| 
 Al-Jazeerah History
 
 Archives
 
 Mission & Name
 
 Conflict Terminology
 
 Editorials
 
 Gaza Holocaust
 
 Gulf War
 
 Isdood
 
 Islam
 
 News
 
 News Photos
 
 Opinion 
	
	
	Editorials
 
 US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
 
 www.aljazeerah.info
 
	  
           |  | 
 Dr. Fai to Continue Work for the Cause of 
	  Kashmir During Incarceration  By Abdus Sattar Ghazali Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 28, 2012   Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai, the Executive Director of Kashmiri American Council, 
	says during his incarceration at the minimal security Federal Correctional 
	Institution (FCI) in Cumberland, Maryland, he will continue his work for the 
	cause of Kashmir. Addressing a gathering of American Muslim leadership and well-wishers on 
	June 21, 2012 in Fremont, CA, Dr Fai said there is no restriction on him to 
	continue his work for the cause of Kashmir. He pointed out that the 
	prosecution had withdrawn charges initially leveled against him to be the 
	agent of a foreign government. Dr. Fai begins a two-year imprisonment term on June 26 for violating 
	certain tax laws related to non-profit organizations. On March 30th he was 
	sentenced to two-year imprisonment for conspiracy and violations of certain 
	tax laws. He was initially charged with conspiring to violate the Foreign 
	Agents Registration Act (FARA) but the prosecution dropped these charges. Judge Liam O'Grady, while announcing the verdict for two-year 
	imprisonment had made it clear that "it's (sentencing) necessary, even 
	though you have done some very moving things on behalf of the Kashmiri 
	people and that your cause is a wonderful cause," Fai told the gathering.He quoted again Judge O'Grady as saying: "I sincerely hope that while you're 
	at a minimal security facility like Cumberland, that I see no reason why you 
	can't continue to advocate on behalf of the Kashmiri people and to write.”
 Dr Fai stressed that no solution to the 65-year-old Kashmir conflict that 
	didn't command a consensus among the 17 million Kashmiri people could endure 
	just as no solution to East Timor held a chance of success until the East 
	Timor's leadership was consulted and a referendum on independence from 
	Indonesia was held. For too long, Fai pointed out, India's persecution of people of Kashmir 
	has been buried under the rubric of  "the world's largest democracy." 
	"There is no democracy in Kashmir; only military rule and the law of the 
	gun. In fact the presence of more than 700,000 Indian military and 
	paramilitary forces have made Kashmir the largest army concentration 
	anywhere in the world." Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai is the Executive Director of 
	the Washington based Kashmiri American Council Kashmir Center. He believes 
	in the peaceful settlement of the Kashmir conflict through tripartite 
	negotiations between Governments of India and Pakistan and the accredited 
	leadership of the people of the State of Jammu & Kashmir.
 
 During the 
	hearing his attorney Nina Ginsburg stated: “Judge, I think (Assistant U.S. 
	Attorney) Mr. Kromberg’s arguments to the Court are appalling.  
	[Federal investigators] have a lot of words that were captured in 
	intercepts, 20 years of intercepts, hundreds of thousands of interprets, and 
	Mr. Kromberg cannot stand in front of this Court with one example of a 
	statement, a public statement by Dr. Fai, a writing by Dr. Fai, a position 
	taken at a conference he sponsored, not one, not one word, that is anything 
	that could be characterized as propaganda for the Pakistani government.”
 Fai himself said he frequently took positions at odds with those 
	espoused by Pakistan. Most fundamentally, he said, he advocated for Kashmiri 
	independence while Pakistan wants the territory annexed into its own 
	country.
 Ginsberg also took exception to the government's efforts to paint Fai as 
	an extremist. She said they had been monitoring his email and phone calls 
	surreptitiously for 20 years, and could produce no evidence to back up those 
	assertions. As for the Muslim Brotherhood, she said Fai answered the 
	government's questions truthfully - he knows many members of the group, 
	which is prominent in many Muslim countries, but is not a part of the 
	organization. Dr. Fai is the founding chairman of the California-based World Peace 
	Forum. He is the Chairman of the International Institute of Kashmir Studies. 
	He is also the Chairman of the Kashmiri American Foundation & the 
	London-based Justice Foundation. Dr. Fai is also the Member of the Board of 
	Director of Istanbul-based the Union of the NGOs of the Islamic World.
 During the trial, Dr. Fai was greatly honored and supported by people from 
	all faiths. Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Zoroastrians, and 
	even atheists wrote dozens of letters regarding Dr. Fai to the judge.  
	These were people from the Unites States, United Kingdom, Netherlands, 
	Norway, Denmark, Thailand, India, Pakistan, Canada, Bahrain, Qatar, Turkey, 
	from both sides of the ceasefire line in Kashmir, and many other countries.  
	The courtroom was filled to capacity with people who came from places like 
	California, Kansas, Illinois, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, 
	Virginia, Washington DC, North Carolina, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and 
	other states.
 Although initially charged under the FARA [Foreign 
	Agents Registration Act] as an unregistered agent of Pakistan, Dr. Fai was 
	never convicted on this allegation, which seemed clearly intended to support 
	negotiations the U.S. and Hillary Clinton were engaged in with India at the 
	time, according to Paul Barrow, Director of United Progressives and the 
	Director of American Affairs for the International Council for Human Rights 
	and Justice.
 American Muslim leadership
 
