South Asia Citizens Wire -  Dispatch No. 2700 - January 18-19, 2011
From: sacw.net

[1] Taking Back Pakistan  (Beena Sarwar)
    - The “epicentre” of terrorism (Ayesha Siddiqa)
[2]  Bad scene in Pakistan, India is lucky to have secularism (Dipankar Gupta)
[3] India : Commendable Court order on Citizenship (Soli J Sorabjee)
[4] Tributes:
      (i) Minhaj Barna passes away (Zaib Azkaar Hussain)
      (ii) K G Kannabiran (Pritam Singh)
[5] India: Supreme Court orders security forces to vacate schools, disband 
Salwa Judam and rehabilitate victims (text of Press Release by Petitioners)

---------

[1] Pakistan:

Viewpoint, January 14, issue 33

TAKING BACK PAKISTAN
by Beena Sarwar 

A complaint has also been registered in Karachi against the cleric of a 
Saudi-funded mosque for inciting hatred and making threatening remarks against 
PPP MNA Sherry Rehman

“There are no less than 24 groups as of now supporting Qadri on FB and 1 
against what he did, that says it all.

So went a tweet from a fellow Pakistani early morning on Jan 5, the day after 
the assassination of Salmaan Taseer, the governor of Punjab who took a 
courageous stand against religious extremists in Pakistan.

The facebook pages cropping up don’t quite say it all. Facebook is usually 
quite slow to take action against pages that users consider abusive (unless 
they have to do with Israel). In this case, many of those pages (mostly started 
by young men who like western shows like Sex and the City, support Pervez 
Musharraf and say they follow Islam – any contradictions here?) were taken down 
within 24 hours – which means that enough people reported them as abusive.

When it comes to religion, there is confusion in people’s minds in Pakistan. 
This confusion has been building up over the years, particularly since America, 
Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and their allies took up cudgels against the Communist 
threat in Afghanistan and injected religion into the Afghans’ war of liberation 
against the Soviet invasion. Calling it a ‘jihad’ or a holy war enabled them to 
draw in Muslim fighters from around the world. The late Eqbal Ahmad warned 
against this long before the horrific events of 9/11 and US President Bush’s 
immature response sent the world into a downward spiral of violence, especially 
Pakistan, the frontline state in America’s war first against the Communists and 
then against extremist Islam.

Of course, Pakistan's leadership is equally culpable not only for accepting 
this narrative that has been adopted by most Pakistani regimes – military, 
those propped up by the military, and those dependent on the military for their 
survival. Even before this narrative gained dominance, Pakistani rulers had 
developed their own security paradigm, based on a siege mentality seeing 
themselves encircled by hostile powers. This mentality is evident in the 
long-running anti-India narrative and the myth of ‘strategic depth’ that 
Afghanistan that Pakistan’s security establishment has propagated and clung to.

The questions arising from Taseer’s assassination indicate that some forces in 
Pakistan are continuing along the old trajectory.  The assassin, 26-year old 
Malik Hussain Qadri, was assigned to the elite force guarding the Punjab 
Governor. It now emerges that he had been removed from the Special Branch 
because he was perceived as a security threat – so how did he end up on the 
security detail of a Governor who was already receiving death threats?

According to the post-mortem, he fired 41 bullets at Taseer as the Governor was 
getting into his car. He then threw down his weapon and raised his arms in 
surrender.

Standard operating procedures in VIP guard duty require the other guards to 
immediately open fire even if the assailant is one of them, explains my 
military analyst friend Ejaz Haider. So why did the other guards not follow the 
SOP?

Chillingly, Qadri has revealed that he had told his colleagues what he was 
going to do and asked them not to open fire, as he would surrender. Which means 
that he was confident of getting away with it. 

“Now the judicial process will take over,” predicts Haider. “The 
judge/prosecutors will be threatened, and the murderer will be declared a hero.”

