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Hidden wounds

Stone Town, Zanzibar, BBC file photo

By Yasmin Alibhai-Brown
Zanzibar

I often went to Zanzibar as a child, with my mother, who was born in Dar es Salaam.

We would take a crowded ferry and stay at a hostel for poor women and their kids, who wanted a subsidised break by the sea.

The women in the local mosque provided lunch and we had a wonderful time.

The island, a fabulous mix of Arab, African, Indian and Persian cultures and peoples, was utterly unlike my racially-divided hometown, Kampala, in Uganda.

Abomination

Then, one day, my mother told me about the thousands of black slaves who had been captured in the hinterlands and brought to the island to be sold.

She took me to Bagamoyo, the slave port on the mainland: the word means "lay down your heart".

That trade went on from the Seventh Century until – it is claimed – the beginning of the 20th Century.

Throughout early history, enslavement was common around the world, and East Africa was just one more lucrative location.

But here, the abomination went on longer than at any other time or place.

The traders were mostly Arab, though some Indian merchants were actively involved.

"My grandmother had a baby, and the baby was still feeding – but the traders said this would delay the journey so they just threw the baby away"

Leila, whose grandparents were slaves

Those who captured and sold humans to the businessmen were local African chiefs and henchmen.

A febrile young child, I was distraught when I learned that Muslims had perpetuated this evil. How could it be

The Prophet Mohammed had freed Bilal, a black slave, and asked him to make the first-ever call to prayer. Surely that meant something

And, as the years went on and we learned to look back with abhorrence at the practice of owning and exploiting humans, how come there was no acknowledgement of this injustice in Zanzibar

The questions circled around in my head obsessively when I was a young teen.

Revolution

Then came 1964, and the island detonated.

A revolution led by African soldiers deposed the constitutional monarch, Sultan Seyyid Bin Abdullah.

It was, in part, retaliation for slavery – by people, and upon people, who were not responsible.

It felt as if some ancient God of vengeance had risen from the sea.

They slaughtered anyone who looked Arab, and some Indians too. They took their daughters to rape, confiscated their properties and banished many.

To this day there is no list of the dead – those tortured and dumped into the sea – the disappeared and the exiles.

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, Zanzibar, 2009

My mother and I never went back to our favourite place, but for years I have wanted to reveal these veiled stories.

Returning for the first time in more than 40 years for the BBC World Service’s Heart and Soul strand, I interviewed Leila, 99, whose grandparents were enslaved.

"My grandmother had a baby, and the baby was still feeding – but the traders said this would delay the journey so they just threw the baby away," she said.

"My father was also thrown away but the missionaries took him in and looked after him here."

Leila became very emotional.

"It is very painful – so many cruel people," she said.

"It’s very hard because we can’t remember our home, can’t see or know our relatives. We are cut off from our history."

When we turned the tape recorder off, her eyes glazed over and she threw up blood all over her lovely satin dress – and me.

Then there were those I talked to about the revolution in 1964.

"We are called Arabs, but I don’t even speak a word of Arabic"

Suleman Hamed, whose relatives were killed

Those who knew the violated and stolen girls cried as they spoke. They were taking risks talking to us, but it was time to do so, they said.

On a secluded beach away from the main town, Suleman Hamed told me how his uncle, sister and brother-in-law were killed.

"People were killed in the streets and houses, and the revolutionaries take your wife and daughters – for raping. That was a horrible time. We think as if it was yesterday. And all because their ancestors were Arabs. We are called Arabs, but I don’t even speak a word of Arabic."

The historian Maalim Idris says he witnessed the gutters running with Arab and Indian blood.

He showed me photographs of mass graves and of trucks piled high with corpses being driven through the main street.

He believes no fewer than 3,000 Arabs and Indians were killed during the revolution, but there is no official figure.

No healing

Going back to Zanzibar was a life lesson in the potency of the whole historical truth.

Those of Arab descent feel too defensive about the slave trade and focus on the revolution; Africans dwell on the trade and expect no mention of the barbaric acts of the revolutionaries.

