[I contest both these claims, but these are not essential to the
architecture of the law and can be given up to build consensus. The law can
be made to apply to all, both minority and majority, and instead of a
national authority, powers of oversight and advice to states can be given
to the National Human Rights Commission, which already defends human rights
without invading state autonomy.]

http://www.hindustantimes.com/comment/columns/no-room-for-hatred-as-winter-session-is-upa-s-last-chance/article1-1154272.aspx

No room for hatred, as winter session is UPA's last chance
*Harsh Mander
<http://www.hindustantimes.com/Search/search.aspx?q=Harsh%20Mander&op=auth>*
November 21, 2013


The continued human suffering and cynical engineering of social ruptures in
Muzaffarnagar is another reminder of the imperative for a law to prevent
further communal violence. This statute was promised by the UPA government
when it assumed power in 2004. But so far it has been unable to muster
the political courage to steer it through Parliament.

This winter session will be its last chance to redeem its pledge to its
people for defending India’s secular democratic fabric.


This same winter, 20,000 people will be forced to subsist in makeshift
camps in Muzaffarnagar: refugees from hate, exiled from their homelands for
the crime of their religious identity. Electoral politics divide people and
social fractures harden through hate, fear, violent intimidation and
organised boycott.

Muslim residents emptied out of more than a hundred villages in the
aftermath of September’s violent attacks spurred by angry claims — later
proved false — that a Muslim boy was stalking a Jat girl. But when people
tried to return to their villages, they faced blockades to employment in
the Jat landlords’ fields, and some were attacked and killed.


Apart from farm labour, the main livelihood of impoverished Muslims of the
region is ‘pheri’ — selling clothes from house to house — but as they try
to recommence this, again they hit both boycott and threats. Their despair
is compounded because hardly any arrests have been made despite more than
400 police complaints of murder, armed robbery and arson. Women speak in
hushed voices about gang rapes. The few times the police enter a village
for arrests, women block their paths and the police return empty-handed.


In many riots I have seen in the past, the surge of hate violence was
almost always followed shortly after by elders and women of both
communities reaching out to each other, by which some social healing and
reconciliation would set in. Gujarat, Assam and now Muzaffarnagar represent
a new dangerous phase in communal relations in India, in which hatred is
actively fostered not just in the heat of the actual violence but equally
in its aftermath.


Survivors are actively blocked from rebuilding their livelihoods through
systematically organised social and economic boycott, and are discouraged
from returning to their homes.


Through such social hate strategies, in Gujarat today many villages have
been ‘cleansed’ of their erstwhile Muslim populations. Muslim ghettoes like
Juhapara have grown from one and a half to four lakh, swollen with refugees
from violence. People in Gujarat speak of ‘borders’ between Hindu and
Muslim settlements, each almost fully segregated from the other. This
threatens to be the new reality in Lower Assam, and now Muzaffarnagar.


There were no riots in the Muzaffarnagar countryside during Partition or
the Babri demolition, but today it is being divided on communal lines,
perhaps permanently. If communal organisations succeed in preventing mixed
settlements of Hindus and Muslims, new generations will grow up knowing
little about each other, with no bonds of understanding and friendship.
This will be the beginning of the end of the idea of pluralist and tolerant
India.


To effectively prevent identity-based targeted hate violence in India, the
central pillar of the communal violence Bill must be passed to make state
administrations legally accountable to prevent communal violence, and to
control it effectively and in the shortest possible time.


Current laws fully empower governments to prevent and control hate
violence: prosecuting those indulging in hate propaganda, the use of force
and calling in the army. If state administrations wish to control even the
largest outbreak of communal violence, they can do so in a matter of hours,
not even days.


The problem is their deliberate failures to use the law to prevent such
violence, and the permanent scars that such bloodshed leaves on communities
that otherwise live together peacefully. The law must, therefore, create a
new crime — ‘dereliction of duty by public officials’, which makes it a
crime if they act — or deliberately do not act — in ways which allows or
fosters communal violence.


‘Command responsibility’ makes not just the officer on the spot but the
level from which commands emerged to not control hate violence criminally
liable. If such a law was in place we would not have witnessed the criminal
abdication of duty by officers to prevent communal carnages such as in 1984
in Delhi, 1992-93 in Bombay, 2002 in Gujarat and 2013 in Muzaffarnagar.


Other critical pillars of the proposed law are protecting victims’ rights
to justice, and mandatory standards of relief and rehabilitation in the
aftermath of communal violence. The importance of these is highlighted when
we observe even an administration such as that currently in power in Uttar
Pradesh which claims to be secular, failing to establish and run relief
camps, provide effective support to rebuild destroyed livelihoods and
homes, or to facilitate legal justice to the survivors.


The version of the Bill prepared by the National Advisory Council, with
which I was closely associated, contains all these essential features. It
has been attacked on two main grounds. The first is that it is the claim
that it offers protection only to minorities, and second, that it
compromises with the federal structure by creating a national authority
with powers over states.


I contest both these claims, but these are not essential to the
architecture of the law and can be given up to build consensus. The law can
be made to apply to all, both minority and majority, and instead of a
national authority, powers of oversight and advice to states can be given
to the National Human Rights Commission, which already defends human rights
without invading state autonomy.


There is just a small window before the general elections, in which
everyone from the right to the Left of the political spectrum needs to come
together, to rapidly build consensus on a law that makes state
administrations legally accountable to prevent and control communal
violence, and ensure survivors’ rights to reparation and justice.


India cannot afford the recurrence of the hate, suffering and social
fractures of Muzaffarnagar yet again.


*Harsh Mander is Director, Centre for Equity Studies*

*The views expressed by the author are personal*

Peace Is Doable

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