Chakka Jam Ends, Farmers Block Roads in Several Parts of the Country

Around 50 people were detained near Shaheedi Park in central Delhi on Saturday for allegedly holding a protest in support of the chakka jam.

Chandigarh/New Delhi: Farmers protesting against the Centre’s new agriculture laws and other issues blocked roads at several places in the country, including in Punjab and Haryana between 12 noon and 3 pm on Saturday in response to the call given by the farmers’ unions for a nationwide ‘chakka jam’.

The unions had announced the plan on Monday, saying national and state highways would be blocked to protest the Internet ban in areas near their agitation sites, harassment allegedly meted out to them by authorities and other issues.

The police have stepped up security and made arrangements for traffic diversion, said officials, adding adequate police personnel were deployed in Punjab and Haryana.

Protesting farmers owing allegiance to different farmers’ bodies blocked state and national highways at several places, causing inconvenience to commuters.

Also read: Farmers’ ‘Chakka Jam’: Delhi Police to Monitor Social Media for ‘Rumours’

Sukhdev Singh Kokrikalan, general secretary of the Bharti Kisan Union (Ekta Ugrahan), said they are holding road blockades at 33 places in 15 districts, including Sangrur, Barnala and Bathinda in Punjab.

In the morning, farmers started assembling at their earmarked protest sites for chakka jam in both states.

“Elders and youth have gathered here to participate in chakka jam. It will be peaceful,” a protestor said at the Punjab-Haryana border in Shambhu near Ambala.

“We want that the government should repeal these three laws as they are not in the interest of the farming community,” said another protestor.

Protesting farmers said emergency vehicles, including ambulances and school buses, will be allowed during the chakka jam.

Closures in Delhi

In Delhi, entry and exit facilities at several prominent metro stations were temporarily closed on Saturday in view of the chakka jam. Although farmers made it clear that they would not block roads in Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand as part of the chakka jam, Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) in a series of tweets conveyed about station closures at Mandi House, ITO, Delhi Gate, and Vishwavidyalaya stations.

Security personnel stand near barricades ahead of the proposed chakka jam by farmers, during their ongoing agitation against Centres farm reform laws, at Ghazipur border in New Delhi, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. Photo: PTI.

“Entry/exit gates of Lal Quila, Jama Masjid, Janpath and Central Secretariat are closed. Interchange facility is available,” the DMRC added in a tweet.

The Delhi police said in the wake of Republic Day violence, elaborate security arrangements were made at the city borders to prevent any troublemakers from entering the national capital.

Around 50 people were detained near Shaheedi Park in central Delhi on Saturday for allegedly holding a protest in support of the chakka jam, police said.

Roads were blocked in Haryana, Punjab, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Telangana and many other states.

Farmers and leaders of various political parties held ‘raasta roko’ programmes in various parts of Telangana. The Congress and Left party workers staged dharnas on various highways across the state. Police intervened and cleared the traffic, saying several people were taken into preventive custody.

Internet suspended again

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has ordered the suspension of internet services at Singhu, Ghazipur and Tikri borders of Delhi, where farmers have been protesting against the new farm laws, for 24 hours till Saturday night in the wake of their ‘chakka jam’ call, officials said.

Apart from the three sites, internet services will remain suspended in their adjoining areas too till 23:59 hours on February 6.

The decision has been taken to ‘maintain public safety and averting public emergency’ under Temporary Suspension of Telecom Services (Public Emergency or Public Safety) Rules 2017, a home ministry official said.

Earlier, the suspension of internet services was ordered at Singhu, Ghazipur, and Tikri borders and their adjoining areas from 11 PM on January 29 and was effective till 11 pm on January 31, which was further extended till February 2.

Jharkhand Pradesh Congress Committee (JPCC) and Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) protest during the ‘chakka jam’ by farmer unions in Ranchi, February 6, 2021. Photo: PTI

‘Time until October 2’

Bharatiya Kisan Union spokesperson Rakesh Tikait said that the government has time until October 2 this year to repeal the three farm laws. “After this, we will do further planning. We won’t hold discussions with the government under pressure,” he said according to news agency ANI.

Thousands of farmers have been protesting since late November at Delhi’s borders with Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, demanding a rollback of the Farmers’ Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, 2020, the Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Act, 2020 and the Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act, 2020.

