http://www.freebinayaksen.org/?p=2328

Understanding Civil Society Action in the Binayak Sen case

Ilina Sen

The case of Binayak Sen ( by this I mean the legal case as well as the whole
body of civil society reaction across national and social boundaries) is in
many ways a landmark in Indian jurisprudence. Apart from the personal pain
and agony that I have gone through, in being witness to Binayak’s uncalled
for incarceration and unjust conviction, the case has also intellectually
challenged me along with many other citizens of my country and forced so
many of us to look critically at the laws and statutes that govern our
lives.

It has brought into the limelight the outdated provisions of the sedition
law in India, and today our Law minister has gone on record as saying that
this law needs urgent revision if not scrapping, in keeping with the spirit
of the times. Many of us who are not legal professionals have looked into
our statute books and discovered horror chambers in sections penalizing
thought / action against ‘any Asiatic Power’ in alliance with the government
of India. This particular statute obviously dates from the time when the
British crown and the crown in Moscow were locked into the ‘great game’ over
the control of Afghanistan, and reminds us that the Afghan people have been
pawned in many games but that no game player has historically succeeded in
selling them down the river.

We have also been forced to look at the way our lower courts function – at
the way the police and the prosecution work in tandem, at the way in which
the established law of evidence is disregared, at bizarre new
interpretations of established legal interpretations and positions. One’s
mind begins to form a sneaking question whether the mandate of the court at
this level is to support the police in keeping anyone labeled as guilty in
custody for some years, and leave the finer points of the law of the land to
higher courts of appeal.

One has seen countless cases of miscarriage of justice as well as the
horrendous conditions in Indian jails at first hand.

However, Binayak’s case also stands as an example where the people of the
world have stood up and said to governments ( their own as well those of
their neighbours) that the state cannot get away with heavy handed
authoritarianism and have the people accept that lying down. Ordinary
citizens are never lawless people and appreciate the fact systems and legal
structures keep us safe, yet when these same laws become instruments of
injustice rather than justice , we all feel it is time for us to stand up
and make our concern felt. Civilized democratic societies and established
political structures are all products of a social contract between the
people and the structures of governance, with the ultimate power resting in
the will of the people. Here we have seen how in city after city – In India,
Asia, Europe, Australia and America- people have stood up and said that is
unacceptable for governments to exercise the power we give them in this way.
I see this as a step in the re negotiation of the social and political
contacts of governance, of which there are many other manifestations in our
times. For me this has been the most important learning, the most important
outcome of the case.

Binayak joins me in greeting all of you, many friends whom we have met, and
many others whom we have not, yet who are together with us in a spirit of
common good.

*Sent for presentation at the UK Seminar on “‘Dr Binayak Sen and the use of
‘Sedition’ Laws to Persecute Human Rights Activists in India” on May 14,
2011.*
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-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
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*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists
of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/*
*http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1*<http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1>

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