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Sorocaba, São Paulo, Brazil
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Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Islamic Fundamentalism

As everybody knows, after 9/11 it is growing stronger in the west a fear of everything Muslim. This fear has lead to wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but far from reach stability it had only deepened the already huge gap between two completely different worlds.

In order to understand the root of the threats we face nowadays by Islamic Fundamentalist groups we have to visit the history of Pakistan's foundation and events in Afghanistan in the last 30 years.


Pakistan 

It is here in the Indus River valley (map below) that two very different civilizations collide. To the southeast lie the fertile lowlands of the Indian subcontinent. To the west and north stretch the harsh, windswept mountains of Central Asia.

It is also where two conflicting forms of Islam meet: the relatively relaxed and tolerant Islam of India versus the rigid fundamentalism of the Afghan frontier.

Pakistan Country map


In 1947 India, a longtime British colony gains its independence and is partitioned into India and Pakistan, a nation for Muslins. 

Back in India, Mahatma Ghandi, the pre-eminent political and ideological leader of India's Independence Movement believed that the question of partition should be resolved by a plebiscite in the districts with a Muslim majority and when in 1946 Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan called for a Direct Action what started a huge manslaughter Ghandi was infuriated. 

The Partition displaced up to 14 million people of the former British Indian empire meaning that  large populations moved from India to Pakistan and vice versa, depending on their religious beliefs. 

Muslim residents of the former British India migrated to Pakistan (including East Pakistan which is now Bangladesh), whilst Hindu and Sikh residents of Pakistan and Hindu residents of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) moved in the opposite direction. It was one of the biggest Human Migration in History.

Maybe what Ghandi was afraid was a manslaughter which followed. As many as a million people died in sectarian riots, massacres and killings along the way.


60 years later

Pakistan today is a country with 165 million people (97% Muslims) but so far it has never been united as one Nation. 

Since its independence It has been involved in four wars with neighbouring India and several borders skirmishes with Afghanistan which made its successive Governments spend billions on the Military while neglecting the basic needs of its people for justice, health, education, security and hope what naturally lead to a growing herd of opponents demanding a return to civilian and democratic rule. It is still a country where politics are made of assassinations, plots, bomb attacks, etc.

Ordinary people are also stifled by a government and police force that are among the most corrupt in the world, led by an army that answers to no one.
It was a similar lawlessness that drove the people of Afghanistan into the arms of the Taliban in the mid-1990s and am afraid it might be the same faith Pakistan will face whether political chaos. poverty and corruption remain.

In 1979 when then Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan and brought the cold war once more to Asia, Pakistan aligned with USA which dropped millions and millions of dollars into it for financing the Mujahideen (Muslim fighters) insurgency who had fled Afghanistan. 

The problem is that what the Mujahideen have done was to declare a Jihad (Holy War) against the Soviets with American money... USA ended up financing extremists groups, among them the Al-qaeda of Osama bin Laden, so by that time Osama was an ally. (sic!)

After the war was ended it was already too late and the seeds of Fundamentalism was deeply rooted into the strongholds of northern Pakistan where these fanatics found a secure place to hide.  Combined with the misery and lack of security of the people the forces of Islamic radicalism are gaining strength and challenging Pakistan's moderate majority...


Afghanistan


A former focal point of the Silk Road and human migration, Afghanistan was destroyed during the 10 years war with Soviet Union. After the war the Americans just left the country to its own faith which lead to a Taliban takeover in 1996. 

When in power, the Taliban enforced one of the strictest interpretations of Sharia law ever seen in the Muslim world, and became notorious internationally for their treatment of women. Women were forced to wear the burqa in public. They were allowed neither to work nor to be educated after the age of eight, and until then were permitted only to study the Qur'an. They were not allowed to be treated by male doctors unless accompanied by a male chaperon, which led to illnesses remaining untreated. They faced public flogging in the street, and public execution for violations of the Taliban's laws.

Devastation of war, scars of the Taliban rule, misery and so on are still felt in Afghanistan. The country has been rebuilt slowly with the support from the international community while dealing with the Taliban insurgency.

After evading U.S. forces throughout the summer of 2002, the remnants of the Taliban gradually began to regain their confidence and launched the insurgency that Mullah Mohammed Omar had promised during the Taliban's last days in power. During September 2002, Taliban forces began a recruitment drive in Pashtun areas in both Afghanistan and Pakistan to launch a renewed "jihad" against the Afghan government and the U.S-led coalition. Pamphlets distributed in secret during the night also began to appear in many villages in the former Taliban heartland in southeastern Afghanistan. 

Small mobile training camps were established along the border with Pakistan by al-Qaeda and Taliban fugitives to train new recruits in guerrilla warfare and tactics, according to Afghan sources and a United Nations report. Most of the new recruits were drawn from the madrassas or religious schools of the tribal areas of Pakistan, from which the Taliban had originally arisen. 

