Sanjha Morcha

2 militants killed in Handwara gunfight:Two Lashkar militants killed in Handwara

2 militants killed in Handwara gunfight

Majid Jahangir

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, May 14

Two militants were killed in a gunfight in north Kashmir’s Kupwara district on Sunday.The gunfight broke this afternoon at Waripora Handwara, some 80 km from Srinagar, when police and Army launched a joint operation in the area.” As the operation was underway, militants hiding in the area opened fire triggering an encounter. Two militants were killed in the gunfight,” police sources said.A senior police officer said that two slain militants belonged to the Lashkar-e- Toiba militant organisation.

Two Lashkar militants killed in Handwara
Army men near the site of the encounter in Handwara on Sunday. Tribune Photo: Amin War

Majid Jahangir & Amin Masoodi

Tribune News Service

Srinagar/Handwara, May 14

In a major breakthrough, security forces killed two Pakistani Lashkar-e-Toiba militants who were a part of the fidayeen attack on an artillery garrison in Kupwara on April 27 that left three Army men, including an officer dead.The militants were killed in a brief gunfight in Kupwara district on Sunday when joint teams of the Army and the police launched an anti-militancy operation in Waripora village of Handwara, around 100 km from Srinagar.“Two fidayeen Lashkar militants killed in Waripora were a part of the infiltrating group that launched an attack on an Army base in Panzgam Kupwara,” J&K Police chief SP Vaid said.The Commanding Officer of 21 Rashtriya Rifles, Colonel Kuldeep Singh, said they had found evidence that confirmed the involvement of the two militants in the Panzgam attack.“We have found a wound on one of the eliminated terrorist which is indicative of likely involvement of these two terrorists in the Panzgam attack. We have found some other evidence, including the war-like stores,” Colonel Kuldeep Singh told reporters.In the first fidayeen attack of the year, an Army captain, two soldiers and two militants were killed while a militant managed to flee from the Army base at Panzgam on April 27. The artillery garrison close to the Line of Control was stormed by the militants from the rear of the camp by cutting the barbed wire.Today’s firefight erupted when the Army’s 21 RR battalion and Special Operations Group of the police, launched an anti-militancy operation following inputs about the presence of the militants.“During the 10-minute firefight, two LeT militants were killed. Their identity is being ascertained but they appear to be Pakistani nationals linked to the Lashkar,” Senior Superintendent of Police, Handwara, Ghulam Jeelani said.“Two AK-47 rifles, two pistols, four AK magazines, two pistol magazines, two UBGL grenades and other articles, including maps, were recovered from the encounter site,” he said.Police sources said for the last one week, the forces had been closely following leads about the presence of the two ultras in the area.


Mystery blast in Tral

Three persons were injured in a mysterious blast in the Tral area of Pulwama district on Saturday night. The police said the incident was being investigated. TNS

AK rifle recovered

An AK rifle and three magazines were recovered in Handwara on Sunday. The police said the recovery was made during the demolition of an old mosque in the Rajwar area of Handwara. “The locals found an AK rifle and three magazines during the demolition of an old masjid sharief in Lashipora, Rajwar. Later, the villagers informed the police and handed over the rifle and magazines to them,” a police spokesman said. TNS


Targeting Locals: New-Look Terror Strategy In Jammu And Kashmir by Lt Gen Ata Husnain

Targeting
Locals: New-Look Terror Strategy In Jammu And Kashmir

SNAPSHOT

The terrorists had targeted policemen and their families but cold blooded killings were far and few.

The aim of targeting the JKP personnel was to create dissensions in its ranks, force them to dither and be demotivated in performing their duties.

Lieutenant (Lt) Umar Fayaz, a product of a school in Anantnag, joined National Defence Academy (NDA) in December 2012 and passed out as a commissioned officer of the Indian Army in December 2016. He was allotted 2 Rajputana Rifles as his unit, an honour any young man would have been delighted to receive. This is the unit, which captured Tololing during the Kargil conflict in 1999 and was designated bravest of the brave among a few infantry units of the Indian Army. On his first leave after joining the unit, Fayaz was attending a wedding near South Kashmir’s Shupian town, some distance from his home town of Kulgam, when he was kidnapped by terrorists, who barged into the event with full knowledge of his presence. Taken away without any resistance from locals his bullet-ridden body, apparently also tortured, was found some distance away, on the road.

