Jihadi Terrorism in India:
The Saudi Connection --- International
Terrorism Monitor - Paper No. 624
By B. Raman
During his just-concluded visit (February 27
to March 1, 2010) to Saudi Arabia, Prime
Minister Dr.Manmohan Singh is reported to
have taken up with the Saudi leaders the
question of Pakistan’s continued sponsorship
of terrorism against India and sought their
good offices for persuading Pakistan to act
against anti-Indian terrorism directed from
Pakistani territory.
2.
Like Pakistan, Saudi Arabia has been
following a dual policy on terrorism. It has
taken ruthless action against Al Qaeda
elements posing a threat to its internal
security. At the same time, it has avoided
taking action against Wahabi organizations
which have been supporting terrorism in
other countries. Many of the so-called
charity organizations, which have been
funding terrorist organizations in other
countries including India and Bangladesh,
are of Saudi origin. Despite international
pressure on Saudi Arabia to act against such
charity organizations and stop the flow of
funds to global jihadi terrorism, the action
taken by the Saudi authorities has been
unsatisfactory.
3. It would be futile to expect that Saudi
Arabia could be of assistance to India in
dealing with jihadi terrorism emanating from
Pakistan or Bangladesh. There has been a
long history of links between jihadi
terrorist elements in India and Saudi Arabia
ever since the demolition of the Babri
Masjid in December,1992. In December 1993,
coinciding with the first anniversary of the
demolition of the masjid , there was a
number of explosions in different railway
trains in North India. The interrogation of
one of the suspects arrested during the
investigation revealed that the Students'
Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) had
organised them.
4.
The suspect also alleged that C.A.M.Basheer,
who was the President of the SIMI in the
1980s, had, along with one or two other
members of the SIMI, attended a training
course in the use of arms and ammunition and
explosives in a camp of the Jamaat-e-Islami
(JEI) of Pakistan in the North-West Frontier
Province (NWFP) run by one Salauddin, a
Sudanese national, in the late 1980s.
During the training, the JEI arranged a
meeting between the SIMI activists and Lal
Singh, alias Manjit Singh of the
International Sikh Youth Federation (ISYF),
Canada, who was then living in Lahore. Lal
Singh was arrested by the Gujarat Police in
the middle of 1992 when he crossed over into
India.
5.
The JEI urged the SIMI and the ISYF to
co-operate with each other for the
"liberation" of the Sikhs of Punjab and the
Kashmiris of Jammu & Kashmir (J&K). The
co-operation project was code-named "K-2",
standing for Kashmir-Khalistan. It was also
stated that Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the then
Amir of the JEI, had nominated Amirul Azim,
the then Propaganda Secretary of the JEI, as
the co-ordinator of the project.
6. The suspect also stated that the JEI had
asked Basheer to send more members of the
SIMI to Pakistan for training, but he could
not do so due to logistic problems. In the
early 1990s, Amirul Azim, accompanied by
Salauddin, the Sudanese instructor, entered
India via Bangladesh and met Basheer and his
associates for discussing their future
plans. They were told that in view of the
difficulties experienced by them in sending
more activists to Pakistan for training,
instructions had been given to the Hizbul
Mujahideen (HM), the Kashmiri terrorist
organisation, which is a wing of the JEI, to
train SIMI cadres in its camps in J&K
itself. The SIMI was asked to send its
future batches to J&K for training.
7.
Despite intensive searches by the police of
different States, Basheer and his
associates, who had allegedly undergone
training in Pakistan, could not be
arrested. Basheer, who must now be around
48, is from Parambayam in Kerala. After
studying in the Union Christian College,
Aluva, near Kochi, he worked for a brief
while in the Safdarjung airport of New Delhi
before taking to terrorism and absconding.
Subsequent reports indicated that he had
taken up residence in Saudi Arabia from
where he was guiding the activities of the
SIMI in India and organising its branches in
other countries of the Gulf. In Saudi
Arabia, he was also reported to have floated
a new organisation called
the Muslim Development Force.
8.
