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Samjhauta Express bombing carried out by indian army officer

Victims are caught and will be punished , if we as a nation were so narrow minded that we believed one religion could do no wrong , then this incident would have been buried under the sand a very long time back.

The fact that it is being investigated so publicly is testament to the fact that we are not ashamed of our Secular Identity.
Very nice, but who will pay for the crime of false accusation?

I remember they said, Pakistanis blew up the bomb to incite Muslim reaction. To me this is beyond vindication. Someone should pay for the false accusation.
 
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The case has not even reached a court & everyone has condemned the accused !!
 
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Very nice, but who will pay for the crime of false accusation?

I remember they said, Pakistanis blew up the bomb to incite Muslim reaction. To me this is beyond vindication. Someone should pay for the false accusation.

This was never an official report or mentioned by Police or any other Govt. authority , possibly so called experts on 24 hrs news channels who have nothing better to do make such random claims without proof. No official blame was ever laid on Pak for this case at least.
 
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At least 10 people, including a serving Lieutenant Colonel Prashad Srikant Purohit and a Hindu monk and nun, have been arrested over alleged involvement in bomb explosions that killed four people in the Muslim-dominated town of Malegaon in the western Maharashtra state in India. The network is linked to another arrested former major Ramesh Upadhyay who represents the terrorist organisation Abhinav Bharat. The accused Lt Col Purohit is also being investigated over a bomb attack in February 2007 that killed 68 people on the Samjhauta Express, a “friendship” train between Delhi and Lahore, killing mostly Pakistani passengers. Investigators fear that the trail will go on to net more serving and retired officers.

The colonel has confessed to the Samjhauta Express blast and foreclosed the “options” of “conspiracy” screamed by some Hindutva politicians. Col Purohit has also confessed to training Hindu terrorists who had taken to attacking Muslims and has told investigators that he not only trained the Samjhauta Express terrorists, he also supplied them with the explosives to do the job.
The intent he says was to cause armed conflict between Pakistan and India so that anti-Muslim passions could be nurtured in India, leading to violence.

Indian analysts are now worried about Hindu terrorism. Some of it has been on display for a long time against the Muslim community. Some of it is recent, targeting Christian missionaries and Christian converts. Because of the rise of Hindu fundamentalism in the 1980s, or a revival of old Hindu supremacist thinkers like Savarkar, who was behind the killing of Gandhi, India is now open to terrorism that is lashing out at the state. People are accustomed to voting the BJP to power as an alternative to the Congress and that in turn empowers the grand Hindu fundamentalist alliance called the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) that contains such extremist outfits as Bajrang Dal.

The Indian state of Gujarat that supplied India with some of its great moderate leaders and gave birth to the trading elite that has brought great prestige to the country, is now ruled by the BJP even after its government was found complicit in the carnage of Muslims. What will Hindu terrorism look like if, God forbid, it should spread into other provinces and the state proves too weak to tackle it? Will it take the shape of the Taliban violence in Pakistan? Will the Indian state be forced to retreat in the face of the terrorists because of its vulnerability to religion? Will the terrorists use intimidation to force the civilian population to elect extremists to power?

While terrorism derives strength from the general disorder prevailing around the globe, the Indian state was thought to be different, being secular constitutionally. But the rise of Hindu fundamentalists has begun to challenge the state and Indian analysts worry that there may be greater penetration of Hindutva ideology in the armed forces. The BJP has been wooing officers and brought into its fold many former generals, giving them tickets to contest elections for Lok Sabha. One former general affiliated with the BJP is a chief minister and one former governor S K Sinha stirred communal passions to a point where the Indian Held Kashmir is up in protest against New Delhi. There is no central dogma in Hinduism which the Hindu terrorist can refer to but Hindutva is being transformed into a dogmatic creed with Hindus agreeing to kill non-Hindus. Given that Lt Col Purohit was working in the Military Intelligence Directorate, the possibility of the intelligence agencies having been tainted can hardly be ignored.

