Prof. Rakesh Sinha was extremely clinical in his assessment of global
terrorism and solutions for India. He was addressing a gathering in a
seminar organised by Manthana Shankarapuram in Mythic Society,
Bengaluru.
Prof. Rakesh Sinha said “Terrorists do 5 important things. 1).
Publicize in graphical way to terrorize a large number of people. 2).
Terrorists use Media as oxygen. Free of cost due to TRP madness. 3).
Expect overreaction. Core support is tiny. Victims should overreact and
make terrorists famous. 4). Invoke religion. Self styled warriors of
God. 5). Holy Book invoked. Believe that dying for religion gets life in
another world.”
“India has to decide. Use the Turkey model of full state intervention
to prevent radicalization, or Indonesian model of soft cultural
integration. What works for US or France will not work for India
considering history, population and large avenues for
radicalization.” “India has 3 unique challenges which is helping the
soft corner for terror sympathisers” said Rakesh Sinha. “Conversions.
Soft Islam and Soft Christianity, taking advantage of caste conflicts.
This makes Hindus go on defensive on harder topics.”
Rakesh Sinha said “Lashkar, ISIS kind of terror networks are openly
discussing India’s domestic politics. A recent 22 min terror video from
Pakistan mentioned nearly 100 times, the Batla terrorist. Add to it
2002, Ayodhya, Muzaffarnagar etc.. They are exploiting emotions and
portraying a victimhood in the hands of Hindu majority.”
Third is Owaisi kind of politics. MIM celebrates 17 Sep. as a Black
day. Our Media doesn’t question why Hyderabad unification is portrayed
that negatively by a parliament member. Teesta and Bhushan kind of
activists openly spread feeling against institutions. De-legitimize
history, institutions and security officers by vested interests, help
prepare ground for terror narrative and victimhood play.” added Prof.
Sinha.
“India should consider all these, and prepare a solid
De-radicalization process as a long term strategy.” said Rakesh Sinha.
The event was attended by over a hundred intellectuals of the city.
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