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Kindly read this article and forward it to others too
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Fr Cedric Prakash

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From: INDIAN CURRENTS <[email protected]>
Date: 21 February 2015 15:30:31 IST
To: Cedric Prakash <[email protected]>
Cc: "Fr. Cedric Prakash" <[email protected]>
Subject: IC Coming Issue PDF File

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Indian Currents    'Journalism With a Soul'.      
Chief Editor     : Dr. Suresh Mathewe-mail              : 
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Contact           : +91 7042562963Contact Office : 011-45873264, 22750667
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The NationPublished: February 18, 2015 12:30 IST | Updated: February 17, 2015 
12:42 ISTCommunalism
Hounding an activistBy ANUPAMA KATAKAMShow CaptionThe Gujarat Police’s pursuit 
of Teesta Setalvad, who has been fighting for the riot victims in Gujarat, in a 
case of “misappropriation” of funds smacks of political vendetta. By ANUPAMA 
KATAKAMTeesta Setalvad has always said they will get her one day. She has told 
this magazine several times that if Narendra Modi becomes Prime Minister, her 
future as a lawyer and activist will be finished. She has been on the Bharatiya 
Janata Party’s (BJP) radar for several reasons, the main one being the Zakia 
Jafri case in which Modi is held culpable for the 2002 communal riots in 
Gujarat. She has believed that he will pursue a political vendetta against her. 

In a dramatic move on February 12, the Gujarat Police arrived at Teesta 
Setalvad and her husband Javed Anand’s house in Mumbai, probably to arrest 
them, after the Gujarat High Court rejected her anticipatory bail plea in a 
criminal case relating to the charge of “misappropriation” of trust funds 
collected on behalf of riot victims. Reportedly, the couple were away for a 
family function. Through the intervention of the well-known lawyer Kapil Sibal, 
the Supreme Court stayed the arrest until February 13. This was later extended 
to February 19. The hearing of the bail pleas of Tanvir Jafri, the son of Ehsan 
Jafri, the former Congress Member of Parliament who was killed by rioters in 
Gulberg Cooperative Housing Society, Ahmedabad, and that of Salim Sandhi and 
Firoz Gulzar, members of Gulberg Society, who were also named in the case, was 
also extended. 

Teesta Setalvad and other activists have repeatedly said that anyone who 
crosses Modi’s path is not spared. “They will be hounded, intimidated, 
persecuted and eventually ruined,” she once said. 

If Teesta Setalvad is found guilty and arrested, it could be the end of the 
road for any form of justice for the families and victims of the Gujarat riots. 
She and the late lawyer-activist Mukul Sinha were perhaps the only two people 
who, against all odds, relentlessly pursued the riot cases for more than a 
decade. 

A statement issued on February 13 by the Citizens for Justice and Peace (CPJ), 
a non-governmental organisation she works with, says: “We have no doubt 
whatsoever regarding their honesty and integrity in the dealings of CJP. We are 
convinced that there is no factual basis to sustain the charge of embezzlement, 
and this has been asserted by the independent auditors of CJP.” 

The human rights activist Father Cedric Prakash issued a statement saying, “All 
are aware that the charges are extremely flimsy and fabricated and are surely 
politically motivated.” 

The case which is threatening Teesta Setalvad’s credibility and safety goes 
back to 2012 when she and her team from the Sabrang Trust and the CJP mooted 
the idea of a memorial museum on the premises of Gulberg Society. Of the 
various means employed to raise funds, one was an art show held in Mumbai. 
Titled “Art for Humanity”, this exhibition had close to 80 leading Indian 
artists donate pieces of art to help the CJP carry on its work in the struggle 
for justice. It was a sell-out. Reportedly, the CJP earned over Rs.1 crore from 
the exhibition. 

