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What’s Lost When We Photograph Life Instead Of Experiencing It?

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By Rebecca Macmillan

At a conference on June 14, Facebook executive Nicola Mendelsohn predicted that the social networking site would be “all video” within five years.

“We’re seeing a year-on-year decline of text,” she said. “If I was having a bet, I’d say: video, video, video.”

Meanwhile, a recent article in The New York Times chronicled the lives of a group of young socialites – the “Snap Pack” – who plan their nights around snapping photos that can be shared with their followers. The reporter explained:

For them, taking photos and videos from Instagram and Snapchat is not a way to memorialize a night out. It’s the night’s main event.

These two stories each arrive at the same conclusion: Images are taking over.
Increasingly, images have become a crucial part of communicating with others, receiving affirmation and documenting new experiences. And though it may seem that a barrage of colors and pixels and faces and scenery could only enrich our imaginations and enhance our engagement with the world, the opposite seems to be taking place.

In her article ‘Instagram Is Ruining Vacation’, journalist Mary Pilon described how, when visiting a temple in Cambodia, a sea of tourists became so preoccupied with capturing the perfect, shareable picture that, ironically, “no one was really present”.

Indeed, the compulsive urge to immediately, electronically exhibit one’s self is a phenomenon made uniquely possible by our digital age. Yes, there are benefits to being able to share more images with a greater audience. But the impulse to incessantly document and post has taken precedent over simple focus and direct human connection.

While it can be difficult to neatly measure this shift, researchers across a variety of disciplines are beginning to see and understand its consequences.

Life In A Self-Reflective Bubble

As psychologist Sherry Turkle writes in “Alone Together“, “Life in a media bubble has come to seem natural” in the 21st century.

With the aid of our phones and computers, no matter where we are or who we may be near, we are constantly connected to and interacting with others. But taking photographs and creating videos have become a central part of this digital exchange.

Psychology professor John R. Suler interprets constant photographing and photo sharing as a quest for confirmation. He writes:

When we share photographs, we hope others will validate the facets of our identities that we embedded in those images. Knowing others can see the picture gives it more emotional power. Feedback from others makes it feel more real.

In pursuit of digital affirmation, even ordinary experiences become fodder for photographs.

Instead of staying present – being (and really observing) where we are – our impulse is to capitalize on all lived experiences as an opportunity to represent and express ourselves visually. Part of what’s troubling about this kind of tenacious documentation is the thin line between representation or expression and – as with the “Snap Pack” – the marketing or commodification of everyday life.

Personal photo collections, publicized through applications like Instagram and Facebook, risk primarily becoming a tool for self-promotion. The ability to constantly measure public feedback for each posted photograph enables, and may encourage, users to tweak visual representations of their own lives in an effort to simply maximize a positive response.

“Every narcissist needs a reflecting pool. Just as Narcissus gazed into the pool to admire his beauty, social networking sites, like Facebook, have become our modern-day pool,” wrote Tracy Alloway, a psychology professor at the University of North Florida.

In a 2014 study, she and her team examined the relationship between Facebook use and empathy. They found that, while there are elements of social media that strengthen social connections, the platform’s image-based features – the ability to share photos and videos – particularly feed our self-absorption.

A woman uses a selfie stick in front of a field on the outskirts of Wuhan, China. Image source : Darley Shen/Reuters
A woman uses a selfie stick in front of a field on the outskirts of Wuhan, China. Image source : Darley Shen/Reuters

Creativity Requires Concentration

But repeatedly pulling away from our real time experiences to take out our smart phones – and then frame, photograph, filter and post – has the adverse effect of interrupting focus. By focus I mean the ability not only to closely observe but also to concentrate, to pay extended attention.

In his book “The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains,” technology writer Nicholas Carr reflects on neuroplasticity, which is the capacity for our neural circuits to change in response to stimuli. Specifically, he discusses the ways our minds have evolved in response to relentless engagement with digital technologies. About web browsing, he writes, “Frequent interruptions scatter our thoughts, weaken our memory and make us tense and anxious.” Similarly, repeated breaks to post images and track their reception threaten to fragment attention and increase anxiety.

As a result, we risk having other aspects of our surroundings and experiences slip away. While we may become better at multitasking, our ability to concentrate deeply over longer periods of time is weakened.

Carr continues:

The mental functions that are losing the “survival of the busiest” brain cell battle are those that support calm, linear thought – the ones we use in traversing a lengthy narrative or an involved argument, the ones we draw on when we reflect on our experiences or contemplate an outward or inward phenomenon.

In other words, the kinds of attention that we’re constantly reinforcing through habitual photo-sharing seem to develop at the expense of those that we need to engage with, say, books. Sven Birkerts, author of “Changing the Subject: Art and Attention in the Internet Age,” links literature with focus, insisting that “Works of art are feats of concentration.”

“Imagination,” he continues, “is the instrument of concentration.”

Baseball fans take photos and videos as Chicago Cubs infielder Kris Bryant hits.
Baseball fans take photos and videos as Chicago Cubs infielder Kris Bryant hits. Image source: Jerry Lai/USA Today Sports

An Empathy Gap?

In a 2013 study hailed by novelists, researchers from the New School for Social Research reported a correlation between reading novels and increased empathy.

It’s likely that many teachers of literature (myself included) reacted with a shrug, since the study confirms what we’ve been saying all along. Literary works offer us the opportunity to imaginatively linger on (rather than simply glimpse or swiftly scroll through) others’ experiences of the world. But we can only seize on this opportunity if we’re able to pay attention – if we allow ourselves to slow down long enough to absorb what we observe.

While that particular study received some pushback, taking the time to engage with prose, poetry and even photography has certainly allowed my students and me to carefully investigate the contours of a range of experiences. It has also compelled us to concentrate with intention on how these experiences matter in relation to current events.

I think, for example, of poet Claudia Rankine’s highly acclaimed book “Citizen: An American Lyric,” which uses both images and text to dwell on the realities of contemporary American racism in its myriad forms – pushing readers to take stock of the inequalities that structure our present day.

“More and more,” notes Birkerts, “I believe that art – via imagination – is the necessary counter to our information-glut crisis.”

If we’re too busy snapping and promoting photographs, or if we’re too scattered because we’re perusing the photostreams of others, we’re unlikely to emerge from “life in a media bubble.”

We’ll miss what’s happening around us. And we won’t be able to give the world the empathy and attention it requires and deserves.

Rebecca Macmillan, Ph.D. Candidate in English, University of Texas at Austin

This article was originally published on The Conversation.

Read the original article.

The post What’s Lost When We Photograph Life Instead Of Experiencing It? appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.


Why Students Are Choosing To Stay Back In India Rather Than Studying Abroad

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By Gayatri Jayaraman:

It was 1992. Then Vishwa Hindu Parishad chief Ashok Sinhal was addressing the students of IIT Mumbai. “You join the university only physically, your souls migrate to the U.S., and your bodies join three years later,” he admonished the gathering as a ripple of laughter ran through it.

The idea of students leaving the country, the ‘brain drain’, signifying the leaking of skill from developing to developed countries, that began in the 1960s and peaked in the 1970s and 1980s, has irked many Indian governments, whether right wing or left wing, through the decades.

