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  • The Gujarati press: Rumour or news?

    Frontline,
    The regional press had no small role in fanning the flames. Goebbels in Gujarat?

    DIONNE BUNSHA

    “If you repeat a lie often enough, it becomes the truth.”
    – Joseph Goebbels, Minister for Propaganda in Nazi Germany.
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    • Chariots of Fear

      The Jagannath rath yatra passes without incident, but for Gujarat’s Muslims it is life on the edge, for the fifth month running.

      DIONNE BUNSHA
      in Ahmedabad

      A festival in a ghost town. Welcome to Ahmedabad’s 125th Jagannath Rath Yatra. While some people in the city celebrated, others abandoned their homes, ran for their lives and hid in fear.
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      • Godhra probe: A foregone conclusion?

        Investigations into the burning of the Sabarmati Express at Godhra on February 27 seem to be directed to prove that it was a pre-planned terrorist act in line with the official script.

        DIONNE BUNSHA

        “It (burning of the Sabarmati Express) was a pre-planned attack. The charred bodies which I saw at Godhra railway station testified to the black deed of terrorism.”
        – Narendra Modi, chief minister of Gujarat, 28th February 2002. (quoted in Rediff.com)

        On the day that the Sabarmati Express in Godhra was burned, killing 59 passengers, chief minister Narendra Modi and his Sangh Parivar brotherhood had already concluded that it was a pre-planned ‘terrorist’ conspiracy. Since then, investigations into the case have been directed towards proving their theory. But more than four months after the incident, a number of questions remain unanswered. The chargesheet filed by the CID (Crime) is vague about how the S/6 coach was set on fire on the morning of February 27th. It mentions that a mob of Muslims from Godhra burned the train. Details of how it was ignited are not mentioned. But, when contacted, police officials were unwilling to give any further explanations.
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        • Go home. Gujarat is back to normal

          Frontline,
          The government wants the camps closed. Chased away, refugees are even living under trees.

          DIONNE BUNSHA

          When Vadodara’s government officials forced all the relief camps to close down and crammed all the refugees into one camp, Zubeidabibi Mansoori was one of those persuaded to go back home. But two days later, she had to come running back to the camp. “They sent us back from the camp, even though our house hasn’t been repaired since it was ransacked and looted. After two days, a fight broke out in the neighbourhood, and we had to leave once again,” she says. When they returned, the camp was too crowded to accommodate Zubeidabibi’s family and others from her neighbourhood. But luckily, a builder stepped in and offered to let them stay at one of his sites.
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          • Back to Abnormal

            It’s a long road back home when there’s no home to go back to. With the monsoon approaching, people may be stranded in relief camps for longer than they imagined.

            DIONNE BUNSHA
            in Ahmedabad, Panchmahal and Vadodara

            The violence may have died down. But peace is yet to return to Gujarat.
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            • Refugees bounce back the cheques

              Disgusted by the pittance being handed out, riot victims reject the government’s token compensation.

              DIONNE BUNSHA
              in Ahmedabad

              Noorbanu Sheikh is in a peculiar dilemma today. After waiting two months for compensation for her broken home, she doesn’t know whether she should encash the cheque or return it to the government. Her house was totally destroyed when a mob went on a rampage in Bismillah nagar at Vatva in Ahmedabad. But all she got was Rs 500 to reconstruct her broken home, a mere 0.5 per cent of all she has lost. “In a month, the monsoon will start. How will we stay in the relief camp then? We want to rebuild our home, but the government hasn’t given us enough to even buy a tin sheet,” says Noobanu. “We left with nothing but the clothes on our backs. No one will even give us a loan.” After Noorbanu and others in the Jehangir nagar relief camp at Vatva received paltry sums as housing compensation, refugees refused government cheques the next time they were being distributed. Of the 300-odd families here, only 23 have received housing compensation.
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              • More hate, more votes

                Keep the Godhra Ghost alive. Keep the hate going till the elections.

                DIONNE BUNSHA
                in Ahmedabad

                * After unleashing mayhem in Gujarat, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad is now cashing in on its campaign of hate. A fund-raising pamphlet published by the VHP’s State treasurer, Chinubhai Patel, exhorts the people to “save our country by boycotting Muslims economically and socially”. The pamphlet, being circulated in Ahmedabad’s middle class colonies, elaborates: “Those who talk of Hindu-Muslim unity are only maligning their own religion. There can be no equality between Hindus and Muslims.” Playing on the fear and insecurity that the VHP has created through engineered violence over the past two months, the pamphlet goes on: “What is your security even in the most decent and secure locality in spite of having security guards? Traitors and terrorists are coming by the truckloads. They will kill your security guards and enter your bungalows. They will murder you in your drawing rooms and bedrooms.” Finally, after raising the level of hysteria sufficiently, the VHP’s pamphlet gets to the bottom line – the moolah. “We must organise ourselves, join Hindu organisations and make financial contributions… After Godhra, cases against several VHP members and Hindus have been registered and many of them are in prison now… It is our duty to protect their families and keep them from starving… You will only be following your dharma by doing so… Contribute to the VHP and avail of 50 per cent tax saving.”
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                • Free and Unfair Elections in the Wild West

                  Even as the attacks on the minorities continue relentlessly, the BJP government’s priority in Gujarat appears to be holding Assembly elections rather than providing relief and rehabilitation.

                  DIONNE BUNSHA
                  in Panchmahal and Vadodara

                  Around 1.5 lakh refugees are stranded in Gujarat’s relief camps. Several people die in violence here everyday adding to the 800-odd killed so far. Chief minister Narendra Modi sat back while VHP, Bajrang Dal and BJP workers orchestrated targeted attacks across the state, killing and hounding Muslims out of their villages and ghettos. The attacks continue relentlessly in Ahmedabad and other parts of north and central Gujarat. Police barge into Muslim houses and harass them as part of ‘combing operations’. Villagers whose homes have been destroyed are living in the open fields. There is no way out for the homeless refugees in relief camps. They cannot return to their homes or start work again.
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