At the time of the art show, Teesta Setalvad told this correspondent that “to 
sustain any movement on a long-term basis, it naturally requires serious 
commitment and a fair amount of funds, particularly when working on scores of 
legal cases.” Furthermore, “the aim of building this platform is to evolve a 
sustainable and strategic fund-raising initiative to ensure a support base for 
the CJP’s pioneering work in the area of legal rights and social justice. There 
was an overwhelming response from the artists when we broached the idea with 
them,” she said. 
The CJP is well known for keeping up the fight for justice for the victims of 
communal attacks since the riots that followed the demolition of the Babri 
Masjid. Mainly concentrated in western India, the CJP in recent times has been 
waging a legal battle against the perpetrators of the 2002 Gujarat pogrom. 
Gulberg Society, a complex of approximately 30 houses and 10 apartments, was 
the target of one of the most brutal attacks by the Hindu mob in the 2002 
communal riots that took the lives of over 800 people. 

Rioters set fire to almost every house. Official figures say 69 people were 
killed and about 100 were injured. Most residents took refuge in Ehsan Jafri’s 
house within the compound hoping that help would come for him and that they 
would be saved. But Jafri was dragged out of his house, hacked and burnt to 
death in front of his family and neighbours. Another 35 people were hacked to 
death and burnt within the premises of Gulberg Society. Jafri had persistently 
telephoned the authorities, and reportedly Modi, the Chief Minister, to send 
help but sadly none came. There are telephone records to prove this. 

This led to the theory that no one wanted to help or the police were told not 
to help and because of that Modi was complicit in the massacre. 

Of the nine riot cases that the Special Investigation Team (SIT) was looking 
into, Teesta Setalvad was helping victims in almost every case. The Gulberg 
Society case was the only one in which Modi was implicated in the larger 
conspiracy behind the riots. Modi had to shake off the communal label. His 
prime ministerial ambitions had begun to emerge. 

Jafri’s widow, Zakia, filed her first case against Modi in 2006. With the help 
of Teesta Setalvad’s legal assistance, she had her family keep up their fight 
for justice even though the odds were stacked against them. 

Informed sources say that Modi and his team were looking for an opportunity to 
discredit and teach Teesta Setalvad a lesson. The opportunity came when a 
disgruntled employee of the CJP, Rais Khan, a survivor of the Gulberg Society 
massacre, alleged that Teesta Setalvad and Anand had uploaded photographs and 
video footage of the riot areas and appealed to people across the globe to 
donate funds towards relief and legal work. 

Khan, who worked for the CJP from 2002 to 2008, was dismissed by the 
organisation when it was found that he was conniving with various riot-accused 
people. The CJP says that following his disengagement with the organisation, he 
began filing complaints against them. In fact, it is believed that the 
government, rather Modi, used Khan to get at Teesta Setalvad and the Jafris. 

In 2012, Khan said the websites posted appeals for money to be sent directly to 
the accounts of the CJP or the Sabrang Trust. He also accused the couple of 
collecting crores of rupees under the guise of building a museum on the Gulberg 
Society premises. Real trouble began for Teesta Setalvad when Khan allegedly 
forged a letter of the Society’s members stating that she and the CJP had not 
given the money to the victims in spite of collecting it in their names. He 
filed it as a complaint with the police. 

In 2013, official representatives of Gulberg Society, in a letter to the Joint 
Commissioner of Police, Crime Branch, Ahmedabad, said that Khan’s letter was 
forged and his allegations were false, but the police disregarded it and said 
an investigation would be carried out before deciding whether Teesta Setalvad 
or the CJP was guilty. 

After the “investigation”, the Crime Branch claimed that the Society members’ 
complaint did not have any substance in it and filed a first information report 
(FIR) against Teesta Setalvad on January 4, 2014. She and her husband were 
granted interim bail, but their bank accounts were frozen. In spite of Gulberg 
Society secretary Firoz Gulzar filing a complaint in court against the police’s 
biased approach, nothing changed. 

Observers say the sudden filing of the FIR against Teesta Setalvad and the 
Jafris soon after the Ahmedabad Magistrate’s acceptance of the SIT report in 
the Zakia Jafri case against Modi and 59 others is not without significance. 
Attempts by Teesta Setalvad to shift the case to the Bombay High Court failed. 

