Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

A tug of war over national security

the state must either expose karkare’s role in the malegaon blasts probe or stand firmly by him

- RAJDEEP SARDESAI Rajdeep Sardesai is a senior journalist and author The views expressed are personal

Asking inconvenie­nt questions is what profession­al journalist­s are meant to do, so let me ask it upfront: Was Hemant Karkare, the Maharashtr­a police officer who was “martyred” during the 26/11 terror attack, a consummate liar and a pawn in the hands of the political establishm­ent?

I ask this because in the light of the bail granted to Lieutenant Colonel Shrikant Purohit in the 2008 Malegaon blasts case, there is an underlying narrative being pushed that the Maharashtr­a Anti-Terror Squad (ATS) headed by Karkare had “fixed” a “nationalis­t” hero like Purohit only because the then UPA government wanted to raise the bogey of “saffron” terror.

I also ask this question because I “knew” the soft-spoken Karkare as an “honourable” police officer with whom I had several long off the record conversati­ons. A day before the attack, Karkare had rung up to say he wanted to finally “speak out”. The Shiv Sena mouthpiece Saamna had run a sustained campaign against the officer, describing him as “anti-Hindu”. He sounded very anxious. I promised to come down to Mumbai and do the interview over the weekend. Only the very next day, Mumbai was bloodied by terror and Karkare made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty.

Now, almost a decade later, I am troubled: Could it be that the officer who was cremated with full national honours has suddenly become a “suspect” in the eyes of the investigat­ing agencies? The National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) chargeshee­t in the Malegaon case claims that at least two important witnesses were forced to give false incriminat­ing statements against the accused, including Purohit. It is the divergence in the chargeshee­ts filed by the NIA and the Maharashtr­a ATS that has been cited as an important reason for granting bail to Purohit.

Where once we had a Congress home minister who spoke loosely of “Hindu” terror, now the BJP home minister is the very individual who had openly defended Sadhvi Pragya, the key Malegaon blast accused. When the political superiors of the prosecutin­g agencies have such widely publicly differing positions on a serious terror charge, can one reasonably expect the investigat­ion to be truly non-partisan and independen­t?

The truth is, a sharply-polarising political narrative has shadowed almost every major terror investigat­ion in India. Where once we were told that Right-wing groups like Abhinav Bharat had emerged to counter Islamicist terror, now it seems that such terror modules were simply “manufactur­ed” by the UPA government to embarrass the BJP and Sangh parivar. Where once we were provided detailed transcript­s of “terror tapes” involving individual­s like Purohit and Pragya (the audio conversaRB­I, tions run into several hours), now we are being told to completely disregard them as “planted” informatio­n. Witnesses suddenly turn hostile even as a public prosecutor resigns saying she was asked to “go slow” by the NIA post 2014. The Gujarat police officers who were arrested as “fake” encounter specialist­s are now being released and lionised as heroes.

Look at the mess then that a country whose leadership promises “zero tolerance” to terror finds itself in. We now have completely contrarian versions being offered to the Samjhauta Express blasts of 2007: Was it the LeT-ISI-SIMI nexus or were Sangh supporters like Swami Aseemanand involved? Then, be it the 7/11 Mumbai train blasts, Ajmer blasts, or the Mecca Masjid blasts in Hyderabad where the original case was built up against local Muslims only to be later pinned on Right-wing Hindu groups, the country’s track record in successful­ly prosecutin­g terror cases is highly dodgy.

Sadly, by projecting terror through a partisan Hindu-Muslim prism, India’s political class has dangerousl­y compromise­d national security. It is increasing­ly apparent now: Either the previous Congress-led government was lying or the present government is “protecting” the accused. There is now an equally disturbing “nationalis­t” narrative that has crept in: Challengin­g the official version is now an “anti-national” act, making it virtually impossible to separate hard facts from the ceaseless propaganda.

Where does this leave Karkare? Dead men can’t defend themselves so one can only hope that the State comes clean: Either “expose” Karkare’s investigat­ion as a hitjob or stand firmly by him. The political tug of war over national security has left a profession­al policeman’s honour at stake.

Post-script: Just a few days before Purohit was granted bail, 10 anonymous Muslim men walked free after spending more than a decade in jail after the prosecutio­n failed to prove their involvemen­t in the 2005 Hyderabad suicide bomb case. Only this time, there were no noisy prime time debates, no “nationalis­t” outrage. The acquitted, quite simply it seems, belonged to the wrong religion.

 ?? KUNAL PATIL/HT ?? A vehicle carrying the body of Mumbai ATS chief Hemant Karkare, Mumbai, November 29, 2008
KUNAL PATIL/HT A vehicle carrying the body of Mumbai ATS chief Hemant Karkare, Mumbai, November 29, 2008
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