---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sushovan Dhar <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2014 11:29:19 +0530
Subject: Khagragarh: The Communalisation of Security Threats, the
Targeting of Communities


Khagragarh: The Communalisation of Security Threats, the Targeting of
Communities

http://www.radicalsocialist.in/articles/statement-radical-socialist/652-khagragarh-the-communalisation-of-security-threats-the-targeting-of-communities



Certain things stand out with clarity over the Khagragarh incident and its
follow up. Two political parties, the TMC, ruling West Bengal, and the BJP,
ruling at the Centre, are both bent on using it primarily, indeed almost
entirely, for their party political agenda. And there is a real security
issue - not just for India, but even more for Bangladesh.



The Bangladesh connection and South Asian Politics:

It is necessary to understand clearly and fully, the nature of the
Bangladesh connection. The history of the Eastern part of Bengal, and its
transformations, have much to do with how strong communalism becomes in the
sub-continent as a whole. Bengal was a Muslim majority area, where, during
the British colonial rule,  the main Indian exploiting class that developed
was mainly Hindu - the new zamindars of numerous layers. Connected to them
was an emerging urban social layer, the bhadralok. Mainly Hindu, mainly
upper caste (with a few notable exceptions), these people became the most
important indigenous social layer in Bengal under British rule.
Administrators, landed middle class people and especially their urbanized
segment, and the intelligentsia generally, were all put together under the
term bhadralok. The rise of the bhadralok is considered to be the most
significant intellectual trend in Bengal and among the most significant for
India in general. At the same time, the majority of the peasants were
Muslims. So a communal dimension could enter class conflicts.

This was further compounded by how the Bengali bhadralok intelligentsia
articulated their nationalism. Cultural constructions of the nation in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries saw, quite often, the nation being
imagined in Hindu terms, using Hindu imageries, and sometimes with Muslims
being portrayed as the opponents of the nation.  In one of the most famous
cases, Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay's Anandamath,  the early thrust on
anti-British action was edited later and turned more into an anti-Muslim
thrust, and the past, present and future of the country was imagined as
three visions of a goddess. Even the campaign against the partition of 1905
involved actions that on occasions looked only after the interests of this
minority elite section - for example the opposition to setting up a
separate university in Dhaka after the partition was rescinded.

The last significant attempt by a Bengali Hindu leader of the Congress to
forge a national/regional identity without religious division was the
Bengal Pact, initiated by C.R. Das. Within a short time after the death of
Das, the provincial Congress leaders overturned it. Subsequently, when A.
K. Fazlul Haque's Krishak-Praja Party elbowed out the Muslim League in the
elections of 1937 from the Muslim reserved seats, class considerations were
crucial in the Congress not collaborating with them (Haque's party was pro
well-to-do peasants and jotedars, while the Congress at the provincial
level was dominated by zamindars). The communalisation of Bengal politics,
in other words, was at least as much the work of Hindu communalists (if not
more) as of Muslim communalists. However, in 1946 it was the Muslim League,
which through its Direct Action Day, sought to unify Muslim opinion behind
it.

The creation of Pakistan, however, had more complex consequences. On one
hand, there was a strong communal identity. By 1956 Pakistan proclaimed
itself to be an Islamic Republic. Riots had recurred. All the way to 1971,
Hindus were targeted. As a result, there were repeated influx of Hindu
refugees from East Pakistan to India (close to 52-55 lakhs between
1947-1971, including the about 15 lakhs who did not return out of the over
one crore of people of all communities who had come in 1971). On the other
hand, the goal of constructing a homogeneous Pakistani Muslim identity led
to the attempt to impose Urdu as the language of Pakistan. In fact, Urdu
was not the language of any of the provinces of Pakistan. The struggle over
the language would initiate a revival of Bengali nationalism.



Jinnah, the leader of Pakistan, had insisted that Urdu must be the language
of all Pakistanis. Students in Dhaka University, with covert work by the
Communist Party, led the struggle against this. On 21 February, 1952, this
resulted in firing and the death of students. After years of unrest, the
Pakistan Government finally accepted Bengali as a national language in
1956. But they persisted in oppressing the Bengali speakers. The cyclone of
1970 and the devastations caused in East Pakistan showed that Bengali
speaking Pakistanis were not equals, a perception strengthened when Yahya
Khan refused to hand over power to the Awami League in 1971, though it won
a majority of the seats in Parliament. In the 300 member Provincial
Assembly, they won 288 seats, and in the 300 member Parliament, they won
160 seats, with Bhutto's Peoples' Party, with a pseudo-socialist rhetoric,
got 81 seats (none in the East). Despite this, the military regime of Yahya
Khan refused to accept an Awami League government.

