By Arun Kumar and Sarath Kumara
Communal violence has continued unabated for nearly
two months in the western Indian state of Gujarat,
actively fuelled by Hindu extremist organisations and
abetted by the Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP)-led
state government. Hundreds of people have now been
killed as Hindu mobs roam the streets of the state
capital Ahmedabad and other towns attacking Muslims
and burning homes and shops.
In the latest clashes on Sunday, another 17 people
were killed and at least 91 injured in Ahmedabad and
other towns. Nine of the dead were Muslims killed when
police shot into what they claimed was a gathering mob
in the state capital. Previously army troops were
dispatched to the state after police were accused of
openly siding with the Hindu fanatics. A police curfew
was imposed in several areas of Ahmedabad as well as
other towns.
The violence took place even as Indian Defence
Minister George Fernandez toured Gujarat on what was
billed as a “healing mission”. The BJP leadership at
the national level, including Prime Minister Atal
Behari Vajpayee, have played a completely duplicitous
role—on the one hand, calling for calm in order to
appease their partners in the ruling National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) who have threatened to break
with the coalition, and, on the other, offering barely
disguised encouragement to the state government and
Hindu mobs.
BJP leaders both in New Delhi and Ahmedabad have
painted the carnage as the “spontaneous” reaction to
the burning of a train carrying activists of the
extremist Vishva Hindu Parshad (VHP) or World Hindu
Council at Godhra on February 27. While the exact
circumstances in which 58 people died are not clear,
some reports indicate that the provocative actions of
the VHP supporters were at least partially
responsible. The incident has since been seized upon
by the VHP and its chauvinist allies—Bajrang Dal, Shiv
Sena and Rastriya Swayam Sevak Sangh (RSS)—to organise
an ongoing communal pogrom.
The Hindustan Times reported yesterday that the VHP
and Bajrang Dal were preparing to “teach the Muslims a
lesson.” VHP international secretary-general Pravin
Togadiya claimed a wave of support was sweeping the
state for a “final settlement” of the communal
problem. According to the newspaper, “Supported by
over five lakh (500,000) activists, VHP and Bajrang
Dal leaders confer each evening for a ‘reality check’
at the Paldi complex in Ahmedabad. Pamphlets, videos
and colour photographs of the Godhra incident are
dispatched for mass distribution, ensuring the
communal fever does not dissipate.”
Prior to last weekend, the Indian government claimed
that the situation was under control. But facts speak
otherwise. On April 14 gangs set fire to 10 shops and
to houses in Ahmedabad. The following day two Muslims
were stabbed to death and another person was shot dead
by police. More than a dozen houses were set on fire
in the Idgah area of Ahmedabad. Muslim students
boycotted state examinations scheduled for April 18
after the state government rejected requests for a
deferral due to the lack of adequate security.
According to official reports, just over 800 Muslims
have been killed and more than 125,000 made homeless
since the beginning of the violence. Other
investigations have put the death toll considerably
higher with as many as 2,500 people still missing.
According to the Times of India, the number of dead
had passed 800 by the end of March. The Frontline
magazine noted: “No one knows how many bodies were
completely incinerated or remain trapped in debris.”
In some cases, especially in villages, whole families
have been killed leaving no one to report the tragedy.
Last Friday Vajpayee inflamed communal tensions by
repeating his claim that the communal killings were
simply the consequence of the Godhra incident. “Hindus
live in their millions but never hurt others’
religious feelings. But wherever Muslims are, they do
not want to live peacefully,” he said. The BJP
executive committee has rejected calls by opposition
parties and Muslim organisations for the removal of
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, a long-time BJP
member and also allegedly of the fascistic RSS.
Modi and other state ministers have been accused of
direct complicity in the communal violence. According
to Frontline, Gujarat’s Health Minister Ashok Bhat sat
in the police control room in Ahmedabad during the
first two days of attacks. Urban Development Minister
I.K. Jadeja was present in the city when the violence
occurred. Among the Hindu extremist groups, the chief
minister has become a hero. VHP leader Pravin Togadia
declared: “Modi is doing a great job.”
A systematic campaign of violence
More evidence has emerged of the systematic and
preplanned character of the anti-Muslim violence.
India’s Outlook magazine reported: “In Ahmedabad, for
instance one official recalled how for the last few
months, there had been concerted attempts to get lists
of Muslim business establishments from the Ahmedabad
municipal corporation. The official says he didn’t
then realise why these inquiries were being made. He
knows now....
“VHP volunteers have also been making the rounds of
professional institutions and universities, seeking
the names and addresses of Muslim students. Some
government sources say VHP members have drawn up lists
of government departments (for example, the Food
Corporation of India) and their allied agencies, and
identified ‘undesirables’ and their addresses. How
many of these lists came in handy on February 27 and
28 and even latter is a matter of conjecture but
observers say it’s difficult to explain how in
clusters of 50 to 100 shops, only those of the
minority community were targeted?”
Eyewitnesses reported that the mob leaders spoke
constantly on mobile phones indicating they were
operating as a network. Some carried
computer-generated lists of Muslim homes. The gangs
had hoarded thousands of LP (liquefied petroleum) gas
cylinders to blow up Muslim businesses and residences
creating a shortage in the city of Ahmedabad. Time
Asia quoted one mob member as saying: “We want to make
sure the Muslims never come back.”
During the first few days of violence, the police
openly collaborated with Hindu gangs. In some cases
police officers were sent into neighbourhoods to check
on the situation before the mob descended. Police
fired on Muslims seeking to defend themselves and
their neighbourhoods. One victim, who tried to hide in
a state transport housing area, told the media: “The
police pushed us out of there, saying it was our night
to die.”
Another told India Today: “The cruelty can’t simply be
described in words. The jawans [constables] in the
State Reserve Police (SRP) headquarters just next door
refused to let us in saying they didn’t have orders
from the top. Had they allowed us in, dozens would
have been saved.”
Muslim-owned businesses have been devastated. An
estimated of 75 percent of bakeries as well as 60
textile and chemical units in Surat and Ahmedabad have
been destroyed. Around 18,000 two- and three-wheeler
cabs and 800 trucks have been wrecked. Along the
700-kilometre Mumbai-Mehsana highway and other state
highways, 700 restaurants have been burned down.
The senior director of the Confederation of Indian
Industry, Sunil Parekh, spoke critically about
attempts by the Gujarat government to play down
economic losses. He estimated that the first four days
of violence alone resulted in damage worth more than
20 billion rupees or around $US400 million.
Thousands of refugees are still struggling in
makeshift camps. Human rights organisations have
accused the state government of doing nothing to
alleviate the lack of food, medicine and proper
sanitation for the victims. There are concerns that
disease may add to the rising death toll caused by the
ongoing communal violence in the state.
From World Socialist Web Site
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Terbitan : 25 April 2002
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