In 2012, the museum plan got shelved. Soaring real estate prices in Ahmedabad 
had Gulberg Society members thinking it might be a better idea to sell the 
property and rebuild their lives. A statement from the CJP says that the funds 
have been kept to be used once a decision is taken on this. “A formal 
resolution of the Society was passed after this was conveyed to them, leaving 
the members free to sell off their properties as per law. In no way have either 
the CJP or Sabrang in any way cheated them or let down the Society.” 

Teesta Setalvad has often asked why 80 leading artists would throw their weight 
behind the CJP if they did not feel the organisation was genuine. Or why 
well-known citizens such as the lyricist Javed Akhtar and the 
businessman-philanthropist Cyrus Guzdar would support the organisation if it 
was not doing good work. Clearly, none of these arguments have worked in the 
court. Justice J.B. Pardiwala said the organisation was “a one-woman and 
one-man show” that misused funds meant for the poor. 

His order states: “The facts of this case are quite shocking and disturbing. 
How can one seek materialistic pleasure and happiness at the expense of the 
poor and needy persons? The facts of this case reflect the sorry state of 
affairs of the NGOs. While giving freedom to the civil society to function with 
the flexibility is positive, too much freedom can lead to abuses by certain 
groups or individuals calling themselves an ‘NGO’, thus giving civil society a 
bad name. It is, therefore, very important to have strict laws regulating 
accountability and monitoring of the NGOs so as to maintain a high trust level 
and good functioning.” 

When the attacks on Teesta Setalvad began two years ago, eminent citizens such 
as the historian Romila Thapar, Justice B.N. Srikrishna and Justice P.B. Sawant 
put the issue in perspective in a statement that read: “Indian citizens have 
just got a disturbing glimpse of how the state would deal with dissidents and 
human-rights defenders should Narendra Modi come to power nationally…. Eleven 
months ago, the police had dropped investigations into these very charges after 
CJP activists explained what they were working towards. The sudden filing of 
the FIR is evidently in anticipation of CJP’s decision to appeal against the 
Jafri case judgment. This follows Gujarat’s well-established pattern of 
harassment of critics, the intention being to intimidate and silence them. Any 
attempt to prevent the early filing of an appeal will subvert the process of 
justice. Such intervention is contrary to the norms of our Constitution and 
speaks of an anti-democratic mindset.” 

Whatever may be said about Teesta Setalvad, that allegation that she used the 
money to holiday and buy luxury goods is difficult to believe. 

Printable version | Feb 20, 2015 12:14:17 PM | 
http://www.frontline.in/the-nation/hounding-an-activist/article6904865.ece 
© Frontline 


===========

From: "Teesta Setalvad" <[email protected]>

Dear Friends, Comrades in Arms
Its been amazing, and very humbling to experience and feel heart warmed by the 
groundswell of support form each and all of you in this past week that has been 
one of deep and difficult trauma; a trial by fire. Our family, close friends 
and most of all the CJP and Sabrang Colleagues in Mumbai and Ahmedabad have 
been amazing; We could not have survived without their long hard hours of 
committed, dogged support. Our team of lawyers, each and everyone in Mumbai, 
Ahmedabad and Delhi dropped everything to ensure that our personal liberties 
were protected.
We know that things will not end here and the Gujarat state backed by the 
regime in Delhi will not stop at the efforts to cripple our functioning. 126 
persons that CJP has managed to get Convicted to Life Imprisonment will 
approach higher courts and of the state under the current regime does not press 
the cases and argue them strongly on merit, the hard won convictions will turn. 
It is imperative therefore that we plod on and not waver from our goal.
The entire bunch of arguments upheld by the Gujarat HC in a shocking and 
painful judgement were answered by us piece by piece in the Accompanying 
Synopsis and Table giving references to the High Court Record. The table is 23 
pages and when read carefully will show how each and every one of our replies 
with documents given to the HC were ignored by the Judge!
Please take the time to go through this table carefully. And also circulate 
this widely.
With very warm regards and deepest solidarity (and relief)
Teesta Javed



                                          

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