This may sound ancient history, but all this has contemporary resonance.
Nurul Amin, Ghulam Azam, Delwar Hossain Sayeedi were among those who
opposed the Awami League. An explicit Islamic identity was the basis on
which many of these people collaborated with the military government,
including in assisting its criminal activities after the military
crackdown. Subsequently, the overthrow of Mujibur Rahman by a military coup
made it possible for sections of these forces to creep back into legality
and legitimacy, a legitimacy further confirmed when the Zia government in
1977 amended the founding principles to replace "secularism" by faith in
Allah as a constitutional principle. In 1988, General Ershad declared Islam
as the state religion. On the other hand, the restoration of democracy has
seen a revival of the struggle for secularism, both by forces which had
been active in the 1971 struggle, and then, during the Shahbag movement, by
younger generation activists. It was the Shahbag movement which fought for
the conviction of the criminals of 1971. But the communal forces are also
quite strong, and as a result of the ideological  as well as organisational
decimation of the Left, have considerable base among the toiling people too.

Muslim communalism in Bangladesh has taken on violent forms over the years.
Verdicts against Ghulam Azam, Delwar Hossain Sayeedi and others have been
met by violent protests. Jamaat-e-Islami and other communal organisations,
which have historically opposed the creation of Bangladesh and rejected the
idea of a Bengali identity, have used all forms, including terrorist
activities.

With 90% of the Bangladesh population as Muslims, it should be evident that
the struggle for secularism is also being waged by Muslims there. But
violence on Hindu and other minorities is a trademark of the communalists
there, since they try to use these to consolidate an aggressive Muslim
identity, rather than a secular Bengali identity. However, the Shahbag
movement and the role of the Awami League government (including its going
ahead with elections despite the BNP-led boycott in early 2014) has put
these forces on the defensive.  It is under these circumstances that they
have turned to shelters in India and making bombs and other weapons there.

The revelations that have come since the Khagragarh explosion a month back
tend to suggest that the manufacture of bombs was aimed at Bangladeshi
targets, including possibly top Bangladeshi political leaders. And this
also shows, that while India has always complained about neighbouring
countries sheltering real or alleged terrorists in camps within their
borders, India has been sheltering such elements.

The communalisation of West Bengal politics

In the West Bengal Assembly elections of 2011, the BJP had won 4% votes. In
2014, during the parliamentary elections, this rose to over 16%. With the
TMC holding on to its vote share, the BJP votes came at the expense of the
parliamentary Left. This has to do with many factors. But certainly, one
very important factor is the successful communalisation of politics in West
Bengal, in which the BJP and the TMC are both participating with great
gusto.

For the BJP, all Muslims are assumed to be suspects. For the BJP, migration
from Bangladesh comes in two forms - if the migrant is a Hindu then he/she
is a religious refugee but if the migrant is a Muslim then he/she is
considered to be an infiltrator. That there can also be migrations driven
by economic hardships are not acknowledged.

What is even more dangerous is the game the BJP government has played. Now,
after the bomb explosions, the NIA has been called in. But the Modi
government has been installed some months now. So it cannot pretend that it
is not answerable. It is being claimed that regular trips were made between
India and Bangladesh by the people arrested or their bosses, in Khagragarh.
With the Central Government being responsible for the border, the Modi
government cannot escape its responsibilities.

Instead of looking at the struggle between secular democratic forces and
their rightwing opponents in a neighbouring country, what the BJP
government has done is, started a blame game against the West Bengal
Government, and attempted to further raise the communal pitch in West
Bengal. Ever since the Khagragarh incident, the target has become the
Muslim community of West Bengal, as if all Muslims everywhere are
responsible for the terroristic activity of a rightwing group.

This of course ties in with the BJPs overall thrust. It denies that Hindu
rightwing politics can also be terroristic. Since coming to power, the Modi
government has been taking actions to ensure that those of the
Hindutva-right accused of terrorism, or any kind of violence, get off.

