May 05, 2010
Why Mohammad Ajmal Amir should be sentenced to 'saza-e-maut'
Mohd. Ajmal Amir (aka Kasab) was found guilty of waging war against India and his sentence will be delivered tomorrow.
The prosecution has argued for the death penalty while the defence has claimed that he was a pawn in the larger scheme of things.
I have no specific views for or against the death penalty, but in this specific instance, India is much better off if he is sentenced to death (section 302 of the IPC) and the sentence carried out in a timely manner.
Imagine if he got life imprisonment and he escaped to Pakistan. Even worse, if there was another terror attack / hostage crisis and the demand was that 'Kasab' should be released in exchange for the hostages.
I don't have too much evidence in terms of previous hostage crises in India, but the 2 instances that come to mind, Rubaiya Sayeed and IC 814, don't inspire any sort of confidence.
In passing, if only the Mumbai suburban railway strike had happened on 26 November 2008!
Labels: death penalty, mumbai terrorism 200811, terrorism
Posted @ 4:28 PM
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July 13, 2009
China's national newspaper took a while, didn't it?
A week ago, fierce riots erupted in Urumqi (or Urumchi or however you want to pronounce it), forcing Hu Jintao to return home from the G8 summit in Italy. Perhaps the President wasn't too sure if the various administrative, governance, police & riot control mechanisms would work. Or maybe he just wanted to send a strong message across ...
In any case, I kept monitoring "The Hindu"'s editorial section for any mention of the rioting, including the events that led to the rioting involving Uighurs and Han Chinese, the Chinese government's response, etc. But of course, there was no word. Maybe the text of the editorial had been sent to the Chinese government for approval and they were too busy dealing with the problem on hand - just as it happened in March 2008 when there was rioting in Tibet.
Then again, I really didn't expect a mouthpiece to do much better than publish [perhaps verbatim] what the Chinese Embassy's Press Officer had to say.
Interestingly enough, there is a Pakistani angle to this as well. The Xinjiang province (of which Urumqi is the capital) borders Afghanistan & Pakistan. Al-Qaeda, the Taliban and other Pakistan-based terror organizations have provided training to Uyghur organizations which have been opposing the Chinese government's policies in Xinjiang, including the mass influx of Han Chinese in the area. Further, Pakistan's Dawn newspaper reported that in 2001, thousands of Uighurs were trained and recruited by the Lashkar-e-Toiba and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen in order to fight in Kashmir.
China has, for a while now, been stepping up pressure on Pakistan to do something about the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Movement and Eastern Turkestan Liberation Organization and had in fact sent Pakistan a list of terrorists from those organizations that it wanted to be investigated & prosecuted.
Perhaps some Pakistani government officer, who saw the words 'list', 'investigate', 'prosecute' & 'terrorism', thought that this was in fact India's list of 20, and immediately forwarded it to the department head with the note 'Most urgent' where it sat collecting dust until Asif Ali Zardari got a polite call from Hu Jintao last week.
Labels: china, pakistan, riots, terrorism, the hindu, uighurs, urumqi, xinjiang
Posted @ 12:01 PM
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April 20, 2009
Karunanidhi's amazing defense of the LTTE and Prabhakaran
In an interview to NDTV, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Karunanidhi said that he didn't consider Prabhakaran, his friend, as a terrorist.
In fact, he so completely approves of the LTTE and Prabhakaran's acts of terror that:
- He considers that some of the people in Prabhakaran's group are terrorists. He reckons that doesn't make Prabhakaran a terrorist or the LTTE a terrorist organization and Prabhakaran cannot be held responsible for those in his group that are terrorists
- He has had only one difference of opinion with Prabhakaran, and that was over Prabhakaran declaring that a hypothetical Tamil Eelam would have a dictatorial government
Presumably, if Prabhakaran couldn't be considered a terrorist if a few of his roommates were grooming a few 10-year olds as suicide bombers or blowing up Indian prime ministers, he admires a leader who has so totally lost control over his organization.
As the head of the DMK, an ally of the Congress(I), and as the chief minister of the state, was Karunanidhi expressing his own personal opinions? Even so, how can the Congress(I) now ally with him considering it had withdrawn support to IK Gujral's government in 1997 on the basis of the Jain Commission report indicting the DMK for tacitly supporting the LTTE.
Like
I noted 5 years ago before the previous Lok Sabha electionIt does seem like Rajiv Gandhi's death was too long ago to matter. Is that true even for Sonia Gandhi?
