Monday, September 3, 2007
Sunday, September 2, 2007
Global terror’s Indian footprint
By M H AHSAN
About a fortnight before two blasts rocked Hyderabad on August 25, 2007, Lashkar-e-Tayeba (LeT) chief Hafiz Saeed told a gathering at Lahore that he has started a movement to occupy Muslim populated regions in India.
He said Pakistan must reclaim Muslim areas like J&K, Hyderabad, Junagarh, Munabao and West Bengal which, he said, was forcibly occupied by India in 1947. Saeed even released a new map of Pakistan incorporating these areas. A week before Saeed spoke, an al Qaeda video footage warned India of renewed terrorist attacks.
These two statements are not mere jihadi rhetoric, but a clear indication of how terrorists, now increasingly grouping under the overarching umbrella of al Qaeda across the world, are stepping up operations against India. The objective is not merely to create terror or create communal disturbances but generate a stronger support for the Islamist agenda of establishing a pan-Islamic arc of influence in Asia.
There are quite a few other dots which need to be connected to see this bigger picture. The first dot is the growing alliance between jihadi groups operating from Pakistan and Bangladesh with ideologically extreme groups in India as investigations into recent terrorist attacks and the chain of arrests and seizures in different parts of India, particularly rural Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, have revealed.
This development signals a new phase of terrorism within India where international terrorist groups like LeT and Harkat-ul Jihadi-e-Islami (HuJI)-and through them al Qaeda-are likely to exert influence over a small and diffused group of individuals to take up arms against the State in the name of religion.
These groups are small and work fairly independently of their patron groups by networking among themselves, tapping into each other’s resources and outsourcing logistics to criminal syndicates. These factors help such groups, rooted in local communities as sleeper cells or agents to escape police scrutiny.
What has changed over the years is the profile of terror recruits-the second dot-who are no longer the bearded, madrassa-type jihadis. A considerable number of them are well educated-doctors and engineers, and adept in exploiting latest communication technologies.
This means these groups which can tap into the world wide web of terror which has not only become a virtual university of jihad but also an overarching umbrella of faith, bringing all the faithful together on a single cyber platform dominated by al Qaeda and its ideology.
There are other equally significant changes in the objectives of these groups which form the third crucial dot. The year long-series of bomb blasts and attacks in Delhi, Varanasi, Ayodhya, Bangalore and Mumbai beginning October 2005 were carried out with the objectives of creating communal violence in Delhi and communally-volatile Uttar Pradesh and target economic centres like Mumbai and Bangalore. The overall agenda was to create a climate of fear at a time when India was being seen as an emerging economic power.
Add the fourth dot-the Islamist agenda of driving the Indian Muslims towards the al Qaeda ideology by targeting Muslims as witnessed in attacks in Hyderabad (twice), Malegaon and the Samjhauta Express in Haryana.
There is a widespread suspicion among the Muslim community that at least the Malegaon and Samjhauta Express bombing were carried out by Hindu extremist organisations. Since these cases remain unsolved, the terror attacks in Hyderabad have only fuelled such suspicions.
The fifth dot is Hyderabad’s history as the launching pad of jihad. The first set of jihadis, post-Babri Masjid demolition, had set up their operational centre at Hyderabad under the banner of the Indian Muslim Mohammedi Mujahideen (IMMM), an Indian branch of the Muslim Defence Force, an fundamentalist outfit, founded in Saudi Arabia by Abu Hamsa alias Abdul Bari Hamsa of Hyderabad.
The outfit was led by Azam Ghauri, who along with Abdul Karim Tunda and Dr Jalees Ansari, carried out a series of train blasts in north India to take revenge for the demolition of Babri Majid. All three were the first operatives of LeT in India.
The sixth dot is the changes that took place in the jihadi groups after 9/11. Under intense pressure from the US, many of these groups, operating from Pakistan, were either shut down or cut to size, or forced to change their operational plans. Many of these groups changed their operational bases and began outsourcing their activities to smaller groups which were not under the global scanner.
One such group is Harkat-ul-Jihad-e-Islami (HuJI) and its various clones which operate from Bangladesh. These groups are now working together, in small, diffused groups to target India. The Hyderabad attack is only a part of this renewed attempt to further the Islamist agenda of a Muslim conclave in Asia.
Meet terror’s latest tentacle
By M H AHSAN
Intelligence agencies are frantically trying to unravel their new nightmare, which goes by the name of Harkat-ul-Jihad-e-Islami
In 1998 when intelligence agencies started combing the heights of Kargil after Indian troops had reclaimed it they found several documents and letters written in Bengali. At that time the significance of their find did not sink in.
