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Gujarat temple massacre inflames tensions between India and
Pakistan
By Sarath Kumara
8 October 2002
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A September 24 attack on a Hindu temple in the western Indian
state of Gujarat, in which at least 42 people were killed, has
inflamed communalist tensions and re-kindled the conflict between
India and Pakistan. The two countries are continuing a military
standoff over the disputed territory of Kashmir.
Two suspected Islamic gunmen, armed with AK-47 assault rifles
and hand grenades, entered the 16-hectare Swaminarayan temple
complex in the state capital Gandhinagar and started shooting
indiscriminately and hurling grenades. Hundreds of people were
in the temple at the time. Those confirmed dead included six women
and four children, while more than 100 people were injured.
Vipul Soni, 15, who was at the temple at the time, told Reuters
that the gunmen barged into the temple and started firing
... I managed to run and somehow escaped. Priti Nahata,
16, said: I am fortunate to be alive.
Muslims in Gujarat immediately fled to relief camps established
during anti-Muslim pogroms in February. Madinaben, a Muslim woman,
told a reporter: We were afraid when we heard that terrorists
had opened fire inside a Gandhinagar temple ... it was impossible
for us to stay at home without fearing for our lives. Having
had her home razed in the February attacks, she fled with her
three-year-old daughter.
Shiraj-ul-Haq, who runs a cycle repair shop, said: I
keep moving from my house to these camps. There is always a lurking
fear. After spending five months in a relief camp, I had been
home for two months when this happened. Now I am back here and
dont know when Ill be able to head for home.
No group has claimed responsibility for the assault. The Indian
authorities claim to have recovered a letter from the dead assailants,
which indicated they belonged to a group called Tehrik-e-Qassas
(The Movement for Retribution).
An Indian-based web site Rediff.com commented that the
assailants did not appear to be Kashmiris. In fact, even
if they were locals, it wont be such a surprise in Gujarat,
which witnessed widespread communal violence this year. There
are several young boys who saw their loved ones being killed and
raped. This was a reference to Februarys pogroms instigated
after a train was set alight at Godhra, allegedly by Muslims,
killing 58 people, who were portrayed in the media as Hindu activists.
The Gujarat government of Chief Minister Narendra Modi was implicated
in the pogroms.
Whoever was responsible for the temple massacre, the atrocity
has only played into the hands of Hindu extremists, as well as
the Indian and Pakistani governments, both of which exploit religious
chauvinism to divide the population and distract attention from
the increasingly oppressive conditions facing the masses across
the sub-continent.
Indian political leaders, including Prime Minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee, his Deputy L.K. Advani and opposition Congress leader
Sonia Gandhi, rushed to the temple, expressing sympathy for the
victims and immediately blaming Pakistan, with Advani denouncing
enemies of the country.
Rejecting these charges, the Pakistan Foreign Ministry condemned
highly irresponsible statements from some quarters accusing
Pakistan of involvement in the terrorist attack. But, for
his part, Pakistans President Pervez Musharraf seized upon
the murder of seven Christian charity workers in Karachi on September
25the day after the Gujarat killingsto point an accusing
finger at the Indian intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis
Wing (RAW), without producing any evidence.
Leading the charge for the Indian government, Advani accused
Musharraf of directly instigating the temple attack. Referring
to Musharrafs speech last month at the UN General Assembly,
Advani said: In fact there was a speech a few days ago in
which our enemy went to the United Nations and spoke of Gujarat.
This indicates that they had planned this for some time. And this
attack was to implement that plan.
Foreign Minister Yashwant Sinha announced that the attackers
had been identified as Pakistani citizens and traced to either
of two Pakistan-based groups, Jaish-e-Mohammed or Lashkar-e-Taiba.
But he produced no evidence to substantiate his allegations. Supporters
of Vajpayees Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP) organised a demonstration
in Delhi where they shouted: Down with Pervez Musharraf,
Stop killing of innocents, Down with Pakistan.
Not to be outdone, the Congress Party, which falsely claims
to stand for secularism, called for a bandh (a general shutdown
and strike) in Gujarat against the killings. It openly appealed
to Hindu fundamentalism, knowing full well that such actions could
spark communal violence. The Congress leader in Gujarat, Sankarsingh
Vaghela, who recently joined the party from the Hindu extremist
Rastriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), issued the call after consulting
the national leadership in Delhi.
To outmanoeuvre Congress, the Hindu chauvinist Vishwa Hindu
Parshad (World Hindu Council-VHP), whose leaders and members were
accused of instigating the February violence, called an all-India
bandh. Though the VHP claimed the bandh was a success, media reports
indicated sparse support. The Times of India reported that
the bandh succeeded in Mumbai (the capital of the western Indian
state of Maharastra) and Gujarat, but the rest of the country
showed little enthusiasm for it. Isolated incidents of stabbing
and the stoning of shops and vehicles were reported.
Bal Thackeray, the leader of Shiv Sena, a fascistic outfit,
stepped up pressure on the government to attack Pakistan. Vajpayee
keeps repeating that we will not tolerate militancy, he
declared. But there is no action to be seen. Thackeray
warned that Shiv Sena could quit the government.
Vajpayee opposes bandh
Confronted by growing disaffection and a series of defeats
in state elections over the past two years, key figures in Vajpayees
BJP leadership, together with their allies in the VHP, Shiva Sena
and the RSS, have been bent on inciting communalism and conflict
with Pakistan. This has led to deepening social tensions and encouraged
counter-attacks by Islamic fundamentalists and Kashmiri separatists.
However, while making accusations against Pakistan, Vajpayee
and the Delhi leadership distanced themselves from the VHPs
bandh call, and were anxious to curb immediate communal violence.
Police and security forces were deployed in Gujarat, while police
in Maharastra made preventive arrests on the eve of the bandh.
The Indian Express reported that Vajpayee warned Gujarat
Chief Minister Modi not to allow a repeat of religious disturbances
in the state.
As a lifelong member of the RSS, Vajpayee has no fundamental
differences with Modi or other hawkish members of the BJP. His
cautious attitude was a reaction to concerns expressed within
the Indian establishment, as well as by the US government, in
recent months.
Indian business leaders publicly opposed the bandh call. While
condemning the temple attack, Confederation of Indian Industry
director Chandrajit Banerjee said: We strongly feel that
such events should not be politicised, as bandhs are not the right
form of response to an act of terrorism. All India Association
of Industries president Vijay Kalantri said the bandh would cost
more than 10 billion rupees (about $US200 million).
There are wider reservations in ruling circles with the BJPs
Hindu chauvinist agenda, which disrupts efforts to secure foreign
investment and push through further economic restructuring. The
Indian Supreme Court last month endorsed the Election Commissions
rejection of the BJPs demand for early elections in Gujarat,
which would have fanned communalism. The media generally denounced
the BJPs demand as well.
US State Department spokesman Richard Boucher issued a statement
on the temple killings. Its imperative that violent
groups ... in the region not be given an opportunity to achieve
their goals, he said, insisting that the US was promoting
dialogue as the means to resolve tensions and conflict in
South Asia.
For its own reasons, the Bush administration has applied pressure
to India and Pakistan to back away from a war. It is concerned
that a conflagration would affect its own drive to consolidate
its grip over Afghanistan and strengthen its hand throughout Central
and South Asia, not to speak of its planned invasion of Iraq.
But by enlisting the support of both the Pakistani and Indian
regimes for its aggression in Afghanistan, the US has only fueled
regional tensions.
See Also:
More than 600 dead in Indian Kashmir
as election draws to a close
[7 October 2002]
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