|
Who are We?
What do we do?
Latest News
Free Resources
Links
|
April is the
cruelest month
Is there a
method behind
the madness?
-
Mayank Jain
(Producer and
Director of 'The
Bangla Crescent
ISI, Madrasas
& Infiltration)
Recently, I
quizzed some
students of
journalism
about the
dates of the
Ayodhya,
Delhi,
Bangalore
and Varanasi
terror
attacks.
Many of them
replied
rather
vaguely.
Contrast
this with
the American
attitude.
See how they
converted
'9/11' to an
international
brand name.
Its very
mention
evokes
images of
suicide
bombers,
planes and
Islamic
terrorism.
No wonder,
there has
not been a
single
terrorist
attack on
the American
soil after
September
11, 2001.
Far from
deliberately
memorising
and
commemorating
terror
anniversaries
in India, we
just escape
by
pretending
that we have
learnt to
live with
these
attacks! The
heroes and
the victims
of terrorism
keep on
fading away
from our
memories.
The least we
can do is to
remember
anniversaries
of terror
events; this
will sharpen
our resolve
to fight the
menace.
Most Indians
have already
forgotten
Rupin
Katiyal, the
hero of the
IC-814 plane
hijacked to
Kandahar.
After
stabbing the
25-year-old
man, the
hijackers
ordered
other
passengers
to watch him
bleed to
death. Has
any one of
us ever
cared to do
anything
worthwhile
for Rupin's
near and
dear ones?
And, what
did we do to
the brave
Punjab
Police
officers who
stamped out
Khalistani
terrorism
out of
Punjab? Far
from
bestowing
them with
honour, we
encouraged
scores of
human rights
organizations
to file
cases
against
them. We
demoralized
them,
entangled
them in a
web of cases
and pushed
them to
suicide.
The Kargil
War heroes
were almost
forgotten by
the fourth
war
anniversary.
The new
realities of
the much
hyped 'peace
process' in
the year
2003 had no
place for
anything
that could
'hurt'
Pakistani
feelings.
"One hardly
noticed the
Indian
public
paying
homage in
remembrance
to the
approximate
one thousand
Officers and
Jawans of
the Indian
Army who
laid down
their lives
to uphold
India's
honour and
dignity."
wrote Dr.
Subhash
Kapila of
the South
Asia
Analysis
group.
In the ever
enlarging
matrix of
terror
incidents in
India, the
date 'April
18, 2001' is
yet to get
the special
attention it
deserves.
This is the
date of the
brutal
killings of
16 BSF
personnel at
Boraibari,
Manakachar,
Assam, along
the Indo
Bangladesh
border. The
anniversary
was 'marked'
by the
Bangladesh
Rifles last
year just
two days in
advance.
They
brutally
murdered
Jeevan
Kumar, a BSF
officer, on
the Tripura
border.
According to
a press
release of
the then DG,
BSF, R S
Mooshahary,
"this
incident
happened on
16th April
2005 when
BSF & BDR
were having
talks at
Dhaka
Late
Shri Jiwan
Kumar, Asstt
Comdt was in
sports gear
and
unarmed
The
gruesome act
of torture
was visible
on the dead
body of late
Shri. Jiwan
Kumar, who
was shot
from close
range."
B. Raman,
the famous
security
expert,
reminds us
of another
incident in
Dhaka just
four days
before the
killings of
16 BSF
personnel:
"On April
14, 2001, a
bomb
exploded at
an open-air
concert in
Dacca,
killing at
least nine
people and
wounding
nearly 50
The concert
was part of
celebrations
marking the
Bengali new
year The JEI
had been
campaigning
against the
celebration
of the
Bengali new
year on the
ground that
it was
unIslamic."
According to
statistics,
April
happens to
be a
favourite
season for
the
Bangladeshi
Islamic
fundamentalists
to unleash
terror not
only against
India on the
border but
also
against the
hapless
minorties
within their
own country.
The Bengali
and Assamese
New Year (Bihu)
falls on
April 15 and
April 14
happens to
be the
Bengali and
Assamese New
Year eve.
The first
day of the
Bihu
is called
goru bihu or
cow bihu,
where the
cows are
washed and
worshipped,
which falls
on the last
day of the
previous
year,
usually on
April 14.
