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India: Five years after 2002 Gujarat pogrom
While the victims languish, the perpetrators go unpunished
By K. Nesan and Kranti Kumara
10 April 2007
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Despite the passage of more than five years since the February-March
2002 anti-Muslim pogrom in the Indian state of Gujarat, not a
single one of the principal perpetrators of this horrific crime
has been punished. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Muslims who
were driven from their towns and villages by roving bands of Hindu
supremacist thugs still languish in relief camps without electricity
or running water.
There is much evidence to show that leading figures in the
Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) (which headed Indias
Union and Gujarat governments in 2002) and its Hindu-chauvinist
alliesthe Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS, literally National
Volunteers Association), Bajrang Dal (Hindu youth organization)
and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World Hindu Council)fomented
and organized the carnage in Gujarat, which resulted in the slaughter
of more than two thousand Muslims and left tens of thousands of
others homeless and jobless. (see India:
further evidence Hindu-supremacist BJP culpable in Gujarat pogrom)
One of the chief abettors of the massacre was Narendra Modi,
then as now Gujarats chief minister. Notwithstanding his
role in inciting the violence and ensuring that security forces
took no effective action to protect Gujarats Muslims, Modi
not only continues to head Gujarats government and to serve
as one of the principal leaders of the BJP at the national-level.
In 2005 he was honoured for leading the best-governed
state in India by the Congress Party-connected Rajiv Gandhi Foundation.
A think-tank created to honour former Congress Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi, the Rajiv Gandhi Foundations trustees include
the current Congress Party president, Sonia Gandhi, Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh and Finance Minister Chidambaram.
The Congress Party portrays itself as a bulwark of secularism
and an implacable opponent of Hindu chauvinism. Yet despite heading
Indias United Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition government
for the past three years, it has not seen fit to use the resources
of the state to mount a serious investigation into the Gujarat
pogrom so as to lay bare the role played by the Hindu supremacist
right and various security forces and punish the guilty.
The Gujarat pogrom occurred in an atmosphere of anti-Pakistan
(and by implication anti-Muslim) hysteria whipped-up the BJP-led
Union government following a reputed terrorist attack on Indias
parliament in December 2001. Accusing Pakistan of complicity in
the terrorist attack, the BJP-dominated National Democratic Alliance
government placed the country on a war footing and deployed hundreds
of thousands of troops to Gujarat and the other Indian states
that border Pakistan.
While the perpetrators of the Gujarat program remain at liberty,
209 peopleMuslims, Dalits (i.e., ex-untouchables), and tribalswho
were first arrested in 2002 under the Prevention of Terrorism
Act (POTAa BJP law formally repealed by the UPA in 2004)
remain in detention. (see Repeal
of Indias draconian anti-terrorism law: Largely a cosmetic
change)
The 209 are among hundreds of people from various religious
and ethnic minorities whom the Gujarat authorities seized under
the draconian, dragnet provisions of POTA for their alleged complicity
in the February 27, 2002 train fire at Godhra, the incident that
served as the pretext for the unleashing of mass anti-Muslim violence.
Some 60 Hindu chauvinist activists perished in the Godhra train
fire. Gujarats BJP government and the police claimed that
the Hindu activists had come under attack because of their Hindu
supremacist views. Subsequent investigation has punctured numerous
holes in the governments and polices version of events;
the train fire was likely an accident.
But the BJP government then as now is not the least interested
in uncovering the truth of what happened at Godhra. With Chief
Minister Modi in the lead, the Gujarat authorities fomented anti-Muslim
hysteria, proclaiming that Gujarats Muslims
were collectively responsible for the deaths of Hindus
at Godhra.
And Indias then prime minister, Atal Vajpayee, whom the
corporate media has extolled as a BJP elder statesman and voice
of moderation, rushed to excuse the subsequent bloodletting in
Gujarat with the quip, What happened after the Godhra incident
is deplorable, but the issue is, who started it?
