---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Razi Raziuddin <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 8:18 PM
Subject: [nrindians] Swami's confession




 [image: Frontline]
*Volume 28 - Issue 03 :: Jan. 29-Feb. 11, 2011*

*TERRORISM*

*Swami's confession*

VENKITESH RAMAKRISHNAN

*Swami Aseemanand's confessions on the involvement of Hindutva outfits in
terror attacks leave investigating agencies red-faced.*

THE HINDU ARCHIVES

*Swami Aseemanand, a file photograph. He was originally arrested in
connection with the 2006 Malegaon blasts but his reported confessions of
December 18, 2010, point to his involvement in as many as five terror
attacks.*

WHATEVER the final verdict on the reported confessions made recently by
Swami Aseemanand, leader of Abhinav Bharat, a Hindutva extremist
organisation, the fact is that they have raised vital questions about
terrorist activity in India. The most important of these relates to the
process that security agencies adopt for investigating terrorist attacks and
the projections they make as part of it.

The confessions also suggest that a widespread network of Hindutva terror
groups has advanced its extremist activities systematically over the past
six to seven years with help from many leaders in mainstream Hindutva
organisations as also groups within these organisations that are a part of
the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS)-led Sangh Parivar.

Another important question relates to the responsibility of the government
and the larger judicial establishment towards persons found to have been
implicated wrongly and arrested in many terror-related cases that have taken
a dramatic about-turn as a result of new revelations such as the one made by
Swami Aseemanand. This also raises the question as to how the government and
other institutions plan to redress the wrong done to these innocent persons.

On the central question raised by Swami Aseemanand's confessions, that is,
of the process of investigation into a terror attack, administrative and
political authorities claim that the multidimensional investigations carried
out by a clutch of agencies, including the Central Bureau of Investigation
(CBI), working together or separately, are done secretly and confidentially.

However, it has been the practice in the immediate aftermath of almost every
attack to blame “jehadi groups” working within the country or their
so-called cohorts based in different parts of the world, including
neighbouring countries. The experience has been that investigating agencies
and those who wield control over them in the security establishment or the
Home Ministry at the Centre or in the States help in the propagation of such
jehad-oriented stories. Aseemanand's reported confessions raise questions
about this practice as well as the line of investigation that has been
adopted in many cases over the past decade.

Aseemanand was originally arrested in connection with the 2006 Malegaon
blasts but his reported confessions of December 18, 2010, point to his
involvement in as many as five terror attacks. According to the reported
confession, Aseemanand and his associates, who were members of Hindutva
terror outfits, were involved in the many terror attacks, including the bomb
blasts in the Samjhauta Express (February 2007) and those at Hyderabad Mecca
Masjid (May 2007) and Ajmer dargah (October 2007). The associates apparently
included Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur, Lokesh Sharma, Lt Col Prasad Shrikant
Purohit, Retired Major Ramesh Upadhyay, Swami Dayanand Pandey (all of whom
were arrested during the course of the investigations) and Sandeep Dange,
who is absconding, and Sunil Joshi, who was apparently killed by a few of
his own associates. The name of Indresh Kumar, a member of the RSS national
executive, also finds mention in the recorded confession.

According to it, these Hindutva activists had joined hands to carry out
attacks at Muslim places of worship or in areas with a significant
population of Muslims. A common feature of the terror strikes was that a
large number of the victims were Muslims. The deadliest attack by this group
was on the Samjhauta Express on the night of February 18-19, 2007, in which
68 persons were killed.

 Significantly, in all the terror attacks referred to in Aseemanand's
confessions, the line of investigation by different agencies focussed only
on “jehadi terror groups” and their national and international associates
such as the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), the Lakshar–e-Taiba
(LeT) and the Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami (HuJI).

The Samjhauta Express blasts, for instance, were described as a macabre
attack by the LeT. This line of investigation and the projections made on
that basis found such widespread currency that this was highlighted even in
international forums such as the United Nations. The U.N.'s listing of the
LeT as a terror outfit in its international watch list made a specific
mention of the Samjhauta Express blasts. Similarly, it was widely propagated
that the Mecca Masjid blasts were planned and executed by the HuJI. Hundreds
of people from different parts of the country were arrested in these cases
as part of the investigation, which has now been exposed as fallacious, and
kept either in custody or in jail for long periods of time.

For example, as many as 60 persons were arrested immediately after the Mecca
Masjid blasts following the HuJI attack theory. The line of investigation
advanced at that time by the Hyderabad police and broadly supported by
Central investigating agencies was as follows: Shahid Bilal, a resident of
Moosrambagh in the old city of Hyderabad had carried out these blasts in
order to create communal tension. There were two first information reports
(FIRs) in this case, one dealing with the blasts and the other dealing with
the recovery of unexploded explosives.

Charges ranging from involvement in seditious activity to conspiracy were
brought against all the 60. The viewing of recordings of the demolition of
the Babri Masjid was held to be an act that spurred the suspects into
indulging in terrorist acts.

The investigation into the Samjhauta Express blasts has also been nothing
short of a roller coaster ride. The attack on the train named after the Urdu
and Hindi word for accord or compromise was perceived as an attack on the
efforts to strengthen India-Pakistan cooperation. The train connects New
Delhi to Lahore and passes through the India-Pakistan border in Punjab at
Attari.

