Do
Not Cry For The Bombay
Riot Victims!
By Subhash Gatade
07 August, 2007
Countercurrents.org
("You have a big heart." Vilasrao Deshmukh is learnt to
have told Balasaheb Thackeray. The Sena chief's response : " I
have a big heart indeed, but people fail to understand this."
_ Indian Express, July 19, 2007)
(Mohite says, “All
the while, the conversation was being interrupted by telephone calls
the Sena chief was getting. He was talking on several phones at a time,
and as I listened I realised that he was directing Sena activists to
attack Muslims. ‘Sarv landyana maroon taka,’ he said. He
told the callers to see that not a single Muslim lived to give evidence
in court.”..Mohite testified to the Srikrishna Commission on June
22, 1997.
Mid Day
, January 13,2003)
It
is difficult to say how many journos or politicos managed to have a
look at the recent meeting between Mr Vilasrao Deshmukh, Chief Minister
of Maharashtra ; his deputy Mr R.R. Patil, who also handles the home
ministry and Bal Thackeray, the octogenarian leader of the Shiv Sena,
at Matoshree, the house of the Thackerays.
It was reported that the
Congress high command had specifically asked Mr Deshmukh to visit the
Sena Supremo to thank him for his support to Ms Pratibha Patil in the
Presidential election.As was expected the meeting went well. While the
two sides formally maintained that not much should be read into their
convergence of views over the Marathi Manushi's candidature for the
august post, it was evident that a new chemistry was unfolding itself
between the long time adversaries. At least one could gather it from
the exchanges they had or the body language of the leaders. "You
have a big heart." Vilasrao Deshmukh is learnt to have told Balasaheb
Thackeray. The Sena chief's prompt reply was worth noting: " I
have a big heart indeed, but people fail to understand this."(
Indian Express, July 19, 2007)
One can understand the lack
of interest or the indifference shown by the media towards this meeting,
as one presumes that it was engaged in covering the Advani and Cos.highdecible
tirade against Ms. Patil or the meekish response by the Congress towards
the attacks.
It could be said to be a
sheer coincidence that the day when the said meeting between the Sena
Supremo and Mr Deshmukh took place, also happened to be the day when
the designated TADA court looking into the Bombay bomb blasts in 1993
announced death sentence for two accused. It was the first death sentence
in the Bomb blasts case. And as expected the media in B'bay was rather
euphoric in reporting the judgement. Jyoti Punwani, a journalist and
secular activist tells us the manner in which section of the media reported
the news stigmatising a whole community in its vein.
It would be height of naivette
to even think that the Deshmukh-Patil duo would have brooded over the
observations of the SriKrishna Commission then - which looked into the
infamous 92-93 riots after the demolition of Babri Mosque - to remind
themselves about the role played by the 'man with a big heart' in aggravating
the situation in those days or the manner in which it looked at the
Bomb blasts :
In fact, Justice Srikrishna
had said in his report: “One common link (between the riots and
the bomb blasts) appears to be that the former appear to have been a
causative factor for the latter. The serial bomb blasts were a reaction
to the totality of events at Ayodhya and Bombay in December 1992 and
January 1993. The resentment against the government and police among
a large body of Muslim youth was exploited by Pakistan-aided anti-national
elements. They were brainwashed into taking revenge and a conspiracy
was hatched and implemented at the instance of Dawood Ibrahim.”
But the most damning indictment
was rather reserved for the Sena Supremo himself who according to Justice
Srikrishna "..[l]ike a veteran General, commanded his loyal Shiv
Sainiks to retaliate by organised attacks against Muslims". The
report of the commission plainly tells us :
From 8th January 1993 at
least there is no doubt that the Shiv Sena and Shiv Sainiks took the
lead in organizing attacks on Muslims and their properties under the
guidance of several leaders of the Shiv Sena from the level of Shakha
Pramukh to the Shiv Sena Pramukh Bal Thackeray who, like a veteran General,
commanded his loyal Shiv Sainiks to retaliate by organised attacks against
Muslims. The communal violence and rioting triggered off by the Shiv
Sena was hijacked by local criminal elements who saw in it an opportunity
to make quick gains. By the time the Shiv Sena realized that enough
had been done by way of “retaliation”, the violence and
rioting was beyond the control of its leaders who had to issue an appeal
to put an end to it."
It does not forget to add
“Even after it became apparent that the leaders of the Shiv Sena
were active in stoking the fire of the communal riots, the police dragged
their feet on the facile and exaggerated assumption that if such leaders
were arrested the communal situation would further flare up, or to put
it in the words of then Chief Minister, Sudhakarrao Naik, “Bombay
would burn”; not that Bombay did not even burn otherwise.”
