http://www.countercurrents.org/cc280216.htm

*14 Years After Guajart Pogrom : Some Reflections*

*By Countercurrents.org*

28 February, 2016
*Countercurrents.org*

*T*his is the 14th anniversary of the infamous Gujarat pogrom. We are also
aware that those who are responsible for the pogrom are in power today.
During these 14 years, violence on the minorities in India have only
increased, unfolding issues like Muzafarnagar, Kandhamal, attacks on
Adivasis in different parts of the country, Ghar Wapasi, violation of
Indian Constitution in multiple ways, capturing of social, historical,
cultural and academic institutions by the Sangh Parivar, communalisation of
food, culture, language, literature, films and art and attacks on writers,
artists and cultural personalities.

In this context we requested a diverse set of people in India who are
active in the Gujarat justice movement to write their reflections and
observations from lessons learnt on the Gujarat pogrom and what they feel
about pursuing for a social order where no more Gujarat violence can take
place in future.

The main violence on the minorities in Gujarat started from February 28 the
onwards. Today we are publishing these reflections so that we shall never
repeat another Gujarat again

*Mani Shankar Aiyar ,Former Central Minister/Member, Rajya Sabha*

I was in Manipur when my wife telephoned to inform me of the burning of the
railway compartment at Godhra. I was deeply apprehensive that this would be
followed by wanton attacks on the Muslim community of Gujarat. What I did
not anticipate was that the Government itself would extend its patronage
and protection to the killers.

Yet, overwhelming evidence has been produced that the State Government in
Gujarat did nothing to restrict the organised attacks that led to the
massacre of at least a thousand and possibly up to two thousand innocent
Muslims, men, women (even pregnant women) and children, with whole
townships being set ablaze while the police stood by doing nothing and, in
many cases, even egging on the mob. Very soon, the pogrom spread beyond
Ahmedabad to a large number of cities and rural areas in the State.
District Magistrates who took action were frowned upon and those who let
the mobs riot were given governmental approbation.

Although it has not proved possible to pin down the Chief Minister’s guilt
in a court of law, wide swathes of informed public opinion continue to hold
the view that communal disturbances on such a large scale could not have
taken place without at least the passive complicity of the authorities.

Tragically, instead of voters turning down a government that had proved so
negligent in its fundamental duty of maintaining public order, communal
polarization led to that government being repeatedly elected. Worse still,
the man who presided over the mayhem is now the Prime Minister of India.

What happened in Gujarat should never be forgotten or forgiven for that
would only encourage a repeat of the crime, perhaps on a national scale. It
is necessary that the nation be warned and put on red alert as the last
eighteen months have demonstrated the extent to which intolerance can be
whipped up, murder condoned and mobs incentivized to take the law into
their own hands. The very Idea of India is under challenge and must be
resisted now.

*Zakia Soman , Founder Member, Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan/ Center for
Peace Studies Gujarat*

Fourteen years after the Gujarat communal carnage it would not be an
exaggeration to say that the survivors have become second class citizens.
They were attacked by armed mobs led by hindutva fanatics as the police and
the administration looked the other way. Over one lakh women, men and
children were forced to flee when attacked by mobs and take shelter in
relief camps. Most of these relief camps were located in kabrastans or
around sufi dargahs in open grounds without any basic amenities such as
drinking water, toilets, roofs or adequate food. There was hardly any
relief provided by the government and help came only from muslim
organizations and some select voluntary groups. There was a refusal to
provide relief, register FIRs and enable legal justice. No efforts were
made by the government for rehabilitation or healing the wounds of innocent
citizens. Paltry amounts were provided as compensation to families who had
lost homes and every asset. Till date no plan has been offered for
alternative livelihoods or any rehabilitation measures. With passage of
time there is very little hope for legal justice. Out of the 2500 plus
legal cases justice has taken place only in one or two matters and a then
sitting minister is serving jail term for the killings of 90 people in
Naroda Patiya. The violence and the apathy that followed have left
thousands of families displaced forever. It is a painful reality that the
survivors of Gujarat have been forgotten.

