Saturday, May 16, 2015

War with Isis: The Brides Brainwashed into Becoming Suicide Bombers

SOURCE :
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/middle-east/War-with-ISIS-The-brides-brainwashed-into-becoming-suicide-bombers/articleshow/47309386.cms




  War with Isis:The Brides  Brainwashed
            into Becoming Suicide Bombers
                                By
                  



War with ISIS: The brides brainwashed into becoming suicide bombers
 
 
Aysha, which is not her real name, attended the course for two days along with many other women. (Representative photo)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I
 
It was when ISIS issued a fatwa saying a wife should obey her husband in all matters, including becoming a suicide bomber, that Aysha, a 32-year-old mother of two children, decided to flee her home in Mosul. She recalls that her husband did not ask her directly to be a suicide bomber, but gradually started talking about it. "He was coming home once a week," she told The Independent, "but recently he came home every day, and finally asked me to attend a new course showing how a Muslim woman could support Muslim society with her soul and body".
 


 Aysha, which is not her real name, attended the course for two days along with many other women. She was appalled by what she heard. She says "the course was a sort of brainwashing, teaching women to sacrifice cheap worldly things - blood, flesh, soul - for the victory of more precious things - religion, Allah, the Prophet, and, most importantly, the eternal afterlife".
 
 
 
 


 But instead of being persuaded by these teachings, Aysha was thinking about her children and how to rescue them from the situation she found herself in. On the third day of the course she pretended to be ill and claimed that her son had flu so she had to stay at home. She says that on 3 April "at the time of the Friday prayers I took my children and told them that we were going to visit their aunt in the same district, al-Rifa'ey, that we lived in, but in fact I had already arranged what to do through my cousin. He lives in Zakho [in north-west of the Kurdistan Regional Government zone] and he has helped many people to escape Mosul". She added that the cousin knew many smugglers in Mosul and KRG. "It cost me about $1,200 (£760) to flee with my son and daughter," she says.
 
 


 Aysha was forced to pledge total obedience to her husband, even when it came to suicide bombing. What happened to her illustrates the complete subjection of women under the rule of the self-proclaimed "Islamic State". Their status has been reduced to that of chattels without rights or independence. A woman is not allowed to leave her house without being accompanied by a male relative. If she does so and is stopped by ISIS fighters or officials, they take her back to her home and her husband is given between 40 and 80 lashes for allowing her out alone. All women going outside must wear the niqab, a cloth covering the head and face. In no other society on earth are women treated like this, not even in Saudi Arabia, where they are forbidden to drive, or in Afghanistan, where girls' schools have been attacked and burnt.
 
 
 
 


 Aysha's story gives an insight into marriage and daily life within ISIS. She gives a fascinating account of the last months of her marriage and her relations with her husband, whom she does not want to name because this might compromise the safety of her children. Prior to ISIS forces unexpectedly capturing Mosul, a mainly Sunni Arab city with a population of two million, on 10 June last year, her husband had been an officer in the Iraqi army. ISIS kills many of its opponents who are Shia or Yazidi and has driven Christians out of Mosul and surrounding towns, but it offers forgiveness to Sunni Muslims who publicly repent working for the Iraqi army or government.
 
 


 
 


 Aysha says that her husband announced his repentance and offered his services to ISIS as a soldier, though it was five months before they trusted him enough to accept him into their ranks where he became a unit commander. Aysha was never sure exactly what he did. "He never told me anything," she says, "and I didn't dare ask him because when I once did so his answer was: "Don't poke your nose into things." She found drops of blood on his uniform and suspected he took part in killings. He was earning a lot of money and had his share of spoils, property and valuables confiscated by ISIS from those it deems to be its enemies. Aysha stole part of her husband's savings, recalling that "
 
when I left home, I had about $6,000 in addition to my jewellery, but I paid a lot to get out of the city [Mosul] and I paid in advance to get to Turkey".
 


