Mumbai Under Siege (Yoginder Sikand in Islam, Peace and Justice)

Yoginder Sikand

"O ye who believe! stand out firmly for God, as witnesses to fair
dealing, and let not the hatred of others to you make you swerve to
wrong and depart from justice. Be just: that is next to piety: and
fear God. For God is well-acquainted with all that ye do."

(The Quran, Surah Al-Maida: 8)

Numerous theories are doing the rounds about the dastardly terrorist
assault on Mumbai. The dominant view, based on what is being suggested
by the media, is that this is the handiwork of the dreaded
Pakistan-based self-styled Islamist and terrorist outfit Lashkar-e
Tayyeba, which, ever since it was ostensibly proscribed by the
Government of Pakistan some years ago, has adopted the name of Jamaat
ud-Dawah. This might well be the case, for the Lashkar has been
responsible for numerous such terrorist attacks in recent years,
particularly in Kashmir.

The Lashkar is the military wing of the Markaz Dawat wal Irshad, an
outfit floated by a section of the Pakistani Ahl-e Hadith, a group
with close affiliations to the Saudi Wahhabis. It has its headquarters
at the town of Muridke in the Gujranwala district in Pakistani Punjab.

The Markaz was established in 1986 by two Pakistani university
professors, Hafiz Muhammad Saeed and Zafar Iqbal. They were assisted
by Abdullah Azam, a close aide of Osama bin Laden, who was then
associated with the International Islamic University in Islamabad.
Funds for setting up the organization are said to have come from
Pakistan's dreaded official secret services agency, the Inter Services
Intelligence (ISI). From its inception, it is thus clear, the Lashkar
had the support of the Pakistani establishment.

The Lashkar started out as a paramilitary organisation to train
warriors to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan. Soon it spawned dozens
of camps across Pakistan and Afghanistan for this purpose. Militants
produced at these centres have played a major role in armed struggles,
first in Afghanistan, and then in Bosnia, Chechenya, Kosovo, the
southern Philippines and Kashmir.

Like other radical Islamist groups, the Lashkar sees Islam as an
all-embracing system. It regards Islam as governing all aspects of
personal as well as collective life, in the form of the shariah. For
the establishing of an Islamic system, it insists, an 'Islamic state'
is necessary, which will impose the shariah as the law of the land.

If, the official website of the Lashkar announces, such a state were
to be set up and all Muslims were to live strictly according to 'the
laws that Allah has laid down', then, it is believed, 'they would be
able to control the whole world and exercise their supremacy'. And for
this, as well as to respond to the oppression that it claims that
Muslims in large parts of the world are suffering, it insists that all
Muslims must take to armed jihad. Armed jihad must continue, its
website announces, 'until Islam, as a way of life, dominates the whole
world and until Allah's law is enforced everywhere in the world'.

The subject of armed jihad runs right through the writings and
pronouncements of the Lashkar and is, in fact, the most prominent
theme in its discourse. Indeed, its understanding of Islam may be seen
as determined almost wholly by this preoccupation, so much so that its
reading of Islam seems to be a product of its own political project,
thus effectively ending up equating Islam with terror.

Being born as a result of war in Afghanistan, war has become the very
raison d'être of the Lashkar, and its subsequent development has been
almost entirely determined by this concern. The contours of its
ideological framework are constructed in such a way that the theme of
armed jihad appears as the central element of its project. In the
writings and speeches of Lashkar spokesmen jihad appears as violent
conflict (qital) waged against 'unbelievers' who are said to be
responsible for the oppression of the Muslims.

Indeed, the Lashkar projects it as the one of the most central tenets
of Islam, although it has traditionally not been included as one of
the 'five pillars' of the faith. Thus, its website claims that 'There
is so much emphasis on this subject that some commentators and
scholars of the Quran have remarked that the topic of the Quran is
jihad'. Further, a Lashkar statement declares, 'There is consensus of
opinion among researchers of the Qur'an that no other action has been
explained in such great detail as jihad'.

