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7 Aug 2015Hindustan Times (Mumbai)Rajdeep Sardesai is a senior journalist and 
author The views expressed are personal RAJDEEP SARDESAI
The claim that evidence is far more difficult to gather in a riot case than in 
a terror conspiracy can no longer be an alibi for a shoddy probe“The Mumbai 
blasts seem to be a reaction to the ‘totality of events’ in Ayodhya and Mumbai 
in December 1992 and January 1993.” Justice BN Srikrishna report.REUTERSCan 
Yakub Memon’s transformation be linked to the fact that Mahim was one of the 
worst-affected areas during the communal clashes?Justice Srikrishna is spot on: 
If there were no riots in Mumbai in 1992-1993, there would have been no serial 
blasts. Like if there was no Godhra train burning there would have been no 2002 
Gujarat riots, or if Indira Gandhi was not assassinated, there would have been 
no anti-Sikh pogrom in 1984. Or we could argue that if the Babri masjid was not 
demolished, the post-Babri riots would not have occurred; if Indira Gandhi 
hadn’t ordered the army to storm the Golden Temple, Sikh militancy would have 
been contained; if the VHP hadn’t undertaken a Kar-Seva in Ayodhya, no train 
would have been targeted. Searching for the ‘root causes’ of any act of 
violence is fraught with danger. Just how far back will action-reaction 
theories take us, and do they eventually lead to rationalising violence?
And yet, it is impossible, as Justice Srikrishna points out, to separate the 
Mumbai blasts from the riots that preceded them. Which is why the narrative 
over 1993 Mumbai blast convict Yakub Memon’s execution cannot but reflect on 
the riots as well. Why did Memon, who by all accounts had set up a relatively 
successful chartered accountancy firm in Mumbai’s Mahim area (Memon and Mehta, 
a Gujarati Hindu being his partner), become part of a diabolical ‘Muslims only’ 
terror plot? Can his transformation be linked to the fact that Mahim was one of 
the worst-affected areas during the communal clashes? Or that his brother’s 
office was attacked in the riots, the family received threat calls, and local 
Shiv Sainiks had warned Muslims in the area to ‘go to Pakistan’?
Whether Memon was fully aware of the serial blasts conspiracy, widely believed 
to have been executed by his brother Tiger, is uncertain. But after the apex 
court verdict, the debate over his exact role in the 1993 blasts must now end; 
what must begin is an attempt to reset the discriminatory manner in which the 
Indian state and the criminal justice system deals with mass crimes.
In the cacophonous television studios, there has been an emphasis on how 
stringent punishment to Memon will be a deterrent to terrorists and provide 
closure to the families of 257 victims of the blasts. But few public figures 
have called for similar tough action against the rioters of Mumbai. More than 
900 people died in the violence, but only three people were convicted and given 
one-year jail terms, one of whom is dead, the others out on bail. And yet those 
who do raise their voice and seek justice for the riot victims are labelled 
‘anti-national’, ‘presstitutes’ and worse. It is almost as if there is a 
selective amnesia where Mumbai’s violent journey begins on March 12, 1993 and 
what happened before is to be conveniently forgotten. And if you do care to 
remember, then you are accused of being an apologist for ‘terrorists’, as if a 
rioter with a sword who kills in the name of religion cannot be compared to a 
terrorist armed with RDX.
With informed liberal opinion being pushed on the defensive, is it any surprise 
then that the voice of dissent is now being hijacked by the likes of an 
Asaduddin Owaisi? The MIM MP from Hyderabad is no bleeding heart liberal, but a 
hard-headed politician who has sensed an opportunity in a surcharged and 
polarised atmosphere to build himself as a defender of ‘Muslim interests’. It 
is no different, in a sense, from how Bal Thackeray saw himself during the 
1992-1993 violence as a ‘protector’ of Hindus, an image that eventually 
catapulted him to power during the subsequent 1995 Maharashtra assembly 
elections. Or how a Praveen Togadia, and even a Narendra Modi, projected 
themselves as Hindu Hriday Samrats and defenders of Gujarati asmita in 2002. Or 
how the Congress under Rajiv Gandhi, during the 1984 general elections, ran an 
insidious campaign aimed at showing the Sikh as a terrorist.
The difference, perhaps, is that then we didn’t have the spectre of a global 
‘jihad’ being waged by terror groups like the Isis. Now, the rising influence 
of such groups and the growing radicalisation of Muslim youth whose rapid 
alienation is pushing them to seek ‘revenge’ demands that the State be seen to 
be just and even-handed. The claim that evidence is far more difficult to 
gather in a riot case than in a terror conspiracy can no longer be an alibi for 
shoddy investigation and, in some glaring instances, for an utterly compromised 
and partisan state apparatus.
You can’t have a Mumbai blast verdict being held up as a symbol of zero 
tolerance to terror even as a number of witnesses turn hostile in cases like 
Malegaon and Ajmer involving Hindu terror groups. Why should a public 
prosecutor in the Mumbai blasts case like Ujwal Nikam become a heroic figure 
while those in the Malegaon blasts are pushed around and threatened? How do you 
explain a Hashimpura verdict where almost three decades after 42 Muslims were 
gunned down, no one is held guilty? If those found guilty in the Godhra train 
burning have been given life or death penalties and remain in jail, why should 
those who were found guilty in the Gujarat riot cases like Naroda Patiya be out 
on bail with the state refusing to push for harsher punishment?
Sadly, in a divided society, raising these questions will perhaps lead to being 
labelled ‘anti-national’ yet again and offered a one-way ticket to Pakistan. 
But look at it in another way: These questions are really only in the nature of 
‘inconvenient truths’ that any mature democracy must confront, the kind that 
might just ensure we don’t become another Pakistan!Post-script: In 1993, I 
deposed for three days before the Srikrishna commission. As I was leaving 
court, a Shiv Sainik accosted me: ‘Don’t forget, Balasaheb is our God, our 
saviour, no court can hold him guilty.’ He was proven right. The BJP-Sena 
government in Mumbai junked the Srikrishna report findings. In 2012, Bal 
Thackeray was given a state funeral by a Congress-NCP government.


                                          

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