Labels: karunanidhi, ltte, prabhakaran, tamil nadu, terrorism
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March 03, 2009
For your own sake, wake up and fight back, Pakistan
I've never been a fan of over-emphasizing the power of sport, despite being a fan of several sports & sports teams. Hence, we need to see the terrorist attack in Lahore on the Sri Lankan cricket team's bus in perspective, as a diplomatic & political issue to be handled between the governments of those two countries and more importantly, as a display of what the terrorists can do, or are allowed to do. The focus should not be on the cricketers being targets. Those in the bus could well have been bob-sledding players, for all the terrorists cared. Indeed, it is likely that those behind the attack picked the Sri Lankan team "because they were there", to use a quote that George Mallory allegedly used. The purpose was to demonstrate an ability to attack at will. We don't yet (and probably never will) know who was behind the attacks.
Yet, when Pakistan sneezes, India catches a cold. When an event of this nature occurs, the implications are larger. For years, Pakistan's political, diplomatic & cricketing establishments have been saying that cricket will never be targetted by terrorists (as if it is acceptable that the target is something else!). When there was debate on India's tour of Pakistan in 2004, I wrote
India's refusal to tour Pakistan because of political considerations and terrorism in J & K absolutely baffles me. It allows Pakistan to accuse India of mixing sports with politics. India's official stance against playing in Pakistan should be that it cannot risk sending its players and citizens to a place where there is a VERY big threat perception. With Ganguly and Tendulkar being targetted by the Lashkar-e-toiba for kidnap, who is to say they wouldn't strike in "home" territory? I know there're sceptics among you who say. 'Ganguly le le, Kashmir de de' or even rejoice at the fact that the allegedly non-playing captain's absence finally offers scope for Yuvraj/Kaif to play or India playing an extra bowler. Thats rather frivolous.
The point is that we should not tour Pakistan. Purely for security reasons. Nothing else.
Last December, after the Indian government announced that
India's tour of Pakistan in 2009 was off, I wrote
In my opinion, the Indian government's decision is right, for the simple reason that India's cricketers would be sitting ducks in Pakistan given the huge potential for terrorist groups there to seek revenge for being banned. I know a lot of folks would say this robs fans of the chance to follow an eagerly awaited series, but that is secondary. The safety and security of cricketers should be the priority.
To me, there is no difference between a Sri Lankan cricketer's life and an Indian cricketer's life, or indeed a Pakistani cricketer's life ... or indeed any life (cricketer or not!). Pakistani security personnel died while fighting the terrorists. Ehsan Raza, the reserve umpire for the Pakistan-Sri Lanka test at Lahore is
seriously injured. Had India toured Pakistan, it is likely that the attack would have happened much earlier, rather than until three days to go before the series ended. India's government evidently believed that its citizens' lives were significantly threatened in Pakistan. Sri Lanka's government did not think so, for whatever reasons.
Yet, the very fact that an apolitical group became a target means that Pakistan needs to seriously introspect on what it wants to be a decade, 25 years or 50 years later. I use the word "Pakistan" in a narrow sense, and exclude its politicians, government, intelligence, defence & strategic establishments from the list. I refer to the
aam aadmi. Do they want to
be a failed state in 5 years time? Do they want their country to be seen as the source of global terrorism? Do they want to live in denial of the bare facts - that their government & related establishments (defence & intelligence) have pursued terror as an instrument of policy since independence, that the government has
no control over nearly half the country, that the economy is in shambles even as
political one-upmanship threatens to destroy "democracy"? The result of these policies is very evident from the situation Pakistan finds itself in.
Pakistanis missed a great opportunity to carry out a clean-up and produce a new generation of leaders after
Benazir Bhutto's assassination like I fervently hoped.
Although her death is a sad event and condemnable, in a warped sense, I hope this is the beginning of a clean-up of Pakistan's political system. The country desperately needs a new generation of leaders.
Bleating that "Pakistan is a victim of terrorism" is just plain nonsense, when the truth is that "Pakistan is a victim of terrorism
that it actively fomented".
Pakistanis deserve much better. Wake up, smell the coffee and fight back, Pakistan! Not for India's sake or the world's sake. For your own sake!
