(I wrote this after Blasts took place in Bangalore and Ahmadabad few
weeks ago)
As in the past, television,
newspapers and all sources of media reported the incident prominently
in prime-time slots and front pages. But you know, tomorrow some
other
‘news’ will make them forget the ghastly incidents. People have
lost
interest in what these journalists say; they comment about the sad
state of affairs and then forget it accepting defeat in the hands of
‘fate’. Police carry out some investigation, claim it to be the
handiwork of the investigative agency from across the border and move
on! Either no one is arrested or no arrest leads to a breakthrough in
the investigation so that any individual, group or country can be
pinned down. Government and politicians make speeches, some political
parties say "terrorism has no religion", ask the "majority to
maintain
calm" and the opposition says "government is soft on terror"… All
so
very predictable!
A question must be asked: Is anybody concerned? Is anybody ready to
see
the larger picture, so to speak? Is anybody doing anything to
safeguard
ordinary citizens and the nation from terrorists?
It seems concerned citizens are a minority and are in no position to
make any substantive change in the Indian society, which is now full
of
those who lust over money, sell their souls, and betray the nation.
The
rest are big mouthed non-performers who fancy being known as
'intellectuals'. The third group is the biggest culprit: "I don’t
care;
it’s commonplace," muse idiots. It’s high time for action. Those
who
are concerned should chart out long-term and short-term strategies to
fight the menace.
Terrorism may not have a religion, but terrorists do. Everybody knows
that there is only one religion, thousands of whose followers call
for
and subscribe to “global jihad”. Study any other terrorist group
(Maoists, LTTE, ULFA, etc), and you will find that their recruits
have
not assembled under an umbrella in the name of religion; what unites
them is a political or an economic reason. Besides, there
co-religionists from different parts of the world do not throng India
or sneak into it to join them in the assault on this state.
Therefore, in the short term, if madrassahs, especially those along
the
Pakistan and Bangladesh border, are monitored, it should help. It’s
very unfortunate that violence-free interpretations of the sacred
texts
of Islam do not arouse the kind of passion in Muslim crowds that
violence-ridden rhetoric by Islamic fundamentalists do. It is true
that
peaceful Muslims are more in number, but their lack of prominence as
anti-jihadis in the national scene does a tremendous disservice to
the
whole community. “Islam means peace/welfare” and “we condemn
terrorism”
sound vacuous when these sound-bytes are given by moderate Muslims a
day after every terrorist strike in India. Whatever happened to the
recent fatwa against terrorism? Was it valid? Does Islam authorise
such
edicts? Did any Muslim take that fatwa seriously?
The other strategy is for the members of the media to sit together
and
agree upon. How about reporting a terrorist attack in a bland manner
instead of getting into the gory, graphic details? Remember, the
sight
of blood that shocks an ordinary citizen, inspires the terrorist at
the
same time.
Next, “difficult terrains” is no excuse. Borders with Bangladesh
and
Pakistan should be completely sealed. All illegal Bangladeshi
infiltrators should be sent back.
A medium-term plan involves politics. The legislature should make
tough
laws and the executive take tougher, faster actions, instead of
indulging in minority appeasement and vote-bank politics.
In the long term, people should be made aware of the real causes and
nature of terrorism. They should be explained how terrorism is not
only
a political motive of our western neighbor, but also a religious
motive deeply rooted in such Islamic doctrines that instigate jihad,
whose supporters are many within the country. This could be done by
publishing books, pamphlets and holding conferences, in mass
awareness
programmes.
Government should corner the country’s hostile neighbors in the
international community and not be soft on them on the issues of
national security. So far, diplomatic pressure on the countries
sponsoring or harboring terrorists has left a lot to be desired. India
realizes that it has to fight this war alone. But the grit of a lone
fighter is conspicuous by its absence.
Rise India!
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