Safer World: April 2007


Safer World

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The World’s Growing Nuclear Club

Monday, April 23, 2007
Behind the heightened tension with Iran lies a wider problem that world leaders must swiftly and substantively grasp. The Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), drawn up in 1968, needs to be re-written to make it both workable and acceptable to nations who view it as outdated and unfair.

Over the next generation, as the scramble for energy gathers pace, many more governments will announce plans to build uranium-enrichment facilities. Some will be friendly to US interests, some hostile. Some may switch alliances with time.

In recent years, India and the deeply unstable Pakistan have both declared their nuclear-weapons programs. Neither was a signatory to the NPT. North Korea joined, but left. Iran is a member, but stands accused of breaking the rules. Israel is not, and remains secretive and undeclared. Iraq signed back in 1969, then totally ignored it.

So, if the present version of the NPT is proving too hit and miss to survive the next half century of nuclear aspirations, what will replace it?

Into this conundrum comes an agreement between India and the US that, if used properly, could show us the way ahead. After more than 30 years of sanctions because of its nuclear program, India is now being allowed into that select club of declared and accepted nuclear powers.

On the technical side, India will be able to sell and buy civilian-use nuclear products on the international market. On the political side, the agreement heals a wound between two huge democracies by giving India some recognition of national dignity – which is, in part, also what Iran is seeking.

Thirty-seven years ago, when Iran was an ally of the US, American warships were confronting not an autocratic Islamic state in the Gulf, but a young socialist democracy in the Bay of Bengal. India, then viewed by Washington as over-friendly with the Soviet Union, was defeating Pakistan over Bangladesh and needed to be brought into line.

The hostile insertion in 1971 of the USS Enterprise carrier group into India’s backyard failed to turn the tide in Pakistan’s favor. But it did create an anti-American sentiment in India that is only healing today.

It also gave India added grit to develop its own nuclear weapons. In 1974, having bought technology under the guise of using it solely for peaceful purposes, India carried out a nuclear test and was put under sanctions.

India’s Tarapur nuclear complex, three hours drive outside of Mumbai, tells what has happened in the interim. Tarapur comprises a weapons-research center; a Soviet-style closed-city with schools, shops and sporting facilities for the scientists, engineers and their families; and four reactors, two designed in the 1960s and two this century.

The first two, known as Taps 1 & 2, were opened in 1969 and built by the American multinational General Electric (GE) in a turn-key operation that included parts, maintenance, training and uranium-fuel supply. Four years later, after the test, the US government instructed GE to withdraw all support.

Far from being deterred, India pushed its nuclear program with even more urgency. It fuelled the reactors by buying uranium first from France, then Russia and, according to some engineers at Tarapur, even briefly from China.

India bypassed sanctions and created a world-class nuclear program. The control room of Taps 1 & 2 looks like an immaculately preserved example of 1960s technology, while the ultra-modern Taps 3 & 4 that opened in 2005 are evidence of what a determined nation can do if it decides to go it alone.

Visitors wear anti-dust cotton coverings over their shoes, and once inside they watch screens monitoring movements deep inside the radioactive area of the plant. Even under its new agreement, this will remain a place closed to inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

At present, India has 17 reactors with five under construction. Of those, 14 will be “safeguarded,” or open to IAEA inspections. Eight will remain closed so they can be used for weapons and other research.

With its billion-plus population and booming economy, India’s plan for the next 20 years reflects much of the developing world’s appetite for secure energy. To meet its galloping demand for power India expects to buy 25 more reactors from Russia, the US and France, as well as build several itself.

That alone is about 5 percent of the more than 400 power-generating reactors in the world today and evidence of boom years ahead, not only for India, but also for the whole global nuclear industry.

The climate-change debate coupled with unpredictable access to fossil fuels has prompted the nuclear industry to brush off the Chernobyl stigma and declare itself safe, inexpensive and carbon-free. America’s GE, for example, is gearing up to supply the Tarapur complex again, as well as bidding for involvement in India’s new reactors.

Of course, it is not just India. A walk through General Electric’s massive warehouse at its fuel plant in Wilmington, North Carolina, shows the momentum sweeping the nuclear industry along. Reinforced metal boxes containing uranium fuel rods are stacked as if in a supermarket waiting to be shipped out to clients.

“This one’s going to Japan, this to Mexico, this to within the US,” says Andrew White, president and CEO of GE’s nuclear business, “Over the next 20 years we hope to be involved in 60 or 70 new plants depending on the technology.”

China’s nuclear plans mirror those of India, and nuclear energy is due to dramatically increase in Europe, where it makes up 30 percent of power, and America, where it comprises 20 percent. Developing nations in Asia, Africa and Latin America are all looking to create their own nuclear programs to provide energy – and there lies the problem.

Egypt, for example, currently a champion of non-proliferation, has two research reactors aimed at creating an independent nuclear-fuel cycle. It could prove to be a matter of Western concern. Like Iran before, the Egyptian regime risks falling to extreme Islamic anti-American forces.

Both Brazil and Argentina once pursued covert-weapons programs. Some years from now, the increasingly left-leaning Latin America might produce a hostile leader, who would expel IAEA inspectors and send us once again into frighteningly familiar territory.