In 1992, the "Time" magazine of the US had
carried an interview with one Commander Abu
Abdel Aziz, with a picture of his in his
henna-dyed beard and Afghan style fatigue.
After the "Time", "al-Sharq al-Awsat", a
Saudi-owned, London-based daily, ran a
front-page story on Abu Abdel Aziz and his
activities in Bosnia. In August 1994, "Al-Sirat
Al-Mustaqeem (The Straight Path)", an
Islamic journal published in Pakistan (Issue
No. 33), carried an interview with Abu Abdel
Aziz. The journal, without identifying his
nationality, reported that Abu Abdel Aziz
spoke perfect Urdu and that he had spent
extended periods in Kashmir. It was stated
that Abu Abdel Aziz's followers, believed
to be mostly Indian Muslims from the Gulf,
were part of the seventh battalion of the
Bosnian Army (SEDMI KORPUS, ARMIJA REPUBLIKE
BH).
9.
In the interview, he made the following
points:
-
"I was one of those
who heard about Jihad in Afghanistan
when it started. I used to hear about
it, but was hesitant about (the purity
and intention of) this Jihad. One of
those who came to our land (presumably
Saudi Arabia) was Sheikh Dr. Abdallah
Azzam. I heard him rallying the youth
to come forth and (join him) to go to
Afghanistan. This was in 1984 -- I
think. I decided to go and check the
matter for myself. This was the
beginning (of my journey with) Jihad.
Then the conquest of Kabul came.
-
"A new Jihad started
in Bosnia, (we moved there), and we are
with it. As to Arab Mujahideen (in
Bosnia), they do not have a separate
battalion. There is a battalion for
non-Bosnian fighters. Arabs are a
minority compared to those of the
Mujahideen (gathered from around the
World). This battalion is under a
unified command and is called Kateebat
al-Mujahideen (Mujahideen Battalion), or
"El-Mudzahidin" as they call them in
Bosnian. Militarily, it has a link to
the Bosnian government under the general
command of the Bosnian Armed Forces. It
is in fact part of the seventh battalion
(SEDMI KORPUS, ARMIJA REPUBLIKE BH) of
the Bosnian Army. I am a field
commander under the "General Unified
Armed Command". We have full
jurisdiction in the region we are
responsible for (Editor's note: Mostly
central Bosnia). The general command of
the Muslim forces wants to see results,
it does not dictate strategy or action.
-
"I met several
prominent Ulema. Among them Sheikh Nasir
ad-Din al-Albani, Sheikh Abdel Aziz Bin
Baz and Sheikh Muhammad Bin Otheimin and
others in the Gulf area. Sheikh Nasir
ad-Din al-Albani is one of the great
Ulema of this time and one seeks
guidance in the light of his knowledge
and view. (I say) in my last meeting
with him, he was supportive of Jihad in
Bosnia-Herzeg (as a religious duty).
However, he told us not to attack - that
is we, the Arab Mujahideen.Since we were
the smaller the Sheikh was afraid we
might get killed in large numbers if we
engaged people in the fight. However,
he requested that we dig in and be at
the most advanced defense-lines (Khat
ad-Difa` al-Awwal) to defend those
persecuted.
-
"The rest of the
Ulema support Jihad by any means
(defensive or offensive). You must
understand that - militarily speaking -
the number of those killed in defense is
(far) higher than those killed in
attack. This is due to the fact that in
attack, clashes and skirmishes take
place between Mujahideen and Kuffar
(non-believers).The Kafir (unbeliever)
does not throw himself arbitrarily in
the cross-fire for fear of killing his
companions. This fact lowers the number
of the dead and this is the most
important fact of the matter.
-
"Jihad in Kashmir is
still going on. It is healthy. Our
Kashmiri brothers have achieved a lot.
Some of our Mujahideen brethren, whether
Arab or (Ajam non-Arab), such as the
Pakistanis and our brethren from
South-East Asia, have also helped.