The successful entry of Fayaz into NDA was celebrated by many in the Valley as much as the success of so many other young Kashmiris, who crack the civil services and other competitive examinations and repeatedly find recognition in different sporting and cultural activities. Young Kashmiri women, in particular, have made it a habit to exhibit their talent in no mean way.

Entry into the officer cadre of the Armed Forces is not new. We have some very accomplished Kashmiris who have performed and achieved much in the three Services. However, ever since the commencement of militancy in 1989, there has been some reluctance to look at the Armed Forces as a career due to the separatist pressure. Yet there have still been odd cases of passion and courage and this trend was just beginning to manifest into something bigger.

It’s good for people to know that Kashmiri Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus and Buddhists all join the JAK Light Infantry or the JAK Rifles as jawans beside having vacancies in other arms of the Army. The Border Security Force, Central Reserve Police Force and Jammu and Kashmir Police (JKP) are also very popular in terms of recruitment. One has to remember the Kashmiri tendency of preferring government jobs to entrepreneurship and proclivity towards service industry. It does happen with people in conflict ridden zones where employment becomes a huge challenge.

I have laboured a bit in reminding about the bursting Kashmiri talent and its tendency to accept all the opportunities being thrown at it by mainstream India. In the same breath, it is also good to remember that even after Burhan Wani’s death on 8 July 2016 and the mayhem that Kashmir witnessed, there was no let up in the long lines at army and police recruiting centres. Many of those who threw stones also registered for recruitment. This has been a trend for long and not something new and I did point out in earlier analyses that a tehsil like Tral (Burhan Wani’s township) had given more loyal and patriotic soldiers to the army than terrorists to the Hizbul Mujahideen.

Obviously a keen mind in the terrorist cadres, separatists or the sponsors in Pakistan observing the trends and reading our analyses took a long term view of the indicators; some deft intelligence work indeed. That mind must have registered that in spite of the passions of Islamism and separatism, the need for rozi roti and Indian strategic communication efforts would drive Kashmiri youth away, as was being witnessed in the long lines in front of JAK Light Infantry Training Centre. The recognition talented Kashmiris were receiving in Bollywood and in the sports field would create a new generation that would compete with Burhan Wani and Pakistani cricketers for the role model space in Kashmir. This is unacceptable in the campaign to create alienation and antipathy against India.

In a TV panel discussion that I was part of on 10 May, the anchor proudly displayed figures to show that 94 per cent of Indians polled perceived that the killing of Lt Fayaz was out of baukhlavat or desperation. That is where he and the 94 per cent are all wrong because their response was from the top off the head and not from experience and analysis. This is no desperation, it’s a deep and well-thought strategy, which only a devious but extremely sharp mind can conceive. It has a long-term aim and its implications for India are extremely negative. The killing of Lt Fayaz preceded by the killing of five Kashmiri policemen and two bank guards signifies a change in the nature of militancy, where there are no qualms about who the victims are; Kashmiris are no different to others.

In the history of Kashmir’s militancy there have been stereotypes, which have come to form perceptions even in military minds. The Al Firan kidnapping of five foreigners in 1995, the beheading of one of them and disappearance of others stamped the viciousness of the foreign terrorist. By and large the impression of local militants was that they were more benign, did not target locals or politicians and lacked the killer instinct. None of this is actually true, as witnessed in numerous beheadings of sources, killing of sarpanchs and even elimination of Ikhwans (counter groups). It’s however true that none of these were executed with any strategy. We witnessed one off killings of local Territorial Army, Home and Hearth personnel, but most of these were personal feuds and too spaced out to give perception of any strategy.

The terrorists had targeted policemen and their families but cold blooded killings were far and few. The aim of targeting the JKP personnel was to create dissensions in its ranks, force them to dither and be demotivated in performing of their duties. The JKP is no mean police force. Having seen many a brave Kashmiri policeman in operations, I salute their resilience in the face of such intimidation. Since they did not wilt under duress, the choice of sending a stronger message fell on the selection of a military target.

Obviously someone was keeping tabs on Lt Fayaz’s movements. This is hardly surprising considering the vast network of agents that the separatists and terrorists have. The intimidation of JKP policemen has also led to a dilution in the intelligence capability of the security forces (SF). But what are the implications of this event and how should these be avoided in the future, is what the reader would wish to know.

