From Vox-Pop to Arrest Pop: Crackdown on Activists Strikes at the Very Core of Free Speech

It reflects a worrying trend where the government is not just targeting political opponents but also those who question its policies from a civil society perspective.

Political arrests have been a recurring theme in India’s turbulent political history. These arrests have often been used as tools for control, suppression, and intimidation. This practice can be traced back to the dark days of the Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi in 1975, marking a significant chapter in the annals of political repression in India.

During the Emergency, civil liberties were suspended, the press was censored, and political opponents were jailed in large numbers. Indira Gandhi’s government used the state machinery to crack down on dissent, leading to the arrest of thousands of opposition leaders and activists.

The Emergency, which lasted for 21 months, is often cited as a blatant example of the misuse of political power to stifle opposition. This period was a stark reminder of how political arrests can be used to undermine democracy and suppress voices of dissent.

In the subsequent years, the trend of using political arrests continued, albeit in a more sophisticated manner. India’s premier investigative agencies like the CBI and ED have often been accused of being used as political tools. During the tenure of P. Chidambaram as the Home Minister, the CBI’s role came under scrutiny.

Often referred to as a ‘Caged Parrot,’ many alleged that the agency was being used to target political opponents and dissenters. High-profile arrests and investigations during this period raised questions about the impartiality of the CBI and its susceptibility to political influence.

Fast forward to the present, and the scenario appears to have not changed much. The current government, led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), has also faced allegations of using arrests to target political rivals. Several opposition leaders have been arrested or investigated on various charges, leading to accusations of political vendetta. Critics argue that these arrests are often timed to coincide with elections or other politically sensitive periods, suggesting a strategic use of state power to weaken the opposition.

However, a new dimension has emerged in recent days: the targeting of influential activists such as Arundhati Roy and Medha Patkar. These individuals, who have a substantial and diverse following, represent a different kind of threat to the political establishment. Unlike traditional political leaders, popular activists often operate outside the conventional political framework. They command a wide fan base that spans various segments of society, making them influential voices of dissent.

Arundhati Roy, an acclaimed author and activist, has been vocal about various social and political issues, often challenging the status quo. Medha Patkar, known for her role in the Narmada Bachao Andolan, has been a prominent advocate for the rights of marginalised communities.

The arrest or targeting of such figures is entirely different from arresting a political persona. While political arrests can be dismissed as routine political manoeuvring, the targeting of activists strikes at the heart of civil society and free speech.

These activists have the ability to mobilise public opinion in ways that traditional politicians often cannot. Their influence extends beyond political affiliations, resonating with a broader audience that includes academia, students, artists, and common citizens.

This makes them a potent force in shaping public discourse and challenging government policies. Arresting or intimidating such figures narrows the space for dissent and critique, leading to a homogenised political environment where alternative voices are silenced. It reflects a worrying trend where the government is not just targeting political opponents but also those who question its policies from a civil society perspective.

The significance of these influential activists lies in their unique position within the societal structure. Unlike conventional politicians, their influence is not limited by party lines or political loyalty. They represent a confluence of diverse societal interests, embodying the concerns and aspirations of a wide array of people.

This broad-based appeal enables them to foster a more inclusive and participatory form of public discourse, challenging the often exclusionary and hierarchical nature of traditional politics.

Moreover, the arrest or intimidation of such figures sends a chilling message to civil society. It signals that dissent, even when it comes from respected and influential figures outside the traditional political realm, will not be tolerated. This not only stifles free speech but also erodes the fundamental principles of democracy, where diverse voices and opinions are supposed to be heard and debated.

Several other non-politically affiliated individuals have faced similar repression. Sudha Bharadwaj, a lawyer and trade unionist, have been arrested for her activism in support of labour rights and indigenous communities. Anand Teltumbde, a scholar and writer, was arrested for his critical views on caste and class injustices.

Father Stan Swamy, a Jesuit priest and tribal rights activist, was imprisoned for his advocacy for Adivasi rights and died in custody. These cases, like those of Roy and Patkar, highlight how the targeting of influential non-political figures strikes at the core of civil society.

The shift from targeting traditional political opponents to activists marks a troubling evolution in the use of political arrests in India. While the suppression of political rivals can be viewed as a strategic, albeit undemocratic, maneuver within the political arena, the crackdown on activists strikes at the very core of civil society and free speech.

It is imperative for a healthy democracy to protect these voices of dissent, ensuring that the space for critical dialogue and opposition remains open and vibrant. Only then can India truly uphold the democratic values it prides itself on.

Nirmanyu Chouhan, a researcher at Lokniti, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, earned his Bachelor’s degree in History from Hindu College, University of Delhi. His areas of interest include caste politics, literature, history, and Indian politics.

A Rogue Regime and its Morally Corrupt Advocates

My generation of midnight’s children were brought up on the drivel that we are a tolerant, caring people, but that’s a myth and a delusion that have been truly “interred with their bones” in the last decade.

This is not a Kafkaesque fantasy but is happening in Modi’s India, once the hallowed land of the Mahatma but today a cesspool of crime, bigotry and injustice. Earlier this month, the Supreme Court granted bail to former Nagpur University professor Shoma Sen who had been arrested in 2018 and charged under the draconian Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) in connection with the Elgar Parishad case which, according to the National Investigation Association (NIA)’s tinkered narrative, was a Communist Party of India (Maoist) conspiracy “to violently overthrow democracy and the state” with intent to strike terror using explosive devices.

But the truth behind the drummed up conspiracy and motives is that she has been behind bars for six years because of the simple, human act of speaking out against casteism, communalism and atrocities against Dalits. In a country with a plethora of laws but little justice, she remains an accused, granted bail, with the most stringent conditions that include surrender of her passport and reporting to the local SHO every fortnight.

To jog the notoriously short public memory, the Elgar Parishad gathering of December 2017, organised by Justices P.B. Sawant and B.G. Kolse-Patil along with non-profit organisations, was enhanced by the presence of our most committed social activists who have spent a lifetime working among the poor and dispossessed. The event not only commemorated the 200th anniversary of the battle of Koregaon Bhima but sounded a clarion call for the annihilation of caste, communalism and Hindutva. Elgar Parishad represented a frontal assault on the core ideology of this regime, whose asymmetrical response betrayed its determination to teach these upstarts a lesson they would never forget, going to the extent of fabricating evidence through inserting counterfeit messages into their email accounts.

The unforgettable retribution was the result of daring to confront a cultural fault line in which inequality has been formalised, even ritualised, and where religion is used to instigate hate. In our surreal world, those demanding enforcement of our sacred constitutional commitments to banish inequality, casteism and communalism are being hounded as terrorists by those seeking an unequal majoritarian identity for the country. Among the alleged terrorists of the Elgar Parishad event was the gentle 84-year-old Jesuit activist Stan Swamy whose repeated requests for medical bail were rejected. He died in jail on July 5, 2021.

Speaking truth to power is an unforgivable crime today. I can recount names of some of the victims of our kangaroo courts that target anyone who gets into the crosshairs of this tyrannical regime. Siddique Kappen, the journalist who spent almost three years in jail under UAPA and PMLA for his links with the PFI, accused of “only reporting on Muslims” and “reporting on communal riots” – crimes for which he has been charged with sedition and promoting enmity. Disha Ravi, the climate activist who was arrested for conspiring with Greta Thunberg to “wage economic, social, cultural war and spread disaffection against the Indian State.”

There’s the case of the 90% disabled professor G.N. Saibaba who spent almost 10 years in jail, mostly in solitary confinement, for having “Maoist links”. A victim of the merciless brutality of our justice system, he was finally acquitted by the Bombay high court in March 2024. Saibaba’s case showcased the venality of our Supreme Court and its complicity with this regime. In a hurriedly convened special hearing on October 14, 2022, a Saturday, the bench of M.R. Shah and Bela Trivedi suspended the Bombay high court’s order discharging Saibaba, directing the lower court to pass a fresh judgement on merits. Fortunately for Saibaba, the high court stuck to its guns, reiterating that there was nothing to link the accused with any terrorist act.

The roll call of the unjustly damned – Umar Khalid, Sanjiv Bhatt and many others – is unending.