In Lashkar discourse, jihad against non-Muslims is projected as a
religious duty binding on all Muslims today. Thus the Lashkar's
website claims that a Muslim who has 'never intended to fight against
the disbelievers […] is not without traces of hypocrisy'. Muslims who
have the capacity to participate or assist in the jihad but do not do
so are said to 'be living a sinful life'. Not surprisingly, therefore,
the Lashkar denounces all Muslims who do not agree with its pernicious
and grossly distorted version of Islam and its hideous
misinterpretation of jihad -- Sufis, Shias, Barelvis and so on—as
being 'deviants' or outside the pale of Islam or even in league with
'anti-Islamic forces'.

The Lashkar promises its activists that they would receive great
rewards, both in this world and in the Hereafter, if they were to
actively struggle in the path of jihad. Not only would they be
guaranteed a place in Heaven, but they would also 'be honoured in this
world', for jihad, it claims, is also 'the way that solves financial
and political problems'.

Astoundingly bizarre though it is, the Markaz sees itself as engaged
in a global jihad against the forces of 'disbelief', stopping at
nothing short of aiming at the conquest of the entire world. As Nazir
Ahmed, in-charge of the public relations department of the Lashkar,
once declared, through the so-called jihad that the Lashkar has
launched, 'Islam will be dominant all over the world'. This global war
is seen as a solution to all the ills and oppression afflicting all
Muslims, and it is claimed that 'if we want to live with honour and
dignity, then we have to return back to jihad'. Through jihad, the
Lashkar website says, 'Islam will be supreme throughout the world'.

In Lashkar discourse, its self-styled jihad against India is regarded
as nothing less than a war between two different and mutually opposed
ideologies: Islam, on the one hand, and Hinduism, on the other. It
tars all Hindus with the same brush, as supposed 'enemies of Islam'.
Thus, Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, Lashkar chief, declares: 'In fact, the
Hindu is a mean enemy and the proper way to deal with him is the one
adopted by our forefathers, who crushed them by force. We need to do
the same'.

India is a major target for the Lashkar's terrorists.

According to Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, 'The jihad is not about Kashmir
only. It encompasses all of India'. Thus, the Lashkar sees its
self-styled jihad as going far beyond the borders of Kashmir and
spreading through all of India. Its final goal, it says, is to extend
Muslim control over what is seen as having once been Muslim land, and,
hence, to be brought back under Muslim domination, creating what the
Lashkar terms as 'the Greater Pakistan by dint of jihad'. Thus, at a
mammoth congregation of Lashkar supporters in November 1999, Hafiz
Muhammad Saeed thundered, 'Today I announce the break-up of India,
Inshallah. We will not rest until the whole of India is dissolved into
Pakistan'.

The Lashkar, so say media reports, has been trying to drum up support
among India's Muslims, and it may well be that it has managed to find
a few recruits to its cause among them. If this is the case, it has
probably been prompted by the fact of mounting murderous
Hindutva-inspired anti-Muslim pogroms across the country, often
abetted by agencies of the state, which has taken a toll of several
thousand innocent lives.

The fact that no semblance of justice has been delivered in these
cases and that the state has not taken any measure to reign in
Hindutva terrorism adds further to the deep-seated despondency and
despair among many Indian Muslims. This might well be used by
self-styled Islamist terror groups, such as the Lashkar, to promote
their own agenda.

Obviously, therefore, in order to counter the grave threat posed by
terror groups such as the Lashkar, the Indian state needs to tackle
the menace of Hindutva terror as well, which has now assumed the form
of full-blown fascism. Both forms of terrorism feed on each other, and
one cannot be tackled without taking on the other as well.

Mercifully, and despite the denial of justice to them, the vast
majority of the Indian Muslims have refused to fall into the Lashkar's
trap. The flurry of anti-terrorism conferences that have recently been
organised by important Indian Islamic groups is evidence of the fact
that they regard the Lashkar's perverse understanding of Islam as
being wholly anti-Islamic and as a perversion of their faith. These
voices urgently need to be promoted, for they might well be the most
effective antidote to Lashkar propaganda.