But now, over the last two years, not only is the significance sinking in with telling effect, the hierarchy of terror outfits is also getting clearer. There are two versions of Harkat-ul-Jihad-e-Islami (HuJI) - the Pakistani version, on which the agencies have always trained their spotlight on, and the Bangladeshi one, which has emerged out of the shadows with devastating force.
“HuJI has been successful in India due to local participation,” say a senior official of Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).
Born during the Afghan Mujahideen operations, HuJI was never expected to be a threat to India. Taking a leaf out of BPOs
Ever since President Pervez Musharraf joined the US War on Terror after the 9/11 attacks, the Pakistani intelligence establishment has been under immense pressure to clean up their act. The emergence of HuJI-Bangladesh can be traced back to this pressure. Most of the actual operations being carried out by HuJI-Pakistan were siphoned off to HuJI-Bangladesh.
The transfer of operations was followed by funds.
“It was as if Pakistan had taken a leaf out of Indian BPOs. The cost of carrying out an operation from Bangladesh was significantly cheaper,” an intelligence officer told HNN. “Everything from raw materials - ammonium nitrate, triggers and RDX - to personnel (read jihadis) was cheaper.”
But the change of base also meant a change in focus. The Pakistani intelligence establishment reduced its focus on Jammu and Kashmir. While everyone from the international community to the Indian Army rejoiced in the declining militant activity in the state, the new targets became India’s financial and economic heart - Mumbai, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Chennai.
“The Pakistani intelligence establishment has changed its strategy. It now realises that the only way to hobble India is to hit it where it hurts most - economy,” says a top intelligence official.
Local muscle is deadly
HuJI has probably the largest number of non-Kashmiri supporters from within India. HuJI’s stunning attacks have been mounted by local recruits. “HuJI changed dynamics of terrorism. They minimised the role of foreigners, recruited locals, trained them in terror tactics,” an official says.
Investigators believe among HuJI’s most significant recruits is Shahid Bilal- key suspect behind the recent Hyderabad blasts. Bilal is suspected to be involved in all three attacks in Hyderabad - suicide attack on headquarters of STF in 2005, attack on Mecca Masjid and last week’s blasts.
Cog in global terror network
A key man behind HuJI-Bangladesh was Mufti Abdul Hannan, an Afghan veteran who had education in Uttar Pradesh’s Deoband, one of the world’s largest Islamic schools imparting training in the ultra-conservative Wahabi beliefs.
“Today HuJI seems to have internalised and successfully executed the strategy of global jihad networks of Europe, Iraq and other areas. They are making bombs out of chemicals commonly available,” says an official. “This has significantly brought down the risk of an operation.”
The greatest success of HuJI comes from the fact that they have able to create their India cells-where the brain and the foot soldiers are all mostly Indians. “It is their success, and our biggest challenge,” says an official who has spent a long period in Kashmir through the 1990s.
Exposed! Delhi’s baby sellers exploit minors
By HNN Special Investigation Team
It’s a shocking tale that exposes the dark underbelly of Capital’s adoption market.
A HNN Special Investigation reveals how a placement agency located in Shakoorpur area of West Delhi forces minor girls into conceiving and later sells the babies for big money.
The Special Investigation Team (SIT) had information that the agency brought girls below 18 years of age from Jharkhand and West Bengal and made them work as domestic helps in Delhi.
But that’s only half the story.
The minor girls were forced to conceive and their babies were sold off through agents.
Following a tip-off, two decoys of HNN Special Investigation team followed up on the case and went to the placement agency - Adivasi Seva Samiti Service - posing as a couple wanting to buy an infant.
The agency is run by one Vinod and his wife Preeti. HNN spoke with Preeti first. Here’s an excerpt from the conversation
HNN: How much do you take per baby?
Preeti: We sold the last baby for Rs 10000
While trying to fix a price for a baby, with Preeti, the team met Sukhmui, a young girl who had delivered a baby 20 days ago. Basanti, the midwife who helped deliver the baby, was also present. She and Preeti had differing takes on Sukhmui’s age.
Here’s an excerpt of a conversation with them, shot on a hidden cam.
Basanti: She must be 16-17 years old
Preeti: No, i think she’s older.
Basanti: I’ve delivered her baby. I know she’s a minor
The girl herself was unclear about when exactly she conceived the child. “It happened in my village,” is all that she recalls.