Origin of Naxalism
S.O.S e - Clarion Of Dalit - Weekly Newspaper On Web
Working For The Rights & Survival Of The Oppressed
Editor: NAGARAJA.M.R… VOL.7 issue.28…… .10/07/2013
Editorial :
CHHATTISGARH MASSACRE BY NAXALITES
We at e-voice express our deep
condolences to the FAMILIES of slain CRPF jawans at chhattisgarh ,
who were massacred by naxalites. We salute the brave soldiers who laid down
their lives while upholding law & order and hereby demand the legal
prosecution of the perpetrators.
We don’t have symapthies
for death of SALWA JUDUM Founding & Supporting
members because they also inflicted terror ,
violence on innocent adivasis & dalits just
like naxalites.
We at e-voice salute our jawans
& police for teaching the external enemies a befitting lesson and
protecting our motherland from the external & internal enemies. We
pay our whole hearted respects to the martyrs , who laid down their lives , in
the course of protecting our people & country from the clutches of
terrorists / naxalites .
India equally faces greater threat from internal
enemies – corrupt public servants (who are deadlier than pak
terrorists & NAXALITES ). These corrupt public servants sell
everything , motherland , for money , for bribe.
Mumbai terrorists killed 200 people
, where as a fake drugs manufacturer kills thousands of people by selling fake
drugs / fake medicines. Drugs control department officials lets off many such
such fake drugs manufacturers , in turn killing thousands of innocents. The
number of end victims are huge than any terrorist attacks. This is just one
instance , in this way corrupt public servants of various departments
compromise with their official duties & murder scores of innocents.
The corrupt public servants network
, is oiled far better than italy's mafia. Common man doesn't get justice , even
if he complains to higher officials , vigilance authorities or even court of
law. As the bribe booty reaches higher-ups & political bosses.. thus black
money is created.
The huge profits earned / black
money created by criminal industrialists / entrepreneurs , finds it's way
to money laundering heavens. Thus our economy is crippled , public
exchequer deprived of it's dues. The money thus laundered feeds terrorist
outfits , underworld dons , in their criminal deeds.
Now , underworld / terrorist
outfits are involved in huge real estate business , film production /
distribution , film piracy business , etc , to reap more illegal profits out of
illegal money. This shakes upside down our government's fiscal policies.
If a corrupt public servant is
apprehended , it is equal to depriving 100 terrorists out of funds ,
putting 100 criminals out of action. Will the common man raise to give a
befitting lesson to corrupt public servants.
Whenever we face crimes by naxalites &
terrorists , government only looks at one face of the case. The other face of
the crime is the atrocities of government itself. The public servants are
corrupt , they are snatching lands , livelihood from tribals , driving them away
& gifting those very lands to industrialists , miners , etc without
any rehabilitation for the tribals. Government has failed to provide basic
health care , education to people . it has even failed to provide food to
tribals & tribals are dying due to hunger. All the much hyped government
programmes like “Food for Work” & “National Rural Employment
Guarantee Scheme” have derailed at the hands of corrupt public servants.
The local Police together with land lords , industrialists , miners are
torturing these local tribals. For these tribals there is no food , no health
care , no education , no justice but only sufferings , physical torture at the
hands of police . The Recruiters of terrorist & naxal organizations are
cashing on this frustration of tribals.
O, JIHADIS, FREEDOM FIGHTERS,
TERRORISTS & NAXALITES
INTROSPECT YOURSELF
INTROSPECT YOURSELF
Kashmiri militants claim they are fighting for
kashmiris, when the very same kashmiris were suffering from loses due to
earthquake why didn't the so-called jihadis didn't make any relief efforts? Why
didn't their foreign master – Pakistan didn't make any relief efforts? Within
the pak occupied Kashmir ( pok) itself, Pakistan didn't make appropriate
relief efforts. It is government of India & international community who provided proper & timely relief.
relief efforts. It is government of India & international community who provided proper & timely relief.
The foreign powers are not at all interested in your
well being. They are ready to spend millions of dollars for aiding terrorism,
but not ready to spend a few hundreds for your education , health care or self
employment schemes through NGOs. The fact is they don't want your well being,
they don't want you to prosper, live peacefully. The ultimate objective of
these foreign powers is to take you on the path of self destruction, destruction
of your motherland & to finally usurp the power, to subjugate you into
slavery in turn looting the resources of your country.
Ofcourse, in India there is rampant corruption. Still
democracy is live & kicking in India, it is the best form of governance.
You have got real examples of countries in Africa, latin America, wherein the
countries have secured independence through separatist / terrorist movements.
The terrorist leaders themselves have become prime minister / president of
newly independent countries. Now, they are more corrupt & barbaric than
their predecessors . even after getting independence, the lives of commonfolk
has become bad to worse. By independence , only leaders have benefited. Will
you lead another struggle ? this is endless, as the selfishness , greed of
leaders knows no bounds.
In the past, government of India aided tamil
separatists, Pakistan terrorists, etc, butchering innocents. The government of
U.S.A aided terrorists in Africa, afghanisthan, latin America , murdering innocents.
Various countries have aided terrorism while preaching peace. These barbaric
acts were motivated by selfish, corrupt, ego-centric leaders. Now, in the
bomeerang effects of their actions, innocents are dying in bomb blasts, etc.
Violence breds violence. Peace & compassion
results in all round harmony, prosperity. Every human being must struggle
against injustices in a peaceful & legal manner. The struggle must be
against the corrupt system, for that peaceful struggle democracy is the best
forum. Don't be pawns in the hands of foreign powers, politicians. They are not
at all interested in your welfare, well being. At the end, it is the leaders
who become ministers & amass wealth through corruption. The common folk
like you will remain as fiddlings, minions forever.
Just imagine yourselves in the place of victims of
delhi serial bomb blasts (29/10/2005)
or Mumbai blasts of 26/11/08 . just imagine the plight of little child MOSHE
who has lost both his parents , imagine Your mother & wife are crying, your
children are dead , your father's hands & limbs are ripped apart in the
blast. How does it feel to be one ? no religion, no god asks it's followers to
cause destruction. All religions, gods are full of eternal love &
compassion. Let that god shine his light, upon you all on the violent path.
Whether it is in india or else where , democratic
system is best form of governance. The people in those countries suffer due to
corrupt public servants . in all such cases , the legal , non violent fight
must be against the corrupt people , corrupt police , corrupt judges , CORRUPT
public servants but not against the system itself.
Let us build ram rajya of mahatma's dream through non violent means within the existing democratic framework . Jai Hind. Vande Mataram.
Let us build ram rajya of mahatma's dream through non violent means within the existing democratic framework . Jai Hind. Vande Mataram.
Who are NAXALS ?
PRICOL VP MURDER , SATYAM CO FRAUD ,
SINGUR AGITATION & GRAZIONO CEO MASS MURDER
-
An eye opener to irresponsible corporate India & GOI
In last week , in the state of
tamilnadu India , some of the sacked laboureres of M/S PRICOL INDUSTRIES mass
lynched & murdered a higher management official , for sacking them from
their jobs. This act of laborers is a heinous crime , illegal & inhuman
act. In India , nowadays the labour movement has been hijacked by lumpen
elements , rowdies , criminals. These criminal elements are there in the posts
of union leaders just to further their self interests rather than the welfare
of the workers whom they represent. These lumpen elements , so called leaders
thrive on controversies & creates disturbances , vitiates harmonious
relations between the management – workers. The company as an organization
needs team work to survive & thrive in business. These labor leaders even
oppose for example OUTPUT BASED PRODUCTION INCENTIVE SCHEME – which is a win
win situation for both the management & workers. These leaders
go to the extent of killing the hen which lays golden eggs , all for their
selfish gains. These rowdy leaders become leaders just to make money , to make
political entry , to shirk-off work , to escape night shift work , etc. In the
midst of these rowdy elements the genuine concerns of ordinary workers
are not at all heard. The ordinary workers who depend on the organization for
their livelihood , who work hard to earn more incentive , are the ultimate
sufferers.
