Home

Why Subscribe ?

Popularise CC

Join News Letter

Twitter

Face Book

Editor's Picks

Feed Burner

Read CC In Your
Own Language

Mumbai Terror

Financial Crisis

Iraq

AfPak War

Peak Oil

Alternative Energy

Climate Change

US Imperialism

US Elections

Palestine

Latin America

Communalism

Gender/Feminism

Dalit

Globalisation

Humanrights

Economy

India-pakistan

Kashmir

Environment

Book Review

Gujarat Pogrom

WSF

Arts/Culture

India Elections

Archives

Links

Submission Policy

About CC

Disclaimer

Fair Use Notice

Contact Us

Search Our Archive

 



Our Site

Web

Subscribe To Our
News Letter

Name: E-mail:

Printer Friendly Version

Riots After Riots: It Happens Only In India

By Syed Ali Mujtaba

17 April, 2010
Countercurrents.org

Communal riots have become part and parcel of Indian social life. The birth pang of the country was on the throes of communal riots. The history of last sixty years or so to a section of the Indian society, who has been on the receiving end of communal riots, is nothing but a history of wanton destruction of their lives and properties.

The irony is, the psyche of the countrymen has become immune to such development that there is little effort either from the government of the day or the civil groups to stop such well planned and well orchestrated communal mayhem in the nation that swears by the word peace, unity in diversity, peaceful coexistence and such blah, blah….

The year 2010 so far has witnessed two communal riots, one in Bareilly a small city in Uttar Pradesh, the other in Hyderabad, the capital of Andhra Pradesh. While the incidence of communal violence in Bareilly is rare, Hyderabad remains on the seismic zone of communal flare-ups.

Genesis Barielly riots

The genesis Barielly riot was the Bara-wafaat procession on March 2, 2010 by the Muslims. It started when a small group of Muslim boys not more than 30, were coming to join in the main procession and they passed through a Hindu locality, where hot words were exchanged and this followed a volley of brickbats on these boys making them bleed profusely. The fact that the brickbats in such huge quantity were kept on roof tops suggests some planning must have been done before the flash point

However, the group of boys somehow made it to the main procession, which characteristically was not a procession where some 30-40 thousand individuals gathered, but of much smaller in number who after seeing their co religionist bleeding retaliated by burning the shops that was indiscriminate.

Unlike the popular belief that it was only Hindu shops were torched, the fact remains that there were many Muslim shops which were completely burned down.

This resulted in the clamping down of the curfew, and after six days when every one thought the curfew would be finally be lifted, the administration on March 8, arrested the powerful Sunni Muslim cleric Maulana Tauqeer Raza Khan, the National president of powerful Ittehad e Millat (IMC) on the charges of inciting the trouble.

Bareilly is great seat of Barellvi sect of Sunni Muslim Shchool and the Maulana is no baby sheep. This made the supporters of Maulana to sit on dharna, demanding his unconditional release of their leader. Their number was around 30, 000 and yet they displayed remarkable discipline and none reported to have done anything negative except peacefully sitting in Satyagrah for over 30 hours. Their number increased with each passing moment.

In was after three days Maulana Tauqeer was released from jail 11th March. The gathered crowd after hearing the release of their leader started dispersing off peacefully to their homes. At this moment the goons of the Bajrang Dal and the BJP started attacked the unarmed Muslims in which two of them sustained severe cut injuries by sword.

At the same time the Bajrang Dal and similar outfits started arson in many parts of city and got busy vandalizing, looting and burning Muslim owned shops and property. This continued unabated on 11th and 12th March and the police and paramilitary forces had tough time containing them. It was only by March 15, when the curfew was finally lifted after two weeks, the city limped back to normalcy.

Genesis of Hyderabad riots

The communal riot in Hyderabad city is a basket case of communal incident. It’s once again the same story where the state apparatus has failed to preempt the situation and only bolted the doors when the cows had fled!

The riot in Hyderabad had its origin in rabble rousing speeches provoking violence against minority communities, at the Vishwa Hindu Parishad conference on March 24th, 2010. This led to cases being filed against those leaders, three days prior to the breakout of actual violence that took place on Hanuman Jayanti day on March 30, 2010.

Hyderabad city saw an unprecedented mobilization by Hindu extremist organizations that blanketed the entire city with Saffron flags for the Hanuman Jayanti, a festival that was hitherto celebrated with relative simplicity.

The belligerence of the Saffron brigade was at height when they provocatively planted Saffron flags and other Hindu religious symbols on Mosques, Churches and other sites of such religions.

This provocation was enough for retaliation from the fearful community and according to reports it was free for all where three lives were lost, ninety people were injured.

Police arrested two hundred and seventy two suspects, most of them Muslims, imposing curfew within the jurisdiction of twenty five police stations of the city. It took several days for the situation to come back to normal and peace to be restored.

In both the cases, Bareilly and Hyderbad, the role of state administration is dubious. It is unfortunate that both the state governments allowed the riots to unsettle the state of communal harmony.

In both the cases the Hindutva groups were the main culprits and agent provocateurs in destabilizing communal harmony and provoking religious violence.

The general public had begun to sense the communal tension but nothing was done by the administration to preempt the situation. It seems the police intelligence agency were either oblivious to the fact or deliberately remained silent about it. The story is a copy book case of communal riots in the country.

Ask those who has been reeling under violence, terror and curfew. Imagine living under the looming shadow of uncertainty, danger and the threat of violence and state imposed restrictions under curfew. What kind of wound it may have inflicted on the minds of the sufferers.

I some time wonder how long this madness will be allowed to perpetrate by the collusion of the state and the central government. Are they not responsible for producing Jhadis in this country? It’s a murky game that going in this country from last 60 years or so, where first you produce the Jhadis and then go after them.

The irony of my country is each one us get carried away by the symptoms and none care of thinking of the ways and means to control the disease. The biggest, stakeholder in this, the state, seems to be wavering in its commitment to uphold the secular credentials that’s guaranteed in the constitution of India.

At the end, would be a regular investigation is ordered to probe these riots and what it leads to. A step further may be a judicial probe of these incidents. Will that be sufficient to get to the real story behind these riots, even if we get one, will it avoid further loss of life in yet another riot on yet another pretext. Your guess is as good as mine!

Syed Ali Mujtaba is a working journalist based in Chennai. He can be contacted at [email protected]