This is of course already happening, as the facebook pages show. Some of them 
have referred to him as a ‘ghazi’ (conqueror) and are justifying and glorifying 
his murderous act – including several religious organisations. In fact, some 
have gone so far as to say that because he was ‘guilty’ of ‘blasphemy’, no 
Muslim should lead or attend his funeral prayers. Most disturbingly, hundreds 
of lawyers, many of whom showered him with rose petals and raised slogans in 
support of him, have come forward to assert that they will argue his case for 
free.

Qadri’s smiling face was flashed on television channels, along with his 
comments that "Salmaan Taseer is a blasphemer and this is the punishment for a 
blasphemer". He is reported to have told interrogators that the Governor had 
called the blasphemy laws ‘black’ and had defended Aasia Noreen, the Christian 
woman sentenced to death for ‘blasphemy’. 

Taseer’s role in highlighting the Aasia Bibi case, as it came to be known, was 
significant although some have criticised his high-profile visit to her jail 
cell and his promise to obtain a presidential pardon for her, which 
circumvented due process. According to due process, the President’s pardon 
would have been sought after the Supreme Court confirmed the death sentence 
following the High Court’s confirmation of it.

The Pakistani state has not executed any blasphemy convicts because so far, the 
High Courts or the Supreme Court have acquitted those accused under this law 
(295-C, imposed by Gen. Ziaul Haq to add to 295-A that existed since British 
times). Yet the mere allegation of ‘blasphemy’ has been enough to incite the 
murder of over 30 people so far. Taseer’s is the most high profile such murder.

Given the current climate, it is unlikely to be the last. For things to 
significantly change, ‘deep state’ will have to change its policies of support 
for ‘jihadis’ and jihadi mind-sets.

But those who have been opposing the blasphemy laws and other injustices 
perpetuated in the name of religion have not given up the fight. Taseer’s 
murder appears to have ignited efforts of ordinary citizens to step up the 
fight to take back Jinnah’s Pakistan.

The recent jumping back of the MQM into the fold gives hope to these efforts, 
particularly since the leadership has indicated its willingness to take up the 
fight. According to members of the Citizens for Democracy (an umbrella group of 
professional organisations, trade unions, NGOs and individuals formed last 
month) who met the MQM leadership in Karachi on Jan 13, Altaf Hussain has 
directed party workers to attend Friday prayers to monitor and report hate 
speech. A complaint has also been registered in Karachi against the cleric of a 
Saudi-funded mosque for inciting hatred and making threatening remarks against 
PPP MNA Sherry Rehman and anyone else who talks of amending the ‘blasphemy 
laws’. Hundreds of citizens have endorsed a request for the Chief Justice to 
take suo moto notice of the cleric who offered a reward to murder Aasia Noreen. 
Others are starting to come forward to make such complaints.

These forces cannot match the street force of the right wing extremists who 
manage to bring out thousands of supporters and shut down cities through 
threats, force and the covert support of secret agencies.

Our battles must be fought through the courts and in Parliament. And that war 
has only just begun.

--

This is an updated and revised version of ‘Salmaan Taseer’s death is liberal 
Pakistan’s loss’ (Jan 10, 2011), published in Tehelka Jan 15, 2011 issue 
-http://www.tehelka.com/story_main48.asp?filename=Ne150111Proscons.asp
        

Beena Sarwar is a film maker and senior journalist based in Karachi          


o o o

The Express Tribune, 15 January 2011

THE “EPICENTRE” OF TERRORISM

by Ayesha Siddiqa

So we don’t like what US Joint Chief of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen said about 
us: that Pakistan has become an “epicentre” of terrorism. Many have disliked 
the statement and consider terrorism as a temporary phenomenon linked with 
American presence in Afghanistan. Once foreign forces leave, things will return 
to normal and we will be a peaceful and liberal society once again.

