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From: Muniza Khan <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, Jul 26, 2015 at 5:21 PM

The courts of this country are on trial, not TeestaIndira Jaising,TNN | Jul
25, 2015, 12.00 AM IST
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[image: The courts of this country are on trial, not Teesta]
Teesta Setalvad.
The hounding of Teesta Setalvad is timed to coincide with the publicly
articulated urge of the Prime Minister to get a "clean chit" from the
courts in relation to the ongoing cases in Gujarat, which Teesta has been
doggedly pursuing. She is the victim of the pursuit for justice.

We are being asked to roll back the clock, consign the 2002 Gujarat carnage
to the dustbin of history and replace Teesta Setalvad as the villain, who
hounded the then chief minister...Can the collective amnesia on the Gujarat
riots, and the view that we must move on be legitimized?

All this could possibly happen if Zakia Jafri and Teesta Setalvad, who are
doing everything constitutionally and legally possibe to hold the head of
the then government accountable, are checkmated, preferably gagged, and put
into jail.

Zakia's criminal revision petition is not about seeking recourse to justice
for one incident of massacre, where her husband was brutally hacked and
burnt to death but about the larger issue of command responsibility of the
then CM, and now PM, in failing to prevent the killings from taking place.

It is high time this country saw the emergence of the Doctrine of Command
Responsibility as a statutory and constitutional imperative, rather than
leaving it to the notoriously weak provisions of the Indian Penal Code,
which address only crime by individuals and punish only the hand that
kills. Conspiricies are not easy to prove, but judging from the attack on
Teesta Setalvad, the PM seems worried and insecure that there is an off
chance, maybe just an off chance, that some well-meaning judge might accept
the evidence pointing out the massive failure of his constitutional duty to
prevent the killings. What stands between him and the "clean chit" are the
courts and the cases Teesta and some of us are pursuing.

This pursuit of justice is slowly but steadily reaching its climax. Could
this be the reason for her threatened arrest? The enormous support and
assistance she gave 5,000 surviving witnesses, who unflinchingly recorded
their testimonies, helped secure 120 convictions to life imprisonments,
including that of a minister in the state cabinet.


*(TOI photo: Sanjay Hadkar)*

I once had a discussion with Teesta in Mumbai at a public meeting soon
after the 1992 riots. We agreed that if we had fought the 1984 Sikh
killings in Delhi the way we do now the Gujarat carnage, the 1993 killing
in Mumbai would not have happened. I can now add that, if in 1993 the
Justice Srikrishna Commssion findings were accepted and we had succeded in
convicting even one accused at the top level, 2002 would not have happened.
It is this understanding that compels her to continue with the fight
against the killers of the 2002 carnage. What we are witnessing is the
power of the state and its terrorising arm, the CBI, to mount a raid on
Teesta's home and office to prove that she misused foreign funds versus the
power of the courts to hold power to account. Who will win this battle? It
is the courts of this country that are on trial, not Teesta.

As for the proverbial wine and visits to the beauty parlour, apart from the
fact that they sustain the myth of the "five-star" activists, I must remind
the courts that they hold their own legal aid meetings spending money meant
for the poor in seven-star hotels. There is a record of a protest as
regards this lodged by no less a person than a former judge of the Chennai
High Court. Will they be swayed by such allegations now to refuse Teesta
bail? This is not to admit on my part that money was so spent, but rather
to expose the hollow legal nature of the reasons to oppose bail. It is
nobody's case that there should be no investigation into the alleged misuse
of funds, rather that the investigation be free and fair.

I now ask a basic question, why is there one law for the non-profit
organizations and another for for-profit corporates? Why is there no
imprisonment under FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) but imprisonment
for non-profits for violating norms relating to getting grants from foreign
donors under FCRA? The only explanation is that the FCRA is a gateway to
crushing human rights, and what is worse, an alibi for an argument that we,
the NGOs who take up human right issues are "anti-national". We compromise
the "economic security" of our countries, expressions that were reserved
for terrorists so far. I call for the repeal of the FCRA and its
replacement with a Foreign Contributions Management Act, which addresses
only public servants.

Perhaps then we will see some justice for Teesta, the woman whose father
named her after a river in Bangladesh which flows fearlessly across borders.

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