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Indias ruling party abetted communal carnage in Gujarat
By Keith Jones
5 March 2002
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There is compelling evidence that leaders of the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP), the dominant force in Indias coalition
government, abetted the anti-Muslim riots that convulsed the western
state of Gujarat last week.
Not only do local activists from the BJP and the BJP-allied
Vishwa Hindu Parishad (or World Hindu Council) figure prominently
among those named by police as orchestrators of the communal violence,
there have been numerous reports from journalists and Muslim victims
that police stood by and watched as mobs mobilized by BJP and
VHP activists attacked Muslim neighborhoods and villages. Ostensibly
many of these mobs had formed to voice their support for a bandh
or general strike called by the VHP and backed by the state BJP
to protest an earlier atrocity in the Gujarat district town of
Godhra allegedly perpetrated by Muslims.
Indias National Human Rights Commission has demanded
that the BJP-controlled Gujarat government explain what it has
done to suppress communal violence in the state, adding that reports
suggest inaction by the police force and the highest authorities
in the State to deal with this situation.
The major opposition parties, including the Congress and the
Communist Party of India (Marxist), have issued a statement condemning
the Gujarat government for its abject failure to protect
human life and property. We are of the view that without
the criminal negligence, if not connivance of the State Government,
such dastardly events could not have happened.
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi has all but publicly defended
the anti-Muslim violence. First he noted that Every action
has an equal and opposite reaction. Then, in a second reference
to the Godhra attack, Modi commended the states population
for their remarkable restraint under grave provocation.
Needless to say, Modi is rejecting all calls for an inquiry into
the police and state governments handling of the crisis.
A report in the London Daily Telegraph suggests that
Indias central government, which is controlled by the BJP-dominated
National Democratic Alliance, also played an important role in
allowing the anti-Muslim violence to continue.
The Telegraph cited an unnamed senior military officer
as saying that early last Thursday evening the military had 13
transport aircraft fuelled and ready to fly troops to Ahmedabad
from Jodhpur in neighboring Rajasthan, But for an inexplicable
reason, even though it was apparent the state police were proving
incapable, 1,000 troops were flown out only the next morning.
Furthermore, when the troops did arrive, they were not provided
with proper transport or intelligence. When the army was
eventually deployed on Friday evening, it was not taken to the
trouble spots, says a second officer, described by the
Telegraph as an intelligence official . The army was
merely asked to display itself in areas from which the Muslims
had already fled. It was a calculated decision by the states
Hindu nationalist government.
The violence in Gujarat is Indias worst communal bloodletting
since the wave of rioting set off by the December 1992 razing
of the Babri Masjid mosque in Ayodhya. Although the BJP leadership,
in deference to its coalition partners, has backed off from its
previous commitment to build a Hindu temple on the Ayodhya site,
the party is inextricably connected to the Ayodhya issue, since
it was the BJPs main rallying cry in the early 1990s.
Gruesome violence
On Monday, the Gujarat police reported that the death toll
in six days of gruesome violence had reached 572. The communal
carnage was precipitated by the February 27 attack at Godhra on
several railway cars carrying Hindu fundamentalist activists back
to Gujarat from Ayodhya, where they had gone to support the scheme
to erect a Hindu temple on the site of the razed mosque. Allegedly
carried out by a mob of Muslims, the Godhra attack left 58 dead.
In the ensuing 48 hours, communal violence erupted in Ahmedabad,
Rajkot, Surat, Baroda and Gujarats other major urban centers
and in many Gujarat villages. In harrowing scenes, Muslim men,
women and children were bludgeoned to death, set ablaze after
being doused with gasoline or burned alive in their homes. Muslim-owned
tea-stalls, shops and businesses were systematically looted and
torched. Only after the mobilization of army personnel and repeated
firings on riotous crowdsthe police report 97 deaths due
to police firingdid the violence abate.
Significantly, outside of Gujarat, Indias only major
state still governed by the BJP, there were only isolated instances
of violence. And the VHPs call for a nationwide general
strike Friday, March 1 was completely ignored.
In a nationally-televised address Saturday, Indias Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee called the communal violence in
Gujarat a black mark on the nations forehead,
adding that it had lowered Indias prestige in the
world.
However, the leader of the BJP said nothing about the actions
of the Gujarat state government, nor the hostility against Muslims
which has been whipped up over the Ayodhya issue by Hindu activists
aligned with his own party and echoed in his own anti-Pakistan
war-mongering.
Vajpayees immediate fear is that the events in Gujarat
could cause the NDA coalition to collapse. Several coalition partners,
including the National Conference of Jammu and Kashmir and the
Telugu Desam Party, draw considerable Muslim support. They have
justified their alliance with the Hindu chauvinist BJP on the
grounds that they can keep its communalism in check. The Gujarat
events come in the aftermath of the BJPs rout in last months
state elections, a rout that has changed the national political
equation and caused all of Indias political players to reassess
their position.
While trying to keep the NDA coalition in tact, Vajpayee also
faces the problem of conciliating his partys increasingly
restless Hindu nationalist base. Vajpayee cancelled his trip to
last weekends Commonwealth heads of government meeting in
Australia to deal with the crisis in Gujarat. But he has spent
much, if not most, of his time, consulting with BJP officials,
Hindu religious leaders and leaders of the Hindu supremacist Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) on how to persuade the VHP not to proceed
with its plan to defy Indias Supreme Court and begin constructing
a temple on the Ayodhya site on March 15.
A third concern for the BJP leadership is that the communal
violence has shattered the governments attempts to gain
international backing in its conflict with Pakistan by contrasting
a purportedly democratic and tolerant India with a military-ruled
Pakistan that is allied with Islamic terrorism. The truth is both
the Indian and Pakistani elites have tried to defect social discontent
by fanning communalism and religious fundamentalism.
In a strong indication that the BJP intends to try to weather
the current crisis by continuing, if not intensifying, its belligerence
against Pakistan, senior BJP officials have claimed that the attack
on the Hindu activists at Godhra was organized by Pakistani intelligence
with the aim of provoking anti-Muslim riots and sullying Indias
reputation. This claim has a double-purpose: to fan hostility
to Pakistan and cover up the BJPs responsibility for the
communal carnage in Gujarat.
See Also:
Indian state election losses intensify
tensions in ruling coalition
[4 March 2002]
India: Ayodhya campaign heightens
the danger of communal conflict and war
[12 February 2002]
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