http://www.countercurrents.org/pudr211212.htmCommute Afzal Guru's Death 
SentenceBy People's Union for Democratic Rights21 December, 2012
Countercurrents.orgPUDR strongly condemns the renewed clamour for fixing the 
date of execution of Mohammad AfzalGuru as unfair and unjust and demands the 
commutation of his sentence.   PUDR    opposes capital punishment in principle 
as violating the right to life, as based on ‘an eye for eye' revengeful 
‘justice'; as inhumane, brutal, arbitrary, and discriminatory. Having followed 
the case closely we have observed the denial of justice to Afzal. We therefore 
appeal for clemency for Afzal.        First, of all those whose mercy petitions 
have come up before the President , the most frenzied demands in recent times 
have been for the execution of Muslim political prisoners- AjmalKasab,   a 
Pakistan national sentenced and executed in the 26/11 Mumbai attack case , and 
now Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri Muslim sentenced to death in the Parliament attack 
case. Afzal's case has been embedded in a politics of hate from the very moment 
of his arrest, thus
 becoming the focus of rabid anti- Muslim sentiment, aggressive nationalism and 
the state's ‘war on terror'.Second, the case against Afzal has been based on 
faulty investigation, circumstantial evidence , and    the    suspicious role 
of the police. Afzal was not present at the site of the shooting, nor could he 
be associated with any unlawful organization. The police by allowing the media 
to interview Mohammad Afzal on 20 December 2003 and its repeated telecast over 
the next two days and then again a hundred days after the attack prejudiced the 
case. Projected as the face of terror, the “identification” by witnesses could 
hardly remain   independent and free of influence. While noting some of the 
violations by the police, the High Court still gave the police the benefit of 
doubt. The court rejected outright the defense's argument that Afzal's 
confession, permissible as evidence under POTA and the fulcrum of the 
prosecution's case, had been
 extracted under duress and torture. In its reports ‘ A Trial ofErrors' and 
‘ Balancing Act' , PUDR had provided a detailed critique of the evidence, 
investigation, and role of the police.Third, as is well known the High Court 
judgment in the Parliament attack case acquitted one of the accused given death 
penalty by the Special Court , reduced another's sentence to ten years' 
imprisonment, and acquitted a third who'd earlier been sentenced to five years. 
On the other hand, the High Court enhanced Afzal's sentence to three life terms 
and two death sentences, in what was clearly a balancing act.  Afzal became the 
scapegoat of a judiciary trying to balance justice and populist sentiment. The 
verdict also attested the circumscribed limits of judicial freedom when it 
comes to political prisoners. Afzal's   is therefore the test case for weighing 
the independence of the judiciary.   However, we contend   that the pressures 
on the judiciary in such
 a social and political environment can never become an excuse to resort to 
capital punishment.Fourth, Afzal's case casts doubt on the free and fair trial 
for those tried under anti-terror laws, and sections under the IPC on waging 
war and conspiracy. The SC in its August 4, 2005 judgment sentencing Afzal to 
death even while accepting that there was no evidence that Mohammed Afzal 
belonged to any terrorist group or organisation, observed: "As is the case with 
most of the conspiracies, there is and could be no direct evidence of the 
agreement amounting to criminal conspiracy. However, the circumstances, 
cumulatively weighed, would unerringly point to the collaboration of the 
accused Afzal with the slain 'fidayeen' terrorists."In this manner,   t he fact 
that Afzal was declared guilty by a trial by media even before his case came up 
for hearing, that he had been subjected to brutal torture, that he had no legal 
representation as no lawyers were ready to
 represent him for fear of reprisal, that he was not even present at the site 
of the attack were not considered mitigating factors.As noted in   PUDR's 
report, A Trial of Errors, “It is perhaps inherent in a trial under POTA that 
the accused is disabled to a point where rules of evidence become pliable and 
conjecture can take over and death sentences become easy to award.” Fifth, the 
subjectivity inherent in the criteria of ‘rarest of rare', the false logic of 
deterrence, the irreversible nature of the punishment and the possibility of 
error, make the death penalty to Afzal completely unfair and unacceptable.The 
Supreme Court in its judgment upholding the ruling of the High Court observed 
that Afzal as a surrendered militant was “bent upon repeating the acts of 
treason against the nation, is a menace to the society and his life should 
become extinct." The Court thus rejected one of the cornerstones of liberal 
jurisprudence i.e., the reformative
 aspect of incarceration. The judgment also states that death penalty was the 
just response in this case as the “collective consciousness of society” must be 
satisfied. The protests in Kashmir against Afzal's capital punishment played no 
part in the judge's understanding of the “collective consciousness of 
society.” Sixth, the subjectivity inherent in the standard of “rarest of rare”, 
possibility of judicial error and the irreversible nature of the penalty all 
call for the commutation of Afzal's sentence and the abolition of capital 
punishment. The possibility of erroneous judgments and convictions, and Muslim 
people's vulnerability has been brought to light in certain recent judgments. 
Two Kashmiri Muslims, alleged members of JKLF convicted in the Lajpat Nagar 
blasts were acquitted after spending sixteen years on death row. In another 
instance the Mumbai HC acquitted two others, Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed, 
convicted in the 26/11
 Mumbai attack case. The proven occurrence of such errors is a powerful 
argument against capital punishment. That those wrongly incarcerated are 
Kashmiri Muslims is no surprise. While the acquittal from or commutation of 
death sentences by these benches are noteworthy for their commitment to 
justice, the prior convictions and death sentences by lower courts underline 
the high possibility of error, and that life and death for certain groups of 
people depend on a roll of the dice and chance rather than free and fair 
trial.Seventh, there had appeared to be a slight shift in the position of the 
political class on capital punishment. President PratibhaPatil commuted the 
death sentences of 35 convicts while President Pranab Mukherjee has commuted 
one. There had been a hiatus of eight years since the execution of 
DhananjoyChatterjee in 2005. The hanging of AjmalKasab on November 21, 2012 , 
and the current demand to fix the date of Afzal's execution, if
 acquiesced to by the pending Home Ministerial advisory to the President, is a 
complete regression. It's also a test case for assessing the exercise of the 
President's Constitutional prerogative to re-examine and reject the verdict of 
the judiciary and its stance on capital punishment. Lastly,   what hangs in the 
balance is the life of a Kashmiri Muslim who crossed over into Pakistan when 
very young, who returned three months later and then voluntarily surrendered, 
who was tortured by the army for refusing to become a BSF informer, who tried 
to carve out a new life for himself by getting a degree in Delhi University, 
and set up a business in Delhi, who was unfairly convicted and sentenced to 
death, who was denied a free and fair trial.Let him not be sacrificed to the 
electoral and communal compulsions of this country.PUDR demands:1.         
Commutation of Afzal Guru's sentence.2.         Clemency for Afzal on the basis 
of prolonged
 incarceration3. Clemency for all death row victims.4. Compensation for those 
wrongfully arrested and incarcerated.5. Abolition of capital punishment by the 
Indian government.PREETI CHAUHAN, PARAMJEET SINGH(Secretaries, PUDR)Over the 
last 30 years or more, the civil rights movement in India has emerged as an 
autonomous voice in defense of civil liberties and democratic rights of our 
people. The   Peoples Union for Democratic Rights , Delhi , is one such 
organisation. It came into existence in 1976-77 as the Delhi unit of a larger 
national forum, and became PUDR on 1 February, 1981 . 


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