The protesting farmers have expressed apprehension that these laws would pave the way for the dismantling of the minimum support price (MSP) system, leaving them at the “mercy” of big corporations.

However, the government has maintained that the new laws will bring better opportunities to farmers and introduce new technologies in agriculture.

(With PTI inputs)

UN Calls For ‘Maximum Restraint’ as Farm Protesters Plan Road Blockade

“The rights to peaceful assembly & expression should be protected both offline & online,” the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights tweeted.

Mumbai: The United Nations human rights office called on Indian authorities and protesting farmers to exercise “maximum restraint” hours before the growers impose a nationwide road blockade on Saturday seeking a repeal of new agricultural laws.

Tens of thousands of farmers have camped on the outskirts of New Delhi for more than two months, blocking key roads and demonstrating against the laws they say will benefit large private buyers at their expense.

The protests have mostly been peaceful, but a tractor rally on January 26, 2021 flared into turmoil as some farmers clashed with police in New Delhi. Since then, authorities have shut down the mobile internet in parts of the national capital and heavily barricaded border roads to prevent protesters from coming into the city again.

Also read: Farmers’ Protest: All You Need to Know About the Countrywide ‘Chakka Jam’ on February 6

“The rights to peaceful assembly & expression should be protected both offline & online,” the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Twitter late on Friday. “It’s crucial to find equitable solutions with due respect to #HumanRights for all.”

The farmers will hold a three-hour “chakka jam”, or road blockade, starting around noon local time (06:30 GMT) across the country except in New Delhi and a couple of neighbouring states.

While the protests were initiated by rice and wheat growers from northern India, particularly opposition-ruled Punjab state, support has been growing across the country.

Also read: Farmers’ ‘Chakka Jam’: Delhi Police to Monitor Social Media for ‘Rumours’

The issue has also caught international attention with celebrities such as pop star Rihanna and environment campaigner Greta Thunberg announcing their support for the farmers. The United States has also urged India to resume talks with farmers.

Modi’s government has held multiple rounds of talks with farmer representatives but failed to resolve their differences. The government says the reforms will bring much-needed investment to the farm sector, which accounts for nearly 15% of India’s $2.9 trillion economy and about half its workforce.

(Reuters)

Farmers’ ‘Chakka Jam’: Delhi Police to Monitor Social Media for ‘Rumours’

Rakesh Tikait’s Bharatiya Kisan Union has pulled out of the plan, saying ‘unruly elements’ could trigger violence.

New Delhi: In preparation for the chakka jam planned by the farmers on Saturday, the Delhi Police have deployed additional measures, including tightening security and intensifying vigil at the city’s border points.

The police will also be “monitoring” content on social media to keep a watch on those “spreading rumours against the force”, officials told news agency PTI.

Delhi police commissioner S.N. Shrivastava held a meeting with senior officers and reviewed the security arrangements on Friday.

Farmer unions on Monday had announced a countrywide ‘chakka jam’ on February 6, blocking national and state highways between 12 pm and 3 pm to protest the internet ban in areas near their agitation sites, harassment allegedly meted out to them by authorities and other issues.

Also Read: Farmers’ Protest: All You Need to Know About the Countrywide ‘Chakka Jam’ on February 6

Elaborating about the security arrangements for the proposed ‘chakka jam’, Delhi Police PRO Chinmoy Biswal on Friday said in view of the violence that took place on January 26 during the tractor rally, adequate security arrangements have been put in place by the Delhi Police at the borders so that “miscreants” are not able to enter the national capital.

The Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM), an umbrella body of the farmer unions protesting the three farm laws, on Friday said there would be no ‘chakka jam’ in Delhi on February 6 even as it asserted that peasants in other parts of the country will block national and state highways for three hours but in a peaceful way.

A senior police officer from the eastern district of Delhi Police said as a precautionary measure, iron nails have been repositioned behind the barricades at the Ghazipur border, another protest site.

Deputy commissioner of police (east) Deepak Yadav said, “According to the protesting farmers, they will not enter the national capital, but still as a precautionary measure, we have made adequate security arrangements to maintain law and order. Adequate police presence will be in place at all important points and junctions across the district.

“There will be additional deployment of pickets at all the border points. All vehicles will be checked thoroughly at the entry and exit points of pickets and borders. Additional buses have already been taken and extra barricades are being put up at the picket points across the city.”