The first implication is that it’s now a no holds barred situation. The gloves should be off as far as the army and other security forces are concerned. There is nothing benign about local militancy and let that sink into every soldier’s mind. That does not mean a spree of intimidation of locals but more discretion and more energy. The numbers in South Kashmir as far as army deployment is concerned have not moved in sync with threats. These must be reviewed.

To throttle the freedom of movement of terrorists and simultaneously handle agitation there is a need for more police and more army. Kulgam needs an RR Sector HQ. During the heyday of high-level militancy in the 1990s it always had one. More units are immediately required in the Weebagh, Kulgam and Shupian triangle. It has to be back to basics type operations; many checkpoints, many cordon and search operations, source development and even search and destroy operations in the numerous karewas and forest clumps, which dot this area and its flanks.

What should be worrying the security man’s mind; this is for the senior army and policemen? It should be the extent to which the local terrorists are willing to go. Progressively, I would look at threats such as targeting of Indian tourists to paralyse an already stricken economy, the targeting of Amarnath Yatra, for the sheer intimidation and lastly a potential resort to suicide bombing. None of this may happen but when you deal with snakes and scorpions, who run this campaign from across the border, one should preferably allow threats to be perceived from flights of fancy.

 

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A dastardly act Amid protests governance marginalised

A dastardly act

The killing of Lieutenant Umar Fayaz, a Kashmiri in the Indian Army, in Shopian in South Kashmir, obliterates all the distinction between the soldiers on duty and those on leave. This is a gruesome departure even from the standards of terrorism. It is a horrible manifestation of the prevailing culture of hate in which anyone siding with the security forces is considered an enemy and has to be purged. The tacit approval of such atrocious acts of the Kashmiri awaam — out of fear or out of sympathy for them — is an invitation for more violence.In this atmosphere governance has gone for a six. Governance has fallen victim to violence and the fear-gripped politics. The political space has shrunk to an alarming level. The reopening of the government offices in Srinagar on Monday as part of the durbar move practice saw the resumption of protests with greater intensity. Nothing has changed for the people, and the government is as remote as it has been since July last year when the killing of a militant, Burhan Wani,  pushed governance to the margins. Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti finds herself isolated as ministers and others flee the Valley as and when she needs them the most. The aimless ministerial reshuffle earlier this year has added to her woes. The ministers and other PDP leaders grudgingly accept her as their leader. Her political constituency and charisma have suffered an almost irreparable dent.The alliance partner, the BJP, is caught in its own infighting. It speaks in multiple voices. One of its spokespersons, arguing that since the Kashmir situation is not conducive for the people of Jammu to visit violence-swept  Srinagar, has called for an “abandoning” of the more-than-century old durbar move practice which is based on the idea of making governance  more  accessible  to the peoples  of the two regions on a rotational basis. The party is missing a larger point. The closure of the durbar in Kashmir amounts to a withdrawal from the Valley. It would have a profound impact on the integrity of Jammu and Kashmir. The BJP is betraying signs of a clueless leadership.


India using Jadhav’s conviction as diversionary tactic: Pak

India using Jadhav’s conviction as diversionary tactic: Pak
Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif. File photo

Islamabad, May 10

Pakistan on Wednesday accused India of using its national Kulbhushan Jadhav’s death conviction to “divert” attention from its “state-sponsored” terrorism in the country.Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif’s allegation against India came a day after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) stayed the execution of 46-year-old Jadhav, who has been sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on charges of “spying”.

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“Indian letter to ICJ attempt to divert attention from state sponsored terrorism in Pakistan. Kulbhushan convicted of offences against national security,” Asif tweeted.It was the first response from Pakistan after the order by the Hague-based ICJ.The order by the ICJ came a day after India approached it against the death sentence handed down to Jadhav by Pakistan’s Field General Court Martial last month.Earlier, Pakistan’s media rejected India’s claim over the order. Geo TV said the ICJ had no jurisdiction over Pakistan as it could take cognizance of the matter only with the consent of the parties.Dawn online did not report about the Indian claim on the stay order. Similarly, the Express Tribune in its report on the issue has not reported about the stay order.India, in its appeal to the ICJ, accused Pakistan of “egregious” violations of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations and asserted that Jadhav was kidnapped from Iran where he was involved in business activities after retiring from the Indian Navy but Pakistan claimed to have arrested him from Balochistan on March 3, 2016.Jadhav’s sentencing evoked a sharp reaction in India.India has warned Pakistan of consequences and damage to bilateral ties if the “pre-meditated murder” was carried out.In its application, India had also informed the ICJ that it learnt about the death sentence against Jadhav from a press release.Jadhav was sentenced to death for “espionage and subversive activities”.India acknowledges that Jadhav had served with the Navy but denies that he has any connection with the government. It also said that Jadhav was kidnapped from Iran.India has also handed over to Pakistan an appeal by Jadhav’s mother, initiating a process to get his conviction overturned. PTI

AIFF website hacked, message against Jadhav’s release posted

New Delhi, May 10

The All India Football Federation’s (AIFF) website on Tuesday was hacked by an anonymous group called ‘Zero Cool’.