Their actions have been very successful,
especially in the lands under Indian
government control. Mujahideen execute
hit-and-run operations. However there
is a lack of support by Islamic
governments and a lack of media coverage
by Islamic outlets, on the level of
atrocity and destruction by the
non-believers in those lands."
10. Subsequently, this Abu Abdel Aziz
appeared at a conference of the LET (Lashkar-e-Toiba)
at its headquarters in Muridke, near Lahore,
in November, 1994. He was introduced to the
audience as an Indian Muslim living in Saudi
Arabia, who was playing a heroic role in
helping the Muslims of Bosnia in their fight
against the Christian Serbs and in helping
the Kashmiris fighting against the
Government of India.
11.
Other reports indicated that in May 1995,
like-minded jihadi groups had formed a
"Rapid Deployment Force" called "Katiba (Kateebat?)
al Mujahideen" (Batallion of the Mujahideen)
at a meeting held in the Philippines.
The meeting was attended among others by
"al-Sheikh Abu Abdul Aziz," described as the
Chief Commander of the 7th Brigade of Muslim
forces in Bosnia, Salamat Hashan, the
Chairman of the Moro Islamic Liberation
Front (Philippines), Abdul Karim, Chairman
of the Islamic Front (Eritrea) and Prof.
Hafiz Mohd Saeed, Amir MDI (Markaz Dawa Al
Irshad, as the political wing of the LET was
then known), Pakistan. "Al-Sheikh Abu Abdul
Aziz" and Abu Abdel Aziz were probably
identical, but one was not certain on the
basis of available evidence.
12. The meeting reportedly agreed on the
following (a) nationalities and frontiers on
the basis of races was an un-Islamic
perception; (b) to work in support of
Muslims in all those parts of the world
where action was being taken against them;
(c) the Mujahideen of the newly formed
Kateebat Al-Mujahideen would carry out
militant operations and fight in Kashmir to
eliminate un-Islamic perceptions of
nationalities and frontiers.
13.
Till 1997, Abu Abdel Aziz either used to
attend the annual conventions of the LET at
Muridke or his recorded speeches used to be
telecast or he used to speak over phone. He
disappeared from public view thereafter.
There were rumours in Islamic circles in
Pakistan that he had been arrested by the
Saudi authorities, apparently because of his
suspected links with Osama bin Laden, who is
against the Saudi monarchy. In August, 2001,
the police of Hyderabad in Andhra Pradesh
claimed to have arrested one Abdul Aziz
alias Ashrafi, who had fought in Bosnia and
Chechnya. From published reports, it was not
clear whether they had questioned him about
the identity of Abu Abdel Aziz and other
Indian Muslims from the Gulf, who had
allegedly fought in Bosnia and their
subsequent whereabouts.
14.
The real identity of Abu Abdel Aziz still
remains a mystery. If he was an Indian
Muslim living in Saudi Arabia, as claimed by
the LET, what was his real name, to which
part of India he belonged, what was his
political affiliation, did he have any links
with the SIMI? All that one could
conjecture was that Basheer could not be
operating under the alias Abu Abdel Aziz
because the Pakistani Urdu media projected
him as operating from Saudi Arabia since the
early 1980s, whereas Basheer was reported to
have moved over to Saudi Arabia only in the
early 1990s, possibly after the Babri masjid
demolition.
15. From the various reports received, one
could make the following surmise:.
-
There were at least
two Indian Muslims operating from Saudi
Arabia and associated with jihadi
terrorism.
-
One of them referred
to by Pakistani jihadis as Abu Abdel
Aziz was linked to the LET. He had
played what the jihadis considered as a
legendary role in organising jihad in
Bosnia and was also closely involved in
assisting the jihadis in J&K.
-
Basheer co-ordinated
the activities of the SIMI in India and
the Gulf from Saudi Arabia.
16. After the Gujarat riots of 2002 and
coinciding with the 10th anniversary of the
Babri Masjid demolition, reports started
circulating in Pakistan that some of the
Indian and Pakistani Muslims working in the
Gulf, including Saudi Arabia, had started a
drive for the collection of funds to be
utilised for assisting the Muslim victims of
the riots and for mounting acts of
punishment terrorism in India to avenge the
killings of Muslims in Gujarat. Compilations
of Indian media reports about the
anti-Muslim atrocities in Gujarat and video
recordings of these atrocities were used as
part of this fund collection drive.
