August 16, 2011

life in general: undemocratic, dictatorial government of India

Criminal Procedure Code sections were applied by the Delhi Police, under instructions from the home ministry of the central government of India, in arresting civil activists Anna Hazare, Kiran Bedi, Arvind Kejriwal and a few other aides of Hazare, today morning.

These activists intended to hold a protest in Delhi against the weak anti-corruption legislation being put to vote by the government of India.

This is the latest incident of the government of India has been directly or indirectly acted against civil activists. There have been several similar instances all over the country, many of which go unreported in the mainstream media.

I am sure that the Congress party and other political parties which form part of the ruling alliance in the central government of India, will not be able to get away with their undemocratic, dictatorial acts for too long. 

Not that alternatives such as Hindu-extremist Bharatiya Janata Party, the Left parties and others are much better. The peformance of their governments in a few states where they won the state elections are not less dictatorial. But the Congress party cannot be allowed to get away with fast degeneration of democratic principles. 

Immediately below is a newsreport on Anna Hazare's arrest by the Delhi police, and following it is another commentary on the unfair restrictions which Anna Hazare and his followers were being asked to comply with.

1)

Unfazed Anna Hazare fasts in police custody as protests in his support spread far and wide

 | New Delhi, August 16, 2011 | 07:37

Anna Hazare; Protests against Anna's arrest.
Hours before he was to launch his fast against corruption, Anna Hazare was on Tuesday arrested by the Delhi Police, preventing him from going ahead with his proposed protest. Other prominent activists in the Lokpal Bill campaign - Arvind Kejriwal, Kiran Bedi and Shanti Bhushan - were also arrested.
Delhi Police personnel; Anna Hazare supporters
Delhi Police personnel and Anna Hazare supporters near his residence.
Hazare and his associates were arrested under CrPC sections 107 and 151. Hazare, a 73-year-old Gandhian, was taken into custody from a residential area in Mayur Vihar before he was to proceed to the venue of his fast at J.P. Park, where prohibitory orders are in place.
My arrest won't stop protest: AnnaIn a CD relased by his team members after his arrest, Hazare urged people to carry on the fight against corruption through non-violent means.
"How can my arrest stop this agitation against corruption? My team will carry on the anti-corruption stir further and this fight will continue," he said.
"I appeal to the people to be non-violent and not damage any individual's or national property. Nobody should be hurt," Hazare urged.

Hazare fasts in police custodyHazare, Bedi and Kejriwal were brought to the Delhi Police Officers' Mess at Civil Lines after their arrest, where the Gandhian launched a fast. Hazare's team said he was not even taking water.

Protests in support of Hazare
Team Anna is planning to move the Supreme Court against the arrests. Meanwhile, there were reports of massive support pouring in for Hazare, with IIT Kharagpur students planning to go on a hunger strike.

Residents of Hazare's village Ralegan Siddhi took to the streets in protest. Scores of people trooped out of their homes soon after news of the arrest of Hazare and his team members reached the village, about 230 km from Mumbai.

There was a spontaneous shutdown in the village. Many villagers, including women, marched to the local Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation bus depot and raised slogans against the government.
While thousands of activists staged a march in Pune, a large number of protestors started a gathering near Dadar in Mumbai. An agitation is planned at Azad Maidan in Mumbai later on Tuesday where prominent activists, including Medha Patkar, are expected to congregate.

Union Home Secretary R.K. Singh said efforts were made in the morning to persuade Hazare to give up his proposed fast, but he refused to relent.

Cops tried to persuade AnnaAccording to sources, senior police officials, including DCP (Crime) Ashok Chand, met with Hazare in the morning at an East Delhi apartment, where he was staying, in a bid to convince him to not go ahead with his planned protest defying prohibitory orders at J.P. Park.
Emergency is back, cries Bedi
Flaying the police move, Bedi said: "Emergency has revisited the country. This is undemocratic and unconstitutional," she said.
Around 500 supporters were with Anna at the time of his arrest. Chanting 'Bharat Mata ki jai' and 'Vande Matram', they created hurdles in the way of police personnel as they were trying to take him to a nearby police station.

Government has become dictatorial: Prashant BhushanPrashant Bhushan, a key civil society member of the joint Lokpal Bill draft committee, said: "The government has become dictatorial. Democratic rights are being infringed upon, which will lead to more anger among the people."

Anna detention undemocratic: Ramdev
Baba Ramdev said the arrest of Anna Hazare was undemocratic.

Ahead of the proposed fast by the Gandhian, a group of people had thronged the East Delhi apartment where Hazare was staying to pledge their support to his protest. Security personnel, including some in plainclothes and some from the special branch, were deployed around the apartment premises.

Chetan Bhagat, Anupam Kher slam arrest
Author Chetan Bhagat said Hazare's arrest was a disastrous move by the government while actor Anupam Kher called it the saddest day for Indian democracy. Anupam Kher said, "Government has angered the common man."

PM holds CCPA meet
Prime Minister Manmohan  Singh held a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs to take stock of the situation.

After the Delhi Police denied him permission to hold his fast, Hazare had on Monday given a call to his supporters to fill up jails all over the country if he is arrested.
Addressing a press conference after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh slammed him for resorting to fast as a protest when Parliament was seized of the Lokpal bill, the Gandhian had said he will go to J.P. Park in Delhi on Tuesday, the venue of his fast, even though the Delhi Police imposed prohibitory orders.
"If I am arrested, I will continue my hunger strike in jail. If I am released, I will go back to the venue and this circle will continue," he said.
Hazare said once he is arrested, people should fill up the jails in every village across the country. "Going to jail for the country is no crime...It is a decoration," he said.
He accused the Prime Minister of "speaking" the language of his ministerial colleague Kapil Sibal saying that the Lokpal bill was before Parliament which will take the call.
Before his press conference, the 73-year old activist had made an unscheduled visit to Rajghat on Monday, where he sat in meditation. Hundreds of supporters gathered around him.
The Delhi Police refused permission to Gandhian and his supporters, saying that Hazare's team refused to give an undertaking on restricting the number of days of protest and protesters besides four other conditions.
In his speech at the Red Fort on Monday morning, the prime minister decried Hazare going on fast and said Parliament alone will decide on Lokpal and those having grievances should approach Parliamentary Committees for airing their views.
-With inputs from Headlines Today and PTI


2)
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/story/lokpal-bill-anna-hazare-fast-democracy/1/148168.html

Protest is central to a democracy

Gyanant Singh | August 16, 2011 | 08:03
Delhi Police has put arbitrary restrictions on Anna's fast.
It is ironic that the capital of the largest democracy in the world has no place for public protest. One might not agree with Anna Hazare or like his mode of protest but the manner in which he has virtually been denied a right to sit for an indefinite fast protest against corruption cannot be justified in a democratic country like India.
The government may be right in claiming that it was its prerogative to draft or give a final shape to the Lokpal Bill but it will find it difficult to explain the use of its power to regulate protests to virtually stifle dissent being expressed in the form of a peaceful protest.
Since the proposed protest was against inaction on part of the executive, the government dealing with the group should clearly seem to be fair and reasonable.
Despite Anna having compromised on the venue for his much publicised 'indefinite' fast protest beginning today, the Delhi Police restricted the duration of his protest to three days at the 'rear portion' of the Jai Prakash Narayan Park on Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg.
Incidentally, the Anna-led group had given up the Jantar Mantar site and had decided to settle for another venue after it was stressed that no 'indefinite' protest could be allowed at Jantar Mantar as many organisations would want to hold protest at the site as the monsoon session of Parliament was in progress.
The new venue was agreed to between the Anna camp and the police after the latter stated that such a long protest could not be allowed at Jantar Mantar in view of the need for equitable distribution of space for protests by various groups.
In a letter on August 16, the Delhi Police said it had 'now been advised' that the venue could not be allotted beyond 'one or two days' due to legal and administrative constraints. It would,
however, persuade the land owning agency to extend the period to three days. To add insult to injury, Anna, Shanti Bhushan, Prashant Bhushan, Arvind Kejriwal and Kiran Bedi have been asked to sign an undertaking that they would ensure that "the gathering does not exceed 4000/ 5000 persons". Apart from the fact that it would be beyond their control to predict the number of people unlike in political rallies where supporters are ferried to the venue, restricting the number of people to a maximum of 5,000 would amount to curtailing the rights of thousands of people who would like to voice their concern against corruption by going to the venue.
The right of people to visit the site to support the protest - which may be justified or unjustified - is independent of the right of Anna or his team.
With team Anna terming the restrictions as unconstitutional and gearing up to defy the Delhi Police diktats, Union minister Kapil Sibal quoted a Supreme Court judgment (1973 1 SCC 227) stating that "the right which flows from Art. 19(1)(b) is not a right to hold a meeting at any place and time". Though Sibal stopped at this, the next line of the judgment stresses that the state can only impose 'reasonable' restrictions in the interest of public order.
"Freedom of assembly is an essential element of a democratic system. The basic assumption in a democratic polity is that government shall be based on the consent of the governed," the Supreme Court has said in the judgment quoted by the minister.
It further stressed that free consent implied discussions and the right of citizens to "meet face to face with others for the discussion of their ideas and problems, and public streets are the 'natural' places for expression of opinion and dissemination of ideas." On limiting the crowd, Sibal said it could have been more if he had opted for far off Burari as the venue for protest. If this argument is taken to be valid, one cannot explain the symbolic march of our first freedom fighters from Meerut to Delhi in 1857 and repeated 'Delhi Chalo' refrain by protesters across the country.
Besides, the Delhi Police had initially agreed to venue. Sibal was further joined by his colleagues in the government to question the protest at a time when the Bill had already been introduced in Parliament.
The ministers reportedly stressed that Anna's demand was unconstitutional and his protest at this time was an affront to Parliament.
No doubt Parliament is an important institution but 'we the people' of the country also enjoy a special status in the Constitution.
Such a protest may not be justified in normal circumstances but to prevent it by imposing onerous conditions might be worse.

