Rising RSS clout in rural Punjab took Gagneja down

RSS activities were always viewed with suspicious by a section of Sikhs and their widening influence in the rural belt added to SAD’s insecurities.
Rising RSS clout in rural Punjab took Gagneja down

JALANDHAR: : There could be a link between the growing clout of RSS in Punjab and the attack on Punjab RSS vice-president Brig Jagdish Gagneja (Retd).

Gagneja, who died 47 days after he was attacked by morotcycle-borne men, was seen as an architect of RSS expansion plans in the state. It is said that widening of the RSS base was viewed with suspicion by some Sikh radicals. His death has also fuelled suspicion that with Assembly polls around the corner, the situation could be further exploited. Punjab Congress leader Sunil Jakhar said, “Gagneja was killed as he was expanding the RSS base in rural areas.”

This attack is not the only example. This year alone, three RSS-VHP leaders were attacked. On April 23, two motorcycle-borne assailants gunned down Punjab Shiv Sena leader Durga Prasad Gupta in Khanna. On February 16, Deepak Kamboj, son of Shiv Sena leader Vinay Jalandhari was injured in an armed attack in Jalandhar, and on January 18, RSS leader Naresh Kumar suffered gunshot injuries in Ludhiana. Ropar-based Gau Sewa Mission head Swami Krishnan also went missing under mysterious circumstances.

Union minister and Punjab BJP chief Vijay Sampla said, “Gagneja served as an important link between the BJP and the RSS.” With the Punjab Police failing to crack the case, it was handed over to the CBI following pressure from alliance partner BJP. The CBI, however, is yet to make a breakthrough.

RSS activities were always viewed with suspicious by a section of Sikhs and their widening influence in the rural belt added to SAD’s insecurities. In the last two years, the number of RSS shakhas in Punjab rose from 600 to 900. Even the Sikhs had started attending shakhas and weekly mandli meetings. State intelligence sources said that the expansion of shakhas in Tarn Taran, Amritsar, Gurdaspur and Hoshiarpur districts made the Sikh radical groups see red.

“There is a fear that the Hindu outfits will dilute the identity of the Sikhs as they are rapidly gaining prominence in the state,’’ a radical leader said.

Gagneja had taken over as Punjab RSS vice-president two years ago and was considered a confidant of RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat. There is simmering discontentment among the RSS cadres but there has been no headway in the case despite the BJP being part of the ruling combine. Punjab RSS president Brij Bhushan Bedi said, “The Sangh has seen bloodshed in the past, our leaders have been attacked, but it had never became a Hindu-Sikh issue in Punjab.” He added that if there are intelligence inputs on possible threat to our leaders, it is the government’s duty to provide them with security.

Punjab BJP general secretary (Organisation), Dinesh Kumar sees the attacks as an attempt to disturb peace in the state. Echoing Kumar’s views, senior Punjab RSS leader Thakur Balwant Singh said the assailants wanted to create communal tension by attacking Gagneja, but they failed to do so. However, former Punjab DGP KK Attari said, “Belligerence of the RSS, Shiv Sena and other Hindu outfits including the latest addition of cow protectors are raising hackles among the common people and other political parties leading to resentment.”

Meanwhile, Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal blamed Pakistan’s ISI for fomenting terror to destabilise the state ahead of the 2017 assembly elections.

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