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C
H A P T E R
I I I
P
A T T E R N : A M E T
H O D I N T H E M A D N E S S
A
clear and distinct pattern of violence emerged on analyzing the various
reports and interviewing a number of survivors. There was a method in
the madness that overwhelmed Delhi after the assassination.
A)
Meetings on 31st October Night:
There
is evidence that in several areas local Congress-I leaders held meeting
on the night of October 31st and these preceded attacks and
killings of the Sikhs.
In
Vinod Nagar (East Delhi) according to a survivor Ram Singh (name changed),
a taxi driver, a prominent Congress-I local leader of Vinod Nagar called
a meeting in the evening of 31st October which was attended
by xxxx, xxx (Bhaiswala), xxx (a known smuggler) and a few others; the
meeting went on till midnight. These men along with 200-250 residents
attacked his house early in the morning of November 1, broke down the
door with iron rods and seeing all three of them (Ram Singh and his 2
sons) still sleeping, xxx told his friends to pour kerosene on them and
burn them to death. Ram Singh woke up, took out his kirpan and leapt out
through the broken door-xxxx stood back and all the others fled. A Hindu
neighbour from Himachal Pradesh helped him to escape.
Surjit
Singh- a Sevadar of a local Gurudwara in Vinod Nagar area (Nihang Singh
Gurudwara, Pandav Nagar) had left his house early in the morning and thus
escaped death but his wife (Tej Kaur) and their 9 years old daughter Minoo,
his friend Nahan Singh and Nahan’s wife were all burnt alive on the morning
of November 1. This sudden unbearable loss had nearly unhinged Surjit
Singh’s mind when we saw him in the Camp.
(b)
In Khajori-Bhajanpura (C Block)-Gamri area in Trans Yamuna one xxxx, a
prominent Congress-I leader of the locality who is a Gujar by caste called
a meeting on the night of 31st October which was attended by
his son xxxx, xxxx (kerosene depot operator), xxx (Principal of
a local school in Bhajanpura) and made an exhaustive list of local Sikh
families who were to be attacked on November 1 by them. According to the
Nanaksar Report “what happened thereafter was sheer unspeakable horror.
In a space of two and a half days among the families who took refuge in
Nanaksar, 155 people had been slaughtered. These numbers, which are but
from a single camp – make mockery of the Government’s estimate of the
deaths in the Capital. 45% of those killed were from Nandnagari, most
of whom were from Block A-1/3, the Punjabi Mohalla and Block E. Gamri
and Bhajanpura-mostly C Block-accounted for another 30%. The dead left
behind them were 107 widows, 72% from the ages 20-45 years.”
(c)
In Kallekhan Basti near Nizammuddin a meeting was held on 31st
October night over cups of tea and lasted till late at night. It was
presided over by a Congress-I elected leader and some gujars including
a well known Vaid-all Congess-I sympathizers attending it, finalizing
their plan for November 1.
B)
Political Organisers:
Throughout
the Trans-Yamuna area in the catchment area, there were three types
of people who were behind-the-scene organizers, those who identified
Sikh households, mobilized hoodlums for mayhem and supplied
fuel for arson. According to the survivors, these came from among
(a) local level Congress-I politicians and hoodlums at different hierarchical
levels, (b) ration shop owners and (c) kerosene depot owners, who have
invariably been members of the same party or closely linked to local Congress-I
politicians (Nanaksar Report).
According
to our Survey, not an insignificant proportion of victims (19 p.c.) and
their neighbours (20 p.c.) said that the attack was motivated by Congress-I
political leaders. And a higher proportion of the victims (42 p.c.) identified
Congress-I sympathizers as assailants.
It
was reported that prominent among the people who were inciting the mob
to violence in Sultanpuri, one was xxxx a Congress-I functionary
and a close associate of xxxx, xxxx allegedly went rouond the area later
building up a climate of fear among the people by spreading the story
that the Sikhs had poisoned the water supply. He was allegedly leading
the attack. There was another one xxxx of the Jamadars, xxxx a narcotic
seller and xxxx.
Well
dressed young men coming in Matador vans or cars or buses later identified
as important functionaries of Congress-I or elected leaders belonging
to Congress-I have been responsible for mobilizing and directing the mob
towards Sikh houses, shops, factories and Gurudwaras. Refugees from Patparganj,
Khichripur, Kalyanpuri in Pandav Nagar Gurudwara separately interviewed
mentioned that a cream coloured Matador (xxx) owned by one xxxx drove
up to Ganesh Nagar (Pandav Nagar Complex) carrying 12 men, one of whom
was xxxx, a Congress-I Councillor; they distributed to the crowd assembled
there lathis, revolvers and rifles - which they had brought with them
- and were heard telling them before leaving ‘Use these on Sardars’.
