*A decade of Gujarat Carnage 2002*


*Ram Puniyani*



India has witnessed many an acts of communal violence. Starting from the
Jabalpur riot of 1961 to the last major one of Kandhmal (August 2008). Many
an innocent lives have been lost in the name of religion. Amongst these the
Gujarat carnage is a sort of marker. It came in the backdrop of massive
Anti Sikh pogrom of 1984, the anti Muslim violence of post Babri demolition
and the horrific burning of Pastor Graham Steward Stains in Kandhmal. It
was a quantitative and qualitative departure from the other major carnages
which have rocked the country.



To begin with the burning of Sabarmati S 6 coach was cleverly projected to
be an act done by neighboring Muslims and in turn the violence was directed
against the Muslim population of Gujarat, on the ground that the Hindu
sentiments are hurt. The section of Hindu community was deliberately
incited by the decision of state to take the burnt bodies of victims in a
procession, against the advice of the collector of the city. The Bandh call
given by VHP created the ground for violence. Here the social engineering
was at its display, and dalits and Adivasis were mobilized to unleash the
violence against the hapless innocent Muslims, accompanied by the
propaganda which demonized the Muslim community as a whole. While in
earlier acts of violence, the state police have been an accomplice and the
silent onlooker to the violence, here a sort of active collusion of state
machinery and the communal forces was on display.



The BJP ruled state Government had unrestricted run in the state as the
Central Government was being ruled by BJP led NDA and the other allies of
BJP were too enamored by the spoils of power to spoil the broth by speaking
out. Modi had already instructed the officials to sit back when the Hindu
backlash will take place. The leading light of socialist movement, George
Fernandez, went to the extent of taking the violence against minority women
in the stride by saying that rape is nothing new and it happens in such
situations. What more was needed for the rioters to run amuck and to
central BJP leadership to let the things go on. The pattern of violence
against women was particularly horrific, targeting at their reproductive
organs and shaming them to no end.



While the architect of Gujarat pogrom Narnedra Modi kept saying that
violence has bee controlled in three days, and central BJP leadership
patted him for this, the matter of fact was that violence went on and on
painfully for a long time, uncontrolled and unrestricted. The attitude of
the BJP controlled state was pathetic and showed the religious bias in
relief and rehabilitation work. The compensations given to minorities were
abysmally low, state quickly retreated from the refugee camps on the ground
that the refugee camps are ‘child production centers’, hitting the
minorities where it hurts most. The biases against them were on full
display. The atmosphere was created by communal forces in such a manner
that the riot victims could not go back to their houses as the people in
their areas demanded a written undertaking from them, that they will
withdraw the cases filed in the context of violence and that they will not
file any cases. Most of the police as machinery either refused to file the
FIRs or if registered they kept enough loopholes for the criminals to get
away. It was in this atmosphere that the process of getting justice became
a close to impossible task. The communalized state apparatus, the attitude
of police and judiciary led the Supreme court to direct the shifting of
cases away from Gujarat.



The investigation against Narendra Modi by the state police was an
impossible task and so the Special Investigation team was constituted.
Unfortunately, that also did not help the matters. Accompanying all this
violence and attitude of state government the minorities started feeling
extremely insecure. They were boycotted in trade and other social spaces.
The result is the sprawling slum of Juhapura as the symbol of polarization
of communities along the religious lines. The total dislocation of the
monitories created multiple problems at the level of education and sources
of livelihood for the minorities.



The religious polarization and section of media has created a Halo around
Narendra Modi, while strictures against him are coming by, about his
failure to protect places of religious worship of minorities, the malafide
intentions of state in filing cases against social activist Teesta
Setalvad, many another cases are still pending, crying for justice for the
victims of Gujarat. Having consolidated the section of majority community
behind him, assured of their ongoing support, Modi started the high profile
propaganda about development and has been trying to distract the attention
from the havoc which he has wrought in the state. The big capitalists are
finding the state of Gujarat as a happy hunting ground for massive state
subsidies, so the media controlled by them is singing praises and
modulating popular opinion in his favor, creating a larger than life size
image, development man, in order to suppress his role in the violence
against minorities.



In this dismal scenario, there have been many an examples of victims and
social activists standing for the cause of justice and doing the
practically impossible task of getting justice for violence victims despite
all the efforts to turn them hostile and protect the guilty of the communal
crimes. While the massive propaganda and state policies are trying to turn
the minorities into second class citizens, there are efforts which have
gone on simultaneously to retrieve the democratic values in the face of
such adverse intimidating situation created by the communal forces. Lately,
apart from Court judgments, the civil society response has been picking up
and the civil society is trying to overcome the stifling situation and
trying to make its voice louder. While we are nowhere close to what should
ideally be there in a democratic set up, the responses of civil society and
social action groups are noteworthy in the matters of getting justice for
victims and in the matters of recreating the liberal space which has been
undermined by the communal forces. Times alone will tell if democratic
values will be successfully brought in this ‘Hindu Rashtra in one state’

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