Resources for all concerned with culture of authoritarianism in society, banalisation of communalism, (also chauvinism, parochialism and identity politics) rise of the far right in India (and with occasional information on other countries of South Asia and beyond)
Amritpal Singh was raising own army, ‘human bomb squads': 10 points ByAniruddha Dhar , New Delhi Mar 20, 2023 06:31 AM IST Security agencies had raised a red flag after intelligence inputs suggested that Amritpal Singh was using drug de-addiction centres and a gurdwara for stockpiling weapons and preparing youths to carry out suicide attacks.
Punjab’s blood-soaked
history may repeat itself, with the new Waris Punjab De chief shooting
his mouth off without any fear of action
Amritpal Singh
(in beige shawl) publicly extols the idea of Khalistan and celebrates
violence with much audacity, courtesy the backing of his powerful
patrons. Pic/Twitter
In
a country where people are arrested for social media posts, it is
astonishing that Amritpal Singh should publicly extol the idea of
Khalistan, celebrate violence, disparage communities, and lavish praise
on Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, the militant leader who, along with the
Indian state, scarred Punjab in the 1980s. Amritpal’s audacity suggests
he enjoys impunity, courtesy the backing of powerful patrons operating
incognito.Amritpal
Singh who? Twenty-nine years old, he came to Punjab last year, from
Dubai, to take over the Waris Punjab De, an organisation late
actor-turned-activist Deep Sidhu had floated in 2021. In Dubai, Amritpal
was clean-shaven and wore denim jeans. He now dresses in a white gown
and blue turban, with a sword dangling by his side. You could dismiss
his carefully cultivated Bhindranwale-like demeanour as a pantomime act
but for his divisive politics.Bhindranwale’s
village Rode was chosen as the place to install Amritpal as the head of
the Waris Punjab De. Amid chants of Khalistan zindabad, he said he
would “only walk the path shown by” Bhindranwale. To ThePrint, he
explained: “We want to give the state a message that no matter how evil
they portray him as, he will always be our hero.”
Amritpal’s speeches evoke imagery of victimhood. “Successive
governments in Delhi [Centre]—and be it the BJP or the Congress—have
worked towards the humiliation or elimination of Sikhs,” he told The
Hindu. In Punjab’s popular parlance, Delhi is synonymous with Hindus,
whom Amritpal indirectly blames for humiliating Sikhs. The panacea,
therefore, is to convey to the State that “they are no longer going to
silently tolerate slavery.”
He perceives the 1984 anti-Sikh riots an outcome of the community’s
resistance to enslavement, and mentions an undeniable fact—that “in the
1980s, scores of Sikhs were killed in fake encounters.” But he has yet
to articulate what is also beyond doubt—the killing of scores by Sikh
militants.
Even his most euphemistic remarks acquire menacing tones because of
his celebration of violence. “Violence is neither good nor bad, violence
is violence,” he told The Hindu. Pointing out that the State, too,
resorts to violence through the courts and police, he argued, “The day
we have that system, our violence would be justified.”
Conversion was never on the radical Sikh’s agenda. Not so with
Amritpal, who asked villages to ban entry of pastors. He allegedly said,
“Jesus could not save himself, how will he save others?” This provoked
Christians to block roads in Jalandhar. Lambasting Hindu migrant
labourers for “worshipping idols, selling cigarettes and drugs”, he
advised, “If you do not want such things…take action.”
But there are also reformist-revivalist streaks in his outpourings.
He speaks against drug addiction, dowry and casteism, and advocates Sikh
baptism; he insists people should be seated on the floor, not on
benches or chairs, when listening to the recital of Guru Granth Sahib in
gurdwaras. Such speeches of his have many remember that Bhindranwale,
too, began as a reformist-revivalist before he turned into a high priest
of militancy, cocking a snook at his political patrons who nurtured
him.
Not for nothing has Amritpal earned the moniker ‘Bhindranwale 2.0’.
Punjab’s blood-soaked history may well repeat itself, with Amritpal
being allowed to shoot his mouth off. Former Chief Minister and BJP
leader Captain Amarinder Singh blames the Aam Aadmi Party government for
the emerging Amritpal phenomenon: “How can you let someone like him go
scot-free? He has been making statements against the unity and integrity
of the country…”
But this is precisely the question Amarinder should pose to the Modi
government, which can order the National Investigation Agency to take
action against Amritpal, for this central agency is empowered to
“investigate and prosecute offences affecting the sovereignty, security
and integrity of India.” Amritpal, ostensibly, has committed these
offences, which should be anathema to the BJP, given its abhorrence of
secessionism. As for the AAP, it believes any action against Amritpal,
such as arresting him, would turn him into a hero and also undermine its
popularity. This could well be his patrons’ endgame, some think.
But undermining the AAP would only be a spinoff of the larger game of
using Amritpal to weaken democratic movements and splinter the
subaltern unity, vividly demonstrated during the farmer movement, said
Prof Parminder Singh, of the Association for Democratic Rights, to me.
He said subaltern unity was the only check against the state
implementing neo-liberal policies.
Indeed, Amritpal’s contempt for the Left-leaning Bharatiya Kisan
Union (Ekta Ugrahan), Punjab’s biggest peasant formation, is obvious in
what he said to the Baaz website: “Bringing the Left and Sikhs together
is like bringing the North and South Pole together.” Amritpal’s
emergence does not surprise BKU (Ekta Ugrahan) leader Sukhdev Singh
Kokri Kalan, who told me, “Whenever people unite, religion is brought
into politics.”
Regardless of the identity of Amritpal’s patrons, his rise could
spawn fear among Hindus about militancy returning to haunt Punjab,
leading to their consolidation. With the Sikhs fractured ideologically,
Amritpal’s shenanigans could be advantageous to the BJP. This electoral
calculation is cited by Punjabi intellectuals as an explanation,
although without evidence, for the NIA’s indifference to Bhindranwale
2.0.
The Indian Express
A foreign offence
Punjab government doesn’t get it: Idea of blasphemy has no point of reference in Hinduism
by Vinay Lal
|
Published: September 11, 2018
The Punjab assembly has approved an amendment to Section 295A of the
Indian Penal Code that imposes a life sentence upon those convicted of
desecrating religious texts. Section 295A, earlier, stipulated a prison
term of three years for anyone found guilty of outraging, or attempting
with malicious intent to outrage, the religious sentiments of the
practitioners of any faith. A number of commentators have in recent days
objected strenuously and with passionate conviction to legislation that
is unquestionably liable to abuse and will almost certainly further
undermine the already endangered secular structure of the Indian polity,
but their arguments do not as much as recognise the principal
intellectual shortcoming of the legislation.
Let it be said that most of the commonplace arguments that have been
raised against this extremely foolish and dangerous gesture on the part
of the Congress government are not insignificant. First, the concern
with desecration of religious texts is not groundless, as the spate of
incidents in Faridkot in late 2015 involving the desecration of the Guru
Granth Sahib suggests. There is, secondly, the question of political
expediency: The country will be going to elections in less than an year,
and the Congress is keen to position itself before voters, not for the
first time, as a champion of religious minorities.
Thirdly, the Akali Dal government in 2016 did pass legislation that
sought life imprisonment for desecrating the Sikh holy book, as well as
an enhanced prison term of 10 years for offenders against other
religious faiths, but the Central government returned the legislation
both on the grounds that the prescribed punishments were “excessive in
law” and, more importantly, in violation of the principles of secularism
enshrined in the Constitution. The violation was construed as emanating
not even remotely from the fact that the state had no business in using
its coercive powers to enforce religious belief, but rather from the
curious fact that in prescribing a higher penalty for desecrators of the
Guru Granth Sahib than for those who had insulted the holy books of
other faiths, the state government had elevated one religion over
another and thereby violated the central tenet of Indian secularism
which insists on parity for all religions.
