Indians
Killing Indians
By B. Raman
1. There is no other
way of describing the wave of jihadi
terrorist strikes spreading death and
destruction across India since July, 2006,
and the wave of anti-Christian violence
being seen in Orissa and Karnataka since
August, 2008.
2. The wave of jihadi
terrorist strikes has affected many
States--- ruled by the Congress (I), the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) and others.
3. Anger against
certain aggressive groups of evangelists
indulging in a scurrilous campaign against
the Hindu religion and converting the
impoverished tribals of Central India into
Christianty through the allurement of money
has been widespread in many States of India,
but this anger has been expressed in a
civilized manner in most States. Only in the
BJP ruled Karnataka and in Orissa ruled by
an electoral ally of the BJP has this anger
taken an ugly, uncivilized turn in the form
of orchestrated attacks on Christians and
their places of worship and even the alleged
rape of a helpless nun. Large sections of
public opinion in India and abroad cannot be
blamed if they attribute this to the
inaction of the local Governments in the
face of the violence and view this as
amounting to culpable complicity.
4. These two waves have
given rise to antagonistic reflexes which
should be of concern to any Indian
interested in the unity, prosperity and
strength of this nation. There is a
disturbing denial mode in sections of both
the Muslim and the Hindu communities.
Sections of the Muslim community are not
prepared to accept that their
co-religionists are behind this wave of
jihadi terrorism. An attempt is being made
by these sections, supported by sections of
the so-called secular community, either to
deny the involvement of some Muslims in
jihadi terrorism or to rationalise their
involvement through various arguments. There
is a simultaneous attempt to denigrate and
demonise the police and other law-enforcing
agencies by debunking their version of the
terrorist strikes and by coming in the way
of their investigation.
5. Sections of the
Hindu community owing allegiance to the
so-called Hindutva groups are not prepared
to accept any blame on their community and
tend to project the anti-Christian violence
as an outcome of spontaneous tribal anger
against Christian missionaries with which,
according to them, the Hindutva
organizations have nothing to do. The
perceived inaction of the law-enforcing
agencies in the face of the anti-Christian
violence is sought to be rationalized and
explained through various arguments such as
the lack of road and other means of
communications in the affected areas which
rendered prompt police action difficult.
6. The history of Islam
is replete with thousands of instances of
destruction of places of worship of other
religions. The Hindus used to be proud of
the fact that their religion respected the
places of worship of other religions and did
not damage or destroy them. But, this is no
longer so since 1992 when some Hindutva
elements carried out a wanton destruction of
the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya.
7. Hopes entertained by
many that this was a one-time aberration
caused by historic anger over the alleged
demolition of a Ram temple in the same place
for the erection of a masjid have been
belied by reports of wanton destruction of
Christian places of worship in Karnataka and
Orissa. India has already been paying a
heavy price for the Hindu anger caused by
perceptions of the appeasement policies of
the so-called secular elements towards the
religious minorities and the Muslim anger
due to perceptions of the failure of the
State to protect them and to be fair to
them.
8. To this will now be
added pockets of Christian anger over the
death, destruction and humiliation inflicted
on their community by the Hindutva elements,
with the State allegedly remaining a silent
spectator. The Christians will be rendered
even more angry by the attempts being made
by some intellectuals and others close to
the Hindutva groups to play down the
enormous gravity of the anti-Christian
violence.
9. Do the orchestrated
acts of violence against the Christians and
their places of worship amount to acts of
terrorism similar to the ruthless killing of
innocent civilians of various communities by
the jihadi terrorists of the indigenous as
well Pakistani and Bangladeshi kinds? Is the
Hindutva Bajrang Dal, which is allegedly
behind the attacks on Christians, a
terrorist organization similar to the
Students’ Islamic Movement of India (SIMI)
and the so-called Indian Mujahideen? These
questions are increasingly occupying the
centre of the debate. Instead of maintaining
a laser-sharp focus on our fight against
jihadi terrorism, we find ourselves spending
more and more time in countering and
removing suspicions of acts of terrorism
against the Christians.
10. There is no
universally accepted definition of terrorism
and what is a terrorist organization, but
most definitions in common currency accept
that there are some important components of
terrorism--- repeated attacks of a
pre-meditated nature on innocent civilians
and their property to achieve an objective,
which may be political, economic, social or
religious. Spontaneous and isolated attacks
in the heat of the moment, which are not
repeated in an orchestrated manner, are
crimes not amounting to terrorism.
11. The anti-Christian
violence started as spontaneous, isolated
attacks in the heat of the moment following
the murder of a respected Hindu leader and
some of his disciples in Orissa and the
circulation of scurilous pamphlets
denigrating the Hindu religion by a
Christian organization in Karnataka. Law
does not excuse even such isolated attacks
in the heat of the moment, but views the
heat of the moment argument as a mitigating
circumstance while deciding the quantum of
punishment. But repeated pre-meditated
attacks of an orchestrated nature long after
the heat of the moment has passed
dangerously degenerate into the zone of
terrorism.
12. If the Hindutva
forces are not able to control the
Frankenstein’s Monsters created by them in
the form of the Bajrang Dal, it is only a
question of time before it comes under the
scanner of the terrorism experts of the
Western countries. In the early 1990s, a
US-based organization called the
Jammat-ul-Fuqra, headed by a Pakistani
cleric and with a large number of
Afro-American Muslims as members, carried
out a wave of arson attacks on Hindu and
Jewish places of worship in the US and
Canada and there were some attacks on the
members of these religions too.
13. The
Counter-Terrorism Division of the US State
Department placed it in the list of
terrorist organizations to be watched and
included a brief note on its activities in
its annual reports to the US Congress. This
cleric has since returned to Pakistan and
its activities in the US have ceased. It no
longer figures in the list of terrorist
organizations.
14. If repeated and
pre-meditated attacks on Hindu and Jewish
places of worship and on Hindus and Jews in
the US can be viewed as amounting to
terrorism, how can we argue that similar
attacks on Christians and their places of
worship in India do not amount to
terrorism?
15. The Hindutva
organizations should read the writing on the
wall and mend themselves lest they come to
be viewed by the international community as
organizations of concern. If the Bajrang Dal
comes to be viewed as a suspected terrorist
organization, the first to feel the pressure
and adverse effect will be the supporters of
the organization in the Hindu diaspora
abroad. It is in their interest to exercise
pressure on the Bajrang Dal and drive some
sense into it.
(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)