"The charge sheet fails to draw a picture of the wider nexus, of a preparatory 
training ground that breeds cadres of such terrorists, of the scale of their 
operation and their continued access to the expertise provided by Indian 
military and intelligence agencies. The latter point raises serious questions 
about ideological infiltration into India’s security agencies"


With Regards 

Abi
 
--- On Mon, 2/9/09, Iqbal Soofi <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Iqbal Soofi <[email protected]>
Subject: TEESTA SETALVAD: Fully Investigate Hindutva Terrorists Role
To: 
Date: Monday, February 9, 2009, 9:51 PM







Fully Investigate Hindutva Terrorists Role: From Nanded To Malegaon and Beyond
The ideological infiltration into India’s security agencies 
by Teesta Setalvad, 9 February 2009  


People’s Democracy, February 8, 2009

The Teror Trail
>From Nanded To Malegaon And Beyond
THE horrifying spectacle of the Mumbai terror attacks that held us all 
paralysed for 60 hours, killing more than 187 persons and injuring dozens, also 
took the pressure off the saffron alliance, squirming for once, for being 
openly associated with acts of bomb terror. The sangh parivar, including its 
parliamentary face, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), had been facing acute 
embarrassment, October through November 2008, over the revelations in the 
Malegaon blasts investigations. Six persons died when pipe bombs placed on a 
motorcycle in a crowded street of Malegaon exploded on September 29, 2008, the 
eve of Id celebrations in the month of Ramadan. 
The slaying of Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) chief, Hemant Karkare, along with 13 
others from the Mumbai police (a total of 17 men from law enforcement died in 
the attacks) at the hands of Ajmal Kasab and his accomplices on November 26 had 
an unexpected consequence. The self-appointed saffron torch-bearers of Indian 
(read Hindutva) patriotism were miffed into silence. The reason? They, who had 
been busy tearing Karkare’s reputation to shreds for weeks before and right up 
to the day he was killed, had now been embarrassed into acknowledging him as 
martyr. But for Karkare’s death, these graceless pseudo-patriots would have 
cynically raised the public temper to a far more hysterical note, baying for 
some blood. 
What was Karkare’s crime, for which he was a hunted man, targeted by the sangh 
parivar the day he died? He had dared to carry out the Malegaon blasts 
investigations with integrity and transparency, tracing the masterminds of the 
crime to a serving lieutenant colonel in the Indian army, Srikant Purohit (who 
was ably assisted by other, retired army personnel), a Sadhvi, Pragnya Thakur, 
and Swami Dayanand Pandey among others. Purohit’s close association with an 
organisation called Abhinav Bharat and the Sadhvi’s own links to the student 
wing of the BJP, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), embarrassed the 
highest echelons of the parivar. Moreover, the Sadhvi has also been a popular 
part of the BJP’s campaign trail in Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat. 
On January 20, 2009 the ATS under its former chief, K P Raghuvanshi, filed the 
charge sheet in the Malegaon blasts case naming 14 persons (11 under arrest and 
three absconding) as accused, holding them guilty of crimes under 16 major 
sections of Indian criminal law, including murder and criminal conspiracy. The 
accused have been booked under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) for murder (Section 
302), attempt to murder (Section 307) and conspiracy (Section 120B); for 
promoting enmity between groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, 
residence, language, and committing acts prejudicial to the maintenance of 
harmony (Section 153A); under Sections 3, 4 and 5 of the Indian Arms Act; and 
Sections 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the Explosive Substances Act. 
Not The First Time 
This was not the first time that the insidious hand of the Hindutvavadi 
terrorist was revealed. The Malegaon blasts investigation is the ATS 
Maharashtra’s third serious investigation into Hindutva-driven terror. The 
first was its probe into the Nanded 2006 blasts which resulted in two charge 
sheets being filed by the squad that were subsequently diluted by the Central 
Bureau of Investigation (CBI) under the present UPA government (see ‘Blast 
after Blast’, Communalism Combat, July-August 2008). The CBI was forced to 
reopen investigations into the Nanded blasts of 2006 following the campaign by 
CC which went on to receive some welcome support from an unexpected quarter. 
During interrogations, Rakesh Dhawade, one of the accused named by the ATS 
Maharashtra in the Malegaon charge sheet, confessed his involvement in the 
consistent training of seven-eight youth who were instructed in the preparation 
and detonation of bombs at a location near the Sinhgad
 Fort, Pune, in July-August 2003. 
A third such investigation, also underway in Maharashtra, is related to the 