Political parties like the BJP have built upon the idea of the Hindu state on the basis of an ideology that indicts the Muslims for having ruled India and imposed their religion on the local population. What is happening today is the high point of this “reaction” to the state’s alleged “pampering” of the Muslim minority even though the Muslims of India are a most backward and disadvantaged community and need affirmative action from the secular state to improve their lot. This “reactive” terrorism may not terrorise the world directly but if it gets out of hand within the region, it will have an indirect larger impact by spurring on the Muslim fundamentalists that are already gearing up for an Armageddon. It could also suck in Bangladesh.

On the plus side, the discovery of a connection between the Indian army and the Hindu fundamentalist could galvanise New Delhi into adopting a new policy that reduces focus on Pakistan as the origin of all such violence in India. The unravelling of the mystery of the Samjhauta Express blasts will hopefully bring India and Pakistan together and reduce their mutual recrimination. Once this trend subsides, the populations of the two countries will be freed from the rhetoric of hatred and distrust released by the two states against each other. Hatred of Pakistan in India feeds upon the constant refrain of “Pakistani involvement” in the bomb explosions in the various Indian cities that are later owned by local organisations. *

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Cant seem to find the Samjhauta Express thread that was up......would be intresting to find out what people thought when the theory of the indians doing the attacks themself's was first mentioned.
Am sure the people that proposed that option where called crazy conspiracy theorist or something along those lines.
 
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TERRORISM

Of saffron variety

ANUPAMA KATAKAM

The Malegaon blast probe points to the existence of Hindu extremist outfits in Maharashtra.

• November 2003: A bomb explodes at the Mohammadiya Masjid in Parbhani, Maharashtra. Several injured.

• August 2004: Bomb blast at the Quadriya Masjid in Jalna, Maharashtra. Several injured.

• August 2004: Bomb blast at Merag-ul-Uloom Madrassa in Purna, Maharashtra. Several injured.

• April 2006: Two Bajrang Dal activists die while making a pipe bomb in Nanded, Maharashtra. Investigations reveal that the house belongs to a Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) worker.

• January 2008: Bombs explode at Gadkari Auditorium, Thane, Maharashtra. Perpetrators turn out to be members of the Sanatan Sanstha, which is linked to the Hindu Jan Jagran Samiti, a well-known extremist organisation in Maharashtra.

• September 2008: A bomb explodes at Bhikhu Chowk in the largely Muslim-populated town of Malegaon in Maharashtra. Five people die and 89 suffer injuries.

EVIDENCE emerging from the investigation into the Malegaon bomb explosion led the police to Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur and two associates, Shivnarayan Singh Kalsangra and Shyam Bhawarlal Sahu. With their arrest on October 23, they became the first to be picked up in connection with the incident. Subsequently, Maharashtra’s Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) arrested six other people, including two Army officers, one serving and the other retired. The ATS believes that a couple of top Hindutva leaders and right-wing politicians may be involved in the blast. Informed sources say that the mastermind, a “Ramji”, is still at large and once he is found the entire “Hindu fundamentalist plot to avenge the recent blasts perpetrated by jehadi groups in India” will be unravelled.

The sadhvi’s arrest is the first case of a Hindu right-wing member being taken into custody and held responsible for a bomb explosion. Although the police are yet to make a statement about radical Hindu groups being responsible for other blasts in the State, they say there are enough facts to indicate that these groups are involved in those strikes.

As the investigation progresses, what seems to be emerging is that there are several Hindu extremist outfits in Maharashtra, some of them linked to one another, and they all have a single-point agenda – combating jehadi terror with terror. Political observers and secularists believe that the saffron brigade, which is known to cause terror through communal rabble-rousing, has now adopted a different form of violence. They say that the establishment must, in the same way it cracks down on jehadi terror cells, pay attention to the rising saffron movement and suppress it before it is too late.

“Until now, the police were under the assumption that only Muslim groups would carry out terror attacks. Ever since the Parbhani blast and the Nanded incident, we [human rights groups] have been asking them to look elsewhere, too. Why would a jehadi group place a bomb in a mosque on a busy prayer day where a number of Muslims would be killed? They do not gain anything by this,” said Asghar Ali Engineer, a Muslim scholar and human rights activist.