This is
followed by
manuh
(human)
Bihu on
April 15,
the New Year
Day. There
is a likely
connection
between
these dates
and the
terrorist
attacks
because of
the JEI
campaign
against
celebrations
in this
period.
Way back in
1992, it was
on April 10,
1992, that
the 'Logong
massacre'
took place
in the
Chittagong
Hill Tracts.
Seventeen
members of
the Congress
of the
United
States sent
a letter to
PM Begum
Khaleda Zia
on Nov 13,
1992.
"According
to reliable
reports, on
April 10,
1992, the
town of
Logong in
the
Chittagong
Hill Tracts
was
surrounded
by Bengali
settlers
accompanied
by
paramilitary
forces. The
inhabitants
of the town
were
systematically
murdered.
Military
officials in
Khagrachari
admit to
over 130
dead;
estimates
from the
Amnesty
International
and human
rights
organisations
in
Bangladesh
range upto
600 or more.
Eyewitness
report that
the entire
village was
burned to
the ground."
Every year
in the month
of April
some of the
Bangladeshi
newspapers
carry
numerous
stories of
rape,
plunder and
killings of
minorities.
ˇ
On April 17,
2002, at 10
PM, Ali, a
cadre of
Jamaat-e-Islami
raped Dr.
Sachidananda's
wife
(The
Daily
Janakantha,
April 2002).
ˇ
On April 21,
2002,
internationally
known
Buddhist
monk Gnyan
Jyoti
Mahastabir
was hacked
to death in
a Buddhist
monastery/
orphanage in
Hingla,
Chittagong,
Bangladesh.
(Bangladesh,
A portrait
of Covert
Genocide)
ˇ
On April 18,
2003, Good
Friday,
there was an
attack on
Bonpara
Mission,
Natore,
leaving ten
people
injured.
(Rosaline
Costa,
Hotline
Human Rights
Bangladesh)
ˇ
On April 2,
2004, there
was a huge
arms seizure
near the
Chittagong
Port in
southern
Bangladesh.
According to
Indian
intelligence,
the cache
included
1,790 rifles
(Uzi
sub-machine
guns and
those of the
AK series),
150 rocket
launchers,
840 rockets,
2,700
grenades and
more than
ten lakh
rounds of
ammunition.
It is quite
possible
that the
deadly cargo
was heading
towards the
northeastern
region in
India.
ˇ
On April 25,
2004, the
Jagrata
Muslim
Janata
Bangladesh (JMJB)
launched an
attack on a
traditional
Bengali fair
at Rajshahi
killing a
minor and
injuring 40
persons.
In India,
the barbaric
killings of
16 BSF
soldiers on
April 18,
2001, gave
the first
indication
of
"Bangladesh
becoming the
Next
Afghanistan".
April 18,
2001 became
a deadly
cocktail of
the killer
month
'April' and
the year of
terrorism --
'2001'. This
was followed
by the
September
11, 2001,
attacks in
the United
States.
In October
2001, there
was an
urgent
announcement
by the Al
Qaeda on the
Al Jazeera
Television
Network that
the
so-called
'Hindu
India' had
been added
to the
target
countries of
Jihad. The
reason given
by the Al
Qaeda
spokesman
was the "US
support to
Hindus
against the
Muslims of
Kashmir".
On October
1, 2001,
there was an
attack on
the Jammu
and Kashmir
Assembly and
the Indian
parliament
was attacked
on December
13, 2001.
Exactly two
years after
the attack
on the
Indian
parliament
i.e. on
December 13,
2003,
Benazir
Bhutto made
a startling
revelation
in Hindustan
Times
Leadership
Initiative
Conference:
"A joint
politico-military
decision was
taken (by
Pakistan) in
1989. The
view was
that
low-intensity
operations
will help
focus
attention on
Kashmir".
'Low
intensity
conflict' is
nothing but
an euphemism
for
terrorism.
Here was
Benazir's
confession
that
Pakistan was
a terrorist
state.
Dates,
anniversaries
and
coincidences
make
interesting
analysis.
Talking
about
November 9,
1989, the
day on which
the
shilanayas
in Ayodhya
and the
breaking of
the Berlin
wall took
place, Jay
Dubhashi
wrote:
"History has
its quirks
but there is
a method
behind the
madness
"
|
|