Indian Violence
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by Sarath Kumara -- Source: www.InformationTimes.com
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A Travesty of Justice
(WSWS.org) -- The protracted legal proceedings over the anti-Muslim
pogroms in the Indian state of Gujarat in March last year have exposed
just how deeply the entire official establishment is mired in Hindu
chauvinism.
The violence erupted throughout the state after a clash in February 2002
involving a train carrying supporters of the Hindu extremist group--the
World Hindu Council (VHP)--left 58 people dead.
The VHP, Bajrang Dal and other chauvinist groups immediately blamed
Muslims and, with the tacit support of the Bharathiya Janatha Party
(BJP) state government, launched an orchestrated rampage against Muslim
families, their homes and businesses. About 2,500 men, women and
children, mainly Muslim, were killed and many more were injured, raped
or left homeless.
The violence was part of a wider agenda. Looking for a means of
reversing a string of electoral losses, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra
Modi and sections of the BJP leadership seized on the riots as the means
for intensifying communal tensions. The BJP won the state elections last
December by appealing directly to Hindu chauvinism in what was a highly
charged communal atmosphere.
Eighteen months after the riots, no one has been convicted over the
anti-Muslim violence despite compelling evidence against individual
thugs. One high profile case involved the murder of 14 people--11
Muslims and three Hindus--who were burnt alive when a mob set fire to
the Best Bakery in Vadodara. The proceedings were given "fast track"
status to enable a speedy decision.
The case was based on the statements of a number of witnesses who had
seen what had happened and identified the culprits. The main
witness--Zahira Habibullah Seikh, the daughter of the bakery
owner--described in detail how the thugs burnt the building down,
killing her father.
But in the course of the hearings, Zahira and 41 of the 73 other
witnesses abruptly retracted their statements. Without bothering to
question why, the trial judge, H.U. Mahida, immediately dismissed the
charges on June 27 declaring there was not an "iota of reliable
evidence" against the suspects. He went on to accuse the witnesses of
fabricating the evidence against the accused.
The judge's 24-page verdict included comments on the Parsi religious
group in India which he described as a model minority that advanced
society "without creating hurdles to any caste or community." The
implication was that Muslims were not a model community and got what
they deserved.
Soon after, it became clear why the statements had been retracted.
Zahira Sheikh and her mother told the media they had withdrawn their
statements after intimidation and death threats. At a press conference
on July 7 in Bombay, Zahira said she "lied in court" as a result of
pressure. She accused BJP MP Madhu Shrivastav and his cousin Congress
politician Chandrakant "Bhattu" Shrivastav of threatening her and other
witnesses.
In an interview with the Frontline magazine, she explained that "Bhattu"
Shrivastav had approached her saying that the police and her own
government lawyer were against her. "Decide now. Do you want to save
your family's lives or do you want these people to be punished? Even now
you have time to think," he told her.
Zahira said that other witnesses feared for their lives. She described
the atmosphere in the court as hostile, pointing out that a number of
Bajrang Dal members connected to the killings had been present. Among
them was Hanuman Tekri, who she identified as one of the thugs involved
in burning down her family's bakery. Zahira has filed a petition in the
Supreme Court calling for the case to be heard outside Gujarat.
After Zahira's revelations, other witnesses declared that they had also
been intimidated. Shehzaak Khan explained that she had been too scared
to speak in court but would now say what she had "seen and name all the
accused."
International human rights organisations have condemned the acquittal in
the Best Bakery case. Demanding a retrial, Amnesty International said
that the decision "confirmed its worst fears about the lack of
government commitment to ensure justice to victims of the communal
violence in Gujarat". The US-based Human Rights Watch accused the state
government of "sabotaging investigations."
Chauvinist Bias
The Best Bakery case is not an isolated incident. Explaining the
situation in rural areas, Navaz Kotval from the Commonwealth Human
Rights Initiative told Frontline: "Prosecutors are playing the role of
the defence. They make sure the case falls through. One fell asleep
during the second half of a trial. There is no decorum in the court.
People jeer while witnesses relate incidents of rape or murder. The
accused keep shouting that they will be freed."
There are many cases of chauvinist bias among police and prosecutors.
Initially police refused to take down witness statements then, when they
did, the names of the accused were left out. Police have already closed
half of the initial 4,252 cases, citing lack of evidence. Several cases
have been closed without any investigation at all.
The lawyers and prosecutors are often hostile to the victims. Yusufbhai,
whose 11 family members were all killed by Hindu extremist mobs,
explained to NDTV: "I am an illiterate man...The lawyer is supposed to
guide me. But he has not spoken to us." He said that the district public
prosecutor, Dilip Trivedi, was a VHP district leader.
Following international criticism of the Best Bakery case, the
government's National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) filed a petition in
the Indian Supreme Court calling for a retrial outside Gujarat. In its
statement, the NHRC declared that "the verdict in the Best Bakery case
is a testimony to the failure of the criminal justice system on many
counts" and ruled out any possibility of a fair trial in Gujarat.
The Gujarat government has moved to block the appeal, however. On August
8, the same day that the NHRC petition was due to be heard, the state
government filed its own case in the Gujarat high court "against" the
Best Bakery verdict. The move was designed to preempt the Supreme Court
case and keep control of legal proceedings within the state.
The BJP state president Rajendrasinh Rana accused the NHRC of damaging
Gujarat's reputation and being "a muted spectator" when it came to human
rights abuses in other states. The BJP in Gujarat also called a
demonstration on August 8 to protest against the NHRC appeal.
During its petition, the NHRC lawyer argued that the state government
appeal was a diversion designed to cover up its actions. But the Supreme
Court judges baldly declared: "We cannot undermine our judicial system
and high court in Gujarat". Their seven-page ruling delayed any decision
on the NHRC request until after the state government appeal has been
heard.
The BJP-led government in New Delhi has largely kept silent on the legal
proceedings in Gujarat. While occasionally condemning the Gujarat
violence to appease international opinion, Prime Minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee and Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani have made clear their
support for the state's chief minister Modi. Their stance is the surest
sign that the BJP plans to run similar chauvinist campaigns in four
upcoming state elections and next year's general election.
While the opposition Congress Party has criticised the outcome of the
Gujarat trials, it is just as heavily implicated in fanning Hindu
chauvinism. The fact that Congress politician Chandrakant Shrivastav
helped his BJP-aligned cousin intimidate witnesses in the Best Bakery
case is symptomatic. During the Gujarat state elections last year, the
Indian media branded the Congress campaign as "soft Hindu chauvinism" as
it was not fundamentally different to that of the BJP.
The legal cases on Gujarat violence reveal the degree to which the
entire Indian political establishment and the state apparatus have
abandoned any pretence of defending basic democratic rights and opposing
communal politics.
See some pictures of Indian Violence and Terrorism.