http://www.countercurrents.org/sasi090815.htm

* Why Are They Hounding Teesta Setalvad Now?*

*By K.P. Sasi*

09 August, 2015
*Countercurrents.org*

*A protest in Bangalore in defence of Teesta Setalvad *

*T*he first time I met Javed Anand was in the early eighties. I met him
since my close friend Paul Kurien used to admire the significance of his
work. Javed used to be part of a documentation centre at that time. Paul
Kurien who was a brilliant mind is a deep memory even now for many common
friends. I found Javed as a deeply reflective person, who is extremely
focused in his work, warm and compassionate. Later I came to know that he
had joined the Times of India as a journalist and he had a partner called
Teesta Setelvad who was also working as a journalist. After that I had
various occasions to meet them individually as well as together in
different places. I must confess that each meeting was inspiring for me as
much as their relentless work, which made me an admirer of their dedication
and passion.

When two senior journalists, Teesta Setelvad and Javed Anand left a well
paid job and started a magazine called Communalism Combat, I never knew,
that such a bold decision would become one of the greatest historical
decisions of their personal lives which would connect the lives of millions
of people later in this country – those who keep aspiring for a consistent
dream of two words called `Secular India’ enshrined in the Indian
Constitution. I never knew then, that their efforts would become such a
prominent symbol in some of India’s greatest fights to preserve justice,
peace and harmony in direct conflict with those machineries who play with
the lives of millions of people using religion as a tool.

The historic step of starting Communalism Combat was motivated by the
violence which Javed and Teesta witnessed on the minority communities in
Mumbai in 1992-93, immediately after the demolition of Babari Masjid.
Sometimes, certain incidents can change your life altogether for the rest
of your life. When Mumbai burnt, even some of the secular sections tried to
protect their securities, instead of raising their voices for a secular
India. But a few of them expressed enormous courage to face the
insecurities. Javed and Teesta decided to leave their well paid jobs to
face insecurities using their skills. With no salaries coming from their
skills they initiated the effort of Communalism Combat in a shed in Juhu.

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Those who have burnt their fingers with alternative magazines can easily
tell that starting a non-mainstream magazine without any proper financial
backing is a difficult job. When the struggle to run the magazine as well
as running a family became too difficult, Shabana Azmi stepped in for help.
She organised some support for this crucial work by performing the play ,
Tumhari Amrita. From the days of their total insecurities till today, if
any objective analysis on the volume of work they have undertaken, it could
easily be found out that the work of Teesta and Javed were absolute healing
touches on the promise of secular India by the Indian Constitution. If the
new generation of activists wish to know how to stretch one’s 24 hours of a
day into 48 hours for committed and dedicated hard work for a cause, they
may study the lives of Teesta Setalvad and Javed Anand. But it is not an
accident that fight against the violence in Mumbai and Gujarat stepped into
their lives. It was a historical necessity of secular political
consciousness in this country.

Only July 8, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) carried out searches
at various premises linked to Teesta Setalvad and Javed Anand. On July 24,
immediately after the CBI court rejecting her anticipatory bail plea, the
Bombay High Court extended Teesta’s interim bail for two weeks. The present
CBI harassment on them amounts to a deep loss of faith of millions of
people in this country, on the role of CBI and how it is being used by the
perpetrators of violence, For all those who have seriously cared to look
into the work of Teesta and Javed, rather than tarnishing the image of
Teesta and Javed, it is the image of CBI that is being tarnished. The test
is not on Teesta and Javed. It is on the CBI to prove that it is an
impartial agency. As far as Javed and Teesta are concerned, their test is
also owned up by a large section of people all over the country by coming
out on streets in support of them.

For any intelligent person in this country, when they enter into a
discourse on `Why Teesta’, the most relevant question is also `Why Teesta
Now?’ Teesta and Javed have been actively involved on the issues related to
communal violence for more than two decades. The Indian State did not
target them for their work till they entered Gujarat genocide of 2002,
which happened during the Chief Ministership of Narendra Modi who is now
the Prime Minister of India. The targeting began from 2004 onwards as a
reaction to many legal activities they undertook for justice for the
victims and survivors of Gujarat violence. But the present scenario is
different.

