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==Contemporary societal Indophobia==
==Contemporary societal Indophobia==
Contemporary Indophobia has risen in the western world, particularly the United States, on account of the rise of the [[Indian American]] community and the increase in [[offshoring]] of [[White-collar worker|white-collar]] jobs to India by American multinational corporations.<ref name="IndFact">[http://www.columbia.edu/~ap2231/ET/et80_July27-05.htm Indophobia: Facts versus Fiction], Arvind Panagariya, [[Columbia University]] archives of ''[[The Economic Times]]''</ref> Societal prejudices against South Asians in the west manifest through instances of intimidation and harassment, such as the case of the [[Dotbusters]] street gang.
Contemporary Indophobia has risen in the western world, particularly the United States, on account of the rise of the [[Indian American]] community and the increase in [[offshoring]] of [[White-collar worker|white-collar]] jobs to India by American multinational corporations.<ref name="IndFact">[http://www.columbia.edu/~ap2231/ET/et80_July27-05.htm Indophobia: Facts versus Fiction], Arvind Panagariya, [[Columbia University]] archives of ''[[The Economic Times]]''</ref> Societal prejudices against South Asians in the west manifest through instances of intimidation and harassment, such as the case of the [[Dotbusters]] street gang.

==Pakistan==
{{POV section|date=October 2011}}
{{too few opinions|date=December 2011}}
Anti-Indian sentiments, coupled with anti-Hindu prejudices have existed in Pakistan since its [[Partition of India|formation]] though they have waxed and waned at various times.<ref name="Vali Nasr">Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, The Vanguard of the Islamic Revolution: The Jama`at-i Islami of Pakistan (University of California Press, 1994) p121-122</ref> According to [[Tufts University]] professor [[Vali Nasr|Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr]], Indophobia in Pakistan increased with the ascendancy of the [[militant]] [[Islamist]] [[Jamaat-e-Islami]] under [[Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi]].<ref name="Vali Nasr"/> According to Nasr, the first victims of Indophobia in Pakistan were not Indian nationals, but the [[Muhajir Urdu]] immigrants who were accused of [[dual loyalty]] with India by the Jamaat and their cohorts, providing them with ammunition needed to justify [[discrimination]] and physical attacks on the Muhajir Urdu minorities.<ref name="Vali Nasr"/>
In addition, racial ideas such as the [[Martial Race]] theory were central to the Pakistan Army which believed that since the [[Pakistan Army]] comprised soldiers of the "martial races", they could easily defeat [[India]] in a war, especially prior to the [[Second Kashmir War]].<ref>Insurgents, Terrorists, and Militias: The Warriors of Contemporary Combat Richard H. Shultz, Andrea Dew: "The Martial Races Theory had firm adherents in Pakistan and this factor played a major role in the under-estimation of the Indian Army by Pakistani soldiers as well as civilian decision makers in 1965."</ref><ref>[http://www.defencejournal.com/2001/november/sepoy.htm An Analysis The Sepoy Rebellion of 1857-59 by AH Amin] ''The army officers of that period were convinced that they were a martial race and the Hindus of Indian Army were cowards. Some say this was disproved in 1965 when despite having more sophisticated equipment, numerical preponderance in tanks and the element of surprise the Pakistan Armoured Division miserably failed at [[Khem Karan]]''</ref> Based on this belief in the martial supremacy, it was popularly hyped that one Pakistani soldier was equal to four to ten Hindus soldiers.<ref>[http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/indo-pak_1965.htm Indo-Pakistan War of 1965]</ref><ref>[http://www.dawn.com/weekly/cowas/990718.htm End-game? By Ardeshir Cowasjee] - 18 July 1999, [[Dawn (newspaper)]]</ref><ref>''India'' by Stanley Wolpert. Published: University of California Press, 1990. "India's army... quickly dispelled the popular Pakistani myth that one Muslim soldier was “worth ten Hindus.”"</ref> and thus numerical superiority of the foe could be overcome.

On [[9 December]] [[2010]], major [[Pakistan]]i newspapers (such as ''[[The News International]]'', ''[[The Express Tribune]]'' and the ''[[Daily Jang]]'') and television channels carried stories that claimed to detail U.S. diplomats' assessments of senior [[India]]n generals as "vain, egotistical and genocidal", also saying "India's government is secretly allied with [[Hindu]] fundamentalists", and that "Indian spies are covertly supporting Islamist militants in Pakistan's tribal belt and [[Balochistan]]".<ref name="fakecab">{{cite web|last=Walsh|first=Declan|title=Pakistani Media Publish Fake WikiLeaks Cables Attacking India &mdash; Comments Alleged To Be from WikiLeaks US Embassy Cables Say Indian Generals Are Genocidal and New Delhi Backs Militants|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/09/pakistani-newspaper-fake-leaks-india|work=[[The Guardian]]|date=9 December 2010|accessdate=11 December 2010}}</ref> The claims were credited to an [[Islamabad]]-based news service agency that has frequently run pro-[[Pakistan Army]] stories in the past.<ref name="fakecab"/>

Later, ''The News International'' admitted the story "was dubious and may have been planted", and ''The Express Tribune'' offered "profuse" apologies to readers.<ref name="pakapol">{{cite web|last=Walsh|first=Declan|title=WikiLeaks Fake Cables &mdash; Pakistani Newspapers Admit They Were Hoaxed &mdash; Papers Apologise to Readers for Publishing Anti-Indian Comments Alleged To Have Been Said by US Officials|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/10/wikileaks-fake-cables-pakistan-apologies|work=[[The Guardian]]|date=10 December 2010|accessdate=11 December 2010}}</ref> [[Urdu language|Urdu-language]] papers such as the ''Daily Jang'', however, declined to retract the story.<ref name="pakapol"/> Declan Walsh, a reporter for [[The Guardian]], summarizes these claims made in Pakistan as a "bogus story, a laundry list of Pakistani nationalist accusations against archrival India", and that papers have apologized "to readers for publishing anti-Indian comments alleged to have been said by US officials."<ref name="pakapol"/>

===Origins===
Since the [[Muslim conquest in the Indian subcontinent]] the Muslims of erstwhile British India did not regard themselves as a minority but as members of the country's ruling class. British diplomacy and supremacy in arms continuously displaced Muslim power which a wide variety of religious and cultural responses from the Muslim populace were unable to stop.<ref name="Lieven2011">{{cite book|last=Lieven|first=Anatol|title=Pakistan: A Hard Country|accessdate=20 December 2011|date=28 April 2011|publisher=Penguin Books Ltd|isbn=978-1-84614-160-7|pages=3–40|chapter=Introduction:Understanding Pakistan}}</ref> With declining political and cultural power of Islam and the introduction of ideas of a British style [[parliamentary system]] of governance after independence they became acutely aware that numbers matter and in an Independent India the numerical majority of Hindus would gain political ascendance after the end of [[British Raj]]. This view was bolstered by the occurrence of religious riots in India such as the [[1927 Nagpur riots]].<ref name="Basu1993">{{cite book|author=Tapan Basu|title=Khaki shorts and saffron flags: a critique of the Hindu right|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=CimVTTVHtwQC&pg=PA18|accessdate=21 December 2011|year=1993|publisher=Orient Blackswan|isbn=978-0-86311-383-3|pages=18–20}}</ref> The [[Two-Nation Theory]] was enunciated by [[Allama Iqbal]],<ref name="winks2001">{{Citation | title=The Oxford history of the British Empire: Historiography | author=Robin W. Winks, Alaine M. Low | year=2001 | isbn=9780199246809 |publisher=Oxford University Press | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=IRB52ijcgMMC | quote=''... At the heart of the two-nation theory was the belief that the Indian Muslims' identity was defined by religion rather than language or ethnicity ...''}}</ref><ref name="khan1940">{{Citation | title=Pakistan: The Heart of Asia | author=Liaquat Ali Khan | year=1940 | isbn= |publisher=Thacker & Co. Ltd. | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=swIYjzJOx5wC | quote=''... There is much in the Musalmans which, if they wish, can roll them into a nation. But isn't there enough that is common to both Hindus and Muslims, which if developed, is capable of moulding them into one people? Nobody can deny that there are many modes, manners, rites and customs which are common to both. Nobody can deny that there are rites, customs and usages based on religion which do divide Hindus and Muslmans. The question is, which of these should be emphasized ...''}}</ref> which found support with the [[All India Muslim League]] and eventually culminated in the [[Partition of India]] and formation of Pakistan in 1947.<ref name="Pande">{{cite web|url=http://www.currenttrends.org/research/detail/islam-in-the-national-story-of-pakistan|title=Islam in the National Story of Pakistan|last=Pande|first=Aparna|date=14 October 2011|work=Current Trends in Islamist Ideology, Volume 12|publisher=[[Hudson Institute]]|accessdate=19 November 2011}}</ref>