Major bases, a few with as many as 200 men, were created in the mountainous tribal areas of Pakistan by the summer of 2003. The will of the Pakistani paramilitaries stationed at border crossings to prevent such infiltration was called into question, and Pakistani military operations proved of little use.

There is no political stability in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. Misery, violence, insurgency, lack of justice and law enforcement altogether lead to despair and frustration.

When government fails to people, people get angry. They lose faith in the system and look for alternatives which gives lots of ground to Islamists or Taliban or Al-Qaeda to grow. 
When citizens are denied their basic human rights, they become radicalized, powerless and easily manipulated.


Peshawar, northern Pakistan

A group of students from a madrassa nearby or religious school in their late teens or early 20s. They say their dream for Pakistan  is "a peaceful nation, in which justice prevails, in keeping with Islamic law." But they believe, as many there do, that Islam is under attack by America, by the West, by India and by their own Government. Under these circumstances, they say, Jihad or Holy war is justified...

What about suicide bombing? Is it sanctioned by Islam? 
"You must think we have classes here in making bombs or AK-47s" exclaims one boy and they all laugh!

We cannot label Muslims as "terrorist" cause first of all  generalizations are stupid and usually don't reflect the reality.  Islam has 1,5 billion adherents and is the second largest religion after Christianity making up 23% of world's population.

The clashes between moderates and extremists in Pakistan today reflects this rift and can be seen as a microcosm for a larger struggle among Muslims everywhere.

I live in Malaysia, a country with a majority of Muslim population. Have several Muslims friends and I dun think one of them will blow themselves anytime soon, but Malaysia is a moderate country and has a completely different Economic and politic background, but even here from time to time you can see some fundamentalism like the caning sentence imposed on Kartika Sri Dewi Shukarnor, a divorced mother of two, for drinking beer in a resort bar two years ago. Later due to pressures coming from the international community the sentence has been commuted to community service on the orders of the Sultan of Pahang.

Should the west be afraid of Muslims or Islamic Fundamentalism?


Monday, October 18, 2010

What Asia has changed on me



Asia has been my backyard for almost 5 years already... It seems like it was yesterday and looking back through the fog of time I'm trying to find that old Marcio who arrived in Asia carrying a heart full of dreams and only two luggages! He doesn't exist anymore...



As you can see at the link above it is the largest and most populous continent on Earth and hosts 60% of the world's population, but what does it look like to live here on a daily basis?
First of all... people... Jesus, wherever you go here you are surrounded by millions of them. See the table below:


PosCountryPopulation
-Asia3,776,000,000
1 People's Republic of China [1]1,322,597,000
2 India1,131,043,000
3 Indonesia231,627,000
4 Pakistan161,998,000
5 Bangladesh158,665,000
6 Japan127,718,000
7 Philippines88,706,300
8 Vietnam87,375,000
9 Iran71,208,000
10 Thailand62,828,706
11 Myanmar48,798,000
12South Korea South Korea48,512,000
13 Iraq28,993,000
14 Nepal28,196,000
15 Malaysia27,544,000
16 Uzbekistan27,372,000
17 Afghanistan27,145,000
18 Saudi Arabia24,735,000
19 North Korea23,790,000
20 Republic of China (Taiwan)22,935,000
21 Syria22,198,110[2]
22Yemen Yemen20,727,063
23 Sri Lanka19,299,000
24 Kazakhstan15,422,000
25 Cambodia14,444,000
26 Israel7,208,520
27 Hong Kong, China7,206,000
28 Tajikistan6,736,000
29 Jordan5,924,000
30 Laos5,859,000
31 Kyrgyzstan5,317,000
32 Turkmenistan4,965,000
33 Singapore4,436,000
34 United Arab Emirates4,380,000
35 Lebanon4,099,000
36 Palestinian Authority4,017,000
37 Kuwait2,851,000
38 Mongolia2,629,000
39 Oman2,595,000
40 East Timor1,155,000
41 Qatar841,000
42 Bahrain753,000
43 Bhutan658,000
44 Macau, China481,000
45 Brunei390,000
46 Maldives306,000
Out of a list with the 27 most populated cities around the world, 15 cities are in Asia. Take a look: The most populated cities in the world

I come from a city in Brazil, Sorocaba which has about 600k inhabitants which already made me fell claustrophobic sometimes, but in China for instance even though there are villages with smaller populations any city has easily 2 million inhabitants. Take a look at the table below. It is crazy!

