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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Saudi pink ribbon breaks Guinness record



Arab News   
JEDDAH, Oct 29: Over 5,000 Saudi and expatriate women on Thursday created the world’s largest human pink ribbon in aid of breast cancer awareness in Jeddah.
According to organizers, the number of women coming into the Education Ministry Stadium in the Faisaliah district exceeded 5,000. However, around 1,000 left before the actual formation of the ribbon due to the delays in getting the sheer numbers of people organized.
The women were able to break the record within the first two hours of the event, as both Saudis and expatriate residents came out in droves to support one single yet very important cause.
The Riyadh-based Zahra Breast Cancer Association organized the event. Princess Reema bint Bandar bin Sultan, founding member of the association, was the driving force behind the campaign, held under the support of the Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Foundation.
Princess Reema said the private sector and the government have been very supportive of the foundation’s breast cancer awareness initiative.
“Let it be known that as of this day, ignorance is no longer an excuse and no woman should be allowed to be left to suffer in silence,” Princess Reema had said at the launch of the awareness campaign.
Attendance at Thursday’s event easily topped the previous record of 3,640 set in Germany in 2007. Thousands of pink scarves were distributed at the entrance gate and the women returned them to the organizers when they left.
The pink human chain, consisting of both Saudis and expatriate residents donning the pink tops and scarves, was built in the shape of the global ribbon of breast cancer awareness.
Saudis and foreign residents, including Arabs, Indonesians, Americans, British, Filipinos and Asians, had been streaming into the stadium since 5 p.m. Only those with transport problems and young children left early.
Participant Aseel Hindi is a 26-year-old math teacher who came all the way from Makkah. “We knew about the event through Facebook three days ago, and we as friends managed to gather and come a long distance to be part of the new Guinness record for the first time ever in our lives,” she said. Over 100 media outlets from around the globe also attended.
It was also the first time women in Jeddah were able to experience the atmosphere of a stadium in the Kingdom.
The stadium was half open, which led participants to cluster in one place. Students from different schools and universities as well as employees of companies and hospitals attended.
Some students said the atmosphere was great and enjoyed socializing with each other. Sixteen-year-old high school student Nouf said she and her classmates knew nothing about the illness and were only there because they had been asked to attend by their teachers.
According to Colleen, who came along with her British friends at the start to support the cause, the event was great but the numbers caused some delays.
“We came because we really wanted to be part of (this event) because it is the first time that something like this is happening in Saudi Arabia,” she said.
“It is disappointing, everybody here wants to be part of this and be involved, but it [took] a long time.”
Private school teachers were in a rush to leave because they had to take the pupils back to school. One of the teachers said: “We’ve been here since five and have promised (parents) that the students will be back by 9:30 p.m. and the event is going on for too long.”
“I thought some sessions or awareness flyers would be distributed to help us learn more about the illness. We even expected some victims to come,” said participant Um Tariq.
Breast cancer is the most-diagnosed form of cancer in Saudi Arabia, accounting for 12.4 percent of all cancers and 23.6 percent of cancers among women, according to a study by the Saudi Cancer Registry.

Friday, October 29, 2010

A 'desi' desire for Aman ki Asha


By Adnan Shahid
 I am a proud Pakistani. I wear my national identity openly. But I am also a strong advocate of Indo-Pak peace. In 2004, I had the opportunity to work on a short term consulting assignment for a multinational oil and gas company in Delhi. Relations between the two countries were then lukewarm at best. But I still felt the warmth at the personal level, which reinforced my belief in the need for people-to-people contact.
These beliefs were further reinforced by my time at MIT as a Sloan Fellow in Innovation and Global Leadership in 2008 - memories of which came crowding back thanks to Zarminae Ansari's article 'Iftar with Puja' (Sep 25, 2010, Aman ki Asha). Like her, I too developed lifelong associations with Indians and their families in while studying in Boston, which bolstered my faith and confidence in the need for peaceful and cordial relations between our two countries.
When I got admission to the Sloan Fellows Programme, I was excited but also nervous about the move to Boston with family. We had hundreds of questions about our relocation - housing, school for my son, halal food stores, a pediatrician for our newborn... There was only one Pakistani, Imtiaz Ahmed, in the outgoing class. He was very helpful, and we were moving into his apartment. But many loose ends still needed to be tied.
There was an orientation session for the incoming class a couple of months before classes were to start (organised by the outgoing class, a tradition of the Sloan Fellows). This gave newcomers a chance to meet the outgoing class and inquire about housing and schooling. In all this hustle and bustle at JFK Memorial Library overlooking the lovely city of Boston, I met Aditya. He introduced himself with his charismatic smile and said, "Bhaisaab Pakistan say ho?"
Aditya was settled in Boston and offered useful tips on anything and everything about moving in. The evening had more surprises in store. I met a lovely couple - Krishna and Matty, like Aditya, "locals" to Massachusetts. Afterwards I sent them several emails with all sorts of queries and they patiently replied. When we reached Boston, my wife Zeasth and Matty became great friends. We have maintained contact, and fondly remember the dinners at their beautiful home. Matty now has her own line of designer clothing - B Matty. We follow her success and support her endeavours.
We moved to Boston in the summer of 2008 - myself, Zeasth, three-year old Abdullah and three- month old Raanya. Moving to Boston with small kids was a big deal but thanks to our new friends, the settling in was much easier than anticipated. There was only one other Pakistani family (Shahid Azim, his wife Nadia and little Zyna) in our class of 100 students from 28 countries.
Our wonderful Indian friends made our little 'American Adventure at MIT' truly memorable. My five-student study group included two amazing Indians - Yatin Hoskote and Pankaj Khare, who proved to be a real blessing. Studies at MIT are tough by any standard. True to 'desi culture', Pankaj and I would have endless debates on our case studies. Yatin was the calming force while Marcelo (from Brazil) and Takefumi (from Japan) looked on. I was always amused that Yatin, who moved to Boston from Portland, had retained his Indian accent despite being in USA for many years. Pankaj was a former Indian Railways General Manager with interesting stories to share. Both were like a support group and the best part -- it extended to our families.
Yatin's amazing wife Ashwini and Zeasth got along really well, going grocery shopping and "mall hopping" together. Abdullah enjoyed the company of Sanaya who was his age. Our baby Raanya played with their twins Shonak and Vedh. We remain grateful to the Hoskote family for the extraordinary care they took of Zeasth when she had a bad fall in the snow, spraining her left arm. I was in Brazil for field research, and it would have been difficult for her to cope with a three-year old and six-month old without Ashwini's help.
Pankaj played a key role in helping us settle into our unfurnished two-bedroom Westgate apartment, driving us in his mini-van to get furniture from Ikea. At one in the morning, he and Himenshu helped me carry the new furniture up two flights of stairs - our only connection: desi connection and friendship.
He and his wife Aparna and kids always treated us like family. We did not have a car, so Pankaj and his family would come all the way to pick us up for any events or functions. Our kids got along very well too - Abdullah is Priya's age but he was a huge fan of Pallavi, about seven years older. He would hold Pallavi's hand every time they were together. We often used Pallavi's name to bribe Abdullah to eat his food. Food reminds me of when Pankaj and Aparna invited us home for dinner and specially got halal chicken for us. These small gestures make you realise how peacefully these two communities coexisted for hundreds of years.
In a city obsessed with baseball and the Red Sox, I found cricket through Prat Vemana. It was a delight to see Prat and his son playing cricket at our class picnics. Cricket remained a main point of conversation. I recall passing scores during class to Yash and Subrat! How can I forget Himenshu and his wonderful wife Nupur and kids Hanu and Manu. Himenshu bhai is a great man and a big cricket enthusiast who I if I recall correctly, played first class cricket in India as well. He had been to Pakistan and we would often discuss how wonderful it would be if we could have peace between our countries.
Other great friends from across the border include Vinod and Pooja, who became our best friends. We rejoiced when we heard about their first born daughter Dhrti, like a new addition to our family and are waiting for them to send us some of Haldi Ram's famous mithai. We have truly enjoyed some great time together, especially during Christmas time in New York.
With two Pakistanis, one Sri Lankan, and twenty odd Indians, we organised a hugely successful South Asian evening at MIT. There was much bhangra, desi food and music and desi jokes going around. It was a great showcase for Indo-Pak peace in particular and South Asia in general. If we can put up a common show outside our region, why can we not do the same at our home base? Our end of the programme was an international trip to Turkey and India. It was soon after the Mumbai attacks and Shahid and I, the two Pakistanis in the class, weren't sure we'd get our visas. Our Indian class fellows rooted for us. At the last minute we got our 'Delhi Only' visas. It was a great trip. Our Indian classfellows were great hosts and we had a wonderful time.
We participated in two special events worth sharing – a Macro Economics debate on 'Is the Economic Growth of India sustainable?' and a 'Country Spotlight on Pakistan'.
As part of Macro Economics course, Prof. Roberto Rigobon organised a debate on India's economic growth. The FOR and AGAINST teams passionately debated their respective positions. When the results were being compiled, I went to the stage and shared my thoughts as an "unbiased and impartial" observer from Pakistan (pun intended :) while acknowledging and appreciating the economic progress made. I also shared the Pakistanis' following of Bollywood and our arch rivalry in cricket. The audience, including a large non-student community, listened attentively.
Shahid and I organized the Spotlight on Pakistan session, in which we discussed the culture, political and economic landscape of Pakistan. A large number of Indians attended, and heard our side of story on Kashmir and Partition. We spoke about the 1948 UN Plebiscite resolution, the Simla agreement, and Pakistan's view on many other issues that our countries disagree on. Our version of history and conflicts is different from what is taught in India. But there was a consensus that regardless of these disputes and differences, we need peace in the region for prosperity.
The list of my Indian friends and anecdotes is long. There were cribbing sessions on governments with Abhishek and Himenshu bhai, desi food ventures with Bobby Dutta and Rupin who loved Pakistani haleem and biryani, desi jokes with Pankaj, Rajeev and Saatish, chats with Niki on all walks of life, homework discussions with Poonam and Subrat, Bollywood movie reviews with Hari, work life balance discussions with Meera and the list goes on.
These great friendships prove that we can get along very well. There are many similarities between us that we need to highlight and hang on too. Yes, we are different too. I believe in the two nation ideology and the national identity of Pakistan. I have met some wonderful and amazing Indians who are equally passionate about India but they too want peace. There is enough poverty, lack of education, insufficient health care and corruption across South Asia. Let us make peace and fight poverty together - for us and our children and our coming generations.
Signing off with desire for Aman ki Asha.

