Eqbal Ahmad, third from right, gestures as he leaves the Federal Building, Washington, DC, in May 1971, as part of the Harrisburg Seven, a group of anti-war activists unsuccessfully prosecuted for allegedly plotting to kidnap Henry Kissinger, US president Richard Nixon's national security advisor. Bettmann / Corbis
Eqbal Ahmad, third from right, gestures as he leaves the Federal Building, Washington, DC, in May 1971, as part of the Harrisburg Seven, a group of anti-war activists unsuccessfully prosecuted for allegedly plotting to kidnap Henry Kissinger, US president Richard Nixon's national security advisor. Bettmann / Corbis
Eqbal Ahmad, third from right, gestures as he leaves the Federal Building, Washington, DC, in May 1971, as part of the Harrisburg Seven, a group of anti-war activists unsuccessfully prosecuted for allegedly plotting to kidnap Henry Kissinger, US president Richard Nixon's national security advisor. Bettmann / Corbis
Eqbal Ahmad, third from right, gestures as he leaves the Federal Building, Washington, DC, in May 1971, as part of the Harrisburg Seven, a group of anti-war activists unsuccessfully prosecuted for all

Book review: Eqbal Ahmad: Critical Outsider in a Turbulent Age – a compelling portrait of a Pakistani activist


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Shortly after the collapse of the Berlin Wall, the Balkans were plunged into a ruthless war that put the western left in a quandary.

Rhetorically it had always been committed to “people’s” struggles, but in practice “anti-imperialism” trumped other concerns.

The extreme nationalism of Slobodan Milosevic’s ethnic cleansers did not lend itself to easy identification so the left went to war against its opponents. Bosnians were painted as pawns of western imperialism, their shortcomings were amplified and any action to end their suffering was resisted. Humanitarian concerns were laid by the wayside.

There were few deviations from the party line. Notable among these was the influential Pakistani intellectual Eqbal Ahmad.

With decades of anti-imperialist activism and prolific dissents on western policy behind him, Ahmad’s credibility could not be gainsaid. But he discovered to his dismay that beyond introspective individuals like the late Edward Said, few were willing to deviate enough from dogma to demand timely action.

It would take three years and more than 200,000 deaths before the world would act to bring the slaughter to an end.

This humanist universalism, analytical acuity and resistance to orthodoxy were Ahmad's distinguishing attributes. These are the features of his personality that radiate through the pages of Stuart Schaar's essential new biography Eqbal Ahmad: Critical Outsider in a Turbulent Age. From the vantage point of personal acquaintance, and following years of research, Schaar has composed a compelling portrait of the dissident as a man of sense, sensibility and principle.

Ahmad lived an extraordinary life that brought him into contact with figures ranging from Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore to Yasser Arafat and Osama bin Laden. United States president Richard Nixon’s justice department would charge him with planning to kidnap Henry Kissinger; Tunisian president Habib Bourguiba would try to persuade him to write his official biography; Pakistani dictator Ayub Khan would try to recruit him as the country’s foreign minister. Ahmad would build notable institutions in several countries. He accurately predicted the consequences of western recklessness in Afghanistan, and his warnings on US intervention in Iraq would prove prophetic.

Ahmad’s early years were marked by tragedy. At the age of 7, he witnessed his father being murdered one night by peasants working for a neighbouring landlord. A man of culture and sensibility, his father had enraged fellow landlords by introducing measures to empower the peasantry. Fearful for their privileges, his peers acted pre-emptively and had him hacked to death. Ahmad was raised by his brother thereafter but he suffered frequent abuse at the hands of his brother’s in-laws.

In 1947, when India was partitioned, Ahmad migrated to the newly-established state of Pakistan. Politically inclined and a fervent believer in the nationalist cause, Ahmad was soon spotted by recruiters for the fight over Kashmir. It was the first military confrontation between the two newly-independent states. With its army still led by British brass, Pakistan opted to bypass restrictions by infiltrating tribal and nationalist volunteers into the valley. Ahmad joined one of these groups and fought for four months before being incapacitated by injury.

He returned from the battle with few illusions about the cause. He had seen tribal volunteers commit many unspeakable crimes but it was a formative experience nevertheless since his unit was a communist one and this first encounter with Marxism left an impression (though he never joined the Communist Party).

