The
Babri mosque was reduced to rubble on December 6,
1992 by the kar sevaks of Ayodhya. Ten years on, the Ayodhya incident in which
2,000 Indians, mostly Muslims, lost their lives, continues
to cast its grisly shadow on India’s political landscape.
And poses the biggest threat yet, to the country’s
democratic, secular polity.
The
most recent outbreak of violence in the Indian state
of Gujarat in which 600 plus Indians, mostly from
the minority Muslim community, were murdered, 30 mosques
razed to the ground and 30,000 rendered homeless,
is a grim reminder of the fact that religious fanaticism
is alive and well in India, nurtured by those currently
in power.
The
violence, according to initial reports, was sparked
off by the death of 60 kar sevaks in a train bogey
that was set on fire by Muslims, allegedly according
to a pre-meditated plan.
Subsequent reports, thanks to some brilliant
investigative work by intrepid Indian reporters, told
the story of what really happened.
What was to follow was as clear as day. But like the writing on the walls of the
Babri masjid, this too remained unread by vested interests for their own
selfish reasons. Indian Prime Minister
Vajpayee described the Ahmedabad carnage as a nation’s shame, but his chief minister in Gujarat
remained unabashedly partisan and helped stoke the fires of communalism
further. His law-enforcement machinery
stood by and watched Ahmedabad burn and,
on occasion, joined in the fray.
The situation is calm for now, but a dangerous trend has
been set in motion and the current dispensation’s Hindutva agenda may well
shatter India’s secular identity.
Pakistan continues to suffer its own religious
Frankensteins.
After lying low post September 11, the ghosts of the Zia
years have returned to haunt us.
They are back in the business of
ethnic cleansing – by killing fellow Muslims in the name of Islam.
Even as interior minister Moinuddin Haider proudly announced
to a group of newsmen in Karachi that 600 sectarian terrorists, including the
notorious Riaz Basra, were in government custody and his ministry was planning
to crack the whip, a doctor had been gunned down that morning while on his way
to the Kidney Centre. He had given up a
lucrative post in the US and returned to serve in his home country only six
months back. A few days later yet
another Shia doctor was killed.
Last month, a Shia mosque in Pindi was targeted , killing 10
and injuring 20. Sectarianism has
reared its ugly head again and again, claiming hundreds of innocent lives, but
its instigators remain at large, seemingly invisible to the law enforcement
agencies of successive governments.
Despite protestations to the contrary, the Musharraf government too has
looked the other way. It continues to
take a soft line, despite claims of major crackdowns.
Meanwhile,
the barbarism on the streets is matched by another
kind of barbarism – that perpetrated in the home.
Hundreds of women have been doused with petrol
and burnt alive, disfigured with acid, tortured, tormented,
killed by none other than their own husbands. The statute books are filled with discriminatory
anti-women laws, but there is no law to deal with
domestic violence.
A chilling reminder of the plight of Pakistani
women in the 21st century.