Labels: cricket, pakistan, sports, sri lanka, terrorism
Posted @ 11:05 PM
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February 17, 2009
Pakistan - Janus
Explain this dramatic u-turn. Pakistan yesterday struck a deal with an organization called the "Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi", a group that openly supports the Taliban & is in favour of imposing Sharia rule all over Pakistan. The group is headed by Sufi Mohammed, whose son-in-law formed an alliance with Baitullah Mehsud's Tehreek-e-Taliban (banned in Aug 2008) after the end of the Lal Masjid complex siege in Islamabad in July 2007.
One day before the announcement, Pakistani President, Asif Ali Zardari, told CBS News 60 minutes
Q: Do you have the support for this campaign against the Taliban? Do you have the full support of the military and the ISI?
A: If that wasn't the case, then Islamabad would have fallen because obviously if the army doesn't do its job, these men are not restricted. They've blown up the Marriott Hotel before. They've attacked us inland before. They would be all around us, wouldn't they?
This is a very lovely definition of a campaign
against the Taliban! To fight the Taliban, bow to their demands. This is how the military and the ISI are supporting the action. The
great game continues.
There are significant implications for India. The Swat valley is around 500 km from Gilgit, in Pakistan-Occupied-Kashmir. The distance between Gilgit and Srinagar or Kargil is between 170-200 km. Given the close affiliation between the Pakistani military, ISI & the various Taliban factions, this provides Pakistan more resources at continuing the terrorism in Jammu & Kashmir, and by extension, India. Lest we forget, during the post-independence attack on J&K by Pakistan to wrest control, Pakistan's army first took control of Gilgit and then used the tribals in the area to capture Skardu, Kargil and the Poonch valley.
Labels: india, jammu and kashmir, pakistan, taliban, terrorism
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February 08, 2009
Pakistan's great game
Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, the owner & administrator of Pakistan's largest & most famous EOU is set free by the Islamabad High Court. Dr. Khan, the poor metallurgist unfairly blamed for transfer of some atoms to Iran, North Korea & Libya, and thus Pakistan's nuclear proliferation record has been mentioned several times here.
I still think I gave a good suggestion around 2.5 years ago when I mentioned that India should provide medical treatment to Dr. Khan, who was (is?) suffering from prostrate cancer. Of course now, with the state of diplomacy, that's just impossible.
On a side note, and without any intention to offend those who do suffer from that form of cancer, shouldn't everyone who repeatedly does namaskarams at various places of worship (and in front of Jayalalitha) also get affected by prostrate cancer?
Reports suggest that
Pakistan will file cases against Pakistanis involved in the attacks in Mumbai. If this is true, will India allow Mohammad Ajmal Amir Iman (aka Qasab/Kasab/whatever) to be trialled (& jailed) in Pakistan?
Wouldn't that be a great opportunity for him to be bumped off? Ok, even if he doesn't actually get killed, they could just say "He escaped", just like Masood Azhar?
I see something developing here - Pakistan, a country that wants the UN to help investigate
Benazir Bhutto's assassination and which has absolutely no control over Balochistan, Swat & FATA (accounting for 47% of the country's land area), reckons that it actually has a judicial & legal system in place to try a terror attack in
another country. Someone help me understand this!
A moronic member of the USA Congress gives another great option - the
International Court of Justice.
I have always had
hatred for Narendra Modi, but I don't see why him
questioning whether it was possible for the attacks to be conducted at that scale & precision without local support implies he is weakening India's stand. It is
very highly likely there was local involvement. The arrests of those responsible for the blasts in Bangalore last July indicate that there are enough folks potentially unconnected with Pakistan who're involved in terror attacks in India. Yet, does that allow Pakistan to get away with murder? Of course not, because the attacks were planned by Pakistan, the attackers were Pakistani and the attackers were backed by Pakistan.
Now that India is sure to rebuff attempts by Pakistan to get "Qasab" over there, Pakistan will just shrug and say: "Hey, we're more than helping out. India isn't responding!". That increases pressure on India to agree to either Pakistani or neutral jurisdiction.
This will coincide with election time in India and the focus will be lost. Regardless of whether a new dispensation takes charge, things'll basically have to start afresh. By then, the USA would be more than happy to
buy Pakistan's line that resolving Kashmir would result in a
Yaadon ki baarat like re-union for the estranged siblings - India & Pakistan.
As for Dr. Khan, I'm sure he'll have a great future making after-dinner speeches on entrepreneurship.
Labels: aq khan, india, mumbai terrorism 200811, pakistan, proliferation, terrorism
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January 29, 2009
Ed Royce - "Let the ICJ try Mumbai terrorists"
Ed Royce, a member of the USA Congress, has given a radical suggestion - that of trying the terrorists responsible for the terror attacks in Mumbai in November 2008 at the International Court of Justice.
