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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Indian Airlines hijacking highlights political tensions on
the Indian subcontinent
By Peter Symonds
30 December 1999
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The hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814 has entered its
sixth day with little sign of any immediate resolution. Six hijackers
armed with knives, grenades and pistols are holding more than
150 passengers and aircrew hostage aboard the A300 Airbus parked
at the Kandahar airport in southern Afghanistan. Most of the passengers
are Indian citizens who were returning from Kathmandu in Nepal
to New Delhi.
The flight was seized on Friday afternoon and landed briefly
in Amritsar in India, Lahore in Pakistan and Dubai in the United
Arab Emirates before being permitted to touch down at Kandahar.
At Dubai, 27 women, children and men were allowed to leave the
plane. The body of Rippan Katyal, who was reportedly stabbed to
death by the hijackers for removing his blindfold, was also taken
off the plane.
The hijackerssupporters of Kashmiri separatisminitially
told the ruling Taliban authorities in Afghanistan that they wanted
the Indian government to release Maulana Masood Azhar, a Muslim
cleric from Pakistan, and several Kashmiris. Azhar travelled to
India in 1992 to support the Kashmiri separatist movement, was
arrested in 1994 and is imprisoned in a high security jail in
Indian-held Kashmir.
Negotiations, firstly with the United Nations Coordinator for
Afghanistan, Erick de Mul, and then with a team of Indian officials,
have failed to end the siege. Indian negotiators only arrived
on Monday after the hijackers threatened to kill the hostages.
Limited supplies of food, water and medicine have been provided
to the aircraft's occupants and a man suffering from diabetes
has been released, but the hijackers turned down appeals to allow
the remaining women and children to leave the plane.
On Tuesday, the demands were substantially increased. Indian
Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh announced that the hijackers were
insisting on the release of Azhar and 35 other Kashmiri separatists,
the payment of $US200 million in ransom, and the return of the
coffin of Sajjad Afghani, who was killed in an Indian jail in
June allegedly during an escape attempt.
The Indian cabinet, which met on Tuesday, is unlikely to agree
to any of the demands. According to a report in the Hindu,
the mood of the ministers, without exception, was that the
demands were obnoxious and could hardly be met. Throughout
the 1990s, the Indian army has been waging an often brutal war
of attrition against various Pakistani-backed Kashmiri secessionist
groups. Conservative estimates put the number of people killed
in the conflict at between 10,000 and 15,000.
On Wednesday, the hijackers withdrew their demands for a ransom
and the return of Afghani's coffin after being told by the Taliban
that these were un-Islamic. But India's Parliamentary
Affairs Minister Pramod Mahajan, speaking after a cabinet meeting
in New Delhi, said that the concession does not make a material
change to the situation. Afghan Foreign Minister Wakil Ahmad
Mutawakel warned yesterday that his government would force the
hijacked aircraft to leave Afghanistan unless the siege was ended
quickly.
The hijacking has quickly brought to the surface the continuing
tensions between India and Pakistanboth have accused each
other of engineering the incident for political purposes.
At a press conference, Singh insisted that the hijackers had
arrived in Nepal aboard a Pakistan International Airlines flight
from Karachi, and pointedly noted their demand for the release
of Azhar, who is connected to the Kashmiri separatist group, Harakat-ul-Mujahdeen,
formerly known as Harakat-ul-Ansar. The organisation was allegedly
responsible for the kidnapping of six tourists in 1995 in an unsuccessful
bid to force the release of Azhar.
Indian officials and the media claim that four of the six hijackers
are Pakistani citizens and accuse the Pakistani government of
permitting Harakat-ul-Mujahdeen to operate from bases within its
borders. An editorial in the Times of India asserted that
this evidence should amply demonstrate that country's [Pakistan's]
role as a state sponsoring terrorism and implied that international
economic sanctions should be put in place against Pakistan if
it did not help in the release of the hostages. Other press reports
claimed that Pakistan's Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) agency
had been directly involved in planning the hijacking.
By attempting to shift the blame onto Pakistan, the Indian
government is seeking to deflect criticism at home of its own
actions. The relatives of the hostages and their supporters have
staged protests in New Delhi outside the residence of Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee and broke open the gates to India's Civil
Aviation Ministry. Media commentators have criticised the slow
response of the government and its failure to prevent the aircraft
leaving Indian airspace after landing at Amritsar.
Speaking on behalf of the relatives, Dr Sanjeev Chibber pointed
to the double standards of Indian authorities. In 1989, Indian
prime minister V.P. Singh freed imprisoned Kashmiri dissidents
to secure the release of the daughter of his home minister Mufti
Mohammad Sayeed. If militants can be released for the sake of
a minister's daughter, Chibber asked, why was there so much reluctance
to do so when over 150 lives were at stake.
The Pakistani regime has vigorously denied Indian allegations
of involvement in the hijacking, responding with counter-accusations
of its own. Pakistan's Foreign Minister Abdul Sattar suggested
that Indian intelligence services had staged the hijacking as
part of efforts to isolate the new military junta. Perhaps
the government of India manufactured another incident in pursuit
of their aim of maligning Pakistan internationally. The possibility
can no longer be ignored that the incident involves a preconceived
design by a foreign intelligence organisation, Sattar said.
Pakistani newspapers have published stories claiming that an Indian
Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) agent was on board the hijacked
airliner.
Pakistan and India came to the point of open military conflict
in June after a Pakistani-backed force seized control of strategic
heights in the Kargil-Dass-Batalik region of Indian Kashmir. Fierce
fighting raged for weeks as the Indian army mounted a large-scale
offensive to dislodge the heavily armed Kashmiri secessionists.
Under pressure from the US, a long-time ally, Pakistan pulled
out its forces and allied Kashmiri fighters in early July. Discontent
over the backdown was one of the factors that enabled the armed
forces to oust prime minister Nawaz Sharif and establish the new
military regime headed by General Pervez Musharraf.
In the aftermath of the Kargil conflict, the US has moved to
establish closer ties with the Indian governmenta coalition
of parties led by the Hindu chauvinist Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP). The Clinton administration has been quick to condemn the
hijacking and, according to press reports, has provided India
with intelligence information on Kashmiri separatist groups. Indian
Foreign Minister Singh told a news conference: I am entirely
satisfied by the support India has received from the United States.
Afghanistan has already been under enormous pressure from the
US, which insisted on UN economic sanctions against the country
over its failure to extradite Osama bin Laden, alleged to be responsible
for the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
Within the US, government authorities and the media have been
attempting to link bin Laden to a fresh terrorist scare following
the arrest of Algerian Ahmed Ressan on December 14 said to have
had bomb making materials in his car when crossing
from Canada. In mid-December, the Clinton administration issued
an extraordinary blanket warning that it would hold Afghanistan
directly responsible for terrorist attacks on American citizens
anywhere in the world.
The Islamic fundamentalist Taliban regime in Afghanistan has
been careful to distance itself from the hijacking and to demonstrate
that it has no sympathy for or connection to the perpetrators.
Afghan Foreign Minister Wakil Ahmad Mutawakel has stressed that
his government will not harbour the hijackers and warned them
that it does not want the blood of innocent people to fall
on the soil of Afghanistan. Taliban officials have threatened
to storm the aircraft if there is any sign that the hostages are
in danger.
The Indian negotiating team has held talks with Mutawakel as
well as the top Taliban military commander in Kandahar. Indian
officials refused to comment on whether discussions had taken
place on a commando operation to seize the aircraft and end the
siege.
See Also:
India-Pakistan
Conflict
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