August 12, 2011

life in general: extremely ugly violence-cum-murder committed by police in pune, maharashtra

Earlier this week, on Tuesday (August 9) afternoon, farmers and residents of some villages in Pune district (in Maharastra state of India) were protesting on the Bombay-Pune Expressway. Their protest involved wrongful acquistion of their lands for a water pipeline project which would pass through their villages and supply water to a large industrial township, Pimpri-Chinchwad, in the Pune district.

An extremely ugly and a highly shocking thing happened at the protest! The protesting villagers were fired upon directly by the police, and when they began to run away from the firing, the police chased them and kept firing at them directly. There was no threat to life to the policemen from the protestors but the police kept firing away. At least 3 villagers lost their lives and several were seriously injured.

Obviously, the permission to open fire, came from very senior politicians of the state government of Maharashtra (the deputy chief minister, Ajit Pawar, seemingly the one to have given permission to do so). The rural police of the Pune district, headed by Superintendent of Police, Sandip Karnik, blindly followed the orders, or even if there were no such orders, he gave the green signal to his men out of sheer criminal madness.

The police gave all kinds of excuses for their firing but when video footage emerged, clearly showing policemen chasing villagers and firing at them, their claims have proved to be nothing but ugly deception.

Immediately below is a video, from youtube, showing a clipping of Star News television channel's coverage, which shows the ugly police firing. After the video, I have copied-and-pasted three newsreports that shed more light on the matter.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPZiro5bDxs





1)
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/story/maval-police-firing-ordered-deputy-chief-minister-ajit-pawar-allege-farmers/1/147726.html

 | Mumbai, August 11, 2011 | Updated 09:20 IST  
The claim of the Maharashtra police and state home minister R. R. Patil that the firing on farmers who were protesting against land acquisition on Mumbai-Pune Expressway on Tuesday was done in 'self defence' has fallen flat on the face.
Footage of the incident shot by local cameramen reveals a completely different picture.
Mail Today has footage of the firing that shows that the police shot and killed farmers without any warning. The footage shows that the policemen did not use their weapons as a last resort or for self defence. They can be clearly seen aiming their guns and shooting at the farmers.
The footage also shows superintendent of police Sandeep Karnik firing at the fleeing protesters from an INSAS rifle.
The police had claimed that they had to fire when the villagers resorted to arson. However, the video shows that it was not the protesters but the policemen who began vandalising vehicles on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway.
Ganesh Taras
Ganesh Taras (25), one of the protestors, was hit in the thigh by a police bullet.
Ganesh Taras (25), who was shot in the thigh, said the protesters were deliberately beaten and provoked by the police. "Is this the way the police should have tackled people who were protesting peacefully? We were already winding up the function when they deliberately beat us up and provoked us. The police chased and shot people who were running away, without any warning," Taras, who is admitted in the ICU in Talegaon General Hospital, said. He added that the police showed no mercy and even women were shot.
Another protester, Ajit Chowdhary (24), who was shot in the leg, said, "Ironically, I was shot while helping out a policeman who had fallen down. I was helping him get up when they fired at me. I was shocked; another youth who came to help me was also shot. I don't know what happened to him." Raman Pawar, a farmer, admitted that stones were thrown at the police by the protesters.
"Some of us did throw stones at the police. However, the police deliberately provoked us. We were ready to move away from the expressway and wanted the collector to come and give us an assurance. The collector did not bother to come and the police started thrashing us, which resulted in the stone throwing," Pawar said.
He added that the 'unwarranted' police action was carried out under the orders of deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar as the Pimpri-Chinchwad water project - against which the farmers were protesting - is his pet project.
"There is no question that the police fired to kill us and the orders were given by Ajit Pawar, who wants water from the Pawna dam to be given to Pimpri-Chinchwad. They can kill some more of our men but we will not give even a piece of our land or water to them," Pawar said.


2) 

I don’t want to be a pawn: Maval victim

Pushed to the wall by pressure from all quarters, Pune SP Sandip Karnik suspended six cops, and held a 2-hr-long press conference. His answers raised more questions about the police action in Maval.

Gitesh Shelke, Nitin Brahme 
►  Police have ‘no idea’ who shot Moreshwar Sathe dead on Tuesday. His friend Vasant Garade says Sathe was shot in cold blood by cops as he walked towards him

►  Tempo driver Navnath Pangare, shot in the leg, denies his statement given to cops on video in a Lonavala hospital that someone in a white car shot him. Says he has no idea who did

►  If both sides of E-way were shut down, how did a car pass through?

►  Pangare’s family has alleged that SP Karnik and a police inspector came to Pune hospital, urged them to avoid media, said all expenses would be ‘taken care of’

►  Mediapersons claim that Karnik made them delete footage of the clash, say cops told them to take Pangare’s byte

Refuting the claims of the police about the circumstances in which he received his bullet injury, tempo driver Navnath Pangare said he has no idea who shot him. His police statement says occupants of a private white Indica or Indigo car fired at him. Pangare is undergoing treatment at a private hospital here. His family is alleging that SP Sandip Karnik and a police inspector approached them in Pune and told them all medical expenses would be met and to avoid the media.

Meanwhile, police claims about the death of Moreshwar Sathe — one of the three shot dead on Tuesday — have been challenged by Sathe’s friend who was present with him on the E-way. Vasant Garade told Pune Mirror that Sathe had been taken to a police van, but was released and was walking towards him and others when police shot him from behind in cold blood.

How did moreshwar sathe die?

Vasant Barku Garade, a close friend of deceased Sathe who was present at the site, said, “About four policemen nabbed him and took him to the van. They made him sit inside for a while. We saw him sitting in the police van. After five minutes, we saw him alighting from the van. He was walking towards us and policemen were standing with their guns near the van. As he was walking, a bullet pierced the nape of his neck and emerged from his mouth.”

Sathe, who was a tractor driver, owned a small piece of land, and had gone to the agitation site. Garade and other villagers who say they were witnesses claimed that Sathe was killed by cops encounter-style.

Karnik refuted the allegations saying police have not indulged in encounter tactics while quelling the farmers’ agitation on Tuesday. “Yes, it is true that police had attempted to detain him at the agitation site. He was caught and was made to sit in the police van parked nearby. But it not known when he left the police van. He left the van without knowledge of the policemen. Also, it is not known how he died of a bullet injury. He might have died by a police bullet, but it wasn’t an encounter.” Karnik said.

Who shot Navnath Pangare?

Pangare, a resident of Khed-Shivapur, was admitted to the general ward of a private hospital in Shivajinagar where he was operated for his bullet injury. However, on Wednesday night, a team of policemen led by Karnik allegedly went to the hospital and shifted Pangare to the ICU.

His father Vitthal told Pune Mirror that policemen restrained family members from speaking to mediapersons. When family members opposed Pangare’s shift to ICU citing high expenses, cops present there told them not to bother about ICU expenses. “We do not want ICU facilities but police have forced us to move to the ICU. We were told to say that Navnath has been discharged from the hospital. We do not know the reason behind such orders,” Vitthal said.