The group hacked the website and posted a message provoking India over Kulbhushan Jadhav, an Indian national booked for espionage and sabotage activities against Pakistan. Jadhav was awarded death sentence by the country.

The hackers posted messages against India and its demand for the release of Kulbhushan Jadhav.

The AIFF has not yet released a statement on this.

Jadhav was arrested in March last year in the restive Balochistan province and was accused of being a Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) agent.

However, in a major relief to India, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has put a stay on the execution after an appeal by India, which accused Pakistan of “egregious violations of the Vienna Convention” and sought a stay on Jadhav’s death sentence. — ANI

Nawaz Sharif meets Army chief amid stay on Jadhav hanging

Islamabad, May 10

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa on Wednesday held a meeting amid the stay order from the International Court of Justice against the hanging of Indian “spy” Kulbushan Jadhav.The meeting between Bajwa and Sharif was the second within a week and is significant in the light of the prevailing civil-military relations in the country.Sources, quoted by Geo News, said that the Prime Minister was briefed on the ICJ order.Gen Bajwa was accompanied by Director General Inter-Services Intelligence Lt. Gen Naveed Mukhtar while Finance Minister Ishaq Dar was also present at the meeting.Reacting to the stay order, Foreign Affairs Advisor to the Prime Minister Sartaj Aziz here said: “We are analysing the Indian petition and the International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) authority (on the case).” Earlier, Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said, India’s decision to move the ICJ to halt the death sentence awarded to Jadhav was an attempt to divert attention from “state-sponsored terrorism in Pakistan”.The ICJ on Tuesday told Pakistan not to hang Jadhav, sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on charges of promoting terrorism in its territory and spying for India.Asif tweeted: “Indian letter to ICJ attempt to divert attention from state-sponsored terrorism in Pakistan. Kulbushan convicted of offences against national security.” — IANS


VISIT TO MARTYR SUB PARAMJIT SINGH RESIDENCE AND HONORED WITH Rs ONE LAKH

Today Visited Martyr Sub Paramjit Singh village in Tarn Taran  and handed over cheque of RS 50000/- to veer  Nari Paramjit Kaur  and Rs 50000/- to his father Udham Singh. 
Capt Harminder Distt congress PresidentJallander 
And
 Col Balbir, President Punjab Unit Sanjha Morcha  accompanied. 
Chq was given by Mr Charanjit Singh Walia President  Nursing training Institutions association  Punjab cum Chairman Mata Sahib Kaur college of Nursing Mohali  along Ex-MLA Inderjit Singh Zira father of MLA Kulbir Singh Zira of congress .
Charanjit Singh Walia  Also announced free nursing course for the youngest daughter till MSc Nursing with 
No academic fee and free hostel facilities 
Col Charanjit Singh Khera
Gen secy 
Sanjha Morcha

Subedar Paramjit Singh whParamjit Singho was mutilated by a Pakistani Border Action Team (BAT) on Monday was part of a battalion that had released a video in November last year warning and challenging Pakistan. The video features Paramjit Singh along with three other soldiers of 22 Sikh Regiment at their post along the Line of Control. The video had gone viral on various media platforms, last year.

One of the jawans, dressed for battle, could be seen singing a Punjabi song. The Jawan mentioned the name of his battalion in several parts of the song. Recorded on a mobile phone, in the video, the Jawan can be heard singing all they need is permission from the government and they will “burn the enemy to ashes in two hours.” “They have seen our love but not our anger yet,” the soldier sings. Also Read: Anti-Pakistan slogans raised in Kashmir’s Poonch after mutilation of Indian soldiers

“Modi isn’t afraid of Pakistan and wants the best for you. Your Sikh brother is singing the truth. We won’t leave them as we have had enough, and we have told them several times too. Every hour they are teasing us, and are asking for their own deaths. You’ll move because Sikhs are standing in front of you, we’ll burn enemy’s country if given two hours,” the Jawan sings, reports India Today.

