Zakir Naik as a jihadi
mentor
By Praveen Swami
Less
than an hour before police surrounded the Indian Mujahideen bomb-factory hidden
away on the fringes of the Bhadra forests in Chikmagalur, Mohammad Zarar Siddi
Bawa had slipped away on a bus bound for Mangalore — the first step in a journey
that would take him to the safety of a Lashkar-e-Taiba safehouse in
Karachi.
Inside
the house, officers involved in the October, 2008, raid found evidence of Bawa's
work: laboratory equipment used to test and prepare chemicals, precision tools,
and five complete improvised explosive devices. Even as investigators across
India set about filing paperwork declaring Bawa a fugitive, few believed they
would ever be able to lay eyes on him again.
But
in February, a closed-circuit television camera placed over the cashier's
counter at the Germany Bakery in Pune recorded evidence that Bawa had returned
to India — just minutes before an improvised explosive device ripped through the
popular restaurant killing seventeen people, and injuring at least
sixty.
Dressed
in a loose-fitting blue shirt, a rucksack slung over his back, the fair, slight
young man with a wispy beard has been identified by police sources in Gujarat,
Maharashtra and Karnataka as “Yasin Bhatkal” — the man who made the bombs which
ripped apart ten Indian towns and cities between 2005 and 2008. Witnesses at the
restaurant also identified Bawa from photographs, noting that he was wearing
trousers rolled up above his ankles — a style favoured by some
neo-fundamentalists.
Bawa
is emerging as the key suspect in Saturday's bombings outside the M. Chinnaswamy
Stadium in Bangalore — a grim reminder that the jihadist offensive that began
after the 2002 communal violence in India is very far from
spent.
The
obscure jihadist
Little
is known about just what led Bawa to join the jihadist movement. Educated at
Bhatkal's well-respected Anjuman Hami-e-Muslimeen school, 32-year-old Bawa left
for Pune as a teenager. He was later introduced to other members of the Indian
Mujahideen as an engineer, but police in Pune have found no documentation
suggesting he ever studied in the city.
Instead,
Bawa spent much of his time with a childhood friend living in Pune, Unani
medicine practitioner-turned-Islamist proselytiser Iqbal Ismail Shahbandri. Like
his brother Riyaz Ismail Shahbandri — now the Indian Mujahideen's top military
commander — Ismail Shahbandri had become an ideological mentor to many young
Islamists in Pune and Mumbai, many of them highly-educated
professionals.
The
Shahbandari brothers' parents, like many members of the Bhatkal elite, had
relocated to Mumbai in search of new economic opportunities. Ismail Shahbandri,
their father, set up leather-tanning factory in Mumbai's Kurla area in the
mid-1970s. Riyaz Shahbandri went on to obtain a civil engineering degree from
Mumbai's Saboo Siddiqui Engineering College and, in 2002, was married to Nasuha
Ismail, the daughter of an electronics store owner in Bhatkal's Dubai
Market.
Shafiq
Ahmad, Nasuha's brother, had drawn Riyaz Shahbandri into the Students Islamic
Movement of India. He first met his Indian Mujahideen co-founders Abdul Subhan
Qureshi and Sadiq Israr Sheikh, in the months before his marriage. Later, Riyaz
Shahbandri made contact with ganglord-turned-jihadist Amir Raza Khan. In the
wake of the communal violence that ripped Gujarat apart in 2002, the men set
about funnelling recruits to Lashkar camps in Pakistan.
Early
in the summer of 2004, investigators say, the core members of the network that
was later to call itself the Indian Mujahideen met at Bhatkal's beachfront to
discuss their plans. Iqbal Shahbandri and Bhatkal-based cleric Shabbir Gangoli
are alleged to have held ideological classes; the group also took time out to
practice shooting with airguns. Bawa had overall charge of arrangements — a task
that illustrated his status as the Bhatkal brothers' most trusted
lieutenant.
Bhatkal,
police investigators say, became the centre of the Indian Mujahideen's
operations. From their safehouses in Vitthalamakki and Hakkalamane, bombs were
despatched to operational cells dispersed across the country, feeding the most
sustained jihadist offensive India has ever seen.
Communal
war
Like
so many of his peers in the Indian Mujahideen, Bawa emerged from a fraught
communal landscape. Bhatkal's Nawayath Muslims, made prosperous by hundreds of
years of trade across the Indian Ocean, emerged as the region's dominant
land-owning community. Early in the twentieth century, inspired by call of
Aligarh reformer Syed Ahmed Khan, Bhatkal notables led a campaign to bring
modern education for the community. The Anjuman Hami-e-Muslimeen school where
Bawa studied was one product of their efforts, which eventually spawned
highly-regarded institutions that now cater to over several thousand
students.