It is for this reason that the amendment to Section 295A stipulates
that “whoever causes injury, damage or sacrilege to Sri Guru Granth
Sahib, Srimad Bhagwad Gita, Holy Quran and Holy Bible with the intention
to hurt the religious feelings of the people, shall be punished with
imprisonment for life”. What was deemed as “excessive” punishment is now
sought to be imposed with uniformity upon an offender found guilty of
the said offence, regardless of religion. Apparently, barbarism towards
all is to be preferred to a barbarism that is
partial.
Much else has been said, and with due reason, against the amendment
to the IPC. The application of “blasphemy laws” in neighbouring Pakistan
demonstrates the extraordinary hazards of such legislation: People
often falsely charge others to settle personal scores, and many of those
accused have been killed by vigilante mobs even before they could be
brought to court. There is also the equally substantive issue that the
threshold for what is deemed “religious hurt” continues to be lowered.
The three dozen retired civil servants who have addressed an open letter
to the Punjab Chief Minister are doubtless right in arguing that
“blasphemy laws are a direct threat to freedom of speech and expression,
a fundamental right.”
While these arguments have merit, a more fundamental problem remains.
The use of the phrase, “blasphemy laws”, is common to nearly everything
that has been written on the subject. The legislation in question does
not use the word “blasphemy”, but all commentators have understood the
gist of it as prescribing penalties for blasphemy. Like many of the
categories that inform our intellectual discourse in India, “blasphemy”
is part of the Judeo-Christian inheritance that was handed down to India
in the wake of colonial rule. Moses is told by the Lord to tell the
Israelites, “When any man whatever blasphemes his God… all the community
shall stone him; alien or native… he shall be put to death” (Leviticus
24:15-16). Moral theologians such as Thomas Aquinas regarded blasphemy
as a sin against faith. The Eastern Roman Emperor, Justinian I, decreed
the death penalty for blasphemy, and in large parts of the Christian
world blasphemy remained punishable by death until comparatively recent
times.
What is absolutely striking is the fact that the idea of blasphemy
has no point of reference or analogue in Hinduism, Jainism, or Buddhism.
The idea is absolutely foreign to at least the adherents of these
religions. Indians, whatever their religious faith, understand the
reverence in which holy books are to be held, or the respect that is to
be paid to religious shrines, but it is questionable whether most of
them would be moved by arguments about “blasphemy”.
What does blasphemy mean to a Hindu, and what is “the holy book” that
is being blasphemed against? On whose authority does the Punjab
government pronounce that the Bhagvad Gita is to the Hindu what the
Bible is to the Christian or the Quran to the Muslim? How did the view
of a certain, and to a considerable extent Anglicised, element of the
Hindu middle class about the Gita come to represent the view of all
Hindus? How does one even begin to understand that every faith, and not
only Hinduism, began to be shaped in the image of Protestant
Christianity commencing from the late 18th century? We have here another
instance of how our thinking takes place without any awareness of the
fact that the intellectual legacies of the Judeo-Christian tradition are
unthinkingly deployed to frame very different experiences.
I am reminded, finally, of an anecdote from the life of Vivekananda.
It is reported that on a visit to Kashmir, some of Vivekananda’s
followers swore, upon seeing the broken images of the goddess strewn
over the countryside, that they would henceforth not permit her images
to be defiled. Vivekananda turned to them with a retort, “Do you protect
the Goddess, or does the Goddess protect you?” The chief minister and
the other self-appointed guardians of religion can usefully take home a
lesson from this story.
It is arrogant for them to believe that the great faiths of India
require the protections of the Indian state; and this is, of course,
apart from any consideration of whether the Indian state has any moral
standing to uplift these faiths. On nearly every ground that one can
think of, the Punjab and Central governments would be well advised to
withdraw the amendment to Section 295A of the Indian Penal Code.
The writer is a professor of History & Asian American Studies, UCLA
The government of Punjab has done the
nation a disservice by seeking to add a section to the Indian Penal Code
(IPC) that would make even reasoned debate of theology a crime that
warrants life imprisonment.
The Centre should reject the recommended change to the IPC. The
colonial-era law already contains two sections, 295 and 295A, which
provide for two-year and three-year prison terms, respectively, for
damaging or defiling any place or object held to be sacred by any class
of people and for hurting the religion or religious sentiments of any
class of people. Punjab now proposes 295AA with life imprisonment for
“injury, damage or sacrilege” to the Guru Granth Sahib, the Geeta, the
Quran and the Bible.
The Akali Dal government of Punjab had proposed a similar law for
defiling the Guru Granth Sahib, in the wake of repeated incidents of
deliberate attempts to incite religious fury by strewing torn pages and
mangled copies of the Sikh holy book in different parts of Punjab. The
Centre had turned down the proposal on the ground that it was not
secular. The present amendment incorporates the holy books of other
major faiths and, so, seeks to clear the secular bar. This is the wrong
response to deliberate attempts by anti-national forces to provoke
religious disturbance. The political class should unite to ask people to
be on guard against such provocation, and seek their cooperation to
defeat anti-India moves. Sensible politics and law enforcement are the
right response, not tougher laws liable to abuse.
To have such a law on the statute book is to invite abuse: the law on
sedition is a case in point. Sedition cases have been rife across the
land, in spite of repeated Supreme Court rulings that only active
incitement to violence against the state constitutes sedition.
Punjab’s Congress government trading a dangerous path again trying to
‘beat’ BJP in using religion as a pretext. Why Mr Amrinder Singh feel
that any critique to religion is sacrilege and the person need to be
punished for life?
While, I can understand that in multicultural societies we need to be
very careful. As administrator we must be above our personal prejudices
based on caste, religion and regional identities and therefore ensure
that deliberate attempt to dishonor faith or humiliate people on the
basis of their faith must be protected, in the very similar way as
people have right to profess their faith as well as declared that they
are non believers.
This country developed secularism under the guise of multiculturalism
which left non believers, humanists, atheists, rationalists outside the
prism of ‘secularism’ even when our first prime minister was a
proclaimed atheist yet secularism was more used as symbolism to look
better governed and functioned than our problematic neighbours where
religious bigot dominated the political discourse as well as politics.
The Sarv Dharm Sambhav business in India has hurt those who seek
reforms with in their own religions. It stop people from doing so as the
religious groups join hands. Multiculturalism and secularism are not
synonymous as being suggested in India. Secularism is basically for the
state to be non religious and treat all equally as per rule of law.
Now, Punjab Sacrilege bill is still not known as what is sacrilege.
Frankly, Punjab was not bothered about others. The Akalis had prepared
the bill that any one who defile Guru Granth Saheb or speak ill against
it will be punished and the bill was returned by the center and now
punjab government has become more ‘inclusive’ and included Geeta,Quran
and Bible in it. Question is what is the definition of sacrilege? Will
it be physical burning or defiling of the religious books or the
definition would be enlarged to include any critique of religion or
religious practices, in the name of ‘hurting’ ‘religious sentiments’ of
the people or spreading animosity among communities. If the bill stops
people from critiquing religion then it will become blasphemy law and
will be dangerous. We all are witnessing how secular, human rights
activists, minority rights activists are being attacked in countries
like Pakistan, Bangladesh, Saudi Arabia under the blasphemy laws where
questioning Islam is blasphemous. Will Punjab lead India towards a new
blasphemous act ? Will other states too follow this ridiculous act to
appease all the religious people of sarv dharm variety ?
All religions have deeply inbuilt prejudices. There are
discriminatory practices divinely sanctioned by religion. You can say
some are better than others but by and large they remain rigid as
religions do not allow you to ‘amend’ their ‘verses’ or hymns which are
absolutely out of date as per our times unlike our constitution which
allow people to amend the rules or acts to suit the interests of the
people according to the time.