 An array of American 
	Muslim leaders and civil rights advocates also spoke at the gathering held 
	at the San Francisco Bay Area’s popular Chandni banquet hall in 
	Fremont/Newark. The event was sponsored by the American Muslim Alliance 
	(AMA) and the Islamic Society of North America. Among the speakers were Imam 
	Zaid Shakir, Zaytuna College in Berkeley, California; Dr. Imtiaz Khan, 
	Vice-President of the Kashmiri American Council, Dr. Hatem Bazian, Professor 
	at the University of California, Berkeley; Dr. Agha Saeed, Chairman of the 
	American Muslim Alliance (AMA); Dr. Mohammad Ahmadullah Siqqidui, Professor 
	of Journalism and Public Relations at Western Illinois University, Macomb, 
	Illinois; Naeem Beg, the Vice President of the Islamic Circle of North 
	America (ICNA); Mark Hinkle, former chairman of the US Libertarian Party and 
	Edward Hasbrouck, author and freelance journalist.
 
 The program began 
	with an address via Skype link by the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front leader, 
	Yasin Malik, from Srinagar. He  spoke about the atrocities caused by the 
	Indian forces. He said the basic reason of unrest in the state is the 
	usurpation of our freedom and prolonging of solution to our political 
	problems,” he said, adding that there will be peace once the Kashmir issue 
	is resolved in accordance with the wishes and aspirations of its people. 
	Yasin Malik said that at present the struggle of the Kashmiri people is a 
	non-violent movement and if the global community did not give attention, 
	this may be turned into a violent movement.
 
 The plight of Pakistani 
	neuroscientist, Dr. Afia Siddiqui, echoed at the gathering of American 
	Muslim leaders when Dr. Afia’s brother Dr. Ahmed Siddiqui addressed the 
	audience via phone. Dr. Afia is serving 86-year imprisonment. She was tried 
	on charges of trying to kill American soldiers in Afghanistan in July 2008 
	and sentenced in September 2010.
 
 Mrs Qadr Chang Fai
 
 Mrs. 
	Qadr Chang Fai made a very moving speech. She thanked everybody for 
	supporting her husband at this critical moment and said life is a journey 
	and each and every day or year is just like you peel an onion, it doesn’t 
	matter how careful you are, it sometimes causes tears. She went on to say 
	that “sometimes obstacles and difficulties let us know what is our weakness 
	and it gives us a chance and opportunity to make us strong.”
 
 “I am 
	sure when my husband returns, after two years vacation, he will come up 
	fresh, strong and we will again work for the cause of Kashmir,” she said 
	adding: “This chapter is over and together we flip the page and start a 
	fresh new chapter of Kashmir’s history. We will make sure that we achieve 
	the goal and the goal is that liberty bell rings at every corner of Kashmir 
	which is the paradise on the earth.”
 
 Dr. Hatem Bazian
 
 Dr. 
	Hatem Bazian, Professor at the University of California, Berkeley, was of 
	the view that the second half of the 20th century and the beginning of the 
	21st century entered into the post-colonial era but Kashmir and Palestine 
	remain in the colonial era (i.e. India and Israel). He said both the people 
	of Kashmir and Palestine are suffering at the hands of occupiers.
 