The numbers bear them out. According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, in the 1990s India lost 1.1 % of its skilled labour force to brain drain and in the 1990s – 60,000 doctors in the UK were of Indian origin, estimated to be 12% of India’s total stock of doctors at the time.

The foreign shore had infinitely greener grass. Comparisons in the early 2000s (Arora et al, 2001) found that salaries in the U.S. tech sector were 10 times those available back home. In comparison, the cost of obtaining a medical degree was found to be eight times the annual per capita GDP in India, and for an engineering degree, four times.

The recovery of the expense incurred to study made it a no-brainer. In 2015, the National Science Foundation of the U.S. reported that 57% of all immigrant scientists and engineers were of Asian origin, India topping that list with 9,50,000 out of 2.96 million scientists and engineers.

Lines of student hopefuls thronged the British Council and the United States-India Educational Foundation as students gave pro-metric exams and sought scholarships to make their way overseas.

In 2013-14 Indian students heading to the U.S. for studies numbered 1,02,673 which amounted to 11.6% of all international students on American campuses.

Last week, emerging education spending data indicated that for the first time in four years the amount being spent on going overseas was falling.

According to a report in Mint citing data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), education-related spends dropped 20 % with an estimated proportionate drop in student flow, though that number is not yet available.

More than spends, it is a change in sentiment creeping up across the country.

But why? Education loans have never been more easily available – the higher education loan market stands at $1 trillion with a penetration of only 20 % and 55% of all loans disbursed by specialist firms like Avanse going towards outbound education.

Moreover, India has 129 schools catering to an International Baccalaureate qualification, and the system, from transcripts to GPAs, is increasingly geared towards integrating with international education. Yet, several factors are influencing the decision to stay.

While India’s well off continue to give overseas education prime importance, academics like Soujanya Pudi, Head of Communications at the NSHM Business School in Kolkata, estimate that shift in middle-class students wanting to go overseas has dropped around 20%.

“At least half a dozen of my students who have gone overseas, specifically the UK, remain unemployed,” she says. Students who remain still flock to colleges such as Presidency, St Xavier’s, Lady Sriram College, IITs and IIMs she says, as they work on merit and provide exposure besides having strong alumni networks.

It also comes from having more lucrative work options at home, or less dismal ones at any rate.

According to the 2016 Monster Salary Index, the IT sector in India has a median gross hourly salary of Rs. 346.62 for men, 24 % higher than the national average, while the financial sector is at Rs 291. 51.9 % were happy with their pay in India and 63.7% had a good work-life balance.

These figures would have been unthinkable barely a decade ago.

The figures also show that those who worked for foreign-owned companies received higher wages and were happier with their jobs. FDI has made it possible to work at an international firm from a local branch.

You could work with Google, or Facebook or Amazon in India itself, not to mention an international law firm, or medical or pharma set up, or fashion, and receive the associated benefits.

There is a reluctance to be a second class citizen elsewhere.

Neil Dutta, a Kolkata-based postgraduate who who has developed over seven apps for Google, hasn’t felt the need to go abroad for the sake of it. “The opportunity that an American has in America is very different from the opportunity an Indian has there,” he says.

His aunt, Jeena Mitra Banik, says going abroad remains an option for him if it satiates his discovery potential and provides him a platform. Perks, which include travel, and liaising with global counterparts, increases exposure levels over that of an American in the same position limited to a circuit in Dallas, Texas.

“The start-up culture in India is right now pretty exciting,” admits Rohit Chopra, associate professor at Santa Clara University in the U.S., who estimates perception that India has more opportunities now is growing.

A great idea and sufficient drive and backing makes success possible without a foreign degree. While job opportunities in the U.S. may abound for engineers, essentially for everyone else, India remains a shinier job market.

India is in fact turning into a hub for Asian education.

A senior faculty member at the Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad, says, “There is an increasing realisation in management that one needs Asian context. So not only are Indian students completing an Indian MBA, and travelling to U.S. universities to only do a second MBA, but India is becoming an education hub for international students from other Asian countries too.”

This is why Singapore-based INSEAD started their India-tailored executive programme last year. Emeritus, another Singapore-based aggregator is also in collaboration with MIT Sloan, Columbia Business School to offer Ivy League education in India.

“The trickle has begun the other way. International MBAs in the U.S. and other countries in the West now need to incorporate a two-week study tour which is invariably done in India,” the ISB faculty member states.

It also emerges from an imperceptible upgrade in the confidence levels of students with Indian degrees. Coupled with access to loans and an awareness of options, counsellors say many still do seek foreign education, but with a little less trepidation and fear of rejection, and more as a value-add or a back-up than a solitary escape route.

Alisha Mashruwala, CEO of On Course, a Mumbai-based education counsellor, attributes some of the perceived drop to students also looking at more diverse countries.

At the postgraduate level, Canada for instance has become more interesting due to the availability of job options after a degree, than the UK or the U.S. Gun control issues and reported issues of rape on American campuses have also stirred some fear.

“But there is also a growing awareness that India has options such as Institutes like Ashoka University and Shiv Nadar University. Since cut offs in India are so high, students do keep applying abroad as a back-up,” she says.

Sarasa Surinarain, who began coaching children in Chennai on how to break into Ivy League schools in the U.S. after her two daughters made it to Princeton and Harvard in the 1980s, says there is a clear affinity in the younger generation for Indian culture.

“Though loans are available, scholarships overseas are almost negligible, jobs are not available post studies, and besides alternate fields like textiles, fashion, film making are fun and dynamic in India today,” she says.

The average Indian teenager also has more clarity on his identity.

Siddharth Varma, a 10th standard student at the Smt Sulochanadevi Singhania School in Thane, Maharashtra wants to be a lawyer. While his childhood ambition was to go to Harvard, he is now clear he wants to study Indian law. “I would like to go to Columbia or Harvard or LSE eventually for global perspective, but my base needs to be India.”

Varma says degrees from both countries can only be an advantage. The shift in thinking is also due to increased global exposure. Varma’s classmate, Sanjeet Agrawal wants to be an automobile engineer like his dad.

The two were recently part of a student exchange programme with a German school near Stuttgart and Agrawal hopes to study their some day, possibly after his IIT, but even he doesn’t dream of migrating. “I’d like to learn German engineering and bring that precision back to India,” he says.

Their group at school has already Skyped with students in Denmark as part of a school project and have studied the welfare system. Others went on a summer school trip to NASA, and have very clear views on the advantages of being Indian.

“I think we are very hardworking, but it can also be a disadvantage for us, we should have more balance, more involvement with nature,” classmate Shama Deshpande says.

With most of the class already having travelled internationally on school trips or personal holidays with parents—India is expected to account for 50 million outbound tourists by 2020.

Outbound tourism, for as low as Rs. 25,000 a trip and cheap EMI options, grew at 27 % in 2015 according to an ASSOCHAM study. The hunger for global exposure then, is not something students today lack when making their choices.

Kids hearing stories of others ‘coping’ overseas have also begun to see value in India’s non quantifiable advantages-apart from alumni and social networks, family, freshly cooked food, social support, friendships, and access to the same consumer durables the west has.

Consequently, a foreign degree has become an optional add on, a way to explore more, add value, and not a must-have.

