Paper no. 2923
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16-Nov-2008
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Muslim Anger Vs Hindu Anger
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International Terrorism Monitor---Paper No.
466
By B. Raman
The manner of the current investigation
by the Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) of the
Mumbai Police into an explosion at Malegaon
in Maharashtra on September 30,2008, which
mainly targeted and killed some local
Muslims should be a matter of concern to all
right-thinking Indians.
2.
Large sections of the Muslims,the anti-Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) political class and the
so-called secular elements in the Hindu
community, which lose no opportunity to
demonise the Hindu nationalists and the BJP
in order to win the applause of the
minorities and project themselves as
liberals, have used the investigation to
divert attention away from the hundreds of
innocent civilians killed by the jihadi
terrorists, many of them trained and
assisted by the intelligence agencies of
Pakistan and Bangladesh and inspired by the
pan-Islamic ideology of Al Qaeda and its
International Islamic Front (IIF).
3. They look upon the leaks from the ATS---
many of them based on narco-analysis of
dubious investigation and evidentiary
value--- as a pre-election Godsend in their
campaign to project the Muslims as more
sinned against than sinning and the
nationalist-minded Hindus, who call for
strong action against the jihadi terrorists,
as chauvinists and Fascists.
4. This, despite the fact that resort to narco-analysis----which was frequently
resorted to by Hitler's Nazis and Stalin's
KGB to obtain confessions from political
dissidents--- has stood condemned in the
rest of the civilised world. Many of the
thousands of political dissidents, who were
sent to the Gulag and the firing squads by
Stalin, were tried and convicted on the
basis of narco-analysis.
5. The Wiki Encyclopaedia says as follows
of narco-analysis: " Narco Analysis
Test or Narco Test: This refers to
the practice of administering barbiturates
or certain other chemical substances, most
often Pentothal Sodium, to lower a subject's
inhibitions, in the hope that the subject
will more freely share information and
feelings. The term Narco Analysis was coined
by Horseley. Narco analysis first reached
the mainstream in 1922, when Robert House, a
Texas obstetrician used the drug
scopolamine
on two prisoners. Since then narco testing
has become largely discredited in most
democratic states, including the United
States and Britain. There is a vast body of
literature calling into question its ability
to yield legal truth. Additionally,
narcoanalysis has serious legal and ethical
implications."
6. Dr. Chandrasekhar, the legendary
Indian Forensic science expert, who played a
highly-acclaimed role in the successful
investigation and prosecution of the LTTE
conspirators involved in the assassination
of Rajiv Gandhi, has been one of the
strongest critics of the police in some
Indian States resorting to narco-analysis,
which is not a scientific method of
investigation. In many countries of the
world narco-analysis is viewed as a
political tool and not a scientific tool.
7. On the basis of statements and remarks
made by the suspects under the influence of
drugs, which induce a state of
semi-consciousness, large sections of the
Hindu community have been sought to be demonised, the army has been unwittingly
stigmatised and attention has been sought to
be diverted from the investigation into acts
of jihadi terrorism and from enquiries to
establish the full extent of the so-called
Indian Mujahideen iceberg.
8. I am proud to have been the first
analyst to have drawn attention on October
2,2008, to the fact that the explosions of
September 30 at Malegaon and Modasa in
Gujarat did not gel with the explosions
carried out in other parts of India by the
jihadi terrorists. I was the first to have
suggested that we should thoroughly
investigate the suspected involvement of
some Hindus in these blasts in order to gain
the trust of the Muslim community and remove
the misgivings in their mind about the
fairness of the Police. I was the first to
have suggested in a TV interview that if the
Malegaon investigation warranted a re-visit
to some of the past investigations into
terrorist strikes in which Muslims were the
main targets, the Police should not hesitate
to do so.
9. I applauded the Mumbai ATS, when they
started the investigation into the suspected
involvement of some Hindus in the Malegaon
blasts, but I have been greatly concerned
over the manner in which their
investigation----instead of remaining
professional and scientific--- has taken
what large sections of the Hindu majority of
this country will view as a politically
motivated direction. Some of the media leaks
attributed to the Mumbai ATS make one think
that the ATS has---wittingly or
unwittingly--- started playing to the
so-called secularists' gallery.
