*Counter Terror*

*Bajrang Dal. VHP. **Abhinav Bharat. The names of ultra right-wing outfits
are increasingly cropping up as investigators wake up to a new form of
terror. **RANA AYYUB** tracks the dangerous trend*

THE TERROR alert had been sounded two years ago. Investigations into the
killing of two persons in Nanded, who had blown themselves up while trying
to assemble bombs in the house of a RSS worker, had pointed squarely in the
face of a new kind of terror. Terror, which was not being exported from
across the borders, but being packaged indigenously. Terror that was being
spurred by religion as its incendiary trigger. The accused had revealed it
all; they had conceived a new tit for tat terrorism because, according to
them, "bomb attacks outside mosques was the only way of safeguarding
Hindutva."Because otherwise, they would be, "treated like hijras."
Counter-attacks, according to them, are the only way of aven - ging terror
attacks. The accused were no self-styled novices. They specifically named
Maharashtrabased members of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and the Bajrang Dal as
being their motivators.

The recent arrests of Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur and her associates in
connection with the September 29 Malegaon blasts has once again focussed
attention on the ugly face of right-wing fundamentalist terror modules which
have been expanding their network across the country. The blast, which
occurred outside a mosque on the eve of Id and killed four people, has
revealed links to various extremist outfits of the Hindu right that have
been planning systematic attacks on Muslims, a revelation first made by
TEHELKA in an investigative report in 2006 (vol. 3, issue 51), naming Hindu
organisations like the Bajrang Dal, the Vishwa Hindu Parisahad (VHP) and the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) as the chief perpetrators. The TEHELKA
story, which was based on the reports of the narco-analysis tests conducted
on the 2006 Nanded blast accused as well as the chargesheet the
Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) filed in the same case, had revealed similar
facts as have been discovered during the investigations into this
September's Malegaon attack.

*TEHELKA (December 30, 2006) had scooped the narco analysis reports which
showed that individuals associated with the RSS, VHP and Bajrang Dal were
developing terror modules. Two recruits died assembling bombs in Nanded.*

The report revealed that the
accused were supported by
Nanded-based VHP leader Govind Puranik, and Abhay Madhukar and Atul Vinodrao
Kamtekar of the RSS and the Bajrang Dal. The three had given Tuptewar, one
of the injured, Rs 45,000-50,000 to trigger the blasts.

*The four accused underwent
training to make IEDs under
Mithun Chakraborty in Pune.
His name has surfaced once again in the current Malegaon investigation.*

The Nanded explosion had
exposed the phenomenon of tit for tat terrorism in the name of
religion. The Maharashtra ATS had filed a chargesheet that lay in cold
storage till the recent arrests, which once again point to ultra right-wing
terror modules.

The 2006 investigation had thrown up the names of the VHP and the Bajrang
Dal, and in an indication of the fact that the new face of terror is
expanding its ideology of violence, the 2008 probe has thrown up names like
the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, the BJP's student wing, the Hindu
Jagran Manch and the Abhinav Bharat. Thirty-seven-yearold Pragya Thakur — an
influential figure in saffron circles and a member since the mid-1990s of
various right-wing organisations — who is now in judicial custody, is
speaking a language not very different from the Nanded accused who avenged
counter attacks. The prime accused Sadhvi — according to the ATS which has a
taped conversation between her and another accused in the blast case, Ramji
Kalsagre, who is still absconding — is supposed to have said, *"Meri gaadi
se blast kiya to itne kam log kaise mare? Gaadi bheed mein kyun nahi lagayi
*(if my vehicle was used for the blast, how come so few people died, why
didn't you park it in a crowd)?" Kalsagre has been quoted as
replying:*"Bheed mein khadi karne nahi diya
* (they didn't let me park it in a crowd)."

The names of people arrested are a clear indication that terrorism perhaps
has a new face, a dangerous face in fact, because the new Molotov cocktail
is shaken and stirred with religion as its main combustion and revenge as
its trigger. Amongst those arrested recently are Abhinav Bharat member
Sameer Kulkarni and a Pune-based retired Major Ramesh Upadhyay, who is
alleged to have helped in procuring RDX. The others arrested — Shyam Sahu,
Shiv Narayan Kalsangra, Jagdish Mhatre, Rakesh Dattaram Dhonde, Ajay
Rahirkar — are all members of various ultra rightwing fundamentalist outfits
from different parts of Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh. All those arrested
were also suspected to have been behind the blasts at Modasa in Gujarat that
occurred the same day as the one at Malegaon.