In the same manner , the management
of companies must be sensible to the genuine concerns of it's workers ,
it must properly balance the worker's concern & company's position . some
of the managements enforce harsh rules on workers , o.k , the management
personnel of those very same companies function without discipline , misuse
company properties , siphons of company money , take commission from
vendors , cheat the government of tax dues , violate environmental laws , tax
laws , labor laws by bribing officials , etc. Finally this kills the
organization as a whole – the end losers shareholders , lending banks , government
& our economy.
The recent public
agitation at singur west Bengal , India against the TATA NANO project ,
is nothing but a struggle for survival by the land loosers. The public of
singur are living there since ancestral times , they fully depend for their
livelihood on the vegetables & other small crops grown there by them. The
livelihood , their survival is at stake. The irresponsible west Bengal
government , to favour the corporate lobby , acquired the lands forcibly
dirt cheap & gave it away at dirt cheap price to TATA'S. why such a
cheap , long term lease period has been given to TATA'S ? The
government literally has thrown the land loosers on street , it didn't bother
about their survival nor about their proper rehabilitation . Basically , TATA'S
is a business house , their only intention is to make profits , more money ,
not the welfare of people. Why not TATA'S acquire land in open market ? the
acquire of lands by state or central government for public good like for
building dams , roads , channels are at least justified
however the rehabilitation is more important. Other than for the projects
concerning public good , for all the projects of private enterprises like pay
& use roads , airports , industries , etc , the lands must be acquired in
the open market at market prices . For some industrialists bid to make riches ,
lives , livelihood of thousands should not be sacrificed. It is not
alround development. In a democracy , the voice of the public , locals should
be honoured but not the diktats of ministers or babus in secretariats. The
present corrupt system in India leading to rise of naxalism , underworld ,
separatist movements are all due to the government policies since independence
till date according to the wisdom (?) of ministers & babus , totally
dishonouring the public voice.
Now , take the case of Graziono CEO
mass murder in noida , it is nothing but fallout of hire & fire
policies. Every human being works for survival , on his meager salary there
will be family dependents , all of a sudden if a person is fired from
service , his whole family will be on streets. O.k , all corporates nowadays
preach & breath the mantra of USA , for everything be it infrastructure ,
flexible labour policies , it compares itself with those
prevailing in the USA. Now , the corporate India is getting infrastructure at
dirt free prices ( very high in the USA ) , has got hire & fire mechanism
by employing contract labour , very lenient environmental norms , very lenient
food & drugs safety rules , relaxation in Factory Act , ESI & PF acts ,
etc add to it the rampant corruption in all govt departments by which you can
get any certificate for a price.
In the USA , of course there is hire
& fire policy , however the minimum wage levels are also very high , so
that during good times workers can save money for their future. Also , there is
social security net to take care of ousted workers , then why not Indian
corporates paying good salary to workers during good times ? why not corporate
India making good contribution to social security net ? in the USA , there are
good infrastructure facilities they take pride in paying taxes to the
government , the corporate India always lobbies for tax cuts , subsidies
, loan waivers , etc. in the USA the environment norms are very strict , the
companies manufacturing hazardous chemicals which were ousted by the US
government have set up shop in India . Government of USA treats lives of people
as precious , where as Indian government treats lives of it's people as
dispensable. In the USA , the food safety & drugs , medicines safety
standards are very high , the drugs , high level adulteration food products
banned by Government of USA are sold in the India , this is the difference
between government of USA & India , the way they treat their people's
lives. Loan recovery , investor safety norms are very high in the USA , where
as in India , loan defaulters , share holder swindling , Non Performing Assets
is very high. Inspite of all the strict norms we have seen enron ,
Xerox debacles in the USA & recent bank fallouts in the USA. In India
with such lax norms , only you can guess.
The lesson here for the government of
India is , development must be allround , must not be at the cost of thousands.
Listen to the voice of public but not to the commands of greedy selfish
corporates , lobbies . Do stop thinking that only babus , IAS officers
& minister are brilliant knowing all and the public people are fools fit to
be herded by IAS officers. Do remember that India is a democracy not a BANANA
REPUBLIC.
The lesson for corporate India , aping
the USA intoto is O.k , but not by parts & bits , follow corporate
USA in every aspect of corporate duties & responsibilities , transparency.
Final word , when it comes to the
question of survival , life , livelihood , it know no bounds . After all
STRUGGLE FOR SUVIVAL is a basic animal instinct , it is a basic human right of
every individual .
Naxalism a result of an oversight of
statutes, says SC
Emphasising on validation of rights
of tribals and forest-dwellers over the forest lands, the Supreme Court has
said that Naxalism was a result of an oversight of constitutional provisions
relating to administration of schedule areas and tribes of the country.
"Nobody looks at Schedules V
and VI of the Constitution and the result is Naxalism. Urbanites are ruling the
nation. Even several union of India counsel are oblivious of these provisions
under the Constitution," said a Bench led by Justice A K Patnaik.
The Bench made a reference to
Schedules V and VI as they contain various provisions relating to
administration and control of scheduled areas and scheduled tribes in several
parts of the country. These provisions apply to states like Andhra Pradesh,
Jharkhand, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh,
Chhattisgarh, Orissa and Rajasthan and Northeastern states such as Assam,
Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram. Essentially these Constitutional provisions,
with the help of plethora of judgments by the apex court, act as a guarantee to
indigenous people on the right over the land they live in and its produce.
During a recent hearing on fresh
guidelines over tiger reserves, the Bench made certain queries from Additional
Solicitor General Indira Jaising over the Centre's proposal to relocate
indigenous people who were still living in the core areas of tiger reserves.
The ASG had informed the Bench there
were around 43,000 families still residing in core areas of tiger reserves and
that the plan was to gradually move them out after proper consultation with
Gram Sabhas. On being asked about the legal provisions to support the argument,
she also read out from the 2006 Forest Rights Act and the Panchayat (Extension
to Scheduled Areas) Act.
Asserting that all stakeholders
should first ensure the legal rights of the tribals are not violated, Justice
Patnaik said their rights must be settled in accordance with the provisions of
the law.
"There is apparently no
human-tiger conflict at least as far as these tribals are concerned. Everyone
must remember that forests belong to forest-dwellers. British government
considered forests of immense value and said through laws that all forests
belonged to government. These people were brought down to poverty and they
couldn't earn their living. They will be arrested for consuming the forest
produce; such was their law," said Justice Patnaik.
His concerns were echoed by senior
advocate Dushyanat Dave, who said forest-dwellers used to get arrested trying
and collect wood or pick fruits from the forests.
The Bench, however, seemed satisfied
with the promulgation of the 2006 Forest Rights Act and said this situation was
sought to be reversed by the new legislation as it sought to identify their
rights.
"One law can make a big
difference. Zamindari abolition law is a good example how a law can reverse the
situation," said Justice Patnaik, adding it was not the state but its
forest departments' officers who did not want to give up their control over the
forests.
At this, the ASG said the Centre was
conscious of its duty towards protecting the rights of forest-dwellers and
would relocate them after following the legal process.