But there is no public outrage. My generation of midnight’s children were brought up on the drivel that we are a tolerant, caring people, but that’s a myth and a delusion that have been truly “interred with their bones” in the last decade. We are arguably the  most selfish people on earth. In a recent piece, when I posited the view that the Lok Sabha election was a fight to “win back the nation’s soul”, a dear friend responded angrily by asking, “Nation’s soul, my foot! Does it exist?” He followed it up with an Urdu couplet, which I have imperfectly translated: “Our riches of poison are overflowing; poison bathes poison everywhere!”

The leader sets the tone for the country. Modi’s India is defined by that crude bully boy slogan: “Ghar mein ghus kar maaroonga!” We cringe before China’s might which is stomping all over our territory and lump it even where Maldives is concerned but are quick to flex a bloated 56-inch chest when dealing with Pakistan. At home, our tinpot dictator watches from afar, the interminable civil war in Manipur. The fake swagger is all too obvious.

Our dysfunctional and emotionally challenged society has lost the capacity for empathy and compassion. Kindliness and decency are seen as symptoms of weakness. We have been hollowed out as a society, no longer even a pale imitation of the humane, secular Republic conceived by our founding fathers. The social ostracism and cultural erasure of Muslims is now state policy. With his recent obnoxious comments on Muslims as infiltrators and stereotyping them as “those who have more children”, Modi has clearly decided that targeting Muslims and keeping the communal pot boiling is the way to win the hearts of the majority. Sadly, his pure malevolence and menacing majoritarianism appeal to many among us.

The Mahatma’s land is now the most hate-filled, violent society on earth. The social ecosystem is steaming with schismatic tensions and ubiquitous daily cruelty – lynchings, ghar wapsi, anti-Romeo squads, beef vigilantism and the rhetoric of pure hate spearheaded by the prime minister of the country. It’s open season for thoki raj and bulldozer justice. An explicit anti-Muslim bias provides the ideological underpinning for state policy. As an electoral stratagem, the Citizenship (Amendment) Act has been exhumed with the mischievous intent of persecuting Muslims, even those who are Indian but have no documentary proof of birth and citizenship.

Such brazen iniquity would be unthinkable in a country committed to liberty, equality and fraternity but it would appear that a section of our countrymen endorses the mischievous heresy that we are better off without democracy. According to a 2023 PEW survey, 85% of the respondents believed that military rule or rule by an authoritarian leader was good for the country. The same outfit that describes itself as a non-partisan fact tank had, in August 2023, arrived at the conclusion that about eight in ten Indians have a favourable view of Modi, although incongruously, his party has never garnered more than 37% of the popular vote. It’s hardly a surprise that the figures churned out by these statistical jugglers rate low on the scale of truth. As writer Mark Twain observed: “There are lies, damned lies and statistics!”

Writer Agatha Christie had sagely observed that sweeping generalisations are seldom if ever true and are usually utterly inaccurate. So let me be specific about whom I mean when I refer to the icy hardness of heart of our people. I have in mind those very guys who told PEW research that India needed an authoritarian leader for its own good – the despicable middle class and our pragmatic, self-serving corporates and celebrities. Unsurprisingly, Erich Fromm, in his diagnosis of the psychology of Nazism had similarly identified the German middle class of shopkeepers and white-collar workers along with the industrialists and aristocracy as the groups fanatically attracted to the fascist ideology. The apathy, the heartlessness and self-absorption of the smug middle class and the rich and privileged have been a consistent feature throughout history.

These apologists for authoritarianism call to mind the characters in a recent Holocaust film based on a surreal Martin Amis novel about human depravity titled The Zone of Interest. The story revolves around the idyllic life of the family of a German commander at a concentration camp in Auschwitz. They live a dreamlike existence amidst the horrors (unseen and yet palpable in the background) of the concentration camp next door. Everything about their life – from the toys the kids play with to the cutlery used to eat food – comes from pillaging the belongings of the victims.  What chills one to the bone is the casual apathy and insensitivity of these ordinary people to the hideous barbarity happening at touching distance. Even more horrifying is their fervour to protect their macabre world built on pure evil.

The stony-hearted supporters of Modi’s authoritarianism would, like it or not, identify with the characters in the film. As for the rest of us, we must guard against what became of the Germans under Hitler. In the book, Amis describes their debasement thus: “But Germans had already got used to living without honour – and without justice, freedom, truth and reason.”

We can avoid the dishonourable fate of the Germans only by standing up and fighting to restore our democracy.

Mathew John is a former civil servant. The views are personal.

‘The Difference Between Then and Now’: Prabir Purkayastha on Emergency and the Modi Years

Ideologically, the Congress was not following the Savarkar thesis which plays out today both formally and informally: Minorities can remain in the country but only as second-class citizens.

September 25, 1975. It was not the usual campus morning at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). A strike called by the Students Federation of India (SFI) to protest the expulsion of Ashoklata Jain — an elected councillor of the students union — was in its second day and the campus was tense.

It was also three months since Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had declared a state of Emergency.

I was on the lawns of the School of Languages that morning, with a few friends from the SFI, when a black Ambassador stopped near us and a burly man got out. He came up to me and asked if I was D.P. Tripathi — then president of the students union. I replied that I was not, but my questioner was a cop, DIG-Range P.S. Bhinder, and he didn’t believe me. He and his men, all in plainclothes, swiftly proceeded to kidnap me in broad daylight. I would end up in jail, kept there for a year under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act (MISA).

Prabir Purkayastha
Keeping Up the Good Fight
LeftWord Books (October 2023)

Fast forward by five decades. The government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Prime Minister Narendra Modi have been in power since 2014. They won a second term in 2019. The India we knew, that we thought of as home, was being changed by the day, in myriad ways.

February 9, 2021. Morning again. I was at home. I had just finished breakfast and was reading the newspapers when the doorbell rang. It was a group of men, one of them with an official-looking paper in hand. They were from the Enforcement Directorate, he announced. The ED was here to conduct a raid. Their target was NewsClick, the digital web platform I had set up in 2009, and which had grown over the years in terms of both its work and its viewership.

The raid continued through almost five days or 113 hours, and was one of the longest raids of a private residence. The record, as I would come to learn, is held by a raid lasting nearly ten days. It had taken place at the Jaigarh Fort of Rajmata Gayatri Devi — a place covering three square kilometres, somewhat larger than my second-floor flat. But no, the ED was not busy searching my flat all the time they were there; they could have easily finished within a few hours. Except that they had a ‘high-tech’ problem: how were they to download my voluminous data from Google? Since Google throttles the speed of downloads beyond a certain limit, the downloading becomes excruciatingly slow after a few hours. My poor digital housekeeping had created a problem for the ED and, of course, for me. Hosting the ED, or any agency of the state, for almost five days is going beyond the call of hospitality, to put it mildly!

My earlier ‘emergency encounter’ was in the context of the students’ resistance in JNU. D.P. Tripathi, Ashoklata (usually called Ashoka), Sitaram (Yechury) and others were among the key figures in that resistance. My encounter in the current ‘emergency’ took place in rather different circumstances. NewsClick, a relatively small outfit, was somehow perceived to be a ‘problem’. Perhaps the problem was not so much NewsClick as the range of movements it covers. Just prior to the government’s unwelcome attention, NewsClick had covered the farmers’ movement quite thoroughly, coverage that drew significant viewership, and not just in India.

But then again, NewsClick was not, and is not, unique in its coverage. Many other digital platforms, and even certain mainstream media, have covered assaults on people, livelihood and reason, as well as the public protests that take place in response. Like us, some of these media organisations are very much under the Government’s scanner.

I do not want to go into the various cases that NewsClick and I continue to face; or the campaign unleashed against us by a hounding variety of media. The legal matters are in the courts and we will fight the cases there. I have no desire to become the news. Nor does NewsClick; its job is to cover the news. It will continue to do what it has done from the time it was set up: follow people’s movements on the ground and amplify the voices of those who are rarely heard in our society.

§

The major difference between then and now is at the fundamental level of ideology. The Congress ideology did not view certain sections of the people as outsiders, to be treated either as second-class citizens or excluded from citizens’ rights.

Since 2014, there has been a dramatic increase in what we can only call hate crimes. Muslims have been the target in a significant number of these crimes; Dalits, Adivasis and women form part of the list as well, as do secular activists. Was it the same situation during the Emergency? Yes, there was oppression; but it was secular oppression. Yes, there was the Turkman Gate incident during the Emergency, when Muslims (and other residents of the area) were attacked. This incident illustrates a particular toxic combination of the Emergency agenda: family planning in the form of vasectomy, and demolition of poor areas to prettify the city. (Family planning expressed the fear of the middle classes that the poor were breeding too much, a favourite bugbear in the West, which saw the population growth of countries like India as a threat to their control over the globe’s resources.) But overall, the Emergency government was not trying to exclude minorities.