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Naik Subedar Paramjit Singh and Head Constable Prem Sagar 200 BSF Battalion were killed and then mutilated by a Pakistani team when they sneaked into the Indian territory under the cover of heavy shelling in the Krishna Ghati sector in Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir. Following the barbaric act on Pakistan’s part, the Indian Army confirmed the involvement of Pakistan’s BAT in carrying out the gruesome attacks in the Indian territory. “Pak Army carried out unprovoked rocket and mortar firing on two forward posts on the Line of Control in the Krishna Ghati sector.

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Simultaneously, a BAT action was launched on a patrol operating in between the two posts. In a unsoldierly act by the Pak Army, the bodies of two of our soldiers in the patrol were mutilated. Such despicable act of Pakistan Army will be appropriately responded,”

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read the Indian Army’s statement. Also Read: Mother of Lance Naik Hemraj reminds Centre of Sushma Swaraj’s ’10 heads in return’ remark

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WATCH VIDEO

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WITH JALLANDER DISTT COGREE BLOCK PRESIDENT AND WORKERS ALONG WITH CAPT HARMINDER SINGH

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Trail of blood proof of Pakistan’s role: India

Foreign secretary S. Jaishankar summoned Pakistan high commissioner Abdul Basit who denied any involvement of the Pakistan Army.

The soldiers killed were Naib Subedar Paramjeet Singh of 22 Sikh Infantry and Head Constable Prem Sagar of 200th Battalion of BSF. (Photo: PTI)

 The soldiers killed were Naib Subedar Paramjeet Singh of 22 Sikh Infantry and Head Constable Prem Sagar of 200th Battalion of BSF. (Photo: PTI)

New Delhi: India on Wednesday issued a demarche to Pakistan, expressing outrage at the killing and mutilation of two soldiers, saying “it had sufficient evidence” that this act was committed by personnel of the Pakistan Army who crossed the Line of Control (LoC). India said, “The blood samples of the Indian soldiers and the trail of blood clearly show that the killers returned across the LoC.”

Foreign secretary S. Jaishankar summoned Pakistan high commissioner Abdul Basit who denied any involvement of the Pakistan Army.

India also demanded that Pakistan take action against its soldiers and commanders responsible for this heinous act.

With the MEA saying that the “trail of blood is of Pakistanis, in this case personnel of Pakistan’s Army”, who came from across the LoC, the obvious meaning is that one or more Pakistan Armymen were also injured in the cross-border raid they carried out in the Krishna Ghati sector on May 1.

The MEA did not elaborate further, but it is also reliably learnt that blood from the severed body parts of the slain Indian soldiers was found in the blood trail leading upto the LoC, indicating that the returning Pakistani troops were taking them back with them.

BSF jawan Prem Sagar, who was martyred in Pakistan’s firing, was finally cremated after UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath called up the bereaved family and persuaded it to lay him to rest.

The ministry of external affairs (MEA) said, “The foreign secretary conveyed India’s outrage at the killing and barbaric act by Pakistan Army personnel.”

“It was conveyed that the government considers it a strong act of provocation and in contravention to all norms of civilised conduct. It is significant that the attack was preceded by covering fire by Pakistani posts in the Bhattal sector,” the MEA said.

“The foreign secretary mentioned to the Pakistan high commissioner that he should convey the sense of outrage on this particular incident to his government on this barbaric act and his response was, he denied that the Pakistan Army was involved in any way in this incident but assured that he will convey the contents of the demarche,” the MEA added.

Home minister Rajnath Singh also chaired a meeting with top security officials, including NSA Ajit Doval, after an alert that Pakistan-based terror groups may strike in other parts of India. Security was beefed-up at all vital installations, including airports.

Meanwhile, there were reports of a group of Pakistani schoolchildren on a trip to India returning earlier than planned after the MEA informed the NGO organisers that this was not the appropriate time for such a visit.


No threats issued to Capt Amarinder by Canadian Sikhs, claims SFJ

No threats issued to Capt Amarinder by Canadian Sikhs, claims SFJ
Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh. Tribune file

Kulwinder Sandhu

Tribune News Service

Moga, May 2

Responding to the Indian government’s complaint to the Canadian government regarding “perceived threats” to Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh during the April 22 Khalsa Parade in Canada, the human rights group Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) has termed it as a nefarious attempt to curb the freedom of expression of Sikhs living in Canada.