The writer is a graduate of
MIT Sloan Fellows program in
Innovation and Global Leadership,
currently based in Islamabad
ashahid@alum.mit.edu



Caption:
Forming the letters 'M.I.T.' at a visit to the Taj Mahal (got 'Delhi Only' visas at the last minute)

Adnan with Abhishek (left): a lifelong bond; (right) with Zeasth, Krishna and Matty: a support group that extended to our families

Top to bottom: Group at South Asian evening at MIT: bhangra, desi food, music and jokes – a great showcase for Indo-Pak peace; my Sloan study group that included two amazing Indians, Yatin Hoskote and Pankaj Khare; Our wonderful Indian friends made our little 'American adventure' truly memorable.

Military Mullah Nexus

 by Shahid Mahmood
It is not a self-created tragedy that almost one million people gave up their lives to endorse the concept of separate country for Muslims in 1947 and still, 63 years on, more than 180 million people of the same country are struggling to defend its political and geographical prolongation?
The ‘Two Nation Theory’, a so called inherent concept of separate Muslim homeland, lagged in tackling dissimilar cultural and economical preferences of both parts of Pakistan as the stubborn ruling elite continued perusing its mistakenly perceived ‘ideology of Pakistan and glory of Islam’. This unrealistically consistent development of perception proved stronger than reality over the years and subsequently gave birth to military and mullah alliance.
The military and mullahs fittingly disseminated their ‘just cause’ declaring it as their national duty and took a divine responsibility of reshaping internal and external socio-economic policies with the manipulative mindset. Eternal friendship with Americans turned into the official guiding principle of the foreign affairs. Consequently, the military lacking cut-throat capacity succumbed to the American interests in the region and at the same time rigidly absorbed into the elusive trepidation of Indian aggression.
The mullahs, on the other hand, were bribed, equipped and trained as a second defence line to ‘ideologically’ puff up India-centric hatred and hysterically rescue Islamic prestige within and beyond the borders. The notorious ‘Al-Badar’ and ‘Al-Shams’ hanged about unexposed as our helpless generals surrendered their pride in East Pakistan. Hence, mullahs’ usefulness remained unquestionable and they were given a ‘heavenly task’ of snatching disputed part of Kashmir from Indians which is nowhere near to its conclusive end even after more than two decades.
A new phase of classic mullah-military partnership born with the hanging of the first popularly elected prime minister of Pakistan. It is a well documented fact that in 1976, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, knowing then COAS Gen. Zia’s strong religious proclivity and connections with Jamat-e-Islami, had warned him that Pakistan doesn’t need a ‘Mullah Army’.  But Gen. Zia, a self-proclaimed Amir-ul-Momneen, wholly changed the socio-political orientation of Pakistan conspiring with JI and JUI’s religious ideology.
Under Zia, military barracks became mosques where Maulana Maudoodi’s ‘Tafhimul Quran’ was distributed amongst soldiers to sharpen their fighting skills. Even ‘Tafhimul Quran’ and other jihadi literature were considered paramount to get promoted for junior commissioned officers. Thousands of Madrassas were purposely established in the mainland and near the volatile borders to prepare bombers for years to come.
How could an army general named Musharraf be different from his predecessors? He fooled his people and the world at the same time by discreetly supporting religious elements. He sold his hypocrisies as the best tool of his foreign policy and deceptively landed more dollars as Zia did in his endeavour to make Afghanistan the fifth province of Pakistan.
However, the military and mullah coalition remained intact as ever under Musharraf too. Even today, both military and mullahs are considered the most powerful elements of the state’s machinery.  The intelligence network of military establishment, particularly Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) is more than self-sufficient to decide the fate of bewildered masses of this country.
In recent years, the matrimony of military and mullahs and midwifery expertise of likeminded bureaucracy, intelligence network and the cluster of anti-PPP politicians have ultimately gifted us with two identical offspring; media and judiciary. Once again, an old game is being played with the replicated rhetoric of the same allegations against peoples’ government. This time, in a very calculative move, a particular section of, otherwise, ‘free media’ and ‘independent judiciary’ appear to be in extra hustle than their real masters.
Who says media and judiciary are free and independent? The big media groups are prejudicially controlled, by military mullah establishment, to be antidemocratic, or in plain words anti-people or anti-PPP. The same is with our ‘independent’ judiciary, which is more interested in resetting the rules of the game of politics not the morals and ethics of justice. In the last few weeks, we had seen the evidence how media and judiciary suitably shielded each other by refusing to accept Prime Minister’s verbal assurance on a particular matter.
The latest interim order on 18th Amendment is definitely not a conclusive paradigm to decide who is supreme, parliament or judiciary? Who knows, how our judges would strike, in the first week of February 2011, if parliament decides to stick to its guns? And above the all, we have to see which way Sharif brothers and Muslim League (N) somersaults this time, if anybody has any doubts? I must congratulate Ms. Asma Jahangir here whose courageous victory has not only exposed ‘chief’s Jan Nisars’ in judiciary but also in ‘sibling media’.
However, the saga of military, mullah, media and judiciary’s allegiance to each other has no other motive but to keep destroying Pakistan Peoples Party, if they can? As ever, the real target is not only the PPP government in power but also the leadership of PPP, this time, elected President, Asif Ali Zardari.
This unholy alliance of irresponsible forces always fails to remember that PPP is not just a political party. It’s simply a romance, possessedness, a furore, a mania, and a voice of masses, which cannot be masked in the toughest of the toughest situations. These ruthless players have no idea that romance never gets old; it never ends and can never say good-bye.
Over the years, it had been proven time and again that it is beyond the intellectual and logical competence of this group to get a grip on the real myth of PPP. They are not only rationally barren but also physically as blind as bat. They cannot imagine what mess they have got us in and they cannot see [foresee] where they will bury us all if they continued meddling with the timeless romance and the endless wishes of the people of this country.
The military, mullah, media, judiciary and their political touts must stop hankering to run Pakistan like a joint-venture. Pakistan is a country of 180 million people who are the political sovereign and the real owner of this land, their wishes [votes] must be respected. Let the people of Pakistan decide their future, otherwise, a country born with scar of tragedy, disfigured with another tragedy, will vanish with an ultimate tragedy.
Shahid Mahmood is a freelance senior journalist and a political analyst