Josya Mitra, 15-year-old Kolkata school girl at DPS Ruby Park, says she’d like to see the world but she’s not in a hurry. “There are enough opportunities here itself today to arm ourselves for a future. My pishi (paternal aunt) made it by staying here and globe-trotting. If she can, so can I. The world is anyways waiting to be discovered. Being a student need not be the only way!”

The article was originally published here on BOOM.

About the author: Gayatri Jayaraman is a Mumbai-based writer.

Featured Image shared on Facebook by Nakul Sridhar.

The post Why Students Are Choosing To Stay Back In India Rather Than Studying Abroad appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

नेत्रहीन होने के कारण हम दोस्त बने, पर वह कैसा दोस्त जो आपका शोषण करे?

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मोनिका सिन्हा:

उस वक्त यह अनुभव हुआ कि वास्तव में दोस्ती करना एक विक्लांग व्यक्ति के लिए सौदा बन जाता है, जब मैंने खुद उस पल को जिया।

मेरी यह दोस्ती ट्रेन से शुरू होकर जेल तक आकर खत्म होती है, क्योंकि यह दोस्ती एक ऐसा घिनौना रुप धारण कर चुकी थी जहाँ एक असहाय और मजबूर लड़की की भावनाओ के साथ बार-बार नही बल्की हजारों बार खेला गया।
2009 का समय था जब मैं अपने नए जीवन की शुरूआत के लिए दिल्ली आ रही थी, तभी एक हमसफर मेरी माँ को इस बात के लिए आश्वस्त करता है कि दिल्ली मे वह मेरी पूरी मदद करेगा। वह हमसफर एक नेत्रहीन था और जीवन के 14 वर्ष बिताकर दृष्टीहीन हुई बेटी की माँ, उस हमसफर के झाँसे में आ जाती है, केवल इसी उम्मीद के साथ कि एक अंजान शहर में उसकी बेटी को उस हमसफर से शायद पढ़ाई में कुछ मदद मिल जाए।

लेकिन दोस्ती जैसे पवित्र  रिश्ते के पीछे छिपे उस इंसान के घिनौने मनसूबों ने जहाँ एक माँ की उम्मीदों  को कुचला वहीं उस लड़की के मन मे दोस्त और दोस्ती की ऐसी छवि बना दी कि, आज भी उन दोनो शब्दों के बारे  मे सोचकर उसका हृदय कांप जाता है। दोस्ती का शुरूआती दौर पढ़ाई के लिए अध्ययन सामाग्री के लेन-देन तक ही सीमित था। बाद में आगे चलकर हमारी दोस्ती गहराती गयी और आखिरकार एक दिन ऐसा आया जब मुझे यह पता चला कि, वो लड़का मुझे पसंद करता है। लेकिन मैंने उसके प्रस्ताव को अत्यंत सरलता से यह कहते हुए ठुकरा दिया कि, ऐसे किसी प्रस्ताव को स्वीकार करना मेरी उम्र के अनुरूप नही है क्योंकि मैं एक स्कूल की छात्रा हूँ और मेरे घर वाले मेरी इस तरह की हरकत को कभी पसंद नही करेंगे, क्योंकि मैं उन्हें बहुत से सपने दिखाकर और अपने साथ एक बड़ा लक्ष्य लेकर दिल्ली आयी हूँ। इसके बाद दोस्ती थोड़ी आगे बढ़ी लेकिन इस दोस्ती में मौजूद उसका एकतरफा प्यार मेरे लिए काफी महंगा साबित हुआ क्योंकि उसके एकतरफा प्रेम ने जहाँ मेरे चरित्र को बार-बार लांछित किया वहीं मेरा सम्पूर्ण सामाजिक जीवन एकांतता के मजधार में आ खड़ा हुआ जहाँ मेरे सारे दोस्तो ने मेरा साथ छोड़ दिया।

उसका एकतरफा प्यार आगे चलकर उस दरींदिगी में बदल गया जहाँ उसे मेरी दूसरों से दोस्ती और दूसरों से बात करना बिल्कुल पसंद नही था। जब भी मैंने कभी उसकी इस हरकत का विरोध किया तो मुझे डराने के लिए वह कभी मेरी सहेलियों को फोन करके उन्हें गालियाँ देता था, तो कभी उनके घर पर फोन करके मेरी और मेरी सहेलीयों के चरित्र को लेकर गन्दी बातें सुनाता था। इसके साथ ही मुझे डराने के लिए वो मेरे हॉस्टल में फोन करके मेरी वार्डन से भी यही कहता कि मैं एक चरित्रहीन लड़की हूँ। वह दरिंदा  इन सारे कार्यों को इसलिए अंजाम दे रहा था क्योंकि मेरे पास उसकी आई.डी. का सिमकार्ड था और इस वजह से वह बड़ी ही आसानी से मेरे कांटेक्ट डीटेल्स निकलवा लेता था।

मैं उसकी इन दरिन्दिगियों को केवल इसलिए सहन कर रही थी, क्योंकि वो मुझे लगातार यही धमकी देता था कि वह  मेरे कॉलेज ओर हॉस्टल में फोन करके मुझे एक चरित्रहीन लड़की बताएगा और मुझे कॉलेज हॉस्टल से निकलवा देगा। उसकी इन हरकतों को मैं  इसलिए भी सहन कर रही थी क्योंकि एक छोटे शहर से आने के कारण मैं काफी डरती थी और यह बात घर वालों को बताने में  इसलिए डरती थी कि कहीं वो मुझे घर ना बुला लें और अगर मैं घर चली जाती तो शायद मुझे दोबारा ना दिल्ली भेजा जाता और ना ही कभी मैं आगे पढ़ पाती ओर अंधकार भरा मेरा जीवन सदा के लिए अंधेरों के गर्त में ही दफन होकर रह जाता।

यही सब सोचकर मैंने कभी घरवालों से यह बात साझा करने की हिम्मत नही की। लेकिन मेरी यही सोच उस लड़के की दरींदिगी को और अधिक बढ़ाने में काफी मददगार साबित हुई। उसकी वो दरिंदगी इस हद तक बढ़ गयी कि, उसने मुझ पर कई बार हाथ उठाया, तो कभी सड़क पर मेरे बाल खींचे तो कभी कॉलेज में आकर छाती पर घूंसा मारा और जब भी मैंने कभी उसका विरोध करना चाहा तो मुझे हमेशा यही धमकी मिलती कि घर, कॉलेज, हॉस्टल, प्रिंसिपल, और वार्डन को फोन कर दूंगा, और ऐसी ही धमकियां उसके खिलाफ बार-बार उठने वाले मेरे कदमों को रोक देती थी।

उसकी ये दहशत भरी दरींदिगी लगभग 4 सालों तक चली। इन 4 सालों में मेरे लिए यह समझ पाना बहुत  मुश्किल हो गया था कि, क्या उस दरींदे ने सचमुच मुझसे कभी प्यार किया था, या फिर एक डरी-सहमी और कमजोर दृष्टिहीन लड़की की मजबूरी का फायदा उठा रहा था। अपने जीवन के इस पूरे दौर में मैने ऐसी कठिनाईयों और संघर्षों को सिर्फ देखा और सहा लेकिन कभी उसका सामना नही कर सकी और इसके पीछे एकमात्र वजह थी मेरी दृष्टिहीनता और उससे जुड़ी मेरी मजबूरियाँ। जीवन के इन 4 सालो में मुझे एक ही चीज सीखने मिली कि विकलांगता वास्तव में दोस्त ओर दोस्ती दोनों के मायने बदल देती है, क्योंकि ये दोनों ही एक विकलांग व्यक्ति को मजबूरी, परेशानी, बदनामी और आँसूओं के अलावा और कुछ नही देती।

