"Sub Inspector A.V.Parmar, constables Prabhatsinh and Suresh from Godhra Sector 
B led this criminal group of policemen, and the women have identified them; 
they would be able to identify the remaining policemen in person if and when 
presented before them"


With Regards 

Abi
 


“At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice 
he is the worst”
- Aristotle


--- On Sun, 1/3/10, Sukla Sen <[email protected]> wrote:
 




From: Irfan Engineer <irfane...@gmail. com>
Date: Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 11:12 AM
Subject: [Secular Perspective] Report of police brutality and sexual violence 
in Godhra
To: [email protected]





Report of our visit to meet the victims of police brutality and sexual violence 
in Godhra
We came to know about the inhuman atrocities perpetrated on the women of 
Hathila and Geni plots (near Urdu School) of Godhra on the midnight of 19th 
-20th of December, almost 12 days later. The media had not reported this 
ghastly attack at all. We visited Hathila plot on the 2nd of January and talked 
to the women who were brutally assaulted and sexually abused during the entire 
episode and later on in custody. The purpose was to meet the victims of this 
police atrocity, be in solidarity with the victims in their trauma, and also to 
ascertain and record the details of this atrocity.
 
The incident
 
The police seemed to have been pursuing an accused alleged of cow-slaughter. 
Due to some reason the accused managed to escape from another residential area 
close to Hathila plot. Following this incident the police ‘raided’ the Hathila 
plot in the middle of the night around 1.00 a.m. (on the 20th of December, 
2009). The police forcibly entered a number of houses and started beating up 
the innocent women. They verbally and physically assaulted the defenceless 
women in their houses and after terrorizing the community for over an hour, 8 
women were dragged away. The women were illegally detained on false and 
frivolous charges and pushed into the police vehicles, in blatant violation of 
the guideline that women cannot be arrested and taken into custody without the 
presence of women constables. And this happened well past midnight.
 
We would not like to go into like the frivolous charges levelled against the 
women, nor the wanton destruction that the police party had engaged in before 
taking the women away. We would like to focus on the inhuman battering and the 
sexual abuse the women were subjected to, which is a very serious violation of 
human rights and the law by the police; and raises very serious questions 
regarding the impunity with which police engage in such brutal violations. 
  
Police atrocities and sexual violence 
  
Sub Inspector A.V.Parmar, constables Prabhatsinh and Suresh from Godhra Sector 
B led this criminal group of policemen, and the women have identified them; 
they would be able to identify the remaining policemen in person if and when 
presented before them. The police personnel who had forced themselves into the 
houses had engaged in extremely sexist abuses and crass acts like opening their 
pants and displaying their private parts. These policemen, particularly PSI 
Parmar and the constables named above, crossed all limits; they grabbed and 
applied brutal pressure on the breasts, buttocks and the private parts of the 
women, while verbally and physically assaulting them.  As the women resisted 
this abuse, they were brutally beaten up with lathis and kicked dangerously in 
the stomach and other parts of the body.  The police forced themselves into the 
house of a widow who was still in the iddat and misbehaved with her despite 
pleas of all those present there.
 She was also abused and manhandled, but the police stopped short of arresting 
her and taking her away with the other women, (perhaps fearing serious 
consequences) . Even a young woman who was to get married the next day was 
beaten up badly and was injured on her toes, which was bleeding profusely. Two 
women who were running away to protect themselves were pursued and battered by 
these police personnel and later loaded into their vehicles. A young mother who 
was nursing her 15 day old child also was brutally beaten while still holding 
the baby. All the women also disclosed that the sexual abuse and violence 
continued in the vehicle and in the police station as they reached there. 
  
All the while they kept shouting obnoxious expletives, threatening to rape and 
kill them, and that nothing would happen to the policemen whatever they do. 
Even after 14 days the clot and the painful injury marks are still visible all 
over their bodies. All the injury marks which were visible in the photographs 
shown by them were verified in person and in private by the women who were in 
this fact finding team. We have not attached photographs so that their privacy 
could be respected. 
  
The young children who had witnessed this violence are still in a state of 
shock and many of them, the women victims and their family members find it 
difficult to sleep at night. 
  
The Magisterial Inquiry 
  
Our experience pertaining to action taken in the event of police brutalities is 
generally negative. The records are invariably manipulated and the victims are 
terrorized into denying any such brutality when produced before the magistrate. 
The police allegedly showed the arrest only at around 5.30 p.m. on the 20th 
although the women were in detention from the wee hours of the morning (around 
3.00 a.m.). However when the women were finally produced before the magistrate 
(who happens to be a woman), she listened to the victims, examined their 
injuries and ordered the police to take them right away to the civil hospital. 
Even this, the police delayed and also forced the medical staff to get the 
medical examination done in their presence and by male staff. 
  
The sensitive observations made by the magistrate are a silver lining in an 
otherwise brutal inhuman atrocity case. This has further enabled the Chief 
Judicial Magistrate to order an inquiry into this atrocity under Section 202 of 
Cr.PC. Hopefully this prima facie case made out against the police would help 
the victims in getting justice. 
  
What next? 
  
The legal process will take its course, and there are civil society 
organizations such as Citizens for Justice and Peace who have taken up the 
matter. But our concern still remains. Violence against women has been on the 
rise in Gujarat; and the kind of brutality that has been perpetrated only shows 
the dangerous and violent mindset that has been setting in particularly after 
the Gujarat Carnage in 2002. We witnessed at that time an unprecedented orgy of 
sexual violence in the carnage by the murderous mobs as well as the police. But 
nothing much could be done about it due to lack of complaints and evidence. Now 
we are witnessing more and more of such brutal violence both by criminals and 
the police with impunity. And when such brutalities are perpetrated by the 
police we know that we are at the edge of a precipice. 
  
We have to see this as a crisis situation and respond with the urgency it 
deserves. There is a need for us belonging to human rights and women’s rights 
organizations to overtly be with the victims of such violence; to take strong 
positions and express this in strongest and loudest ways possible. While the 
legal process should also be strengthened it is equally important that we 
respond socially and politically to eliminate this mindless violence. We have 
to challenge our collective conscience and commit to prevent and end this 
violence against women. Can we come together to do something before it is too 
late? 
  
Meera Rafi Malek 
  
Prasad Chacko 


-- 
Peace Is Doable







      

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