An affidavit submitted in late August to the sessions court in Maharashtra's Nanded district by Yashwant Shinde-a member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and the former head of the Bajrang Dal in the state-is a watershed moment in the Bharatiya Janata Party's claimed record of combating terrorism. Shinde in his affidavit-as well as in subsequent interviews-claims that he, along with several others, was trained in making bombs and conducting blasts in the lead up to multiple national elections, including in 2004 and 2014. Shinde said that they were trained by members of the RSS and the Vishva Hindu Parishad. He also claims that these RSS and VHP members facilitated members of the Indian Army in training them in the use of modern weaponry. So far, the RSS has not conclusively denied Shinde's affiliation with it and neither the VHP nor the Indian Army have denied the contents of the affidavit. Shinde has also not been arrested or sued.
The affidavit includes names that have been frequently mentioned in the bevy of chargesheets related to a string of nine bombings, from Parbhani in 2003 to Malegaon in 2008, that killed more than one hundred and twenty people and injured more than four hundred. Others he named still maintain senior positions within the RSS or VHP. Among those who trained with Shinde were Himanshu Panse and Naresh Rajkondawar. The training was allegedly organised by Rakesh Dhawade and Milind Parande-the current secretary general of the VHP-and conducted by a mysterious figure called Ravi Dev.
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