Pangare’s ‘statement’ was recorded by police on video at a Lonavala hospital where he was initially admitted. According to it, Pangare says “Indica-wala challa hota, ani tyatun golibar zhala” (A white Indica was passing by and there was firing from it).

However, on Thursday, Pangare denied having ever made such a complaint or given such a statement to the cops. Police said Pangare had lodged a private complaint registered with the Vadgaon Maval police station. “I just gave a statement to the police but I don’t know whose bullet it was. I don’t know who fired at me. I have not filed any complaint. I don’t want to be made a pawn in the game,” Pangare said.

Police dragging Moreshwar Sathe away after trouble broke out on the E-way on Tuesday

Karnik said Pangare’s tempo was heading towards Pune from Mumbai when it got caught in traffic on the Expressway. “Both the corridors — Mumbai and Pune — of the Expressway were blocked and Pangare’s tempo was standing on Pune corridor at Kamshet tunnel. Around five policemen were standing there. It was at around 1.30 pm when when an Indica or Indigo car passed through. Pangare said unidentified occupant/s of the car fired at him. The case was registered with Lonavla police and then transferred to Wadgaon Maval police station.”

He added: “We have not found spent cartridges from the site of the firing and we are yet to get ballistic reports of the bullet found in Pangare’s thigh. Police have obtained vital clues about the car and suspects will be tracked down. As per Pangare’s statement, we have registered the case against the car’s occupant/s.” What he didn’t spell oit was how a private car drove through when both E-way corridors were blocked.

  Cops instructed media to delete some footage 

The controversy surrounding the Pune Rural police’s role in the Maval firing is deepening. New revelations show that cops may have forced local cameramen to delete videos of the firing.

On Tuesday afternoon, local reporters landed at Baur, as the firing took place. They recorded the agitation, firing and stone pelting – but policemen soon routed them.

On condition of anonymity, one mediaperson told Mirror, “After the firing, we rushed to the truck and started recording videos of the police damaging the vehicle. Suddenly, one officer who was with the superintendent of police came and threatened us and ordered us to delete the videos. We ran to the SP and told him that some police were damaging vehicles, but he became angry with us. He said, ‘Do you know whose vehicles these are? You do not see anything’. Then, the SP wrote down our names and those of our publications and left.”



3)

http://www.punemirror.in/article/62/2011081020110810054634621f6e114c2/How-Ajitdada-acquired-Maval-farmers-%E2%80%99-wrath.html

For two decades, Maval farmers have surrendered land to mega projects like the Expressway, MIDC, SEZs, a ring road, but it was dy CM Ajit Pawar’s pipeline project that broke the proverbial camel’s back. Farmers who took on cops on Tuesday say they don’t want to give the govt any more land, but Ajit Pawar is forcing them to

Pune Mirror Bureau
Posted On Wednesday, August 10, 2011 at 05:46:24 AM


The body of the first victim of Tuesday’s mayhem, Shyamrao Tupe, lies on the Expressway as farmers clash with police over land acquisition
Even as the horror of Tuesday afternoon and the images of devastation and death sink in, a scratching of the surface reveals a taluka of farmers pushed to the wall by deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar and his Nationalist Congress Party’s (NCP) designs on their land.

  How Ajitdada acquired the wrath of Maval farmers  


Cops open fire in a conflagaration that wreaked havoc on the E-way
Protestors mill amidst confused traffic and alert security forces during riots on Tuesday
Farmers who clashed with cops said they would not have resorted to the extreme step of blocking the E-way, had Pawar given a patient hearing to their valid demands — compensation for the land being acquired for the proposed pipeline project from Pavana dam to Pimpri-Chinchwad and permission to draw water from the pipeline for irrigating their agriculture holdings. Land for the pipeline project is to be acquired in Donje, Shirgaon, Somatne, Parandwadi, Urse and Adhe villages. Farmers protesting the Pavana pipeline are stressing that it is a “politically motivated project.”

“The NCP had its own designs. Their modus operandi is to deny water to the local farmer and make his survival difficult. He will ultimately sell his land and migrate elsewhere. Of course, the political land mafia will do the rest — snatch the land,” said Keshav Wadekar, a local farmer.

Deepak Phalle, a farmer from Baur, gave vent to the collective fear of being dispossessed of their ancestral land and robbed of the Pavana dam waters, when he told Pune Mirror, “Ajit Pawar is our guardian minister, but he does not want to protect the interests of Maval farmers because they have not voted for the NCP.”

Phalle’s allegation is reflected in the project’s progess report. It was launched before the Lok Sabha and Assembly polls in 2009, but the NCP adopted a go-slow approach during the elections fearing an adverse reaction from voters. It lost the Maval Lok Sabha seat to Shiv Sena’s Gajanan Babar, and then the Assembly segment to BJP’s Sanjay Bhegade. Work on the project was relaunched with full vigour in December 2009.

Farmer Santosh Dabhade from Dabhade Wasti said the pipeline was laid in such a way that land belonging to NCP supporters was spared, while those like him aligned with opposition parties like BJP had to give up their land. “JCBs were pressed into service to flatten our standing crop. When we opposed the action, police cases were registered against us,” Dabhade said.

The farmers said they were fighting for the last crumbs of land left with them. “In the past two decades we have lost land to the MIDC, then the Expressway followed by special economic zones. We hear the ring road project too is in the pipeline. We have lost thousand of acres for paltry or no compensation,” said Ajit Dabhade from Talegaon.

Rajabhau Chavan, a farmer who was injured in the lathicharge, said, “This is nothing but a political conspiracy to finish the Mavalas in Maval.” He warned that the Mavalas had withstood injustices for centures since Shivaji’s time. “Ajit Pawar may have forgotten, but we have fought enemies like the Mughals in the past,” he said.

Shiv Sena’s MP from Maval Gajanan Babar said, “We strictly condemn the barbaric action against the farmers. This is the fourth firing incident against innocents in the state. This is happened on the orders of guardian minister Ajit Pawar. The SP should be charged with murdering the people. This battle will continue. We will ensure that this project is not completed over the dead bodies of farmers.”

► NCP had its own designs — they deny water to the farmer, make his survival difficult. He ultimately sells off his land and migrates. Then the political land mafia do the rest

- Keshav Wadekar, a farmer from the area

August 03, 2011

life in financial markets: india's prolonged tax breaks to IT companies

I have always doubted the credibility of continued favoritism being extended to the information technology (IT) industry by the government of India. This is usually given by way of exemption from various applicable taxes (income tax, excise duty, customs duty etc) or in other ways.

Here is a summary of the incentives given to the IT industry, as revealed by the government itself in the Indian Parliament today, in response to a question by a member of parliament.



Ministry of Communications & Information Technology
03-August, 2011 15:13 IST
Incentives to IT industry
The Minister of State for Communication and Information Technology, Shri Sachin Pilot today informed Lok Sabha in written reply to a question that Government extends several incentives for Information Technology Sector in the country. Under Software Technology Parks (STP) scheme, approved units are allowed to import goods required by them for carrying on software export activities as per the Foreign Trade Policy. Such goods may be imported either on outright purchase basis or free of cost or on loan basis from the client without payment of custom duty. Apart from this, the approved STP units can avail excise duty exemption on procurement of indigenously available capital goods, components & other specified goods.
Apart from this, Software is exempted from basic customs duty. Furthermore, several items for the IT sector are covered under the ITA Agreement, and hence exempted from customs duty. Section 10AA of the Income Tax Act provides for a deduction from the total income of hundred percent of profits and gains derived by a unit located in a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) from the export of articles or things or from services for the first 5 consecutive assessment years, of fifty percent for further 5 assessment years and thereafter, of fifty percent of the ploughed back export profit for next 5 years.
As per the Central Board of Excise & Customs, Department of Revenue, Ministry of Finance, the Central Excise duty collection from IT Sector in respect of units registered with Central Excise during the current financial year upto June, 2011 is Rs. 4.47 Crore. Collection from other charges viz. MOT, Fines, Penalties etc. is Rs. 45.3 lakhs only in respect of these units. The “Other Charges” relate to Central Excise duty and do not include Service Tax and Customs Duties.
SP/ska
(Release ID :73758)

July 29, 2011

life in general: ugly tactics of police in india when investigating bomb blasts or other similar cases

Whenever unfortunate bomb blasts or gun attacks on innocent civilians in public places occur in India, the police investigating into the suspects behind these criminal acts tend not to be clean with regard to the means they employ to solve the cases. Prejudices, dishonesty and outright cruelty have been seen in the police investigtions.