*Nirjari Sinha , 'Convener, Jan Sangharsh Manch, Gujarat*

The fire that had engulfed Gujarat in 2002 has now virtually spread to
every part of our country. From students to journalists to artists to
activists to minorities, everybody is under an unprecedented attack by the
current fascist regime. In addition to their own goons, they have misused
state power so blatantly that it brings back memories of the 1975
Emergency. Even if this fascist regime falls in 2019, much like 2002, the
hate and divisiveness that the saffron brigade has injected into the
populace will haunt India for many years to come. That makes it all the
more necessary for all progressive forces of the country to unite and
completely uproot the saffron brigade so that India can heal.



*Fr. Cedric Prakash SJ, Director of PRASHANT, the Ahmedabad based Jesuit
Centre for Human Rights, Justice and Peace*

The Gujarat Genocide of 2002 was the bloodiest chapters in post-independent
India. Sadly, the one who presided over it today “rules’ the country- which
seems to legitimize the killings, rapes, arson, loot, displacement,
denigration of thousands of Muslims. True, there have been some
convictions- but the real culprits still roam with impunity and immunity.
There must be healing- but for that to take place, the victim-survivors
have to experience the triumph of truth and justice. A reality can never be
swept under the carpet. The Judiciary must prove that it serves the cause
of Justice alone, media has to be impartial and objective and above all,
civil society must be courageous to counter the fascist and fundamentalist
forces at work in the country

In December 2003, the then Chief Justice of India V.N. Khare presiding over
a Divisional Bench of the Supreme Court criticized the Government of
Gujarat saying, “I have no faith left in the prosecution and the Gujarat
Government. I am not saying Article 356. You have to protect people and
punish the guilty. What else is raj dharma? You quit if you cannot
prosecute the guilty.” And in a landmark ruling on February 8th, 2012, the
Acting Chief Justice of Gujarat Bhaskar Bhattacharya, very emphatically
stated, “Gujarat government’s inadequate response and inaction (to contain
the riots) resulted in an anarchic situation which continued unabated for
days on…the state cannot shirk from its responsibilities”.

In the context of the many cases and the fact that several fingers were
pointing to the connivance of the Modi Government, the Supreme Court of
India appointed a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to look into certain
cases, very specially a complaint made by Zakia Jafri with regard to the
murder of her husband, the former Member of Parliament Ehsan Jafri and
several others. It is common knowledge that the role even played by the SIT
is highly questionable. There are speculations and plenty of “leakages”, of
the final SIT Report. Whatever it says and does not say; lapses and
manipulations therein; the complicity and the culpability of the powerful
and of vested interests, is beyond doubt.

Today, ten years down the road, in spite of the best efforts of several, to
sweep the reality under the carpet, and flaunt a so-called ‘vibrant model
of development’ the hard fact is that, most minorities in the State,
particularly the Muslims, are treated as second-class citizens. The
victim-survivors of the carnage continue relentlessly in their pursuit for
truth and justice. Human rights groups continue demanding that the full
truth emerge. A good section of the media, take pains in not allowing this
horror chapter to be forgotten.

The pro-Government responses of others are on expected lines: “2002 was
just an aberration in fact a distraction”; “look at the way, we have
progressed since; the roads, the shopping malls, the riverfront, the
flyovers...in fact all the industrialists want to come only to Gujarat”;
“didn’t they deserve it, after all, they are but terrorists”; “why is the
same importance not being given to the massacre of the Sikhs in 1984 and
for that matter, to the Hindu pundits in Kashmir?”; “We Muslims need to
move on…” The rationalisations are typical. They come from the educated
elite and also from those who are afraid to deal with the past. Statements
like these often gripped by fear…Fear seems to rule the roost... the truth
is, a sizeable section of the population is terribly afraid of the plain
truth. Besides, many suffer from selective amnesia!

It is indeed noteworthy that several national channels, magazines and
electronic media gave ample coverage to the tenth anniversary of the
carnage. Inspite of an over-drive by the Modi Government through their
American publicists, they have not been successful in their efforts to
“make people forget” about 2002.

On March 26th, in far away United States, a City Council had to say this:
"The Harvey City Council condemns the Gujarat Pogrom of 2002 as a gross
violation of human rights and a failure of the law and order machinery in
the State of Gujarat," states the resolution. The Council also expressed
concern that "despite worldwide horror and condemnation, the surviving
victims have been denied justice and due process." There have been very few
arrests and even fewer convictions arising out of the cases registered
during and after the mass killings.”