The Judgment Beyond the ‘Neo-Liberal’ Rhetoric
The debate over the PIL filed in
2007 by Nandini Sundar and others challenging the ‘creation’ of Salwa Judum
(SJ), variously translated from the Gondwani dialect as peace march or peace
movement, as an armed tribal ‘vigilante group’, has taken a new turn in several
respects since the Supreme Court of India struck down the use of tribal youths
as a supplementary counter-insurgency force on Tuesday, July 5, 2011. Aside
from expectedly mixed reactions both in the media and the public, three
significant reactions need our attention and analysis. First, both the Union
and Chhatisgarh governments expectedly reacted against it by expressing their
intent to appeal to a larger SC Bench. Second, responding to some reactions in
the government and the media circles that the members of the disbanded SJ could
be targeted by the Maoists, the Maoists issued a blanket amnesty for those ‘adivasis’
who had joined the SJ under ‘government pressure’, thus reinforcing their
friends-of-the-tribal image; simultaneously attempting to brush clean their own
image as a ruthless group. Third, the Chhattisgarh Government, not to let go
the ‘advantage’ it had gained with the SJ, declared that the former SJ members
would be absorbed into the police as constables, even if that meant lowering
the educational and physical standards laid down for recruitment to the
constabulary. I will return to these issues a little later in my analysis.
The Media Reactions
THE INDIAN EXPRESS (July 7, 2011)
editorialised this ‘Too Judgmental’ verdict rather pithily: ‘Rather than a
granular approach that restricts itself to interpreting cases in the light of
particular laws and statutes, the courts have enlarged their self-image, as
populist champion and scold.’ In fact, drawing from some other recent judgments
that it thought made the Court getting carried away, the daily felt: ‘The
troubling thing about these judgments is not what they finally resolve, but
their tendency to draw straight connections between diverse, highly specific
cases about Salwa Judum, corruption in telecom license allocation or imperfect
solutions to the land acquisition problem, to a cloudy abstraction called
neo-liberalism.’
In a signed article ‘The Supreme
Quote’ on July 9, 2011, Editor-in-Chief of The Indian Express Shekhar Gupta
dubbed this and other recent judgments as having the intellectual depth of a
JNU postgrad: ‘Large parts of these judgments are just lectures on political
economy that makes you ask a legitimate question: what is the job of the
judges, to interpret law, or to criticise/make/change economic policy.’ In a
similar vein The Sunday Hindustan Times (July 10, 2011) column by Chanakya commented
against ‘Neo-Judicial Ideologues?’: ‘The judiciary is not an op-ed page
contributor or a JNU post-graduate in post-colonial studies.’ A scathing
commentary on what is considered a case of ‘judicial overreach’ influenced by a
superfluous academic red bastion of the country! However, prominent political
economy analyst Swaminathan S. Akalesaria Aiyar (‘Neo-Illiberalism is India’s
Bane’, The Times of India, June 17, 2011) argued that neo-liberalism that
advocates market economy sans any governmental control had not yet taken shape
anywhere ‘and never will’ as ‘governments do not come to power in order to
abolish all their powers’. He called the Indian political economy as
‘neo-illiberalism’ coming out of the ‘New Delhi Consensus’ (not the Washington
Consensus) —‘all parties are fully agreed on continuing to making money out of
a smaller but hugely profitable license-permit raj’.
In a more sedate tenor The Pioneer
editor-in-chief Chandan Mitra commented that ‘It is not my intention to suggest
that their Lordships acted out of ignorance in declaring this mass movement
“unconstitutional” and harangued the State Government for converting innocent
tribals into armed vigilantes, but I do wish the judges had travelled to Bastar
to acquaint themselves with the ground reality before passing this draconian
order.’ (‘Flawed Verdict on Salwa Judum’, July 10, 2011) The Hindu (July 9,
2011) in its editorial, on the other hand, agreed with this ‘landmark verdict’:
‘In demanding an end to the SPO system, the Supreme Court has acted as much out
of concern for the hapless tribal population of Dantewada as for the tribal
youth who were press-ganged by their individual circumstances into becoming
“cannon fodder” for the state.’
The Economic Times (July 11, 2011)
agreed with the SJ part of the judgment. However, on its critique of the
neo-liberal policies, it said: ‘…it is unfortunate that the Court chose to pass
facile judgment on economic paradigms and develop-ment strategies…. That the
Union Government can today spend lakh crores to advance popular welfare stems
wholly from the success of the policies the Court dismissed as privatisation
leading to emaciated state capacity to finance vital functions. The Court fails
to distinguish between economic reforms and the unreformed, degenerate politics
that aborts much of the emancipatory potential of economic reforms.’ The Times
of India (July 10, 2011) report supported the verdict on SJ, but cautioned:
‘(b)y launching a tirade against neoliberalism, the court provides unnecessary
ammunition to critics who accuse it of judicial overreach.’ Prakash Nanda in
his editorial column in the Uday India (July 23, 2011) felt that ‘(t)he
honourable Judges have effectively provided intellectual legitimacy by citing
the factors of poverty and exploitation’. He over-stretched his argument by
suggesting that if empowering the common people to make electoral choices was
alright, how was it wrong to arm them in self-defence.
While the human rights camp of
public personalities that spearheaded this PIL and campaign against the tribal
militia is naturally elated in being vindicated, other reactions vary from
being cautious in their optimism to a total dismay at the Apex Court upsetting
the entire counter-insurgency operations by the Chhattis-garh and other concerned
State governments organised around ‘cooperation’ with the local communities.
Both the final outcome and the tenor of the judgment have been interpreted as
being sympathetic to the Maoists, even anti-tribal, by this section of the
public opinion. There is also a strong criticism of judicial over-reach in
terms of criticising the Indian state on its developmental model at a time when
strong arguments have been advanced in favour of second generation of reforms.
Why should the Supreme Court of India indulge in rhetoric on neo-liberalism and
go out of their immediate context to offer an ideological critique, when the
reform process is far from complete. On the security front, disbanding a
well-formed voluntary security structure, in the process jeopardising the
Special Police Officer (SPO) system across States and endangering the lives of
the disarmed SJ SPOs of Chhatisgarh. The larger concerns emanating out of a
critique of a JNUsque criticism of ‘neo-liberalism’ by the Judiciary and its
tendency to encroach upon the executive and legislative terrain is also
significant.
The Judgment
THERE are two parts of the judgment—
‘analytical’/explanatory and operative. And there are two dimensions of the
judgment—one with political implications and the second with public security
implications.
Let me first look at the operative
part of the judgment. The Honourable Court has ordered the Chhattisgarh
Government to cease forthwith continuing with the SPOs, that is, disband the
SJ; this stops the Union of India from funding any such initiative by any State
Government, directs the Chhattisgarh Government to recall firearms from the SJ
SPOs and protect their lives from the Maoists. Additionally, the judgment also
declared the sections of the Chhattisgarh Police Act 2007 providing for the
appointment of SPOs as unconstitutional. The Honourable Court further commented
on the incident of violence against Swami Agnivesh in Chhattisgarh with concern
and directed the CBI to investigate this matter and report to it in six weeks.
The ‘analytical’/explanatory part of
the judgment declared ‘having the depth of a JNU postgrad writing’ by the press
tsars consumes most part of the judgment in which the learned judges have
quoted extensively from literature on related issues—classical and contemporary
—to buttress their arguments. There are two sets of arguments in the judgment.
The first set of arguments relate to poverty and deprivation, particularly of
the traditionally dispossessed social groups such as the adivasis, and the
second set of arguments is regarding public security and both eventually get
intertwined in articulating the final judgment.
In the first set of arguments the
judgment relates deprivation to rebellion that expresses itself in violent
agitation politics. This is the section of the argument that some commentators
have found both rhetorical as well as ‘dangerous’ rationalisation of the Maoist
politics in India. Whether the learned judges have the luxury of rhetoric drawn
from social science and political philosophy literature in a judicial
pronouncement, or they should use only a prosaic legal language in explanation
and verdict, is a separate issue. One among the main issues, as articulated by
Aiyar, is whether the current economic situation in India, in which the politics
of the Maoist kind has sustained and expanded since the 1980s, is due to
‘neo-liberal’ economic policies enforced by external pressures, or it is
India’s own mess wherein the policy regime is still ‘illiberal’ and far away
from market dictated ‘neo-liberalism’. The point indeed is well-taken. From
this perspective, it is only the characterisation that is problematic.