This does not mean the police never end up catching the actual criminals behind the mass bomb blasts or gun attacks. They do, but sometimes. Most of the time, however, the police ends up assigning the blame on people who may be suspicious but who are not involved in the terrorist acts. In the context of India, it is usually the Muslims who suffer in the police brutality.
 This is ugly. The only positive thing for those wrongly accused is that most courts in India do not believe the police blindly and end up giving bail to them. But not before some, or many, years of their lives have been cruelly taken way.

Justice ought to be provided to families and loved ones of the innocent public victims who die or get badly injured in bomb blasts or other terrorist acts. I only pray that the investigating authorities believe that the means to the end are as important as the end.

I give below two stories which appeared in two newsmagazines recently. They give good insights on how injustice happens to Muslims in India on account of investigations into terrorist acts.

1]

http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?277760

The Wrong Name
What of the innocent Muslims picked up after every blast?
Saba Naqvi

Imagine being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Perhaps having the wrong name, in that wrong place. Imagine landing in jail, being tortured and beaten for that unfortunate conjunction of destiny and birth. Presumably our investigative agencies do track down real terrorists based on real intelligence and forensic evidence. But all too often in the rush, panic and clamour after a ‘serial blasts’ incident, the police often make random arrests, construct a narrative that soon turns out to be completely bogus.

Of late, it’s always the case that within hours of a blast the police and intelligence starts mouthing terms like HuJI, LeT, IM and SIMI. It’s happening in Mumbai now where a certain Faiz Usmani has already died in police lock-up. It happened, most infamously, in Hyderabad after the Mecca Masjid blast in 2007. As it turned out, the state police just made up its mind about who’d done it—it was simply a matter of catching some unfortunates and producing them as terrorists. Take the story of Ibrahim Ali Junaid, then a student of Unani medicine in Hyderabad. For a month he was questioned by the police and told that he must know who did it for “we know you Muslims are terrorists”. He was then taken into police custody for six days where he was beaten and given electric shocks as the police tried to extract a confession from him. He spent five months in jail, was subjected to narco-analysis and finally, after paying bail of Rs 50,000, he was released.

After the Mecca Masjid blast, the state police first arrested about 60 boys, let some of them off, while 28 were sent to jail. All were eventually released as each case soon turned out to be completely false. Later, the state minorities commission appointed an advocate commissioner to prepare a report on allegations of police abuse. The report found that “most detainees carry tell-tale signs of bodily abuse obviously not self-inflicted” and even when they were in judicial remand “they were unable to have these injuries recorded even before the magistrate”. The report stated that “all the detainees believed they were picked up and ill-treated because they belong to a particular community”.

Among them was Mohammad Raees, who says that the 28 boys from Hyderabad were kept in cells meant for ISI agents and convicted terrorists. “It was quite clear to all of us that the police just needed to pick up some Muslims to show they had done their work,” says Raees. When the CBI team came to meet them, Raees says they actually said “we know you are innocent but the state police is determined to make a case against you”. Investigating agencies now say the Mecca Masjid blast was the handiwork of Hindu terrorists. Raees has filed a case against the state police and is seeking damages of Rs 20 lakh.

In Andhra Pradesh, at least there was an inquiry of sorts. The situation is far worse in Maharashtra, according to Suresh Khairnar, a Nagpur-based activist who’s been tracking terror cases and arrests for years. “No one is willing to listen here and the agencies keep spreading lies and innocents keep getting arrested. Some people imagine it is a secular government in Maharashtra. But let me tell you, after Gujarat we have the most communalised system here. The media is also complicit in spreading lies.” Tellingly, Maharashtra holds the record for the highest number of custodial deaths in the country.

Till now, no human rights commission or activist group has put together an all-India figure for the numbers of Muslims arrested after each blast who turn out to be innocent. We have to put together the sorry saga, case by case, blast by blast. After the 2006 Malegaon blast, for instance, 115 Muslims were arrested. Over the years most managed to get out, brutalised and tormented, but at least free men. Nine still remain behind bars. Again, the NIA has said that the Malegaon blast was the handiwork of Hindu extremists like Sadhvi Pragya, but the local MCOCA court and state police insist on holding the Muslims. In March this year, the bail application of the nine accused was again rejected although the Swami Aseemanand confession has put an entirely different perspective on the story.

No one really cares about the fate of people like Adnan Mulla who ran a small business supplying milk in Mumbai. He was picked up in 2003 by three policemen of the crime branch who tried to get him to admit that he was involved in the blasts in Mulund, Vile Parle and Mumbai Central. It was over a month before he was produced before a court and then the torture of police remand began, first in Shahpur taluka and then at the crime branch office in Crawford Market. “I was questioned, tortured and beaten by the policemen. They were constantly telling me to confess my crime. I asked them what crime have I done to confess? They kept saying, accept the fact that you are involved in the Mulund blast and confess that you knew the plans. This went on for months.” His parents and elder sister saw his condition and in desperation even told him to confess to whatever the police was saying. But Adnan refused and says, “I never signed any paper they gave me”. After six years and 11 months, he was granted bail by the high court on the condition that he mark his presence every day at the police station. He says, “The crime branch have no evidence but have made me an accused in three blasts. They have ruined my life.”

Perhaps in the case of Adnan it was just a random arrest of a man who the authorities saw as dispensible. At other times, individuals pay a heavy price for a passing connection with someone suspected of being a terrorist. In Jaipur, Dr Ishaq, a 60-year-old ayurvedic practitioner, was picked up in connection with the 2008 Ahmedabad and Jaipur blasts. He says, “My crime is that the man allegedly involved in these blast incidents had stayed with me for 15 days as a tenant. Everyone in my area has known me for several decades now. I have no record that they should question my integrity to the country.” He was arrested on August 15, 2009, and is now out on bail. But the family continues to pay a price. The father is out but his student son has been put behind bars. “Our life is an endless misery,” says Ishaq.

The terror discourse is so loaded against the Muslim community that the larger public does not really care as these sad little stories play out away from the public glare. Certainly, there are some guilty who do get arrested. In Gujarat, for instance, 62 people were arrested after the 2008 Ahmedabad blast. They are all still behind bars as they had moved the Supreme Court to shift the cases out of the state. Their appeal was turned down and the trials begin this week in the special court in the state. Lawyer Mukul Sinha is involved in one of the cases. He says, “I believe some of the accused are indeed guilty of being involved in terrorism. But the majority are innocent.”

This majority is the collateral damage of terrorism. Take the story of Faiz Usmani’s death, still fresh in the news. His only crime, if one can designate it as such, was that his brother Afzal is an accused in the Ahmedabad blasts. There was nothing to suggest Faiz was a terrorist. If one goes by the police version, then the man died because he forgot his blood pressure medication while concerned policemen were rushing around him, trying to give him his pills, take him to hospital. Their version suggests they only wanted to have a polite chat with him in case he had any terror links as his brother was a suspect character. We will never really know what actually happened to Faiz Usmani as he is now quite dead. But there are so many human wrecks who have revealing stories to tell about the heavy-handed methods of the police in our country.

Stereotypes beamed at us by popular media and the Hindu Right often present the Muslims as both overt and covert supporters of terrorists. But the reality is that every time a bomb goes off and innocent civilians die, it is the minority community that is gripped by anxiety. In the short term, they are the ones who face all the harassment. In the long term, such incidents polarise society, fuelling the agenda of forces who are anyway anti-minority to begin with.

By Saba Naqvi with Chandrani Banerjee




2]
http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/nation/rigour-mortis

30 July 2011
Rigour Mortis
The pursuit of justice in Mumbai’s terror cases demands an investigative thoroughness. Which, for all practical purposes, seems dead
BY Sreenivasan Jain

I spent the morning on a long conversation with Saqib Nachan, described by the Mumbai Police as a ‘terrorist mastermind’, someone who allegedly trained and armed Muslim youth to execute a series of terror attacks that struck Mumbai in late 2002 and through 2003, killing and wounding dozens. The reason I was able to talk to him this week is not because I was given special access to his prison cell, but because he is out on bail. Nachan was speaking to me from his native Padgha, a semi-rural hamlet two hours north of Mumbai, where he says he has returned to his family business of ‘land development’. This transformation—from life as an alleged dreaded militant boss accused of multiple attacks to a regular work routine—is not an isolated instance. Soon after, I spoke to another ‘ringleader’ of another Mumbai blast, Dr Abdul Mateen, who has been fully acquitted, now at home in Aurangabad practising medicine.