Numerous Indian Islamic scholars I know and have spoken to insist that
the Lashkar's denunciation of all non-Muslims as 'enemies of Islam',
its fomenting of hatred towards Hindus and India and its understanding
of jihad are a complete misrepresentation of Islamic teachings. They
bitterly critique its call for a universal Caliphate as foolish
wishful thinking. And they are unanimous that, far from serving the
cause of the faith they claim to espouse, groups like the Lashkar have
done the most heinous damage to the name of Islam, and are to blame,
to a very large extent, for mounting Islamophobia globally.

At the same time as fingers of suspicion are being pointed at the
Lashkar for being behind the recent Mumbai blasts, other questions are
being raised in some circles. The significant fact that Hemant
Karkare, the brave ATS chief who was killed in the terrorist assault,
had been investigating the role of Hindutva terrorist groups in blasts
in Malegoan and elsewhere and had received threats for this has not
gone un-noticed. Nor has the related fact that the assault on Mumbai
happened soon after disturbing revelations began pouring in of the
role of Hindutva activists in terror attacks in different parts of
India. That the attack on Mumbai has led to the issue of
Hindutva-inspired terrorism now being totally sidelined is also
significant.

And then there is a possible Israeli angle that some are raising.
Thus, the widely-read Mumbai-based tabloid Mid-Day, in an article
about a building where numerous militants were holed up titled 'Mumbai
Attack: Was Nariman House the Terror Hub?', states:

"The role that Nariman House is coming to play in this entire attack
drama is puzzling. Last night, residents ordered close to 100
kilograms of meat and other food, enough to feed an army or a bunch of
people for twenty days. Shortly thereafter, the ten odd militants
moved in, obviously, indicating that the food and meat was ordered,
keeping their visit in mind, another cop added. "

One of the militants called up a television news channel and voiced
his demands today, but, interestingly, when he was asked where are
they all holed him, he said at the Israeli owned Nariman House and
they are six of them here", one of the investigating cops said. Since
morning, there has been exchange of gun fire has been going on and the
militants seem well equipped to counter the cops fire. To top it, they
have food and shelter. One wonders [if] they have the support of the
residents, a local Ramrao Shanker said."

A Mossad/Israeli hand in the affair might seem far-fetched to some,
but not so to others, who point to the role of Israeli agents in
destabilizing a large number of countries as well as possibly
operating within some radical Islamist movements, such as a group in
Yemen styling itself 'Islamic Jihad', said to be responsible for the
bombing of the American Embassy in Sanaa, and which is said to have
close links with the Israeli intelligence.

Some have raised the question if the Mossad or even the CIA might not
be directly or otherwise instigating some disillusioned Muslim youth
in India, Pakistan or elsewhere to take to terror by playing on Muslim
grievances, operating through existing Islamist groups or spawning new
ones for this purpose.

If this charge is true -- although this remains to be conclusively
established -- the aim might be to further radicalize Muslims so as to
provide further pretext for American and Israeli assaults on Islam and
Muslim countries. The fact that the CIA had for years been in very
close contact with the Pakistani ISI and radical Islamist groups in
Pakistan is also being raised in this connection. The possible role of
such foreign agencies of being behind some terror attacks that India
has witnessed in recent years to further fan anti-Muslim hatred and
also to weaken India is also being speculated on in some circles.

Whether all this is indeed true needs to be properly investigated. But
the fact remains that it appears to be entirely in the interest of the
Israeli establishment and powerful forces in America to create
instability in India, fan Hindu-Muslim strife, even to the point of
driving India and Pakistan to war with each other, and thereby drag
India further into the deadly embrace of Zionists and American
imperialists.

In other words, irrespective of who is behind the deadly attacks on
Mumbai, it appears to suit the political interests and agendas of
multiple and equally pernicious political forces -- Islamist and Hindu
radicals, fired by a hate-driven Manichaean vision of the world, but
also global imperialist powers that seem to be using the attacks as a
means to push India even deeper into their suicidal axis.

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