http://www.tehelka.com/story_main40.asp?filename=Ne230808whatif_itwasme.asp
�What if it was me or my father?�

Chasing the SIMI Tribunal�s trail was not easy but exposing one of the biggest 
lies was worth every moment, writes AJIT SAHI after three months in the field

State is organised violence. � MAHATMA GANDHI

AS A reporter, I take vainglorious pride in rarely being distracted on the job. 
But the morning of June 12 this year turned into a testing moment. I was in 
Hyderabad, sitting in the living room of Moutasim Billah, a 22-year-old bearded 
Muslim, an engineering college dropout. Billah, who wears the traditional 
Muslim skullcap, is implicated in more cases of terrorism and sedition than I 
have cared to count. As he spoke without emotion of his 90 days in prison that 
had ended only hours earlier, I pretended to fill my notebook. But unknown to 
the six-odd youngsters crowding the small room, I desperately searched for an 
excuse to send out two young boys not much older than eight years in age so 
that they would be spared Billah�s chilling story of persecution and injustice.

Their chins on their palms, their elbows on their knees, the two boys seemed to 
soak in the alleged terrorist�s every word. One brought me water when I asked 
for it but was back on his haunches instantly. I don�t know their names 
because, for once, I was loathe to make them my story. As neither Billah�s home 
nor his tale was my domain, the boys, to my discomfort, sat through his 
storytelling. My thoughts raced then as they race now: what have they made of 
Billah�s staccato narrative of the unending humiliations of beatings, torture, 
jail, false charges? How far have they internalised Billah�s story? How 
amplified is it in their perception? Celebrated reporter Robert Fisk of 
Britain�s The Independent once opined why the Taliban of Afghanistan turned out 
so regressive: driven away from their motherland, growing up in the refugee 
camps of Pakistan, those Afghan youngsters perhaps sought to recreate the sad 
and repressive world of their camps once they marched victoriously back into 
Kabul.

To be sure, when I started investigating the state�s supposedly open-and-shut 
case against the Students� Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), I knew it was a 
singular story, for rarely had there been an issue in which �the other point of 
view� had been so denied a right to exist by just about everyone: the 
government, the police, much of the judiciary and the media, and the (largely 
Hindu) middle class. Anyone I spoke with, everything I read, had only this to 
say: SIMI is a terrorist organisation. It is working to break up India. It must 
be contained. My mother, childhood friends, cousins were stunned into silence 
when I shared with them that I was probing SIMI, and, so far, it seemed the 
group was in the clear.

Indeed, the more I read the more I found a complete absence of that 
foundational element of sustainable accusation: evidence. I�m a journalist from 
the 1980s when the word of the police wasn�t to be trusted, unlike today, when 
for the corporate media, to borrow a nomenclature from Noam Chomsky and 
Arundhati Roy, that word alone is the overwhelming proof of culpability. When I 
first landed the Centre�s Background Note (issued with the ban notification of 
February 7, 2008), it was so ridiculous a document that I knew I was on the 
right track.

Yet, it has been a difficult story to fetch because there is no doubt SIMI is a 
fundamentalist Islamist organisation that, as the Centre
Illustration:Naorem Ashish

says, believes in the propagation of Islam. Its stated ideology clashes with 
the idea of India that the globalised, Western-aspiring, stockmarket punting 
middle classes have mounted to give a thumbs up to �development�: nuclear 
deals, large dams, more IITs, more IIMs, Indian companies buying international 
ones, and what not.

Until its ban on September 27, 2001, SIMI had constantly pushed the envelope, 
engaging with radical Islamists in Pakistan and the Middle East, stridently 
suggesting that a pan-global Islamic agenda was of direct consequence for 
Indian Muslims. Employed with a news agency at the time, I had interviewed 
SIMI�s then president, Shahid Badr Falahi, just days before the group was 
banned and he was arrested. Among other questions, I had asked him what SIMI 
thought of revered leaders like Mahatma Gandhi. Of course, Gandhi failed to 
make the grade with SIMI. In purist Islam, there are only Allah, the Holy 
Quran, Prophet Mohammad and the story of his life as a beacon.

BUT AT another level, this was an easy story to pursue, for all I had to do was 
to remember the basics: That the idea of India is not homogenised, that the 
founding fathers of the Indian Republic promised fundamental rights to all 
citizens to peacefully practice their religions and faiths and navigate their 
lives as they wanted. In terms of the law, it was still easier: I only had to 
reject prejudice and look for evidence. I just needed to remember: every single 
accused Indian Muslim is as bona fide an Indian citizen as I am. �Is there a 
doubt?� former SIMI general secretary Ziaduddin Siddiqui, who lives in 
Aurangabad and has a bouquet of criminal cases against him, had laughed when I 
had made this comment to him.

But this is no dry story rising from lifeless court documents. It has been an 
emotional rollercoaster to sit across young boys barely into manhood, their 
foreheads creased by sleepless nights worried stiff over the jailing of a 
father, a brother, wondering endlessly, �Will this end? Is this for real? What 
do I do now? Where do I go now? Will he survive this? Will I survive this?� As 
I interviewed countless Muslims so weathered, I couldn�t but ask myself, �What 
if this was me? What if it was my brother, my father in jail?�

In the three months I chased this story across India I found tremendous anxiety 
among not just SIMI members or sympathisers but also those who reject SIMI�S 
puritan ideology and prefer India�s syncretic Islam of a thousand years. For 
many such Muslims, the idea of India as promised them by the Constitution is 
fast fading, and they need urgent reassurances that the state hasn�t abandoned 
them.

Falahi and scores of his brethren may not know it, but the Indian establishment 
they are ranged against has, in a way, elevated them to the status of Mahatma 
Gandhi by invoking an oppressive British law to charge them that the erstwhile 
rulers of India had used to convict Gandhi. This is Section 124A of the Indian 
Penal Code of 1860. In March 1922, standing in the court of Ahmedabad�s 
District & Sessions Judge, CM Broomfield, accused of sedition, this is how 
Mahatma Gandhi described this obnoxious law: �Section 124A under which I am 
happily charged is perhaps the prince among the political sections of the 
Indian Penal Code designed to suppress the liberty of the citizen. Affection 
cannot be manufactured or regulated by law. If one has no affection for a 
person or system, one should be free to give the fullest expression to his 
disaffection, so long as he does not contemplate, promote or incite to 
violence. But the charges under which (I am) charged is one under which mere 
promotion of disaffection is a crime.�

While replacing the phrase �His Majesty or the Government established by law in 
British India� with �Government established by law in India�, the law stands 
today as it did in 1922. �Whoever by words,� it says, �either spoken or 
written, or by signs, or by visible representation, or otherwise, brings or 
attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite 
disaffection towards the Government established by law in India, shall be 
punished with imprisonment for life, to which fine may be added, or with 
imprisonment which may extend to three years��

When TEHELKA began publishing this series three weeks ago, I passed on a copy 
to Falahi�s lawyers when we met in the last days of the Tribunal at the Delhi 
High Court. Unexpectedly, one of them asked me to sign on it, giving me a rare 
moment of self-indulgence. �To the SIMI bravehearts,� I scribbled in the 
magazine, then added as a considered afterthought: �Someday, this will be used 
against me as evidence.� �
>From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 33, Dated Aug 23, 2008

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