Irrespective of the ‘ism’ followed by India’s policy regime, land acquisition
by the ‘eminent domain’ for the public good and displacement without adequate
resettlement,1 policies for which are still being fine-tuned, is still creating
huge pockets of discontent, leaving a large sections of the poverty stricken
populace to be recruited for ‘revolution’ by the Maoists. That processes, circumstances
and consequences of acquisition of land by the government(s) in India is
turning out to be curious is evident from the recent judgment of the Allahabad
High Court relating to acquisition of land from farmers and sale to private
builders in Noida/Greater Noida. Though neither Maoism, nor resettlement is an
issue in these cases, but circumstantial and consequential anomalies of the
land acquisition policies are, whatever ‘ism’ we use to explain this away.
That the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist
politics in India beginning in Telangana in 1946 (then in Hyderabad state),
travelling to Naxalbari in West Bengal a decade-and-a-half since its withdrawal
on the advice of Stalin in 1951, surviving its obliteration in West Bengal in
1972 because of its sprouting in Srikakulam since the 1960s and gradual spread
to the ‘red corridor’ since the founding of the People’s War Group (PWG) is
well-analysed in social science literature, not all of which is supportive to
this movement.2 Obviously, the spread is not merely due to a handful of
ideologues and activists, they have found fertile ground in the areas they are
entrenched in to build up a cadre and an armed militia that has been testing
the might of the Indian state for two decades.
The argument that there are areas of
more acute poverty without Maoist influence is fallacious, for the two are
compatible but not causally linked. However, a look at the data on gradual
spread of the red corridor shows that the Maoist ‘revolutionaries’ have
succeeded in targeting poverty pockets for their spread. Obviously, in stating
this, the SC has not shown any sympathy for the Maoists. In fact, in stating
that the Indian state is ‘adopting the same modes, as done by Maoist/Naxalite
extremists’ and ‘The problem, it is apparent to us, and would be so to most
reasonable people, cannot be the people of Chhattisgarh, whose human rights are
widely acknowledged to being systematically, and on a vast scale, being
violated by the Maoists/Naxalites on one side, and the State, and some of its
agents, on the other.’ There are more such references in the judgment.
Obviously, the honourable judges are not endorsing the Maoists and criticising
them for human rights violations. The point succinctly made is that the state
must not behave as the Maoists.
It is in this connection that the
honourable judges have ‘dared to’ give their critique of ‘neo-liberalism’
inviting a strong wrath of the Fourth Estate—‘Predatory forms of capitalism,
supported and promoted by the State in direct contravention of constitutional
norms and values, often take deep roots around the extractive industries…. The
argument that such a development paradigm is necessary, and its consequences
inevitable, is untenable.’ They have linked the consequences of these
developments to be violative of the norms stated in the Preamble of the Indian
Constitution: ‘Fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual’. In their
opinion, the spread of Maoism is part of this holistic scenario. They have not
said anything new. In the past one decade, commentators on developments in
Orissa, West Bengal, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh have stressed the need to
protect the interests of the adivasis and peasants in the face of increased
activities of industrial expansion and mining. The entire policy debate on land
acquisition, forest dwellers’ rights and some coherence in rehabilitation of
the displaced arises out of the development dichotomy inherent in the economic
policies that have been pursued lately, howsoever we describe them. I would be
surprised if the honourable judges believe that this is reversible; but to
point out that the Indian state must take care of the anomalies is not out of
context.
The second set of arguments on
public security is an extension of the first set of arguments. First, they have
stressed that ‘(t)he primary task of the state is the provision of security to
all its citizens, without violating human dignity.’ In this context they have
questioned the pursuing of ‘policies whereby guns are distributed amongst
barely literate youth amongst the poor to control the dissatisfaction in such
segments of the population would tantamount to sowing of suicide pills that
could divide and destroy society’. The section of the judgment on SJ is
comprehensive, despite a strong criticism for its disbanding; the analysis
based on complaints, questions raised against the initiative, the affidavits
filed by the Union and State governments is comprehensive.
The Chhattisgarh Government has
simultaneously claimed that the SJ is a people’s movement and that the SPOs
have statutory sanction in the Chhattisgarh Police Act of 2007, which draws
from the Indian Police Act 1861. This is a contradiction. In any case, the
beginnings of SJ are unclear. According to one report, Salwa Judum began in
June 2005 when the tribals of nearly 25 villages in Bijapur police district
held a spontaneous anti-Naxal rally at Mathwada weekly market, declining the
Naxal diktat to pay to them more rent and enhanced wages to labour for Tendu
leaf picking, This is when Mahendra Karma, the then Congress MLA from
Dantewada, took over as the leader and subsequently the State Government, and
from behind-the-scenes the Union Government, stepped in to organise them
further into an armed militia, if not a vigilante army. This was later mixed up
with the shifting of the tribals from villages in the areas of Maoist influence
into special camps and the youths from these camps, both boys and girls, were
enrolled into it.3
It is in this process that at some
stage the provisions for SPO in the Indian Police Act 1861 (Sections 17-19)
were brought in. The Chhattisgarh Government has claimed application of not the
Indian Police Act, but of the Chhattisgarh Police Act (CPA), 2007, enacted two
years after the SJ came into existence. Sections 9 (1), (2), read together with
Sections 23-25 and other such relevant sections govern the powers,
responsibilities and functioning of the SPOs. The idea of SPOs in the Indian
Police Act 1861 is interesting. If we ascend from Section 19 of the Act to 18
and 17, it is clear that the colonial government could compel anyone, in the
manner of conscription, to act as an SPO, obviously when a situation of 1857
kind arose. In any case, it was designed as neighbourhood policing, not an
armed militia. The CPA in comparison is vague about circumstances and
functions.
It is not surprising that the SC has
come down hard on the Chhattisgarh Government for endangering the lives of the
SJ members or SPOs, as also on the Union Government for not preventing this
using Article 355 of the Constitution.4 The SC has pricked large holes in the
affidavits and arguments and these must be read carefully before handing out a
blanket criticism of the judgment. The casualties of the SJ cited in the
judgment, if they are real, are large enough for us to be cautioned. One of the
arguments cited by the State Government is that these people know the terrain
and area well and with arms training they can thwart the Maoist offensive. If
we take only one case in point, the butchering of 77 CRPF personnel last year,
who had not followed the standard operating procedure according to the E.N.
Rammohan Committee, two stark points emerge. First, the SJ was not to be seen
there to guide them. Second, if such a well-trained and seasoned force falters,
how could we look at at the SJ as a counter-offensive against well-strategised
Maoists. Further, if we look at the media reports of the past five years, there
were several instances of the SJ members or SPOs misusing their new-found
weapon, power and status against their own community. Some instances of their
being used by the police as cannon fodders were also reported.
Before we damn the judgment, we
should also consider the lapse on the part of the States in India in not only
in filling up the sanctioned vacancies, but also in not reviewing it
periodically. Chhattisgarh indeed had fewer sanctioned vacancies at all levels
in December 2009—over 1000 at all levels, but special circumstances and the
terrain of the State demands larger strength. It is a new State and still has a
Police Academy coming up. The Jungle Warfare School, set up by the Union
Government, has apparently not made a major dent in security so far.
Interrogating Public Security
BEYOND the sharp disagreements with
it, the judgment should make us think hard on issues of public security in
India. In the 64th year of independence an SC judgment questioning the raising
and use (and dismantling) of a vigilante militia to tackle an extremist
challenge, described by Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh from the ramparts of
the Red Fort in his address to the nation on independence day only five years
back as the most serious internal security threat to the country, is being
described in public discourse as a disastrous step that would irreparably
compromise the Indian state’s mission against the Maoist challenge. Looking at
the phenomenon and situation purely from a statist perspective and leaving
aside the socio-economic and other circumstances that have led to its rise and
spread, several questions arise.
