 Vidya Bhushan Rawat |
| Blog | Posted By:hindtoday on:6/14/2012 10:25:56 AM |
Human Rights Activists Seema
Azad and her husband Vishvavijay have been awarded life imprisonment by a lower
court in Allahabad on charges of sedition, waging war against nation under the
provision of Unlawful Activities Prevention Act. The district judge Sunil Kumar
Singh also slapped a fine of Rs 70,000 on the couple. It has to be noted that
both Seema and Vishwavijay were shown arrested in police record at the
Allahabad Railway station when they were returning from Delhi after
participating in the World Book Fair on February 6
th, 2010 by the
Special Task Force.
The police had
‘recovered’ ‘offensive’ literature of Mao, Che-Guevara and Lenin from them.
According to police they were associated with Communist Party of India (Maoist)
which is banned in the country. Since then, all the efforts to get the release
by the human rights organizations have failed. Now, this judgment by a lower
court has shocked the nation as they are again questioning whether any
association if it is with any one makes you criminal. Whether possession of so
called ‘banned’ literature is crime? Can the government of India come out
clearly what is a ‘banned’ literature?
Hundreds of activists, theatre
artists are facing police torture in different jails of India for promoting
‘banned’ literature. They are being charged with ‘war against state’. Even
writing an article or doing a fact finding in the forest areas where big
companies have ravaged our beautiful forests and suppressed innocent tribal are
act of ‘war on nation’. Any protest against the current mode of governance is a
war on nation. Seema and Vishwvijay had been scholars at Allahabad
University. Both of them were sensitive to the human rights issues of the poor
particularly the Dalits and farmers. Seema Azad was the editor of bimonthly
magazine ‘Dastak’ which has been publishing reports about land acquisition as
well as terror of mining mafia in the Bundelkhand regions particularly adjacent
to Allahabad such as Koshambi and Shankargarh. In both these regions, Dalits
and the Kol Adivasis are exploited by the stone and quarry mafia and any effort
to organize them is met with the severe terror by these mafias. As reported, Vishwavijaya
was active in the University politics and ideologically closure to the
marginalized communities and their efforts to get justice against exploitation.
They investigated many cases and published their fact finding reports. As members of People’s Union for Civil
Liberties (PUCL) they were part of many human rights investigations and protest
movements all across the country. They brought out report against the
malpractices in the Ganga Express Highway which was displacing thousands of
farmers and poor people in Uttar-Pradesh. We all know Ganga is the latest
victim of not just mining mafia but ‘developmental terrorists’ too. ‘Dastak’ reported how the Muslim youths in
Azamgarh were being branded as ‘terrorist’ by the investigating agencies and
their parents were facing allegation and humiliation in public.
The arrest itself was dramatic
from the railway station. They were charged for being member of CPI (Maoist)
and shown to have possessed Maoist literature. Now the court has found them guilty and
pronounced a harsh verdict of life imprisonment and a fine of Rs seventy
thousand. The two sensitive souls who dare to write against the state terror
are now declared ‘terrorists’ by the court.
It is shocking how the lower courts do not even follow the preceding verdict of
similar nature in the Binayak Sen Case when the apex court actually suggested
that reading any kind of literature is not a crime. The court has also said
that even being member of a banned organization does not amount to a crime
unless somebody is directly linked with any kind of terror activities. It is unfortunate
that the lower courts did not question the police version and went on for
harsher punishment without really hearing the other side of the story.
The time for human rights
activist is tough as the courts which have always upheld fundamental rights of
individuals in the past through their historic judgments are unable to carry
the same legacy. Why are the authorities
so much worried on our writings even when all of us are expressing nonviolently
and arguing for the human rights of the people?
