*Striving for Just Society*

* *

*Ram Puniyani*



The verdict of magistrate Dr. Jyotsna Yagnik, sentencing Dr. Maya Kodnani,
Babu Bajrangi and others to long imprisonment (31 August, 2012) has come as
a big relief to the victims of Naroda Patiya, for whom it was like return
of *Eid *to their houses. Naroda Patiya had witnessed horrific carnage and
acts of rape in 2002 and this judgment will give a solace to the victims
and their near and dear ones’. This judgment came as a culmination of the
mammoth efforts of the human rights activists, the victims, the witnesses
and the team of legal activists who stood all the opposition form every
conceivable quarter to ensure that justice is done in the case. The adage
that ‘there can’t be peace without justice’ has been redeemed with this
court judgment.





This judgment also puts right various misconceptions deliberately
propagated by communal forces. First and foremost was that the Gujarat
violence was a reaction to the Godhra train burning. By now this is
believed by most of the sections of society, more so by the communalized
sections of society all over and more so in Gujarat. The judge made it
clear that “thousands of persons…attacked weaponless and frightened victims
with intention, pre planning while sharing common objects”. It was not a
spontaneous reaction to burning of train in Godhra. Rather Godhra train
burning was used subtly as a justification for the preplanned pogrom.
Communal forces tried to pass it off as ‘natural anger’ which the state
could not control. Contrary to this perception, now court has ruled that it
was a deliberately planned carnage, using the Godhra incident as a mere
pretext to consolidate communal polarization in the state of Gujarat.





India has witnessed so many communal riots, acts of violence. Lately these
riots have been assuming the form of well organized pogroms. This finding
of Human Rights groups and the report of Citizens for Justice and peace
gets validated through this judgment, for sure. So far the trend has been
that the innocents have been killed in the violence and the perpetrators of
violence have gone scot free. Now it seems that with the human rights
defenders tightening their belts can set right the adverse trend, where
guilty were getting away without any punishment. In this case human rights
defenders have put in all the efforts to reverse the prevalent trend due to
which the perpetrators of crime were more or less sure that they can get
away with their crimes and consolidate their politics.





For once the message is loud and clear that the automatic mechanisms of
justice delivery system are not effective and a super human efforts by
dedicated human rights defenders like Teesta Setalvad, Gagan Sethi, Harsh
Mander, Yusuf Muchala, Mukul Sinha, Govind Parmar and many others like
them, working through different angles, supplementing each other’s efforts
can ensure that justice is done. They had to plug the leaks in the system
to ensure that victims are protected, witnesses are protected, the
complaints, FIRs are properly recorded, and to see that all the hurdles to
justice are overcome.





The first question which comes to mind is, will this state of affairs
continue like this where nothing short of super human efforts,
protecting-sustaining the victims and witnesses against heavy odds will be
needed for getting justice. Society and the nation needs to plug the
loopholes in the policing system, in the bureaucratic apparatus and in the
attitude of political leadership so that the justice delivery becomes a
matter of routine rather than an exception. Victims of so many riots,
pogroms are still awaiting justice, Bhagalpur, Delhi and Mumbai to name the
few, still have not got the justice.





This brings to our attention another aspect of the violence, those who led
it. Dr. Maya Kodnani came up through Rashtra Sevikasamiti, an organization
subordinate to Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh, RSS. One notes incidentally
that in RSS worldview, women don’t have a swayam (Self) as is manifest in
the name of Rashtra Sevikasamiti. Also that Maya Kodnani was sitting MLA,
and after the pogrom and her role in it, inciting the mob, distributing
fuel and armaments, she was promoted to the level of minister and once she
was charged with the role in violence, she was dumped from the ministry and
disowned by the state Government. Section of RSS followers in VHP etc. are
protesting against the judgment. As such the standard technique for RSS
stable is that, once its members-followers undertake the crime, murder of
Gandhi, burning of Pastor Stains, or play their part in terror attack, they
are declared not to be having any association with the parent organization,
whose ideology they are living and breathing through their actions. Kodnani
for certain reasons did say that she was victim of politics! What does this
mean? While this statement is a mystery, one hopes the meaning of this
victimhood comes out one of the days in future.





Babu Bajrangi is another character, whose revelations in Tehelka were
nothing less than shocking. He said they have been given time for three
days, and that his team-associates are playing not the test cricket but one
day match, where high score is to made in short time. And that after
killing the hapless Muslims he felt like Rana Pratap. One wishes he knew
that Rana Pratap was not killing in the name of religion, he was fighting
other kings for power and that in his army there were Muslims soldiers as
well. One of the his army generals who died while fighting for Rana Pratap
was Hakim Khan Sur, whose tomb is there in the Haldi Ghati even now. How
distortions of medieval history are done deliberately to incite hate
becomes clear again.





And what is happening to the conscience of Narendra Modi, who has been the
major beneficiary of the carnage of 2002? Any remorse, any tears for at
least those who were reporting to him during the carnage, whom he promoted
for their role in the violence and now are being punished by the due
process of law?





One hopes that we recast our laws and system to ensure that the violence is
punished in due course and that this punishment acts as a deterrent and
ensures that in future such inhuman dastardly acts don’t repeat themselves.
This welcome judgment also leaves a few questions, what about those who
faulted in the discharge of their duties to protect the innocents, to
register their legitimate complains, and to nail the guilty as a matter of
their assigned duty? We do need to work towards a system where to begin
with such hate crimes don’t take place, and if by chance such a tragedy is
engineered by some political forces, we have the system in place which can
check it right away and punish those who are either conspiring, or
executing or are not controlling those dastardly acts. One hopes that the
human rights defenders will be on their tip toes to come forward with such
yeomen efforts to have a society with justice and peace.

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