People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 19 May 09, 2004 |
Best
Bakery Case: Faith Redeemed
Teesta
Setalvad
THERE are rare moments when the system rises to the occasion and meets the hopes
and aspirations of the bruised and the downtrodden. April 12, 2004 was one of
them. In the two years since democratic India’s worst examples of state
terrorism when 19 of Gujarat’s 25 districts allowed violence of the most base
kind to get unleashed on innocent girls, women, men and boys, the Supreme Court
of India delivered a verdict that vindicated all that had been said about the
happenings in that state.
The judgement by Justice Doraiswamy Raju and Arijit Pasiath in the famous Best
Bakery case is a victory not simply for the brave witnesses who underwent the
process of attaining justice against all odds but is a significant and historic
verdict for human rights defenders and on the whole issue of impunity for mass
crimes.
It has been argued by us for many decades, led or supported by others, that the
nature of community-driven division and hatred [for this is what communalism is
all about] when it translates into rape and killing is tinged with irrationality
and brutality of a kind that requires interventions at all levels to be made
from a position of neutrality. At the specific point of time, and the months
that precede and follow it, civic atmosphere gets tainted by this unreason and
bias which is rooted in manipulated facts and hatred. Violence and terror become
the easy and accepted weapons and means.
At
such times, few wings of the system remain immune and wedded to time-tested
norms of constitutional equity and non-discrimination. For the first time
through the historic Best Bakery judgement there is a judicial vindication for
and of this argument. By making the historic transfer of this trial outside
Gujarat to Maharashtra, the highest court has deliberated upon and accepted the
arguments being made over the decades – that were amplified a thousand times
in the case of the Gujarat genocide – that such incidents need for the system
to operationalise areas and mechanisms of neutrality to avoid subversion of the
process of both fair investigation and justice, in short, due process of law.
MAKING
OF
The unfortunate instances of communal violence that have, over the past decade
and a half taken the distinct character of pogroms against religious minorities,
both Muslim and Christian, reveal distinct patterns and similarities. These were
evident in full-blown measure in the Gujarat genocide.
The first is the months of insidious preparation by outfits committed to the
politics of hatred and division who initially used hate speech and hate writing
to vilify and demonise a particular section, here a religious minority and
create a local climate that consents to violent crime against the demonised
section. This technique which has been well-honed and also proven by over two
dozen commissions of inquiry after every bout of communal violence has after the
Gujarat genocide been given even more vicious dimensions. Documented cases of
such a bias guiding or rather affecting the conduct of the police are now
legion. Justice being delivered are rare and few.
Preparations
for communal carnages now are not restricted to hate pamphlets and speeches
though these form a vital ingredient to cooking up such a hate-filled
atmosphere. Now, as I personally experienced and witnessed in Gujarat (see
Combat March-April 2002) preparations are taking the form of full-fledged
training camps of young men and women where violence is sold as the sole means
to self-empowerment and weapons are openly distributed, unchallenged by wings of
the state and the law and order machinery. The potent drug that informs these
camps is hate anecdotes against communities wherein history is interwoven with
current day politics and the demonisation legitimised.
PUSHING THE SYSTEM
The
system on its own does not intervene to deliver justice, condemn discrimination
and slaughter, it has to be pushed to do so. It has been rare that our system
has delivered in the case of communal carnage and crime. The pogrom against
Sikhs in 1984 in the capital or the post-demolition pogrom of Muslims in Mumbai
have escaped judicial condemnation and correction and therein lies a tale. If
the victims of earlier bouts of communal violence or pogroms did not have the
satisfaction of a resounding judicial verdict in their favour, it speaks about
the role of the police and the State and the existing legal and justice system.
Our Constitution remains on paper. Rarely do our courts initiate suo moto action
on issues of mass homicide and rights atrocities.