There will not be real, deep healing between the citizens of various ethnicities until everyone talks more honestly about past injustices.

Without that, paradise is but an illusion.

An earlier version of this piece appeared in Yasmin Alibhai-Brown’s column in the Independent newspaper. Her radio documentaries can be heard via the Heart and Soul website.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Sultan Sooud Al-Qassemi: The Gulf States Already Have Links with Israel

Should the Gulf countries maintain contacts with Israel if this would make life easier for Palestinians? Could having such ties propel the Middle East peace process forward?

Former Afghan FM Abdullah emerges as serious challenger to Karzai

Afghanistan’s former Foreign Minister, Dr. Abdullah Abdullah, has emerged as a serious challenger to President Hamid Karzai, who is bidding for a second consecutive term in office.
According to a New York Times report, Dr. Abdullah may have started his presidential campaign late, but is drawing larger crowds than Karzai in the six provinces that he [...]

India, US decide to work together in the field of climate change

Minister for New and Renewable Energy Farooq Abdullah on Tuesday said India and United States have decided to work in close tandem in the field of climate change.
Abdullah, who met Todd Stern, US Special Envoy for Climate Change here to bridge differences between the two countries on reducing greenhouse gases, favoured transfer of technology to [...]

Curtain closer

(File picture 18 December 2008) A Saudi man holds up his entrance ticket to see the Saudi comedy film Manahi at a theatre in Jeddah

By Roger Hardy
BBC Middle East analyst

Directors, writers and cinema buffs had arrived in Jeddah for what had been billed as a week-long festival of films from Saudi Arabia and neighbouring states.

The festival was due to begin on Saturday. But an hour before midnight on Friday the organisers were told by the Jeddah municipality to cancel it.

The only official explanation was that the event had not been sufficiently prepared.

But it is widely believed the ban is the latest victory for religious conservatives, who regard cinema as a form of Western moral pollution.

Jeddah – the Red Sea city which is also the Saudi business hub – has long been more liberal and open than the desert capital, Riyadh.

Its film festival started in 2006, as a conscious attempt by Saudi liberals to push the boundaries of cultural freedom.

Family feud

Behind closed doors, Saudis are avid consumers of movies – and there is no shortage of budding directors, actors and actresses.

Yet cinemas and theatres are banned, and conservatives are wary of efforts to get round the ban – for example, through officially sanctioned cultural festivals.

Prince Waleed bin Talal with his wife Amira al-Taweel

Conservatives are particularly hostile to the wealthy Prince Waleed bin Talal, whose Rotana entertainment group was the main sponsor of the Jeddah film festival.

The 54-year-old prince has been outspoken in his support for easing cultural restrictions and for greater women’s rights.

This has made him the target of conservative criticism.

Last month, in an unusually public display of discord within the ruling family, one of Prince Waleed’s brothers, Prince Khalid bin Talal, denounced his efforts to introduce cinema into Saudi society.

He even went as far as calling for his brother’s assets to be frozen.

Prince Khalid wants all film festivals to be banned.

Those who favour reform initially pinned their hopes on King Abdullah, who ascended the throne in 2005.

The king has been a cautious advocate of change. In February he removed the head of the religious police, in a re-shuffle that brought in the country’s first female junior minister.

But Abdullah has faced opposition from within the religious establishment and from his half-brother Prince Nayef, the powerful minister of the interior.

An anonymous official is quoted by Reuters news agency as saying the Jeddah film festival "was cancelled upon indirect instructions from the interior ministry".</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pakistan rains kill at least 26

A Pakistani family in their flooded house in Karachi, July 19

At least 26 people have been killed in monsoon rain in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi, officials say.

Most of the deaths were caused by collapsing walls and electrocution.

The downpour flooded low-lying parts of the city and left most areas without electricity on Saturday night, but power was gradually being restored.

Monsoon rains wreak havoc in Pakistan almost every year. Correspondents say an ageing drainage system leaves parts of Karachi vulnerable to flooding.

Pakistan’s chief meteorologist said nearly 14.7cm (6in) of rain fell on the city on Saturday.