The [[Partition of India]] was accompanied by several acts of genocide and hundreds of thousands of deaths by people from both sides of the border leading to lasting memories of pain and anger amongst the surviving refugee populations on both sides.<ref name="Bhatia2008">{{cite book|last1=Gera Roy|first1=Anjali|last2=Bhatia|first2=Nandi|editor=Bhatia, Nandi |title=Partitioned lives: narratives of home, displacement, and resettlement|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=YWB0GmmoOSMC&pg=PR15|accessdate=22 December 2011|year=2008|publisher=Pearson Education India|isbn=978-81-317-1416-4|pages=ix–xxx|chapter=Introduction}}</ref> In Pakistan, this contributed to [[Indophobia]]. In an interview with Indian news channel [[CNN-IBN]] Pakistani cricketer and politician [[Imran Khan]] said “I grew up hating India because I grew up in Lahore and there were massacres of 1947, so much bloodshed and anger. But as I started touring India, I got such love and friendship there that all this disappeared.”<ref name="dawn2011114">{{cite web|url=http://www.dawn.com/2011/11/14/i-grew-up-hating-india-imran-khan.html|title=I grew up hating India: Imran Khan|date=14 November 2011|work=[[Dawn (newspaper)]]|accessdate=5 December 2011}}</ref>
====Two-Nation Theory====
The [[Two-Nation Theory]] predicates that India at the time of Partition was not a nation and in its extreme interpretation postulates that the Indian Hindus and Indian Muslims constituted nations which cannot co-exist "in a harmonious relationship".<ref name="epw1979r">{{Citation | title=Economic and political weekly, Volume 14, Part 3 | author= | year=1979 | journal= | isbn= |publisher=Sameeksha Trust | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=dN4nAAAAMAAJ | quote=''... the Muslims are not Indians but foreigners or temporary guests - without any loyalty to the country or its cultural heritage - and should be driven out of the country ...''}}</ref><ref name="sankhdher1991">{{Citation | title=National unity and religious minorities | author=M. M. Sankhdher, K. K. Wadhwa | year=1991 | isbn=9788185060361 |publisher=Gitanjali Publishing House | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=bwGKAAAAMAAJ | quote=''... In their heart of hearts, the Indian Muslims are not Indian citizens, are not Indians: they are citizens of the universal Islamic Ummah, of Islamdom ...''}}</ref><ref name="savarkar1989">{{Citation | title=Savarkar commemoration volume | author=Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, Sudhakar Raje | year=1989 | isbn= |publisher=Savarkar Darshan Pratishthan | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ByFuAAAAMAAJ | quote=''... His historic warning against conversion and call for Shuddhi was condensed in the dictum 'Dharmantar is Rashtrantar' (to change one's religion is to change one's nationality) ...''}}</ref><ref name="chakravarty1990">{{Citation | title=Mainstream | author=N. Chakravarty | year=1990 | journal=Mainstream, Volume 28, Issues 32-52 | isbn= |publisher= | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DDLQAAAAMAAJ | quote=''... 'Dharmantar is Rashtrantar' is one of the old slogans of the VHP ...''}}</ref> An Indian strategic thinker Ashok Kapur opines that the Two Nation Theory has served Pakistan well and is a continuing source of Indophobia in Pakistan - it helped it gain an independent nation; it enabled Pakistan to gain one third of Kashmir by force of arms in 1947 and to lay claim to it in entirety; it enabled the displacement of Muslim politicians of Indian origin such as Jinnah and Liaqat Ali Khan and the Mohajir community by the Punjabi elite; and also helped to cement the nation and prevent civil war between the provinces.<ref name="Kapur2005">{{cite book|last=Kapur|first=Ashok|editor=Paul|others=T. V.|title=The India-Pakistan conflict: an enduring rivalry|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=G2k6v-Rva5wC&pg=PA142|accessdate=19 December 2011|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-67126-2|pages=142–145|chapter=Major Powers and the Persistence of Indo Pakistan conflict}}</ref>

===Pakistan as a state construct===
Indophobia formed a crucial feature of the ''[[wiktionary:raison d'être|raison d'être]]'' of the newly formed Pakistani state. Soon after creation of Pakistan [[Hans Morgenthau]] writing in [[The New Republic]] stated "Pakistan is not a nation and hardly a state. It has no justification, ethnic origin, language, civilization or the consciousness of those who make up its population. They have no interests in common, save one: fear of Hindu domination. It is to that fear and nothing else that Pakistan possess its existence and thus for survival as an independent state".<ref name="IDR">{{cite web|url=http://www.indiandefencereview.com/geopolitics/Pakistan-The-Anti-India-Identity.html|title=Pakistan: The Anti-India Identity|last=Singh|first=RSN|date=25 November 2010|publisher=Indian Defence Review: Vol. 23.4 Oct-Dec 2008|accessdate=19 November 2011}}</ref>

According to [[Husain Haqqani]] after partition Pakistan faced multiple challenges to its survival. At the time Pakistan's secular leaders decided to use Islam as a rallying cry against perceived threats from India which was predominantly Hindu. Unsure of Pakistan's future they deliberately promoted anti India sentiment with "Islamic Pakistan" resisting a "Hindu India".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.twq.com/05winter/docs/05winter_haqqani.pdf|title=The Role of Islam in Pakistan’s Future|last=Haqqani|first=Husain|date=Winter 2004-05|work=[[The Washington Quarterly]]|page=89|accessdate=26 November 2011}}</ref>

===Post-partition===
According to [[Tufts University]] professor [[Vali Nasr|Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr]], [[Anti-Indian]] sentiments, coupled with [[anti-Hindu]] prejudices have existed in Pakistan since its [[Partition of India|formation]], alternated with [[military dictatorship]], and India being a [[secular state]] with a civilian government.<ref name="Vali Nasr">Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, The Vanguard of the Islamic Revolution: The Jama`at-i Islami of Pakistan (University of California Press, 1994) p121-122</ref> [[Indophobia]] in Pakistan increased with the ascendancy of the [[militant]] [[Islamist]] [[Jamaat-e-Islami]] under [[Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi]].<ref name="Vali Nasr"/><ref name="PIPS">{{cite web|url=http://www.san-pips.com/download.php?f=25.pdf|title=The Arabist Shift from Indo-Persian Civilization & Genesis of Radicalization in Pakistan|last=Hashmi|first=Arshi|work=Pak Institute for Peace studies|accessdate=23 November 2011}}</ref>