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The rights panel said no threats to life were issued to Amarinder during the parade and all those who participated in it were law-abiding citizens of Canada.   In a statement issued to The Tribune, the SFJ has stated that Canadian Sikhs had a constitutionally protected right to express any political opinion, no matter how discomforting it might be for the Indian Government, including propagating for Sikh homeland Khalistan.  On April 22 during the Khalsa Day parade in Surrey, British Columbia, thousands of Sikhs followed the Khalistan float with the images of Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and his followers who were killed in Punjab during militancy.  Calling the Indian Government’s complaint against SFJ to Global Affairs Ministry of Canada as frivolous, Attorney Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, legal adviser to SFJ, claimed, “Separatism is not terrorism and SFJ always works within the framework of law.”“Captain Amarinder is a human rights violator as per the international laws and we are waiting for him to be in Canada, America or European Union Countries so that we can hold the Punjab CM accountable for all the atrocities committed on the Sikhs and prosecute him for crimes against humanity,” Pannun said.In April 2016, SFJ blocked Amarinder from addressing public rallies in Canada by initiating a “private prosecution” seeking his arrest warrants for his “culpability in the torture of Sikhs in Punjab during his tenure as CM of Punjab between 2002 and 2007”. Now, again, the SFJ has filed a defamation suit against Amarinder in a Canadian court.


Navy to review units’ readiness

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, April 30

Senior commanders of the Indian Navy will meet in New Delhi to review security measures of naval assets, bases and air stations and the overall operational readiness of units with particular emphasis on indigenisation towards achieving greater self-reliance and support the “Make in India”.A four-day Naval Commanders’ Conference is scheduled in the national capital from May 2 to May 5. Navy Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba will lead the commanders in focusing the Navy’s plans for sustained operational effectiveness, combat readiness and improved maintenance philosophy to carry out its roles and missions. One of them is the Navy’s role in a joint/unified military structure in future.In the backdrop of terrorist threats, the conference is the Navy’s approach to increase Maritime Domain Awareness. Ways to strengthen maritime security would be discussed