Abdullah, a resident who was standing by the body of his neighbour’s son, said the child had drowned after falling into a drain.

"People pulled his body out of a rain drain which was running very fast," he told Reuters news agency. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Crude guess

Andrew Walker
Economics correspondent, BBC World Service

Oil pump

The oil market is volatile at the best of times. But the last year has been extraordinary even by those standards.

A year ago the price came close to $150 a barrel. At that price even many oil producers thought the commodity overpriced.

And yet, some analysts were forecasting $200 a barrel before long and oil producers were under international political pressure to do something.

Producers, however, had such little spare capacity that there was not very much they could do.

King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil producer, hosted a conference in Jeddah in June to discuss the problem.

He needn’t have worried, at least not about high prices.

In the event, a recession undermined demand for energy and sent the price diving. Since then it has dipped below $40 and is now back to about $70.

Oil’s impact

Oil prices have been a factor, sometimes the most important one, in several recessions over the last few decades.

But was oil the reason for the recession this time

While the oil price was high it added to business costs and left consumers with less to spend on other items, including perhaps mortgage repayments.

So the price of oil might have contributed to the financial crisis, or at least exacerbated it.

Price rebound

The subsequent partial recovery in the price reflects several developments.

Recent news suggests the economic situation might have stabilised (or at least is deteriorating more slowly), which suggests demand for oil might do so too.

TAKING THE PULSE OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY

  • The BBC is Taking the Pulse of the Global Economy, looking at a range of subjects this summer
  • Food prices – which remain a concern particularly in many developing economies
  • Highly volatile energy prices – which have been a major issue in the past year
  • The plight of migrant workers – as the global recession takes hold in many economies
  • Housing markets – which have turned from boom to bust in many countries
  • Rising unemployment levels – as firms cut back because of falling orders

BBC World Food Price Index

Taking the pulse explained

Central banks policies to expand the money supply and heavy government borrowing have begun to raise concerns about future inflation.

Buying oil and other commodities could provide some protection against that for investors.

Opec, the oil cartel, has recently cut production and member countries – unusually – implemented many of those cuts.

Member states are often tempted to produce more than their allocation to get the extra cash.

The relatively high compliance by Opec this time round probably reflects the alarm they felt as the price dropped rapidly.

"It’s amazing what a good dose of fear can do," says analyst Julian Lee, at the Centre for Global Energy Studies.

Reason why

There is also a view that the wild swings in prices are due to speculation in the commodities markets.

Oil pipelines

It is a perennial complaint from Opec.

This may be partly a position intended to deflect attention from Opec at times when prices are rising, whose line is "don’t blame us it’s those speculators."

But it is not just Opec. Some analysts think there is something to it, others says the price swings largely reflect what they call fundamentals.

However it is certainly true to say that there is speculation in the oil market. But does speculation really explain the big price swings Opinion is divided.

Where next

Opec’s Secretary General Abdallah Salem el Badri said recently that $70 was a price that didn’t damage the economy, but did allow Opec members to invest and get a reasonable income from their oil.

But many analysts think that some countries need a higher price – $80 or more – for the government spending they want to implement.

There is also a question of whether a lower price provides sufficient incentive for investment in exploration and exploitation of new oil fields.

Forecasting the oil price is a risky business.

But it is reasonably safe to say that one of the key factors will be when and how strong is the global economic recovery. Opec’s actions will also be important.

Click here for more from BBC World Service on Taking the Pulse of the Global Economy
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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Terror hits S Punjab