Equally powerful impressions had been left on him by his early encounters with Gandhi and the Bengali poet, educator and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore. Gandhi imparted to Ahmad a sense of the power of mass, non-violent mobilisation; Tagore instilled in him a suspicion of parochial identifications.

This diversity of influences enabled him to avoid all orthodoxies. Ahmad believed in the power of ideas, but he also knew that ideas subordinated to political projects could harden into dogma. He resisted the temptation of comforting certainties and maintained his independence, regardless of personal and political costs. He confronted the powerful and, where necessary, parted with comrades to remain true to his principles.

Ahmad admired Karl Marx for focusing the “intelligentsia’s attention in a positive way on the other, the poor, the weak ... on the common good”. But this never led him into campist identification with the nominally Marxist Soviet Union during the Cold War. Indeed, he considered Soviet communism “one of the most defective formations humanity has ever seen”.

He inclined more, writes Schaar, towards the "humanistic socialism of Antonio Gramsci", the Italian Marxist thinker best known for his Prison Notebooks, written while imprisoned under Benito Mussolini's fascist rule. From Gramsci, Ahmad learned the value of change through civil society rather than an unrepresentative revolutionary vanguard.

Education and institution building were his preferred methods of change. But his career as a reformer had an abortive start. When he led a busload of students to the frontier backwater of Kalabagh, Punjab, to set up a school, he was unceremoniously evicted by the Oxford-educated aristocrat lording over the region. “We don’t want education here,” he was told, “and if you don’t leave, you’ll be skinned alive.”

Ahmad’s next experience as an educator, teaching political theory to the Pakistan Army, was less eventful. He decamped to the US soon thereafter to resume graduate education at Princeton.

His student activism, his irrepressible charisma and his gregariousness made him a popular figure on the American left. His Pakistani hospitality and his superior culinary skills (the book includes the recipe for Ahmad’s famous “Chicken Tikka Masala Marinade”) guaranteed a parade of famous guests to his home.

He mentored Edward Said and befriended Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn and Daniel Ellsberg. He also conspired with the Berrigan Brothers (Philip and Daniel, prominent Jesuit activists) in efforts to end the Vietnam War. Later, when Daniel went underground, he organised a network of safe houses for the conscientious fugitive.

Regardless of his extraordinary achievements, including stints in Paris, Tunisia and Amsterdam (where he served as the founding director of the Transnational Institute), Ahmad’s activism on behalf of Palestinians would make him persona non grata at the American academy.

After a long stint at Hampshire College, towards the end of his life, Ahmad returned to his native Pakistan with the intention of establishing Khaldunia University, an institution that would deliver a liberal arts education steeped in Islamic culture and tradition (rather than theology). But his uncompromising criticism of the country’s venal leaders ensured that he got little support and was obstructed often. He died in 1998, before he could realise the dream.

Today, western intelligentsia is once again in a quandary, confounded by the developments in Syria. At the peak of the Bosnian War, Ahmad broke with the western left to call for the arming of besieged Bosnians.

Today, as the defenders of Aleppo are left to fend for themselves, Schaar’s book is invaluable in reminding us of the acute need for a disabused intelligence like Eqbal Ahmad’s.

Muhammad Idrees Ahmad is the author of The Road to Iraq: The Making of a Neoconservative War. He is currently writing a book on the war of narratives over Syria.

Pox that threatens the Middle East's native species

Camelpox

Caused by a virus related to the one that causes human smallpox, camelpox typically causes fever, swelling of lymph nodes and skin lesions in camels aged over three, but the animal usually recovers after a month or so. Younger animals may develop a more acute form that causes internal lesions and diarrhoea, and is often fatal, especially when secondary infections result. It is found across the Middle East as well as in parts of Asia, Africa, Russia and India.

Falconpox

Falconpox can cause a variety of types of lesions, which can affect, for example, the eyelids, feet and the areas above and below the beak. It is a problem among captive falcons and is one of many types of avian pox or avipox diseases that together affect dozens of bird species across the world. Among the other forms are pigeonpox, turkeypox, starlingpox and canarypox. Avipox viruses are spread by mosquitoes and direct bird-to-bird contact.

Houbarapox

Houbarapox is, like falconpox, one of the many forms of avipox diseases. It exists in various forms, with a type that causes skin lesions being least likely to result in death. Other forms cause more severe lesions, including internal lesions, and are more likely to kill the bird, often because secondary infections develop. This summer the CVRL reported an outbreak of pox in houbaras after rains in spring led to an increase in mosquito numbers.