आज मुझे किसी से भी दोस्ती करने में डर लगता है और इसकी वजह मेरे मन में दफन उस दरिन्दे का खौफ है। यह सच है कि इस विकलांग समाज ने मुझे बहुत कुछ दिया है, लेकिन शायद मुझमें ही कुछ कमी रही होगी कि मुझे इस समाज से कोई अच्छा दोस्त ना मिल सका। इस समाज में आकर जहाँ एक ने दोस्त बनकर मेरी मजबूरी का फायदा उठाया वहीं कुछ ऐसे दोस्त भी मिले जिन्होंने उस वक्त मेरा साथ देने से इंकार कर दिया जब मैं उस दरिंदे के शिकंजे से बाहर आने के लिए कानूनी लड़ाई लड़ रही थी। लेकिन यहाँ भी धोखा ही मिला। आखिर में मन में सिर्फ एक ही बात बस गयी है कि, दोस्त के रूप में मुझे जो शैतान मिला उसने सचमुच मुझे आँखों के साथ-साथ दिमाग से भी अंधा कर दिया था क्योंकि उन 4 सालों में मैं उसके खिलाफ कुछ भी नही कर सकी और ना ही अब कुछ कर पा रही हूँ।

The post नेत्रहीन होने के कारण हम दोस्त बने, पर वह कैसा दोस्त जो आपका शोषण करे? appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

In Photos: People In Kolkata March For Kashmir, Get Threats From Right Wing Groups

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By Sourav Sahoo for Youth Ki Awaaz:

Thousands of people came out in a rally in Kolkata on July 14 to condemn the ongoing violence in the Kashmir valley. Human rights activists, various students’ organizations, civil society groups as well as ordinary citizens of the city joined the rally. Even some school students could be seen. Slogans like “Kashmir maange azaadi” and “Manipur maange azaadi” were raised in the rally. There were also solidarity messages on posters from the Bastar Solidarity Network (BSN).

Protesters also demanded AFSPA free Kashmir and Manipur, meaning that the heavy deployment of armed forces in the two states be removed and the impunity they enjoy under the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act be revoked.

A protester said that after the announcement of the rally, the protestors had received a number of threats from groups of  right-wing people . There was also a call for a ”direct action day” by them and they assembled at College Street, where the protestors too had gathered. Due to a heavy deployment of the police force, the protest site remained non­violent and the protesters marched from College Square to Sealdah station, although the police did not give the permission to march on the pre­-decided route. Rallies are usually held in Kolkata from College Street to Shyambazar, which was also the pre-decided route for this protest.

Chanting “stand with Kashmir”, “stop the killing”, and “demilitarise Kashmir”, the protesters also carried placards bearing the names of those killed during the unrest that has engulfed the Kashmir Valley after the death of the militant commander Burhan Wani.

Photos from the protest:

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Also Read: “I Don’t Hate India. I Hate India’s Policies”: Delhi Citizens Protest Kashmir Killings

The post In Photos: People In Kolkata March For Kashmir, Get Threats From Right Wing Groups appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

“Commodification Of Women Is Near Absolute”: Rahul Bose On Sexism In The Film Industry

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By Oxfam India:

Gender sensitivity plays a key role in cinema, through its acknowledgement or the lack of it. It’s well known how differently the industry pans out for male and female actors. To formally question and address this difference, Oxfam India in partnership with Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival has announced the launch of an award to recognise the “Best Film on Gender Equality”. Rahul Bose, Oxfam’s global ambassador, talks about his perception of gender equality in his personal and professional environment, and whether this award will impact change.

What is your view on gender equality?

I grew up in a house seeing reversed gender roles between my parents. Every morning my father packed our lunchboxes in the kitchen, gave us oil massages on Sunday, while my mother encouraged me to play rugby. I never saw my mother walk behind my father. She always walked with him or ahead of him.

This was my early initiation in understanding gender equality. When I visited my friends and saw their mothers cooking in the kitchen I always asked if their father was unwell. That’s when I started realising that the world outside was different from the world inside my home.

As I grew older, even in my very gender equal world, I started noticing my sister had a different curfew time than I did. I could bring girls home but it wasn’t the same for her. But for most part of my upbringing, it made me aware that there was another way possible, that could harness the power of two people in the family.

How is gender equality perceived in the film Industry?

There is no surprise about the way things are in the industry – it’s a reflection of how women are viewed in society. The commodification of women is near absolute, be it on the cover of a magazine, music video or an item song.

To me the idea of gender equality is two-fold: one, for women to have the power to make their own choices, and two, to be treated as anybody else would, regardless of gender. Even if it means doing an item song in front of fifty men in a bar, so long it’s a woman’s choice, I’m fine with it. But she should have complete awareness and knowledge of the consequences of her choices. The moment a film chooses to include an item song that has nothing really to do with the narrative of the film it means they don’t know how to take the story forward and the only way to interest the audience is by titillating them with a woman’s body. There is a large section of women who unwittingly, unknowingly buy into that.

Today, films are one of the biggest influencers in the society. People idolise film characters and actors. Trends take off after the success of a certain film. The fraternity has a responsibility towards what they inject in the society as popular culture. There is a growing consciousness about this now, that cinema is watched equally by both men and women.

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How have you contributed to impact gender-based social norms in the industry?

My latest film which I am directing, “Poorna”, I’m proud to share, we had set up a sexual harassment code on the set, a first for the industry. We instituted a sexual harassment tribunal – a panel led by Nandita Shah of Akshara. If there was any sexual harassment on the set, a woman had the right to go and complain and it would be independently and impartially judged.

There is no gender-based discrimination for the cast of my film either. A 13-year-old girl plays the lead in the film, while women characters play traditional male roles like those of revenue secretary and PA. the film passes the Bechdel test with flying colours! Women talk to each other all the time without referring to men.

When I came to the industry I realised, to uphold my values I had to choose films which questioned gender-based stereotypes and the norms which are deeply embedded in our society. I chose films which were written with gender sensitivity, even if my roles weren’t like that. “Dil Dhadkne Do” is a recent example of this where even if my character did not stand for those values, the film did.

How can Indian cinema become more gender sensitive and impact social change?

Fact of the matter is that if you are going to walk up to directors and ask them to make gender sensitive films, that’s not going to work. Commercial success is the first thing on a director’s mind and there are multiple pressures on her or him to ensure that.

In the future we can borrow an idea from Hollywood: they have associations where one can come with a cause they want to popularise. The association on behalf of these issues approach people in the industry at the writing stage and before you know it the plots reflect narratives of these issues, which range from date rape, drugs to even the refugee crisis.

Another effective way to get to the industry would be to conduct workshops with directors. There should be conversations with directors after they have watched a film that they have watched before, but this time through the lens of gender sensitivity.

