Bhavika says

Terror: The Aftermath by Anand Patwardhan December 10, 2008

Here’s an article I came across by documentary filmmaker and social activist Anand Patwardhan on 26/11 and its aftermath. His films include Father, Son and Holy war,  In the Name of God (Ram ke Naam), War and Peace (Jung aur Aman), etc. for more information on himand his work you can log onto http://www.patwardhan.com.

So anyway, this article was rejected by the Times of India and has not been published elsewhere yet. I think it’s an extremely well written article.  He talks about what the problems are with all the amendments being proposed by all and sundry to root out terror alongwith proposing a few solutions of  his own. It’s a must read. Here goes and feel free to post comments!

Terror: The Aftermath

The attack on Mumbai is over. After the numbing sorrow comes the blame game and the solutions. Loud voices amplified by saturation TV:  Why don’t we amend our Constitution to create new anti-terror laws? Why don’t we arm our police with AK 47s? Why don’t we do what Israel did after Munich or the USA did after 9/11 and hot pursue the enemy?  Solutions that will lead us further into the abyss. For terror is a self-fulfilling prophecy. It thrives on reaction, polarization, militarization and the thirst for revenge.

The External Terror

Those who invoke America need only to analyze if its actions after 9/11 increased or decreased global terror. It invaded oil-rich Iraq fully knowing that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, killing over 200,000 Iraqis citizens but allowing a cornered Bin Laden to escape from Afghanistan. It recruited global support for Islamic militancy, which began to be seen as a just resistance against American mass murder. Which begs the question of who created Bin Laden in the first place, armed the madarsas of Pakistan and rejuvenated the concept of Islamic jehad? Israel played its own role in stoking the fires of jehad. The very creation of Israel in 1948 robbed Palestinians of their land, an act that Mahatma Gandhi to his credit deplored at the time as an unjust way to redress the wrongs done to Jews during the Holocaust. What followed has been a slow and continuing attack on the Palestinian nation. At first Palestinian resistance was led by secular forces represented by Yasser Arafat but as these were successfully undermined, Islamic forces took over the mantle. The first, largely non-violent Intifada was crushed, a second more violent one replaced it and when all else failed, human bombs appeared.

Thirty years ago when I first went abroad there were two countries my Indian passport forbade me to visit. One was racist South Africa. The other was Israel. We were non-aligned and stood for disarmament and world peace. Today Israel and America are our biggest military allies. Is it surprising that we are on the jehadi hit list? Israel, America and other prosperous countries can to an extent protect themselves against the determined jehadi, but can India put an impenetrable shield over itself? Remember that when attackers are on a suicide mission, the strongest shields have crumbled. New York was laid low not with nuclear weapons but with a pair of box cutters. India is for many reasons a quintessentially soft target. Our huge population, vast landmass and coastline are impossible to protect. The rich may build new barricades. The Taj and the Oberoi can be made safer. So can our airports and planes. Can our railway stations and trains, bus stops, busses, markets and lanes do the same?

The Terror Within

The threat of terror in India does not come exclusively from the outside. Apart from being hugely populated by the poor India is also a country divided, not just between rich and poor, but by religion, caste and language. This internal divide is as potent a breeding ground for terror as jehadi camps abroad. Nor is jehad the copyright of one religion alone. It can be argued that international causes apart, India has jehadis that are fully home grown. Perhaps the earliest famous one was Nathuram Godse who acting at the behest of his mentor Vinayak Savarkar (still referred to as “Veer” or “brave” although he refused to own up to his role in the conspiracy), murdered Mahatma Gandhi for the crime of championing Muslims.

Jump forward to 6th December, 1992, the day Hindu fanatics demolished the Babri Mosque setting into motion a chain of events that still wreaks havoc today. From the Bombay riots of 1992 to the bomb blasts of 1993, the Gujarat pogroms of 2002 and hundreds of smaller deadly events, the last 16 years have been the bloodiest since Partition. Action has been followed by reaction in an endless cycle of escalating retribution. At the core on the Hindu side of terror are organizations that openly admire Adolph Hitler, nursing the hate of historic wrongs inflicted by Muslims. Ironically these votaries of Hitler remain friends and admirers of Israel.

On the Muslim side of terror are scores of disaffected youth, many of whom have seen their families tortured and killed in more recent pogroms. Christians too have fallen victim to recent Hindutva terror but as yet not formed the mechanisms for revenge. Dalits despite centuries of caste oppression, have not yet retaliated in violence although a small fraction is being drawn into an armed struggle waged by Naxalites.

It is clear that no amount of spending on defense, no amount of patrolling the high seas, no amount of increasing the military and police and equipping them with the latest weaponry can end the cycle of violence or place India under a bubble of safety. Just as nuclear India did not lead to more safety, but only to a nuclear Pakistan, no amount of homeland security can save us. And inviting Israel’s Mossad and America’s CIA/FBI to the security table is like giving the anti-virus contract to those who spread the virus in the first place. It can only make us more of a target for the next determined jehadi attack.