Ideologically, the Congress was not following the Savarkar thesis which plays out today both formally and informally: Minorities can remain in the country but only as second-class citizens.

That was not what the Congress ideology was. Nor what the national movement had built; certainly, the Congress could not publicly espouse such an ideology. The Congress could and did say that the Emergency was a necessary interim period of ‘discipline’ — or, as Vinoba Bhave put it, ‘a festival of discipline’ (apaatkal ka anushaasan parv). The Emergency was described as a short-period fix; whether this was the only intent or not, it was not translated into a structure within the state.

We are seeing something different today. The structure of the state is apparently the same; but it is being hollowed out. There is an organised force that has risen to complement state power. This organised force takes on any resistance that comes from the people, and there is a compact between the state and this kind of intimidation politics. It’s important to remember that these forces do not comprise fringe elements; they are a significant political force in the country, they are ‘mainstream’. They help to build a kind of destructive and sectarian politics. The object is to exclude people on the basis of their community, to the extent of eroding the citizenship rights of some Indians. The Congress did not have all these exclusionary politics in its genetic composition; the RSS has them in its genes. That’s the crucial difference.

The other difference between then and now is the sustained and multifarious attacks we see today on our secular ethos, on culture, on education, science and reason. This is, of course, part of the ideology-driven project of building a Hindu Rashtra which will have little to do with the inclusive, secular nation with a scientific outlook envisioned by so many of our freedom fighters. The Hindutva brigade failed the national movement. They did not fight for independence. So their vision for India is to take it onto a different trajectory from the attempt in 1947 which had, by and large, consensus among the people. Their battle was and has been against the Muslims. To put it another way, possibly a more precise way, it was, and is, for Hindu supremacy. The India they are fighting for will have one religion and one people, Hindi-Hindu- Hindu Rashtra; this means large numbers of Indians will become second-class citizens. In many ways, the Hindu supremacists are still fighting their battle in the past, whether it is by renaming streets and cities, pulling down monuments, or finding mandirs everywhere. The battle they are engaged in looks backwards; they have nothing to offer for the future.

Narendra Modi and Indira-Gandhi.

How do we resist this new powerful Emergency without a name? I think we need a much larger coming together of people. This is why the farmers’ movement has been so important. In Western Uttar Pradesh, for example, the Muslim and Jat farmers came together through the movement. To understand how significant this is, we have to recall that in September 2013, riots broke out between Muslims and Jats in the Muzaffarnagar district. Several members of the BJP were accused of instigating the riots; and the BJP won the subsequent general and assembly elections from the region. The fracturing between the two communities that took place during the Muzaffarnagar riots was, to some extent, healed by the farmers’ movement.

Movements build this kind of unity. This is why the rightwing considers movements based on class issues dangerous: they make it impossible to build on caste and community divisions, which is what the BJP does. Is it any surprise that movements — from farmers’ movements and workers’ movements to anti-caste movements and students’ movements — become ideological threats to the RSS and the BJP?

During the Congress Emergency, the jailers were quite aware that some of the people they were holding in prison could well become the rulers someday. That was a clear motive to treat these prisoners differently. Mrs Gandhi’s government also accepted the fact that these prisoners were not ‘ordinary’ people they had to ‘break’. Their plan of action was to take control of the media and its messaging, and to marginalise opponents.

The methods, and in fact the overall plan to silence people, seems quite different today. The driving question seems to be How do we break the people who are standing up to us? The aim is to remould the state without these dissident voices; and ensure that nobody is able to stand up to the government or the right-wing forces in all their various avatars. This may explain some of the terrible pettiness we have seen in the current regime’s handling of political prisoners. The most obvious example is that of Stan Swamy, the 83-year-old activist who worked with Adivasis and who was jailed for alleged involvement in the Bhima Koregaon case. Here was a frail old man who suffered from various medical conditions including Parkinson’s. He had to apply for a sipper and straw because of the tremors in his hands. The NIA ‘sought time’ to consider his request; a special court turned down the request. The activist had to make a fresh application for the sipper cup as well as winter clothes. Such banal acts of cruelty, such dehumanising acts, seem to carry a message: We can do anything we want to you, and no one can stop us. As long as the courts do not give political prisoners the protection they should, the message may well continue to hold true.

Our hope is that as these flagrant violations of rights become more visible, more questions will also grow audible. One positive development is that the courts seem to be taking up more of these cases. Perhaps the ice is cracking a little? We will have to see.


This excerpt from Keeping Up the Good Fight is republished with permission from LeftWord Books.

In a Letter From Jail, Stan Swamy’s Co-Accused Ask President Murmu to Stand Up for What Is Right

Today is Father Stan Swamy’s second death anniversary.

Two years ago on this day, 84-year-old Jharkhand-based tribal rights activist Father Stan Swamy breathed his last while in custody. His death exposed the state’s negligence and inability to protect prisoners. Swamy, a Parkinson’s patient, spent close to a year in jail, deprived of the most basic facilities – one of which was a sipper to drink water from.

On his second death anniversary, 11 of his co-accused – all human rights activists and academics – write a letter to President of India Draupadi Murmu, who belongs to the tribal community that Swamy worked very closely with. Murmu, who recently spoke passionately about the conditions of Indian prisoners, was the governor of Jharkhand when Swamy’s organisation, Bagaicha, was raided and eventually he was arrested by the National Investigation Agency.

Along with the letter, the still-arrested human rights defenders also announced their one-day symbolic hunger strike in Mumbai’s Taloja and Byculla jails, where they are presently lodged.

The full text of their letter to the president is below.

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July 5, 2023. It has been two years since Fr. Stan Swamy’s custodial death, or rather an institutional murder carried out through a series of well-calculated, cold blooded steps by the State machinery that resulted in a loss of a precious life, devoted to the fight for the rights of India’s poorest of the poor – especially the tribal people of Bihar-Jharkhand – for a period spanning more than half a century. In the last two years, we also witnessed for the first time the election of a tribal woman as the President of India. Her Excellency Smt. Draupadi Murmu was the Governor of Jharkhand when Fr. Stan’s residence at ‘Bagaicha’ in Ranchi was raided twice by the Pune Police on allegations of his involvement in the Bhima-Koregaon (BK) case and when the NIA arrested him and took him to be imprisoned at Navi Mumbai. The Hon’ble Governor had maintained silence then.

However considering Fr. Stan and his commitment to democratic ideals, he would have been excited with her election and would not miss the opportunity to petition her office regarding social concerns that were close to him and the absurdity of the BK prosecution. For him after all, she was one of his own. So here is an attempt by his eleven still-jailed co-accused to recreate Fr. Stan’s prayer to our Constitutional head. We thought of some concerns, Fr. Stan would definitely have more.

Johar, Your Excellency! We sincerely hope that during your term in office, the upliftment of India’s tribal population and other poor and marginalised classes and communities are not reduced to mere acts of tokenism. This is a real danger as the present rulers want to win over the poor through cultural and caste symbolism while at the same time promoting a corporate sell-out of the entire economy. In its gradual creation of a Brahminical Hindu Rashtra, the present ruling dispensation has ignited communal hatred throughout the country and increased fascist attacks on minorities, resulting in a vicious environment wherein not only one’s fundamental rights are threatened, but even one’s citizenship and patriotism stand questioned. History will assess Your Excellency’s tenure on whether you went beyond symbolism and acted in defence of the poor as proof of your commitment to your roots.

We hope that during Your Excellency’s tenure importance to tribal issues will not be confined to showcasing Adivasi dance and headgear, which has been a regular feature on all your official visits. Meanwhile the rights of tribals are gradually being eroded. From being the traditional forest-protectors/ dwellers, Adivasis are now seen as forest destroyers. The Supreme Court in its 2019 order directed the eviction of over Twenty Lakh forest dwellers. Though this judgement is under review, the State’s disinterest is apparent from its lethargy. Fr. Stan and his Adivasis brethren had in the mid-2000s initiated the ‘Pathalgadi’ movement in Jharkhand wherein tribal villages would erect stone-slabs inscribed with the powers of the Gram Sabhas under the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution and the PESA act. However rather than being complimented for promoting legal awareness, thousands of Adivasis were booked for sedition. Fr. Stan too was named as accused. A similar situation exists in other tribal areas, wherein hundreds of Adivasi youth are being imprisoned in Maoist cases. Some are even killed in false encounters. The proposed census even attempts to deny tribals their separate religion – Sarna.