First, any public security challenge
within the national boundaries has to be first and continually taken care of by
the police. That the police in State after State have been put into a
sitting-duck situation against serious organised crime, terrorism and various
kinds of extremist politics, including Maoism, for the past three decades
raises serious questions on the efficacy of the policy-makers in India—both
political and bureaucratic. Even if we forget all the exercises Police Commissions
in different States did during the 1960s and early 1970s, the situation since
the submission of the Dharam Vira Commission report in 1980 is comical, to say
the least. The political class, so worried and exercised about judicial
overreach since the two judgments lately, has made a mockery of the SC judgment
on a PIL by Prakash Singh and others in 2006. The ‘tragedy of errors’ could not
have starker than the recent terrorist attack in Mumbai. Following 26/11 only
three years back, a draft of a counter-terrorism mechanism was presented to the
government under the auspices of the Centre-State Relations Commission at work
at that time.5 The recommendations on public security have not been discussed
in the public domain at all. The press tsars who have slammed the judgment on
this count have neither undertaken a sustained campaign for police reforms, nor
have they spared their valuable time to review, discuss and make suggestions on
the valuable exercise carried out by the Commission on internal security and Centre-State
relations.
One significant point being totally
missed in this alarmist debate is that we are talking about the use of police
powers of the state, which in a democracy is significant for a discreet use of
legitimised violence under the umbrella of the rule of law. In this case we are
linking the right to ‘self-defence’ in a situation in which the state agencies
designated for the purpose have proved unequal to challenge with the police
powers of the state. The resulting anomalies and distortions have been
discussed from time to time and the judgment too highlights this. The
honourable judges have stressed that the SJ was not equipped to use legitimate,
controlled, coercive violence that the Indian state is supposed to use in this
situation. Another significant point is whether this militia was constituted
with consent or coercion. This is extremely significant to determine whether
the Indian state had judiciously passed on its responsibility to a ‘citizens’
militia’. Since the truth is somewhere in the middle, the apprehensions
expressed in the judgment were not misplaced.
Summing Up
SHARP disappointments, dissenting
voices and criticism notwithstanding, it is a significant judgment. Both in the
areas of dichotomies arising out of the policies of a remiss state and public
security, it makes bold statements. Indeed, the boldness of the statement,
illustrated with a ‘graduate-student’ like thesis on neo-liberal policies,
appears to have ruffled many feathers. But many of us have argued that in order
to tackle the Maoist challenge, the Indian state has to seriously undertake to
bridge decades of development deficit, be careful with regard to development
dichotomies arising out of new developmental paradigm and carefully remove the
displacement-rehabilitation hiatus that has existed since the 1950s and has
found a new context in India’s globalised economy. Several studies have shown
that the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are the most affected by
displacement.
The bold and comprehensive statement
made on public security also deserves serious considerations. An SPO initiative
of the Salwa Judum kind is only a fire-fighting a
The debate over the PIL filed in 2007 by Nandini
Sundar and others challenging the ‘creation’ of Salwa Judum (SJ), variously
translated from the Gondwani dialect as peace march or peace movement, as an
armed tribal ‘vigilante group’, has taken a new turn in several respects since
the Supreme Court of India struck down the use of tribal youths as a
supplementary counter-insurgency force on Tuesday, July 5, 2011. Aside from
expectedly mixed reactions both in the media and the public, three significant
reactions need our attention and analysis. First, both the Union and
Chhatisgarh governments expectedly reacted against it by expressing their
intent to appeal to a larger SC Bench. Second, responding to some reactions in
the government and the media circles that the members of the disbanded SJ could
be targeted by the Maoists, the Maoists issued a blanket amnesty for those
‘adivasis’ who had joined the SJ under ‘government pressure’, thus reinforcing
their friends-of-the-tribal image; simultaneously attempting to brush clean
their own image as a ruthless group. Third, the Chhattisgarh Government, not to
let go the ‘advantage’ it had gained with the SJ, declared that the former SJ
members would be absorbed into the police as constables, even if that meant
lowering the educational and physical standards laid down for recruitment to
the constabulary. I will return to these issues a little later in my analysis.
The Media Reactions
THE INDIAN EXPRESS (July 7, 2011) editorialised
this ‘Too Judgmental’ verdict rather pithily: ‘Rather than a granular approach
that restricts itself to interpreting cases in the light of particular laws and
statutes, the courts have enlarged their self-image, as populist champion and
scold.’ In fact, drawing from some other recent judgments that it thought made
the Court getting carried away, the daily felt: ‘The troubling thing about
these judgments is not what they finally resolve, but their tendency to draw
straight connections between diverse, highly specific cases about Salwa Judum,
corruption in telecom license allocation or imperfect solutions to the land
acquisition problem, to a cloudy abstraction called neo-liberalism.’
In a signed article ‘The Supreme Quote’ on July
9, 2011, Editor-in-Chief of The Indian Express Shekhar Gupta dubbed this and
other recent judgments as having the intellectual depth of a JNU postgrad:
‘Large parts of these judgments are just lectures on political economy that
makes you ask a legitimate question: what is the job of the judges, to
interpret law, or to criticise/make/change economic policy.’ In a similar vein
The Sunday Hindustan Times (July 10, 2011) column by Chanakya commented against
‘Neo-Judicial Ideologues?’: ‘The judiciary is not an op-ed page contributor or
a JNU post-graduate in post-colonial studies.’ A scathing commentary on what is
considered a case of ‘judicial overreach’ influenced by a superfluous academic
red bastion of the country! However, prominent political economy analyst
Swaminathan S. Akalesaria Aiyar (‘Neo-Illiberalism is India’s Bane’, The Times
of India, June 17, 2011) argued that neo-liberalism that advocates market
economy sans any governmental control had not yet taken shape anywhere ‘and
never will’ as ‘governments do not come to power in order to abolish all their
powers’. He called the Indian political economy as ‘neo-illiberalism’ coming
out of the ‘New Delhi Consensus’ (not the Washington Consensus) —‘all parties
are fully agreed on continuing to making money out of a smaller but hugely
profitable license-permit raj’.
In a more sedate tenor The Pioneer
editor-in-chief Chandan Mitra commented that ‘It is not my intention to suggest
that their Lordships acted out of ignorance in declaring this mass movement
“unconstitutional” and harangued the State Government for converting innocent
tribals into armed vigilantes, but I do wish the judges had travelled to Bastar
to acquaint themselves with the ground reality before passing this draconian
order.’ (‘Flawed Verdict on Salwa Judum’, July 10, 2011) The Hindu (July 9,
2011) in its editorial, on the other hand, agreed with this ‘landmark verdict’:
‘In demanding an end to the SPO system, the Supreme Court has acted as much out
of concern for the hapless tribal population of Dantewada as for the tribal
youth who were press-ganged by their individual circumstances into becoming
“cannon fodder” for the state.’
The Economic Times (July 11, 2011) agreed with
the SJ part of the judgment. However, on its critique of the neo-liberal
policies, it said: ‘…it is unfortunate that the Court chose to pass facile
judgment on economic paradigms and develop-ment strategies…. That the Union
Government can today spend lakh crores to advance popular welfare stems wholly
from the success of the policies the Court dismissed as privatisation leading
to emaciated state capacity to finance vital functions. The Court fails to
distinguish between economic reforms and the unreformed, degenerate politics
that aborts much of the emancipatory potential of economic reforms.’ The Times
of India (July 10, 2011) report supported the verdict on SJ, but cautioned:
‘(b)y launching a tirade against neoliberalism, the court provides unnecessary
ammunition to critics who accuse it of judicial overreach.’ Prakash Nanda in
his editorial column in the Uday India (July 23, 2011) felt that ‘(t)he
honourable Judges have effectively provided intellectual legitimacy by citing
the factors of poverty and exploitation’. He over-stretched his argument by
suggesting that if empowering the common people to make electoral choices was
alright, how was it wrong to arm them in self-defence.