The continuing persecution of Gujarats
Muslim minority
Five years on, Gujarats Muslims continue to live in fear
and misery.
The state government has made a show of refusing to accept
relief money from the central government, even as tens of thousands
of Muslims have been condemned to live in squalor in relief camps.
Those Muslims who have returned to their hometowns and villages
in the years since the pogrom have frequently been forced to make
concessions to their Hindu chauvinist tormentors and
must live under the constant threat of renewed Hindu supremacist
violence.
Many Muslims were only able to return to their home villages
after agreeing to drop criminal cases filed against
Hindus, i.e., against those who had killed their family
members and/or set fire to their dwellings and shops.
In many Gujarat villages, the local mosque has had to cease
making calls to prayer and Muslims now must celebrate their religious
festivals behind closed doors.
In some villages, Muslims, under the threat of violence, have
also been compelled to stop openly selling meat.
Gagan Sethi, a member of a monitoring committee of the National
Human Rights Commission (NHRC), told the Hindustan Times,
There is a grudging acceptance that Muslims have to keep
their heads down and keep a low profile.
The BJP state government has provided only a pittance in aid
to the victims of the 2002 pogrom and has refused on the flimsiest
of pretexts to provide money to restore damaged or razed mosques
and Muslim-owned businesses.
According to Preeta Jha, of the volunteer group Nyayagraha,
There are severe lifestyle changes and (Gujarat Mulsims)
livelihood has been affected. Their economic spine has been broken.
To commemorate the fifth anniversary of the anti-Muslim violence
and demand that the guilty be punished, more than 6,000 angry
survivors demonstrated last month in Ahmedabad, the capital of
Gujarat.
The Best Bakery Case
The Best Bakery Case has come to symbolize how
Gujarats Muslims have been denied justice and often further
victimized by Indias legal system.
On March 1, 2002 a huge mob surrounded and set fire to Best
Bakery, a Muslim, family-owned, bakery. Fourteen people, 11 Muslims
and 3 Hindus, perished in the fire.
Twenty-one people were subsequently arrested and charged with
various crimes relating to the Best Bakery arson deaths. However,
in July 2003 all the accused were released, with the court citing
lack of evidence after the principal prosecution witnessZaheera
Sheikh, the 19-year-old daughter of the bakerys ownerretracted
her initial statement to the police.
Zaheera Sheikh later revealed that she had recanted after she
and the surviving members of her family had been threatened with
reprisals by a BJP state-legislator.
The case was subsequently reopened and a trial ordered out
of state in Mumbai (Bombay). During this second trial Zaheera
Sheikh again gave contradictory testimony.
Rather than showing any sympathy towards this confused, distraught
and terrified young woman, Indias Supreme Court proclaimed
itself duty bound to show zero tolerance to perjury. Zaheera Sheikh
was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to a year in prison
and a mammoth fine. Only recently was she released from jail after
serving her full sentence.
Meanwhile, the BJP state legislator who threatened her and
her family has escaped any legal sanction.
The Congress Party-led UPA declares that it is helpless to
intervene in Gujarat to aid the pogroms victims in obtaining
justice since law and order is a state responsibility.
This argument is made despite the fact that successive Indian
governments have deployed hundreds of thousands of troops in Kashmir
and Indias northeast in the name of upholding law
and order.
There are ample provisions in the Indian constitution allowing
the central government to directly intervene in a state, including
the power to dismiss a state government and impose central government
rule, should the state government fail to uphold the constitution.
Congress-led governments, including the current UPA regime, have
frequently made use of the presidents rule provisions
of the Indian constitution for brazen partisan political reasons,
but the UPA government has no intention of sacking Gujarats
blood-soaked BJP regime.
Rebutting the UPAs helplessness argument,
a recent commentary in the Times of India noted, [Article]
355 of the Constitution authorizes, indeed requires
the central government to intervene in situations of grave
internal strife (emphasis added).