The Nanded blast of April 6, 2006, was the first to open up a glimpse into
the activities of the country's saffron terror modules. It took place at the
residence of RSS worker Lakshman Rajkondwar, a retired irrigation department
engineer, and was apparently an accident, occurring during the preparation
of bombs meant to be placed outside a mosque in Aurangabad after Friday
prayers. The accident had, importantly, been fuelled by a need to uphold
'Hindu' honour. The aim, then, was to avenge the 2005 blasts in Delhi and
the 2006 blast in Varanasi, by engineering explosions in Muslim-dominated
areas in central Maharashtra and killing at least 300 to 400 Muslims in each
incident. This was also the intention of the blasts at Parbhani, Jalna and
Purna, all of which occurred outside mosques between 1.30 and 2 in the
afternoon, to ensure as many casualties as possible.
  [image: coverstory]

*Everyday terror* The aftermath of the Nanded bomb blasts in 2006

THE ROLE in these attacks of the Nagpur-based Bhonsla Military School was
exposed after Upadhyay's arrest last month, but, as this magazine reported,
it had also come up during the 2006 Nanded probe. The narco-analysis test on
a Nanded accused had revealed that the VHP workers had received explosives
training from one Mithun Chakraborty in Sinhagad in Pune. The group, it was
learnt, had also been addressed on at least one occasion by VHP leader
Pravin Togadia. ATS officials do not, however, have any leads on
Chakraborty, apart from a suspicion that he is also an ex-army man. The ATS
chargesheet also mentioned a statement by one of the school's teachers,
Sanatkumar Raghuvittal Bhate, describing a training session it held in May
2000 that was attended by 100 to 115 people from all over the country.
Instructions were imparted, Bhate said, in karate, navigating obstacle
courses, and the use of gelatin sticks and weapons; ex-army men and a
retired intelligence officer gave training in firearms.

AREPORT BY ACP Anil J Tamaychekar, then with the ATS, clearly states that
the Nanded accused were influenced by Sangh Parivar ideology and would use
festivals like Gudi Padwa, Vijaydashmi, Ganeshotsav and Ram Navami to stir
up anti-Muslim sentiment. Sanjay and Himanshu Panse were joint owners of a
gym called Power, which was used as an explosives storehouse and a meeting
point for young men being recruited for the terror cause. The report also
gave insights into the fact that the accused were prepared with their
defence in advance. Tamaychekar's report stated, "They were aware of the
danger involved and had a firecracker theory read. The accused had illegally
stockpiled a large quantity of firecrackers. They had prepared two IEDs from
the explosives at their disposal, which were to be used for terrorist
activities to inflict maximum casualties."

However, no action was ultimately taken against anyone from the rightwing
fundamentalist parties implicated in the Nanded explosion. The case faded
from public memory and would have been forgotten had it not been for the
arrests made in last month's Malegaon blast. KPS Raghuvanshi, who was the
ATS chief during the Nanded investigation, said the agency had done its work
but the CBI, which had taken up the case, did not press any further action
on its findings (see interview). The CBI, in fact, dropped cases against
some of the accused, among them Lakshman Rajkondwar, who owned the house
where the bombs were being made. In the end, the ATS also dropped cases
against 11 accused, citing lack of evidence. "The charges against them were
not proved," Raghuvanshi said, "and we could not arrest someone just because
their residence had been used." His statement, however, contrasts sharply
with the way the police have been detaining people in other blasts cases.
Former Bombay High Court judge BG Kolse- Patil, who is also a member of the
factfinding committee that brought the Nanded blast case to the public eye,
said he was disappointed with the way the police had handled not just the
Nanded case but also the current Malegaon case. "I have a problem not only
with the police but also with the media. In previous cases, whenever a blast
happened, the ATS held press conferences and every possible detail of the
accused's life was given out in a day. What's happening now? On other
occasions, the media would also announce the hand of Muslim militant outfits
right after an attack, whether there was any truth in it or not. Why are
they silent over this case?" he asks. Kolse-Patil also has questions about a
powerful explosion that took place at a bakery — again in Nanded — in 2007,
killing two people, one of whom was a Sena Vibhaag Pramukh.

