Opinion/ V C Bhaskaran
The game has always been to drive the Muslims
against the wall
The BJP is in a quandary over the CBI-designated court's
decision to frame charges against some of its leaders for the
Babri Masjid demolition on December 6, 1992.
Naturally, the United Front contingent and its main prop the Congress are happy. The BJP has been cornered for attempting to disturb the 'secular'
fabric of Indian society.
The BJP has sought to explain the demolition as resulting from
a mass movement. It has never defended the act or owned responsibility
for it. The Shiv Sena and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad have, however,
claimed credit for it and even expressed happiness.
The BJP's rath yatra, led by its president L K Advani,
has given their movement a great impetus. In the process, it has allowed
a free hand to some fundamentalists to spit fire against the Muslim
community. This is a wholly condemnable act. While no one can deny that many Mughal rulers discriminated against Hindus, by no stretch of reason could one
take a vengeful attitude towards the whole community. But unfortunately, the seeds of hatred sowed by the British between
Hindus and Muslims continue to vitiate our society.
The December 6 tragedy and its aftermath which resulted in the killings of hundreds
of Muslims are symptomatic
of the deep malaise that has afflicted us.
The Congress-UF attitude
of untouchability towards the BJP is only a vicious extension
of that malaise -- this one for political gain at the cost
of the country's long-term interests.
Their glee at the BJP's
discomfiture should be seen in this light.
The timing of the court's
action was a
most inopportune one for the BJP as the party's nominee for
the Uttar Pradesh chief ministership, Kalyan Singh, was scheduled to take over from
the incumbent Mayawati.
The BSP had also been waiting to queer the BJP's pitch in UP.
BSP supremo Kanshi Ram suddenly discovered that
changing the assembly speaker was a prerequisite to
Mayawati handing over power to Kalyan Singh! Now that Kalyan Singh
is in the dock over the Babri Masjid demolition, the issue assumed a moral
dimension,
especially as both the Election Commission and Parliament have
agreed to debar those facing criminal prosecution from contesting
elections.
In all probability, the BJP will break its alliance with the BSP
after allowing it to enjoy its largesse. The same political expediency
which prompted the BJP to enter into an untenable alliance with
the BSP should, however, impel it to bend a little -- if not more --
to get back power. Power, after all, is very important for a party
caught in a bind.
At the time of the Babri demolition, the BJP was in power in UP under
Kalyan Singh. The central government was with the Congress under
P V Narasimha Rao. Framing charges against both Rao and then home minister S
B Chavan will only be a logical step for the prosecution.
By the same logic, Sharad Pawar, then Maharashtra chief
minister, should also be brought to book. Bombay
witnessed the worst rioting in its history soon after the Babri incident. Counteraction engineered by fugitive gangster Dawood Ibrahim in the RDX bombings
of some vital locations in Bombay on March 12, 1993 was possible
only because of the active collusion of a section of the police and
political leadership.
I was in Bombay on the day of the blast and escaped
death by the skin of my teeth. A committed police inspector,
who had vital clues on the Memon brothers who masterminded the
execution of Ibrahim's plans, was prevented from going ahead with his investigation. Worse, the criminals were allowed
safe passage to Dubai. Sudhakar
Naik, who was chief minister during the December-January rioting, had to resign;
but his successor Pawar continued regardless.
The list
of communal rioting in the country since Independence is a long
and tragic one. And invariably in all these cases, the Congress
was in power. Some inquiry reports speak volumes
on man's inhumanity to man, nurtured and nourished by a self seeking
political leadership. The game has always been to drive the Muslims
against the wall.
Law is reason, without passion -- that is an old saying. If the Lucknow
court's action is taken in that spirit, it is well for all. However,
if it is used to gather political mileage and electoral advantage,
it will further accentuate the communal divide.
Advani and company will have to prove their innocence.
If they are found guilty, no one need shed any tear. We have to
live in peace. India can no longer afford to be a plaything
in the hands of forces inimical to us.
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