Yashwant Shinde, a former functionary of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh on August 30 shook the political circles in the country by submitting a sworn affidavit in a Nanded Court alleging that the RSS engineered several bomb blasts across the country to help the BJP win elections in the 2000s.

Shinde in the affidavit has also offered to be witness in the case and to provide all the information pertaining to the case to the Nanded bomb blast case. In 2006, two people including a worker of the Bajrang Dal – the youth wing of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad – were killed in Maharashtra’s Nanded district when a bomb they were allegedly trying to assemble exploded.

Shinde has said that the two right-wing activists died while they were preparing a bomb being prepared to attack a mosque in Aurangabad.

Shinde said he knew this because one of the two men who died, Himanshu Panse, was a long-time associate and a fellow traveller in the Hindutva ecosystem. Panse was a Vishwa Hindu Parishad worker, the affidavit says.

In 1999, Shinde had, on the instructions of Indresh Kumar, a senior Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh functionary, “taken Himanshu and his 7 friends to Jammu…[where] they received training in modern weaponry from the Indian Army jawans”, he alleged in the affidavit.

Four years later, in 2003, he and Panse attended a “bomb-training camp held near Sinhgad in Pune”, Shinde claimed.

The “mastermind and main organiser of the camp”, Shinde alleged, was Milind Parande – who is currently the “national organiser” of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad. The main instructor at the camp was a man by the name of “Mithun Chakravarty” whose real name, he would discover later, was Ravi Dev [Anand] – who now heads the Uttarakhand unit of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad.

“The said Mithun Chakravarty would reach the camp at 10 a.m. and would conduct the training for two hours in different groups. The trainees were given material like 3-4 kinds of explosive powders, pieces of pipes, wires, bulbs, watches etc. for preparing bombs.

“After the training the organizers took the trainees in a vehicle to a secluded forest area for testing the bombs by carrying out rehearsal of blasts. The trainees would dig a small pit, put the bomb with timer in it, cover it with soil & big boulders and detonate the bomb. Their tests were successful. There were big blasts & the boulders were thrown away to long distances.” Shinde has said in the affidavit.

Shinde claimed he tried to dissuade Panse from carrying out any blasts but “after the training Himanshu had caused three blasts in Marathwada region of Maharashtra”. “He had a plan to cause a major blast in the main mosque in Aurangabad and while making a bomb for that blast he lost his life in Nanded in 2006,” he alleged.

Much of what Shinde has alleged in his affidavit is part of the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad’s first chargesheet in the case. The chargesheet said that Panse had gone to a resort in “Sinhagad near Pune in 2003 for training in making pipe bombs from a man named Mithun Chakraborty”.

Also, investigators were reported to have recovered materials that indicated that there was a plan to strike a mosque at Aurangabad from the house where the explosion that took Panse’s life occurred.

However, the Central Bureau of Investigation, which took over the case in 2013, claimed that the explosion was an isolated incident.

But Shinde’s affidavit contests this conclusion. According to him, among the other people at the bomb-making camp was Rakesh Dhawade, who has been accused in the Malegaon blast case.

Shinde told Scroll.in said several terror attacks in the country in the 2000s including the Samjhauta Express in 2007 and the Malegaon blasts in 2008, stemmed from the same conspiracy as the Nanded blast. “Nanded was only a small part,” he said.

In the affidavit, Shinde claimed that he spoke to several senior functionaries of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, including current chief Mohan Bhagwat, to caution them about Pandare’s machinations, but they turned a deaf ear. “After listening to the excuses of these leaders, the applicant came to the conclusion that the senior leaders of the RSS and VHP tacitly supported terrorist activities and that after the BJP government came to power in 2014, they have been further encouraged and have been assiduously engaged in such activities,” he alleged.

The decision to file this affidavit, Shinde told Scroll.in, was driven by his desire to “purify” the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which he said, “had fallen into the wrong hands in recent times”.