Organisations
like the Anjuman helped the Navayath Muslims capitalise on the new opportunities
for work and business with opened up in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi
Arabia during the 1970s. But this wealth, in turn, engendered resentments which
laid the ground for an communal conflict. In the years after the Emergency, the
Jana Sangh and its affiliates began to capitalise on resentments Bhatkal's
Hindus felt about the prosperity and political power of the Navayaths. The
campaign paid off in 1983, when the Hindu right-wing succeeded in dethroning
legislator S.M. Yahya, who had served as a state minister between 1972 and
1982.
Both
communities entered into a competitive communal confrontation, which involved
the ostentatious display of piety and power. The Tablighi Jamaat, a
neo-fundamentalist organisation which calls on followers to live life in a style
claimed to be modelled on that of the Prophet Mohammad, drew a growing mass of
followers. Hindutva groups like the Karavalli Hindu Samiti, too, staged
ever-larger religious displays to demonstrate their clout.
Early
in 1993, Bhatkal was hit by communal riots which claimed seventeen lives and
left dozens injured. The violence, which began after Hindutva groups claimed
stones had been thrown at a Ram Navami procession, and lasted nine months.
Later, in April 1996, two Muslims were murdered in retaliation for the
assassination of Bharatiya Janata Party legislator U. Chittaranjan — a crime
that investigators now say may have been linked to the Bhatkal brothers. More
violence broke out in 2004, after the assassination of BJP leader Thimmappa
Naik.
Zakir
Naik as a jihadi mentor
Iqbal
Shahbandri and his recruits were, in key senses, rebels against a traditional
political order that appeared to have failed to defend Muslim rights and
interests. Inside the Indian Mujahideen safehouses raided in October, 2008,
police found no evidence that traditional theological literature or the writings
of the Tablighi Jamaat had influenced the group. Instead, they found pro-Taliban
videos and speeches by Zakir Naik — a popular but controversial Mumbai-based
televangelist who has, among other things, defends Al-Qaeda chief Osama
bin-Laden.
“If
he is fighting the enemies of Islam”, Naik said in one speech, “I am for him. If
he is terrorising America the terrorist—the biggest terrorist — I am with him.”
“Every Muslim” Naik concluded, “should be a terrorist. The thing is, if he is
terrorising a terrorist, he is following Islam”. Naik has never been found to be
involved in violence, but his words have fired the imagination of a diverse
jihadists — among them, Glasgow suicide-bomber Kafeel Ahmed, 2006 Mumbai
train-bombing accused Feroze Deshmukh, and New York taxi driver Najibullah Zazi,
who faces trial for planning to attack the city's Grand Central Railway
Station.
Language
like this spoke to concerns of the young people who were drawn to separate
jihadist cells that began to spring up across India after the 2002 violence,
mirroring the growth of the Indian Mujahideen. SIMI leader Safdar Nagori set up
a group that included the Bangalore information-technology professionals
Peedical Abdul Shibli and Yahya Kamakutty; in Kerala Tadiyantavide Nasir, Abdul
Sattar, and Abdul Jabbar set up a separate organisation that is alleged to have
bombed Bangalore in 2008
Storms
of hate
Well-entrenched
in the political system, Bhatkal's Muslim leadership has been hostile to radical
Islamism. Efforts by Islamist political groups to establish a presence there
have, for the most part, been unsuccessful. But authorities acknowledge Bhatkal,
like much of the Dakshina Kannada region, remains communally fraught.
Small-scale confrontations are routine. Earlier this month, the Karavalli Hindu
Samiti even staged demonstrations in support of the Sanatana Sanstha, the
Hindutva group police in Goa say was responsible for terrorist bombings carried
out last year.
Pakistan's
intelligence services and transnational jihadist groups like the Lashkar
nurtured and fed India's jihadist movement — but its birth was the outcome of an
ugly communal contestation that remains unresolved. Even as India's police and
intelligence services work to dismantle the jihadist project, politicians need
to find means to still the storms of hate which sustain it.
URL:
http://www.newageislam.com/NewAgeIslamIslamTerrorismJihad_1.aspx?ArticleID=2725
1 comments:
There is no truth in this report. Everyday some new names are coming. This is nothing but media terrorism.
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