---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Siddhartha Mitra <[email protected]>


*Bringing out the kill*


 It was a black and white
<http://www.hindu.com/2010/06/17/stories/2010061755610100.htm>picture. That
too, not of very clear resolution. But what was clear was that a body of a
dead was being carried by security personnel. The hands and legs were tied
to a pole, and the body was being carried out like that of a carcass by the
grim faced security forces.

According to the police authorities, she was a Maoist killed in an
encounter. At a distance, she seemed to have civilian clothes, but clothes
do not make a Maoist, one can claim.

But is this the way to treat the dead? Even if the dead is an “enemy
combatant”, after all a citizen of the state?

When the mutilated bodies of 16 Indian security personnel
<http://www.india-today.com/itoday/20010507/bangladesh.shtml>were returned
by Bangladesh several years ago, there was a huge uproar. People were not so
much upset by the alleged incident of border violation by the Bangladesh
Rifles police force. What seemed unbearable was the way the bodies were
hanged from the poles, akin to that of the carcasses of wild animals. It
seemed to be the ultimate form of disrespect. As a nation, citizens rose up
and demanded justice against this humiliation. It was a blow to the national
pride.

Will there be any such hue and cry over similar treatment of the body of a
woman, a citizen of the country, though one who had purportedly taken up
arms against the state?

One strongly doubts if this will be the case. For the last few months had
seen one debacle after another for the Indian state in its war against the
Maoists. First there was the horrific massacre of 76 security personnel
<http://www.hindustantimes.com/Maoists-kill-76-securitymen-in-Dantewada/Article1-528116.aspx>in
the forests of Dantewada. Barring the few initial shots of bloodied bodies,
all one was left with was a long row of caskets. And then there was the
tragic incident of the ambush of the bus near
Sukhma<http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article432488.ece>,
not too far from Dantewada, which claimed 35 more lives. This time, as there
were no security personnel involved (apart from “special police officers”),
there were no caskets. All that remained was some twisted remains of a bus
and bodies by the broken road, bodies covered by sheets.

A respect for the dead. The security personnel who gave their lives for the
sake of the state, and the civilians who were caught in the conflict. In the
end, they were all citizens of India.

Respect for the dead goes beyond any specific writ in the constitution or
legal law. A dead person cannot pose any danger, nor can he or she continue
working on any cause, good or bad. In death, strangely enough, we all become
human. While it is in our nature to commemorate a well-lived live by paying
the final respects to the mortal remains as the person passes forever from
our sights, it is also in us to acknowledge that human being in all by
showing respect to a dead person, however ill-lived that life had been. It
is not in us to desecrate or disrespect dead bodies.

Then why was the body of the woman shown that way in the media? What purpose
does it serve?

Perhaps it is an implicit acknowledgement of how adivasis are viewed n
Indian society. Since the invasion by the Aryans, these people have always
been treated as if they were subhumans. And today, when the rest of India
rushes headlong into “development”, these people living in the “museum
cultures” are being even more left behind. Their marginalisation has led
them to join the Maoist movement in large numbers, and also have led them to
protest by other means. In response, instead of trying to address the root
causes of the problem, the state has launched “Operation Green Hunt”. The
people who have dared to take up arms against the state will need to be
exterminated, like wild animals that pose dangers to humans. What we see is
a kill being trumpeted as a trophy.

Looking closely, one fails to see why the body was carried out in the first
place. Very likely, this woman, Maoist or not, was a tribal living in the
forest. The boy with the disheveled hair and vacant look, who was captured
in the same operation, who we now know is dumb and possibly mentally
challenged<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Cops-parade-deranged-man-as-Maoist/articleshow/6060704.cms>,
does seem to be one such. He certainly was not like the very different
looking army personnel, possibly from the cities and plains of Northern
India, who were escorting him. Since the woman was allegedly in the same
group, very likely she was a tribal as well. As the personnel had reached
the body, they could have easily searched and confiscated any relevant
papers or arms and ammunition, and left the body, possibly to be taken away
by her comrades or relatives for a tribal burial.

The only rationale that explains this is one of making a statement. A
statement of the crudest and most vindictive kind. The state needed a
victory. Blood for blood, eye for an eye. Body for a body. If it cannot show
the face of shining success, it can at least show that it is not beaten. If
it cannot eradicate the structural violence that leads the poorest to stand
up against it, it can at least show the shining India that those people who
stand up will not get the claim to being a human, something that was denied
to them in life.

Strangely enough, this is not the first time that the bodies of people
standing against the state has been marked for desecration. Lalmohan
Tudu<http://www.countercurrents.org/ray230210.htm>,
the mild-mannered elderly leader of the PCAPA, who was brutally gunned down
as he was walking unarmed near his house, and that of Laxman
Jamuda<http://www.thehindu.com/2010/05/13/stories/2010051357660300.htm>,
the innocent villager who was killed in Kalinganagar, Orissa, were both
taken to the police
station<http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA20/013/2010/en/6a21ed47-2366-4ce6-9230-ca6b610cd574/asa200132010en.html>,
out of bonds of their mourners and relatives. In fact, the reign of terror
was so complete, that their relatives did not dare ask for their bodies.
Reports indicate that the return of the bodies could lead to independent
examinations and exposure of the illegality of their executions. Something
that the state understandably wanted to cover up. But for all purposes,
their relatives and their friends just wanted to pay their final respects.
By denying them that last wish, the authorities could have the free hand in
humiliating their memories, leaving Lalmohan and Jamuda forever in a cloud
of false suspicion.

The possession of the bodies could be the cover of the failure of state. But
how long can the starving masses, deprived of their livelihoods, can be
hidden in the recesses of the darkness that engulfs the narrow beam of light
that is the shining India? Can the millions of starving carcasses be carried
out of their forest dwellings to clear that darkness? Or by bringing that
darkness out, are we not accepting the failure of the light to shine?

By failing to honour the dead civilian, the state has implicitly
acknowledged its failure to live up to the rights of the people. It is not a
march of triumph, but a march of failure. And what was carried out was
representative of the death of the once vibrant living community that formed
the heart of the country. We can at least give that body its final dues in
memory of what should be and could have been.

 --
=en <http://groups.google.com/group/freebinayaksen-us?hl=en>.



-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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