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Bomb attack in Kashmir heightens tensions between India and
Pakistan
By Peter Symonds
4 October 2001
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A devastating attack on the state legislature building in Indian-controlled
Jammu and Kashmir on October 1 has sharply raised tensions within
the state and further strained relations between India and Pakistan,
already heightened by the US-led war drive against Afghanistan.
According to the Indian media, several gunmen stole a government
telecommunications vehicle, packed it with explosives and drove
it through the security cordon surrounding the heavily guarded
complex in Srinagar at around 2pm. The driver detonated the explosives
and, in the commotion that followed, the others dressed in police
uniforms rushed inside firing their weapons and setting off grenades.
They barricaded themselves into the building and were killed after
a seven-hour battle with Indian soldiers and police.
The death toll has steadily risen to 38 as more bodies have
been recovered from the rubble. Those killed include members of
the Indian security forces, legislature employees and a number
of civilians. At least 75 more were injured in the blast and subsequent
shootout10 people are in hospital in a critical condition.
Most of the states legislators, who were likely targets,
were not in the vicinity at the time, having just left a nearby
temporary building. Some 150 buildings and stalls in the area
were damaged by the blast.
The attack comes amid an escalation in fighting between Indian
security forces and various armed Kashmiri separatist groups.
At least 70 people lost their lives in a series of clashes just
in the week prior to October 1. More than 30,000 people have died
in the past 12 years of fighting over the status of Kashmira
constant source of conflict between India and Pakistan since the
partition of the subcontinent and independence from British colonial
rule in 1947.
In a media statement released in Srinagar, the Islamic extremist
organisation Jaish-e-Mohammad initially claimed responsibility
for the latest attack and named those involved. The group was
established by Massood Azhar, one of three Kashmiri militants
released by the Indian government in a deal struck to end the
hijacking of an Indian airlines plane to Afghanistan in late 1999.
Through a spokesman in Pakistan, however, the organisation has
since attempted to distance itself from any involvement.
US preparations for a military strike against the Taliban regime
in Afghanistan have inflamed the political situation in Kashmir.
A number of Kashmiri separatist groups have links with the Taliban
and Islamic fundamentalist organisations in Pakistan, and are
stridently opposed to the support being given by Pakistans
military ruler General Pervez Musharraf to the US military.
Jaish-e-Mohammad along with Lashkar-e-Toiba, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen
and other Islamic fundamentalists organised a strike in Jammu
and Kashmir on September 21 in support of protests inside Pakistan
against Musharraf. Protesters in Srinagar burned US flags and
chanted slogans in support of the Taliban. The Al Umar Mujahideen
group issued a statement calling for the Muslim world to
unite and fight against America in the event of any US attack
on Afghanistan.
The strike brought to the surface deep rifts within Kashmiri
organisations. The leadership of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference
(APHC) called on the residents of Jammu and Kashmir not to support
the protest and expressed its unanimous support for Musharrafs
realist, bold and forthright stand. APHC chairman
Abdul Ghani Bhat had previously condemned the September 11 attacks
on New York and Washington.
As well as being aimed against Indian rule in Jammu and Kashmir,
this weeks bomb attack on the state legislature appears
to be directed against Kashmiri organisations such as the APHC
that in the past have advocated negotiation with New Delhi over
the political status of Kashmir and have now backed Musharrafs
stance. Following Bhats opposition to the September 21 strike,
a coalition of Islamic groups warned him to get ready to
pay a heavy price.
Tensions have also been fanned by the communalist actions of
the Indian governmenta coalition led by the Hindu fundamentalist
Bharathya Janatha Party (BJP)which last week banned the
Islamic Students Movement of India (SIMI) and launched a nationwide
police crackdown. At least 240 SIMI activists have been arrested,
including its president Shahid Badr. In Uttar Pradesh, police
killed four people when they opened fire on protesters opposing
the ban.
The government of Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee accused
SIMI of inciting communalism and having connections
with the Al-Qaeda group of Osama bin Laden but has provided no
evidence. Indian opposition parties including the Congress Party,
the Samjwadi Party and the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M)
immediately criticised the ban as a ploy to polarise Hindu voters
and bolster the BJPs support in upcoming state elections.
In Kashmir, APHC leader Syed Ali Geelani denounced the charges
against SIMI as baseless.
A boon for Vajpayee
Whether Jaish-e-Mohammad was responsible or not, this weeks
bomb blast in Srinagar has certainly been a boon for Vajpayee.
As well as imposing tougher security measures in Jammu and Kashmir,
the Indian government has seized on the attack to denounce Pakistans
support for Kashmiri separatists and press the US to brand its
rival as a terrorist-supporting nation.
New Delhi has been desperately seeking to regain ground in
Washington after the Bush administration abruptly shifted its
stance towards Pakistan following the September 11 attacks on
the US. Over the last three years, the US has been discernibly
shifting support away from its Cold War ally, Pakistan, and establishing
a closer strategic and economic relationship with Indiamoves
that have been welcomed with open arms by the Vajpayee government.
