(Countercurrents.org)
I have just had a book out – a collection of essays based on reportage and travel over the last few years. I wrote it in the hope that through these stories of reporting from the field, other people too could share in my understanding of me, my times and my country.
There has been a great outpouring of goodwill and support from family, friends and colleagues. I have been exhausted and happy, particularly when I see that the average person is actually willing to engage with some of the more serious issues I've put in the essays. But today, I am also forced to worry: What would happen if everything I wrote was disbelieved, or challenged by others who didn't want to agree with me? Additionally, what would happen if a group of people who disliked me or my politics was to try to discredit my reportage by issuing public statements about me?
Earlier this week, I was forwarded an email with what appears to be a statement issued by the Jamia Teacher's Solidarity Association (though I cannot find it on their own website, it does appear on Countercurrents, a website that I have a fair amount of respect for. The piece (dated April 25, 2010) accuses journalist Praveen Swami of being a liar. To my knowledge, this is the first time a pressure group has formed that publicly singles out a journalist on a given beat for such strident criticism, and in absolute isolation from his/her organisation and other journalists who cover the same region/beat. I was concerned, partly because it seemed like an attempt at constructing outrage against one individual, isolating him from his field of work and thereby discrediting even the editorial leadership of the newspaper he works for by indirectly insinuating that the editors don't know what they're doing.
Before I go any further, I would like to declare some basic facts. Mr Swami was bureau chief at a time when I was working for Frontline, and I just have a book out in which he features in the acknowledgments. He was a good boss and very un-boss-like in that he treated me as an intellectual equal (unlike certain other older male journalists whom I shall not name here) and was always up for a good debate, always listening with an open mind to what I had to say. He is still a friend.
However, this is not about loyalty or a defense of friendship. This is about journalistic integrity and the rights of reporters to report the truth as far as they can access it. The correct thing to do, if you suspect a journalist is not quite doing his job, is to write to the editor of the paper. The Hindu is one of those rare papers that has a readers' editor. It is surprising that the teachers' association did not send in their note to the editor there. Or that they did not put it up as a press statement on their own website, addressed to the The Hindu editor. It would have given Mr Swami a fair chance to defend himself. It seems wrong to me to accuse someone without giving them a chance to have their say. You, being an editor who stands for truth - even truth that is not immediately apparent and which is often ignored or willfully suppressed - probably understand this sentiment. Though I must also say that if I had been an editor of a website that carried the aforementioned note by the JTSA, I would have expected the allegations to be a little more rigorously researched and properly phrased, or I might have found myself slapped with a libel suit.
However, I have done your job for you. Like a good journalist, I wrote to Mr Swami asking for a clarification, with specific reference to the examples of the 'lies' the note referenced. He has answered with a point by point rebuttal of the JTSA's allegations (see below). Having read it, it appears that the note you have published betrays a certain terminological inexactitude on the part of the writers, not to mention wide swathes of intellectual laziness (which is strange, considering these are professional intellectuals). But we can always conduct debates with intellectual rigour at another date. For now, I am hoping that you will be fair, and publish Mr Swami’s rebuttal for the sake of editorial integrity.
Regards
Annie ZaidiApril 28, 2010
Dear Annie:
Thank you for your letter. I’m glad that, unlike many people I know, you’ve actually sought my opinion on the allegations that the Jamia Teachers’ Solidarity Association has levelled at me. Some people seem to have been perfectly content to circulate the allegations without any effort at verification. Since the JTSA’s allegations have not been addressed, to the best of my knowledge, to my Editors at The Hindu, I’ve had no opportunity to respond to what I believe are scurrilous allegations. However, I do hope you will not be upset if I take the liberty of circulating my reply to you to a few people who may be interested in what I have to say.
The principal JTSA claim, if my understanding is correct, is that I’ve invented a suspect for the Bangalore and Pune bombings, undermining my own earlier position—as they see it—that Hindutva groups had carried out the attacks.
