The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1
The EconomistAugust 4th 2018 Asia 41

1

2 lations with India the sworn enemy.
There is room for surprises though. Un-
der Nawaz Sharif the civilian government
and the army clashed. The generals dis-
trusted and then thwarted Mr Sharif’s
overtures to his Indian counterpart Naren-
dra Modi. Relations with India they make
it clear are their remit. But perhaps says Se-
har Tariq of the United States Institute of
Peace “harmony” between civilian rulers
and the army (ie civilian subservience)
could “reap dividends” over India. High-
level exchanges have recently taken place
between the two countries’ armed forces.
Pakistan’s army chief General Qamar


Bajwa is relatively doveish towards India
acknowledging that home-grown jiha-
dism is a far greater threat to Pakistan. Paki-
stan via the generals may yet find the will
to seek better Indian ties.
One day though Mr Khan will surely
clash with the generals. He speaks of open-
ing the border with Afghanistan an idea at
odds with the 2300km-long fence the
army wants to build. And he wants to
spend heavily on health and education
money which can only be found by crimp-
ing the armed forces’ budget. Farooq Tir-
mizi an analyst predicts a fight that will
come down to “guns versus textbooks”.

But that is for the future. For now Mr
Khan who has seldom attended parlia-
mentary sessions and who has described
the assembly as “the most boring place on
earth” must find a sense of dedication de-
tail and compromise that has evaded him
till now. He must learn to work with a polit-
ical class he has only slammed. And he
must gently let down his most enthusiastic
supporters from the irresponsible highs he
generated for them—for instance by pro-
mising to end corruption within 90 days. It
will require dogged strength which he has
in abundance and humility—which
equally he lacks. Over to the captain. 7

A controversial register ofcitizens in north-east India

We are Assamese if you please


G

IVEN the problem it seemed a rea-
sonable solution. The north-eastern
state of Assam is among themost ethni-
cally linguistically religiously and topo-
graphically mixed bits of India. It is also
the most combustible. In the 1970s and
1980s thousands died in unrest mostly
(but by no means entirely) sparked by
fears of the biggest group Assamese-
speaking Hindus ofbeing swamped by
an influx of Bengali-speakers. An impov-
erished country Bangladesh had sprung
up next door in 1971 pushing both perse-
cuted Hindus and Muslim migrants over
a border so porous that 162 bubbles of
foreign territory some no bigger than a
few rice paddies had been left trapped
on either side. So why not the state’s
leaders suggested in 2005 do a tally to
sort out Assam natives from recent in-
truders and send anyone who came
after 1971 packing?
Fast-forward to July 30th when the
state government released a draft of its
National Register of Citizens. The much-
delayed count undertaken in earnest
only in the past three years suggests that
some 4m out of the state’s 33m people
most of whom are Bengali-speaking
Muslims have failed to prove they are
pukka Assamese. The prospect of so
many being made stateless and possibly
expelled hasunderstandably aroused a
furore.
Opposition politicians decry the
exercise. They say the ruling Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP which reigns in Assam
as well as in Delhi India’s capital) has
cynically designed it to rally its Hindu-
nationalist base in advance of next year’s
general election. Mamata Banerjee chief
minister of neighbouring West Bengal
state warns of “a civil war a bloodbath”.
While cooler heads in the BJPnote that
the count was started under previous

governments hotterones accuse the
opposition of being unpatriotic and
playing “vote-bank politics” with Mus-
lims who make up over a third of As-
sam’s population. OneBJPlegislator
from far-off southern India declared that
if Bangladeshi or Rohingya immigrants
(the latter fleeing persecution in Myan-
mar) do not leave they should be shot.
Assam remains calm for now. Local
leaders insistthe register is just a draft
and that anyone may challenge their
status. As it is many have spent weeks
and months as well as fortunes in legal
fees to dig up the dusty old documents
needed to prove ancestral links to the
state—if these even exist. Those left off
the current list include officers in the
Indian army one from a pair of twins
tens of thousands of women from fam-
ilies too poor unlettered or conservative
to have considered registering their births
or marriages and several serving or
former members ofAssam’s local legisla-
ture—including one from the BJP.

DELHI
Some 4m worry whether they are suddenly about to become stateless

Counting who counts and who doesn’t

I

T DID not take long for Islamic State (IS)to
claim responsibility for a bomb on the is-
land of Basilan partof the southern region
of Mindanao in the Philippines that killed
nine soldiers and civilian bystanders
along with the driver of the van the bomb
was carried in. The army suspects the work
of Abu Sayyaf a brutal kidnapping-for-
ransom gang from Basilan and the neigh-
bouring island of Jolo which these days
claims allegiance to IS.
The attack on July 31st highlighted the
dangers of dragging out a slow stumbling
peace process that had made a leap for-
ward just days before when President Ro-
drigo Duterte enacted the Bangsamoro Or-
ganic Law. The law is key to ending half a
century of rebellion by Filipino Muslim
separatists in Mindanao which has cost
tens of thousands of lives. It is surely key
too to ending the chaos in which jihadists
such asISthrive.
Congress in Manila the capital had tak-
en years to pass the new law which pro-
vides for greater autonomy for the home-
land of the Bangsamoro Muslims who are
in a majority in their part of Mindanao
(which is predominantly Christian like the
country). In return the main rebel group
the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
has dropped its demand for Bangsamoro
independence. Greater autonomy was
promised in a peace agreement signed by
the government with the MILFin 2014.
The armed campaign for Bangsamoro
independence began in 1969. The 2014
agreement was the culmination of de-
cades of on-and-off negotiations between
the government and Muslim separatist re-
bels first the Moro National Liberation
Front and then its less secular offshoot the
MILF. During those years war-torn im-

Rebellion in the Philippines

Murder in


Mindanao


MANILA
A bombing tells peacemakers to make
haste
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