Also read: Five Years of Incarceration – and the Audacity of Hope

Your Excellency rightly spoke that rather than building more prisons, the government should strive to create conditions wherein fewer prisons are needed. Honourable words indeed. Fr. Stan had himself, through a PIL, petitioned the High Court of Jharkhand regarding the false imprisonment of numerous tribal youth in Maoist related cases. This was revealed through a systematic six-month research among Undertrial Prisoners in Jharkhand conducted by the ‘Bagaicha’ staff and some lawyers. However the state in its response not only chose to deny any wrongdoing but rather decided to literally kill the messenger.

A key unelected person of the Union Government has blatantly declared that civil society is the new frontier to wage war for National Security. Retrospect, the BK prosecution and the anti-CAA cases of Delhi-UP are examples of this Machiavellian agenda at work. If a protest or an agitation erupts against the Government, change the narrative and either criminalise the protesters or communalize the environment or better both. Any organisation or NGO that does not toe the line can be booked for an FCRA-FEMA violation or even for being a front of a terrorist organisation. CBDT can be called in or else ED & NIA would be ever willing. Media houses too can be dealt with this prescription. If they cannot be silenced by co-option, then get a corporate friend to buy them off and slowly saffronise content. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology will play its role by tweaking the relevant IT Rules.

At every judicial hearing, the state repeatedly claimed that the prosecution against the BK accused is not about muzzling dissent but rather that of unearthing and punishing a pan-Indian Urban Naxal conspiracy. However the testimony of the sole witness against Fr. Stan among the total of 336 witnesses reveals otherwise. His evidence states that the priest publicly expressed at a hall meeting in Kolkata that the BK accused were falsely prosecuted and were in fact innocent. If keeping an 83 year old in prison for eight months for such “incriminating” act so as to cause his death is not a itself a criminal act of silencing dissent, pray, Your Excellency, what is?

Father Stan Swamy (26 April 1937 – 5 July 2021). Art: Pariplab Chakraborty/The Wire

Fr. Stan’s sipper incident epitomised the malaise of our criminal justice system. Not only was Fr. Stan’s plastic sipper-tumbler arbitrarily confiscated at the prison gate, but the trial court ridiculously adjourned the matter for almost a month for the NIA to file its reply to his request for a new one. Due to severe Parkinson’s, he could not drink from glass without spilling. However within hours of this becoming headlines, the Prison Superintendent rushed to provide Fr. Stan six sippers, drinking straws, a walking stick, a walking crutch, a wheelchair, a western commode and a cot. The Superintendent made sure Fr. Stan posed for a photograph beside all these, probably to douse his superior’s anger. This is exactly how prison reforms happened – either due to a media exposé or on the superior’s whims, but never due to an inmate’s needs.

Also read: The Elgar Parishad 16 Must Not Be Forgotten

Your Excellency, Fr. Stan’s initial reaction to the documents shown to have been found in his computer was of deep shock, contempt and disgust. He would repeatedly tell his inmates that he could “never in his wildest imagination” possess such literature. The Courts did not believe him. On the other hand, if a deep-fake appeared of a ruling party politician or celebrity, the State would immediately rush to its best forensics to dispel similar emotions of disgust. However in Fr. Stan’s instance no such attempt was ever made. The truth never mattered. What mattered was the construction of a false narrative that catered to the political needs of the rulers.

Last December, Arsenal Consulting, the US based Digital Forensic firm released its report after analysing the Hard disk of Fr. Stan that supposedly contained incriminating documents. It revealed that Fr. Stan’s computer was the target of a continuous Malware attack for nearly five years, the longest known, the firm said, for any of us accused. The Malware was used by the attacker to surveil Fr. Stan’s activities and plant fabricated documents. The night before the Hard disk was seized, on June 12, 2019, the attacker performed an extensive “clean-up” to obfuscate their tracks. Leaving us without any doubt that the Malware attacker was in-league, if not within the Police team that seized Fr. Stan’s computer. Now it made sense – on August 28, 2018 the Pune police missed seizing Fr. Stan’s infected computer and hence had to come back on June 12, 2019 to rectify this error.

During the bail hearings of Fr. Stan before the Bombay High Court, Your Excellency, a senior Judge of the bench had expressed with awe how Fr. Stan’s funeral was viewed online by thousands of netizens. On the following hearing, he was not only made to apologise by the Government’s Counsel, but in due time a few Hindutva backed organisations started a concerted letter-campaign with the CJI for his impeachment. Resultantly, the Hon’ble Judge soon recused himself from any matters related to the BK case. There was no subsequent impeachment, but the message was delivered. And bail still remains difficult.

Of late, the ruling party has begun an outreach to Christian Church leaders, especially in Kerala, where Christians constitute 14% of the population, even as the the other significant minority is increasingly getting alienated. Such engagement helped electorally in the North-east. However in Fr. Stan’s case, the Christian Church was targeted due to its role in organising Jharkhand’s tribal population. Not only was Fr. Stan made out to be a member of a banned organisation, but his fellow clergymen were harassed in the name of investigations. In the fabricated letters, a local and popular community organisation run by the Jharkhand Diocese was made out to be engaged in religious conversions, receiving unregulated foreign funds and being a Maoist front. For minority leaders, those willing to accept the larger Hindutva project could be accommodated. However those who posed a challenge would be brutally crushed.

The Code of Criminal Procedure stipulates that an inquiry by a Judicial Magistrate be conducted into the cause of death of a person in custody. Though such an inquiry has been instituted regarding Fr. Stan’s death, no findings have come forth. However the crucial question is whether the Magistrate will confine herself to merely immediate causes or dwell into the deeper issue? Will she looked into the systemic failure of the State to take care of its detainee? The failure of the Prison department to appoint an MBBS doctor during the period Fr. Stan was in the prison hospital? The failure of the Prison Superintendent to honestly apprise the Court that they did not have the infrastructure to take care of Fr. Stan’s medical needs? The deliberate opposition of the Public Prosecutor and Investigation Officer to Fr. Stan’s bail on medical grounds during the pandemic, despite the Supreme Court & Government calling for decongestion of prisons? The deliberate failure of the Prison Medical Officer to record Fr. Stan’s oxygen (SPO2) levels dropping below 85% and thus not immediately conducting Covid RT-PCR tests? Will the Magistrate question how Fr. Stan what is immediately diagnosed Covid positive on reaching the Private Hospital but never in prison? Or rather, the most important question – whether the NIA was justified in making the arrest, in the first place?

Also read: Stan Swamy’s Laptop Was ‘Planted’ With Incriminating Documents, Says New Forensic Report

Your Excellency’s voice is crucial. The silence that Fr. Stan endured from the Governor of Jharkhand’s office resultantly denied him his longing to be with his people. The same silence would now deny the same for many more.

We will continue to voice these grievances. In Fr. Stan Swamy’s memory, on July 5, 2023, all of us will be on a one-day symbolic hunger strike in prison.

– Sudhir Dhawale, Rona Wilson, Surendra Gadling, Shoma Sen, Mahesh Raut, Vernon Gonsalves, Arun Ferreira, Hany Babu, Ramesh Gaichor, Sagar Gorkhe and Jyoti Jagtap

Five Years of Incarceration – and the Audacity of Hope

Father Stan Swamy died on this day two years ago, while incarcerated in the Elgar Parishad case. His co-accused Rona Wilson writes about continuing oppression in the country – and where he finds hope.

To have spent more than five years in prison, for alleged offences under the most draconian acts of the Indian Penal Code, fully aware that the only ‘crime’ you and your co-defendants have committed is speaking truth to power, is an experience that is surreal. To live such a quotidian life in prison is a dystopia that stares at you. Yet you have little choice in prison but to engage with this audacity. It is through words that you confront this dystopia, name it.

Through words we name the world we confront/inhabit, and make sense of our existence.

To confine someone is to silence them. But then, silence can’t be silenced. Words enliven them; words of silence; silence of words; words that are armed, armed words; fearless words; liberating words.

What words can make sense of the Bhima Koregaon-16 case? It is fitting example of words as inversion of reality, in order to silence words that refuse to be silent, words that are against silencing of words, words that write, words that dare to dream.