Commenting on Indophobia in Pakistan in 2009 former [[United States Secretary of State]], [[Condoleezza Rice]] called Pakistan a fragile entity and stated "You know, having been carved as it was, essentially, out of India, its identity has always been a problem and its always -- not always, but some elements in Pakistan find their identity through extremism and through extreme anti-India sentiment." <ref name="Hindu20090507">{{cite web|url=http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200905050940.htm|title=Pak a fragile entity survival on anti-India sentiment: Rice|date=5 May 2009|work=[[The Hindu]]|accessdate=24 November 2011}}</ref>

In his article "The future of Pakistan" published by [[Brookings Institution]] American South Asia expert [[Stephen P. Cohen]] notes "When it comes to its relations with its most important neighbor, India, and its most important international ally, the United States, its overarching narrative is that of victimhood. Pakistan’s perception of itself as the victim of Hindu domination has led to the mother of all “trust deficits,” a deficit that can never be eliminated because it stems from the deeply held belief that Indians are dominating, insincere, and untrustworthy. In this view, there is nothing that Pakistan can do to normalize the relationship because Indians/Hindus are essentially untrustworthy and have proven that to be true time and time again. My view is that if trust is a component of the problem, it is an eternal one."<ref name="Cohen2011">{{cite web|url=http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/papers/2011/01_pakistan_cohen/01_pakistan_cohen.pdf|title=The Future of Pakistan|last=Cohen|first=Stephen P.|date=January 2011|work=[[Brookings Institution]]|accessdate=25 November 2011}}</ref>

==== In Pakistani textbooks====
{{Main|Pakistani textbooks controversy}}

According to [[Sustainable Development Policy Institute]] since the 1970s Pakistani school textbooks have systematically inculcated hatred towards India and Hindus.<ref name=sdpi>Nayyar, A.H. and Salim, A. (eds.)(2003). [http://www.sdpi.org/whats_new/reporton/State%20of%20Curr&TextBooks.pdf The subtle Subversion: A report on Curricula and Textbooks in Pakistan]. Report of the project ''A Civil Society Initiative in Curricula and Textbooks Reform''. Sustainable Development Policy Institute, Islamabad.</ref> According to this report 'Associated with the insistence on the Ideology of Pakistan has been an essential component of hate against India and the Hindus. For the upholders of the Ideology of Pakistan, the existence of Pakistan is defined only in relation to Hindus, and hence the Hindus have to be painted as negatively as possible'<ref name= sdpi/>
A 2005 report by the National Commission for Justice and Peace a non profit organization in Pakistan, found that [[Pakistan Studies]] textbooks in Pakistan have been used to articulate the hatred that Pakistani policy-makers have attempted to inculcate towards the Hindus. 'Vituperative animosities legitimize military and autocratic rule, nurturing a siege mentality. Pakistan Studies textbooks are an active site to represent India as a hostile neighbor' the report stated. 'The story of Pakistan’s past is intentionally written to be distinct from, and often in direct contrast with, interpretations of history found in India. From the government-issued textbooks, students are taught that Hindus are backward and superstitious.' Further the report stated 'Textbooks reflect intentional obfuscation. Today’s students, citizens of Pakistan and its future leaders are the victims of these blatant lies'<ref>[http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006%5C04%5C25%5Cstory_25-4-2006_pg7_26 Hate mongering worries minorities], [[Daily Times (Pakistan)]], 2006-04-25</ref>

=== Indo-Pakistani military conflicts===
[[File:PakistanPoW.jpg|right|frame|A Pakistan stamp depicting the 90,000 POWs in Indian camps. The humiliating 1971 surrender by the Army, the loss of East Pakistan and the capture of such a large number of prisoners of war Pakistanis further inflamed anti-India sentiment. The POWs were released by India after the signing and ratification of the [[Simla Agreement]].]]
During partition, India had successfully absorbed all the princely states including Junagadh and Hyderabad, both wishing to accede to Pakistan, on the grounds that the population was predominantly Hindu and the states were part of the Indian mainland disjunct from Pakistan. When the Hindu Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, which had a Muslim majority population, vacillated about acceding to either state, Pakistan launched a clandestine invasion of tribals which looted and plundered their way into the Kashmir vale. This had the reverse effect as the Maharaja acceded to India. The intervention of the Indian Army helped prevent Pakistani capture of the valley and a bitter conflict ensued. The war ended in a UN-bartered ceasefire which saw a large part of Kashmir captured by India and beyond the reach of Pakistan till date. The Pakistani people strongly believe that Kashmir should legitimately be part of Pakistan and there is tremendous ill-will towards India on this account.
<!--mention of 1965 here -->

In 1971 rising political discontent in [[East Pakistan]] led to calls for independence which were [[1971 Bangladesh atrocities|brutally suppressed]] by [[Pakistan Army]] leading to [[Bangladesh Liberation War]]. When India intervened a brief [[Indo-Pakistani War of 1971]] followed culminating in formation of [[Bangladesh]]. According to [[Ardeshir Cowasjee]] in [[West Pakistan]] the military whipped up anti India sentiment with the slogan "crush India" trying to convince the people that the only issue in east Pakistan was India supporting a secessionist movement.<ref name="Dawn20111106">{{cite web|url=http://www.dawn.com/2011/11/06/pakistanis-do-not-learn-from-history.html|title=Pakistanis do not learn from history|last=Cowasjee|first=Ardeshir|date=6 November 2011|work=[[Dawn (newspaper)]]|accessdate=25 November 2011}}</ref>

Writing for [[Middle East Research and Information Project]] Pakistani nuclear scientist [[Pervez Hoodbhoy]] states that Anti Indian sentiment is instilled in Pakistani soldiers early in their training at [[Cadet College Hasan Abdal]] and [[Cadet College Petaro]]. He also opines that in order to prosper Pakistan needed to overcome its hatred for India.<ref name="MER20110712">{{cite web|url=http://www.merip.org/mero/mero071211|title=Pakistan, the Army and the Conflict Within|last=Hoodbhoy|first=Pervez|date=12 July 2011|work=Middle East Report|publisher=[[Middle East Research and Information Project]]|accessdate=2 December 2011}}</ref>

===In Pakistani media ===
Prominent Pakistani media commentators like [[Zaid Hamid]] have specifically been accused by other Pakistani's of promoting Indophobia in Pakistan.<ref name="DT20100318">{{cite web|url=http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010%5C03%5C18%5Cstory_18-3-2010_pg3_6|title=Zaid Hamid and Ghuzwa-i-Hind|last=Shah|first=Tayyab|date=18 March 2010|work=[[Daily Times (Pakistan)]]|accessdate=19 November 2011}}</ref> In an editorial published in [[Daily Times (Pakistan)|Daily Times]] Tayyab Shah accused him of doing so at the behest of Pakistani security establishment and condemned his views.<ref name="DT20100318"/> Along with [[Lashkar-e-Taiba]] he is one of the main proponents in present day Pakistan of [[Ghazwatul Hind]] a future battle where Muslims will conquer India and establish [[Sharia]] rule according to a controversial [[Hadith]].
<ref name="CTC">{{cite web|url=http://www.ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Vol2Iss3-Art5.pdf|title=Lashkar-i-Tayyiba Remains Committed to Jihad|last=Ali|first=Farhana|work=CTC Sentinel: March 2009, Vol 2|publisher=[[Combating Terrorism Center]]|accessdate=19 November 2011}}</ref>