This particular scenario building does not seem to take cognizance of the rapid 
social changes that Pakistan faces today, mainly due to the prominence of the 
militant and right-wing narrative. The fact is that Mumtaz Qadri’s act is not a 
coincidence nor is the behaviour of the lawyers offering to defend him odd. One 
should also consider the behaviour of the Punjab police as normal — it 
reportedly created security hazards for the Islamabad police as it came to drop 
Qadri in Adiala jail. Apparently, the jail superintendent physically attacked 
the officer who had come to drop off Qadri. The Punjab police has grown 
vehemently anti-US and inclined towards the religious right. The main issue is 
not that they dislike the US, but that they have grown in the fear of militants 
which operate amongst them with impunity. The Punjab government’s secret deal 
with Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, which resulted in the release of the outfit’s leader 
Malik Ishaq, is a case in point. Recently, Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah 
defended Qari Saifullah Akhtar of the Harkatul Jihad al Islami, saying that he 
was not a terrorist. Similarly, the government has completely overlooked the 
rapid expansion of the second big madrassa-cum-ideological conversion facility 
being built by the Jaish-e-Mohammad in Bahawalpur. The fact that it is on the 
main road, connecting Lahore and Karachi, does not impress the provincial 
government either.

Naturally, these are friendly forces, which we claim are not attacking 
Pakistan. However, we have no guarantee that people joining these outfits will 
not become hostile to the state, or that forces will easily give up power once 
foreign forces leave the region. If we consider two possible scenarios around 
the withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan, we may see that peace and 
stability may just not be on the cards for the future. The first scenario is 
that of foreign forces leaving without any major adjustment and replaced by 
regional states with competing interests. This could mean more conflict, not 
less. Another possibility is that foreign forces leave after installing a 
Taliban-dominated government in Kabul which will be friendlier towards 
Pakistan. The question is: in this perfect scenario, will the Pakistani state 
have the intent and the capacity to dismantle the friendly militants?

Given the state’s eroding capacity to deliver to the general public, any form 
of militancy is a rising fad. Moreover, such militancy is likely to find safe 
ideological havens within state institutions. Already, we have a system where 
the police are unable to furnish evidence by which some of the known 
militant-terrorists could be convicted. The judiciary, on the other hand, is 
either too scared or inclined to the right to convict the killers (Mumtaz 
Qadri’s case, in fact, will be a major test of whether the judiciary has enough 
courage to bring the killer to justice, especially when the bulk of the legal 
community seems supportive of Qadri).

Courtesy the war on terror, our ambivalence towards fighting the war, and our 
support to ideologically driven non-state actors, has affected our attitudes 
and encouraged latent-radicalism in the society, across the socio-economic and 
political spectrum. Latent radicalism can be described as the tendency to be 
exclusive instead of inclusive, vis-à-vis other communities on the basis of 
religious beliefs. Such an attitude forces people to develop bias against an 
individual, a community, a sub-group or a nation on the basis of faith. In its 
extreme form, it can take people towards violence as well. Such an attitude is 
akin to European fascism which was internally destructive.

Another possible development is the tighter embrace between religion and 
politics, and the disconnect between ideological and electoral politics 
becoming sharper. Traditional western-liberalism is on its way out, which may 
not be that bad, but admission of facts is necessary for any intelligent 
intervention in the future design of the state and society.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 16th,  2011.

____


[2] : [Why should liberal Indians be mock at neighbour's malhuer, they should 
instead extend solidarity to Pakistanis and help repair the gaping holes in 
India's secular system  ?]


Mail Today

LOOK AT PAKISTAN AND BE HAPPY

by Dipankar Gupta

OUR grief at Salman Taseer’s assassination has a schadenfreude aspect to it. We 
are sad that a brave man died unjustly, but we are happy this happened to our 
neighbour next door. True, Taseer was part of the establishment, but he had a 
change of heart when it came to the blasphemy law.

It takes a lot to leave your barber halfway through a haircut, but he did that, 
and paid for it.

The broad band endorsement of Taseer’s death is clearly more horrifying than 
the act itself. While rejoicing that we are lucky to be born here and not 
there, let us remember that Khap Panchayats in Haryana and UP are against women 
wearing jeans, Ram Sene does not want couples to date in coffee shops, and 
honour killings take lives of young women. We are that close to being like 
Pakistan; but we could have been closer.