Many organisations all over the country have strongly condemned the blatant
hounding of Teesta Setelwad, Javed Anand and their associate Gulam Mohammed
Peshimam. Many organisations have already held public protests demanding
Narendra Modi Government to stop targeting Teesta. Condemning the misuse of
CBI by the Government, Committee for Protection of Human Rights (CPDR)
stated: `The first year of BJP rule has been marked by brutal bulldozing of
all forms of dissent. While the plank for attacking NGOs was whether the
foreign funds received by them violated FCRA regulations, the government is
selective in targeting only those organisations who oppose their agenda.’
As per the motive of this harassment, the statement spelt out: `These
activists are actively pursuing the Zakia Jafri case and the Naroda Patiya
appeals among many others related to the 2002 Gujarat anti-Muslim pogrom.’
The connection between the timing of the final hearings of the Zakia Jafri
case and the present harassment on Teesta and Javed is too crucial. When
the human rights activists fight for justice for victims and survivors,
they are forced to spend their time and energy in defending their human
rights instead of the victims and survivors they represent. The transition
from the status of human rights defender to human rights victim is
something which happened to many people in this country during the short
regime of Modi’s rule.

*Jagdish G. Chandra addressing the protest meeting in defence of Teesta in
Bangalore *

It is not just Teesta being hounded for fighting for justice. Gujarat
special judge Jyotsana Yagnik , who presiding over a designated court for
the trial of the 2002 Naroda Patiya massacre case convicted 32 persons
including former minister Maya Kodnani and Bajrang Dal leader Babu
Bajrangi, had stated in May this year that she has received 22 death
threats since retirement. Her security cover was not enhanced, but scaled
down. In her judgment Jyotsana Yagnik had termed Maya Kodnani as the
‘kingpin’ of the massacre and sentenced to 28-year imprisonment, whereas
Bajrangi was ordered to stay behind bars for entire life. It is an irony
that Maya Kodnani is now walking free by getting bail on flimsy grounds
while Teesta and others are being hounded for fighting for justice for the
riot victims.

The activists following this issue state that the harassment on Teesta can
be understood more precisely, when AK Sharma who was the joint CP in Crime
Branch in Gujarat, also one of the accused by Zakia Jafri for the cold
blooded murder of her husband Ehsan Jafri, is pushed to a prime position in
CBI today. The theory of vengeance on Teesta has such strong circumstantial
evidences.

As a response to these realities, the National Alliance of People’s
Movements (NAPM) has demanded :

1) The Parliament of India to enact a comprehensive legislation protecting
the human rights defenders and whistle blowers, who are always at the
receiving end for seeking execution of constitutional rights and demanding
accountability from the State.

2) To keep CBI as an independent agency free from interference of all
political powers.’

When the fabricated cases were registered against Teesta and Javed, they
used the legal machineries fight them effectively. Usually, ordinary
activists can easily get tired in such processes. When the State failed to
suppress their voices, the cheapest trick was to use character
assassination to generate negative publicity against the popularity of
Teesta and Javed.

It is an age old practice used in politics right from the smallest entrant
in politics to political party leaders at the national level, to use
character assassination as a strategy to deal with their political
opponents. The strategy is: If you cannot deal with the political questions
raised by your political opponents, then use personal slander on them. Such
character assassination has been done on many committed significant
personalities in the past. Medha Patkar, SP Udayakumar, leaders of the
anti-POSCO movement and many others have been victimised several times on
such grounds before. And if the State uses institutions like CBI for
character assassination on dedicated activists, one must assume that Teesta
and Javed have reached a level of success in their work to such an extent
that even the state machinery can not deal with their questions. Teesta
Setalvad has thus become the biggest thorn on Modi’s foot today which he is
struggling to deal with and observers rightly feel that they deserve a more
decent treatment.

Morally speaking, it should have been the role of the opposition parties to
undertake the role of a sustained struggle for justice for the victims and
survivors of communal violence in this country. Even if they could not do
that job, the minimum they should be doing is to organise strong protests
against the victimisation of human rights activists like Teesta. But it is
a significant section of other like minded groups and human rights
activists all over India which is doing this job and the opposition parties
are still lagging behind. If democracy has to sustain, the political
parties will have to play a more positive role in situations like this.