Those who read this, with the horror of 13 July still fresh in memory, may feel angry. Anger is important, but misdirected anger is counterproductive. It is true that men charged in the past with serious acts of terror are now out of prison, leading free lives. Does this mean there is no justice? These men would argue that this is justice—they are free or out on bail not by accident, but by legal decree. They would even argue that injustice has been done unto them—one of them has spent about eight years in prison, roughly twice the minimum penalty under Pota, the anti-terror law under which they were charged. But the victims of the blasts with which these men were charged also feel robbed of justice—who is it, then, that killed their fathers, sons, daughters, wives?

Mostly, these questions are co-opted by the usual media flotilla of politicians, city notables and prime-time pundits who convert them into expressions of glib outrage and demands for ‘justice’, which are usually forgotten by the end of the news cycle. Any genuine attempt to seek answers would require a dogged engagement with the slow, grinding progress—or, as we shall see, paralysis—of Mumbai’s previous blast cases.

It means staying with the story long after the candlelit vigils have ended, suspects been arrested, terror masterminds named and chargesheets filed. At the very least, this may help locate these calls for ‘justice’ in a less vacuous and more informed commentary. At the very best, sustained and informed public attention might spur India’s law enforcement machinery to be more rigorous in making claims to the public and in courts of law. It might even hasten the Judiciary’s delivery of justice in cases of terror, both long-pending and new ones.

As it stands, this is the depressing algebra of Mumbai’s bombing cases: seven blasts (or blast cases) in a span of four years from late 2002 to 2006, counting Ghatkopar, Bombay Central, Vile Parle, Mulund, a second Ghatkopar blast, the twin Gateway and Zaveri Bazaar blasts, and the serial train blasts of 2006. That’s 280 people killed, and perhaps thrice that number wounded. Of the seven cases, one has collapsed outright, three others are on the verge of collapse, with most of the accused out on bail (and trials not even begun), and a trial has only just started in the fifth case, three years after the incident; there have been only two convictions.

Let’s first tackle the wave of bombings that hit the city in the aftermath of the Gujarat riots of March 2002. From December 2002 to August 2003, Mumbai suffered six blasts in nine months, all linked by the ‘Gujarat revenge’ theory and by the police’s forceful contention that they were the handiwork of Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) modules that had become active in western India in tandem with the Students Islamic Movement of India (Simi).

Apart from the timing, the revenge theory was given weight by the targets selected: mostly residential Gujarati areas like Ghatkopar, Mulund and Vile Parle, or Gujarati-frequented commercial hubs like Zaveri Bazaar. While making their second claim, of LeT-Simi links, the police brought in some of Mumbai’s ‘encounter specialists’. This was their high noon. By the late 1990s, they had cleaned up the underworld and needed a new target. Many of them were assigned to the blast cases, and they deployed some of the methods they had used in their fight against gangsters in the fight against terrorists, tapping a widespread network of informants, conducting high-profile encounters, committing custodial excesses, and slapping the same groups of men with multiple accusations. But the methods that may have worked in containing the underworld faltered against the far more complex menace of urban terrorism.

The first of the ‘Gujarat theory’ blasts had targeted a bus in the Mumbai suburb of Ghatkopar in December 2002. Within a month, the police were in receipt of intelligence on a phone intercept between two men discussing the blast in a ‘suspicious manner’—Dr Mateen, a doctor from Aurangabad doing an internship in Mumbai, and one Muzammil. The police arrested them as the main accused. Later, they arrested Imran Rehman Khan, a Mumbai phone-booth operator said to be the plot’s mastermind. He was picked up from Dubai, where the police said he’d fled three months before the blast after planning the operation.

In all, nine men were arrested. By April 2003, the police filed a 1,100-page chargesheet; it cited the statements of 191 witnesses, including those who’d identified the bomb planters, as well as confessions of two of the accused who claimed they saw Dr Mateen making the bomb in a hostel room of JJ Hospital. All of them were charged with various links, not just with the LeT and Simi, but even Jaish-e-Mohammed and Al-Qaida.

By then, another blast had taken place—in the ladies’ compartment of a train pulling into the suburban station of Mulund in March 2003—for which a group of 13 men had been arrested from Padgah, including Saqib Nachan. The police—improbably—slapped this group with the Ghatkopar case as well. They said that they had grounds to suspect Nachan and his group’s role in the earlier blast too, but it was widely seen as a blatant attempt to foist more cases on Nachan, casting him as the ‘mastermind’ of a series of explosions. The assertion was so weak that the then public prosecutor Rohini Salian, in a rare and embarrassing admission, had to stand up before a judge and say that there was no evidence that the Padgah group had anything to do with the Ghatkopar blast. All 13 were let off in that case.

Further evidence of police chicanery surfaced—the confessions of three separate accused noted down by three separate DCPs were identical down to the last word, as if photocopied thrice over. As did more disturbing facts—the possible custodial murder of one of the accused, Khwaja Yunus, a software engineer from Dubai. The Ghatkopar chargesheet claimed he was missing because he’d escaped from a police vehicle that met with an accident while he was being taken to verify a location outside Mumbai. But Dr Mateen said that he saw Yunus beaten up in the Ghatkopar crime branch lock-up. The Yunus disappearance grew into a controversy that almost eclipsed the main Ghatkopar case. The state CID finally filed a chargesheet against Sachin Vaze, the police officer (and ‘encounter specialist’) who was said to be transporting Yunus and three constables. Vaze was arrested in 2004 but released on bail for lack of evidence (another crime left unsolved). But by then, the prosecution’s case stood severely battered.

The final blow to the case came after one of the key witnesses, the bus conductor, turned hostile. By December 2004, Dr Mateen and the eight others were discharged. It took two years for the Ghatkopar case to crumble.

The tremors from the collapse of the Ghatkopar case reached the Mulund blast case as well, where, instead of learning from the perils of loading multiple cases onto the same accused, a stung police force lapsed into further legal heavy handedness. They accused Nachan and his group not just of the Mulund blasts, but of two low-intensity blasts earlier the same year—in a McDonald’s outlet at Bombay Central station, and on a bus in Vile Parle.

Clumsy handling marked the Mulund case investigations right from the outset. The police claimed they discovered Nachan’s role after gunning down three suspected LeT militants in the Mumbai suburb of Goregaon a week after the Mulund blast. On one of them, they said they found a diary that named Nachan as the blast’s mastermind.

Unlike Dr Mateen, who had no prior criminal record, Nachan had just completed 10 years in prison after being convicted under Pota in a terror-related case in Gujarat. (Nachan offered a glimpse of his mind years later, in 2007, when he offered during his trial to bury the unclaimed bodies of the 26/11 terrorists in Padgha, an offer that many locals found abhorrent). There were also reports of his involvement in the murder of a local politician in 2002. To the police, his past history, combined with the diary entry, was evidence enough. They said he was running training camps with the LeT in the hills near Padgha, and so, a massive khaki contingent, along with some of the city’s top encounter specialists like Pradeep Sharma and Sachin Vaze, descended on the hamlet to arrest him. Nachan mobilised a group of villagers to come out in strength to block his arrest—claiming he would otherwise be killed in a fake encounter.

Nachan finally surrendered before the court a few weeks later, and was arrested and chargesheeted along with 13 others, but by then his lawyers had enough material to mount a ferocious offensive on the nature and circumstances of his arrest. They asked for a CBI enquiry into the killing of the three ‘LeT militants’, arguing that one of them had already been under arrest. They pointed to the improbability of a militant carrying a diary with names of blast masterminds. They also claimed an AK-47 recovered from his house had been planted.

Less than a year into his trial, Nachan dropped his lawyer, Mubin Solkar, and decided to mount his own defence, filing a barrage of petitions and applications. His most effective stalling tactic, as it turned out, lay in moving the superior courts on the ground that under Pota, the statement of one accused cannot be used against another. By the time this technicality was heard and disposed of, almost seven years had elapsed. It was enough for the case to lose steam and the accused to begin getting bail in batches.

In January this year, eight years after he was arrested, Nachan walked out on bail. The trial for the three blast cases in which he is charged—Bombay Central, Vile Parle and Mulund—has not started.

The spectre of multiple masterminds and multiple theories—and legal delays—came to haunt the Mumbai Police three years later, after the train blasts of 2006. It started off as a prestige investigation for the force and its newly revived Anti-Terror Squad (ATS). Within a week of the blasts came what was touted as the ‘breakthrough’—the interception of a number of conversations on the blasts between Mumtaz Chowdhury, an Arabic teacher from Navi Mumbai, and his brother-in-law Kamal Ansari, a tailor from Bihar.