Talking to reporters after inaugurating an exhibition in [[Lahore]], [[Majid Nizami]] who is the chief editor of [[Nawa-i-Waqt]] newspaper stated "freedom is the greatest blessing of the Almighty, Who may save us from dominance of Hindus, as our sworn enemy India is bent upon destroying Pakistan. However, if it did not refrain from committing aggression against us, then Pakistan is destined to defeat India because our horses in the form of atomic bombs and missiles are far better than Indian ‘donkeys’."<ref name="Nation 20100311">{{cite web|url=http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Regional/Lahore/11-Mar-2010/Pakistan-destined-to-defeat-India-Nizami|title=Pakistan destined to defeat India: Nizami|date=11 March 2010|work=[[The Nation (Pakistani newspaper)]]|accessdate=24 November 2011}}</ref>

Much of Pakistani media indulges in anti India propaganda at the behest of Pakistani military.<ref name="AJE20101201">{{cite web|url=http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia/2010/12/2010121014844808155.html|title=WikiLeaks hoax hits Pakistan media|date=10 December 2010|work=[[Al Jazeera English]]|accessdate=9 December 2011}}</ref> In December 2010 many leading Pakistani newspapers published reports based on [[United States diplomatic cables leak]]s which portrayed India in a negative light.<ref name="BBC20101210">{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-11967664|title=Wikileaks: Pakistan hoaxed by bogus anti-India cables|date=10 December 2010|work=BBC|accessdate=9 December 2011}}</ref> After [[The Guardian]] reported that none of the information reported by Pakistani media could be verified in its database of leaked cables.<ref name="Guardian20101210">{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/09/pakistani-newspaper-fake-leaks-india|title=Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India|last=Walsh|first=Declan|date=9 December 2010|work=The Guardian|accessdate=9 December 2011}}</ref> Thereafter several newspapers apologized.<ref name="ET20101210">{{cite web|url=http://tribune.com.pk/story/88268/pakistani-media-fake-wikileaks-cables-attacking-india-published/|title=Pakistani media: Fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India published|date=10 December 2010|work=The Express Tribune|accessdate=9 December 2011}}</ref> The fake cables were believed to have been planted by [[Inter-Services Intelligence]].<ref name="BBC20101210"/>

In 2011 [[Jama'at-ud-Da'wah]] was criticized for running a hate campaign against India by advertising on backs of [[Auto rickshaw]]s with messages like ‘Bharat say rishta kya, Nafrat ka goli ka’ (What is our relationship with India? Of hate, of bullets) and ‘Bharat say rishta kya, Nafrat ka intikam ka’ (What is our relationship with India? Of hate, of revenge) leading to calls by some for regulating such advertising.<ref name="ET20111205">{{cite web|url=http://tribune.com.pk/story/302365/targeted-advertising-jd-fans-anti-india-sentiment-by-rickshaw/|title=JuD fans anti-India sentiment by rickshaw|date=5 December 2011|work=The Express Tribune|accessdate=9 December 2011}}</ref>

=== Reduction efforts ===
In 2008 then trade minister of Pakistan [[Ahmad Mukhtar]] called upon Pakistanis to renounce "[[Indophobia]]" and cultivate trade with India.<ref name="DT20080720">{{cite web|url=http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008\07\20\story_20-7-2008_pg7_11|title=We must come out of ‘Indophobia’, says Mukhtar|date=20 July 2008|work=Daily Times (Pakistan)|accessdate=23 November 2011}}</ref>

In 2011 Fazalur Rahim Marwat ,the chairman of Textbook board of [[Khyber Pakhtunkhwa]] stated "After the [[Indo-Pakistani War of 1965]] countless lessons and chapters were introduced that spread hatred among the students and portrayed India as the biggest enemy of the Muslims. That stuff should be done away with." He blamed General [[Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq]] for “sowing seeds of discord in society on religious and ethnic lines by stuffing school curricula with material that promoted hatred now manifested in the shape of extremism, intolerance, militancy, sectarianism, dogmatism and fanaticism.”<ref name="Dawn20100727">{{cite web|url=http://archives.dawn.com/archives/136078|title=Curricula to be cleansed of hatred|last=Yusufzai|first=Ashfaq|date=27 July 2010|work=[[Dawn (newspaper)]]|accessdate=10 April 2011}}</ref>

The reification of symbolised nationalistic jingoism between the two nations are the "[[Beating the Retreat]]" spectacles at sundown at the [[Wagah]] and [[Fazilka]] borders. The governments of both countries agreed to tone down the aggression as part of Confidence Building Measures, resulting in eventual reduction of aggressive gesturing in the displays.<ref name="BeatRetreat">{{cite news |title=“Beating the Retreat” ceremony at Wagah border to be less aggressive |author=ANI |url=http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/feature/beating-the-retreat-ceremony-at-wagah-border-to-be-less-aggressive_100400247.html |newspaper=www.thaindian.com |date=22 July 2010 |accessdate=19 December2011}}</ref>


==Bangladesh==
==Bangladesh==

Revision as of 12:06, 9 January 2012

Indophobia refers to hostility towards Indians and Indian culture. Indophobia is formally defined in the context of anti-Indian prejudice in East Africa as follows: "Indophobia is a tendency to react negatively towards people of Indian extraction against aspects of Indian culture and normative habits".[1] Its opposite is Indophilia.

Historical anti-India sentiment

By the late 19th century, fear had already begun in North America over Chinese immigration supplying cheap labour to lay railroad tracks, mostly in California and elsewhere in the West Coast[2] (see also Sinophobia). In xenophobic jargon common in the day, ordinary workers, newspapers, and politicians uniformly opposed this "Yellow Peril". The common cause to eradicate Asians from the workforce gave rise to the Asiatic Exclusion League. When the fledgling Indian community of mostly Punjabi Sikhs settled in California, the xenophobia expanded to combat not only the East Asian Yellow Peril, but now the immigrants from British India, the "Turban Tide", equally referred to as the "Hindoo Invasion" [sic].[3][4][5]

Among nineteenth-century Indologists

The relation of "Indomania" and "Indophobia" in colonial era British Indology has been discussed by American Indologist Thomas Trautmann (1997). Trautmann finds that Indomania had become a norm in early 19th century Britain as the result of a conscious agenda of Evangelicalism and Utilitarianism, especially by Charles Grant and James Mill.[6] Historians have noted that during the British Empire "evangelical influence drove British policy down a path that tended to minimize and denigrate the accomplishments of Indian civilization and to position itself as the negation of the earlier British Indomania that was nourished by belief in Indian wisdom."[7]

In Charles Grant's highly influential "Observations on the ...Asiatic subjects of Great Britain" (1796),[8] Grant criticized the Orientalists for being too respectful to Indian culture and religion. His work tried to determine the Hindu's "true place in the moral scale", and he alleged that the Hindus are "a people exceedingly depraved". Grant however believed that Great Britain's duty was not simply to expand its rule in India and exploit the subcontinent for its commercial interests, but to civilise and Christianise the natives.

