By systematically persecuting Dr Binayak Sen, a tireless champion of human
rights and the rights of adivasis and workers, the state is sending a strong
message to civil society about the price of not toeing the line.

*Raja bola raat hai, *
*mantri bola raat hai,*
*court bola raat hai,
ye subah subah ki baat hai!*

(The king said it was night. The minister said it was night. The court said
it was night. It was early morning!)

On 24 Dec 2010, the District Court in Raipur in Chhattisgarh state of
central India sentenced Dr Binayak Sen to life imprisonment. Given the
flimsy nature of the evidence, to most it came as a shock; to the state
seeking to silence dissenting human rights activists and social workers, it
was shot in the arm.

Targeting Dr Binayak Sen, a well-known civil rights and public health
activist, has wide implications for democracy and civil rights in India. Dr.
Sen is the National Vice President of the Peoples’ Union for Civil Liberties
(PUCL), one of the most respected civil liberties organizations in India
founded by late Jaya Prakash Narayan during the 1975-77 internal Emergency,
the worst era in the history of post-independence India. Dr Sen’s work in
the area of public health is well known; in fact, he was a part of the group
which set up the Mitanin rural health care system for Chhattisgarh twenty
years ago when the state was still under formation. He is a man for whose
bail, twenty two Nobel laureates had appealed. For whose release, the
British House of Commons had issued a motion.

*Off the beaten track*

Dr Sen completed his basic medical studies from the prestigious Christian
Medical College, Vellore, in 1972. He was awarded an MD in Pediatrics by the
same institution in 1976 after which he joined the faculty of the Centre for
Social Medicine and Community Health at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New
Delhi. There, he remained for two years before working on a field-based
health programme at the Friends Rural Centre in Rasulia in Hoshangabad
district of Madhya Pradesh, concentrating on diagnosis and treatment of
tuberculosis.

A growing understanding of the socio-economic causes of the disease nudged
Dr Sen to move to Dalli-Rajhara in 1991, the site of the captive iron ore
mines of the Bhilai Steel Plant in central India. Initially, beginning with
a dispensary, a group of doctors, Dr Sen among them, worked with the
Chhattisgarh Mines Shramik Sangh, a trade union of contract workers in the
mines. Along with the radical trade union leader Shankar Guha Niyogi, killed
by the industrialists of Bhilai in 1991, Dr Sen helped workers to establish
the Shaheed Hospital which practiced low-cost and rational medicine for the
miners and working people of the area. Popularly known as '*bada*' doctor,
Dr Sen is remembered with fondness and affection by the people in the area.
After a long period of work in Dalli Rajhara, Dr Sen worked to develop a
health programme for the adivasi population in and around the village
Bagrumnala in the present Dhamtari district of Chattisgarh.

*Cracking down*

[image: alt]In response to a summons, Dr Sen presented himself to the police
and was arrested on 14 May 2007 under the Unlawful Prevention Activities
Act, 1967 (UAPA) and the Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act, 2005
(CSPSA). The draconian provisions of lapsed central laws like the Terrorism
and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, (TADA) and Prevention of
Terrorism Act, 2002 (POTA) have been incorporated in the UAPA through an
amendment in 2004 and in state laws such as the CSPSA.

Thereafter, sedition under Section 124 A of the Indian Penal Code, 1860
(IPC) appears to have been added to the charges against Dr Sen. The extreme
prejudice caused by the mere allegation of sedition ensured the repeated
rejection of his application for release on bail by all courts, beginning
with the trial court and culminating with the apex court of the land. Thus,
the presumption of innocence notwithstanding, Dr Binayak Sen had to spend
two years in jail, including a stint in solitary confinement as an
under-trial. Finally, the Supreme Court granted him bail on 25 May 2009.
After his release, Dr Sen continued to focus on the pathetic health
conditions of the poor, particularly the high level of malnutrition in
adults and children.

*Arbitrary and subjective*

The Second Additional District and Sessions Judge, Raipur, convicted Dr
Binayak Sen of sedition and criminal conspiracy on 24 December 2010 and
imposed the maximum punishment of life imprisonment. Sedition is the most
serious of the charges; however, Dr Sen also stands convicted of lesser
offences under the UAPA and the CSPSA, with terms ranging from one to a
maximum of five years of imprisonment.

A look at the principles of constitutional jurisprudence and criminal law in
the context of provisions such as sedition will assist in getting a
comprehensive picture of the trial of such offences. Laws against offences
involving the curtailment of the most fundamental rights of life and liberty
of an individual generally lay down precise and specific ingredients which
have to be established before punishment can be imposed. For example,
offences like theft, murder and dacoity are defined precisely as acts which
constitute such crime, and there is little room for the exercise of
arbitrariness and play of subjectivities.

