Shame, shame A Travesty of Justice
Teesta Setalvad
Come February-March 2008, six years down after post independent India's worst ever communal carnage, victims, perpetrators and masterminds not only roam free but have now, obtained redoubled electoral legitimacy. In year 2002 itself, those accused who were politically powerful and monied in caste and monetary terms obtained easy bail from Gujarat's courts. (the Citizens for Justice and Peace has placed a tabulation of over 600 bail orders on the record of the Supreme Court demonstrating this and Tehelka's Operation Kalank has some further evidence in this regard). In sharp contrast, six years down, 84 persons accused of the Godhra coach fire ---- most of the accused are innocent having just been picked up on the basis of cooked up police witnesses, one is a boy 100 per cent blind!!--still rot in Gujarat's jails years after the incident.
The fact that many of them are ill, one is blind; the fact that their families have been reduced to penury and indignity while the main accused and masterminds of the post-Godhra carnages not only roam free but rule Gujarat by action and word, raises the niggling, troublesome question once again. Discriminatory justice. Can a discriminatory system of justice be viable in principle, given what our Constitution espouses? What does this reality mean in practical terms, given that today we also face the challenge of another kind of terror, internationally supported bomb terror? Can such a blatantly discriminatory scheme of dispensation of criminal justice win the faith of each and every system, particularly a community that is at the receiving end of such a system.
Bail is a natural and normal remedy for any accused according to our system of criminal jurisprudence. Even draconian laws, anti terror laws that have questionable provisions on bail, simply do not allow for sustained and continued detention of persons in this fashion. How then can Indian democracy, booming in its growth rate, shining with the glitter of development explain away the dark crevices of sustained institutionalised torture and prejudice?
Some interesting points in this shameful tale are: Godhra Hindu Victims of the S-6 Coach of Sabaramati Express also asked for Transfer of the Godhra Trial Out of Gujarat in SC. In October 2003 Hindu victims of the Train Burning Filed a case for Transfering the Godhra Trial out of Gujarat. It was following this application by CJP that the Godhra Trial was stayed by the SC in November 2003.
There has been no bail order for the Godhra accused since October 2004 from the Courts.The last bail order was granted by the Gujarat High Court on October 30, 2004. The court has simply not heard any bail applications since. One of the 22 absconding accused, a maulvi, was implicated in the crime by an accused/witness, Sikandar, who stated that the maulvi was allegedly seen on the terrace of a Masjid at Godhra (ostensibly planning the conspiracy) although it was later established that the Maulvi was in Maharashtra and not even in Godhra on the relevant day. There were many serious discrepancies in the arrests, glaring inconsistencies that have been pointed out to the state, which simply refuses to address these concerns.
Worst of all, after a change of government at the center in 2004 and the repealment of POTA, the Central Review Committee after examining the issues at hand, ruled that POTA is not applicable to Godhra, May 2005.
Legal
provisions under POTA allow for the review of individual cases by a
central review committee to prevent misuse of the Act and its
draconian provisions. A decision by the Central Review Committee on
May 16, 2005 ruled that none of the alleged offences in the Godhra
case warranted the invocation of POTA. However, the committee's
decision has not been taken into consideration by either the Gujarat
government or the POTA court. Matters relating to bail for the
accused, especially in view of the decision by the Central Review
Committee, have been brought before the apex court. However these too
have faced repeated delays.
Finally, the Supreme Court permits Accused to File Writs for Bail, No Bail after Six Hearings. Following an order of the Supreme Court in late 2006, giving liberty to all accused to file for bail while hearing the matters relating to the findings of the Central POTA Review Committee, seven separate such applications have been filed. Despite six-seven hearings in the matter, the matter has not been seen fit to be heard.
Tomorrow the matter comes up before the Supreme Court. Will justice be done?
In the ultimate analysis, genuine secularism and constitutional governance must mean that issues of mass violence, accountability, transparency, impunity for mass murderers and government officials, are not merely the stuff of election campaigns but the basis on which the balance sheets of our public servants and representatives are drawn. Only then would we have made the transition from a purely electoral democracy to true constitutional democracy.
Accompanying BOX
Judiciary Watch
Once more a
serious denial of basic fundamental rights has been caused today by
the delay caused by either insensitive or unaccountable listing
procedures of the registry of the apex court of India, the Supreme
Court.
