NEW
DELHI, March 12 (IslamOnline) - Curfew was completely lifted Tuesday
morning from Ahmedabad, the worst affected city in Gujarat during
the current bout of anti-Muslim riots. Other cities, like Surat and
Vadodra are still affected.
There
are reports of continuing violence in the rural areas and tribal
belts.
Authorities
are keeping a stiff upper lip about the true figures of the
casualties. A state official said that "No list has been
prepared of those missing." There are allegations that many
bodies have been disposed of illegally or cremated.
Tight
security is maintained in many parts of Ahmedabad, including the
Muslim-majority areas like Dariapur, Shahpur, Mirzapur and Khanpur.
Earlier, indefinite curfew was imposed in 20 police station areas of
the total 30 after large-scale arson and violence since February 28
following the tragic train incident in Godhra.
Nearly
250 people were burnt alive during the violence in Ahmedabad alone.
The total official casualty figure for the state of Gujarat crossed
726 today. Unofficial sources claim that the casualties are around
five thousand. Losses due to looting, burning and destruction have
yet to be quantified.
According
to the victims, licenses and other relevant papers from the civic
bodies were used to target the hotels and other business
establishments owned by them.
"All
my five hotels including 'Renbasera' meant for poor people were
attacked, while three other hotels still stood," said a
hotelier.
Muslim
community people allege that the voters' list was virtually used as
a killing tool as the mob went around different localities as part
of "cleansing operation". "They hardly failed in
laying their hands on their targets, thanks to documents like
voters' lists," said a police official adding "the mission
was accomplished with clinical precision." "The voters'
list has certainly made their task easier and the motivated mob knew
exactly who stayed where," said a woman inmate at Sanklitpur
relief camp in Johopura. This is for the "first time in the
country" violence was carried out using documents like this,
said a senior cop on condition of anonymity, reported the Press
Trust of India (PTI).
The
state government's interim report to the National Human Rights
Commission (NHRC) changed the story about the riots. Hitherto, state
officials, starting from Chief Minister Narendra Modi claimed that
the riots were 'backlash' and 'reaction' to the Godhra train
incident. Modi had quoted Newton's Third Law that for every action
there is a reaction. But the first official version sent to the NHRC
refuses to call the riots as a "reaction" to what happened
at Godhra. It suggests, whatever happened thereafter was an
"expected repercussion," though the state did not want
them to happen.
The
report claims the state government called para-military forces on
February 27 itself. Giving reasons for so many deaths during such a
short duration, the report says that this time the riots were more
wide-spread than any time earlier. They took place in areas of
Ahmedabad which were never considered "sensitive" before.
The report claims that there was no intelligence failure. The mobs
were huge, yet the riots were controlled in the shortest duration,
it claims. The Union Home Minister LK Advani has already given clean
chit to the Gujarat state government.
Kolkata
daily newspaper, The Telegraph, published a detailed report
on March 10 by Sujan Dutta, its correspondent in Ahmedabad.
"The riots in Gujarat in the wake of the Godhra train carnage
on February 27 were not only tacitly backed by the state
administration, but chief minister Narendra Modi’s government also
gave the VHP/Bajrang Dal stormtroopers 24 hours to do the job,"
Dutta said.
The
violence spilled over to the districts, villages and smaller towns.
It continues in small pockets more than a week after the Godhra
burnings. That the VHP and the Bajrang Dal have organic linkages
with the current rulers of Gujarat is public knowledge.
The
Telegraph quotes from a conversation with Kaushik Mehta, one of
the two joint general secretaries of the VHP in Gujarat. The
conversation took place in the VHP office in Ahmedabad on March 7
and was an hour-long. Mehta wanted the conversation to be kept off
the record, but The Telegraph did not make a commitment.
The
quoted part of the conversation went as follows:
Mehta:
“Let me tell you something off the record. The violence would not
have taken place if the secular parties had strongly condemned the
attack on the Ramsewaks (temple volunteers).
In
particular, till the late-evening of the 27th, we were expecting a
condemnation of the attack from the Shahi Imam of Delhi’s Jama
Masjid. But that did not come. Then it was decided there should be a
model for reprisals. It was important to teach a lesson that could
be emulated…. We had also sensed that once again the Centre was
moving towards blaming the ISI for perpetrating the Godhra attack.
All the 2,000 men, women and children could not have been ISI
agents".
What
followed was a pogrom. People were targeted irrespective of standing
and political colour. Asked if violence would not beget violence,
Dilip Trivedi, state VHP general secretary, said: “We hope not. We
hope that after what has happened, a lesson will have been
learnt," said The Telegrpah report.