He wants the terrorists to face trial in a court that his own country has little faith in. The USA has so far twice withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the ICJ - the compulsory jurisdiction in 1985 and the optional protocol in 2005.
Pakistan has now apparently come to the conclusion that the attacks were planned outside Pakistan. This implies two things: Pakistan isn't going to handover anyone anywhere, and hence there is no question of any chargesheet/trial.
The attacks in Mumbai were on Indian soil. Now that Pakistan isn't going to do anything about it, David Miliband's suggestion that Pakistan courts get into the act is obviously no longer applicable.
The time for subtle pressure on Pakistan is over. A trial by the ICJ is going to take forever, if at all Pakistan is a signatory/member state. If it isn't, we've been taken for a nice ride by Ed Royce. If it is, there're multiple ways to circumvent the ICJ's jurisdiction, one of them being a withdrawal. i.e. take the bat & ball and go home after scoring a duck!
Labels: mumbai terrorism 200811, pakistan, terrorism, usa
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January 20, 2009
PMK's Ramadoss wants an "indefinite" bandh in Tamil Nadu
In a brazen attempt at terrorizing Tamil Nadu, the PMK's founder & president, S Ramadoss has proposed an "indefinite" bandh in Tamil Nadu in protest against the Sri Lankan army's attacks on the LTTE.
Thankfully, he is charitable enough to exclude ambulances and the supply of milk from the scope of the bandh. Of course he isn't going to be impacted. He and his goons will court arrest and be released in an hour, probably escorted home by the DGP.
The ones who suffer are the general populace, without the ability to go to work, run their business, buy vegetables & fruits at affordable rates, etc.
Given that the Supreme Court had ruled, a decade ago in 1998, that bandhs were illegal and unconstitutional, Ramadoss' demand for an "indefinite" bandh is an indicator of how important adherence to laws and the Constitution is for him and others of his ilk. Although I don't foresee it happening, the Tamil Nadu government should throw Ramadoss & the rest of the gangs into jail for threatening to breach the law and order of the state.
Labels: ltte, politics, strike, tamil nadu, terrorism
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January 16, 2009
David Miliband echoes Barack Obama's prescription
In an article in "The Guardian", David Miliband, currently visiting India in his role as the Foreign Secretary of the UK, reckons that the various terrorist entities across the globe need to be handled differently since their motivations are different and points out the example of groups like the IRA & Eta to back his argument since those groups really had nothing in common.
The central difference is that the main aim of terrorist organizations is to challenge the state, rule of law, liberty and various freedoms by using violence, including mass-scale attacks & suicide attacks, as a mechanism to achieve their goals. In this respect, terrorist groups are all identical - take your pick from the Lashkar-e-Taiba, Al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Hamas, LTTE, SIMI, the various units of the Sangh Parivar which went on a killing spree in Gujarat, Jaish-e-Mohammed, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Naxalites, Maoists, etc.
Miliband goes on to write
Although I understand the current difficulties, resolution of the dispute over Kashmir would help deny extremists in the region one of their main calls to arms, and allow Pakistani authorities to focus more effectively on tackling the threat on their western borders.
This echoes what
Barack Obama said in his interview with MSNBC late last year.
The flaws in this thinking are:
- Assuming that the terrorists' only aim is the liberation of Kashmir.
- Assuming that Pakistan will co-operate in helping eliminate the Al-Qaeda & Taliban in Afghanistan when the Kashmir problem has been resolved.
- Assuming that if Kashmir and Afghanistan are both cleaned up & resolved, then the Pakistani army and the ISI will sit idle when their raison d'être is to bleed India with a thousand cuts.
As expected, the
Ministry of External Affairs has reacted, pointing out that David Miliband was free to express his views. Pranab Mukherjee and Manmohan Singh need to find out if these views are David Miliband's alone or does Gordon Brown & his government share the same sentiments. If so, there's a lot of diplomacy work needed to debunk this thinking given that Barack Obama has identical thoughts.
Labels: india, jammu and kashmir, pakistan, terrorism, uk
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January 09, 2009
Strikes are a form of economic terrorism
This week almost all parts of India have been significantly hit by striking truckers and oil PSU officers. As a result, the supply of petrol, diesel and other fuels used for transportation & cooking has dwindled, most places in India are facing a severe shortage crisis, the price of commodities has gone up due to scarcity of supply.