The police arrested the duo, claiming that Ansari was a ‘known operative of the LeT’ who routinely brought Pakistani terrorists into India from across the Bihar-Nepal border. These arrests led them to Bandra-based Faizal Sheikh, a garment exporter described as ‘the LeT’s main recruiter for western India’. In all, they made 11 arrests. According to police claims, several of the accused had confessed, leading to a 10,000-page chargesheet that had vivid details of how the bombs were assembled in Govandi, a sprawling Mumbai slum, how Pakistani handlers were sneaked into the city, how they set off in pairs (Pakistani handler and Indian bomb planter) to Churchgate station, and how the bombs were planted in seven northbound commuter trains.

The first setback to what seemed like a professionally handled case by the ATS came in the form of a technicality, when the accused, charged under Mcoca— Maharashtra’s tough anti-organised crime law, Pota having lapsed two years earlier—moved the superior courts on the applicability of certain conditions of Mcoca to their case. As the Supreme Court mulled over this petition, two years went by. The trial finally restarted last year. In the interim, several of the accused have filed applications retracting their confessions, claiming they were extracted under torture.

But perhaps the greatest challenge came towards the end of 2008, when the Mumbai Police’s crime branch began arresting members of the Indian Mujahideen for a series of blasts in major Indian cities throughout the year (and earlier). One of those arrested, Sadiq Sheikh ‘confessed’ not only his role in the blasts of Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Delhi, Hyderabad, Gorakhpur and Varanasi, but also in the Mumbai train blasts of 2006. By Sadiq’s statement, it was his group that had planned and executed the train bombings. According to him, no Pakistanis were involved. His confession formed part of the crime branch’s chargesheet, and suddenly, the 2006 train blasts had two different narratives and two different sets of accused.

The courts eventually released Sadiq on bail for the train blasts case, citing lack of evidence, but it left the ATS red-faced. Forced to explain themselves, ATS officers said his ‘confession’ was typical of the stalling tactics used by hardened terrorists to throw investigators offtrack, but many detected a whiff of politics between the ATS and the crime branch.

Whatever the truth, it brought into focus serious questions about the credibility of evidence and initial claims made by the ATS in 2006—not the best status for a case now in its final stages.

Rohini Salian, the state’s redoubtable public prosecutor through this difficult period, finally quit her office around the same time. She cites a multiplicity of reasons for her decision, one of them being ‘politics’ between the ATS and the crime branch over the train blasts.

In all this time, there has been a conviction in only one case—the Gateway-Zaveri Bazaar twin blasts of August 2003, the last of the series of ‘Gujarat revenge’ bombings. The three accused, including Hanif and Fahmida, a husband-and-wife team from Mumbai, were tried and sentenced to life in 2009. They were convicted for having taken a taxi to their target destination and left a bomb in the car, hoping that the blast would kill the driver and eliminate a potential witness; but the taxi driver strolled away from his cab after dropping them off at the Gateway of India, and survived. His description, backed by rigorous police groundwork, led the police to the couple barely a week after the blast.

Hanif, an auto driver, had evidently been brainwashed by the LeT while he was in Dubai as a migrant worker into taking revenge for Gujarat. The police played this case by the book, limiting the number of arrests and resisting the urge to overload the accused with other cases, adding to their charges only one other blast—a second Ghatkopar bus blast that took place in 2003.

Investigating and prosecuting terror cases successfully is never easy. The evidence is largely based on confessions, which comes with attendant legal weaknesses. Terror is a transnational phenomenon, the monitoring and pursuit of which are often beyond the capacity of local police forces that are under enormous pressure for swift results. In all this, there are also communal sensitivities to negotiate. And unforgiveable legal delays.

But equally unforgiveable, let’s face it, are hasty investigations, papered over by sensational claims of breakthroughs and masterminds, custodial abuse and low-level evidence tampering. In almost every case, the police approach to arrests has been less with the precision of an angler, more with the sweep of a mechanised trawler; they cast the net wide, hoping to trap a few guilty in a shoal of bystanders.

These are generic failings, common to Indian policing everywhere in varying degrees. But it is all the more galling in the case of the Mumbai Police, with its earlier record of professionalism. It is worth noting that the first wave of blasts coincided with a decline in the force’s professional standards. It reached its nadir in 2003, the year that the city was hit by most of its blasts. It was also the year of the Telgi stamp paper scam, perhaps the greatest internal crisis to engulf the city force.

Those of us reporting the blast investigations were also reporting an ever-growing spiral of charges of police corruption that claimed a number of senior Mumbai police officers, including those supervising terror cases, such as Sridhar Vaghal, who was joint commissioner of the crime branch during the crucial 2002-03 period, and encounter specialist Pradeep Sawant. Both were suspended and arrested for aiding Telgi, the stamp paper forger, in his charged crimes. Predictably, the case against them failed to get anywhere, and they were reinstated.

While the decline of the Mumbai Police merits an entire report of its own, for now some urgent steps are in order that require the intervention of India’s Home Minister and Maharashtra’s somewhat tentative Chief Minister. The state’s legal department needs to be galvanised into ensuring that the Mulund, Vile Parle and Bombay Central blast cases are prosecuted with levels of urgency comparable to that demonstrated in the 26/11 case against Ajmal Kasab. Likewise, promptness is needed in the cases of Sadhvi Pragya, Lieutenant Purohit and other so-called ‘saffron terrorists’—another trial that is threatening to lapse into a legal twilight zone.

And finally, the country needs clarity on the Indian Mujahideen (IM), accused of a series of blasts that hit major Indian cities through 2007 and 2008. Not long after the recent Mumbai blasts, the IM’s name came floating predictably out of that hall of mirrors occupied by the police, the media and its ‘sources’. As the IM theory gains momentum and results in a series of arrests, it is worth noting that there are already 60-odd young men in jails all over the country for the past three years—alleged members of the IM.

For a representative snapshot of the sorry state of affairs, one needs look no further than the case of 21 Indian Mujahideen men arrested by the Mumbai Police in 2008. The Gujarat Police sought custody of 13 of them in connection with the Ahmedabad blasts of 2008; a Mumbai Special Court gave the go-ahead on the condition that they would be sent only for questioning. But once they reached Gujarat, the Gujarat government passed orders that they would be sent back only after the trial in the Ahmedabad blasts is complete. Now, this trial is yet to begin, since legal technicalities have held it up.

Meanwhile, the other eight IM men are held under tight security in Mumbai jails, waiting for the Gujarat trial to end so that their co-accused can return to the city and their own trial can begin. Just how long this Byzantine legal maze might take to yield any result boggles the mind. And this does not even factor in the custody sought of the same group by other blast-hit, justice-seeking states—Karnataka, Andhra and so on.

It has all the makings of a major travesty of justice—for these men and for the families of blast victims. To avoid this, the Union Home Ministry would do well to club together all IM-related cases in courts across India, and move them to a single fast-track court designated specifically for the purpose.

It is not the job of journalists to certify anyone’s guilt or innocence. In the case of Dr Mateen, the Ghatkopar blast accused, his innocence has been resolved by the courts. In the case of Saqib Nachan, he has been acquitted in one case and awaits trial in another case that’s on the brink of collapse. But I know of at least three IM men of the group of 21 who have admitted their guilt. I know this because, unlike in the case of Saqib Nachan, I have spoken to them while they were in custody. It was an unsupervised conversation that took place three years ago, and they admitted their involvement in some of the blasts of 2008 with candour—whether as planners, car thieves (to transport bombs), or senders of emails in the aftermath.

This kind of knowledge can be a curse in a system of justice that offers no guarantee that the guilty will be charged and the innocent set free.

June 24, 2011

life in general: indian government's devious exemption to CBI from RTI Act


Here is an insightful newsreport from Tehelka that spells out the danger posed by the Indian government recently removing the Central Bureau of Investigation from the purview of the Right to Information Act:


Two steps backward, one at a time
Kunal Majumder questions the government’s motives in keeping the CBI out of RTI

The worst fear of Right to Information (RTI) activists has come true. The government has moved the premier, yet controversial, investigative agency the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) out of the RTI purview. Their excuse is national security. Ignoring the already present provisions of Section 8 of the RTI Act, that safeguards sensitive information, the government decided to give the CBI a blanket exemption. What is more shocking is the secretive manner in which this change was brought about. In March this year, RTI activist Subhash Chandra Agrawal had filed four RTI petitions with the CBI demanding to know details of the corruption cases involving bureaucrats and ministers. In response, the CBI declined information, calling it voluminous. Agrawal then made his first appeal with the Appellate Authority of the CBI in May. However, on 16 June, the Appellate Authority refused to intervene and informed him that according to a government notification dated 9 June, the CBI had been moved from the purview of the RTI Act. This notification was not even made public before 20 June.

