PTI

Christians protest against attacks on their community in Orissa












BIASED INDIAN STATE

Few Blind Men Of Hindostan 

Why is the Indian State quick to nail minority offences but myopic to Sangh 
transgressions?  





Saba Naqvi











 








"We didn’t expect UPA to be so uncaring about our plight in Karnataka and 
Orissa. They don’t care because Christians do not make a votebank." 
-Fr Dominic Emmanuel, Spokesman, Delhi Catholic Church 
"The situation today is more lethal for Muslims because an individual can 
become a national hero by showing bias against them." 
-Shahid Siddiqui, Editor, Nayi Duniya 
"This talk of mastermind is nonsense. No mastermind is involved in planting 
bombs. A mastermind certainly isn’t a boy on a computer." 
Ajit Doval, Former IB chief 
"Some would be satisfied if there is a law offering complete immunity to a 
person who shot another on mere suspicion of being a terrorist."  
-K.G. Kannabiran, Andhra Civil Rights Activist 
"Those who took part in the ’92 riots may be respectable citizens today. 
Terrorists are committed to undermine the state’s sovereignty."  
-Swapan Dasgupta, BJP ideologue 
"State performance relates to all levels of governance, not just minorities. If 
the cops are ham-handed, it’s to cover their own incompetence."  
-Gurcharan Das, Author 
***Instruments Of Bias 
POTA 

Defunct terror law used in Gujarat to target Muslims for Godhra. Hindus 
involved spared 
3,000 arrests nationwide since the law’s enforcement. Most detentions in 
Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand; also in TN against LTTE sympathisersArmed Forces 
Special Powers Act 

Applies to declared ‘disturbed’ areas like J&K and Manipur; offers immunity to 
army officers from prosecution 
Five Rashtriya Rifles officers still not prosecuted for killing five in a March 
2000 fake encounter in J&K 
Assam Rifles jawans accused of raping Manorama Devi in Manipur 
unpunishedOfficial Secrets Act 

Allows state to persecute those seen as a "national threat" 
Widely misused to fix whistleblowers, dissenters 
Administrative Reforms Commission called for its immediate repealTarget Maoists 

Most above laws and state-specific security acts have been used to target 
Naxals, their ‘sympathisers’ and rights activists like Dr Binayak Sen 
***






Cross Christians: Protesting the attack on this Bangalore church
In the age of terror and hate campaigns, the Indian state looks so much less 
than it was intended to be. Human beings are full of prejudice; the state 
should be seen to be above bias. In India the majority of citizens have for 
years seen the state as the epitome of inefficiency and corruption. But more 
damningly, the poor and the marginalised see it as an active instrument of 
injustice. And now, Muslims and Christians increasingly agree. 
Consider some basic facts that have been part of the public discourse in the 
last few weeks. Muslim youth are picked up at random and identified as 
terrorists, with the police in several metros claiming they have "the 
mastermind". Their identities and sketches are released to the media. 
Christians continue to be attacked in the Indian hinterland but no serious 
attempt has been made to stop the hate crimes or ban the organisations engaged 
in assaults on the minority. A dangerous imbalance is at play. An incoherent 
and asymmetrical response that can only further undermine the ideals India was 
built on. 
Today, most Christians and Muslims believe the state is biased against them.




Says Father Dominic Emmanuel, spokesperson of the Delhi Catholic Church, "We 
did not expect the UPA at the Centre to be so ineffective and uncaring about 
our plight in Orissa and Karnataka. But they are callous and don’t care because 
Christians do not make a votebank. They don’t want to alienate Hindus and that 
must be why they are not coming down hard on the Bajrang Dal and other Sangh 
parivar outfits. We are helpless as we continue to be attacked in a country 
where liberty and freedom were promised to all." 

We see you: Police keep strict vigil on Muslim protesters in Delhi 
What about Muslims—a votebank pursued hotly by most political parties? In an 
instance of black humour emerging out of the community, one sms reads: "The 
politicians are after our vote, the police in hot pursuit of us." Says Shahid 
Siddiqui, editor of Urdu weekly Nayi Duniya and BSP member: "Muslims aren’t the 
only people the state is biased against.














"Politicians are after our vote, police in our hot pursuit" — SMS circulating 
among Muslims.












Many underprivileged communities and the poor have faced prejudice from society 
and the state. But the situation today is more lethal for Muslims because an 
individual can become a national hero by showing bias against them." So, if 
Narendra Modi can become an iconic 





political figure, why should an ordinary policeman care if innocent Muslims are 
arrested in the hunt for terrorists? 
There is, however, a larger problem in the manner in which investigations into 
terror strikes are being conducted. Former IB chief Ajit Doval is considered a 
hawk on matters of national security but he tells Outlook: "The talk of getting 
a mastermind is nonsense—no mastermind is ever involved in planting bombs as 
the police tell us. If there is a mastermind, it is certainly not a boy with 
details on his computer." Does Doval therefore believe the state is biased? "In 
certain situations, government agencies behave in a way that leads certain 
communities and individuals to conclude that the response is biased." He 
explains the process: when security agencies are under political and media 
pressure to deliver results for public consumption, they do not count the 
collateral damage.