Our assemblies and Parliament have number of people who have criminal
cases of serious nature against them. They are not simply political cases but
related to heinous crime like rapes and murders and yet they become our law
makers. In Uttar-Pradesh, Mafias are still enjoying their day as most of them
have greater stake in mining, quarrying and other government programmes which
are meant to serve the poor. The courts have not covered them with great
glory and we have seen person who should have been in the Jail are now ruling
the state. It is deeply dissatisfying moments that scholars who defy the
popular myths have to face the people’s terror but those who defy the stated
position of the state are being targeted in such a way that it would be
difficult for ideologically strong people to join the people’s movement. It is
shocking that bright young scholars who could have got fanciful job elsewhere
decided to devote their lives for the cause of the people and the outcome is
disappointing. Rather than appreciating their contribution for the cause of
human rights and dignity of the people, an issue which Indian state should have
done it long back, and the state apparatus is terrorizing them and branding
them with different names.
Can Indian state really challenge the power of ideas? A country where
literacy rate is dismal and where the gender discrimination is growing and
showing negative growth, sending ideologues to jail will only prove that we are
afraid of ideas. The state can accommodate the goons to become political
leaders. It can accommodate all kind of people who are not a ‘threat’ to the
stated anti people position of the state. All those are in the good books of the state as ‘people’
have ‘elected’ them but ‘writer’ or an ‘activist’ is not ‘elected’ hence you
are free to arrest them and humiliate them. It is a great sign of
depression. Nothing much will happen if
we do not attain 9% growth but
more and more writers, activists, film makers face threat from the
Indian state for loving freedom and expressing solidarity with those who are
victim of ‘developmental terrorism’ and such a situation will send India into
real depression. We faced the state repression during emergency in 1975 but
what is being seen today is much larger as State is not alone in its activities
against people. It is using mass media and ‘developmental’ agencies against
‘people’s voices. It is justifying its misdeeds in the name of ‘democracy’
where ‘majoritarian’ voices even if they are wrong, have to be ‘respected. That
is why, despite cry of Bastar’s tribal or Kudankulan’s people to save their
lives, the Indian state and its middle classes still talk about ‘nation
building’ even when the cost of human lives is too high in the affected regions.
A few months ago, we all showed
our solidarity with Salman Rushdie when he was wrongly denied visit to Jaipur
Book Festival as his visit would cause ‘law and order problem’. We all know why
Rushdie is an unwanted man in India despite being citizen of this country. We
felt that as a writer he has a right to speak and his freedom of expression
must be respected. Our media and their loudspeakers continued for days for the
freedom of expression hounding Muslims as if all other religious minds respect
that freedom. People like us supported Rushdie’s right to express his views
despite our differences of his depiction of Islam. But what is most unfortunate is that this freedom of expression is
reserved for the power elite of this country and therefore there would not be
such special shows on our mainstream programmes and newspapers which condemn
the illegal arrest and detention of Seema Azad. How can you deny me my write to
read something? Should the state has the power what I should read and what not?
If reading Maoist literature is a crime then this crime is being committed by
millions of Indians and let the government send all of them to jail.
Government must act on the things where it is wanted to work and not to decide
about our choices to read or write.
The threat to freedom of
expression in India is real particularly if you are speaking against the stated
policies of the state which have a near ‘unanimity’ among political parties. Of
course, we will have to think whether Indian people are only represented by
political parties or are there other elements also who represent people. But as a writer and activist and not
claiming to speak on anybody’s behalf, I would like to state that has not
freedom to read and write come with my fundamental right and it is not
necessary for me to justify my writing and speeches as how many people read it
or like it. It is time for us to respect international covenants and human
rights laws so that we really become a society which respects freedom to read
and write despite political and ideological differences. Let the government of India respect of
fundamental rights and not afraid of our ideas to serve our people. The essence of a true democracy is in
respecting the dissenting voices and trying to integrate them by accepting
their viewpoints too. All those dissenters who are writing are not asking
anything for themselves. They too have worked tirelessly for the people and it
would not bring any glory to Indian democracy if we continue to treat our
dissenters as terrorists. We hope the higher courts will rectify the error committed
by the lower court by releasing Seema and Vishwavijay unconditionally as well
as honorably.
(The writer is a full-time Human Rights Activist )