Meanwhile, last month, the Committee of Secretaries under the chair of then Cabinet secretary KM Chandrasekhar recommended the RTI exemption for the CBI, the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) and the NatGrid. When Tehelka raised alarm about the immediacy of the decision, Chandrasekhar assured that there would be many more discussions, including at the level of the Union Cabinet and the Prime Minister. There was no timeframe specified to complete this process. But, then suddenly on 16 June, we read news reports of government’s decision to exempt the CBI from the RTI act. We probably would not have known, if it were not for Agrawal’s rejected application.

Does the CBI, whose credibility is already in question, need such a blanket exemption from the RTI Act? Is the CBI an investigative body or is it an intelligence agency? Why was the public not consulted before such an important decision was made? Has the UPA government opened a Pandora’s Box wherein various state governments would arbitrarily add any agency to the RTI exemption list?
This decision has thrown up a number of questions, which have so far been left unanswered. What we find is vague replies. Attorney General Goolam Vahanvati says that the CBI was taken out of the RTI purview because it is involved in intelligence gathering and safeguarding country’s economic security. As the top lawyer of the country, he chooses to ignore Section 8(1) of the RTI Act, which gives all necessary protection to investigative agencies. If the CBI does not want to reveal certain aspects of their investigation they can do so as guided by the present RTI Act. There are particular provisions made just for intelligence and security agencies.

Is the CBI an intelligence agency or an investigative agency? The CBI is no Research and Analysis Wing or the Intelligence Bureau. The government needs to define and differentiate between investigative, intelligence and security agencies. If any agency that gathers intelligence is an intelligence agency, then every police station is an intelligence agency. The CBI stands on the same footing as any investigation agency, whether it is the Crime Branch or even district police. After all, it is formed under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act 1946. So, if this exemption is granted to the CBI, it should be granted to all other investigation agencies.

Of course, in any investigating agency certain things have to be kept secret. The act does not ask to reveal every bit of information. It has exemptions within the RTI Act. What the CBI and other such agencies are trying to do now is to escape from being under the RTI Act altogether. The big question for the government to answer is in the last five years of the RTI Act has it hindered the CBI’s operations in any way?

Apart from the CBI, there are 22 other bodies exempted from answering RTI queries. The NIA and the NatGrid have also been added to the Second Schedule. It is time the government laid down very strict norms on what classifies as a security and intelligence agency and is worthy of being covered under the Second Schedule of the act. A wider political consensus and public debate is a must. Even Section 4(1)C of the act states that the government should discuss policy changes with the public. In the context of corruption, this is a big policy change. At the moment, the government merely places the revised schedule in Parliament. It does not require parliamentary approval. The government just gets post-facto approval.

Transparency is the best way to show that an agency is just; otherwise people will continue to call the CBI a puppet in the hands of the ruling party. Every state police department will also start seeking RTI exemption, and what can make matters worse is that the state governments have the authority to decide on these demands. The Uttar Pradesh government has already placed civil aviation department in the list of agencies to be exempted under the act. Others will follow. If the very government that gave us the right to know starts defining what we do or do not have the right to know, isn’t it killing its own law?

Kunal Majumder is a Correspondent with Tehelka.
kunal@tehelka.com

life in general: all need to respect the rights of servants, nannies & other domestic workers

(the picture used in this post below has been taken from http://www.bahrainrights.org/en/node/2490)


Here is some positive development emanating from the efforts of Human Rights Watch:


http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2011/06/23/victory-domestic-workers?tr=y&auid=8559204

 
June 23, 2011

Domestic workers -- nannies, housekeepers, and caregivers -- are some of the most exploited workers in the world. But a new international treaty has been adopted to help protect them, thanks in part to 10 years of Human Rights Watch research and advocacy. The treaty is the first of its kind.

The 50 to 100 million domestic workers worldwide often face a range of abuses, from long working hours with no days off to sexual harassment or violence from their employers. Many work for months without getting paid, or are not paid at all.


This landmark treaty gives these workers the dignity they are due and the same rights other workers have under the law. This includes earning a minimum wage, a weekly day off, and limits to their working hours. It also obliges governments to protect them from violence and to monitor and enforce these provisions.

About 30 percent of domestic workers are girls, some of whom start working between ages 6 and 8, leaving them especially susceptible to abuse. Workers who have migrated from other countries also run a high risk of experiencing violence. The treaty addresses the vulnerabilities of both groups.

When we began investigating abuses of domestic workers throughout the world 10 years ago, almost no one was paying attention to the issue. Our research and advocacy, along with a growing domestic workers' rights movement, helped build widespread recognition of the problem.

We conducted investigations into the abuse of domestic workers in more than 15 countries. While investigating child domestic workers in El Salvador, Guinea, Indonesia, and Morocco, we found that some children start working at age 6 and work up to 16 hours a day, seven days a week. In Indonesia we found that only 1 of 45 child domestic workers interviewed was attending school.

In Malaysia, Singapore, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and other Middle Eastern countries, we found that on any given day foreign embassies often doubled as shelters for abused domestic workers filing complaints or trying to return to their homelands.

And in Lebanon, we uncovered a grim death toll. Domestic workers, all of them migrants, were dying at a rate of more than one a week -- generally from suicide or botched escape attempts from tall apartment buildings.

We have pressured governments to improve protections for migrant women, with some success. 

June 12, 2011

life in journalism: (part 1) earlier pakistani journalist, now indian journalist, murdered


The masterminds behind the recent murders of Bombay-based Indian journalist, J. Dey, the investigations editor for Mid-day newspaper, and Islamabad-based journalist, Syed Saleem Shahzad, the Pakistan bureau chief for Asia Times Online, will sooner or later be exposed.



A significant way to do justice to journalists murdered in the line of duty is to read most of their stories. For their murderers would be someone who stood exposed by their stories.

In this post, I am presenting below J. Dey's recent story on oil mafia in Bombay & Maharastra. In other subsequent posts, I will be presenting other stories written by Dey and Shahzad.

I humbly pray before our universal energy to guide the departed souls of Dey and Shahzad, and to soothe the severe pain their family members and loved ones would be going through. After Dey's recent story on oil mafia below, I present the reactions of some of his colleagues to his tragic death.




Sea-soned diesel kingpin arrested
By: J Dey           Date:  2011-05-16           Place: Mumbai

As fuel prices soared yet again, an oil kingpin was nabbed with 50,000 litres of smuggled diesel; cops say the Rs 10,000 crore racket runs deep -- from international mariners to local politicians

Less than 24 hours after the news of hike in fuel prices -- this time by a hefty Rs 5 -- formed a lump in your throat, police uncovered a sinister diesel smuggling syndicate off the city's shores. In the wee hours of Sunday, a team led by Senior Inspector Rakesh Sharma of the Special Branch, nabbed a diesel kingpin who goes by the nom de guerre of Bada Noora.
Noora was returning with his spoils of the night, from the deep seas some 100 miles off the city's shores, where stolen diesel exchanges hands and is smuggled into the metropolis. No sooner had the kingpin landed the consignment of more than 50,000 litres of the fuel valued around Rs 1 crore in his barge, than the sleuths impounded it. The development indicates that the seas around the city are fast becoming a cesspool for diesel smuggling, or what is called pani ka kaam in gangland vernacular, as it is smuggled in via sea routes.
Logistical chain
 
A number of agents are involved in this underground market, not the least of which are captains and officials of foreign-flagged ships, police sources detailed. These compromised international mariners, ravenous to make a fast buck, often go on an austerity drive at sea by switching off some of the auxiliary engines, air conditioners and other fuel-consuming equipment on board the vessel, to save on the fuel.

The saved quantity is then sold to clandestine operators from the city. The operators get it from the ship's captain for as low as Rs 12 per litre. The oil mafiosi sail on their transporting freights to meet the tainted mariners some 100 miles off the city's coast. The diesel is offloaded on their vessels in tanks -- the way it was on Noora's barge -- and snuck in to the city. The consignment thus smuggled in is sold in the city at a throwaway Rs 18 per litre.

Parallel economy
The business of bootlegged diesel, which is sometimes mixed with naphta and kerosene, is estimated to be around Rs 10,000 crore for the mafia annually. Moreover, there have been pointers that it is taking place with the connivance of some senior politicians and policemen, a senior police officer admitted on the condition of anonymity.