It means all the critique by the Dalit Bahujan Adivasis in India to
the so called brahmanical religious text which degraded them and
devalued them, will come under this act ? It means any Muslim woman or
former Muslim who question Quran or any christian who write ‘ Why I am
not a Christian’ should face life imprisonment ? It means Dr Ambedkar’s
‘Riddles of Hinduism’ will be prohibited ? It means we can’t read Salman
Rushdie’s book ‘freedom at midnight’ or Satanic verses. If means all
the Mazhabis and Ravidasis who critique Sikkhism will get life
imprisonment. In democratic societies, we need not to agree with
everything said by people or written by them but we defend their right
to express themselves. Differences are only countered through providing
better critique and alternatives and not by stifling their voices or
sending them to imprisonment.
It is dangerous. All Ambedakrites, human rights activists, those
believe in human freedom must oppose the Punjab bill as it is an attempt
to stop people from critiquing religion. We can understand and will
support if some one defile a religious place physically but writing
critique of religion or speaking against it does not and should not come
under such stringent laws. Even if Punjab government want an act, it
must consult human rights groups, general public at large, social
activists on the issue. The supreme court must reject it
unconstitutional which gives us freedom of expression and thought.
Is not not strange and shameful that religious critique which our
constitution allow us to do is being banned and punishment being made to
life imprisonment while those who are burning the constitution and
insulting it are let off lightly.
What an India. Rahul Gandhi and Congress party must ponder it whether
Amrinder Singh is deliberately hurting Congress or whether he has the
support from Congress high command. If the party high command support
it, then we must say, the congress has still not learnt its lessons well
and continue to appease the religious groups. It is time, the voices of
common people must be heard and not merely the religious heads. Punjab
government must be forced to take this bill back which is against our
constitution and all democratic norms. It violate the fundamental rights
of an individual to critique religion and can be misused by police
officials as well as politicians to target their opponents which will
bring more chaos and anarchy in the society. India has to be guided by
religious morality and not through individual religious values. Vidya Bhushan Rawat is a social and human rights activist. He blogs at www.manukhsi.blogspot.com twitter @freetohumanity Email: vbrawat@gmail.com
The blasphemy law also messes with secularism. A liberal state needs two sensibilities.
The Punjab government’s proposal to amend Article 295 of the Penal
Code is deeply regressive and will have deep ramifications beyond
Punjab. The proposed amendment gives life imprisonment for whoever
causes injury, damage or sacrilege to the Guru Granth Sahib, the Bhagwad
Gita, the Quran and the Bible. As we have seen in the case of
neighbouring Pakistan, the progressive strengthening of anti-blasphemy
laws during the Seventies was a sign of a toxic combination of greater
intolerance and authoritarianism. Does India want to traverse the same
road?
Holy books like the Adi Granth are sacred. They are sacred not just
for their content. They express the highest truths about Ultimate
Reality. The “Sat” in “Ek Omkar Sat Nam” brilliantly combines both Truth
and Existence. But in the Sikh tradition, the Book is also treated
iconically, with elaborate rituals around its sacred treatment, often to
the point where it is not easily disseminated. But using state power to
enforce the sacred, both defiles the sacred and messes with the
secular.
The article defiles the sacredness of the Book, the eternity of the
Word because the status of the Book now becomes an artefact of state
power. It is if the song of Krishna, or the word of Mohammad, or the
teaching of the Gurus, now need the imprimatur of state violence to
secure their sacredness.
Rather than being luminous, potent and transcendent texts, their
status is now reduced to a section of the Indian Penal Code. It also
gives defilers of these texts more power: It is in effect saying these
books can, in fact, be defiled by some rearrangement or even a burning
of a copy. So much for the indestructible Word. The greatest heresy is
to think that the word of God needs protection from the mortal state.
The sacrilege to the book is not its burning, it is this law.
But this law also messes with secularism. A liberal state needs two
sensibilities. The first is that many good things are good and derive
their authentic meaning precisely from the fact that there is no
coercion behind them. The second is that my beliefs and faith, even if
entirely sound, do not by themselves provide sufficient ground for the
state using its coercive power to enforce them. The argument that the
state needs to use coercive power in deference to religious sentiments
(however sincere those sentiments might be), is a piece of illiberal and
dangerous nonsense. I may respect something, but it does not give
sufficient warrant for the state to enforce this belief or sentiment on
others. Religious sentiments need not be illiberal; but they become
illiberal when they become the basis for the state enforcing the idea
that everyone has to defer to those sentiments. In India, we are
constantly expanding the circle of deference to religious sentiment.
Contrary to what the Punjab government says, making religious sentiments
the basis for law, is a recipe for competitive political mobilisation
and conflict, not of peace. This law is also deeply authoritarian. The
idea of life imprisonment for acts of injury to the book is neither
about deterrence, nor piety. It is simply about the state making a show
of its power because it can.
The law also messes with history in bizarre ways. In order to show
that the law was not directed at a particular religion, the act includes
texts like the Bhagwad Gita in its ambit. The law is still sectarian in
that it protects four texts, and the state has decided which texts get
protection. But whatever the glories and importance of the Bhagwad Gita,
the idea that the state now creates a new liturgy of respect around
that text in the same way as the Adi Granth or the Koran, is the state
taking over the right to define the significance of these texts in its
own way. It is in effect converting the text to what it has never been.
Defenders of the amendments say that the text will not lead to the
closing of spaces for criticism, since the act of injury to the text is
narrowly defined. But this is plain nonsense. One of the tragedies of
modern Sikhism is simply that the religion of extraordinary ecumenism
and wondrous detachment has become often seriously internally
intolerant. Part of this is political: The SGPC wanting to maintain as
much of its monopoly over the religious organisation as possible. But if
you talk to serious Sikh scholars you will quickly find out just how
difficult it is to do serious critical scholarship in this area:
Scholars have been traumatised by their communities. I have personally
known scholars who will not write critically on intra-Sikh politics for
fear of reprisals.
Often the issue is simply that the scholarship dealing with the
character of the text is considered “injurious” to the text, a
defilement. In another context, even our courts have held rearranging
Basava Vachanas in a different order (to give a more “feminist” reading)
was offensive to the Lingayats. Given this context, any law that
empowers the state to give upto life imprisonment for injury to the book
is about nothing but creating a pall of fear. Its effect will not be
the number of prosecutions; its effect will be more palpably felt in
people not even daring to push the boundaries of protest.
When the original IPC was discussed in the 1920s, our leaders were
far more conscious of its possible infringement on liberty. Now the
political class legitimises any infringement on liberty with the
imprimatur of majoritarian sentiment behind it. It is true that in
Punjab there were acts of desecration of several religious texts. But
there are enough existing laws to deal with those who would want to
maliciously generate enmity between communities. Second, the motives of
these desecrators are mixed. But if they have a political purpose, it is
to make sure that they can use religious sentiments to destroy India’s
liberal democracy. By caving into those fears, by treating Indian
citizens as infantile creatures of passion who cannot be educated for
liberty, we are unwittingly aiding their political agenda.
It should also worry a democracy that no political party has opposed
or called out the authoritarian character of this bill. Congress and AAP
are now both legitimising “religious sentiment” as itself a valid
argument (think Ayodhya). For, caving in to some nebulous argument about
religious sentiments does not just make us destroy both religion and
the state, it also produces political cowardice of the highest order.
A new real threat of Khalistani terror,
fuelled and funded by foreign gurudwaras patronised by liberal white
politicians, has revived memories of a blood-drenched era of Punjab’s
history
Dilawar Singh, the
‘human bomb’ who assassinated the then Punjab chief minister Beant Singh
in a suicidal attack in 1995, was hailed as a ‘great martyr’ at his
death anniversary held at the Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat of
Sikhs, in the Golden temple complex on Thursday.