 After her husband was accepted into ISIS as a military officer, Aysha found that his behaviour began to change and he became more aggressive. She says that recently he had started to ask her for obedience "even when it comes to the sacrifice of the soul and body, otherwise I will not win paradise in the afterlife and hell will be my place. In this life I may be punished or be taken to jail." She responded to these threats by pretending to be wholly obedient to him and to sharia. Aside from pressure on her to become a suicide bomber, she feared that if her husband were killed she would be compelled to marry another ISIS commander. It was when her husband was absent on some military operation that Aysha fled to Irbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Regional Government. She has had no contact with him since her escape.
 

 Becoming a martyr in the cause of defeating the enemies of religion is at the heart of the ISIS ideology as Aysha was taught during the course her husband insisted she attend. Suicide bombing is an effective military tactic, turning fanatical but untrained volunteers into lethal weapons. Families across the "Islamic State", which has a population of six million, are fearful that their children will be brainwashed into this self-sacrifice.
 
 
 
 


 This was why Noura, a 36-year-old married woman, fled Mosul with her husband and six children. ISIS had established camps where young teenagers were trained for suicide bombing. Noura, who wants her real name kept secret, reached Irbil on 22 March. She told The Independent in an interview that the main reason she and her family left is that "my children were under threat because ISIS decided to establish camps for adolescents between 12 and 16 to educate and train them for suicide bombing". She says the preachers did not speak of "suicide bombing" but of "martyrdom honour". When these camps were first established it was possible for families to pay a fine instead of sending their children to them, but later attendance became compulsory.
 


 Unlike Aysha, Noura had little money and her husband was jobless. This was a further reason for them and their family to leave Mosul. She explains that "people don't find jobs, so they offer their services to ISIS for food. The problem is that many jobless people start to be attracted to the idea of working with ISIS, not because they are happy with it, but because it is the only option available even if it is undesirable."
 


 Aside from the threat of her children being trained as suicide bombers, Noura found day-to-day living difficult in Mosul. She says there was no public supply of electricity "and we didn't have the money to pay for the [electric] generators so it was terrible". Cooking-gas cylinders were expensive, costing 80,000 Iraqi dinars (£44), and tomatoes and potatoes each cost 15,000 dinars (£8) a kilo. There was a lack of clean water. More recently, she has heard by phone from her parents, who are still in Mosul, that things have improved a little and there are two hours' electricity per day and the price of gas has halved.
 


 ISIS must have received more money, says Noura. Her father told her that wheat farmers around Mosul will sell their harvest this year to ISIS because it is the only buyer and has promised to pay a high price. Aysha tells much the same story about the lack of electricity - only three hours every two days in her district and none at all in others. There is no shortage of food because ISIS imports it from Syria "so we have many products from Aleppo and Raqqa in addition to Iraqi products". ISIS has blown up the mobile phone masts, but mobiles still get a signal in high buildings.
 


 Aysha and Noura's accounts of life under ISIS corroborate each other, but on one point they disagree. Aysha does not think that ISIS will be defeated "because, although they are in financial crisis, they have solutions to their crises". They impose fines on people and on those leaving Mosul: some leave with permission after paying a lot of money, though others are not allowed out for security reasons. Aysha had to pay smugglers to get her out.
 


 Noura, on the contrary, believes that ISIS will be defeated because it is running out of money and becoming more corrupt. She says bribery has become rampant but she does not think that US air strikes will defeat ISIS.
 
 "The devastating factor internally is corruption - bribery, nepotism, favouritism - that will be the final blow." Significantly, neither woman speaks of any armed resistance to ISIS despite its moves to recruit women and children as suicide bombers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, May 14, 2015

NAXALs MAOISTs - Face-to-Face with Maoist Group: PLFI Claims it's Fighting Corruption

SOURCE :
http://www.hindustantimes.com/ranchi/brutality-and-populism-plfi-s-mantra-in-its-fight-against-the-state/article1-1346158.aspx






Face-to-Face with Maoist Group: PLFI Claims it's Fighting Corruption


                        B Vijay Murty


 Hindustan Times, On the hills along the Jharkhand-Odisha border
: May 12, 2015 1

PLFI rebels taking a breather. Today, the group has spread its influence to Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Bihar and West Bengal and the mere mention of its name inspires fear. (Parwaz Khan/ HT Photo)

 
Coming face to face with Dinesh Gope, chief of the People’s Liberation Front of India (PLFI) that has built a reputation for cruelty and ruthlessness over the past decade, is no easy task.

