Anti-Muslim
Reprisal Terrorism? - International
Terrorism Monitor--Paper No. 460
by B. Raman
"Some sections of the Muslim community
suspected that this attack ----like the
other attacks targeting members of their
community--- must have been the
responsibility of Hindu extremist elements.
There was no basis for their suspicions, but
they persist. The only way of removing their
suspicions is through a thorough
investigation and the definitive
identification of all those involved. The
many missing links in the investigation of
this strike as well as in the terrorist
attack on the Mumbai suburban trains should
be a cause for concern. Targeted attacks on
innocent Muslims by Al Qaeda and other
jihadi organizations is nothing new. Such
attacks take place often in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Pakistan. But, in those
countries, the attacks on Muslim civilians
are generally due to one of two factors.
Either the targeted Muslims belonged to a
rival sect (Sunni vs Shia or Deobandi vs
Barelvi) or rival organization or were
perceived as collaborators of the Government
and hence apostates. None of these factors
applied in the case of the
Muslims----Indians and Pakistanis--- who
were traveling by the Samjotha Express. 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. "-----My comments on the terrorist
strike in the Samjotha Express in my book
"Terrorism---Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow"
published in June, 2008, by the Lancer
Publishers of New Delhi
(www.lancerpublishers.com)
"While there are
grounds for suspecting that the blast of
Delhi and those of Agartala might have been
carried out by the IM ( Indian Mujahideen)
and its associates from the Lashkar-e-Toiba
(LET) in Delhi and the
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) of
Bangladesh in Agartala, the blasts in Modasa
and Malegaon seem to stand apart. Though the
Gujarat Police are reported to have detained
some members of the Students' Islamic
Movement of India (SIMI) during their
investigation of the Modasa blast, the
Modasa and Malegaon blasts do not carry any
unique signature. More evidence will be
required before one could analyse as to who
might have been responsible. "----From my
article of October 2, 2008, titled
"Mushrooming Terrorism: Now Agartala" at
http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers29/paper2866.html
In the last three years, we have had at
least seven terrorist strikes in different
parts of the country in which the
perpetrators seemed to have targeted
innocent Muslim civilians. Those seemed to
be not indiscriminate attacks on all
civilians, but targeted attacks on Muslims.
There were two such incidents in Malegaon in
Maharashtra and one each in New Delhi,
Hyderabad, in the Ajmer Sharif in Rajasthan,
in the Samjotha Express to Pakistan and in
Modasa in Gujarat.
2. On the basis of the available reports,
I had myself stated after five of these
strikes---- but not after the Malegaon and
Modasa incidents of September 29,2008---
that they seemed to have been carried out by
terrorists belonging to jihadi terrorist
organisations. I had also referred to
instances of jihadi terrorists deliberately
targeting innocent Muslims in many countries
in pursuit of their agenda.
3. Some months after the Ajmer Sharif
incident, a young Muslim officer of the
Indian Police Service (IPS) had met me
privately and expressed his doubts as to
whether Muslims would have been involved in
these incidents. He strongly believed that
no Muslim however extremist he might be and
to whichever jihadi organisation he
belonged would have planted a bomb in or
near the Ajmer Sharif.
4. I did not feel convinced, but felt
somewhat troubled by what he said. I felt
that as a senior (though now retired)
officer of the IPS, I owed it to him and
other young Muslim officers of the IPS to
take note of what he said and re-open my
mind. It was in pursuance of this that I
made the above-mentioned observations in my
book.
5. Who carried out the pre-September 29,
2008, terrorist strikes, which seemed to
have mainly targeted innocent Muslims? Where
they the acts of the usual jihadi
organisations or are they the precursor to
acts of reprisal terrorism against members
of the Muslim community by some irrational
elements in the Hindu community? These
questions, which were already being raised
by sections of the public----Muslims as well
as non-Muslims--- even before September 29,
have re-surfaced following the publication
or dissemination by some sections of the
media of reports claiming that the
Anti-Terrorism Cell (ATS) of the Mumbai
Police have detained three Hindus in
connection with their investigation into the
recent Malegon blasts. The ATS itself has
neither officially denied nor confirmed
these reports.
6. The matter is in the initial stages of
the investigation. To instill confidence in
our Muslim community, the ATS should see
that the investigation against these Hindus
and any others associated with them is
carried out thoroughly irrespective of their
organisational affiliation. Religion is not
a mitigating factor in deciding on the
culpability of a person suspected of
involvement in a criminal act. If they are
proved to have participated in the acts of
terrorism in Malegain and Modesa, the fact
that they are Hindus would not make them any
the less criminal or terrorist.
7. Indian criminal laws----the Indian
Penal Code, the Indian Evidence Act and the
Criminal Procedure Code--- do not talk of
the majority or the minorities or even of
Indian citizens or foreigners. Their
provisions apply to anyone who commits an
offence in Indian territory---whether he or
she is an Indian national or a foreigner,
whatever be his or her religion, language or
ethnicity. The arrested persons must be
investigated and proceeded against without
worrying about their background or
organisational affiliation.
8. Do these arrests strengthen the case
for a ban on the Bajrang Dal or any other
organisation to which they might have
belonged? Or do they at least call for a
characterisation of such orgainsations----even
if they be of Hindus---as terrorist
organisations? To characterise an
organisation as a terrorist organisation and
to take legal action against it ----and not
merely against its members---- two types of
evidence are required. Firstly, that its
constitution or manifesto advocates the
resort to violence amounting to terrorism
for achieving its objective. Secondly, that
it has been involved in repeated acts of
pre-meditated violence which amount to
terrorism. One has to wait and see whether
such evidence surfaces during the
investigation.
(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)