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IOS organizes discussion on
'Security and Terrorism'
Bhopal, December 5 (Pervez Bari): Eminent journalist M. J. Akbar has advised
Indian Muslims to look within and introspect why some Muslim youth had taken to
terrorism.
Akbar was speaking at a discussion on "Security and Terrorism" to a select
gathering of journalists, legal luminaries and social activists held at India
Islamic Cultural Center in New Delhi on Thursday. The discussion was organized
by Institute of Objective Studies, (IOS), and it was chaired by former Chief
Justice of India, Justice A.M. Ahmadi.
According to Press release issued by IOS Akbar said that Muslim terrorists
should be punished under severe Quranic laws that treat the murder of a single
person as the murder of entire humanity. He quoted the meaning of part of a
Quranic verse that says “God does not love rioting and disorder”. He said
Muslims should reach out to Hindus all over India right up to small towns and
villages on which “a pall of fear has fallen”. He wanted Muslims to “begin the
process of healing”.
Managing Editor of Hindustan Times Samar Harlankar said that people looking at
the Mumbai attack in a Hindu/Muslim format should keep it in mind that
one-fourth of those killed were Muslims. It was an attack on India rather than
on Hindus or Muslims. Even in the earlier train blast in Mumbai a lot of Muslims
were killed.
“There is a lot of anger in middle class India over the developments. We must
channelize this anger into creative channels”, he added.
Pankaj Pachauri of NDTV said the Mumbai attack’s target was not Hindus or
Muslims, but India itself. He said the vocal sections of India were concerned
about their own class interests rather than the well being of all Indians. None
of these people were bothered when Raj Thackeray’s MNS drove 26,000 people out
of Mumbai. There was no middle-class outrage over riots.
He cautioned Indians against imitating America. “We hear assertions like there
was no terror attack in the United States after 9/11, but in India there is no
end to attacks”. He said the Americans had paid the price of homeland security.
“We have been evading taxes while American tax payers are funding their homeland
security whose annual budget is $ 69 billion, that is 70 per cent of India’s
total annual budget”, Pachauri said. He advised the rich classes to “pay up” if
they want a security apparatus like that of the US.
Deepak Chaurasia of Star TV said that terrorists in Mumbai had breached four
layers of security, which had given common people the feeling that it was the
government’s commandos and security forces which suffered defeat in
confrontation with terrorists. He said the perception would change only after
better handling of such situations became a reality.
Ranjit Deoraj, Asia-Pacific editor of Inter Press Service (IPS), observed that
as the editor of IPS he got to handle copy written in Pakistan that showed “Pak
journalists are uncomfortable with the situation obtaining there”. Within
Pakistan there were some vested interests that thrived on discord. Such elements
should be identified, he added.
Lawyer Prashant Bhushan said that strong-arm tactics of the state did not
increase security. Instead, they increased insecurity. “There is no greater
security than in Israel, yet it is constantly plagued by insecurity. Security
lies in addressing people’s problems, not in acquiring guns”.
Famous journalist Sayeed Naqvi said that the Mumbai attacks should be seen in
the background of international power politics. However, he added that “good
days are around the corner.”
Veteran journalist Kuldip Nayar showed great concern over the fact that Hindus
and Muslims had begun speaking differently. “They are not listening to each
other.” That, he said, was ominous for the country’s well-being.
He asserted, “War with Pakistan is no option”. Hindus and Muslims have to unite
and India and Pakistan have to work out their differences peacefully. “An
atmosphere of suspicion that is reminiscent of Partition days is building up. It
must end”, he said.
Roving editor of Nayi Duniya Bhasha Singh wondered as to why every time a
terrorist attack occurs, Muslims are expected to apologize. “Did anybody ask the
Hindus to apologize after the attacks on mosque?” She warned that India was
getting sucked into American-British-Israeli security plans. She said it was not
in India’s interest to act as the surrogate of these powers.
Veteran journalist Nina Vyas lambasted the Indian middle class for its alleged
double standards. “Gujarat riots continued for a month, Meerut riots for 40
days. From Hashimpura and Maliana Muslim youths were lifted by PAC, massacred
and thrown into the Hindon. Nobody was outraged,” she said. The same denial of
justice was evident in Babri Masjid case even after 16 years and the massacre of
Christians in Orissa went unpunished. “Such behaviour of the state breeds
terror”, she argued.
Vyas said that the criminal justice system had failed the weak. Corruption had
undermined security. “By giving a couple of thousand rupees to the people
guarding the coasts of India criminals can smuggle in narcotics and weapons”,
she added.
Former MP and journalist Santosh Bhartiya predicted, “expect war or communal
riots before January 26”. He warned that the civil society must come together to
stop it.
Journalist and Christian leader John Dayal asserted that Karnataka did not have
any memory of Partition, but today it stood thoroughly communalized. “Sixty days
of one-sided attacks on Christians in Orissa did not move the government to
act”. He said Partition memories were not always relevant as Nayar had said.
The IOS Chairman Dr. Mohammad Manzoor Alam said that understanding the
underlying factors of terrorism would help in combating it.
Urdu Sahara editor Aziz Burney observed that much of the terror we saw today was
part of a larger sequence of events related to “RSS terror”.
Mumbai lawyer Yusuf Muchchala suggested administrative reforms to cope with the
problem. (pervezbari@eth.net)
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