No riot is possible beyond a few hours, except
with the connivance of the police. This is because the rioter is, by his very
nature, a coward. This is true about all the riots that happened in the
country, including the February riots in Northeast Delhi where 53 people were
killed. A majority of the victims were Muslims.
They suffered the most, in terms of not only
lives but also property and worship centres. The modus operandi was as clear as
daylight. Bring in rioters from other places, arm them with gas cylinders and
instigate them to indulge in arson, looting and killing.
The whole operation involved identifying the
houses, shops and other business establishments that needed to be put to the
torch. That is what I witnessed when I toured the worst riot-hit areas to meet
the children who lost everything except their innocence.
I had seen many video clips and photographs,
published on social media, which showed the police gloriously gazing at a
distance when right behind them men masking their faces were pelting stones or
indulging in violence.
Over three decades ago, I had personally
witnessed policemen turning a blind eye to the looting of shops owned by the
Sikhs in Patna in 1984. I saw the phenomenon repeating a few years later at
Hazaribagh, now in Jharkhand, where the victims were Muslims.
All this has confirmed my belief that without
police patronage, no prolonged riot, as in Gujarat and Delhi, is possible.
I understand that the chargesheet in a Delhi
riot case against 15 runs into 17,000 pages, when Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace
had only 1225 pages when it was first published. The size is a reflection of
poor sleuthing, not efficient policing.
How did the police prepare such a large
chargesheet, when Albert Einstein needed only a few pages for his thesis,
E=mc2? Einstein wanted fellow scientists and the common people to read and
understand his dissertation on “a new determination of molecular dimensionsâ€,
while the Delhi Police do not expect even the judge hearing the case to read
the voluminous rubbish.
The judge should not be faulted if he finds
the task of reading the chargesheet beyond human endurance. The police have a
task like the task of the 16-member — purely upper caste, north Indian male —
committee to study the culture of India over the last 12,000 years.
The Delhi Police also seem to have a task on
hand — prove that the riots were a part of the nationwide protest against the
citizenship laws that discriminated against the Muslims. One only has to recall
how the Delhi Police and their political masters tried to fix the blame on the
Muslims for spreading Coronavirus!
When they realised that the charge would not
hold when even the second most powerful person in the country, Amit Shah, who
threatened to obliterate the termites, had to get admitted to Dr Naresh
Trehan’s Medanta hospital in Gurugram, ostensibly to fight Covid-19, they
dropped the campaign.
The Delhi Police are determined to prove that
the riots were to denigrate India, particularly when US president Donald Trump
was on Indian soil for no other purpose than to wean some American voters of
Indian origin away from the Democratic camp.
A BJP spokesperson with a Muslim name (Shazia
Ilmi) even went to the extent of suggesting on television that the Muslims
virtually killed themselves to blame the Hindus and the government for the
riots.
It was the most atrocious argument I have
heard about the Delhi riots. I would have missed it, had my friend Nalini
Ranjan Mohanty not done a post on it on his Facebook Timeline. Let me quote
him, “That the Muslims conspired to set off the conflagration, that one of
their strategies was to die in large number so that the Hindus could be blamed
and Modi's India could be besmirched in the international mediaâ€.
It is in the context of proving the police
theory that the riot was an extension of the massive protests that the country
witnessed over the Citizenship Amendment Act that the Delhi police have
included, among others, the names of CPM leader Sitaram Yechury, Prof
Apoorvanand and political and social activist Yogendra Yadav in the
chargesheet.
But BJP leaders like Kapil Mishra and Union
minister Anurag Thakur who shouted “Goli maro s… ko†and thereby instigated the
riots are nowhere in the picture as they move about with police protection.
What kind of police investigation is this, when the victim is hounded and the
assailants have the last laugh?
On September 17, the court granted bail to
Natasha Narwal, arrested in connection with the riots at Jafrabad because the
police’s claim that she instigated the riots was found to be as hollow as the
brains of those in uniform who booked her.
Alas, the poor girl cannot come out of the
jail in the near future, as the police have filed a case under the dreaded
Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. Who will compensate her and her family
for the trauma they have been undergoing for the last six months?
Last week, Umar Khalid was arrested, again, under
the UAPA. He is one person who swears by the Constitution, perhaps, in the
mistaken belief that it will set him free. He and others of his ilk forget what
Dr BR Ambedkar had famously said, the Constitution was as good as the people
who implemented it.
Earlier, during the JNU agitation, this man
was accused of sedition without a shred of evidence. He will now be in jail,
God alone knows, for how long? What is the real charge against him? It is that
he took part in the agitation against the CAA. Under Modi’s dispensation,
dissent has become as big a crime as sedition.
In Uttar Pradesh, Chief Minister Adityanath is
busy constituting a new police force which will be answerable only to itself.
It can search anyone’s premises and arrest anyone without a warrant. Of course,
the victims will, certainly, have the freedom to hire the best advocates and
file a case in the Supreme Court!
Under Amit Shah, the Delhi Police have already
started functioning like an authoritarian force that pays scant regard to
established norms of maintaining law and order. Small wonder that ace policeman
Julio Ribeiro finds unacceptable everything about the Delhi riot investigation.