Within weeks of the carnage, or genocide as some of us squarely put it, citizens
at different levels had petitioned the highest court in the land praying for
it’s judicial interpretation of an utter constitutional breakdown in that
state. Unfortunately then the courts had preferred to wait, possibly to see if
correction came from the executive and legislative arms of the state.
Within six months of the carnages across several districts, two of Gujarat’s
lower courts in the Panchmahals district had acquitted all accused of the
slaughter of 70 human beings in the village of Pandharwada and other accused for
burning alive 62 Muslims trying to escape in two tempos at Limbaidiya Chowkey in
Sabarkantha district. The state of Gujarat did not file any appeals against the
acquittals. The Citizens for Justice and Peace (CJP) has intervened in both
massacres.
It was only after the country experienced the sensation of Zahira Shaikh’s
testimony in a press conference organised by CJP, Mumbai, that the whole import
of the situation in Gujarat became real and addressed by the courts.
What became transparent before the Supreme Court was not simply that a huge
human tragedy had befallen Gujarat in 200[1] but the tragedy was compounded by a non-remorseful
administration and executive that two years later was without guilt or remorse.
All police officers who had functioned without fear or favour, and they were
many, are today sidelined in Gujarat.
The role of the public prosecutor has been truly subverted by the State with
persons owing distinct allegiance to the outfits who perpetrated the hatred and
violence against the minorities being asked to appear for the victims! The
struggle for justice meant meticulously documenting this before the courts so
that any claim that we made was backed by irrefutable facts.
The issue of investigation in communal case trials being deliberately subverted
by the police so that the names of the influential and powerful [politicians of
the ruling party, in Gujarat the BJP, VHP and Bajrand Dal] are not recorded in
FIRs, the chargesheets and all documents are unsubstantiated and repeated pleas
by witnesses under section 173[8] of the CRPC for re-investigation are ignored.
These crucial issues have been addressed by the honourable judges in this
historic judgement that in its 70 pages charts path-breaking territory for a
revived Indian judicial system.
FILLIP
TO
Another critical aspect, where we come in, both individually and as Citizens for
Justice and Peace, was how the apex court has dealt with the issue of rights’
activists and groups intervening actively to be with the victims and see their
fight through. The Gujarat High Court had seen fit to pass scathing remarks
against us and even on this the SC has made judicial precedent. By not simply
expunging the remarks but doing so actively with stern observations on baseless
observations by the HC, the judgement lends credibility and strength to the
whole human rights fraternity in the future.
“The Highest court appears to have miserably failed to maintain the required
judicial balance and sobriety in making unwarranted references to personalities
and their legitimate moves before the competent courts – the highest court of
the nation, despite knowing fully well that it could not deal with such aspects
or matters. Irresponsible allegations, suggestions and challenges may be made by
parties…But such besmirching acts, meant as innuendoes or serve as surrogacy
ought not to be made or allowed to be made, to become part of solemn judgements,
of at any rate by High Courts, which are created as court of record as well.
Decency, decorum and judicial discipline should never be made casualties by
adopting such intemperate attitudes of judicial obstinacy.”
Through
the agony of the past two years, the role of the National Human Rights
Commission (NHRC) in the Gujarat carnage must be appreciated. Both at the time
of the carnage under Justice J S Verma and thereafter after the Best Bakery
acquittal under the stewardship of Justice A S Anand this statutory body has
done India proud. Today, the Supreme Court of India through its judicial verdict
of April 12, 2004 has done India and Indian democracy proud.
Even
as we revel in this first flush of victory, reports from Orissa (CC March 2004)
and Rajasthan (CC March 2004) and Madhya Pradesh too are deeply frightening. The
hate-driven polarisations within village, kasbah and big town society are being
systematically engineered by architects of the Gujarat genocide through achingly
similar preparations for violence. Apart from savouring this success we need to
ponder what needs to be done there and here and everywhere else not simply to
intervene for justice but for the prevention of blood into the streets.
(Courtesy:
Communalism Combat; April 2004 issue)