*Kerala goes soft on Simi, country pays*
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/PoliticsNation/Kerala_goes_soft_on_Simi_country_pays/articleshow/3374387.cms
18 Aug, 2008, 0000 hrs IST,Bharti Jain, ET Bureau

NEW DELHI: The kerala link to the Ahmedabad blasts confirms that Gujarat has
only paid for the failure, or worse, reluctance of the LDF government to act
against fundamentalist elements thriving in the state.

At least two training camps were reported from the forests of Kerala,
cocking a snook at the ban enforced against Simi under the Unlawful
Activities (Prevention) Act, 2004. The first camp for physical and mental
conditioning of Simi cadres was held in 2006 in Binanipuram near Aluva in
Ernakulam district, followed by another training workshop in December 2007
at Vagamon in Idukki district. After each of these camps, police cases were
filed.

Following the Binanipuram training camp, the Kerala police even managed to
round up 18 Simi activists on August 15, 2006. Of these, five were named in
the FIR. They were Ansar Moulavi, Shaduli, Nizamuddin, Abdul Rafeeq and
Shamas. The others were let off after questioning.

The investigations never went beyond these five arrests. Sometime later,
even these five were released on bail after the police failed to bring
charges against them for indulging in terrorist activity. Two of the
released, Shaduli and Ansar Moulavi, also attended the second Simi camp at
Vagamon, Idukki, in December and January 2007. The two would later be
arrested by the Rajasthan police for their alleged role in the May 13 serial
blasts in Jaipur.

Going by the statement of Kerala home minister Kodiyeri Balakrishnan, the
state government was under "pressure" to set the Simi men free. "Terrorists
are operating in Kerala. But their main activities are outside the state.
When we took police action against some of them, there was a hue and cry
from human rights activists saying that minorities were being targeted," he
told reporters in Alappuzha on Sunday.

The LDF government's passive attitude and its failure to bring charges
against the organisers of the Binanipuram camp emboldened Simi to hold
another training session for around 40 cadres from UP, MP, Delhi, Gujarat,
Karnataka and Jharkhand in December-January 2007. Activists were given
commando training covering aspects like jungle warfare including the
medicinal herbs and plants that must be consumed for survival, rock climbing
and scaling and sliding using a rope.

The trainees were also taught how to avoid giving away too much information
during police interrogation.
Shockingly enough, even the 2007 Simi training camp was reported to the
Kerala police. A case was registered at the Mundakkayam police station on
June 19, 2008, but no investigation was undertaken. Yet another reason why
the Simi activists, following the intensive training, could easily
re-assemble in states like Gujarat and Rajasthan and put their training to
practice. And their lessons in how to dodge the police seemed to have worked
when even the arrests of the Simi top leadership from Indore and Ujjain
failed to yield intelligence on plans to target Gujarat and Jaipur.

According to Kerala forest minister Benoy Viswom, though his department had
information on meetings of suspicious extremist elements in the jungles, the
Centre had not passed on any information pinpointing the Simi sessions to
the forest department.

The reluctance of the various governments in Kerala to act against
fundamentalist elements in the state is not a new phenomenon. It be recalled
that the Kerala assembly had in 2006 passed a unanimous resolution demanding
the release of Coimbatore blasts accused and PDP leader Abdul Nasser Madani
on "humanitarian and medical" grounds.

The leader, incarcerated in a Tamil Nadu jail since 1998, is said to have
been ailing at the time. Not only this, CPM T K Hamza even called on the PDP
leader in jail in March 2006, after which Madani announced his support for
the LDF in the 2006 assembly elections.

The PDP chief was named as accused number 14 in the 1998 Coimbatore blasts
chargesheet and charged with arranging the explosives and being part of the
criminal conspiracy behind the blasts that killed 58 people. Madani was
acquitted by the sessions court in 2007.

Reply via email to