http://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/1884110/column-of-blunt-swords-and-other-police-dilemmas
Of blunt swords and other police dilemmas
Wednesday, Sep 4, 2013, 11:45 IST | Agency: DNA
 [image: Jyoti Punwani]
Jyoti Punwani <http://www.dnaindia.com/authors/jyoti-punwani>

Swords feature commonly in riots in Mumbai. Ever wondered how people lay
hands on this medieval weapon in this 21st century city? It’s not
difficult. Last week, Shiv Sena leader Abhijit Panse distributed swords to
male and female participants of a dahi handi programme. The men were
advised to use them to ‘‘cut off the limbs of those who attack women’’, the
women for self-defence. To do so, women will have to carry these swords all
the time. Won’t that be a crime? And, are the men supposed to dismember
attackers of women as they catch them red-handed, or after they have been
arrested? That’s not as improbable as it sounds. At least one recorded
instance exists of Mumbai police handing over a deaf-mute Muslim to a Sena
mob in the post-Babri Masjid riots.

The Srikrishna Commission inquiring into the riots recommended action
against this group of policemen, but the recommendation was overruled by a
government-appointed team comprising their colleagues. In another instance,
the police asked a Muslim if he wanted to be killed by them or by the Sena.
On Justice Srikrishna’s insistence, the Muslim agreed to identify these
cops, but backed out on the day scheduled for identification.

Why have the police not acted against Mr Panse? In the only report on the
incident, two officers explained their inaction. ACP Dhananjay Kulkarni
said he didn’t know if blunt swords could be defined as weapons. But the
man distributing them had no such doubts! No complaint had been made, said
Joint CP Sadanand Date. Whose complaint is he waiting for? An eye-witness
to the distribution? Or someone attacked by these swords?

Similar strange reasons were given by the police to Justice Srikrishna for
not arresting Sena leaders. They ranged from not wanting “to hurt their
followers’ feelings’’ to not being sure under what offences the leaders
could be booked.

Interestingly, Mr Panse seems to live by the sword — no pun intended —
doing things “the Sena style’’, as he himself puts it. The police has
supported him all the way; whether in 2007, when his followers vandalized
internet cafes after an “I hate Bal Thackeray’’ community was found on
Orkut; or in 2008, when they put up posters declaring that they were
‘‘proud to be terrorists if killing traitors…bombing those who criticise
the motherland and the religion is terrorism.’’ A Thackeray edit in Saamna
had called upon Hindus to form ‘‘suicide squads’’ and make ‘‘better bombs’’
against “mini-Pakistans’’ in India.

Defending his posters, Mr Panse had declared: “We are not Gandhians, we are
Shiv Sainiks. This is the language we speak.’’ The violent intent of the
posters screamed at every passer-by. But not at the police, who were
waiting — DCP Milind Bharambe had said then, ‘‘to understand from legal
experts the implications of these words,’’ adding for good measure that the
posters must have been put up after taking legal advice!

Thus emboldened, Mr Panse went from strength to strength. In 2010, his boys
scored two victories against their old enemy — books: burning copies of
Rohinton Mistry’s Such a Long Journey outside the University; and warning
booksellers not to stock James Laine’s book on Shivaji.

When Muslims who attacked policemen at Azad Maidan last year were thrown
into jail, their families recalled the impunity with which members of the
city’s two Senas regularly run riot. By choosing not to act against a Sena
leader who openly distributes weapons, the Mumbai police is sending out a
message that won’t be forgotten.

*The author is a Mumbai-based freelance journalist*


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