The Malegaon case arrests have come in the wake of a concerted effort by
intelligence agencies and ATS officials, who have been identifying
right-wing organisations for their role in terror activities. A couple of
months ago, the Mumbai ATS arrested members of the Sanatan Sanstha and the
Hindu Jagran Manch for their role in blasts at Thane and Panvel. The arrests
have, predictably, angered VHP and Bajrang Dal workers across the country.
The Sanatan Sanstha is not the only organisation under surveillance, though.
According to a state intelligence officer, many small-time right-wing
outfits have come up over the past two years in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh
and Rajasthan, with backing from mainstream political parties. This year's
riots in Orissa's Kandhamal and Maharashtra's Dhule and Burhanpur are
manifes-tations of these outfits' growing presence. According to
intelligence officials, most of the new parties that are coming into
prominence for their role in terror attacks are formed by hardliners from
across the right-wing spectrum, looking to forge a new identity. These
outfits have quickly become popular and have been carefully expanding their
base, attracting cadres in the name of combating a perceived threat to
Hinduism. Among the Hindu fundamentalist groups whose role has emerged as
instigators of terror and rioting are: the Durga Vahini, the Bajrang Dal's
womens wing; the Hindu Raksha Samiti, which played a key role in instigating
the Dhule riots and is known to be affiliated with the Shiv Sena; the
Rashtriya Jaagran Manch, an offshoot of the RSS, believed to be behind the
Modasa blasts, and the Abhinav Bharat, to which most of those arrested in
connection with this year's Malegaon attack are affiliated. Abhinav Bharat
is headed by Himani Savarkar, the niece of Mahatma Gandhi's assassin,
Nathuram Godse, and is married to the nephew of his mentor, Veer Savarkar.
Himani also came out in support of Thakur and, in a show of solidarity,
stood outside the Nashik court where she had a hearing this week.

WHILE THE facts regarding the growing network of these organisations are
alarming, what is also equally alarming is the access they have to
sophisticated equipment and explosive material such as RDX and ammonium
nitrate. This is where the involvement of defence personnel becomes
critical. Major (retd) Ramesh Upadhyay, who is alleged to have trained
Thakur and her associates, worked as a military intelligence officer and was
living in Pune. Access to RDX would not have been a problem for him. The
Bhonsla Military School, believed to be the conspirators' training ground,
is run by ex-army officers. Its website provides a summary of its
philosophical foundation with a translation of a shloka on its homepage: "A
person having four vedas (knowledge) in front (to guide him), a bow and
arrows (power) at his back (to back him), has a combination of *Brahmyam*and
*Kshatram* and hence he is capable of defeating the enemies either by
*Shap*(Power of Knowledge) or
*Shar* (Knowledge of Power)."

When contacted by TEHELKA, a key school official who is not in the country
at present and is reportedly under the police scanner, said, "I have no clue
about the training you are talking about. It's a military school and we
impart the training that we should be giving to our students." Various key
right-wing party members have been known to give training at the Bhonsla
Military School. A Bajrang Dal state head said he was a regular there, and
had taught selfdefence techniques, in which, he said, there was nothing
wrong.

THE INCREASING cluster of smalltime extremist Hindutva outfits has put
parties like the Shiv Sena and the BJP in a dilemma. The
  [image: coverstory]

*Bloodied town *Malegaon faced terror in 2006(above) and again after two
years in 2008 *Photo:* REUTERS

BJP's association with Pragya Singh Thakur landed it in considerable
embarrassment after it first distanced itself from her and was then
compelled to come out in her support. Speaking of her detention, party
spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said, "the investigation lacked fairness
and transparency and may suffer the tag of a sponsored investigation".

The Shiv Sena and other parties have also come out in Thakur's support and
have offered her legal help. Bajrang Dal leaders in the state are, however,
incensed over the Sena's show of support and say they don't want the party
to look at the case in terms of political gains. The VHP and the Bajrang Dal
have not been very vocal, though, on Thakur's behalf and have kept publicly
a safe distance from her; VHP workers claim, on condition of anonymity, that
they are doing everything possible to help her behind the scenes. A
delegation of top Sangh Parivar leaders has also met to discuss the issue.
Pamphlets and newsletters, copies of which are with TEHELKA, have been
distributed, calling the media biased. In an effort to provide an appearance
of credibility, fake details have been provided of various news
organisations alleged to be receiving funds from foreign agencies, most of
them Saudi Arabian.

With elections around the corner, not just the BJP, but the Congress too is
trying to play it safe. Minority groups are already deeply mistrustful after
the way the Nanded blasts were handled. A clean chit in this year's Malegaon
case could do the Congress great electoral damage. As Justice Kolse-Patil
pointed out, "We have seen the way investigations happen in this country and
the biases attached to them. It just seems to be a gimmick for the Congress
before the elections to get minority votes. For all you know, the accused
will all be exonerated, on the claim that there was a lack of evidence.

For now though, going by the way the investigations are proceeding, it looks
like the law enforcement agencies have finally woken up to a new form of
terror which, if not nipped now, could assume dangerous proportions. What is
also required at this point is a thorough reinvestigation with an unbiased
approach of other blasts that have happened in the country. Unlike BJP
President Rajnath Singh, who has coined the phrase 'cultural nationalism' to
defend the Sadhvi, the party's prime minister designate, LK Advani, is
walking the straight line saying, 'take action against those found guilty.'
The Malegaon investigation will test both, the new face and the politics
that now so surrounds violence. •

 *From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 45, Dated Nov 15, 2008*

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