It is a measure of how polarised our discourse — and much of our society perhaps — has become that the controversy over the Netflix series about the IC 814 hijacking has followed predictably ideological lines.
On one side are what might be called the voices of the Hindu Right Wing.
They object to the show, and many want it boycotted or banned, because the script does not make it clear that the hijackers were Muslims. In one scene, the hijackers offer up such nicknames for themselves as Bhola and Shankar. This has led to a social media uproar, especially among those who have not seen the show who claim that the series is pretending that the hijackers were Hindus and is therefore demeaning the Hindu community.
As this controversy has raged, there has been a response from people on the so-called liberal side, defending the show, praising its ‘realism and authenticity’ and defending it for its determination “to tell the real story.”
Both parties are wrong. And their positions are mostly idiotic.
The Hindu nicknames offered up by the hijackers were obviously false. But they did actually use such names as Bhola and Shankar to describe themselves. To faithfully record this fact on the screen is not to demean the Hindu community but to record what actually happened.
Equally, the liberal response that the series is true to the facts and (despite a few ‘creative liberties’) tells us what really happened is no more than a knee-jerk counter response to the Hindu right wing’s campaign.
There are two elements to the series. The first is the reconstruction of what took place inside the aeroplane. This is, apparently, based on a memoir by the pilot and through there have been varying recollections among passengers of what actually transpired, I am willing to accept that this is a sincere depiction of events.
My problem is with the second element of the series: its account of what happened on the ground. This is inaccurate and often childish and silly. It is also a lie. The deliberate evasions and inventions turn the whole show into an expensive PR job for the ISI.
That, rather than the Hindu-Muslim aspect, is my objection to the series. If you tell lies about an extremely important event in our recent history to a generation that is too young to remember what actually happened, your falsehoods and untruths become the accepted version and the truth is buried.
Yes, the hijackers did use the Hindu aliases. So that is accurate. But nowhere does the show tell us what their real names were. In fact, the government of India has publicly named them: Sunny Qazi, Shakir, Zahoor Ibrahim, Akhtar Sayed, and Ibrahim Athar.
The show does not even tell us that these men were Pakistanis and that, a couple of days into the hijack, Indian intelligence agencies had identified them as Pakistani operatives and even knew which parts of Pakistan they came from.
Instead, the show seeks vaguely and unconvincingly to link the hijackers to Afghanistan and even to Al Qaeda, suggesting that the hijacking was part of some grand plan hatched by Osama bin Laden and that, if ISI was involved, then it was in a very junior position.
This is a straight-out lie. The hijacking was an ISI operation, part of the covert war that Pakistan has waged against India for decades.
You can tell which route the narrative intends to take when it shows an Indian agent (described as a First Officer in the embassy: no such post exists) tracking a Pakistani diplomat. But the Pakistani, we then learn, is a mere minion; the true leader of the plot is an Afghan.
"It is a strange position for an Indian TV series made for an Indian audience to take without any solid evidence to back up this story-line." |
This story-line, unsupported by any convincing factual evidence that I have seen in 25 years, is used to suggest that R&AW had advance intelligence about the plot, and that an Indian agent even tried to stop the plane from taking off. This is a lie.
R&AW is then shown resorting to torturing Nepalese civilians to extract information about the plot. All of this is fabricated. It is not some ‘creative liberty’.
These fabrications are integral to the series’ message: yes, the terrorists may have been bad men but the other side (i.e. the Indian government) was not much better: incompetent fools who were also torturers.
It is a strange position for an Indian TV series made for an Indian audience to take without any solid evidence to back up this story-line.
The other scenes set in Delhi unfold like they were written by a 12-year-old who has never seen a government office. The Foreign Minister, meant to be Jaswant Singh, sits under a large signboard that says “Ministry of External Affairs’ in his own office as though he is a receptionist at the Passport Office.
It is from this office that the Jaswant Singh character plays a key role in fashioning the Indian response to the hijacking: another fabrication because the only role Jaswant Singh played in the saga, right till the end, was to try and ask the world to help us (they did not). He was not a major part of the security response.