There are long queues at the few petrol dispensing stations that do have limited supply. People are finding it hard to go about their normal business, including going to work, sending their children to school, buying commodities, etc. People are unable to travel by road or air. Manufacturing companies are finding it tough to transport their products around. My company has a cab pickup-drop service, but all drops from the afternoon have been cancelled. This means anyone who came in to work by cab (me! me! me!) has to figure out how to get home after work!
Despite the fact that petrol & other related fuels (kerosene, LPG, CNG, diesel, etc.) are included in the list of commodities under the Essential Commodities Management Act, the government hasn't acted tough with the striking folks.
It is likely that those striking have legitimate demands. But I find it abhorring that the general public is expected to put up with the outcome of their actions, in much the same manner as my cable operator asking me to put up with the inconvenience when all non-Kannada channels were off the air during a one-day strike over Belgaum, in 2006.
Given the huge impact on the country, I'd say this is a form of economic terrorism as well.
Labels: petrol, strike, terrorism
Posted @ 11:29 AM
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January 06, 2009
You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours - Part 2
Richard Boucher, the Assistant Secretary of State in the government of the USA, was conferred the Hilal-e-Quaid-e-Azam award for his contribution to USA-Pakistan ties. This at a time when there's huge diplomatic pressure on Pakistan to act decisively & firmly to dismantle the infrastructure of terrorism in the country.
I fully expect we will be treated to verbose diplomatic speak which effectively translates to "Sorry India, we can't do anything about this Pakistani government except pray and hope you guys can forget about it and live together as part of one big happy family. These guys are acting on the terrorists! Promise! See, they even banned the organizations!".
Part 1 was when Pakistan conferred a 'Hilal-e-Pakistan' award to a retiring World Bank chief when the bank had just appointed someone to review Pakistan's complaint over the Baglihar dam dispute with India.
Labels: india, mumbai terrorism 200811, pakistan, terrorism, usa
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December 11, 2008
UN bans Jamaat-ud-Dawa, but will that be enough?
Earlier today, the UN Security Council announced that Jamaat-ud-Dawa was added to its list of banned entities as part of the requirements of resolution 1822 of the UNSC. The ban on the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the organization formerly called the Lashkar-e-Toiba, also extends to Hafiz Saeed, the big boss of the LeT. It is interesting that China didn't opt to play spoilsport by using its veto.
Resolution 1373 requires all member states to "prevent and suppress the financing of terrorism, as well as criminalize the wilful provision or collection of funds for such acts". Clearly, the fact that the LeT & JuD have been having a nice fun time in Pakistan implies that Pakistan violated that resolution. In addition, Pakistan did nothing to prohibit its citizens or entities within its territory from making funds & other resources/service available to terrorists or terrorist organizations. Pakistan also provided a safe haven for the LeT & the JuD.
However, merely banning the organization means nothing. The LeT has been banned for a few years now and yet was operating & striking at will. SIMI and LTTE have also been banned for so many years now. That hasn't stopped them from spreading terror far and wide. Pakistan has been a victim as well. They claimed they'd banned the Tehreek-e-Taliban, which then blew up the Marriott in Islamabad!
The need of the hour is to ensure that the top leadership of the proscribed organizations is taken out of the equation, by arresting them or eliminating them. The second aspect is to ensure that the morale of the organization plumbs so low that there's no motivation amongst those left over to continue the 'jihad'. More importantly, terrorists must be held up as an example for what would happen when you go astray. There needs to be a mechanism which tells folks about why they shouldn't even sign up for terrorism in the first place, regardless of the 'root causes'.
Is the extra pressure from the US & other governments a result of foreign nationals, specifically citizens of the USA & UK, being targetted during the attacks? There've been several terrorist attacks in India over the past few years. Exactly what have we been waiting for? Was targetting foreigners the last straw? Have the terrorists & their (state) sponsors just made a very stupid mistake?
As an aside, in a couple of days, it will be the 7th anniversary of the attack on the Indian Parliament. Any plans?
Labels: india, mumbai terrorism 200811, pakistan, terrorism, united nations
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December 10, 2008
After "classical language status", its now time for demanding an NSG unit
Around this time last month, folks in Kerala were angry because Kannada and Telugu had been granted 'classical language' status. A month later, the outcome of the terror in Mumbai is that every single state in India would now demand an NSG unit. That's "National Security Guards", not the Nuclear Suppliers Group!