While the human rights camp of public
personalities that spearheaded this PIL and campaign against the tribal militia
is naturally elated in being vindicated, other reactions vary from being
cautious in their optimism to a total dismay at the Apex Court upsetting the
entire counter-insurgency operations by the Chhattis-garh and other concerned State
governments organised around ‘cooperation’ with the local communities. Both the
final outcome and the tenor of the judgment have been interpreted as being
sympathetic to the Maoists, even anti-tribal, by this section of the public
opinion. There is also a strong criticism of judicial over-reach in terms of
criticising the Indian state on its developmental model at a time when strong
arguments have been advanced in favour of second generation of reforms. Why
should the Supreme Court of India indulge in rhetoric on neo-liberalism and go
out of their immediate context to offer an ideological critique, when the
reform process is far from complete. On the security front, disbanding a
well-formed voluntary security structure, in the process jeopardising the Special
Police Officer (SPO) system across States and endangering the lives of the
disarmed SJ SPOs of Chhatisgarh. The larger concerns emanating out of a
critique of a JNUsque criticism of ‘neo-liberalism’ by the Judiciary and its
tendency to encroach upon the executive and legislative terrain is also
significant.
The Judgment
THERE are two parts of the judgment—
‘analytical’/explanatory and operative. And there are two dimensions of the
judgment—one with political implications and the second with public security
implications.
Let me first look at the operative part of the
judgment. The Honourable Court has ordered the Chhattisgarh Government to cease
forthwith continuing with the SPOs, that is, disband the SJ; this stops the
Union of India from funding any such initiative by any State Government,
directs the Chhattisgarh Government to recall firearms from the SJ SPOs and
protect their lives from the Maoists. Additionally, the judgment also declared
the sections of the Chhattisgarh Police Act 2007 providing for the appointment
of SPOs as unconstitutional. The Honourable Court further commented on the
incident of violence against Swami Agnivesh in Chhattisgarh with concern and
directed the CBI to investigate this matter and report to it in six weeks.
The ‘analytical’/explanatory part of the judgment
declared ‘having the depth of a JNU postgrad writing’ by the press tsars
consumes most part of the judgment in which the learned judges have quoted
extensively from literature on related issues—classical and contemporary —to
buttress their arguments. There are two sets of arguments in the judgment. The
first set of arguments relate to poverty and deprivation, particularly of the
traditionally dispossessed social groups such as the adivasis, and the second
set of arguments is regarding public security and both eventually get
intertwined in articulating the final judgment.
In the first set of arguments the judgment
relates deprivation to rebellion that expresses itself in violent agitation
politics. This is the section of the argument that some commentators have found
both rhetorical as well as ‘dangerous’ rationalisation of the Maoist politics
in India. Whether the learned judges have the luxury of rhetoric drawn from
social science and political philosophy literature in a judicial pronouncement,
or they should use only a prosaic legal language in explanation and verdict, is
a separate issue. One among the main issues, as articulated by Aiyar, is
whether the current economic situation in India, in which the politics of the
Maoist kind has sustained and expanded since the 1980s, is due to ‘neo-liberal’
economic policies enforced by external pressures, or it is India’s own mess
wherein the policy regime is still ‘illiberal’ and far away from market
dictated ‘neo-liberalism’. The point indeed is well-taken. From this
perspective, it is only the characterisation that is problematic. Irrespective
of the ‘ism’ followed by India’s policy regime, land acquisition by the
‘eminent domain’ for the public good and displacement without adequate
resettlement,1 policies for which are still being fine-tuned, is still creating
huge pockets of discontent, leaving a large sections of the poverty stricken
populace to be recruited for ‘revolution’ by the Maoists. That processes,
circumstances and consequences of acquisition of land by the government(s) in
India is turning out to be curious is evident from the recent judgment of the
Allahabad High Court relating to acquisition of land from farmers and sale to
private builders in Noida/Greater Noida. Though neither Maoism, nor
resettlement is an issue in these cases, but circumstantial and consequential
anomalies of the land acquisition policies are, whatever ‘ism’ we use to
explain this away.
That the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist politics in
India beginning in Telangana in 1946 (then in Hyderabad state), travelling to
Naxalbari in West Bengal a decade-and-a-half since its withdrawal on the advice
of Stalin in 1951, surviving its obliteration in West Bengal in 1972 because of
its sprouting in Srikakulam since the 1960s and gradual spread to the ‘red
corridor’ since the founding of the People’s War Group (PWG) is well-analysed
in social science literature, not all of which is supportive to this movement.2
Obviously, the spread is not merely due to a handful of ideologues and
activists, they have found fertile ground in the areas they are entrenched in
to build up a cadre and an armed militia that has been testing the might of the
Indian state for two decades.
The argument that there are areas of more acute poverty
without Maoist influence is fallacious, for the two are compatible but not
causally linked. However, a look at the data on gradual spread of the red
corridor shows that the Maoist ‘revolutionaries’ have succeeded in targeting
poverty pockets for their spread. Obviously, in stating this, the SC has not
shown any sympathy for the Maoists. In fact, in stating that the Indian state
is ‘adopting the same modes, as done by Maoist/Naxalite extremists’ and ‘The
problem, it is apparent to us, and would be so to most reasonable people,
cannot be the people of Chhattisgarh, whose human rights are widely
acknowledged to being systematically, and on a vast scale, being violated by
the Maoists/Naxalites on one side, and the State, and some of its agents, on
the other.’ There are more such references in the judgment. Obviously, the
honourable judges are not endorsing the Maoists and criticising them for human
rights violations. The point succinctly made is that the state must not behave
as the Maoists.
It is in this connection that the honourable
judges have ‘dared to’ give their critique of ‘neo-liberalism’ inviting a
strong wrath of the Fourth Estate—‘Predatory forms of capitalism, supported and
promoted by the State in direct contravention of constitutional norms and
values, often take deep roots around the extractive industries…. The argument
that such a development paradigm is necessary, and its consequences inevitable,
is untenable.’ They have linked the consequences of these developments to be
violative of the norms stated in the Preamble of the Indian Constitution:
‘Fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual’. In their opinion, the
spread of Maoism is part of this holistic scenario. They have not said anything
new. In the past one decade, commentators on developments in Orissa, West
Bengal, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh have stressed the need to protect the
interests of the adivasis and peasants in the face of increased activities of
industrial expansion and mining. The entire policy debate on land acquisition,
forest dwellers’ rights and some coherence in rehabilitation of the displaced
arises out of the development dichotomy inherent in the economic policies that
have been pursued lately, howsoever we describe them. I would be surprised if
the honourable judges believe that this is reversible; but to point out that
the Indian state must take care of the anomalies is not out of context.
The second set of arguments on public security is
an extension of the first set of arguments. First, they have stressed that
‘(t)he primary task of the state is the provision of security to all its
citizens, without violating human dignity.’ In this context they have
questioned the pursuing of ‘policies whereby guns are distributed amongst
barely literate youth amongst the poor to control the dissatisfaction in such
segments of the population would tantamount to sowing of suicide pills that
could divide and destroy society’. The section of the judgment on SJ is
comprehensive, despite a strong criticism for its disbanding; the analysis
based on complaints, questions raised against the initiative, the affidavits
filed by the Union and State governments is comprehensive.