Separately, the JTSA also makes two, somewhat mutually-contradictory claims: first that I blindly broadcast the views of India’s intelligence services, and secondly, that I make up stories. The first of these two charges is, by its nature, difficult to prove or disprove: after all, if someone has persuaded themselves that I am an agent of India’s intelligence services, my denials are hardly likely to persuade them otherwise.
It seems common-sense to me that the issue is not who I get my information from—which I am professionally bound, as you know, not to disclose—but how accurate that information is. This brings me to the second claim—i.e., that I have invented or misrepresented facts. This allegation is a serious one, but can be tested. Below, I’ve put my responses to their claims in the order in which they appear. Please make up your own mind.
The JTSA claim
My response
While the Pune police commissioned experts to draw sketches of the suspects based on this footage, ATS dismissed this exercise as “anything but useful”, as their source, the CCTV footage, was itself grainy. (Siasat, April 12). Where does Swami stand on this? He wrote in his 19th February piece: “All that investigators have by way of suspects are three men recorded holding brief meetings before the blast by a poor-quality closed-circuit television camera. From the videotape, it is unclear if the men had anything to do with the attack.” Exactly a month later, Swami conveniently develops an amnesia about Abhinav Bharat and even about the poor quality of CCTV footage. What was earlier ‘unclear” and hazy has in one month segued into solid shape: in the form of top Indian Mujahideen (IM) operative Mohammad Zarar Siddi Bawa ie., Yasin Bhatkal….
The JTSA is right: I did indeed write about grainy video footage obtained from a camera installed in a hotel opposite the German Bakery (I’ve dealt with the Abhinav Bharat issue they’ve raised below, to avoid confusing issues). What I didn’t know when I wrote the story was of the existence of footage from the second CCTV camera, installed above the cash counter in the German Bakery. Please note, though, that the existence of this footage was known to journalists other than me long before the Maharashtra Police Anti-Terrorism Squad disclosed its existence. Mid-Day, to cite just one of several examples that can easily be unearthed from the internet, had an account of its existence as early as February 17, 2010.[2] The article made clear that the police had instructed witnesses not to talk about the footage: “Pravin Panth, cashier at the bakery, said, ‘I have seen the footage, but I cannot reveal the inputs. I have been advised to refrain from revealing details to the media as this may harm investigations’.” Please also note that Yasin Bhatkal’s possible role in the bombings was dwelt on at this stage of the investigation by other journalists.[3]
Clearly, Swami’s changing perceptions about the CCTV footage is in accord with the shifting attitude of the ATS itself.
I wish my supposedly-formidable contacts in the intelligence services and elsewhere had told me about the cash-counter footage. That they didn’t should lead to some obvious inferences; the implications are too clear to need fleshing out here. As the JTSA points out, the Maharashtra Police Anti-Terrorism Squad did indeed claim that it had identified Yasin Bhatkal, from footage harvested from the cash-counter camera. This was widely reported in early April, before I wrote.[4] I was, I have to say, sceptical—hence, I worked to access the footage, and see for myself if the man in the tape did indeed resemble Yasin Bhatkal. I was reasonably satisfied by what I found. In any case, if investigators changed their views when new evidence came to light, why is that a problem?
Swami’s articles appear magically, faithfully reflecting the Intelligence reports. After the Batla House ‘encounter’, he launched a tirade against all those who were questioning the police account of the shootout labeling them all ‘Alices in wonderland’. He went so far as to identify ‘precisely’ how Inspector Sharma was shot by claiming that “abdomen wound was inflicted with [Atif] Amin's weapon and the shoulder hit, by Mohammad Sajid”…. And no sir, Swami’s conclusion was not based on post mortem reports of the killed, fire arm examination report or ballistic report but on this innocent fact: “the investigators believe that…”
The National Human Rights Commission studied the same evidence I did—and more which was not available when I wrote. It says: “…swabs which were taken from the right hands of Mohd Atif Ameen and Modh Sajid by the doctors at the time of post mortem in AIIMS were sent in sealed bottles to CFSL for dermal nitrate tests in the laboratory. The same were found to contain gun shot residue. This conclusively establishes that Mohd Atif Ameen and Mohd Sajid had both used fire arms at the time of incident”.[5] Unless it believes that the NHRC is an intelligence agency, the allegation made by the JTSA is untrue.
