http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/case-over-paris-cartoon-forces-mumbai-editor-to-go-behind-a-veil/99/

Case over Paris cartoon forces Mumbai editor to go behind a veil

Charlie Hebdo attack.

Written by Tabassum Barnagarwala , Srinath Raghvendra Rao | Mumbai |
Posted: February 3, 2015 5:01 am | Updated: February 3, 2015 10:53 am

"How should I drink this now?" A few minutes later, she finally
managed to slip in the straw through her face-veil to take a long sip
inside a restaurant in south Mumbai.

Shirin Dalvi, 46, had never worn a burqa till about two weeks ago when
she was the Mumbai bureau chief of the Urdu daily Avadhnama. But all
that changed on January 17, when Avadhnama published an image of
Charlie Hebdo's 'Je Suis Charlie' cover the week after the terror
attack in Paris.

While the world hailed the French magazine for going ahead with that
special edition, Dalvi's world crashed around her. On January 19, she
lost her job. Nine days later, she was booked and arrested by Thane
police "for outraging religious feelings" with "malicious intent"
under Section 295 A of the IPC.

Today, apart from threats to her life, Dalvi has six FIRs registered
against her -- in Mumbai, Thane and Malegaon. And, as she struggled to
finish that glass of lime juice, she revealed that she hadn't been
with her two teenaged children for two weeks now, except for a few
hours as she surrendered in Mumbra and got bail from a Thane court.

"It was a clear news story. If you write about the terror attack on
Charlie Hebdo, you also need to publish a relevant picture with it.
That image has been printed in the Indian media in several places, but
I am being singled out," Dalvi told The Indian Express.

Avadhnama's six other editions, all in Uttar Pradesh, didn't publish
that image -- they remain open -- but the furore after the Mumbai
edition of January 17 hit the stands was immediate. Complaints were
registered at numerous police stations in the city, including J J
Marg, Nagpada and N M Joshi Marg. Many of those are now being probed
together at the N M Joshi Marg station.

On January 18, Avadhnama published an apology written by Dalvi on the
front page. But that didn't help. A day later, Avadhnama's Mumbai
edition was shut down and all its 15 employees sacked.

In a statement on behalf of Taqdees Fatima, owner of the Avadhnama
title, Waqar Rizvi said Fatima had no links with the Mumbai edition
which was run by a separate entity. "The Mumbai edition has no direct
link with our edition except the title. The editor, publisher and
printers are totally different and... (are) responsible for the
contents," Rizvi said.
Dalvi's trauma, meanwhile, had just begun.

After receiving bail on a deposit of Rs 10,000 in the FIR filed in
Mumbra, Dalvi's interim bail plea in another will be heard by Bombay
High Court on Wednesday. The rest await.

"Why am I being harassed even after publishing a front-page apology?"
she asked. "Facing the community again has become a great concern for
me as there is still a lot of unrest. I have avoided showing my face
in Muslim-populated pockets. I have not gone back to my house (in
Mumbra) since the protest started," she added.

Dalvi is now "passing time" at the homes of friends in Mumbai, and
hasn't even been able to speak to her children on the eve of their
exams. "Our house has been locked since the trouble began. Both my
daughter and son are living with relatives. They haven't been able to
get their books, and they haven't attended college in the last two
weeks," she said.

Then, there are the threats. "My children have my old phone and they
told me that someone has been sending messages through WhatsApp,
saying "Maafi nahin milegi (You won't get forgiveness)," she said.
Dalvi has also been facing allegations from her former colleagues at
Avadhnama that she had courted controversy for "publicity". "She said
we should be broad-minded and try something new," said a former
colleague, who did not wish to be named.

Dalvi denied the allegation, saying it was "not true". "I did not
anticipate such a backlash and even after tendering an apology on
January 18 in the paper, cases continue to get registered against me,"
she said.

Dalvi also questioned the credibility of those behind the multiple
FIRs lodged against her, saying they had "no real legitimacy in the
Muslim community". "When organisations such as Raza Academy and Jamiat
Ulema-e-Hind were satisfied with my apology, I do not understand why
these letterhead organisations are hounding me. Their only agenda is
to harass a woman editor," she said.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to