Deccan Chronicle

Find newer ways to curb terror ‘space’

-

The recent terrorist strikes in London and in Kabul — the latter on the first day of fasting in the Muslim holy month of Ramzan, which was the deadliest since 2001 — suggests that the world needs to be far more proactive in tackling Islamist violence. London was hit by a major terrorist attack late Saturday night, with Islamist terrorists first trying to run over pedestrian­s on London Bridge and then three men going around the busy Borough Market area nearby on a stabbing spree. This was the third terrorist attack in Britain in the last three months, two of them after the general election was announced. This does raise speculatio­n whether an object of the terrorists was to influence the poll results. But no matter how that question is answered, it is undeniable, as Prime Minister Theresa May noted, that newer ways need to be found to “restrict the free space”, in communitie­s and in cyberspace, in which terrorists operate. This may mean modifying the law so that freedom of speech is reconfigur­ed in coming to terms with extremism.

It will be interestin­g to see how Britain goes about this. Civil society in the West has frequently been critical of India when it restricts Internet connectivi­ty in Kashmir. But the terrorist challenge cannot be met by putting more security personnel on the streets. Having a heavy security apparatus hasn’t worked in Kashmir, although Kashmir’s special problem of being a border area must be recognised.

US President Donald Trump used the latest London incident to gain approval for his policy of denying visas to citizens of certain Muslim countries. It’s not clear how this can help even if it is conceded “political correctnes­s” does not take us far.

The terrorist incidents in the UK and in Europe as a whole in recent times haven’t been perpetrate­d by new arrivals but largely by those whose families have made these Western societies their home decades earlier.

The recent truck bomb attack in Kabul has led the Afghan authoritie­s to blame Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligen­ce. This is not a knee-jerk reaction, given the politics of the past four decades. It also appears that one of the three London terrorists is of Pakistan background. It is time leading Western nations, and particular­ly the United States, acknowledg­ed Islamabad’s role in first becoming the nursery of global jihad with Western connivance, and using terrorism as an instrument of policy in Afghanista­n and India. A tough aid posture toward Islamabad, close military coordinati­on against ISIS in the Iraq and Syria theatre, and a supportive US stance at the UN on defining terrorism will help to check Islamist terrorism globally.

A tough aid posture toward Islamabad, close military coordinati­on against ISIS in the Iraq and Syria theatre, and a supportive US stance at the UN on defining terrorism will help to check Islamist terrorism globally

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India