The dead – heroes,
innocents, and culprits – have been buried. The smoke from the funeral pyres
have merged with the air. The haunting notes of the Last Post have faded away. A
shell-shocked nation is slowly coming to terms with the Mumbai holocaust.
And, as the battle sounds
subside and the smoke clears, what is the picture before the country and the
world?
The father of Maj. Sandeep
Unnikrishnan refuses to meet the Kerala Chief Minister and Home Minister who
come on a condolence visit. Snifter dogs had preceded the CM and party to
sanitize the house of the brave soldier who had died fighting the terrorists.
The wife of Hemant Karkare,
the Mumbai Anti-Terrorist Squad Chief who was killed by the terrorists, refuses
to accept financial assistance offered by the Gujarat Chief Minister. The CM’s
party had been virulently attacking the outstanding officer for pursuing
investigations that it found inconvenient.
The Opposition leader and
his party president refuse to attend an all party meeting convened by the Prime
Minister to discuss the aftermath of the Mumbai crisis. They have more
important things to do.
The Maharashtra Chief
Minister takes a jaunt of the devastated Taj with his actor son and a film
maker. The producer claims he has no plans to make a movie based on the
tragedy. The Deputy Chief Minister of Maharashtra
goes one step ahead. He announces what happened in Mumbai last week was a small
incident – the only man in the world who seems to think so. This person is the
Home Minister as well.
Reports come in that the
Central intelligence agencies had forewarned the Maharashtra
government about terrorist strike, citing Taj and Oberoi as specific targets. Who
received these communications? Were they passed down the pecking order?
Gathering information is important; reaching it post haste to action centers is
critical.
The National Security Guards
(NSG) is blamed for delayed arrival at the distress sites. Possibly the
deployment could have been much faster. There is criticism that the commandos
rushed into action without sufficient intelligence backing and information. Another
view is that since the terrorists had started shooting indiscriminately,
immediate retaliation was necessary.
While the experts discuss
the point, there is another question that needs to be addressed. While waiting
for the NSG, did someone bother to collect floor plans of the buildings
targeted and provide them to the commandos on arrival? That would have made the
operation less risky and more efficient. The details would have been available
at the Municipal Office or the headquarters of the companies owning the
properties.
Analyzing the details of the
recent terror episode and planning for the future certainly cannot be left to
the various departments of the governments where action would be buried in red
tape. The job has to be entrusted to duly empowered professionals.
Hopefully one silver lining
seems to be emerging from the tragedy – the realization that Mumbai is
geographically situated in Maharashtra state, but the great city belongs to India.
Ends.