The CBI claimed that Teesta and Javed are a `threat to national security’.
Here, the question is who the nation is and whose security is affected? Any
look into their activities will tell us that their activities affected the
perpetrators and criminals of violence and this lot can not be allowed to
be defined as nation and their insecurity can not be undertaken as a matter
of concern for national security.

Against all the harassment of the machineries of the central Government,
Teesta had openly stated that explanations consisting of around 25,000
pages have already been given as reply for all allegations. So the idea of
the Government appears to be simple. Instead of running Communalism Combat,
let them write these explanations.

If foreign fund is the issue, then the Prime Minister and the ministers all
over the country should not be travelling abroad consistently to welcome
foreign funds in the process of offering this country for the multinational
corporations. If foreign fund is the issue then the ideal ground for the
CBI should be looking into the millions of dollars received by people like
Mata Amritanandamayi, Ravi Shankar and many other God men as well as bodies
of Vishva Hindu Parishad as well as other organisations under the control
of Sangh Parivar. CBI could have easily investigated the thousands of
crores of rupees Narendra Modi received during his election campaign. I do
not have to go into the list of financial scams of thousands of crores
during the present regime. But that big money is different. And the small
money which comes for NGOs which work actively on human rights issues is
xplained as a threat. A threat for whom? Not for the nation, but for the
ruling elites! The real issue seems to be what Teesta dreamt of using the
money for and not the money itself. If Teesta Setelvad dreams to build a
museum for the victims and survivors of Gujarat genocide, and if the Indian
state believes that such activities should be blocked on financial grounds,
then thousands of ordinary people in this country will whole heartedly
support her dream with their savings. It appears that the Government
machineries have made a gross under estimation on their political
calculators.

The process of Indian State transforming itself into an Emergency type of
State became so apparent within the civil society from the targeting of
Binayak Sen onwards. Targeting of human rights activists and suppressing
dissent had already started before Modi became the Prime Minister. Human
rights activists have been calling it with terms like Silent Emergency or
Undeclared Emergency. In real terms, what Narendra Modi did in this short
period of rule was to speed up this process of crushing dissent, crossing
all constitutional and democratic norms. But what the civil society did not
really imbibe is that the same voice of fear of people, was also
articulated by none other than the leader of BJP and the former Deputy
Prime Minister LK Advani himself. Advani had spent his time in jail during
Emergency. Modi hasn’t. It is not a human rights activist who is telling
now that the Indian State is transforming itself into an Emergency type of
State under Modi’s rule. It is Narendra Modi’s senior leader with the
experience of Emergency, giving him a warning.

This warning has to be taken seriously not just by the Modi camp, but also
the entire media which has a responsibility to look after their own
interests, by not lying down under the feet of the Emperor when asked to
kneel down. Media has a different role to play as the keeper of
consciousness and as a pillar of democracy. And remember, what Teesta
Setalvad and Javed Anand did was also to play this role as editors of
Communalism Combat, a role that mainstream media till today could not
perform properly. It was through Communaism Combat that Javed and Teesta
tried hard to bring out facts on the violence in Gujarat. What a section of
mainstream media did by publishing some positive reports for justice for
the victims and survivors of Gujarat genocide was more or less to follow
people like Teesta. What is interesting is that after Teesta and Javed left
the mainstream media to do this immense historical work, their work also
forced even the mainstream media like the Times of India to follow their
work as important sources for information. Now, taking the cue from LK
Advani, it is time that even the mainstream media should work for freedom
of expression, if not to protect human rights activists, but at least to
protect their own interests.

Today, Teesta Setalvad has become a symbol of human rights in India. For if
Teesta Setalvad is imprisoned, any human rights activist or group can be
imprisoned on any grounds. And if human rights activists are silenced,
justice for the minorities, Dalits, Adivasis and other marginalised
communities and thousands of people’s movements will become a distant
dream. It is so apparent that the Indian State is in a conscious effort to
clean up: To build a `Swatch Bharat’ where there is no dissent! Watch your
doorstep!

*K.P. Sasi *is a film director and Associate editor of Countercurrents.org

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