News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 11 years ago
Home  » News » The security implications of Al Qaeda's call to Indian Muslims

The security implications of Al Qaeda's call to Indian Muslims

By Bibhu Prasad Routray
Last updated on: July 24, 2013 15:13 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

If viewed as a part of the Al Qaeda's radicalisation effort to produce jihadists out of discontented Muslim youth in India, the call could well have a much larger dimension, both in the near as well as long term, directly impacting on national security, says Bibhu Prasad Routray.

The title could well be inspired by an evangelical video, "There's A Storm On the Ocean". On July 23, Al Qaeda's media arm, As-Sahab, released the English translation of a video statement it had posted earlier in June calling upon Indian Muslims to join the jihad in Syria. Titled, "A Message for the Muslims of India: Why is There No Storm in Your Ocean?", this video features Maulana Aasim Umar, an Al Qaeda ideologue believed to be based in northwest Pakistan.

Umar is believed to be 'a scholarly militant who liaises closely with Al Qaeda’s core leadership'. Many of Umar's writings are freely available on the internet and include "Teesri Jange Azeem aur Dajjal", "Imam Mehdi (R.A) K Dost Aur Dushman", etc.

Speaking in Urdu, Umar vents his frustration regarding the inability of the organisation to recruit Indian Muslims into global jihad.

The 11-page statement specifically exhorts the Muslims of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, southern India and Gujarat to "Join the forces of global jihad." Some of the points he makes:

  • Will the land of Delhi not give birth to a Shah Muhadith Delhvi who may once again teach the Muslims of India the forgotten lesson of jihad and inspire them to take to the battlefields of jihad?
  • Is there not even a single mother in Uttar Pardesh who may sing those lullabies to children after listening to which they grow up to stage the battleground of Shamili instead of heading to bazaars, parks and playing fields?
  • Has the land of Bihar become so barren that it is unable to prepare even a single group of the like of the Mujahideen of Azeemabad?
  • The Muslims of southern India, it seems, have totally forgotten those words of the lion of Mysore which still cause the infidels to tremble in fear: ‘A single day’s life of a lion is better than a jackal’s life of a thousand years’.
  • What has afflicted the land of Gujarat, where the cries of Takbeer were raised against Kufr and Shirk, that today although the cries of Takbeer are still being raised, but Somnat does not tremble in fear?
  • Why is it that the Muslims of India are totally absent from the fields of jihad?  ...How can anyone scare you from bloodshed?
  • Muslim youth of India.. Head for arenas of jihad to establish the system of the Caliphate [again]!  Join the forces of global jihad!

According to the Long War Journal, Umar claimed in July that many militant leaders and fighters from the Af-Pak region have been transferred to the Syrian front. "At present, Al Qaeda and other mujahideen of Islam have fully controlled this movement", he said in a statement. "Several lashkars from Afghanistan are also leading in Syria", he added.

The BBC in July, quoting Mohammad Amin, a senior Taliban operative and 'co-ordinator of the Syrian base, too reported that 12 Tehrik-e-Taliban "experts in warfare and information technology" have been moved to Syria in the past two months (May and June 2013) to aid Syrian jihadists.

The TTP's Syrian base came up sometime in January/February 2013. Although further details are currently unavailable, the base remains integral part of the Pakistani Brigade 313, which consists of the Taliban and associated jihadist groups such as the Laskhar-e-Jhangvi, Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, Lashkar-e-Tayiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed, Jundallah (the Karachi-based, Al Qaeda-linked group), and several other Pakistani terror groups are known to have merged with Al Qaeda in Pakistan.

To dismiss Umar's call to the Indian Muslims as a rhetorical statement with an outward and external manifestation could be a mistake. The natural tendency would be to treat the statement with negligible repercussions on the India's security. The timing of the English translation could well be linked to the American Vice President Joe Biden's trip to India.

However, viewed as a part of the Al Qaeda's radicalisation effort to produce jihadists out of discontented Muslim youth in India, the call could well have a much larger dimension, both in the near as well as long term, directly impacting on national security.

Image used for representation only

Dr Bibhu Prasad Routray is a Singapore-based security analyst/consultant and served in the National Security Council Secretariat, New Delhi.

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Bibhu Prasad Routray
 
Jharkhand and Maharashtra go to polls

Two states election 2024