Rakesh Tikait’s Bhartiya Kisan Union (BKU) on Friday pulled out of the chakka jam plan in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, saying it could cause inconvenience to sugarcane farmers in the two states. The Union also expressed fears that “unruly elements could infiltrate the stir again”.

“During this time of the year, sugarcane farmers, mostly in UP and Uttarakhand, move their produce to mills and a chakka jam would delay them by at least two days. Our decision was also guided by information that a few people might attempt to trigger violence,” Tikait said, according to the Times of India.

Farmers’ Protest: All You Need to Know About the Countrywide ‘Chakka Jam’ on February 6

Protesting unions are readying for a nationwide chakka jam on Saturday, January 6. Farmers have called for roads and national highways to be blocked everywhere except for New Delhi.

New Delhi: Protesting farmer unions are readying for a nationwide chakka jam on Saturday, February 6. The Sanyukt Kisan Morcha, which represents over 40 farmer unions, has given a call for all roads and national highways to be blocked throughout the nation except Delhi.

The latest move is in response to the Centre’s handling of the prolonged agitation, budgetary allocation, and the contentious farm laws.

Standing firm on their demand for a complete repeal of the laws, farmers continue to camp at Delhi borders, including at Ghazipur, Singhu and Tikri, in spite of heavy and unprecedented fortification. On orders of the Union home ministry, internet has intermittently been cut off as well.

The ebbs and flows of the movement have attracted global attention, been chalked up to “propaganda” by pro-government actors, and hailed as a revolutionary spectre in India’s history by pro-farmer groups.

What is the chakka jam about?

The Sanyukt Kisan Morcha’s road block call was given on Monday, February 1, after the announcement of Union Budget 2021. Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar had claimed that the Budget should clear doubts on the contentious agriculture ‘reforms’ and encouraged leaders to look at it “positively”. Protesting leaders, however, expressed concern over the slashing of budget for agriculture and allied sectors – from Rs 1.54 lakh crore in 2020-21 to Rs 1.48 lakh crore in this fiscal year.

Farmer leader Darshan Pal noted that the jam is in opposition to the three farm laws, the government’s repressive measures against protesters – including the internet shutdown, ‘illegal’ arrests and the repression of journalists – and the reduction of budgetary allocations to the farm sector.

The Ministry of Home Affairs has already extended the suspension of internet services at the farmer protest sites in Singhu, Ghazipur and Tikri borders till Tuesday night. Internet services were also temporary suspended in some parts of Delhi on January 26, when large scale violence was reported during the farmers’ tractor rally.

Also read: The Wire and Its Reporter’s Names Added To UP Police FIR Against Siddharth Varadarajan

“Our February 6 protest would also be against this harassment faced by journalists who are trying to report the truth from the ground and the Twitter restrictions,” Balbir Singh Rajewal, a noted farmer leader from Punjab, and part of the SKM said.

Earlier this week, Twitter accounts of over hundred people reporting and commenting on the farmers’ movement were withheld (and restored eventually) citing “legal” demands made by the government authorities. Swaraj Abhiyan leader Yogendra Yadav alleged the action against the Twitter account was taken on the “request of government authorities”, adding accounts of some private individuals, who have been very vocal against the movement, had also been restricted.

On Friday, Twitter again suspended or withheld the accounts of some users commenting on the farmers’ stir. At least three accounts — Sanyukt Kisan Morcha’s official IT cell Kisan Ekta Morcha, Tractor2Twitter and BKU (Ekta-Ugrahan) — are among those suspended. The fresh suspension comes after the IT ministry’s warning, threatening a legal notice if Twitter failed to comply with its directives.

Farmer leaders are expected to meet today to discuss the preparations for tomorrow’s protest.

What will happen during the jam?

Highways and roads will be blocked between noon and 3 pm, farmer union leaders said at a press conference. The rally is to take place in the afternoon so as to not inconvenience daily commuters.

Bharatiya Kisan Union’s Rakesh Tikait clarified that the blockade will not take place in Delhi, but will be carried out in other parts of the National Capital Region (NCR). This includes parts of neighbouring Uttar Pradesh and Haryana, along with other states.

“Dilli mein hum nahi kar rahe, wahan to raja ne khud qile-bandi kar li hai humare jaam karne ki zaroorat hi nahi hai (We are not going to do anything in Delhi, the king there has already fortified it, there is no need for us to do a blockade now),” he said.