17. In December 2002, the Tamil Nadu Police
claimed to have unearthed a new organisation,
apparently inspired and controlled by jihadi
elements in Saudi Arabia, called the Muslim
Defence Force (MDF). It was not clear
whether this was identical with the Muslim
Development Force of Basheer. Published
reports about the Tamil Nadu Police's
detection indicated as follows:
-
One Abu Hamsa, alias
Abdul Bari, an Indian Muslim living in
Saudi Arabia and associated with the
LET, and one Abu Omar, a Pakistani
Muslim working there, had together
formed the MDF after the Gujarat riots.
They had also met a Muslim leader from
Tamil Nadu who had gone to Saudi Arabia
on haj pilgrimage.
-
On his return to
Tamil Nadu, this leader held a
clandestine meeting at Tenkasi in
Tiruvelveli district, which was attended
by about 30 Muslims. At this meeting,
plans for organising MDF activities in
India were discussed.
-
Subsequently, two of
those, who had attended the Tenkasi
meeting, went to Sri Lanka (the Eastern
Province?), where they were to have
another meeting with Abu Hamsa, but he
did not turn up from Saudi Arabia. They,
therefore, returned to Tamil Nadu
without meeting him.
-
Abu Hamsa alias Abdul
Bari was wanted in connection with an
explosion in Andhra Pradesh. He had
given instructions to his contacts in
Tamil Nadu to organise the activities of
the MDF and also to float another
organisation called New Vision to
propagate Islam amongst the so-called
backward classes of the Hindu community
and recruit them for jihad.
-
The associates of Abu
Hamsa in Tamil Nadu were instructed to
form an elite force to establish
hide-outs and protect jihadi terrorists
visiting Tamil Nadu and to recruit youth
for training in jihad at an undisclosed
destination in the Gulf.
-
Amongst those
arrested by the Tamil Nadu police during
their investigation into the activities
of the MDF was Noohu Thambi Hamid Bakri,
an alleged sympathiser of the LET. He
was stated to be the principal of the
Ayesha Siddique Arabic College for Women
at Kayalpattinam and also the President
of the All-India Tauhid Jamath
Federation. He also used to be
associated with an organisation called
the Kayal Islamic Defence Force, which
is now believed to be dormant.
-
It was Hamid Bakri,
accompanied by one Zakkaria, who had met
Abu Hamsa in Saudi Arabia and
subsequently gone to Sri Lanka for
another meeting, which did not
materialise.In November, 2002, Zakkaria
was allegedly in receipt of Rs.1,50,000
from Abu Hamsa in Saudi Arabia through
hawala.
18.
None of the reports relating to the
unearthing of the activities of the MDF in
Tamil Nadu had referred to any role of
Basheer in this connection. However, his
name again cropped up as possibly amongst
the dramatis personae associated with the
series of explosions in Mumbai since
December, 2002.
19. For some years now there have been
indicators of the clandestine creation of a
jihadi web in Mumbai, south India and
possibly in the Eastern Province of Sri
Lanka, with the SIMI and the LET playing an
active role in this matter, either in tandem
or separately of each other. Much of the
inspiration and financial support for this
came from Indian and Pakistani jihadi
activists in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf
countries.
20. The LET receives funds from the
so-called charity organizations in Saudi
Arabia. It has an office in Saudi Arabia to
make recruitment of jihadis from the Indian
Muslim community living in Saudi Arabia. It
also recruits from Muslims of other
countries visiting Saudi Arabia for
pilgrimage.
21. It would have been more useful if the
Prime Minister had taken up with the Saudi
authorities the question of their acting
against the LET activities from Saudi
territory and stopping the flow of funds to
the LET from Saudi organizations. He should
have also raised the issue of the activities
of absconding SIMI elements from Saudi
Arabia.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)