So far, I've already seen demands from Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Maharashtra. I wouldn't be surprised if others also pitched in. Having an NSG unit would then become a status symbol, much like having an IIT, IIM or IISc campus; a Microsoft, Wipro, TCS, Infosys or Reliance office; a dozen flyovers that do little to solve traffic problems; a metro rail system designed for today & not for 20 years hence; a Nehru stadium or a Mahatma (or even Uttamar) Gandhi road.
Labels: india, mumbai, mumbai terrorism 200811, nsg, symbolism, terrorism
Posted @ 10:59 PM
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November 30, 2008
Shivraj Patil resigns
There's news trickling in that Shivraj Patil has resigned as the Union Home Minister. He's handed in his resignation to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. That's odd. I thought he'd have handed it in to Sonia Gandhi, given that he has previously said "Well, I have full blessings of my leader".
Unconfirmed reports suggest he may have used the word 'responsibility'. But he could turn up tomorrow saying he was 'misquoted' or 'quoted out of context'.
Immediately after I read the news reports, I checked the Ministry of Home Affairs website's press releases section to see if there was an update there. The list of releases shocked me, specifically the top 3 entries. I took a screenshot for posterity's sake.

Of the 3 items that were posted after the Mumbai terror attacks, two related to the death of former Prime Minister VP Singh. I guess that gives you an indication of where his priorities lay. There's no update about the situation in Mumbai. Neither is there any sort of message praising the bravery of the army, navy, NSG & policemen who helped save so many lives, with some of them not alive to see the results of their actions.
In any case, it's about fucking time, probably 3 years too late!
Labels: congress (i), india, ministers, resignation, shivraj patil, terrorism
Posted @ 12:42 PM
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November 29, 2008
The next steps
Will summoning the ISI's boss achieve anything other than him bleating about lack of evidence etc? What next, take along Pakistani army folks when we're trying to flush out terrorists, and make sure they're with the Indian army folks all through lest there be accusations of planting of passports, currency, dry fruits, hate literature, etc.?
The despicable part is that this one is called Mumbai's 9/11. The attacks of 11/9 [:)] resulted in ~ 3000 people dying that day. From around the mid-80s (Operation Bluestar) & the riots following Indira Gandhi's assassination to after the 1993 Bombay blasts, there were major terrorist incidents just about every year, whether it was a bomb on an aircraft (Kanishka) or a kidnapping of a minister's daughter (Rubaiya Saeed), assassination of politicians (Longowal, Beant Singh, Rajiv Gandhi).
After 1993, there was a lull for a few years with a few sporadic attacks. Then a massacre in Chattisinhpura, blasts in Coimbatore, an attack on J&K's assembly, Parliament, Godhra & the resultant riots, attack on Akshardham, 5 bombings in Mumbai in a period of 5 months, Diwali blasts in Delhi, attacks in Varanasi, July 11 bombings in Mumbai ... I'm running out of breath. We've had far too many "9/11s".
There is a need to inculcate an understanding of being watchful without being hyper-sensitive. CNN-IBN reported yesterday that a grocer around Nariman House told them that a bunch of folks he'd not seen in the area earlier had bought 50,000 worth provisions from him in the last few days. Things like that should make you perk up and go to the police. Do what you have to do. If the police doesn't respond, then you could choose to go to a higher authority or drop the ball altogether. But individuals must do their bit.
The political establishment needs to do something about intelligence agencies. If they're not doing a good enough job, disband it. Shivraj Patil said yesterday when asked about prior-intelligence reports "Maalomaat to hote hain, lekin aise nahin maaloom hota hai ki kahan aur kab attack hoga". Next thing he'll want an invitation sent to his home by courier 2 weeks before an attack!
We also need to have a rethink about a government's primary responsibility. To me, it is securing the borders and ensuring the protection of the country's citizens. The secondary responsibilities are bijli, sadak, pani, roti, kapda, makan, etc. Right now the political establishment has a vested interest in making the secondary responsibilities appear as the primary responsibility.
If security needs to be stepped up at airports, railway stations, bus terminuses etc. and one of the deterrents is a higher charge for visitors, then we must be ready to pay the cost associated with security, in terms of time spent being frisked or the price of platform tickets. Over-crowded stations and bus terminuses are great places for terrorists to merge in with the populace. How many times has an airport been blasted? In contrast, how many times has a bus terminus or a railway station been a target?
There also needs to be a recognition that the locally-bred terrorists are now reasonably self-sufficient in terms of human resources that Pakistan's involvement in the attacks is likely to be more of a benefactor role, including providing arms & other resources.