At this point, we also need to highlight the fact that all the hue and cry
in defence of the NIA is a further attack on human rights. Whether a person
is accused of being a thief, a murder, a tax-evader or a terrorist, she or
he should have equal rights with all others. That is because you are not
guilty just because the police is bringing charges against you, to say
nothing of trial by media. And increasingly, the label "terrorist" has been
used to arrest people, to get dubious confessions from people, to create
special law courts where the defendants find their legal rights curtailed
or simply ignored. The UAPA Amendment and the creation of the NIA fall
under such activities. That is why, to demand that not the local police,
but the NIA must be called in, cannot be a communist stance. Rather, the
demand must be for proper use of law by the state police.

The parliamentary elections of 2014 showed that West Bengal has both
potentials for the BJP as well as problems. TMC, another deeply rightwing
party is in power in West Bengal, and like the BJP, this party is also
willing to use rightwing tactics to retain power. However, its specific
tactical line is very different. In the last stage of the 2014 elections,
the TMC practically stopped talking about its principal adversary i.e.
CPI(M), as it seemed to have realised the way things were moving, and
campaigned against only the BJP. It did so, by seeking to consolidate a
Muslim vote by favouring Muslim communalism. There is a considerable
difference between supporting and protecting a minority, and aiding any
kind of communalism, including minority communalism. This is precisely what
the TMC did. This probably enabled it to consolidate the bulk of Muslim
voters behind it. But this also gave the BJP a handle. In the past, for all
its faults, including occasional compromises with Muslim  communal forces
(for example over the demand for expelling Taslima Nasreen from West
Bengal) the CPI(M) led Left Front government did not take such blatant
stances of the type taken by the TMC. On the other hand, the Left had in
the past seen the issue of refugees as a matter of human rights rather than
in religious terms. Refugees from erstwhile East Pakistan had fought for
resettlement under Left leadership. The coming to power of a Left Front
Government had changed that. Refugees settled very badly in Madhya Pradesh
sought to come to West Bengal and were terribly attacked in Marich Jhanpi.
Nonetheless, the older generation had been settled, and had got some
stakes. A kind of social democratic balancing act had been done. The TMC's
blatant siding with Muslim communal forces to win elections pushed a
section of the former refugee voter in the direction of Hindutva forces. In
addition, the rightward drift of the CPI(M) has meant it is increasingly
unable to provide a militant radical line that attacks communalisms of all
shades while putting forward real alternatives. With its succumbing to the
neoliberal strategies, at best offering what has been called "social
liberalism"(liberalism with a few sops) it has tended to become less and
less central.

So, we argue, it is not a matter of fact that all Muslims are terrorists,
or even that all terrorists are Muslims. Rightwing terrorism is tied up
with the overall politics of rightwing parties.  The politics that Amit
Shah espouses, the politics that has brought the BJP absolute control in
Gujarat, these too were and are politics of violence, of terrorising
people. Gujarat pogrom of 2002, Kandhamal, these are cases of use of terror
on a minority community to consolidate the majority on a communal-fascist
project. That does not make all Hindus, or even all BJP voters terrorists.

The fact is, the TMC has been going soft on these forces, including going
to the extent of trying to destroy evidences, because it believes that all
Muslims can be mobilised by supporting Muslim communalism. The BJP has also
been targeting all Muslims, in the hope that by doing so, it can gather
support from all Hindus on the basis that they are Hindus, rather than on
class basis, or on any progressive social basis.

The response to this lies in fighting for  a series of issues.

On the question of terrorism and violence, we demand that it is not by
special laws, but by proper application of normal laws, which are adequate,
that real culprits be apprehended. We oppose the assumption of guilt by
religious identity.

At the same time, we argue that to fight the BJP, the TMC is not an option.
It is necessary to oppose the neoliberal agenda, of which the BJP
government is now the leading proponent. But to do so, it is not useful to
rely on a right wing regime that can only occasionally hand out doles to
selected supporters and funds to clubs, etc. Instead, we need to build a
militant alternative that will fight for extension rather than demolition
of MNREGA, that will fight for minimum wages as per the 15th ILC norms,
oppose GMOs, oppose privatisation of healthcare and fight for bringing more
of health and education back under state expenditure and control. It is by
looking after real social needs that we can undercut the insidious ways in
which both communalisms try to gather followers.
Sushovan Dhar
28/4, Jogipara Road
Kolkata 700 028
+91 98744 85935
+91 90888 78309
skype: sushovan.dhar



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