Thane-Panvel blasts of 2008. In October 2008 the then ATS Maharashtra chief, 
Karkare, had also investigated and charge-sheeted persons accused in the 
Thane-Panvel blasts where activists from the Hindutvavadi outfits, Sanatan 
Sanstha and Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, were involved. The 1020-page charge sheet 
named six accused charged with attempt to murder, criminal conspiracy, causing 
disappearance of evidence and causing damage to property under the IPC as well 
as sections of the Arms Act, the Explosive Substances Act and the Unlawful 
Activities (Prevention) Act. Significantly, the ATS did not directly implicate 
the organisations in the crime. At other times similar incidents where 
Hindutvavadi outfits were found to be involved in explosives creation have 
surfaced only to be suppressed. A blast also occurred at Modasa in Gujarat’s 
Sabarkantha district on September 29, 2008, the
 same day as in Malegaon, and primary evidence pointed to a link between this 
incident and the group(s) responsible for the Malegaon terrorist attack. The 
Gujarat police however have brazenly refused to make public any details of the 
incident. 
In the charge sheet filed in the Malegaon case, a significant omission is the 
ATS’s failure to charge sheet the accused under Section 125 of the IPC for 
waging war against the nation despite some serious ingredients of the crime 
being in evidence. The ATS has also on the face of it treated the involvement 
of serving and retired army officers (a serious development) as a one-off event 
despite the evidence that has repeatedly surfaced, through the Nanded, Malegaon 
and even the Jalna, Purna and Parbhani blast investigations, of a wide network 
of serving and retired officers being involved in some of these activities. 
Instances of RDX leakage from the armed forces that have surfaced in over a 
dozen cases all over Maharashtra since 2002 have also not been treated with the 
severity the offence demands. Public prosecutor, Ajay Misar, first told Judge H 
K Ganatra of the chief judicial magistrate’s court in Nashik that another 
(unnamed) army man had told
 investigators about Purohit’s role in stealing 60 kilos of RDX from the 
Deolali army base, Nashik, and leaking it out through a person named Bhagwan 
for use in the blasts. This is not an offence for which Purohit is specifically 
charged, however. 
The ATS has also spared two important private institutes, the Bhonsala Military 
Schools at Nashik and Nagpur, which were found to have been regularly used for 
terror training and bomb-making, as well as the Akanksha Resort at Sinhgad near 
Pune. These institutes enjoy patronage from the highest echelons of the sangh 
parivar. These locations had earlier been used to train cadre in bomb-making as 
has been revealed in the Nanded blast charge sheets filed by the ATS in 2006. 
In the Nanded investigations, as also the investigations into both the Malegaon 
and the Jalna mosque blasts, a common link is accused Rakesh Dhawade, an expert 
in arms-making. Dhawade’s statement, (a copy of which is in our possession), 
clearly demonstrates his involvement in this terror ring for over six years 
now. 
Both the Nanded investigations as well as the Malegaon probe have pointed to 
the indoctrination/inspiration provided by high-profile rabble-rousing leaders 
of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), Dr Praveen Togadia and Acharya Giriraj 
Kishore, in exhorting youngsters towards these acts, both individuals having 
allegedly visited Nanded on the eve of the blasts in 2006. The ATS has been 
wary of drawing them into the charge sheet as accused or witnesses, however. 
Similarly, in the Malegaon case, the involvement of Himani Savarkar, niece of 
Mahatma Gandhi’s assassin, Nathuram Godse, and daughter-in-law of Narayan 
Savarkar, the brother of Hindutva ideologue, Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, is also 
handled with kid gloves. Himani Savarkar, a member of Abhinav Bharat, (who is 
on record on video as saying that she supports the ‘bomb versus bomb theory’) 
was, according to the ATS’s own investigations, also present at the meeting in 
which the Malegaon conspiracy was
 hatched. She is not named as part of the conspiracy but is only named as 
witness. 
Links to other blasts in which this widespread terror ring may be involved have 
also surfaced during these investigations. During a narco-analysis test 
conducted on November 9, 2008 Lt Col Srikant Purohit spilt the beans about his 
own role in and his network’s connections to the Samjhauta Express blasts that 
occurred on February 18, 2007, killing 68 persons, most of them Pakistanis. 
Similarly, he spoke during his interrogations of a possible role in the Ajmer 
Sharif blast (that killed two persons) and the Mecca Masjid blasts in Hyderabad 
(where 11 people died in the blasts and five in subsequent police firing). The 
police force in Haryana and Rajasthan are re-investigating these blasts in the 
wake of this information while the CBI is handling the Mecca Masjid blasts 
