*(No) Crime and Punishment*


*Ram Puniyani*



The state of crime and punishment is very paradoxical in current times. The
guilty of communal violence generally get away without any punishment,
while the innocents are being punished in acts of terror, just if they
happen to belong to a particular religion. In current scenario, the current
policing and social system seems to operate on the assumption that Muslims
are terrorists. Both communal violence and war against terror have
demonized and targeted them in particular. While the society at large has
come to believe in various myths about minorities; the large section of
police force has acted in the most prejudicial and biased manner on the
issues related to violence in the name of religion and in case of terrorist
violence.

There have been innumerable cases of young Muslim youth being picked up in
the aftermath of terror attacks, incarcerated in the jails and then let off
as the legal protective mechanisms, though painfully slow, catch up to
intervene and release some of these terror accused. While every such case
of young man is a heart rending tale, while every such case of police
action ruins the family and career of the accused, the one related to
Mohammad Aamir Khan aged 32 today (March 2012) probably ranks amongst the
most horrendous ones’. The other interesting aspect of this young man
trying to restart his life all over again is that he is full of
appreciation of the positive aspects of the system and acknowledges the
good aspects of the system, which released him from dark dungeons after 14
long and tortuous years. The same system mercifully kept him connected to
the outside world with the interlude in solitary confinement
notwithstanding.



Aamir, a 10th standard student, aged 18 was abducted by the Delhi police
and charged of being the master-mind of the acts of terror and other
related crimes. The methods employed by the police need not be recounted as
while the talk of police reforms etc. is on ‘on the paper’, the brutality
of the many men in khakhi continues unabated. They also keep innovating
newer and newer forms of torture. The illegal act of taking signatures on
blank paper seems to be routine with the ‘guardians of law’. Those supposed
to be protecting our law must be probably the biggest violators of law in
the power dens where they are rarely answerable and generally get away with
the most serious cruelties committed in the confines of their fiefdom, the
police stations and jails. Aamir underwent all this. He tried to continue
his study while in jail, through IGNOU center. But that was not to last
long as one police officer in his zeal of punishing the lad belonging to
the ‘wrong’ religion put him in solitary confinement and cut off his
education which he was seriously pursuing.  With 14 long years in the jail,
how he maintained his sanity to look forward to the study of journalism or
law must be amongst some of the mysteries which our society provides in
abandon.



Coming back to Aamir, while in the prison he lost his father and his mother
suffered paralytic stroke. His family property had to be sold to off to
fight the infinite cases put against him by the police. The ‘leaders of the
community’ did not have time to take up his case, and the label of
‘terrorist’ and that too, a Pakistani one warded off many other friends and
relatives to come and help.



Today out from the jail, with two cases still hanging on his head, he is
working with an NGO to make a living, taking care of his mother’s expensive
treatment and tying to look forward to a life where he can become a
professional of some sort. Who is responsible for the wreckage of the lives
of Aamir and likes of him? While one can see the role of our biased police
system, which regards that Muslim are criminals and terrorists in the main,
one can also see the role of the prevalence of biases and misconceptions
about the community, floating all around, duly promoted and deepened by the
communal forces, our educational books and the slant of media reporting.
Now what is the responsibility of community and state in rehabilitating
these young boys?  In Mecca Majid blast the accused after being arrested
were let off and given the compensation of 3 lakhs each, Interestingly when
they were arrested there were banner headlines of Muslims being arrested
for the blast but when they came clean of it small hidden news is all that
items welcomed them.



The situation during last couple of years seems to be slightly better,
especially after Hemant Karkare’s path breaking investigation in Malegaon
blast and Rajasthan ATS taking the issue forward and the whole saffron gang
of Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur, Dayanand Pandey, Swami Aseemanand and
company coming under the scanner. Interestingly once this gang has been
apprehended the acts of terror have also come down substantially; the right
inference needs to be drawn here. It seems the major flaw of these
investigations has been the prejudiced mind of the investigating
authorities. While a proper rehabilitation and suitable compensation to
these youth is imperative there is a dying need for police reforms and
their torture techniques need to be questioned. The rights of the inmates,
the rights of accused need to be honored. Police authorities are reckless
when it comes to Muslim youth, and those officers violating the basic norms
generally get away without any punishment. The Khaki seems to be giving
them too much unrestrained power to wreck the lives of innocent youth. Is
it not time that the case of Aamir and his likes acts a sort of mirror to
our Policing system? It calls for an urgent need for putting the issues
related to communal harmony, the falsity of prevalent myths on priority
basis. Hope such introspection is on amongst those vested with lot of
powers.



It is rare that an 18year old, after being tortured for 14 years for
belonging to a particular religion, will come out with such positive
sentiments, the system also needs to introspect in the context of this
young man, help him out in Toto and ensure that such acts of brutality are
not repeated by the system and by men in khaki in particular.

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