Secularism

Secularism, with all its faults, has helped to distance us from Pakistan in 
more ways than we imagine. It is not just that we are secular and Pakistan is 
not, but that we are thinking development and they are not.

Secularism takes our minds off whether our wives and sisters are behaving, or 
whether our gods are being upstaged by other gods.

In place of such ungovernable passions, it positions issues of economic growth 
and development instead.

Pakistan’s near total obsession with identity politics has disabled it on a 
number of fronts. Its theocratic character has kept it from bringing about land 
reforms, curbing the military, setting up institutions of higher learning, and 
establishing steel mills. That we have been able to do all that— from 
engineering units to IT giants— is because secularism gave us the space to 
grow. We had energy in stock to think of poverty removal, economic sovereignty, 
export promotion, and so on.

In politics a kind of zero sum game is at work. Either we exhaust our reserves 
asserting identity politics or get ahead with developmental programmes. The two 
cannot be combined. Is it surprising then that theocratic states are nearly 
always the least developed? Once we open the door to ethnicity, out goes 
progress and economic well being.

Those who snigger at India’s secularism should perhaps take a step back from 
the fence that separates us from Pakistan. Only then will they realise how 
fortunate we actually are. All the forces of primeval passion, let loose by the 
Partition, were baying for a Hindu state mirroring that of Pakistan; blood for 
blood, and so on. Pakistan has not made matters easier either.

Every time it gets too hot and crowded in their kitchen, they open the window 
and throw junk in our backyard. There have been more times than we would like 
to remember when we have given in to ethnic passions.

That we did not go all the way is because secular values are still with us, 
courtesy, the founders of our Constitution.

When the UPA came to power in 2004, we were more relieved than elated. We could 
now switch off the ethnic engines ( they were over heated anyway) and think 
development instead. Today, that promise the UPA held out is without real legs. 
It is not because this government has yielded to Muslim and minority baiters, 
but because it has done little to improve the everyday life of everyday people— 
majority and minorities included. This is why ethnic parties are getting their 
tails up once again. There is no point in condemning Narendra Modi for being 
communal if Congress- run states elsewhere cannot out- perform Gujarat on the 
economic front. Secularism has a double burden: it must not only be good, it 
has to be better than the rest.

Growth

This is a lesson that is often hard to drive home. Secularism is not just about 
minority protection, it is about majority promotion too. Secularism draws our 
attention away from medieval concerns so that we can think about economic 
progress. History is a testament to this. When the western world came out of 
the religious trap, they experienced economic growth like never before. By not 
emphasising this aspect, the promoters of secularism have under served their 
cause.

In the period 1820 till today, the per capita income in Europe and America grew 
anywhere between fifteen fold to twenty fold. Till that time, for centuries, 
nobody knew about anything called growth. It never rang anybody’s door bell. 
John Maynard Keynes made this point emphatically in his 1930 essay, “ Economic 
Possibilities for our Grandchildren.” He argued there that from the beginning 
of the Christian era right up to the 18th century “there was no real change in 
the standard of living of the average man….” Life expectancy till then was 
extremely low; people died of natural causes that are easily controllable now; 
epidemics swept the world— even in today’s developed countries.

How did it all change? There are many reasons for this, but the most important 
one is that politics changed. It now espoused industrialisation, freedom of 
movement, rights of children and workers as free citizens.

Religion was put in its place.

Round the corner we have the example of Singapore where once ethnic tensions 
were dominant and the economy stagnant.

After Lee Kuan Yew banished religious politics Singapore became a poster- state 
and a model worth emulating. There are negative examples too.

Hitler’s promise of full employment was backed by his unrepentant anti- 
Semitism. It took him some distance, but where is fascism now in Germany? On 
the other hand, there are continuous success stories that read like fairy 
tales. Quebec, in Canada, and the Basque province of Spain, made huge strides 
after they shook off the hold of the Catholic Church.