It is doubtful that global diplomacy can survive scenarios whereby every time a government is accused of stepping out of line, the UN Security Council is called upon to implement sanctions and US carrier groups steam toward hostile coastlines.

More than any other nation, India has the credentials to immerse itself completely in this dangerous conundrum and put forward fresh guidelines to extract us from it. India has persistently condemned the NPT for being discriminatory, arguing that the nuclear-armed UN permanent five cannot forever dictate what other nations do. This view is shared throughout much of the developing world, and as that sentiment grows, it will be more and more difficult to keep a lid on it.

A solution may be many years away, and getting there will be difficult. It will have to include both technical elements, such as guarantees of fuel supplies, and political ones involving perceptions of national dignity and fairness.

India’s elevation to nuclear acceptability comes with a price. It cannot simply accept its new privileges and stay quiet. India went against all odds to create its nuclear program. It must now take up a new challenge to create a nuclear roadmap for the next century.

Extremism's new face

Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Religious extremism is a countrywide reality in Pakistan, not restricted to some remote corner, but present in the heart of the capital.

Creeping `Talibanisation': The Jamia Hafsa is well known for its radical Islamic stand.


AABPARA MARKET, in an Islamabad neighbourhood of junior government employees, is known as the place where you can get everything at half the price of those in the city's posh shopping squares, plus stuff you won't find anywhere else. In its busy inner lanes are about a dozen or so shops selling DVDs, VCDs and music cassettes. Beginning February, the shops started getting unusual visitors who made it clear the very first time they were not out on a shopping trip.

"They came three or four times, some 10 or 15 of them at a time. Their faces were covered and they were holding sticks, and they said to me, `your business is against Islam. You are spreading vice. Why don't you switch to some other business?'" remembered one shop owner, who didn't want his name published.

Pro-Taliban leaning

The boys said they were from the mosque. The Lal Masjid runs two madrassas — the Jamia Fareedia for men and the Jamia Hafsa for women. The mosque and the madrassas are well known for their pro-Taliban sympathies and for the dissemination of militancy.

At first, none of the shopkeepers took the visits seriously. Then, one night in March, some 40 Jamia Hafsa girls, accompanied by an equal number of boys from the Lal Masjid, entered a home in the neighbourhood and dragged out the three women inside, accusing them of running a brothel. Tied up in white sheets, the women were dragged through the neighbourhood and into the Jamia Hafsa, where they were imprisoned for two days. They also took two policemen hostage, in retaliation for the arrests of two teachers suspected of involvement in the kidnap.

A few days later, on a Friday afternoon, the owner of a music shop in Aabpara heaped up his videos and DVDs and CDs on the road outside the mosque. After noon prayers at the Lal Masjid, under the eyes of the mosque administrators and madrassa students, Bilal, the shop owner, set fire to the heap. As the flames ate the movies, he told reporters that he had given up his business voluntarily. He realised it was anti-Islamic. He would start anew with something else.

Abdul Aziz Ghazi, the Lal Masjid prayer leader, announced that if the Government did not close down all brothels and shops in Islamabad selling movies and music within a month, the students would start taking action on their own. He threatened fidayeen suicide attacks if the Government tried to stop them.

The Aabpara market tradesmen fear they are first in the line of fire. "It isn't easy to close down a business. It's taken me years to establish this shop. I can't just abandon this overnight and start something else. And there's no guarantee that I will make money in the new venture," said the shopkeeper. He ruled out closing down. Like him, other music/movie storeowners in the market said they were "watching the situation and praying for the best".

* * *

"Talibanisation" is the term used to describe what is happening in the out-of-control northwest frontier. Even though some say the word is used "loosely" the growing assertiveness of extremist Islamists in the tribal regions of Pakistan is undeniable. In that remote area, pro-Taliban militants and clerics have all but taken over public space.

Spreading influence

Barbers in areas of the northwest such as Dir, Bajuar and Mardan have been ordered to stop shaving customers. School-going girls and women teachers are directed to wear the veil. Clerics oppose a polio vaccination campaign saying it is a western conspiracy to make men infertile. Militants even killed a doctor in charge of the government's anti-polio programme in Bajaur.

The influence of these "local" Taliban has been spreading into neighbouring "settled" areas. In Peshawar, the capital of the North West Frontier Province, co-education schools remained closed for several days after receiving bomb threats. In Tank, a district in NWFP bordering tribal South Waziristan, militants battled security forces last month to avenge the police shooting of two men who were trying to recruit school students for jihad.

* * *

Aabpara is not the wild northwest. Neither is it some far-flung suburb of Islamabad. Constitution Avenue, with the President's Aiwan-e-Sadr office, the National Assembly, the Supreme Court, the Prime Minister's office, the secretariat and all the important ministries including Foreign Affairs and Finance and the Diplomatic Enclave, is less than two km away. But Abdul Aziz and his brother Abdul Rashid, who run the Lal Masjid complex together, are undaunted. Together, they can take the credit for pushing before the world another face of militant Islam — women, covered head to toe in black niqaab, wielding sticks, talking tough on what Muslims must do and not do, and throwing one challenge after another to the government since January.