0 0
There is no doubt that neither
Mr Deshmukh or Mr Patil - as custodians of law and order in the state
- would like to revisit the not so recent period in the history of the
city when 'the city that never sleeps' burnt for days together at the
instigation of the 'veteran General' and the callous manner in which
Deshmukh's predecessors reacted. As loyal soldiers of their respective
parties who had been deputed to thank the 'man with the big heart' for
his gesture, in future also they would see to it that the bond gets
further strengthened, at least he is not put to any inconvenience.
But will it be so easy to
obliterate the fact that officially close to 1,000 people were killed
in those riots and 1,00,000 displaced during the organised mayhem which
visited the city during December 2002 and January 2003. The continuous
denial of justice to the riot victims was brought forth in an editorial
in 'Outlook' ( 26 September 2006) last year. It had tried to couterpose
the euphoria present among a section of the middle class over the verdict
of the designated TADA court in the bomb blasts case and the conspiracy
of silence about the Bombay riots.
It said :
"In all the euphoria of “getting the guilty” in each
of the staggered verdicts in the ’93 Bombay blasts case, the city’s
overlooked one thing: that the judgement, however just and overdue,
addresses only one side of the violence attending the Babri Masjid demolition
and leading to the blasts.
Even as the CBI, Mumbai police
and governments pat themselves on the back, and citizens demand death
penalty for all the Memons—four of the family have been convicted,
three acquitted—there has been no conviction in any of the thousands
of cases registered during and after the post-Babri riots from December
7, 1992, to January 21, 1993.
Ironically, some riot victims
are fighting cases fabricated against them by the police while perpetrators
of the violence, whether men in uniform or in saffron, are walking free.
Why, Sena chief Bal Thackeray, the ‘mastermind of the riots’,
hasn’t even been touched. "
Few months back the 'Combat Law' team had looked into the ( Combat Law
June-July 2007) manner in which Srikrishna Commission report was ultimately
dumped.It looked at the way in which no significant action had been
taken against 31 police officers -right from the rank of the deputy
commissioner of police to constables - indicted for their role by the
commission. Accusing the police officers of being 'communally biased
against Muslims' and demanding action against them it had even observed
that the 'lapses in the investigations were not merely cases of negligence
but deliberate attempts to suppress material evidence and sabotage the
probe into violent incidents.'
The petitioner Shakeel Ahmad
( and Jyoti Punwani) who had filed a PIL in the Supreme Court to look
into the actions taken against police officers found to their dismay
that found that 'most of the officers against whom Justice Srikrishna
passed severe strictures were in fact promoted. Many were granted anticipatory
bail. All were released on bail with the public prosecutor often not
arguing for their detention.' RD Tyagi, a joint-commissioner of police
at the time of the riots, was, according to Srikrishna Commission, not
at all justified in killing unarmed and innocent nine bakery workers
on January 9, 1993; he 'merrily continued in service and retired as
DIG. He has also been discharged from a case that was initiated against
him. He was appointed to this high post by the Shiv Sena-BJP government
at the instance of Bal Thackeray.'
0 0
Close watchers of the Indian
polity would tell us that the conspiracy of silence over the Bombay
riot victims is nothing new. They can present n number of examples from
the history of post-independent India to buttress their point. At one
level it would be difficult to disagree with their observations.
But at another level one
would agree to differ and would like to underline that things have deteriorated
further. Perhaps the situation as it is present before us is a marker
of the growing rightward shift in our polity where one witnesses a lack
of remorse after the communal frenzy is over. Gujarat has become a prime
example where even five years after the genocide in 2002 at the hands
of the Hindutva brigade, one rarely finds a sense of repentance among
the civil society.
In fact, it would not be
incorrect to state that today the whole debate around 'secular' versus
'communal' has started culminating in the debate around 'soft Hindutva'
versus 'hard hindutva' only. One can say that the state of Maharashtra
is today a new symbol of the synergy between 'soft' as well as 'hard'
Hindutva. Few months back the elections to the municipal corporations
and city councils in Maharashtra witnessed ex/old activists/leaders
of Shiv Sena leading the campaigns of different parties - may it be
the case of Narayan Rane, Chhagan Bhujbal or Raj Thakre, underlining
this fact in a stark manner.
It is the same state where
one witnessed participation of activists belonging to RSS/VHP/Bajrang
Dal in the bomb blasts in Nanded, Parbhani, Jalna and many other places.
But despite having a secular coalition at the helm of affairs the civil
society itself saw to that the all such acts by Hindutva brigade people
are underreported or cleverly silenced.
The conspiracy of silence
over the Bombay riot victims is nothing surprising.
:email : [email protected]
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