Col R Hariharan
Here is a summary of answers given to print and
electronic media questions on the serial blasts in Bodh Gaya on Sunday July 7,
2013.
What is your take on the serial blasts in Bodh
Gaya, although the police seem to have had timely alerts before they occurred?
A series of nine explosions rocked the Maha Bodhi
temple complex in Bodh Gaya, the holiest of all Buddhist sites, in the early
hours of Sunday (July 7, 2013). Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde has
confirmed that in all 13 explosive devices were planted in and around the
temple complex out of which ten had exploded and the other three were defused.
Undoubtedly, this was a terrorist attack carried out by an organized body
of terrorists.
According to the police improvised explosive devices
(IED) using 2-kg LPG cylinders filled with ammonium nitrate, Sulphur and
Magnesium and sharpnels were used in the explosions. Analogue timers were used
to set off the explosion.The number of IEDs planted would indicate more than
one person was involved in the attack.
Fortunately, two of the holy sites - the main temple
sanctum, and the Bodhi tree area - the seat of Buddha’s enlightenment, suffered
only minor damage. The giant statue of Buddha that overlooks the worshippers
was unscathed. The ineptitude in planting IEDs in close proximity to each other
to explode at different timings rendered some of the timers ineffective and
saved a huge disaster.
For once neither political leaders nor the media can
fault the intelligence agencies which had warned about Jihadi terrorist threats
to Bodh Gaya on three occasions in October 2012, January 2013 and last month.
In fact, the IB had warned of possible attack on Bodh Gaya when it named three
suspected terrorists when they entered Bihar.
After receiving the latest alert, Bihar police met
with the temple management last week and discussed the security arrangements in
the temple complex! Despite all this effort, the terrorists have managed to
carry out their task. This showed the gross failure of Bihar police’s
security management set up.
The casualness with which the IB alert was treated in Bihar is evident from the explanation given by the state that the temple authorities were managing the security inside the temple and the police were providing protection outside it. And the blasts have exposed the shoddiness of the argument.
Whatever be the reasons for the failure to prevent the
terrorist attack, it once again confirms that our counter terrorism effort
continues to be a never ending 'work in progress' although five years have
passed since the 26/11 Lashkar terrorists struck in Mumbai. It is a national
shame.
What were the weaknesses in security management?
Bihar has been the home of some of the notorious
Islamist terrorists (according to one report as many as 26 of them belonged to
Bihar). Maoist extremism also had been thriving in this state, though Bihar
Chief Minister Nitesh Kumar seems to have politically managed to keep it on
leash at least for the time being.
In spite of such a background, the Gaya terrorist
attack shows the state government had not taken terrorist threat seriously and
took timely, informed decisions on preventing it. The state has to plan
whatever action was required in advance and the state police has to coordinate
and rehearse counter terrorism drills involving all stakeholders - the state
and central police and intelligence bodies and civilian security guards.
Whatever was done did not stop the terrorists from carrying out their deadly
mission.
The fact that terrorists managed to carry 13 IEDs each
weighing nearly four Kgs in and around the temple complex with impunity showed
utter lack of professionalism and poor training of temple security personnel
and the police. The temple security personnel did not know how to use the
scanners or CCTV.
The Chief Minister has now asked for the deployment of
Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) for the temple security. However, that
is no panacea for preventing future terrorist attacks in the state because the
problem is multifaceted. It is the responsibility of the state to provide
overall policy guidance and make structural arrangements to facilitate security
management. Apparently this is lacking.
On the positive side, there seems to be better sharing
of information between state police bodies than before. Similarly the central
security and intelligence agencies also appear to be sharing their inputs with
state police in time. There is better coordination with the NSG and NIA
to investigate the incident after it occurred. This would help in identifying
the group involved in the terror strike. Media management was better and kept
the information flow to the public on a regular basis.
Do you see this attack as retaliation for attacks
on Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar? Or is it a Islamist terrorist backlash to
recent escalation in anti-Muslim rhetoric in Myanmar and Sri Lanka by Buddhist
activists led by monks?
Taliban extremists’ anti-Buddhist activity has a long
history. Even as early as 2001 they destroyed the renowned Bamiyan Buddha
statues in Afghanistan. The persecution of Rohingiya Muslims in
Myanmar has a long history and it continues with sporadic attacks on them in
Rakhine state. The 2012 anti-Rohingya riots left about 140 killed and rendered
100,000 homeless.
This had kindled worldwide protest among Muslims
particularly in Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia. Even in India in Kolkata and
Chennai Muslim organizations held protest marches. Last year, some mischievous
elements had in fact triggered mass exodus of people from Northeast working in
Chennai and Bengaluru by sending text messages threatening to attack them in
retaliation for attacks on Rohingyas!
In addition to this, in Myanmar Buddhist activists
have been leading sporadic attacks against local non-Rohingya Muslims also. In March 2013, Buddhist
activists killed a total 43 people and injured 93 in Meikhtila in Central
Myanmar. In all 1227 homes, 77 shops and 37 mosques were destroyed. The riots
quickly spread to six other townships in Thayawady district in Bago Region in
Lower Myanma and to 11 townships in Mandalay and Pegu divisions, where Muslim
neighbourhoods were ransacked.And the army had to be called to restore order
rather belatedly.
