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Hundreds of Muslim leaders in India demanded on Tuesday that the government protect their community from persecution, saying Muslims were being unfairly targeted in a police crackdown after bombings across the country.

"Today, with the injustice and harassment, Islam and Muslims in this country are under threat," said Maulana Syed Ahmed Bukhari, influential leader of the Jama Masjid mosque, the largest in north India.

"We have been quiet for a long time, but we cannot take this anymore. We too have rights."

Bukhari said neither the ruling Congress nor the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were a suitable option for the Muslims, who make up 13 percent of India's population.

"They think we only have these two options," he said, addressing a crowd of Muslim leaders and others on the lawns of the Jama Masjid, a 17th century mosque built by Mughal kings.

"But water will find its way, it will find its own level."

Bombings have killed hundreds of people in recent months, and Muslim leaders accuse the police of indiscriminate arrests of young Muslim men who have been paraded before the media.

Muslims are key voter bases for the Congress and for regional parties.

"Just as the Congress and the BJP use terrorism to secure their voter base, the Muslim leaders are also using it to secure their position," said Ajai Sahni, executive director of the Institute for Conflict Management.

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow 'DON'T WORRY BE HAPPY': HAPPINESS IS KEY TO LONGER LIFE
'DON'T WORRY BE HAPPY': HAPPINESS IS KEY TO LONGER LIFE PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 14 August 2008

Picture: (AFP/Deshakalyan Chowdhury)
A Bhutanese woman smiles while shopping at a market in Thimphu, as seen in March. a Dutch professor has concluded that the effects of happiness on longevity are "comparable to that of smoking or not".

Keep humming "Don't Worry Be Happy". New research shows being happy can add several years to life.

Ruut Veenhoven of Rotterdam's Erasmus University in a study to be published next month says "Happiness does not heal, but happiness protects against falling ill".

After reviewing 30 studies carried out worldwide over periods ranging from one to 60 years, the Dutch professor says the effects of happiness on longevity were "comparable to that of smoking or not".

That special flair for feeling good, he says, could lengthen life by between 7.5 and 10 years.

The finding brings a vital new piece to a puzzle currently being assembled by researchers worldwide on just what makes us happy – and on the related question of why people blessed with material wealth in developed nations no longer seem satisfied with their lives.

Once the province of poets or philosophers, the notions of happiness and satisfaction have been taken on and dissected, quantified and analysed in the last few years by a growing number of highly serious and respected economists -- some of whom dub the new field "hedonics", or the study of what makes life pleasant, or otherwise.

MRN-AFP

Last Updated ( Friday, 15 August 2008 )
 

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