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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, January 01, 2000 |
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Opinion
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Great relief but a heavy price
THERE IS A widespread sense of relief and rejoicing that there is
finally a safe homecoming for the some 150 Indian citizens and
the several foreign nationals who were trapped in a gruesome
seven-day ordeal aboard the Indian Airlines flight hijacked last
Friday en route from Kathmandu to New Delhi. By all accounts, the
nightmare on board the hijacked Flight IC-814 was one of the most
traumatic experiences faced in plane hijacks in the recent past.
The cold-blooded murder of a young man, Rupin Katyal, returning
from a honeymoon in Nepal, whose only mistake was apparently to
glance up at his captors and was consequently viciously stabbed,
places this particular hijacking in the category of the most
brutal kind. The other passengers who apparently sat traumatised
and terrified in their seats through the grim week, did not have
it any easier. Blindfolded initially and asked to look downwards
most of the time, they were starved of food for a full 24 hours
at one point because of the hijackers' pique. It was clear that
the group of deranged desperados who showed very little
compassion even for the children who were trapped aboard and who
did not waver even for a second from their emphatic demand for
the release of a bunch of terrorists jailed in India, had planned
their chilling strategy down to the last detail.
The deal that the Government was finally forced to agree to - the
release of the Harkat-ul-Mujahadeen cleric, Maulana Masood Azhar,
two other militants, Ahmed Omar Sheikh and Mushtaq Zargar - which
came after five days of hard negotiations in Kandahar between
Indian negotiators, the Taliban regime and the hijackers is
certainly a bitter pill for the country to swallow. Yet it was a
Hobson's choice, given the fact that more than a hundred innocent
lives were at stake and could not on any account be traded in for
the continued captivity of a few militants, however dreaded they
were and however ominous their release was in terms of the impact
it would have on the battle against cross-border terrorism in
Kashmir. As the chilling story of the last seven days reveals,
the country had a gun pointed at its head by a group of
criminals. The hijackers managed to browbeat the Government of
India, virtually spiriting the aircraft away from Amritsar where
it had landed for at least a full 40 minutes, adroitly avoiding
any stalling action at Lahore or Dubai and finally forcing the
plane to land in Kandahar, the stronghold of the Taliban, thus
virtually placing more than a hundred Indian lives at the mercy
of a fundamentalist regime that has no diplomatic relations with
India.
In retrospect, without taking away from the wholesomeness of the
happiness that is attendant in the liberation of these
traumatised hostages, the painful reality is that the
Government's strategy and tactics in this period demonstrably
foundered. It does appear that the Government's inability to
rescue the hostages without inviting this costly trade-off, even
as the hijackers are apparently walking off scotfree into the
welcoming arms of their Taliban hosts, has extracted a heavy
political cost and could damage India's prestige internationally.
At every stage in this sordid affair, the Government seems to
have squandered some crucial bargaining space and time, while
investing far too much hope in the Taliban's professions of good
faith. To briefly recount here the points at which it was clear
that the Government's options narrowed sharply: the first fatal
blunder was the failure to utilise the hijackers forced landing
at Amritsar, after being denied permission to land in Lahore.
There was no attempt to storm the plane or at least stall its
take-off by engaging the hijackers in some sort of tactically-
dictated parleys. Thus the country's vulnerability to this
criminal operation and its strategic implications, intensified to
the point that it no longer had control over its own decisions in
respect of the hijacking, when the hijackers triumphantly took
the plane out of Indian skies to unfriendlier destinations. The
second mistake was the failure to persuade authorities at Dubai
to try to stall the aircraft's departure by rushing a negotiating
team there. The third and fatal flaw in the Government's
strategic response manifested in the approach to the negotiations
in Kandahar.
The strong connections between the Afghan fundamentalist militia
represented in the Taliban regime and the Islamic fundamentalist
terrorist groups operating with considerable assistance from
Pakistan, have been established and therefore should not have
been underestimated. It is also well known that the dangerous
dimensions acquired by the insurgency in the Kashmir Valley were
the consequence of the infiltration across the border of hardcore
mercenaries and militants with strong Afghan connections. Thus
when the aircraft landed in Kandahar on Saturday morning after
its hijacking, the Government was obviously nonplussed. Yet two
critical days were wasted in pondering over the diplomatic
implications of what was an unavoidable engagement with the
Taliban regime. The public anger that erupted in this country at
the delay in bringing the nightmare to an end, particularly
fuelled by the agony of the relatives of the hostage passengers,
was a result of the perception that the Government was more
concerned with the implications of the negotiations for India's
diplomacy. The negotiations began only on Monday, three days
after the passengers had begun their nightmarish ordeal.
Another worrying indication that the Government did not seem to
have a credible strategy to deal with this situation was that
there was no evidence of a persistent effort to persuade the
Taliban to allow a commando operation to free the hostages. In
hindsight, it would seem that too much faith was placed in the
Taliban which ultimately proved to be conniving with the
hijackers to step up the pressure on India to place the release
of the terrorists as the centrepiece of any negotiation. If
indeed the Taliban was a responsible state with respect for
international law, it should have unhesitatingly supported an
Indian action to storm the plane. Since that was not on the
cards, the Government was left with no other option but to
surrender to the hijackers' demands.
Amid the rejoicing, the Government and the people of India will
have to absorb the sober implications and consequences of this
horrendous event. First, there can be no question of
``rewarding'' the Taliban for its double-dealing in Kandahar. The
hijackers and the freed terrorists have now melted into the crowd
of nameless and faceless militants who wander about the Afghan
countryside. Second, the military and police operations to hunt
down terrorists in the Kashmir Valley would have to be
intensified in the wake of the release of Maulana Azhar and his
companions. But most important, the formulation of a long-term
strategy to deal with militancy in the Valley, including a
recognition of the need for a political approach to the
aspirations of the Kashmiris, is an urgent necessity.
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