http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/fallen-god/article5093950.ece#.UihD7A4Fp3k.gmail

  Opinion <http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/> »
Editorial<http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/>   September
5, 2013
 Fallen God


   The 10-page resignation letter of suspended Gujarat cadre IPS officer
D.G. Vanzara — one among over 30 policemen currently in jail in connection
with a chain of post-2002 encounter murders — is so much a case of damning
with ‘high’ praise that on a first reading it could be misunderstood as a
defence of Narendra Modi and his government. The letter is, indeed, worded
in a manner to suggest that the chief recipient of Mr. Vanzara’s ire is
Modi-confidant and BJP general secretary Amit Shah who, with his “evil
influence,” usurped the Chief Minister’s “eyes and ears.” Mr. Modi himself
is described by Mr. Vanzara, who was Deputy Inspector-General of Police
until his 2007 arrest, as “a God” whom he adored. The one-time celebrated
top cop also fully justifies the liquidation of terror suspects as a
necessary outcome of the Gujarat government’s “pro-active policy of zero
tolerance for terrorism.” However, the deceptive eulogy is merely a cover
for a full-blown attack on Mr. Modi, whom Mr. Vanzara accuses of “marching
towards Delhi” without a thought to the jailed police officers who merely
followed the Chief Minister’s orders; if anything, Mr, Modi owed a “debt”
to the officers whose actions “endowed him with the halo of a brave Chief
Minister among a galaxy of other CMs.”

The mocking and sarcasm do not stop here. Arguing that those at the helm of
decision-making too needed to be put in jail for pursuing a “conscious”
policy of “alleged fake-encounters,” Mr. Vanzara suggests that the Gujarat
government shift its offices to the prisons where the arrested policemen
languished. So what is the real message in the letter? To start off, it
exposes the deep schism between the Modi administration and its own police
force. The sense of betrayal so acutely evident in Mr. Vanzara’s long
lament comes from the differential treatment given to the police officers
and Mr. Shah, who is himself an accused in two cases of encounter killings.
The Gujarat government secured the release on bail of Mr. Shah while the
officers were left to their own devices. More seriously for the State
government, Mr. Vanzara confirms that suspected terrorists were killed
under orders from the highest quarters. The accused officer, of course,
puts a veneer of patriotism on the murders, insisting that but for the
systematic purging of the suspects, Gujarat would have become another
Kashmir. But no civilised country can permit the extra-judicial killing of
its citizens, which is why Mr. Vanzara is cooling his heels in jail. The
desperate police officer’s lament that he was merely following orders will
not get him off the hook. But it does leave Mr. Modi and his government
with much to answer for.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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