France realised the importance of this very early when in 1906 it clipped the 
wings of the Catholic clergy and forced them to behave. It is only after that 
that the vision of the Third Republic got a fighting chance of realising itself.

Choice

David Brooks, one of America’s renowned Conservative journalists, made a 
similar point recently. He argued that when secular ideologies come to the 
fore, ethnic passions must recede. This is an interesting insight, made more 
remarkable by the fact that it comes from Conservative quarters. Yet, because 
he is a Conservative he termed political ideologies the new ethnicity, and 
spoilt it all.

If we want to believe like our forefathers did, if we want to tremble at the 
sound of thunder, if we want to be helpless in the face of avoidable diseases, 
we should go back to religious passions.

If, on the other hand, we want to enjoy the comforts of today, the sciences of 
today, then we better get secular.

There is much more to secularism than mere religious tolerance, religious 
equidistance, or even religious goodwill. Without secularism there is no 
development, and that is the hard truth.

The choice is clear. We can either think like our grandparents and go ethnic, 
or think of our grandchildren, as Keynes did, and become secular. There is no 
other option!

The writer is a senior fellow at the Nehru Memorial Museum & Library

____

[3] INDIA COURT ORDER ON CITIZENSHIP

Deccan Chronicle, 17 January 2011

[excerpt from] Padmas are for defenders of human rights

by Soli J Sorabjee
[. . .]
Justice For Tibetans: Namgayal Dolkar, a Tibetan, applied for a passport. It 
was refused on the ground that Namgayal was not an Indian citizen and that in 
her application for grant of identity certificate she had declared herself to 
be a Tibetan national. The decision was challenged in the Delhi High Court. Dr 
Roxna Swamy in her elaborate submissions before the court argued that under the 
Citizenship Act as amended in 1986 “every person born in India on or after the 
26th January 1950 but before the 1st day of July 1987” shall be citizen of 
India by birth. In the instant case admittedly the petitioner was born in India 
on April 13, 1986, ie after January 26, 1950 but before July 1, 1987 and merely 
because she described herself as a Tibetan national did not amount to 
renunciation of citizenship. Justice S Muralidhar in a well-reasoned judgment 
accepted Dr Roxna Swamy’s submissions. He referred to the policy of the MEA set 
out in the affidavit of the government which made it clear that MEA treats 
Tibetans as ‘stateless’ persons and that is why they are issued identity 
certificates. The learned judge highlighted that “without such certificate 
Tibetans face the prospect of having to be deported. They really have no choice 
in the matter.” The court ruled that holding of an identity certificate, or the 
petitioner declaring, in her application for such certificate, that she is a 
Tibetan national, cannot constitute valid grounds to refuse her a passport.

The judgment is commendable for its realistic approach to the grim ground 
realities facing Tibetans who are constrained to obtain identity certificates 
to avoid deportation.

The judgment provides welcome relief to several Tibetans who face the same 
dilemma as Namgyal Dolkar.

[. . .].

_____


[4]  Tributes 


(i) The News International


MINHAJ BARNA PASSES AWAY

Saturday, January 15, 2011

By Zaib Azkaar Hussain
Karachi

The sad demise of veteran journalist, poet and writer Minhaj Barna came as a 
shock for the people belonging to different sections of society, particularly 
the journalist community. Barna passed away on Friday in Rawalpindi. He was 85.

Barna was not only a veteran journalist and founding President of the Pakistan 
Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) but he also acted as a trade union leader, 
besides being a writer and poet.

The Pakistan Institute of Labour Education and Research (Piler), Progressive 
Writers’ Association, National Council of Academics and Irtiqa Institute of 
Social Sciences have expressed deep shock and grief over the sad demise of 
Minhaj Barna. Another writer and poet Mahboob Sada also passed away in 
Rawalpindi the same day. The PILER representatives said that both the scholars 
had rendered great services in the filed of literature and journalism. The 
leaders and representatives of different organizations, including former 
President of Karachi Union of Journalists (KUJ) Wahid Bashir and Iqbal Alvi, 
described Minhaj Burna as a stalwart of democracy, freedom of press and one of 
the pioneers of democratic struggle.

