Date: 1 January 2011


 [image: TRUTHOUT] <http://www.truth-out.org>

Published on *Truthout* (http://www.truth-out.org)

------------------------------
Indian Justice: Punishment by Trial?
Jason Overdorf | Friday 31 December 2010

New Delhi, India - Consider the following scenario: A much-admired man
points out gross human rights violations committed against tribal peoples —
including alleged rapes, murders, etc. But the state consistently seeks to
cover up the incidents this man exposes, and instead uses a colonial-era law
against free speech to sentence him to life in prison.

If this were China and its Nobel Prize-winning dissident Liu Xiaobo, it
would come as no surprise. But, brace yourself, this is cuddly India we're
talking about.

One of India's biggest selling points, particularly in contrast to China,
has been its progressive attitude toward human rights and its commitment to
the rule of law.

But the conviction and subsequent sentencing of human rights activist
Binayak Sen — and the similar sedition charges leveled against novelist
Arundhati Roy and several other outspoken Indians this year — show that
India's commitment to democracy is more fragile than anyone believed.

The question now is, will it be enough to threaten India's image as a
progressive, democracy-loving state?

Here's a play-by-play: On Christmas Eve, a lower court in the eastern state
of Chhattisgarh sentenced Sen, a celebrated pediatrician and activist, to
life in prison for his alleged links to the Maoist revolutionaries.

Sen and his supporters say he was targeted for exposing the state's
involvement in the large-scale clearing of villages. In 2005, Sen led an
investigation that pegged so-called economic development — in the form of
Chhattisgarh's booming mining industry — as the culprit in driving
indigenous tribes off their ancestral lands and turning them into beggars.

After Sen received his life sentence and the judgment was made public,
outrage began mounting almost immediately among India's intellectual
circles. Some asserted that Sen was railroaded through the system as payback
for exposing alleged rape and murder committed in the name of the
government.

Many critics said his treatment once again exposed the weaknesses in India's
legal system. Corruption and politically motivated trials, critics said,
have now joined incompetence and sloth to make a travesty of justice.

"The judge has become a willing instrument of the state to victimize people
who are raising their voices against [its] human rights abuses," said
Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan. "It's not merely a gross miscarriage
of justice, it's outrageous."

So, what's the impact going forward?

The court decision has further polarized an India already deeply divided
over the path its economic development should take. One side says develop at
all costs, even if that means stealing land and giving it to mining
companies who destroy the environment and ravage indigenous cultures. The
other side says that further subverting the rule of law in favor of crony
capitalism promises a disastrous future.

Already, street protests have mushroomed across India and associations of
every stripe — including police — have condemned the verdict. But even if it
is eventually overturned by a higher court, the apparent misuse of the legal
system as a political tool could have broader implications.

"The whole judiciary system is a mess at so many levels — delays, process,
sanctity of evidence — and [a judgment like this one] really shows you how
vulnerable it is," said Pratap Bhanu Mehta, who heads the Center for Policy
Research, a New Delhi-based think tank.

Some of those problems are notorious. An overburdened system has created a
vicious cycle of continuances, appeals and a mounting backlog that some
estimate will take hundreds of years to clear. Petty corruption — fees to
access files and the like — is ubiquitous, and hardly a day goes by without
a report of a witness recanting his testimony when challenged over lack of
evidence.

But in recent years allegations of higher level corruption have been given
seeming validity by the supreme court's refusal to make judges' assets
subject to public scrutiny under the Right to Information Act (RTI).

Increasingly, high-profile judgments like the Allahabad High Court's
decision to divide into three parts the disputed Ayodhya
site<http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/india/100921/bombay-riots-ayodyha>
of
the destroyed Babri Mosque and the decision to reopen the case and dole out
a harsher sentence to the policeman accused of molesting Ruchika Girhotra
have showed that India's courts are all too willing to ignore the letter of
the law when it is expedient or popular to do so.

More and more cases like Sen's have demonstrated that the legal system's
other deep flaws make it ideally suited for abuse for political, or even
criminal, ends.

"We often say punishment should be after due process," said Bhanu Mehta. "In
India, due process can be the punishment."

That doesn't make India look good in the eyes of investors. An unknown wag
once quipped that an Indian civil suit was the closest one could get to
experiencing eternity. A simple property dispute — such as evicting a
delinquent tenant — can take decades of monthly court appearances to
resolve. And corporations have by and large dismissed the Indian legal
system as a means of enforcing contracts, writing in clauses that mandate
arbitration or litigation in foreign courts.

But for the Indian people, who must depend on the courts to protect their
rights and enforce their laws, it's chilling.

The Chhattisgarh court found Sen guilty of two counts of sedition and
conspiracy based on charges that he carried letters from a jailed Maoist
leader to his comrades in the field and opened a bank account on behalf of
another rebel.

But because the evidence presented by the prosecution hinged largely on
circular reasoning — proof of links to people whom the police claim are
Maoists but who themselves have not been convicted, for instance, and the
letters that Sen allegedly carried contain nothing incriminating — critics
say that it's nothing more than another attempt to silence peaceful support
for the tribal people caught between the Maoists and the state.

Most ironic of all, Sen earned his life sentence for the same crime —
sedition — that India's British colonizers used against Gandhi and other
freedom fighters.

Typical of persecution laws, the storied history of the supposed crime gives
its perpetrator an added aura of legitimacy, much like China's old standby,
"exposing state secrets" — which implicitly acknowledges that the dissidents
jailed for it speak the truth.

Worse than that, to apply it to Sen's case, legal experts say the
Chhattisgarh district judge had to ignore a landmark supreme court ruling
that mandated that sedition could only be allowed to curb free speech when
there is a direct incitement to violence or serious public disorder.

"It's a hideous judgment; it's a hideous case," said Ajai Sahni, executive
director of the New Delhi-based Institute for Conflict Management, which
researches terrorism and other Indian security concerns. "They had no
business taking this to court in the first place. They had no evidence."

If there's any silver lining, it can be found in the encouragingly unified
chorus against the verdict. However, most of the criticism has hinged on the
claims that Sen is a good man, rather than a clearheaded assessment of the
evidence and his legal rights.

And Sen himself — who was jailed for two years without bail after his arrest
in 2007 — must be growing tired of all the support. In 2008, the cause
celebre languished in jail while 22 Nobel winners lobbied for his release
after he was chosen to receive the prestigious Jonathan Mann Award for his
efforts to reduce the infant mortality rate and deaths from diarrhea. Who's
to say today's protests will be any different?

"What you are doing right now is using what I describe as punishment by
trial," said Sahni. "If he is innocent, how are you ever going to restore
those years to this man? And if he's guilty, you should have brought the
evidence against him. It's utterly disgraceful."
 *Source URL:* http://www.truth-out.org/indian-justice-punishment-trial66452



 --
-- 
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*
*
*
*
*

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement?hl=en.

Reply via email to