"There are times when events in far-flung parts of the world not only move
our hearts, but strengthen our resolve to always stand up for truth and
justice. The horrific massacres that took place in the Indian State of
Gujarat in 2002 are one such event," said Harvey City Mayor Eric Kellogg in
a historic speech after the passing of the resolution. "The fact that such
horrific violence took place in the birth place of Mahatma Gandhi, who was
the ambassador of peace and harmony, is especially shameful".

In Gujarat, there is much that keeps happening with frightening regularity!
Those who take a stand for justice and truth are hounded no end: false
cases are foisted on them; a crime of the past is raked up and cases are
reopened; a divide-and-rule policy co-opts minorities; Government officials
are instructed to rope in the “minorities” and to make their presence very
visible at Government “shows”; like the Sadbhavna tamasha, we saw in
Gujarat recently; select information from top secret documents is carefully
leaked. In fact, every trick in the book is resorted to, in order to keep
the truth from being revealed.

However, history has proved otherwise. Those who attempt to fool all of the
people all the time, have never ever succeeded in their game plan. One
thing is clear that the resilience of several victim-survivors and the
heartaches and cries of strong women like Zakiaben or Rupaben, (who is
still hoping that her son Azhar, lost in the carnage of 2002 will one day
be found) will never go unheard! They will be vindicated some day! Truth,
after all, is a non-negotiable. Truth has always triumphed!

*Ram Puniyani, Writer/Former Professor of IIT,Mumbai*

Fourteen years ago on the pretext of Godhra Train burning violence was
launched. The tragedy led to the death of 58 innocent people. In the
carnage unleashed by communal forces nearly 2000 people lost their lives
and a loss of thousands of crores of property. The displaced persons could
not come back to their old homes, they hardly got adequate compensation and
the rehabilitation efforts were not initiated by the ruling government.
This tragedy was followed by the ghettotisation of Muslim community, the
polarization of society along religious lines and strengthening of BJP at
political level. Struggle for justice is going on but the path is very
difficult.

*Ajaya Kumar Singh, Activist, Kandhamal justice movement*

“You are just burning tyres. How many Isai houses and churches have you
burnt? Without kranti (revolution) there can be no shanti (peace). Narendra
Modi has done kranti in Gujarat, the reason why shanti’s there.” Odisha
Viswa Hindu Parishad Leader Laxmananda Saraswati ordered his followers.
(Tehelka, Jan 19, 2008). The Hindutva leader had his eyes on other southern
districts to consolidate Sangh Parivar. Despite Malkangiri district
administration detention, he forced upon them to visit then Maoists
dominated southern districts in April 2008. Rumours spread that he wanted
to build the forces like Salwa Judum to fight against Maoists and religious
minorities.

The Maoists warned two days before that he would be eliminated as he was
spreading hatred among the communities. Swami filed the complaints too
before the Police station two days before he was gunned down and Maoists
claimed responsibilities of killing. There was lull for two days until
Gujrati Pravin Togadia, Viswa Hindu General Secretary and Indresh Kumar,
National Executive Member, Rastriya Swayam Sevak Sangh (RSSS). Although
Maoists had claimed the responsibilities of gunning down, the hardcore,
blood thirsty bayed for Christians blood and announced through media that
the Swami was killed by Christians; not Maoists leaving the trails of
anti-christian violences; with women and girl children being raped and
molested, reducing the churches and houses into ashes; chasing Christians
out of their homes and villages.

Angana Chatterji, Anthropologist and historian wrote Orissa: A Gujarat in
the Making in Communalism Combat on 2nd November, 2003. How prophetic she
was. Script was ready. Only the characters required and sequences were only
awaited. Godra train burns and some karasevaks died. Here Laxmananda
Saraswati gunned down. It is immaterial who set the train on fire or it is
immaterial even if Maoists claimed the responsibilities. Christians and
Muslims are responsible. They deserved to be punished. They would not be
spared. It just spontaneous reaction and only natural justice for the
traitors of the nation!!

To whip up the passion and hatred towards the religious minorities, dead
bodies are brought to the city of Ahmedabad in a procession; so also the
body of swami was taken in a procession throughout the district covering
more than 150 kilometres.

