Hashimpura,
Srebrenica And Rohingyas in Rakhine: Similar And So Different
Saeed
Naqvi
Incidents, similar in their chilling
monstrosity, came to mind when I saw photographs of a row of Rohingya Muslim
young men, on their knees, their hands tied behind their back. Gun wielding
military police, lurking within the frame, eventually mowed them down.
This is the face of the horror the world
will remember. In a state of funk, Myanmar’s commander-in-chief, General Min
Aung Hlaing has admitted mass graves in one village: Inn Din 50 km north of the
Rakhine state capital, Sittwe. Journalists have scoured many other mass graves.
The other gruesome episode etched on my mind
is Srebrenica in Bosnia (1995). Hashimpura in Meerut (1987), ofcourse, is our very
own tragedy, still lingering. In each one of these macabre events, Muslim youth
had their hands tied behind their backs and shot by the local army.
In the latest massacre of the Rohingya in
August 2017, the local Buddhist clergy and army turned upon the Muslims. The
number killed exceeds 6,700 according to the NGO Doctors without Borders.
In Srebrenica, the orthodox Christian troops
of the Bosnian-Serbian army, murdered 7,000 Muslim youth and expelled 20,000
civilians from the area.
In Hashimpura, forty two young men were
lined up along a nearby irrigation canal and shot by soldiers of the Provincial
Armed Constabulary. These soldiers were Hindus. Can their denomination be spelt
out? Apparently not, given the manner in which Asaduddin Owaisi of the
Ittehadul Muslimeen has been shouted down for having dared to mention Muslims as
“martyrs” because in the latest outrage it is mostly them who have been killed
by terrorists.
Owaisi was making a simple point.
Patriotism of Indian Muslims is regularly challenged on prime time television
which places them on the wrong side of the secular line. But five out of seven
killed in the Sunjwan army camp happened to be Muslims. Why is this detail
missing from reports? Such stories would go some distance in bridging communal
divide. No, said the anchors almost in chorus, “Owaisi is communalizing the
army”. Pray, how? “By reporting that five of the seven killed in the camp were
Muslims”? Muslims must never upstage Hindu soldiers in the martyrdom stakes?
Given this attitude, the killers of the
42 Muslims in Hashimpura must be seen only as instruments of the “secular”
state. That 19 PAC personnel, under the platoon commander, Surinder Pal Singh,
rounded up Muslims in the Hashimpura neighbourhood of Meerut, should be blandly
reported without mentioning religious identities. Religious identity must only be
mentioned if terrorists turn out to be Muslims which is what they are when police
shoots them down. The number of youth taken away is still unclear, but the
police narrative suggests 42, mostly weavers and daily wage earners, who were
taken in a truck to the upper Ganga canal in Murad Nagar, near Ghaziabad.
The men were blind folded, and shot.
Their bodies were dumped in the canal. This was not the only such operation
following a series of communal clashes in Meerut that year since March.
On May 24, 2007, 20 years after the
massacre, 36 members of victim’s families filed applications under the Right to
Information Act at the office of the Director General of Police in Lucknow. The
inquiry revealed that all the accused remained in service. In their Annual
Confidential Reports there was not even a hint of their involvement in the
Hashimpura massacre. The secular state was protecting its own.
The case has dragged on, zig zagged
without any evidence of the establishment really searching for justice. News is
expected from the High Court on February 20. Reporters recall the Minister of
State for Home, P. Chidambaram, outside his North Block office actually scream
at officials. “Crush them” he shouted. He was very hands-on during the Meerut
riots and the aftermath. Subramaniam Swamy actually named Chidambaram as an
accomplice but the allegation, coming from Swamy, became prima facie suspect.
In the fullness of time, the PAC men involved in the case, including Surinder
Pal Singh, have all departed to their maker, one by one.
I have given the fairly common place
details of the tragic saga of Muslims in the Hashimpura case simply to
establish the contrast with massacres in Srebrenica and Rakhine in Myanmar.
Orthodox Christians in one instance and Buddhists in the other brazenly
targeted Muslims and for which they have been or are being punished. But in
India the secular edifice would be weakened if the religious identity of police
or armymen who kill Muslims is mentioned. And the case will be dragged on eternally.
In Serbia-Bosnia, the International
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia concluded that what happened in Srebrenica
was “genocide”. It pinned the blame on senior officers in the Bosnian Serbian
Army.
Bill Richardson, former Governor of New
Mexico and US Ambassador to the UN, resigned last week from a Myanmar Advisory
Board on the Rohingya crisis. He called it a pro government “cheerleading
squad”. Richardson has been a friend of the country’s civilian leader, Aung San
Suu Kyi. This did not prevent him from expressing his anger at what he said was
a whitewash in which she was complicit. “She has developed the arrogance of
power”, he said.
For the horrors of Srebrenica senior
commander Ratko Mladic and a host of his accomplices, have been awarded long
sentences at the International Court of Justice. In Myanmar, Aung San Suu Kyi
and her military accomplices are inching towards global opprobrium and eventual
justice.
Why then are the perpetrators of
Hashimpura, the oldest of the three massacres, still scot-free?
Supposing Owaisi were to lift the scab from
another raw wound and say “wheels of justice, even when the complainants are
Muslims, move faster in non Muslim theocratic states than in pretentious secular
ones”. Would he be shouted down again?
Most Indians shy away from a glaring reality.
Eruptions in former Yugoslavia and Myanmar took place when Muslims were in bad odour
globally after the wars in the Arab world.
Communal clashes in India, particularly police
versus people, have been endemic since the Partition of 1947. And the world does
not take much notice because it is a routine “internal affair” of a sovereign state.
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site where innocent 42 muslim youths were gruesomely shot down by notorious PAC personnel should be developed and people should be encouraged to visit the site to remind our Govt that all is not well with the minority in India.
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