Saturday, October 23, 2010

A fraud Person Pretends to be a Scientist, but some religious Muslim believe He is a Great Scientist. while They are not believe in Sciense .......

To-days I am receiving "Zam Zam's research" from lot of emails.....

I found the reality .....

Masaru Emoto

October 31st, 2006
Emoto: wishful thinking
Masaru Emoto is a Japanese pseudoscientist who claims that by directing positive or negative thoughts at water we can affect the shape of the crystals that form when it is frozen. As astonishingly untrue as this is, Emoto boasts a significant following, especially as he was featured in the hit crackpot film “What the Bleep Do We Know!?”. Emoto hasn’t submitted a single paper to a peer-reviewed journal, but he has published several volumes of a book containing pictures of his ice crystals next to their “words of intent”.Emoto also shares a great deal in common with TV copromancer Gillian McKeith, as he:
  • *.....holds a degree in International Relations
  • *.....has a PhD in alternative medicine from an unaccredited university
  • *.....pretends to be a scientist
  • *.....is a crackpot
Like many pseudoscientists, Emoto is an astute businessman and holds exclusive rights to market in Japan a device called the Bio Cellular Analyzer. He renamed it the Magnetic Resonance Analyzer, though I suspect it doesn’t employ Magnetic Resonance or analyse anything. Emoto also talks a lot about something called Hado Theory, which involves water and crystals and PayPal.
Emoto’s methods are to attach stickers with words such as “love” or “hate” to beakers of water, freeze them, and photograph the resultant ice crystals. Positive words, music or thoughts are expected to create ice crystals that are aesthetically pleasing. The most important part of this process is to ensure the technician looks long enough to find a crystal that will correspond to the tag. A double blind test could easily remove bias and prove the existence of this phenomenon. It would involve the technician photographing crystals without being told whether the samples were positively or negatively “charged”. To date, Emoto has not attempted a double-blind trial.
When questioned, Emoto responded that he didn’t “understand this double-blind too much”.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Science and Fundamentalist's Illusions