Swami however felt no need to pen an article when the postmortem reports of Atif and Sajid revealed that they had been shot from close range and that neither of them sustained gunshot wounds in the frontal region of the body—an impossibility in the case of a genuine encounter.
I didn’t. I still don’t. Having studied the available evidence, the NHRC concluded: “In such circumstances, the action taken by the police party in which Mohd. Atif Ameen and Mohd. Sajid received fatal injuries and died is fully protected by law”.[6] Parenthetically, I note that members of the Facebook group I believe the 2008 Batla House encounter was FAKE insist that “not only the JTSA report, but also NHRC (a statutory body of GOI) says that the encounter is fake”.[7] Either these people have not read the NHRC report—or are lying.
When two crude bombs went off outside the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium ahead of the match between Mumbai Indians and Royal Challengers Bangalore on 17th April, the Karnataka Home Minister V.S. Acharya announced that the state Police were investigating the alleged involvement of the cricket betting lobby. He forcefully denied any link with the earlier blasts in the city in 2008.
But Yasin Bhatkal seems to have preoccupied Swami’s mind on 19th April for he evokes him again in connection with the stadium blasts (“Stadium Blasts herald new IM offensive”). Citing the ever cooperative ‘investigators’, he says that the ‘similarity in design’ and the manner in which some bombs failed to explode are a sure indicator of the IM hand
Leaving aside the minor irony here—the JTSA’s great faith in an embarrassed BJP politician—there are two facts that need to be recorded. In pursuit of the government’s “betting mafia” story, the Karnataka Police arrested five Uttar Pradesh suspects. Those suspects were cleared of any involvement in the attacks by the Uttar Pradesh Police.[8] Second, I clearly identified that suspicions directed at Mohammad Zarar Siddi Bawa, a.k.a. Yasin Bhatkal, were based on what investigators were telling me. Similarity in bomb design is quite evidently reasonable ground for suspicion—though it is not of course proof. Since I have no independent expertise in bomb forensics, the information was clearly attributed to investigators. Its up to readers whether they want to believe them or not.
Swami here details the biographies of SIMI activists in South India, making the link, ever so cleverly, between SIMI—and yes, IM—and the stadium blasts, without providing any evidence of their actual linkage.
I’m a little uncertain here about precisely what the allegation is here—but think the JTSA has some problem with my suggesting that SIMI and the Indian Mujahideen are linked to terrorism. I’m in good company, I think, in this belief. Javed Anand had a must-read article on the issue some time back.[9] Yoginder Sikand had some good background earlier.[10] If you’re willing to fork out a few bucks for more detail, do read C. Christine Fair on the subject.[11] This is just a tiny part of a mass of literature—not including charge-sheets, trial records and so on—on the subject. You don’t need access to the Intelligence Services to access it—just a few hours in a good library
-
Like so many people driven by blind faith, the JTSA’s members don’t seem willing to be persuaded by fact. Increasingly, the positions of its supporters seem driven by bizarre conspiracy theories. For instance, Omair Anas, one of the leading lights of the “Shut Up Praveen Swami” group[12] (which includes among its members an odd array of Islamists linked to the Jamaat-e-Islami’s student wing as well as members of that flag-bearer of Delhi’s regrettably unsubstantial radical-chic, Sarai), has this post up on his Facebook wall:
Omair Anas Who carried out 9/11 attack? Israel ! Israel! know how http://pakalert.wordpress.com/2009/12/01/israel-did-911-all-the-proof-in-the-world/