He added: “I am certain that the arrest of the sadhvi and others is just the tip of the iceberg. We will soon see exactly what these so-called Hindutva groups are responsible for. If the police are left to do their job without any pressure, much more will be revealed and hopefully the real culprits will be caught.”
TERROR TRAIL

Pragya Singh Thakur, 36, was arrested in Surat after the police traced the ownership of a motorcycle used in the Malegaon blast to her. A telephone conversation, transcripts of which were presented in court, confirmed that she did not only own the bike but was involved in the terror strike in the town. She says in the phone call to one of the accused: “Why did so few people die? Why didn’t you park [the bike] in a crowded area?” While arguing her own case, she told the court that she and the two others arrested along with her were innocent and were being implicated as part of a larger game to defame the Hindutva movement. Originally from Indore and operating largely out of there, Pragya Singh was once an active member of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) student wing. She was also a member of Durga Vahini, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s (VHP) women’s wing.

As a student, the motorbike-riding Pragya Singh was known to beat up roadside Romeos. She took up sanyas in 2006. In the past few years, she has allegedly been a member of various right-wing organisations and has been networking with godmen, Hindu spiritual leaders and those inclined towards Hindu extremism, with the aim of advancing the Hindutva agenda.

The other two arrested with Pragya Singh were also from Indore. Shivnarayan Kalsangra allegedly assembled the timer device for the bomb used in Malegaon. Shyam Bhawarlal Sahu reportedly was one of its planters. Five days after their arrest, Sameer Kulkarni was picked up for his alleged role in arranging the chemicals for the bomb.

He was a member of the ABVP and is now an active member of the Abhinav Bharat, a Maharashtra-based right-wing organisation. Retired Major Ramesh Upadhyay was also held that day for allegedly training the accused in bomb making. A few days later, three other members of the Abhinav Bharat were taken into police custody.

On November 5, the police had a major breakthrough when they arrested a serving Army officer, Lieutenant Colonel Shrikant Prasad Purohit. He apparently provided the RDX (Research Department Explosive) for the bomb and along with Ramji masterminded the operation. This sent shockwaves across the country. He is the first officer from the Indian Army to be arrested in connection with a terror attack. The Army was quick to defend itself by saying Purohit’s arrest did not mean everyone in the forces was communally inclined. Should he be found guilty, he would be punished, the Army said.

Ever since the Nanded incident, there have been murmurs that right-wing organisations affiliated to political parties were being active in forming terror modules. In April 2006, Naresh Kondwar and Himanshu Phanse of the Bajrang Dal were killed while making bombs in Nanded, a small town in Maharashtra. Investigations revealed that the owner of the house in which the bombs were being made was an RSS member.

It was found that Kondwar and Phanse were responsible for bombing a mosque in Parbhani in 2003. The police also established that members of the Bajrang Dal cell in Nanded were responsible for the blasts in Jalna and Purna in 2004.

Soon after the Malegaon case arrests, the question people were asking was why Nanded was not taken more seriously. Were the government and the police all too quick to dismiss the incident as a one-off case? Was this not a clear indicator of what was happening?

K.P.S. Raghuvanshi, the ATS chief at the time, said it was taken seriously but the case languished once it was transferred to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

He pointed out that the ATS had, in fact, been cracking down on right-wing organisations for their role in some of the attacks. In August this year, it arrested members of the Sanatan Sanstha and the Hindu Jan Jagran Samiti for their role in the Thane and Panvel blasts. The Malegaon arrests have come in the wake of concerted efforts by the ATS, and the police are confident that in the coming days many more will fall into their net.
HINDU EXTREMISM

The arrest of so many right-wing activists by the ATS is enough cause for concern about the rapid growth of extremist groups in Maharashtra. A police officer told Frontline: “In the name of protecting Hindutva and the perceived threat to it, these groups are becoming very popular. They attract cadre by making dramatic speeches during Hindu festivals. Clearly, their base is expanding and one has to watch out for them.”

The officer said that typically many of its activists were unemployed and had been brainwashed into believing that they could save their country by carrying out right-wing plans. There were vast numbers who believed that this was the best option to combat the so-called war on Hindus, he said. What was disconcerting, he said, was that a sophisticated chemical like RDX was used in the blasts. With adequate support, these groups could have access to even more weaponry and ammunition, thus increasing their strike power, he pointed out.