The
list giving the names of these 12 men was given to Mr. H.K.L. Bhagat,
Union Minister, to Mrs. Tajdar Babar the Congress-I Metropolitan Councillor
and President of the Delhi Pradesh Committee of Congess-I and also to
Mr. Bedi, an official in the Ministry of Defence. No action was taken
against those named.
In
Bhogal, it was xxxx, a Congress-I worker and xxxx, owner of a sweet-shop-
a Congess-I sympathizer- who were seen directing the crowd to Sikh shops
in Bhogal Market which were all looted.
In
Mangolpuri, a white Ambassador was seen driving up near the flyover
from Mangolpuri. Sitting inside was xxxx, a prominent Congress –I man
who had masked his face as not to be recognized (but he was recognized
all the same). He called the crowd to his car and gave them some advice
and then left; soon after that the Gurudwara went up in flames in the
morning of November, 1.
In
Vinod Nagar East two buses full of khadi kurta-pyjama
clad young men drove up from the direction of the UP Border and led the
local miscreants already assembled there, first to loot and burn Sikh
shops and houses and then to burn alive human beings; genocide was perpetrated
on November 1 in that small East Delhi colony. On 2nd November,
35 lawyers had visited some riot-affected areas. Mr. Ram Jethmalani’s
eye-witness account of the after-math of Vinod Nagar killings is given
in Chapter IV on ‘Nature of Violence’.
In
Jehangirpuri, xxxx’s name, a Congress-I leader, has been reported,
it has come up again and again as the one who incited the mob; once his
henchman, xxxx had identified the Sikh houses he prodded them on to loot
and burn these down. That politics of criminilisation was being played
by the Congress-I functionaries has been conclusively proved.
According
to the affidavit of Gurdeep Kaur -
“On November 1 in Trilokpuri about 500 peopole came to Block
32. In such a crowd it was not possible to recognize everyone. Since I
have lived in Trilokpuri for 8 years now I did recognize a few of the
mob who had killed my family.
They
were Tello, Manu (alleged to be a smuggler), Jagga and his wife Draupadi,
Kishori Jamadar (sells pork), Rampal Saroj (Congress-I goonda who participated
fully in looting and murder and also supervised the killing of several
people), Roop Lal and his 3 sons who are thieves. Rampal Saroj came to
our lane and assured us that Sikhs will not be harmed. He said that there
was no need to be afraid; being the local leader he told the Sikhs not
to get out of their houses because that would be safer. I was shocked
that this traitor had deceived us and was a part of the mob. Rampal Saroj
was leading the killers and the assurance he had given us was just a trick
of his so that no Sikh would leave the house. Within 5 hours he brought
the goondas, showed them each Sikh household, saw to it that the Sikhs
were pulled out, and in his presence many Sikhs were beaten and burnt
alive.”
C)
Method of Identification :
Identification
of Sikh shops and houses was done in a systematic way by (i) persons moving
in scooters, in Matadors, or even on foot as if making a survey of the
place; (ii) checking up names and addresses of Sikh students from school
registers; (iii) with the help of ration cars and voters’ lists; and (iv)
by marking Sikh houses – Nazi fashion, as in Hitler’s Germany. Nanaksar
Report mentions: “xxx and xxx the owner of a shop which stands in the
Bhajanpura Main Market, went from door to door of Sikh houses in Khajori
Colony, Gamri and Bhajanpura marking them thus- X, S, (X), (S)- the houses
were therby marked for arson, looting and murder.”
D)
Collection of Incendiary Material:
Kerosene
was collected from
-
Jhuggi
dwellers (as in Nizammuddin Basti) by threatening them,
-
Ration
shop owners too willing to help,
-
Kerosene
depot owners.
Nanaksar
Report says: “Several sources jointly and individually have pointed to
xxxx, xxxx, xxxx and xxxx as the ones who supplied kerosene oil by the
bucket-full on the Ist November. Further it was strongly alleged that
xxxx under the order of xxxx also supplied phosphorous in the buckets
of kerosene to aid the process of arson (but who supplied phosphorous
to xxxx?)…… None of the witnesses spoke of the “safed cheez” being handled,
everyone said it was in kerosene buckets and seen only when the kerosene
was spilled on to floors.” The “white powder” was used in Jehangirpuri
also.