Vehicles participating in the blockade will be offered water and food, he said. “Items like ‘chana’ and peanuts will also be distributed to these people and we will apprise them of what the government is doing with us,” the leader noted.

Who is participating, who is not?

The jam is expected to be observed by unions under the SKM. The RSS-affiliated farmers’ body, Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS), said that they would not support the chakka jaam, alleging that the protests had become “political propaganda.”

“Now, the protest at all the borders of Delhi is very much political and it is clearly visible that this has become political propaganda,” BKS general secretery Badri Narayan Choudhary said to the news agency ANI.

Travel restrictions, security beefed up

As Ghazipur border emerges as the new focal point of farmers’ unrest, police have beefed up security at the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh route. The Delhi police placed iron nails, concrete barriers and barbed fences on the other borders with Delhi including Singhu, Tikri and Ghazipur borders.

In the national capital, the Delhi Police have erected multi-layer barricades, concertina wires, spikes on roads, along with parking buses on streets to restrict the movement of protesters as opposition continues to swell at farmers’ protest sites. Police and other paramilitary forces have been deployed in large numbers in the wake of Republic Day clashes. Drones have also been deployed to monitor the protesters.

Barricades with pointed spikes have also been placed at both of the main Delhi-Noida borders, namely the Chilla border and DND flyover.

However, Tikait said, “The farmers will pull out all iron nails of the government, and also pull out those fixed at protest sites one by one.”

Deputy Commissioner of Police (East) Deepak Yadav had earlier said that the iron nails studded on roads have been “repositioned”, referring to images from Singhu border on Monday where workers were seen hooking iron rods between two rows of cement barriers on a flank of the main highway to put up a makeshift wall, to further restrict the movement of protesters.

Balbir Singh Rajewal further claimed that trains were being diverted to prevent farmers from reaching the protest sites in the national capital from neighbouring states.

Bharat Bandh: Farmers to Block National Highways, Security Heightened at Delhi Borders

Almost all opposition parties and several trade unions are backing the Bharat Bandh, and many have announced parallel protests in support of the farmers.

New Delhi: Protesting farmers started preparations to block key roads and occupy toll plazas on Tuesday as part of their call for a ‘Bharat Bandh’ against the Centre’s new agri marketing laws.

All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) general secretary Hannan Mollah said the Bharat Bandh is a show of strength by the farmers, and their legitimate demands have found support from people across the country.

Agitating farmers’ unions have threatened to block national highways and occupy toll plazas across the country during their ‘chakka jam’ protest from 11 am to 3 pm as part of their stir. Emergency services will be exempted during the bandh.

“We are standing by our demand that we want a complete repeal of the three laws and will not accept any cosmetic changes. The nature of these laws are such that amendments will not make any difference. Today we have called a bandh, and if our demands are not met, we are ready to take our agitation to the next level,” Hannan Mollah said.

In view of the nationwide strike, the Delhi Police beefed up security at all border points and made arrangements to maintain law and order across the city, including market places.

Joining the Bharat Bandh call, some auto-rickshaw and taxi unions took off their vehicles from the roads in the national capital.

Kamaljeet Gill, president of Sarvodaya Driver Association of Delhi, which comprises mainly drivers working with cab aggregators, claimed most of its members were on the strike. “There are around four lakh app-based cabs in Delhi-NCR. Most of our members are on strike,” he said.

The protests have not been limited to the national capital. In Gujarat, for instance, protesters blocked three highways in rural Gujarat by placing burning tyres on roads, affecting vehicular traffic for some time.

A highway connecting Ahmedabad to Viramgam was blocked near Sanand by protesters from the Congress party who placed burning tyres on roads, causing a traffic jam. Another group of protesters blocked a national highway in Vadodara. In another incident, a highway connecting Bharuch and Dahej in Bharuch districtwas similarly blocked near Nandelav by protesters.

The state has imposed Section 144, which curtails gatherings of more than three people, to try and curb the protests.

Widespread support

With almost all opposition parties and several trade unions backing the Bharat Bandh and many announcing parallel protests in support of the farmers, the Centre has issued an advisory directing all the states and Union Territories to tighten security and ensure COVID-19 guidelines are followed. The railways too asked its personnel to step up vigil saying protesters may organise rail blockades in 16 states.