Both Gujarat and Odisha have the histories of communal violence. The
targets unequivocally remained Muslims and Christians. For the first time,
attacks on Christians in Dangs of Gujarat in 1998 showed that RSS too after
the Christians until then, it was Muslims. Of course, the Gujarat Program
2002 shook the world. Although, anti-christian violence in 2007-08
considered the largest attacks on Christians in 300 years of Indian
history, Orissa recorded nearly 2000 deaths of Muslims in 1964 unknown
until.

Who would forget the gang rapes of women in public when being watched by
hundreds including the police personnel around; thereafter the women of
Sangh Parivar taking lead role in defending the crimes against halpless
women. Shocked to hear that the Sanghi Adivasi women could demand that the
raped woman to be handed over to be get married off to their men and took
out the procession. Although, the victim survivor adivasi catholic nun
herself.

Not to be far off dalit and adivasi who were brain washed in Sanghi
ideology were ready to kill and rape their own clan people; only different
being they happen to be followers of Christs. Dalit and Adivasi played foot
soldiers in the program; ready to kill and burn the houses and villages.
The story of Adivasi and Dalit became too willing foot soldiers in Gujarat
2002. Togadia and Indresh Kumar led the violence from the front against
Christians in Kandhamal, while the Union Minister of State for Home
Sriprakash Jaiswal, who was supposed to protect the citizens, was not
allowed to visit the district by the state government.

The hatred against the religious minorities is deep seated not just on the
part of non-state actors; more over the state seems to be in complicit to
it. The state has failed to unearth the killers who murdered people by
burying them alive, setting them on fire in houses as well as in jungle and
chopping them in front the siblings and parents and relatives; show cases
of these ghastly murders and rapes as trophies. More than two thirds
complaints were not converted into First hand report. Out of which only 5%
conviction according to the study conducted by Vrinda Grover, Supreme Court
lawyer. This shows that only less than 2% victims survivors had hard hardly
has had secured justice. Presently, not a single person is behind the bar
for such carnage while seven innonent adivasi and dalit Christians are
behind the bar without bail for murdering the swami for last eight years on
flimsy and framed charges although Maoist claimed the responsibility of
killing the swam as well as the arrested do not have any connected with
them. The subversion of justice as in Gujrat as one study stated to be less
than 10% (Times of India, May 9, 2014) sad reflection of the way state
cares about it.

Sangh Parivar war on the religious minorities continues and gets
consolidated every passing day. It is high time those who care the human
rights need to come together before they are consumed in the fire of
hatred. Wish the observance of anniversary bring solidarity among the
survivors as well as solidarity groups to secure justice for the people as
well as end factory of hatred campaign and violence at the earliest.

*Dhirendra Panda, Human Rights Activist,National Solidarity Forum Convener,
Civil Society Forum on Human Rights (CSFHR) and Secretary, Centre for the
Sustainable use of Natural and Social Resources (CSNR)*

We say, it was a Pogrom, Genocide in Gujarat 2002! For Sangh Parivar – it
was great step towards Hindu Rashtra (Nation). It was a big experiment for
the fundamentalists. In 2002 they came for the Muslims in Gujarat, in
2007-08 they came for the Christians in Kandhamal, in 2016 they are coming
for Leftists, Dalits, atheists, rationalists and liberals. In the name of
nationalism, they’ll destroy our Secular & Democratic Nation to establish a
Brahmanic Caliphate. They have already started cleansing Universities,
Media, Bureaucracy, Police and Judiciary. Not to speak of ‘dissent’, our
freedom of thoughts, expressions, beliefs or practice may not be there,
unless we are prepared to stand together to protect our Constitution and
Nation.


*Fr.Ambrose Pinto, Bangalore*

It is 14 years since that genocide. The legal system has not yet addressed
the issue. Delays are causing frustration in victims. The very same killers
have moved beyond Gujarat into Delhi to rule the country. The living of the
dead seeking justice are fighting against an unjust system that is
determined not to provide justice. The forces of death and destruction,
hate and violence have increased their influence and are in a position to
subordinate persons willing to stand against. There are more people who
have accepted their legitimacy now than then. What is required is hope in
the hopeless situation, a massive education of the masses so that citizens
and people, individuals and organisations agitate, organize and throw out
the ideology that killed the Mahatma and were responsible for the genocide.
Who can do it? In the absence of a Mahatma or an Ambedkar all of us need to
come together to defeat these forces.