Sun at 23:55 · Share
Israel did 9/11, ALL THE PROOF IN THE WORLD!![13]
I have two points to make in conclusion:
First, a number of Islamist groups, as well as some of Maoist supporters, have been engaging in a wilful misrepresentation of my work—misrepresentation that, your letter leads me to believe, may be succeeding simply because the audiences for this campaign do not seem to take the trouble of reading what I have written. For example, a Google Groups thread claims that I have been advocating targeted killing of “insurgent leaders (and cadres)! Understandably, away from the battlefields. Dragged out of homes or on the city streets? A la Mossad!?”[14] Please see for yourself if I actually said anything of the kind. I did indeed point to a successful campaign targeting “the leadership and cadre of Khalistan terrorists”. I trust no sensible person would have objections to the targeting of these murderous criminals. I concluded that “Learning from its own success stories, India needs to fight insurgencies in smarter, leaner ways. Like Andhra Pradesh, States must invest in training facilities that meet their particular needs; expand intelligence capabilities; and use technology effectively. Instead of focussing on simply expanding the size of Central forces, the Union government must understand the need for them to be properly trained and equipped”. [15]
Second, it seems to me a little sad that my critics have chosen to use personal slurs and innuendo, instead of engaging in a debate on facts—a debate I think is important and healthy. It is all the more dismaying when people you would expect to value civil debate engage in these kinds of tactics. I find these tactics despicable. I’m happy to be challenged on points of fact and interpretation. I believe that informed criticism is good for public debate and good journalism. Sadly, I don’t think the JTSA statement has helped either cause.
Warm regards
Praveen
[1] Jamia Teachers’ Solidarity Association, ‘Praveen Swami’s Not So Fabulous Fables’ (CounterCurrents.org: http://www.countercurrents.org/jtsa250410.htm)
[2] Bipin Kumar Singh and Kaumudi Gujjar, ‘Footage gave important leads: cops’ (MidDay: http://www.mid-day.com/news/2010/feb/170210-german-bakery-blast-cctv-footage-vital-clues.htm), February17, 2010.
[3] Johnson TA, ‘Yasin Bhatkal is IM bombmaker, now in Karachi: Probe team’ (The Indian Express: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/yasin-bhatkal-is-im-bombmaker-now-in-karachi-probe-team/582699/), February 22, 2010.
[4] ‘IM leader Yasin Bhatkal mastermind of Pune blasts, claims ATS’, (Daily News and Analysis: http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report_im-leader-yasin-bhatkal-mastermind-of-pune-blasts-claims-ats_1368789), April 8, 2010.
[5] ‘Shri Kamran Siddique Gen.Secretary, Real Cause, New Delhi: 2811/30/8/08-09-FE’ (National Human Rights Commission: New Delhi, July 20, 2009). Online at nhrc.nic.in/Batla.doc. Page 21
[6] Shri Kamran Siddique Gen.Secretary, Real Cause, New Delhi: 2811/30/8/08-09-FE’ (National Human Rights Commission: New Delhi, July 20, 2009). Online at nhrc.nic.in/Batla.doc. Page 25
[7] http://ko-kr.facebook.com/BatlaHouse
[8] Aakash Singh, ‘Suspects arrested for Chinnaswamy blast case are thieves from UP’ (MyNews.in:http://www.mynews.in/News/Suspects_arrested_for_Chinnaswamy_blast_case_are_thieves_from_UP_N49091.html), April 22, 2010
[9] Javed Anand ‘Suspect SIMI? Of course’, (The Indian Express: http://www.indianexpress.com/story-print/349496/), August 16, 2008
[10] Yoginder Sikand, ‘The SIMI story’, (Countercurrents.org: http://www.countercurrents.org/comm-sikand150706.htm), July 15, 2006.
[11] C. Christine Fair, ‘Students Islamic Movement of India and the Indian Mujahideen: An Assessment’, Asian Policy Vol 9 (Washington DC: National Bureau of Asian Research), January 2010.