The Chhattisgarh Government has simultaneously
claimed that the SJ is a people’s movement and that the SPOs have statutory
sanction in the Chhattisgarh Police Act of 2007, which draws from the Indian
Police Act 1861. This is a contradiction. In any case, the beginnings of SJ are
unclear. According to one report, Salwa Judum began in June 2005 when the tribals
of nearly 25 villages in Bijapur police district held a spontaneous anti-Naxal
rally at Mathwada weekly market, declining the Naxal diktat to pay to them more
rent and enhanced wages to labour for Tendu leaf picking, This is when Mahendra
Karma, the then Congress MLA from Dantewada, took over as the leader and
subsequently the State Government, and from behind-the-scenes the Union
Government, stepped in to organise them further into an armed militia, if not a
vigilante army. This was later mixed up with the shifting of the tribals from
villages in the areas of Maoist influence into special camps and the youths
from these camps, both boys and girls, were enrolled into it.3
It is in this process that at some stage the
provisions for SPO in the Indian Police Act 1861 (Sections 17-19) were brought
in. The Chhattisgarh Government has claimed application of not the Indian
Police Act, but of the Chhattisgarh Police Act (CPA), 2007, enacted two years
after the SJ came into existence. Sections 9 (1), (2), read together with
Sections 23-25 and other such relevant sections govern the powers,
responsibilities and functioning of the SPOs. The idea of SPOs in the Indian
Police Act 1861 is interesting. If we ascend from Section 19 of the Act to 18
and 17, it is clear that the colonial government could compel anyone, in the
manner of conscription, to act as an SPO, obviously when a situation of 1857
kind arose. In any case, it was designed as neighbourhood policing, not an
armed militia. The CPA in comparison is vague about circumstances and
functions.
It is not surprising that the SC has come down
hard on the Chhattisgarh Government for endangering the lives of the SJ members
or SPOs, as also on the Union Government for not preventing this using Article
355 of the Constitution.4 The SC has pricked large holes in the affidavits and
arguments and these must be read carefully before handing out a blanket
criticism of the judgment. The casualties of the SJ cited in the judgment, if
they are real, are large enough for us to be cautioned. One of the arguments
cited by the State Government is that these people know the terrain and area
well and with arms training they can thwart the Maoist offensive. If we take
only one case in point, the butchering of 77 CRPF personnel last year, who had
not followed the standard operating procedure according to the E.N. Rammohan
Committee, two stark points emerge. First, the SJ was not to be seen there to
guide them. Second, if such a well-trained and seasoned force falters, how
could we look at at the SJ as a counter-offensive against well-strategised
Maoists. Further, if we look at the media reports of the past five years, there
were several instances of the SJ members or SPOs misusing their new-found
weapon, power and status against their own community. Some instances of their
being used by the police as cannon fodders were also reported.
Before we damn the judgment, we should also
consider the lapse on the part of the States in India in not only in filling up
the sanctioned vacancies, but also in not reviewing it periodically.
Chhattisgarh indeed had fewer sanctioned vacancies at all levels in December
2009—over 1000 at all levels, but special circumstances and the terrain of the
State demands larger strength. It is a new State and still has a Police Academy
coming up. The Jungle Warfare School, set up by the Union Government, has
apparently not made a major dent in security so far.
Interrogating Public Security
BEYOND the sharp disagreements with it, the judgment
should make us think hard on issues of public security in India. In the 64th
year of independence an SC judgment questioning the raising and use (and
dismantling) of a vigilante militia to tackle an extremist challenge, described
by Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh from the ramparts of the Red Fort in his
address to the nation on independence day only five years back as the most
serious internal security threat to the country, is being described in public
discourse as a disastrous step that would irreparably compromise the Indian
state’s mission against the Maoist challenge. Looking at the phenomenon and
situation purely from a statist perspective and leaving aside the
socio-economic and other circumstances that have led to its rise and spread, several
questions arise.
First, any public security challenge within the
national boundaries has to be first and continually taken care of by the
police. That the police in State after State have been put into a sitting-duck
situation against serious organised crime, terrorism and various kinds of
extremist politics, including Maoism, for the past three decades raises serious
questions on the efficacy of the policy-makers in India—both political and
bureaucratic. Even if we forget all the exercises Police Commissions in
different States did during the 1960s and early 1970s, the situation since the
submission of the Dharam Vira Commission report in 1980 is comical, to say the
least. The political class, so worried and exercised about judicial overreach
since the two judgments lately, has made a mockery of the SC judgment on a PIL
by Prakash Singh and others in 2006. The ‘tragedy of errors’ could not have
starker than the recent terrorist attack in Mumbai. Following 26/11 only three
years back, a draft of a counter-terrorism mechanism was presented to the
government under the auspices of the Centre-State Relations Commission at work
at that time.5 The recommendations on public security have not been discussed
in the public domain at all. The press tsars who have slammed the judgment on
this count have neither undertaken a sustained campaign for police reforms, nor
have they spared their valuable time to review, discuss and make suggestions on
the valuable exercise carried out by the Commission on internal security and
Centre-State relations.
One significant point being totally missed in
this alarmist debate is that we are talking about the use of police powers of
the state, which in a democracy is significant for a discreet use of
legitimised violence under the umbrella of the rule of law. In this case we are
linking the right to ‘self-defence’ in a situation in which the state agencies
designated for the purpose have proved unequal to challenge with the police
powers of the state. The resulting anomalies and distortions have been
discussed from time to time and the judgment too highlights this. The
honourable judges have stressed that the SJ was not equipped to use legitimate,
controlled, coercive violence that the Indian state is supposed to use in this
situation. Another significant point is whether this militia was constituted
with consent or coercion. This is extremely significant to determine whether
the Indian state had judiciously passed on its responsibility to a ‘citizens’
militia’. Since the truth is somewhere in the middle, the apprehensions
expressed in the judgment were not misplaced.
Summing Up
SHARP disappointments, dissenting voices and
criticism notwithstanding, it is a significant judgment. Both in the areas of
dichotomies arising out of the policies of a remiss state and public security,
it makes bold statements. Indeed, the boldness of the statement, illustrated
with a ‘graduate-student’ like thesis on neo-liberal policies, appears to have
ruffled many feathers. But many of us have argued that in order to tackle the
Maoist challenge, the Indian state has to seriously undertake to bridge decades
of development deficit, be careful with regard to development dichotomies
arising out of new developmental paradigm and carefully remove the
displacement-rehabilitation hiatus that has existed since the 1950s and has
found a new context in India’s globalised economy. Several studies have shown
that the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are the most affected by
displacement.
The bold and comprehensive statement made on
public security also deserves serious considerations. An SPO initiative of the
Salwa Judum kind is only a fire-fighting arrangement. It must not be confused
with a permanent answer to India’s widening public security gap. The honourable
judges have widely quoted Philip Bobbitt, ‘if we act lawlessly, we throw away
the gains of effective action.”
Doctors Aiding Police to inflict
3rd degree Torture on detainees
By Stephen Lendman
In April 2009, a confidential
February 2007 ICRC torture report was publicly released. Titled, "ICRC
Report on the Treatment of Fourteen 'High Value Detainees' in CIA
Custody," it detailed harsh and abusive treatment from their time of
arrest, detention, transfer, and incarceration at Guantanamo where ICRC professionals
interviewed them.
Besides detailed information on
torture and abusive treatment, they obtained damning, consistent detainee
accounts of medical personnel involvement, including:
-- their monitoring of and direct
participation in torture procedures;
-- instructing interrogators to
continue, adjust, or stop certain ones;
-- informing detainees that medical
treatment depended on their cooperation;
-- performing medical checks before
and after each transfer; and
-- treating the effects of torture
as well as ailments and injuries during incarceration.
Condoning or participating in
torture grievously breaches medical ethics and the 1975 World Medical
Association (WMA) Declaration of Tokyo "Guidelines for Physicians
Concerning Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment in Relation to Detention and Imprisonment." It states:
-- in all cases at all times,
"physician(s) shall not countenance, condone or participate in"
torture or any other form of abuse;
-- they "shall not use nor
allow to be used (their) medical knowledge or skills, or health
information" to aid interrogation in any way;
-- they "shall not be present
during any procedure during which torture or any other forms of cruel, inhuman
or degrading treatment is used or threatened;"
-- they "must have complete
clinical independence" in treating persons for whom they're medically
responsible; and
-- WMA encourages the international
community and fellow physicians to support medical professionals who face
"threats or reprisals resulting from a refusal to condone" all forms
of torture and abuse.