As a result, 84 of those allegedly accused of the Godhra
train burning (one of whom is near hundred per cent blind) have been
denied their personal liberty for six years. Bail is the fundamental
prerequisite inalienable fundamental right to any and every accused
under Indian criminal law and civilized form of jurisprudence.
Even draconian anti-terror laws that are severely contested because
they vest untested powers on the police and executive, do not ever
condone custody for such a long time.
Here's the
Chronology of the Godhra Bail Matters before the Supreme Court
Chronology:
22.2.07. Through an order of
outgoing SC Judge Justice BP Singh, the SC ruled that the Godhra
accused could fie bail applications before the SC. The matter being
considered was the Report of the Central POTA Review Committee that
had held that the provisions of the POTA legislation could not be
applied to the Godhra case.
10.4.2007
Bail applications are filed in the SC
9.4.2007.
Matter is listed by the Registry but not heard because the Court
is hearing the All India Judges Association Matter. Plus the
summer vacation is after two days. The SC thus directs hat the bail
applications should be listed for " final disposal" on
18.7.2007 after the vacation. What happens after these
directions? After the vacation and on SC's reopening on 18.7.2007,
there is no sign of the matter.
First week of August
2007. The matter is again listed on a miscellaneous day at which
point, accused reps and counsel travelling at their own cost from
Godhra again point out to the court that this matter must be listed
on a non-miscellaneous day so final arguments can be completed.
For
two and a half to three months no matters are listed as Judges are
sitting on the Constitution Bench. Thereafter though matters are
shown as pending on the SC list o November 18-19 they are not listed
by the Registry.
21.11.2007 Matter is again mentioned
by legal reps of the bail accused after which Court asks Registry to
list.
First Week of December 2007. Again Bail
Matters that are clubbed with POTA Review Committee Matter are listed
on a miscellaneous day which means that arguments an never be
completed.
12.12.2007. Matters are shown as listed
before the Chief Justice and Panchal. Hence again reps of bail
accused mention the matter on 11.12.2007 pointing out that since
Justice Panchal hails from Gujarat and his brother is a Public
Prosecutor for the state of Gujarat, the matter could not be before
him. The Court agrees. Again, what does the Registry do?
12.12.2007. Fully knowing the circumstances behind
which the matter had been mentioned on 11.11.2007, the Registry still
lists the matter before Justices Agrawal and Singhvi. (Justice
Singhvi had heard the POTA REVIEW COMMITTEE matter earlier and hence
would face similar issues as Justice Panchal). Sure enough, the next
day Justice Singhvi says " not before me." One more chance
to argue the matter and get bail for the victims is lost.
12.12.2007. Agitated, the reps of the bail accused
mention the matter again the same afternoon before the Chief pointing
out this repeated problem from the registry. The CJ directs that the
matter should be mentioned in the second week of January after which
he would constitute a special three judge bench and list it for the
third week of January.
17.1.2008
Unmindful it appears of the CJ's order, the Registry lists it on
Thursday which may be a non miscellaneous day but which also means
that arguments will spill over to the following week. In the first
instance the matter is shown as listed before Justices Bhan, Sinha
and Mathur. Late the evening before, that is on Wednesday 16.1.2007
it is shown as appearing before the CJ, Ravindran and Panchal. What
does it mean that the Registry again lists it before a Judge who
cannot hear the matter. On 17.1.2008 Once again, the CJ says it would
be posted next week or at the earliest. Personal liberty is denied
and no questions ae asked as to what is going on within the Registry
of the highest court in the land.
Can no questions be asked
about the systems in operation in the Supreme Court of India?
Which
matters get automatic priority and which do not?
Which matters
suffer because of the delays and interim orders of the Supreme Court?
Is there no prioritization of cases where issues of personal
liberty, denial of basic fundamental rights, mass crimes and impunity
to the rich and powerful is concerned?
If we can ask no questions,
we will receive no answers.
The time has come to question the
basic accountability procedures of the highest court in the land.
Has the Supreme Court of India lost its soul and is it turning a
blind eye to cases related to fundamental rights violations?
If
so, where then do we turn?
--TS