Terrorism:
Biased Investigation
By Ram Puniyani
11 March, 2007
Countercurrents.org
One
more blast took place on 10th February 2007 in Nanded, city in the remote
interiors of Mahrashtra, in the wee of hours of the morning. On the
day next, the initial media reports did describe it as a blast. It took
place in a biscuit shop, Amol Biscuits. It was a low key reporting in
the media. In this blast one person, Pandurang Amilkanthwar, died instantly
and another, Dyaneshwar Manikkwar, suffered 70% of burns and succumbed
to his injuries on sixth day. In the initial statement, Manikwar said
that it was an electric short-circuit. The next day he retracted his
statement to say that he and Pandurang had deliberately put fire by
using petrol to claim the insurance money as they were having financial
problems.
Police and a section of media
promptly accepted this version and stated that there was no political
angle involved in the case, overlooking the fact that Pandurang was
a Shiv Sena Shakha Pramukh, who was close to Bajrang Dal also. Just
to recapitulate a year ago (April 6, 2006), in Nanded, in a blast two
Bajrang Dal workers were killed while making a bomb. The police explained
it as a burst of crackers. But the impact of the blast was too strong
and the police version stood exposed. The blast shattered the windows
in the surrounding area of over a Kilometer. The house search revealed
the powerful bomb, with timer and remote control, after which the Inspector
General of police conceded that it was a bomb blast and that those involved
in the blast are the members of Bajrang Dal. Local papers reported that
a diary has been found at the spot, which has the details of bomb making
techniques and other relevant information. The local BJP MP stated that
it was a minor incident. Meanwhile all the top leadership of RSS, VHP
visited the hospital to see the injured and mourn the dead.
The police did arrest some fourteen people, who were close associates
of the one's who died. But they were all released, as the charges under
which they were arrested related to minor offense only. Also the police/state
pleader had no objections if the bail was granted to the arrested ones.
The Bajrang Dal chief and other activists of the dal were left untouched
despite the correlation of blasts with this RSS affiliate. Anti Terrorist
Squad Inspector General K.P.Raghuvanshi stated that the explosives and
other weapons seized on the spot indicate that they were being trained
in making bombs and operating firearms. They also started investigating
the possible involvement of Bajrang Dal, a RSS affiliate, in a blast
outside a mosque in Parbhani, two years ago.
One recalls that there were
series of episodes and blasts in Maharashtra in Parbhani, Purna, Jalna,
Mumbai and Malegaon. The most disturbing of these was the train blast
in Mumbai, July 11 2006 and Malegaon September 8, 2006. The timing of
blasts shows a clear pattern, barring in Mumbai, it was outside the
mosques and in the afternoons. In the aftermath of Mumbai train blasts
hundreds of Muslim youth were recklessly arrested in the Malvani area
of Mumbai. In other places also many youth were put behind the bars
on the slightest suspicion. This bias in police attitude was so blatant
that in Malvani, the local people took the procession to the police
station to get the innocent youth released. In Malegaon blast also,
which took place on the day of Shab-e-Barat out side the Mosque near
Bada kabristan, police acted on the ground that Muslim groups are involved
in the process. Here also the arrests were mostly of those who had minority
identity. Some of those with previous SIMI connection were the easy
target. The local Muslim community was so disgusted with the attitude
of the state and the police that it refused to accept the relief offered
by the Chief Minister of the state under whose nose the biased attitude
of police is clearly discernible. Interestingly in Malegaon police had
been on high alert during the Ganapati festival, and dropped guards
when it was Shab-e-Barat. The premise being that it is Muslims who create
problem during Hindu festivals, else all is heavenly peace. The police
had failed to take adequate precautions on a day prior to Shab-e-barat.
They also expressed their frustration by boycotting the meeting called
by minority commission and the panel which went to study the situation
in the city.
The brain mapping and narco
test of Nanded blast accused of 2006, (http://communalism.blogspot.com/search/label/Maharashtra)
revealed that Nanded was acting as the Bomb Nirmiti Kendra (Center for
Making Bombs), guided and supported by the state level VHP and Bajrang
Dal leaders. The plan was to make explosions in front of mosques on
Friday Afternoons around 2 PM, when the attendance in the mosques is
maximum. Himanshu Panse the one who died while making a bomb is known
to have stated that unless, Hindus do the blasts near Mosques, it will
be perceived as if Hindus are Hijras. The blasts are the only way to
stop the attacks like the one in Varanasi and Delhi.
Coming on the heels of this
Malegaon episode, the explanation given for the current, 2007, Nanded
incident was very puzzling. The Citizens Committee (http://www.sabrang.com/nanded/nanded.htm),
which investigated the incident points out that the deceased changed
his statement within hours. In the current event, a scooter parked on
the side of the road at some distance got burnt, the presence of nails
and blades, gas cylinder in the room remaining unaffected and some food
items not catching fire, indicated that there is a possibility of blasts.
The committee amongst others comprised of the retired High Court judge
of Mahrashtra, Justice Kolse Patil and noted social worker, Teesta Setalvad.
The committee with the help of on sight inspections, interviews and
opinions of forensic experts concludes that it was not a short circuit
fire. The available evidence leads it to opine that it might have been
an explosion caused due to an accident during the preparation of liquid
bomb. It might have been due to combination of liquid inflammable substances.
Surprisingly similar techniques have also been used in causing the blast
in Samjhauta Express, in which most of those killed were poor Muslims.
One wonders what is happening
to the investigations in such matters of serious concern. The contrast
in the treatment of accused of two religious communities is glaringly
obvious. We know the attitude and high handedness of state and police
authorities in dealing with Mumbai and Malegaon blasts, one has seen
the ?promptness? of the authorities in apprehending any body from the
Muslim minority even on the slightest pretext and to keep such a person
in the custody on one ground or other. There are too many gory tales
about the lock up deaths and the type of treatment meted out to some
of the accused. In the case, of Nanded blasts, the one of 2006 and the
one of 2007, despite the narco test report and brain mapping the inaction
shown by authorities concerned is totally baffling. The new police commissioner
of Mumbai, Dhananjay Jadhav, has stated that tackling terrorism will
be on the top of his priority list. What does he mean? Will he at least
try to look at all the evidence in an impartial way to punish the guilty
and protect the innocent? Will he break the shackles of prejudices binding
the police force while dealing with the minorities? If that?s what he
means, it is a welcome sign for the state riddled with so many acts
of terror. There needs a turn around in the policy of the state government
and police officials who have been taking a blind partisan view and
attitude in the investigation of the events like this.
The conclusions reached by
the committee, more so in the wake of earlier similar blast in Nanded,
and the efforts to present sop stories to cover up the incidents point
to the deeper conspiracy hatched by groups equally insane and fanatic
as the one?s belonging to Al Qaeda are. What is surprising is that the
so called secular government of Maharashtra which got elected on the
secular ground, on the ground that it will implement the Shrikrishna
commission report which it never did of course, has been very biased
in its policies as reflected in the investigations done in the cases
of Mumbai and Malegaon blasts. It has failed to connect up the Nanded
blasts of April 2006 and has treated these incidents with jaundiced
vision. None of the functionaries of Bajarang Dal have been taken to
task, and the parent organization of Bajrang Dal, RSS sits pretty. Its
time Central government intervenes, and inquiry of all the terror incidents
in Maharashtra is handed over to CBI or preferably to the committee
headed by a judge of impeccable credentials. Are Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan
Singh listening?