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Concern grows that Hindu
terrorists could become more apt to target Christians.
After the recent arrests
of numerous Hindu terrorists for exploding bombs,
authorities increasingly view Hindu rightwing extremists
as a threat not only to Muslim and Christian minorities
but also to national security.
Historically Hindu terrorist groups have traded blows
with India’s Muslim extremists, but because of a
perceived threat from Christianity – as one Hindu
extremist leader expressed to Compass – many analysts
believe Hindu terrorists increasingly pose dangers to
Christians as well.
Police in Goa state arrested two members of Hindu
terrorist group Sanatan Sanstha (Eternal Organization)
on Saturday (Oct. 31) for their alleged role in an
explosion that took place near a church in Margao on Oct
16. Christians, which make up more than 25 percent of
the 1.3 million people in Goa, were apparently not the
target of the explosion, which occurred accidently when
two members of the Sanatan Sanstha were trying to
transport explosives to a nearby location on the eve of
Diwali Hindu festival, according to DNA newspaper.
Nevertheless, the incident served as a wake-up call to
Christian leaders and others who fear Hindu terrorists
could take greater aim at the Christian community. John
Dayal, secretary general of the All India Christian
Council (AICC), said that while terrorism was not new
for rightwing groups, some of the extremist groups had
“metamorphosed into fully fledged terrorism squads on
classical lines – cells with local leaders, supply
lines, bomb-making experts, and clear linkage with the
intellectuals and motivators in the RSS [Hindu extremist
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh] hierarchy.”
Suresh Khairnar, a civil rights activist who has
conducted nearly 100 fact-finding trips on communal
incidents, told Compass that Muslims may be the main
target of Hindu terrorist outfits, but “there is no
doubt that they pose a threat to the Christians also.”
He added that these Hindu groups also launch attacks on
Hindus from time to time – masquerading as Islamist
groups to create communal unrest, as well as to confuse
investigating agencies.
Asghar Ali Engineer, chairman of the Centre for Study of
Society and Secularism in Mumbai, concurred that
Christians have increasingly become a secondary target
for rightwing Hindu terrorists behind Muslims, who form
13.4 percent of the population.
“Christians, on the other hand, are only 2.3 percent,”
said Engineer. “And because of their engagement with
education, medicine and social work, it is difficult to
promote anti-Christian sentiments.”
A former inspector general of police of Maharashtra, S.M.
Mushrif, also said that while Muslims are the prime
target of Hindu terrorists, attacking Christians also
helps the Hindu assailants to portray themselves as
“working for a Hindu cause.”
Members of suspected terror groups are known to have
attacked Christians. On June 27, Shailendra Chauhan,
alias Uday Singh – suspected to be a close aide of
Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur, the prime suspect in a
September 2008 blast in Malegaon, Maharashtra – was
arrested for allegedly killing a Christian priest in
Noida, a satellite town of Delhi. The 25-year-old
Chauhan was also accused of vandalizing a church
building in Sangam Vihar in Delhi in October 2008,
according to The Times of India.
The AICC’s Dayal added that Islamic groups are the
immediate target of Hindu terrorist groups, “but once
the terror gangs of Hindutva [Hindu nationalist
ideology] taste blood, it is easy to predict that they
will swing into action against any perceived enemy
target.”
How Alleged Terrorist Group Views Christians
The Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) of Mumbai is
investigating powerful bomb blasts in Malegaon town,
Maharashtra, allegedly carried out by members of the
Hindu nationalist Abhinav Bharat (Pride of India) in
September 2008. Compass spoke with the president of
Abhinav Bharat about the alleged terrorist group’s
attitude toward Christians.
The Malegaon blasts near a mosque killed six people and
injured more than 100. The ATS arrested 11 people,
including a serving officer of the Indian Army, from the
Abhinav Bharat and other rightwing outfits.
The president of the Abhinav Bharat, Himani Savarkar,
told Compass that members of her organization had been
falsely accused, saying “The government is lying about
their involvement. There is collusion between Muslims
and the government.”
Asked if only Muslims were a threat to Hindus, she said,
“There is danger from both Muslims and Christians,
because of conversions and terrorism.”