STATECRAFT Revolution, three years later b y Harish Khare

Revolution, three years later
Illustration by Sandeep Joshi

A revolution was deemed to have been ushered in on May 26, 2014, in the forecourt of Rashtrapati Bhavan. Three years later, it is all too obvious that the meretricious cult has not been allowed to go stale; nor, have the “revolutionaries” lost their swagger. If anything, the revolution and its high priests seem inexhaustible and unstoppable. The Prime Minister’s reputation as the greatest demagogue of our times stands undiminished; he has been blessed with, to use Tiruvallavar’s words, “the gift of the gifted tongue.” As a nation, we remain seduced. Our anxieties and animosities are kept bubbling; and, we are all comfortable with #hashtag ill-liberalism. We have been induced to believe that we are being governed by less corrupt and more effective rulers than we were during the days of the parasitic Gandhis; we are unceasingly bombarded with facts and fiction, all intended to convey a sense of competence and accomplishment. Indeed, we are not allowed to catch our breath; we are being constantly transported from one crisis to another — and, a sense of relief that there is someone out there who is willing to use violence against those who threaten us with violence. There is no denying that the new revolution continues to demonstrate untiring political energy and populist verve; perhaps its greatest — uniquely unprecedented — strength remains its ability to control the national narrative, what we think or are allowed to say in public domain. It has mastered the new communication techniques and technology. The result is a bit of national incongruity. The same media that only a few years ago thought its primary institutional responsibility — rather its very raison d’etre — was to ask uncomfortable questions, to show a mirror to power, to speak up to authority, has been enlisted, unresistingly and self-consciously, as a government surrogate. Night after night, dissent and disagreements are shouted down in television studios; those in disagreement with the government are simply told to “stop cribbing.” This has been one of the most remarkable achievements, that too without seemingly any recourse to the coercive instruments available to any government. The media has been seduced to redefine its role: run the Opposition out of town. No other government since Independence has had the media so eagerly eating out of its hand, not even during the infamous Emergency. Yet, three years later, the character and direction of the revolution stand changed. It can be argued, admittedly with a bit of exaggeration, that the “revolution” has been reduced to a fight over Indira Gandhi’s legacy between her biological grandson (Rahul Gandhi) and a putative political grandson (Narendra Modi). The revolution changed direction once the Bihar electorate in the late 2015 put an end to the emerging Modi presidency; and, suddenly, the man who was widely hailed to be an Indian Deng Xiaoping, dexterously changed the course. After the Bihar voter settled Modi’s hash, the reformist platform was pushed on the back-burner (even though the FICCI and the ASSOCHAM continue to sing paeans, perhaps out of habit.) Let us make no mistake. Three years after the revolution, the Indian State is back with a bang — back with all the Stalinist impulses of the Indira Gandhi era. The State and its authorised functionaries breathe down the citizen’s neck, in the most intrusive and demanding manner. At least, three elements of the Indira Gandhi State stand restored as functioning mantras of the new revolution. First, the poor have been discovered, circa 1969. The grand disruption that went by the demonetisation was dressed up in pro-poor rhetoric in a manner that would have earned a nod of approval from Indira Gandhi. All those who thought that the corporate imagination and the market innovation would be relied upon to find answers to our problems of economic stagnation and unemployment, have watched in silence as the State was now charged with the responsibility to ameliorate the poor’s plight. Shades of Garibi Hatao. All the Indira Gandhi acolytes have noted with satisfaction that the 2014 revolution has not meant the withering away of the welfare State. Second, the inspector and his stick are back. In the name of unearthing black money, the raid raj has been brought back. Not since the brief period of VP Singh’s tenure as Finance Minister has the country been invited to celebrate the daily visits from the CBI or the Enforcement Directorate. It is being harshly demanded that taxes be paid up; otherwise be prepared for a visit from the income-tax man. Rather than the citizen being asked to live up to his obligations to the State, a collectivist mindset appears to be at work. And, where the legal functionaries are unable to be persuasive, there is the lynch mob, out to enforce and impose new prejudices and preferences. The State has asserted its right to oversee all spheres of cultural and social activity. The State is more muscular, more muzzling, and more manipulative than at any other time in recent decades. And, the third Indira Gandhi mantra at work is invocation of nationalism and its unremitting demands on our emotions and loyalties. Our nationalism has been reoriented as an anti-Pakistan mantra. Stupid and shallow men in Islamabad and Rawalpindi continue to fuel our sense of righteous indignation. Indira Gandhi remains the historic role model. Our present leaders cannot be faulted for remembering that Indira Gandhi enjoys the status of being the only “Hindu” ruler in our history to have inflicted a crushing defeat on a “Muslim” adversary. Even Atal Behari Vajpayee had to hail her as Durga. History carries its own allurements for the current saviours. And, just as it was Indira Gandhi’s wont, these mantras are being pressed to good use for a single-minded pursuit of personal political dominance and hegemony. The pursuit of personal political hegemony has, necessarily, to be non-ideological, practical, pragmatic and tactically ambiguous. The purists can keep on bemoaning the ideological flakiness and the absence of a Margaret Thatcher-like clarity and conviction, the hegemon has no doubts about his aims and direction: maximalist power as a personal entitlement, as a necessary requisite for orderly and stable governance. A political leader defines himself as much in terms of what his regime stands for as in terms of who he chooses to designate as his putative enemy. The Modi revolution continues to position itself as the anti-thesis of the Gandhis, and to appropriate for itself a moral and spiritual superiority — a very Indira Gandhian ruse, as it seeks to lay its own claim to the historical legacy of Indira Gandhi. In this quest lie the seeds of the revolution’s own disintegration. 


Lt Gen Anbu stresses relentless ops

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, May 25

Northern Command chief Lt Gen Devraj Anbu today emphasised the need for relentless intelligence-based operations to sustain pressure on the militant organisations.Lt General Anbu said this with interacting with troops on the ground in north and south Kashmir.An Army spokesman said Lt Gen Devraj Anbu today visited the formations and units in north and south Kashmir to review the prevailing security situation.“The Northern Command chief interacted with troops on the ground and emphasised the need for undertaking relentless intelligence-based operations to sustain pressure on the terrorist organisations,” the spokesman said.Commending the troops for their dedication to duty and high standards of professionalism, the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of the Northern Command asked them to continue strict vigil to thwart any nefarious designs of inimical elements, he said.Lt General Anbu also reinforced the need for synergy among all security agencies to effectively meet any emerging security challenges and maintain a safe, secure and peaceful environment for the people.During the visit, Lt General Anbu was accompanied by Chinar Corps Commander Lt Gen JS Sandhu.