Pak_cleric/articleshow/1934850.cms

'Those interested in dance should go to India'

ISLAMABAD: Notwithstanding the nationwide rallies which are being held against attempts to enforce strict Islamic law here, a radical cleric has said that dance and music would not be permitted in Pakistan and those interested in these should go to India.
"We will not wait more. It will now be Sharia (law) or shahadat (martyrdom)," said Maulana Abdul Aziz, one of the clerics of Lal Masjid who have threatened to impose the strict Islamic law in a month's time in the capital.

In his Friday prayer sermon, he said those interested in dance and music should go to India, the media here reported.

Aziz vowed to enforce Sharia in the country even if the government did not itself do so, saying the Sharia would be enforced at any cost for which the whole nation should support the mosque's management.

"We don't need the government's help for the enforcement of an Islamic system because we are capable enough to do it without its assistance," he said.

His comments came as moderate political parties like Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and human rights and women rights groups held massive rallies all over Pakistan, opposing threats by the Lal Masjid clerics and their supporters to resort to moral policing and impose Sharia law.

தாராளமாக வாருங்கள்.
இசை, நடனம் ஆகிய கலைகளுக்கு இஸ்லாமில் இடமில்லை என்று மதரஸா தலைவர் கூறுவது உங்களுக்கு உவப்பில்லை என்றால், இந்தியாவுக்கு வாருங்கள்.

இந்தியாவில் இந்துமதம் பெரும்பான்மையாக இருக்கும் வரைக்கும், இந்தியாவில் இசை நடனம் ஆகிய கலைகளுக்கும் இடம் இருக்கும்.

இந்துமதம் வாருங்கள்.

கால்கரி சிவா said...

இசையால் இறைவனை காண்போம். காட்டுமிராண்டிகளின் அடக்குமுறையில் வாழும் பாகிஸ்தானியர்களை முழு சுதந்திரத்துடன் இந்தியாவில் ஆடி பாடி இறைவனை காண வழிசெய்வோம்.

அரபு அடிமைகளாய்தான் இருப்போம் என்றால் அவர்களை பாகிஸ்தானிற்கு அனுப்பி அவர்கள் அடிமைகளாக வாழவும் வழிகாட்டுவோம்