Can five years of incarceration, yet unabated, silence our words? This same question was echoed, albeit in a different context, when Shobha Gupta – the lawyer for Bilkis Bano, who struggled for years alongside the rape survivor to secure her justice – on being asked by senior journalist Barkha Dutt if Bilkis Bano would take legal measures against the Gujarat government’s decision to give remission to 11 of those men who were sentenced to life for violating her – lamented, “How much courage can one woman show?”

Words that can unsettle you… Especially, in the context of a human being, a woman in particular, condemned to that unimaginably unbearable moment of being gang-raped before her mother, to then witness her mother and two sisters being meted out the same brutality; to watch them die; to be mute witness to her three-year-old daughter being killed, her head smashed with a stone.

Gupta’s outrage is mindful of a woman who refused to be silent, and gave up 17 years of her life struggling for justice to put behind bars all those men who violated her. The disquiet that betrays the outrage in her lawyer’s lament is eloquent of the uncertainties attending Bilkis Bano’s life ahead. The gross injustice that was visited upon her is turned upside down – yet another instance of inversion of reality – by C.K. Raulji, a BJP legislator and one of the members on the Gujarat government panel that recommended the release of these convicts, when he says in an interview to Mojo Story that these men who got released were “Brahmins, and Brahmins have good sanskar (culture). Their conduct in jail was good.” Words that invert reality. Words that silence.

File photo of Bilkis Yakub Rasool (née Bano). Photo: Shome Basu

Brazen impurity as words to express/understand the injustice meted out to Bilkis Bano – the act of releasing those who violated her followed by the justification of their release – will not suffice, as the ‘standardisation’ of her experience will effectively silence her. The insidious nature of this act should also be read/named as Brahminical exceptionalism, the very logic of fascist Hindutva politics.

Not to say, the BK-16 case is undoubtedly a chilling example of Brahminical exceptionalism.

An unsettling quiescence that accompanies lawyer Gupta’s question putting us all to shame, is a silent testimony to our times.

The prime minister, who primes in the politics of naming/labelling, has preferred to call the 75th year of post-1947 India as ‘Amrit Kaal’. In his recent visit to the US, while addressing the joint session of the Congress, the prime minister was lavish with the word democracy, much to the curiosity of the international media. Not a misplaced curiosity, as the ‘new India’ being ushered in, post-2014, has been witnessing growing assaults on the basic freedom of people. Issues that should be of least significance in the everyday life of ordinary citizens – like what you eat, drink, wear; whom you talk to, move around with; where you go, offer your prayers, stay, buy your daily provisions from – have suddenly become of utmost significance.

Words that project the ‘new India’ are a misnomer, an exercise in the inversion of reality.

While the prime minister tries to convince the international community that India is the ‘mother of democracy’, that democracy is India’s ‘DNA’, nine years of the Narendra Modi-led government has promoted a systematic assault on the ability of people to come together to make sense of what is becoming of their country. Muslims are the worst hit in this politics of construction of a ‘new India’ – the strategic project of Brahminical Hindutva fascism – always in search of an imaginary enemy, that thrives and breeds in the constant othering of minorities.

A recent fact-finding report by the Citizens and Lawyers Initiative edited by senior advocate Chander Uday Singh with a foreword by Justice Rohinton Nariman (retd) has called out the systematic, planned manner in which Ram Navami and Hanuman Jayanti processions were used in April 2022 – in Gujarat, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi, Uttarakhand, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Karnataka, Bihar and Andhra Pradesh – by Hindutva forces to foment riots in localities where Muslims stay. This was followed with targeted destruction of the homes and businesses of Muslims by the governments mostly in BJP-ruled states. Muslims have been forcibly prevented from offering namaz in public places. There are also open calls for the social and economic boycott of Muslims by Hindutva forces, with the connivance of the powers that be.

Video screengrabs from Howrah, Mathura district and Jahangirpuri in Delhi, during Ram Navami processions on March 30.

Several BJP-ruled states have enacted laws against the imaginary threat of ‘love jihad’. Even the Modi dispensations’s studies on the socioeconomic status of Muslims could not hide their abysmal condition – worse than Dalits and Adivasis. India ranks second to Indonesia in having the second largest population of Muslims (around 200 million) in the world. The Citizenship (Amendment) Act and the National Register of Citizens (NRC) have reduced Muslims to second-class citizenship as they lack documents which many Indians lack.

Yet another key word as an exercise in the inversion of reality is ‘normalcy’. Kashmir has been frozen under a wet blanket of ‘normalcy’. There is no independent verification of the state of affairs in the region of Kashmir – which is among the most militarised zones in the world – ever since the 2019 revocation of the special autonomous status of Jammu and Kashmir, ending seven decades of protection.

Atrocities on Dalits and Adivasis have peaked in the last five years. The law, that is supposedly meant to protect Dalits, works against them. Caste is so well entrenched that for every case of atrocity filed, a fictitious counter case is instantly filed, involving offences ranging from sexual harassment to robbery, against the original complainant. With more and more public sector undertakings (state-owned enterprises) being sold off to the private sector, even the marginal share of representation of Dalits in jobs in PSUs has dwindled, effectively neutralising whatever little gains that reservation policy brought. The deepening crisis, in  favour of the rich upper castes, has further aggravated the plight of Dalits.

As the prime minister gets verbose about green technology and clean energy, and the need to reduce the carbon footprint, we are witness to the unbridled corporate exploitation of verdant, biodiversity-rich and unique forests in central and eastern India by a global conglomerate owned by Gautam Adani. It has displaced Adivasis from their natural habitats, irreversibly damaging them  and rendering them uninhabitable. Safeguards guaranteed by the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution are being flagrantly violated. That seemingly disarming sobriquet, flaunted by the media, of ‘ease of doing business,’ is a smokescreen to bypass the gram sabhas of Adivasis and to further dilute environmental guidelines that serve as modalities for environmental impact assessment.

Five years of our incarceration also saw targeted attacks, on some of the best institutions of higher learning, for promoting liberal, progressive and critical thinking. These institutions have been starved of their state-funding. The best research institutes dealing with public policy and NGOs keeping a watch on the government’s socio-economic and environmental policies have been at the receiving end of government ire, and their licenses for foreign donations have been revoked.

Close on the heels of concerted efforts to dismantle some of the best institutions of higher learning in India, the prime minister serenades the international media as he claims India to be the ‘vishwaguru‘ of philosophical wisdom and knowledge. Ironically, this campaign dovetailed with a systematic design to spread obscurantism and the motivated dissemination of misinformation, hate and ignorance through social media, by forces that are chosen by the powers that be. They have gained considerable influence among a cross section of society, resulting in deep polarisation.

Whatever is left of the independent media is being threatened into silence. Words are strategically deployed in the pliant media, to control, contain and coerce narratives that cater to the interests of Hindutva politics. So-called experts from a few think-tanks, owned either by the corporate sector or funded by it, or owing allegiance to Hindutuva politics, crowd the opinion pages of the print media as well as the primetime news of the visual media.

Over the nine years of his tenure Narendra Modi has built an intrusive state with sweeping powers for the police, intelligence agencies, central agencies like the NIA, CBI, ED and an all-powerful NSA. Careful tinkering with the postings of civil servants in important posts has resulted in a loyal bureaucracy that favours the whims of the political leadership. This intrusive state is further teethed with state-of-the-art malware and spyware that, in Edward Snowden’s words, has the “ability to gain possession of more than just your words… [and is] capable of winning total control of your whole device, including its camera and microphone”.

The Bhima Koregaon-Elgar Parishad case or the BK-16 is the first of its kind in post-2014 ‘new’ India where spyware and malware were used to control, capture and implant incriminating material in recent times, in the computer hard disks and electronic devices of human rights activists, academics, lawyers, cultural activists and journalists to frame them in false cases.

The 16 arrested in connection with the Elgar Parishad case. One of them, Father Stan Swamy, passed away in custody. Photo: The Wire.

Those who have dared to speak truth to power have been behind bars under draconian laws like the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, the National Security Act (NSA), sedition law, etc. What happened to Gauri Lankesh, Govind Pansare, Narendra  Dabholkar and M.M. Kalburgi may await you, in a worst-case scenario. One may also be visited  by serious illness which finally took away Father Stan Swamy, incarcerated as one of the co-defendants of the BK-16 – a case of institutional murder.