[12]http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=115282715164932&ref=search&sid=100000903926148.964712540..1
[13]http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1383468305#!/profile.php?id=1383468305&v=wall
[14]http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth/browse_thread/thread/d9c6220d869a0cc5/f48d96c7a196bad5?lnk=raot&pli=1
[15] Praveen Swami, ‘For a review of counter-insurgency doctrine’, (The Hindu: http://beta.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/article395529.ece), April 13, 2010.
13 comments:
Kudos, Annie. And thank you.
Annie,
1. I have no problems with the basic issue you raise here but I think the JTSA article should be covered under FoS. Mr.Swami can rebut. He can sue for libel if possible.
2. [Praveen Swami]: "..I trust no sensible person would have objections to the targeting of these murderous criminals..."
I think this is the crux, the core of the disagreement. I'm not familiar with JTSA but in the Maoist context, Mr.Swami maybe referring to people who have supported the 'disciplined armed resistance' mounted by the Maoists (Nandita Haksar) and have other contexts and frames of reference.
A few posts ago, I commented that Himanshu Kumar was muddying things up by claiming repeatedly that tribals were behind the Dantewada attack that massacred 76 CRPF men.
He is partly corroborated by some of the survivors of the attack; they told the reporters (India Today) that there were hundreds of tribals ringing around behind the attackers. The tribals were essentially rooting for the Maoists. They may have put down some of the men. They certainly moved in and stripped the bodies of their weapons etc.
Mr.Swami is most likely mistaken when he expresses the hope that people like Himanshu Kumar, Binayak Sen and Ms.Haksar are onboard with targeted assassinations of these people.
Thanks,
Jai
PS: The formatting could be bad, the post runs all together and weird in both firefox and IE8 browsers.
jusst a ismaal qoshton -
What has PS got to say about Shorabhuddin,kausar bi case? Dint he pen down stories about that?
What about the ishrat jahan case? what about that story?
both these cases are being challenged in courts now.
does that mean what he wrote about these 2 incidents still holds ground?
you know a small qoshton.
Hi Annie,
Thanks for taking the pain to write to Sri Swamy and get his side of the story (and some glimpse to his sources!)
Counter currents published this 'rebuttal' by Praveen Swamy, and held their 'editorial integrity'. JTSA has responded to this [Swamy and friends], point by point.
However, there is one more point that I want to stress.
One basic ethic in Jornalism is that you attribute all the facts that you report to some source, because well, at least to the reader, the journalist is not Almighty. Praveen Swamy is probably the only person in mainstream media who turns his back on this basic principle most of the time and packages his knowledge/fiction/whatever as reportage.
Regards
Sudeep
clash and Annie, here's more on Ishrat Jahan case:
An 'investigation story' by Praveen Swamy (link) claimed that the IB used an Ahmedabad lawyer sympathetic to the LeT to run the Modi assassination plot (which Ishrat and Javed were part of!!) as a sting operation. “The lawyer was instructed to tell Javed Sheikh, a Pune resident who was amongst those killed on June 16 [2004], that the infrastructure was in place to execute an attack on Modi.”
The highlight part under the headline said, "The June 15 shooting in Ahmedabad that killed four alleged Lashkar operatives shows that the State and its Hindu fundamentalist leaders will continue to be targeted for the anti-Muslim pogrom of 2002."
Last year, the court ruled that it was a fake encounter in the first place, and the Policemen were guilty. (See: Ishrat's family seeks action). (Praveen swears by court and law in his defence time and again in the letter above, that is why I refer to court -- not that I believe everything that court says is truth).
Sudeep, thanks for the response. However, you are incorrect when you say that Mr Swami is the only or one of the only journalists who fail to attribute facts to a source(and both you and the JTSA need to learn to be a bit more careful about spellings! Swami doesn't spell his name with a 'y' and anyone who reads his work and takes the trouble to put out press releases against him ought to at least name the man correctly.)
