‘If the accused have set up an anti-fascist front, they’re, in fact, acting
in defence of democracy’Ajai Sahni, executive director of the Institute for
Conflict Management, speaks on the prosecution’s claims in the Bhima
Koregaon case.
File Photo
Yesterday · 06:43 pm
Scroll Staff <https://scroll.in/author/8>

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As three of the five activists – Vernon Gonsalves and Arun Ferreira in
Mumbai and Varavara Rao in Hyderabad – arrested across the country on
August 28 were produced in a Pune court
<https://scroll.in/article/892464/photo-shows-about-lynchings-seeking-arms-from-nepal-claims-against-activists-arrested-on-tuesday>
on
August 29, public prosecutor Ujjwala Pawar claimed that they were members
of the outlawed Communist Party of India (Maoist) and constituted an
“anti-fascist” front that aims to overthrow the government.

Two activists detained on August 28 – Sudha Bharadwaj in Haryana and Gautam
Navlakha in Delhi – had petitioned the High Courts and had been placed
under house arrest.

*Scroll.in *posed some questions to Ajai Sahni, executive director of
Institute for Conflict Management, about the case. Excerpts:

What do you make of the prosecution’s arguments against the activists
arrested on August 28?
If I had read these excerpts
<https://scroll.in/article/892464/photo-shows-about-lynchings-seeking-arms-from-nepal-claims-against-activists-arrested-on-tuesday>
without
knowing the context, I would have thought them the work of a satirist or
comedian. Obviously, not a single charge will actually stick, but that is
clearly not the intention. The case will drag on in what I have described
as a process of “punishment by trial
<https://scroll.in/article/892252/this-is-absolutely-chilling-ramachandra-guha-prashant-bhushan-ajai-sahni-aakar-patel-others>”.
The judicial system is slow, and is willing to pretend that it does not
notice the utter silliness of the prosecution’s submissions. The accused
will either continue to languish in jail or, even if enlarged on bail, will
be harassed for years by the judicial process. This alone is the objective.
In any civilised country, this would be regarded as malicious prosecution,
and the people responsible would be severely penalised. In India, however,
officers putting up such cases face no consequences beyond a rare dressing
down by a conscientious magistrate.

The prosecutor claimed that Arun Ferreira “recruited” Maoists through photo
exhibitions on mob lynching which created an anti-government opinion. Does
opposing the government constitute an offence under Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act
<https://scroll.in/article/831282/saibaba-conviction-how-the-uapa-introduced-the-concept-of-thoughtcrime-into-indian-legislation>?
Are photo exhibitions of mob lynchings evidence of Maoist recruitment?
If their offence is protesting against mob lynchings, half this country
would be in jail. There is no such offence. Unless the specific charge of
recruitment can be proven – and mere claims that “two students were
specifically radicalised by him” will not suffice – the case will
eventually be thrown out of court. Further, “radicalisation” is not an
offence under UAPA; terrorism is. Unless direct involvement in recruitment
for terrorism is proven, nothing will hold.

By labelling the activists “anti-fascist”, what is the prosecution implying?
The prosecution should first be taken to task by the court and the
authorities for suggesting that the government is a fascist organisation.
If the accused have set up an anti-fascist front, they are, in fact, acting
in defence of democracy and the Indian constitution.
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The prosecution claims that that the anti-fascist front had started
negotiating with an arms dealer in Nepal, and that Varavara Rao was the
conduit. The prosecutor submitted a “catalogue of arms” allegedly received
from a dealer. Does this scenario seem plausible?
Varavara Rao has long been known as a Maoist sympathiser. This is something
that has been known to enforcement authorities and security analysts for
decades. We may not approve of this, but this does not constitute any
offence. As regards the allegation of mediating an arms deal, submitting a
“catalogue” of arms received will prove nothing. A chain of material
evidence would need to be established between suppliers and the recipients,
with Rao plumb in the middle. I am confident that no such chain will ever
be established.

Have we heard of arms flowing in from Nepal before?
There were a few reports of arms flows from Nepal over a decade ago. There
has been no credible report of such arms transfers in recent years. Of
course, I work on the open source, and the government may have evidence
that I have no access to. But prima facie, these claims are not credible.

The prosecution claimed that Arun Ferreira went to Kerala on International
Human Rights Day with the intention of convincing “young leaders” to talk
to Varavara Rao. Do you think it is fair to conflate human rights with
Maoist work?
Participation in a Human Rights event and asking “young leaders” to meet
Varavara Rao constitute no offence whatsoever.

The prosecution used the term “Urban Naxalite” in the court, though he
admitted it was not well defined. What do you make of this term?
“Urban Maoist”, “half-Maoist” are labels of recent invention. They have no
utility in a court process. The court requires proof of membership in a
proscribed terrorist organisation, or of participation in terrorist
activities. There is no suggestion here that any such proof is available.
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The prosecution acknowledged the names of the accused were not in the First
Information Report filed after violence in Bhima Koregaon, but said the law
does not require this. Most of the statements made by the prosecution did
not relate to the Bhima Koregaon investigation but pertained to general
claims about Maoist propaganda, recruitment. What does this indicate as far
as the strength of this case goes?
The law may not require inclusion of the names of the accused in the FIR.
However, the inclusion of any additional accused after this stage weakens
the case against them, and the requirements of evidence become even more
stringent.

The prosecution said that Arun Ferreira’s work is nothing but propaganda
for Maoists which inspires many young minds and eventually pushes them to
the jungles to join Maoists, and so is involved in recruitment. What do you
make of this argument?
“Maoist propaganda” and recruitment for Communist Party of India (Maoist)
are two entirely different issues. There are numerous Maoist formations
that participate in electoral politics. These are parties of ex-Naxalites
who have given up violence, but continue to believe in some of the
fundamentals of the Maoist ideology. There is no legal prohibition against
“Maoist propaganda” or “Maoist advocacy”.

The prosecution brought up an alleged letter
<https://scroll.in/article/882273/activists-arrest-by-leaking-modi-assassination-plot-letters-pune-police-went-against-the-law>,
which is said to include a plot to assassinate the prime minister, and it
has been claimed that this is one of the main pieces of evidence for police
to proceed in this case. Others have, however, questioned the authenticity
of the document, in part because of the manner in which it is written.

As regards the letter, first, the integrity of the chain of recovery would
have to be established, proving beyond reasonable doubt that it was
recovered from the individual and in the manner claimed by the police. From
open source reportage it appears that it is unlikely that such a chain
would be established. An analysis of the contents of the letter, moreover,
strains credibility. Anyone familiar with the patterns of communication
adopted by the Maoists would immediately reject this letter as an obvious
fabrication. Moreover, in trying to implicate a number of unrelated and
prominent critics of the current regime in a plot to murder the Prime
Minister, prosecuting agencies appear to be constructing a straw man in
order to sensationalise the case. I do not believe the case will be
sustainable over time, unless courts are sufficiently intimidated by the
political executive, as they were, for instance, in the Binayak Sen case in
Chhattisgarh, to pass a judgment that would eventually be thrown out by the
Supreme Court.

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