Gope, a 33-year-old former soldier, is always on the move because he is under the constant surveillance of intelligence agencies and security forces. After more than two months of persistent efforts, Hindustan Times visited a PLFI camp deep inside forests along the Jharkhand-Odisha border on Saturday and interacted with Gope, the first time any national newspaper has met the rebel leader.

The two emissaries sent by Gope to guide the HT team to his hideout had said we should be extremely careful because he trusted no one. 
 
 
Read: Full interview with Dinesh Gope
 
  The journey began early on Saturday in a private vehicle from Ranchi and it took almost four hours to reach the hills along the Jharkhand-Odisha boundary. The HT team waited at a school run by the PLFI in an area surrounded by hills for 20 minutes when Gope and his men appeared on four motorcycles. We were asked to surrender our camera.

While Gope sat down for a discussion, his men spread out over a radius of 100 metres. The interview had just begun when his sharp eyes spotted two SUVs speeding towards us. Within seconds his guards raised an alert – “Saheb force hai (Sir, it’s the security forces)”. Gope apologised and left.
 
 
Video: PLFI members brandishing arms along Jharkhand-Odisha border

The troops in the SUVs, led by Rania police station in-charge Dinesh Prajapati, accosted us we left in a different direction. We were grilled for half an hour and allowed to leave only after we surrendered our identity cards.
 
 

Two hours later, we a got a call from Gope to reach a different location – a temple built by the PLFI deeper inside the forests. There was virtually no road as we drove through fields and wastelands, crossed hills and rivulets to reach the destination.
 
 
On the way, we came across armed men talking on phones, apparently informing Gope of our movements. It was getting dark when we arrived. Gope and his men were waiting for us.
 

After we surrendered our phones, the interview began and ran late into the night as Gope patiently replied to all our queries. It was after many requests that he agreed to be photographed with his men, albeit with their faces covered.
 
 

Long before the Islamic State became known for its brutal executions, the PLFI, which has its origins in Jharkhand, was allegedly killing people by slitting throats, beheading, severing limbs and even chopping them into pieces. 
 
 

Today, the PLFI has spread its influence to Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Bihar and West Bengal and the mere mention of its name spells fear. It is now giving its parent group, the CPI-Maoists, and the police a run for their money.
 
 
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2015/5/PLFI2new.jpg
 
PFLI rebels have built a reputation of being brutal in its methods. (Parwaz Khan/ HT Photo)

Despite losing more than 100 cadres in fighting with rival groups and security forces and having an equal number locked up in jails of the five states, the PLFI’s strength is increasing by the day.
 
 
The Jharkhand Police recently launched two operations – Karo I and Karo II – and spent crores to wipe out the PLFI but failed to make a dent. PLFI leaders continue to hold their own in strongholds and move around freely in villages and even towns.

Gope claimed the group’s “philanthropic work” is making it popular among the neglected tribespeople and poor in the countryside. As he spoke, more than half a dozen members of the group stood on a desolate landscape with shrubs and trees, clad in jeans and brandishing AK-47s.

Gope said the PLFI was talking to tea garden labourers to extend its base to Assam after having spread to Uttarakhand and Haryana. He also claimed his cadres were in Sri Lanka, Mauritius, China and Nepal for talks with “like-minded organisations”.
 
 
 
 
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2015/5/PFLI3.jpg
 
 
The temple constructed by the PLFI. (Parwaz Khan/ HT Photo)

The leaders claimed a major chunk of the “levy” they collect from contractors, businessmen and mine owners – the amount is estimated to run into several crores – goes into a slew of “welfare programmes” that help them connect with the people.
 
 
The PLFI claimed it is running at least 16 residential schools in Jharkhand –former chief secretary Sajal Chakraverty had raided one school at Beriya in Khunti district last year – as well as one school each in Odisha and Chhattisgarh. The banned group also claimed it has acquired around 300 bighas (48 acres) in Bihar to set up educational institutions.

Hindustan Times visited one such residential school – whose location is withheld at the request of the rebels – where some 70 tribal boys and girls were living and getting free education.