In contrast, Section 124 A of the IPC titled 'Sedition' lays down that
whoever by written or spoken words, or by signatures or visible
representations attempts or brings into hatred or contempt, or attempts or
excites disaffection towards the government established by law shall be
punishable with life imprisonment. The explanations to the proviso exclude
comments expressing disapprobation of government or administrative measures
as long as they do not excite hatred, contempt or disaffection. This
provision has been on the books since colonial times, and was used by the
British to act against those whom they perceived as a threat to the Empire.
After Independence, Parliament amended section 124A to insert the punishment
of 'imprisonment for life' instead of 'transportation for life or any
shorter term' but chose to retain the substantive provision.

The use of imprecise and vague phrases like disaffection – which literally
means absence or alienation of affection – leaves great room for arbitrary
use and for the play of subjective notions of the executive and the judicial
officials. In fact, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the father of the nation, at
his trial for sedition in 1922 by the court at Ahmedabad declared the
provision of sedition as 'the prince among the political sections of the IPC
designed to suppress the liberty of the citizen'. Gandhi declared that
preaching disaffection against imperial rulers had become his foremost duty.
He pleaded guilty and invited sentence.

Just as in the case of Section 124 of the IPC, acts like 'terrorism',
'disruptive activities' and 'unlawful activities' have been defined in broad
and vague terms under laws like TADA, POTA, UAPA and CSPSA. This leaves room
for a pick-and-choose strategy by the executive in the use of these punitive
laws. The phrases employed in such laws led to the provisions being used
against peaceful protests by farmers and against agitations by workers. It
also led to the targeting of minorities by those in power.

The broad and vague definition of the offences can be used to cover a wide
variety of acts, which would not fall within sedition in the ordinary
common-sense understanding of the term. The range of acts which can be
brought into its ambit can be seen in the conviction of Bal Gangadhar Tilak
for sedition in 1897 - he had published a poem about the medieval the murder
of Afzal Khan by Maratha king Shivaji  - and in the Bombay High Court
verdict in 1910 which declared the publication of a photograph titled 'The
Nation Personified' showing a self-reliant India wearing bracelets of
self-rule (*swarajya*) and holding the sword of boycott (*bahishkar*) with
the words *V**ande mataram* (Hail, motherland) was seditious. Recently, in
the context of the present agitation in Kashmir, young boys throwing stones
at security forces have in some cases been charged with the serious crime of
sedition. There have been instances of youth in Bihar being charged with
this crime for blackening the face of a minister, a minor offence by any
standards.

*Infirm evidence*

A look at the trial court judgment convicting Dr Binayak Sen illustrates the
hazards of retaining provisions like sedition on the statute books. The
principal allegation against Dr Sen is of passing three letters written by
jailed Naxalite leader Narayan Sanyal to unspecified people in Kolkata. The
fact that Dr Sen met Sanyal in jail several times seems to have caused a
grave prejudice in the eyes of the court thereby, impacting the evaluation
of the prosecution evidence. Dr Sen had formally applied for permissions for
each of the meetings as the General Secretary of the PUCL, permissions
granted by the jail authorities. In fact, the jailors deposed that all of
the meetings were strictly supervised, ruling out the possibility of any
letters being exchanged between Sanyal and Dr Sen.

The three letters were purportedly recovered from one Piyush Guha at the
time of his arrest. According to Guha, the police detained him from Mahindra
Hotel on 1 May 2007 after which they blindfolded him and kept him in illegal
custody for six days. Guha said he was produced before a magistrate on 7 May
2007. The police, on the other hand, claimed before the Sessions Court that
Guha was arrested on 6 May 2007 from Station Road along with incriminating
letters in his bag. Besides being a grave violation of fundamental rights,
illegal detention and confinement are serious offences under the IPC, yet
the allegations made by Guha on this count were never investigated. The
police affidavit in the Supreme Court, which opposed Dr Sen’s bail
application, does reflect Guha's position, that Guha was arrested from
Mahindra Hotel; however, this gross contradiction between the police version
before the Sessions Court and the affidavit in the Supreme Court, which
erodes the credibility of the prosecution story, has been passed off and
accepted as a 'typographical error' by the trial court.

The sole independent witness produced by the prosecution to establish the
arrest of Guha and the seizure of three incriminating letters from him is a
cloth merchant named Anil Kumar Singh. According to the testimony of Singh,
Piyush Guha, on being questioned about the letters at the time of seizure,
said that Dr Sen used to visit Narayan Sanyal in jail and that the letters
were given then. Under the law of evidence, 'hearsay evidence' is not
admissible in court. However, under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act,
1872, in case of facts discovered as a consequence of information received
from an accused in police custody, the information relating to the fact
thereby discovered may be proved.

