*Victims Of India's 'War On Terror'*

*By Yoginder Sikand*

11 September, 2008
*TwoCircles.net*

*I*n a development of far-reaching and frightening implications for the
stature of the Indian judiciary, Bar Associations in several parts of the
country are effectively banning advocates from defending Muslim youth
branded as 'terrorists', many of them who may well be wrongly accused. A
chilling indicator of how deeply-rooted anti-Muslim prejudice has now
become.

The Bar Association of Dhar, a small town in Madhya Pradesh, is a case in
point. Taking the law into its own hands, it has declared that no local
lawyers can defend terror-accused—all Muslims, incidentally. Yet, no action
has been taken against this patently illegal declaration. Says advocate Noor
Mohammad, who was viciously physically assaulted by lawyers in Dhar who
sought to prevent him for taking up the case of a Muslim who he says has
been wrongly accused of running a terrorist-training camp in a jungle near
Dhar , 'This is an alarming development, an indication of how widespread
Hindutva sentiments have become. They indiscriminately brand Muslims as
terrorists and presume them guilty even before proper investigations have
been made. At the same time, no action is taken against the RSS when it
openly declares that it will take up arms. It's as if India's laws do not
apply to them.'


In April 2008, Noor Mohammad travelled to Dhar to defend the accused, but at
the gate of the court he was assaulted by a group of lawyers and activists
of the BJP youth wing and was badly beaten up. 'I told the judge about
this', he says. ' I told him that the life of the accused might also be in
danger and requested that the case be transferred elsewhere. The judge told
the lawyers who were beating me to leave the court premises. He repeated
this three times but they refused to listen. Instead, they kept laughing, as
if to say that they had no respect for the court. And the judge did not
write all this down.' To add insult to injury, when he approached the local
police, they threatened him. 'They told me that I must say that I don't want
to take any action against the lawyers and that I was not hurt.'
When, some days later, Noor Mohammad returned to Dhar he was again beaten up
by BJP youth activists, this time so badly that he fell unconscious. 'A
Hindu boy helped me by putting me into an auto-rickshaw and taking me to the
police station. The hapless local Muslims are just too terrified to speak
out, fearing that they will be branded as terrorists or
terrorist-sympathisers if they do', he says.
The same fate befell Lucknow-based lawyer Muhammad Shoeb, who has taken up
seven cases of Muslims accused of being terrorists across Uttar Pradesh—in
Rampur, Lucknow, Barabanki and Faizabad. 'The Faizabad Bar Association
declared that no lawyers would be allowed to defend any terror-accused, and
so, when I travelled to Faizabad to take up the case of Maulana Hakim
Muhammad Tariq Qasmi, who has been accused in some terror-related case, I
was badly beaten up by lawyers inside the court. The judge said nothing and
the police refused to register my complaint.' 'They are trying every means
to sabotage the judicial system', he goes on, 'but I will continue fighting
the cases I have taken up despite their efforts to intimidate me.'

Muhammad Shoeb believes that in scores of cases across the country, Muslim
youth have been deliberately and wrongly implicated by the police in acts of
terror. 'As I see it, Hindu communalists and powerful elements in the state
apparatus are hell-bent on unleashing such terror on Muslims that they are
actually forced to take to terror so that, in this way, they can justify a
concerted campaign to clamp down on the entire community', he says. While,
as in Faizabad, several Hindu lawyers are firmly behind the local Bar
Association's decision not to allow any lawyer to defend Muslims accused of
being terrorists, he says that some Hindu lawyers have supported him in his
struggle. 'Many of them are just too scared to speak out though', he points
out, 'although when I organised a press conference at the Uttar Pradesh
Press Club in Lucknow, some Hindu lawyers came to express their solidarity.
A Hindu lawyer and I are jointly fighting the case in Barabanki involving
Maulana Tariq Qasmi and Khalid Mujahid.'

Noor Mohammad and Muhammad Shoeb were among the several Muslim victims of
the state's 'war on terror' who came to testify recently at a public hearing
organised by a group of reputed human rights' activists at Hyderabad. At the
hearing, numerous other Muslims related similarly harrowing tales of being
persecuted by the police and by the state, besides Hindutva forces, of being
wrongly branded as 'terrorists' and of being falsely implicated in
terror-related cases.

The situation is equally grim in states ruled by the BJP and the supposedly
'secular' Congress. Says Latif Muhammad Khan, a social activist from
Hyderabad, 'There has been an alarming rise in fake encounters in Andhra
Pradesh, where innocent Muslims, Adivasis and Dalits are being gunned down
by the police in the name of countering terrorism and Naxalism, who are then
rewarded for this. Deliberate attempts are being made to destroy Muslim
identity. For instance, Maulana Nasiruddin from Hyderabad has been
languishing in a jail in Gujarat without any trial—his only 'fault' was that
he had condemned the destruction of the Babri Masjid.'

Bomb-blasts which might have well been engineered by other forces are
wrongly blamed on Muslims, providing an excuse to the police to unleash
terror on Muslim localities, Khan says. A case in point—a blast in the Mecca
Masjid in Hyderabad, which Khan argues, could surely not have been done by a
Muslim. Several Muslims were shot dead in cold-blood by the police in the
wake of the blast in what can only be called uncalled-for firing.
Thereafter, scores of Muslims were arrested and subjected to brutal torture
and even abuse of their religion. 'They tortured them so mercilessly that,
unable to bear the pain, many of them have forced to make false confessions.
The situation is worse than in the Guantanamo Bay prison, but yet their
voices are silenced. Many Muslims are just too scared to protest, fearing
that they will also be branded as terrorists if they do' he relates. For
daring to take up the cases of these innocent Muslim victims of state
terror, Khan has been falsely implicated in a terror case. 'The police have
said that I should be killed in a fake encounter', he says.

Reflecting the general sentiment of the dozens of Muslim victims assembled
at the public hearing, Noor Jehan Begum, a social activist from Gujarat,
remarked, 'They want Muslims to be made into the new untouchables. They want
to grind us to dust, to make us their slaves so that we cannot raise our
heads and live with dignity.'


A grim story indeed of a community over 150 million strong under siege, and
of a system whose secular and democratic claims are increasingly being
exposed as hollow.

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