Oxfam India, through this award, should challenge filmmakers to maybe not change the film they make but at least make sure gender sensitivity is a part of it as much as good acting or music or any other element is.

What impact will this gender award have on Indian films?

Slow and hopefully, steady. But one should keep in mind just because there is an award for being gender sensitive; it doesn’t mean people will be running to make gender balanced films. I think more realistically, an award like this will shed light on what makes for a gender sensitive film and what does not. It will alert people that there is something called gender sensitivity in a movie. I don’t think most filmmakers have that consciousness as yet.

This will get people to question why the same rules don’t apply to men and women. It should get the film fraternity questioning why equal time is not given to male and female roles in the movie.

The instant response to all these questions will be that the box office does not accept such radical change. But if you look at the success of films like “Queen” and “Neerja” in the recent past, and hopefully “Poorna” in the next few months, it proves otherwise. That it’s not a man who drives the film anymore, but a great story.

So while this award is not going to change gender-based social norms in Indian cinema overnight, its victory will be just to make people aware that you can see a film from the lens of gender sensitivity and not just plot and good acting.

This article was originally published here.

Featured image source: Getty
Banner image source: Facebook

The post “Commodification Of Women Is Near Absolute”: Rahul Bose On Sexism In The Film Industry appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

#NewsInTweets: Heavy Rains Lash Delhi And Gurgaon, Hundreds Stranded

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By YKA Staff:

What’s the latest around the world today? Curated for you from the interwebz, here’s a quick morning fix to keep you updated. In 140 characters at that! Presenting, #NewsInTweets:

1. Heavy rainfall brings Delhi, Gurugram to a halt; Delhi Traffic Police issues regular updates to ease traffic.

2. A 20-year-old engineering student was beaten to death by her ex-boyfriend in a classroom in Chennai. He came drunk and followed her into the classroom where he attacked her with a log, leaving her in a pool of blood.

3. A whopping number of 8358 cases of scheduled caste atrocities have been recorded in Uttar Pradesh.

4. Typhoon Lionrock hits Northen Japan; nine reportedly found dead. 

5. Maharashtra State Govt. ensures students who fail SSC, eligible for skill development course.

6. Spokesman and chief ISIS strategist Al-Adnani killed while overseeing operations in Syria.

7. 432 cases of chikungunya, 487 cases of dengue; Union Health minister Nadda assures help. Govt caps Rs. 600 to Rs.1500 for tests to confirm chikungunya.

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Banner, featured and thumbnail image source: Arif Khan, Fayaz Peer/Twitter

The post #NewsInTweets: Heavy Rains Lash Delhi And Gurgaon, Hundreds Stranded appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

A Survivor Of Child Sexual Abuse Shares How Important It Is For Parents To Talk About Sex

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Submitted anonymously:

In India, parents seldom have the ‘sex talk’ and most importantly they do not talk to their children about the ‘wrong’ and ‘right’ touch. Yes, I am referring to the rampant child sexual abuse prevalent in India. We tend to ignore such incidents and with the alarming rise in the sexual abuse amongst children in India, it is devastating. I am a victim of child sexual abuse. It scarred me for life, it turned me into a shy child who was given a reality check at the tender age of 12. I was only 12.

Being the only child of a single mother, I was already in a vulnerable position. We were visiting a family friend who lived with his wife and a 5 year old child. At first, he kept urging me to sit on his lap but I was not comfortable. After a while he took me out for ice-cream on his bike and asked me to hold on to him tightly. I didn’t really feel good about anything and didn’t say anything to my mother as she was busy reminiscing the old days.  My mother and I were in the guest room, while the family was in the next room. In the middle of the night I felt someone’s hand on my stomach. I froze. Slowly the hand moved upwards and I instantly felt blood gushing through my face, I was petrified. I couldn’t utter a word. It was him. He went on to touch me for another 10 minutes and I couldn’t move because he held on to me. The worst part was, my mother was right next to me and I still couldn’t reach out. I finally pushed him away and woke my mother and the man rushed out of the room.  I couldn’t sleep. I was so scared.

The next morning, I told my mother everything that happened and she just hugged me and cried silently. We immediately left the house, without saying another word and never talked about the incident ever again.

I am sure many children across India, go through similar incidents and are unable to confide in anyone because of the taboo attached to talking about sex that is imperative.

Not everyone is comfortable with discussing sex and it is alarming because our youth resorts to the information available online and pornography to learn about sex. In schools, the chapter on sexual reproduction and reproductive organs is hurriedly rushed through or skipped altogether. Sex education is extremely important and it’s high time that people do not shy away from such discussions.

I am 20 now. My mother and I are extremely close and have open discussions about everything under the sun. But not everyone is fortunate to have someone to talk and discuss such issues. I hope things change, I wish parents talk to their children more often, about real issues and not just scoring well in exams, or competing with Sharmaji’s son or daughter.

The post A Survivor Of Child Sexual Abuse Shares How Important It Is For Parents To Talk About Sex appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

How Will India’s Intervention In Balochistan Affect Its Equation With Pakistan And China?

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By Shubhranshu Suman and Ujjwal Pandey:

Since long India has refrained from mentioning Balochistan in its diplomatic parleys. However, this consuetude was broken on 15th of August, 2016. Just a day after Pakistan’s High Commissioner to India Abdul Basit dedicated his country’s independence day to “Kashmir’s Azaadi”, PM Modi’s response has brought Balochistan to the centre of attention. Although PM’s speech has been praised by former Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Baloch nationalist leaders, it has also been blamed by the opposition parties, asking the government to end its knee-jerk policy with Pakistan. In the words of Mr Vikram Sood, ex-head of RAW, the mere reference was enough for all of Pakistan to go up in a rage. It will be interesting to track the future course that the government takes on Balochistan.

Non-possibility Of Intervention

It has been India’s age-old policy to not-meddle in the internal matters of Pakistan. However, Brahumdagh Bugti, leader of the Baloch Republican Party, recently cited that India can intervene under the ambit of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine. India used a concept similar to R2P in the past to intervene in Bangladesh Liberation War, 1971 and Operation Poomalai, 1987.

But these interventions occurred long before R2P came to a commitment at the United Nations 2005 World Summit. Nevertheless, invoking R2P in its current framework remains the prerogative of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), with China, an all-weather friend of Pakistan, being its permanent member. This makes Indian intervention improbable. What also makes intervention highly unlikely is the geographical reality that India doesn’t share a contiguous border with Balochistan.

Reactions Via Involvement In Derailing CPEC

Although the previous governments have raised the issues of Gilgit-Baltistan and POK, Balochistan has found a rare mention in PM’s speech. The real intent, however, of this acknowledgement seems to address the strategic threat to India from Chinese involvement in Balochistan via China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

CPEC aims to connect China’s largest province, Xinjiang, with Pakistan’s Gwadar port in Balochistan via a network of roads and rails. India fears a potential Chinese naval base in Gwadar after completion of CPEC that may translate into Chinese maritime hegemony in the Indian Ocean.

These developments make derailment of CPEC imperative for India’s security needs. However, any Indian attempt to sabotage CPEC may have undesirable consequences. On one hand, it may call for an incursion by Chinese troops into Indian territories, as they did previously in Chumar area of Ladakh during President Xi Jinping’s visit or recently in Arunachal Pradesh in June.