To take a hypothetical example, if A says B said to him, 'I have slit the
throat of C and the knife is buried near the well'. If, as a result of the
information, the knife is recovered from near the well, then the knife is
admissible as evidence. However, the statement 'I have slit the throat of C”
is not admissible as evidence in a court. In the present case, the letters
could be admissible; however, the alleged statement from Guha that Sen said
that the letters were given to him by Sanyal on the jail visits would be
inadmissible. Despite this, the trial court has held the statement as
evidence against Sen.

Quite apart from the issue of admissibility, the contents of the letter do
not refer to or show or link to any acts of violence. This is important,
because in post-independence India, the Supreme Court held that this section
aims at rendering penal only such activities as would be intended, or have a
tendency to create disorder or disturbance of public peace by resort to
violence. For example, in 1995, the apex court which set aside the
conviction of Balwant Singh and Bhupinder Singh observed that the raising of
slogans like ; ‘Khalistan Zindabad’ and ‘Raj Karega Khalsa’ did not have any
consequences such as inciting people to disorder and therefore, Section 124
A had no application in these circumstances. In the Binayak Sen case, even
if the prosecution story were to be accepted *in toto*, it is doubtful that
the act of carrying letters neither inciting nor resulting in acts of
violence would amount to sedition in the context of the earlier apex court
judgments.

*Extreme prejudice*

The prejudice caused by the mere allegation of sedition can be seen in the
attitude of the court towards the prosecution's production of an unsigned
letter, purportedly written by the Central Committee of Communist Party of
India (Maoist), as having been seized from the house of Dr Sen. This letter
is not mentioned in the seizure list prepared at the time. Neither has it
been signed by the investigating officers, the witnesses to the search or by
the accused Dr Sen, as is required by law. The letter was also not a part of
the charge sheet received by Dr Sen in court. The aforesaid circumstances
clearly indicate that an afterthought and subsequent plant by the police has
been accepted on the specious plea that it was probably stuck to some other
documents and hence, could not be signed by the investigating officers,
search witnesses and Dr Sen.

The other 'evidence' the trial court relied on seems to include a statement
from Inspector Sher Singh Bande, in which Bande states that the area under
the Churia police station in adjoining Maharashtra state often hosts state
and central Committee meetings of Naxalites, and that Dr Sen and his wife
used to attend these meetings. The judgment does not mention any evidence
produced to corroborate the allegation. In a similar vein, getting jobs and
house on rent to help Shankar Singh and Amita Shrivastava, referred to as
'hardcore Naxalites', to open bank accounts has been held to establish the
offence against Sen. The category of 'hardcore naxalite” is unkown to law in
India. Individuals can be charged with various offences as defined in
statutes, and are presumed to be innocent until convicted. However, police
routinely refers to and uses terms like 'hardcore naxalites” to cause
prejudice in the minds of the judge. In any event, persons in public life,
especially social work, routinely help hundreds of people and cannot be held
guilty of crimes even in cases where some of those individuals in need of
help may have been accused of specific offences.

*An attempt to silence*

In addition to the work in the field of public health, Dr Binayak Sen, in
his capacity as General Secretary, Chattisgarh PUCL, has been in the
forefront of organizing numerous investigations and highlighting atrocities
committed by the state-sponsored militia 'Salwa Judum” and by the police and
para-military forces on ordinary people residing in the areas looked upon as
hotbeds of Maoist activity by the Government. Aside from the allegation that
he was conspiring to commit violent acts, Dr Binayak Sen throughout his long
open public life – whether with Friends Rural Centre, Rasulia, which was
focused on promoting natural farming; or at Kishore Bharti, an experiment in
education; or the health work in Chattisgarh; or as a civil rights
activist – has never been associated with or has advocated violence.

The choice of Dr Binayak Sen, a winner of international awards, for
prosecution by the state would be really puzzling if the motive were not so
obvious. The targeting of an individual like Dr Sen is not something
initiated by a Superintendent of Police or an Inspector General of Police.
It is but, undoubtedly, a high-level decision made by the powers-that-be to
send a message to civil liberties activists to desist from highlighting
atrocities committed by the state against people in Maoist-affected areas.
Instead of starting a dialogue or addressing  inequalities in society that
give rise to Maoist movements, it seems that the state is bent on breaking
all forms of connection between the civil society and the Maoist rebels, as
if to prepare a prelude to a military crushing,

*Rakesh Shukla is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India.*

*Poster Credit: Orijit Sen*
http://www.himalmag.com/component/content/article/3533-good-doctor.html
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
*"Nobody is giving up violence. Neither the state nor the Maoists are giving
up violence. I am interested in furthering my cause, which is the cause of
peace with justice.- DR BINAYAK SEN *
*www.binayaksen.net*
*PL SIGN ONLINE PETITION: *
http://www.petitiononline.com/sen2010/petition.html
*DO JOIN THE FACEBOOK GROUP *
*http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=14205312918*
*JOIN THE FACEBOOK EVENT: ONE MILLION FACES
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=179177728772740*
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