Challenging the government


When Islamabad's Capital Development Authority began demolishing the first of over 80 mosques that it said were encroachments on public land, the Jamia Hafsa girls seized a children's library next door to their madrassa in protest and continue to occupy it. They led the raid on the alleged brothel. And according to the two brothers, the girls are the ones spearheading the entire exercise to "cleanse" Pakistan.

The activities of the Jamia Hafsa and the Lal Masjid have hammered home the reality that religious extremism is a countrywide reality, not restricted to some remote corner of Pakistan, but present right in the heart of the capital. The mosque has now set up a Shari'a court in its premises, appointing to it 10 senior clerics who can issue fatwas. The first fatwa went out against Tourism Minister Nilofar Bakhtiar, who went paragliding in France recently, and was shown in photographs hugging her male French instructor after her endeavour.

* * *

Where is the Government? This is the question everybody is asking — from music shop owners in Aabpara to newspaper editors. Why is this being allowed to happen right under its nose?

Government's reactions


President Pervez Musharraf, Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, and the entire cabinet have "condemned" the Lal Masjid activities. They say the Government will not allow anyone to take the law into their hands, and that those who violate it will be "dealt with according to the law". But nothing has been done.

Instead a sense of helplessness prevails. The President says any attempt to use force against the Lal Masjid complex could end in bloodshed. Musharraf has instead appealed to civil society to "educate" the misguided "kids" at the Lal Masjid complex, pleaded with them for "tolerance" and "open minds". He wants to "negotiate" with the girls and the mosque's clerics.

Eijaz ul-Haq, the minister of religious affairs, said that Pakistan had been trying to tell the world that its madrassas were centres of learning, not extremism, but the activities of the Lal Masjid had forced the Government "to hang its head in shame".

Yet the minister participated in a negotiated surrender to the Jamia Hafsa girls on the illegal mosque demolition issue. On TV and in photographs, he was seen laying bricks for reconstruction of the mosques demolished by the CDA. That was the first taste of victory for Lal Masjid, and since then, it has been a one-sided match.

Later, the Government negotiated for the release of the two policemen being held hostage in the mosque. It agreeing to release in return the two teachers arrested for the "brothel" raid. The kidnapped "prostitutes" were left to the Hafsa students, who released them only after extracting a public "confession" of their "sins" and a vow to turn over new leaves.

Genuine dilemma


Not a single policeman was in sight when thousands of madrassa students gathered for a bonfire of videos. Nor have the police stopped the students from threatening shopkeepers in the neighbourhood.

Government supporters say there is a genuine dilemma — action against the Lal Masjid could really set off more suicide attacks. And how to use force against teenage girls? But Opposition parties attribute other motives to the Government's inaction. They argue that in this crucial year of parliamentary and presidential elections, his position weakened by the crisis over the sacking of the chief justice, Musharraf is under pressure even from the U.S. to hold free and fair elections and give up his position as army chief. They see the Lal Masjid crisis as Musharraf's design to first stay on as President, in uniform and second and to divert attention from the lawyers' agitation.

The People's Party of Pakistan says the Government is encouraging the Lal Masjid "drama" to create "the misperception that Talibanisation has spread to the federal capital so as to lift pressure for holding free and fair elections". The Benazir Bhutto-led party accuses the Government of creating such an impression "with a view to deceiving the international community... that the choice in Pakistan is between military dictatorship and religious fanatics".

Why this sudden lightness of touch on the government's part, opponents ask? After all, it bombed a madrassa in Bajaur killing 80 people and killed Baloch tribal leader Akbar Bugti.

Some commentators have also asked if the Government's inaction is a reflection of infighting within the establishment, with some sections still nursing a soft corner for the Islamists. And the Islamist religious-political parties such as the Jamaat-e-Islmai and the Jamaat-e-ulema Islami ask if it is a conspiracy by the ISI to defame madrassas.

* * *

From the jihad in Kashmir to the one in Afghanistan to the madrassas that still disseminate these ideas, the well springs of religious extremism in Pakistan hav been well documented. They have all come together after 9/11 flowing into the same river of intolerance, militancy, violence, and medieval obscurantism. But the river is now flowing backwards with a vengeance. Not a day passes without extremism rearing its head in some lethal way in Pakistan, whether it is to enforce "morality", wage war against the state, or against another Islamic sect.

Bitterness and fear


Fear of radicalised individuals acting on their own to "cleanse" society grew after a man recently shot a woman minister of the Punjab province because he believed it was against Islam for a woman to hold public office. He had allegedly killed several women before but was released each time for "lack of evidence". This time, the courts moved quickly and gave him a death sentence.

But taking one life for another gives no solace. Among liberal and moderate Pakistanis, who want their country to be "normal", there is a real fear of "creeping Talibanisation". Those who have already tasted its wrath are bitter. Ask Shameem, the woman who was dragged through the streets of Islamabad by the girls and boys from the Lal Masjid complex for being a "prostitute". She told reporters after her two-day ordeal of imprisonment in the Jamia Hafsa, "If this is what Islam is about, I would rather convert to Christianity".