According
to the survivors in Sultanpuri the material used for arson was kerosene,
some sort of liquid burns and also some kind of powder which explodes
or catches fire.
Diesel
oil and petrol were collected from petrol pumps, passing motor vehicles,
cars and scootors.
E)
Collection of mob:
1)
In Hari Nagar Ashram, miscreants, 400 to 500 strong, arrived by Delhi-Palwal
Shuttle Express from Faridabad at 9.45 A.M. and also by Kutub-Narmada
Express at 11 A.M., armed with lathis, iron rods, soda water bottles and
drums of kerosene. They joined the local mob, 700 strong, who had come
from nearby J.J. colonies.
These people were led by xxxx, a Congress-I local leader followed by his
friends xxxx, xxxx and xxxx. The mob now over 1000 strong split in
two, one group attacking the Bala Saheb Gurdwara and the Shalimar
area - the sikh pocket.
2)
In Jehangirpuri also the pattern of collection
of the mob is the same – neighbours as well as villagers from Balaswa,
Ramgarh and Badli.
3)
In every Resettlement Colony ‘outsiders’ were brought in buses
from villages if they were far off, otherwise people came on foot and
joined the local people.
4)
In Sultanpuri the mob came from nearby Pooth
Village and some were bad character and local goondas from block C-2,
C-3,C-4, C-6. All their names are with us. If and when called for they
would be produced.
5)
Inquiries in Punjabi Bagh and Madipur colonies involving victims and looters,
showed that the person leading the mobs were those who were used by ruling
party to moblise support.
The
type of areas which the Lt. Governor identified at his Press briefing
on November 4, 1984 are similar to those from which crowds were collected
by the ruling party both for the kisan rally three years ago and the bank
loans function in January 1984. It was Mongolpuri, Sultanpuri, Tirlokpuri
and Kalyanpuri from where Congress-I politicians found their crowds. “And
it was Jehangirpuri where the mobs killed several persons of a minority
community on suspicion that they had not voted for the Congress-I in civic
elections in Delhi in January 1983.” (Statesman, November 5, 1984).
F.
Composition of Mob:
a.
Anti –social elements – some of them dacoits with police record such as
xxxx, xxxx, xxxx, xxxx, xxxx (a mob leader as well), and so on. In Jehangirpuri
there are persons who are willing to testify against these people in court;
b.
Scheduled caste – Khatiks, Chamars, Purbiyas, Jamadars, bhangis (there
is a great deal of resentment against the bhangis, most of whom
rear pigs);
c.
Backward castes – Jats, Gujars, Ahirs, most of them erst-while land owners;
their land was acquired by the government for setting up new colonies.
They have become hostile to the Sikhs because they live in these colonies.
Weapons
used by them – in addition to lathis and iron rods, daggers and axes were
used extensively.
G.
The Type of Killers
Generally,
Jat villagers from outskirts, Jamadars, bhangis and lumpens have been
accused as killers by the survivors. The Congress -I ring leaders paid
Rs. 1000/- to each killer as boasted by the killers themselves who invariably
used to be heavily drunk before killing. Some witnesses have accused some
policemen also of killing as in Sultanpuri or in Bhopal. Even today, two
and a half months after the carnage, the refuges are afraid of three categories
of human beings: Gujars, police and politicians.
As
mentioned in the Nanaksar Report : ‘xxxx in these colonies is probably
the most vicious of the killers
– a general hoodlum of the Gamri, Bhajanpura and Khajori area, a class
associate of xxxx, and always carries a revolver; he not only planned
but actively participated in the killings and looting in Gamri and in
C Block, Bhajanpura.” Another Gujar, xxxx doodwalla who supplied milk
to Janata flat No. xxx Nand Nagari killed the male Sikh in the flat.
H.
Method of Attack
Depending
on the size of the mob, attacks were simultaneous or sequential.
Where the mob was very large, as in Hari Nagar Ashram or again in Tirlokpuri,
it split into 2 groups and the pattern of simultaneous attack was observed;
but where the mob was smaller, 150-250 persons, the pattern was sequential;
taking it easy, first Gurdwaras were destroyed one after another and then
the Sikh houses and shops already identified were looted and finally the
sikh men were humiliated, their hair was cut,
their tubans torn apart, then they were brutally murdered and finally
burnt down. This clever pattern leaves very little doubt that the violence
had been extremely well organized by men who were experts at the game.
I.
Repeated Visits:
To
make sure if the victim was dead, the mob came back repeatedly to the
place of violence like birds of prey. In Bhogal the crowd came at intervals,
first at 11 A.M., then at 2 P.M., to see if the shops had burnt out. In
Jehangirpuri also it returned to see if the men who had been burnt were
dead.