Science and Delusion

by Awais Masood
Naik
Freak Stage Magician
They use Global Positioning System (GPS) devices to find out the direction of Kiblah. Their smart phones, priced hundreds of dollars, are equipped with all the necessary software they need to perform their religious duties. Their black berry devices are all too ready to send out emails containing lucrative material preaching the ideology of the school of thought they belong to. They use World Wide Web to watch streaming videos of hate-mongers, pseudo-scholars and so called security analysts spilling out the most profound lies in the name of history. They watch TV Channels dedicated to bring stage illusionists, presenting self-sustaining and cyclic arguments as rational proofs of what they want to believe. They cannot help but clapping, along with all the mindless spectators present at those TV “entertainment shows”, at the most ludicrous arguments that any college freshman, taking a course comprising of epistemology, can debunk in less than five minutes.
They belong to the urban educated middle class of Pakistan. They are one of the luckiest people in this country who are equipped with the necessary tools of language and basic understanding to grasp the reality of this universe and the way this world behaves with an open mind. But here comes the catch. The method that has assisted us in learning how this world behaves is termed as a human invention, a faulty tool created by all so incompetent and “evil” human species. The way science elegantly describes this universe and challenges our dogmatic notions is ignored and most of the time comically challenged with the utmost stubbornness. It has become a custom of these people to dig
DNA could be used to confirm paternity or convict criminals but not evolution?
DNA could be used to confirm paternity or convict criminals but not evolution?
deeper into its intellectual ignorance by rejecting natural sciences and at the same time using the technology developed (by infidels of course) upon the foundations of  science. It is therefore not strange to find a person rejecting Theory of Evolution, modern genetics or the Big Bang Model of the universe but it will not stop him from having a DNA test to confirm the paternity of his children (what else could one expect from male chauvinists) or play with the wireless inventions of the modern day that owe their existence to the underlying electromagnetic theory of Physics.
I can recall watching a discussion with Nobel Laureate Steven Weinberg (who shared Nobel Prize for Physics with Abdul Salam and Glasshow). Weinberg narrated how Salam went to oil rich Gulf States, in order to convince them to develop universities in the Islamic world, where research in natural sciences would be given its due share. He was given a cold shoulder as most of the rulers of Muslim majority countries are interested in technology but consider natural sciences as corrosive to faith and hence to the hegemony of those monarchs who use religion as a tool of authoritarian rule and subjugation of their subjects.
What else could be more comical than a religious zealot using a computer connected to internet and within all his/her senses (if
InternetDynamic
Internet
he/she is left with any) denying the authenticity of science. What is more troubling is the fact that he/she does not even appear to understand the absurdity of that claim. One must need to realize that the GPS devices, desktops, laptops and the blackberries and all such computing devices are manifestations of elegant engineering achievements which are based upon the basic predictions and theories of natural sciences. Any powerful computing device of today consists of a large number of micro-processing devices. It is quite common these days for an average microprocessor, which itself is no large than a postage stamp, to contain millions of embedded electronic switches, turning on and off more than one billion times a second in a musical harmony which can easily disrupt a fundamentalist’s mind as it is usually unable to understand figures such as billions. It is quite natural because for most of the fundamentalists, planet earth is a few thousand years old (rather than four billion years, which is the actual age of the earth).
This state-of-the-art computing technology of today did not grow out of nowhere. It was not plucked from trees. It did not land from the heavens. It was not brought to us by extra-terrestrials traveling in U.F.O(s).  It was developed scientifically, systematically, meticulously and (most importantly) intelligently. It is based upon some of the most important discoveries of natural sciences that explain how a certain element of nature named Silicon shows a peculiar electronic behaviour under certain conditions. The electronic behaviour is itself explained byelectron natural sciences as a phenomenon that exists due to the flow of an elementary particle of all matter, named as electron. If just for once, it is assumed that there exists no such particle named electron or that there exists no such phenomenon as the motion of electrons, the whole body of knowledge that was used to develop the world of today will collapse. There will be no foundations to support the sky scrapper of the modern day technology. Therefore whenever a fundamentalist uses his/her computer to post, on an online forum, an arrogant, ignorant and absolutist stance that science is not reliable, he/she actually exhibits a perfect example of self-contradiction, intellectual degeneration and cowardice.
The purpose of above example is to relate how technology exists due to the accurate and precise explanations predictions of the natural sciences.The same argument could be based upon the examples of breakthroughs in applied sciences such as medical science, mechanical and structural engineering to name a few. evolutionary_medicineTherefore whenever a Science-Rejecting-Arrogant-Fundamentalist visits a doctor to seek cure for an ailment affecting him/her or his/her children, undergoes a complicated surgical procedure, drives an automobile, boards an airplane, switches on an air conditioner, makes an electronic financial transaction to his/her favourite Jihadi outfit or simply switches on TV to watch the renowned stage magician from India, play tricks with his/her mind, in the name of religion, he/she implicitly acknowledges the accuracy of the scientific theories and their predictions that led to those technological achievements. Natural science is the firm, solid and essential foundation of all the luxuries that these confused arrogant fundamentalists use to preach their baseless hypocrisy to unsuspecting youth, caught in the vicious ford between modernity and tradition.
Scientific Method
Scientific method allows human species to expand the circumference of its knowledge. These techniques, employed by scientists, allow us to understand this universe as it is. Science is elegant and beautiful as it incorporates both the beauty and creativity of human consciousness and at the same time requires the accuracy and precision of observation and evidence. Scientific method involves:
  1. Observation of natural phenomena.
  2. Formulation of a hypothesis – an outcome of the creativity of human mind which could be artistically aesthetic – to explain the observed natural phenomena.
  3. Usage of the formulated hypothesis to predict new phenomena or observable outcomes of the model, that are testable.
  4. Testing those predictions through experiments and hence falsify the hypothesis if those predictions are wrong.
By continuously applying the above method, human species has been able to expand the sphere of its knowledge to a level where children of both Secularists and Fundamentalists alike have much higher chances of survival through infancy as compared to their ancestors. Science has beyond no doubt helped us in reducing infant mortality rates. It has allowed us to live longer and healthier by providing better health care services. It has served to raise our consciousness  by ridding us of the self-indulgent delusion of being the centre of a small pre-Galilean universe. It has saved us from indulging in the horrors of burning alive old women at stakes after declaring them as witches just because we had low yield of crops that year. It has freed us (or at least some of us) from the evil spirits and demons that ran amok during the times of our ancestors and caused great damage through storms, hurricanes and thunderstorms. It has allowed us to stop exorcising demons out of anguished psychological patients and instead provide them with proper medical care and finally it has enabled us to challenge the tyranny of those ruling in the name of divine rights. Science is a perpetual, systematic quest of seeking the unknown and turning it into the known. It requires respect towards facts, the ability and courage to shed already present notions of the world, when finally contradicted by evidence, no matter how dear and personal they are to the scientist.  Most importantly, science operates on the principle of methodological naturalism, that is; this universe, which is to be studied, is a closed, self-sustained system where we strive to explain the unknown. But whatever remains unknown in this system does not belong to the supernatural. It only remains “unknown” to be later explored, sought, explained and hence converted to the “known” by the systematic study of the world.
Had it been a habit of the scientists to attribute, what they could not understand- during the course of their work- to the supernatural, we would not have known this world as we now know it today. Had Benjamin Franklin and Michael Faraday used supernatural explanations, rather than conducting experiments, to study and explain the phenomena related to electric charges, our beloved fundamentalists would not have been able to appear on TV screens and shamelessly deny the discoveries of science. Had Galileo and all the following astronomers, made use of tradition instead of observation to explain a model of the solar system, these modern day stage acts would have been using their putrid arguments to explain how their scriptures prove that sun and everything else in the universe revolves around the planet Earth.  Had Newton (and every one else) attributed motion of objects and their fall towards the earth to a divine presence rather than the inherent laws of this ordered universe, we would not have even developed a basic theory of mechanics and hence pop-artists-turned-fundamentalists would not have been able to travel in Sports Utility Vehicles (SUV), priced millions, along with their fellows in order to preach what they thinks is right. In fact no fundamentalist would have been able to drive a car, board a plane (or crash those cars/ planes into buildings) because there would not have been any cars or planes.
Modern astronomy has shown us that this universe is extremely vast for our minds to fathom. We live on a a small sized planet, revolving around a middle sized star, located at an insignificant spiral of a galaxy, that contains billions of such stars and we are in an expanding universe that may contain billions of such galaxies. Not to forget the theoretical possibility, that there could be many, perhaps billions of such universes. universeTo imagine such cosmic loneliness may turn out to be one of the most horrifying mental experiences by opening doors to an intolerable feeling of despair and hopelessness. But perhaps all is not that bleak as we expect. The same doors that can make a human mind plunge into despair, may lead a way towards the realization of the most cherished gift of nature to human species. The very same, not yet fully understood, human consciousness that allows us to realize the vastness of this cosmos, look at it, touch it, feel it and perhaps love it, is what makes us special. It is exactly when Descartes exclaims, Cogito, ergo sum, a human is defined. Our brain creates a visual model of this world inside us, which is then interpreted by our subjective consciousness as the world we see. This world is all what our mind shows us to be. It is, at the end, only our ability and capacity to think that differentiates us from lifeless matter and most of the other animal species. Being extremely insignificant creatures of this universe, the very thing that makes us special is the ability to realize, understand and explore this insignificance. Such a realization can open new doors towards appreciating the beauty of life, consciousness and last but not the least, every other being that can think, feel and understand like us. To develop a very humble feeling of pride in being a human  and to be able to feel and care for every other human being is perhaps not a bad deal at the end. Note: The example of electron is inspired from an audio recording of a Keynote address delivered by Pervez Hoodbhoy.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Destination Dubai For Our Bhai

I read the news item In Thursday  Sept. 30, 2010′s “The News” about MQM’s Supremo, Altaf Bhai’s potential plan of changing his Postal Code.
http://www.thenews.com.pk/30-09-2010/Top-Story/975.htm
Like any other political observer, I was perplexed, why would a British citizen decide to leave England after almost two decades.
If it is Dr. Farooq’s murder and security concerns, then Britain is providing full security protocol to former President Musharraf, who is not a British citizen. Some would argue that former President was a “Head Of State” and supported the US led and UK supported, GWOT, so he is entitled to such pleasantries. Mr. Hussain has been running his party from its London Secretariat very ably, for so many years. This sudden change of venue may have something more than mere security concerns as the primary motive, behind this sudden move. Of course as usual, there are a lot of speculations about his decision.

