Announcements on successive days by the warring self-styled community representatives unveiled the likely turn of events in 1989, insofar as the dispute over the shrine in Ayodhya was concerned. The newly formed AIBMAC (All India Babri Masjid Action Committee) declared in the Indian capital on 31 January that it was forming hifajati dastas or ‘defence squads’ to protect the mosque from attempts of the VHP activists to demolish it. Their leaders announced that secret squads would be ‘trained adequately to sneak into the inner ring’ of the shrine and ‘maintain a vigil’ to prevent ‘assembly of VHP activists with the aim of demolishing the mosque’. Undeniably, the plan, if allowed to go through by the government, had the potential of setting off nationwide violence. But even before a coherent response could be articulated to this announcement, the other, and the unambiguously more potent, declaration was made by the VHP at Allahabad where the Maha Kumbha Mela was being held. In hindsight, there appears little doubt that the calendar of events was planned in advance by the dramatis personae on both sides and they merely went through preordained motions at formal meetings.