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This article has been republished from The Quint’s archives in the light of the recent attack on Istanbul’s Ataturk airport. It is suspected that ISIS was behind the triple explosions that rocked Turkey’s busiest airport on Tuesday, claiming at least 36 lives. Incidentally, it was on the same day – 28 June – two years ago that ISIS declared itself as a caliphate.
This article was first published on 29 January 2016.
Twelve suspected ISIS terrorists have been nabbed in pan India counter-terror raids. While the suspects have been sent to NIA custody till February 5 by a special court, sources say that the fear of a Paris like attack looms large.
Intelligence agencies suspect a strike against the Republic Day parade which will see French President Francois Hollande in attendance. The agencies have also warned against a lone wolf attack. The French Consulate in Delhi has received a threat. Malls and prominent public places have been placed on high alert. Suddenly, the threat of the ISIS, which was seen as a foreign force operating in a foreign land, recruiting and threatening foreigners is not so foreign.
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The ISIS has head hunters in India. Official government figures indicate that 23 Indians have become ISIS fighters, 30 others have been stopped or deported while trying to reach the conflict zone in Iraq and Syria and there are over 150 people (conservative estimate) who are under government surveillance for pro-ISIS leanings online.
Muslim leaders and clerics in India dismiss these figures as inconsequential.
In a bid to send out a strong message against the proliferation of the idea of the Islamic State, 70,000 Indian Muslim clerics issued a fatwa against the ISIS, Taliban, Al-Qaeda and other terror organisations in December 2015 claiming that these organisations were ‘non-Islamic’ in nature.
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It was the same reason why several leading Islamic organisations having prominent leaders led protests in different parts of the country after the Paris attacks.
Madani insists that is a fundamental difference in the way Indian Muslims interpret Islam from those who kill in its name. The founding principles followed by Indian Muslims does not permit violence or brutalities.
While the Muslim clerics in India are making the right noises, Dr Adil Rasheed, author of ISIS: Race to Armageddon believes that story is more complex.
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