Monks
had been at the forefront of such extremism. Monks like
Wirathu, leader of the 969 movement, have been delivering provocative sermons
against Muslims. This has caused global concerns; even the last issue of Time
magazine featured Wirathu on its cover under the caption ‘Buddhist terrorism’.
Jihadi elements have been using the popular sympathy
for the oppressed Muslims among the global Muslm community to spread their
influence by holding out terror threats against Buddhists. In Pakistan the god
father of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jamaat ud Dawah chief Hafiz Saeed had
tweeted on June 14 accusing India of collaborating with Burmese government
“wipe out Muslim population of Myanmar.”
He also said it was “an obligation on the whole Muslim
Ummah to defend the rights and honour of Rohingya Muslims in Burma” and asked Muslim rulers to “unite and raise their voice for
the genocide of muslims in Burma at the security council."
According
to a report in The Express Tribune of Pakistan,Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan
(TTP), popularly known as the Pakistani Taliban, threatened to "attack
Burmese interests" if Pakistan did not cut off its diplomatic relations
with Myanmar. It threatened to take revenge for the attacks.
Considering these reports and the capability of these
terror outfits, it is reasonable to assume Gaya attacks could be part of their
retaliation against Buddhists for the Rohingya persecution. However, the
process of identifying the perpetrators is going on and it would be too
premature to attribute it to any particular terror outfit; but its anti-Indian
and anti-Buddhist character is evident.
As far as Sri Lanka is concerned Buddhist activism and
vigilantism against Muslims and Christian places worship has been growing for
sometime now. Mosques and churches, and even temples have been attacked. The
monks have been leading the campaign against halal slaughtering done by
Muslims. They have forced closure of shops selling halal meat. This had created
panic and unease among Muslims.
Though the government had been neutral, some of the
ruling coalition partners like the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), right wing monks
party, had been supporting these campaigns led by vigilante outfits like Ravana
Balaya and the Bodu Bala Sena. At times, at the local level officials tend to
ignore the violent activity of the lumpen elements of these outfits or take
action belatedly.
However, Sri Lanka Muslims as well as most of the
Sinhala leaders have been careful not to allow it to become a full
blown Muslim-Buddhist confrontation. And the government also appears to be
aware of the dangers of such a confrontation which could have its backlash in
Gulf countries where Sri Lankan expatriates work in large numbers. However, in
the long term, if these vigilante activities are not curbed by the government
the situation could get out of control.
I do not believe Sri Lanka situation has anything to
do with the IED attacks in Gaya, though LTTE had the dubious distinction of
carrying out a terror attack on the Temple of the Tooth at Kandy. Despite all
the speeches on Tamil Eelam, at present I do not think there is any Tamil
outfit which has either the motivation or capability to carry out an attack on
a holy site like Bodh Gaya.
What is your comment on the politicization of the
attack on Bodh Gaya that appears to be overtaking security concerns?
In India every issue ends up as a political debate. So
it is not surprising that a
serious security breach that ended in terrorist
attack in Bodh Gaya is also meeting the same fate. The reasons for this are
many – inter-party and intra party politics and schism, national versus
regional jealousies among political outfits, caste and religious ‘vote bank’
politics and historical prejudices etc. We do not have national
leadership strong enough to focus on our national priorities. I doubt very much
whether we can outlive this.
As a result of this all our hallowed national
institutions have been corrupted. The unseemly conduct of CBI in naming IB as
party in the Ishrat Jahan case is the latest of such dismal episodes. So
reports on terrorist activity or suspects do not get the attention they deserve
at every level. For example in Kerala, the coalition politics has been
leveraged to pamper the minority community and this environment has been
cleverly exploited by extremist and divisive elements to increase their
clout.
So after every terrorist incident our leaders
castigate the ruling party or whitewash their weaknesses. National leaders
after Gaya explosions used the same clichés – ‘cowardly act,’ ‘will not
tolerate,’ ‘guilty will be punished’ that have been repeated after every acts
of terrorism since 26/11 terror attacks. This is symptomatic of our national
weakness: inability to think beyond spouting clichés after the incident
rather than getting our act together before they take place.
When P Chidambaram took over as Union Home Minister in
the wake of 26/11 terror strikes in Mumbai he promised to revamp the entire
national counter terror effort. He tried to address weaknesses in structural
and information sharing systems embedded in the culture of our intelligence
agencies and police organizations, particularly at the state level.
The political class has long been accustomed to use
the state police to serve their political interest. So it is not surprising
Chidambaram’s efforts to professionalise policing and improve the coordination
between and among police organizations and intelligence agencies are mired in
petty politics and political grandstanding. As we are facing a parliamentary
election soon, I do not have much hope of seeing light at the end of the tunnel
as it seems unending.
Col R
Hariharan, a retired Military Intelligence officer, is associated with Chennai
Centre for China Studies and the South Asia Analysis Group.E-mail: colhari@yahoo.com; website: www.colhari.org
Courtesy: South Asia Analysis Group Paper No. 5526 dated July 9, 2013
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