Thursday, March 7, 2013

Endless are Britain's colonial crimes......

British Prime Minister David Cameron's desperate bids to play PR blitz in India flopped. He regretted the brutality of his colonial ancestors perpetrated in India, admitted that the notorious 1919 Jallianwala Bagh massacre was a "deeply shameful" episode in British colonial history but stopped short of offering a full apology for the murder of hundreds of unarmed men and women. Cameron, much to the chagrin of not only the Indians but also of the entire global demography which was once colonised by imperial forces, joined the secretary of state for the army who said on 8 July 1920, "Frightfulness is not a remedy known in the British pharmacopeia." In his smugness towards the crimes his forefathers committed, Cameron added a revolting dimension to the traditional British conceits on its destructive colonial legacy.

Britain has still not owned up its colonial crimes. On the contrary, it has always maintained a conspicuous silence on the darkest phase of its national history. And in the post World War II period, as Britain assumed upon itself self-granted righteousness lecturing the world along with the United States on morality, its attitude towards its hideous crimes and horrific legacies changed virtually dramatically. 

Noam Schimmel of London School of Economics has drawn a perfect picture of the British attitude. Colonisation and its impact on the colonised is rarely a topic of sustained public conversation in Britain. It is not even a tangential topic. It is simply ignored, elided with very infrequent and brief exceptions such as the one prompted now by the case of Kenyan survivors of torture and other human rights abuses of British rule in Kenya.

In fact, Cameron's half-hearted expression of regret for the Jallianwala Bagh massacre reminds us much like it has reminded noted author Geoffrey Wheatcroft that British politicians never recant their own or their ancestors' transgressions. Britain, in fact, is not known and will probably never be known for undergoing any kind of soul-searches and "self-flagellation over Empire and all the horrors committed in its name."

Instances galore to vindicate this belief. Britain's lack of remorse has recently been conjured up by what its Foreign Secretary, William Hague said: "We have to get out of this post-colonial guilt. Be confident in ourselves." No, Hague isn't the first British politician to appear so blissfully conceited. Way back in 2005, former UK prime minister Gordon Brown asserted: "The days of Britain having to apologise for its colonial history are over".

Sixteen years ago in 1997 visiting India along with Queen Elizabeth II Prince Philip struck a note of incoherence. He was overheard saying that the Indians have "vastly exaggerated" the death toll of Jallianwala Bagh massacre. This exhibition of insensitivity vastly scuttled the reconciliation Queen Elizabeth II offered. She described the massacre as a "difficult episode in our past — but one that was nonetheless part of "history that cannot be rewritten, however much we might sometimes wish otherwise". 

David Cameron has only towed what has been a British tradition — a straw man of English conceits. Therefore, none really expected that he would say sorry and break his nation's insouciance — a deliberate amnesia, rather a hubris of despicable magnitude. England, on the contrary, finds it much easier in berating other foreign nations such as Turkey for failing to own up its alleged role in Armenian genocide while shoving the darkest days of its history under the carpets. 

Neither hubris nor advertent silence over its colonial past can wash off the human blood that still stains the British tuxedos. History does not tell lies and it says that everywhere, be it in Asia or Africa the British colonial rule has been chillingly cruel—a blatant saga of human rights violation. Therefore, when Hague claimed that they were committed long time ago and Britain has retreated from its empire we ought to remind him that nothing short of apology will console the souls of millions who it killed to satiate its greed for wealth. The atrocities were all committed within our living memories which are indeed hard to forget and forgive. 

In Sudan, Lord Kitchener's campaign was brutal to the extent that we may not find many parallels in human history. Historian Piers Brendon has put it his book, The Decline and Fall of the British Empire, "British punitive expeditions in the Sudan" were extremely brutal, "at times amounting almost to genocide". The repression of Mau Mau uprising in Kenya was so vicious that Harvard historian Caroline Elkins described it as "Britain's gulag". Cameron's forefathers had killed at least 100,000 people of Kikuyu tribe. 

It had presided over the horrible deaths of four million Bengalis who starved to death in famine of 1943 in India. Four million civilian lives were cruelly snuffed out when Winston Churchill diverted food to feed British soldiers and countries such as Greece. 

The horror of the famine still haunts some British souls and one such is that of commentator and columnist Owen Jones. Owen, in one of his recent essays has referred to Churchill who justified the deaths of four million men and women, boys and girls, old and young saying: "The starvation of anyway underfed Bengalis is less serious than that of sturdy Greeks. I hate Indians. They are a beastly people with a beastly religion." He said to his Secretary of State for India, Leopold Amery.

Endless is Britain's tale of horror. Britain's political class has indeed succeeded in persuading average Britons that the nation has tortured enough over its empire. But an apology from the nation is still awaited and is overdue. Anything short of that would not console the Indians, the Kenyans, the Sudanese and others. Britain still remains the worst aggressor, the worst violator of human rights and a shameless plunderer.   

