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Here’s What May Work Towards ISIS’ Advantage in India

Ghettos in India marked by economic deprivation are likely targets for radicalisation by ISIS, writes Abhinav Pandya.

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ISIS will not gain ground in India for a plethora of reasons – India’s liberal Sufi Islam, inherently diverse and  tolerant nature of state and society facilitating stronger integration of Muslims in the mainstream society and the presence of a strong right wing. However, after the Brussels attack, symbolic of the fast-spreading global reach of ISIS and its ideology, I feel that once again we need to address the alarming question, “Will ISIS get a foothold in India?”

If ISIS ever gets any following in India then it will be due to its clear, immediate, strong, and focused religious appeal. Graeme Wood in his essay, What ISIS Really Wants?, writes that ISIS follows a distinctive variety of Islam whose beliefs about the path to the Day of Judgment matter to its strategy, and can help the West know its enemy and predict its behaviour. He further informs, “In conversation, they insist that they will not--cannot--waver from governing precepts that were embedded in Islam by the Prophet Muhammad and his earliest followers.”

The directness, clarity and the force of its religious appeal invoking all Muslims to be the part of the project that brings back caliphate has always been missing in outfits like Al Qaida, Taliban, Lashkar-e-Toiba whose objectives are a vague concoction of nationalist, religious and sectarian agenda and they are seen as regional groups working as proxies for intelligence agencies.

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Ghettos in India marked by economic deprivation are likely targets for radicalisation by ISIS, writes Abhinav Pandya.
A man holds a sign as he protests against ISIS at New York’s Times Square, United States, March 22, 2016. (Photo: AP)
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Warning Sign

Interestingly, Mahatma Gandhi led the first mass-based and nation-wide non-violent Jihad viz. Khilafat movement in 1919 to restore the Caliphate.

MJ Akbar in his seminal work Tinderbox-Past and Future of Pakistan, informs that though Indian Muslims joined Gandhi’s jihad but they soon got disappointed with his non-violent methods and parted ways arguing that Jihad, as sanctioned in Quran is a violent war.  Given the fact that Indian Muslims joined Mahatma Gandhi’s non-violent Khilafat movement en masse, their reverence for the authority and concept of Khalifa cannot be denied.

Further, India has a strong history of the ardent following of the Wahhabism, which is an ideological backbone of ISIS. Patna was a seat of Wahhabism in India and from 1800 to 1900 A.D. the British armies had to engage in most fierce battles with Wahhabi forces in NWFP ( North-West Frontier Province) under the leadership of Syed Ahmad Barelvi (1831). More recently, between 2011-13, Rs 1700 crore was channeled into India for Wahhabi proselytisation by Saudi Arabia.

India is also home to one of the most orthodox schools of Islam called Deobandi School, often referred to as the Indian variant of Wahhabism and it is followed by Taliban. Off late the influence of Deobandi School is spreading fast across the country which could be found in the increasing number of Muslim women taking to Burqas, rejection of Sufi practices and the fast-spreading network of Deobandi mosques.

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Ghettos in India marked by economic deprivation are likely targets for radicalisation by ISIS, writes Abhinav Pandya.
Azhar Iqbal, a terror suspect having alleged links with Islamic State terrorist outfit who was arrested by the NIA being produced at a court in Bhopal on February 2, 2016. (Photo: IANS)
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Foothold in India

The fact of religious appeal being the extraordinary powerful factor vis-à-vis other factors like economic deprivation, in drawing minority youth can be gauged from the fact that so far Indians who joined ISIS came from middle-income and educated backgrounds, for example, the Indian Oil engineer from Jaipur and the students from Hyderabad.

Bruce Hoffman, terrorism expert at Georgetown University, observes in “Foreign Affairs” that there is a strong possibility of the merger of ISIS and Al Qaeda in future as the differences between them are on trivial ego-based issues and strong ideological similarities will make it very likely for both of them to come together. In such a scenario, it will be much easier for ISIS to gain a foothold in India because, Al Qaeda already has a strong nexus with organisations like SIMI and the Indian Mujahideen which by virtue of being indigenous, could play a linchpin role in facilitating the ISIS’ entry into India. Further, the presence of ISI and its extremist proxies like Lashkar and JeM might act as congenial springboards for ISIS to launch itself in India.

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Are Ghettos Easy Targets?

If we consider the factors like economic deprivation and integration, then also we do not have many reasons to feel happy about. Molanbeek type ghettos where radicalisation, deprivation and crime go hand-in-hand are spread across the nation, in almost every city of India.

The rampant poverty, crime, and unemployment make it very easy to find targets for radicalisation. Often, the reach and control of law-enforcement machinery in these areas is very poor so it is difficult to detect if any suspicious activity is going on.

Along with such ghettos, India also has huge unauthorised markets from where it is very easy to buy explosive materials like hydrogen peroxide and fire-arms. Porous borders with Nepal, Bangladesh and Myanmar have the potential to make things worse. Incompetent police and state intelligence agencies are no matches to the terrorist groups, who are technologically advanced, skilled, and exposed to the dynamics of transnational terror operations.

Lastly, appeasement of Islamic extremists for political expediency  and the overly-soft and defensive  attitude of media and intellectuals under the politically correct  garb of  multiculturalism and democratic values puts the greatest hindrance in raising general awareness on terrorism and adversely affects the morale of the security forces.

Hence, it can be argued that India is not all that far from ISIS, and it needs a focused and organised counterterrorism strategy. I would conclude with what Rosa Brooks, Georgetown Professor said that terrorism is a problem to be managed and in order to do that the first and foremost thing we need to do is to have a nuanced understanding of terrorism and religious extremism. And, then we need a multi-pronged strategy to address the problem.

(The writer is Project Consultant, ILO, Delhi. He can be reached at @abhinavpandya)

This is a personal blog and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.

Also read:

After Brussels, Indian Security Agencies Cannot be Complacent

Tackling ISIS and Extremism in India: Where Are the Women?

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