http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2009/apr/02/g20-india

G20: Lessons from an Indian jail

The story of a doctor locked up for years for speaking up for the
voiceless poor is a morality play with implications for all of us

Priyamvada Gopal
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 2 April 2009 22.00 BST

As the world's financial and political elites ponder our economic
futures today, having whipped themselves into a frenzy about projected
violence by the discontented, the case of an imprisoned Indian doctor
teaches us something about power and impunity in our times. In our
world, a select few – state actors and powerful corporations – seem
authorised to enact their own forms of violence, destroying lives,
life savings and livelihoods without brooking challenge or fearing
punishment. Speaking up against these impunities can result in
anything from intimidation, blacklisting and suspension to
incarceration and, as the tragic instance of Ken Saro-Wiwa in Nigeria
showed, even simple murder.

For two years now, Dr Binayak Sen, an award-winning physician and
civil rights activist practising in the Indian state of Chattisgarh, a
resource-rich yet economically deprived region, has been rotting in
prison. The charges levelled at him by the state are flimsy and the
evidence even thinner. Caught, like other Chattisgarhis, in a virtual
civil war between Naxalites, Maoist-inspired militants and a
state-backed vigilante paramilitary known as the Salwa Judum, Sen has
been accused in vaguely speculative terms of supporting the former.
The case drags on with neither credible evidence on offer nor a
determinate end in sight. A now seriously unwell Sen has also been
denied bail and appropriate medical treatment for a heart condition.

His real crime? As vice president of India's venerable civil rights
organisation the People's Union for Civil Liberties, Sen, explicitly
committed to non-violence, was involved in documenting and speaking up
against the violent and unlawful activities of Salwa Judum, which
include arson (burning down entire villages), forced displacement and
vigilante killings. Salwa Judum, as an independent review (pdf)
concluded, has become a means for the state to outsource law and order
to "underage, untrained and unaccountable civilians" – with
predictably disastrous results.

The context of the desperately uneven globalisation that underlies
India's position in the G20 is central to the story of Sen's
politicised imprisonment. As a medical doctor, Sen was long involved
in treating the rural poor, that large population left out of the
capital-intensive entrepreneurial fairytale we see celebrated so much.
Developing low-cost healthcare programmes in the impoverished region,
the intrepid doctor criticised state failures in relation to
malnutrition and dysentery epidemics, themselves indicative of the
growing divide between urban rich and rural poor. Sen also helped
document corporate land-grabbing, custody deaths and staged
assassinations of suspected insurgents in fake "encounters" with the
police. For an Indian state busy burnishing the tale of unalloyed
economic success, these less glorious realities better remain
unacknowledged and unaddressed.

Chattisgarh itself embodies many of the contradictions and tensions of
"India Shining". This mineral-rich region to which huge industries
such as the Tatas (of "Nano" fame) are drawn is one that literally
fuels India's heavily coal- and iron ore-dependent economy. For its
rural poor, however, little has changed for the better. Indeed, there
are question marks around the forced clearances of villages that just
happen to sit on valuable mining terrain. Sen spoke up publicly about
the expropriation of natural resources and common property from the
poor through corporate privatisation, calling also for better public
distribution systems.

The people Sen spoke up for may be marginalised, but it is telling
that he himself remains in desperate circumstances despite having no
shortage of public and prominent advocates. Amnesty International has
taken up his cause, as have prominent filmmakers, writers, Nobel
laureates, retired supreme court judges and in today's Guardian,
several eminent UK-based academics. For his pains, the filmmaker Ajay
TG was also thrown into jail after producing a documentary on Sen.
Outside Raipur Jail where Sen languishes, a peaceful Gandhian
satyagraha is now taking place with, among others, survivors of the
1984 Bhopal disaster, demanding justice. It is an indication of what
is at stake in this battleground between rich and poor, powerful and
disenfranchised, that both local and central governments have simply
ignored such audible appeals.

Sen's case shares with G20 protests here the predictable abuse of
anti-terror legislation by the state to curtail legitimate protest.
Vested interests and the G20 governments that pander to them can go to
enormous lengths to protect themselves and to undermine criticism.
Seen in this light, Sen's story is not so much a distant happening as
a morality play with implications for all of us. In demanding fair
treatment for him, we assert our own right to speak the truth without
intimidation. It is the only way to reclaim human rights from the
empty rhetoric and perversions to which the powerful have consigned
it.

 __._,_.___

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to