The deep social polarisation that we are witness to in the last nine years, on the lines of caste, religion, region, colour, nationality, food choices, attire, is not an accidental encumbrance that has befuddled us. It is the result of the three decades of opening up of the economy of India, through policies that gave predatory monopoly capital (domestic and international) ample avenues for profit maximisation, resulting in tiny islands of prosperity surrounded by vast swamps of poverty and misery. A minuscule minority has become insanely rich while the gap between the rich and the poor has catastrophically widened. The glossy success stories of the market that are projected in the corporate media, belong to a small segment (though sizeable in terms of numbers given the huge population of India) of conspicuous consumers of goods who are part of  globalised consumption chains. This newfound power of consumption, that was earlier off bounds, has made this middle-class section the vocal proponents of a ‘new’ India that is ready to take on the world head-on.

Three decades of market liberalisation, globalisation and privatisation have resulted in a far greater concentration of wealth in a few hands, while unemployment and underemployment with abysmally low wages mark the general features of the far larger segment (the unorganised sector) of the economy. The pro-monopoly, pro-big capital policies of the Modi government, like demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax, coupled with the devastating impact of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine, have further deepened the crisis in the economy. It is in the fault lines of  this complex matrix of an economy that is polarised between the few super-rich and the vast sections of the poor, in a society further exacerbated by deepening social divisions, that a highly intrusive and coercive state under Narendra Modi and Amit Shah connives with Brahminical Hindutva fascism to reap the dividends of a cynical politics that is based on the age-old colonial dictum of ‘divide and rule’, deliberately putting communities, castes, religions, nationalities and regions against each other and  constructing an enemy within.

Having set the kaleidoscopic picture of this broader political context, it makes sense to return to the questions that we had set out to confront at the beginning of this write up. The lament of Bilkis Bano’s lawyer returns to visit us, ill at ease, informed with portents of the emerging scenario.

Bilkis Bano’s anguish, anger and pain writhe in the wrenching verse of Bertolt Brecht as he writes: “When the wound stops hurting, what hurts us is the scar.”

As Brecht’s verse gives life to the lived experience of Bilkis Bano, the scar that epitomises the memory of her ordeal also rekindles her to struggle against the powers that be, to borrow from Milan Kundera, in the struggle of her “memory against forgetting”. It is these seventeen years of her struggle for justice, her courageous determination to never  give up, despite extreme adversities, that gives us hope.

Bilkis Bano’s never-say-die spirit resonates with the determination of the women at Shaheen Bagh, Delhi, who initiated the historic sit-in against the discriminatory Citizenship (Amendment) Act of the Modi government that had questioned the very citizenship of Muslims, reducing them to second-class citizens. The perseverance of the women at Shaheen Bagh transformed their historic struggle into a torrent of Shaheen Baghs all over the country. Notwithstanding the uncertainties in an atmosphere of growing Islamophobia, lynching and othering, Muslims dared to dream of a world contrary to the devious machinations of Brahminical Hindutva. This gave hope to all the freedom-loving people of this country.

The spirit of Bilkis is also visible in the undying hope of the Adivasis of central India, the poorest of the poor, as they marched thousands of kilometres raising their voice against the changes being proposed in the Forest Rights Act, which if implemented, would have doomed their lives and livelihoods.

This march forced the authorities to review the proposed Bill. The politics of the protest that the Advasis embarked on evoked hope of a future with a smaller carbon footprint, for security for all. The heroic year-long protests of the farmers’ unions, against the Farm Bills introduced by the Modi government, were a historic watershed. They were heroic for their unequivocal position of not wanting to be talked down to, but to be heard, to fight for what really ails the farming community, for all that is at stake regardingfood security in this country. And finally, contrary to the Modi government’s unilinear modes of communication, portraying the interests of monopolies as the real interests of the agricultural sector, and dominating every form of communication, the dogged struggle of the farmers, despite the all-out efforts to negatively profile them, to criminalise their struggle, and to create dissension within their ranks, could still think through and take action, through multiple forms of communication, along with the mobilisation of various sections of people, to knit together a narrative that was uniting, giving hope.

Very recently, Indian women wrestlers of international repute, unhindered by the threats made against their promising careers, embarked on their struggle against horrifying instances of sexual harassment, stirred by the hope that this can/will open up spaces for future sportspersons to perform with dignity, without fear, free from sexual predation by officials.

These are the markers that indicate that, despite all the intrusive, criminalising, highly repressive, vindictive and intimidating presence of the state with fascist Brahminical Hindutva as its ideological weapon, the audacity of hope of the struggling masses, of freedom-loving people, cannot be crushed.

To live in hope is to trust that it will motivate you to find the way ahead. Human beings have distinguished themselves from other species with their unique faculty to situate their quotidian subjective experience in the larger objective reality of their society. This being and becoming cannot be seen in isolation but are determined by familial, social and cultural contexts. This self-realisation of their unique capabilities to comprehend their individual and social experiences not as exclusive insulated events but as each determining the other and vice versa is what gives them hope and strength to go to any extent to defend and nurture their land/community/society that make and remake them.

Nothing, let alone endless incarceration, can silence our words. This write-up, as we move beyond the mark of five years of our continuing incarceration, is hope, its audacity to take wings in the form of words.

In the last five years we lost Father Stan Swamy, one of our co-defendants, on July 5, 2021, due to the gross insensitivity and the criminal neglect of the system, regarding his specific medical condition. They wanted to silence all of us. They thought they had ‘silenced’ him for the last time. But Stan personifies the embodiment of the audacity of hope; he refuses to die, even in his death. His death, his silence, has become ever more eloquent. Today there are even more words on Stan, on his lifelong commitment to his people, the poorest of the poor Adivasis of Jharkhand, where their forests, rivers and land are being endangered by the avarice of big capital. Yes! Stan’s memory lives in the struggles today of the Adivasis for their lives and livelihoods, against the criminalisation of their youth. Stan’s memory lives in the undying hope of the Adivasis of Jharkhand for a better future. Their struggle, in Kundera’s phrase, is the struggle of their memory against forgetting. It is the audacity of hope.

Father Stan Swamy (26 April 1937 – 5 July 2021). Art: Pariplab Chakraborty/The Wire. Words: Father Stan Swamy

It is the fear of this audacity of hope, its immense potential to unite people, to open up the horizons of their world, that echoes in the words of the National Security Advisor Ajit Doval as he thinks aloud before an audience of new recruits of IPS probationers at the Hyderabad Police Academy on November 11, 2021. To quote the relevant part: “The new frontiers of war, what you call the fourth generation warfare, is the civil society… it is the civil society, that can be subverted, that can be suborned, that can be divided, that can be manipulated, to hurt the interests of a nation. And you are there to see that they stand protected.”

It is no strange coincidence that Brahminical Hindutva fascism detests the idea of hope, the audacity to transcend barriers so as to unite people. The very idea of hope strikes at the root of Brahminical Hindutva’s hierarchical, divisive notions of social segregationthat leave peoplefearful and narrow minded, always in search of an imaginary enemy. Hope is anathema to the ideology of Brahminical Hindutva fascism which builds on divisive politics and has created a rigidly hierarchical social order that is, by compulsion, paternalistic, anti-intellectual and rigidly narrow-minded in its rejection ofcritical thinking, while always in search of its  imaginary enemy.

Historian Ernst Bloch, writing during the time of Germany’s fascism (Nazism), made this incisive observation in his three-volume study, The Principle of Hope: “The emotion of hope goes out of itself, makes people broad instead of confining them.”

Our continuing incarceration after five years, even after  forensic audits by reputed and credible forensic firms in the US proved  beyond doubt that the so-called electronic evidence against us, on the basis of which arrests were made, were all implanted in our computer hard disks and other electronic devices, reveals more about the lawlessness of the process that is taking refuge in the black side of draconian legal instruments. They may kill the flowers, but can they hold back the spring? Can they kill the audacity of hope?

Rona Wilson is a human rights defender, arrested along with other activists and academics in the Elgar Parishad case in 2018. Until his arrest, Wilson was public relations Secretary of the Committee for the Release of Political Prisoners (CRPP). As part of CRPP, Wilson extensively wrote and advocated against draconian legislations like the UAPA. He was later booked under the same UAPA law.