Lord Macaulay, serving on the Supreme Council of India between 1834 and 1838, was instrumental in creating the foundations of bilingual colonial India. He convinced the Governor-General to adopt English as the medium of instruction in higher education from the sixth year of schooling onwards, rather than Sanskrit or Arabic which were then used in the institutions supported by the East India Company. He claimed: "I have never found one among them who could deny that a single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia."[9] He wrote that Arabic and Sanskrit works on medicine contain "medical doctrines which would disgrace an English Farrier - Astronomy, which would move laughter in girls at an English boarding school - History, abounding with kings thirty feet high, and reigns thirty thousand years long - and Geography made up of seas of treacle and seas of butter".[10]

One of the most influential historians of India during the British Empire, James Mill was criticised for being prejudiced against Hindus.[11] The Indologist Horace Hayman Wilson wrote that the tendency of Mill's work is "evil".[12] Mill claimed that both Indians and Chinese people are cowardly, unfeeling and mendacious. Both Mill and Grant attacked Orientalist scholarship that was too respectful of Indian culture: "It was unfortunate that a mind so pure, so warm in the pursuit of truth, and so devoted to oriental learning, as that of Sir William Jones, should have adopted the hypothesis of a high state of civilization in the principal countries of Asia."[13]

However, the Indologists were also often under pressure from missionary and colonial interest groups, and were frequently criticised by them.

Among nineteenth-century colonialists

Stereotypes of Indians intensified during and after the Indian Rebellion of 1857, known as "India's First War of Independence" to the Indians and as the "Sepoy Mutiny" to the British, when Indian sepoys rebelled against the British East India Company's rule in India. Allegations of war rape were used as propaganda by British colonialists in order to justify the colonization of India. While incidents of rape committed by Indian rebels against British women and girls were generally uncommon during the rebellion, this was exaggerated to great effect by the British media in order to justify continued British colonialism in the Indian subcontinent.[14]

At the time, British newspapers had printed various apparently eyewitness accounts of British women and girls being raped by Indian rebels, but with little physical evidence to support these accounts. It was later found that some of these accounts were false stories created in order to paint the native people of India as savages who need to be civilized by British colonialists, a mission sometimes known as "The White Man's Burden". One such account published by The Times, regarding an incident where 48 British girls as young as 10-14 had been raped by Indian rebels in Delhi, was criticized as a false propaganda story by Karl Marx, who pointed out that the story was written by a clergyman in Bangalore, far from the events of the rebellion.[15] A wave of anti-Indian vandalism accompanied the Rebellion. When Delhi fell to the British, the city was ransacked, the palaces looted and the mosques desecrated in what has been called 'a deliberate act of unnecessary vandalism'.[16]

Despite the questionable authenticity of many colonial accounts regarding the rebellion, the stereotype of the Indian "dark-skinned rapist" occurred frequently in English literature of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The idea of protecting British "female chastity" from the "lustful Indian male" had a significant influence on the policies of the British Raj in order to prevent racial miscegenation between the British elite and the native Indian population. While some restrictive policies were imposed on British females in order to "protect" them from miscegenation, most of these discriminatory policies were directed against native Indians.[17][18] For example, the 1883 Ilbert Bill, which would have granted Indian judges the right to judge British offenders, was opposed by many British colonialists on the grounds that Indian judges cannot be trusted in dealing with cases involving the rape of British females.[19]

In the aftermath of the 1919 Amritsar Massacre, the long-held stereotype of Indian males as dark-skinned rapists lusting after white British females was challenged by several novels such as E. M. Forster's A Passage to India (1924) and Paul Scott's The Jewel in the Crown (1966), both of which involve an Indian male being wrongly accused of raping a British female.[20]

Contemporary societal Indophobia

Contemporary Indophobia has risen in the western world, particularly the United States, on account of the rise of the Indian American community and the increase in offshoring of white-collar jobs to India by American multinational corporations.[21] Societal prejudices against South Asians in the west manifest through instances of intimidation and harassment, such as the case of the Dotbusters street gang.

Pakistan

Anti-Indian sentiments, coupled with anti-Hindu prejudices have existed in Pakistan since its formation though they have waxed and waned at various times.[22] According to Tufts University professor Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, Indophobia in Pakistan increased with the ascendancy of the militant Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami under Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi.[22] According to Nasr, the first victims of Indophobia in Pakistan were not Indian nationals, but the Muhajir Urdu immigrants who were accused of dual loyalty with India by the Jamaat and their cohorts, providing them with ammunition needed to justify discrimination and physical attacks on the Muhajir Urdu minorities.[22] In addition, racial ideas such as the Martial Race theory were central to the Pakistan Army which believed that since the Pakistan Army comprised soldiers of the "martial races", they could easily defeat India in a war, especially prior to the Second Kashmir War.[23][24] Based on this belief in the martial supremacy, it was popularly hyped that one Pakistani soldier was equal to four to ten Hindus soldiers.[25][26][27] and thus numerical superiority of the foe could be overcome.

On 9 December 2010, major Pakistani newspapers (such as The News International, The Express Tribune and the Daily Jang) and television channels carried stories that claimed to detail U.S. diplomats' assessments of senior Indian generals as "vain, egotistical and genocidal", also saying "India's government is secretly allied with Hindu fundamentalists", and that "Indian spies are covertly supporting Islamist militants in Pakistan's tribal belt and Balochistan".[28] The claims were credited to an Islamabad-based news service agency that has frequently run pro-Pakistan Army stories in the past.[28]

Later, The News International admitted the story "was dubious and may have been planted", and The Express Tribune offered "profuse" apologies to readers.[29] Urdu-language papers such as the Daily Jang, however, declined to retract the story.[29] Declan Walsh, a reporter for The Guardian, summarizes these claims made in Pakistan as a "bogus story, a laundry list of Pakistani nationalist accusations against archrival India", and that papers have apologized "to readers for publishing anti-Indian comments alleged to have been said by US officials."[29]

Origins

Since the Muslim conquest in the Indian subcontinent the Muslims of erstwhile British India did not regard themselves as a minority but as members of the country's ruling class. British diplomacy and supremacy in arms continuously displaced Muslim power which a wide variety of religious and cultural responses from the Muslim populace were unable to stop.[30] With declining political and cultural power of Islam and the introduction of ideas of a British style parliamentary system of governance after independence they became acutely aware that numbers matter and in an Independent India the numerical majority of Hindus would gain political ascendance after the end of British Raj. This view was bolstered by the occurrence of religious riots in India such as the 1927 Nagpur riots.[31] The Two-Nation Theory was enunciated by Allama Iqbal,[32][33] which found support with the All India Muslim League and eventually culminated in the Partition of India and formation of Pakistan in 1947.[34]

The Partition of India was accompanied by several acts of genocide and hundreds of thousands of deaths by people from both sides of the border leading to lasting memories of pain and anger amongst the surviving refugee populations on both sides.[35] In Pakistan, this contributed to Indophobia. In an interview with Indian news channel CNN-IBN Pakistani cricketer and politician Imran Khan said “I grew up hating India because I grew up in Lahore and there were massacres of 1947, so much bloodshed and anger. But as I started touring India, I got such love and friendship there that all this disappeared.”[36]

Two-Nation Theory

The Two-Nation Theory predicates that India at the time of Partition was not a nation and in its extreme interpretation postulates that the Indian Hindus and Indian Muslims constituted nations which cannot co-exist "in a harmonious relationship".[37][38][39][40] An Indian strategic thinker Ashok Kapur opines that the Two Nation Theory has served Pakistan well and is a continuing source of Indophobia in Pakistan - it helped it gain an independent nation; it enabled Pakistan to gain one third of Kashmir by force of arms in 1947 and to lay claim to it in entirety; it enabled the displacement of Muslim politicians of Indian origin such as Jinnah and Liaqat Ali Khan and the Mohajir community by the Punjabi elite; and also helped to cement the nation and prevent civil war between the provinces.[41]