What’s worse, Kapil Mishra had the cheeks to
demand death by hanging for Umar Khalid. It is a measure of the standards of
justice and equity in India that his statement became a hit with those who
tweet and forward tweets on Twitter. Elsewhere in the world, a character like
him would not have been roaming around.
Recently, Kesavananda Bharati, the seer of a
mutt in Kerala, passed away in old age. It was he who filed a case against the
land reforms in Kerala under which the Mutt’s property was acquired by the
government.
When Nani Palkhivala accepted Bharati’s brief
and questioned the law in the Supreme Court, it resulted in the famous
Kesavananda Bharati verdict in which the Supreme Court said that the basic
structure of the Constitution was as inviolable as the Himalayas.
When the Supreme Court has judges like Arun
Mishra, who can order removal of all human habitation near railway tracks and
prevent even high courts from hearing petitions related to such eviction, has
not the basic structure collapsed already like the Babri Masjid on December 6,
1992?
If the custodians of law and order are
themselves suspect and have their own political agenda, aligned with that of
the ruling party, what fairness can be expected from them? M Nageswara
Rao is an IPS officer from Andhra Pradesh whom Prime Minister Narendra
Modi handpicked to head the CBI.
We knew what kind of a man he is when he
issued a statement on the death of Swami Agnivesh, who was born in Andhra but
whose karmabhoomi was North India.
This is what he tweeted: “GOOD RIDDANCE
@swamiagnivesh. You were an Anti-Hindu donning saffron clothes. You did
enormous damage to Hinduism. I am ashamed that you were born as a Telugu
Brahmin. Lion in sheep clothes. My grievance against Yamaraj is why did he wait
this long!â€
I have never in my life heard anyone saying
anything like this about a dead person. In our culture, it is considered
sacrilegious to speak ill of a dead person. Why? Because after his death, he is
answerable to God for whatever he did on earth. Also, a dead person cannot
defend himself, which is a Constitutional right every citizen enjoys.
Come to think of it, Rao was once the Director
of the CBI, the police agency which many think is the most efficient in the
country. Modi and Co. did not condemn him for his tweet, though an embarrassed
Twitter removed it from its archive.
When we have jackals like him in “sheep’s
clothes†the Narwals and Umer Khalids can only waste their lives in jails. For
all you know, Nageswara Rao may even be chosen for a gubernatorial post in the
Northeast.
I hope readers have not forgotten what
happened to Justice Muralidhar, who was summarily transferred from Delhi to the
Punjab and Haryana High Court for ordering investigation against those who
shouted “goli maro s… koâ€.
It is simple logic that if more Hindus are
killed or attacked, more Muslims will be in jail facing trial. Ditto if more
Muslims are killed or attacked, more Hindus will be in jail facing trial. Is
that true in the case of the Delhi riots?
Is it any wonder that many retired police
officers like Julio Ribeiro have come forward picking holes in the
investigation carried out by the Delhi Police so far.
When George Floyd was killed, rather
asphyxiated, by the rogue police in Texas in the US, there was protest all over
the world against the brutal killing. Many might have thought that everything
was hunky-dory in India. Is that so?
“India too has a rogue police force that is
emboldened by its impunity, and is particularly brutal in dealing with the
weaker sections of the population, notably women, Dalits, Adivasis, religious
minorities and people from marginalised communitiesâ€.
Just in 2017-18, there were 1674 custodial
deaths in India — about five people killed every day, usually after torture at
the hands of policemen.
Remember Jayaraj and Bennicks, the father-son
duo, who were arrested by the police in Tamil Nadu for keeping their mobile
phone shop open after the curfew hours. They were tortured so badly in the
police lockup that they succumbed to the injuries in their private parts two
days after the arrest.
As encounter killings increasingly become the
norm, rather than the exception, can anyone mention a single case of a
policeman hanged to death for killing an innocent person in police custody?
It is not that the ruling party does not react
to instances of injustice. When Kangana Ranaut’s illegal construction was
demolished in Mumbai, the Maharashtra Governor received her with great warmth
to hear her in person. I do not know why she likened Mumbai to the capital of
Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, which I found has resemblance to a town like
Dalhousie in Himachal Pradesh.
She was rewarded with Y-plus security. This is
the kind of country that India has been reduced to. I do not know whether
Tagore could have imagined that India would come to this pass after writing
those stirring lines:
“Where the clear stream of reason has not lost
its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit; Where the mind is led
forward by Thee into ever-widening thought and action; Into that heaven of
freedom, my Father, let my country awake
â€.
It is pointless to expect the Delhi Police to
change its style of functioning when it looks up to the Home minister for
direction. It will be a gross miscarriage of justice if the innocent are
punished just because they had the courage of conviction to fight against the
CAA which many of us did not have.
What is the alternative? Appointment of a
judicial commission, as demanded by some Opposition leaders? When there is no
respect for the rule of law, and when the fence is ready to devour the crop,
there are no easy solutions. Therein lies the tragedy the country is beset
with.
(Published on 21 st September 2020, Volume XXXII, Issue 39)