Bomb blasts | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Fri, 15 Oct 2021 12:03:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Bomb blasts | SabrangIndia 32 32 Afghanistan: 32 killed, 53 injured in bomb blast at Shiite mosque in Kandahar https://sabrangindia.in/afghanistan-32-killed-53-injured-bomb-blast-shiite-mosque-kandahar/ Fri, 15 Oct 2021 12:03:48 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/10/15/afghanistan-32-killed-53-injured-bomb-blast-shiite-mosque-kandahar/ This is the second such blast at Shiite place of worship during Friday prayers

The post Afghanistan: 32 killed, 53 injured in bomb blast at Shiite mosque in Kandahar appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Bomb attackImage Courtesy:freepressjournal.in

A massive bomb blast ripped through a Shiite mosque in Kandahar, a city in the southern part of Afghanistan. The targeted blast took place during Friday prayers, and has so far killed around 32 people and injured 53 others.

According to a report carried by NDTV, a doctor at the city’s central Mirwais hospital said, “Thirty-two bodies and 53 wounded people have been brought to our hospital so far.” While the cause of the explosions was not immediately clear, there seems to be a pattern of targeting the Shiite community with such attacks. 

Last Friday at least a 100 people were killed in a bomb attack on a Shia mosque in Kunduz city of Afghanistan. That attack on the community was called the “bloodiest assault since US forces left the country.” The Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid had then said an unknown number of people had been killed and injured when “an explosion took place in a mosque of our Shiite compatriots” in Kunduz. 

This Friday, the community has been targeted again, and various news reports are hinting at a high death toll, adding that the ambulances were rushing to and from the scene and that “the mosque’s Facebook account made an appeal for blood donations.” 

According to Afghanistan’s Tolo News, “Three back-to-back explosions hit the mosque, one of the biggest in Kandahar city.” Friday is a day of the busiest congregational prayers. Though no group has reportedly claimed responsibility yet, last week ISIS-K (Khorasan faction) claimed responsibility for the Kunduz mosque attack.

According to AFP, an eyewitness said he heard “three explosions, one at the main door of the mosque, another at a southern area, and a third where worshippers wash before their prayers.” A Twitter handle reportedly belonging to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan’s interior ministry spokesman Qari Sayed Khosti stated, “We are saddened to learn that an explosion took place in a mosque of the Shiite Brotherhood in the first district of Kandahar city in which a number of our compatriots were martyred and wounded. Special forces of the Islamic Emirate have arrived in the area to determine the nature of the incident and bring the perpetrators to justice.”

Related

Afghanistan: Bomb attack kills at least 100 at Shia mosque in Kunduz
Mundra Adani Port: NDPS court orders probe into heroin seizure
A tribute to Danish Siddiqui (May 19, 1983 – July 16, 2021) 
We do not recognise a Taliban govt: Afghan students in Pune
Journalists for Afghanistan: A fundraiser for colleagues targeted by Taliban

The post Afghanistan: 32 killed, 53 injured in bomb blast at Shiite mosque in Kandahar appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
More convictions in 1993 Mumbai blasts case but no justice yet for victims of riots that came before https://sabrangindia.in/more-convictions-1993-mumbai-blasts-case-no-justice-yet-victims-riots-came/ Sat, 17 Jun 2017 05:57:34 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/06/17/more-convictions-1993-mumbai-blasts-case-no-justice-yet-victims-riots-came/ The bomb blasts were tried by a special court. The communal riots in which 900 people died were investigated by just a powerless commission of inquiry.   Image: bhindibazaar.asia On Friday, 24 years after the Mumbai bomb blasts of 1993, a special court convicted Abu Salem, Mustafa Dossa, Firoz Khan, Tahir Merchant and Riyaz Siddiqui […]

The post More convictions in 1993 Mumbai blasts case but no justice yet for victims of riots that came before appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
The bomb blasts were tried by a special court. The communal riots in which 900 people died were investigated by just a powerless commission of inquiry.

 


Image: bhindibazaar.asia

On Friday, 24 years after the Mumbai bomb blasts of 1993, a special court convicted Abu Salem, Mustafa Dossa, Firoz Khan, Tahir Merchant and Riyaz Siddiqui for the serial explosions that killed 257 people. Another accused man, Abdul Qayyum, was acquitted of all charges.

Immediately after the blasts, the state government set up a special court under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act to hold trials in the blast cases. So far, the TADA court has convicted 106 people for their involvement in carrying out the bomb blasts. Yakub Memon, one of the convicts, was hanged in July 2015.

The 12 blasts rippled down the spine of Mumbai on the afternoon of March 12, 1993. Orchestrated by underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, the blasts were an act of revenge against the communal riots that swept through Mumbai in December 1992 and January 1993 after the demolition of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya on December 6, 1992. At least 900 people were killed in the riots and more than 2,000 were injured – the majority of them Muslims.

However, the state government’s response to the communal riots was significantly different.
 

The Srikrishna Commission dilemma

After the riots of December 1992 and January 1993, the state government set up a Commission of Inquiry under Justice BN Srikrishna. The Commission spent more than five years investigating the events of the riots, and published a comprehensive report that proved damning for the Shiv Sena, the nativist party that was elected to the Maharashtra government in 1995.

The Srikrishna Commission report indicted Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray, other party leaders as well as the party mouthpiece Saamna for playing a major role in inciting communal passions and triggering Hindu attacks on Muslims during the riots. It described Thakeray’s role as that of a “veteran General” who “commanded his loyal Shiv Sainiks to retaliate by organised attacks against Muslims”.

But even after conducting exhaustive investigations – much like a court of law – the Srikrishna Commission did not have the power convict any of the alleged perpetrators named in its report. Under the Commissions of Inquiry Act, an inquiry cannot be considered a court of law. Unsurprisingly, state governments appoint such commissions whenever they have no will to actually bring justice to crimes.

By constituting it as a commission of inquiry, the state government restricted the Commission’s powers to merely making recommendations for prosecution. Its recommendations were then taken up by the police for further investigation.

The recommendations in the Srikrishna Commission report were rejected outright by the Shiv Sena government, and over the years, successive state governments too did not act upon the recommendations.
 

The fallout

So far, only three people have been convicted for their involvement in the riots, all on relatively minor charges like hate speech and inciting violence. No one has been convicted for the serious charges of murder, rape or arson, not even the many assailants named in the Commission’s report based on witness testimonies. In the majority of cases, the police simply chose to close the investigations.

Over the years, several of the police personnel indicted in the report for their complicity in the violence went on to get promotions.

One of the three convicts was former Shiv Sena MP Madhukar Sarpotdar, who was found guilty in 2008 of carrying weapons during the riots. Sarpotdar died in 2010 without ever serving his jail sentence, and today, he has a park in suburban Mumbai named after him.

Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray, whose recorded speeches from 1992 openly incited violence against Muslims, was arrested briefly, but the court eventually dismissed the charges against him by saying the statute of limitations had expired. When Thackeray died in 2012, he was given a state funeral.

This article was first published on Scroll.in

 

The post More convictions in 1993 Mumbai blasts case but no justice yet for victims of riots that came before appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>