The Asian Age
October 2, 2008

WHY EVERYBODY LOVES A GOOD STEREOTYPE

by Antara Dev Sen

"You support terrorists?" my friend was horror-struck.

"We can?t presume they are terrorists," I begin, "there must be a
trial first."

"Rubbish! They are terrorists! And it?s indefensible that Jamia Milia
University is using government money to protect them."

"Everyone is entitled to legal aid and is innocent until proven
guilty..."

"They are guilty. The police nabbed them."

"That?s the police version?"

My friend, a secular and sensitive writer, is mortified. "The
terrorists shot an officer dead! But you still won?t believe them?"

"You believe police ?encounters??"

"Certainly. You don?t?"

"Maybe, if they?re credible."

"Why won?t you believe the police?"

"It would have been easier to believe the cops if they didn?t offer
several versions of the same ?encounter?, if they could find the
bullets that killed Inspector M.C. Sharma and the gun that fired
them, or answer the questions locals and activists are throwing at
them punching holes in their theories, if fake ?encounter? killings
like Sohrabuddin?s and his wife?s were not fresh in our minds?"

"A police officer is killed, and you side with the terrorists!"

"No, a life cut short is tragic ? especially for the family. But two
boys were also killed in the shootout. Terrorists? Prove it. Sharma
did have a reputation ? remember his killing ?terrorists? in a fake
encounter at Ansal Plaza?"

"He faked his own killing, you say?"

With bombs going off every few days and our threat perception
spiralling, it?s not easy to root for civil rights. Logic and ethics
get all tangled up as fear spooling out of bombed markets and
grieving neighbourhoods flood your senses. Where does one draw the
line between safeguarding human rights and supporting terrorism? How
much of our rationality and morals are we ready to barter for some
more security? Would it really buy safety or are we being manipulated
into fighting others? battles? Conversely, are we bending over
backwards so much to protect civil rights that we can?t see the
obvious?

For example, you can?t deny that there is Muslim terrorism in India.
We are not immune to the global virus, especially since some
neighbours have been diligently breeding it for us. And it is naive
to pretend that all Muslim terrorism in India is retaliation against
discrimination and abuse, or to romanticise the murder of innocents.

But to prop up Muslims as the enemy, or suggest that every Muslim is
a potential terrorist, is ridiculous. For decades, we have faced
terrorism from non-Muslims, from Punjab to the Northeast to the
recent rash of terror across India by Maoists or Hindutva extremists.
We have lost one Prime Minister to Sikh killers and one to Hindu
terrorists. And lost thousands of lives to Muslim militants, from
Jammu and Kashmir to the Mumbai blasts.

Yet the trend today is to equate terrorism with Islam. Take Delhi.
Every recent bomb blast has been blamed on Muslims ? the attack on
the Red Fort in December 2000 and on Parliament in December 2001, the
Diwali blasts of October 2005, the serial blasts of September 13,
2008, and the blast last Saturday. Even though 15,000 clerics had
congregated in February at Darul Uloom Deoband, the Muslim seminary
in Uttar Pradesh whose alumni include the Taliban, and denounced
terrorism as anti-Islam.

We love stereotypes. So while parading the three suspects in the
Delhi blasts ? middle class kids, two of whom are students of the
Jamia Milia Islamia University ? instead of the hood to protect their
identity, the police wrapped brand new red Palestinian scarves around
their heads, revealing only their eyes, like Hamas militants.
Manipulating the perception of the Muslim as terrorist, or the
terrorist as Muslim, was easy.

Religious profiling has been part of our anti-terrorism drive, and
with their socio-political deprivations, Muslims are easy targets.
According to the Sachar Committee Report, only 59 per cent of Muslims
are literate and their participation in governance is severely
limited: only 4 per cent in the IPS, 3 per cent in the IAS, barely
1.8 per cent in the IFS, etc. Marginalised for long, Muslims are now
being pushed dangerously close to the edge.

Apart from violating the constitutional guarantee of equality,
religious profiling hinders the fight against terror. It diverts
attention from those who are tangibly linked to terrorism but do not
fit the religious profile. So stereotypes about Muslim terrorists
make us ignore State-sponsored Hindu terrorism like in Gujarat, where
justice was so beyond reach that the Supreme Court had to transfer
the 2002 "riot" cases outside of the state. Or the continuing terror
attacks on Christians in Orissa (about 50 killed in Kandhamal this
time), and Karnataka by Hindu extremists. Bajrang Dal activists have
been found making bombs, like in Kanpur a month ago. Maharashtra?s
Anti-Terrorism Squad found them making bombs in Nanded in 2006 and
also recovered a false beard, moustache and sherwani. This Hindu
group had bombed three mosques since 2003. Once free from
stereotypes, the police can efficiently counter terror.

But stereotyping terrorists is easier. We remember the jailing and
torture of Iftikhar Gilani, Delhi bureau chief of Kashmir Times, for
almost seven months, before intense lobbying by the media and
politicians got him released in January 2003. Similarly, Tariq Ahmed
Dar, a young Kashmiri model, was jailed for several months in 2006,
as a "Pakistani spy". He was released after intervention by the media
and top politicians. In August, cops picked up Milan Molla, a tea-
shop owner in Kolkata, threatening to brand him a terrorist unless he
paid up Rs 150,000. His mother paid part of it with borrowed money,
freed him and went public with a complaint. Every year, there are
dozens of such cases. Given that young Muslim men are routinely
targeted in the name of fighting terrorism, Jamia?s decision to
provide legal aid to its students is perhaps essential.

"But would Jamia have provided this support if the boys were accused
of rape?" exclaimed my friend. Maybe not. But then, being accused of
a crime against an individual is not the same as being charged with a
crime against the nation. The loyalty of Indian Muslims is regularly
questioned ? from India-Pakistan cricket matches to national
politics. In a terrified society, officially branding them anti-
national would be easy. To prevent our strained social fabric from
falling apart, we need to pursue the truth, not myths, and protect
civil rights. That does not make us supporters of terrorism, it helps
us curb it.

Antara Dev Sen is editor of The Little Magazine. She can be contacted
at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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