Pakistan as a state construct

Indophobia formed a crucial feature of the raison d'être of the newly formed Pakistani state. Soon after creation of Pakistan Hans Morgenthau writing in The New Republic stated "Pakistan is not a nation and hardly a state. It has no justification, ethnic origin, language, civilization or the consciousness of those who make up its population. They have no interests in common, save one: fear of Hindu domination. It is to that fear and nothing else that Pakistan possess its existence and thus for survival as an independent state".[42]

According to Husain Haqqani after partition Pakistan faced multiple challenges to its survival. At the time Pakistan's secular leaders decided to use Islam as a rallying cry against perceived threats from India which was predominantly Hindu. Unsure of Pakistan's future they deliberately promoted anti India sentiment with "Islamic Pakistan" resisting a "Hindu India".[43]

Post-partition

According to Tufts University professor Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, Anti-Indian sentiments, coupled with anti-Hindu prejudices have existed in Pakistan since its formation, alternated with military dictatorship, and India being a secular state with a civilian government.[22] Indophobia in Pakistan increased with the ascendancy of the militant Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami under Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi.[22][44]

Commenting on Indophobia in Pakistan in 2009 former United States Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice called Pakistan a fragile entity and stated "You know, having been carved as it was, essentially, out of India, its identity has always been a problem and its always -- not always, but some elements in Pakistan find their identity through extremism and through extreme anti-India sentiment." [45]

In his article "The future of Pakistan" published by Brookings Institution American South Asia expert Stephen P. Cohen notes "When it comes to its relations with its most important neighbor, India, and its most important international ally, the United States, its overarching narrative is that of victimhood. Pakistan’s perception of itself as the victim of Hindu domination has led to the mother of all “trust deficits,” a deficit that can never be eliminated because it stems from the deeply held belief that Indians are dominating, insincere, and untrustworthy. In this view, there is nothing that Pakistan can do to normalize the relationship because Indians/Hindus are essentially untrustworthy and have proven that to be true time and time again. My view is that if trust is a component of the problem, it is an eternal one."[46]

In Pakistani textbooks

According to Sustainable Development Policy Institute since the 1970s Pakistani school textbooks have systematically inculcated hatred towards India and Hindus.[47] According to this report 'Associated with the insistence on the Ideology of Pakistan has been an essential component of hate against India and the Hindus. For the upholders of the Ideology of Pakistan, the existence of Pakistan is defined only in relation to Hindus, and hence the Hindus have to be painted as negatively as possible'[47] A 2005 report by the National Commission for Justice and Peace a non profit organization in Pakistan, found that Pakistan Studies textbooks in Pakistan have been used to articulate the hatred that Pakistani policy-makers have attempted to inculcate towards the Hindus. 'Vituperative animosities legitimize military and autocratic rule, nurturing a siege mentality. Pakistan Studies textbooks are an active site to represent India as a hostile neighbor' the report stated. 'The story of Pakistan’s past is intentionally written to be distinct from, and often in direct contrast with, interpretations of history found in India. From the government-issued textbooks, students are taught that Hindus are backward and superstitious.' Further the report stated 'Textbooks reflect intentional obfuscation. Today’s students, citizens of Pakistan and its future leaders are the victims of these blatant lies'[48]

Indo-Pakistani military conflicts

File:PakistanPoW.jpg
A Pakistan stamp depicting the 90,000 POWs in Indian camps. The humiliating 1971 surrender by the Army, the loss of East Pakistan and the capture of such a large number of prisoners of war Pakistanis further inflamed anti-India sentiment. The POWs were released by India after the signing and ratification of the Simla Agreement.

During partition, India had successfully absorbed all the princely states including Junagadh and Hyderabad, both wishing to accede to Pakistan, on the grounds that the population was predominantly Hindu and the states were part of the Indian mainland disjunct from Pakistan. When the Hindu Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, which had a Muslim majority population, vacillated about acceding to either state, Pakistan launched a clandestine invasion of tribals which looted and plundered their way into the Kashmir vale. This had the reverse effect as the Maharaja acceded to India. The intervention of the Indian Army helped prevent Pakistani capture of the valley and a bitter conflict ensued. The war ended in a UN-bartered ceasefire which saw a large part of Kashmir captured by India and beyond the reach of Pakistan till date. The Pakistani people strongly believe that Kashmir should legitimately be part of Pakistan and there is tremendous ill-will towards India on this account.

In 1971 rising political discontent in East Pakistan led to calls for independence which were brutally suppressed by Pakistan Army leading to Bangladesh Liberation War. When India intervened a brief Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 followed culminating in formation of Bangladesh. According to Ardeshir Cowasjee in West Pakistan the military whipped up anti India sentiment with the slogan "crush India" trying to convince the people that the only issue in east Pakistan was India supporting a secessionist movement.[49]

Writing for Middle East Research and Information Project Pakistani nuclear scientist Pervez Hoodbhoy states that Anti Indian sentiment is instilled in Pakistani soldiers early in their training at Cadet College Hasan Abdal and Cadet College Petaro. He also opines that in order to prosper Pakistan needed to overcome its hatred for India.[50]

In Pakistani media

Prominent Pakistani media commentators like Zaid Hamid have specifically been accused by other Pakistani's of promoting Indophobia in Pakistan.[51] In an editorial published in Daily Times Tayyab Shah accused him of doing so at the behest of Pakistani security establishment and condemned his views.[51] Along with Lashkar-e-Taiba he is one of the main proponents in present day Pakistan of Ghazwatul Hind a future battle where Muslims will conquer India and establish Sharia rule according to a controversial Hadith. [52]

Talking to reporters after inaugurating an exhibition in Lahore, Majid Nizami who is the chief editor of Nawa-i-Waqt newspaper stated "freedom is the greatest blessing of the Almighty, Who may save us from dominance of Hindus, as our sworn enemy India is bent upon destroying Pakistan. However, if it did not refrain from committing aggression against us, then Pakistan is destined to defeat India because our horses in the form of atomic bombs and missiles are far better than Indian ‘donkeys’."[53]

Much of Pakistani media indulges in anti India propaganda at the behest of Pakistani military.[54] In December 2010 many leading Pakistani newspapers published reports based on United States diplomatic cables leaks which portrayed India in a negative light.[55] After The Guardian reported that none of the information reported by Pakistani media could be verified in its database of leaked cables.[56] Thereafter several newspapers apologized.[57] The fake cables were believed to have been planted by Inter-Services Intelligence.[55]

In 2011 Jama'at-ud-Da'wah was criticized for running a hate campaign against India by advertising on backs of Auto rickshaws with messages like ‘Bharat say rishta kya, Nafrat ka goli ka’ (What is our relationship with India? Of hate, of bullets) and ‘Bharat say rishta kya, Nafrat ka intikam ka’ (What is our relationship with India? Of hate, of revenge) leading to calls by some for regulating such advertising.[58]

Reduction efforts

In 2008 then trade minister of Pakistan Ahmad Mukhtar called upon Pakistanis to renounce "Indophobia" and cultivate trade with India.[59]

In 2011 Fazalur Rahim Marwat ,the chairman of Textbook board of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa stated "After the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 countless lessons and chapters were introduced that spread hatred among the students and portrayed India as the biggest enemy of the Muslims. That stuff should be done away with." He blamed General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq for “sowing seeds of discord in society on religious and ethnic lines by stuffing school curricula with material that promoted hatred now manifested in the shape of extremism, intolerance, militancy, sectarianism, dogmatism and fanaticism.”[60]

The reification of symbolised nationalistic jingoism between the two nations are the "Beating the Retreat" spectacles at sundown at the Wagah and Fazilka borders. The governments of both countries agreed to tone down the aggression as part of Confidence Building Measures, resulting in eventual reduction of aggressive gesturing in the displays.[61]

