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Qaida won’t find India easy: Intelligence agencies
Jayaraj Sivan,TNN | Sep 6, 2014, 02.59 AM IST
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READ MORE intelligence agencies|Indian Subcontinent (AQIS)|Ayman Al-Zawahiri|al-Qaida
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Coming from one of the most dreaded terror outfits in the world, nobody dare take the threat lightly, but al-Qaida may not find it easy to set up base in India, say intelligence agencies. A senior official with more than two decades of experience in the Intelligence Bureau (IB) said there could be stray elements with the potential to cause trouble but India did not give them room to flourish.
A young man from Cuddalore district who was working in Singapore made for Syria and joined ISIS. Three others from Thane joined ISIS and one of them died fighting for the rebel group in Iraq. Yet, the official said, a foreign terror group cannot sink its roots in the country unless the social divide is wide enough.
Islamic Forum for the Promotion of Moderate Thought says Indian Muslims are peace loving and do not subscribe to al-Qaida's worldview. Nevertheless, the forum's secretary general, A Faizur Rahman, feels mosques in the country should use Friday sermons to counter puritanical schools of thought in accordance with the Prophetic warning against linking extremism and religion.
"Threat perception is already high in the country. Al-Qaida is currently not in a position to make it any higher," a senior police officer said. Many in the establishment feel Zawahiri's video clipping is only an attempt to raise the sagging morale of al-Qaida members who are losing visibility with the rise of ISIS.
"In Afghanistan, there is a cultural divide between Arab-dominated al-Qaida, who have lost out to the inward-looking Pushtoon-based Taliban. In neighbouring Pakistan, Lashkhar-e-Taiba and the Pakistani Taliban have overshadowed al-Qaida. The same cultural divide would be the main stumbling block for Zawahiri in India too. There is no dearth of homegrown extremist groups like al-Umma and Indian Mujahideen, but they will not want to be treated like second-grade jihadists by al-Qaida," the officer said.
Motives that drive homegrown extremists of Tamil Nadu are different from those that drive groups like al-Qaida and ISIS, a central intelligence official said. "Al-Umma has mostly targeted local Sangh Parivar leaders," he said. The feedback that fundamental elements who visit other Muslim-dominated countries bring with them is not encouraging for potential recruits. There is a perception even among extremist groups that they enjoy greater freedom in India, where they can even stage a protest against the administration, another official said.
India's economic progress is another impediment for extremist groups, said former RAW chief P K Hormis Tharakan. In the late '80s, when the Indian GDP trailed Pakistan's, separatism and terrorism gained currency in Kashmir. The situation has now reversed and extremism is on the decline in Kashmir.
"National security is not merely about thwarting terrorist attacks. It is also about economic well-being and improving standards of living of the poor," Tharakan said. Equity in distribution of wealth and opportunity reduces discontentment. When there is prosperity, there is less propensity for terror."
But he admitted that the emergence of a young breed of educated and affluent terrorists was a cause for concern.
Jayaraj Sivan,TNN | Sep 6, 2014, 02.59 AM IST
9
comments
0
inShare
Share More
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READ MORE intelligence agencies|Indian Subcontinent (AQIS)|Ayman Al-Zawahiri|al-Qaida
RELATED
- 'Pakistan army, ISI stage-managing al-Qaida advance into India'
- 'Pakistan faces greater threat from Qaida wing'
Coming from one of the most dreaded terror outfits in the world, nobody dare take the threat lightly, but al-Qaida may not find it easy to set up base in India, say intelligence agencies. A senior official with more than two decades of experience in the Intelligence Bureau (IB) said there could be stray elements with the potential to cause trouble but India did not give them room to flourish.
A young man from Cuddalore district who was working in Singapore made for Syria and joined ISIS. Three others from Thane joined ISIS and one of them died fighting for the rebel group in Iraq. Yet, the official said, a foreign terror group cannot sink its roots in the country unless the social divide is wide enough.
Islamic Forum for the Promotion of Moderate Thought says Indian Muslims are peace loving and do not subscribe to al-Qaida's worldview. Nevertheless, the forum's secretary general, A Faizur Rahman, feels mosques in the country should use Friday sermons to counter puritanical schools of thought in accordance with the Prophetic warning against linking extremism and religion.
"Threat perception is already high in the country. Al-Qaida is currently not in a position to make it any higher," a senior police officer said. Many in the establishment feel Zawahiri's video clipping is only an attempt to raise the sagging morale of al-Qaida members who are losing visibility with the rise of ISIS.
"In Afghanistan, there is a cultural divide between Arab-dominated al-Qaida, who have lost out to the inward-looking Pushtoon-based Taliban. In neighbouring Pakistan, Lashkhar-e-Taiba and the Pakistani Taliban have overshadowed al-Qaida. The same cultural divide would be the main stumbling block for Zawahiri in India too. There is no dearth of homegrown extremist groups like al-Umma and Indian Mujahideen, but they will not want to be treated like second-grade jihadists by al-Qaida," the officer said.
Motives that drive homegrown extremists of Tamil Nadu are different from those that drive groups like al-Qaida and ISIS, a central intelligence official said. "Al-Umma has mostly targeted local Sangh Parivar leaders," he said. The feedback that fundamental elements who visit other Muslim-dominated countries bring with them is not encouraging for potential recruits. There is a perception even among extremist groups that they enjoy greater freedom in India, where they can even stage a protest against the administration, another official said.
India's economic progress is another impediment for extremist groups, said former RAW chief P K Hormis Tharakan. In the late '80s, when the Indian GDP trailed Pakistan's, separatism and terrorism gained currency in Kashmir. The situation has now reversed and extremism is on the decline in Kashmir.
"National security is not merely about thwarting terrorist attacks. It is also about economic well-being and improving standards of living of the poor," Tharakan said. Equity in distribution of wealth and opportunity reduces discontentment. When there is prosperity, there is less propensity for terror."
But he admitted that the emergence of a young breed of educated and affluent terrorists was a cause for concern.