The peace of justice
BY M J AKBAR

27 February 2006


IF THERE is justice there will be peace. Nine men from Baroda were
sentenced to life imprisonment by a special court in Mumbai for a
massacre of innocents (known as the Best Bakery case) during one of
the most terrible communal riots in our history, the Gujarat carnage
of 2002; and every Indian can declare with pride that he or she lives
in a nation that has not only democracy, but something more:
institutions of justice that deliver in matters of honour, truth, life
and death.

A democracy is much more than counting votes once in five years. A
democracy is about rights and wrongs each living day. The peace that
democracy delivers, therefore, is a positive, creative, enhancing
peace, not the peace of the graveyard that settles like a pall on
nations condemned to dictatorship.
Democracy is about civil society and equality, of high courts as well
as a scene I witnessed in a 7am Indian Airlines flight I took from
Mumbai to Delhi on the morning of writing this column: an airhostess
taking special care of an elderly Muslim man with a cap and a beard
who was unsteadied by age as he walked uncomfortably into the
aircraft. He was not at all wealthy; this could have been his first
flight, perhaps taken for medical reasons. The airhostess gave him
more help and attention than she offered anyone else. This is equality
and civil society without prejudice in India. The Gujarat carnage is
part of the truth; the airhostess is part of the larger truth. India
is not secular because it is democratic. India is democratic because
it is secular.
In a democracy, elections may be the court of first as well as last
appeal, but there is so much space in between. Governments are
unstable in a democracy, which is an excellent thing; but society is
stable, which is even better. Governments are stable in a
dictatorship, but society is unstable, constantly simmering under the
pressure of a forced calm, and threatening to erupt at the slightest
crack in the edifice. Those in power did everything they could to
subvert justice in the Best Bakery case, using authority to try and
undermine the judiciary and money to change the evidence. The police
are a mighty force in India, and never mightier than when they attempt
to become the law. Governments bullied and bribed witnesses who were
poor and vulnerable: I would not be too harsh on the poor and
vulnerable, for we have very little idea of what constant, daily
pressure by the police can mean.
The important, and vital, point is that justice survived the
malfeasance of the system; perhaps that is the only point. The courts
were assisted by the dedication and sheer, determined obstinacy of
civil society leaders like Teesta Setalvad, who refused to be defeated
by the acquittal of the accused by a court in Gujarat, and went to the
Supreme Court. One of those sentenced to life imprisonment, Sanjay
Thakkar, begged for mercy once the judgment was announced. He once
must have thought that his mentor, Gujarat chief minister Narendra
Modi, would succeed in saving him from retribution. Thank God for
Teesta Setalvad and the Supreme Court. And thank God for a free media
too.
There were two judgments on the murder of Jessica Lal, in which the
prime accused was a rich thug called Manu Sharma, son of a former
minister of the Union government of India, no less, Vinod Sharma.
There is little purchase in naming the political party to which he
belonged, for all parties are infected with this insolent, brutal
Delhi plague. The facts are simple, and their simplicity itself is
evidence of how Delhi?s ruling elite believes that it can get away
with murder after it has got away with theft. Jessica Lal, a model,
was shot dead in public in a restaurant owned by Bina Ramani. It was a
crime of power, wealth, corruption and arrogance: power was the means
to wealth, wealth was the source of corruption, and corruption is the
reason for this murderer?s arrogance. The murderer took out a gun in
full public view, shot Jessica dead and walked off. As simple as that.
The case was widely reported.
On February 21, additional sessions judge S.L. Bhayana acquitted
Sharma. The judge was hapless if not helpless: he explained that the
three key eyewitnesses had turned hostile.
The media delivered the second judgment on this case. It refused to
accept the judicial verdict. One of the truths of Delhi is the fact
that the police believe that they are employed not only to implement
the law, but also to twist it according to their will. The media
refused to let police get away with their lucrative indolence in this
case. Every newspaper gave headlines that accused the authorities of
corruption. No editor, of print or audiovisual media, consulted anyone
else. Each editor reached his or her own conclusion, and the
conclusion was similar. The stench of corruption was too strong for
even the most cynical nose.
This anger was not limited to the police. It was also addressed to the
New Class that has become a running, cancerous sore of Delhi. It
consists of rich, political or pseudo-political (by which I mean
hangers-on of political progeny) thugs who are brimming with black
money, and who are convinced that they are a phone call away from
safety if they get into trouble. Their cars are a menace on the
streets; their behaviour a menace to social life; their criminal side
a menace to life. They are the middlemen of deals, the scum that has
become obese thanks to cuts from the billions that are spent by the
government each year in purchases. Their behaviour might have been
funny were it not so deadly. Many of them actually behave like
villains from the screen, flaunting their power as if there is no
accountability in Delhi?s ravenous jungle, and never will be. The
media was also saying that Manu Sharma, a perfect example of this
class, would not be permitted the luxury of indifference.
By Friday, the Delhi High Court had summoned the files of the Jessica
Lal case from the Delhi police. This too was recognition of injustice.
Standards change; yesterday?s scandal becomes today?s morality; we
stop asking questions in the name of friendship, or in the hope of a
good time; the culture of consumerism becomes the primal law; your
dress becomes your address. Sab chalta hai. Anything goes.
Delhi is the world?s largest glasshouse: who shall throw the first
stone? But there comes a moment when you no longer care whether the
glasshouse remains intact or shatters. If that glasshouse is going to
protect the killers at Best Bakery or the murderer of Jessica Lal,
then it is time it got shattered into smithereens. Civil society rose
in both instances. It threw stone after stone in the Best Bakery
matter, rousing the conscience and the best instincts of the highest
judiciary. It rose again in the matter of Jessica Lal, and the Delhi
High Court has taken the initiative. But one stone was not sufficient
in Best Bakery; and one stone might be insufficient in the case of
Jessica Lal as well. The establishment has a very, very thick hide,
thickened further by the belief that the public has a very, very short
memory. The establishment has an invaluable weapon in time. The media
woke up in the immediate aftermath of injustice. How long will it
remain awake when the files wend their slow way through the courts,
impeded by procrastination and fudge? Eternal vigilance is the price
of liberty etc, but how eternal is eternal? The Delhi High Court has
asked Delhi?s police commissioner to send a status report in four
weeks and said it will hear the matter on 19 April. Six weeks is a
pretty long eternity in media terms. We will see if media has the
tenacity of a Teesta Setalvad or not. The dead do not return. But they
will haunt us until there is justice.

-- Anivar Aravind

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
greenyouth mailinglist is the activist support mailinglist for kerala run by
Global Alternate Information Applications (GAIA)
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to