Posted By
Debasish Mitra
Opinion Author Of Times of Oman.


Ethiopians in Israel are treated as animals.........


They are virtually endless in number and in their suffering of untold ignominy they offered the world a shocking and compelling story. They are the Ethiopian women, young and middle-aged and they are Jews who migrated to Israel in search of better life and living. Instead, in their new country they were subjected to unbelievable tribulations as the white Zionists sought to establish complete control over their lives.

Israel perpetrated 'an inconceivable crime' against these women only because of the colour of their skin. In 2012 alone, heaven knows how many, adult Ethiopian women, irrespective of whether they were married or not, were forcibly given Depo-Provera contraceptive injections so that they cannot conceive ever in their life. The Zionist objective was to reduce black population and maintain white Caucasian hegemony in Israel by criminal infringement upon the reproductive rights of a section of Israeli population.

Under mounting pressure and criticism, Israel has admitted its crime but hasn't yet come clean on the issue. No figures saying how many Ethiopian women were duped and given the contraceptive injection have yet been officially released. Researcher Sava Reuven, says that at least 40 women have received the shot. But journalist Gal Gabay's "Vacuum" documentary series shown on Israeli Educational Television, said that countless new female immigrants from Ethiopia were given the injection and without their consent or knowledge.

The injections given to Ethiopian women are part and parcel of an overall Israeli attitude toward the immigrants, especially those who are not white and the Ethiopians. Ferocious incitement against these powerless minorities and neo-Nazism in Israel in the name of fulfilment of the Zionist dream has been growing in Israel since over a decade. The situation in the Zionist state is appallingly similar to that what prevailed in certain parts of England way back in 1968 in the wake of a virulent anti-immigrant movement.

The sentiment in Israel today is one of virulent bellicosity against the Ethiopian immigrants. The country resembles Germany of nineteen thirties or Britain of nineteen sixties.

In a world where apartheid has now become a taboo word racism is embarrassingly and terrifyingly too rampant to be shoved underneath the carpets. Israel is a racist nation with multiple racial fault lines perceptibly crisscrossing the society.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Bishop Desmond Tutu was shocked to witness blatant racism in Israel which he described as: "Much like what happened to us black people in South Africa. I have seen the humiliation of the Palestinians at checkpoints and roadblocks, suffering like us when young white police officers prevented us from moving about".
A survey done by Israel Democracy Institute showed that at least one third of the Jewish population in Israel is racist who do not consider either the Arab citizens or the coloured Ethiopians as Israelis.

Racism in Israel is not a new phenomenon. It has been there since the inception of the Jewish entity in 1948 and is at present alarmingly widespread. It is between the Jews and Arabs, between Jews from America and Europe, between Jews from western world and Africa and so on. So endemic is the scourge that even religious edicts have been issued, time and again, forbidding the white Jews from selling, renting and leasing out their houses and other properties not only to the Arabs but also to non-white Jews who have migrated from Africa and Asia.

Regrettably, the stony silence of the government in reaction to such edicts and the crime has made its complicity to the felony more than evident. In fact, former Israel's justice minister Yaakov Neeman, since his appointment, has added fuel to the fire significantly which has virtually kept the depravity raging.

Studied and calculated reticence of the majority has only offered tacit support to the apartheid. Helped the ultra Rights to take over forcing the Israeli society into a state of paralysis, nay comatose. Surprisingly, even the United States, who has been lecturing the world on human rights, has been maintaining an inexplicable silence on the matter.

Racism in Israel dates back to 1948 when hundreds and thousands of Palestinians were driven out only to grab their land. Like the white settlers in South Africa Zionist pioneers, colonised a land which was already inhabited. And since then the plague has survived six decades of shameful existence assuming more insidious proportions.

Race matters in Israel which is at present predominantly white. At least 121,000 citizens of Ethiopian descent live mostly in the smaller urban areas of central Israel. In an opinion piece in Haaretz Roy (Chicky) Arad has been absolutely unequivocal. He opined that Israeli Ethiopians suffer from racism directed at African migrants. Many Ethiopians are reluctant to walk around areas like southern Tel Aviv at night, from fear of being targets of violence and racial slurs.

Israel is in the grip of a new level of racial intolerance today. 'Today, Arab schools receive less funding than Jewish schools and Arab areas of East Jerusalem receive less municipal services'. Israeli society today is in a despicable state of decay. And for sure, had not there been the benevolence of the United States Israel would have by now been one among the failed states in the world.

In the ecstasy of sharing a new common enemy whose elimination the white Zionists feel is must. This is not only small-minded but also extremely dangerous. If this is how easily such a simple and flawed message is accepted by the Israeli audience, then what hope is there for the equally hapless Palestinians?

Posted By
Debasish Mitra 
The author is the Opinion Editor of Times of Oman