There're just far too many easy ways for a terrorist to attack any place in India. How many times have airline or airport authorities insisted on seeing your photo id when you're taking a flight? How many times has the railway travel ticket examiner asked you to show your photo id when you've booked an e-ticket?
People in authority get away without the normal security procedures, because they're the privileged ones. What's the penalty for violating the Indian Passport Act and taking along a woman and boy claiming them to be family? Being expelled from the Lok Sabha when the Indian Passports Act prescribes a fine of (a piddly amount of) Rs. 5,000 and 2 years in jail!
Stop having exceptions in security procedures. Everyone is the same. Enforce the security procedures properly. Have close-circuit cameras at public places. There will be a cost to the residents, builders, tenants, owners, etc. But the cost is miniscule compared with the loss of human capital caused due to terrorist attacks occuring every six weeks.
I see now that the TV channels are having a field day bringing in experts to discuss what should be done. However my fear is that we think November 26 2008 isn't going to be repeated. I fear that there's another one, just around the corner, maybe as little as a week away.
In addition, I wonder if the reaction from the public and the media would have been had the target been a place like Chennai or Kolkota, which isn't a financial capital, nor the political capital, nor an IT capital, nor a religious centre. I fear, and I suspect I maybe right, that the reaction would have been a lot more muted, mainly because this would have been the first time Chennai or Kolkota (barring the 2002 attack on the US Consulate) was impacted by this nature of terrorism.
Mostly cross-posted from my reply to Mekin's post.
Labels: india, mumbai, mumbai terrorism 200811, security, terrorism
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November 27, 2008
Time to show your resilience and spirit again, Mumbai
After the blasts on 11 July 2006 in Mumbai, I wrote
Mumbai, please stop getting on with life. Cry! Become angry! Riot! Do something to let those in power know that they can't go off to sleep and let another terrorist attack happen, knowing well that the Mumbaikar's resilience and spirit will ensure that they don't get blamed in the end.
It isn't fair. The terrorists are cheats. It's only been
4 weeks since the last attack, not the
6 weeks that normally transpires. How can they
attack again so soon?How will the government react? This is how their cabinet meeting this morning will go.
- Two minutes silence for the dead
- Shivraj, please answer the following questions
- Any ministers injured or dead? No
- Any MPs injured or dead? No
- Any state CMs or ministers injured or dead? No
- Any MLAs injured or dead? No
- Any former PMs or CMs injured or dead? No
- Any 'important' politicians not belonging to the above list injured or dead? No
- Any film stars or cricketers injured or dead? No
- Any other important media, cultural or sports personalities injured or dead? No
- Right, we move on to the next item on the agenda.
I'd expect no better from the government, since like I mentioned after the attacks in New Delhi on 13 Sep:
In my opinion, the terrorists will keep getting away with these attacks as long as they target civilians. The moment a politician is affected, that's when the representatives will wake up and take action. We saw that with the Khalistan movement, especially after Indira Gandhi was assassinated. We also saw the stance taken by various parties against the LTTE after it assassinated Rajiv Gandhi.
Labels: india, mumbai, mumbai terrorism 200811, terrorism
Posted @ 7:56 AM
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November 04, 2008
Obama's remarks on a Kashmir quid pro quo with Pakistan
In an interview with MSNBC, US Presidential candidate Barack Obama indicates that if elected, he would 'facilitate a better understanding between Pakistan and India and try to resolve the Kashmir crisis so that they can stay focused not on India, but on the situation with those militants.'
I guess he is implying that in return for the USA stepping in & facilitating an agreement between India & Pakistan on Jammu & Kashmir, Pakistan will automatically switch focus away from the eastern border and help out with isolating and eliminating Al-Qaeda and Taliban terrorism on the other border.
Unfortunately, that's just wishful thinking. Jammu & Kashmir is just one of the thousand cuts that the Pakistani establishment (civilian, military and intelligence) wants to use to make India bleed.
Labels: jammu and kashmir, obama, pakistan, president, terrorism
Posted @ 8:42 PM
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October 30, 2008
Six weeks over, let's have a blast!
The last significant terror attack in India was on 13 Sep 2008 in New Delhi, six weeks ago. Today, it was Assam's turn.
Of course, the Home Minister has given a reaction. That's what he's there for!