Located on an elevated plateau in Khunti, the school follows the curriculum of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) and has tables and benches, round-the-clock power, water supply, beds for students and faculty, separate toilets for boys and girls, a TV set and sufficient food in its kitchen.

In a state where only 47.1% of primary and middle schools have usable toilets, only 19.8% of schools in rural areas have drinking water and 55.7% of Class I students cannot recognise the English alphabet, the PLFI-run school appeared ideal.
 
 
 


 
 
 
Experts have long contended that left wing extremists have been able to extend their influence by stepping in to fill the vacuum created by the lack of governance, speedy justice and basic services in states such as Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. The rebels have capitalised on a feeling of neglect and alienation among the tribes people.

The PLFI also claimed it runs several health clinics in hard-to-reach areas and for people living in forests, where the government’s healthcare initiatives haven’t reached so far.

Rebel leaders claimed they had built several places of worship, mostly temples and churches, and regularly organised community feasts.

Several villagers, they claimed, have got jobs in mines, factories, government offices and even the police force thanks to the clout of their chief. “We also contribute generously to families for weddings of daughters and treatment of the ailing,” said a leader. 

But police and state government rubbished his claims.

“We know of only two schools they have built and these are their pseudo fronts to hold meetings,” said deputy inspector general of police Arun Kumar. Of these two, he said, the government took over the management of a school in Beriya village that was raided by security forces led by the chief secretary and police chief last year.

“Parents that paid fees to PLFI then have not only stopped paying the fees but are also demanding mid-day meals now,” he said.

Chakraverty said, “Mercilessly killing people and by exhibiting their severed limbs as trophies to spread fear they are doing no service to humanity. Unfortunately, the PLFI takes pleasure in such acts.”

But Gope pointed to what he said was the group’s expanding appeal among people as proof of their conduct.

He said the PLFI has scores of professionals, including engineers, and even church pastors in its ranks. They picked up the gun to fight the government’s “corrupt system”, empower the last man and create a socialist society where everyone will be treated equally, he claimed.

“If we were a terror group,” Gope said, “we would not have been growing so fast and earning the acceptance of all sections of society.”
 
 





 

Also read


Man who wrote Nepal’s scarcely-followed building code tells a story


 



 
 


 
 
 

 

O. R. O P. :PARRIKAR THE MAGICIAN :





    O. R. O. P :PARRIKAR  THE  MAGICIAN



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Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Cost Disease in China's Military

SOURCE:
http://thediplomat.com/2015/05/chinas-military-and-cost-disease/






             Cost Disease in China's Military

Yemen Crisis: More than Shia-Sunni Battle

SOURCE:
http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/comment/yemen-crisis-more-than-shia-sunni-battle/79116.html








Yemen Crisis: More than Shia-Sunni Battle  

                                          By

                                                              K C REDDY       

       

Yemen, which was once acknowledged as the Fortunate Arabia or Happy Arabia by ancient geographer Ptolemy, has now become a cauldron of insurgencies.

 

 

            


The Conflict Zone



    • 2011: Arab Spring protests spread to the streets of Yemen's capital Sana'a. President Saleh is badly injured in a rocket attack, suffering burns to 40 per cent of his body, and is flown to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment. Returns to Yemen, promising to hand over power to his deputy Adbrabbuh Mansour Hadi.


    • 2014: Following the conclusion of the 10-month National Dialogue Conference, Hadi announces that Yemen will become a federation of six regions. Houthi rebels reject the plan. Tribesmen blow up Yemen's largest oil pipeline. Houthi rebels seize control of the capital Sana'a. The UN attempts to broker a political settlement.

    • 2015: Houthis seize government installations and take power. The UN Security Council denounces the move. Hadi resigns, is arrested, then escapes from detention in Sana'a, fleeing to Aden. Islamic State carries out its first attacks in Yemen: two suicide bombings against Shia mosques. Houthi rebels advance south to Aden, prompting Mr Hadi to flee to Saudi Arabia. A coalition of Arab states launches airstrikes against the Houthi, with US support.