It is no secret that MQM is very well aligned with the “establishment.” It was a strong ally of former President Musharraf and his Q League. Former President Musharraf, who is presently settled in London as well, a few months back, had stated that he might shift to Abu Dhabi, to be close to his aging mother in Pakistan. Mr. Musharraf wants to launch his APML, shortly as well.
It is a no brainer, that it will unify the PML Q and other Leagues (minus PML N) in the mix. Perhaps MQM will be invited to join the new and improved “King’s Party” as well.
Mr. Hussain’s recent calls for revolution in Pakistan which only made some self proclaim experts on the idiot box, jump up and down, were ignored by the population in general. People have a lot of other issues on their plate and day to day survival takes the utmost precedence. Of course those were “feelers” thrown by the Quaid e Tehreek on behalf of certain people. The failure to stir any storm on their behalf, may be one of the reason behind all of this.
His recent criticism of the US and the demands from the US to produce evidence against Dr. Siddiqui are of course comical. There is no one in his league when it comes to providing spontaneous entertainment. My personal assessment, he would have made a great stand up comedian, had he pursued that particular field. Even in his present capacity he uses the microphone to amuse many around the globe. I am one of his great fans, when it comes to his mimicry, songs and street smart Karachite jokes.
Dr. Farooq’s murder, which is still under investigation, of course has changed the entire scenario. There was an item on www.bbc.com., which eluded that his murder may be due to an internal strife within the MQM. There are very few key members of the party residing in the UK. The rest of the party is mainly based in Karachi. If the strife hinted towards, its rival faction, then that rival faction and the real MQM’s rivalry dates back to the 90′s. The timing does not seem to have the date stamp of the rival faction
The bizarre developments are of course raising more questions than answering them. A few years back, supposedly Imran Khan of Tehreek e Insaf, brought a lot of very important and damaging information against AH to London. He made a lot of tall claims, but till date nothing transpired out of those allegations.
I remember Nawaz Sharif had also joined the chorus back then with IK, but it was just bunch of political rhetoric.
But this change of venue has at least one definitive clue. UK is no longer a place, where the Pakistani political elites and figure heads can seek refuge or carry their political business as usual. The new and perhaps permanent, political nest for them may be the ever bustling Dubai. Incidentally, a place that does not allow any political parties, democracy or any remote concept thereof to its own citizens. As they say in Politics, “any and everything is possible.”

MQM chief may shift to Dubai




By Mumtaz Alvi
 ISLAMABAD: The hitherto mysterious assassination of Dr Imran Farooq and the chain of unfolding events afterwards in England and back home have compelled MQM supremo Altaf Hussain to consider shifting his party’s international secretariat to Dubai, The News learnt here on Wednesday.
Party insiders said their leader now feels he must move out of England as soon as possible and the best and safer place could be Dubai, though some other Muslim countries are also an option.
However, the party sources almost ruled out his homecoming. Altaf has spent almost two decades in London. They pointed out that MQM was facing grave challenges to its leader and its own existence from many sides locally and internationally and with the passage of time, the situation could become complicated.
“Circumstances are such that the sooner he shifts to any other place, most probably Dubai, the better it would be for him and indeed the party, as signals from Pakistan also are not positive in recent weeks,” they pointed out.
Moreover, MQM leadership is also intrigued by an unexpected move by Pir Pagara to form the All Pakistan Muslim League (APML), which it feels can provide the desperately needed support to the PPP government in Sindh and more importantly in the Centre, it was learnt. MQM legislators and members of theRabita Committee see making of APML as a ‘pressure group’.
In an interview with a private television channel, PML-Nawaz Quaid Mian Nawaz Sharif also expressed his apprehensions regarding APML and wanted to know who was behind it. His party has turned down an informal offer of merger by Pir Pagara, who has been calling himself the man of GHQ.
As things stand today, they pointed out, MQM would ultimately be left with no other option but to sit on the opposition benches and claimed though they were part of the ruling coalition, they were hardly being consulted.
“The NRO-triggered crisis almost took the government the other day but MQM was not seen anywhere in a series of consultations held with the other coalition partners,” he maintained. He said the PPP-MQM relationship took a turn for the worst when ignoring loud and clear calls, President Asif Zardari visited France and then Britain and there was no warmth from Zardari and Altaf for a rendezvous, which has been a routine during the former’s previous visits.
A former MQM minister, who preferred not to be identified, insisted that the Rabita Committee could not afford giving a green signal to Altaf Hussain to return to Pakistan and settle down again in Karachi, a city that continues to remain in the grip of target-killings.
He claimed closed-door consultations in Pakistan as well London were currently under way on adoption of a future line of action in an entirely topsy-turvy situation, wherein Altaf Hussain has leveled allegations against certain institutions that has never been his topic in the past. His party also took out rallies in Karachi and elsewhere to denounce the US for inflicting jail term on Dr Aafia Siddiqui
After these activities, Altaf Hussain would summon the Pakistan-based members of the Rabita Committee to the MQM international secretariat to adopt a final strategy on leaving England and the party’s conduct inside and outside parliament.

Reading Woodward in Karachi

Is this the nail in the coffin of the U.S.-Pakistan relationship?