Appealing to everyone to join the “symbolic” bandh, farmer leaders said they will block key roads during their ‘chakka jam’ protest from 11 am to 3 pm as part of their stir, which has drawn people from northern states especially Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi since the last 12 days.

“Our bandh is different from that of political parties. It is a four-hour symbolic bandh for an ideological cause. We want that there should be no problem to the common people. We appeal to them not to travel during this period,” farmer leader Rakesh Tikait said. “We also urge shopkeepers to shut their outlets during this period.”

Bhartiya Kisan Ekta Sangathan president Jagjit Singh Dallewala asked farmers to maintain peace and not to try enforce the shutdown. He said emergency services will be exempted during the bandh. The leader also claimed the bandh will be effective across the country.

“The Modi government will have to accept our demands. We want nothing less than a withdrawal of the new farm laws,” farmer leader Balbir Singh Rajewal said.

The Centre and the farmer unions are slated to hold the sixth round of talks a day after the bandh as previous discussions failed to end the deadlock.

Tuesday’s strike could impact the transport of goods as the All India Motor Transport Congress (AIMTC), the apex body of transporters representing about 95 lakh truckers and other entities, said it will suspend operations in the entire country to support the bandh.

The Railways’ two biggest unions, AIRF and NFIR have extended their support to the bandh and are planning to hold rallies and demonstrations in their support. The All India Railwaymen’s Federation has around nine lakh members.

They are the latest to show solidarity with the agitating farmers, who have found support from transport unions and the joint forum of trade unions like the Indian National Trade Union Congress (INTUC), All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC), Hind Mazdoor Sabha (HMS) and the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU).

Traders’ body CAIT and the All India Transporters Welfare Association, however, said markets across the country including in Delhi will remain open and transport services will also remain operative.

While the Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT) claims to represent around seven crore traders, AITWA said it represents 60 to 65 percent of the organised transport sector in the country.

Bank unions also said they will not participate in the Bharat Bandh on Tuesday, even as they expressed solidarity with farmers protesting against the new farm laws. All India Bank Officers’ Confederation (AIBOC) General Secretary Soumya Datta said the union has expressed its solidarity with farmers but will not be participating in the Bharat Bandh called by them.

Similarly, All India Bank Employees’ Association (AIBEA) General Secretary C.H. Venkatachalam said union members would wear black badges while on duty, stage protest after or before working hours and display placards before bank branches to support the cause of farmers of the country, but banking operations will not be hit.

The Congress, Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), Trinamool Congress, DMK and its allies, TRS, RJD, Aam Aadmi Party, Samajwadi Party and the Left are among the political parties that are backing the strike. Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati too tweeted on Monday in support of the bandh and appealed to the Centre to accept the farmers’ demands.

Several of these parties have announced protest programmes for Tuesday while supporting the Bandh call by the farmer groups, who have maintained that their stir is apolitical.

While the Congress, which is in power in Punjab, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh and Puducherry, has said it will hold protests at all district and state headquarters, the ruling TMC on West Bengal has announced sit-ins in various areas for three days. The TMC, however, said it will not enforce the bandh.

The Congress said the Centre would be responsible for any inconvenience caused to people during the bandh. Its Punjab unit president Sunil Jakhar said the farmers were justified in opposing these laws and urged all sections of people and political parties to support the Bharat Bandh, blaming the government for the impasse.

The ruling TRS in Telangana has announced active support to the bandh.

The Odisha government announced that all its offices except essential services will be closed as public transport is expected to be affected by the shutdown. The ruling BJD in the state has, however, not supported the bandh.

The Aam Aadmi Party said it will hold a peaceful demonstration in the national capital.

What the protests are about

Thousands of farmers, mostly from Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, are protesting at various border points of Delhi against the new farm laws for the last 12 days.

The bandh has been called against Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement of Price Assurance and Farm Services Act, 2020, the Farmers Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, 2020, and The Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act 2020, all of which were passed by Parliament recently.

The three farm laws enacted in September have been projected by the government as major reforms in the agriculture sector that will remove the middlemen and allow farmers to sell anywhere in the country.

However, the protesting farmers have expressed apprehension that the new laws would pave the way for eliminating the safety cushion of Minimum Support Price and do away with the mandis, leaving them at the mercy of big corporates.