 (There are many points of similarity between Kashmir and Palestine. Both are 
	the result of the partitioning of a country (India in one case, Palestine in 
	the other); both were formerly under British rule; and both were partitioned 
	in 1947. It will not be too much to say that the year India and Israel 
	celebrate their birthday is actually the birthday of these two conflicts, 
	perhaps the two deadliest unresolved conflicts of our times.)
 
 Dr. 
	Hatem Bazian said that sometime it is suggested that we should have 
	non-violent movement, I say that we are non violent. Occupations are the 
	most violent manifestations of the structure of violence. “Population is 
	always act as non-violent, while the states which occupy set up violent 
	structure.”
 
 He said that Kashmir is on the global chess board. “The 
	United States wants India to balance China, because if there is a conflict 
	with China, we always like that the darker people fight our war and the more 
	these people die is better for the officers because racism can be manifested 
	across many sectors.”
 
 On the other hand, he said, Israel has a 
	periphery foreign policy which means where ever possible divert Muslim 
	resources outside the periphery so that they cannot support the Palestinian 
	struggle. He said it is India and Pakistan where most pro-Palestine 
	sentiments prevail. He recalled that “in 1931 after the incident of the 
	Wailing Wall, a conference was held by the Indian subcontinent Muslims and 
	only 350,000 people showed up. Today if we have a gathering of 25,000 
	people, we are very happy. But the organizers of the 1931 rally apologized 
	the Palestinian delegation that we are sorry that everybody didn’t show up.”
 
 Alluding to Dr. Fai’s case, Dr. Bazian said that “in the post-9/11 era 
	there is strategic and systematic process of targeting the Muslim leadership 
	of organizational structures by eliminating the existing leadership that has 
	developed over the last 40 years studying together, graduating together, you 
	disrupt the civic political engagement in the country and second you allow 
	infiltrators those who are on the pay role of government to  just cause 
	disruption.”
 
 He went on to say that Dr. Fai is targeted because he 
	is successful. “It is because of his ability to transcend from this small 
	area of his work and to reach out beyond the confines and be very effective 
	in advocacy.”
 
 100,000 Kashmiris killed in the last two decades
 Dr Imtiaz Khan, Vice-President of the Kashmiri American Council was 
	another major speaker at the gathering. In his speech Dr. Khan said that 
	more than 100,000 Kashmiris have been killed by Indian military and 
	paramilitary personnel over the last two decades.  He deplored the silence of the international community because of India's 
	nuclear and economic strength. He said that the United Nations with a moral 
	obligation to intervene on behalf of the people of Kashmir; and, that the 
	United Nations should strengthen its monitoring force along the cease-fire 
	line.  It may be pointed out that the UN Special Rapporteur’s report on India’s 
	human rights violations was released the same day when Dr. Fai’s verdict was 
	announced. The UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary 
	executions, Christof Heyns released an interim report at the end of his 
	12-day visit to Jammu & Kashmir and the states of Gujrat, Kerala, Assam and 
	West Bengal, terming the Armed Forces Special Powers Act as a symbol of 
	excessive state power that has resulted in consuming innocent lives in Jammu 
	and Kashmir and Indian state Assam.  Christof Heyns told reporters in New Delhi that the Armed Forces Special 
	Powers Act allows the state to override rights and has no role in a 
	democracy. Under the law, troops have the right to shoot anyone suspected of 
	being a rebel and to arrest suspected militants without a warrant. “This law has been described to me as ‘hated,’ and a member of a state 
	human rights commission has called it draconian,” said Heyns. The special 
	powers law has been in force in different parts of the country since 1958 
	and is currently enforced in Indian-administered Kashmir and in the states 
	of Manipur and Nagaland in the northeast, all battling separatist movements. 
	In all three regions, human rights workers have accused Indian troops of 
	illegally detaining, torturing and killing rebel suspects, sometimes even 
	staging gun battles as pretexts to kill. The law also prohibits soldiers from being prosecuted for alleged rights 
	violations unless granted express permission from the federal government. 
	According to official documents, the state government in Indian Kashmir has 
	sought permission to try soldiers in 50 cases in the last two decades, but 
	the federal government has refused every one. 
 
 |  |  |