J.
Slogans:
In
the over-all planning and organization, the slogans had a very important
part to play and they were mainly 3 types used all over Delhi.
The
object of the slogans was to incite the people to take revenge by playing
upon Mrs. Gandhi’s greatness and the next moment reminding them that she
was dead.
Thus
frenzied cries of :
‘Indira
Gandhi Zindabad’,
‘Indira
Gandhi Amar Rahe’ and
‘Jab
tak sooraj-chand rahega
Indira
tera naam rahega’,
Were
followed by
‘Khoon
ka badla khoon se Lenge’
and
‘Sardaron
ko jala do, ‘loot lo’, ‘Sardaron ko mar do’ and
“
Hindu-bhai, Muslim-bhai,
Sardaron ki kare safai”.
K.
Rumours
The
method of spreading rumours was subtle. It was done in three phases.
In
the first phase, on 31st October, only one rumour was spread
in the evening. Its sole intention was to arouse and incite the spirit
of revenge, which was otherwise being fed by the incessant of showing
of the dead body of Mrs. Gandhi on the TV and the continuous announcement
of the two killers. The
media even suggested the course of revenge when the voice of the excited
mob at Teen Murti came through clear and sharp in the TV :
“Khoon ka badla khoon se” (“Blood for blood.”). The rumour was that Sikhs
all over Delhi were celebrating Mrs. Gandhi’s assassination by distributing
sweets, dancing the ‘bhangra’ and bursting crackers as in Diwali. This
spread like wild-fire though nobody had seen either the distribution of
sweets, the dance or the Diwali illumination. Yet, all, even highly placed
educated men and women accepted the rumour as true and were getting furious.
In
the second phase, on November 1 after the Gurudwaras had been burnt down
and a number of Sikhs burnt alive or hacked to death, to prevent or remove
any kind of sympathy or compassion for them, three kinds of rumours were
floated. People heard that
“every Gurudwara was an arsenal” and “weapons which were used by the extremists
were found under the Gurudwaras when they were burnt down”. However, in
truth, no weapon was found in any of the burnt Gurudwaras. The second
rumour was more forceful – after the killings of Sikhs had been put into
effect – that the “Sardars were coming to attack armed with swords and
they were just round the corner”. This second rumour sprouted into several
harmful rumours – like “Sardars will kidnap children”, ‘they will attack
at night’ – as a result people became afraid of Sikhs and parents living
in several bastis deposited their children and their few possessions in
the houses of their employees on November 2. In Chandni Chowk, the police
were the author of an interesting slogan ‘Raat Hamari, Din Tumhara.’ It
might have been begun as a cynically humourous statement since the police,
being refused a share in a big Sikh jewellery shop, had broken the safes
in the Saraf Bazar and had helped themselves with cash and jewellery;
later this was twisted and was supposed to have been a threat coming from
the Sikhs – the meaning being clear. The third and most dangerous rumour
was spread on November 1 night, round about 10.30, after the carnage was
nearly complete in the central areas, that the Sardars had poisoned the
drinking water. Strangers rang up to give the news and warned people not
to drink or use the Corporation water. This had a terrific impact and
worked up even a secular minded Hindu against his Sikh neighbour.
In
the third phase, on November 2, when trains arrived in Delhi with dead
bodies of Sikhs, the rumour was spread that Hindus had been killed in
Punjab and that their bodies had been brought to Delhi by the Jhelum Express
from Punjab. It was necessary to substitute the truth by fiction
to keep up the anger against the Sikhs because the extermination had not
yet been completed in the Resettlement Colonies.
While
analyzing the sordid episode of this genocide, one sees an invisible hand
moving the pieces on his chessboard with remarkable dexterity; the most
powerful leader of the locality calls the meeting, allocates to different
selected groups different duties – like identification os Sikh houses,
supervision and execution of the plan; determines the size and the composition
of the mob and the areas from where it should be brought, settles the
payment for each killing and most important, decides on the sequence of
the attack – the Gurudwaras always being the first target.
It was a double-edged strategy. To the killers, the Gurudwara was
supposed to be the arsenal of the Sikhs and so the precaution had to be
taken to destroy it first. To a Sikh the Gurudwara is the symbol of everything
he stands for – his faith, love, courage - once the Gurudwara falls, he
falls with it. It was to break him first morally, then physically- so
also the Gurudwara was attacked first everywhere and then he was murdered.
The slogans were also selected meticulously and the rumours were carefully
spread so as to justify the carnage.
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