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DESCRIPTION:WHAT: Protest at the Indian Consulate: Revoke the Barring of Professor 
 Richard Shapiro, End the Isolation of Kashmiris\n\nWHERE: 540 Arguello 
 Boulevard, San Francisco, CA,\n\nWHEN: November 8th, 11am-12pm\n\nOrganized 
 by Students and Friends of the International People's Tribunal on Human 
 Rights and Justice in Indian-administered Kashmir (IPTK)\n\nPress contact: 
 Amanda McBride, ciisstudentsolidarity@gmail.com, 415-642-0503\n\n\nOn 
 Monday, November 8th, at 11 am, a group of students and community members 
 will be protesting India’s banning of Richard Shapiro, a US scholar, 
 without any reported legal basis. The protest will take place at the San 
 Francisco Consulate General of India, at 540 Arguello Boulevard. \n\nOn 
 November 1st, 2010, Professor Shapiro was denied entry by the Immigration 
 Authorities in New Delhi.  Professor Shapiro is a US Citizen and Chair, 
 Anthropology Department, at California Institute of Integral Studies. 
 Professor Shapiro traveled to India with his life partner, Professor Angana 
 Chatterji, a citizen of India and a permanent resident of the US. Professor 
 Chatterji, a prominent and frequent visitor to the region, was granted 
 entry to India while Professor Shapiro, was prevented from entering the 
 country. Reports indicate that no legal basis was given for the decision to 
 deny his entry. Professor Shapiro was in possession of a valid passport and 
 visa. Given that Professor Shapiro’s work focuses neither on South Asia 
 nor India, it appears that his right to travel has been restricted in an 
 attempt to further intimidate Professor Chatterji, and to discourage her 
 from continuing her work as Co-Convener of the International People's 
 Tribunal for Human Rights and Justice in Kashmir (IPTK).\n\nSince 2006, 
 Shapiro has regularly traveled to Kashmir, and interacted with various 
 human rights defenders, scholars, and youth to bear witness and to learn 
 from their experiences. He helped form a Jewish-Muslim Friendship Circle. 
 The focus of his scholarship and academic work is not India or Kashmir, but 
 issues of race, class, gender, and alliance building in the United States, 
 and discourses on power and subjectivity. Richard Shapiro had written an 
 op-ed in 2009 and another in September 2010. These were analytical pieces 
 based on articles and newspaper reports, and not on primary research that 
 had been conducted by him. Any scholar can do that. This is a matter of 
 academic freedom, and beyond the control of states and their desire to 
 regulate thinking on the injustices they perpetrate.\n\nOn November 1, when 
 Professor Shapiro first presented his passport to the Immigration 
 Authorities, he was stamped an entry permit. Then, they started processing 
 Professor Chatterji's passport. She has been stopped regularly since the 
 inception of IPTK in April 2008. As they paused over her passport, the 
 Immigration Officer again asked Richard Shapiro for his passport. Then, he 
 was informed that he may not enter India, and that the ban was indefinite. 
 The Immigration Authorities refused to pay for his return airfare. He was 
 made to leave at 11.50 am that same morning. The Immigration Authorities 
 refused to give any reason, while stating that Professor Shapiro had not 
 been charged with anything.\n\nThis arbitrary and undemocratic act by the 
 Indian government is an affront to academic freedom, the right of families 
 to be together, and further isolates Kashmiris from international 
 solidarity in their struggle for peace and justice. The barring of an 
 international scholar to Kashmir raises serious questions into the 
 functioning of democratic rights and human rights conditions of Kashmiris. 
 Denying Shapiro entry without due cause impinges upon academic freedom, 
 freedom of movement, and the right to travel with his legal partner and to 
 visit his family in Kolkata.\n \nThe Indian state has regularly targeted 
 those that have been outspoken on injustices and military governance in 
 Kashmir. The Indian state has targetted Professor Angana Chatterji and her 
 colleagues in Kashmir, Parvez Imroz and Khurram Parvez, for their work 
 defending human rights. Recently, writer Arundhati Roy was a target. When 
 academics and/or journalists are banned, such actions speak to the intent 
 of the Indian State in maintaining impunity, and in deliberately isolating 
 Kashmiris from the world and the world from Kashmiris. \n\n·       We call 
 upon the Government of India to:\n\n·       Revoke the entry ban of 
 Richard Shapiro from India.\n\n·       Stop obstruction of the IPTK's 
 work.\n\n·       End barring without due cause.\n\n·       Support 
 democratic processes, the exchange of ideas.\n\n \n\n \n\nFor more 
 information on the IPTK, see www.kashmirprocess.org.\n\n \n\nFor a press 
 note by Scholars at Risk regarding Professor Shapiro, please 
 visit:\nhttp://scholarsatrisk.nyu.edu/Events-News/Article-Detail.php?art_uid=2454\n\n 
 \n\nArticles by Richard Shapiro:\n\n \nGoverning Kashmir (August 2010): 
 http://www.greaterkashmir.com/news/2010/Aug/29/governing-kashmir-17.asp\n\nA 
 Just Peace in Kashmir? (August 
 2009):\nhttp://www.zcommunications.org/a-just-peace-in-kashmir-by-richard-shapiro\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/11/08/18663510.php
SUMMARY:Protest at the Indian Consulate: Revoke the Barring of Professor Richard Shapiro
LOCATION:540 Arguello Boulevard, San Francisco, CA,
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/11/08/18663510.php
DTSTART:20101108T190000Z
DTEND:20101108T200000Z
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