A ‘sandesh’
(message) of Jagtar Singh Hawara, a convict in the assassination case,
was read out at the event by his father Gurcharan Singh, who was
designated as a parallel jathedar of Akal Takht at the radicals’ Sarbat
Khalsa (grand Sikh assembly) held in Amritsar in 2015.
Hawara, who is serving a life sentence in Tihar jail at Delhi, glorified his aide Dilawar Singh as a “great martyr.”
No
Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) employee stopped
Gurcharan Singh from reading out Hawara’s message, even as members of
the task force of the apex gurdwara body were present on the occasion.
Dilawar,
a cop-turned-militant, had blasted himself to kill Beant Singh outside
the Punjab civil secretariat at Chandigarh on August 31, 1995.
Like
previous years, an ‘akhand path’ was organised at the Akal Takht, the
bhog ceremony of which was solemnised on early Thursday morning. It was
followed by ‘gurbani kirtan,’ which concluded around 8 am.
Meanwhile,
Akal Takht jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh, who had declared the Beant
Singh’s assassin as ‘qaumi shahid’ (martyr of the community) in 2012,
skipped the ceremony.
During the previous years, the Golden
Temple’s head granthi Giani Jagtar Singh used to honour kin of Dilawar
Singh, but this time he too, besides other SGPC office-bearers, kept a
distance from the ceremony.
However, Akal Takht head granthi Giani
Malkit Singh honoured the kin of the assassin, including the latter’s
brother Chamkaur Singh, with siropas (robes of honour).
Sikh
hardliners owing allegiance to the Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar), led
by Simranjit Singh Mann, Akhand Kirtani Jatha and Dal Khalsa paid
tributes to Dilawar.
Talking to the media, some of them demanded
that Dilawar’s portrait be installed in the Central Sikh museum at the
Golden Temple.
Notably, despite all-out efforts by Sikh radicals
to ensure a huge gathering during the ceremony, there was a low turnout.
Apart from the SGPC, the police had made tight security arrangements
inside and outside the Golden Temple complex to prevent any untoward
incident.
In the
last 15 years, novelist and writer Desraj Kali has seen Punjab undergo some striking
changes. But none is as striking as its gradual religious revolution.
A
growing number of people in the predominantly Sikh state, he says, are now visiting
Hindu temples. Not those of principal deities like Vishnu, Shiva and Rama,
but of Shani, the elder brother of the god of death Yama, who is notorious for
his malefic influence on life.
More than
ever before, Kali says, people are visiting the gurudwara of Baba Deep Singh in
Amritsar. According to legend, Deep Singh, a Sikh warrior, was decapitated while battling the forces of Ahmad Shah Abdali, the king of
Afghanistan. In a niche in the perimeter of the Golden Temple in Amritsar, there
is a painting depicting the storied aftermath:
Deep Singh, holding his severed head with
his left hand and swinging a massive sword with his right, continued
to fight, and died only after reaching the Golden Temple.
There
are more, says Kali. People in increasing numbers are placing chadars at Pirs’ mazaars. There is a “thousand-fold” increase in the number of tantrik ads in the local media. Eeven
orthodox Sikhs – Amritdhaaris, who carry the sacred daggercalled kirpan – have begun
visiting “non-traditional deras”, religious centres with living gurus, though Sikhism expressly forbids worship
of individuals. Baba Deep Singh's gurudwara in Amritsar. Credit: M RajshekharThe rise of uncertainty
What
explains these sweeping changes in Punjab’s religious milieu? It is the rising
uncertainty in people’s lives.
For
decades now, the economic engines that pushed Punjab’s growth have been
slowing. Farm growth, which peaked at around 5%-6% annually in the early 1980s,
has slowed to around 1%-2% now.
Agriculture
in Punjab, says Abhijit Sen, a former member of the erstwhile Planning
Commission, depended on two factors: “A state committed to running agriculture
(like funding agricultural research and providing water), and a tradition of
bequeathing all land to the firstborn, so that landholdings did not get smaller
and smaller.”
Over
the years, this architecture has corroded. The state ran out of new land to
bring under farming; between sustained mono-cropping and high use of chemical
inputs, its agricultural soil weakened; the state withdrew from extension work and farm research; monsoon patterns began to change; and legal
norms (finally) allowing daughters to inherit property contributed to the
fragmentation of landholdings.
Industry,
similarly, went into a tail-spin. At the time of Independence, Punjab was
industrialised and local demand for its products was thriving. Thanks to
migration, the state tapped into markets beyond its boundaries. “Industry in
the state was relatively small-scale, but was able to sell outside Punjab,”
said Sen.
In
recent years, however, as Scroll.inreported earlier in this series, industry has tanked, with predictable
impacts on businesspeople in the state. “Only about 40% of the companies here
are surviving,” said Amarjit Singh, proprietor of the Ludhiana-based real
estate company Bhumi Solutions. “Another 30% have sublet their premises to
other businesses. And about 30% have shut down.” Much of this decay happened,
he says, in the last four years.
As you
travel through Punjab, you see first-hand just how fragile most household
budgets are. Take a farmer with two acres. In a good year, he will make about
Rs 90,000. If he spends Rs 3,000 a month on running the house (Rs 36,000
annually) and another Rs 15,000 each on preparing for his kharif and rabi crops
(Rs 30,000), he is left with just Rs 24,000. Of that, if Rs 12,000 goes into
the school or college fees of his two children (assuming a minimal Rs 500 per
month per child), he is left with just Rs 12,000 to meet all other expenses.
Even
conservative arithmetic leaves no margin for acts of man or god. If there is an
illness in the family, if the crop sells at lower rates than expected, if the
rains are less than ideal – in the last decade, Punjab has seen six weak monsoons, resulting in only one of the two crops doing well – households go
into debt.
“In
Punjab, people who earn Rs 10,000 but have their own home live at subsistence
levels,” said Sucha Singh Gill, director-general of Chandigarh’s Centre for
Research in Rural and Industrial Development. “Those making Rs 10,000 but
living in a rented house live at semi-starvation levels.” A loss of control
Synchronous
with the decline of agriculture and industry is the unravelling of the social
milieu. “Before militancy, there was a certain Nehruvian idealism in the state
– a desire to make Punjab something,” said Sumail Singh Sidhu, former professor
at Delhi University’s Khalsa College and former state convenor for the Aam
Aadmi Party. There was also the ethos absorbed from progressive left movements.
The Sikh movements themselves had left, centrist and right wing schools.
All
that was crushed, partly by the sectarian Sikhs as the Khalistan movement took
shape, and partly by the state government. One visible outcome of it today is
the loss of local leadership. “The traditional activist is gone,” said human
rights activist and advocate RS Bains. “In terms of human character, they were
the best of people. They were truth-speakers. They wanted to change society.”
In this
vacuum, a new set of actors have emerged – like the extra-constitutional halka in-charge and other local elite, who have compensated for the power they
lost due to, say, the Dalits’ economic independence by drawing close to the ruling political party. And alongside the rise
of rapacious extra-constitutional power centres, gun culture has taken root in
the state.
In the
process, says Jagrup Singh Sekhon, a professor at Amritsar’s Guru Nanak Dev
University, the nature of Punjab’s villages has changed considerably. “Villages
today are faction-ridden. You are either with the Akali Dal or you are not.”
Village
life, as a result, is one of oppression and uncertainty. As the previous story
in this series reported, justice can be elusive. “We
cannot go to the police,” said Kishan Chand, a ghoda-gaadi wallah who lives in the poor quarters of Nurmahal town
in Jalandhar. “I can complain, but the police might get tapped by the other
side and register a case against me instead.” How the state responded
The
people of the state have responded in a number of ways. Addiction to drugs and
alcohol is high. Migration is on the rise. The state, judging by its pop
culture, is awash in nostalgia. Punjabi pop videos jive around memes of
machismo and imperilled romance before the hero brandishes a gun, launches into
fights, and sets things right.