On the other hand, it may attract disproportionate response from Pakistani army, who according to Rajiv Sikri, India’s former ambassador to Kazakhstan, have traditionally used the pretext of an imagined threat from India for their privileges and perks. This response may be an increase in cross-border infiltration in Kashmir; compounding the existing turmoil in the valley.

Intervention May Backfire

An Indian adventure in Balochistan may backfire. Take, for instance, the case of the US support to anti-communist rebels during the Soviet-Afghan war. The US supplied the rebels with funds and arms to force their enemies, the Soviets, to withdraw. But the unintended consequence was the creation of anti-American “Taliban”. A similar approach by India in Balochistan, like the East Pakistan intervention, may result in a civil war. It carries the danger of a domino effect across the entire region and spill over of militancy from Afghanistan. If that happens, the situation will not be possible to contain.

Securing Strategic Interests

Indian governments since independence have been sensible to base foreign policies to suit India’s strategic interests; not succumbing to emotions or jingoism. India’s interests in its extended neighbourhood are to secure access to Iran and Central Asia for energy needs as well as to ensure the stability of a nuclear-armed Pakistan.

A full-fledged Indian support to Balochistan is unlikely to secure these interests as it may end up in the creation of an independent Balochistan; whose fate India would be unsure of – an Indian ally or a breeding ground for Jihadi groups conspiring against India. So any Indian intervention should aim at gaining greater autonomy for Balochistan within Pakistan’s federal framework rather than outright independence.

Alternatives To Balochistan Diplomacy

India should rather focus on engaging Pakistan without indulging in Balochistan. The long-term strategy should be to strengthen the civilian government vis-à-vis Pakistani army. One option that deserves greater attention is non-violent “compellence”: the use of state diplomatic, economic, and social resources to build and sustain international pressure on Pakistan to force changes in its behaviour.

The panic generated in Pakistan in September 2008 by an intended disruption by India in the flow of Chenab to fill Baglihar Dam suggests that water resource is an effective leverage against Pakistan. Therefore, policy initiatives like renegotiating Indus Waters Treaty should be taken. Moreover, efforts should be made by India to fully utilise the waters of the Eastern Rivers – Sutlej, Beas and Ravi, entitled to her under the existing terms of the treaty.

Excessive adventurism in Balochistan may lead to undesirable consequences. Hence, there is a need to rethink on the alternative geopolitical leverages against Pakistan rather than resorting to impulsive policies.

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Image Source: John Moore, Rob Stothard/Getty Images

The post How Will India’s Intervention In Balochistan Affect Its Equation With Pakistan And China? appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.


4 Ways India Can Send A Strong Message To Pakistan, Without Military Force

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By Shubhranshu Suman and Ujjwal Pandey:

The attack on the Indian Army Brigade headquarters in Uri shook the nation’s soul, inviting rhetoric comments from all sections of the society. There were calls to conduct military strikes in Pakistan to project India’s resolve to counter any threat emanating from the neighbouring country.

These calls were well received when the Indian army conducted dauntless surgical strikes on terrorist “launch pads” in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir along the Line of Control. The statement from the Director General of Military Operations, Lieutenant General Ranbir Singh, stating that India was ceasing all operations with no plans for such actions, implies that the strikes were meant to project India’s military prowess and battle preparedness, with no intention of escalation.

This strike is a classic example of display of military restraint when the stated objectives of a military operation are accomplished. Amidst all the fuzz surrounding the retaliation to Uri attacks, the Indian Army has shown that it is extremely important to be pragmatic in our response. Now that the surgical strikes are over, it is significant to explore all non-military means that can be employed to build sustained pressure on Pakistan.

Isolation At The International Level

India can reinforce the most conventional way of diplomatic resentment: condemnation of Pakistan on all multilateral forums to isolate it internationally. The Minister of External Affairs, Sushma Swaraj’s address to the 71st Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) is a grand start to this strategy, where she accused Pakistan of nurturing and turning the evil of terrorism into a hydra-headed monster. Similarly, as India backed out from the 19th SAARC summit, followed by Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Bhutan, has sent a strong message to Pakistan that India isn’t going to sit back and watch.

Though Nepal, current chair of the SAARC, is urging member states to attend the summit, it is necessary that India ensures the SAARC summit doesn’t happen this year as it will be a major regional embarrassment for Pakistan.

Following in the footsteps of Indira Gandhi before the 1971 war, the government should send envoys to influential world capitals, notably US Western allies, to gather support for action against Pakistan because of the patronage it allegedly grants to designated terrorists like Hafiz Saeed, Masood Azhar, Dawood Ibrahim and Sayeed Salahudeen. This would initiate a chain of international lobbying, pushing the “Pakistan State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation Act”, introduced in the US House of Representatives, to its early conclusion.

With the US Presidential Elections round the corner, it is imperative that India intensifies its diplomatic operations to get the law into effect before President Obama leaves office.

Granting Asylums

Long dormant avenues of diplomatic offence, like granting political asylum to Brahamdagh Bugti and Hyrbyair Marri have to be considered. This would be a great leap forward in the bid for gaining greater autonomy for Balochistan. Political asylum given to Dalai Lama way back in 1959 has kept the Tibetan movement alive and a similar Indian approach vis-à-vis Pakistan will keep Balochistan at the centre of attention, giving India an effective leverage against Pakistan.

Offering safe havens to family members of prominent Baloch nationalists will go a long way in building long-term goodwill for India among Balochis. In the past, India has provided asylum to the family of former Afghanistan President Mohammed Najibullah and other top officials, after he was murdered by the Taliban.

However, caution can be exercised while exploring these options as India’s excessive adventurism in Balochistan may induce secessionist tendencies among minority Balochis in Iran and Afghanistan, with whom India wants cordial relations.

Indus Water Treaty : A New Recourse

While military action can bring limited gains and diplomatic retaliation will take time to materialise, it is the retaliation on the economic front, like capitalise on the Indus Waters Treaty (a water distribution treaty between India & Pakistan that decided which country ought to use water from which rivers and for what purposes) that needs serious contemplation.

The IWT is perhaps the only treaty of its kind that stands as a testimony to the generosity of an upper riparian state, in this case, India. Even after multiple Indo-Pak wars, the treaty stood the test of time. But now the time is opportune to use the treaty to reinforce our position. Firstly, infrastructure projects need to be accelerated to fully utilise the waters of the three eastern rivers: Ravi, Beas and Sutlej, the ones India has, under the existing terms of the treaty.

The second prong of strategy with respect to the IWT is regarding the western rivers – Indus, Jhelum and Chenab. India can get the Pakistani government to renegotiate the IWT, just as the US did with the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. India should base its demands for renegotiation on the fact that water requirements in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir have multiplied over the years.

It is highly unlikely that Pakistan will accept any Indian demands to change the provisions of the IWT. But India will be able to wrest diplomatic initiative vis-à-vis Pakistan and reach out to the people of Jammu and Kashmir; as India will directly link the treaty with the welfare of the Kashmiris.

