Author: Mayank Jain
Publication: IndiaCause.com
Date: April 18, 2006
URL: http://www.indiacause.com/columns/OL_060418.htm
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 minorities
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.
o On April 17, 2002, at 10 PM, Ali, a cadre
of Jamaat-e-Islami raped Dr. Sachidananda's wife
(The Daily Janakantha,
April 2002).
o 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)
o On April 18, 2003, Good Friday, there was
an attack on Bonpara Mission, Natore, leaving ten people injured. (Rosaline
Costa, Hotline Human Rights Bangladesh)
o 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.
o 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
"