City↓Metro Area Population↓Level↓Administrative Area Population↓
 Shanghai17,000,000Municipality (National central city)18,884,600
 Beijing13,200,000Municipality (National central city)17,430,000
广 Guangzhou12,000,000Provincial capital (National central city)15,000,000
 Shenzhen8,615,000Special economic zone City13,300,000
 Tianjin8,200,000Municipality (National central city)11,950,000
 Chongqing7,500,000Municipality (National central city)32,353,200
 Hong Kong7,055,071Special Administrative Region7,055,071 (2009)
 Dongguan6,950,000Prefecture8,300,000
 Nanjing6,800,000Provincial capital7,588,900
 Wuhan6,600,000Provincial capital8,970,000
 Hangzhou6,300,000Provincial capital7,966,000
 Shenyang5,060,000Provincial capital7,500,000
 Harbin4,750,000Provincial capital9,873,742
 Chengdu4,750,000Provincial capital11,300,000 (2007)
 Hefei4,650,000Provincial capital10,100,000 (2006)
 Zhengzhou4,360,000Provincial capital7,500,000 (2007)
 Jinan4,000,000Provincial capital6,300,000 (2007)
 Qingdao3,800,000Sub-provincial city8,000,000 (2007)
西 Xi'an3,800,000Provincial capital10,500,000 (2007)
 Nanchang3,790,000Provincial capital4,990,184 (2007)
 Dalian3,500,000Sub-provincial city6,200,000 (2007)
 Taiyuan3,413,800 (2004)Provincial capital4,000,000 (2006)
 Shantou3,200,000Special economic zone city7,600,000 (2006)
 Kunming3,055,000Provincial capital6,800,000 (2007)
 Zibo3,000,000Prefecture4,510,000 (2006)
 Huizhou2,900,000Prefecture3,210,000 (2006)
 Guiyang2,720,000Provincial capital3,993,000 (2009)
 Fuzhou2,710,000Provincial capital7,000,000 (2006)
 Shijiazhuang2,600,000Provincial capital9,600,000
 Changsha2,520,000Provincial capital6,103,000 (2007)
 Wuxi2,400,000Prefecture4,800,000 (2006)
 Suzhou2,400,000Prefecture6,400,000 (2006)
 Changchun2,290,000Provincial capital7,400,000 (2007)
Now just imagine to commute over there using its public transport, or trying to get a taxi, even the quantity of cars on the roads, its pollution, its needs for jobs, housing, healthy care, education etc... Everything must be seem in an exponential basis.

Now go a little deeper into the constitution of these populations: ethnics and religion plays a huge role to hold them altogether! Don't be misleaded by the assumption that China for instance has 1,3 billion of Chinese and that's it.
Even though Han Chinese makes up 91% of its population there are at least 55 other nationalities or ethnic groups  recognized by the Chinese Government in mainland China and regular clashes in Tibet or with the Uighurs minorities have lately made news around the world.

One child policy
During the 1950s right after the formation of the People' s Republic of Chinlaws banning birth control, sterilization, and abortion were repealed, and China started to mass produce and distribute contraceptives, including, condoms, diaphragms, and spermicidal jelly. It seems Chairman Mao Zedong believed that with a smaller population it would be easier for China to give the intended Great Leap Forward.

The result?!: Nowadays 70% is the rate of "Working age population" in China, but by 2050 it will be 50% which means half of its population will have to work to carry the aged other half on their backs... which could amount to 700 million people.


India

Now take a look on India with its population of 1,2 billion people and counting... It is so far the second most populated country but it is projected to surpass China by 2050 reaching 1,6 billion "touchi"* people...
* touchi: joking, but it is like Chinese refers to Indians. Touchi is a kind of black bean.

India has tried to curb the increasing of birth rates (2,76 children born/woman - China has 1,7), but has a strong tradition of arranged marriages before people age their 20's and start to have kids right after that. It is projected that by 2050 the rate of "Working age population" will still be around +60%. It gives it an edge compared with the dramatic challenge of China, but still India has a long way to go. Despite India's impressive economic growth over recent decades, it still contains the largest concentration of poor people in the world.

India has 80% of Hindus, 13% of Muslins, 2% of Christians, 5% others and has an even bigger number of spoken languages: 

Rank↓Language↓Speakers↓Percentage↓
1Hindi dialects[23]422,048,64241.03%
2Bengali83,369,7698.11%
3Telugu74,002,8567.19%
4Marathi71,936,8946.99%
5Tamil60,793,8145.91%
6Urdu51,536,1115.01%
7Gujarati46,091,6174.48%
8Kannada37,924,0113.69%
9Malayalam33,066,3923.21%
10Oriya33,017,4463.21%
11Punjabi29,102,4772.83%
12Assamese13,168,4841.28%
13Maithili12,179,1221.18%
14Bhili/Bhilodi9,582,9570.93%
15Santali6,469,6000.63%
16Kashmiri5,527,6980.54%
17Nepali2,871,7490.28%
18Gondi2,713,7900.26%
19Sindhi2,535,4850.25%
20Konkani2,489,0150.24%
21Dogri2,282,5890.22%
22Khandeshi2,075,2580.20%
23Kurukh1,751,4890.17%
24Tulu1,722,7680.17%
25Meitei (Manipuri)1,466,705*0.14%
26Bodo1,350,4780.13%
27Khasi1,128,5750.112%
28Mundari1,061,3520.105%
29Ho1,042,7240.103%
Usually Indians have difficulties in understanding each other within their own country. China doesn't have this issue: even though with several dialects the basic written mandarin is the same. What might change is the pronunciation or even the meaning of some characters. Something like British and American English...