BY MOSHARRAF ZAIDI | OCTOBER 4, 2010

Bob Woodward's books have an uncanny ability to create palpable nervousness in Washington. They almost always expose some government officials in a poor light. But though many figures in his latest, Obama's Wars, don't come off particularly well, there is one clear, overwhelming, and irreconcilable villain. It isn't a member of Barack Obama's administration, the Taliban, or even al Qaeda. In fact, it's not a person at all.
In the opening chapter, Woodward introduces his bad guy: "the immediate threat to the United States [comes] ... from Pakistan, an unstable country with a population of about 170 million, a 1,500 mile border with southern Afghanistan, and an arsenal of some 100 nuclear weapons." Never mind the Woodward effect in Washington; in Obama's Wars, the villain is an entire country.
Relations between the United States and Pakistan have never been more fraught. Last month, NATO helicopters breached Pakistani airspace several times. In the first instance, they engaged a group of suspected terrorists, killing more than 30. On Sept. 30, in another breach of Pakistani territory and airspace, NATO gunships fired on Pakistani paramilitary troops from the Frontier Constabulary (FC). Three Pakistani soldiers were killed and another three were badly injured. No one even attempted to dismiss the incident as friendly fire. In response, Pakistan has shut down the main border crossing and supply route into Afghanistan at Torkham, and militants have attacked convoys bringing fuel to NATO forces. All this comes after the most intense month of U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan since the campaign began.
Into this environment comes Woodward's account of the Obama administration's decision to embrace a surge strategy in Afghanistan, which also offers a pretty good window into what American power sees when it looks at Pakistan. Woodward's emphasis on the "Pak" in AfPak reflects a larger shift in emphasis in official Washington. Perhaps inadvertently, the book is also likely to confirm many of the darkest suspicions that ordinary Pakistanis have about their erstwhile American allies.
Before 9/11, Pakistan's hot and cold relationship with the United States was the object of obsession for three generations of Pakistani foreign-policy analysts, but there were hardly a dozen serious Pakistan scholars in the United States. The imbalance was for good reason. America was a massive ATM for corrupt and lazy Pakistani governments -- especially military dictatorships. Conversely, though Pakistan periodically offered an interesting and useful ally in the South Asia region, it was too cumbersome to trust as a long-term friend.
It isn't surprising therefore that no matter how sincerely U.S. presidents have wanted to befriend and help Pakistan -- and it is clear that Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama all have made serious and sincere efforts to "get" the country -- the outcome of the efforts tends to look alarmingly more like a relationship between adversaries than friends.
Woodward's book is advertised as an insider's peek into how Obama has chosen the team and run the plays on the U.S. war in Afghanistan. And a large factor in this process has been the increasingly tense and complicated calculus that describes the relationship between the Obama administration and the Pakistani government. This calculus is made more convoluted by the fact that a large part of the U.S. military effort in Pakistan entails a covert war, parts of which have the blessing of Pakistan's military and political leaders, and parts of which fall into some tricky gray areas.
It should be self-evident that this covert war is not designed to kill Pakistanis or weaken the Pakistani state. It would be hard to convince reasonable people that key U.S. leaders, from Obama to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, from Vice President Joe Biden to Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, seek to damage Pakistan, or Pakistanis. Indeed, Kerry and Biden have been huge supporters of Pakistan and of the need to establish a deeper relationship with the Pakistani people. Kerry, in particular, has been at the forefront in pushing civilian aid funds to Pakistan through Congress. Still, for the U.S. leadership under Obama, the prize is simple. Hunt down al Qaeda and its enablers hiding out in Pakistan. Kill them all. And move on. But today, it's increasingly unclear just who Enemy No. 1 is anymore.
And this message is heard loud and clear back on the Pakistani main street. As much as supporters of the effort -- both in Washington and Islamabad -- may go to great pains to explain that this war is for Pakistan's own good and that the United States is not waging a war on Pakistan, such appeals are likely to fall on deaf ears, and not just among the conspiratorial hypernationalist types.
Even among some of the most stalwart supporters of the United States, suspicion of Washington's intentions runs deep and wide. In an account of a meeting between President Asif Ali Zardari and U.S. diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad, Woodward describes Zardari's passionate elaboration of why he is convinced that the TTP -- often called the Pakistani Taliban -- are being financed and directed by the United States to weaken Pakistan so that Washington can grab Islamabad's nukes. This kind of ridiculous suspicion of the United States is, of course, as Woodward also notes, a regional disease, with Afghan President Hamid Karzai routinely blaming the United States for supporting the insurgency. But dismissing the ridiculous without understanding its resonance is also dangerous. If this account of Zardari's meeting with Khalilzad ever made the front page in Pakistan, Zardari, whose popularity has suffered for being a U.S. ally, would get an immediate boost. That's how deep the suspicion runs.
All conspiracies, no matter how wild, need to be oxygenated by facts. Since that meeting, at the beginning of May 2009, drone attacks in Federally Administered Tribal Areas have consistently increased. Most damning for the U.S. presence has been the enduring presence of contractors like the company formally known as Blackwater. All of these issues are huge stories in Pakistan's vibrant 24/7 news culture -- largely because they feed the fear-based narrative of what the United States really wants in Pakistan.
Woodward's book confirms the covert war in Pakistan and provides some measure of its extent in an account of Obama's first serious intelligence briefing lead by Michael Hayden, who preceded current CIA Director Leon Panetta. In that briefing, on Dec. 9, 2008, Hayden gave Obama a full rundown of every category of covert activity the United States was involved in across the globe. The first and most significant was a package of clandestine counterterrorism operations around the world that included Predator drone strikes against suspected terrorists. When Obama asked, "How much are you doing in Pakistan?" the answer Hayden gave was about 80 percent. We own the sky, Hayden said, and informed Obama that the drones take off and land at secret bases in Pakistan.
But Hayden wasn't boasting; he was well aware of the limited value of remote warfare. And his concerns were eerily prescient in the context of September's record-breaking drone strikes. He repeatedly warned the incoming Obama administration that the drones did not represent a strategy, but a tactic: "Unless you're prepared to do this forever, you have to change the facts on the ground." Hayden was convinced that without successful counterinsurgency on both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, those facts on the ground would not change.
Of course, we know what has happened since. The drones have become one of the primary instruments of U.S. foreign policy in Pakistan. Planeloads of young State Department officers, accompanied by dozens of private and public-sector security personnel, land in Islamabad on a weekly basis. They bring with them promises of increased aid, more effective aid, more civilian aid, and more transparent aid. Yet every meeting they attend, every cocktail party they are invited to, every op-ed section they scan is littered with references to drone attacks.
Is it any surprise that Pakistanis see conflicting messages coming out of Washington? Within this deeply negative and gloomy context, Woodward's book exposes some of the U.S. government's contingency plans for Pakistan, including military strikes on as many as 150 suspected terrorist training sites. One conspiracy theory popular in Islamabad, which the book will no doubt feed, is that U.S. special-operations forces will one day come and take Pakistan's beloved crown jewels -- the more than 100 nuclear weapons thecountry bankrupted itself to develop.
Biden, according to Woodward, broached this topic at a strategy meeting in the fall of 2009, saying, "We can't lose sight of Pakistan and stability there. The way I understand this, Afghanistan is a means to accomplish our top mission, which is to kill al Qaeda and secure Pakistan's nukes." Of course, Biden is not suggesting that the United States would take Pakistan's nukes, but rather that it would ensure that there isn't an overthrow of the Pakistani government by terrorist groups, but his words are still likely to be interpreted as the ultimate proof of what this whole fuss -- 9/11, the war on terror, the reorientation of the Afghan campaign, and the covert war in Pakistan -- has all been about. For the ordinary Pakistani, there is no better or more comforting explanation for the three years of nonstop suicide bombings and violence that Pakistan has been plunged into.
But what might be most offensive to Pakistanis may be the sense among U.S. officials, as conveyed by Woodward, that Pakistanis are not taking the militant threat seriously. Pakistanis are keenly aware of the 30-year-old monster of extremists and radicals that their governments and military have cultivated in the name of national security. The terrorists of the TTP and other al Qaeda affiliates that have wreaked so much destruction -- causing more than 30,000 deaths since 2001 in Pakistan -- are deeply unpopular.
But these enemies are, at least, domestic and familiar. The public knows full well that the monster of extremism is an intergenerational challenge, one that will require careful and assiduous attention. Anti-American hatred, on the other hand, is fueled by a simpler narrative. There is no ideological commitment or religious fervor that fuels the Pakistani public's anti-Americanism. Nor is there a particularly civilizational flavor to it. Pakistani anti-Americanism comes from a sustained narrative in which Pakistan is the undignified and humiliated recipient of U.S. financial support -- provided at the expense of Pakistani blood. This may not be reflective of the intentions of Obama's war, but it is reflective of the outcome of this war on main street in Pakistan. And perception is reality.
One of the most telling accounts in the book is of Husain Haqqani, the Pakistani ambassador to the United States, trying to explain to members of the Obama administration how to engage with Pakistan. After trying a number of analogies, the unflappable Haqqani finally just lays it out plainly, "Give us a little bit of respect. Don't humiliate us publicly."
The public humiliation of being the subject of Obama's war, without being able to publicly acknowledge its myriad dimensions, is a pressure that is crushing Pakistan's fragile democracy and hurting wider U.S. goals. If one of the objectives of Obama's war was to stabilize and secure Pakistan, then, by that measure, the war is not doing well at all. The surge has been a massive failure, notwithstanding the achievements of the clandestine war and the drone strikes.
That perfectly captures the American conundrum in Pakistan. The things that have the most value for the Obama administration -- using covert actions and drone strikes to take out known al Qaeda members -- provoke the most disquiet in Pakistan. Pakistanis will not come away from reading Obama's Wars with any confidence in the warm sincerity of Hillary Clinton's multiple visits to the country to build bridges and spur the U.S. public diplomacy machine. Instead, the suspicious instincts of Pakistanis will be vindicated. The irony could not be richer. No U.S. administration has ever invested so much effort and time in trying to understand and accommodate Pakistan's complex realities into its own calculus. Woodward's book confirms what this outpouring of U.S. interest and attention is all about: It is about fear.