"A policeman will be told nothing should happen in your area and get the 
terrorists quickly," says Doval. 
The sequence of events could go like this: the police team starts watching 
Muslim hubs like madrassas and urban ghettoes in their neighbourhood. 












In Karnataka, Bajrang Dal convenor got bail while Christians were charged under 
non-bailable sections












Some young men are picked up on suspicion. If they do indeed have other 
"suspicious" material on their person, in their homes or on their computers, 
they are possibly arrested as terrorists. In the case of the Delhi accused, the 
police procured head-scarves associated with Palestinian guerrillas, swathed 
three young men in them and produced them before the media as terrorists. The 
Christian community too is facing prejudice in a somewhat different form. 
 
In Karnataka, for instance, Christians protesting the violence against them 
have been charged under non-bailable sections of the law. But the charges 
against Bajrang Dal state convenor Mahendra Kumar were so weak that he secured 
bail in a few days. Nor did the BJP government in Karnataka express any remorse 
about the attacks on Christians in the state. 
For right-wing ideologue and journalist Swapan Dasgupta equating the Bajrang 
Dal with SIMI is like comparing a water pistol to an AK-47. "Rioters," he says, 
"cannot be equated with terrorists. An individual who took part in the Bombay 
riots of 1992 may be a respectable citizen today while a terrorist is committed 
to undermining the sovereignty of the state." Dasgupta also counters the 
argument about the state being prejudiced against particular communities or 
social groups.



"The Indian state is not a neutral state. It has multiple levels of biases. It 
is also not a very efficient state and is a source of harassment for all 
citizens regardless of caste and creed." 
A lucid argument perhaps. But facts suggest a systematic bias against specific 
social groups at different times because of a perceived threat by those who 
constitute the state. Noted Andhra Pradesh civil rights activist and PUCL 
president K.G. Kannabiran says that before the serial blasts across the 
country, the poor were targeted in the state because of Naxalism. Now it’s the 
turn of Muslims to feel this heat not just in AP but across India.














"You can bring in any law," says ex-CJI J.S. Verma, "but it’s as good as the 
people who implement it."












He also says that the political clamour for stronger laws is just eyewash. "If 
POTA is removed, state governments bring in other laws that are equally 
draconian. But there is a section in our society that would only be satisfied 
if a law existed that allowed complete immunity 





to someone who shot someone on mere suspicion of supporting terrorism!" 

 
In the absence of any real political courage or coherent policy to tackle 
terrorism, there is competitive sloganeering about stronger laws. Serial blasts 
have, after all, struck India in the global context of the war against terror 
and the domestic backdrop of a general election. Given the way our democracy 
has evolved, it is the stuff of emotive politics, not sensible policy. Former 
Chief Justice of India, J.S. Verma, says that all this talk of new laws is 
rubbish as those who understand the legal system know it is adequate to tackle 
the problem. "You can bring in any system or law," he says, "but it is as good 
as the people in the system who will implement it." 
The first President of India, Dr Rajendra Prasad, had once said that the "worth 
of the Constitution will depend on the worth of the men who work it". Justice 
Verma says the state is not biased, it is rotting from within. "The original 
sin is the pursuit of personal interest by public men. That is today the only 
ideology followed by those who serve the Indian State. After themselves, they 
serve their kith and kin. Then the caste and community." That, according to the 
former CJI, is how biases work in the state. Not because there is a great 
national conspiracy. Verma points to the fact that the last bastions of public 
accountability—the judiciary and media—are also getting corrupted or swayed in 
what passed for public hype. He says: "Dr C. Rajagopalachari had once said that 
national character is determined by the sum of individual character. There are 
many people of conviction in India but they don’t get a chance as the system is 
rotting from within.
 If you have a billion rotten apples you will have a stink." 
Is the state biased by intent? Or callous by default? Management guru and 
columnist Gurcharan Das believes the Indian state is just incompetent and 
incapable of delivering on most fronts. Combine that with political 
interference and we have a recipe for disaster. "We know there is great 
institutional rot in the bureaucracy, judiciary and other institutions of the 
state. The issue of state performance is related to all levels of governance, 
not just minorities. If the police do a ham-handed investigation that terrifies 
minorities, it is to cover their own incompetence," he says. He does not 
believe there is a grand conspiracy against minorities or the poor. 
To define a state as unwieldy as ours would be almost impossible. Social 
activists would argue that the state is an instrument of oppression used 
systematically against minorities and the poor. The right wing would say India 
is a soft state that simply cannot come down hard on terrorists and 
"anti-national forces".The truth probably lies somewhere in between. India is 
at many levels an incompetent state that can be manipulated to target certain 
communities. It is a state run by men who can be overcome by their own 
prejudices and never be held accountable for such lapses. It is a state that 
some would argue is biased against all citizens because it delivers nothing to 
anyone. It is a state where an attempt is made to cover incompetence with more 
incompetence. It is a state that criminally neglects its duties. Or acts in an 
overzealous manner that convinces many citizens that the state is indeed the 
enemy.
 
http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20081006&fname=Cover+Story&sid=1&pn=3


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