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Indian bomb blasts: the end product of communal politics
By Sarath Kumara
1 September 2003
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Two devastating bomb blasts in Bombay, Indias financial
centre, last week claimed the lives of at least 52 people and
injured more than 150. One exploded at the Zaveri Bazaar, the
citys jewelry district, near the Hindu Mumbadevi temple.
The other blast took place near one of the citys main tourist
attractionsthe Gateway of Indiaa British monument
built during the colonial rule of India.
The two bombs, both planted in taxis, detonated within 15 minutes
of each other around midday last Monday. Both areas were crowded
and the results were indiscriminate casualties. According to police,
the two taxis had compressed gas cylinders, adding to the force
of the blasts, which hurled car parts more than 100 metres.
There have been four other explosions in Bombay since last
December but the latest was by far the most destructive. It is
the worst in the city since a series of bomb blasts in 1993 claimed
the lives of 260 people and injured hundreds.
No one has claimed responsibility for last weeks bombings.
The police immediately accused Kashmiri separatist militia groupsLashkar-e-Taiba
and Jaish-e-Mohammadas well as the outlawed Student Islamic
Movement of India (SIMI) but provided no evidence of their involvement.
A police spokesman announced yesterday that five suspects had
been detained. No details have been released.
Whoever was responsible, the attack was a deeply reactionary
act that has already been seized upon by the ruling Bharathiya
Janatha Party (BJP) and its Hindu extremist allies to foment further
communal antagonisms. In Bombay itself, thousands of BJP activists
and supporters of the fascistic Shiv Sena party held a demonstration
last Thursday.
There is widespread concern about the prospect of communal
violence. Every moment, I feel there is danger in Bombay.
But still, I have to put my life on the line and go to work today,
a Muslim tailor told the media. Yet thousands of people from all
religious backgrounds have flocked to the citys hospitals
to donate blood to help the victims. In the Zaveri Bazaar,
Muslims and Hindus helped each other, pulling bloody victims from
the smoking wreckage of cars and shops, the Hindu
reported.
By contrast, Indias Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani
immediately stirred up communal hostilities by pointing the finger
at Indias rival, Pakistan. While he did not accuse Islamabad
of being directly involved in the bombing, he nevertheless blamed
Pakistan for not doing enough to stop terrorism. Pakistans
war of terrorism... is not directed only at Jammu and Kashmir
and Punjab, its targeted at destabilising the country and
its secular fabric, he said.
Islamabad issued an official statement condemning the attack.
But Advani dismissed the comments, demanding that Pakistan prove
its sincerity by handing over 20 people alleged to have
taken part in an attack on the Indian parliament in December 2001.
Following the incident, the two nuclear-armed countries were poised
on the brink of war after New Delhi initiated a massive troop
build up along the border with Pakistan.
While there is no indication of an immediate return to military
confrontation, the resort to communal politics has a logic of
its own. Following the explosions in Bombay, Indian Prime Minister
Atal Behari Vajpayee warned that planned talks between the two
countries would not go ahead if terrorist activities
continued. The Pakistani foreign ministry immediately responded
by declaring that it was Indias responsibility to maintain
normalcy in areas of tension like Kashmir.
The BJP is directly responsible for heightening communal tensions
inside India. There are some indications that the bombs may have
been directed against Hindus from the state of Gujarat. One of
the two bombs was detonated near the Gujarati section of Bombays
Zaveri Bazaar. Three of the previous blastson December 6,
January 28 and March 4took place in the area of Bombay known
as the Gujarati section.
The bombings took place after a communal pogrom in Gujarat
in March 2002 by mobs of BJP, Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and
Bajrang Dal supporters that resulted in the deaths of an estimated
2,500 Muslims. The violence, which had the tacit support of the
BJP government in Gujarat, left 150,000 people homeless. Gujarat
Chief Minister Narendra Modi and sections of the BJP leadership
exploited the communal polarisation and directly appealed to Hindu
chauvinist sentiment to win last years state elections.
Eighteen months later, the Gujarat pogrom is still a source
of communal tensions. Despite compelling evidence, no one has
been convicted for the murders, rapes and other violent acts that
took place. The police, courts and prosecutors have shown systematic
bias in favour of the accused. The police have summarily closed
many cases without any significant investigation or attempt to
find the culprits. It has recently been revealed that eyewitnesses
in one high profile casethe burning of Best Bakerywere
intimidated into recanting their testimony.
As even the Indian press has noted, the persecution of Muslims
in Gujarat could have provided fresh recruits to various Islamic
extremist organisations. A Hindustan Times columnist speculated
that some of those involved in the Bombay bombings may have been
Indian Muslims who have found no justice within the system
and who have been traumatised and brutalised by such events as
the Gujarat riots.
Communal tensions have also been exacerbated by the long-running
campaign for the construction of a temple on the site of Babri
Masjid mosque in Ayodhya that was destroyed by a Hindu mob in
December 1992. The BJP and leaders like Advani were directly involved
in the destruction of the mosque, which triggered widespread communal
violence throughout the Indian subcontinent resulting in more
than 3,000 deaths.
Bombay was one of the worst affected cities. Hindu mobs led
by Shiv Sena attacked Muslim homes and businesses in the city
leaving 575 people dead and another 50,000 homeless. A series
of bomb blasts in Bombay in 1993 were attributed to Muslim extremists
seeking revenge.
The BJP exploited Ayodhya to whip up Hindu chauvinist sentiment
to consolidate its political base. Having come to power, however,
Vajpayee and Advani sought to play down the issue and left the
courts to decide on the divisive issue of building a Hindu temple.
That protracted process is reaching a conclusion after the Archeology
Survey of India recently presented a report to the courts claiming
to have found evidence that the site of the destroyed mosque was
previously used by Hindus.
Hindu chauvinist organisations seized on the report to insist
that construction of a temple to the Hindu god Ram should begin.
VHP General Secretary Pravin Togadia announced: We have
decided to start a mass movement to mobilise support for the temple
in Ayodhya. BJP president Venkaiah Naidu declared that this
dispute should be put to rest and all of us should come together
to rebuild the temple.
A senior BJP leader last week commented to the Hindu
newspaper: We will be able to get back our Hindu vote with
the help of Ram temple issue. Incapable of addressing the
appalling social conditions facing the majority of the Indian
population, the BJP, with the complicity of the opposition parties,
has no compunction in whipping up communal divisions to shore
up its declining political support.
After a string of electoral losses, the BJP won last years
poll in Gujarat through a vicious anti-Muslim campaign, to which
Congress and other opposition parties adapted. In November, the
BJP faces state elections in five statesthe capital Delhi,
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and Mizoramas well
as national elections next year. The BJPs strategy is already
evident: to whip up and openly appeal to chauvinist sentiment.
It is this fetid political atmosphere that has produced the
bomb blasts in Bombay.
See Also:
A travesty of justice:
Acquittals in cases of communal violence in India
[25 August 2003]
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