Hindu bombers break 'myth'
- Mumbai police arrest 'terrorist' duo for theatre blasts  OUR SPECIAL
CORRESPONDENT      Gadkari and Nikam (faces covered) after their arrest.
(PTI)

*Mumbai, June 16: *Two Hindu "terrorists" were arrested today for allegedly
planting bombs at theatres, prompting the Maharashtra chief minister to say
this had shattered "the myth" that all bombers came from a particular
community.

Ramesh Hanumant Gadkari, 50, and Mangesh Dinakar Nikam, 34, are accused of
targeting shows of Ashutosh Gowariker's film *Jodhaa Akbar *and a Marathi
play that is a spoof on the Mahabharat. They are charged with two blasts
that injured several people and an attempted bombing.

Police said the duo were members of the Sanatan Sanstha and the Hindu Jana
Jagruti Samiti, organisations involved in protesting "denigration" of Hindu
religious icons as in, allegedly, M.F. Husain's paintings.

"These (the bombings) were definitely terrorist acts as they were carried
out by people motivated by an ideology," said Hemant Karkare, chief of the
anti-terrorist squad that nabbed the accused.

"The arrests… have broken the myth that persons belonging only to a
particular community are involved (in blasts)," chief minister Vilasrao
Deshmukh said.

Gadkari and Nikam have said they felt the play, *Amhi Pachpute *(We, the
Pachputes) by Santosh Pawar, had "caricatured and distorted" Hindu gods,
Karkare said. *Jodhaa Akbar *angered them by glorifying the Mughal emperor
Akbar, whom they saw as an oppressor of Hindus.

The duo were arrested from Panvel on Mumbai's outskirts and remanded in
police custody till June 24.

A low-intensity explosion had taken place in a Panvel cinema screening *Jodhaa
Akbar *on February 20 this year. On May 31, the police defused a bomb at a
theatre in Navi Mumbai. In June, a blast in the car park of a theatre in
Thane injured seven.

"All three bombs contained traces of ammonium nitrate and gelatin sticks.
Nikam got the chemicals and made the bomb," Karkare said. "Both admitted to
working with the two organisations, but we are yet to find out if they were
card-holding members. There is no evidence so far that either of the groups
are involved."

He added: "We have not found any links between the duo and the Bajrang Dal
or other (Sangh parivar) groups."

The Sanstha's Abhay Vartak and Jana Jagruti's Uday Dhuri denied the accused
were members.

*Amhi Pachpute* shows the Pachpute family of five brothers and five
stepbrothers quarrelling over a *paan* shop. It is a modified version of
Pawar's previous play, *Yada Kadachit*, which directly satirised the
Mahabharat and angered Hindutva groups two years ago.
  [image: 
Top]<http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080617/jsp/frontpage/story_9422805.jsp#top>

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