January 15, 2011

Economic & Political Weekly EPW january 15, 2011 vol xlvI no 3

Aseemananda’s Confession

The links of the RSS to terror stand exposed, 
as does the incompetence and complicity of the Indian state.

It is difficult to overestimate the importance of the confession 
made by Swami Aseemananda relating to the planning and 
execution of the bomb blasts in Malegaon (2006 and 2008), 
on the Samjhauta Express (2006), and in Mecca Masjid (2007) 
and Ajmer Sharif (2007). What is even more significant is that 
Aseemananda’s confession was made voluntarily before a magistrate, 
after he was kept away from the police, in judicial custody 
for two days, to ensure that it was not being made under duress. 
Aseemananda is no ordinary person. He is a Rashtriya Swayamsevak 
Sangh (RSS) pracharak, head of the RSS-affiliated Vanvasi 
Kalyan Ashram in Gujarat and he runs a religious centre in the 
Dangs district of Gujarat. He is powerful enough to have Gujarat 
Chief Minister Narendra Modi visit him and share the dais with 
him on frequent occasions. 

In his confession, Aseemananda has laid bare the entire conspiracy, 
and he has named the people involved. His sudden decision 
to confess voluntarily is melodramatic, and somewhat suspicious. 
This swami apparently met, in a Hyderabad jail, one among the 
young boys who were arrested by the police after the Mecca 
Masjid 
blast and tortured. This young boy, Abdul Kaleem, impressed 
Aseemananda so much with his behaviour and kindness, that 
when he came to know that Kaleem spent a year and a half in jail 
and suffered police “interrogation”, he wanted to repent and thus 
came his confession. Whatever be the reason, Aseemananda has 
detailed in a sworn testimony to a magistrate the entire 
working of 
RSS-inspired Hindutva terrorism in India. Such a confession before 
a magistrate has weight in the court of law, but more importantly 
it gives the investigating authorities the full picture of the entire 
conspiracy, its execution and the people involved. It, therefore, 
makes it that much easier for them to find the substantiating evidence 
to charge sheet all those involved and obtain convictions. In 
sum, Aseemananda’s confession has shown that a large number of 
terror strikes in India have been the handiwork of Hindutva terrorists 
who have close organisational and ideological links with the 
RSS and its front, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad. The jigsaw puzzle, 
which was being slowly pieced together 
by the police of different 
states, after the stellar investigative work of Hemant Karkare and 
his team in Maharashtra, has suddenly all fallen into place thanks 
to this five-hour confession. However, it is hardly a certainty that 
this confession will lead to convictions and punishment of the 
guilty. Far less probable is that there will be any serious action 
against the RSS and its “parivar”, which have now, once again, been 
shown to be dangerously violent and a threat to the republic. In their 
actions following each of these cases of terror, most of the police 
and the other investigative agencies have shown themselves to be 
thoroughly incompetent, politically compromised and infiltrated 
by the personnel and ideologies of this very Hindutva brigade. 
In each of the cases, where now evidence has been found of the 
involvement of Hindutva groups, the police had instinctively 
arrested Muslims and put out elaborate stories about Islamic 
terrorist groups planning and executing these attacks. Hundreds 
of young men were arrested, tortured into giving false “confessions” 
and hauled up in courts, which in turn happily carried on 
with this charade. (The media has emerged no less honourably; 
it was ever ready to swallow police theories of Islamic fundamentalists 
from Bangladesh to Pakistan as masterminds and 
painted grand theories of syncretic Islam being threatened by 
these extremists.) Now that we have Aseemananda’s confession, 
reading those police accounts of how Islamic terrorists executed 
these attacks shows the extent of the incompetence and duplicity of 
our men in khaki. To expect them, as an institution, to take the 
prosecution to a successful conclusion is perhaps asking for too 
much. In addition to all its innate failings, the law and order 
machinery may not even receive sufficient political backing from 
the government, as it takes on India’s principal opposition 
party’s 
paterfamilias, the RSS. 

The Congress as a party and the government under its dispensation 
have, at best, been indecisive in their approach to Hindutva 
violence. Congress administrations have been known for their 
ambivalent and often complicit behaviour when dealing with 
RSS-inspired anti-Muslim violence, whether it was in Ahmedabad 
in 1969, Hyderabad in 1978, Meerut in 1987, or the post-Babri 
masjid demolition riots in Mumbai, Surat and other places. Lastly, 
it should be remembered that in Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, 
it was the police under Congress or coalition administrations which 
arrested and tortured innocent men whose only crime was their 
religion. Given such a track record, it is but obvious that suspicions 
will remain about the ability of the present governments, both at 
the centre and in states like Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Andhra 
Pradesh, to successfully prosecute those named by Aseemananda 
and, further, 
to investigate the actual involvement of the RSS and 
its affiliates in these terror acts.

Within a month of Aseemananda’s confession, the usual 
play-acting has started. The RSS and its affiliate, the Bharatiya 
Janata Party (BJP), have denied the charges and attacked the 
Central Bureau of Investigation for playing Congress politics. 
They have claimed that the Congress is using this to divert attention 
from corruption and inflation. The media in its stilted 
attempt to balance the story has downplayed the culpability of 
the RSS. In any case, this is not the first time that the RSS has 
been exposed for its violent, communal and destructive politics, 
and given its deep penetration of social and political institutions, 
it has managed to come out of such situations in the past too. 
This battle against the RSS and the world view it represents has 
to be won politically. Aseemananda’s confession will hopefully 
disabuse 
many of those who have come to view the RSS, through 
its electoral affiliate – the BJP – as a legitimate organisation and 
expose once again its true character. If popular political pressure, 
combined with media 
scrutiny and civil society activism, 
can be sustained, there is a possibility that those guilty of the 
present round of terror acts may be punished. This itself will be 
a major achievement.

Finally, we must now ask Prime Minister Manmohan Singh 
which is the “biggest internal security threat” to the idea of India. 
Is Maoism, 
as he often says, a basic threat to India, or, on the 
basis of the mass of evidence of right wing extremist involvement 
in terror, can it be Hindutva? Perhaps Congress Party General 
Secretary Rahul Gandhi shows greater awareness of the reality.

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