(With PTI inputs)

‘Do Mullo Ko Maara Bhai Ne’ Vs ‘Maintain Peace’: A Tale of Delhi Riots and Two WhatsApp Groups

While the police have charged several members of the DPSG WhatsApp group with anti-terror laws including UAPA, the Kattar Hindu Ekta group members have not been charged beyond murder and conspiracy.

New Delhi: Recently, the Delhi Police filed a chargesheet against 15 anti-Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) protesters under FIR 59/2020 in the Delhi riots case. The chargesheet runs to over 17,000 pages with annexures. FIR 59/2020 had invoked 25 IPC sections, including murder, attempt to murder, rioting, as well as the anti-terror law – the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).

Because police investigators have worked on the theory that the riots were the product of a conspiracy by those opposed to the CAA, this most crucial chargesheet is silent about a WhatsApp group made during the Delhi riots – named ‘Kattar Hindu Ekta’, or Militant Hindu Unity – whose members boasted about killing Muslims and were full of praise for BJP leaders, including Kapil Mishra and his controversial speech made just before the violence began on February 23.

Instead, describing what it called a “large scale conspiracy” behind the February riots, the Delhi Police have named three other groups as being responsible for the violence: the Muslim Students of JNU (MSJ) group, of which JNU student Sharjeel Imam was a member; the Jamia Coordination Committee (JCC) headed by Jamia students Safoora Zargar and Meeran Haider and the Delhi Protest Support Group (DPSG) led by several well-known anti-CAA activists including members of United Against Hate, Not in My Name and Pinjra Tod: such as Rahul Roy and Saba Dewan, political activists Kavita Krishnan, Yogendra Yadav, Annie Raja, social activists Harsh Mander, Apoorvanand, Anjali Bhardwaj and N.D. Jayaprakash, trade unionist Gautam Mody, United Against Hate member Nadeem Khan and Khalid Saifi, Pinjra Tod member Natasha Narwal, and former JNU students Umar Khalid and Banojyotsana Lahiri.

Also Read: Delhi Police Spreads Riots ‘Conspiracy’ Net, Drags In Eminent Academics and Activists

Several of these members have been charged with UAPA such as Natasha Narwal, Khalid Saifi, former JNU student Umar Khalid, who was the latest to be arrested.

The chargesheet filed in June in the case involving the Hindu Kattar Ekta group – whose members actually exchanged messages that helped mobilise crowds to kill Muslims in the northeast region of Delhi – identifies 11 accused, nine of whom have been arrested and charged with murder, rioting with a deadly weapon and criminal conspiracy.

The Wire accessed 2,306 pages of chat in the DPSG WhatsApp group sent between December 28, 2019 and March 1, 2020. Compared to the Hindu Kattar Ekta group, which boasted of killing Muslims, this group – as was the case with the anti-CAA movement as a whole – spoke about non-violence and repeatedly stressed its belief in the Indian constitution. There is no evidence linking them to any specific act of violence. Despite this, several of its members have been charged under UAPA.

The chargesheet essentially holds the DPSG group responsible for the violence, calling its members “professional ideological deviants;” the members of the other two groups – the MSJ and JCC – are labelled “amateur student activists” but some of them have also been included in the police’s conspiracy theory.

The charges brought against members of two WhatsApp group in the Delhi riots case present a stark contrast. Photo: Reuters/Dado Ruvic

Stark contrast between the two groups

Messages such as “Tumhare Bhai ne abhi 9 bje k krib b.vihar m 2 mulla mare hai (Your buddy has just killed two mullahs [derogatory word used for Muslims] in Bhagrirathi Vihar at around 9 pm)” and “Ganga Vihar, Gokul Puri, Jhoripur, In sab jagha gumha Hu. Or 23 mullao k sir faade hai (I have been to Ganga Vihar, Gokul Puri, Jhoripur. And burst open 23 mullahs’ [referring to Muslims] heads.)” did rounds on the Kattar Hindu Ekta group. The same day at 8:14 pm, a message boasted about burning down a madrasa, an institution for Islamic studies.

Also Read: ‘Tear Them Apart’: How Hindutva WhatsApp Group Demanded Murder, Rape of Muslims in Delhi Riots

In the DPSG group, around a month before the riots, plans for Republic Day – January 26 – were being charted out. Members spoke of hoisting the national flag and making parchas to educate people about the CAA, a law they believed was discriminatory. Messages were drafted to encourage people to dress in tricolour and for women to wear bangles in the colours of the Indian national flag: orange, white and green. Several references to the Indian constitution were made.