*Jagadish G Chandra, New Socialist alternative, Bangalore*

Gujarat was a watershed as for as the oppressed minorities are concerned.
The right wing drew monstrous energy out of those ghastly and inhuman
carnage. Needless to say the polarisation of Indian polity in general took
to speed since that year. No point in brooding over the things that have
shed blood, the need of the hour is to build Unity and Defence mechanisms
to fight the resurgent RSS/BJP and the whole Hindutva mindset. Even
electorally, Bihar has shown the limitations of Modi mania, it is the
bounden duty of all of us aspiring for a radical change to build on the
latent energy unleashed by the Dalit & minorities assertion in the recent
times, and defeat the anti-people, anti-democratic ruling regime.

*Kedar Mishra, Writer/ Art Critic, Bhubaneshwar*

Gujarat has become a model for all that is inhuman and undemocratic. In the
backdrop of Gujarat genocide we heard a new slogan of development. The
development model soaked in blood caught the imagination of politically
ignorant middle class. Gujarat was a bottle of blood labeled as honey and
it was sold to Indians in high prices. The high priest of Gujarat genocide
is now in Delhi and he is undisputedly most powerful man of this country.
He was very clear, he wants to rule India the way he ruled Gujarat ! In
2014 there was a brilliant repackaging of inhumanity as human development.
The hawk dressed like a dove becomes the supreme leader of this country.
Today we see the country has become Gujarat of 2002, full of fears and
divisiveness. The so called development agenda has gone to hearth, now
every freedom loving citizen is branded as anti national. The Gujarat is
India now. A dozen of ABVP workers can outnumber a whole university. Few
violent members of Bajrang Dal can cut your thraot and go scot free.
Gujarat has become India finally.

*K.P Sasi, Film Maker*

Over 2,000 innocent Muslims were killed in Gujarat, starting from end of
February, 2002. Thousands had to flee from Gujarat. Innocent women were
subjected to brutal mass rape, houses and shops destroyed and the very
dignity of a large community belonging to Islamic faith was questioned,
branding them as terrorists and anti-nationals. The justification for such
brutal violence on innocent people was the incident of burning of a train
in Godhra. Later, ample evidences came out that the burning was initiated
inside the train and not from outside. The brutal incidents which followed
Godhra reveal that Gujarat genocide was systematically planned affair. The
statistics on the communal violence in Gujarat may differ and for all its
probabilities, widely underestimated. But the experience of Gujarat never
remained in Gujarat alone in the broader evaluation of time and space in
history. It remained as one of the greatest attempts of the emerging
fascist forces to strip the very identity and dignity of a segment of
Indian population. The arrogance of such an achievement paved the way for
several series of violations on the citizens’ rights enshrined in the
Indian Constitution by Dadasahib Ambedkar. The obvious victims were
minorities, women, Dalits, Adivasis, sexuality minorities and those who
lived their lives depending on land, water and forests.

Muzafarnagar and Kandhamal may be incidents of such grand schemes in the
communal history of our nation during these 14 years. But what really
shocked the whole world was the deep violation of human rights and freedom
of expression on writers, artists, film makers, academicians, theater
personalities and musicians also. Fascism reached our dining tables and
menu cards of restaurants during this period. And finally, the recent
developments in FTII, IIT (Chennai), and Hyderabad University brought shame
to every thinking citizen reminding us about a history since Manusmriti and
the very incident of burning it by Ambedkar in order to facilitate our
existence without shame. What followed in the end was JNU, placing critical
thinking itself as `anti-national’!

What is shocking is that the perpetrators of violence on the bodies and
minds of a large population have been lifted up to power in a country which
believes in democracy, freedom of religion, freedom of expression,
secularism, harmony, diversity and tolerance. Today, on February 28, 2016,
it is time for us not only to remember 14 years of Gujarat genocide, but
also to reflect on the series of developments during these 14 years. It is
the moral responsibility of every conscious citizen in this country to
remember the pains and sufferings of a past history and learn lessons from
it, so that a new generation can walk towards a future history with joy,
peace, justice and harmony. Remember the past to walk without shame and
guilt in future!

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