Among the groups under the scanner is the Abhinav Bharat, which is named after an organisation set up by the Hindutva ideologue Vinayak Damodar Savarkar in 1904 to strike against the British. Himani Savarkar, who is married to Savarkar’s nephew (she is also the niece of Mahatma Gandhi’s assassin Nathuram Godse), has come out supporting the sadhvi’s innocence in the blast.

The Sanatan Sanstha and the Hindu Jan Jagran Samiti are reportedly linked to the RSS. In January this year, their operatives attempted to bomb the Gadkari Rangayatan theatre in Thane to protest against the staging of Amhi Pachpute, a Marathi satire on the Mahabharata. Other groups include the Durga Vahini; the Hindu Raksha Samiti, which played a role in the recent Dhule riots and is affiliated to the Shiv Sena; and the Rashtriya Jagran Manch, which is also linked to the RSS. The police are monitoring the activities of some VHP and Bajrang Dal members also.

The trend towards extremist behaviour is not new to Maharashtra. In the early 1900s, Bal Gangadhar Tilak’s call to fight the imperialists through anything other than peaceful methods found favour not just at the ground level but even among Western-educated upper-class Hindus.

The RSS, which has its headquarters at Nagpur, has deep roots in the State. Generations have grown up on its ideology. In contemporary times the Shiv Sena’s stunning rise in Maharashtra was to a great extent dependent on the Hindutva ideology.

It must be observed that Pragya Singh and her associates are not from Maharashtra. But the State, owing to its well-organised right-wing extremist cadre, is conducive to carrying out their operations.
INFILTRATION

Interrogation of Major (retd.) Ramesh Upadhyay revealed that the Bhonsla Military School in Nashik was used as a training ground by the conspirators. While the school has denied its involvement in the blast, it is under the scanner for allowing Bajrang Dal activists to hold training sessions in the use of arms and martial arts.

Incidentally, the school was founded by B.S. Moonje, who was Savarkar’s close friend and who assisted in creating the RSS. The school’s links to the RSS is open knowledge.

“It is deeply worrying that Army personnel are involved in such terror activities,” said Engineer. “It just goes to show how deep the infiltration is in this country.”

According to Engineer, constant indoctrination over decades by the VHP, the RSS, the Bajrang Dal and the BJP has resulted in this kind of violence, which will be disastrous for India. “During the six years of BJP rule, they infiltrated into crucial areas: the police force, the army and the education department. We are seeing the results of that,” said Engineer.

Ram Punyani, secretary of the All India Secular Forum and a human rights activist, said that the deep and widespread ideological indoctrination began years ago but was propagated thoroughly during the National Democratic Alliance [NDA] regime. It placed its members in the bureaucracy, particularly in the education department, and in the cultural arena, he said. “RSS people who once headed a department may have retired, but they have ensured that the damage continues, as they would have hired a number of like-minded people. So you can imagine how deep the penetration is. It will take generations to root this out,” said Punyani.
POLITICAL GAINS

The emergence of these small radical Hindutva groups has put parties such as the Shiv Sena and the BJP in a spot. Leaping to get some political mileage, the Shiv Sena came out in total support of Pragya Singh. It even said it would offer her legal help, as she was truly a fighter for its people. While the VHP and the Bajrang Dal have not been very vocal, the BJP is doing a bit of flip-flop on the issue. Initially it denied any association with Pragya Singh but later supported her.

It has been saying vociferously that the investigation is biased and lacking in transparency. Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh, however, said that those parties that once sought lethal POTA (Prevention of Terrorism Act) charges framed against suspects from minority communities were now asking the government to go easy on the Hindu right-wing extremists.

With the general elections just round the corner, each party has to play a careful game. For the Congress it will be a tough call. If it lets go of the Malegaon suspects, that will further anger an already seething Muslim community, which believes it is facing severe persecution because of the jehadi terror attacks. Yet, the Congress also has to appease the larger Hindu population.