KHANEWAL/MULTAN – A huge blast at a seminary in the outskirts of Tehsil Mian Channu on Monday killed at least 15 persons, including seven kids, and injured around 95, as the explosive material stored at a house by the militants ignited resulting in large-scale destruction.
According to details, the explosion rocked the village 129/15-L at 9:30 am, as the people were busy in their routine works. The explosion with deafening sound shattered everything around as more than 25 houses and a health centre were razed to the ground. The intensity of the blast can be gauged by the fact that the blast created a 15 feet deep and 25 feet wide crack. At the time of explosion, a large number of children were studying Quran there and seven of them died in the incident.
Locals say the explosion occurred in the house of Riaz Kamboh, a cleric having links with militant organisations. They further said that Riaz had established the seminary for minor boys and girls just adjacent to his house situated near the government-run health centre of the village.
A local UC Nazim Asif Sindhu talking to media said Riaz had visited Afghanistan for training.
District Police Officer Kamran Khan, who is leading the rescue work, has said that two suicide jackets, six rocket launchers and some jihadi literature are also recovered from the blast site. Sources say the literature found belonged to ‘Harkat-ul-Jihad’, a militant outfit.
On the other hand, Rana Sana Ullah while talking to the newsmen at village 129/15-L has disclosed that three terrorists have been arrested from the area, but he did not confirm the arrest of the house owner Riaz Kamboh. He said Chief Minister Punjab Mian Shahbaz Sharif is monitoring the rescue work and slackness on the part of any official would not be tolerated.
To assist in the rescue operation, high-ranking officials, fire brigade and social and political volunteers reached the site from Multan and Khanewal, while a heavy police contingent surrounding the locality. Local MNA Pir Aslam Bodla and MPA Babar Japani, both of PPP, and District Naib Nazim Pir Ahmad Nadeem Bodla were also trying to control the situation.
The rescue operation is in progress and the injured are being treated at THQ, DHQ and private hospitals whereas many seriously wounded persons have been shifted to Multan.
Meanwhile, emergency was declared at Nishtar Hospital and Medical College Multan following the Mian Channu blast. The hospital administration arranged 50 beds in emergency block and called all medical staff to duty, who were out or on leave.
Hospital sources disclosed that 19 injured of the blast were brought to the hospital out of which two had expired. The deceased were identified as Ghulam Nabi (40) and Hajra Bibi (4). The condition of five others is also precarious, they added.
According to latest details issued by the district administration 9 had died on the spot and two in the Nishtar Hospital Multan. Three of the dead children belonged to a family including Aaisha (21), Abdullah (16) and Asad (6).
The remaining are Hajran Bibi D/O Anwar, Rimsha D/O Ashraf 3 and Iqra D/O Zulfiqar while three dead bodies are yet be identified in the THQ Hospital Mian Channu.
ONLINES add: Master Riaz, owner of explosion-wrecked house, his brother and their six other associates have been arrested and taken to unspecified destination for interrogation.
According to a private TV channel, Riaz and his brother, who were admitted to a hospital for treatment after being injured in blast, were arrested by a heavy contingent of police and intelligence agencies officials
Earlier, DPO Khanewal and other sources had said that Riaz was member of a banned Sipha-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) and participated in Afghan war for about 8 years. He had settled in Mian Channu for the last several years.
Hospital sources have also confirmed Master Riaz Hussain and his brotherÂ’s arrests.
The number of killed is feared to be around 25 to 30 with around 150 houses destroyed completely.
APP adds: President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday ordered an inquiry and sought an immediate report into the explosion at a village in Mian Channu that killed nearly 20 people and injured several others.
The President expressed his shock over the loss of innocent lives in this dastardly act of terrorism in which apparently explosives hidden in a house went off, causing widespread damage to people and property.
he condemned the incident and said innocent people were falling victim to the acts by unscrupulous elements, who for personal gains were threatening the lives and property of people.
Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani also ordered an inquiry into the explosion.
The PM also denounced the blast and asked the provincial authorities to investigate the matter and submit him an immediate report as to how the incident occurred.
He ordered that best possible medical care be provided to the injured and measures taken to provide relief to those whose houses were damaged and destroyed.
He expressed deep grief and sorrow over the loss of precious lives and directed the authorities concerned to ensure provision of best medical care to the injured.
The PM also conveyed his condolences to the bereaved families.

Town of fear

Empty street in Mingora, 9 July 2009

Pakistan says the army has almost ended operations against the Taliban in the former tourist resort of Swat and nearby districts. Some two million people are being urged to return to their homes in the north-west. The BBC’s Syed Shoaib Hasan reports from Swat’s main town, Mingora.

