[ Beheading and mutilating a captive is revolting and nauseous. No doubt
about that.

But it tends to get legitimised in an environ marked by brutal violence.

That's precisely why when the state unleashes brutal and gory violence in
the name of fighting it, and that too on non-combatants, it is just not
morally reprehensible but also sets an extremely dangerous precedence to
trigger a vicious cycle of gory violence.
It is the job of the state to ensure justice and peace.
Failure, more so when this is wilful, leads to disastrous tragedies.]


http://www.indianexpress.com/news/cop-beheaded-if-you-fight-for-poor-why-kill-our-son/572890/0

<http://www.indianexpress.com/news/cop-beheaded-if-you-fight-for-poor-why-kill-our-son/572890/0>Cop
beheaded: ‘If you fight for poor, why kill our son?’

Shiv Sahay Singh <http://www.indianexpress.com/columnist/shivsahaysingh/>
Friday , Jan 29, 2010 at 0205 hrs

Kalyan Bera, the brother-in-law of Sanjoy Ghosh, has a question for
Kishenji. “I want to ask him, if you are fighting for the poor, then why did
you kill Ghosh?”

The son of a daily wage earner from Satragachi near Kolkata, Ghosh had
joined the State Armed Police just 16 months ago, nine months of which were
spent in the jungles training and guarding a police camp in Bankura.
Yesterday, the jawan returned home, his head beheaded, his hands chopped off
and with multiple wounds on his torso. He was 23, and the only earning
member of his family.

Ghosh was abducted by Maoists from the Satnala camp in Bankura and is
believed to have been killed on January 25-26. His mother Pratima can’t get
over the shock of the sight of his body. “You need not strike so many times
and so brutally to kill a man. I don’t know who the Maoists are and what
they are fighting for. How could they kill a poor family’s son, our only
support?” she sobs. “It did not resemble a human body,” mumbles Bera.

Father Tapan Ghosh, who used to work as a contract labourer at construction
sites, had only recently taken a break after Sanjoy got the job. At 63, he
may have to return to the job again. While two of his daughters are married,
he has to still marry the youngest, 27-year-old Rupa. It was Rupa who last
spoke to Sanjoy on January 25 evening. “I spoke to him at 7.30 pm. He could
talk only briefly, saying he was going out on duty and would call later,”
says Rupa. Next day afternoon, the family came to know he had died from
television. Family members say they hadn’t been told he had been abducted,
nor if the Maoists had put forth any demands.

Rupa still remembers the toil Sanjoy put in to get into the State Armed
Police. “For three years, he got up early in the morning and went to the
nearby ground to practise. We did not have any money to support his studies
after Class X, so he got enrolled at a technical training institute in Belur
for an electrician’s course. He used to cycle all the way to Belur.”

Sanjoy last came home on January 12, in fact, to appear for a diploma
examination for his electrician’s course and had promised to return in
February. There were other promises he made, remembers his father, small
promises that looked possible in the certainty of a government job. “Every
monsoon, the small room in our house would go under water. Water would also
seep in from the holes in the ceiling. Sanjoy used to say he would repair
those soon,” he says.

With no politician paying even lip-service at their 16/2 Kankarapara lane
house, barely 30 km from Kolkata, the family isn’t sure what compensation
they will get. An official at Writers’ Buildings says that the family of any
policeman killed in a Maoist attack gets Rs 15 lakh, and continues to get
the salary he was getting. Sanjoy’s grandmother Chaina Ghosh hopes the
government gives Rupa a job. “The family can then survive at least,” she
says.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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