Bangladesh

Historically, anti-India sentiments were expressed during the liberation of Bangladesh from foreign domination by Pakistani pan-Islamist groups sympathetic to the Pakistani regime, such as the Razakars, Al-Shams and al-Badr Islamist militias, who were, in part, responsible for the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities.[62] These attitudes were vigorously encouraged by the East Pakistan administration. Often, racism and prejudice directed at Bengalis (Hindus, Muslims, Indians or Bangladeshi Bengalis) incorporated Indophobic attitudes. The term "Indophobia" is first applicable to denote these prejudices when they began to morph from traditional anti-Hinduism in the Muslim communities to political accusations against Bengali Hindus from Bangladesh specifically pertaining to dual loyalty with India.[63][64]

The Muslim identity of present-day Bangladesh was sought to be established way back in 1901 and 1947 during the partition of India, and although a sizeable Hindu minority remained in East Pakistan (which later became Bangladesh), growing anti-Hinduism caused steady migration into India.[65] The phobia that had grown from anti-Hinduism into Indophobia is also a part of ethnic Bengali Nationalism in the country,[65] which continues to mark an average Bangladeshi’s perception of Indians. The ruling Bangladeshi class had realized this soon after the formation of Bangladesh and consequently made successive attempts to project not only the anti-India stance of the country, but also Islamic extremism which came to be basis of anti-India propaganda.[65]

Political disputes like the Farakka Barrage, Indo-Bangladesh enclaves and Indo-Bangladeshi barrier have created rift between the two.[66] Persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh by the rising tide of militant Islamists and cross-border infiltration into India by illegal Bangladeshi immigrants has created likewise anti-Bangladeshi sentiment in India. Indophobia in Bangladesh is coupled with anti-Hinduism in Bangladesh, whereby Bangladeshi Hindus are persecuted and accused of dual loyalty with India by militant Islamist parties such as the BNP and the Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh.[67][68]

Sri Lanka

In Sri Lanka, Indians are called by the derogatory term 'Kalla-Thonis', originally used to denote smugglers. It is suggested that anti-Indian prejudices in Sri Lanka may be caused by the island nation's historically antagonistic relationship towards larger and more powerful empires in India (such as the Chola Empire), as well as their ethnic tensions with Sri Lanka's Tamil minority, who are accused of dual loyalty to India.[69]

Despite India's alliance with the Sri Lankan government during the Sri Lankan Civil War, anti-Indian hatreds and prejudices are fairly common among the ethnic Sinhalese, fuelled by Buddhist Nationalism and militancy. Attitudes among sections of Sri Lankan society towards the minority Tamils of the country is associated with Indophobia, and Tamil minorities are scapegoated as "Indian spies". Indian traders and businessmen, patronized by the Tamil minority, have been shunned and attacked by the Sinhalese.[69]

During the 1950s, a series of discriminatory measures taken by the Sinhala regime targeted Indian traders (typically from the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala), resulting in the traders being forced out of Sri Lanka. Following this, trade with India was deliberately scuttled, as was the sale of Indian magazines.[69]

The Indophobia of that era also resulted in the Sinhala government going after the so called Tamils of ‘recent’ Indian origin. These immigrant plantation workers imported by the British more than a hundred years earlier had already been stripped of their citizenship by a prior legislation – the first Legislative Act of the newly independent Sri Lanka in 1948. Since then, these Tamils had been living as ‘stateless’ persons, many have repatriated to India.[69]

Sub-Saharan Africa

Former British colonies in Sub-Saharan Africa have many citizens of South Asian descent. They were brought there by the British Empire from British India to do clerical work in Imperial service. In academic discourse, racial prejudices directed against these people from their host countries fall under the rubric of Indophobia.[70] The most prominent case being the ethnic cleansing of Indian (sometimes simply called "Asian") minority in Uganda by the dictator Idi Amin.[70]

According to H.H. Patel, many Indians in East Africa and Uganda were as tailors and bankers businesses, where they were kept forcibly by the British colonialists. Since the representation of Indians in these professions was high, stereotyping of Indians in Uganda as tailors or bankers was common.

Also, some Indians perceived themselves as coming from a more advanced culture than Uganda. Indophobia in Uganda thus predated Amin, and also existed under Milton Obote. The 1968 Committee on "Africanization in Commerce and Industry" in Uganda made far-reaching Indophobic proposals.

A system of work permits and trade licenses was introduced in 1969 in order to restrict the role of Indians in economic and professional activities. Indians were segregated and discriminated against in all walks of life. After Amin came to power, he exploited these divisions to spread propaganda against Indians involving stereotyping and scapegoating the Indian minority.

Indians were stereotyped as "only traders" and so "inbred" to their profession. Indians were attacked as "dukawallas" (an occupational term that degenerated into an anti-Indian slur during Amin's time). Indians were stereotyped as "greedy, conniving", without any racial identity or loyalty but "always cheating, conspiring and plotting" to subvert Uganda.

Amin used this propaganda to justify a campaign of "de-Indianization", eventually resulting in the expulsion and ethnic cleansing of Uganda's Indian minority.[70] About 25,000 British passport holding Asians out of an estimated 80,000 expelled Asians (Indian-origin) settled in Britain.[71]

North America

Hate crime statistics against Indians in North American countries are unavailable. Though not at all widespread, it is believed that sporadic bouts of communal and institutional hatred against Indians have occurred, though their frequency may have decreased in recent years. In the late 1980s a Jersey City, New Jersey street gang calling themselves the "Dotbusters" targeted, threatened and attacked South Asians, specifically Indians.[72] Indophobia in the United States has risen in certain circles due to anti-immigrant sentiment against Indian Americans, attempts by extremists to undermine US-India cooperation, as well as myths and misconceptions about them propagated on the internet.[21][73]

Vamsee Juluri, author and Professor of Media Studies at the University of San Francisco, identifies Indophobia in certain sections of the US media as part of a racist postcolonial/neocolonial discourse used to attack and defame India and encourage racial prejudice against Indian Americans, particularly in light of India's recent economic progress, which some "old-school" colonialists find to be incompatible with their Clash of Civilizations world view. Juluri identified numerous instances of bias and prejudice against Indians in some prominent sections of US media, such as the New York Times and Foreign Policy.[74]

South America

In countries such as Guyana[75][76] and Trinidad and Tobago,[77] as well as some Caribbean islands,[78] racism against the Indian populations are quite present, and sometimes even violent.

Fiji

A significant percentage of the population of Fiji are Indo-Fijians (of Indian ancestors). Indo-Fijians account for about 37% of the total population. There was a period worked as indentured laborers and a period of major religious and social divisions. The Fiji coup of 2000 provoked a violent backlash against the Indo-Fijians for a time and persecution is still present between Indo-Fijians and native ethnic Fijians.