Policing, Justice and the Media
As for draconian anti-terror laws, they too only breed terror as for the most part they are implemented by a State machinery that has imbibed majoritarian values. So in Modi’s Gujarat after the ethnic cleansing of Muslims in 2002, despite scores of confessions to rape and murder captured on hidden camera, virtually no Hindu extremists were punished while thousands of Muslims rotted in jail under draconian laws. The same happened in Bombay despite the Shiv Sena being found guilty by the Justice Shrikrishna Commission. Under pressure a few cases were finally brought to trial but all escaped with the lightest of knuckle raps. In stark contrast many Muslims accused in the 1993 bomb blasts were given death sentences.

The bulk of our media, policing and judicial systems swallows the canard that Muslims are by nature violent. Removing democratic safeguards guaranteed by the Constitution can only make this worse. Every act of wrongful imprisonment and torture that then follows is likely to turn innocents into material for future terrorists to draw upon. Already the double standards are visible. While the Students Islamic Movement of India is banned, Hindutva outfits like the RSS, the VHP, the Bajrang Dal, and the Shiv Sena remain legal entities. The leader of the MNS, Raj Thackeray recently openly spread such hatred that several north Indians were killed by lynch mobs. Amongst these were the Dube brothers, doctors from Kalyan who treated the poor for a grand fee of Rs.10 per patient. Raj Thackeray like his uncle Bal before him, remains free after issuing public threats that Bombay would burn if anyone had the guts to arrest him. Modi remains free despite the pogroms of Gujarat. Congress party murderers of Sikhs in 1984 remain free. Justice in India is clearly not there for all. Increasing the powers of the police cannot solve this problem. Only honest and unbiased implementation of laws that exist, can.

It is a tragedy of the highest proportions that one such honest policeman, Anti-Terrorist Squad chief Hemant Karkare, who had begun to unravel the thread of Hindutva terror was himself gunned down, perhaps by Muslim terror. It is reported that Col. Purohit and fellow Hindutva conspirators now in judicial custody, celebrated the news of Karkare’s death. Until Karkare took charge, the Malegaon bomb blasts in which Muslims were killed and the Samjhauta Express blasts in which Pakistani visitors to India were killed were being blamed on Muslims. Karkare exposed a hitherto unknown Hindutva outfit as masterminding a series of killer blasts across the country. For his pains Karkare came under vicious attack not just from militant Hindutva but from the mainstream BJP. He was under tremendous pressure to prove his patriotism. Was it this that led this senior officer to don helmet and ill-fitting bullet proof vest and rush into battle with a pistol? Or was it just his natural instinct, the same courage that had led him against all odds, to expose Hindutva terror?

Whatever it was, it only underlines the fact that jehadis of all kinds are actually allies of each other. So Bin Laden served George Bush and vice-versa. So Islamic and Hindutva jehadis have served each other for years. Do they care who dies? Of the 200 people killed in the last few days by Islamic jehadis, a high number were Muslims. Many were waiting to board trains to celebrate Eid in their hometowns in UP and Bihar, when their co-religionists gunned them down. Shockingly the media has not commented on this, nor focused on the tragedy at the railway station, choosing to concentrate on tragedies that befell the well-to-do. And it is the media that is leading the charge to turn us into a war-mongering police state where we may lead lives with an illusion of safety, but with the certainty of joylessness.

I am not arguing that we do not need efficient security at public places and at vulnerable sites. But real security will only come when it is accompanied by real justice, when the principles of democracy are implemented in every part of the country, when the legitimate grievances of people are not crushed, when the arms race is replaced by a race for decency and humanity, when our children grow up in an atmosphere where religious faith is put to the test of reason. Until such time we will remain at the mercy of  “patriots” and zealots.

Anand Patwardhan
November 2008

 

The “spirit” of Bombay be damned! November 29, 2008

Filed under: 26/11 — Bhavika @ 12:12 am
Tags: , ,

I am honestly sick and tired of listening to people harp on about the “spirit” of Bombay. I really wish people would just stop. The so-called “spirit” of Bombay is nothing but the sheer need of the common man to get up each morning and get to work come hell or high water to be able to keep alive in the city. It’s nothing but a fight for survival. The “spirit” of Bombay thus, is not out of choice but rather the lack of it.

I, for one, am sick of being taken for granted in the name of our “spirit”. The “spirit” of Bombay has been used and abused so much that it holds no value anymore. It is nothing but a cliche. It is nothing but an excuse for the appalling failure on the part of the intelligence, the Government time and time again.

I’m sick of my city, my country being constantly under attack. It’s time for change. It’s time for our politicians to give us answers. We cannot, should not and will not remain silent as our security blanket continues to be torn away bit by bit. The authorities have been lackadaisical for way too long. We’ve watched on silently from the sidelines for way too long. It’s time for us – the citizens- to come together and fight this injustice. United we can and we will make a change, a difference. The “spirit” of Bombay be damned!

