Jamia Teachers’ Solidarity  Association

 
26th April 2010

Praveen Swami’s not so fabulous fables

If there is one infallible indicator of what the top Indian
Intelligence agencies are thinking or cooking up, it is this: Praveen
Swami’s articles. Each time the security establishment wishes to push
a certain angle to this bomb blast or that, Swami’s articles appear
magically, faithfully reflecting the Intelligence reports. After the
Batla House ‘encounter’, he launched a tirade against all those who
were questioning the police account of the shootout labeling them all
‘Alices in wonderland’.  He went so far as to identify ‘precisely’ how
Inspector Sharma was shot by claiming that "abdomen wound was
inflicted with [Atif] Amin's weapon and the shoulder hit, by Mohammad
Sajid".

And no sir, Swami’s conclusion was not based on post mortem reports of
the killed, fire arm examination report or ballistic report but on
this innocent fact: “the investigators believe that…”  He certainly
brings in a whole new meaning to ‘investigative journalism’. Swami
however felt no need to pen an article when the postmortem reports of
Atif and Sajid revealed that they had been shot from close range and
that neither of them sustained gunshot wounds in the frontal region of
the body—an impossibility in the case of a genuine encounter. Was it
because the police and the Home Ministry chose to remain quite after
the revelations—hoping that the storm would quietly blow over.?

Flip Flops on German Bakery Blasts

And meanwhile there was the German Bakery blast in Pune. Writing less
than a week after the blasts, Swami hinted at the possible involvement
of the Hindutva groups, namely Abhinav Bharat (“Hindutva Terror Probe
Haunts Pune Investigation”, 19th February 2010). Indeed, this was mood
in the ATS (though this was no deterrent to the large scale illegal
detention and brutal interrogation often at private premises, of
scores of Muslim youth in Pune.) Even the following week, the Home
Department officials were not ruling out the possibility of the
involvement of the Right wing Hindutva groups. But that was February.
By March, political impatience at the probe taking such a turn was
palpable. Responding to a riled Shiv Sena in the legislative assembly,
the Maharashtra Home Minister, R.R. Patil thundered: “I will inquire
if Raghuvanshi really indicated to the media about involvement of
Hindu organisations in the Pune blast and if he did, action will be
taken (against him)." As if on cue, two days later, Rakesh Maria was
installed as the new ATS chief. This was of course only after a few
months when Vinita Kamte, widow of the slain ATS officer Ashok Kamte,
made serious allegations casting aspersions on Maria’s role in
responding to the then ATS chief Hemant Karkare’s call for
reinforcements during 26/11.

CCTV Footage:

Since its start, the probe had little to go on by way of leads except
for the CCTV footage. While the Pune police commissioned experts to
draw sketches of the suspects based on this footage, ATS dismissed
this exercise as “anything but useful”, as their source, the CCTV
footage, was itself grainy. (Siasat, April 12). Where does Swami stand
on this? He wrote in his 19th February piece: “All that investigators
have by way of suspects are three men recorded holding brief meetings
before the blast by a poor-quality closed-circuit television camera.
>From the videotape, it is unclear if the men had anything to do with
the attack.”

Exactly a month later, Swami conveniently develops an amnesia about
Abhinav Bharat and even about the poor quality of CCTV footage. What
was earlier ‘unclear” and hazy has in one month segued into solid
shape: in the form of top Indian Mujahideen (IM) operative Mohammad
Zarar Siddi Bawa ie., Yasin Bhatkal. Suddenly imparted with
enlightenment, Swami writes dramatically of how a closed circuit
television camera ... “recorded evidence that Bawa had returned to
India—just minutes before an improvised explosive device ripped
through the popular restaurant killing seventeen people and injuring
at least sixty.” The poor quality (by Swami’s own admission) and
useless (by the ATS’s admission) visual evidence has morphed into
precious footage of Bhatkal, “the fair, slight young man with a wispy
beard” … “dressed in a loose-fitting blue shirt, a rucksack slung over
his back.”

Clearly, Swami’s changing perceptions about the CCTV footage is in
accord with the shifting attitude of the ATS itself. The ATS began by
keeping the option of probing Abhinav Bharat open; developed cold
feet, preferred to lapse into the usual Lashkar-IM litany,
‘rediscovered’ hitherto worthless footage and resurrected the IM. In
an unequivocal reference to the manner in which innocent Muslim youths
were arrested earlier by the ATS in its pre-Karkare days, a senior
officer of the Pune Police admitted that  “There have been some
arrests in the Pune blast incident just as in the case of the 2006
Malegaon explosions. But we would never know whether those arrested
were actually the men who triggered the blasts.” (Siasat, April 12,
2010). Rumours that the probe might be handed over the National
Investigative Agency must have also pressured the Maharashtra ATS to
show ‘results’—and viola, within two weeks of taking over, Maria
submitted a preliminary report to the state government identifying the
hand of Bhatkal and IM in the blasts. This was of course promptly and
proudly relayed by R.R. Patil to the legislative assembly (surely to
the relief also of the Shiv Sena legislators). Is it a coincidence
that the Pune Police Commissioner has been transferred, ostensibly for
the rising crime graph a couple of days ago? It seems improbable that
the running battle between the Pune police and the ATS—whose current
chief Maria had thrown a tantrum following Vinita Kamte’s accusation,
demanding the support of the state Home Ministry—had no role to play
in this.

The Bangalore Blasts:

When two crude bombs went off outside the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium ahead
of the match between Mumbai Indians and Royal Challengers Bangalore on
17th April, the Karnataka Home Minister V.S. Acharya announced that
the state Police were investigating the alleged involvement of the
cricket betting lobby. He forcefully denied any link with the earlier
blasts in the city in 2008.

But Yasin Bhatkal seems to have preoccupied Swami’s mind on 19th April
for he evokes him again in connection with the stadium blasts
(“Stadium Blasts herald new IM offensive”). Citing the ever
cooperative ‘investigators, he says that the ‘similarity in design’
and the manner in which some bombs failed to explode are a sure
indicator of the IM hand. Beyond this, he has nothing to link
Bangalore bombs to Bhatkal. But good stories can always compensate for
lack of facts. His piece, “To Bangalore with Hate” on 21st April
(which has charming subtitles such as Jihad at ginger Plantation”), is
no less crude then the two bombs at the stadium. Swami here details
the biographies of SIMI activists in South India, making the link,
ever so cleverly, between SIMI—and yes, IM—and the stadium blasts,
without providing any evidence of their actual linkage. Life stories
of these men are proof enough, he assumes.

It is quite clear that Mr. Swami has provided a (sometimes
entertaining) dramatized version of the charge sheets files by the
various police departments across the country. While it may make for a
good script, we do hope that Mr. Swami understand what charge sheets
are: a list of charges or allegations, which the police has still the
burden to prove in a court of law--not irrefutable or established
truth. Perhaps, Mr Swami fancies himself a literary genius who
believes in narratives acquiring their own lives. In which case, he
has manufactured a large corpus of mediocre short stories.

Released by JTSA (www.teacherssolidarity.org)






On Apr 14, 11:32 am, Shaji K A <[email protected]> wrote:
> Will somebody come out with more information on him. His political
> orientation? Why The Hindu is giving him  so much space? The major instances
> when he torpedoed public interest by siding with the establishment?

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