case. (Muslim youth who were initially accused of perpetrating the attacks but 
were subsequently found not guilty had been brutally tortured while in custody 
of the Andhra Pradesh police).
 When public prosecutor, Ajay Misar, first made these declarations public in 
November 2008, the then ATS chief, late Hemant Karkare, had quickly clarified 
that the Malegaon investigations had revealed no connections whatsoever with 
the blasts on the Samjhauta Express. 
Evaluating The Charge Sheet 
Given these details, how does one rate the charge sheet in the Malegaon blasts 
case? 
The charge sheet has drawn a firm net around the 14 persons accused of the 
immediate crime that took place at Malegaon. Making a strong argument for the 
application of MCOCA (Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act), the charge 
sheet states that “this organised crime syndicate of Rakesh Dhawade (accused 
number 7) had been committing bomb blasts since year 2003.” All the other 
accused had joined the said organised crime syndicate and continued its 
unlawful activities which “included the procurement and transportation of the 
materials which are required to make bombs”. They had also transferred huge 
amounts of money, arms and ammunition used to aid and abet unlawful activities 
and had worked together to advocate and promote their organised gang and 
continue its unlawful activities, namely promoting their fundamentalist 
ideology to form a separate Hindu Rashtra. Their strategy, according to the ATS 
charge sheet, was to explode bombs and other
 improvised explosive devices in areas with a dense Muslim population even as 
they seek to create the impression that they act in retaliation and revenge for 
acts committed by the Muslim community. 
But the charge sheet fails to draw a picture of the wider nexus, of a 
preparatory training ground that breeds cadres of such terrorists, of the scale 
of their operation and their continued access to the expertise provided by 
Indian military and intelligence agencies. The latter point raises serious 
questions about ideological infiltration into India’s security agencies. 
Detailed revelations of the involvement of over half a dozen serving and 
retired army officers in this network of Hindutva-driven terror that spans at 
least eight states in the country and goes back at least a decade remain 
largely ignored, with the ATS Maharashtra treating it as a single, albeit 
serious, case of terror-driven crime. As investigations go, under both Karkare 
and Raghuvanshi, the results have been professional but limited. 
Historic Legacy 
The reluctance of the authorities to track and trace the vicious spread of 
Hindutva’s terror network despite its systematic planning and exhaustive 
training in violence is a historical legacy. Eight attempts were made on 
Gandhi’s life before the final one on January 30, 1948 was successful. Yet 
public discourse is reluctant to recognise that the first act of terror 
perpetrated on independent India’s soil stemmed from determined and vicious 
planning from the Hindu Right. Discourse is formed by what a society allows and 
accepts out in the open. Be it in our public parks, drawing rooms, state 
assemblies, parliament, school texts or public speeches. 
It is this reluctance to accept the genesis, seriousness and viciousness of 
Hindutvavadi terror that has affected our law enforcement agencies as a whole 
and can be analysed in the charge sheets of both the Thane-Panvel and the 
Malegaon investigations. These lacunae are rooted in the assumptions reflected 
in the pervasive discourse that surrounds home-grown terror and violence. 
Cleverly but not entirely influenced by the ideologues of the BJP and the sangh 
parivar who are omnipresent in the national media, Hindutva-driven terror is 
slotted by definition as reactive and through this association as less 
pervasive and dangerous than the jihadi’s murderous games. Its easy and 
‘natural’ certificate of association with patriotism lends a further dangerous 
ambivalence to the Hindutvavadi’s actions. 
The limitations in the Malegaon charge sheet therefore stem as much from 
probable and insidious political pressure exerted on officers of the ATS both 
within and without the system as from this carefully formulated discourse of 
the sangh parivar. It is a strategy cultivated through propaganda that stresses 
that any violence stemming from the Hindu fold is only retaliatory, driven by a 
righteous angst against the heap of injustices perpetrated on ‘us’ in the name 
of Islam. And where jihadi attacks are seen as only the most recent 
manifestation of a centuries old plan to devour this civilisation through 
invasions of both a physical and moral kind.

source: http://www.sacw.net/article633.html




----------------------------------
--  Iqbal Soofi
o  Do not Forward or Print unless the need is felt



      
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"newsline" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/newsline?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to