Digital Warfare

Perhaps, the most unexplored retaliatory option is the use of cyberspace to launch attacks on Pakistan’s digital networks. It offers the advantages of swiftness, minimal casualties, plausible deniability and severe damage to Pakistan’s infrastructure. India can develop its offensive cyber capabilities to fully harness the potential of this option.

It is high time that India calls Pakistan’s bluff for nuclear retaliation. Pakistan knows very well that a pre-emptive strike on India will invite strong retaliation. No such mishaps have happened in the past, even when the threat of nuclear warfare was greater, like the Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 and the Sino-Soviet Border Conflict, 1969.

The Uri attack seems to be carefully calibrated to match with the ongoing tensions in the valley. It also coincides with 71st session of the UNGA; exposing Pakistan’s intent to internationalise the Kashmir issue. However, prompt response by the Indian forces along with the offensive diplomacy will go a long way in sustaining pressure on Pakistan.

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Image source: Getty Images

The post 4 Ways India Can Send A Strong Message To Pakistan, Without Military Force appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

‘A War Without Limits Leads To A Battlefield Without Doctors’

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By Médecins Sans Frontières (India):

Today, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is remembering one of the darkest moments in its history. On October 3 2015, U.S. airstrikes killed 42 people and destroyed the MSF trauma hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan.

As we grieve the loss of our colleagues and patients, we are left with the question: is it still possible to safely provide medical care on the front line? In the past year, there have been 77 attacks on medical facilities run and supported by MSF in Syria and Yemen. Hospitals are being continually dragged onto the battlefield, and patients and their doctors and nurses are sacrificed in the process.

It was the destruction of the Kunduz Trauma Centre and the devastating assault on health facilities in Syria and Yemen that led to the UN Security Council Resolution 2286 being passed in May 2016. The resolution strongly condemned attacks on medical facilities and demanded that all parties to armed conflict comply fully with their obligations under international law.

And yet, five months later and on the same day as two health facilities were hit in Syria, we returned to the chambers of the Security Council to decry the hypocrisy of States – particularly those involved in the wars in Syria and Yemen. With one hand, States sign a resolution to protect health facilities and with the other they continue to be directly involved or complicit in the ongoing onslaught of health workers and patients in conflict zones.

What is clear is that with every attack on a health facility the chasm widens between the rhetoric from governments about their respect for International Humanitarian Law and the way they wage wars in reality.

October 3, 2015 will forever remain a black day in MSF’s history. In the early hours of the morning, MSF’s trauma hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan came under precise and repeated airstrikes. Under attack, our colleagues fought for their lives and for the lives of their patients with extraordinary determination and courage. Fourteen MSF colleagues lost their lives that tragic day. All of MSF grieves with the victims’ families. They will be tremendously missed and never forgotten.
No government has ever said it intentionally bombs hospitals, but they are bombed nonetheless. More often than not, these attacks occur under the umbrella of the ever-expanding ‘war on terror’ – a label used with increasing frequency including today by all military coalitions in Syria. Attacks are either dismissed as tragic ‘mistakes’, denied outright, or become political footballs as States desperately point fingers at each other while claiming at the same time that their bombs are the smartest and that their airstrikes are the most ‘humanitarian’.

There have been no impartial investigations carried out by an independent international body into any of the attacks on hospitals that have occurred over the past year. This is because there is zero political will among governments to have their military conduct examined from the outside.

In the case of Kunduz, the U.S. carried out an internal military investigation and made a heavily redacted report available to the public in April. It is more than we have received from any other military force that has been involved in bombing an MSF facility.

This investigation undertaken by the U.S. has allowed us to gain a deeper insight into the events that occurred in Kunduz on the night our hospital was attacked. Some of what we have learnt from the U.S. investigation report is deeply worrying.

The ground troops in Kunduz falsely assumed that “all civilians had fled and only Taliban remained in the city.” They made no effort to find out if this was actually true and did not take the necessary precautions to avoid civilian casualties. The entire city of Kunduz was deemed hostile. While invoking ‘self-defence’ rules, U.S. forces in Kunduz were opening fire pre-emptively in a ‘shoot first, ask questions later’ military operation. No one in the chain of command consulted the no-strike list in the hours leading up to the attack. The report determines that our hospital was misidentified. This led to the 211 artillery shells from an AC-130 being unleashed on our hospital without any hostile threat being confirmed.

MSF continues to engage with the highest levels of the U.S and Afghanistan governments to gain assurances that this will not happen again.

The responsibility for the protection of hospitals – in whichever conflict they operate – does not lie with us moving healthcare away from the battlefield. At the core of the law of war is the responsibility that militaries have to distinguish legitimate targets from protected civilian sites. If there is no distinction made between a civilian and a combatant, then everyone becomes a potential target.

For more than 40 years MSF has negotiated the protection of its medical facilities in conflicts around the world. Our work in convincing warring parties to respect health facilities will continue. For example, to this day, some Afghan officials attempt to justify the attack on our trauma centre by falsely claiming that the hospital was “full of Taliban”. We are left to wonder: does following medical ethics and treating everyone who needs it, including the wounded from all sides, transform our hospitals into ‘enemy bases’?

 

 

We cannot accept that we might be targeted for treating the wounded enemy. We will take our message to those with the fire-power in all of the places where we work. We will continue to demand of the most powerful and their allies that they turn their rhetoric into reality. And we will denounce those who seek to erode the laws of war.

A war without limits leads to a battlefield without doctors. We will not sit silently by and let this happen.

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Image source: Andrew Burton/Getty Images

The post ‘A War Without Limits Leads To A Battlefield Without Doctors’ appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

Watch A Young Mumbaikar Recount His Struggle For A ‘Legal’ House

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By Shahid:

The Afzulpurkar Committee, which preceded the formation of Mumbai’s Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA) in 1995, noted in their study that “an authorized dwelling unit is a first step in the right direction” for enhancing the living standards of the city’s slum dwellers. The study also said that slum-dwellers had been forced to live in shanty structures and unhygienic environment “as they were thrown out of the formal housing sector, the latter being unaffordable”.

Yet when the SRA came to Shahid’s Mariamma Nagar in 2002, these conditions, instead of changing, only got aggravated. “Most of the people who had given their land for further constructions are not given fair spaces to live,” Shahid says. Moreover, he claims, their land is declared illegal despite having all the required documents.

Since the SRA’s construction was not complete and Shahid’s family of eight found it difficult to live in their small accommodation, his parents used their savings to buy another house in the area. The house, they later learnt, was illegal. 13 years after the rehabilitation scheme was initiated in their area, not only had Shahid’s family not been rehabilitated, their savings too had been spent. In March last year, a 17-year-old Shahid then took on the mantle of solving this problem not only for his own family but also for others living in the area. This is his story.

Text by Abhishek Jha. Produced by Rachit.