We just saw some details on the Population, Ethnics and Religion of two countries in Asia: China and India. 
Even though Asia is much more than that I would say that their influences go deep into each one of the other countries here. With different extents there are always bounds with either China or India, sometimes with both of them. 
Please, don't mention the Europeans cause even though there were some interbreed they came to Asia latest on the XV century.

I could be killed by saying that, but even Korea and Japan which are far in the Northeast Asia region can trace back their Chinese origins, not only Chinese for sure but they are not Caucasians right?!
Remember once in Seoul when having lunch with a wannabe Korean girlfriend she almost killed me when I mentioned her Chinese heritage... She was outraged but I said: "Look Korea is a peninsula which the only way in/out is by land though China. Your history dates back to 300.000 years and there were no boats by that time. Which is the logical conclusion?". She left me for good!

Coming back to myself
I lived the first 4 yrs in Singapore a country with a strong Chinese influence (70% of its population) even though it was part of Malaysia till 1965 when it self proclaimed a Republic, which makes me laugh, but that's another story.
If I could use a word to define Singapore, it would be "money"... it is all about money! 
Ethics, Honor... what's that? Only words...

One must understand Chinese mentality. There are two basic characteristics: 
  • strong bound with the family therefore a huge cult over ones "ancestors"  
  • no welfare provided by the state: so things like public healthy and retirement don't exist
The immediate effect is that everything is based and provided by the family and its connections (mafia). Chinese people are prepared to count only on themselves and their network so they don't believe in Government, Justice or on the efficiency of Laws for their basic needs. If something goes wrong instead of looking for the police or lawyers they will head back to their family's connections, be it for a simple bureaucratic issue or to "punch" some bully.

Once they cannot expect anything from the government they save money... Their savings are the highest on the planet (50%). Which means every month at least 50% of their salaries are saved or invested. In Europe the average is 20%.

Within a Chinese family there are no secrets. Everything is said and discussed openly meaning that is also accepted some strong "warning" or "disapproval". The head of the family is the father: he has the final word in anything. On the lack of a father, the oldest brother and so on...

They were born for gambling. They love it and they always gamble for money. Westerners if they play cards is only for fun... for a Chinese this is a serious business. Which means they are very competitive and hate to lose. A Chinese will never lose, whatever it happens.

This naturally makes a Chinese mindset very different of their Westerners counterparts and one will have to deal with it in a daily basis. If there is a vacancy in the office they will bring you some relative or someone out of their connections: it doesn't matter whether you need an engineer and they bring you a teacher... that's not the point. The point is to make a favor to someone and have a credit for the future. For a westerner mind this is nepotism. I found in my job here lots of people working in key positions without the minimum background required.

Their values are different and one have to find its place among them from another standards, as a starting point. Forget your own beliefs and ethics if you want to make business or live with them. That's a cultural aspect and it doesn't mean they are the worse human beings on Earth, it is only their way of doing things and if their cultural values don't see it as wrong they don't have any problem with that. It is only a question of perspective. Just place yourself in the other side and try to understand how they see our values... you will be surprised with your findings!

China will rule the world as all predictions say. It is already the nr 2 Economy and will surpass USA as nr 1 soon, which means there will be a great change in the world's mentality and culture values once everybody will have to adapt to this new order... a Chinese new order... and I tell you, China has been humiliated in the last 5 centuries since the arrival of the Europeans. They will never forget that and they are ruthless, the most ruthless people I have ever seen. They can tolerate you, but you will never be accepted as one of them.

Trust me, I am in Asia for 5 year and I have a Chinese boyfriend whom I live with! They can be adorable, but they will never buy your values...

So, what all of this has changed on me?
That old Marcio who came to Asia, as a phoenix had to reinvent himself out of the ashes!

Nowadays my world is much broaden than before: People are a reflexion of their culture, environment, history and religion, but at the end we are all the same. We all want to succeed, to provide for our families, to live well among friends and families, to believe in something bigger than us and to be happy. 
We all need to eat and go toilet! 
We all are born and dye and what makes us different is what we do out of our lives between these two extremes.