“Barna was a mentor of political activists, poets and journalists, and an 
advocate for the rights of the down trodden.”

They noted that Barna was imprisoned several times for fighting for the right 
to information as well as for the welfare of working journalists.

Barna had remained steadfast in his beliefs and principles and his death was a 
loss to the democratic journalist fraternity all over Pakistan, they added.

Some representatives mentioned that Barna was a veteran journalist who, among 
many organisations, worked at Imroze and later as a correspondent for the 
Pakistan Times.

He also served as general secretary of the Pakistan Federal Union of 
Journalists (PFUJ). Being associated with the Communist Party, he made untiring 
efforts to link the struggle for journalists’ rights with the labour movement. 
Being a poet and creative writer, he was a formidable part of the Progressive 
Writers Association, they said while expressing deep sympathy with the bereaved 
family.

The story of compiling literary works by Barna is so interesting that people 
close to him knew that he was a wonderful poet, but others were unaware of this 
posture of Barna till the appearance of his books in 2007.

It was he who did not publish his poetry collection despite the fact that he 
had written a lot and then a time came when in 2007 he had to consider the 
requests of his close friends and admirers to bring a book and he got his 
poetry collection published. The book by Minhaj Barna entitled “Marssiya 
Chauthey Sutoon Ka” is in fact a story of violation of human rights and 
imposition of ban on freedom of expression in Pakistan in poetic form. His 
poetry covered almost all the regimes of dictators in Pakistan who not only 
violated human rights and democratic norms, but also imposed restrictions on 
newspapers and journalists for depicting the actual plight of the people of 
Pakistan. In a way, his poetry was a kind of epic that presented a study on the 
overall situation in Pakistan, including the imposition of martial laws and 
emergencies, toppling of governments, victimization of journalists, trade 
unionists, political workers and other representatives of masses.

He depicted the negative role of rulers in a highly courageous manner with 
regard to the victimization of people, punishing human rights activists, 
judges, women, workers and journalists.

Prominent Urdu critics and educationists and other scholars have described the 
poetic work by Barna as a unique experience.

Meanwhile, Muttahida Qaumi Movement chief Altaf Hussain has expressed deep 
shock and grief over the sad demise of Minhaj Barna. In a statement, he said 
that the country’s journalist community has lost a dedicated and principled 
journalist. While praying for the departed soul, Altaf Hussain expressed 
profound sympathy with the bereaved family.

o o o

(ii)

Letter to EPW - January 15, 2011

K G Kannabiran

I felt a sense of personal loss on hearing of the death of K G Kannabiran, the 
great stalwart of India’s human rights movement.  I had met Kannabiran only 
once but his earnestness and deep compassion left a lasting impression on me. 
In the early 1980s when the Punjab crisis was brewing up, I spoke on the crisis 
at a meeting in Hyderabad organised by the People’s Union for Civil Liberties. 
The meeting lasted for several hours. Kannabiran and the others asked searching 
questions about the class, nationalist, religious, linguistic and regional 
dimensions of the crisis. They were interested in developing a holistic human 
rights perspective on the conflict. It was the best meeting I ever had on Punjab 
and the human rights situation there. I came away from the meeting enriched by 
the understanding that different regions and states of India looked at the 
Punjab conflict in different ways.  In Kannabiran’s death, India’s human rights 
movement has lost one of its tallest figures. In every critical moment in 
India’s history in the last few decades whether it was the Emergency, Naxalite 
movement or the Gujarat carnage, Kannabiran was in the forefront in using his 
legal erudition and moral authority in defending the rights of the victims of 
authoritarian state power. His was a life well-lived that has left a powerful 
legacy behind.