In the course of time, there will be more arrests and perhaps the whole story will unfold. Or, as in other terror attacks, the true masterminds will never be found and the real story never told.

Communalism Watch
 
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Stopping Hindu extremists’ infiltration in security forces:
Top Indian sleuths to consider strategies in 2-day moot
* Intelligence officials will also discuss probe into September 29 Malegaon blasts
By Iftikhar Gilani

NEW DELHI: A two-day meeting of top Indian sleuths has been convened here to discuss a probe into the involvement of serving army and police personnel in bomb blasts targeting Muslims.

Sources said the meeting of top Intelligence Bureau (IB) officials will discuss the fallout of the probe into the September 29 Malegaon blasts and consider strategies for tackling the suspected infiltration of Hindu fundamentalists in the army and police. Hindu nationalist parties, including the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), have targeted the government for probing arrested army officer Lt Colonel Srikant Pruhit’s involvement in the Pakistan-bound Samjhota train blasts.

Propaganda: BJP spokesman Ravi Shankar Prasad on Wednesday said it would give Pakistan a handle for a global propaganda against India. A section in the government also shares this view and has warned against pursuing the probe. Until recently, Indian authorities had built up a case of Pakistan-based terrorists’ involvement in the Samjhota Express bombing, and had even provided Islamabad the photograph of a suspected Pakistan national. Prasad said the whole case of India becomes suspicious because the terrorist attack is being portrayed as the work of ‘Hindu terrorists’.

Pakistan: “Pakistan is bound to tell India to first decide itself whom it really suspects fore the Samjhota incident, before expecting anything from it,” Prasad said. He said there should be no surprise that Pakistan may even demand a fresh inquiry into all major terror incidents in India that were blamed on the Pakistani ‘jihadis’. The director generals of police of all 28 states and 35 joint directors of IB from across the country would also attend the meeting. It will also discuss the Union Home Ministry’s bid to ban the ultra-Hindu nationalist Bajrang Dal, allegedly involved in attacks on Christians in Orissa, Karnataka and other states, the sources said.

They said the ongoing battle of Hindu fundamentalist outfits with Maharashtra’s Anti-Terror Squad (ATS) over arrest of Sadhvi Pragya Thakur would also figure in the deliberations. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will interact with top security and intelligence officers gathered from across the country twice, first over a lunch he is hosting for them on Saturday, and again on Sunday when he would join in their discussions. Home Minister Shivraj Patil will preside over the inaugural session while those invited to join the deliberations include National Security Adviser MK Narayanan. Sources said the Military Intelligence (MI) has been urged to depute a senior officer for a briefing on how the defence forces intend to tackle any infiltration in the light of arrest of Lt Col Purohit for investigations into the Malegaon blasts.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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lol i remember they blamed ISI for that :D which shows their obsession for ISI
 
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Terror probe may harm talks with Pakistan: BJP

NEW DELHI, Nov 19: An Indian police probe into an army officer’s alleged role in the Samjhauta Express blasts among other terror attacks could harm talks with Pakistan, India’s main opposition party said on Wednesday.

The Bharatiya Janata Party described ongoing investigations by the Maharashtra state police’s anti-terrorist squad (ATS) as juvenile.

“Earlier the Congress regime was soft on terror, now they have turned juvenile,” BJP spokesman Ravi Shanker Prasad was quoted by the Press Trust of India as saying. “The juvenile investigations would encourage jihadi elements in Pakistan and would have an effect on the talks between the two countries which are due in the last week of this month.”

He said the move to malign the armed forces by claiming that the RDX for the Samjhauta blasts was provided by army personnel and then retracting the statement the next day was “very demoralising at a time when the ISI has been propagating the theory that the Indian Army supports terror in Jammu and Kashmir,” he added.

“There is a risk of Pakistan seeking a review of all the terrorist attacks in which India had alleged a Pakistani hand. In the Samjhauta blasts case, we had even provided to Pakistan a photograph of a Pakistani national who was involved,” Mr Prasad said. The morale of the Indian Army should be protected at all costs, he said.

“The ATS theory would give Pakistan an opportunity to prove that India is involved in sponsoring anti-Pakistan campaign on terror,” Mr Prasad said.