Investigations by this newspaper revealed that that there are dozens of local gangs, most of them affiliated to Dawood's right-hand-man Chhota Shakeel, which provide the oil and diesel mafia with the necessary man and muscle power. In return, they receive protection from local politicians, which was a major giveaway pointing to their complicity.

Spin-offs
The purloined fuel is sold to dozens of tug owners and sand mafia operators in and around the city, confirmed senior inspector Sharma. A large number of fishermen and dubious petrol pump owners also thrive on the smuggled diesel to carry out their daily business, after buying it at Rs 18 per litre. Investigations indicate that transactions of more than 500 tonnes takes place almost every alternate day. The volume of the business is around Rs 180 crore for a two-month-season. The diesel smuggling business also perpetuates and enables the hawala business in the city, mainly controlled by Dawood's henchmen. Payments are made to the foreign captains and other officials in on the illegal trade in dollars.

Security threat
Other than the parallel economy the mafia is running, which puts its oar in the demand and supply of fuel in the white market, these operations also pose a serious threat from a national security perspective, as these vessels can as easily and unsuspectingly be used to smuggle arms and ammunition into the city. Cops say that Noora's arrest is just the surface of the smuggling world that they have scratched. They have launched a hunt to nab Bada Noora's key associate Akbar.

Some of the other key players in the dock areas are Chhota Noora, Rafiq, Aziz, Aziz Battiwala, Chand, Munna Maldar, Santosh, Sadiq and DK Bhai. A major player, whose real identity and role investigators have not yet revealed, is someone who goes by the alias of Pandit.

Change of guard
Initial investigations have indicated that Bada Noora has been appointed as a replacement for slain oil kingpin Chand Madar, shot dead by his gangland rivals outside his Ballard Pier office last year. The role of the underworld, the links with Dawood, and the extent to and manner in which the nexus spreads are all part of the ongoing investigations, Sharma said.

What should verily raise alarm is the fact, confirmed by the police, that a large number of foreign-flagged ships are now diverting their vessels close to Mumbai to sell surplus diesel to the mafia and make quick money. This information came to light during the questioning of Bada Noora, said Sharma. In fact, feverish illegitimate activity is expected in the seas surrounding Mumbai in the coming days. The mafia will try to stock up on as much diesel as they can because of the imminent monsoon season, which makes the seas turbulent to venture into and the business dicey.





Reactions from Dey's colleagues in Mid-Day:

http://www.mid-day.com/news/2011/jun/120611-MiD-DAY-newsroom-J-Dey.htm



Vinod Kumar Menon,

Chief Reporter

J Dey was an unassuming colleague whose fame came from his meticulously researched crime stories. Though few knew of his passion for the environment; he was also an animal-lover. Dey was very particular about his diet, which included non-oily food and kadak, sugarless chai. I recall a chat with Dey in our office canteen. He had carefully removed the foil that contained neatly folded chapattis. "My mother packed it for me," he said, looking at the chapatti, "It is a declaration of a mother's love; don't ever tell your ma you do not want to carry her dabba ”  it'll hurt her because all her love goes into making it for you and that's why it tastes so good."

Well-connected and trusted among his sources, police officers and colleagues, Dey was credited with exposes that others in the field would die for. Yet, he always keep himself busy with work. He was pretty reluctant to get himself photographed. He shied away from taking centrestage for his big crime breaking stories. A strapping 6'1", he could be mistaken for a spy at work. He never spoke of his achievements and believed in hard work.

Even at 56, he preferred to be amid his sources, at the crime scene, where he would report on-the-spot reactions.

He was a mentor and guide to young, aspiring crime journalists; they addressed him as 'Sir'. It is hard to believe that 'Sir' will not be around. The people who killed him may have succeeded, but Dey is with us. The principles he stood for, for which he fought for, will remain with us forever. A gun cannot kill that indomitable spirit.



Hemal Ashar,

Assistant Editor

The picture that went with his byline when he wrote a column for this paper, was that of a cap covering a face. Like that picture, J Dey worked in the shadowy world of crime, where most is hidden and surreptitious is a byword.

He sat only a few desks away from me in office, his head above the cubicle enclosure, attesting to his tall stature, as he typed out stories about the city's dark and deadly. It takes a man dedicated to his work to slice open the ugly underbelly of Mumbai with the precision of a surgeon. Mumbai's map is dotted by the underworld. From 'addas' to buildings where shootouts have taken place, this is all about a big city pockmarked by dons, gang wars, bloodlust and revenge.

Dey knew this world only too well. So well in fact, that he had compiled a lexicon of crime lingo in a book called Khallas which gave readers the A to Z of gangster talk ” morbidly fascinating gobbledygook to the layperson but so familiar to him. 

I would often go up to J Dey's desk and ask him ” 'Dey, could you do an in-depth article for the centrespread pages (a daily double page feature) on something about the current crime scenario?' He would answer: "Yes, when do you want it?" Sure enough, it would be in my email inbox, a few days later, sinister and compelling all at once.

Now, I remember those pieces vividly. There was one about smuggling activity on the high seas. I headlined it: Once Upon A Crime in Mumbai; an obvious twist on Ekta Kapoor's movie about the underworld. Dey had smiled broadly when he saw the headline. The other was a piece about the transformation of Mumbai's red light area, a look at how the demographics were changing at Kamathipura.

Yet, Dey was more than a crime reporter. He was a football fan. I think back now on how keenly he had watched the football World Cup 2010, sitting on a bean bag opposite the TV in office, laughing and debating the merits of a player or the chances of a team with colleagues. Just two days ago, Dey, a colleague, and I were sitting in the MiDDAY canteen, drinking tea and discussing holiday destinations. Dey suggested Bhutan, a place still relatively untouched by modernity, whose serenity and silence were in direct contrast to the hustle of Mumbai.

He passed by my desk post that discussion, on the way to his workplace and bent over to look at a plastic packet near the computer. They were hard-boiled sweets. "Oh," he remarked as he grinned and looked more closely. "I don't like sweets," he said lightly as he moved on to where he sat. Now, I wish I had something salty in that packet that day.

It has just been a few hours post the news of his death, and phones are trilling shrilly. They are calls from TV reporters wanting to get a few 'bytes' for their news channels about J Dey, ironically responsible for breaking news ” (called scoops in journalistic parlance) ”  who has today become the subject of breaking news himself.
An  emptiness wraps itself like a shroud in this newsroom, usually loud with clicking keyboards and phone interviews as journalists rush to complete their stories for the Sunday MiDDAY edition.

Early in my career, a senior journalist would remark jocularly as he saw frazzled reporters scramble to file in their stories as the clock ticked away, 'All journalists die not from heart attacks or cancer but deadline pressure'.

Not all of them. Some die from bullets.

June 07, 2011

life in general & financial markets: its just another example of ugly face of congress/upa government

The midnight violent attack by the Delhi police, at the behest of India's Congress Party/UPA government in the centre, on the people who were at the Baba Ramdev-organised gathering at Ram Lila ground in New Delhi was only another example of the ugly & authoratarian face of the Congress Party/UPA government.

Such incidences have been happening in the hinterland of India since the last 8-9 years when Congress/UPA has been in power, and even prior to that under the previous regime of BJP/NDA. In states ruled by the communist and socialist parties too, police brutality on people has been a norm.

It is good that many affluent Indians, who are the supporters of Baba Ramdev, who are now getting aware of the violent face of the Congress/UPA government. I hope they also become sensitive to the problems of non-affluent Indians so that next time a government will find it difficult to turn into a monster.

Same applies to the hordes of financial market professionals including economists who look at a government's performance throw a very narrow prism.

May 02, 2011

life in general: not enough for osama bin laden to be eliminated


It is good that Osama Bin Laden, who committed several terrorist acts against innocent people in multiple countries, is no more. He was killed in a US raid in Abbottabad in north Pakistan today.

But this is not enough in any true fight against terrorism. For one, the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York, were not just the handiwork of Osama Bin Laden. There were elements within the George Bush administration which were also involved in the hijackings of the plane, the pinpoint crashing of the planes on the twin World Trade Centre towers, collapse of the two towers, the collapse of smaller tower no. 7 in the vicinity etc.

These other elements have also to be bought to justice. Further, terrorism in its truest definition involves still many more people, some of them being government officials themselves in several countries. Justice will eventually reach them too, I have no doubt.

Anyway, below is a snapshot from wikimapia of a map showing the location of Abbotabad in north Pakistan and the surrounding cities & towns in Pakistan, India & Afghanistan. I have marked Abbotabad in a red circle. Click on the image to see it enlarged. Here goes: