03-13-2005, 03:12 AM
The necessity of hindu counter-rioting post Godhra
As the following article shows, muslim criminals do fear hindu reprisals if hindus are pushed beyond a point and that keeps their goondaist behavior in check
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?m...t&counter_img=1
<b>How 'kill Advani, Bal' plan fell through at Dawood's den </b>
Pioneer News Service/ New Delhi
FALLOUT FEAR FORCED TERROR HONCHOS TO OPT FOR MUMBAI BLASTS INSTEAD--- The Supreme Court may have upheld the stay on a film depicting "the true story" of the biggest ever terror attack on Mumbai on March 12, 1993, but the book Black Friday, on which the film is based, has made startling revelations about a pan-Islamic conspiracy to trigger a bloodbath in India by assassinating Advani and Thackeray. Â
âAdvani and Bal can be killed by just one handshake or one garlandâ
As the megapolis completed 12 years of surviving the serial blasts, jinxed film-maker Anurag Kashyap was battling to show how the people behind the explosions were not just D-company but the entire fundamentalist Muslim world for whom avenging Babri Masjid was just a ploy to achieve another aim - intimidating a 'non-believing' nation into subjugation.
The book's author S Hussain Zaidi talks about how, at a top secret meeting held just before the blasts at Dawood's mansion in Dubai, the head honchos of Islamic terrorism, including Dawood, his brother Anis, Tiger Memon and certain PLO leaders, ironed out the nitty gritties of the terror attack on Mumbai.
The brigade tabled various options before zeroing in on rocking Mumbai with covert landings of explosives on Indian shores. Among the first suggestions tabled in this chamber was the assassination of BJP chief L K Advani and Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray.
Zaidi writes that a man who seemed to be a Palestinian, said his operatives could easily breach Thackeray's security, "whenever we want to snuff his life out." He added: "Thackeray and Advani can be killed by just one handshake or one garland. That will be sufficient to despatch them to the pit of hell." Warned of the tight security cordon around the two leaders and the impossibility of reaching even within a kilometer of them, the man thundered that PLO had the means to achieve the impossible. "We have ways and means of doing it, and you people don't deserve to know them. But if worse comes to worst, we can always buy out one of the policemen around him and pay him fantastic sums to have the job done," he told the audience.
He also took a cue from the Amal militia in Lebanon, that stormed into the houses of Christians with truckloads of explosives to suggest that Advani's end could be brought about by storming an RDX-laden truck into his residence.
Zaidi also mentions that the plan had to be dropped after much debate and fears of an uncontrollable backlash on Indian Muslims.
The first to dissent was Shaikh Ahmad who said: "You are assuming that your men can get close to Thackeray and Advani. That is impossible: They will not get anywhere within several kilometres of him."
Next was Tiger Memon who came up with an argument few could dispute: "The Hindus will turn them (Advani and Thackeray) into Godlike figures and Muslims throughout India will be massacred. No. No. No. This cannot happen."
He, in turn, was countered by an Arab fundamentalist, who said that Muslims had the power to annihilate "non-believers." Even as he held everyone in sway, Anis pointed out that 60 crore Hindus in India couldn't be finished and that the UN and "India's mentor, Russia", wouldn't stay silent.
Ahmed said: "The best thing to do will be to turn the tables on Hindus. If we can intimidate Hindus in such a manner that in the future they will not in their wildest dreams try to subjugate the Muslims..." he said.
After a long discussion on whether to go for the assassination, Dawood Ibrahim finally opted for blasting the financial hub of India and, thus, creating a spectacle of terror in Indian minds that would stay forever.
(Excerpts of the book in Foray)<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
As the following article shows, muslim criminals do fear hindu reprisals if hindus are pushed beyond a point and that keeps their goondaist behavior in check
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?m...t&counter_img=1
<b>How 'kill Advani, Bal' plan fell through at Dawood's den </b>
Pioneer News Service/ New Delhi
FALLOUT FEAR FORCED TERROR HONCHOS TO OPT FOR MUMBAI BLASTS INSTEAD--- The Supreme Court may have upheld the stay on a film depicting "the true story" of the biggest ever terror attack on Mumbai on March 12, 1993, but the book Black Friday, on which the film is based, has made startling revelations about a pan-Islamic conspiracy to trigger a bloodbath in India by assassinating Advani and Thackeray. Â
âAdvani and Bal can be killed by just one handshake or one garlandâ
As the megapolis completed 12 years of surviving the serial blasts, jinxed film-maker Anurag Kashyap was battling to show how the people behind the explosions were not just D-company but the entire fundamentalist Muslim world for whom avenging Babri Masjid was just a ploy to achieve another aim - intimidating a 'non-believing' nation into subjugation.
The book's author S Hussain Zaidi talks about how, at a top secret meeting held just before the blasts at Dawood's mansion in Dubai, the head honchos of Islamic terrorism, including Dawood, his brother Anis, Tiger Memon and certain PLO leaders, ironed out the nitty gritties of the terror attack on Mumbai.
The brigade tabled various options before zeroing in on rocking Mumbai with covert landings of explosives on Indian shores. Among the first suggestions tabled in this chamber was the assassination of BJP chief L K Advani and Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray.
Zaidi writes that a man who seemed to be a Palestinian, said his operatives could easily breach Thackeray's security, "whenever we want to snuff his life out." He added: "Thackeray and Advani can be killed by just one handshake or one garland. That will be sufficient to despatch them to the pit of hell." Warned of the tight security cordon around the two leaders and the impossibility of reaching even within a kilometer of them, the man thundered that PLO had the means to achieve the impossible. "We have ways and means of doing it, and you people don't deserve to know them. But if worse comes to worst, we can always buy out one of the policemen around him and pay him fantastic sums to have the job done," he told the audience.
He also took a cue from the Amal militia in Lebanon, that stormed into the houses of Christians with truckloads of explosives to suggest that Advani's end could be brought about by storming an RDX-laden truck into his residence.
Zaidi also mentions that the plan had to be dropped after much debate and fears of an uncontrollable backlash on Indian Muslims.
The first to dissent was Shaikh Ahmad who said: "You are assuming that your men can get close to Thackeray and Advani. That is impossible: They will not get anywhere within several kilometres of him."
Next was Tiger Memon who came up with an argument few could dispute: "The Hindus will turn them (Advani and Thackeray) into Godlike figures and Muslims throughout India will be massacred. No. No. No. This cannot happen."
He, in turn, was countered by an Arab fundamentalist, who said that Muslims had the power to annihilate "non-believers." Even as he held everyone in sway, Anis pointed out that 60 crore Hindus in India couldn't be finished and that the UN and "India's mentor, Russia", wouldn't stay silent.
Ahmed said: "The best thing to do will be to turn the tables on Hindus. If we can intimidate Hindus in such a manner that in the future they will not in their wildest dreams try to subjugate the Muslims..." he said.
After a long discussion on whether to go for the assassination, Dawood Ibrahim finally opted for blasting the financial hub of India and, thus, creating a spectacle of terror in Indian minds that would stay forever.
(Excerpts of the book in Foray)<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->