Protocol I of the 1949 Geneva
Conventions states:
"Persons engaged in medical
activities shall neither be compelled to perform acts or to carry out work
contrary to, nor be compelled to refrain from acts required by, the rules of
medical ethics or other rules designed for the benefit of the wounded and sick,
or this Protocol."
On July 7, 2005 in the New England
Journal of Medicine, Dr. Gregg Bloche and Jonathan Marks published an article
titled, "Doctors and Interrogators at Guantanamo Bay" in which they
cited evidence that "Health information (was) routinely available to
behavioral science consultants and others" engaged in interrogations, in
violation of strict medical ethics.
In early 2003, detainee medical
records were readily available, and since late 2002, psychiatrists and
psychologists were involved in crafting extreme stress techniques
"combined with behavior-shaping rewards to extract actionable intelligence
from resistant captives."
"Wholesale disregard for
clinical confidentiality" seriously breaches medical ethics "since it
makes every caregiver into an accessory to intelligence gathering." It
also "puts prisoners at greater risk for serious abuse."
In July 2006, the Center for
Constitutional Rights (CCR) published a report titled, "Report on Torture
and Cruel, Inhuman, and Degrading Treatment of Prisoners at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba" that included evidence of medical personnel involvement in torture.
Detainee Othman Abdulraheem Mohammad
was told that medical treatment would depend on his cooperation. Lakhdar
Boumediene said every time he requested care he was told to ask permission from
his interrogators. They "controlled his access, (and it) was granted or
denied based on the interrogator's assessment of his level of
cooperation."
Bosnian prisoner medical records
confirmed that medical staff were present during their interrogations "and
authorized (them) to proceed."
Medical personnel monitored Mohammed
al Qahtani's interrogation during nearly two months of "severe sleep
deprivation and physical stress." At one point, they rushed him to the
base hospital when his heart rate dropped dangerously low. After stabilization,
they returned him the next day for more interrogation.
Other prisoners described doctors
performing unnecessary and abusive procedures, including forced amputations,
after which they were denied proper treatment.
Psychiatrists and psychologists
designed "extreme interrogation techniques as part of the Behavioral
Science Consultation Team (BSCT)." In late 2002, it was tasked "to
torment detainees in interrogations...."
International and US Laws
Prohibiting Torture
Numerous international and US laws
unequivocally ban torture under all conditions at all times with no allowed
exceptions ever, for any reasons, including in times of war.
The Third Geneva Convention covers
war prisoners and detainees. It prohibits torture and protects their right to
be treated humanely against "violence to life and person (and) humiliating
and degrading treatment" as well as to judicial fairness and proper
medical treatment. The Fourth Geneva Convention affords the same rights to
civilians in times of war.
The federal anti-torture statute (18
USC, 2340A) prohibits its use outside the US and defines it as "an act
committed by a person acting under the color of law specifically intended to
inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering....upon another person
within his custody or physical control."
The 1991 Torture Victims Protection
Act authorizes civil suits in America against individuals, acting in an
official capacity for a foreign state, who committed torture and/or
extrajudicial killing.
The 1984 UN Convention Against
Torture bans all forms of torture, cruel and degrading treatment in all
circumstances at all times with no exceptions ever allowed.
The US Constitution's Fifth, Eighth
and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or
punishment.
The US Army's Field Manual 27-10
states that military or civilian persons may be punished for committing war
crimes (that include abusive interrogations) under international law. Army
Field Manual 34-52 outlines interrogation procedures and specifically prohibits
force, mental torture, threats, and inhumane treatment.
The Uniform Code of Military Justice
(UCMJ) bans cruelty, oppression, actions intended to degrade or humiliate, and
physical, menacing, and threatening assaults. Army Regulation (AR) 190-8
protects detainees from violence, assaults, and insults, and directs that they
be treated humanely with respect.
The 1996 US War Crimes Act prohibits
grave Geneva Convention breaches, including (as stipulated under Common Article
III) "violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds,
mutilation, cruel treatment and torture (as well as) outrages upon personal
dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment."
Other binding international laws
also prohibit torture, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and
the 1992 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights with no
exceptions or justifications allowed, such as orders by field commanders,
Pentagon officials, or the President of the United States.
Physicians for Human Rights (PHR)
Founded in 1986, PHR "mobilizes
health professionals to advance health, dignity, and justice and promotes the
right to health for all." It also "investigates human rights abuses
and works to stop them" in conflict zones, US prisons, and offshore
detention facilities where torture is routinely practiced.
In 2005, it published a report
titled, "Break Them Down: Systematic Use of Psychological Torture by US
Forces," which it called the first comprehensive examination of "the
use of psychological torture by US personnel in the so-called 'war on terror,'
" including sensory deprivation, prolonged isolation, sleep deprivation,
forced nudity, using fierce dogs to instill fear, cultural and sexual
humiliation, mock executions, and threatened violence against loved ones.
It called the effects devastating
and longer-lasting than physical torture, and said psychological abuse is
morally reprehensible and illegal under international and US law.
In August 2009, PHR published a new
report titled, "Aiding Torture: Health Professionals' Ethics and Human
Rights Violations Revealed in the May 2004 CIA Inspector General's
Report," including ethical misconduct not previously known. It revealed
the role of health professionals involved "at every stage in the
development, implementation and legitimization of this torture program."
It explained that doctors and
psychologists actively participated in abusive interrogations and contributed
to the physical and mental suffering of detainees. It called their actions
"an unconscionable affront to the profession of medicine," made worse
by experimenting on inmates, then "aggregat(ing) data on (their) reaction
to interrogation methods."
PHR's Steven Reisner said "They
were experimenting and keeping records of the results," a war crime under
Geneva and the Nuremberg Code that requires "voluntary consent" of
human subjects and prohibits experiments:
-- that inflict "unnecessary
physical and mental suffering and injury;"
-- if there's "an a priori
reason to believe death or disabling injury will occur;" and
-- from being implemented if there's
reason to believe they'll cause "injury, disability, or death to the
experimental subject."
PHR's report detailed the
psychological and medical effects:
-- forced shaving inflicts
psychological harm "by means of humiliation, both personal and
religious;"
-- hooding disorients and causes
acute anxiety depression, depersonalization, and abnormal behavior;
-- dietary manipulation inflicts
discomfort and psychological stress;
-- prolonged diapering causes
physical and psychological stress and harm;
-- walling inflicts physical
injuries as well as psychological stress, rage, and helplessness;
-- confinement in a box in extreme
stress positions causes extreme physical and psychological pain and trauma; and
-- other abuses, including
waterboarding that simulates drowning and the feeling of helplessness to
prevent it.
Involvement of Medical Professionals
They help develop, implement,
provide cover for, and justify torture and abusive practices. They're actively
involved in designing harmful interrogation techniques in clear violation of
the law and medical ethics. They're "complicit in selecting and then rationalizing
(methods) whose safety and efficacy in eliciting accurate information have no
valid basis in science." Their actions constitute "a practice that
approaches unlawful experimentation."
CIA guidelines require health
professionals, including a doctor and psychologist, to be present during
enhanced interrogations, "thereby placing (them) in the untenable position
of calibrating harm rather than serving as protectors and healers as"
their ethical code demands.
They also participate in initial
physical and psychological assessments, then monitor all subsequent
interrogations. They know their actions are harmful, unethical, and illegal,
yet they serve willingly.
PHR believes they should be investigated on
charges of "alleged criminal conduct." Those proved guilty should be
prosecuted, lose their license, professional society memberships, and any
standing in the medical community henceforth.
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