Of Gujarat, the commentary further observed, There is
perhaps no instance since Independence of such open and sustained
denial to a segment of citizensof elementary rights of security,
livelihood, shelter and legal justiceonly on the grounds
of its adherence to a minority faith.
The Congress Partys reluctance to act against the BJP
and its allied Hindutva organizations is not surprising
given the Congresss own role in fomenting an anti-Sikh pogrom
following the 1984 assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
and Congresss long history of conniving with the Hindu supremacist
right, including in the violent upheavals that accompanied the
1947 communal partition of India.
In spite of this sordid record, the Stalinist Communist Party
of India (Marxist) or CPM, continues to peddle the fiction that
the Congress Party and UPA can be pressured into bringing justice
to Gujarats Muslim victims.
In an editorial in the March 14 issue of its English-weekly
Peoples Democracy, the CPM writes, [It] is
high time that the UPA government at the centre pulls up its socks
and ensures that justice is finally delivered to the victims [of
the Gujarat pogrom] and the perpetrators of the crime are punished.
This is absolutely essential to restore the confidence of the
people in our justice delivery system and regain the confidence
in Indias secular democracy. This is all the more necessary
at a time when the communal forces are sharpening their weapons
to once again plunge the country into communal strife to advance
their electoral fortunes. The UPAs raison dete [sic]
is the safeguarding and strengthening of Indias secular
democratic foundations. If this task is not seriously undertaken,
then the UPA would be reduced to a coalition with no character
(emphasis added).
In other words, the CPM and the CPM-led Left Front will ritualistically
condemn the UPA for its complicity in the continuing persecution
of Gujarats Muslims, but will continue to provide the UPA
with the parliamentary votes it needs to remain in office, all
the while fobbing off on the masses the claim that the UPA is
the only credible means of blocking the BJPs return to power.
There are several reasons that the Congress Party cannot and
will not act against the BJP. The sympathies of significant elements
within the Congress, especially in Gujarat, lie not with the Muslim
victims of the 2002 pogrom but rather with its instigators. In
the December 2002 Gujarat elections the Congress mounted a campaign
that even sections of the press derided as Hindutva-lite.
The Indian bourgeoisies second party, the BJP, has played
a pivotal role in implementing the neo-liberal socioeconomic reform
program pioneered by the Congress government of 1991-96 and continued
by the current UPA coalition. The Congress relies on the BJPs
support in pressing forward with the bourgeoisies reform
agenda in the face of widespread popular opposition, even while
using it, with the help of the Stalinists, as a right-wing foil,
as a means to intimidate the working class and toilers into rallying
round the Congress-led UPA as the lesser evil.
Third, the failure to indict and convict any of the principal
perpetrators of the Gujarat pogrom has underscored that wide layers
of the police and judiciary are sympathetic to the noxious Hindu
supremacist doctrines spouted by the BJP and the RSS. The UPA
government fears that were it to mount a serious inquiry into
the Gujarat pogrom and its cover-up, it would come under attack
from elements within the state and, even more importantly, that
such an inquiry could destabilize the state institutions that
underpin bourgeois rule by shedding light on the extent to which
they have been overrun by fascistic elements.
Last but not least, were the Congress leadership to dig into
the BJPs role in fomenting the Gujarat pogrom or the 1992
razing of the Babri Masjid mosque in Ayodhya, there is no doubt
the BJP would retaliate by clamouring for an inquiry into the
Congress Partys own culpability in the 1984 anti-Sikh massacre.
In other words, the two principal parties in the worlds
most populous democracy have a secret understanding to bury
each others foul communal crimes.
See Also:
Government report
concedes Indias Muslims are a socially deprived, victimised
minority
[30 December 2006]
India: Stop the state
murder of Mohammed Afzal
[14 November 2006]
India: Gujarat Congress
party lines up with BJPs campaign against actor Aamir Khan
[1 July 2006]
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