Conversion represents a threat in that people converting
to Islam change their loyalties from India to Mecca,
while the loyalties of converts to Christianity shift
from India to the Pope, Savarkar said. She also spoke of
a more direct threat in Christianity – “Muslims want to
kill the kafirs [unbelievers], and even Jesus asks in
the Bible to kill all those who do not believe in Him” –
and it is not known how many other Hindu extremists
share this fallacy.
The number of Hindus, she added, “is slowly reducing,
and one day we will become a minority in our own nation.
We do not have any other nation.”
Savarkar, niece of Nathuram Godse, a Hindu nationalist
who killed Indian independence leader Mahatma Gandhi in
January 1948, said that in her view the main reasons
people convert away from Hinduism are poverty and
illiteracy.
“They do not know what they are doing,” she said. “We
have to awaken Hindus. Hindus need to be made aware of
the threats.”
Violent Despair
The use of bombs is a sign of frustration among
extremists, said civil rights activist Khairnar,
referring to the two successive defeats of the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP), political wing of the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), India’s chief Hindu nationalist
conglomerate. The BJP, which ruled the federal
government from 1998 to 2004, has lost both the 2004 and
2009 general elections.
“They are now exploding bombs because they know they
cannot succeed democratically,” he said, though he added
that bomb-making per se was not a new development. “Even
Nathuram Godse, the killer of Mahatma Gandhi, launched
several bomb attacks before finally succeeding in
assassinating him.”
In the case of the Malegaon blasts, Dayal said that the
involvement of Hindu religious leaders and former army
personnel indicated that terror attacks by rightwing
Hindu groups were well planned. Security analysts warn
that the extremist groups must be prevented from
graduating to bigger terror groups.
On Oct. 21, the Mumbai Mirror daily quoted an ATS
officer as saying Hindu extremist groups “are putting up
a mild face as an organization while their members are
detonating bombs. It’s only a matter of time before they
begin to acquire better technology and more lethal
bombs. Their influence is growing; there are several
politicians and even ex-policemen who owe allegiance to
them. They can be dangerous if not stopped now.”
O.P. Bali, former director general of police of
Maharashtra, told Compass that until 2003, the year he
retired, extreme Hindu nationalist groups like the
Bajrang Dal mainly used weapons like sticks, tridents
and knives.
“Bomb-making is a newer development, and they are still
learning,” Bali said. “Considering the way some local
Islamist groups have graduated from making and
detonating of small bombs to bigger ones, the efforts of
rightwing groups must be nipped in the bud.”
Hindu/Muslim violence has a long history. In 1947, when
India became politically independent, British colonial
India was divided into “Hindu-majority” India and
“Muslim-majority” Pakistan. The partition resulted in
the killing of around 1 million people – Hindu, Sikh and
Muslim – in violent clashes mainly during the mass
migration of around 14.5 million people from India to
Pakistan and vice versa.
Engineer said the common notion that increasing
modernization in India would put a halt to the growth of
extremist groups was mistaken.
“Extremism is a reaction to modernization, and therefore
such groups will grow even bigger in the future.”
Dayal seconded Engineer, saying the rightwing extremist
groups were trying to keep pace with Islamist groups.
“Fortunately, in most areas, government vigilance, civil
society and good relations between communities have kept
these terror groups at the margins,” Dayal said. “But
with the growth of parties that use identity-based
divisive issues such as the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena
party, with the apathy of government in BJP-ruled
states, and with the middle-class support base for them,
I fear such Hindutva terror groups may grow. That has
been the historical experience in Western Europe and
elsewhere.”
When suspects in the Malegaon blast were formally
charged in January 2009, ATS officials told the court
that the alleged terrorists’ goal was formation of a
Hindu nation – and that the suspects planned to approach
Israeli intelligence for help in combating Muslim
extremists if the need arose, according to a Jan. 21
article in The Hindu.
Following numerous arrests, The Times of India daily on
Oct. 21 quoted senior police officials as saying that
Maharashtra was fast becoming a “hub of rightwing
organizations’ terror activities.”
“The youth are being indoctrinated by fundamentalist
organizations,” an officer told the daily. “The state
should act quickly to control rightwing terror.”
www.vishalarora.co.in
(Courtesy :Compass Direct News)
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