“The
songs have guns, big houses, open jeeps, Royal Enfields,” said novelist Kali.
“Even as people struggle, caste ka
ghamand liye ghoom rahein hain." They are drawing arrogance from their
caste.
Another
response, says Ronki Ram, dean (faculty of arts) at Chandigarh’s Panjab
University, is the increasing escape into religiosity. “In their understanding
of causes, however, people are guided more by religion than rationality,” Ram
said. “That is because the central logic running through the people is
religion. Development is to be received through religion – not through
technical means.”
The
interesting development here, Kali notes, is that people are turning towards
the new gurus and away from orthodox religion. This is similar to what Scroll.in noticed in Odisha as well,
where there is a sharp rise in the number of religious gurus. “In the last ten
years, more than 50 matths have
opened in Bhubaneswar alone,” said Rama Ballav Pant, a former BJD leader. “They
are all self-appointed babas.”
The rise of new religious complexes
For an
observer from outside, the changing religious landscape of Punjab is
bewildering. The state has old, historic gurudwaras run by the Shiromani
Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee, the apex body of the Sikhs. Then there are the
new Gurudwaras which, while not under the SGPC, follow its norms and preach
from the Guru Granth Sahib. And then there are the offshoots, and the
breakaways from Sikhism.
Some,
like the Ad Dharmis, are
caste-specific breakaways. Some are sects like the Radhasaomis, which has a
sprawling complex near Beas, a town between Jalandhar and Amritsar, and smaller
campuses across Punjab’s hinterland. Then there are the growing number of
living sants like Dera Sacha Sauda’s Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Insaan
(and, till he was declared clinically dead, Baba Ashutosh of Divya Jyoti
Sansthan at Nurmahal).
These sants, says a former member of the SGPC,
are different from the preachers who set up new gurudwaras. While the preachers
preach from the Guru Granth Sahib, the new sants
have their own holy books, their own accounts of how the world came into being. A
matter of demand and supply
The first reason
people flock to these new sants is
tactical. As Sekhon says, life in Punjab’s villages has become faction-ridden
and hard. “In such a construct, who can save people
from the police, the patwari, the
village leaders? That is what takes people to the sants.”
These sants, with their mass following, form a
protective buffer between the state and the individual, since local leaders
listen to the sants.
Why?
Because, as Laxmi Kanta Chawla, a former health minister and BJP member, says,
the nature of political leaders in the state is changing. “These [leaders] are
people who have not done anything to build a following of their own. So they
have to pander to communities, leaders who can make them win.”
This influence over
politicians is one reason why the number of sants
is rising fast. “Someone might be working in another dera, but cannot become its leader or make a name of his own,” a businessman in Moga said, explaining the amoeba-like
multiplication of sants and deras. “So he either splits the dera, or starts one of his own. The new
leader usually gets someone – perhaps a follower of the original dera – to back him financially. They do
a few functions to which local leaders are invited, and thus the forging of
bonds begins.”
When
people see local leaders visiting the new dera,
they recognise it as a power centre and begin going there as well. “In a nearby
village called Barauli, three or four new deras
have come up,” said the businessman. “People are going there because they feel kaam
ho jayega ." The work will get done.
Much of this, says
Bains, is inevitable. “When formal institutions fail,
informal ones come up," he said. "Even in a dictatorship, informal channels will work.
Society mein networking to hota hain.” And these informal
institutions have always been put to instrumental use. As Sekhon says, “Every
system has patronised the deras – be
it the Centre, the militants or the state.”
What is
relatively new is the open, symbiotic relationship with politicians and the
capitalisation of the sants. The big
ones are very well-funded. They market themselves aggressively. They run
schools and health camps, and offer subsidised food. And at the new deras,canteens offer subsidised colas and chow mein, drawing in more
people with the novelty. Turning away from Sikhism
Novelty
apart, many people feel, the main reason for the popularity of the new sants is the perception that orthodox
Sikhism is failing them.
“When
you are frustrated, you seek external help, advice,” said Sarabjit Singh Verka,
an investigator with Punjab Human Rights Organisation. “And that is something
the gurudwaras are not very good at – they refer you back to the Guru Granth
Sahib. In contrast, in a dera, koi aapka kaam kara dega ." Someone will
get your work done.
Kali
agreed and drew a link between uncertainty and insecurity. “There is a
hopelessness. And then a process to save yourself starts.”
The
evening I met him in Jalandhar, Kali explained the move towards the deras with
an example. “Ab main bimaar hoon. Ab main
toot chuka hoon. Ab mera shabd se kuch nahin hoga. Ab mujhe deh ki zaroorat
hain (I am ailing. I am broken. The book doesn’t give me solace. Is that
book listening to me? Is it hearing me? I want a remedy for the specific things
ailing me. I want a human to hear me and respond to me).”
This,
he says, is pushing people towards the supernatural. Baba Deep Singh’s
Gurudwara is a case in point. People go there because, he said, “Wahan ek
shakti hain. Shaheed ki shakti (There is a force there. The force of a
martyr).” A view from the street of Baba Deep Singh's gurudwara. Credit: M RajshekharAlternately,
they go to the sants who prescribe
remedies. “In these deras, the baba
makes promises and prophecies,” said the Moga businessman. “The people for whom
the predictions come true tell others. And the following grows.”
This is
similar to what Scroll.in had heard
in Odisha. “Physical poverty and distress has a psychological and social effect
on people,” a person there had explained. “This belief in babas springs from there – be it Radhe Maa or Sarathi Baba. People
live in the hope that the guru will change the condition of their lives – an illness they cannot cure on their own,
lack of money, whatever.”
As Panjab
University’s Ronki Ram said, “People go to the new deras because they find them offering a vital space for recognition
and identity.” The inevitable fallout
The
flow of people towards deras and sants – at first a trickle, now a trend
– is in turn giving rise to questions about the future direction of Sikhism.
In a
sense, it is the continuation of an age-old process. Sikhism was an offshoot of
Hinduism; the Jatt Sikhs and others had broken off from mainstream Hinduism
over caste discrimination, and created for themselves a rational religion that
was more of a manifesto for social transformation, one that spoke about gender
and caste equality.
However,
over time, little of those ideals converted into practice. Caste discrimination
continued, resulting in Dalit groups like the Ad Dharmis splintering out of Sikhism, and eventually leaving it
entirely.
Today,
as a new set of marginalised people – the small farmers amongst Jatt Sikhs –
foray beyond Sikhism, the perception that Sikhism could be under threat is
again gaining ground among some.
Ronki
Ram does not agree with this assessment. “People go to the new deras because they are rational. There
is more to gain by going there. It is a strategic choice. But when the Sikh
gurudwaras see this, they get desperate, thinking people are leaving us.”
According
to him, what we are witnessing is not the decline of orthodox Sikhism but an
increased, escalating religiosity across the state. The number of agencies
propagating religion is going up. Some people are turning to Sikhism, others to
the deras. Some read the Guru Granth
Sahib, others pin their faith on books written by Valmiki. “Between them, dharam
aagey badh raha hain (The
state is getting more religious).” And all this, he says, is playing out in the
absence of development.
Where
is this trend leading the state? The answer is anyone’s guess, says Ram. “A
rise in religiosity can give rise to new confrontations. People will get angry
not because their survival is in danger, but because they think they are
discriminated against due to their religion. Therefore, they reason, if they
save their religion, they will save themselves.”
All
this, in turn, can lead to a rise in militant defence of emerging religions,
and a consequent escalation of social tensions.
On the eve of
the anniversary of Operation Blue Star – the army’s attack on Jarnail
Singh Bhindranwale and his heavily armed militants holed up inside the
Golden Temple in Amritsar on June 5-6, 1984 – it is
worth remembering how some leaders of the Congress party sabotaged the
attempts that were being made to resolve the deteriorating situation in Punjab.