Pritam Singh
Oxford, UK

_____


[5] India: Supreme Court orders security forces to vacate schools, disband 
Salwa Judam and rehabilitate victims

http://www.sacw.net/article1863.html

18th January 2011

PRESS RELEASE ON HEARING OF SALWA JUDUM MATTER

  1. SCHOOLS TO BE VACATED BY SECURITY FORCES WITHIN FOUR MONTHS
  2. GOVERNMENT ASKED TO SHOW TIME BOUND PLAN TO DISBAND SALWA JUDUM CAMPS AND 
RESTORE PEOPLE TO THEIR VILLAGES
  3. STATE RELIEF AND REHABILIATION COMMITTEE TO SHOW ACTION ON COMPENSATION TO 
ALL VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE, WHETHER BY SALWA JUDUM, SECURITY FORCES OR NAXALITE. 

The Salwa Judum matter was heard in Court 9 of the Supreme Court today by 
Justice Sudershan Reddy and Justice SS Nijjar. The petitioners were represented 
by Senior Counsel, Mr. Ashok Desai, the Centre by the Solicitor General, Mr. 
Gopal Subramanium and the State of Chhattisgarh by Mr. Harish Salve and Mr. 
Manish Singhvi. Arguments lasted all day.

The Court ordered the Chhattisgarh government to vacate security forces from 
all educational institutions within four months. The Court also recorded the 
consensus on the need for Salwa Judum camps to be disbanded and their 
inhabitants to be sent back to their villages. The state government is required 
to submit a plan for this within two weeks by February 3rd. The Court recorded 
the Chhattisgarh government’s statement that the State Relief and 
Rehabilitation Committee had compensated all victims of violence regardless of 
perpetrator, as well as the submission of the counsel for the petitioners that 
only victims of Naxalite violence were compensated. The State Committee is to 
give a report within two weeks (by February 3rd) as to who has been 
compensated, how much etc.

Right at the beginning of the proceedings, Justice Sudershan Reddy said he had 
received a small chit saying that since he was a member of the PUCL, and PUCL 
had impleaded in the case, he should not be hearing the matter. He asked all 
counsel if they had any objection to his hearing the matter. Mr. Subramanium, 
Solicitor General, replied that he too had been giving donations to the PUCL. 
Nobody had any objections. In any case, it was pointed out that this was not a 
case filed by the PUCL and the PUCL impleadment filed by Mr. KG Kannabiran 
(specifically on the biases of the NHRC investigation team) had not yet been 
formally admitted. The Judge has formally recorded in his order that none of 
the counsel raised any objections.

Mr. Desai began by going through the written submissions of the petitioners 
addressing the five points raised by the court in its directions of August 
2010, to which the Chhattisgarh government had been asked to respond:

  1. Disbanding of Salwa Judum
  2. By when schools and ashrams would be vacated by security forces,
  3. Report on the FIRs registered and prosecution undertaken
  4. Status of rehabilitation and compensation to all victims regardless of 
perpetrator,
  5. Constitution of a High Level Committee to oversee rehabilitation and 
registration of FIRs.

He pointed out that there was a serious conflict of interest in having a 
monitoring committee headed by the Chief Minister and comprising the DGP and 
Mr. Mahendra Karma all of whom had been vociferous supporters of Salwa Judum 
and also referred to a newspaper report that textbooks in Chhattisgarh had a 
chapter praising Salwa Judum. Mr. Harish Salve denied the existence of any such 
textbook. The Court, while noting the state government’s support for Salwa 
Judum, sought to know from the Counsel for the state whether the Chief Minister 
could be set aside when it came to overseeing rehabilitation.

Mr. Desai pointed out that nobody was challenging the power of the Chief 
Minister, and that the petitioners were explicitly requesting state support for 
a high level monitoring committee. However, the specific task of rehabilitation 
was different from the development core group presided over by the Chief 
Minister, quite apart from the conflict of interest. Mr. Desai also argued that 
the draft affidavit submitted by the Union Government on 7.1.11 in court 
referred to an Integrated Action Plan proposed by the Planning Commission, 
which however, has been publicly repudiated by the Planning Commission itself. 
Finally, he presented a tentative list of names for an independent committee 
which included four independent persons, four representatives of the union, 
four representatives of the Government of Chhattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh and 
two of the petitioners.

