Montreal Gazette

Unlikely enemy for Modi

He was complicit in riots in India that saw her husband hacked to death

- DEAN NELSON THE LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH

Narendra Modi is widely expected to become India’s prime minister next month, but the widow of politician Ehsan Jafri wants him held to account for the 2002 riots in the state of Gujarat that led to the deaths of more than 700 Muslims, including her husband.

Minutes before he was hacked to death by a Hindu mob, veteran Muslim politician Ehsan Jafri reached for his phone and dialed one last number.

For the dozens of neighbours cowering in his home, it seemed like their only chance. At the other end of the line, Jafri told them, was Narendra Modi, the powerful Hindu politician who is widely expected to become India’s new prime minister next month. In 2002, though, he was the chief minister of Jafri’s home state of Gujarat, and arguably the only man who could save them from the crowds outside.

By the time Jafri finished the phone conversati­on, however, he knew they were doomed. Far from offering help, Modi had taunted him and even expressed surprise that he was still alive, Jafri told those around him in his final moments. “No help will come,” Jafri added.

Shortly afterwards, Jafri’s wife, Zakia, watched in horror from a balcony as rioters marched her husband naked from their home and chopped off his fingers, hands, arms and head.

Twelve years after the riots which left more than 700 Muslims dead, Modi is cruising to become the leader of the world’s largest democracy, which will declare results from its mammoth nine-phase general election on May 18. Jafri, however,

“They beat him with swords. They chopped his hands and arms bit by bit.”

ZAKIA JAFRI

wants him prosecuted for abetting mass murder, over what was one of India’s worst ever outbreaks of communal violence.

Now 75, she seems an unlikely opponent to Modi, 63, who is being courted by world leaders. He might, however, be unwise to underestim­ate her. On Friday, she won another round in her fight to reopen a judicial inquiry that exonerated him of any responsibi­lity for the riots.

Last week, she and her former neighbours held a campaign meeting i n the charred ruins of their abandoned homes in Ahmedabad. It was here, on Feb. 28, 2002, that the mob attacked, following rumours that Muslims had been responsibl­e for the deaths of 58 Hindu pilgrims in a train fire at Godra the previous day.

In an interview with London’s Daily Telegraph, Jafri told how she saw the mob trying to force her husband to sing Hindu prayers. When he resisted, “they beat him with swords,” she said. “They chopped his hands and arms bit by bit.”

Her claim that Modi should be held to account for the massacres is based on conversati­ons with Indian police officers, who told her they had been ordered to stay at home during the rioting. “Why does an old lady still want to fight against this powerful man?” she asked. “Because I’m on the path of truth. I will fight for justice, and I will win.”

Some fellow Muslims, however, question the point of pursuing the case now. They say that Modi had only been in his post as minister of Gujarat for a few days when the riots broke out, and had yet to master the levers of government.

For his part, Modi denies speaking on the telephone to Jafri that day. While he offered his resignatio­n as minister in the wake of the riots, he has never publicly apologized for failing to save Muslims or visited survivors, for fear opponents would make political capital of it.

But survivors say his decision to visit the scene of the Godra train fire incident and to remember only Hindu victims still rankled with them. “I lost everything, my son, my house,” said Rupaben Mody, a witness to the massacre. “I don’t want him to be prime minister. All I can do is appeal to the people of India to support a mother’s struggle.”

 ?? SAM PANTHAKY/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Zakia Jafri says her husband called the man likely to become India’s next prime minister as a Hindu mob surrounded their home, but received taunts instead of help.
SAM PANTHAKY/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES Zakia Jafri says her husband called the man likely to become India’s next prime minister as a Hindu mob surrounded their home, but received taunts instead of help.

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