Had they not done so, there would have been no need for military action in the
Golden Temple – and terrorism in Punjab, fuelled by the Pakistani exploitation
of Sikh sentiment, would not have spread like fire the way it did from June
1984 onwards. Indeed, the events
leading up to Blue Star are reminder of how even shrewd leaders like
Indira Gandhi can become victim of the undesirable elements around them. As I
explained in my book, Bloodshed in Punjab,
she was surrounded by undesirable elements who lead her to the path of
destruction. There were many forces working on these lines who succeeded in
their mission but caused enormous damage to the country.
First act of
sabotage: In the first week of
April 1982, Bhindranwale visited the capital on the invitation of Jathedar
Santokh Singh, who was close to Indira Gandhi and also Zail Singh, who was
president at the time. Bhindranwale was moving around the capital with
his armed supporters, who sat on the roof top of a bus with
Bhindranwale inside, and this was a very embarrassing situation for the central
government. The then home secretary, T.N. Chaturvedi and Lt. Governor of Delhi,
S.L. Khurana, felt very concerned over the situation. They were in
touch with the Intelligence Bureau director, T.V. Rajeshwar.
Khurana was planning
to have Bhindranwale arrested in Delhi itself. Chaturvedi discussed the
entire situation and its consequences with Indira Gandhi and then sent Khurana
to convince her that they would be able to face the situation. Indira
Gandhi asked him many questions – how would they handle the situation and
what would happen if Bhindranwale died in the process. Khurana told
her that Bhindranwale was always sitting inside the bus and he
would not be hurt. But even if some unfortunate situation develops, we
should face it, he said. Indira Gandhi consented and authorised the
police to arrest Bhindranwale. Unfortunately, information about this
plan leaked. Bhindranwale received a message – that he
should leave Delhi as there were plans to arrest him. Intelligence reports
of the time hinted at the leak originating from persons close to Zail
Singh. Whatever the truth, Bhindranwale immediately shifted to the Majnu
ka Tila gurudwara on the outskirts of Delhi and left the next morning for
Punjab, foiling the plan to have him arrested.
Second sabotage: The
second act of
sabotage took place in November 1982. Indira Gandhi had appointed a
cabinet
committee on Punjab, and she had asked Sardar Swaran Singh to persuade
the
Akalis to come for talks. Swaran Singh had a reputation as
an excellent negotiator. After the Chinese aggression in 1962, talks
were
started with Pakistan under US pressure. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, as
Pakistan’s foreign minister, was leading his country’s delegation.
Jawaharlal Nehru deputed Swaran Singh to lead the Indian delegation –
and prolong
the talks as long as possible. Swaran Singh had seven rounds of
dialogue with Bhutto and after the seventh, a hassled Bhutto held a
press
conference in Delhi which I also attended, and attacked the Indian
delegation.
That was the end of the talks.
Whether for his
filibustering skills or his ability to actually produce a compromise, Indira
Gandhi asked Swaran Singh to take up the task of talking to Akalis who
were lodged in different jails.
The veteran
negotiator succeeded in bringing them to the table, so to speak. The
Akalis’ first agitation had failed and they were to announce their next
programme on November 4, 1982 at Amritsar. Swaran Singh had pleaded with the
cabinet committee on November 3, 1982, in Pranab Mukherjee’s room in parliament
house, that a situation should be created in which the Akalis are persuaded to
postpone their plans as once they announce any programme from the Golden
Temple, they would not be able to go back on that. He spoke to various
Akali leaders from Pranab Mukherjee’s room and a way out was found – that the
government should make a statement in parliament the next day making certain
assurances. A brief statement was prepared in which the government appreciated
the sacrifices made by the Sikhs in the freedom struggle and assured
sympathetic consideration of their demands. As for their political
demands, the government said it needed some time for consultations with other
states. The Akalis agreed to accept this statement.
A copy of the
draft was sent to Indira Gandhi. It was at this stage, late at night, that
she succumbed to pressure from Arun Nehru and M.L. Fotedar, who supported
the argument put forward by Bhajan Lal of Haryana that if this statement
was made, the Congress would lose the Haryana assembly elections which
were due in next few months. At their urging, the
statement was changed and the next day, Union home minister P.C. Sethi made a
statement on Punjab that was different from the one that had been read
out to the Akalis. I know this because I had seen a copy of the original
statement. Swaran Singh himself had come to parliament to listen to the home
minister.
After Sethi’s statement, Swaran Singh told me: “This is neither
the same statement nor the same spirit’, and I am going to withdraw from
negotiations.” So it was that on
November 4, 1982, the Akalis announced their next programme – declaring a
boycott of the Asian games, which led to a further cleavage between them and
the government. It was during this period that Bhajan Lal, who was Haryana
chief minister, played the dirtiest role and prevented the entry of Sikhs –
including high court judges and army officers – coming to Delhi. News of this
humiliation spread like a fire not only in India but in the Sikh diaspora
in the United States, Canada and many other countries and there were protests
against Indira Gandhi at many places.
There is a lesson
here which leaders must learn – that if they keep undesirable elements around
them, they will be misled completely and this will result in great
damage to the country. Between Zail Singh on one side and the Arun
Nehru-Fotedar group on the other, the people advising Indira Gandhi played
a very destructive role in exacerbating the Punjab crisis. If these
two acts of sabotage had not taken place, I am sure there would have been
no need for Operation Blue Star, and perhaps Indira Gandhi might still
have been alive.
The current Bharatiya
Janata Party-led government at the Centre and its leaders have not
learnt any lessons from the events in Punjab; my fear is that the open Hindutva
agenda of the Saffron parivar may harm the country more than the tragic events
in Punjab did three decades ago.
Members of VHP, Shiv Sena and Bajrang Dal remove Pakistani flags from shops selling products made there.
Written by KAMALDEEP SINGH BRAR | Amritsar
pakistani-stalls-759 Members of Vishwa Hindu Parishad demand removal of Pakistani flag from a stall at the Punjab International Trade Expo in Amritsar on Saturday. Rana Simranjit Singh
Activists from pro-Hindutva outfits Saturday barged into venue of PITEX (Punjab International Trade Expo) here and removed the pictures of Pakistani flags from the shops selling products manufactured in Pakistan even as the police watched. SAARC countries have been participating in this international festival.
Pakistan’s participation has already been the lowest at PITEX in the last 10 years. There have been few stalls selling Pakistani products. A day earlier, Shiv Sena members had visited the PITEX office and warned against the presence of Pakistan traders.
On Saturday, activists of Vishav Hindu Parishad, Bajrang Dal and Shiv Sena entered the venue of PITEX in the afternoon and started removing the flags and signboards from the shops belonging to Pakistan.
Police and security were mute spectators. Fifty-four exhibitors from Pakistan had got visas to participate in the PITEX. None of them, however, came citing demonetisation blues.
A few stalls of Pakistan were booked by an Indian promoter which are manned by Indians. The attackers targeted these stalls.
“We had warned them to remove flags themselves. But they didn’t. So we were forced to remove these flags and sign boards. We have also made an appeal to people to not buy Pakistan-made products. Pakistan is encouraging terrorism in India and we should stand by the Army instead of Pakistani traders,” said, Sanjay Suri, a local Shiv Sena leader. They also demanded that Pakistan traders should not be given visas.
Parveen Rathee, Regional Director, PHDCCI in Chandigarh, said, “We have informed police about today’s episode. Officers had come and reviewed the security arrangements. We have been assured that the security will be strengthened to avoid any such incident in future.”
ACP (north Amritsar) Bal Krishan said, “We have received a complaint from the PITEX organisers. We will take appropriate action. Nobody will be allowed to create any trouble in this trade show.”
