Author: George Iype
in Hyderabad
Publication: Rediff
on Net
Date: July 14, 2000
For the last five years,
Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Nara Chandrababu Naidu has been working to
make Hyderabad the Silicon Valley of Asia. And for the last eight
years, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence, the most deadly agency that
aids militancy in South Asia, has been spreading that side.
Its mission: make Hyderabad
the hub of its activities in South India. The ISI today has a massive
base in Hyderabad. 'Its thrust, subversive activities and secessionist
plans are of grave concern and great threat to the state's security,' notes
a secret Andhra Pradesh intelligence document. Sleuths give several
reasons for Hyderabad -- especially the Muslim-dominated Old City area
-- emerging the epicentre of ISI operations after 1992. The Union
home ministry and the state police have deployed special squads to bust
its network, which officials concede connects Hyderabad to other sensitive
areas in the south Indian states of AP, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala.
Thus, Hyderabad, Warangal,
Nalgonda and Mahboobnagar in AP, Bangalore and Gulbarga in Karnataka, Malappuram
and Palakkad in Kerala, and Madras, Coimbatore and Ramanathapuram in Tamil
Nadu are under the scrutiny of intelligence agencies.
Their brief: prevent
the madrasas [Muslim religious schools] from being used as recruiting centres
for militants.
The nearly 12 Islamic
fundamentalist organisations that are active in the four southern states,
too, are under observation, sources say.
THE Naidu government
has reasons to be worried. In the last eight years the police have
arrested nearly 65 ISI agents responsible for minor and major bomb blasts,
killings and communal violence, and seized several trucks carrying RDX
explosives in select areas of the state.
"Hyderabad attracts the
ISI for various reasons. First, it is the city with an active Muslim
population from whom the Pakistani agency has been recruiting youths to
various militant outfits," says Additional Director General of Police,
law and order, M L Kumavat.
Kumavat had worked for
five years in Bombay probing the ISI network after the serial bomb blasts
of 1993. He says the ISI has selected many soft targets across the
country, and "carefully cultivated" a network in the southern states.
"Militancy in madrasas
is the most dangerous threat that the ISI is posing these days," he feels.
According to Kumavat,
one reason why "Hyderabad is a soft and easy target" is that there are
a number of vital defence installations in the city, especially those of
the Defence Research Development Organisation. Hyderabad's proximity
to Bombay and other Maharashtra districts like Aurangabad, Nanded, Beed
and Akola, which are escape routes, is another advantage.
Intelligence records
show that the kingpin of the ISI operations in Hyderabad was Azam Ghauri.
The police claim to have killed him in an encounter in April.
The most active terrorist
group that is recruiting Muslims from the city is the Lashkar-e-Toiba,
the ISI-aided urban warfare outfit operating in the Kashmir valley.
It was LeT's supreme
leader Hafiz Mohammad Sayeed who recruited the Warangal-born Ghauri a decade
ago. In messages to several Muslim fundamentalist organisations in
the country, Sayeed had proclaimed that LeT's priorities "were the liberation
of Kashmir and Hyderabad."
After being trained at
the LeT headquarters in Pakistan and with the Taliban militia in Afghanistan,
Ghauri reached Hyderabad in 1993 and began terrorist strikes across southern
states. He subsequently floated the Indian Muslim Mohammadi Mujahideen,
that claims to be the LeT's sister outfit.
The police estimate that
Ghauri alone has recruited over 100 Muslim youths from Hyderabad.
They were trained in various LeT camps in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.
They then formed different groups and have carried out some 60 operations
in Hyderabad and across Andhra Pradesh in the last few years. The
first ISI killing masterminded by Ghauri was in 1992, when G Krishna Prasad,
an additional superintendent of police, was killed in Hyderabad.
In 1993, four ISI agents killed two Vishwa Hindu Parishad activists, Nandaraj
Gaud and Pappaya Gaud. Because, they participated in the kar seva
in Ayodhya that led to the Babri Masjid demolition in December 1992.
In 1994, ISI operatives led by Jalees Ansari of Bombay planted bombs at
the Madina Education Centre, AP Express and the Secunderabad railway reservation
complex.
In 1998, the police seized
a huge quantity of explosives. LeT's Salim Junaid was arrested.
In November 1999, a Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh worker, Devender Sharma,
was killed by members of the LeT and IMMM.
These Islamic outfits
carried out their most famous killing early this year, when they executed
Mahavir Prasad. A Hyderabadi jeweller, he had sparked a furore in
1997 when he ordered his staff to search a burkha-clad Muslim woman whom
he wrongly accused of shoplifting. The ISI had pledged to kill him
for the "unIslamic act."
The police shot Ghauri
in April. However, they admit that Ghauri's trained men numbering
over 100 are at large in different parts of Andhra Pradesh. "Several
fundamentalist organisations in the state are acting as fronts for ISI
terrorists," says special branch Deputy Commissioner of Police E Jayarami
Reddy.
Officials like Reddy
admit that tackling the growing militancy in the Muslim-dominated Old City,
which has a minority population of around 2 million, is tough. The
menace has forced the Hyderabad city police commissioner to restrict some
50 cable operators from showing Pakistan television.
A special task force,
specially created for tackling ISI activities, closely monitors the Friday
prayers in the mosques and the Urdu schools in the city and surrounding
districts.
"We have information
that some of these mosques are being misused by the ISI for recruiting
Muslim youth," says a police officer.
MUSLIMS in the Old City
say it is unemployment that encourages their kith to join the ISI.
"There have been some
cases of Muslim youths joining organisations like IMMM and the Students
Islamic Movement of India. But the real problem is that we do not
know how many Pakistanis are illegally staying in the city," says Mohammad
Hamid, a schoolteacher.
Community leaders like
Hamid claim that though after the Babri Masjid demolition Muslims in Andhra
Pradesh have began to support the Telugu Desam Party, the latter's joining
hands with the Bharatiya Janata Party has forced many to join fundamentalist
groups.
Moreover, the Muslims
of Hyderabad are increasingly being deprived of their property and businesses;
majority community businessmen are "invading" real estate, pearls, jewellery
and textiles. The depressing job markets in the Gulf countries too
add to the problem.
These days audio cassettes
with anti-India speeches and pamphlets are being secretly circulated whenever
there is a major terrorist strike in Jammu and Kashmir. During the
Indian Airlines hijacking in December, the police had seized hoards of
such cassettes and pamphlets containing the provocative speeches of the
released militant Maulana Masood Azhar.
Such literature is distributed
in the city at regular intervals: during the Kargil war, after India's
nuclear tests and, lately, on the day when Jammu and Kashmir passed the
autonomy resolution.