Most journalists, particularly those who cover defense or politics, do not name sources or even specify designations of anonymous sources because the source is very quickly likely to dry up if they do.
After the JTSA's accusations, I began to look at the newspapers more closely to compare coverage about terrorism in India and did not find that much difference between Mr Swami's work and any other journo on the same beat. Definitely not enough of a difference to merit such a singling out for a (metaphorical) public whipping.
With regard to the Ishrat (Jahan? Jehan? I am no longer sure) encounter, your allegation seems a bit mixed up. I understand what you're getting at but please understand that there is a difference between the court acknowledging that the encounter was fake and the court clearing Ishrat's name of an assassination conspiracy against Modi. I did visit her home and got a fair sense of her life and hopes after Ishrat died. The encounter was fake, and the cops need to be punished but I don't know if Swami has denied that. But until some evidence surfaces that disproves the security agencies' claim that Ishrat was connected to a terror outfit, how can you accuse a journalist of lying?
As regards the JTSA's response, I have a response to that response from Mr Swami (in another, following comment).
I did not think I wanted to get sucked into this debate further but since you have been good enough to come to this space and confirm your integrity, perhaps you will be interested in the response, and perhaps you will also see it fit to publish it. I certainly do.
And here is what Mr Swami sent back to me when I raised the question of the NHRC report in the Batla House encounter case.
"There are a number of points in the JTSA statement; many are questions of opinion, and I have no desire to engage in further disputation on these. I agree with you that the substantial fact they have raised is that of the credibility of the National Human Rights Commission's findings on Batla House.
Having made enquiries into the matters, I understand the facts are thus:
When the NHRC receives any complaint, it asks for the relevant records and interviews the officials against whom allegations have been brought on the basis of whatever has been alleged. This is what the NHRC does in the Batla House case.
If the NHRC finds that there is any prima-facie evidence to believe the complaint (of torture, fake encounter, etc.) is justified, is conducts what is called a "spot enquiry"--the equivalent of a rough-and-ready criminal investigation which includes interviewing witnesses. In this case, the NHRC did not believe there was a prima facie case, and thus did not conduct a "spot enquiry".
Shabnam Hashmi's NGO, 'Act Now for Communal Harmony and Democracy' did not feel the NHRC had assessed the evidence correctly, and appealed to the Delhi High Court asking for a judicial investigation. The Delhi High Court, however, upheld the findings of the NHRC.
ANHAD appealed against the Delhi High Court order to the Supreme Court, where it again lost.
I note that the JTSA, who seem to have a regrettable habit of omitting pertinent information from their writings, have chosen not to mention that their criticism of the NHRC was heard by the judiciary and found unpersuasive.
Litigants and observers are, of course, free to critique the High Court and the Supreme Court if they believe these fora have not done justice. However, given that the NHRC's handling of the Batla House case been upheld by the two of the highest judicial fora in the country, I do not see that my use of its findings is especially contentious. The case against the Indian Mujahideen suspects who the JTSA are defending will also be heard by the courts; I shall await the judgments (and, doubtless, appeals) with interest.
Parenthetically, on the charge that I mindlessly reflect the positions of the state, you may wish to see my critique of of the investigation of the 2006 Mumbai bombings, which you can find here and, more recently, here. You may also wish to see what I had to say on the prosecution of Fahim Ansari, the suspect recently acquitted in the 2008 Mumbai case; the last three paragraphs of this article may be of interest to you. You may also wish to read what my colleague Anupama Katakam and I had to say on Malegaon back in 2006 and my own follow-up article in Frontline."