Child bride horrors last a lifetime



By Mohammed Jamjoom, CNN
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Sana'a, Yemen (CNN) -- Reem al Numeri is 14-years-old and recently divorced. She was 11 when she says her father forced her to marry a cousin more than twice her age.
Reem says she has been stigmatized by her divorce and now lives the life of an outcast. Without a husband or father to support her, she cannot attend school.
Her story has echoes of Nujood Ali -- the Yemeni girl whose story sparked an international outrage that many thought would force change in the country.
But a bill to outlaw child marriages got blocked and the practice continues. On Saturday, Yemen's parliament will look again at child marriage.
Reem's desperate pleas to stay a child fell on deaf ears as her father forced her to marry a 32-year-old cousin. "He said you need to go into the room where the judge is and tell him you agree to the marriage," Reem said. "I said I won't go in there - he took out his dagger and said he'd cut me in half if I didn't go in there and agree."
For Reem, the terror and the trauma were just beginning. She said she was told to sleep with her husband, but refused. She locked herself in a bedroom every night to ensure her safety but, according to Reem, he managed to sneak in and raped her.
Reem said members of her family first ordered her to submit, then expected her to celebrate. "They chose not to buy me any bridal dresses until they were sure I'd had sex with him because they didn't want their money to go to waste," she said. "Once they were sure, they bought me the bridal clothes and threw me a party. After that, I burned the white bridal dress I was given and then I used a razor to try to kill myself." Reem's father and ex-husband did not return CNN's calls.
In Yemen, a deeply tribal society, the issue of child marriages is a complicated one.
Two years ago, 10-year-old Nujood Ali shocked the world when she took herself to court in Yemen's capital city of Sana'a and asked a judge for a divorce.
After a well publicized trial, she was granted one -- and became a heroine to those trying to shine a spotlight on the issue of child brides in Yemen, where more than half of all young girls are married before age 18, mostly to older men.
In 2009, Yemen's parliament passed legislation raising the minimum age of marriage to 17. But conservative parliamentarians argued the bill violated Sharia, or Islamic law, which does not stipulate a minimum age of marriage.
And because of a parliamentary maneuver the bill was never signed into law.
More than 100 leading religious clerics called the attempt to restrict the age of marriage "un-Islamic".
Mohammed Aboulahoum, who advises Yemen's president, said the law should be passed, but he added the fight against child marriage restrictions were a distraction -- a way for the parliament to avoid bigger, more sensitive, political issues.
"I think there should be an age limit," Aboulahoum said. "And if you sit even with the religious people and you ask them, would you let your daughter marry at the age of 12 or 13, they would tell you no. So it is something, we use it more for politics."
Reem's attorney, Shada Nasser, is one of Yemen's most well known advocates for children's rights.
Nasser has represented several child brides seeking divorce, including Ali. She doesn't even think the practice should be called marriage. "I think it is rape," she said.
But Nasser also has hope that Reem's generation will help build a new Yemen, free of child marriages.
"Who can build this Yemen?" asked Nasser. "Me? No - all these small girls -- they must build Yemen. But all these girls need a good law - a family law." Nasser begs the clerics standing in the way: "I ask them to give these girls mercy."
A prominent Yemeni human rights activist, Amal Albasha, is also outraged the practice continues. Her organization, Sisters Arab Forum, tries to intervene on behalf of child brides, to stop the marriages from taking place. Albasha added that nothing will change until people in Yemen try to fully understand the horror a child bride goes through.
"You know, just two days ago, a 9-year-old girl got married in Taiz." she said. "Just think about the pain, the fear -- just think about a 9-year-old with a 50-year-old in a closed room," said Albasha. "The experience remains until the day of death."

Pakistan Goes Rogue

What the sole footnote in Bob Woodward's Obama's Wars tells us about Europe's growing fears of a terrorist attack.

BY SIMON HENDERSON | OCTOBER 4, 2010

Something brewing in Europe has spooked counterterrorism officials. On Oct. 3, the State Department issued a rare warning to Americans, urging them to show vigilance during their trips. Over the last week, European counterterrorism officials have escalated their precautions: The Eiffel Tower has been cleared twice in the last three weeks because of bomb alerts, and special anti-terrorism forces have been active on French streets. The threat, which covers France, Britain, and Germany, is reportedly of a "Mumbai-style" attack by al Qaeda. In November 2008, terrorists wreaked havoc on the Indian port city by launching coordinated attacks against hotels, restaurants, and tourist sites, killing 166 people. Could the same sort of horror be in store for Paris, Berlin, or London?
An unusual footnote in Bob Woodward's Obama's Wars sheds light on where responsibility for such an attack might originate. Indeed, it is the only footnote in the whole book.
Woodward's footnote qualifies a line reporting that, within 48 hours of the Mumbai attacks, then CIA Director Michael Hayden told Pakistani ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani that CIA intelligence showed no direct link to the Pakistani military's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) directorate, the country's main spy agency. "[T]hese are former people who are no longer employees of the Pakistani government," Hayden reportedly told Haqqani. However, the U.S. intelligence community would apparently revise this assessment because there, at the bottom of page 46 of Woodward's book, are the words: "The CIA later received reliable intelligence that the ISI was directly involved in the training for Mumbai."
The Pakistani military would admit a month later that it had connections to individuals involved in the attack. The head of ISI, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, briefed Hayden at CIA headquarters, telling him that the planners of the Mumbai attacks, identified as "at least two retired Pakistani Army officers," were linked to the ISI, but the operation had not been authorized by the Pakistani military. It was rogue, Woodward writes, before quoting Pasha: "There may have been people associated with my organization who were associated with this. That's different from authority, direction and control."
The "rogue" quote in Woodward's book has been picked up by the Indian media because it fits with the narrative, popular among many in Pakistan's bigger neighbor, that the Pakistan military in general and the ISI in particular have ceased being national institutions subordinate to legal or governmental control. Saikat Datta, writing this week in Outlook India, described the Pakistani terrorist organizations responsible for the Mumbai attacks as "a parallel state run with quiet and ruthless efficiency by the ISI."
The Indians have a point -- and when they read Woodward's footnote, they will be even more convinced. With U.S. officials having originally assured New Delhi that the Mumbai attacks were not sanctioned by Islamabad, thereby averting Indian military retaliation, it is unclear whether they told their Indian counterparts of their revised view or left it for them to read in Woodward's book.
So far, the "R word" has yet to enter the American public's lexicon. But Obama's Wars also introduces another "R word" that holds great consequence for U.S. policy toward Pakistan: "retribution." If Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistani-American citizen, had successfully blown up his SUV in New York's Times Square in May, National Security Advisor Gen. James Jones warned Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, the United States "would be forced to do things Pakistan would not like," according to Woodward. Pakistani readers of the book would have been surprised to learn that the U.S. response "could entail a retribution campaign of bombing up to 150 known terrorist safe havens inside Pakistan." Dating from George W. Bush's administration, Woodward writes, the United States already has a "brutal, punishing" plan (of which Obama has been informed): "the U.S. would bomb or attack every known al Qaeda compound or training camp in the U.S. intelligence database."
Neither "brutal" nor "punishing" sounds much like a measured response -- but Obama's Wars is clear that there aren't many options for eliminating the terrorist threat emanating from Pakistan. After the entanglements in Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States is not in the business of invading any more countries -- and certainly not a country like Pakistan, which possesses dozens of nuclear weapons.
But that doesn't mean that the United States can afford to ignore the growing chaos in South Asia. When Bruce Riedel, the former CIA analyst who conducted the Afghanistan and Pakistan strategy review for the White House, briefed Obama on Air Force One, aside from another 9/11 traceable to Pakistan or a jihadi government in Islamabad, the "third bad thing" he said he feared was another Pakistani attack on India, "either directly or indirectly, Mumbai redux." The next attack would provoke an Indian military response, "and that means you are talking about the potential for nuclear war."
Last week, CIA Director Leon Panetta met General Pasha in Islamabad. Woodward's Washington Post colleague, David Ignatius, quoted a senior ISI official as saying that the two men "discussed everything possible," and Panetta had been "reassured" of Pakistan's "support for U.S. efforts in Afghanistan." Let's hope so.
Let's also hope that wiser heads emerge in Pakistan. Woodward depicts the Army chief of staff, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani (a former ISI chief himself), as unreliable and capable of telling only half the story. Nor does the civilian government offer much comfort: Zardari "doesn't know anything about governing," according to Woodward, quoting "a candid private assessment" by the U.S. ambassador to Islamabad, Anne Patterson. Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani does not merit a mention in Woodward's "Cast of Characters" or even his index.
So Europe is on alert for terrorist attacks that would likely originate in Pakistan and be controlled from Pakistan -- the two distinguishing features of the 2008 Mumbai attacks. Until Woodward's book, observers might have assumed that, in the intervening two years, the United States might have succeeded in pressuring Pakistan to place the ISI under tighter control. We can no longer make that assumption.
Perhaps we should be asking: Why is General Pasha still head of the ISI? He was, after all, appointed a month before the Mumbai attacks that Woodward, in his footnote, linked firmly to the ISI.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Are monkeys self-aware?


