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India: Ayodhya campaign heightens the danger of communal conflict
and war
By Sarath Kumara
12 February 2002
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The World Hindu Council (VHP), a Hindu extremist group connected
to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), is pressing ahead
with plans to construct a temple to the Hindu god Ram in the northern
Indian city of Ayodhya. The VHP insists on building the temple
on the site of the Babri Masjid (mosque), which was torn down
by Hindu fanatics in 1992. The campaign threatens to fan religious
communalism in the region right at the point when India and Pakistan
are engaged in a tense military standoff.
The VHP has set a deadline of March 12 for the BJP-led government
to hand over the land to allow the construction to begin. To press
their demands, the organisation launched a march from Ayodhya
to New Delhi late last month but was only able to attract several
thousand supporters. In 1992, the VHP, along with sister groups
such as the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), mobilised hundreds
of thousands to break through a security cordon and physically
destroy the mosque.
The land on which the mosque stood is subject to an ongoing
legal battle, which the Supreme Court has placed in the governments
hands. The VHP, RSS and other Hindu chauvinist organisations are
demanding that they be permitted to begin building on the area
surrounding the actual site of the mosque, pending the outcome
of the legal case. Over the weekend VHP spokesmen announced that
they would start moving carved stones and columns to the site
on March 15, regardless of any decision by the government or courts.
The issue is a highly inflammatory one. The destruction of
the Babri Masjid in December 1992 triggered rioting throughout
the region. In India, more than 3,000 people were killed and thousands
were injured in the worst communal violence since the partition
of the subcontinent in 1947. In Bombay, Muslim shops and houses
were ransacked and looting, burning and pogroms continued for
nearly a month. In Bangladesh and Pakistan, Muslim extremists
responded by attacking Hindus.
The Hindu fundamentalists claim that Mir Baqi, one of the Mogul
Emperor Baburs generals, built the mosque in the 16th century
after razing a Hindu temple. The destruction of the mosque some
four centuries later is part of their broader, completely reactionary
agenda of establishing the domination of Hinduism and Hindu culture
in India and erasing the legacy of the Muslim invaders.
According to RSS leader S. Sudarshan, Muslims in India, who number
in the tens of millions, must accept the culture
of the majority community.
Key figures in the BJP-led government are long-standing RSS
members, including Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Home
Minister L.K. Advani. All of them have taken the RSS pledge: For
the betterment of my sacred Hindu religion, Hindu culture, and
Hindu community, I will devote myself to the prosperity of my
Holy Motherland.
Advani and other BJP leaders faced charges for their direct
involvement in the demolition of the Babri Masjid but none have
ever been convicted. Last October members of the BJPs youth
organisation went one step further and tried to deface the intricate
inlaid marble that covers the Taj Mahal, built in the 17th century
by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan.
The Vajpayee government is treading a fine line over the issue.
None of the BJP leaders have backed away from their role in the
Babri Masjids destruction. As recently as last July, Advani
described the point at which the mob of Hindu fanatics broke through
the police cordon around the mosque complex as the happiest
moment of his life. Conveniently the charges against him
over the affair were dropped last year on a legal technicality.
Moreover, the BJP is facing a series of state elections over
the next two weeks, including in its stronghold of Uttar Pradesh
where Ayodhya is located. The party was routed in elections held
in five states last year and cannot afford further losses. There
is no doubt that BJP leaders in Uttar Pradesh are hoping to capitalise
on the VHPs campaign to build the Ram temple to obscure
the deepening social divide in one of Indias largest and
poorest states.
Government opposition
At the same time, however, Vajpayee has so far not agreed to
the VHPs demands. He has denied that he promised VHP leaders
that a solution would be found before their March
12 deadline. He has called on them to respect the rule of law
and warned that any attempt to flout the courts could create a
law-and-order problem. He has been supported by the hardline Advani,
who has called on the VHP to follow the prime ministers
advice.
There are several reasons for the BJPs apparent reluctance
to openly push the Ayodhya issue. The party does not hold a majority
in parliament and only took office in 1998 with the support of
a number of minor, regional based parties. To form the National
Democratic Alliance (NDA), the BJP had to shelve parts of its
Hindu communalist agenda, including the building of the Ram temple,
as its coalition parties were concerned about losing the Muslim
vote.
More fundamentally, sections of the Indian ruling class supported
the BJP and its Hindu fundamentalist agenda as a means of diverting
attention from the growing social polarisation produced by the
economic restructuring program implemented in the 1990s. Yet any
widespread outbreak of communal violence could undermine the agenda
of privatisation and cutbacks to social spending, and inhibit
the flow of foreign investment.
As a result, editorials in the number of major Indian newspapers
have urged Vajpayee to take a tough stand against the VHP. The
Hindustan Times, for instance, commented: It is a
matter of deep regret that one organisation, with its dubious
claim to speak for the entire Hindu community, is allowed to hold
the country to ransom with its provocative postures. Some of the
speeches made by their leaders should have landed them in jail
straightaway for violating the simple norms of decency, not to
mention abusing a particular religious group.
The Indian Express also had harsh words for the VHP:
Basically, the process of the resolution of the Ayodhya
dispute, if it is already afoot, must proceed at its own pace.
It cannot allow itself to be disturbed by the nuisance value,
fast diminishing, of a bunch of hoodlums.
In the aftermath of September 11, another factor has entered
Vajpayees calculations. He has exploited the Bush administrations
war against terrorism to order to aggressively push
Indias demands that Pakistan rein in armed Kashmiri separatist
groups. Following the attack on the Indian parliament building
on December 13, New Delhi issued a series of demands on Islamabad
and threatened to take unspecified military action if they were
not met.
Vajpayees ability to denounce Pakistan for not taking
action against Islamic fundamentalist groups would, however, be
compromised if his government were seen to be too closely identified
with the VHP and its provocative communal campaign. Moreover,
if the BJP-led government were to openly champion the Hindu extremist
cause, it might disrupt Indias developing ties with the
US. The Bush administration might be forced to break its studied
silence on the fundamentalist agenda of its Indian allies.
The major Indian opposition parties, including Congress and
the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M), have made timid
protests about the VHP campaign. Congress leader Mun Singh warned
that the VHP is playing with fire. The CPI-M Polit
Bureau stated last month: The speeches made in Ayodhya,
Lucknow and Kanpur were full of inflammatory rhetoric against
the minorities. Samajawade Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav
demanded a ban on the VHP.
But for all their claims to defend secularism, these parties
do not hesitate to flirt with, appeal to and at times whip up
communal sentiment. Just over a year ago, the Italian-born Sonia
Gandhi, widow of assassinated prime minister Rajiv Gandhi and
now Congress leader, sought to prove her Hindu credentials by
bathing in the Ganges during the Kumbh Mela religious festival.
Former CPI-M leader and West Bengal Chief Minister Jyoti Basu
has shared a political platform with Vajpayee as part of a joint
anti-Congress campaign.
For its part, the VHP is well aware that its campaign has the
potential to inflame communal tensions and heighten the dangers
of war with Pakistan. Its leaders have been clamouring for Vajpayee
to take an even more aggressive stance. They have indicated that
the only circumstance in which they are prepared to call a halt
to the construction of the Ram temple is if the Indian army attacks
Pakistani-controlled Kashmiran action that would almost
certainly trigger war between the two nuclear-armed powers.
See Also:
India continues to stoke conflict with
Pakistan
[4 February 2002]
Indian government
cracks down on Islamic student organisation
[31 October 2001]
Hindu regime in India
fans anti-Muslim sentiment
20 September 2001]
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