*'My name is Sayed and I'm not a terrorist'*
*- Sayed Sameer
*
http://www.mid-day.com/news/2011/jul/090711-Sayed-Abedi-Mumbai-Police-photographs-traffic-junction-terrorist-mumbai.htm

* *

****

*"Don't talk too much, just shut up and listen to what we are saying. Your
name is Sayed, you could be a terrorist and a Pakistani." Mumbai Police
officer*

*MiD DAY's photographer Sayed Sameer Abedi recounts his harrowing experience
with the Mumbai Police after he was detained for more than four hours for
taking innocuous photographs of a traffic junction and an airplane. He was
threatened, roughed up and even called a terrorist because of his name*
*
*
HAVING been a photojournalist for 12 years, I never thought the Mumbai
Police would harass me for doing my job. That is exactly what happened to me
yesterday, however, when I was detained for four hours for merely taking
photographs and realised just how drunk on power, money-hungry and racist
some of our officers are.


*The photograph of a traffic jam that led to Sayed Sameer Abedi's detention
yesterday
*

During those harrowing four hours, I was roughed up, threatened and treated
like a criminal and one officer even cast aspersions on my intentions based
on my religion. He  said I could be Pakistani and a terrorist because I have
a Muslim name.

I was on a regular assignment at Zari Mari road near Saki Naka at 2 pm when
I found that traffic near the junction was a mess after President Pratibha
Patil and her entourage had passed by. While taking photographs of the jam,
I noticed an aircraft landing at the airport and clicked a few photos of
that as well.

Suddenly, a police constable appeared on the scene and shouted, "What are
you doing, what photos are you taking? Don't you know that you cannot take
photos like this? You need to take permission before clicking photographs.
Come to the senior inspector.". I went with the constable to the inspector,
who asked me why I was taking the photographs.

I told the senior police inspector, Samadhan Dhanedhar, that I work as a
photojournalist for MiD DAY and Inquilab and that I was merely taking
photographs of the traffic condition. I also complained to him that the
constable had jerked me around and treated me like a criminal.

He asked me to show him the photographs I had clicked and then asked me how
I had dared to take photos of an aircraft without taking permission from
him. When I protested and told him that I was just doing my job and was
doing nothing that was against the law, he shouted me down and asked me not
to raise my voice.

He then turned to the constable and asked him to make sure that I was
arrested and booked on serious charges. The policeman made me sit in the van
for more than half an hour and then finally took me to the Saki Naka Police
station.

*A terrorist?*
At the police station, Sub-Inspector Ashok Parthi, the investigating officer
in my case, asked me about the incident. I explained everything and said I
had done nothing wrong.

"Don't talk too much, just shut up and listen to what we are saying. Your
name is Sayed, you could be a terrorist and a Pakistani.

The Senior PI (Dhanedhar) has asked me to inform the Special Branch and file
all kinds of charges, including those of terrorism, against you. The only
option left for you then would be to get your name cleared in court.

Do you want us to do that? Let me inform you that we have all the power in
the world to do what we want," Parthi said.

When I told him that I wanted to speak to Dhanedhar, Parthi said that the
senior PI did not want to talk to me.
He continued threatening me with dire consequences and sobered down only
when I showed him my MiD DAY identity card and press accreditation and
informed him that I had covered several press events involving the Prime
Minister and the President.

After some time, he said, "If I wanted, I could have filed several charges
against you, but I am not doing it and I am only imposing a fine."

The other policemen present there told me that I could go after paying a
fine of Rs 1,200. I told them that I did not have the money and would not
pay the fine. One of my colleagues came to the police station a while later
and paid the fine on my behalf. We finally left the police station at 6.45
pm.

While we were stepping out, my colleague clicked a photograph of mine, which
made a policeman pull us into the station again. One of the inspectors
shouted at us again and said that we had failed to learn our lesson, before
letting us go.
__,_._,___

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