A message for Republic Day read:

“If you believe in the constitution and its promise of Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity to all its citizens irrespective of religion, caste, creed, gender, and sexual orientation. If you are concerned about the dilution of its principles by the CAA…if you wish to register your commitment to the integrity of the constitution, then come join your fellow citizens…”

As its name suggests, the overall purpose of the DPSG appears to have been to share information, create a database of creative content and news articles, providing live updates from the protest sites,  verification of information about the anti-CAA protests, and sharing anxieties about police action and also relevant news articles and tweets.

A peek inside the DPSG chats

The very first message on the group, divided into two parts: “General comments” and “Immediate Plan of Action” gives a sense of what its purpose was. The message describes the discussion in the meeting among members of the group at the Indian Social Institute. It credits student unions for the success behind the spontaneous action in Delhi, referring to the anti-CAA protests. The tenth point in the message, sent by filmmaker Saba Dewan, clearly says, “There should be every effort made to try and make sure that the protests remain non- violent.”

Other points also talk about a possible reaction of the “State” to discredit the protesters by “lying,” “pitting Hindus against Muslims,” calling the protests an “urban naxal phenomenon,” and lastly by using force to crush [the protests]. It also calls the National Population Register (NPR) more dangerous than the National Register of Citizens (NRC), talks about representation in participation by farmers groups, worker unions, railway employees, bank employees and trade unions.

The first meeting of the DPSG members was held on December 26, 2019, after which the WhatsApp group was made, with Rahul Roy and Saba Dewan as the admins. The next was held on January 2, 2020, and then on January 11, and then again on January 22. A meeting was again called on February 3. Elaborate minutes of only the first meeting were posted on the group. The meeting of January 11 was described in a few lines by Rahul Roy. “The movement needs to stick with a clear demand of No CAA/NPR/NRC,” it declared. After each meeting, several new members were added to the group. On January 28, the group name was changed from “Delhi Protest Support Group” to “DPSG.”

Shaheen Bagh on Republic Day. Photo: Raghu Karnad/The Wire

The second part of the message, titled, “Immediate Plan of Action,” talks about attempting to ensure that there is minimum overlap between protests and teams, disseminating creative content on CAA/NRC, setting up delegations for meeting with non-BJP state leaders, creating a fact sheet on the NPR, making the news reports [on the protests] accessible. It also talks about sending a team to Karnataka and ends with the details of a new, upcoming meeting to be held on January 2, 2020.

Also read: Rahul Roy, Saba Dewan – Named in Delhi Police’s Riot Chargesheet – Have a History of Promoting Peace

Chakka jam or no chakka jam?

While the police have built their narrative around the claim that the DPSG group plotted the ‘chakka jaam’, or road block, at Jaffrabad knowing well that it would result in violence, the archive of WhatsApp messages appended to the chargesheet itself establishes that this could
not have been the case.

For one, it is evident that the DPSG was not organising or directing the protests, least of all at Jaffrabad. The WhatsApp messages show the DPSG was clearly reacting to the events as they were unfolding. Several members of the group vocally stood against the idea of a ‘chakka jam’, one member blamed another for supporting the idea of a road block but none of the members’ messages indicate any support for the ‘chakka jaam’.

One member, responding to an appeal that asked people to mobilise to block both sides of the road, said, “Please note that this is a self-defeating move. The attempt to create another Shaheen Bagh at ITO is sheer adventurism. ‘Chakka jam’ is no way to carry on a movement. It is a long-drawn struggle; ways and means to generate public opinion should be the strategy. Any action that tends to generate public anger should be shunned.”

Another member asked, “What’s the point we are trying to make with this blockade? Public opinion will shift very rapidly if this blockade continues even for one day.” Another message read, “It is vital to keep one side of the road open for free flow of traffic.”

Another message by a local protester clearly stated, “Locals from any protest sites are not willing to block the road because they are locals, and they will suffer. But some outsiders who claim to facilitate the protests, are planning to block the roads…we want non-violent
protests. We can’t allow roadblock plans.”

Protest against the CAA, NRC and NPR at Delhi’s Jaffrabad. Photo: PTI/Files

It is clear from the messages that a debate was going on whether a ‘chakka jam’ was the right move. But there is no evidence in the voluminous chargesheet that linking the group’s members with the actual ‘chakka jam’. Far from uniformly pursuing any one line, the chats
show there was confusion rather than clarity about what was happening in the group a day before the riots broke out.

