http://scroll.in/article/821568/the-daily-fix-bastar-crackdowns-warn-india-what-an-emergency-could-look-like-in-the-21st-century

Bastar crackdowns warn India what an Emergency could look like in the
21st century

2 hours ago
Updated 2 hours ago

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

Police state
While Delhi occasionally has to grapple with the real excesses of
state power, such as when the government orders a news channel to go
blank, the police state is alive and thriving in Chhattisgarh’s
Bastar. The district, which became infamous two decades ago for the
significant presence of Maoists, has also become a symbol of Indian
state abuse and has been the site of some of the most brazen attempts
by the authorities to hound out all dissent.

On Monday, the Hindustan Times reported that one of its journalists
was threatened by SRP Kalluri, Chhattisgarh’s inspector-general of
police, a man who has made clear his willingness to act against anyone
questioning his department’s actions. Kalluri told the HT journalist,
“If you all do like this, we will not let you visit …you went with my
reference to Bastar.”

This is not anomalous behaviour from the man who helped use the
police-initiated citizens body, the Samajik Ekta Manch, to drive out
any journalist living in the district who might question the police’s
actions – including Scroll.in’s Malini Subramanian who faced threats
of violence and brick-throwing. This week, Inspector-General Kalluri
has made it clear that even those who live outside Bastar will have to
toe his line if they want to enter the district to report.

This is even more pertinent because the story the HT journalist was
working on concerns another effort to keep people out: the murder case
against Delhi University professor Nandini Sundar and others. Sundar
was accused of being part of a crowd that had gone to the victim’s
village and warned him not to oppose the Maoists. However, the wife of
the murdered adivasi in whose name the case has been registered
against Sundar has said she did not add these names.

This again is being seen as an effort to keep out all those who might
be able to reflect a different viewpoint, and counter the state’s
narrative. These attempts gain further import because, as Bastar
slowly turns into a blackhole from which no dissenting information can
emerge, the chance of state abuse – already a recorded feature in the
district – becomes even higher.

The Opposition is set to take up the matter in the upcoming Winter
Session of the state assembly. Just days ago, the ruling Bharatiya
Janata Party was defending itself against charges of having imposed
Emergency following its now-stayed NDTV India ban, insisting that its
leaders had to face the brunt of Indira Gandhi’s authoritarian
tendencies and would never replicate the same measures.

If the BJP just looked at what’s happening in Bastar though, it would
find a district that would fit much more readily into Indira’s
Emergency-era India than the progressive nation they claim to dream
of.


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Peace Is Doable

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