[Also look up: 
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/chhattisgarh-assures-sc-it-will-not-arrest-nandini-sundar-and-others/articleshow/55379503.cms>.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/nandini-sundar-booked-tribal-murder-ndtv-india-one-day-ban-pathankot-attack-4373572/

Republic of Unfreedom

NDTV and Bastar incidents display the undemocratic instincts of
India’s politicians and public officials.

Written by Ramachandra Guha | Updated: November 14, 2016 12:06 am

DU Professor Nandini Sundar. (Source: YouTube screen grab)

This has been a bad month for Indian democracy. First, there was the
one-day ban on NDTV India imposed by the government of India. This
sparked much protest; bowing to the pressure, the government seems to
have stayed the ban — whether for the moment or for ever, it is not
clear. Just when Indian democrats began to breathe easier, however,
news came that the Chhattisgarh police had booked a group of writers
and activists for murder, among them India’s finest anthropologist,
Nandini Sundar, a respected professor at Delhi University with a wide
and deserved international reputation.

Freedom of expression has long been in peril in our country. Writers
have had their books banned, artists their exhibitions vandalised,
film-makers their films censored. But what happened recently in
Chhattisgarh marks a new low. The group, of which Sundar was a part,
had visited the strife-torn region of Bastar, and prepared a report on
the deteriorating human rights situation in the state. This was their
real crime, that so enraged the Chhattisgarh police that they filed a
charge of murder!

Bastar is a part of India that has long interested me. I wrote a
biography of Verrier Elwin, the great chronicler of Adivasi life and
culture, who did his best work in Bastar. Elwin argued passionately in
defence of tribal rights in land and forests. He hoped that
Independent India would respect and protect tribal rights; instead,
successive governments have treated them with contempt and
condescension. The expropriation of tribal lands and forests has led
to deep discontent, adroitly exploited by the Maoists, who in recent
decades have made major strides in Adivasi areas, not least in Bastar.
A democratic state should have fought Maoism by redressing the many
wrongs it had committed against the tribals. Instead, the Chhattisgarh
government promoted a vigilante army named Salwa Judum, provoking a
savage war, in which the violence of the Maoist was met by the equally
brutal violence of the state-sponsored Judum. The tribals were caught
in between, vilified by one side and victimised by the other. In this
ongoing civil war, dozens of villages have been burnt, hundreds of
Adivasis killed, and close to a hundred thousand people displaced.

In 2006, a group of independent citizens, which included Sundar and
myself, visited Bastar. Afterwards, we filed a public interest
litigation in the Supreme Court. In its judgement of July 2011, the
court ordered the disbandment of Salwa Judum. The Supreme Court said
it was “aghast at the blindness to constitutional limitations of the
state of Chhattisgarh, and some of its advocates, in claiming that
anyone who questions the inhumanity that is rampant in many parts of
that state ought necessarily to be treated as Maoists, or their
sympathisers, and yet in the same breath also claim that it needs the.
sanction, under our Constitution, to perpetrate its policies of
ruthless violence.” Judges Sudarshan Reddy and S.S. Nijjar remarked
that “lawless violence, in response to violence by the Maoist/Naxalite
insurgency, has not, and will not, solve the problems, and instead it
will only perpetuate the cycles of more violence”.

Sadly, while the Supreme Court can pass strictures it cannot ensure
that its orders are followed on the ground. The brutal, barbaric civil
war in Bastar continues. The Maoists fetishise and glorify violence,
which is why this writer detests them. Tragically, a government sworn
to uphold the Constitution has emulated the Maoists in showing an
utter contempt for the rule of law and for basic democratic values.
Bastar is a war zone, where ordinary citizens fear not just the
Maoists but the Chhattisgarh police as well.
Chhattisgarh has had a series of freedom-hating police officers, each
more vicious and vindictive than the last. The inspector general now
in charge of Bastar was reported by The Hindu as saying, “We don’t
need any interference or guidance, Bastar knows to handle its own
problems. We don’t like any kind of interference”. In pursuance of
this policy, the Chhattisgarh police have arrested several journalists
on trumped-up charges, and hounded several others out of the region.
Most recently, they have filed this FIR charging Sundar and several of
her colleagues with murder. I have read the FIR, whose wording and
precise recollection of names of people the witness had never met,
make it clear that it was doctored and/or coerced.

The timing of this attack on one of India’s most admired scholars (a
winner of the Infosys Prize) may not be accidental. Last month, Sundar
published The Burning Forest, a deeply moving and richly researched
book on the civil war in Bastar. This book, which by no means
exonerates the Maoists, shines a sharp spotlight on the errors and
crimes of the Chhattisgarh state government, its consistent and
sometimes gross violations of the law, its utter contempt for the
Constitution and for the Supreme Court. The FIR initiated by the
police is a malicious act of revenge.

This act by a rogue police force brings shame on Indian democracy. As
I write, the state and Central governments have stayed silent. Do they
condone it? One hopes not. For foisting false murder charges on
independent (and utterly non-violent) citizens is characteristic of
police states like Putin’s Russia or Xi Jinping’s China. I do not
credit the Chhattisgarh government with a deep understanding of
democratic principles. But surely some ministers in the Central
government must understand the damage such arbitrary and vengeful
behaviour does to the image of their party, the Union government, and
the nation itself.

NDTV India is a prominent channel based in New Delhi. Professor Sundar
has a high international standing. If they can be subject to such
treatment, one shudders to think of the fate of writers, journalists,
scholars and artists who work away from the glare of the national
media. And of the fate of ordinary citizens too. Physical attacks on
journalists in remote parts of India, often encouraged by the state
and/or powerful politicians, are now increasingly common. The everyday
harassment, by the police and paramilitary, of ordinary citizens in
conflict-zones such as Bastar, Kashmir and Manipur is very nearly
ubiquitous.

I have increasingly come to think of India as an “elections-only
democracy”. Elections are free and fair; but once a party (any party)
wins power, it considers itself immune from criticism or fair
appraisal for the next five years. The NDTV and Bastar incidents
display afresh how profoundly undemocratic are the instincts of Indian
politicians and public officials.

Ramchandra Guha’s most recent book is ‘Democrats and Dissenters’
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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