The group members also discussed, several times, ways to avoid violence. A message by Rahul Roy in the group states: “Besides the warning about possible violence that this regime may want to spark, we need to come up with some ideas on what people can do. If peaceful and yet assertive response ideas are on the table then the chances of violence will reduce…”

The Delhi police has, however, completely ignored the multiple calls for peace and non-violence given in the group. In a flow chart, the Delhi police calls the DPSG group “Remote supervisors” and “leaders of site but from outside” of the Shaheen Bagh protests and “local
leaders” of several other protest sites such as Khureji in northeast Delhi.

The chargesheet reads: “In pursuance and furtherance of common conspiracy members of JCC were alerted to start preparations for escalating the 24*7 sit in protest to higher level by completely blocking the traffic at pre-designated spots i.e. Chakka Jaam and then engineering riots by inciting violence.”

Messages on the group debating the wisdom of the locals blocking the road have been construed by the Delhi police as, “Road block and plan of inciting violence,” even though nowhere do the chats establish that DPSG as a group is organising or even advocating a ‘chakka jam’ that the police believe led to the violence.

From the messages, it appears that the two most important goals of the group were to build consensus among different protest groups and shape public opinion through the media.

Also read: How Delhi Police Turned Anti-CAA Whatsapp Group Chats Into Riots ‘Conspiracy’

Umar Khalid, called one of the “key conspirators”, hardly sent two to three messages on the entire WhatsApp group. On January 1, members of the group took an oath to “defend the constitution.”

The difference in the intensity of the charges on the members of the two groups: one made by the anti-CAA protesters and another by pro-Hindutva men, hints at the selective nature of the Delhi Police’s investigation into the Delhi riots and raises several questions on the nature of the investigation.

Shaheen Bagh: SC Says Road Block Can’t Go on Indefinitely, Appoints Mediation Team

“My concern is if everybody starts blocking roads, maybe due to genuine concerns, where does it stop,” Justice Kaul said.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday said that a mediation team should talk to protestors at Shaheen Bagh about opening up the road that has been blocked. The team will be headed by senior advocate Sanjay Hegde, who happened to be present in the court to observe when the case was being heard.

A bench of Justices S.K. Kaul and K.M. Joseph was hearing petitions filed by lawyer Amit Sahni and Bharatiya Janata Party leader Nand Kishore Garg, who want the road to be opened and the protest to be removed. The sit-in protest led by Muslim women has been ongoing in Shaheen Bagh for more than two months now. The protestors want the Citizenship (Amendment) Act to be revoked and the National Register of Citizens and National Population Register exercises cancelled.

While people have the right to protest, the bench said, the road blockade cannot go on indefinitely and the location of the protest could be changed. There needs to be a “balance” in how the right to protest is exercised, Justice Kaul said, according to LiveLaw.

“Democracy works on expression of views. But there are lines and boundaries. If you wish to protest, while the matter is being heard here, that’s also ok. But our concern is limited. Today there could be one legislation. Tomorrow another section of society could have a problem with something else. Blocking traffic and causing inconvenience is our concern. My concern is if everybody starts blocking roads, maybe due to genuine concerns, where does it stop,” Justice Kaul said.

Also read: Women Kick off ‘Chennai’s Shaheen Bagh’, Refuse to Quit Until State Rejects CAA

The bench said Hegde could choose two others to join the mediation team. He suggested advocate Sadhna Ramachandran and former chief information commissioner Wajahat Habibullah, who has filed an intervening application in the matter.

The Solicitor General told the court that “there was a complete blockade” and “the entire city was being held hostage”. When the lawyer for an intervenor said school buses, ambulances, etc. are being allowed to pass, he disagreed.

“What we want you to look into are alternatives for where they can go instead of blocking roads to protest,” Justice said to the SG.

The SG, however, said it should not look like the court is agreeing to the protestors demands. “I don’t want the message to be that we’ve been brought to our knees,” he said. “It is upon them to discuss and then inform. We will give suggestions, but this cannot be their contention that since we have not been able to find alternatives, they will continue there.”

The case will next be heard on February 24. The bench had earlier orally noted that protests cannot go on indefinitely, and that they should limited to areas “designated for protests”.