People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 43 October 28, 2012 |
DUJ
Welcomes Mohd
Kazmi’s Release THE Delhi
Union of Journalists (DUJ) had welcomed the
Supreme Court’s act of granting bail to
journalist Syed Mohammad Ahmad Kazmi,
after he spent seven months in prison. Kazmi, a
50 years old scribe who was
working for an Iranian news agency in Kazmi was
arrested on March 6 by the Special Cell of
Delhi Police on the charge of helping Iranian
agents to conduct a
reconnaissance of the area around the Israeli
embassy in his car. A
motorcyclist, allegedly an Iranian, had planted
a bomb in a car of the Israeli
embassy on February 13, causing injuries to the
occupants including the wife of
the Israeli defence attache. The police named
four Iranians in the chargesheet
filed belatedly last month. The Iranians, the
police say, fled Soon after
Kazmi came out, DUJ office bearers and
members including its president Sujata Madhok,
general secretary S K Pande,
Javed Naqvi, John Dayal, Seema Mustafa,
Venkatesan, Jal Khambata and Ifthikhar
Gilan visited Kazmi's family and felicitated
him. While hailing the Supreme
Court verdict, they decided to work jointly with
secular groups on common
issues of solidarity with Kazmi. The DUJ has
called for a wide united front to
look into all aspects of the Kazmi case and its
ramifications for journalists in
general. They also called upon the media to
ensure that all sides of the case
are reported in public interest. The DUJ
believes that journalists have to maintain all
sorts of contacts and sources for their stories.
Such connections for
professional purposes should not be misconstrued
as active collusion or
connivance in dubious activities including
crime. The DUJ follows the constitutional
and legal principle that a person must be
treated as innocent until and unless
convicted as guilty. It has also advised its
members, particularly those on the
crime and legal beats, to bear this dictum in
mind while filing their reports
and stories. They should be wary of the stories
planted by the police or by
vested interests. Sensationalism is an easy trap
to fall into, but we must
remember that we are dealing with the lives and
reputations of people. Kazmi's
son, Shauzab, has been saying from day one
that his father is innocent, and now the Supreme
Court has upheld that belief
by granting bail. "I believe in the judicial
system….. And I am thankful
to all those who stood with us," he said. The Jamia
Teachers Solidarity Group also visited the
Kazmi family. The Kazmi
Solidarity Committee that has been agitating
in the capital as also in towns of Uttar Pradesh
welcomed the relief from the
Supreme Court. In a statement, it accused the
Special Cell of orchestrating a
media trial to establish his guilt by planting
malicious stories of his
"confession" of the crime. Among the stories
published was the charge
of receiving foreign remittances of Rs 21 lakh
but the chargesheet only shows
recovery of 1250 dollars (about Rs 70,000) as
alleged payment to Kazmi for
supplying information to the attackers.