Tag Archive - al-qaeda

Terrorism: Whose War is This Anyway?

3 December 2008 by , No Comments

The only surviving suspect, Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, in a photo taken during the attacks.

The media has been closely following the fallout on diplomatic ties between India and Pakistan. It has questioned whether the terrorist attacks on Mumbai last week should lead to stronger action by both India and Pakistan to ferret out these terrorists from their training camps in Pakistan.

Gauhar Ayub Khan, Former Foreign Minister of Pakistan who was interviewed on NDTV today evaded questions about whether Pakistan would or could deal with terrorist groups openly operating on its own soil, by focusing instead on a massive security failure in India. When the NDTV journalist pressed the issue quoting US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice’s statement today,  “Non-state actors, that’s still a matter of responsibility if in fact it somehow relates to your territory. ” But Khan continued to point to the uselessness of Indian intelligence, its national security and anti terrorist forces. He even suggest that India has orchestrated the killing of its own Top Guns and has “cooked up” information about the 10 Mumbai attackers.

As much as I stand aghast at the lack of sensitivity and intelligence shown by our Mumbai politicians, it amazes me that a man like Khan could be appointed such a high post in any state.

Whose war is this anyway? Mr. Khan… is this not your state’s war against terrorism as much as it is anybody elses’s?  Have you forgotten Benazir Bhutto’s assassination just a few months ago?

Do people like Khan not understand that it is statements like his that inflame the sensitivity of a highly emotional group of people? Mr. Khan..what will we achieve with this attitude? The last thing we need right now is an India-Pakistan war which given the history of hostility between these two neighbors, is always a possibility.

Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the only surviving suspect in the deadly attacks on Mumbai has reportedly given up information, including his name, the identity of his father and details on a three-month training stint in Pakistan, Indian police said Wednesday. He has confirmed that he is from the village of Okara in Pakistan’s Punjab province and that he has spent the last 18 months at training camps run by Lashkar-e-Tayyiba — a Pakistan-based terror group allied with al Qaeda. (CNN)

Listen to Condoleezza Rice’s words today:

“Non-state actors sometimes operate within the confines a state … and when that is the case, there has to be very direct and tough action against them.”

When it comes to terrorism, it is not just a matter of punishing the crime, but also a matter of preventing the people that continue to plot and plan these events in the future. At this point many nations have expressed a desire to help India in flushing out the people who contribute to the global war against terrorism….Britain, U.S. to name a few. Like all nations, Pakistan also has a responsibility to address this issue fully, transparently and urgently.

Image Credit: Associated Press

How Do You Deal With A Child’s Questions About Terrorism?

1 December 2008 by , No Comments

This year I was determined to have a meaningful Thanksgiving. After all of the shocks we have faced this year with the economy, Wall street, mounting financial issues…not to mention a slew of family health and business problems, it was time to finally sit down and celebrate the change that Obama has promised.

And then…in the very wake of the Thanksgiving hour came an SMS message from a friend alerting us about the terror attacks in Mumbai: “Right this very minute, bombs are going off in every corner of our city. Please call home and ensure that your loved ones are safe.”

All of Wednesday, I was glued to the TV and checked lists of the deceased on the hour every hour…luckily no one had been harmed. But on Thursday, the day that we sat down to by thankful for what we have…I received word that a good friend and her husband had been shot at a restaurant in Mumbai’s Oberoi hotel orphaning three young children. It was the restaurant that our family frequents for Sunday brunch, the restaurant in which we celebrated my daughter’s birthday just three months ago.

My daughter who overheard everything could not help but ask how it is possible that a child’s parents can go out for dinner as they do every week perhaps, yet one day never come back. That night she wanted to sleep in our bed, in between her father and her mother petrified that somehow that they too might be taken away from her for some unjust reason.

Over the course of the holiday, we continued to receive news of friends who had dodged bullets as they fled to safety and the less fortunate ones who did not make it. Mumbai is a city where everyone knows everyone. For all the victims that we knew directly, we were separated by barely one degree from those that we did not. My children recognized many of the victims and survivors.

As we watched NDTV my son overheard a reporter speak of the orphaned child of a Rabbi and his wife who was saved by his nanny. It was the child’s second birthday the day after. My son who like any child anticipates his next birthday every day of the year, asked me, “Why did God kill his parents on his birthday?

What kind of answer can a parent create or concoct for questions like these? How to deal with a child’s natural curiosity, fear and intense emotion?

This morning I was told a story about a family of four killed in one of the hotels: The terrorists first killed the father and watched the mother go beserk. They then killed the mother as the two teenage kids stood by. They set fire to a table cloth ordering the kids to place it over their parents…”you need to cremate them,” said one of the terrorists. When the tablecloth somehow brushed the arm of one terrorist, he shot one of the kids. Then…having let the other kid linger over his dead parents and sibling for some time, the terrorist finally shot him too.

Can we seek solace in knowing that the entire family was killed and so none will be left to grieve? What justice is there in this world?

Whether terrorism is economically driven or whether it occurs due to religious strife, we can no longer rely on others to protect us. What can we do as individuals to make the world we live in a safer place for our children?

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