But what took him so long? Shinde said he was at heart a Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh man and a firm believer in the Hindutva ideology, so he did not want to give the organisation a bad name. “I spoke to so many senior people, tried so hard to get them to take action, but they didn’t,” said the 49-year-old who is currently unemployed and lives with his mother, wife and children in Mumbai’s Lower Parel area.

Shinde claimed to have spent his first nine years at the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh in Jammu and Kashmir under the tutelage of Indresh Kumar. It was during that tenure that he claimed he took Panse and nine others to attend a training in “modern weaponry” in Jammu imparted by Indian Army jawans. “It was held in a place called Talab Tillo in Jammu,” said Shinde, who said he was now a “social worker” and filed Right to Information requests on government land and policies.

Shinde said he stopped actively participating in the RSS’s activities around 13-14 years ago, but continued to be a member.

“But things have become particularly bad in recent years,” he said. “They are polarising the country to stay in power, so I thought I needed to do this.”

Besides, Shinde said he wrote to Union home minister Amit Shah before filing the affidavit – but got no response.

When asked why anyone should believe him, Shinde said, “So many people in the Sangh Parivar are upset with the leaders, but they are bearing it. But now that I have spoken up, you’ll see there will be an eruption soon and everyone will realise I am speaking the truth.”

With Inputs from Scroll.in

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New Delh (PTI) The Congress on Saturday said it is perhaps not very surprising that India is not part of a US-led strategic initiative to build a secure silicon supply chain, given the "sharp downturn" in the Trump-Modi ties, and asserted that it would have been to "our advantage if we had been part of this group".

Congress general secretary in charge of communications Jairam Ramesh took a swipe at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, saying the news of India not being part of the group comes after the PM had enthusiastically posted on social media about a telephone call with his "once-upon-a-time good friend and a recipient of many hugs in Ahmedabad, Houston, and Washington DC".

In a lengthy post on X, Ramesh said, "According to some news reports, the US has excluded India from a nine-nation initiative it has launched to reduce Chinese control on high-tech supply chains. The agreement is called Pax Silica, clearly as a counter to Pax Sinica. The nations included (for the moment at least) are the US, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and Australia."

"Given the sharp downturn in the Trump-Modi ties since May 10th, 2025, it is perhaps not very surprising that India has not been included. Undoubtedly, it would have been to our advantage if we had been part of this group."

"This news comes a day after the PM had enthusiastically posted on his telephone call with his once-upon-a-time good friend and a recipient of many hugs in Ahmedabad, Houston, and Washington DC," the Congress leader asserted.

The new US-led strategic initiative, rooted in deep cooperation with trusted allies, has been launched to build a secure and innovation-driven silicon supply chain.

According to the US State Department, the initiative called 'Pax Silica' aims to reduce coercive dependencies, protect the materials and capabilities foundational to artificial intelligence (AI), and ensure aligned nations can develop and deploy transformative technologies at scale.

The initiative includes Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and Australia. With the exception of India, all other QUAD countries -- Japan, Australia and the US -- are part of the new initiative.

New Delhi will host the India-AI Impact Summit 2026 on February 19-20, focusing on the principles of 'People, Planet, and Progress'. The summit, announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the France AI Action Summit, will be the first-ever global AI summit hosted in the Global South.

Prime Minister Modi and US President Trump on Thursday discussed ways to sustain momentum in the bilateral economic partnership in a phone conversation amid signs of the two sides inching closer to firming up a much-awaited trade deal.

The phone call between the two leaders came on a day Indian and American negotiators concluded two-day talks on the proposed bilateral trade agreement that is expected to provide relief to India from the Trump administration's whopping 50 per cent tariffs on Indian goods.

In a social media post, Modi had described the conversation as "warm and engaging".

"We reviewed the progress in our bilateral relations and discussed regional and international developments. India and the US will continue to work together for global peace, stability and prosperity," Modi had said without making any reference to trade ties.