Mario Goveia wrote:
This is tragic.  The terror in India from the government's failure to protect
them has reached a point where the jihadis don't even have to plant a bomb any 
more to kill hundreds of innocent Indians; all they have to do is plant a rumor.
Comment:
Please refer to the article underneath to umderstand the genesis of terror.Do 
you honestly believe it will abate considering the actions of the VHP/ Bajrang 
Dal?

Regards,

Marshall


Terrorists breeding most in riot-hit areas by  Subodh Varma & Rema 
Nagarajan,(times of India dt 22.9.2008) 
 
  
NEW DELHI: One of the questions troubling security experts and government 
agencies in the context of growing incidents of terror attacks is the origi 
ns of the terrorists. 

Going by results of investigations, most of these terrorist hail from states 
like Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka and Gujarat. 

There are reports of cells in these states, which provide logistic support, 
training grounds and the personnel to carry out the actions. In many cases, the 
locations of these places are unexpected. How and why are youths from small 
towns in these states getting influenced by the ideology of violence? 

Undoubtedly, there is a complex set of circumstances contributing to the 
evolution of terrorists. But a disturbing truth emerges if one looks at the 
recent history of communal relations in various states. Between 2001 and 2007, 
over 71% of all communal incidents in the country took place in the very same 
states where these terrorists hail — that is Gujarat, Karnataka, Maharashtra, 
MP and UP. 

Of the people killed in these communal incidents, an overwhelming 85% were in 
these states. This exceptionally high proportion is partly due to the Gujarat 
carnage, which saw nearly 3,000 people, mostly Muslims, killed after the Godhra 
train-burning incident. But even if one excludes Gujarat, more than two-thirds 
of all deaths in communal incidents in the rest of the country during this 
period were in Maharashtra, UP, MP or Karnataka. 

Several states, like Assam, West Bengal and Kerala, have a high Muslim 
population and yet do not display such tensions on anything like the same 
scale. In fact, Assam and Bengal have a huge problem of illegal migrants from 
Bangladesh. Yet neither has a recent history of communal violence of the scale 
witnessed in Gujarat, Maharashtra, etc. 

And, neither do these states seem to have thrown up sizeable numbers of 
Islamist terrorists. In fact, where the intelligence or police have accused 
Bangladeshi migrants of being involved in terrorist activities, they were 
allegedly working with people from essentially the same states on which we are 
focusing here, apart from Andhra Pradesh. 

It appears, therefore, that there is some correlation between the areas from 
where terrorists are arising and the deep sense of siege and fear that follows 
communal violence. The fact that in most cases of communal riots, the 
perpetrators have got away scot free even where they have been identified 
obviously only makes matters worse. 

This alienation, when tapped and played upon by fundamentalist forces, may be 
creating a distorted desire for some kind of revenge. For instance, in Gujarat 
some of the accused in the Ahmedabad bomb blasts were directly affected by the 
riots of 2002 where mobs burnt down their houses, schools or college. 

In a chronology of major communal incidents in India collated by the Institute 
of Peace & Conflict Studies, the same states show a much higher number of 
incidents of communal riots in the period between 1989 and 2003. This period 
coincides with the rise of fundamentalism in the country, led by the VHPs 
movement relating to Ayodhya, and the watershed year of 1992 when Babri Masjid 
was demolished by kar sevaks of various Hindu fundamentalist organizations like 
the VHP and the Bajrang Dal. 

So, for those born since the 1980s, especially in these states, communal 
conflagration and the toxic propaganda that accompanies it must have been a 
constant background as they grew up. The fact that the Muslim community in the 
country is generally more afflicted with poverty, unemployment and lack of 
education would also contribute to youths being more susceptible to calls by 
fundamentalists for revenge. 
 
 


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  • ... Mario Goveia
    • ... Frederick [FN] Noronha * फ्रेडरिक नोरोन्या
      • ... Mario Goveia
    • ... marshallmendonza

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