Australia

In May and June 2009, allegedly racially motivated attacks against Indian international students and a perceived poor response by the police sparked protests in Australia. Rallies were held in both Melbourne and Sydney. Impromptu street protests were held in Harris Park, a suburb of western Sydney with a large Indian population.Representatives of the Indian government met the Australian government to express concern and request that Indians be protected. The Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd, expressed regret and called for the attackers to be brought to justice.The United Nations termed these attacks "disturbing" and rights commissioner Navi Pillay has asked Australia to investigate the matters further.[79]

There were internet groups on Facebook which set up anti-Indian groups on the Facebook.[80] The Rudd Government has set up a special taskforce, headed by the Prime Minister's national security adviser, Duncan Lewis, to deal with the proposal to make sending of a text message encouraging someone to commit a racial attack to become a federal offence. The proposed amendment to the existing legislation would strengthen the powers of the police to respond to attacks against Indian students.[81] Internet based racism has been a problem due to lack of legislative powers to effectively lay charges on the perpetrator due to privacy laws. The current system allows the commission to investigate complaints of racial vilification and then attempts to resolve complaints through conciliation with ISPs and social-networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook.[82]

Media

BBC

In 2008, the BBC was criticised by some for referring to the terrorists who carried out the November 2008 Mumbai attacks as mere "gunmen",[83][84] This follows a steady stream of complaints from India that the BBC has an Indophobic bias that stems from its culturally ingrained racism against Indians, stemming from the British Raj. Rediff reporter, Arindam Banerji, has chronicled numerous cases of Indophobic bias from the BBC regarding reportage, selection bias, misrepresentation, and fabrications.[85] Hindu groups in the United Kingdom have accused the BBC of anti-Hindu bigotry and whitewashing Islamist hate groups that demonize the British Indian minority[86]

In protest of the biased coverage of the BBC, renown journalist Mobashar Jawed "M.J." Akbar has elected to boycott the BBC to speak about the Mumbai terror attacks. British parliamentarian Stephen Pound has supported these claims, referring to the BBC's whitewashing of the terror attacks as "the worst sort of mealy mouthed posturing. It is desperation to avoid causing offence which ultimately causes more offence to everyone."[87]

Writing for The Hindu Business Line, reporter Premen Addy criticizes the BBC's reportage on South Asia as consistently anti-India and pro-Islamist,[88] and that they underreport India's economic and social achievements, as well as political and diplomatic efforts, and disproportionately highlight and exaggerate problems in the country. In addition, Addy alludes to discrimination against Indian anchors and reporters in favor of Pakistani and Bangladeshi ones who are hostile to India.

Writing for the 2008 edition of the peer-reviewed Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Alasdair Pinkerton analyzes the coverage of India by the BBC since India's independence from British rule in 1947 until 2008. Pinkerton observes a tumultuous history involving allegations of anti-India bias in the BBC's reportage, particularly during the cold war, and concludes that the BBC's coverage of South Asian geopolitics and economics shows a pervasive and hostile anti-India bias due to the BBC's alleged imperialist and neo-colonialist stance.[89]

Writing on western media bias regarding South Asia in the journal of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, media analyst Ajai K. Rai strongly criticizes the BBC for anti-India bias. He writes that there is a total lack of depth or fairness in the BBC's reportage on conflict zones in South Asia, and that the BBC has, on one occasion, fabricated photographs while reporting on the Kashmir conflict in order to make India look bad. He also writes that the BBC made false allegations that the Indian Army stormed a sacred Muslim shrine, the tomb of Hazrat Sheikh Noor-u-din Noorani in Charari Sharief, and only retracted the claim after strong criticism from the media in India for several weeks.[90]

New York Times

Critics have also charged that The New York Times is Indophobic, and promotes neocolonialism with its slanted and negative coverage of India.[91] American lawmaker Kumar P. Barve has called a recent NYT editorial on India as full of "blatant and unprofessional factual errors or omissions", and having a "haughty, condescending,arrogant and patronizing" tone that reminded him of the British Raj.[92] Sumit Ganguly, a visiting scholar at the Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law, has similarly criticized the NYT in Forbes, finding anti-India bias in The Times' coverage of the Kashmir Conflict, the Hyde Act, and other India-related matters.[93]

Terrorism

Due to the large size and diversity of India, there are various forms of anti-India activities all over the country. Racism, regionalism and militancy are prominent forms of anti-constitution/anti-India activities. Terrorism in India is primarily attributable to Islamic, Sikh, Christian, Naxalite and ethnic nationalist radical movements. The regions with long term activities against India today are Bihar, Jharkhand, Jammu and Kashmir and Seven Sister States (the main anti-India movements in Jammu and Kahmir and the Seven Sisters are independence and autonomy movements). In the past, the Punjab insurgency led to militant activities in the Indian state of Punjab as well as the national capital Delhi. As of 2006, at least 232 of the country’s 608 districts were afflicted, at differing intensities, by various insurgent and terrorist movements.[94] In August 2008, National Security Advisor M K Narayanan has said that there are as many as 800 terrorist cells operating in the country.[95]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ali. Mazrui, "The De-Indianisation of Uganda: Does it require an Educational Revolution?" paper delivered to the East African Universities Social Science Council Conference, December 19–23, 1972, Nairobi, Kenya, p.3.
  2. ^ A PhD on Chinese railroad laborers http://web.mac.com/matthew.annis/iWeb/Chinese%20railroad%20labourers/Introduction.html
  3. ^ Chan Sucheng,Asian Americans: An Interpretive History,Twayne 1991
  4. ^ "Shut the gate to the Hindoo invasion", San Francisco examiner, June 6, 1910
  5. ^ Closed Borders and Mass Deportations: The Lessons of the Barred Zone Act by Alicia J. Campi
  6. ^ Aryans and British India By Thomas R. Trautmann (1997)
  7. ^ Trautmann 1997:113
  8. ^ Grant, Charles. (1796) Observations on the state of society among the Asiatic subjects of Great Britain, particularly with respect to morals; and on the means of improving it, written chiefly in the year 1792.
  9. ^ http://www.atributetohinduism.com/FirstIndologists.htm
  10. ^ Macaulay, Thomas Babington, 1835:242-243, Minute on Indian education.
  11. ^ Trautmann 1997:117
  12. ^ H.H. Wilson 1858 in James Mill 1858, The history of British India, Preface of the editor
  13. ^ Mill, James - 1858, 2:109, The history of British India.
  14. ^ Beckman, Karen Redrobe (2003), Vanishing Women: Magic, Film, and Feminism, Duke University Press, pp. 31–3, ISBN 0822330741
  15. ^ Beckman, Karen Redrobe (2003), Vanishing Women: Magic, Film, and Feminism, Duke University Press, pp. 33–4, ISBN 0822330741
  16. ^ Keay, John, India Discovered, The Recovery of a Lost Civilization, HarperCollins, London, 1981, ISBN 0 00 712300 0
  17. ^ Kent, Eliza F. (2004), Converting Women, Oxford University Press US, pp. 85–6, ISBN 0195165071
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  23. ^ Insurgents, Terrorists, and Militias: The Warriors of Contemporary Combat Richard H. Shultz, Andrea Dew: "The Martial Races Theory had firm adherents in Pakistan and this factor played a major role in the under-estimation of the Indian Army by Pakistani soldiers as well as civilian decision makers in 1965."
  24. ^ An Analysis The Sepoy Rebellion of 1857-59 by AH Amin The army officers of that period were convinced that they were a martial race and the Hindus of Indian Army were cowards. Some say this was disproved in 1965 when despite having more sophisticated equipment, numerical preponderance in tanks and the element of surprise the Pakistan Armoured Division miserably failed at Khem Karan
  25. ^ Indo-Pakistan War of 1965
  26. ^ End-game? By Ardeshir Cowasjee - 18 July 1999, Dawn (newspaper)
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  71. ^ About 10,000 Indian citizens plus some 5,000 British passport holders went to India. Canada took most of Uganda citizens (about 40,000 and the rest were taken by other countries, e.g. the US, Holland, Austria, Sweden, Denmark, etc.Uganda's loss, Britain's gain - BBC
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  95. ^ "800 Terror Cells Active In Country". The Times Of India. 2008-08-12.

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