New results suggest that rhesus macaques recognize themselves in the mirror, but the debate is far from over


[Published 30th September 2010 04:47 PM GMT]


Rhesus monkeys may recognize their own reflection in a mirror, indicating self-awareness--a trait traditionally reserved for humans, chimpanzees and orangutans and a topic of much debate among researchers, including Marc Hauser, professor of psychology at Harvard University and the recent subject of misconduct investigations.



Rhesus monkey
Image: Wikimedia commons, user 13bobby
The results, published in the September 29th issue of PLoS ONE, question the existence of a stark cognitive divide that separates higher primates from the rest of the animal kingdom.

"In most instances, monkeys do not show [self-awareness]," Christopher Coe, director of the Harlow Primate Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who was not involved in the work, said in an email to The Scientist. But the new study "indicates that rhesus monkeys can acquire this ability in the right setting and with the right tools."

For years, the Gallup mark test has been the standard method for assessing self-awareness. Researchers dye a small tuff of hair on an animal's head, and then give it access to a mirror. If the animal touched the mark while looking in the mirror, researchers concluded it understood the reflection to be its own. Humans over the age of two, chimpanzees, orangutans and potentially gorillas can conclusively pass this test. Monkeys, on the other hand, nearly always fail.

In 1995, Hauser published a controversial paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), which reported that cotton-top tamarins show signs of self-awareness, despite many failed attempts in the past by other researchers. He used a modified form of the Gallup mark test, however, by dying the entire white head of the tamarin a bright color, such a green or pink. Hauser argued that the small mark was simply not relevant to monkeys, causing them to fail the test in the past.

Yet, monkeys react to a Gallup mark that they can see on their arm or hand, noted Gordon Gallup, lead researcher in the field, professor of psychology at the University at Albany, SUNY, and inventor of the Gallup mark test. "If it's salient on their arm, then it ought to be equally salient on their face."

Skeptical after reading Hauser's paper, Gallup requested to see some tapes recorded during the study. "When I looked at the tapes, I was absolutely shocked," he said. "There was not a shred of evidence in any of the video tapes that suggested that cotton-top tamarins could recognize themselves in mirrors."

In 2001, Hauser reported that he was unable to reproduce the results of the 1995 paper. His new findings, published in the American Journal of Primatology, suggested that cotton-top tamarins do not exhibit behaviors suggesting self-awareness, once again limiting this ability in primates to the great apes.

Despite the irreproducible results of the 1995 paper, Randy Schekman, editor-in-chief of PNAS, said the journal does not have plans to retract Hauser's original paper. "The Harvard committee investigating Hauser has not contacted us about it, and we have no reason to pursue the matter unless someone challenges the paper."

Another study, on the rule learning abilities of cotton-top tamarins, unrelated to his tests of self-awareness, was the subject of the recent misconduct investigation and the retraction of a 2002 Cognition paper.

The new study on rhesus macaques now provides more evidence that some monkeys do possess the ability to recognize themselves in mirrors. Luis Populin, a professor of anatomy also at the UW-Madison, who normally studies the effects of drugs such as Ritalin on monkeys, stumbled upon this project when graduate student Abigail Rajala claimed that she observed a monkey using a small mirror provided for enrichment to groom himself. The monkey paid particular attention to the area around an implant in its head, which the researchers used in their studies on attention deficient disorder.

The observation prompted Populin and his colleagues to test for self-awareness in the monkeys, replacing the traditional splotch of color used in the Gallup mark test with the head implant. They also used monkeys that had years of experience with mirrors, which Populin believed was a necessary ingredient for them to pass the mark test.

While looking into the mirror, the monkeys examined and groomed the area around their implant and other unseen areas on their bodies, such as the genitals. In cases where the implant was removed, the monkeys failed to touch their heads at all, but continued to examine their genitals in the mirror.

This movie shows a monkey waking up from a nap, reaching for the small mirror outside his cage, positioning it to view himself, and grooming the area around the implant while looking at himself. The view of the head implant has been blocked for discretion.
Video courtesy of Luis Populin.

The implanted monkeys also showed sparing amounts of aggressive or submissive social responses, another indication that they did, in fact, see the reflections as themselves.

The paper contains a couple of flaws, however, that "render the results inconsequential and uninterpretable," said Gallup. For one, the monkeys can feel the implant in addition to seeing it, unlike the traditional color mark, which controls for tactile cues. Thus, they could be drawn to touch it, despite their reflection in the mirror.

However, Populin believes he controlled for this by presenting the monkeys with a mirror blocked by black plastic. When the mirror was concealed, the monkeys failed to examine their implant and their genitals as often. "Subjects may touch the area because it itches or it is irritated," he agreed. "Although if that were the case, one would see no difference between the mirror and no mirror condition."

The videos of Populin's work, which were published along with the paper, are no help in solving the debate. Some researchers argue the behaviors in the videos do not illustrate self-awareness, and some argue they do. The videos don't "strike me as compelling, self-directed behavior," said Gallup, "but [they do] strike me as investigative behavior coupled with instances of intermittent social behavior." Contrastingly, Charles Snowdon, professor of psychology and zoology at the UW-Madison, who was not involved in the research, said, "the videos are impressive in that rhesus macaques show some evidence of precursors of mirror recognition," in an email to The Scientist.

Whether there exists a blatant cognitive divide separating higher primates from the rest of the animal kingdom still remains open. "For other species, vocal or odor recognition may be more salient," said Coe, "but until paradigms are developed in other modalities we will not know what other species may have [self-awareness]."


Read more: Are monkeys self-aware? - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences http://www.the-scientist.com/news/display/57730/#ixzz116q06LYF