10. So many obvious questions, which
should have been asked by objective
opinion-makers, have not been asked. One of
the suspects is alleged to have lent her
motor-cycle to the perpetrators. Can one
think of any instance in the recent history
of terrorism in which a terrorist-suspect
created evidence against himself or herself
by using his or her own vehicle for planting
an improvised explosive device (IED)?
11.A private military school, which
coaches aspirants to a career in the Armed
Forces, has been sought to be condemned on
the ground that some of the suspects held a
meeting in its premises. What is important
is, what was the purpose of the meeting? Was
it to plan specific acts of terrorism or was
it merely to discuss how to counter
anti-national jihadi terrorism? Innumerable
meetings and seminars are held every year in
presitgious training institutions of the
Government to discuss, inter alia,
appropriate strategies against jihadi
terrorism, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Very
often, the speakers call for strong
retaliatory attacks against the terrorist
organisations, Pakistan and Bangladesh? Are
they to be viewed as instigators of
terrorism and are our training institutions
to be criticised for holding such
discussions?
12.We are now told that the explosions in
the Samjotha Express in the beginning of
last year were also carried out by some
Hindus with the help of RDX explosives
allegedly supplied by a serving Army
officer, who is presently under
investigation.
13.I had written as follows on the
Samjotha Express blasts on February 20, 2007
( http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers22/paper2144.html
) :"The blasts on the Delhi-Attari Samjotha
Express (Peace Express) on the night of
February 18, 2007, are remarkable for the
success as well as the failures of the
terrorists. Their diabolic success is
evident from the fact that two of the IEDs,
reportedly attached to bottles containing
incendiary material, functioned without a
mishap, causing a carnage in which 67
passengers---mostly Indian and Pakistani
Muslims---perished. Their surprising failure
is evident from the fact that at least a
half of their IEDs failed to explode and has
been recovered by the railway authorities.
According to some reports, they had planted
a total of five IEDs of which three failed
to function. According to others, they had
planted four IEDs, of which two failed. So
many failed IEDs should normally be a
surprise in the case of well-trained,
clued-up and experienced terrorists. The
failures of the perpetrators of Deewana
could indicate a possibility---remote at
present--- that they were new to this
business of terrorism---either new recruits
of old and well-established organisations or
new recruits of new organisations. A
systematic follow-up of the forensic trail
left by them should help in determining
their identity in course of time."
14. The Delhi police, who investigated
the blasts, did not say anything about the
use of RDX explosives. From their briefings,
it appeared that incendiary devices and not
explosive devices were used in the Samjotha
Express. That was also the conclusion of
many Western experts, including of STRATFOR,
the well-known US analysis organisation. If
the Delhi police knew at that time that RDX
was used, did they try to find out the
source of the explosive? If not, why not?
15. If what the public is told now----on
the basis of the leaks from the Mumbai ATS---
is correct, then what the Delhi Police told
the public in February,2007, was wrong. and
vice versa.
16.The Mumbai ATS should investigate the
blasts thoroughly and need not hesitate to
have a second look at the Samjotha Express
explosions, but they should do it in a
professional manner, but not in a manner
that adds to suspicions that the
investigation has taken a pre-election
political turn----- with the objective being
to fix the Hindu nationalists and not to fix
the terrorists.
17.I have written and spoken repeatedly
about the spreading Muslim anger against
what many Muslims look upon as the
unfairness of the Indian criminal justice
system against the Muslims. I have equally
written and spoken frequently about the
spreading Hindu anger against the Government
and the so-called secularists over the
failure to act strongly against the jihadi
terrorists.
18. One should be careful to see that the
manner of investigation by the ATS does not
add to the Hindu anger and lead to a
situation similar to what had happened in
Northern Ireland where elements from the
Protestant community took to arms and
terrorism against the Catholics due to
perceptions that the Government was not
doing enough to protect them from the
perpetrators of violence from the Catholic
community.
19. This may please be read in
continuation of my earlier article titled
"Anti-Muslim Reprisal Terrorism?" at
http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers29/paper2892.html
(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)
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