http://scroll.in/article/810325/the-daily-fix-as-terror-charges-against-sanatan-sanstha-grow-why-isnt-the-government-banning-it

As terror charges against Sanatan Sanstha grow, why isn’t the
government banning it?

2 hours ago
Updated 2 hours ago

Shoaib Daniyal

Kid gloves

On August 20, 2013, as Narendra Dabholkar was out for his morning walk
in Pune, he was shot by two assailants at point blank range. He died
instantly. Dabholkar had spent his life battling religious
superstition and had received a number of threats from Hindutva
groups. On February 20, 2015, another rationalist, Govind Pansare was
killed in almost the exact same way in Kolhapur. In August 2015, a
third rationalist, MM Kalburgi was shot dead in Dharwad, Karnataka.

The organisation thought to be behind the Dabholkar murder is the
Sanatan Sansta, which has a presence across Goa and Maharashtra. Last
week, the Central Bureau of Investigation arrested a member of the
organisation, Virendra Tawade, in connection with the case. Since
then, officials familiar with the case have painted a scary picture of
the Sanatan Sansta and its activities. The Dabholkar murder was
planned with meticulous detail, they say. Moreover, Tawade allegedly
wanted to raise a militia of 15,000 people to target “anti-Hindus”.

This isn't the Sanstha's first association with violence. It has
already been accused of being responsible for an explosion in Goa in
2009, and for bombings in Vashi, Thane and Panvel in 2007.

It's disconcerting, therefore, that the government seems oddly
sanguine about the Sanstha. As early as 2010-'11, the Maharashtra
government under the Congress had moved to ban the organisation but
the Union government refused to accede to the demand. This inaction
may have had consequences. “I feel had the Centre taken the decision
to enforce the ban, we could have prevented the killings of Narendra
Dabholkar, Govind Pansare and MM Kalburgi,” said former Maharashtra
chief minister Prithviraj Chavan.

In 2015, a Goa BJP MLA compared Sanatan Sanstha to the banned Students
and Islamic Movement of India and asked for a ban. But in December
2015, Union minister of state for home Kiren Rijiju clearly rejected
calls for a ban.

This kid-gloves approach seems to be in keeping with the manner in
which other terror cases involving Hindutva activists are being
prosecuted. For instance, Rohini Salian, the Maharashtra government’s
special public prosecutor in the 2008 Malegaon case, said she was
asked to go soft on the accused by the National Investigation Agency
after the BJP came to power in 2014. Hindutva activists Sadhvi Pragya
Thakur and Shrikant Purohit were among 12 people arrested by the
Maharashtra Anti-Terror Squad for their alleged involvement in the
blasts.

Already perceived as being biased against minorities, the BJP must
move surely to clamp down any encouragement of this tendency of
Hindutva groups to resort to violence. As a strong political signal –
since that is nearly as important as criminal prosecution – the
Sanatan Sanstha should be banned.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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