Meanwhile, PTI said, the probe into how Hindu outfits accused of terrorism had links with some armymen brought a few business houses under the scanner of the ATS and federal agencies investigating the finances of the group allegedly responsible for the Malegaon blast.

It said a check was being conducted whether the business houses were aware about the end use of funds. “We have questioned some of them and we are working to ascertain as to how much of money had been handed over to the saffron outfit,” a senior probe official said.
 
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Pak may bring up Lt.Col. Purohit’’s role in Samjhauta blasts at Interior Secretaries” meet


Islamabad, Nov.20 (ANI): Pakistan may raise the recent findings of the Maharashtra’’s Anti Terrorist Squad (ATS) indicating a probable involvement of the Indian Army’’s Lieutenant Colonel Prasad Shrikant Purohit in the Samjhauta Express blasts incident during the scheduled meeting between Interior Secretaries of India and Pakistan to be held in Islamabad on November 25.

Purohit, presently under arrest in connection with the Malegaon blasts case, has been remanded by Nashik court Additional Judge H.K. Ganatra to judicial custody till November 29 as a prime suspect in the case.

The News has raised fingers on the ‘’sketches of suspects” released after Samjhauta Express blasts by the authorities under the government of India suggesting Pakistan being the perpetrator for the incident.

The Samjhauta train blasts tragedy took place on February 17, 2007 and killed 68 people, most of them Pakistanis.

Pakistan’’s Interior Secretary Kamal Shah will represent Pakistan while India will be represented at the talks by Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta.
Additional Secretary Azhar Chawdhury will represent the Pakistan’’s Foreign Office.

“The issue of the Samjhauta Express has been taken up with New Delhi in several meetings including during our talks on Anti-Terror Mechanism level. We have been asking the Indian side about more information on this tragedy and sincerely hope that they will be able to share their findings with us”, the Foreign Office spokesperson was quoted by The News as saying.

The spokesman said that in the past, officials had conceded that efforts to prevent drug-trafficking between the two sides had been successful. However, when it came to anti-terror efforts, acknowledging of wanted criminals by both sides, gun-smuggling and fake currency, the progress remained slow. “But even if it is a slow process it is a useful experience. After all, talking to each other about these issues is the only way”, he was quoted as saying.

In July 2007, India and Pakistan at the last such talks had set up three sub-groups to go into the contentious issues such as terrorism and extradition and deportation of wanted criminals from each other’’s territory. (ANI)

Pak may bring up Lt.Col. Purohit’’s role in Samjhauta blasts at Interior Secretaries” meet
 
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'Hindu terrorism' debate grips India

BBC News

A new and highly controversial phrase has entered the sometimes cliche-riddled Indian press: "Hindu terrorism".

As with the term "Islamic terrorism" and "Christian fundamentalism", this latest addition to the media lexicon is highly emotive.

It was in the aftermath of the 29 September bomb blast in the predominantly Muslim town of Malegaon in the western state of Maharashtra that the term "Hindu terrorism" or "saffron terrorism" came to be used widely.
That was because the state police's Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) arrested 10 Hindus following the blasts and has said that it wants to arrest several more.

Little-known
One of those detained was a female priest, Sadhwi Pragya Singh Thakur, aged 38, who has been accused by the ATS of being involved in the Malegaon blast. Her detention shocked members of the faith.
So too did the arrest of a serving Indian army officer, Lt-Col Prasad Srikant Purohit, who the ATS says is the prime accused in the case.
Police are investigating whether some of those arrested are members of a little-known Hindu outfit called Abhinav Bharat (Young India).

At least three of those held have some links with a prestigious college in the city of Nasik, the Bhonsala Military Academy.
ATS investigators have questioned two of the academy's former office bearers several times.

One of them was Col Raikar, who retired from the Indian army some months ago. Both he and Col Purohit served in the same unit of the army and became friends. The ATS claims the meeting in which the plan for the bomb blast was hatched was held in the Bhonsala school.

