'3 Terror Attacks In 10 Months': PM On Events Leading Up To Gujarat Riots

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New Delhi:

The 2002 Sabarmati Express attack in Gujarat’s Godhra was a “tragedy of unimaginable magnitude” and the riots that followed this “was tragic for everyone,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said today in a podcast interview with US computer scientist and podcaster Lex Fridman. 

In a three-hour-long overarching interview, PM Modi was asked about the 2002 riots in Gujarat and what lessons he drew from it. PM Modi pointed out that the riots that took place, contrary to perception, were not the worst that Gujarat has seen. Nor has there been any religious tension snice. 

He also described the backdrop in which the events took place — the Kandahar hijack, the 9/11 attack in the US, attack on the J&K Assembly, and the parliament. 

These events, he said, had “created the background”. 

“In such a tense environment, even the smallest spark can ignite unrest. The situation had already become extremely volatile,” he said. 

Then he was handed the responsibility of leading Gujarat as its Chief Minister amid the massive quake in Latur and the rehabilitation efforts that followed. 

“This was a crucial task, and from day one after my oath, I immersed myself in it. I was a person who had absolutely no prior experience with government. I had never been part of any administration, never even served in government before. I had never contested an election, never even been a State Representative. For the first time in my life, I had to face elections. On February 24, 2002, I became a State Representative, an elected representative, for the first time. And it was only around February 24th, 25th, or 26th that I stepped into the Gujarat Assembly for the very first time. On February 27, 2002, we were seated in the assembly for the budget session, and that same day, it had been just three days since I’d become a State Representative, when suddenly, the horrific Godhra incident occurred,” he said. 

It was a “tragedy of unimaginable magnitude, people were burned alive,” PM Modi said.

“You can imagine, against the backdrop of incidents like the Kandahar hijacking, the attack on Parliament, or even 9/11, and then to have so many people killed and burned alive… You can imagine how tense and volatile the situation was. Of course, this was tragic for everyone, everyone prefers peace,” he said. 

The perception that these were the biggest riots ever is actually misinformation, PM Modi said.

“If you review the data from before 2002, you’ll see that Gujarat faced frequent riots, curfews were constantly being imposed somewhere. 

Communal violence could erupt over trivial issues, like kite-flying contests or even minor bicycle collisions. Before 2002, Gujarat witnessed over 250 significant riots. The riots in 1969 lasted nearly six months,” he said

But in the years since, there has not been a single instance of communal violence, he said. With the policy of “Sabka Saath, sabka vikaas, sabka Vishwas”, the politics of appeasement has been changed into politics of development.





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