      The airstrikes can only lead to a prolonged conflict. The international community will have to take diplomatic intiatives to resolve the crisis






      FOR the last few weeks, Yemen has been hitting headlines in the global media for the wrong reasons. It has become a cauldron of insurgencies —by the Shias, people of south Yemen and finally the Islamic State. The Shia insurgency in North Yemen, popularly known as “the Houthis” is carried out by Zaydi Muslims (a sub sect of Shia) constituting 35-40 per cent of Yemen's Muslim population.



      Oversimplifying the Issue
       

      Attributing the present day Yemeni crisis as a mere Shia-Sunni power struggle amounts to oversimplification of the issue as Yemen is largely a tribal society and around 400 Zaidi tribes are operating mostly in the North Yemen area. Inter- tribal and intra-tribal tensions crop up in the control and distribution of economic resources and power-sharing arrangements as well. The internal struggle for power between long-competing factions remains at the core of the Yemeni crisis. Subsequent support by countries like Saudi Arabia, Iran etc. to the fighting factions either directly or indirectly  and emergence of terrorist outfits like Al Qaida and the Islamic State provide a unique and complicated dimension to the Yemeni crisis.


       

      Root Causes 

       
      A dispassionate scan of the historical and political developments of Yemen throws ample light on the root causes of the present-day crisis. Till 1990, two states existed in Yemen — one in the North and another in the South. The southern state of Yemen was formed in 1967 and the socialist state was officially known as the Peoples’ Democratic Republic of Yemen. After six years of civil war (1968) between Hamiaddin royalists supported by Saudi Arabia, Britain and Jordan on one side and the republicans backed by Egypt on the other side, the republicans came out victorious and formed the Yemini Arab Republic. However, the power struggle between the two states continued with the eruption of fresh fighting. Finally, with the Arab League brokered peace in 1990, both states reached an agreement on the joint governance of Yemen. Both Yemeni Arab Republic and Peoples' Democratic Republic of Yemen were merged and paved the way for the formation of the present-day Republic of Yemen and Ali Abdullah Saleh became the President.  In order to honour the power-sharing agreement, the Vice-President was taken from South Yemen. The fragile peace did not last long and lead to the 1994 civil war. In spite of Saudi Arabia actively backing South Yemen leaders, their armed forces were defeated and many Yemeni socialist leaders and other southern secessionist leaders fled into exile.

       Ali Abdullah Saleh became the first directly elected president of Yemen in 1999, winning 96.2 per cent of the vote.
       

      North-South divide
       
      A deep divide persisted between the Shia Muslim-dominated North Yemen and Sunni Muslim-influenced South Yemen. High poverty levels, an oppressive and corrupt government, a large number of weapons in private hands are some of the factors contributing to the present crisis. Sensing the chaotic situation, Al Qaida stepped in and conducted a number of attacks on Yemeni military convoys and mosques despite Ayaman al Zawahiri's guidelines advising against attacks on mosques. Not wanting to lag behind, the Islamic State in March this year, deployed four suicide bombers at two Houthi mosques in the capital Sanna, killing more than 100 worshippers .The Islamic State threatened to carry out more such attacks more in future.
       



       
      Yemeni Revolution
      Earlier, in 2011, encouraged by the popular ouster of the Tunisian government, street protests started in Sanna. The protests were initially against unemployment, adverse economic conditions and governmental corruption. Additionally, the proposed amendment to the Yemini constitution sought to allow then President, Saleh, to remain in office for life. It was strongly believed that his son Ahmed Saleh was being groomed to eventually take over reins from his father. The Houthis participated in the Yemini revolution in 2011 along with other insurgent groups, socialists, Islamists, student bodies, anti-government tribes and opposition parties.
       
       
      As a result of the peace brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in the last part of 2011, Saleh handed over power to his deputy Abdu Rabbo Mansoor Hadi. In 2012 presidential elections, which were also boycotted by the Houthis as well as southern insurgents; Hadi got 99 per cent of the vote.
       
       
      Another factor which contributed to the Houthis capturing power was the withdrawal of fuel subsidies in July 2014. It was estimated in 2013, the fuel subsidies in Yemen were $ 3 billion — roughly 20 per cent of the state expenditure .The Houthis capitalised on the frustration among diverse segments of the population over the Sunni-dominated government's decision to discontinue the fuel subsidies.