Mr. Harish Salve arguing for the state of Chhattisgarh insisted on referring to 
the NHRC report, which he claimed did not show the Salwa Judum in a bad light 
and said that all the petitioners allegations about it had been found invalid. 
However, in the course of his reading of the report, it clearly emerged that 
the Salwa Judum had been violent. Justice Nijjar remarked that the situation 
showed a lot of violence all through and asked how the state could support such 
a movement. Mr. Salve then said ‘such things happen when people become 
hotheaded, but now the movement is over’. (According to this view all rapes, 
murders, arson and looting would be forgotten and consigned to the past because 
‘such things happen’. No justice would ever get done.) He also again raised the 
bogey about the petitioners being Naxalite supporters saying they were 
‘intellectually robust’ and that Naxalites had intellectual backing, to which 
the Court again asked him not to accuse everyone of being Naxalite supporters.

Mr. Desai pointed to the shortcomings in the NHRC investigation, since they 
sent sixteen police officers who were accompanied by SPOs and went about in 
armoured tanks. Mr. Salve claimed that the petitioners had never objected to 
the NHRC investigation whereas the petitioners affidavit in response to the 
NHRC report clearly points to a number of problems with it, including letters 
sent to the NHRC investigation team during the investigations itself about 
witnesses being threatened etc. There was some discussion between the counsel 
and the bench on whether this could even be considered an NHRC report since 
none of the members had themselves heard the petitioners and had merely 
forwarded the report of the police investigation team. Mr. Desai conceded that 
whatever the problems with the report, we should take this as the view of the 
NHRC. He pointed to the recommendations of the NHRC, all of which supported the 
petitioners, and showed how even these had not been followed by the government 
of Chhattisgarh, despite claiming that the report was in their favour. Hence, 
he reiterated, there was a need for an independent monitoring committee.

In the course of Mr. Salve’s reading of the NHRC report, the Judges remarked 
that all the fundamental rights of the Salwa Judum camp residents appeared to 
have been suspended and they were virtually imprisoned. Mr. Salve said they 
were all now supporters of the Salwa Judum and SPOs and if they were sent back 
to the villages, they would be killed, though he later admitted that living in 
camps was unnatural. He said there were only 18,000 people left in camp. Mr. 
Salve also claimed that the State Human Rights Commission could be strengthened 
to deal with the issue of complaints. (The SP, Mr. Manhar, who started Salwa 
Judum and is recorded as saying kill all journalists if they come here, was 
posted to the State Human Rights Commission).

The Court concluded the day’s hearing by recording the consensus that Salwa 
Judum camps should be shut down and people enabled to return home and asked the 
state of Chhattisgarh to provide a time bound action plan for this. They also 
asked for a report on the status of compensation paid to all victims of 
violence. Finally, they directed that all schools should be vacated within four 
months.

*It should be noted that Mr. Desai who is over 75 years old is arguing the case 
pro-bono, and is doing a brilliant job of it. He was on his feet all day today, 
giving up all his other matters for this. He is assisted by a team of lawyers 
who are also working pro bono, Nitya Ramakrishnan, Menaka Guruswamy, Suhasini 
Sen, Bipin Aspatwar, Rahul Kripalani, Sumita Hazarika and Pragya Singh 
(Advocates on record). Senior counsel Mr. TR Andhyarujina has also argued this 
matter pro bono on several occasions. Were it not for the commitment of these 
lawyers to the constitution and the rule of law, as well as their concern for 
the fate of the country’s poorest citizens, we would not have come this far.

Petitioners

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South Asia Citizens Wire
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. An offshoot of South Asia Citizens Web: 
www.sacw.net/


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