SAFFRON TERROR: Debate On Barkha Dutt's Show
On NDTV
by B. Raman
"The Buck Stops Here " talk show of NDTV
anchored by Ms. Barkha Dutt had an
interesting discussion on August 25, 2010,
on the passing reference to the recently
noticed phenomenon of "Saffron Terror" made
by Shri P. Chidambaram, the Home Minister,
while inaugurating a conference of
Directors-General of Police at New Delhi the
same day.
2. The discussion was balanced and free of
accusations and counter-accusations. It was
refreshing to note that all the
participants, including Shri Swapan Dasgupta,
shared the concern of Shri Chidambaram over
this phenomenon. There was no attempt to
deny the fact that some Hindu elements,
known to be close to the ideology of the
Hindu nationalist group, are suspected of
involvement in acts of terrorism against
members of our Muslim community and that
there was a need for a thorough
investigation into this.
2. The debate, while refreshingly balanced
and free of ideological polemic, was
incomplete in some important respects. I
myself, in my writings and speeches, have
refrained from naming this phenomenon
"Saffron" or "Hindutva" or Hindu terror
since I felt that such characterisations
could politicise the investigation and
prosecution and aggravate the divide between
the Hindus and the Muslims. I , therefore,
prefer calling the phenomenon "Hindu
reprisal terrorism".
3. In the relations between the Hindus and
the Muslims, there have always been acts of
reprisal during communal riots in different
parts of the country, but those were acts of
reprisal committed in the heat of the moment
at the height of the riots. What we have
been seeing since the Malegaon blasts on
September 8, 2006, are some pre-meditated
acts of reprisal by some members of the
Hindu community against Muslim soft targets.
These are deliberate acts meant to punish
Indian Muslims for the acts committed by
some Pakistani terrorist organisations
sponsored by the Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) ----- with or without the help of
Indian Muslims belonging to the Students
Islamic Movement of India (SIMI).
4. The Malegaon blasts of September 8,
2006, constituted in my view the first act
of reprisal terrorism by some Hindus against
innocent Muslims. While almost everybody was
blaming the ISI and its Pakistani surrogates
for the blasts, in an article written on
September 10, 2006---two days after the
blasts--- I said inter alia: " While one
should not be surprised if the Malegon
blasts also turn out to be the work of
jihadi terrorists, one should not rule out
at this stage the possibility of the
involvement of non-Muslims, keeping in view
the long history of tensions between the
Muslims and the Hindus in Malegaon.....It
also needs to be underlined that any
ill-advised actions by angry elements of the
Hindu community to give vent to their anger
over the continuing acts of terrorism, by
indulging in reprisal attacks against
innocent members of the Muslim community
would be detrimental to our national
interests and could contribute to an
unbridgeable divide between the two
communities. The Government should act with
equal firmness against whoever indulges in
acts of terrorism/, irrespective of the
community---Muslim or Hindu--to which he or
she belongs. There cannot be one law for the
Muslims and another for non-Muslims."
( http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers20/paper1945.html)
5. Subsequently, I wrote as follows in my
book titled "Terrorism---Yesterday, Today &
Tomorrow" published in June 2008: "The
conventional wisdom was that the Muslims
were now being deliberately targeted by the
jihadi organizations in order to provoke
them against the Government and the Hindus.
I do not subscribe to this wisdom. It is
important to keep an open mind while
investigating these targeted attacks on
Indian Muslims and one should not jump to
the conclusion that the LET or the HUJI must
have been involved. We owe it to our
Muslims, most of whom have kept away from Al
Qaeda and other pan-Islamic
organizations, to see that these cases of
targeted attacks on Muslims are thoroughly
investigated instead of coming to a facile
conclusion that jihadi organizations must be
behind them."
6. Two aspects of the phenomenon of Hindu
reprisal terrorism worry me. The first is
the attempt of the Hindus allegedly involved
to punish the Indian Muslims for the acts of
the ISI and its jihadi surrogates. The
second is the alleged involvement of some
ideologically motivated members of the
security forces in these reprisal attacks.
One saw a worrisome combination of religious
and military elements coming together to hit
out at our Muslim community. This showed the
beginning of a possible ideological
penetration of sections of our security
forces by Hindu nationalist elements.
7. There are many---including myself--- who
have long been saying that we will not be
able to deal with jihadi terrorism unless we
hit out at Pakistan, but , at the same time,
we have been strongly advising against any
retaliatory action in our own territory
against our own people who are perceived as
being sympathetic to the ISI-sponsored
jihadis from Pakistan. The investigations
into the Malegaon blasts and some other
incidents have brought out that there are
possibly elements in our security bureacracy
who seem to believe that acts of reprisal
against our own Muslims would be as
justified as retaliatory attacks against
Pakistan. This is a dangerous idea that
needs to be eradicated ruthlessly.
8. As I had pointed out in a recent article,
US investigators seem to believe that jihadi
organizations from Pakistan were involved in
the terrorist attacks in the Mecca Masjid of
Hyderabad and on the Samjotha Express. If
they are correct, the contention of our
investigators that some of the arrested
Hindus were involved in the Mecca Masjid
blast stands disproved. Our investigators
are still to make a headway in the Samjotha
express case. The contradictions in the
conclusions of the US and Indian
investigators show that while there may be
prima facie evidence against the arrested
Hindus in some of the cases, there are
others in which the evidence is not strong
enough.
9. There is a need for a three-pronged
action by the Government----- firstly, a
thorough investigation of the pending cases
against the arrested Hindus and their
prosecution, if warranted; secondly,
reconciliation of the differences in the
Mecca Masjid case and , thirdly, action
against serving and retired members of the
security bureaucracy who encourage openly or
covertly acts of reprisal against our Muslim
co-citizens.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate
of the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com)