Third Test

Day 3, stumps

India 443-7 (d) & 54-5 (27 ov)
Australia 151

India lead by 346 runs with 5 wickets remaining

Match info

Uefa Champions League Group B

Barcelona v Tottenham Hotspur, midnight

Classification of skills

A worker is categorised as skilled by the MOHRE based on nine levels given in the International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO) issued by the International Labour Organisation. 

A skilled worker would be someone at a professional level (levels 1 – 5) which includes managers, professionals, technicians and associate professionals, clerical support workers, and service and sales workers.

The worker must also have an attested educational certificate higher than secondary or an equivalent certification, and earn a monthly salary of at least Dh4,000. 

Zimbabwe v UAE, ODI series

All matches at the Harare Sports Club:

1st ODI, Wednesday, April 10

2nd ODI, Friday, April 12

3rd ODI, Sunday, April 14

4th ODI, Tuesday, April 16

UAE squad: Mohammed Naveed (captain), Rohan Mustafa, Ashfaq Ahmed, Shaiman Anwar, Mohammed Usman, CP Rizwan, Chirag Suri, Mohammed Boota, Ghulam Shabber, Sultan Ahmed, Imran Haider, Amir Hayat, Zahoor Khan, Qadeer Ahmed

In numbers: China in Dubai

The number of Chinese people living in Dubai: An estimated 200,000

Number of Chinese people in International City: Almost 50,000

Daily visitors to Dragon Mart in 2018/19: 120,000

Daily visitors to Dragon Mart in 2010: 20,000

Percentage increase in visitors in eight years: 500 per cent

Yuki Means Happiness
Alison Jean Lester
John Murray 

Ireland v Denmark: The last two years

Denmark 1-1 Ireland 

7/06/19, Euro 2020 qualifier 

Denmark 0-0 Ireland

19/11/2018, Nations League

Ireland 0-0 Denmark

13/10/2018, Nations League

Ireland 1 Denmark 5

14/11/2017, World Cup qualifier

Denmark 0-0 Ireland

11/11/2017, World Cup qualifier

 

 

 

Pharaoh's curse

British aristocrat Lord Carnarvon, who funded the expedition to find the Tutankhamun tomb, died in a Cairo hotel four months after the crypt was opened.
He had been in poor health for many years after a car crash, and a mosquito bite made worse by a shaving cut led to blood poisoning and pneumonia.
Reports at the time said Lord Carnarvon suffered from “pain as the inflammation affected the nasal passages and eyes”.
Decades later, scientists contended he had died of aspergillosis after inhaling spores of the fungus aspergillus in the tomb, which can lie dormant for months. The fact several others who entered were also found dead withiin a short time led to the myth of the curse.

Company Profile
Company name: OneOrder

Started: October 2021

Founders: Tamer Amer and Karim Maurice

Based: Cairo, Egypt

Industry: technology, logistics

Investors: A15 and self-funded 

England's lowest Test innings

- 45 v Australia in Sydney, January 28, 1887

- 46 v West Indies in Port of Spain, March 25, 1994

- 51 v West Indies in Kingston, February 4, 2009

- 52 v Australia at The Oval, August 14, 1948

- 53 v Australia at Lord's, July 16, 1888

- 58 v New Zealand in Auckland, March 22, 2018

Results:

5pm: Maiden (PA) Dh80,000 2,200m | Winner: AF Al Montaqem, Bernardo Pinheiro (jockey), Ernst Oertel (trainer)

5.30pm: Maiden (PA) Dh80,000 1,200m | Winner: Daber W’Rsan, Connor Beasley, Jaci Wickham

6pm: Handicap (PA) Dh85,000 1,600m | Winner: Bainoona, Fabrice Veron, Eric Lemartinel

6.30pm: Handicap (PA) Dh80,000 1,600m | Winner: AF Makerah, Antonio Fresu, Ernst Oertel

7pm: Wathba Stallions Cup Handicap (PA) Dh70,000 | Winner: AF Motaghatres, Antonio Fresu, Ernst Oertel

7.30pm: Handicap (TB) Dh90,000 1,600m | Winner: Tafakhor, Ronan Whelan, Ali Rashid Al Raihe