This story has been told before, but can never be told enough.
The UPA government needs to realize that selective justice may bring relief to a section of the population, but, if such justice is denied to other sections, such a course can only the more justly and forcefully dub it communal than any overt act of
This story has been told before, but can never be told enough.
On the 6th of December, 1992, a majority right-wing Hindutva putsch overcamethe majesty of the Indian State.
With the full and open collaboration of the then BJP government in UttarPradesh, and the measly connivance of the Congress government at the centre, thefascists succeeded in overwhelming and demolishing out of existence afive-hundred year old mosque in Ayodhya.
That putsch was effected despite written commitment on affidavit made byKalyan Singh, the U.P. chief minister, to the Supreme Court of India that theState would not allow any damage to the mosque.
As the mosque was reduced to rubble, the most front-ranking leaders of theBJP were caught in full view of cameras—of the BBC especially—hugging oneanother in ugly glee. There was no end to the sweets that were distributedto mark the "victory" both over Indian Muslims and over the State.
II
In the city of Mumbai, the "victors" celebrated the humiliation of the Muslimsby taking out cycle rallies.
In the inter-community rioting that this led to, 900 citizens lost theirlives, 575 of them Muslims.
A Commission of Enquiry was set up under the then junior judge, JusticeSrikrishna (since few others offered their services). It was thought apoint in his favour that he was after all a "devout and practicing Hindu." Sadly for the killers and their instigators, Justice Krishna turned out to beoutstandingly courageous and objective in his findings.
As word leaked about the determination of the Commission to be fair and aboveboard, the Commission was disbanded. It must be said to the creditof the then Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, that the Commission wasreactivated in May, 1996. Caveat: the terms of reference of the Commissionwere now expanded to include enquiry into the serial blasts that followed thecommunal killings!
III
Justice Srikrishna, however, was able to make all-important sequentialconnections between the demolition of the Babri mosque, the subsequent communalrioting, and the serial blasts that followed:
"The serial bomb blasts were a reaction to the totality of events at Ayodhya and Bombay in December,1992 and January, 1993. . . . The common link between the riots and the blasts was that of cause and effect."
Further, the riots during Advani’s "rath yatra" (that had culminated inthe demolition of the mosque "were the distant thunderclaps portendingthe storm to come."
Some other crucial pronouncements of the Commission are as follows:
Under "Immediate Causes." Justice Srikrishna lists "demolition","aggravation of Muslim sentiments by celebration rallies", "insensitive, harsh approach of the police";
And then:
"From 8 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
organizing attacks against Muslims."
The Commission names other top leaders of the Shiv Sena, including MadhukarSarpotdkar, in whose house the army found unlicensed guns (somethingrather similar to what was found in Sanjay Dutt’s house in the serial blastscase).
IV
Quite the other day, court proceedings with respects to all those adjudgedguilty in the serial blasts case have concluded; some tenunfortunate people have received the death penalty, and about double that lifeimprisonment. The pursuit of the serial blasts case has evidencedexemplary political, investigative and judicial will.
Which invites the question as to why to this day the report of the SrikrishnaCommission remains not just unimplemented but unadopted. And regardless ofwhich political formations have been in the seat of power, centrally, or locallyin Maharashtra.
It is to be said that some English Dailies are beginning to ask thisdiscomfiting question, although noted columnists still seem to fight shy ofmentioning the Pramukh of the Shiv Sena, Bal Thackeray even when the SrikrishnaCommission does so explicitly as a "veteran General who commanded his loyaltroops" during the Bombay riots (see "Shhh. . .Muslim!" lead articleby Sagarika Ghose in the Hindustan Times, Aug.,3,2007, for instance.)
For the Congress especially matters must be seen to be complicated by theShiv Sena’s support to Pratibha Patil in the just concluded Presidentialelections. It must seem forgivable to argue that Bal Thackeray’s supportto the UPA Presidential candidate may have had less, after all, to do withMaharashran pride, more with the Srikrishna Commission findings. Someweight is leant to this view when one remembers that such Shiv Sena support hadnot been forthcoming to Sushil Kumar Shinde, another Maharashtrian and a Dalitto boot, who was the Congress candidate for Vice-President at the lastelections. Was it not an important consideration that at that time not theCongress-led UPA but the BJP-led NDA was ruling at the centre?
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The Congress, we feel, must ask the following questions of itself:
1. Would its continued appeasement of the Shiv Sena be consistent withits oft-repeated claim that as the genuine party of governance it alone may betrusted to uphold the Constitution and the rule of law?
2. Would such appeasement sit well with the various attempts it seeks tomake to remedy and improve the lot of the minorities, Muslims particularly,pursuant to the findings and recommendations of the Sachar Committee?
Nor should it be forgotten that the Bombay riots into which the Srikrishna Commission enquired are not the only instance where the victims have
received short shrift. The abortive fate of the Srikrishna Commission has
been preceded by similarly aborted Commission findings in, to name a
few, five other noted instances. These are:
3. Would the Congress-led UPA be able to escape the accusationthat, having received Shiv Sena support for Pratibha Patil’s candidature, ithas no stomach to proceed with the Srikrishna findings?
4. Would the UPA’s touted determination to bring legislation toeradicate communal strife and killing have the least credibility if it continuesto fail to show the sort of political will with respect to the Bombay riots as has been in evidence in the matter of the subsequent serial blast cases?
VI
The UPA government needs to realize that selective justice may bring reliefto a section of the population, but, if such justice is denied to othersections, such a course can only the more justly and forcefully dub it communalthan any overt act of commission.
It is now generally recognized that Indian Muslims are poised on a thresholdmoment; with each day their willingness to participate in constructive measuresto accord them due rights and opportunities as equal citizens becomes moreevident. At such a moment in the history of India’s composite polity,any tainted evasion of justice due to the victims of the Bombay riots—some ofwhom will indeed be Hindu as well—when such justice has been all-too loudlyensured to the victims of the serial blasts is fraught with potential disasterfor the entire polity and for the locus standi of the State.