Kejriwal's statement of giving ' holy city ' status
By saying that if AAP comes to power in Punjab it will give the status of ' holy city ' to Amritsar, Arvind Kejriwal has in my opinion stooped to the lowest level.
If this is done, Allahabad ( Prayag ), Varanasi, Ayodhya, Mathura, Puri, Dwarka, Haridwar, Rishikesh, Gaya, Maheshwar, Madurai, etc ( by Hindus ) and Ajmer ( by Muslims ) will also demand status of ' holy cities '.
Such appeals in the name of religion may be a good vote catching device, but they are totally reactionary and feudal, and damaging to the country's secular fabric. One may recall the demand for a Ram Mandir ( on the site of the Babri Masjid ) which no doubt propelled BJP to power, but it resulted in colossal damage to the country.
By issuing such a statement Kejriwal has exposed himself as a mere demagogue and mountebank who has nothing in his head, but can go to any low level to get votes.
Arvind Kejriwal reached out to various religious communities during his Punjab visit
He accused SAD of desecrating the Quran to defame AAP
Sukhbir Badal led SAD's counter attack
More in the story
Kejriwal's definition of a "true Hindu"
War of words in Punjab
Religion was the flavour of the three day Punjab visit of Aam
Aadmi Party's (AAP) national convener and Delhi chief minister Arvind
Kejriwal. Kejriwal tried to woo Sikhs, Christians and Muslims while
travelling through the state's heartland.
At the same time, he
attacked the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD)-BJP combine in Punjab and the
Narendra Modi government at the centre.
He spoke about the
desecration of Sikh religious texts last year and the recent desecration
of the Quran in Malerkotla on 24 June. An AAP MLA Naresh Yadav, has
been booked in connection with the Malerkotla incident.
Kejriwal
accused the SAD-BJP of indulging in communal politics and trying to
defame AAP since it had emerged as a serious challenger in Punjab. "They
are not leaving any stone unturned to defame AAP. It is shameful that
to defame AAP, they (SAD) did not even spare the holy Quran Sharif." Also read - How a 'Muslim hater' failed to instigate a communal riot in Malerkotla
"After
becoming the prime minister, most of the time Modi is on 'flying mode'
and whenever he lands in India, he is always in 'planning mode' to
disturb the Delhi government by creating hurdles in the on-going
developmental works", Kejriwal said while addressing a function
organised by the Punjab Christian United Front.
Reaching out to Muslims and Dalits
Later
while addressing a gathering at Malerkotla, the only Muslim
dominated town in Punjab, Kejriwal said that some
anti-national elements are trying to destabilise the country.
Expressing his pain over the desecration of Quran, he said,
"Some people are trying to malign me and my party in the name of
religion. But I am anguished that they had to resort to sacrilege
to malign me. In their endeavour to malign AAP, they have played
with the sentiments of minority community".
He supplemented
his statement by saying that a true Hindu would never
indulge in the desecration of holy book of any religion, he
would rather have love and respect for all religions. He
participated in an Iftar and later interacted with the
town's Muslim population.
He tried to strike a chord with the
Dalits in Doaba region again by expressing concerns over the
growing number of incidents of atrocities on Dalits in Punjab. He
announced that once voted to power, AAP would constitute a
Special Investigation Team (SIT) to review these cases.
"It
has been noticed that many false cases were registered against
Dalits. There have been atrocities against Dalits An Akali leader
chopped of a Dalit's (Bhim Tank's) hands because he refused to
work for him," Kejriwal said while addressing a gathering of
Dalits. He cited the suicide of Rohith Vemula and accused the BJP
of being anti-Dalit.
Protests
Kejriwal's
visit was not a smooth affair as there was opposition to him right from
the start. He was targeted by some unidentified persons who threw
leaflets at calling him "anti-Sikh" when he was on a visit to the Golden
Temple on the first day of his visit. The pamphlets held him
responsible for razing a "piao" (drinking water kiosk) outside Sis Ganj
Gurudwara in Delhi. The protestors also raised anti-Kejriwal slogans and
entered into a scuffle with AAP supporters.
Kejriwal's visit was
not recognised by the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC)
that did not give a Siropa (scarf of honour) to him.
At Malerkotla
he faced protests by the local Muslims affiliated to SAD on his party's
MLA being an accused in the Quran desecration episode.
On
the political front, deputy chief minister Sukhbir Badal led the charge
against him. He castigated the AAP for committing sacrilege by
insulting and disrespecting Guru Granth Sahib by equating it with a
'frivolous' manifesto released by the party in Amritsar. He said that
AAP and its spokesman Ashish Khetan had equated the document with the
Guru Granth Sahib in presence of Kejriwal."This is an act of blasphemy
which has hurt the sentiments of the Sikh community worldwide and we
condemn it as such," Sukhbir said.
Pointing that it was understood
that AAP leaders in Punjab do not have any conscience and have become
yes men of Kejriwal and his team of outsiders and hence had not raised
their voice against this sacrilegious act, Sukhbir said, "But for me as a
Sikh it is galling to learn how this new party and its mentally sick
leaders have attacked Sikhism. They have through their actions shown
they don't respect Sikhism and its tenets."
Asking Arvind Kejriwal
to take immediate action against his underling, the SAD president said
no apology on the part of Khetan would be good enough to assuage the
hurt feelings of the Sikhs.
"However immediate dismissal of Khetan
from all party posts and expulsion from AAP will send a signal that you
are not party to this heinous act. But if you do not act immediately
against your arrogant and mischievous underling it will be presumed that
this utterance was part of a planned AAP agenda authored by you," he
added.
Besides Sukhbir, his other party men too launched a frontal
attack on Kejriwal on the issue of Ciao demolition in Delhi. "You have
hurt sentiments of the Sikhs by being responsible for demolition of the
piao at Sisganj Sahib gurudwara. People of Punjab have come to know you
and will no longer be befooled by fake promises and manifestos," said
party leader Daljit Singh Cheema.
Punjab chief minister Parkash
Singh Badal too attacked AAP for arousing communal passions in the
state. Speaking at the sidelines of a Sangat Darshan programme in
Batala, Badal reportedly said that AAP is trying to communalize the
situation in Punjab and trigger violence. He made this comment in the
context of sacrilege of Quran at Malerkotla.
Malerkotla Quran sacrilege: One of 3 arrested men is VHP Punjab secretary, BJP MLA backs ‘framed’ cry
Vishal Rambani, Patiala
Updated: Jun 29, 2016 21:02 IST
A day after the police announced the arrest of three men for the June 24 Quran sacrilege incident in Malerkotla that
had led to violence, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) said one of them
was the radical outfit’s Punjab unit secretary (organisation) and was
being framed.
Police had claimed that none of three was affiliated to any
organisation and that the trio had acted out of “hatred for Muslims and
Pakistan” with the intention to start a riot in Punjab’s only
Muslim-majority town. The town did see arson but no communal riot. Also read I ‘Muslim-hater’ among 3 held for Quran sacrilege at Malerkotla
The affiliation of Nand Kishore ‘Goldy’ — whose son Gaurav too is
under arrest along with the alleged mastermind, Delhi businessman Vijay
Kumar — became known when the VHP’s state vice-president Devinder Kumar
and other functionaries held a press conference in Sangrur. “Police have
framed our leader Goldy, who is totally innocent. The cops picked him
up from his residence at Begowal village in Pathankot district, and
showed his arrest from Sanaur in Patiala. It’s a farce. We will not
tolerate it,” alleged Devinder. He said Goldy had never visited
Malerkotla and was present at his native place on June 24. He said even
BJP’s Bhoa MLA Seema Kumari knew it was a frame-up.
After the arson at Malerkotla on June 24.