Labels: india, shivraj patil, terrorism
Posted @ 11:35 PM
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September 23, 2008
When a ban doesn't work
I'm fairly sure the most popular conversation-filler amongst Pakistan's government & political establishment after last Saturday's blast in Islamabad is this:
We're doing so much as a FATWAT state. We even banned the Tehreek-e-Taliban last month! That's an indication of how serious we are about combating terrorism!
So how come the ban doesn't work? Isn't the ban supposed to have destroyed their infrastructure and aren't they supposed to have slunk back into the caves they came from?
Labels: pakistan, terrorism
Posted @ 12:20 AM
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September 15, 2008
Why the terrorists struck again today
The number one reason is that we have an absolute arsehole as a Home Minister. He's there on probably a 'Patil' quota. Alternately, as Mint & Tehelka mentioned last month, he's in that post because Sonia Gandhi is extremely grateful to him for having guided her between 1999 & 2004 and his interpretation of his job as being one where he needs to be balanced without take sides is admired by one and all.
In my opinion, the terrorists will keep getting away with these attacks as long as they target civilians. The moment a politician is affected, that's when the representatives will wake up and take action. We saw that with the Khalistan movement, especially after Indira Gandhi was assassinated. We also saw the stance taken by various parties against the LTTE after it assassinated Rajiv Gandhi.
I was totally frustrated and angry with seeing Shivraj Patil on TV, because I knew how he would condemn the blasts. He said
I strongly condemn today’s blasts in Delhi. I convey my condolences to the kin of the deceased and pray for speedy recovery of the injured. The fact that the blasts took place in crowded markets on a Saturday indicates the evil intention of the culprits to cause maximum casualties and damage.
Anti-national elements have been trying to disturb peace and create panic among the people in various parts of the country. The Government will continue to deal firmly with such elements. I am confident that security agencies will soon be able to get to the bottom of these incidents and the culprits will be brought to book. Let us on this occasion deal with the situation with confidence and maintain peace and tranquility and defeat the nefarious design of the culprits.
So I set about digging up previous statements he (and his other ministers) had made when there were blasts earlier. The template is as follows - "I condemn today's blasts in _CITY_. I appeal to people to maintain calm and foil the designs of anti-national elements who aim to disturb the communal harmony. I am confident that the culprits will be brought to book.". Seems like a pretty easy job, doesn't it? In fact, I sincerely hope he doesn't have a speech-writer on his staff.
In a previous post, I had wondered if
Shivraj Patil would have the dubious distinction of being in charge when the most terrorist attacks happened in India. I'm not sure if its easy to answer that question. Yet, going by the Ministry of Home Affairs website, there been over 20 (yes!) terrorist attacks in India, including today's, since
the blasts in platform six of Varanasi railway station in March 2006 while my parents were on platform one.
- 7 Mar 2006 @ Varanasi
- 14 Apr 2006 @ New Delhi
- 21 May 2006 @ Srinagar
- 1 Jun 2006 @ Nagpur
- 11 Jul 2006 @ Srinagar
- 11 Jul 2006 @ Mumbai
- 8 Sep 2006 @ Malegaon
- 18 May 2007 @ Hyderabad
- 26 May 2007 @ Guwahati
- 29 Jul 2007 @ Srinagar
- 12 Aug 2007 @ Assam
- 23 Nov 2007 @ UP
- 13 Dec 2007 @ Assam
- 17 Dec 2007 @ Manipur
- 1 Jan 2008 @ Rampur
- 13 May 2008 @ Jaipur
- 25 Jul 2008 @ Bangalore
- 26 Jul 2008 @ Ahmedabad
- 13 Sep 2008 @ New Delhi
This works out to something like a terrorist attack every 6 weeks! Note that I may have missed out on some attacks because of oversight (it's nearly midnight!). I also notice that there was no press release displayed for the Samjhauta Express bombings in Feb 2007 and the Lumbini Park blasts in Aug 2007 (Hyderabad).
Also note that this isn't by any means an exhaustive list of situations where Shivraj Patil has been caught with his pants down. If we added the incompetent handling of the Amarnath Yatra crisis, naxalite terrorism in the North East, Bengal, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh & Chattisgarh, then we'd get to around one incident a week!
As long as ministries are allotted to hopeless, incompetent arseholes because they've sucked up to a dynasty more than others, we will continue to
bear the cost of terrorism.
Update: Noted on
Vipin's latest blog post another instance of how politicians are provoked into action against terrorists only when they're impacted -
the attack on Parliament on Dec 13, 2001.
Labels: india, shivraj patil, terrorism
Posted @ 11:44 AM
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