As we move deeper into the Swat valley, the ravages of war are all around us.

Destroyed buildings and broken roads mark the passage of fighting which was heaviest close to Mingora.

There is also a steady stream of people moving to and from the region.

"We came back to check out whether our house and belongings had survived the fighting," Abdullah, a Mingora resident, told us.

"Thanks to Allah, it has survived intact. Now I am going back to my family, who are in a camp in Mardan."

See a map of the region

Abdullah tells us the situation has improved greatly and the army is largely in control.

"Hopefully, we can come back soon."

He had just one complaint: "The army is still making it very hard for us to get around. We have to stop at every checkpoint and identify ourselves.

"This makes it impossible for most public transport to move about."

Checkpoint in Swat, 9 July 2009

Because of such restrictions, most travellers we met, including Abdullah, were on foot.

Curfews can leave people stranded for hours – after nearly three hours of arguments and phone calls with local military and civil authorities, we were able to get a curfew pass.

But even so, it took us nearly four and a half hours to cover a distance which usually takes two. The main reason were security checkpoints lining the road to Mingora.

In addition, bands of soldiers on patrol would also stop anyone they deemed suspicious.

‘Like doomsday’

We pass the village of Qamber, strategically located on a hill outside Mingora guarding the road into town.

"This is where the Taliban made their stand against the army," says Mingora resident Yousuf Khan.

There are no buildings left in Qamber, just ruins, pieces of brick and scorched roads, a testament to the intensity of the fighting that went on here.

But the militants finally had to retreat and Mingora is now in complete control of the army.

Troops in Mingora, 9 July 2009

Contrary to many reports, most of the town is largely intact.

Fighting has taken place in some quarters of the city, and a number of buildings and premises have been damaged.

But, by and large, the markets and residential areas are still standing.

"Most of the fighting in Mingora took place in the first three days," Yousaf Khan tell us.

"It began after the army moved to seize control of the emerald mines."

Mr Khan stayed behind during the entire conflict and says he still feels shaken when he thinks about those events.

"After all that has happened, this is our greatest fear – the Taliban can still return"

Mingora resident Yousuf Khan

"It was like doomsday. My children were very scared but there was nothing we could do."

Another Mingora resident, Wasif Ali, agrees.

"The gunships were right over the neighbourhood when they shelled the mountainside."

He adds that the exchange of fire went on for three days, after which the Taliban were pushed out of the mines.

"A lot of them were using the tunnels in the mines as cover to fire back at the army."

Mr Ali explains that the army then used aircraft and artillery to target the mountainside, which collapsed.

"Many of the militants were buried alive when that happened.

"But others managed to escape using passages they had dug connecting the mines to wells inside the nearby houses.

The passages were built to take take away the emeralds safely, but ended up providing an unlikely escape route for the Taliban.

"They escaped through the narrow lanes and into the fields," Wasif Ali explains.

Subsequently, the army was able to quickly oust the militants, who did not put up much of a fight.

‘We can hear firing’

Thanks to the curfew, Mingora resembles a ghost town.

Only army patrols moved through the streets.

The only real sign of life was the presence of dozens of locals outside a military-run relief goods distribution centre.

Damaged building in Mingora, 9 July 2009

They were waiting to get a bag of wheat, as food supplies remain drastically low.

While some were highly critical of the government, others were hopeful that peace would now be restored.

But almost all were critical of the army, which they say has done little to help residents.

"Their attitude is like we are all supporting the Taliban."

We witness this ourselves when a man is arrested and driven away in a security convoy.

And when we are leaving town, we also encounter another detainee being dragged half naked to a building next to the relief goods office.

As we leave Mingora, we cannot help but wonder at the prime minister’s announcement that refugees can return from 13 July.

"The army may have seized the region, but it still does not control all of it," Yousuf Khan says.

"The Taliban, despite Maulana Fazlullah being seriously injured, are still very strong. At night, we can hear the exchange of fire between them and the army.

"After all that has happened, this is our greatest fear – the Taliban can still return."

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.