In the space of just a few weeks, however, Washington has dropped
its criticisms of the military junta in Pakistan and provided
the country with desperately needed economic aid in exchange for
Musharrafs support for the US war drive against Afghanistaneffectively
passing over Indias offer of a partnership to fight Islamic
extremism.
In Indian ruling circles, concerns have been raised over the
implications of the US shift towards Islamabad. New Delhi issued
a statement welcoming the recent US decision to freeze the assets
of groups alleged to have links to bin Laden, including the Kashmiri
organisation Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin, but called for further initiatives.
We hope that we will see more such organisations being targetted
as the US spreads the web wider with such groups that are known
to indulge in terrorist activities and have huge financial networks,
a spokesperson said.
India has bluntly accused Pakistan of being responsible for
the Srinagar blast and demanded that it take action to curb the
activities of Kashmiri separatist groups on its soil. The Indian
External Affairs Ministry issued a statement on October 1, insisting
that Pakistan continues to be a country that aids, abets
and sponsors terrorism and terrorist networks. It then warned:
At a time when the democratic world has formed a broad and
determined coalition against international terrorism, India cannot
accept such manifestations of hate and terror from across its
borders.
Two top Indian ministersNational Security Advisor Brajesh
Mishra and External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singhhave been
in Washington over the past week seeking reassurances from the
Bush administration that it still wants close relations with New
Delhi and pressing for further US action against Kashmiri separatist
groups as part of its war against terrorism.
In an extraordinary letter, hand-delivered to Bush by Singh
on October 1, Vajpayee issued a thinly-veiled threat of retaliation
against Pakistan. Referring to the US preparations for military
strikes against Afghanistan, the Indian Prime Minister indicated
that he understood Washingtons core responsibility
for security of the American people. He then added: There
has been understandable anger in the country at this wanton act
of violence. Incidents of this kind raise questions for our security
which, as a democratically elected leader of India, I have to
address in our supreme national interest. Pakistan must understand
that there is a limit to the patience of the people of India.
Indias Home Minister L K Advani, a hardline Hindu extremist,
has gone one step further. On October 2, he again branded Pakistan
as a terrorist country and then insisted if
it wants to prove its seriousness in this regard [fighting terrorism]...
It should hand over Jaish-e-Mohammad leaders to India. The
parallel with the US demand for the Taliban to hand over bin Laden
and his followers is unmistakable, as are the implicationsif
Pakistan fails to do so, India will respond militarily. Advani
also reiterated Indias demand that the US should not just
concentrate on Afghanistan, but should take action against all
terrorist camps, outfits and countries who have been harbouring
terrorists.
Indias junior foreign minister Omar Abdullah told the
BBCs Question Time India yesterday that India should send
its forces into Pakistan to destroy terrorist training camps.
It does not have to be [done] overtly, he said. You
can do it covertly and destroy these camps because otherwise bleeding
by a thousand cuts is really not the way to go about it.
The junior home minister I D Swami reinforced the message, saying:
Striking terrorist camps in PoK [Pakistan-occupied Kashmir]
has always been a possibility.
The Bush administration has condemned the Srinagar attack and
offered reassurances to India, in general terms, that its war
against terrorism is not unidirectional and
will include targets other than Afghanistan in the future. The
Indian media has made much of the fact that Bush dropped in during
a meeting between Singh and US National Security Advisor Condoleezza
Rice at the White House and held informal talks with the Indian
foreign minister. But concerned over the ramifications for the
already shaky Pakistani regime, the US has offered New Delhi nothing
tangible.
For its part, Pakistan has condemned the attack in Srinagar
and denied any involvement. A Pakistani foreign ministry statement
said that the attack was especially reprehensible as it
appears to be aimed at maligning the legitimate struggle of the
Kashmiri people for their right to self-determination. Other
top Pakistani officials have openly accused India of organising
the attack as a means of enlisting US support against Kashmiri
groups.
Musharraf, however, is walking a very fine line. With the support
of the military high command and Islamic parties, he ousted Narwaz
Sharif in 1999 after the former Pakistani prime minister caved
in to US demands to rein in Kashmiri separatist fighters in the
Kargil area of Jammu and Kashmir. Now he is facing growing protests
inside Pakistan over his support for the US military preparations
against the Taliban.
After the US froze the financial assets of Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin,
Pakistan was obliged to close the organisations offices.
If Musharraf is forced to take any further action against Kashmiri
groups, he could easily face the same political fate as his predecessor.
The events of the last week indicate that Kashmir, which has
been the trigger for two wars between India and Pakistan over
the last half century, is already a tinderbox. Any US military
action against Afghanistan will have immediate political repercussions
inside Kashmir, which in turn poses the danger of open conflict
between the two nuclear-armed rivals on the Indian subcontinent.
See Also:
Pakistan's military regime
rallies to US war coalition
[25 September 2001]
In the name of America's
"war on terrorism"
Hindu regime in India fans anti-Muslim sentiment
[20 September 2001]
Recriminations follow the
collapse of the India-Pakistan summit
[30 July 2001]
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