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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, October 01, 2001 |
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Call to thwart designs of communal outfits
By Our Staff Correspondent
JAIPUR, SEPT. 30. Speakers in a State-level convention on
communal harmony here today called for concerted efforts to
thwart the designs of communal outfits active in Rajasthan and
denounced the Central Government's ban on SIMI while turning a
blind eye to the ``hate campaign'' launched by the Bajrang Dal.
The convention was organised jointly by the State units of CPI,
CPI(M), Samajwadi Party, Janata Dal (Secular), Nationalist
Congress Party (NCP) and the Samajwadi Jankranti Manch. The
participants, including those from the areas which had witnessed
communal tension recently, feared that the campaigns launched by
the Sangh Parivar constituents could lead to escalation of
tension across the State.
While the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) has announced its
plan to organise a massive congregation and march in the State
Capital on October 13, the Bajrang Dal has already launched a
Statewide programme of ``Trishul Diksha'' as the first step of
the VHP's renewed campaign for construction of Ram temple.
The State unit secretary of CPI, Mr. Tara Singh Siddhu, said the
ban on SIMI had thrown up a greater challenge before the secular
forces as the decision seemed to have legitimised the acts of
terror of the Sangh Parivar outfits. ``The blanket ban on SIMI
and an open licence to RSS cannot go together,'' he commented.
While the general secretary of the NCP's State unit, Mr. Sriram
Gotewala, called for strengthening of secular forces at all
levels to counter the communal onslaught, the CPI(M) MLA, Mr.
Amra Ram flayed the Congress(I)-led Government in the State for
its failure to put the communal forces under check despite the
latter desecrating mosques and shrines in Bhilwara district.
He said the State Government's stance during these incidents was
similar to that of the Central Government in 1992 when the Babri
Masjid was demolished. ``The Government has not only failed to
rebuild the Asind mosque but also acted in a manner that casts
doubts about its integrity,'' he said.
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