       
      The Houthi insurgency started way back in 2004 when the government accused them of seeking to overthrow it. Houthi leaders denied the allegations by saying that they were only defending themselves from the government attacks. Since then, regular attacks and counter- attacks between government forces and militias backed by them on one side and the Houthis on the other continued, resulting in thousands of casualties .The Houthi insurgency reached its peak in February this year when they installed a Revolutionary committee to administer  the country and chased out the internationally recognised President Hadi. The President made an unsuccessful attempt to establish his authority in Aden (South Yemen), before being forced to flee to Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia.
       

      Saudi-led Airstrikes
       
      With a view to destroy military bases and armed depots of the Houthis, Saudi Arabia led a coalition of GCC ( Gulf Cooperation Council) countries in air raids. The US, the UK, France, Turkey and Belgium supported Saudi Arabia's military action on Yemen while Iran, Russia and China opposed it. It is too early to say whether Saudi-led airstrikes will resolve the crisis or prolong and deepen it, particularly due to the historical reality that air power is not enough to win battles. Ground troops remain an indispensible factor to win a war in spite of air superior power. From all accounts, it appears the air strikes may even drag on. The aerial strikes by coalition forces may halt further advance by the Houthis but they are not adequate to dislodge them from their mountain homelands in North Yemen. The air campaigns elsewhere, like the one in Libya, resulted in a chaotic nation with very little hope of improvement in the near future. Similar is the case with coalition air strikes in the areas occupied by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria which did not resolve the crisis.
       
       
      Another striking feature of Yemeni crisis is the conspicuous absence of United State's active role. For the last two decades, the US was playing an active and leading role in the Middle East but now the lead role remained is with Saudi Arabia.
       Is it due to a shift in the US policy in the Middle East?
       It is more likely the US has no economic interest in Yemen's energy resources, particularly after the discovery of shale gas deposits. Moreover it's interest in Yemen seems to be more on containing the expansion of Al Qaida in Arabian Peninsula.
       
       
      Initially, Pakistan's participation was contemplated in some quarters but the unanimous resolution passed by Pakistani Parliament killed such a possibility. Pakistan's stand might have been driven by two considerations — its security forces are overstretched in tackling its own insurgencies and with 20 per cent Shia population, it can ill afford to field ground forces for Yemeni conflict.
       
       
      Pakistan's decision to stay away from Saudi led air strikes on Yemen and its likely impact on its relationship with other Gulf Coordination countries may alter the exiting geopolitical equations in the Middle East.
       
       
      The current unstable security situation gave a serious blow to Yemen's ailing economy. In spite of having sufficient oil and natural gas resources, the crisis in Yemen has adversely impacted their exploration and transport. Being an oil-based economy, the chaotic security situation has contributed to significant levels of unemployment.
       

      India's  Historical Ties
       
      Unlike many Asian countries, India maintained a deep-rooted historical and trade relationship with Yemen leading to the migration of thousands of people of Yemen-origin to Hyderabad. Some reports indicated presence of 300,000 strong Yemeni-origin diaspora in India. Similarly, an estimated 100,000 people of Indian origin are concentrated in South Yemen and they enjoy a fair degree of cultural and religious freedom.
       
       
      Besides regular people-to-people contacts between India and Yemen, prominent leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose also visited Aden (South Yemen) and Aden remains on the Hajj route for Indian pilgrims.
       
       
      The intensified coalition air strikes may prolong the struggle and lead to a political vacuum in some parts of Yemen. This will lead to Al Qaida in Arabian Peninsula and Islamic State attempting to realise their dream of establishing caliphates in those areas. Thereafter, the crisis may not remain a mere problem between two groups or two countries and it may assume a regional /global dimension. The international community needs to be aware of the potential threat and activate diplomatic efforts to resolve the crisis before it is too late.
       
       
      The Indian Connection
       
      Unlike many Asian countries, India maintained a deep-rooted historical and trade relationship with Yemen, leading to the migration of thousands of people of Yemen-origin to Hyderabad. Some reports indicated the presence of 300,000-strong Yemeni--origin diaspora in India. Similarly, an estimated 100,000 Yemeni-origin people of Indian origin are concentrated in South Yemen.





       
       
      The writer, a former IPS officer, is former UN Chief Security Adviser.