The Elgar Parishad 16 Must Not Be Forgotten

The case represents what the government can do to well-meaning people who speak up against atrocities, and who stand up for the weak and dispossessed. For this reason alone, they are seen as enemies of the state and kept in prison for as long as the government can manage.

This month marks five years since the first arrests in the Elgar Parishad case. In total, 16 people were arrested, including one, Father Stan Swamy, who died in custody. Most of them are in jail. No one has been convicted in the case, none has been connected with violence in the place for which the matter is named. If there is a case that exemplifies the draconian nature of the law they have been arrested under, the cruelty of the State’s intent not on prosecuting cases but keeping people jailed indefinitely, it is this one.

It is important we not forget it or those jailed under it. Less than 10% of all cases under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) have ended, and only a fourth of the adjudicated ones end in convictions. In this case, the activists, who include academics, professors, lawyers and poets, have been accused of waging war against the state.

The man who filed the complaint on the basis of which the arrests were made says he follows a “simple” rule for his Hindutva: “We should keep things which are helpful for Hindus; rest should be abandoned.” After his complaint, the case was spun to include accusations of attempting to overthrow the government and assassinate the prime minister.

When the BJP was defeated in the Maharashtra elections, the case was taken away from the Pune police. Uddhav Thackeray was sworn in on November 28, 2019. The Union government told Maharashtra it had given the case to the NIA on January 24, 2020. One can infer from that what one wants but all of this was accompanied by mistreatment of the accused by the government.

Representative image. Photo: PTI

A history of mistreatment

Stan Swamy, suffering from Parkinson’s disease, was disallowed a glass with a sipper straw in jail for weeks. Shoma Sen, suffering from arthritis, found it difficult to use the Indian commode in jail. Her daughter brought her a commode chair, but was turned away.

Surendra Gadling asked to access books, including the UAPA and IT Acts, some paper to take notes on and four books by Swami Vivekananda. The government opposed this vehemently, with the prosecutor even saying she was unsure whether Vivekananda’s books were banned or not in India.

After the court allowed the books to be brought, the prison authorities still didn’t allow them to be given to Gadling. He was denied a sweater despite a court order, and told only thermal sweaters were allowed and not woollen ones. When his wife brought him a full-sleeved thermal sweater, this was disallowed saying only half-sleeved ones were allowed.

The spectacles of Gautam Navlakha, 70, were stolen in prison. He was virtually blind without his glasses. But he was not permitted to make a call to ask for a replacement for three days. His partner sent a pair to the jail, but the jail authorities refused to accept it though they were told the packet was coming.

When Gadling’s mother died, he applied to be allowed to attend the funeral. It was denied on the grounds that his application didn’t have her death certificate, without which the NIA would not accept that she was dead. The family could not get the certificate because of the lockdown. When the certificate was produced, the NIA said the funeral had already been conducted so they saw no reason to let him out temporarily. When Gadling applied to go to the condolence meeting, this was turned down as he hadn’t submitted a “copy of the meeting” with his application.

When Sudhir Dhawale’s brother died, the application was supported with documentary evidence, an announcement card for the post-funeral meeting and the death certificate. This application was rejected on the grounds that bail could not be given because the offence was “serious”. Mahesh Raut’s sister married while he was in jail as an undertrial. When Vernon Gonsalves’s mother died in May 2021, he chose not to put his family through the rigmarole of attempting to get him bail.

In February 2021, The Wire reported that the letters “found” by the police on Rona Wilson’s laptop had been planted. Malware was used to introduce them to the computer, an independent analysis found. These letters, including the one allegedly on the Modi assassination, had been created using a newer version of Microsoft Word that did not exist on Wilson’s computer, the report said. There was no evidence that the documents or hidden folder were ever opened. In April 2021, a leading firm in digital forensics said it had “irrefutable” proof Wilson’s computer was hacked. Files were planted on it on January 11, 2018, 11 days after the Bhima-Koregaon violence.

Despite all this, most of the accused remain in jail. The case is not the only instance of the government misusing the law to go after those who dissent. Umar Khalid has spent over 1,000 days in jail for being one of the most eloquent voices against what the BJP is doing to India. Of course, the minorities, the poor and the marginalised face the brunt of a brutal State. They always have. This isn’t in dispute. But this case is emblematic. It represents what the government can do in India against well-meaning people who speak up against atrocities, who stand up for the weak and dispossessed and for this reason alone are seen as enemies of the state and kept in prison for as long as the government can manage. So long as the rest of us do not speak up against this misbehaviour by the State, so long as we forget about those who have been made its victims, this behaviour will continue.

The 16 must not be forgotten.

Aakar Patel is the chair of Amnesty International India. Twitter: @aakar__patel.

Court Issues Notice in Surendra Gadling’s Contempt Plea Against Prison Officials

The human rights lawyer, an accused in the Elgar Parishad case, claims that despite favourable court orders, the prison officials have blocked his access to hospitals, worsening his health condition further.

Mumbai: Surendra Gadling, a human rights lawyer and an arrested accused in the Elgar Parishad case, has been ailing with multiple health issues, including serious cardiac issues and psychiatric disorders. Over the past year, he has made multiple applications before the court seeking adequate medical care. And despite favourable court orders, the prison officials have allegedly blocked his access to hospitals, worsening his health condition further. 

Gadling, desperate for treatment, recently sought contempt proceedings against the officials. On January 12, the Gadchiroli sessions court, before which he is facing another trial, accepted his application. The court has issued notices to the Taloja prison superintendent and the prison’s chief medical officer, a copy of which The Wire accessed through Gadling’s lawyer.

In the past five years, the human rights defenders arrested in connection with the Elgar Parishad case have had to move innumerable applications before the court each time they had to access even the most basic medical care. Even after the courts’ intervention, they continue to be denied medical assistance, causing a serious impact on their health.

Gadling, in his application made to the sessions court in Gadchiroli, narrates the entire chronology of his medical condition and the time when he was denied treatment. Soon after his arrest, Gadling developed a severe cardiac issue and needed angioplasty. His heart condition continues to be precarious. 

In July last year, Gadling complained of chest pain and was taken to the state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai. Here, Gadling recalls, the severity of his condition meant that he was admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU). On stabilising, the doctors had directed him to undergo a series of tests and return to the hospital in a few days and again periodically for checkups. This, Gadling says, was denied to him. The Wire tried to reach Taloja jail officials for comment but has not heard from them yet. The story will be updated if they respond. 

The psychiatrists of the JJ hospital, who have been treating him for the past year, also prescribed counselling and medicinal treatment on a regular basis. The medical record, attached with Gadling’s application and accessed by The Wire, shows that the jail authorities failed to take Gadling to the hospital on multiple occasions. 

Access to medical treatment has always been a challenge for prisoners across Indian prisons. Every year, an average of 1,800 prisoners die in jail. In most cases, the National Crime Record Bureau (NCRB) report shows that these deaths could have been avoided if medical treatment was made available on time.

Gadling is one of the 16 persons arrested in the Elgar Parishad case and has languished in jail for close to five years. On July 5, 2021, Jesuit priest and tribal rights activists Stan Swamy died because of delayed and inadequate medical treatment made available to him. His co-accused and Telugu poet Vara Vara Rao’s health too took a severe beating while in jail. He was later released on bail on medical grounds. Another accused, Gautam Navlakha, was shifted to house arrest after the Supreme Court took note of his health condition.

Delhi University associate professor Hany Babu M.T., has also had a difficult time accessing the hospital in the past two years of his incarceration. His wife Jenny Rowena, also an academic, had to move to the Bombay high court seeking urgent intervention when Babu tested positive for COVID-19 and his health deteriorated. Babu developed a severe eye infection and had to be in the hospital for many months.

Activists Call for Release of Accused in Elgar Parishad Case, Probe into ‘Fabrication’ of Evidence

There is a fresh demand for an impartial probe from activists in the wake of a recent report by a US-based digital forensics firm stating that ‘incriminating evidence’ was ‘planted’ on the laptop of activist Stan Swamy, an accused in the case. 

New Delhi: Human rights activists, lawyers and academicians on Thursday, December 22, called for the release of the accused persons in the Elgar Parishad case and an impartial probe into the allegations of tampering of electronic devices and fabrication of evidence of all those accused in the case.

They had gathered at the Mumbai Marathi Patrakar Sangh on Thursday, December 22, to raise their voices against the attacks on human rights defenders.