The inaccuracies pile up: the Kathmandu torturer turns up in Delhi to meet the R&AW chief and clicks his heels at the end of the meeting as though he is a cadet taking his NCC exam. (Or maybe he is on loan from the Gestapo.) Nobody involved with the show seems to have any idea of how the intelligence agencies or the government of India function; we are not a military-run state like Pakistan.
There is zero research on display, only fabrications.
Nor do they know much about newspapers. A completely unnecessary sub-plot, which serves no narrative purpose except to give Dia Mirza a role, so totally misunderstands what newspapers and their offices were like in 1999 that it is clear that, in this area too, the makers did no research at all.
By the end, the show is even more clear in its message: it was all to do with Al Qaeda and the Afghans. Apparently, when the hijackers finally got what they wanted, they celebrated with Osama bin Laden, the narration tells us, and the ISI was so out of things that it wasn’t even invited to the celebration.
In fact, the hijacking was masterminded by the brother of jihadi ideologue Masood Azhar to secure his brother’s release from an Indian prison. R&AW and the Indian government had worked this out by the second day of the hijacking. The other terrorists who were eventually released with Masood (in return for the passengers on IC 814) were also Pakistani assets: Omar Sheikh who returned to Pakistan where he was involved in the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl and Mushtaq Zargar (‘Latram’) who was used by the ISI to foment trouble in Kashmir.
The three released terrorists were helped by the Taliban to go to Pakistan where they were warmly welcomed. Masood Azhar even attended a public function in his honour.
So why would an Indian TV show play down all this? Why would it focus on an unlikely Al Qaeda connection to let ISI off the hook? Why would it tell so many lies?
I doubt if the makers of the show were motivated by a desire to subvert the truth. I think they just did not know any better. They worked from a script that included these evasions and lies and because they knew nothing about the subject, believed, in their naivety, that this was what really happened.
I don’t necessarily accept all the conspiracy theories that are floating around. Yes, the series was filmed in Jordan with the cooperation of that country’s film board but I would be wary of reading too much into that. Likewise with the allegations about Adrian Levy, the British journalist who wrote the story and who, Indian agencies believe, is sympathetic to the ISI. (In his book Spy Stories India and R&AW come off very badly with suggestions about their communal bias and the ISI comes off much better; but that alone is no proof of any ISI sympathies.)
What is clear is that nobody involved in the show bothered to speak to anyone of consequence who was portrayed in the show. They relied on the pilot’s account for scenes set inside the plane and then just made up the rest. Admittedly many of the principals are dead but those but those who are alive (AS Dulat who was R&AW chief, Ajit Doval, who handled the ground negotiations, Anand Arni who went to Kandahar on behalf of R&AW and others) were not consulted and many of them are surprised by the distortions and inaccuracies in the series.
Of course, the Indian security establishment screwed up. But the biggest screw-up (letting IC 814 take off from Amritsar) demonstrated layers of indecisiveness and ineptitude that are not reflected in the script. Instead we are fed bogus stories about secret tape recordings and tortures in Kathmandu.
So forget all the Hindu-Muslim stuff. That’s just a social media red herring. Focus on the real question: why did Netflix allow a whitewash job for the ISI to get made?
Name:
E-mail:
Your email id will not be published.
Friend's Name:
Friend's E-mail:
Your email id will not be published.
Additional Text:
Security code:
Other Articles
-
Only five years ago I would have been stuck with Akasaka in Def Col. or Moti Mahal Deluxe in South Ex. Now I have amazing options to choose from.
-
In the pursuit of vegetarianism and vegetarian guests lies the future. And great profit.
-
I think that Indians have less desire to ‘belong’ than Brits do. We don’t need social approval. And this is a good thing.
-
And ask yourself: have I really been enjoying the taste of vodka all these years or just enjoyed the alcoholic kick it gives my cocktails?
-
There is a growing curiosity about modern Asian food, more young people are baking and the principles of European cuisine are finally being understood
See All