Banner image credit: Punit Paranjpe/ Stringer/Getty

The post Watch A Young Mumbaikar Recount His Struggle For A ‘Legal’ House appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

ज़मीन से जुड़े नवाज़ुद्दीन फ़्रांस से लेकर आये किसानों के लिए सींचाई की तकनीक

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प्रशांत झा:

मुन्नाभाई के बाबूजी का पहले सीन में जो लड़का पॉकेट मारता है और फिर जिसकी जमके धुनाई होती है वो याद है ना? इससे पहले ब्लैक फ्राइडे में मुम्बई ब्लास्ट केस में भी पकड़ा गया था, लेकिन शुक्र हो मुन्ना के बाबूजी का, कि कान ऐंठ के सही रास्ते पर ले आये। लड़के का ह्रदय परिवर्तन हो चुका है ये तो तभी पता चल गया जब उसने बजरंगी भाईजान के साथ मुन्नी को सही सलामत घर पंहुचा दिया। उसके बाद सिनेमा से नाम कमाया और कान फेस्टिवल पहुंच गया, और वहाँ से अपने गांव के किसान के लिए जबर तकनीक ले आया, एकदम स्वदेश के मोहन बाबू जैसे।

इस बार नवाज़ुद्दीन सिद्दीक़ी कान फ़िल्म महोत्सव के दौरान वक़्त निकालकर, फ़्रांस के किसानों से मिलें और उनके द्वारा इस्तेमाल किये जाने वाले सेंटर पिवट इरीगेशन सिस्टम यानि केंद्रीय धुरी सिंचाई तकनीक को समझा। नवाज़ इस तकनीक से प्रभावित हुए और एक मॉडल के ज़रिये अपने गांव बुढ़ाना के किसानों को इससे अवगत करवाया। किसानों ने इस नयी तकनीक का पुरज़ोर समर्थन भी किया।

नवाज़ ने अपने फेसबुक अकाउंट पर भी इसकी जानकारी दी। बकौल नवाज़, “मेरा गाँव बुढाना पानी की कमी के चलते डार्क ज़ोन घोषित किया जा चुका है। मैंने यहां एक अरसे तक खुद खेती की है। फ्रांस में जब मुझे खेती की एक ऐसी तकनीक के बारे में पता चला जो कम बिजली पानी खर्च किये, बारिश जैसा फायदा दे सकती है तो मैं उसे अपने गाँव ले आया। तकनीक और हमारी इच्छा ये दो चीज़े ही पानी को बचा सकती हैं।”

केंद्रीय धुरी सिंचाई व्यवस्था किसी भी पारंपरिक सिंचाई के तरीके से ज़्यादा सक्षम है, और इसमें होने वाली पानी की खपत किसी भी और तरीके से होने वाली खपत से आधी है। इस तकनीक से एक ओर लगे पाइप से पानी के पतले-पतले फव्वारों से कम से कम एक बार में एक एकड़ ज़मीन की सिचाईं हो सकती है। सिक्योरिटी गार्ड से बॉलीवुड के श्रेष्ठ कलाकारों में शामिल होने के सफ़र के बीच नवाज़ अपनी जड़ों को नहीं भूले, और इसीलिए जब भी मौका मिला वो अपने खेतों में फावड़ा थामे भी नज़र आएं। नवाज़ ने एक लंबे अरसे तक खेती की है और शायद तभी हर मौके पर न सिर्फ किसानों के साथ खड़े नज़र आएं बल्कि लोगों से भी अन्नदाताओं की हरसंभव मदद की अपील की।

हमारे देश में कृषि के लिए उपलब्ध भूमि में से महज़ 35% पर सिचाईं की जाती है, और ज़्यादातर पारंपरिक तरीके से। मौजूदा हालात में जहाँ जलस्तर देश के कई राज्यों में लगातार नीचे जा रहा है, नवाज़ की ये कोशिश बुढ़ाना के किसानों के लिए वरदान से कम नहीं है।

जाते-जाते नवाज़ की #SeedTheRise कैम्पेन के दौरान दिए गए इस खूबसूरत संदेश को सुनिए और माटी के लाल को दुआ नज़र करिये।

The post ज़मीन से जुड़े नवाज़ुद्दीन फ़्रांस से लेकर आये किसानों के लिए सींचाई की तकनीक appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz, an award-winning online platform that serves as the hub of thoughtful opinions and reportage on the world's most pressing issues, as witnessed by the current generation. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to find out more.

Do You Know Of The Oral Storytellers Banned By The British And Nizam?

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What if we tell you there was a rural community of oral storytellers who was banned by both the British Raj and the Nizam of Hyderabad because they posed a significant threat to imperialism and feudalism? Burrakatha was an oral storytelling technique in the Jangam Katha tradition, performed in villages of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. The troupe mostly consisted of the leading performer (...

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The Story Of This Popular Writer Whose First Film Was Banned In India

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The year is 1934. Dhanpat Srivastava, a printing press owner in Benares was an unhappy man, despite being an acclaimed writer. He was struggling with ill health and financial difficulties. Right then, a new opportunity came up. In the early 1930s, the film industry in Bombay was expanding rapidly. Writers from all over India were congregating there in search of better fortunes.

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Pasoori’s Classical Dancer Tells An Amazing Story Of Defying Dictatorship

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While the Coke Studio creation Pasoori is breaking boundaries and winning hearts, the ravishing Bharatanatyam Dancer tells a fascinating story of defying dictatorship. This is a story about dance and dissent. The song starts with the powerful portraiture of Sheema Kermani performing classical dance moves in a breathtakingly aesthetic traditional attire. There was no one better than Sheema Kermani...

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The Story Of A Banned Newspaper That Fueled India’s First War Of Independence

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This is the story of a forgotten newspaper that was in a league of its own, a banned daily that fueled India’s first war of independence, the indomitable Payam-e-Azadi. On the afternoon of 29 March 1857, Mangal Pandey, a sepoy of the 34th Bengal Native Infantry in Barrackpore, rebelled against his commanders, marking the inception of the Great Indian Sepoy Rebellion. A month earlier...

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The Curious Tale Of Partition, Refugees In Bombay And Fish Koliwada

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Every partition story is a weeping witness of dreadful human acts, but a few of them also enrich the cultural cascade of India. The strange origin of Fish Koliwada is one such interesting anecdote. During partition, many displaced Sikh refugees from Hazara district and Peshawar, who didn’t have relatives in Punjab, Delhi or Kashmir, boarded the iconic Frontier Mail and headed to Bombay with a hope...

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Stranger Things And The Stranger Story Of Gandhi And A Smuggler

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We all loved Stranger Things to the moon and back. But only a few have noticed this ‘cameo’ of Gandhi in Season 4 of this celebrated Netflix Original drama. As the plot unfolds quietly, we unveil the strange story of Gandhi & a smuggler. Read on. Spoilers ahead. There may have been many people who missed the Duffer Brothers’ Stranger Things S4E3’s brief mention of Gandhi, which is a subtle...

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The Remarkable History Of India’s Love Affair With ‘Papad’

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The humble crunchy Papad had been a silent observer to an astonishingly powerful tale of partition, migration and new hope for survival. You could fall deeply in love with Papad, but not in the same way that a Sindhi would. For Sindhis in India, Papad is an indispensable love affair. In every Sindhi household, greeting a guest with Papad and water is a necessary ritual. It has a remarkable history.

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‘Gully Boy’ Got India Hooked To Battle Rap, But Its Roots Date Long Back

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When ‘Gully Boy’ hit the screens in India, the entire country got hooked on Battle rap overnight. However, it remains a little-known fact that an identical twin of this dramatic form of battle had its roots in India long before it became a part of American pop culture. The agonizing condition of slavery prior to the American Civil War introduced many popular genres of music to the world.

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