2008 India mosque blast suspect wins federal seat


Sadhvi Pragya Thakur, who won a parliamentary seat for the ruling BJP, is accused of participating in a 2008 mosque bombing that killed six people and injured more than 100. – AFP pic, May 24, 2019.

A FIREBRAND Hindu nationalist nun facing terrorism charges over a deadly mosque bombing has been elected to Parliament, a week after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi condemned her for celebrating the assassin of independence hero Mahatma Gandhi.

Sadhvi Pragya Thakur is accused of participating in the 2008 attack that killed six people and injured more than 100 others.

She spent nine years in detention over the charge, and is still awaiting trial for terrorism and criminal conspiracy after being bailed out in 2017.

But the 49-year-old won an emphatic victory for Modi’s right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in results announced yesterday, taking 62% of the vote for a seat in the central industrial city of Bhopal.

Thakur joined BJP only last month, and the party stunned many when it named her as a parliamentary candidate earlier this month.

She courted controversy throughout the campaign, telling journalists that the radical Hindu assassin of Gandhi was a “patriot”.

Thakur also raised eyebrows for claiming that drinking cow urine helped cure her cancer, and extolling the benefits of drinking a concoction of milk, butter and cow dung.

The opposition Congress party, which made a pitiable showing in the polls, denounced her as symbolic of the rise of extreme Hindu nationalism in India under Modi.

Modi was forced to admonish Thakur as backlash grew over her comments on Gandhi’s assassin, mere days after publicly backing her candidature.

“She apologised publicly for the comments, but I won’t forgive her at a personal level,” Modi said in a TV interview.

But, BJP has usually defended Thakur, with party president Amit Shah calling the terrorism charges against her “fake”.

Police said her motorcycle was used to carry the explosives used in the 2008 attack, and that she took part in a key planning meeting before it was staged.

The trial dragged on in India’s notoriously slow legal system, and election rules allow anyone to stand for office as long as there is no conviction. Some of the other candidates face murder charges.

The charges had little impact on Bhopal voters, many of whom sought blessings from Thakur at her public events.

Thakur described her win over her Congress rival in Bhopal as a “victory of right over wrong”. – AFP, May 24, 2019.


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