P.S. I’ve created an event on facebook to hold a peace rally or candlelight vigil perhaps to protest against the . Do join in. The time is NOW! Here’s the link-http://www.facebook.com/home.php?ref=logo#/event.php?eid=41080875973. if it doesn’t open just go search for the event called ‘Citizens for Peace’ and you should find it. Spread the word. The larger the number, the stronger the message.

 

What’s going on?! November 27, 2008

Filed under: 26/11 — Bhavika @ 9:13 pm
Tags: ,

the image that'll remain imprinted on our minds forever...

I’m sure everyone has been following the news and knows what Bombay is going through at this point in time. After more than 24 hours of being under fire the battle, I believe, still rages on. I wonder how long this will continue. I wonder how long it will be before everyone in Bombay, me included, will feel safe again.Sure, Bombay has been under siege before and sure the city and it’s people have picked up the pieces and moved on. But this time around, especially for me, it feels like the attacks hit really close to home. By saying that, I am in no way underrating the gravity of the earlier attacks-like the bomb blasts on the local trains etc. – but what I’m saying is that this time the scale of the attacks is unprecedented. Never before have any of us in Bombay witnessed such a widespread encounter that has gone on for over 24 hours. Never before have we witnessed people randomly opening fire at civilians. Never before have we watched on silently, helplessly as our city and it’s citizens continue to burn.

Personally for me, this experience was and continues to be terrifying. My s

ense of security has been shattered. It makes me wonder if it’s worth living in a city that is constantly under attack. It  makes me wonder if I have the strength to continue to live in a city where fear is my constant companion. I don’t want to keep worrying about the safety of my family and friends as they leave home in the morning to go to work. I know it may all sound slightly dramatic but after having being locked up in a restaurant (All Stir Fry at The Gordon House Hotel, where my friends and I were celebrating a friend’s birthday ) for over 10 hours with only a few buildings separating us and the Taj and hearing the sounds of gunfire, you can’t really blame me! I mean, the places that were and are under attack are all the places that my friends, my acquaintances, my family and I visit so often. Leopold Cafe for instance- I was there only last week! The Taj- I celebrated my birthday there less than a month back! After coming back home, I heard so many stories of friends’ relatives being trapped at the Taj, of a friend’s teacher being shot dead, of a relative’s friend losing a limb. I feel like my space has been violated. Like after this nothing will ever be the same again.

while Bombay burned...

While we were locked up in the restaurant, the hotel authorities were kind enough to have two TV sets running through the night relaying the news. We watched all night as the enormity of the situation worsened. I think for me the seriousness finally sank in as I heard the news of ATS chief Hemant Karkare, Additional Commissioner Ashok Kamte and encounter specialist Vijay Salaskar being killed by the terrorists. It made me wonder how top cops like them fell victim to terrorist attack. Weren’t they given enough protection? Did they under estimate the arms and ammunition that the assailants were loaded with? I mean being the ATS chief and all that shouldn’t he and the others been given double the pr

otection before they took the terrorists on? It’s simply appalling to think they died when they actually could have been safe if only they were better equipped. They and the countless others in uniform are the real heroes, aren’t they? Like one of my friends’ rightly pointed out – it takes a ot of courage to lay your life on the line for a bunch of people you don’t even know! Makes me think all of us should be grateful to them for fighting for and ensuring our safety in the face of terror.I bow my head to them. I pray they rest in peace.

the benches that served as our beds...

So what is it that is at the root of all this hatred? Religion seems to be the most obvious answer. All this fighting in its name makes one wonder how deep seated this hatred, this intolerance for the “other” is. It makes one wonder if a world without communal tension will ever be a reality. If it’ll ever be possible for all of us to live in complete harmony. I for one do believe that it is possible. Every person that refuses to fight in the name of religious differences is proof of that- is a slap in the faces of those who want to divide us according to which God we pray to.

So what is the solution to all of this? Some say that eradicating a certain religion and all its followers will do the trick. Some say bombing our neighbouring country is the ONLY solution. I say WTF??!! Do these people really think these measures will obliterate all the hatred that has existed for so long?! I think not. If anything it will only spawn more hatred and intolerance. I wish these people who make these statements would just pause for a while and THINK about what they are saying and I’m sure they’d realize that this in fact is not a solution!

Well that pretty much brings me to the end of this post. I continue to watch the news and and the situation as yet does not seem to be entirely under control. I haplessly wait and watch as the atrocities continue. I wish there was something I could do. Some say it’s time for us- the people- to take our safety in our own hands and stop waiting to be taken care of. Sure I agree. But what is it that we can do when even our top most officials are unable to do anything in terms of prevention? All I can do now is pray for all those who lost their lives, for all those who lost their loved ones, for resilience, for the strength for everyone to fight this horror, for unity, for a better tomorrow.

 

 
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