Another retired army officer, Maj Prabhakar Kulkarni, is also under arrest. He too was an office bearer at the school. In addition, the ATS says that at least one of the 10 suspects received military training here.
Sadhwi Pragya Singh Thakur, Col Purohit, Maj Kulkarni and Col Raikar have denied any connection with terrorism, as has the Bhonsala Military Academy and its parent organisation, the Central Hindu Military Education Society (CHMES).

Founded in 1937, the sprawling Bhonsala campus is run by the CHMES, an organisation established in the 1930s by Dr BS Moonje, a former president of the militant Hindu Mahasabha (Hindu Assembly) organisation.
His vision was to militarise India to fight the British Raj.

Military-style training
As the name suggests, this is not an ordinary college.
Its aim, as its website claims, is to "encourage students to take up careers in the armed forces of the country".

Military training involves teaching students how to fire guns. The students are prepared for the National Defence Academy, the central government's premier military college.

The branch of the academy in the city of Nasik has many impressive buildings.
One of them is used to impart military-style training to students, aged 10-16 years.
Its secretary, Divakar Kulkarni, laments the fact that his school is getting a bad press these days.

He says that besides military training, students are taught Hindu philosophy and scriptures. Mr Kulkarni accepts it's primarily a school for Hindus, but he adds that there are two or three Muslim and Christian children in every class of 45 students.

'Tea and biscuits'
"Even Muslim students study the Bhagwat Gita and the Ramayana [Hindu scriptures]," he says proudly. So how does he respond to the ATS allegation that the bomb plot was hatched at a meeting in the academy?
"Col Raikar let out a hall to Abhinav Bharat for a meeting for two hours, but we don't know what transpired in the meeting," Mr Kulkarni said.

The ATS believes Col Raikar was also present in the meeting. But according to Mr Kulkarni he went there just for a few minutes "to ask if they wanted tea and biscuits".

The ATS says that it has also found the aims and objectives of Abhinav Bharat downloaded on the computers of the two men.

Mr Kulkarni insisted that there was a perfectly innocent explanation for this: "They downloaded the outfit's aims and objectives without knowing much about its work," he said.

Meanwhile, most Hindu organisations believe India's Congress party-led government is playing politics by defaming Hindus. They argue that the very term "Hindu terrorist" is not only a creation of the media but also a contradiction in terms - because the faith explicitly renounces violence.
"The government, with an eye on the general election next year, is trying to woo Muslims by maligning Hindus," says Datta Gaikward, chief of the right-wing Hindu Shiv Sena party in Nasik.

Hindu political parties are also staunchly defending Sadhwi Pragya Singh Thakur, the arrested female priest. They have hired lawyers to represent her and at every legal hearing in Nasik supporters of right-wing parties gather outside the court and shout anti-government slogans.

All eyes will be now be on the court proceedings - whenever they start in earnest - to find out whether "Hindu terrorism" really has taken root or not.

BBC NEWS | South Asia | 'Hindu terrorism' debate grips India
 
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lol i remember they blamed ISI for that :D which shows their obsession for ISI

India had initially named banned Pakistani organisations, Lashkar-e-Tayyaba and Jaish-e-Muhammad in collusion with Bangladesh-based Harkat-e-Jihad-e-Islami (HUJI), for the Samjhota train blasts that killed 68 people.

Indian officials had even handed over a suspect’s photograph and also mentioned the names of other suspects to their Pakistani counterparts.

As we have all been saying for ages....its the hindu terrorist with the help of indian army/govt that is doing the bombings.
 
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Now no one seems to be doubting the Indian investigating agencies!

The same people whose only worry in life was when the ISI would be blamed after every terror attack are now fully convinced that this time the investigative agencies are right.

May be they are, they were also right when they sent the details of that international terrorist Dawood'd Karachi address to Pakistan.
 
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Here in India ...Law is equal for every citizen . If someone is guilty he will be get punished. No matter whether he is a Hindu or a Muslim or Sikh or from any other religion .

And don't blame our security agencies. They are best in the world...
India has banned many terrorist organizations for they were involved in terrorist activities across Indian cities.

Now when a few men/women of other religion (hindu) were found to be involved in such act they are put under trial(by the same security agencies)

India is fighting against Islamic terrorism for decades , now this new terrorism will definitely raise problems...
 
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