On the basis of the perception that the blasts were perpetrated by those who
wanted to scuttle or at least impair India-Pakistan cooperation, both the
Indian and Pakistan governments condemned the attack. A day after the
bombings, Indian investigating agencies said it was a suitcase bomb attack
carried out by five people associated with the LeT. The agencies even
released sketches of two suspects. Later, some people who allegedly sold the
suitcases to the alleged attackers were arrested from Indore. But that was
about all in terms of concrete progress.

R.V. MOORTHY

*THE DEADLIEST ATTACK by Aseemanand and his associates, according to his
confession, was on the Samjhauta Express in February 2007, in which 68
persons were killed. Here, an NSG commando inspects a bombed out coach of
the train near Panipat station, 80 km from New Delhi.*

Things started to unfold differently in November 2008 when the interrogation
of Lt Col Purohit revealed that there could be a Hindutva terror dimension
to the attack. This aspect gained momentum in October 2010 when the charge
sheet prepared by the Rajasthan anti-terrorism squad stated that a meeting
of Hindutva bomb makers in February 2006 discussed the Samjhauta Express as
a potential target for attack. In yet another development, WikiLeaks linked
David Headley, the suspected brain behind the Mumbai attacks of November 26,
2008, to the bombing. Aseemanand's confessions have come as the latest twist
in this series of events.

The Sangh Parivar as a whole, and specifically the RSS and its political arm
the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), have pointed to the changing facets in the
investigations to claim that the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance
(UPA) government at the Centre is using various agencies to prop up a
“misnomer” called “Hindu terror”. According to an editorial in Organiser,
the journal of the RSS, Aseemanand's confessions are nothing but the
concoctions of the investigating agencies to suit the political needs of the
Congress.

The editorial stated: “So far there has been no instance of any Hindu
organisation boasting credit for a terror strike anywhere in the world. So
far no outfit has claimed to work underground to advance a Hindu agenda
through arbitrary force, undemocratic means or through intimidation.
Normally gangs resort to such methods when they are in a miserable minority
and have no hope of achieving their goal through democratic, constitutional
methods. Or when they are not confident of the support they enjoy in
society. In any case, even home-grown terrorism cannot sustain without
technical and logistic support and funds from outside the country. By
general consensus there is no religion or colour for terrorism. But the
jihadi outfits do not make any secret of the religious agenda they want to
enforce. By all these parameters Hindu terror is a misnomer.”

It also wondered why “only the persons named in alleged Hindu radicalism
seem to be making ‘confessions'” and why “we have not heard of a [Ajmal]
Kasab, [Mohammad] Afzal [a.k.a Afzal Guru] or Geelani or such other jihadi
terrorists making any confession”. The Sangh Parivar leaders, including BJP
president Nitin Gadkari, have made bold to absolve RSS national executive
committee member Indresh Kumar of all culpability and have appeared along
with him in several public functions.

Notwithstanding such protestations, there is enough evidence to show that
Hindutva terror groups have time and again received overt or covert support
from mainstream Hindutva organisations. Not only the cases cited by
Aseemanand but also a number of untoward happenings in Maharashtra
underscore this point. Independent civil society investigations into the
blast in the house of an RSS worker in Nanded, which resulted in the death
of two Sangh Parivar activists, and the attacks later in Pabhani, Beed and
Jalna have underscored the collusion between leaders and activists of
mainstream Hindutva organisations and peripheral Hindutva terror units.

Incidentally, Aseemanand himself came into prominence within the Hindutva
fold when he organised a massive Hindutva-oriented conference in the
tribal-dominated Dangs district of Gujarat in 2006. That conference, where
plans were made for the coming decades, was perceived by Sangh Parivar
observers as a milestone event. Aseemanand worked closely with the BJP's
Hindutva icon, Chief Minister Narendra Modi, and his ministerial colleagues
in convening the conference. A similar meeting is being organised in 2011,
obviously without the presence of Aseemanand, but of course with the
blessings of Narendra Modi. Clearly, these connections and the push they
give to fringe Hindutva groups cannot be wished away.

According to the Lucknow-based political observer Indra Bhushan Singh, who
is also a senior lawyer in the Lucknow High Court, the trajectory of
terrorism of different hues can be distilled and identified properly only if
such organisational activity, too, is monitored properly.

He said: “Only such scrutiny will lead to correct investigations and correct
conclusions. Unfortunately, our investigating agencies seem to be
perennially in reaction mode and not in a proactive mode. That is why we
have spectacles such as the investigation into the 2006 Varanasi blasts,
where a man was arrested and even convicted but a couple of years later new
accused were discovered and paraded from different parts of the country.
Clearly, this is an issue involving basic human rights and demands serious
attention and concrete action from different sections of society, including
lawmakers. “

Indra Bhushan Singh's contention has special relevance in the context of
Aseemanand's confessions and the effect it will have on people linked to the
several attacks he has mentioned. However, given the track record of the
investigating agencies and their political bosses, it may be too much to
expect concrete measures to correct the flip-flop methods that drive terror
investigations.

-- 
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~----~----~----~
Getting out of this group is easy. Just send an email to
[email protected]
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~-----~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~----~----~----~

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" 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/humanrights-movement?hl=en.

Reply via email to