(HT File Photo)
Kumari, when contacted, said, “Yes, I am aware that Nand Kishore
(Goldy) was picked up by the police on June 25. I had called the SSP
(senior superintendent of police), Pathankot, who said Nand Kishore’s
son Gaurav was needed in a case and they would let him go after
interrogation. Now I have come to know that they have shown his arrest
from Sanaur from Patiala, while he was picked from his residence and
even some villagers travelled with him up to Gurdaspur, where he was
kept in a lockup. It’s wrong. Nand Kishore is not such a person.”
Devinder said Goldy’s son was employed with the businessman Vijay
Kumar. “I don’t know about the background of Vijay, but he has misled
the police by naming Gaurav, who is also innocent. Gaurav was a mere
employee for Vijay. If he has indeed committed the act, Vijay kept
Gaurav in the dark,” he said, adding that he ahd taken up the matter
with the VHP’s central leadership.
However, Patiala range inspector general of police (IG) Paramraj
Singh Umranangal, who held the press conference where the three were
paraded, stood by the police version, and said the trio was indeed
nabbed from Patiala. “I am not aware of what the MLA and VHP are saying,
but the three men have confessed to the crime,” he claimed, adding that
the police had taken Vijay to Delhi to search his house. Police claim
the trio wanted to “avenge” the Pathankot and Dinanagar terror attacks
through riots here.
Southern Punjab must be central to any sustainable effort to counter jihadist violence within and beyond Pakistan’s borders, given the presence of militant groups with local, regional and transnational links and an endless source of recruits, including through large madrasa and mosque networks. The region hosts two of Pakistan’s most radical Deobandi groups, Jaish-e-Mohammed, held responsible by India for the 2 January 2016 attack on its Pathankot airbase; and the sectarian Laskhar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), which was at least complicit in, if not solely responsible for, the 27 March Easter Sunday attack that killed more than 70 in Lahore. To reverse the jihadist tide, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N)’s federal and Punjab province governments will have to both end the climate of impunity that allows these groups to operate freely and address political alienation resulting from other governance failures these groups tap into.
Southern Punjab was once known for a tolerant society, but over the past few decades, state support for jihadist proxies, financial support from foreign, particularly Saudi and other Gulf countries, combined with an explosive mix of political, socio-economic, and geostrategic factors, has enabled jihadist expansion there. Bordering on insurgency-hit and lawless regions of the country and also sharing a border with India, it has long provided a convenient base where these outfits can recruit, train and plan and conduct terror attacks. Although jihadist groups still harbour a fringe minority in a region where the vast majority follows a more tolerant, syncretic form of Islam, their ability to operate freely is largely the result of the state’s policy choices, particularly long reliance on jihadist proxies to promote perceived national security interests. The absence of rule-of-law, combined with political dysfunction and inept governance, also allows these organisations to exercise influence disproportionate to their size and social roots.
With state sponsorship and a pervasive climate of impunity enhancing jihadist groups’ recruitment potential, the risks of joining are far lower than potential gains that include employment and other financial rewards, social status and sense of purpose. These are all the more compelling in Punjab’s largely rural and relatively poorly developed southern regions, where perceptions of exploitation by the industrialised central and north Punjab, referred to by southern Punjabis as Takht Lahore (throne of Lahore), are high, the result of political marginalisation, weak governance, economic neglect and glaring income inequity.
After the December 2014 attack on the Peshawar Army Public School by a Pakistani Taliban faction that killed over 150, mostly children, the civilian and military leadership vowed to eliminate all extremist groups. Yet, the core goal of the counter-terrorism National Action Plan (NAP) it developed – to end distinctions between “good” jihadists, those perceived to promote strategic objectives in India and Afghanistan, and “ bad” jihadists, those that target the security forces and other Pakistanis – appears to have fallen by the wayside.
A highly selective approach still characterises the ongoing crackdown on militant outfits in southern Punjab and undermines broader counter-terrorism objectives. While the anti-India Jaish continues to operate freely, paramilitary units use indiscriminate force against local criminal groups, and the Punjab government resorts to extrajudicial killings to eliminate the LeJ leadership and foot soldiers. Overreliance on a militarised counter-terrorism approach based on blunt force might yield short-term benefits but, by undermining rule-of-law and fuelling alienation, will prove counterproductive in the long term.
The lack of progress on other major NAP goals, particularly reform and regulation of the madrasa sector, has especially adverse implications for southern Punjab, with its many Deobandi madrasas. The children of the poor are exposed to sectarian and other radical ideological discourse. The state’s unwillingness to clamp down on it in sectarian madrasas and mosques so as to counter hate speech and prevent dissemination of hate literature increases the potential for radicalisation in the region.
In the poorest region of the country’s richest and most populous province, where economic hardships are compounded by periodic natural disasters, including droughts and floods that destroy homes and livelihoods, jihadist groups, often with state support, their access being facilitated by the bureaucracy, are given opportunities to win hearts and minds through their charity wings. At the same time, civil society organisations capable of filling the gaps in the state’s delivery of services are often subjected to restrictions and intimidation.
Despite jihadist inroads, the vast majority in southern Punjab still adhere to more moderate syncretic forms of Islam: Sufism, and Barelvism, with practices and rituals that Deobandis and Wahhabi/Salafis portray as heretic. Yet, a general climate of impunity is encouraging extreme religious, sectarian and gender discrimination and exclusion. If left unchecked, these groups’ influence will likely spread within and beyond the region.
Lahore and Islamabad should enforce the law against all jihadist organisations, without exception. If they do not, many in southern Punjab may continue to see the rewards of joining such organisations as far outweighing the costs.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To end the climate of impunity
To the federal and Punjab governments:
1. Replace selective counter-terrorism with an approach that targets all jihadist groups that use violence within or from Pakistani territory, including by thoroughly investigating the alleged role of Pakistan-based jihadists in the Pathankot attack, extending beyond individual operatives to the organisations that sustain them.
2. Focus counter-terrorism efforts on reforming and strengthening the criminal justice system, with a properly resourced, authorised and accountable provincial police force at its heart, so as to moderate reliance on lethal force.
3. Investigate and monitor under the Anti-Terrorism Act or UN Security Council Resolution 1267 and its blacklist all madrasas, mosques and charities with known or suspected links to banned groups, as well as those that maintain armed militias, or whose administrators and/or members incite violence and other criminal acts within or from the country; and act first against those madrasas in southern Punjab already identified as actively training militants and having direct or indirect links with jihadist outfits.
4. Prevent circulation of hate literature and enforce laws against hate speech in madrasas, mosques and other forums, including by following through on all current cases against hard-line preachers and others accused of violating them.
To redress policy that favours a jihadist fringe over a moderate and diverse civil society
5. Remove arbitrary official and unofficial restrictions on NGOs and other civil society organisations in southern Punjab and assume responsibility for protecting against jihadist threats.
6. Repeal all legislation that discriminates on the basis of religion, sect and gender and refrain from backtracking on provincial pro-women legislation or yielding to Islamist party pressure to dilute its provisions.
7. Protect southern Punjab’s religious minorities, in particular Christians and Hindus, and take action against perpetrators of violence against women by acting through the legal system on reports of intimidation and abuse.
To redress the political, social and economic alienation in southern Punjab that contributes to recruitment opportunities for jihadist groups
To the federal and Punjab governments:
8. Reform and expand the public school network, including by removing intolerant religious discourse and distorted narratives glorifying jihadist violence from the classroom; and accompany education reform with assistance along the lines of the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) to help poor families afford to send their children to school.
9. Increase southern Punjab’s development budget, accompanied by meaningful consultations with communities on development programs; and establish and implement requirements to hire a significant proportion of local labour for such programs and provide it related training.
To the ruling and opposition parties:
10. Respond to the political alienation in southern Punjab by including local leaders within party decision-making processes and structures, and giving them a voice at the local, provincial and national levels.
11. Redress local grievances by addressing them in the provincial and federal parliaments, including through appropriate legislation.