http://www.outlookindia.com/article/Why-I-Stand-By-Her/293486

Why I Stand By Her
Support for Teesta is support for access to justice for victims of a pogrom.
Indira Jaising

Victims of crime are known to get so tired of legal processes that
they drop out from fatigue. Often, they are bought over by the
accused. This is likelier when the accused is a powerful person, with
the ability to mobilise finances and wield political clout.

Zakia Jafri, widow of Ehsan Jafri, a former Congress MP who was burnt
alive in Gulberg Society during the 2002 anti-Muslim riots in Gujarat,
was fighting a chief minister (Narendra Modi), and it was not until
the Supreme Court appointed an SIT--taking the investigation of the
very state she was fighting--that things started to move. Citizens for
Justice and Peace (CJP), of which Teesta Setalvad is the moving
spirit, supported Zakia through this and supports her to this day.
Support for Teesta is support for access to justice for victims of a
pogrom.

It's for the courts, of course, to decide whether a crime has been
committed, but the least society can offer Zakia is the support she
needs to carry the prosecution through to completion. There is no
'clean chit' yet. Appellate and constitutional justice is yet to be
done. Teesta's organisation, the CJP, supports victims of communal
violence. They are human rights defenders, who in turn must be
protected by law.

One of the ways of denying access to justice is to go after the
supporters of a victim. here, Teesta.

Access to justice can be denied in different ways. One is to
intimidate those who support a seeker of justice. The case against
Teesta smacks of a plan to deter her from assisting victims of the
Gujarat 2002 riots. Thanks to CJP, 119 people--one of them a
minister--have been convicted and given life terms for their part in
the riots. This is a record of convictions for any communal riot in
India.

The financial dealings of Teesta and CJP can be probed, but the
disproportionality of the legal process, the timing, and the
insistence of the prosecution on custodial interrogation, smack of
vendetta. Teesta is not running away from an investigation. She's only
asking: "Why arrest me?" And she's asking for a fair investigation.
What needs to be addressed here is the perception of bias in the trial
process.

What I am saying is, the disproportionate nature of the attack on her,
the timing and the attempt to arrest her and her husband Javed Anand
smack of vendetta and bias, an impression which can only be corrected
by the courts stepping in and addressing the issue of her demand for a
transfer of the investigation out of Gujarat. The issue is not whether
CJP has commited financial misconduct. The issue is how fair are our
pre-trial processes and how impartial our justice delivery system.

In contrast to the vehemence of the Gujarat police to prosecute and
arrest Teesta and Javed, one sees the failure of the CBI to appeal
against the discharge of Amit Shah, the chief of the ruling BJP, in a
case in which he is accused of three murders. One wonders if is this
not a case of manipulation of the investigation machinery by the
State?

Indira Jaising is a former additional solicitor-general; E-mail your
columnist: letters [AT] outlookindia [DOT] com



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