The meeting comes almost a week after a US-based digital forensics report found that incriminating evidence was ‘planted’ on the laptop of activist Stan Swamy, who was named an accused in the Elgar Parishad case and who passed away last year in prison.

According to Hindustan Times, the press conference was addressed by Father Joe Xavier, convenor of the Father Stan Swamy Legacy Committee of the Jesuits; Father Frazer Mascarenhas, former principal of St Xavier’s College; senior advocate Mihir Desai, who represented Swamy; and professor Nagarjuna G., formerly associated with the Homi Bhabha Center for Science Education, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.

The forensics report by Arsenal Consulting said, “Swamy was the target of an extensive malware campaign for nearly five years, the longest known for any defendant, right up until his device was seized by police in June 2019.”

The hacker had gained full access to his computer, dropping dozens of files into a hidden folder without his knowledge, the Washington Post had reported.

According to the report, these documents, including the so-called ‘letters to Maoists’, are cited by the police as evidence against Swamy and others.

However, the report also mentioned that Swamy never accessed the documents planted on his laptop – a critical point the late activist’s friends also highlighted on Thursday.

Hindustan Times reported professor Nagarjuna as saying, “Arsenal has found no digital evidence to indicate that there was any interaction between the owner of the computer and the documents that were planted on the hard disk. Further, the 45 documents seized by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) as evidence were created in such a short period of time that it was not possible for any human being to do it.”

Senior advocate Mihir Desai said NIA’s attitude towards the findings of the report was itself suspicious.

“Firstly, if the prosecuting agency is relying solely on computer-based evidence, they have to be sure it will work, and they can’t be so confident unless they know that it is planted. More importantly, if the charge against all the arrested accused was that they were a threat to state security, how is this not a bigger threat? Are you not curious to know how documents can be planted remotely on a computer? Are you not concerned that this could happen to the prime minister or the home minister tomorrow?” he asked.

He added that either the NIA is not carrying out the investigation into the tampering and fabrication of evidence in Swamy’s computer or the investigation reveals things that they don’t want to disclose.

“The only conclusion I come to is that they may be trying to suppress the probe,” Mid-Day reported him as saying.

The NIA had arrested him on October 8, 2020. He was the 16th person to be arrested in connection with the case and charged since June 2018.

The new findings were released after Arsenal examined an electronic copy of Swamy’s computer, at the request of his lawyers, the Post had reported.

In fact, activist Rona Wilson’s laptop was also hacked by the same person, the report added.

In February, Wilson had filed a plea in the Bombay high court, seeking a probe into the alleged planting of evidence in his laptop, right before his arrest. In response to his plea, the NIA had dismissed the findings by Arsenal Consulting that damning material was planted in Wilson’s computer.

Father Xavier reminisced how Swamy – a Parkinson’s patient – lost his cool when he was denied a sipper and a straw in jail.  It was given to him a month and a half after filing an application in the special NIA court.

“Stan said that there were people living worse lives than him and he did not deserve limelight over something like this,” he recalled.

Stan Swamy’s Laptop Was ‘Planted’ With Incriminating Documents, Says New Forensic Report

The new findings were released after Arsenal Consulting, a US-based digital forensics firm, examined an electronic copy of Swamy’s computer, at the request of his lawyers.

New Delhi: A new digital forensics report has found that multiple incriminating documents were planted on the laptop of activist Stan Swamy, who was named an accused in the Elgar Parishad case and who passed away last year in prison.

A new report by Massachusetts-based digital forensics firm, Arsenal Consulting, said that “Swamy was the target of an extensive malware campaign for nearly five years, the longest known for any defendant, right up until his device was seized by police in June 2019,” the Washington Post reported.

“During that period, the hacker gained full access and had complete control over his computer, dropping dozens of files into a hidden folder without his knowledge,” the Post said, citing the Arsenal report.

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) had arrested him on October 8, 2020. He was the 16th person to be arrested in connection with the case and charged since June 2018.

According to the report, these documents, including the so-called ‘letters to Maoists’, are cited by the police as evidence against Swamy and others.

The NIA didn’t respond to the newspaper’s request for comments.

The new findings were released after Arsenal examined an electronic copy of Swamy’s computer, at the request of his lawyers, it added.

Arsenal’s report said Swamy’s laptop was infected beginning in October 2014 with NetWire, a malware focused on password stealing and keylogging, and also includes remote control capabilities.

The hacker copied more than 24,000 files and folders from Swamy’s computer onto his own server, the report said.

“On the night of June 11, 2019, hours before Swamy’s computer was seized by the police, the hacker performed an extensive ‘cleanup’ of their activities, including getting rid of malware and surveillance data and creating distractions by copying a large number of files into folders used maliciously before the cleanup,” the report said.

Interestingly, it also said that the same hacker had targeted activist Rona Wilson and lawyer Surendra Gadling – both accused in the Elgar-Parishad case. The hacker, as per the report, used the same command, control servers and NetWire configurations, including the hacker’s passwords.

In December last year, Arsenal Consulting had confirmed that Wilson was a victim of both surveillance and incriminating document delivery for close to a year before his arrest on June 6, 2018.

In June, tech magazine Wired had claimed, citing researchers from SentinelOne, an American cybersecurity firm, that the hacking of e-mail accounts of activists Wilson, Varavara Rao and Delhi University professor Hany Babu were linked to the Pune police.

Grassroots Level Judges Reluctant to Grant Bail for Fear of Being Targeted: CJI Chandrachud

‘This sense of fear nobody talks about, but which we must confront because unless we do that we are going to render our district courts toothless and our higher courts dysfunctional,’ the CJI said.

New Delhi: Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud on Saturday, November 19, stressed the need to learn to trust the district judiciary, saying it would truly answer the needs of common citizens who seek access to justice.

According to LiveLaw, CJI Chandrachud said, “The way we look at the district judiciary affects deeply our own personal liberty as citizens. If district judges do not have the confidence in their own abilities, in their own respect in the hierarchical system, how would we expect a district judge to grant bail in an important case.”

He was speaking at a function organised by the Bar Council of India to felicitate him on being appointed as the CJI.

He said the higher judiciary is getting “flooded” with bail matters because of the reluctance at the grassroots level to grant bail.

“And why judges at the grassroots are reluctant to grant bail, not because they don’t have the ability, not because the judges at the grassroots don’t understand the crime,” he said, adding there is a “sense of fear” among the judges at the grassroots that if he grants bail “will somebody target me tomorrow on the ground that I granted bail in this heinous case”.

Also read: Judiciary in the Modi Era: Shielding the State and Leaving the People Vulnerable

“This sense of fear nobody talks about, but which we must confront because unless we do that we are going to render our district courts toothless and our higher courts dysfunctional,” he said.

Why should one distrust any person who grants relief to a citizen, he asked.

He said much has to be done for improving the service conditions of the district judiciary. “But above all, we have to bring to our district judiciary a sense of dignity, a sense of self-worth, a sense of confidence in their own respectability, which is why I always say our district judiciary is not a subordinate judiciary,” he said.

He said the apex court may lay down “big ticket judgments” on important issues, but the district judiciary defines the peace, the happiness, tranquillity and faith of the common citizens.

Also read: Inconsistencies in Bail Orders Mean Individual Liberty Is Now the Outcome of Judicial Lottery

The CJI’s comments have come against the backdrop of the Supreme Court emphasising that bail remains the rule and jail is the exception.

Despite this, several political prisoners – including activists and journalists – have been repeatedly denied bail.

Umar Khalid, who has been in jail since September 14, 2020, over what the Delhi police have claimed is his connection with the ‘larger conspiracy’ behind the northeast Delhi riots, has been denied bail several times.

After spending 23 months in jail, Kerala journalist Siddique Kappan, who was arrested in October 2020 while on this way to cover the Hathras gangrape in Uttar Pradesh, was granted bail in a UAPA case in September. However, he remains in jail because he has been refused bail in a PMLA case.

Sharjeel Imam was granted bail in September in a sedition case in which he was accused of instigating violence at Jamia Millia Islamia University in 2019. However, he is still under judicial custody as the Delhi Police also considers him an accused in the 2020 Delhi riots conspiracy case.

He was arrested on January 28, 2020.

In the Elgar Parishad case, 84-year-old tribal rights activists Stan Swamy was repeatedly denied bail despite raising serious concerns over his health. He passed away in July last year after he had contracted COVID-19 in prison.

They all were arrested under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

(With inputs from PTI)