Oops. My limited html skills put the links out of the letter. Here are the links from the concluding para of the comment above:
"Parenthetically, on the charge that I mindlessly reflect the positions of the state, you may wish to see my critique of of the investigation of the 2006 Mumbai bombings, which you can find here (http://www.hindu.com/2006/10/18/stories/2006101801331200.htm) and, more recently, here (http://www.hindu.com/2009/02/22/stories/2009022258900800.htm). You may also wish to see what I had to say on the prosecution of Fahim Ansari, the suspect recently acquitted in the 2008 Mumbai case (http://www.hinduonnet.com/2009/02/28/stories/2009022854791200.htm); the last three paragraphs of this article may be of interest to you. You may also wish to read what my colleague Anupama Katakam and I had to say on Malegaon back in 2006 (http://www.hindu.com/2006/09/09/stories/2006090907431100.htm) and my own follow-up article in Frontline (http://www.thehindu.com/fline/fl2319/stories/20061006004101900.htm)."
Sorry Annie, one correction: I am not from the Counter currents editorial team. I was only commenting on the editorial integrity that they (Counter currents) showed, by publishing Praveen Swami's 'answers'.
An intergrity that I think is missing in The Hindu. Many people, including Adv Prashant Bhushan, have written to N Ram with a lot of evidences against what Mr Swami (thanks for correcting the spelling) writes in their paper, and The Hindu has not dared to carry that.
You say Mr Swami is not the only or one of the only journalists who do not attribute facts (!!) to a source, and that "most journalists, particularly those who cover defense or politics, do not name sources or even specify designations of anonymous sources because the source is very quickly likely to dry up if they do." I think that is pretty much the same thing as what JTSA says -- that Swami's "facts" are IB's tip-offs. Anyway it would be good if you could name at least one other such journalist worth a name in this country.
About Ishrat Jahan, I will take it in another comment. Thanks again.
Now, for Ishrat Jahan case:
Praveen's article is founded on the premise that the lady and the three men who were killed by the Gujarat Police were indeed terrorists and they had plans to kill 'Hindu fundamentalist leaders'. He writes without a matter of doubt: "While members of the group did indeed plan a suicide-squad attack on Hindu fundamentalist leaders, the mission was monitored by Indian intelligence at each stage, and infiltrated from its outset. It was an intelligence coup: a fiction conceived by an Intelligence Bureau (I.B.) mole in the Lashkar, and authored by his handlers."
Whereas the court did not find any evidence to prove such a claim.
This, I think, is an example of irresponsible journalism in its worst form. We are not living in a place where people are "guilty until proven innocent".
(It does not surprise me that IB 'owns up' the whole Ishrat encounter episode and proudly claims they have a 'mole' in Lashkar who could execute such a great act of 'elimination'. And these turns of events are reasons enough for a reader like me to suspect that the real 'mole' they have is in The Hindu.)
I find that most of his stories are based on such unfounded pieces of "facts" that he gets from unreliable sources, and they only serve the purpose of spreading hatred by feeding to the Anti-Muslim 'sentiments' of the middle class Hindu mass.
If you visit Jamia where many were picked up in connection with the Delhi blasts, or the Muslim families from which many young Muslim mem were picked up as Mecca Masjid blast suspects, you would know how hard it is to live the life of "guilty until proven innocent". Praveen Swami would not ever have to face such a situation in life, with a Brahmin Hindu name on him.
Since this thread closed on Ishrat Jehan, it is very relevant to place here the latest news:
David Cameron Headley, under US custody and protection from any of our 3rd degree, at no risk of extradition, has confirmed that Ishrat Jehan was working with the LeT.
This may not be clinching but is a strong pointer Mr.Swami was right.
I dont know if Sudeep's suspicions run to the US too and we need some Chinese or Russian sources to corroborate :-) but it was good enough for me.
thanks,
Jai
But hold on... you said up there:
"But until some evidence surfaces that disproves the security agencies' claim that Ishrat was connected to a terror outfit, how can you accuse a journalist of lying?"
I used to suspect Ms.IJ was mixed up with the LeT. Post-Headley its a strong conviction. But that is not the legal view and you seem to have the above statement exactly backwards.
No wonder Sudeep was ranting about being guilty until proven innocent.
rgds,
Jai
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